NASA Refuses to Disclose Air Safety Survey

125gJoe

2009 VMAX
Jul 6, 2002
3,047
0
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Without getting into the UFO stuff, I am not suprised NASA won't reveal many of their issues. Recently in our city, a woman had a metal object fall through the roof of her car and was so hot it couldn't be touched for hours. The FAA said it didn't come from a plane but people who work on planes said it was clearly a cargo hook from some sort of military plane. Of course her auto insurance doesn't want to pay, and the FAA doesn't want people worrying about lethal debris falling from the sky!
 
It might be a space debry. Space debry fall to earth all the time. Space shuttles are one of the safest vehicals and I dont think cargo hooks will fall during launch and re-entry as there arent any cargo hooks attached outside the shuttle at those crucial times.

There are thousands of space debry going around in orbit for years, anyone of them can fall after losing their orbit.
 
Oh no!

Yet another NASA blunder "quietly fixed"...

http://michellemalkin.com/2007/08/0...98-was-not-the-warmest-year-in-the-millenium/

"NASA quietly fixes flawed temperature data; 1998 was NOT the warmest year in the millenium..."

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I just stumbled across this one...
Is it possible NASA has the most acronyms compared with any other organization? There are so many repeats in the list, it's a wonder how they figure anything out!

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/acronyms.cgi?program=shuttle&searchall=true

In case you are wondering how many acronyms NASA has - it's around 13,932.

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ha ha ahaaaa :laugh:
Ok. Didn't a *human mathematical* error also lose one of the earlier Mars' probes?
It doesn't take much to have 2 other people, with no vested interest, to double check the math.

Edit: I read further into the links (blogs). There is a bit of personal opinion and skewing of what was actually written. But checking the math... still a good idea.
 
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