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Question:

Can you control where lightning strikes?

If you had a very positively charged object higher then every other object around it, could you control the lightning to hit the object?

Answer:

I'd say that the reality depicted in 'Blade Runner' - one of my all time favorites -, will be 75/90% accurate in 2019. The idea of genetically engineered humanoid replicants is under development with recent cloning techniques. As far as, for instance, the vidphon booths, we already have surpassed that with cell phones that feature video transmission of the person you're calling and vice-versa. We've had magnetic cards that open doors for quite some time, like Deckard's card that opens the door of his apartment. There are also the so-called intelligent buildings, computers with voice print identification or similar to it, and advanced artificial intelligence. Not so good is the serious industrial pollution in vast areas close to cities as the one depicted in the film, and that we fear will and is worsening climate problems in actuality - like in China, just to name one! One thing missing is the phenomenally cool flying cars, the spinners, which don't exist, yet The closer example would be a Harrier jet that lifts off vertically, just like the ones seen in the movie 'True Lies', but that's an airplane not a car. We also do not have advanced space exploration and colonies in other planets, like the 'Off-World' ones advertised in that blimp in the movie. Yet, we could get there soon, who knows? PS: It was indeed Arthur Clarke, who co-wrote '2001: A Space Odyssey' with Kubrick, that came up with the communication through satellites concept.
Listen goofball I think you ARE the son and this is some bullshit you made up to try to make yourself look like a bigshot.

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