Planet X: HEAT from NASA et al
It goes beyond what Ive already described goes on, when a member of the
public goes into an observatory, asking to look THERE. This takes the
tack of observatories being either [Closed Indefinitely], as in
Vancouver, [Refusing to Look], as in South Africa, or [Partially
Cooperating], or [Pretending to Cooperate], as in the Southeast US, all
creating the comic situation noted below. Details on this are available
as [links] from the TEAM page.
(Page http://www.zetatalk.com/teams/tteam342.htm)
> To share some of the experiences reported to me, the
> tack taken by observatories this Fall [2001] has been to:
>
> 1. Refuse to look THERE. "We ain't gona look THERE,
> and never mind why."
>
> This works as long as the refusal does not become
> too obvious. One has to wonder, why NOT? If there's
> nothing to hide, why NOT?
>
> 2. Refuse to look ANYWHERE. "We're closed for repairs,
> indefinitely. Go away."
>
> This is what Steve is reporting in Vancouver.
> Observatories in the vicinity closing down too.
> All it takes for an observatory to close is for
> Steve Havas to glance it its direction. If there's
> nothing to hide, why CLOSE?
>
> 3. Give extensive help, which does anything but.
> "Here, lets take a CCD image for 3 minutes or so,
> and compare to the star charts ... see, nothing
> there but the usual stars. Too cloudy for infrared
> today, though."
>
> Presented with an explanation that the object
> searched for is so tiny it may be a pixtel on
> an image, needs infrared or red spectrum search
> to stand out, and does not have the intensity of a
> star nor is it reflecting sunlight as Pluto does,
> infrared is refused and a short time CCD is
> proferred. If there's nothing there, why not
> LOOK?
(Posting at http://www.zetatalk.com/usenet/use90318.htm)