Author Topic: ITT: It's the year 2027  (Read 3040 times)

wait how does this thread exist if the forums are shut down what

remember, i made the last thread on this board, forever

also OT


« Last Edit: November 05, 2017, 05:59:38 PM by The Titanium »

lol world won't last that long

the world........................ ............................. ............................. as we know it......

remember, i made the last thread on this board, forever

also OT



>me irl when its 2027

it's 2027, the koreans are dead from radiation. florida is underwater.


I'm still chillin in Argentina, getting mugged here and there, looking at the rest of europe being blown to pieces by religion of peace, the us turning its citizens into swiss cheeze, uruguay getting annexed, and Chile just doesn't exist anymore.


The year is 2027, and we are all still playing Blockland and posting on BLF2

 :cookieMonster:


the year is 2027 and the earth was confirmed flat by praised earth scientist goth boy

loving nasa are pieces of stuff if they don't get their rockets up into space by 2027 and colonizing mars like brother what's stopping you? some imaginary force keeping your rockets on the loving ground? don't be stupid

loving nasa are pieces of stuff if they don't get their rockets up into space by 2027 and colonizing mars like brother what's stopping you? some imaginary force keeping your rockets on the loving ground? don't be stupid
this. the no manned missions thing they're doing is absolute bullstuff

loving nasa are pieces of stuff if they don't get their rockets up into space by 2027 and colonizing mars like brother what's stopping you? some imaginary force keeping your rockets on the loving ground? don't be stupid
i imagine the reason they aren't is because of lack of funding coupled with the enormous cost of such a journey + the logistical nightmares of keeping a crew of humans alive on a year-long round-trip journey to mars and back + the fact that spaceX is already taking huge strides in the space field

most things government does today have the capability of being done better by private enterprise. government agencies tend to be very inefficient at doing tasks than private ones. and we're seeing that very evident in SpaceX. nasa has not made any significant milestone achievements in decades and yet spaceX has been doing things over the past few years that NASA is still at least a decade away from doing (such as creating computer-controlled rockets that are intelligent enough to initiate a controlled descent burn upon returning to atmo, and land themselves on a recovery barge intact so they can be reused).
« Last Edit: November 08, 2017, 11:23:20 AM by Planr »