Posts by: Tallseas

  • Tallseas Dating Profile
    Tallseas OP Pelion, South Carolina, USA
    Jan 13, 2024 2:30 PM UTC
    Contact restrictions It is mind bending to see profiles that look great, but you look at the contact criteria and it says" user must live within 20 miles". Are you kidding me? It is 18 miles to my nearest Walmart. 44 to my nearest hospital. In these United States, where cities and towns are scattered so far apart, how can you expect to meet anyone new within 20 miles. I commuted 55 miles one way to work for 20 years. I'm just stunned by the number of people that put 30 miles or less on the contact criteria. If the man of your dreams lived that close, chances are you already have seen him a dozen times at the gas station. It is a big country with big states. You might want to venture out past your back yard if you are truly looking.
  • Tallseas Dating Profile
    Tallseas Pelion, South Carolina, USA
    Jan 11, 2024 11:34 PM UTC
    The Best Of The BestMine own experience may not be as inspiring, but has great significance to me. I had the honor, and pleasure, to help one of the original red tails. A Tuskegee airman, 94 years old at the time, change his tire. Being a veteran, fortunate enough to have not seen armed conflict, it was truly amazing to meet such a humble gentle man.
  • Tallseas Dating Profile
    Tallseas Pelion, South Carolina, USA
    Jan 7, 2024 12:15 PM UTC
    Dating Over 50 stinks.....LOL The only thing that has changed is us...we are not as young and stupid, so we avoid all the wierd ones, crazy ones, self centered ones, needy ones, greedy ones, strung out ones etc. Most of us have enough experience to recognize " she ain't it" in about 5 minutes. So that target has become super small now. We know what we want, so even though there are still a mountain of rocks out there, we just keep walking past all the rubble looking for that one we recognize has a gold nugget in there. Keep looking, the nuggets are out there.
  • Tallseas Dating Profile
    Tallseas Pelion, South Carolina, USA
    Jan 6, 2024 9:52 AM UTC
    The universeIt always amazes me, the ignorance of " scientist" who support something as preposterous as "The big bang". Common sense just seems to fly out the window here. Without going into a huge volume of details, just consider a few small but relevant things. There entire theory is based on one single point of observation. Earth. And if you look west and take a snap shot of the farthest galaxy you can observe, it " appears to have an enormous redshift z=>13. Point it east and you get the same results. Infact, point it any direction you get the same results. So the conclusion they draw is, the universe is expanding and these galaxies are heading away a >99% the speed of light. Well that's convenient, but who made earth the center of the universe. Infinity is a concept man has a hard time wrapping their puny minds around. You cant expand infinity. If everything was expanding in space-time, then the galaxy they observe at a given point with that enormous redshift, when compared to another galaxy 90 degrees in another direction at the same redshift, they should be moving away from each other at 141% of the speed of light. But that is not what we observe and that makes it pretty much a non starter. Space is anything but empty. And the only samples we have are limited to our local environment. Our infinitesimally small solar system. Get out into interstellar space and it is a bit more crowded. But even that is so immeasurably small a sample it is nearly insignificant. Get out into intergalactic space and it is way more crowded. We can only observe what is illuminated or energized sufficiently for our very limited technology to detect. And ths vastness of the universe gives an extremely limited view from our singular vantage point. To draw such a conclusion as there must have been a big bang, based on such limited information is just nonsense.