| Monica: Well, this should be interesting
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| Spider: Remember that they make music with a very dense light
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| John: Yeah
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| Monica: O. K
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| Spider: And remember about the smoke standing still and how they they really
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| get uptight when you try to move the smoke, right?
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| Monica: Right
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| John: Yeah?
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| Spider: I think the music in that dense light is probably what makes the smoke
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| stand still. |
| As soon as the pony’s mane starts to get good in the back any sort
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| of motion, especially of smoke or gas, begins to make the ends split
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| Monica: Well don’t the splitting ends change the density of the ponies' music
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| so it affects the density of the pigs' music, which makes the smoke move which
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| upsets the pigs?
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| Spider: No, it isn’t like that
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| John: Well, how does it work?
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| Spider: Well, what it does is when it strikes any sort of energy field or solid
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| object or even something as ephemeral as smoke, the first thing it does is
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| begins to inactivate the molecular motion so that it slows down and finally
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| stops. |
| That’s why the smoke stops. |
| And also have you ever noticed how the the
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| smoke clouds shrink up? |
| That’s because the molecules come closer together.
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| The cold light makes it get so small, this is really brittle smoke
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| John: And that’s why the pigs don’t want you to touch it
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| Spider: See, when the smoke gets that brittle what happens when you try to move
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| it is it disintegrates
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| John: And the pigs get uptight 'cause you know they, they worship that smoke.
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| They salute it every day
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| Monica: You know we’ve got something here
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| John: And, and, and, and that’s the basis of all their nationalism.
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| Like if they can’t salute the smoke every morning when they get up. |
| .
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| Spider: Yeah, it’s a vicious circle. |
| You got it |