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Originally posted by IntoxicatingMadness
I'm not even going to check the video because the freeze frame looks like that of traffic lights.
Originally posted by havok
I just walked outside and put on welders glasses to look at the Sun.
Again.
I do this everytime I see a thread pop up about this lunacy.
*sigh*
There's no "second sun".
Not today, at least.
Sorry to burst any hoaxers bubbles.
Astrophotographer Alan Friedman produced stunning results from his backyard in Buffalo, New York, when he put a webcam and a telescope together in front of a high-end filter.
Originally posted by ThisIsNotReality
Don't know what this is, looking forward to attempts to debunk, as I have no clue. Seems legit, I just wish the UPS guy would have taken a look but indeed, too stuck in the matrix
Secondly, for those who say "if there was a second sun we should all see it by now" - you clearly don't understand anything about astronomy, physics, and in particular the nature of elliptical orbits in connection with the earth's own revolution around the sun.
Originally posted by ThisIsNotReality
I don't see why we all HAVE to see this second planet either. We're living in an infinite universe, how arrogant to come here and dictate that what little laws of nature we know, should rule over the entire universe...
Everything is possible in infinity, I don't have an explanation, but to me, that's better than trying to fit everything in the current frame of knowledge we have, and when it doesn't fit, just simply discard it as a hoax... It's not because you don't know it that it doesn't exists, I'm sure there are plenty of possible explanations for a star that would not be visible the entire time or to the entire globe, even if you have to go as far as interdimentionality etc, who are you to tell me it's NOT possible?...
Originally posted by totallackey
...
please, spare us the irrelevant crapola about needing to understand astronomy and orbital mechanics in this case.
...
Aristotle (Meteorology III.2, 372a14) notes that "two mock suns rose with the sun and followed it all through the day until sunset." He says that "mock suns" are always to the side, never above or below, most commonly at sunrise or sunset, more rarely in the middle of the day.
Originally posted by boncho
Myself personally I just look at this picture: