hello. this is intended for my class, but they will never see this so y'all get to question what was going on at the time. Now, since i never got to fully ramble on because my teacher cut me off, i will do it here. so, basically, in class we debated if pluto should be a planet or not, both sides (my side being not a planet) had good points, and like i said before the teacher cut me off at the end of school, it doesn't matter much (not being rude). What i meant was that it isn't relevent, and we need better defenisions. we can't even make it to pluto ourselves, let alone mars, so it doesn't matter, and by the time we do make it to pluto, we will know if it is a planet or not. I told Luke about this story, which got cut off because he wasn't listening, so I'll say it here. This lesson isn't really fact based, its oppinion based and slightly philisophical. This reminded me of a comment i saw a long time ago, all you need to know is 'telo' means liquid, 'lili' means small, and 'mute' means a lot, these words coming from 'toki pona', a small con-launguage. Once, a comment was talking about themselves, a person who lived near a lake. Most people would normally call a lake 'telo mute', meaning a lot of water, or large water. This person called the lake 'telo lili', meaning 'small water'. Toki pona is a very personalized launguage, which means a lot of thing are up for interpertation. I think things like this are the same, facts that are oppinions. This is why if pluto is or isn't a planet does not matter, although arguing is fun, there will always be people who have different oppinions, as pluto is similar enough to a planet that its basicly on the border of planet and dwarf planet. So, thats mostly what I wanted to say.