Badger Kitten said:''an independent truth seeker''
what's one of those then BK? And is that not an oxymoron?
Badger Kitten said:''an independent truth seeker''
fela fan said:Not sure. Doubtful though.
Certainly, disaffected muslims did the damage.
But who set them off the leash...
fela fan said:You know what mate, it's real interesting to me that you remember so much about me. Maybe my mirror shines more brightly...
TeeJay said:Come on, I don't think it is fair to drag Jazzz into this thread/fight if he hasn't posted here. fela is just trying to make people do a "call out" - I don't think we should enlist a 'team' for him. If they want to come and back him up they will do so themselves.
Blagsta said:I find you amusing
fela fan said:what's one of those then BK? And is that not an oxymoron?
Blagsta said:why do they need anyone to "set them off the leash"?
It seems that if you're not whining about urban75 and trying to deny things you've said in the past, you're posting up this kind of bullshit.fela fan said:Y Maybe my mirror shines more brightly...
Blagsta said:why do they need anyone to "set them off the leash"?
Yet another off-topic whinge...Lock&Light said:No. TeeJay, I don't. I have no serious problems at all. If you have a problem, and that problem is me then I think it is you who should think about seeking help.
Ignore lists are used for those people who's messages you wish not to read. By adding someone to your ignore list, those messages posted by these individuals will be hidden when you read a thread.
fela fan said:I didn't get the hump.
But it's interesting that you thought i did. As if i could be arsed about what someone wrote on an internet forum.
Life's far too much fun to be bothered about some pseudonym and their mutterings.
Get off your lazy arse, do some research and you'll find a long list of banned conspiraloons.fela fan said:I've been reading about all these 'conspiraloon' comments for four years. Due to other posts on this thread, i decided to try and find out just who all these legions of loonspuds were.
Badger Kitten said:Fine ,Fela fan, don't admit you made a mistake and thought I was slagging off your pet site about 9/11 when I was not talking about 9/11 at all as the thread is not about it as far as I can tell.
''Independent truthseekers'' is what the 9/11 forum brigade call themselves, they do not like the term '''conspiracy theorist'', or ' conspiraloon'' for some reason.
editor said:Get off your lazy arse, do some research and you'll find a long list of banned conspiraloons.
Not that you didn't know that already.
Why are you playing this deceitful game, fela?
Badger Kitten said:I'm very pleased that you are not getting all cross. And I entirely agree with you.
fela fan said:BK, i really don't give a shit about either of these events. I have a life to lead.
I'm interested in 911 in as far as if it comes out that indeed elements of the USG were involved then we will move into a better political western world with less wars and aggression.
Whether this was the case or not, we will never know with the continued silence of the media.
The biggest event of our times, of our generation,
editor said:It seems that if you're not whining about urban75 and trying to deny things you've said in the past, you're posting up this kind of bullshit.
If you've got nothing remotely on topic to add to this thread, kindly fuck off and take your ridiculous 'mirrors' elsewhere.
Badger Kitten said:Or are you afraid of the Powers that Be and have cunningly decided to disassociate yourself from the ''conspiraloon'' tag?
fela fan said:Answer your own question. It's a pretty simple one to answer.
fela fan said:Good. Positive vibes are always better than negative ones.
Glad to be of good service.
Badger Kitten said:Can I ask what caused this sudden change of heart within the last few moments? Or are you afraid of the Powers that Be and have cunningly decided to disassociate yourself from the ''conspiraloon'' tag?
I know I am going to regret asking this but...fela fan said:...The two events are closely related, and understanding one can help to understanding the other.
If you could solve 911, then you will solve 7/7...
Blagsta said:I'm laughing at you, not with you
Blagsta said:I'm asking you.
TeeJay said:I know I am going to regret asking this but...
...why are they "closely related"?
have you just pulled this claim out of your arse or do you have some as yet undisclosed information given to you by one of your had-to-much-to-drink expats/undercover rogue CIA operatives in your local Chang Mai bar?
TeeJay said:I know I am going to regret asking this but...
...why are they "closely related"?
have you just pulled this claim out of your arse or do you have some as yet undisclosed information given to you by one of your had-to-much-to-drink expats/undercover rogue CIA operatives in your local Chang Mai bar?
Yes - it means you are a trolling cunt who is just here to pick a fight.fela fan said:I only give a shit about 911 on this forum. Which takes up a tiny percentage of my life.
Outside of this website i just really don't give a shit.
Does that explain things?
While aluminium foil and tin-foil are traditional, less fragile materials such as 3M Velostat (a kind of metallised plastic) and metal window-screen mesh are now more commonly used. Electrical conductivity is seen as a key quality.
Scientific basis
There is a small amount of truth or reason to be found in the tin-foil hat story. A well constructed tin-foil enclosure would approximate a Faraday cage, reducing the amount of (notionally harmless) radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation inside. A common high school physics demonstration involves placing an AM radio on tinfoil, and then covering the radio with a metal bucket. This leads to a noticeable reduction in signal strength. The efficiency of such an enclosure in blocking such radiation depends on the thickness of the tin-foil, as dictated by the skin depth, the distance the radiation can propagate in a particular non-ideal conductor. For half-millimeter-thick tin-foil, radiation above about 20 kHz (i.e., including both AM and FM bands) would be partially blocked. (Classical Electrodynamics, John David Jackson, Wiley Press 1998.)
The effectiveness of the tin-foil hat as an electromagnetic shield for stopping radio waves is greatly reduced by the fact that it is not a complete enclosure. Placing an AM radio under a metal bucket without a conductive layer underneath demonstrates the relative ineffectiveness of such a setup. Indeed, because the effect of an ungrounded Faraday cage is to partially reflect the incident radiation, a radio wave that is incident on the inner surface of the hat (i.e., coming from underneath the hat-wearer) would be reflected and partially 'focused' towards the user's brain. While tin-foil hats may have originated in some understanding of the Faraday cage effect, the use of such a hat to attenuate radio waves belongs properly to the realm of pseudoscience.
A (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) study by graduate students at MIT determined that a tin-foil hat could either amplify or attenuate incoming radiation depending on frequency [1]; the effect was observed to be roughly independent of the relative placement of the wearer and radiation source. Note that GHz wavelengths are well below the putative skin-depth of even the thinnest foil.