A Lazy Afternoon filled with Hollow-ness
Today I came to work to meet an EMPTY office. Literally empty. Aboslutely no one was around. The silence was quite enjoyable, but a little scary. By 930 am a couple of people did come in but I hardly know them and they sit quite far away so it didn't make any difference, especially since my sup is on leave.
I'm actually typing this entry now cos I am kinda bored in the office and really tired. This is partly due to the exhausting Chinese New Year visiting schedule I had over the last 2 days, and partly due to the work I did (or at least tried to do) today... Actually I should be rushing my project cos my sup gave me quite a tight deadline, but at present my mind's a blank, which is why I decided to do this entry...
Anyway, as usual, my tired mind tends to wander to "fantasy land", so I took a short break to read some stuff online. As luck would have it, I found a fitting theory to suit the hollow-ness of my office and, in some ways, my head - The Hollow Moon...
Click here for the full article.
I'm actually typing this entry now cos I am kinda bored in the office and really tired. This is partly due to the exhausting Chinese New Year visiting schedule I had over the last 2 days, and partly due to the work I did (or at least tried to do) today... Actually I should be rushing my project cos my sup gave me quite a tight deadline, but at present my mind's a blank, which is why I decided to do this entry...
Anyway, as usual, my tired mind tends to wander to "fantasy land", so I took a short break to read some stuff online. As luck would have it, I found a fitting theory to suit the hollow-ness of my office and, in some ways, my head - The Hollow Moon...
Another piece of evidence pointing towards the theory that all heavenly bodies are hollow is that, as you would expect with a hollow sphere, both the Earth and our moon are known to "ring like a bell" when hit with a shock wave.
In "Moongate: Suppressed findings of The US Space Program" (1982), Nuclear Engineer and researcher/writer William L. Brian II presents evidence proving that the moon, as any hollow sphere would, "rings" when hit by asteroids or heavy space junk. And that's not all. According to Dr. Brian, "the evidence provided by Apollo seismic experiments also points to the conclusion that the moon is hollow and relatively rigid." (1)
Click here for the full article.


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