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WTH are the Chinese doing?

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  • #31
    Red Gong?

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    • #32
      I'm going to China on Saturday for a couple weeks. I'll ask the president and let you guys know.

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      • #33
        Originally posted by Trip McNeely View Post
        You didnt know?? thats Ohio States own Johnny Utah.


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        • #34
          Originally posted by Ratt View Post
          I'm going to China on Saturday for a couple weeks. I'll ask the president and let you guys know.
          (no racist) But it's just too easy...
          Kick him in the barrs and tell him reave us arone.
          "It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."

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          • #35
            Originally posted by Dave View Post
            What the.....


            If china invaded us, every American would have to kill 25 chinease. Just a stray thought from tweedle dumb.
            as long as those 25 chinese each had a box of twinkies and a bag of double cheeseburgers it would be no problem!

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            • #36
              the answer is deathstar.
              www.hppmotorsports.com
              ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ

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              • #37
                I am sure they are actually working on different methods of farming to help stop the starvation in other countries.

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                • #38
                  Obama is sending 2500 troops to austrailia to increase our presence near china......

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                  • #39
                    Originally posted by Magnimike1 View Post
                    Maybe the grid is of DC and they test missiles on the area to gauge destruction for future invasion tactics? just a thought
                    Definitely a ballistics range. All over that area are mockup airfields, buildings, and other things all blown to hell and pocked with craters. But not DC, I'm not even sure where that idea came from.

                    I don't see what the big deal is. It's not like it should be a big surprise that they are developing weapons and testing them. People are getting all twisted over this and it's silly.
                    Men have become the tools of their tools.
                    -Henry David Thoreau

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                    • #40
                      According to this article, its a calibration pattern for spy sattelites...

                      The latest news and headlines from Yahoo News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.


                      Newfound Google Maps images have revealed an array of mysterious structures and patterns etched into the surface of China's Gobi Desert. The media — from mainstream to fringe — has wildly speculated that they might be Chinese weapons-testing sites, satellite calibration targets, street maps of Washington, D.C., and New York City, or even messages to (or from) aliens.

                      It turns out that they are almost definitely used to calibrate China's spy satellites.

                      So says Jonathon Hill, a research technician and mission planner at the Mars Space Flight Facility at Arizona State University, which operates many of the cameras used during NASA's Mars missions. Hill works with images of the Martian surface taken by rovers and satellites, as well as data from Earth-orbiting NASA instruments.

                      The grids of zigzagging white lines seen in two of the images — the strangest of the various desert structures — are spy satellite calibration targets. Satellite cameras focus on the grids, which measure approximately 0.65 miles wide by 1.15 miles long, and use them to orient themselves in space. [Gallery: Mysterious Structures In China's Gobi Desert]

                      The existence of these calibration targets may seem suspicious or revelatory, but Hill said it really isn't; China was already known to operate spy satellites, and many other countries (including the United States) do so as well. In fact, the U.S. also uses calibration targets. "An example I found just now is a calibration target for the Corona spy satellites, built back in the 1960s, down in Casa Grande, Ariz., [at coordinates] 32° 48' 24.74" N, 111° 43' 21.30" W," Hill told Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience.

                      The 65-foot-wide white lines that make up China's grids are not made of reflective metal as many news sites have suggested. "They have gaps in them where they cross little natural drainage channels and the lines themselves are not perfectly filled in, with lots of little streaks and uneven coverage. I think it's safe to say these are some kind of paint," Hill said, noting that if they were made of white dust or chalk, the wind would have caused them to streak visibly.

                      The calibration targets are larger than might have been expected, he said, suggesting that the satellite cameras they are being used to calibrate have surprisingly poor ground resolution.

                      Another strange image taken not far away shows a Stonehenge-like arrangement of objects radiating outward, with fighter jets parked at its center. "This is almost certainly a calibration/test target for orbital radar instruments," Hill said. "Since a significant amount of radar return is due to differences in surface roughness, they're probably testing ways of making the areas around planes 'bumpy' enough that the planes are partially masked."

                      In other words, the Chinese military probably uses radar instruments to send signals down at the target from above, and determine how much radar bounces back to the instruments from the fighter jets, and how much gets scattered by the Stonehenge-like arrangement of bumps surrounding them. From this, the country's radar experts can learn how best to hide China's military operations from other countries' satellites, and possibly get clues for how to find carefully hidden objects in other countries. However, the fact that the planes are made out of metal will increase their radar return and make it very hard to completely mask them, Hill said.

                      Since the initial reports of these structures became widespread, industrious readers of the gadget blog Gizmodo have spotted a few more interesting structures in China. One, Hill said, appears to be a weapons testing zone, perhaps for evaluating explosives. Elsewhere, a giant grid resembles a Yagi antenna array. Instruments like this can be used for any number of things, such as weather tracking, space weather tracking and high-altitude atmospheric research.

                      Hill noted that most of these structures are quite closer to each other. "I think we're seeing some sort of military zone/test range, which explains the large amount of equipment and technology in an otherwise remote area," he said. "Sometimes the truth can be just as interesting, if not more so, than the conspiracies that people come up with."

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                      • #41
                        The real McCoy?
                        "PSH!!!"

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                        • #42
                          China and Russia arent supporting sanctions against Irans nuke ambitions. I think thats bullshit. Its obvious they are trying to build a weapon not a power plant. By the first of the year Israel will probably take care of it.

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                          • #43
                            Originally posted by QIK46 View Post
                            China and Russia arent supporting sanctions against Irans nuke ambitions. I think thats bullshit. Its obvious they are trying to build a weapon not a power plant. By the first of the year Israel will probably take care of it.
                            I've got money on before that, but at least I found a common ground that we agree on.

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