bookmark_borderOpt

You missed,
Calling me a pessimist,
For I opt,
To be an optimist,
But, that doesn’t mean,
I should close my eyes,
To the mean scene.
Nooooo…
I should scrutinize,
Realize,
And, materialize.

Create the love,
With a kid’s glove,
Gentle,
On the mental,
As we progress,
Though our regression,
Success,
Instead of depression.

Though it makes no sense,
The human presence,
Wants to go that way,
It hasn’t been a matter,
Of what I say,
I can point to the evidence,
Showing them the tatter…
But, it doesn’t seem to matter!

It’s easy now,
To see,
What we want to be.
Somehow…
I’ve found,
We got turned around.

On closer inspection,
Does anyone notice,
We’re headed,
In the wrong direction?

On introspection,
Is our justice,
What’s dreaded,
We just lack the diction?

We’re not apt,
To adapt,
Quick enough,
I’m not saying, “Tough!”
Rather,
Let’s get it together,
So, we don’t sacrifice,
Innocence.

We may choose,
For us to lose,
But, should we impose,
Our view,
On those,
Who are without blame?
I’m asking you…
’cause that’d be a shame.

bookmark_borderPrerogative

Here I am…
Is it predestined?
Will I eat steak,
Or ham?
Have I no choice?

Yet, I know,
I can raise my voice,
Sure, I can take,
But, I can grow,
To give, too.

What about you?
Do you choose,
Where you go?
Or, are you asleep,
At the wheel?

How deep,
Do you feel?

Is it fate,
To hate?
Is my destiny,
To cause injury?

If you say,
“That is the way.”
Then, why bother,
Going through the day,
If it doesn’t matter,
How you play?

My will is free,
Completely,
It is I,
Who determines,
How hard,
I try.

It is man’s,
Prerogative,
As to how,
He will live.

It would be a shame,
To take away blame,
By saying he has no freewill,
To help save,
Or, decide to kill.

It’s never fate,
To hate…
Wouldn’t you say,
That’s no way,
To behave?

bookmark_borderChains Of Events

Will I be an event,
In this chain reaction?
Can I prevent,
The preceding event?

The Earth did quake,
Causing man to shake,
… in his boots,
The sea did wake,
Are they in cahoots?

In these chains of events,
Will there be a change of servants?
Does chaos theory suggest,
The rest?
Though it sounds strange,
Will we rearrange,
First and last?

It’s hard for my pea brain,
To grasp,
I feel lame,
Trying to tame,
The chain of events,
In the past,
And, the present.
Will the future,
Hold my last attempt,
To prevent,
My final event?

In the row,
What domino,
Am I?
Do you know,
When I’ll fall?
Is it an outcome,
We can call?
I don’t want to say,
“There’s more I could’ve done!”
Will I figure a way,
To know the answer why?
And, stop the next fellow,
From falling over,
Or, at least discover,
A way to slow,
The approach?

I understand,
The ocean does encroach,
The land,
In this last chain of events,
But, what prevents,
This chain from going on… and on and on and on and on… so long?

bookmark_borderInfancy

infancy, n:

infancy, n:
The period of our lives when, according to Wordsworth, “Heaven lies
about us.” The world begins lying about us pretty soon afterward.
— Ambrose Bierce

Do you fancy,
Infancy?
Do you sense,
The innocence?

Though not able to stand,
Living in the promised land,
Though not able to speak,
Representing the meek,
Does it sound wild…
Coming from something so mild?

Ahhh… through the eyes of a child,
You can see,
The way it’s suppose to be,
Through the heart of a child,
You’re in heaven,
Oblivious to the sin,
You live within.

Why leave this stage?
Why try to age?
It escapes me,
Why one wouldn’t fancy,
Infancy?

bookmark_borderCracked Bell

Take pity,
On every city,
’cause when the Earth quakes,
Our foundation shakes.

It’s more than rumor,
That we felt a tremor,
’cause it’s true we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell,
Nature’s singing,
“Say farewell.”

Ding dong the witch ain’t dead,
Bringing on what we dread,

“It’s a small world after all,”

“For whom does the bell toll?”

Is nature’s fall,
Due to man’s role?
As we vibrate the gate,
And, open hell.

Now, we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell,
Feel it stinging?
Doesn’t feel so swell,
Now, we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell.

Ding. Dong. Ding. Dumb.

NOTES
I’d said: By the way…
The earthquake that rocked Indonesia…
was felt by seismic meters in Pennsylvania
I guess, it’s a small world after all?

sidd replied:
the whole earth rings like a bell for weeks after such an event …

I wonder:
like a cracked bell?

rick asks:
don’t get much higher than a 9 does it?
what would happen in a 10?
does the scale go higher than 10?

sidd replied:
http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/general/magnitude_intensity.html

sez …

However, rock mechanics seems to preclude earthquakes smaller than about -1
or larger than about 9.5

i wonder:
hmmm… “seems”?

leroy replied:
years ago, the 60s, an indian master told people i know
that the earth could shift axis in two and a half days
you read the science reports that the earth’s wobble changed
from this “event”
water rising
ice age
ask
what is the cause of all this

i’d said:
whole earth ringing — like a cracked bell?

rick replied:
it wasn’t ringin’ for freedom

i go on:
that’s what i’m wondering… if it perhaps is was ringing for freedom?

what i mean is… there have long been natural disasters
BUT i’m questioning whether man is increasing the volatility AND
perhaps the intensity

does it “seem” that we could push over 9.5 because of the crack
we made in “our bell”

the alaska earthquake / global warming study seems to say
“seems” is so? the higher sea level and 10,000 of thousands
of people on the coast line dyin’ also seems to suggest
Man is making a bad situation worse

so, will mother nature ring Her earth free again…
even if it means free from us?

yes… perhaps the answer to leroy’s question
“what is the cause of all this”
is
“well i don’t know if one thing is the cause…
so i won’t say — human is the cause…
but it sure ‘seems’ like humen would be a good
answer?”

humen built to close to the sea
humen made the sea rise
humen helped intensify natural disasters

without these mistakes made by individual humans…
no one would have died?

bookmark_borderAlright Already

Refrain:
Keep in sight,
We just might,
Be all right.
Alright?
All right!

Please… no, no, don’t lose sight,
Life doesn’t have to be that hard!
Why kick, scream n’ fight?
Life doesn’t have to be that hard!
You can make it easy enough,
This is no bluff,
Life doesn’t have to be that hard!

Discard —
The need to dwell,
Over what can’t be undone,
Looking backward,
Is awkward,
I search forward,
For someone,
Living in a hell,
Asking for hellp.

As I ease their pain,
I lessen my strain,
Acting as grease,
For letting in ease,
And, our lives aren’t so hard.

Play the card,
Life doesn’t have to be that hard!
Lower the guard,
Life doesn’t have to be that hard!
Let in the light,
It will be alright,
All right!
Alright already?
All right!

bookmark_borderBuy Some Time

Can I buy some time,
’cause I’m diggin’ this scene,
And, just reaching my prime,
So, can I buy some time?
What do you mean,
Mine is all spent?
I dunno where it went.

What can be found in McMurdo Sound?

I thought we’d go on forever,
Then, again…
Am I that different than a penguin?
Do they find it strange…
This climate change?
Wonder if they’ve read “State Of Fear”
And, understand the truth ain’t near?

Can I buy some time,
Don’t wanna resign,
To flailing n’ floundering,
What do you mean,
… none left to call mine?
Well…
don’t be so mean,
Can’t I have a little spell?

How are ya, Hawaii?

An ocean swell,
Like a belch from hell,
Causes a rippling effect,
Mother Nature begs respect,
But, what the heck,
Giant waves crashed,
Smashed,
Dashed upon the land,
Makes ya understand,
It’s what it’s about —
“that sort of cancels everything out”

If it sounds like I’m begging… I am.
Advisories warning,
Of a dangerous condition,
Start blurring,
Our grasp of the situation,
So, until I can get a handle,
Please treat me gentle…
And, let me buy some time?
How could it all be spent,
I dunno where it went,
So, please… a little time would be fine.
Oooooh… just a little bit more time?!?!
If it sounds like I’m begging… I am.

NOTES
Iceberg causing penguins to starve
12/14/2004 4:24 PM
By: Associated Press
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A giant iceberg blocking McMurdo Sound in Antarctica is fascinating scientists, but it’s also threatening tens of thousands of baby penguins.

The iceberg is about 1,200 square miles and one researcher called it “the largest floating thing on the planet right now.”

Scientists said the penguin chicks could starve in coming weeks because the ice build-up in the sound has cut off their parents’ access to waters where they catch their fish.

The penguins are important to scientists who’ve been studying the birds for 25 years to look for signs of environmental change, like global warming.

The iceberg is also blocking the route for supply ships that are due to bring food and fuel to the researchers.

December 16, 2004
Surfers daring huge waves:
Giant swell sparks Hawaiian contest, expected to hit here Sentinel staff and wire reports
HALEIWA, Hawaii – Giant waves crashed along the North Shore of Oahu Wednesday, leaving sand and debris on roadways and prompting officials to close beaches as waves reached 40 feet and higher.

Huge waves are expected in Santa Cruz the next several days, the result of a powerful series of storm systems located over the Pacific Northwest.

Advisories warning of dangerous conditions on Central Coast beaches and rock areas have been issued by State Parks officials.

Amid the debris in Oahu, world-class surfers – including two from Santa Cruz – gathered for a rare big-wave surfing competition that occurs only when such enormous waves sweep the island’s coast.

Kelly Slater, a former world champion and one of the 24 elite surfers invited to surf the Quiksilver In Memory of Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational, described the waves at Waimea Bay as “giant.”

“I don’t think I’ve seen it like this,” Slater said.

The competition is held only when the waves reach giant proportions – only six times in the last 19 years.

Two Santa Cruz big-wave surfers, Peter Mel and Darryl “Flea” Virostko, were invited to the contest featuring 24 contestants. The late Jay Moriarity, who died in a diving accident in 2001, was an honorary invitee.

Neither Mel nor Virostko was available by phone. Mel’s wife, Tara, said her husband had come in first in his initial heat Wednesday morning. Mel was in second place overall at the end of round one, following Bruce Irons of Kauai.

“Pete said it’s perfect, no wind,” said Mel, speaking from Santa Cruz.

The water began coming ashore before dawn, crossing roads and leaving sand and debris in its wake, prompting officials to close a portion of Kamehameha Highway in the North Shore town of Haleiwa until 11 a.m.

“Big surf is supposed to be big business,” said Rebekah Horner, manager of the Haleiwa Chevron. “I thought I’d be super busy this morning but with the road closed that sort of cancels everything out.

“Tourists, surfers, a lot of people from all over come to see the surf when it’s this big.”

The seaside Surf N Sea surf and dive shop suffered minor flooding, but opened at its normal time of 9 a.m.

“There’s a lot of sand on the road,” sales clerk Jake Gomez said as he helped clean the water off the floor. “Business is going to be kind of slow today until they open the road.”

The National Weather Service warned of high surf on north-facing shores of all islands except Lanai until Wednesday night. But the exact height of the waves coming on shore was difficult to gauge.

“When it’s this big, its hard to tell for sure exactly how big the waves are because they tend to break out offshore on outer reefs,” said Tom Birchard, a meteorologist with the federal agency.

In Santa Cruz, high surf and dangerous conditions are expected along the coast. The most significant of the high surf periods should peak Friday before gradually tapering off over the weekend, said Alex Peabody of the State Parks Department.

He urged people to avoid swimming, wading and other water activities due to the high surf.

“This will be a very large swell, with long wave periods,” said Peabody. “Park visitors may be fooled into thinking that the waterline is safer than it is due to long lulls between sets of waves.”

Back in Hawaii, a buoy 200 miles northwest of Kauai recorded an open ocean swell of 26 feet Wednesday, he said. By the time that swell gets closer to the islands, waves can top 35 to 50 feet, he said.

In the past, such high surf has damaged beachfront homes and left beachside roads and highways littered with debris.

Capt. George Ku of the Sunset Beach fire station said his crew had not been called out on a single surf-related emergency as of 8 a.m., two hours after the peak.

“I guess everyone was prepared and took the high-surf warnings seriously, thank goodness,” Ku said.

Oahu Civil Defense advised residents to avoid the beaches and stay out of the water, but crowds began gathering before dawn at Waimea Bay Beach Park for big wave surf contest.

The surf competition is named for Eddie Aikau, a big-wave surfing legend who died in 1978 when an ocean-going canoe he was on capsized. Aikau attempted to swim for help and was never seen again.

Michael Crichton Takes on Global Warming in Latest Work
Author Says Environmentalists Are ‘Fomenting False Fears’
By JOHN STOSSEL
Dec. 10, 2004
So often what you think you know may not be so. And it’s a reason I love the book just out from America’s top-selling thriller writer, Michael Crichton. He’s the man who created the popular TV medical drama “ER,” wrote “Jurassic Park,” which ranks among the top 10 grossing films of all time, and much more.

Crichton’s books and movies have grossed more than $4 billion. Now, he’s tackling global warming in his latest techno-thriller, “State of Fear.”

Crichton is an extraordinarily bright man. He paid his way through Harvard Medical School writing his thrillers. He told “20/20” he based “E.R.” on what he witnessed as a med student at Harvard. “It was just experiences that I had had in the emergency room,” Crichton said.

He says Anthony Edwards’ and Noah Wiley’s characters on “E.R.” are based on him, describing them as “a little fumbling, not sure of themselves — nice people.”

When he wrote “The Andromeda Strain,” the story of an organism from outer space that threatens to wipe out mankind, Hollywood came calling, and his medical career was over.

Ideas Ahead of Their Time

Thirty-five years later he is still meticulously melding fiction with cutting-edge science, which continues to open him up to criticism.

He was called anti-science when he wrote about the perils of manipulating DNA for cloning in “Jurassic Park.” After writing “Disclosure,” the story of a man who is sexually harassed by his female boss, he was labeled a sexist. But he was also prescient. At the time of “Jurassic Park,” few people talked about cloning. Now it’s often in the headlines. And sexual harassment of both women and men has been featured in newsmagazines.

Will he be similarly ahead of his time with his new book? “State of Fear” expresses skepticism of the claim that global warming is real and imminent.

The controversy the book is bound to stir up almost kept Crichton from writing the book. “I’m 62 years old. I’ve had a good life. I’m happy and I’m enjoying myself,” he said. “I don’t need any of the flak that would come from doing a book like this.”

bookmark_borderSure Sore

Chorus
I’m not quite sure,
Why I’m so sore,
So, to myself I say,
“Hey! Didn’t think you could take any more?”
To which, I reply,
“Ahhh… so what,
I’ll endure.”

Though my heart does ache,
In fact, we make it break,
When we’re so careless,
With all at steak,
My stomach does turn,
The more I learn,
About what we’ve done,
But, that’s just half the mess,
’cause we continue,
We do.

Chorus

Though my head is numb,
Knowing we’re dumb,
We’re dumb?
We’re done…
Getting second a chance,
We’ve missed,
The last dance,
And, it’ll make ya sick,
If’n ya think on it,
Once it’s clicked,
It’ll make you irritated,
It’ll fester and boil…
Until it’s over?

Please… let us discover,
A cure.

Chorus

bookmark_borderSo Precious

At the precipice,
If you’re asked to list,
What is precious,
Will it exist?

Buffalo stampede over the cliff,
Will you be able to resist,
The urge to head with the herd,
Will you concede your principles,
At the precipice,
What if?

Do you know…
At your precipice,
What’s sooo precious?
Will it proceed you,
Or disappear, too?
What will you leave behind?
Will you take it all with you?
The earth, the fire, the wind…
Do you care if they all go?

Are you sooo precious?
More than all of us?
Are you sooo precious,
That you’re willing to perish,
Being selfish?

Sooooooo precious?

bookmark_borderShut Up Shutting Up

You talk too much,
But, you sure look good:
“Better off thought a fool,
Than to open your mouth,
And, remove all doubt.”

Blabbin’ “this, that and some such,”
Are ya out of brain food,
Are ya an empty soul,
Did all your senses fly south,
Has your rational run out?

You talk too much,
But, you sure look good,
Good enough to touch,
And, yes! I would,
If ya’d just hush.

Yes, hush little baby,
Don’t bother to cry,
You’ve done run daddy… done run daddy dry,
Oooooo… I ain’t talkin’ maybe!
Ya see… here’s the thing,
You don’t need a diamond ring,
But, there’s plenty of people,
That’ve been going without,
It’s time for their mocking bird to sing,
Yeah, plenty’ve been deprived,
Now, maybe their ship arrived,
Maybe “now” is what they’re all about?

bookmark_borderNo (k)Not

Thought everything,
Was going fine,
’til I took an overview,
Of introspect.

What did I expect?
To escape what’s due?
So, I thought I’d sew,
A stitch in time,
And, fix that,
Which I call mine,
Pulling the needle through,
But… what?!!?!
The thread,
Has no knot,
Though I’ve racked my head,
Now I know,
There’s nothing,
I can do,
No. Not…
A single thing,
Within view.

Thought everything,
Was going fine,
’til I took an overview,
Of introspect.

With due respect,
You’re a cause, too,
Peering in my window,
It is you,
Casting a shadow,
So, if you don’t mind,
I hope you’ll be kind,
And, let the light shine through?

Then, give me a hand,
With a thing of two?
It appears all,
Has come undone,
So, just for fun,
I’ll try to settle,
Our balance due,
And, though it may seem sublime,
I’ll try to sew a stitch in time!

Thimble to needle,
Push, push, pull,
But, once past the sticking point,
The thread,
Just keeps passing,
Unhindered,
Continuing,
Because the filament,
Has no knot,
Surely, this was not meant…
Not meant to be,
The end of me.

Will the stars anoint,
Will my soul be led,
Can I conjure,
Our deus?
“Ohhhh… please help us!
And, ensure,
My head is fed,
With a settlement.”

No. Not to beg for help,
That was not my plan,
No. Not to squeal and yelp —
A pathetic (little) man,
No. Not to beg for mercy,
For what we’ve done,
No. Not to wince in fear,
Trembling from anxiety,
No. Not to shed a tear,
Over my self-pity,
No. Not no.
Uh Oh…
No.
Not no.

bookmark_borderYou Can Be

You can be,
After all,
You are.

You can be,
Total,
No more.

But, would yawanna,
Dwindle…
Lesser?

Who’d wanna,
Terminal,
Temper?

Don’t wannbe,
Dismal,
For sure.

Luckily, it’s easy,
For me to be,
Me.

I appreciate,
Being fortunate,
Won’t consolidate,
My love.

I reiterate,
It’s a great fate,
To procreate,
Our love.

You can be,
What you wannabe.

bookmark_borderBeen Carbon

Are you ready for some action?
What’ll bring ya satisfaction:
Some carbon composite,
Set in a golden ring?
Or, a certificate of deposit,
Baring interest?

Are you ready for gratification,
Why not spare the carbon,
From an inanimate thing,
Instead,
Before you’re dead…
Consider your very being?
After all,
You’ve been,
Carbon.
All your life,
You depend,
We all,
Have been,
A carbon,
Composite,
It’s our code,
Of living.

Why be catastrophic,
To allotropic,
Forcing uniform,
Forcing the norm,
Let us exist,
In more than one form!
Let’s get is straight,
About our substrate,
We’re but a minor element,
Of the Earth’s crust,
Yet, we’ve spent,
The entire trust.

Abundant,
Yet, abandoned,
Of judgement.

Been carbon,
Now… I’m just a has been.

NOTES
From Florida State University
Carbon is a nonmetallic chemical element, one of the five chemical elements that make up Group IVa of the periodic table. Elemental carbon is actually a minor component of the Earth’s crust, but it is one of the more abundant elements in the universe. Only hydrogen, helium, oxygen, neon, and nitrogen are more abundant.

This element is essential to life, its atoms forming the substrate for all the major molecules that life on Earth possible, including sugars, proteins, fats, and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the molecular structure that carries the genetic code of living organisms.

Carbon is allotropic, that is, it exists in more than one form: amorphous carbon such as charcoal, coal, and coke; crystals such as graphite and diamonds; and fullerenes, a soccer ball-like arrangement of carbon atoms.

bookmark_borderChaos’ Shadow

In the shadow of chaos,
Lots can be lost,
By all of us,
And, it’s not just…
A matter of things —
Our passion for possession,
No, the havoc it brings,
Runs much deeper.
(I can’t afford to be such a sleeper.)

Be forewarned,
Even remnants of an Asian storm,
Can blow you away,
On any ole day.

Be forewarned,
Once you’re airborne,
You’re airborne —
From land… torn.

Though it has no scent,
You can tell where it went,
Though it has no smell,
It’s as destructive as hell,
I mean… what the #$*&,
Blowin’ away a truck,
Though it has no feel,
It’s a real big deal,
You can’t lay eyes on it,
Only the wake of debris,
Raining over me,
It has no flavor,
For you to savor,
Only an after-taste,
That won’t quit,
In and of itself,
She’s a mute,
Very stealth,
But, those victimized,
Are quick to realize,
Her voice ain’t cute.

The sparks fly in Sparks,
As the wind,
Leaves its marks,
Showing where it’s been,
A truck toss,
With devastating loss.

People being extracted,
After being elevated,
Then… drop!
Plop!

So, watch where ya go,
Ya might blow right past Reno,
Ya never know,
Which way the wind will blow.

NOTES
From The Nevada Appeal
Trucks tossed around in Washoe wind
by F.T. Norton
December 9, 2004

WASHOE VALLEY – A Sparks man was seriously injured in one of six accidents in which tractor trailers were overturned by 75 mph winds that raced through here Wednesday morning.

Dwain Darr, 43, a driver for Crown Beverage of Sparks, was northbound on Old Highway 395 two miles south of Bowers Mansion when the second trailer on a southbound Matheson Fast Freight truck driven by William Richard Watson Jr. of Reno was pushed into the northbound lanes by the wind.

Darr’s vehicle slammed into the empty trailer about 11 a.m., ripping it apart and leaving him seriously injured, said Nevada Highway Patrol Trooper Chuck Allen. Darr underwent emergency surgery Wednesday afternoon.

Another truck that had stopped for the accident was tipped over by the wind.

Two miles south, a Swift truck was knocked over into a ditch near the intersection of East Lake Boulevard and Old Highway 395. That driver was extricated from the cab and taken to the hospital. Allen said his name and condition were not available.

He said the other accidents at Washoe Valley, three on Old Highway 395 and on Highway 395 did not result in injuries. Because of the high winds, the vehicles will not be removed until 6 this morning.

Nevada Department of Transportation spokesman Scott McGruder said reader boards at the north and south entrances to Washoe Valley warn truck and camper drivers of high winds.

Sensors on the signs allow them to automatically warn drivers when winds reach 15 mph with 30 mph gusts. A sign prohibiting trucks and campers is posted when winds reach 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph.

Both old and new Highway 395 were closed to traffic for about 10 hours. Traffic was rerouted through the valley on East Lake Boulevard.

Alexcis Raj, training director of Horizon Commercial Truck School in Sparks, said students are taught the difference between trucks with a cargo and empty ones like the Matheson rig.

“An empty truck is a whole lot easier to blow over. When it’s airborne, it’s airborne,” he said.

During the school’s five-week course its 200 student’s are especially instructed on driving in wind.

But, Raj said, his best safety tip is common sense.

“If you’ve got a highway advisory, pull over and wait. There’s no freight in the world that’s worth delivering and losing your life over,” he said.

According to the National Weather Service, a strong Pacific storm was responsible for the strong winds. Today’s weather is expected to be partly cloudy with a southwest wind of 12 mph and a high temperature of 51 degrees.

WIND WARNINGS

Nevada Department of Transportation reader boards at the north and south entrances to Washoe Valley warn truck and camper drivers of high winds.

Sensors on the signs allow them to automatically warn drivers when winds reach 15 mph with 30 mph gusts.

A sign prohibiting trucks and campers is posted when winds reach 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph.

bookmark_borderBad Astronomy

Bad astronomy,
Nooo… just can’t be,
Good astronomy,
Watching over me.

Brown dwarf?
Make me barf,
You can forget,
That old midget,
You can bet,
An odd object,
Is what you get,
Tightening the Kuiper Belt.

It was not too far,
It could be felt,
A passing star,
Perturbing Sedna.

Bumped from her area,
Thrown into hysteria,
Now she’s coming,
To our inner system?

An eclectic ecliptic,
An orbit… “messed” a bit,
Will the orbit’s girth,
Collide her with Earth?

Is the sun’s companion,
Our Nemesis?
Will Oort’s pollution,
Hit… or will it miss?

Bad astronomy,
Nooo…. none for me.
Won’t sicken,
With any ‘ole Sichin.

Bad astronomy,
Nooo… just can’t be,
Good astronomy,
Watching over me.

NOTES:
John asks:
Is there a website(s) dedicated to or at least discussing the fallout/ramifications of a passing brown dwarf star, through the Ortt Cloud? There were some studies done by Univ Louisiana and the Royal Astronomical Society, back in the 90’s, suggesting that the spate of comets that we had ,were being kicked out by an unknown object about 1 ly or so out. I mean legitimate studies, or serious discussions, not “Bad Astronomy” or “Sichin”.
Thank You

Sidd replies:
sedna (an odd Kuiper Belt object) is supposed to be one body that may have been perturbed by a passing star. It is theorized that there are other such bodies whose orbital planes should be far from the ecliptic. The existence of the Oort cloud rests on analyses of long period comets, but has never yet been directly observed. The old studies you are referring to … i believe there was some speculation about a large companion body to the sun in a faraway orbit (sometimes called Nemesis) that perturbed hypothetical Oort cloud objects into orbits that passed through the inner system, but there is no real evidence for such an object. for more see the archives of sci.astro, sci.astro.research, and perhaps alt.sci.planetary (please be aware that only the second group mentioned is a moderated newsgroup, so the quality of postings on the other two groups leaves much to be desired)

if you wish, we can do some more research, but that is all i can remember off the top of my head