Comet Elenin Does NOT EXISTS!! Instead - Brown Dwarf: NIBIRU!.mp4
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@DoveDancing A Brown Dwarf is a Failed Star...Comets are Balls of ICE and SpaceDust so could not possibly be "kicked out" by it...in fact the Gravity of the Brown Dwarf would Pull the comets into it..and Crush them
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Nothing of this on this video is said was true. Nobody had to emigrate from the coast lines to the inner regions for the moment.
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Nibiru cant exsist because a planet just cant bob and weave out of planets like traffic. its orbit is to elliptical and if had such gravity, it would be affecting all the planets right now. Elenin is a comet, and if it was anything else it would be messing us all up now. Also, they arnt associated with earthquakes, earthquakes are caused by magma, not comets.
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I don't believe there is a brown dwarf coming but if any of you are Christains, if the the time is short, we should be telling people to repent from their sins and acknowledge that they are sinners who need a savior and to trust and believe in Jesus Christ and what He did 2000 years ago by dying on the cross and rising again from the dead to save them. So we need to focus on the gospel not doom and gloom.
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That is a distant galaxy circled in green.
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google sky search mercury infrared...thats one big mofo
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@DoveDancing Polarities
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They both exist. Completely different entities but the brown dwarf star is kicking out these comets. There are at least 7 coming soon that I know of... Please don't make this another polaries "either or" issues pitting sides against each other... GEEZ
The reasons I don't believe there is a brown dwarf in our solar system is that an object that big, with a minimum mass of about 13 times the mass of Jupiter, would already be wreaking havoc on the orbits of the planets of our solar system. It also would already be a bright naked eye object in the night sky particularly in late March 2011 when it was in line with the earth with the sun in line behind the earth where it would be visible all night long like a planet at opposition. Where is it?
kentaappel 6 months ago 5
"Only" an 18" telescope? You folks do realize that the 18" is the aperture, and an 18" telescope is considered very large. The tiny telescope shown in this video won't see 1/1000th of what an 18" telescope will be able to see. Before spouting nonsense, first learn that the "power" of a telescope means nothing - it's all about the aperture (light gathering ability). The large the telescope is AROUND, the more light it can gather. I'll be back in a few months when nothing happens, Fools!
SWeberpal 8 months ago 2