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Joseph L. Wiess's avatar

The magnetosphere is dependent upon the spin of the earth's core.

If you need any further proof that "Climate change" is a scam, it is in the fact that these pseudo-scientists never look at the big picture.

We are in a warm period between two ice ages. Those warming periods cause a rise in the ocean level, which creates more plankton, which creates more O2, which pulls in more CO2. CO2 is responsible for the growth of green plants and trees. The ozone layer is responsible for deflecting the cosmic rays that warm the planet. If the magnetic field weakens, it lets in more Cosmic rays, which perpetuates the cycle. At this point, I'm waiting for the next cooling period so I can laugh at the "climate" scientists.

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Edwin's avatar

You can start laughing, the cooling period started 8500 years ago. These fools think that global warming is the problem, they are the problem!

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Brandon is not your bro's avatar

Good one Edwin! Thank u

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Timothy Andrew Staples/pop122's avatar

Maybe the human race will not progress scientifically fast enough to be able to avoid extinction from a sufficient change in the magnetosphere.

But for sure, the human race will suffer when the State decides *that* is the next "emergency" for which it *must* have even more control.

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FreedomFighter's avatar

What is unknown by man is unknown. Those that think they know the unknown or think that they can control the unknown are fools or worse. If the unknown was meant to be known, likely, we would already know it.

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Roger Beal's avatar

Graham Hancock is a proponent of what may be called anti-gradualism: A theory that looks at the effect periodic, unique geophysical events may have on earth's climate, and on the creatures and plants that dwell here. (Mainstream thought advocates for steady, slow, predictable climate change over the millennia).

Hancock points to the brief but disastrous cooling and flooding that occured shortly after the end of the last ice age during a period called the Younger Dryas - about 12k years ago. The cause may have been a comet strike on earth's ice cap, one that caused severe flooding and ocean rises, coupled with dropping temperatures resulting from dust and moisture clouds released into the atmosphere. Such a flood is described in the Christian Bible as well as in many other ancient cultures' mythologies.

Hancock proposes the likelihood of similar events in our future, as a result not necessarily of comet strikes but of the earth's periodic magnetic pole reversals and their impact on temperatures, water levels, and polar precession. See his book "Magicians of the Gods" for the full story.

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