This video contains Alex Jones saying he's got a copy of the script for Prometheus, that it reveals something about the illuminati.
He talks about ancient aliens, and there's the usual GMO fear-mongering, but he reveals himself as a fraud by saying:
This is total nonsense. The X-Club was a social group of scientists. They promoted Dawinism, but were not in any way cheerleaders for panspermia (the theory that life came from off-planet).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Club
And that life "simply started on its own" is exactly what most evolutionary scientists thing. It's by far the most common theory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_life
Jones is simply trying to create an alternative narrative to promote his particular brand of conspiracy theory.
This video contains Alex Jones saying he's got a copy of the script for Prometheus, that it reveals something about the illuminati.
He talks about ancient aliens, and there's the usual GMO fear-mongering, but he reveals himself as a fraud by saying:
By the 1870s T.H. Huxley group and their X-Club was dominating the Royal Society in England. The dominent theory within the X-Club was that humans had been seeded here, along with most other life forms by advanced beings from space. From the inception of Darwins theory on the origin of species, evolutionary scientists never believed for a minute that life simply started on its own, that evolution is not some random slow system developing by chance, but is actually directed by off-world seeders, terraformers, creators of worlds.
This is total nonsense. The X-Club was a social group of scientists. They promoted Dawinism, but were not in any way cheerleaders for panspermia (the theory that life came from off-planet).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Club
The X Club was a dining club of nine men who supported the theories of natural selection and academic liberalism in late 19th-century England.
The X Club came together during a period of turbulent conflict in both science and religion in Victorian England. The publication in 1859 ofCharles Darwin's book On the Origin of Species through Natural Selection brought a storm of argument, with the scientific establishment of wealthy amateurs and clerical naturalists as well as the Church of England attacking this new development. Since the start of the century they had seen evolutionism as an assault on the divinely ordained aristocratic social order. On the other side, Darwin's ideas on evolution were welcomed by liberal theologians and by a new generation of salaried professional scientists; the men who would later come to form the X Club supported Darwin, and saw his work as a great stride in the struggle for freedom from clerical interference in science.
And that life "simply started on its own" is exactly what most evolutionary scientists thing. It's by far the most common theory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_life
Abiogenesis (pronounced /ˌeɪbaɪ.ɵˈdʒɛnɨsɪs/ ay-by-oh-jen-ə-siss) or biopoiesis is the study of how biological life could arise from inorganic matter through natural processes. In particular, the term usually refers to the processes by which life on Earth may have arisen. The geologic era in which abiogenesis took place likely was the Eoarchean era, i.e. the time after the Hadean era in which the Earth was essentially molten.
Most amino acids, often called "the building blocks of life", can form via natural chemical reactions unrelated to life, as demonstrated in the Miller–Urey experiment and similar experiments that involved simulating some of the hypothetical conditions of the early Earth in a laboratory.[1] Other equally fundamental biochemicals, such as nucleotides andsaccharides can arise in similar ways. In all living things, these biochemicals are organized into more complex molecules, including macromolecules, such as proteins,polysaccharides, and nucleic acids. These three molecules are essential for all life functions and make up all living organisms. The construction of these macromolecules is mediated by nucleic acids and enzymes, that are themselves synthesized through biochemical pathways catalysed largely by proteins. Which of these various classes of organic molecules first arose, and how they formed the first life, is a major topic in the discipline of abiogenesis.
Jones is simply trying to create an alternative narrative to promote his particular brand of conspiracy theory.