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Brandon
Destiny
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Comments by "Brandon" (@gravoc857) on "Voyager 2 Comes Back Online And Detects A Mysterious Hum" video.
I used to subscribe to the belief that there aren’t intelligent civilizations out there, because we don’t see artificial mega structures like stellar engines, Dyson swarms or intergalactic starships that would produce loud signatures like stars do. That belief is changing. Science just discovered for the first time ever that there are massive galactic filaments that snap apart and together by the electromagnetic force. These are a very likely candidate to explain the billions of times more powerful radio bursts we’re seeing flare up all over the galaxy. It’s also making science contemplate if dark matter is truly so mysterious, or if the answer is glaringly obvious. So to me, the fact that billions of times more powerful galactic objects exist in the Milky Way AND they went undetected for so long. That makes me challenge the belief that we should be seeing signs of galactic or intergalactic civilizations. Why would we see a higher intelligence, if it took us so long to see these natural behemoths in our own galaxy. I don’t believe we’re alone. Here’s to hoping that gets proved in my lifetime. I’ll even take single celled organisms living in the clouds of Venus and Jupiter.
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The most annoying thing about the 21st century? The mainstream popularization of human pessimism 🤡🤡🤡🥴
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@TheSorcerer1 You’re referring to the filaments on a universal scale that are influenced by gravity and connect galactic super clusters together. I’m referring to the new discovery made this year (May 2021), that shows that our galaxy has its own individual filaments and that they interact with each other utilizing the electromagnetic force. I suggest you check out the NASA’s newest image they have captured using the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. It captured the clearest image of the center of our galaxy that we have to date. It reveals massive filaments at the center of our galaxy and that these filaments only interact with our galaxy alone. These filaments snap apart and reform, releasing x rays billions of times stronger than anything else we’ve witnessed in the universe. Also, I just re read your comment. Not sure where you’re getting the portion about me stating them being man made. I never stated these things are being built by living beings. I’m simply describing a massive scientific discovery that changed my perspective on the Fermi Paradox. It changed my perspective, because it took modern humans a really long time to discover something in our own galaxy that’s billions of times more powerful than we’ve seen before. If something like THAT can go undetected for so long. Then it would be a great answer to the Fermi paradox on why we can’t see life anywhere else in the universe. Why would we see hyper intelligent civilizations, if we couldn’t even see some of the largest and most powerful natural structures of our own galaxy.
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