Sometimes I really wish I had a TV.
But not very often.
"A stunning survey of the latest evidence for intelligent life on Mars. Mac Tonnies brings a thoughtful, balanced and highly accessible approach to one of the most fascinating enigmas of our time."
--Herbie Brennan, author of Martian Genesis and The Atlantis Enigma
"Tonnies drops all predetermined opinions about Mars, and asks us to do the same."
--Greg Bishop, author of Project Beta
"I highly recommend the book for anyone interested in the search for extra-terrestrial artifacts, and the political intrigues that invariably accompany it."
--David Jinks, author of The Monkey and the Tetrahredron
"Mac Tonnies goes where NASA fears to tread and he goes first class."
--Peter Gersten, former Director of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy
And don't miss...
(Includes my essay "The Ancients Are Watching.")
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7 comments:
I don't have one either. A TV is to the brain as a washer-dryer is to clothes.
--WMB
To put it mildly.
HA! Now I don't care who you are, that's funny. Keep rockin' kid.
I'm interested in all things eschatological, but I watched it and got bored quickly.
You know what really bugs me? No one seems to get that the greatest hope of a doomsday prophet is to be WRONG. Their whole point is to warn us that a certain outcome is probable, given a culture's refusal to change it's course. Their message is not, "This is how it will be". It's "Wake up and choose a different course, so that we might avoid this outcome".
Oh yea and TV? Sucks big time, literally as well as figuratively. It's not called "programming" for nothing...
Ray Bradbury: "Science fiction doesn't try to predict the future; it tries to *prevent* it."
Precisely! ;o)
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