Quote:
The general theory of relativity could be regarded as the law that confirms the development of time in bent three-dimensional space. But having bent space to a certain point it must inevitably reach a singular point (where time and space become indefinable). This is known as the Penrose-Hawking singularity theorem. It explains the destruction of space-time by gravity, and black holes are singular points enclosed by an "event horizon".
When objects are sucked into black holes, they continue falling for an unlimited period of space and time. At a central point, gravity becomes infinite, time and space are bent, and concepts of time and space, as we know them, become irrelevant. Such an occurrence happened when the Universe was formed, and this is also known as a singular point. Objects sucked into singular points disappear from our Universe without a trace.
I have bolded parts of that quote, because I do not believe there is any experimental justification for them. They could be valid statements, but they are based on the extrapolation of equations into situations that cannot be tested.