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Strategies & Market Trends : Taking Advantage of a Sharply Changing Environment
NRG 161.58-2.8%Jan 5 3:59 PM EST

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To: Hawkmoon who wrote (1210)12/30/2018 9:05:18 PM
From: Doug R2 Recommendations

Recommended By
3bar
Hawkmoon

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Hawk,
It may be the same thing causing both. It may also be that as the Sun's dynamics move toward "micronova", the Sun influences the Earth in a way that brings about the magnetic pole flip first.

If I put Rolf Witzsche's information into the mix, it may be a galaxy-wide event. Changes are being seen on other planets and there has to be a wider cause to it all.

Also, I've come to the conclusion that "micro-nova" is a misnomer. Robert Schock uses the term "major solar outburst". Both "micronova" and "major solar outburst", to me, would be an enormous coronal mass ejection.

Then on the crustal displacement thing, there's a lot of evidence of thousand-plus feet deep water rapidly flowing across different continents. Randall Carlson shows this in the following videos ascribing it to an impactor event.
An enormous CME would also be considered an impactor event leaving the same type of astronomic traces as a cometary impact with the microspherules and microdiamonds etc.




This one includes Michael Schermer - "Michael Shermer is a science writer, historian of science, founder of The Skeptics Society, and Editor in Chief of its magazine Skeptic." (except that Schermer uses the "consensus" falsehood that global warmists use notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com ) So if you're more pressed for time this would be the first one to watch but Schermer's not too bright so it may be difficult to listen to. But all are worthwhile. The cycle of catastrophe is actually well known among many geologists, historians and multi-disciplinary researchers looking into it.


I've also looked into the research on mitochondrial DNA in regard to identifying population bottlenecks in human history. Some of which were quite severe. en.wikipedia.org

I'm not sold on crustal displacement being a 12,000 yr repetitive event but there is a lot of evidence for a 12,000 yr. (with margin of dating error) periodicity of catastrophe of various types.


And then there's the book, "Hamlet's Mill". A large reading project.
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