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toad88
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quick question

Post by toad88 »

How is the the moon being blacked out then turning blood red a good thing? shoudnt we prepare for the end of the world?
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Ultra
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Post by Ultra »

you really need to stop watching those end of the world movies... they rot your brain.... did we faulter on jan 1 2000... no.... but everyone said it was the end of days..... if anyone is to survive.. its Ultraman..... i have no worries
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Yazule
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Post by Yazule »

naa, I am just showing off again toad, it is ok, I dont plan on destroying the world any time soon
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1nst1nct
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Post by 1nst1nct »

:shock: *phew* well thats a relief yaz being such a nice person and all :)
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Grudge
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Post by Grudge »

The BLOOD MOON

According to folklore, October's full moon is called the "Hunter's Moon" or sometimes the "Blood Moon." It gets its name from hunters who tracked and killed their prey by autumn moonlight, stockpiling food for the winter ahead. You can picture them: silent figures padding through the forest, the moon overhead, pale as a corpse, its cold light betraying the creatures of the wood.

Our planet casts a long shadow. It starts on the ground--Step outside at night. You're in Earth's shadow. Think about it!--and it stretches almost a million miles into space, far enough to reach the moon.

Suppose you had a personal spaceship. Here's your mission: Tonight, at midnight, blast off and fly down the middle of Earth's shadow. Keep going until you're about 200,000 miles above Earth, almost to the moon. Now turn around and look down. The view from your cockpit window is Earth's nightside, the dark half of our planet opposite the sun. But it's not completely dark! All around Earth's limb, the atmosphere glows red.

What you're seeing is every sunrise and sunset on Earth--all at once. This ring of light shines into Earth's shadow, breaking the utter darkness you might expect to find there. Turn off the cockpit lights. There's a lovely red glow.
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