Global Warming Drowning Polar Bears? the 2012 Effect is the Real Culprit!
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2009/07/30 23:41
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(2009/07/29 10:30) Reporter Wang Zongming / Taipei Report
Since the beginning of the 21st century, bizarre weather phenomena such as extreme heat, severe cold, typhoons, and hurricanes have made it difficult for experts to explain solely using last century's concepts of global warming, El Niño, or La Niña. Instead, they have begun to consider that the issue may not be limited to global warming alone, as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions have also become more frequent in recent years. Alongside major climatic changes, these events may very well be the result of Earth's unstable and weakening magnetic field.
Professor Lin Zhongbin from Tamkang University pointed out that scientists have discovered magma beneath the Earth's crust has been flowing away from the equator over the past decade. This could lead to abnormal ocean currents outside the crust, which in turn may trigger climate changes—namely, global warming.
Lin Zhongbin stated, however, that global warming cannot influence the movement of magma beneath the Earth's crust, nor can it explain why earthquakes and volcanic activity have become more frequent. Instead, the celestial alignment approaching 2012 could account for abnormal magma activity beneath the crust, increased seismic activity, volcanic eruptions, irregular ocean currents, and climate anomalies.
Lin Zhongbin added that in recent years, extreme and bizarre weather events—such as snowstorms in mainland China, heavy snowfalls in the eastern and midwestern United States, and record-breaking heatwaves in southern Australia—can no longer be explained by "global warming" alone. Global warming should instead be seen as just one symptom of a larger, deeper, and longer-term transformation: the celestial cycle pointing toward 2012.
The year 2012 marks a transitional point in the celestial cycle, where the old cycle ends and a new one begins. In that year, Earth, the solar system, and the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way will align. Scientific calculations indicate that such an alignment occurs only once every 25,700 years. When these three entities align, Earth's magnetic field is bound to experience significant disturbances.
Perhaps future historical records will note that when polar bears drown due to the complete disappearance of Arctic sea ice, global warming was merely a minor accomplice—while the true culprit was the celestial alignment of 2012.
Source:
http://www. nownews. com/ 2009/ 07/ 29/ 11490- 2484363. htm