Scientists Not So Sure Doomsday Machine Wont Destroy World

 

We Know from the word of God that neither this device nor any other device shall destroy the earth.

 

However the things that this devise could do are horrific. The bible allows for the city of Babylon to be destroyed of blotted out in a single day. The bible allows for one third of the land in the earth with all on it to die. The word of God allows for one third of the sea to die.  And the bible allows for a pit to be opened deep into the earth from which demons have been bound with chains since before the flood have been bound.  

 

Geographically that pit seems to be in Gaza.

 

The sea and the land are destroyed by a comet call wormwood.

 

But the destruction of the merchant city or nation of Babylon is not clearly identified. If Switzerland was vaporized all of its banks and the billions if not trillions that have been hid there would vaporize as well which indeed would cause all the merchants of the world to cry especially now in this great economic downturn.

 

We have heard no word of the Lord of this project, we have no sense in the spirit of anything regarding this device, therefore we suspect that this thing shall run without incident or else the disaster of it shall be extremely localized as in it destroys itself and those in the pit with it.

 

 

Fox News

November 18,2008

GENEVA  —  Fixing the world's largest atom smasher will cost at least 25 million francs ($21 million) and may take until early summer, its operator said Monday.

An electrical failure shut down the Large Hadron Collider on Sept. 19, nine days after the $10 billion machine started up with great fanfare. The European Organization for Nuclear Research recently said that the repairs would be completed by May or early June.

Fox News
Tuesday, January 27, 2009

 

Still worried that the Large Hadron Collider will create a black hole that will destroy the Earth when it's finally switched on this summer?

Um, well, you may have a point.

Three physicists have reexamined the math surrounding the creation of microscopic black holes in the Switzerland-based LHC, the world's largest particle collider, and determined that they won't simply evaporate in a millisecond as had previously been predicted.

Rather, Roberto Casadio of the University of Bologna in Italy and Sergio Fabi and Benjamin Harms of the University of Alabama say mini black holes could exist for much longer — perhaps even more than a second, a relative eternity in particle colliders, where most objects decay much faster.

Under such long-lived conditions, it becomes a race between how fast a black hole can decay — and how fast it can gobble up matter to grow bigger and prevent itself from decaying.

Casadio, Fabi and Harms think the black hole would lose out, and pass through the Earth or out of the atmosphere before it got to be a problem.

"We conclude that ... the growth of black holes to catastrophic size does not seem possible. Nonetheless, it remains true that the expected decay times are much longer (and possibly >> 1 second) than is typically predicted by other models," the three state in a brief paper posted at the scientific discussion Web site ArXiv.org.

FoxNews.com can think of a few other things that didn't seem possible once — the theory of continental drift, the fact that rocks fall from the sky, the notion that the Earth revolves around the sun, the idea that scientists could be horribly wrong.

We're also wondering how often the LHC might create individual black holes, since longer-lived ones have a greater chance of merging with each other, and, um, well, see ya.

If the worst comes to pass, and there's now a slightly greater chance that it might, at least it might explain why we've never heard from extraterrestrial civilizations: Maybe they built Large Hadron Colliders of their own.