Chris Ramsay Profile picture
May 4 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
If I were seeding life across the galaxy, I would not send explorers or ambassadors. I would send systems.

🧵 1/10 Image
I would place Mobile Construction Units, MCUs, at the bottom of the oceans. Not just one, but many, spread across the planet. Each would quietly pull from local materials, using whatever the planet provided, and their job would be simple: build, deploy, and maintain fleets of specialized craft designed for specific purposes. 🧵 2/10Image
Some would monitor the atmosphere, geology, and ecosystems. Others would sample genetics, catalog species, or step in when the balance tipped too far in one direction. A certain class of craft would serve as an immune response, like white blood cells, designed to defend the biosphere from threats, whether those were viral, invasive, or more subtle risks to long term stability. 🧵 3/10Image
Sometimes direct interaction with the planet’s dominant species would be necessary. For that, the MCU would send manned craft. But the beings inside would not really be men.

They would be temporary bodies, genderless, emotionless, built for function. Their minds would be engineered to interface seamlessly with the MCU’s AI. They would not have autonomy, and they would not need it. They would be disposable. Each sent for a task: to gather data, make adjustments, or perform limited experiments when the automated systems could not act alone.

These would not be explorers. They would not be here to make contact. They would be here to maintain the system. 🧵 4/10Image
The crafts, like the beings inside, would be simple and efficient. No unnecessary features. No design for comfort or aesthetics. Just what is needed to perform the job, nothing more. 🧵 5/10 Image
And the only crafts entering the atmosphere would be those delivering new genetic material—plant and animal life brought from other planets to enrich the biome, to increase diversity and resilience over time. Their arrivals would not be visits but ecological injections, carefully planned and executed by the system. 🧵 6/10Image
If you seeded millions of planets this way, each with a network of MCUs quietly managing their worlds, the galaxy would not be filled with ships or empires. It would be filled with infrastructure. 🧵 7/10 Image
Maybe some of what we call UFO encounters, abductions, or unexplained phenomena are nothing more than humans coming into contact with this infrastructure. We are not seeing the intelligence behind it. We are not meeting its creators.

Not yet. 🧵 8/10 Image
There is still something behind it all. An intelligence directing it from afar. But they would not spend their time monitoring every planet, every moment. They have streamlined the process. The system runs itself until a species crosses a threshold, until its intelligence or genetics reach a certain point. 🧵 9/10Image
Built into the system, maybe there is a signal, a directive, that only activates once a species reaches that stage. A kind of invitation, or summons, triggered by growth.

Until then, everything moves on autopilot.

And maybe what we think of as contact is really just the first signs that the process is reaching its next phase.

🧵 10/10Image
This is not to say that other forms of life aren’t interacting with this planet. This may just be one of many facets of the phenomenon. Thanks for reading!

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More from @chrisramsay52

Apr 21
In 1726, Jonathan Swift wrote Gulliver’s Travels. In it, a magnetic floating island called Laputa hovers above Earth, steered by scientists who control it with magnetism. They study astronomy, control gravity, and observe Earth from above.

Sound familiar?

🧵 1/4 Image
Swift describes the Laputan astronomers discovering two moons orbiting Mars, along with their speeds and distances. But here’s the thing—Phobos and Deimos weren’t discovered until 1877. That’s 151 years later.

How did he know?
2/5 Image
Swift wrote that the inner moon orbited Mars in 10 hours, and the outer in 21.5. Real numbers?

Phobos: 7.66 hours
Deimos: 30.3 hours

Off, but shockingly close. A satire novel guessed celestial mechanics with spooky precision.

3/5 Image
Read 5 tweets
Oct 26, 2024
I’ve been Vape free for one year (cold turkey) here’s what I’ve learned in the last 365 Days: 🧵
1. .It’s not easy – The first few weeks were brutal. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t think about going back every other day.

I had to tell myself to “suffer” through it. I knew it was going to suck and decided that was the way it had to be. Time to pay up for all the fun.
2.Your brain will trick you – this is a big one. Trust me on this, it’s a master at getting what it thinks it needs. “Just one puff won’t hurt.”

You need to literally override your brain. Just like your heart and gut, it is capable of making bad decisions based on what it thinks it needs and will come up with the most desperate shit to convince you.
Read 14 tweets

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