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User: gr8-no-w8

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  1. Re:What the FUCK! on 550 Metric Tons of Uranium Removed From Iraq · · Score: 1

    Sure have. Have you heard of HUMOR before? Satire? Sarcasm? I thought everyone that posted here was familiar w/ those concepts. Guess you learn something new ea. and every day.

  2. Re:What the FUCK! on 550 Metric Tons of Uranium Removed From Iraq · · Score: 1

    You BASTARDS!

  3. Re:What the FUCK! on 550 Metric Tons of Uranium Removed From Iraq · · Score: 1

    Uhhh... why do you think 90% of them live w/in 100 mi. of the border?? I've been saying for years, they're amassing, poised for invasion. But does anyone listen?? Nooooooo, not until there's a mountie on your front lawn, but by then, of course, it's too late. BLAME CANADA, BLAME CANADA!! (courtesy Matt & Trey)

  4. Re:So... on Mars Soil Appears To Be Able To Sustain Life · · Score: 1

    Wow, a life (almost?) entirely underground. Sign me up? :-/ Though I suppose that by the time this is all in place, may have managed to make life here at least as miserable.

  5. Re:So... on Mars Soil Appears To Be Able To Sustain Life · · Score: 1

    I saw a History Ch. program in which it was envisioned that we would set up factories to essentially gassify elements already there to create a greenhouse effect, and the scientists interviewed seemed to think doing so, given enough time, was quite realistic. My question concerns what I thought was a prevailing theory; that Mars may have once had an atmosphere, but because its core had cooled (being so much smaller than Earth, it cooled faster) and solidified, there was no magnetic field protecting the atmosphere from solar winds, which proceeded to blow the atmosphere into space. So my question: if that is indeed the case, what's to keep any atmosphere we create there from meeting the same fate?