U.N to appoint ambassador to Outer Space

When the aliens arrive, they will need to make reservations with Mazlan Othman, the head of the United Nation’s Office of Outer Space Affairs.

I am glad to see this as it is long over due. The UN will be dismantling the Men in Black unit (MIBU) in preparation for formal relations with the Diplomatic Inter-Planetary Society (DIPS).

I am taking courses in diplomacy in preparation for a possible appointment to the Office of Nautical Nonsense and an ambassadorship to Bikini Bottom.

6 thoughts on “U.N to appoint ambassador to Outer Space”

  1. Actually… the life forms she’s talking about are pre-biotic or single-celled organisms. I’d not just be surprised, I’d be astounded if we didn’t find such in the oceans of Europa.

    I’ve recently returned from ALIFE-XII – the 12th conference on artificial and simulated life, and it’s possibly a very good job that what we’ve been doing has snuck under the radar screens of various religious groups.

    We can already “compile” wholly synthetic DNA to insert into existing cells, to cause them to do useful things. We are also more than halfway to making all the components of cells themselves. It turns out the control mechanisms are the easy part. We now have a very good understanding of the RNA mechanisms involved – they can be looked on as computational devices, there are structures analogous to the NAND, NOT, NOR, AND, OR etc gates that make up CPUs and memory.

    Expect fully artificial life in the next 5-10 years, possibly sooner. And lab conditions found in nature that will cause life to self-assemble soon after that.

    It won’t prove that Life came about this way; just that it could have, with no supernatural intervention needed.

    There’s still room for the Almighty though: because we have no idea why the Universe happens to have physical constants that make the evolution of Life not just possible, but inevitable.

    To illustrate self-organisation – take a bowl of mixed nuts. Brazils, hazelnuts, cashews, etc. Stir them well. Then gently shake for a couple of minutes, completely randomly. The Brazil nuts will rise to the top, as if an invisible hand had selected them, and placed them there.

    Or look at crystals forming, organised patterns out of a homogenous mixture.

  2. It would be kind of ignorant to think that we are the end all and be all. Nothing like being prepared.

  3. Lol, these ppl are beginners. The aliens are already among us, d’uh. I know, I’m a reptilian……

    So the lady at the UN is an alien and she doesn’t even know it.

  4. Lol, these ppl are beginners. The aliens are already among us, d’uh. I know, I’m a reptilian……

    So the lady at the UN is an alien and she doesn’t even know it.

  5. Actually… the life forms she’s talking about are pre-biotic or single-celled organisms. I’d not just be surprised, I’d be astounded if we didn’t find such in the oceans of Europa.

    I’ve recently returned from ALIFE-XII – the 12th conference on artificial and simulated life, and it’s possibly a very good job that what we’ve been doing has snuck under the radar screens of various religious groups.

    We can already “compile” wholly synthetic DNA to insert into existing cells, to cause them to do useful things. We are also more than halfway to making all the components of cells themselves. It turns out the control mechanisms are the easy part. We now have a very good understanding of the RNA mechanisms involved – they can be looked on as computational devices, there are structures analogous to the NAND, NOT, NOR, AND, OR etc gates that make up CPUs and memory.

    Expect fully artificial life in the next 5-10 years, possibly sooner. And lab conditions found in nature that will cause life to self-assemble soon after that.

    It won’t prove that Life came about this way; just that it could have, with no supernatural intervention needed.

    There’s still room for the Almighty though: because we have no idea why the Universe happens to have physical constants that make the evolution of Life not just possible, but inevitable.

    To illustrate self-organisation – take a bowl of mixed nuts. Brazils, hazelnuts, cashews, etc. Stir them well. Then gently shake for a couple of minutes, completely randomly. The Brazil nuts will rise to the top, as if an invisible hand had selected them, and placed them there.

    Or look at crystals forming, organised patterns out of a homogenous mixture.

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