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View Full Version : Grim, this one's for you: Pole Flip


smurfslappa
02-16-2006, 02:29 PM
From this article http://www.michaelmandeville.com/earthmonitor/polarmotion/2006_wobble_anomaly.htm

Read it and understand it, because if you do, you'll see just how fast all this shit is happening. The guys data is pretty damn solid and the what's to come looks very bleak. He's hoping it'll take decades, because he ain't ready for it. I don't expect diogenes, spoon, Ferine, Reizvolles, Dwaine, Joe, ucicare or anyone else to read it, because it's pretty long and boring. But oh well, what can you do? They already think the whole idea of some earth-shattering scenario is pretty silly.

So like I said, when shit gets bad I'm headed somewhere. Maybe Canada, maybe the equator. Gotta bail out from this sinking ship called the states though. Everything in religion and what I see coming tells me we'll have it the worst.

smurfslappa
02-16-2006, 03:48 PM
And somebody's all up on Wikipedia lately, spreading all that disinformation they like to do. Helping out certain senators, dismissing this wobble thing. Even throwing out there that somebody on Coast to Coast AM was saying the wobble stopped, to make it sound even more ridiculous and using words like "The truth of the matter." You can barely even read that data, and plus it's old. I hate these guys.

During the first hour of the national radio broadcast of Coast to Coast AM on January 28, 2006, Lloyd Stewart Carpenter reported that the Chandler wobble has stopped (i.e., its amplitude has reduced to zero) -- which could be a harbinger of a catastrophic pole shift. This is however completely unfounded speculation as the actual recorded data shows no indication that the wobble has stopped, or shows any signs of stopping. If it did stop for any length of time this would be of great interest in gaining a better understanding the causes, but would not cause any catastrophic changes in the overall rotation axis of the planet.

The Truth of the matter.

The Chandler wobble has changed, simply take a look at the US Navy data for the past 2 years. It clearly shows the wobble has diminished as of mid-late 2005.

link to the graph on US Navy website - http://maia.usno.navy.mil/yplot2.gif & http://maia.usno.navy.mil/xplot2.gif Historical data can be seen here - http://maia.usno.navy.mil/yplot1.gif & http://maia.usno.navy.mil/xplot1.gif


What they have to say about Katrina

The storm weakened considerably before making its second landfall as an extremely large Category 3 storm on the morning of August 29 along the Central Gulf Coast near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana.

UUUUrrrttT... I thought it was a 5, oh wait, it was a 4, oh wait it was a 3? Nigga Please.

The highest sustained wind of all these hurricanes has also been tampered with, since I'm pretty sure I remember different...

175 mph (280 km/h) Katrina

185 mph (295 km/h)[1] Wilma

175 mph (280 km/h) sustained Rita