A Russian scientist is putting forth the notion that kindness to strangers is an interstellar concept.
One Dr. Yuri Labvin, president of the Tunguska Spatial Phenomenon Foundation, "insists" that a UFO deliberately crashed into the meteor that exploded over Siberia on June 30, 1908. Talk about taking one for the team...and they weren't even on our team. The good doctor believes that quartz crystals with strange markings found at the site are pieces of an alien control panel that fell to the ground after the disco volante went all 'splodey. Not having the technology to imprint crystals in such a manner, as well as the presence of only-produced-in-space ferrum silicate, is proof of the UFO, says Doc Labvin.
Let me be the first one to come out and say I believe in the existence of extra-terrestrial life. Space just seems way too big for God not to put anything in it but little old humans. Sounds boring, too, and God does not seem to me to be the boring type. We as humans may not get it, and want to believe our monstrous egos that tell us the all-ness of space is our private sandbox, but I'm not buying it. So aliens aren't mentioned in the Bible? I don't remember the Bible saying God had to tell us everything, either.
But aliens ramming a meteor to save the Earth from worse catastrophe? That sounds far-fetched even to me, and it took me a while to figure out The X-Files wasn't a reality show. I could buy the aliens being drunk, maybe, and running into the meteor by accident, or the fact that they were sight-seeing and not watching the space-road. But a UFO getting itself blasted to pieces like that? Not so much. I mean, c'mon...this guy is telling me the aliens came all that way without a decent laser-cannon? Just don't see it.
But I like this old kook, just because he is a kook.
Story here.
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