All one need know about this article is that it originated with the Weekly 
World News, an entertainment tabloid with its tongue firmly embedded in its 
cheek to a depth not measurable by any instrument known to man. Unfortunately 
Yahoo!, a primary news source for many people on the Internet, reprints some 
Weekly World News articles in their TV News section under a heading of 
"Entertainment News & Gossip," a title that doesn't convey a strong "bogus" 
warning to readers who don't notice the original source is the Weekly World 
News (or don't know what the Weekly World News is). So, after Yahoo! picked up 
this alarming WWN article about scientists' predicting that the sun would blow 
up within six years, it was forwarded on and circulated by people who knew only 
that it came from a "real news source." (For the record, although the European 
Space Agency is a real and respected scientific organization, no "Dr. Piers Van 
der Meer" turns up as anyone who has ever had his name attached to a scientific 
journal article about astronomy, astrophysics, or planetary science, a rather 
odd circumstance for someone claimed to be "a top expert affiliated with the 
European Space Agency.")

Over the years, plots by scientists to deliberately blow up the moon with an 
eye towards stabilizing the Earth's climate have been a recurring theme in 
Weekly World News articles. Oddly enough, the original "let's blow up the moon" 
article from 1991 wasn't a goofy idea made up out of whole cloth by a Weekly 
World News writer; it was a scheme proposed by the late Dr. Alexander Abian, a 
mathematics professor at Iowa State University who was also well known as a 
bona fide USENET kook to the regular participants in the sci.astro and 
sci.physics newsgroups.

In April 2002, the Weekly World News ran a story about a new plan to "blow the 
moon to smithereens" for the sake of creating a "temperate climate all around 
the globe," this one supposedly advanced by "five top Russian scientists." As 
the Weekly World News subsequently reported, the group that issued the loudest 
howls of protest over the Russian scheme was, predictably, werewolves.

http://www.snopes.com/science/sunboom.htm

--------------
Ian Skinner
Web Programmer
BloodSource
www.BloodSource.org
Sacramento, CA
 
"C code. C code run. Run code run. Please!"
- Cynthia Dunning

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