Microsoft's Bill Gates Al-Qaida can drop anything out of the sky from any normal airplane now and you will believe their story about the UARS being the blame.
They can drop jagged pieces of titanium onto someones house or onto someones head anywhere inside the debris zone or even outside the debris zone on Friday the 23rd and all of you will believe their story that the UARS satellite was to blame.
United States NASA has complete maneuvering control on that United States NASA UARS satellite and they can drop any kind of germ warfare weapons any place inside the debris zone or near the debris zone and you will believe any story those Nazi propaganda forces concoct about the UARS satellite being to blame.
I don't even know if blogger.com, as they host my blog in the world wide web, is even letting people access my blog and read my warnings about a grave threat to public safety.
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20110922/D9PTR4AO1.html
excite
Old NASA satellite to tumble to Earth on Friday
Sep 22, 6:09 PM (ET)
By ALICIA CHANG
LOS ANGELES (AP) - While North America appears to be off the hook, scientists are scrambling to pinpoint exactly where and when a dead NASA climate satellite will plummet back to Earth on Friday.
The 6-ton, bus-sized satellite is expected to break into more than a hundred pieces as it plunges through the atmosphere, most of it burning up.
But if you're hoping for a glimpse, the odds are slim. Most sightings occur by chance because the re-entry path can't be predicted early enough to alert people, said Canadian Ted Molczan, who tracks satellites for a hobby.
In all his years of monitoring, Molczan has only witnessed one tumble back to Earth - the 2004 return of a Russian communications satellite.
It "looked like a brilliant star with a long glowing tail," he said in an email.
The best guess so far is that the 20-year-old Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite will hit sometime on Friday afternoon Eastern time. The latest calculations indicate that it will not be over the United States, Canada and Mexico during that time.
Until Thursday, every continent but Antarctic was a potential target. Predicting where and when the freefalling satellite will land is an imprecise science, but officials should be able to narrow it down a few hours ahead.
While most of the satellite pieces will disintegrate, 26 large metal chunks - the largest about 300 pounds - are expected to survive, hit and scatter somewhere on the planet. With nearly three-quarters of the world covered in water, chances are that it will be a splashdown.