Scientists Looking for Invisible Dark Matter Can't Find Any
Maybe that's because it DOESN"T EXIST. Perhaps maybe, just maybe it's time to reject the prevailing hypothesis (yes, it never was a "Theory") and begin again with step one of the Scientific Method: Objective observation.
Aaah, but there's no government funding for that, now is there? And "Science" proceeds to the tune of available funding.
For three years, scientists have been looking for dark matter — which though invisible, makes up more than four-fifths of the universe’s matter — nearly a mile underground in a former gold mine in Lead, South Dakota. But on Thursday they announced at a conference in England that they didn’t find what they were searching for, despite sensitive equipment that exceeded technological goals in a project that cost $10 million to build.
Maybe that's because it DOESN"T EXIST. Perhaps maybe, just maybe it's time to reject the prevailing hypothesis (yes, it never was a "Theory") and begin again with step one of the Scientific Method: Objective observation.
Aaah, but there's no government funding for that, now is there? And "Science" proceeds to the tune of available funding.
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