Good point.
Besides this little planet probably attracts attention otherwise too. Unlike
most rock planets, this one constantly emits energy over most of the
wave-spectre (or whatever you Americans call it...). Plus, it's not just
random signals - they actually seem to have some sort of pattern. Surely
highly developed civilisations or species, capable of travelling between
stars or maybe even galaxies must know how to produce and read radio
waves...

Med venlig hilsen / Yours sincerely
M. Malmkvist / WWW.PowerCad.dk

-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]P� vegne
af Michael Harney
Sendt: 28. juni 2002 07:26
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: Would Aliens Visit?


From: "The Fool" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> http://www.space.com/searchforlife/seti_shostak_visit_020627.html
>
> Would Aliens Visit?
>
> By Seth Shostak
> Senior Astronomer, Project Phoenix
> posted: 07:00 am ET
> 27 June 2002
>
>
> When it comes to alien activities, visiting Earth seems to be pretty high
> on the "to do" list. But does that make sense?


An interesting editorial, but it fails to take into account certain other
possiblilities...

I am not a true believer in aliens having visited our planet, and am
sceptical of comments that the Nasca drawings or pyramids have an
out-of-worldly reason, but I acknoledge the posibility that aliens may have
visited our planet.

Why is it not so unthinkable that aliens might have visited?  Let's consider
that Aliens may have an interest in life bearing planets.  Not unthinkable
at all considering anywhere you find life on this planet, you are bound to
find human researchers studying that life.  Would aliens go out of their way
to do this?  Why not, reasearchers that study animals in antarctica go out
of their way to study those.  Moreover, researchers that study life at the
bottom of the ocean go out of their way to create technology just to study
the life there.  Let's assume that their only interest is in surveying new
species on the planet and observing the planet's evolution, with absolutely
no interest in learning about the behavior of individual species.  In order
to get a comprehensive picture of the evolution of the planet they would
have to visit about every 5000 years.  Now let's say that the aliens notice
the egyptian pyramids in one of those surveys.  That would be bound to catch
their interest, and they may have decided to watch humans more closely since
first seing the evolution of technology, society, and language of  Humans
(which, to get an acurate picture of that, aliens would have to visit at
least once every 50 years).

If aliens do visit here, that would seem the most likely reason.

<joking>
That would also explain all those abductees that were implanted with
microchips and anally probed.  If these aliens are the nature show hosts and
animal researchers of their planets, they would be interested in what the
animals eat (which an anal probe could reveal), and would also want to tag
individuals that they have studied before for long term research.  I
wouldn't want to have a run-in with the Steve Irwin of their planet though.
Maybe they have their own "Human Hunter" show where an alien and his wife
track down humans only in corn fields because "These guys are real
dangerous, you never want to get to close to densly populated areas of these
fellas, 'cause if you do... Twack! They'll knock your ship down with their
combustion propelled projectiles, grab you, drag you to their nests, and rip
you apart with sharpened bits of metal."
</joking>

Michael Harney
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

We do not inherit the Earth from our parents; we borrow it from our
children.  -  Native American Phylosophy

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