10.04.2005

Jules of the Sea


Not even a week ago, Japanese scientists reported recording a giant squid on film in the sea south of Japan. Reporters likened the milky images to the massive mollusk described by Jules Verne in his "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea."

Today, US scientists released an image of a glowing spot in the Indian Ocean the size of Connecticut. Sailors have reported these "milky spots" for centuries. The latest and only well-documented appearance was on January 25, 1995 in the Indian Ocean east of Somalia. Only last week, a US Naval Laboratory scientist tracked down satellite images of the occurrence, which again elicited thoughts of Jules Verne. Turns out old Captain Nemo himself encountered these same milky seas in the same Indian Ocean.

Yeah, right.

These liberal, atheistic scientists care about only two things: corrupting children with their nonsense evolution talk, and making themselves famous with "discoveries" and whatnot. And they'll make up stuff to do either.

Don't be surprised if next week they tell us that there's some sort of passage between the Mediterranean and Red Seas. Maybe that there rocket ships that take people to the moon. Or, better yet: the government has some sort of boats that can travel completely under water. These people can't even come up with something original, so they steal stuff from old books.

Scientific gobbledygook.

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