I think all of these deaths are related. I, for one, appreciated you finding yet another recent murder. Something is coming and they've known about it for some time.
The scientists who are now becoming alarmed and wanting to discuss it are being systematically eliminated.
The 'elites', world leaders, wealthy, and corrupt, don't want the everyman to know about it and demand to know why the government isn't going to protect them from it.
These 'special people' want assurances that they are able to get away safely and hide in their hidden mountain bunkers or on their doomsday crafts before the average Joe learns about it. No need to stop the wheels and cogs from turning before they've safely entered their safe houses.
"Specifically, Hicks was involved with the DART Project, NASA’s test to see if humans could deflect dangerous asteroids away from Earth. " Hmmm
On April 13, 2029, the asteroid 99942 Apophis will make an extremely close, harmless flyby of Earth, passing at a distance of approximately 31,600 to 32,000 kilometers (19,600–20,000 miles) above the surface. This event will bring the 375-meter-wide (roughly 1,100 feet) space rock closer than many geostationary satellites orbiting our planet, making it the closest approach of an asteroid of this size ever known in advance.
While the asteroid will not strike Earth, the encounter will significantly alter its trajectory; it will shift from the Aten group of asteroids to the Apollo group, changing its orbital period from roughly 0.9 years to 1.2 years. The flyby will be visible to the naked eye by billions of people across Europe, Africa, and Asia, appearing as a bright star moving rapidly across the night sky.
Despite initial fears of impact in 2029, 2036, or 2068, NASA and ESA have definitively ruled out any collision risk for at least the next 100 years following precise radar observations. This unique event offers a rare opportunity for scientists to study the asteroid's physical properties, with missions like ESA's Ramses and NASA's OSIRIS-APEX planned to observe the asteroid before and after its close approach.
Just note that this particular death was 3 years ago.
Whoops. Reading in an article posted today, I thought it was recent. I’ll delete it.
I don't think you needed to delete this.
I think all of these deaths are related. I, for one, appreciated you finding yet another recent murder. Something is coming and they've known about it for some time.
The scientists who are now becoming alarmed and wanting to discuss it are being systematically eliminated.
The 'elites', world leaders, wealthy, and corrupt, don't want the everyman to know about it and demand to know why the government isn't going to protect them from it.
These 'special people' want assurances that they are able to get away safely and hide in their hidden mountain bunkers or on their doomsday crafts before the average Joe learns about it. No need to stop the wheels and cogs from turning before they've safely entered their safe houses.
Sure. Thanks fren!
"Specifically, Hicks was involved with the DART Project, NASA’s test to see if humans could deflect dangerous asteroids away from Earth. " Hmmm
On April 13, 2029, the asteroid 99942 Apophis will make an extremely close, harmless flyby of Earth, passing at a distance of approximately 31,600 to 32,000 kilometers (19,600–20,000 miles) above the surface. This event will bring the 375-meter-wide (roughly 1,100 feet) space rock closer than many geostationary satellites orbiting our planet, making it the closest approach of an asteroid of this size ever known in advance.
While the asteroid will not strike Earth, the encounter will significantly alter its trajectory; it will shift from the Aten group of asteroids to the Apollo group, changing its orbital period from roughly 0.9 years to 1.2 years. The flyby will be visible to the naked eye by billions of people across Europe, Africa, and Asia, appearing as a bright star moving rapidly across the night sky.
Despite initial fears of impact in 2029, 2036, or 2068, NASA and ESA have definitively ruled out any collision risk for at least the next 100 years following precise radar observations. This unique event offers a rare opportunity for scientists to study the asteroid's physical properties, with missions like ESA's Ramses and NASA's OSIRIS-APEX planned to observe the asteroid before and after its close approach.
AI-generated answer. Please verify critical facts.
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