Earth (Worship) Day - Printable Version +- Radix Fidem (https://radixfidem.org) +-- Forum: Discussion (https://radixfidem.org/forum-8.html) +--- Forum: Miscellaneous (https://radixfidem.org/forum-11.html) +--- Thread: Earth (Worship) Day (/thread-1064.html) |
Earth (Worship) Day - Ed Hurst - 04-22-2022 Today is the high holy day of the Green Religion. By the way, I've been reading some of the comments on Suspicious Observers' videos. From what I gather, if Saturn shows the effects of the galactic gravity/dust wave in the next few years, that would seem to indicate we have ten, or at most twenty years, before that dust cloud hits earth and the sun. Now, the sun will probably take its time reacting. If the pattern holds, earth will begin to enter an ice age at that time. And God alone knows what it will happen after our magnetic poles converge. But from what I've read, an ice age takes about five years to reach crescendo. I've haven't seen anything suggesting how long that will last. There's an awful lot we don't know, and I know only a small portion of that, but it sure looks to me like we get maybe another ten years before the commencement of an ice age. Somewhere in there we will see at least one good massive CME before the micro-nova. Probably won't be much point in taking pictures of that stuff with a digital camera... RE: Earth (Worship) Day - jaybreak - 04-24-2022 Might be good to read up on what we know of the previous ice age, even if from mainstream science/normie sources, to see what's possible to navigate it. If it's like Neptune's, it will be relatively quick but in a day-to-day context, it's fairly slow. Even if the Carrington event happens before, we can notice a persistent series of days being cold when they shouldn't be, or snow lasting on the ground further into spring. Earth has a unique atmosphere so, thinking positively here, it may be an even more prolonged cooling period than Neptune. Who knows. I very clearly remember more than one teacher in school mentioning we are pretty much living between ice ages. It appears we knew they were cyclical to begin with, though I don't think we necessarily know the timing. RE: Earth (Worship) Day - Ed Hurst - 04-24-2022 Earth is very sensitive to anything that deflects sunlight. One volcano was enough to cause a year without summer a couple of centuries back. It wasn't that long ago that someone pretty much nailed down that previous ice ages set in very quickly, in 5-10 years. I've read somewhere where someone said that you should think of the colder climate simply moving south. What we see in northern Canada today would be what we should expect for South Dakota or Nebraska. Meanwhile, a permanent ice cover would spread out from the poles, shifting by the same margin, as it were. Hey, the whole of Long Island is just a big pile of stone carried and dropped by glaciers that eventually melted. What your life be like if the nearest glacial front was around NYC, southern Idaho, etc.? |