Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that there are aliens, extraterrestrials, non-human intelligence (NHI), cryptoterrestrials, interdimensionals, etc.
Would it make sense that all these beings across the board would be malevolent toward all humans?
Or would it make more sense for each species to have its own particular set of intentions, behaviors, and actions toward humans? Would there be consistency among beings within each species?
Within the human race alone I’ve met some that are so compassionate and loving they are “like” angels. I’ve met some that are more malevolent in nature. Within groups there are subgroups and individuals. If we look at some nation-states’ actions here on Earth, we can sometimes witness levels of malevolence so atrocious they could even be considered “demonic,” yet that doesn’t necessarily represent the subgroups or individuals of said nation-state.
To assume that all aliens, if they exist, are malevolent or demonic without evidence is blanket prejudice. There are a few fitting labels for this: species racism, speciesism (bias against members of another species), and xenophobia (fear of the foreign or “other”). Just as we reject such thinking when applied to humans, we should be cautious about applying it to any other intelligent beings.
@benrayfield@BenjaminDEKR Ya, it appears there are currently ai language decodification efforts happening. Near instant translation could be here sooner than later. They may be carrying significant oral history.
@gchavez101 It’s too bad we don’t have a full medical eval on him. There could’ve be some trace indicators remaining discoverable in his body. Maybe still?
@gchavez101 Is it for sure that it was radiation sickness?
My understanding is that his symptoms were similar to that of radiation sickness but no known evidence of radiation poisoning?
World Water Speed Record Still Unbroken After 47+ Years.
The official unlimited class record stands at 511.11 km/h (317.59 mph) — set by Australian legend Ken Warby in his backyard-built jet hydroplane Spirit of Australia on 8 October 1978 at Blowering Dam.
This insane run (with a peak around 345 mph) hasn’t yet been beaten despite multiple deadly attempts. Warby’s son Dave is now pushing Spirit of Australia II hard in testing, but the record endures.
Water speed records are among the most dangerous in motorsports.