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Paradoxically, some of the bacteria you brought with you on that time machine could be that spark of life!
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Hmmmm,
sasadler wrote: Paradoxically, some of the bacteria you brought with you on that time machine could be that spark of life! Would that make all of the life decended from @Mike-Mullikin Mulligans?
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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I'd go into the future but the way things are going, there's not much future left.
I'd probably avoid the past.
When I was growin' up, I was the smartest kid I knew. Maybe that was just because I didn't know that many kids. All I know is now I feel the opposite.
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I want to see what there was before the big bang.
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Then you find out your time machine divides by zero, and you're stranded there. Well done, Marc...
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dandy72 wrote: Then you find out your time machine divides by zero, and you're stranded there.
Well, if it's a double, I don't get an exception, I get infinity! How fitting, haha.
> double a = 0.0;
> double b = 1.0;
> double c = b / a;
> c
∞
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Before the movie starts there is just popcorn and silly commercials.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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Sorry guys, i'll be bit sentimental... This is my very personal confession...
I'd like to move into the future where there's a medicine for my brother's illness. Then i'll back to 2003 to bring it to my brother...
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Go back to my 20s and have a lot more sex.
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Quote: be present as an invisible observer
Sounds weird.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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I didnt read that far...
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Here's an important twist: Are you allowed to come back, or is this a one-way trip?
Would be interesting to see how people's answer would be different if that condition was introduced. I'd bet most people would think a lot harder about that choice, and that some would prefer not to go anywhere at all, despite what they think about their current circumstances...
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Once you have established time travel as possible why would you limit yourself to one time/place only?
Of course, the first time/place I would visit is to be in Hitler's bunker when he takes the poison and then follow his body out to when it was burned. I haven't had a good belly laugh for a long time.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Or did he!, cue lots of theories about South America...
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Apparently he didn't die and is currently living in a secret nazi base on the far side of the moon - along with Elvis.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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I thought he moved to South Carolina and became a greeter at a Wal-Mart. (There were too many Jewish people in Miami.)
"They have a consciousness, they have a life, they have a soul! Damn you! Let the rabbits wear glasses! Save our brothers! Can I get an amen?"
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No particular order:
- October 11, 1492 to watch the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria before they step foot on Guanahani.
- Febuary 07, 2862 to lobby the world government to remove the temporal non-interference treaty and extend coverage down to 2000.
- III Akhet 8, I'd go and watch the construction work on the Great Pyramid of Cheops as it's being renovated by Khufu.
- July 20, 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong step on the moon.
Best Wishes,
David Delaune
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July 20, 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong step on the moon.
And hang on a few weeks to attend Woodstock
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g_p_l wrote: And hang on a few weeks to attend Woodstock
Hmmm, I dunno it consumes alot of energy to remain into 3-space for an extended period of time. The good news is that they are only expecting 150,000 people to attend the festival. Maybe we can find a parking spot.
July 21, 1969 Bethel, New York
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Hmmmm,
Slow Eddie wrote: But I was in the Beaconette Lounge, at the bar, drinking a cold Dixie beer, waiting for the band to come on Yes, the broadcast was interesting to see. But there is probably a much better view when looking from the edge of the crater 190 meters away from the landing site.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Randor wrote: July 20, 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong step on the moon. Day early, mate. He didn't step out until the 21st (UTC, anyway). You've got a time machine, and you're wasting time??
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Well,
DerekT-P wrote: You've got a time machine, and you're wasting time?? Yes, about eight hours early I believe. Front row seats at the rim of the crater are expensive and it takes a while to coordinate the 700nm viewing ports so all 65,535 viewers get an unobstructed view. Besides, everyone wants to see them land too.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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- Future to the year 802,701 to see Eloi and Morlocks, as told in The Time Machine.
- Back 5000 years, to see Lord Krishna tell the Bhagavad Geetha.
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