1. Welcome to Paranormalis.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (conversations), respond to polls and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support.
  2. Thursday and Friday, 9:00 PM EST: Paranormal Chat Event.
    Featuring discussions about everything Paranormal, in the Chatroom!

DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

Discussion in 'Artifacts and History' started by Eddy_P, May 25, 2009.

  1. Whitelight Active Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    I don't think it should be. Anyone can put pictures on a cd rom and say that's what people in the past were talking about.


  2. StarLord Active Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    That's the fun part about Pseudo History.

    You can make anything you want connect to anything and it can mean anything you want when you want and why you want it to do that. You can formulate your own logic to show what ever you want using made up meanings to hide the fact that Science Fiction is being portrayed as if it is real.

    You can't have something as trivial as facts and real history get in the way of selling Books. Ask Sitchen and Von Daniken.


  3. Harte Active Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    Yeah, it's been a while since I was on your site. 6 years, actually.

    The assertion then was that the CD instigated the "legend" of Atlantis (BTW, there is no ancient "legend" of Atlantis - thus the quotation marks) when the ancient people being visited by your time-traveller saw it and the program on it, along with the icons and cursor, IIRC.

    I don't know what your asserting nowadays, and I didn't go back to your site - you just jogged my memory.

    I wouldn't go back to that ridiculous site if you paid me.

    Harte


  4. gl100 New Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    Funny, I always pictured the ancient Egyptians as being more Mac people. Now the Visigoths, PC all the way.


  5. Numenorean7 Administrator

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    Yeah, what if instead of a PC, it's was a MAC ? Is there any way to know how many buttons the mouse had ?
  6. StarLord Active Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    That's one of the two best jokes from that place. First joke is the circle with the dot Hieroglyph denoting a CD. Second best joke was the scarab being shoehorned into standing for a mouse...

    I'd say you would need a 15 pound Maul in order to fit that square peg into the round hole and have it stay put. Of course there would be a lot of excess wood left over what didn't fit that arcade's guesses.

    Come to think of it, the whole place would resemble a wood mill with shavings, shards and chunks of wood strewn all over the floors.
  7. Eddy_P Member

    Re: DOOPArts: documented-out-of-place artifacts

    Back in the early to mid 1990s, the 386 and 486 computers that I used, each had a two buttoned mouse.
  8. Eddy_P Member

  9. StarLord Active Member

    Just imagine what fun it was to defrag a computer while standing around in ancient Egypt, And then you realized there was no place to plug it in to the sand dune beside you.
    It was a fun story Eddy, too many holes in it though and the logic that shot it down has not changed. Your CD's and picture stories may have changed, sadly, the logic that disproves it has not.
  10. justin_see Member

    I see this thread is a bit old, but anyone interested in this type of stuff should check out "The Hidden History of the Human Race", contains tons of documented things found in history that don't fit in with the time periods. A fantastic read. ISBN: 0-89213-325-2 Its by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L.Thompson
  11. Graveyard Hound Active Member

    Well at least I finally got my curosity satisfied as to what the site was all about.
  12. Graveyard Hound Active Member

    Really interesting discusion. Love the notion of "time travel", just to observe, to do more than simply watch, and then there is the problem with messin' around with the past and it changes the "our present" but one doesn't know anything has changed until one gets back to the present they had just left. Darn interesting notion to speculate over.:)
  13. Jeff Member

    what tha shit is with el pinko texto man it burns my eyes!

    eddyp where you been broseph? anything new?
  14. Eddy_P Member

Facebook:

Share