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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2012 22:26:48 GMT -6
OK...
One of the higher "voices" sounds like a twittering bird sound.
Another one sounds like a siren.
The other one is the sweeper one... hopefully that will help you some...
If it's not the twittering one or the siren one it's the sweeper one...
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2012 22:27:29 GMT -6
If you tell me which one it is i *might* be able to make it on my keyboard through my recording program... i dunno if i have a siren sounding one on there or not though...
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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2012 22:29:26 GMT -6
It's like a pitch bender thingy and an automatic filter sounding thingy...
I'm not an expert on this I might not be calling it the proper terms but that's what my recording program calls it, it has several sweeper voices on it...
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Post by skywalker on Sept 6, 2012 22:42:27 GMT -6
It's kind of hard to tell what sound is what since I can't hear the darned song because of this crappy internet connection. Stupid internet. I can't do it very well from memory. I don't think it sounded like a tweety bird. What's a siren sound like? Or a sweeper?
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Post by skywalker on Sept 6, 2012 22:45:28 GMT -6
Silly me. I forgot I had the CD here with me in the truck. Let me listen to it real quick.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 6, 2012 23:06:15 GMT -6
Ok...I think I know what the tweety bird you are talking about is. That's not it. And it's not the bass sound either. I don't think it is the siren sound either...
The sound I heard was a constant high-pitched sound. It didn't change or waver any but it was steady the whole time.
I'm going to start counting from when the music first begins and I'll let you know when I hear the sound.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 6, 2012 23:22:31 GMT -6
The sound that I heard starts right at the 30 second mark. The music in the song is kind of low and then at 30 seconds it rises in pitch and stays that way for several seconds. That high-pitched sound is the one that I heard while I was being zapped with the beam of light. It was just a constant sound...it didn't change or go up and down or anything but was just constant the entire time.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 0:46:18 GMT -6
I listened to all of it last night. I haven't heard it in years. RUSH made a few songs that were just awesome and way ahead of their time. Tom Sawyer is one of the best songs they ever made Imo.
For a 3 man band they know how to rock .
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 6:51:55 GMT -6
I hope I have time to listen to this tonight . I never made it to a Rush concert because they were always sold out. I liked "Tom sawyer" also, and esp. "working man" ;D. I believe that Rush also had a song about "temples of Syrinx". Mr. Getty (lead singer) has a very unusual voice. If I remember correctly, several bands of that era had some futuristic lyrics and tones. Any one heard of Queensryche? They had a couple of hits. I have a cassette that tells a "story" as they sing. It starts out with the guy (lead singer) talking and saying "I Remember Now. . ." and he goes on later about being given an injection that put him out . Any how, one of their tunes was " Jet City Woman". My kids claim that older music is better ;D. One of my daughters teachers was playing Queens "Bohemian Raphsody" while they were working in class. She loves it! (And that's a whole different subject. That people recognize that some students do better with music playing in the background )
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 10:04:33 GMT -6
So do patients in mental facilities. Most people seem to be soothed by music..depending on the variety..I'm not sure heavy metal is particularly meant to be soothing ;D I'm really eclectic in my music taste..I think most everyone here is..and I even have one metal piece I like because the drums are amazing. I never could study to music though
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 11:20:18 GMT -6
The sound that I heard starts right at the 30 second mark. The music in the song is kind of low and then at 30 seconds it rises in pitch and stays that way for several seconds. That high-pitched sound is the one that I heard while I was being zapped with the beam of light. It was just a constant sound...it didn't change or go up and down or anything but was just constant the entire time. You are describing the difficult to explain "sweeper" voice.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 11:24:24 GMT -6
I like Tom Sawyer too... good song! Jo, I have trouble focusing when music is playing too. It gets me too distracted because I find my mind automatically gravitates towards and focuses on the music- especially if it's familiar... JC, I agree. A lot of older rock songs are better than the newer stuff... but recently the newer artists have been making some interesting stuff... Metal isn't for soothing. Metal is for venting frustration without actually breaking stuff (or the bones of your enemies)... ;D
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 17:52:51 GMT -6
Oh, I like the new stuff, too. That guy from "maroon 5" has a very interesting voice also, IMO.
I also like all kinds of music ;D. I have to say that I like it when "hard rock" has incorporated violins into their tune. Something about hearing guitars and violins together is very stimulating!
Now, to try and listen to that "Rush" that Sky was talking about. . .
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Post by Deleted on Sept 7, 2012 18:07:52 GMT -6
Yep, just when i get all comfortable, I have to go to a different room to access anything on yout. Ugh.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 9, 2012 21:55:13 GMT -6
Jc, The Temples of Syrinx song that you mentioned is part of the 2112 story. It comes right after the beginning part where the weird familiar noises are. I wonder why a UFO would make a sound like a synthesizer? I always compared it to a turbine engine on a jet plane because I assumed it was the sound of the craft's engine or power source, but it didn't really sound like a turbine engine. It sounded exactly like a synthesizer. I wonder why a UFO would do that?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 9, 2012 22:28:59 GMT -6
Jc, The Temples of Syrinx song that you mentioned is part of the 2112 story. It comes right after the beginning part where the weird familiar noises are. I wonder why a UFO would make a sound like a synthesizer? I always compared it to a turbine engine on a jet plane because I assumed it was the sound of the craft's engine or power source, but it didn't really sound like a turbine engine. It sounded exactly like a synthesizer. I wonder why a UFO would do that? Sky, the way I see it UFOs have been around since before keyboard synthesizers were in normal use. I think the synthesizers were molded after the noises made by UFOs... but that's my opinion... ~shrug~
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Post by skywalker on Sept 10, 2012 18:31:26 GMT -6
I'm sure the synthesizers were trying to copy the UFO sounds, or at least what they thought UFOs might have sounded like. I remember they use to promote synthesizers as having a very "space-age" sci-fi sound. I was more wondering what type of machinery or technology a UFO could have that would make asound like that. Since we know little about what actually makes the things fly it would be pretty difficult to even guess at it though.
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Post by Morgan Sierra on Sept 20, 2012 19:52:35 GMT -6
The First Pen on the Moon
When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first men to walk on the Moon that fateful day back in 1969 they achieved the greatest accomplishment in the history of humanity...leaving the boundaries of the Earth and traveling through space to a distant alien world. It's no wonder that the men became legends in their own time. Even some of the simple little tools that they used obtained almost mythical status, and it is no wonder. The Moon landing was a magnificent moment and a remarkable achievement...one that will forever go down in the annuls of history. It may have only been a small step for man but it was definitely a giant leap for mankind.
Of course there were a lot of other people involved in the effort who also deserve some credit for that small step. In order to overcome the Earth's gravity and travel through space, rockets had to be built, fuel had to be developed, a capsule had to be designed that could provide the men inside with oxygen, as well as all of the other basic necessities of life. The proper calculations had to be made in order to keep the space craft from missing its target and whizzing off into the never-ending void of deep space. Space suits had to be created that would protect the astronauts from the burning heat and freezing cold temperatures that exist outside the atmosphere, as well as the deadly cosmic rays that bombard any space traveler who dares to leave the safe confines of their home planet. It took a whole team of hundreds, if not thousands of people to overcome all of these potentially deadly obstacles.
When all of the dangers and difficulties are taken into consideration it is amazing that anybody had the courage and fortitude to even try to take that giant leap. Neil and Buzz are definitely American heroes, as are the other astronauts who went into space before them.
Some credit for the Moon landing should also be given to the cosmonauts from the former Soviet Union. It was the Soviets and their space program that first galvanized the United states into action. When it was announced in 1957 that the tiny little Sputnik satellite had made it into orbit it caught the Americans completely by surprise. The thought of Russian space craft circling the earth armed with spy cameras or nuclear weapons was not a pleasant thought, especially in the middle of the Cold War when both sides were trying desperately to gain a military advantage over the other. When President Kennedy assumed office three years later he immediately announced the goal to put a man on the Moon by the end of the decade and the space race was on.
It is interesting to compare the contrast between the two nations and how they went about attempting to achieve their goals. The United States was a capitalist country with a free market economy that produced enormous amounts of wealth that could be poured into the space program. The Soviet Union was a communist country where everything was owned and tightly controlled by the government.
In the USA individual citizens had the freedom and liberty to come up with new ideas, put them into action and succeed to the best of their abilities. In the USSR only the government was allowed to have new ideas and the people just blindly carried out their orders while trying to not draw unwarranted attention to themselves.
In the United States where practically every extravagance was readily available, more was never enough and too much was usually just right. In Communist Russia the emphasis was always on efficiency, expediency and constantly making do with less.
The difference in the social and economic make-up of the two countries determined the style and overall success of each of their space programs. While American scientists were working in spotlessly clean, air-conditioned laboratories with every modern convenience at their disposal the Soviets were stuck in old worn out warehouses with broken windows and dirty concrete floors. Instead of tables the Soviet engineers had to make do with a sheet of plywood placed on top of an empty cardboard box. For heat they burned firewood in old oil drums.
While NASA engineers were given virtually an unlimited budget to design and construct any part necessary to build their equipment, the Russian rocket scientists were scrounging around in junkyards trying to find parts that they could salvage and modify to fit their needs. Is it any wonder that when the big Saturn V rocket lifted the Apollo 11 crew towards the Moon the Soviets huge N-1s were still blowing up on the launchpad? Given the obstacles and disadvantages they had to overcome it is a wonder the Russians ever even got off the ground.
The fact that they beat their American counterparts into space and even managed to put a few things into orbit is a testimony to the ingenuity and resourcefulness of the Soviet engineers. They may not have had the bountiful budget that the NASA scientists had but they more than made up for it in pragmatic simplicity.
No greater example of the difference between the two countries and their space programs can be found than in their choice of writing instruments. The NASA scientists knew that the astronauts were going to need something to write with on their lunar voyage. Mathematical calculations would need to be performed, notes and ideas would need to be jotted down, and not just any old ink pen would work in the harsh environment of space. Lack of gravity and extreme temperatures have a tendency to make the standard ballpoint pretty much useless. NASA knew that something special would be needed to claim the title of the first pen on the Moon.
What they came up with was the Fisher Apollo AG-7 space pen, or astro pen. This little marvel of science was actually developed by a private entrepreneur, Paul fisher, who owned the Fisher Pen Company. He approached NASA about using the pen and after an extensive evaluation process it was eventually selected by NASA to be used by the astronauts on the Apollo missions.
The pen basically consisted of a nitrogen filled canister that was pressurized at a rate of 50 pounds per square inch. The gas pressed against a plunger that forced an almost solid mixture of thixotropic ink against a revolving ball point that liquefied the ink whenever it was rotated. The ball itself was an ultra hard Tungsten Carbide ball held in a stainless steel socket. In spite of the fact that it was still the same general size and shape as a standard ball point pen it was a thing of beauty and it worked as well as it looked.
The little six-inch long astro pen could write for more than seven miles which was 300% further than any other ball-point pen. It could write upside-down, against walls or any other vertical surface. It could reportedly write over butter, grease, sweaty hand-prints or even totally submerged under water. It could write in the burning heat or freezing cold of outer space, and even if it were bombarded with deadly cosmic rays. It was claimed that the thing would even be capable of writing when it was a hundred years old. The special ink that was in it was guaranteed to not clot, leak, clog, dry out or evaporate. It would always write instantly at the slightest touch, as long as the ball was contacting a surface.
According to contemporary promotional literature the AG-7 space-pen cost a grand total of one million dollars to develop back in 1969. That is a staggering sum for what was basically a glorified ink pen. Still, Paul Fisher and NASA both deemed it to be well worth the money. It was a perfect example of what the most prosperous nation in the world can do when the people put their best minds to solving a problem.
And what did NASA's competitors in the race to the Moon do to overcome the challenge of writing in space? When the Soviet Union was faced with the dilemma of finding an instrument that could write in zero gravity, in the freezing vacuum or burning heat of outer space...or even when being bombarded by deadly cosmic rays...they used the same simplistic solutions the Soviet scientists were famous for...they used a pencil.
Of course it wasn't just the Soviets who had to come up with simple solutions. Many people are not aware of it but Neil and Buzz almost didn't make it back from that first Moon mission. There was a minor malfunction in the space craft that could have turned into a major problem if a quick solution had not been found and legend has it that a certain little pen may have played a major role in it.
When the two intrepid explorers climbed back into the Lunar Lander after their final space walk they could see that there was a problem. Lying on the floor was a small piece of a circuit breaker that was part of the ignition switch that would launch the craft away from the Moon. Without the circuit breaker the craft could not take off. It was definitely not a good situation.
As an army of engineers mobilized back on Earth to attempt to solve the problem the astronauts tried to find a fix themselves. Looking at all of the different tools that they had at their disposal Buzz Aldrin realized that the tip of a pen could be used to close the circuit and activate the ignition without causing any sparks or setting anything on fire. He quickly pulled a pen out of his pocket, used it to start the engine and the astronauts were home free.
Naturally, as with any good legend, there is a bit of controversy over just which pen was used. The Fisher Pen Company, which changed it's name to the Fisher Space Pen Company, claimed it was their very own Fisher AG-7 space pen that saved the day and they proceeded to launch a major advertising campaign saying so. They were so successful at convincing people that the astro-pen was the real hero that even NASA picked up the story and added it to their official record. The space agency's stamp of approval just about gave the first pen on the Moon its legendary status.
There are those who question the accepted story however, one of them being Buzz Aldrin himself. According to Aldrin it wasn't the Fisher Space Pen that he used to get the engine started but a Dura felt tip marker. Neil Armstrong confirmed the use of the marker so that should have pretty much settled any controversy. It's not that easy to change a legend however. Even now, several years after the space pen story was refuted, its legendary status continues to grow and many people, including some senior officials at NASA still continue to credit the Fisher space pen with the heroic deed.
Regardless of whether it was the pen or the marker that actually started the space craft the legend no doubt will continue to grow. Paul Fisher's little space pen will always be remembered as the first pen on the Moon, and just like Neil and Buzz, it will forever be a part of history.
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Post by skywalker on Sept 20, 2012 21:26:38 GMT -6
Here is what the little critter looks like. It looks pretty much the same as any other ball-point pen. They have the actual pen that was with Apollo 11 when they went to the Moon on display at the San Diego Air and Space museum. It is all black and burnt because the museum caught on fire and burned to the ground a few years ago. Somehow the pen managed to survive. It was one of the few things that did. I don't know whether or not it still writes.
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DEADnGONE
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Still have this damn illness to put up with. Not terminal,can be seen as good or bad, depending
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Post by DEADnGONE on Oct 25, 2012 21:54:51 GMT -6
Just curious, wonder how you define "reality"? A test will be given later to see who is paying attention.that''s just the psychologist in me, always wanting to administer "tests".
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Post by Deleted on Oct 25, 2012 22:44:31 GMT -6
Just curious, wonder how you define "reality"? A test will be given later to see who is paying attention.that''s just the psychologist in me, always wanting to administer "tests". Reality is in the eye of the beholder. My reality may be different from your reality. It is all dependent on perception. That's how I see it at least- of course that is how I see everything. My perception shapes my reality.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 25, 2012 23:21:56 GMT -6
There is your perception of reality...my perception of reality and reality somewhere in between. Being a psychologist you know we don't all process in the same way nor do we 'see' the world around us in the same way, heck..we don't even think alike. Then of course a person's perception is clouded by what they want to see ...especially if it has anything to do with UFO's. If someone wants to see the sugar coated variety of alien from Alpha Centauri who's inevitably going to come whisk us away to their planet where they will cure old age and we will live in beauty and comfort forever...then they aren't likely to be receptive to a less helpful visitor who perhaps views mankind in the same cage with a monkey. Eventually...we'll know all of the answers...or not. ;D
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Post by plutronus on Oct 26, 2012 17:45:56 GMT -6
Just curious, wonder how you define "reality"? A test will be given later to see who is paying attention.that''s just the psychologist in me, always wanting to administer "tests". A reality test? Oohh...I love tests. Why don't you try testing me?
[:-{) {:-] ]:-o plutronus
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Post by Deleted on Oct 27, 2012 2:59:57 GMT -6
I think I'd rather chew glass than take a test ;D
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Post by lois on Oct 31, 2012 23:22:41 GMT -6
I think I'd rather chew glass than take a test ;D I know what you mean Jo . I had to take a test two weeks ago. I hated it. ;D ;D
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Post by Deleted on Feb 18, 2013 7:45:18 GMT -6
On the Edge of Area 51Area 51 has long been a mythical place in UFO circles. Rumor has it that alien spacecraft are being reverse engineered in Super secret underground bunkers connected by a spiderweb of hidden tunnels that spread out beneath the desert floor. Others say that actual extraterrestrial beings are being held in secret locations within the Top Secret facility while efforts are being made to communicate with them. Whether these rumors are true remains to be seen but regardless, the myth seems to have attained legendary status. If Roswell is the UFO community's Mecca than Area 51 is Heaven...or Hell, depending on how you look at it. Many intrepid UFO hunters have tried to penetrate the veil of secrecy that surrounds the base...and many have been arrested and fined for doing so. The fine can be anywhere from $600 to $1000 dollars for the first offense, and much higher for those who didn't learn their lesson the first time. That still doesn't stop people from trying though. The lure is just too irresistible. I have already written about the recent trip I took to Nevada and my journey down the Extraterrestrial Highway that culminated with a visit to the Little A' le inn...the local watering hole and alien-themed souvenir shop that sits on the outskirts of the Nevada Test range. This is usually the starting point for those attempting to make the journey to Area 51. People come from all over the world to do so. Having heard all of the tall-tales about the infamous base, and traveling almost 2000 miles to get there, I was definitely primed for an adventure. The fact that I had a brief encounter with a shady man in black while at the A' le Inn only added fuel to the fire. I was definitely going, one way or another. Believe it or not, despite the government's official denial that the base even exists, there are several methods one can use to get to it. The first is to drive aimlessly up and down the many dirt roads that criss-cross the desert until you accidentally wander across the boundary...or run out of gas, neither of which would be a good thing to do. Both the desert and the government can be unforgiving. The second way is to hire somebody to take you there. There is actually a tourist guide service that operates out of Las Vegas and specializes in trips to the front gate of Area 51. The group is called Adventure Photo Tours and they can pick you up at the airport and drive you out to the middle of hell on Earth in air-conditioned comfort. In addition to the base, their tours can also include a visit to see the fleet of unmarked airliners that fly workers to and from the base, some Native American petroglyphs that supposedly resemble aliens, and a visit to the black mailbox and lunch at the Little A' le Inn. It's not a bad way to see the sights if you don't want to go it alone. The third way to find the base is with a map. I managed to procure mine from the bartender at the Little A' le Inn. (They sell them there for 33 cents. ) In addition to giving detailed driving instructions to the front and rear gates, the map also shows the location of some of the other interesting sites in the area, like the "black" mailbox, Mailbox Road, and Groom Lake Road. Armed with this fiendish little device I hopped in my pickup and headed for Dreamland. As I bumped and skidded down the dusty dirt roads I couldn't help but wonder what was in store for me. I had seen pictures of the base boundary before, (and even some of the base itself ) so I pretty much knew what I was going to see, but actually being there in person is a whole different story. There is an aura of mystery that permeates the desert out there...a feeling that's very hard to explain. It's a sense of dread that echos off the mountains and flows down the dry ravines, sending cold shivers racing down your spine. It's a feeling of being watched...like somebody doesn't want you to be there. Every time I went around a curve I half expected a herd of MiBs to come stampeding out from behind the hills and drag me into some deep, dark, dungeon filled with little gray slanted-eyed cellmates. Definitely not a pleasant thought. As I rounded the last curve before the base boundary my feelings of being watched were justified. Perched up on top of a hill overlooking the entrance was a white four-wheel drive pickup with two sinister looking guards in it. These are the infamous MiBs, or"cammo-dudes" as some people call them because they always wear camouflage clothing. They are members of a private security firm contracted by the military to keep curious onlookers out and the base's secrets in. They reportedly take their job very seriously. I was mildly surprised to see the Adventure Photo Tours people were there as well. Their big SUV was parked off to the side of the road just before the entrance marker. Two sun-shade wearing tour guides were setting up a camera with the biggest lens I had ever seen and pointing it in the direction of the Cammo-dudes. They could have counted the whiskers on an aliens face from a mile out with that camera. I was impressed. I was also impressed with the lone tourist the tour guides were showing the sights to...a beautiful blond with big...uhh...eyes and an intoxicating smile. It was little wonder that two guides came along on the excursion with their single client. I had half a mind to sign up for a tour right there on the spot, even though I was already at the destination. The other half of my brain told me that Area 51 was nearby and waited to be explored. When the buxom beauty finally wandered over a hill to get a closer look at something or another I finally tore my eyes away from her and started reading the signs around me. "Warning" they said. "Photography of this area is prohibited." That's nice, I thought, as I started snapping pictures. Most people aren't aware that it is actually legal to approach and photograph the boundary, you just can't go across. The boundary is clearly marked with signs and orange stakes stuck in the ground at regular intervals. There are no chain-link fences, minefields or concrete walls to keep trespassers out, but one false step will bring the wrath of the cammo-dudes rushing down upon you. They even have miniature cameras and infra-red beams disguised as rocks and hidden in the cactuses just in case anybody tries to sneak across. Attempting to trespass into the interior would not be a good idea. As I continued taking photos I kept a close eye on the white pickup sitting up on the hill. I wondered if the guards were watching me or the beautiful blond? There was no way to tell through the truck's tinted windows. In an attempt to find out I started to creep closer to one of the boundary markers...closer and closer I went. When I was only a few inches away from it I could dimly feel the cammo-dudes giving me the evil eye and then, with a mischievous grin on my face, I reached out and touched the marker. I know it was a silly thing to do and is probably something a thousand other people have done...but I couldn't help it. I guess the rebellious part of me just isn't going to rest until I get thrown in the slammer. I seriously doubt there was any possibility the guards would have come charging down from their lofty perch just because I touched a sign, but I was still a little bit giddy when I did it...especially since I made sure my foot was across the boundary line at the time. I can now triumphantly claim that I have set foot on Area 51. ;D Other than that there is not much to see out there. The base is completely surrounded by hills and the outer boundary is a long ways away from the inner perimeter where the action actually takes place. Anything secret would be carefully stored underground or out of sight and away from prying eyes. There used to be a couple of vantage points on nearby mountains where people could legally go and set up telescopes to observe some of the activity at the base, but thanks to the government's infamous land grabs in the 80s and 90s that is no longer possible. Both of the viewing areas at Bald mountain and Freedom Ridge are now off limits. Whatever mysteries lie within Area 51 are going to have to remain mysteries for now. I don't see any way that anybody could get closer to the base than I did, at least not without getting arrested. The place may as well be an impenetrable fortress surrounded by miles and miles of cactuses, cameras, rattlesnakes and MiBs. Even the photos that I took are not much different than the ones I had already seen posted on the internet. I'm still glad that I made the journey though. Being there gives you a feeling that you just can't get from looking at photographs. It allows a person to appreciate the isolation and sense of security that surrounds the base. Whatever the government has hidden there is definitely something they do not want people to see. Whether it involves aliens, UFOs or something more earthly in origin, the Top Secret experiments they are conducting there will have to remain a secret...at least for now. ;D ;D That could've been you Morgan ;D ;D ;D
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CitizenK
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I'm Back Guys!!! I've missed you so much!!!
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Post by CitizenK on Feb 19, 2013 1:03:45 GMT -6
wow those boys are a handful of stupid and a cup of brave!!! I think if I were to attempt sneaking in I'd go on foot the way the crow flies lol
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 19, 2013 11:23:41 GMT -6
Laughing..you have such a way with words ;D
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CitizenK
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I'm Back Guys!!! I've missed you so much!!!
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Post by CitizenK on Feb 19, 2013 23:36:35 GMT -6
ha ha , thanks
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Post by Morgan Sierra on Dec 15, 2013 22:57:03 GMT -6
It's been a while since I've posted anything on my blog because I've been too busy (lazy ) to write anything. I need to get back to it so I'm going to put something here today. Every now and then I have an idea for a song pop into my head and I will write the lyrics down just for the heck of it. I haven't actually done anything with any of them because I'm a writer not a singer or a musician. I can't dance worth a flying flip-flop neither. I would someday like to learn to play some instruments but I'm not going to hold my breath waiting for it to happen because if I did I would look like this... ...for a long time. This is a song that I wrote about alien abductions which is a subject that I am slightly familiar with. Cliff wanted me to post it here so I'm gonna go ahead and do it. I hope you guys like it. The Alien in Me
They come in the night When everyone's peacefully sleeping Their eyes hypnotize So you won't remember a thing There may be monsters under your bed You hear their voices inside of your head
Blacker than night are the eyes They even see what you're feeling Then the lights paralyze And you float up to the ceiling You don't know if it's real or just dreaming But when you wake up you can hear yourself screaming!
(chorus) Take me! Take me! Take me away from this hell that I am living in Wake me! Wake me! Wake me up from this nightmare that is my life
The things that they do Cause me such pain and confusion They're coming for you Or maybe it's just an illusion I cry for help but there's no one to save me Everyone says that I'm going crazy!
Take me! Take me! Take me away from this hell that I am living in Wake me! Wake me! Wake me up from this nightmare that is my life
Take me! Take me! Take me away from this hell that I am living in Wake me! Wake me! Wake me up from this nightmare that is my life
(background chorus) Nobody knows the hell that I've been going through No one believes the things that I have seen No one can feel the terror that's inside of me No one can see the alien in me
Whenever they come to take me I feel so alone I'm all on my own I keep on screaming I wanna go home!
Take me! Take me! Take me away from this hell that I am living in Wake me! Wake me! Wake me up from this nightmare that is my life
Take me! Take me! Take me away from this hell that I am living in Wake me! Wake me! Wake me up from this nightmare that is my life
Nobody knows the hell that I've been going through No one believes the things that I have seen No one can feel the terror that's inside of me No one can see the alien in me
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