Friday, March 14, 2008

The Cosmos and where planets come from

As you know, there is much speculation on the universe as to where and how things exist. I am going to keep this as simple as possible and not bore you with astrophysics babble. One for example is planets. The current theory is that they come from stars after they are born. Where planets really come from are quite different. Planets are formed in the black holes of space. That is right, after a start consumes itself; its gravitational force pulls everything including light into its void. It pulls in space dust, comets, gases, asteroids, meteors and just about all the elements of space that are floating around. Each black hole has a different design and condition for planetary output. Once all the matter and stuff from space is pulled into the black hole and the mass trigger of the black hole says stop, it begins to fire up the iron core of the matter that it consumed from immense pressure of the squeeze on the matter in its black hole. Some black holes will shoot out less dense planets (gaseous planets) and some will shoot out planets with more stuff so to say (like earth). It appears that earth and its surrounding planets were once near several black holes and a new star birth area (our sun). Once the black holes spit out the planets that we now have around our sun, the sun was then created (born) and it pulled our planets into its orbit. You can see this pattern all over the universe.

Additionally, the big bang theory is more closely related to an alien attack than reality. Consider this ... the universe is infinite and there is no end to it. The big bang suggests that there was a central finite mass of gases and what not that exploded and went outward to form our universe. Wow, that is odd ... how did this finite mass explode and fill the whole infinite universe? It didn't. Then they say well, its expanding outward … hum, if that is so then why are they looking at the beginning of the universe and telling us that they see the original stars? How can they see the original stars when there is theoretically no center of the universe to look outward to? Like somehow they know where the center is and they found the first stars that were created at the end of the universe from the original explosion?

Let me say this, it is more likely that an advanced civilization far more advanced that we came and far more bigger than us went to deep space, found an area of the universe that is empty of any mass and set off a singularity and are now sitting back watching the explosion like we watch a nuclear bomb go off. This fits a micro bang theory with limited mass and finite space. The big bang assumes finite mass and infinite space being filled at an expanding rate which cannot be seen. No, the materials and all the matter in space was created from an invisible eternal force, a very powerful invisible force that has no matter or mass. It’s called God. He is eternal and timeless and can create something from nothing. Something has always been there, forever ... it’s called being.