I'm afraid the truma was too much for my mind and I have totally dissociated from the person I was then. I can't remember anything. I think maybe there were..... no... nothing. I see nothing, I feel nothing.... Like the reclining Buddha, I am at peace
They don't seem to care about pollution much. Still lots of nuclear waste being dumped and buried along with a lot of other stuff. All they care about is carbon dioxide !!!
Yes, there may be something to see but I don't think it was ever goin to be massive. The biggest possibility of something interesting, I think, is on Jan 15 when we pass through it's path of two weeks ago when it was on it's way into the Sun.
The sky is beautiful these nights. Venus in the south after dark and Jupiter hight in the night sky later. And a million shooting stars and satellites.
NASA were really caught out on this one. Today they admit 'it may have survived' as it rips out the far side of the Sun, getting brighter as it goes.
It has fragmented a good bit but there should still be something to see in a few days when it starts to get above the eastern horizon before dawn.
This is a good documentary on the state of knowledge ignorance within the Astronomical community regarding comets. It appears they are still thinking of comets as 'dirty snowballs' as they call them - lumps of frozen gases with bits of rock. This one getting so close to the Sun and surviving proves that wrong. What they really want to deny is that the Universe is an electrical grid and not just lumps of rock floating in 'nothing'. This may be in no small part due to the simple view being necessary to justify the state view that cLIEmate change is only due to mankind and nothing to do with the Sun's magnetic activity
This is the latest gif I've seen. It starts on the 26th and shows ISON passing the sun tonight. It takes a few minutes to go through. Look at some of the coronal mass ejections the sun gives off. One of those right at earth would heat things up a bit
RE: Is there life after death?