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• #327
Slight change of subject, but while on holiday in the US two years ago I met two separate people who detailed conspiracy theories, one chemtrails and one some kind of alien/government thing. These were seemingly sober people, a shop manager and a taxi driver, not placard bearers in the street outside government buildings.
The taxi driver was interesting, we were on our way to an aircraft museum at an old airbase and he started with urban legends about unexplained cockpit lights being seen at night, propellers rotating even when the engines were removed.
Pretty common stuff which you hear/read about around pretty much every old airfield. He didn't seem to even take them seriously himself, but I channelled Jon Ronson/Louis Theroux and appeared credulous. He then alluded to 'problem people' in the area and I asked if he meant meth users, which I'd realised was a big issue from local news.
He then gradually dropped hints to his bizarre worldview, which I'm still not clear on, but started with implying the meth was supplied by the government or another organisation, and was a factor in mind control.
He then started on 'illegal aliens', and I assumed he was back on familiar taxi driver themes, so asked if he meant Mexicans.
So he started along the lines of "'Mexicans'? Yes these 'Mexicans' are a real problem, but some of them come from a whole lot further away than Mexico, if you get what I'm saying" while gesturing vaguely at the night sky.
Very strange. Also rather clichéd, but that's one of the interesting things about conspiracy theories, they have a great degree of shared belief. And I suppose these archetypes of sun-crazed Californians have to come from somewhere.
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• #328
propellers rotating even when the engines were removed.
Props will rotate, given sufficient airflow.
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• #329
Surely one would park them long term with blades feathered to 'neutral' or whatever the term is. Anyway, seeing some physical or human phenomenon and leaping to a rather different conclusion to the majority is rather the point.
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• #330
Yeah but you can "prove" anything with facts, everyone knows aliens go round turning driveless props why do you think the government is so deafeningly quiet on the matter??
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• #331
Have we actually decided what to do with these people yet?
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• #332
You can't decide anything for yourself mate all your thoughts were injected by sky vapour meth aliens. Time to break out of the simulation bro
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• #333
If I were really rich, I'd pay for them to be sent to space to see what their reaction would be. If they still don't believe the earth is round, they can stay there. Put some cameras on it, could be a new TV format.
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• #334
Ignore them I think
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• #335
MMR vaccine = truth serum.
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• #336
I'd pretend to send them into space, and show them a CGI-rendered flat Earth to 'prove' their theory. Much more fun.
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• #337
Cabbages.
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• #338
It could be on the back of 4 elephants which are in turn on the back of a turtle. Get them back to earth and invite them on to loads of talk shows to tell everyone what they saw.
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• #339
I'd pretend to be a flat earther, just to fly to space for free
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• #340
Slightly smaller than infinite, then? Wow.
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• #341
No, they're all infinite depth cones. Reference to size is the cross section of the wide end. Don't feel bad, you're just a brainwashed heliocentrist trying to deride the truth.
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• #342
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• #343
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• #344
Just like not all derailleurs are indexed, not all props can be feathered.
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• #345
I'm not sure any derailleurs are indexed, the shifters are.
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• #346
So now you see the dangers of generalising! ;D
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• #347
Generally.
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• #348
Actually indexing was often done within the derailleur before indexed shifters came along. See Shimano Positron etc. Just thought I would add to the increasingly off-topic point-scoring ;-).
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• #349
Shimeeple.
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• #350
Indexing is also done at the mechs with the new Rotor hydraulic groupset.
Yes, I guess you are right.