Chris Liss on Nostr: Thinking of writing a longer form post on this, but thoughts aren’t well organized ...
Thinking of writing a longer form post on this, but thoughts aren’t well organized enough yet:
Basically, if you’ve followed Ashton Forbes on Twitter, his work on the disappearance of flight MH-370 in 2014, there are some interesting takeaways:
Very little of the plane (and none of the 277 people on board) have been found despite advanced technology and extensive searching.
The plane (based on a video that surfaced) may have been teleported via three orbs that opened up a wormhole of sorts. They condition the space around the craft in some way.
Forbes suggested recently after an interview with a navy engineer that maybe the worm hole is actually a black hole, but that the reason it didn’t swallow the entire earth is very small black holes last a very short time, perhaps a fraction of a second. They fall victim to entropy as the universe constantly seeks equilibrium.
*My half-baked theory if any of this is even true:*
If the worm hole were a black hole, it might explain why we haven’t found the plane — near a black hole, time is massively dilated. What might take seconds for someone there could take decades for an observer on earth.
It’s not so much “Where is MH-370, but *when*?”
Other thought:
Thinking about how black holes, even supermassive ones, eventually decay reminded me of the Goodstein Sequence, summarized here:
https://www.numberphile.com/videos/the-goodstein-sequenceIt’s a simple math sequence that blows up quickly and beyond comprehension. And yet eventually it always, no matter how big it gets, goes to zero, thanks to its element of decay (a minus one) after each step.
Published at
2025-04-27 19:24:40Event JSON
{
"id": "928083a5b459081e4858c63eb18cda7b3d1e6b3eff34e6dcf93a9f035c83e97f",
"pubkey": "6ad3e2a34818b153c81f48c58f44e5199e7b4fc8dbe37810a000dce3c90b7740",
"created_at": 1745781880,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"client",
"Nostur",
"31990:9be0be0fc079548233231614e4e1efc9f28b0db398011efeecf05fe570e5dd33:1685868693432"
]
],
"content": "Thinking of writing a longer form post on this, but thoughts aren’t well organized enough yet: \n\nBasically, if you’ve followed Ashton Forbes on Twitter, his work on the disappearance of flight MH-370 in 2014, there are some interesting takeaways:\n\nVery little of the plane (and none of the 277 people on board) have been found despite advanced technology and extensive searching. \n\nThe plane (based on a video that surfaced) may have been teleported via three orbs that opened up a wormhole of sorts. They condition the space around the craft in some way. \n\nForbes suggested recently after an interview with a navy engineer that maybe the worm hole is actually a black hole, but that the reason it didn’t swallow the entire earth is very small black holes last a very short time, perhaps a fraction of a second. They fall victim to entropy as the universe constantly seeks equilibrium. \n\n*My half-baked theory if any of this is even true:* \n\nIf the worm hole were a black hole, it might explain why we haven’t found the plane — near a black hole, time is massively dilated. What might take seconds for someone there could take decades for an observer on earth. \n\nIt’s not so much “Where is MH-370, but *when*?”\n\nOther thought: \n\nThinking about how black holes, even supermassive ones, eventually decay reminded me of the Goodstein Sequence, summarized here:\n\nhttps://www.numberphile.com/videos/the-goodstein-sequence\n\nIt’s a simple math sequence that blows up quickly and beyond comprehension. And yet eventually it always, no matter how big it gets, goes to zero, thanks to its element of decay (a minus one) after each step.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"sig": "eae442e85b59ecce8e952bd64e4068ec01d2b3aa6b8c659e663ee29d9f88ffba241124e6aceeae48473bc392307eb6a55b25218c545fb54bed2ca83e12ce3ce6"
}