Message from @Lichlord9333

Discord ID: 688392681516564643


Ahh yes, as if cleaning with bleach and shit, constantly breathing in that good stuff does not cause any sort of health issue as well. <:smugon:512048583806025739>

But muh cancer man! When they are cleaning the buss there usually are no passengers or any living person in there <:pepelaugh:544857300179877898>

2020-03-14 09:36:34 UTC  

https://climatism.blog/2020/03/07/46-statements-by-ipcc-experts-against-the-ipcc/

2020-03-14 09:38:09 UTC  

Links to false statements and papers which completely destroy the argument of human induced climate change. Co2 FOLLOWS temp increase. not the other way.

2020-03-14 09:45:24 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/680587502918041623/688321878892478511/IMG_20191003_140357.jpg

2020-03-14 09:59:06 UTC  

Mountain of data showing that the periodic activity of the sun in coordination with the periodic weakening and shifting of the earth's magnetic field leads to periodically irradiating much of the planet, disrupting the earth's crust by the sun actuating the mechanism that creates earth's magnetic field (rather than the other way around) and induces long periods of cold as the gaps in the field increases the moisture in the air by several degrees of magnitude. Solar Forcing.

2020-03-14 10:00:45 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/680587502918041623/688325740047237126/220px-Magnetic_North_Pole_Positions_2015.png

2020-03-14 10:01:53 UTC  

Last 20 yrs, earth's north pole sayin, "Screw this. I'm headed south."

2020-03-14 10:18:03 UTC  

@ManAnimal Isn't solar activity on the decline since 2000?

2020-03-14 10:22:57 UTC  

Yes. Solar cycle. After an extreme minimum, comes an extreme maximum. When the earth's pole is stable, the earth's magnetic field forms a dipole, providing maximum coverage. However, as the poles move closer together, the field weakens. When the solar maximum corresponds with the earth's magnetic field being at it's weakest..... ot-oh

2020-03-14 10:24:54 UTC  

Ever take two magnets and move similar poles closer and closer together? What happens? It becomes harder and harder to move similar poles closer together until suddenly, the magnet physically reorients itself. The geological record doesn't capture such events that happen 'suddenly', only the long-term effects.

2020-03-14 10:26:54 UTC  

If the movement of iron in the earth's core induces a magnetic field, what happens when you put more energy into the field directly than there is motion in that churning iron?

2020-03-14 10:28:27 UTC  

In electric power generation, we call this 'reverse power'. A generator becomes a motor.

2020-03-14 10:32:41 UTC  

Typically, the generator tears itself apart.

2020-03-14 11:09:45 UTC  

Will cause a great many natural disasters if it does actually happen quickly. As far as I know evidence points to polar shifts typically taking long enough that it isn't cataclysmic, just somewhat disastrous.

2020-03-14 11:23:10 UTC  

How much of the planet is covered with water? Where does Goblekki Teppe fit into the history books? Or the ruins on the ocean floor near asia? Lots of unexplained evidence that predates or doesn't fit into what is accepted as the historical record. Earthquakes happen all the time. However, how much of a civilization would survive if earthquakes happen everywhere at the SAME time worldwide? what would be the difference in the fossil record to indicate this? Remember up until the 20th century, there were less than 2billion people on the planet.

2020-03-14 14:54:22 UTC  

@ManAnimal Could just be the global flood and shifting of the continents that happened several thousand years ago

2020-03-14 14:54:51 UTC  

Really depends on which view of history you accept as reality

2020-03-14 17:45:06 UTC  

@Troye basic assumption is that everything happens slowly and nothing happens suddenly. However, the evidence just doesn't support that but because there is no evidence of exactly WHAT happens during those transient states, it's easier to assume everything occurs gradually

2020-03-14 23:37:09 UTC  

@ManAnimal My god you're retarded if you think any of that is accurate

2020-03-14 23:40:28 UTC  

@ManAnimal Majority of the underwater shit is underwater because of the glaciers melting. Some magnetic activity wont cause the Earth to suddenly destroy itself you pseudoscience tard.

The earth's crust moves by convection of the layers beneath it. The core is suspended in liquid, and tons of other material that is free moving/liquidious

2020-03-15 00:46:11 UTC  

@Malac, instead of screaming like a sperg , how about your the paper. No one ever said, " the Earth to suddenly destroy itself", you strawman building tard. Tectonic plates ride onto of the iron molten core whose motions generates the earth's electric field. THIS IS FACT.

2020-03-15 00:49:41 UTC  

Now, if you actually knew some REAL science, you'd know how the excitation system works on an electrical machine worked, you'd know that 1) an electric generator is the same machine as an electric generator/dynamo and 2) you can induce a FIELD by moving the rotor/dynamo OR you can induce MOTION by directly exciting the field. more than yo

2020-03-15 00:49:57 UTC  

this is FACT, used to keep your god damn lights on

2020-03-15 00:50:19 UTC  

@ManAnimal No. the Core resides in a liquidious outer-core. On top of which sits a mantle so pressurized that it's a solid despite the heat

2020-03-15 00:50:54 UTC  

please try to follow along without jumping ahead

2020-03-15 00:51:11 UTC  

And no. The earth doesn't act like a mechanical fucking motor.

2020-03-15 00:52:19 UTC  

You're treating it like a piece of fucking machinery. It's not. It's a giant ball of fucking molten iron squeezed so fucking tight it's a solid for all intents and purposes. There can't be any mechanical fucking blowback or tearing because it's not a fucking solid structure

2020-03-15 00:52:27 UTC  

the theory goes that in the event the field is excited MORE than the motion in the core which GENERATES the field, it will place stress on the core.

2020-03-15 00:53:19 UTC  

And what would that stress do? Move about some atoms? Lose a bit of rotational force. Slow down its rotation just a tad

2020-03-15 00:53:31 UTC  

"The earth doesn't act like a mechanical fucking motor." - please explain the origin of the earth's magnetic field.

2020-03-15 00:53:36 UTC  

It's not going to cause an apocalypse by tearing up the Earth you tard

2020-03-15 00:54:22 UTC  

Generating a magnetic field through sheer physical qualities /=/ your fucking toys, you engineering twat

2020-03-15 00:54:41 UTC  

it's a fucking dynamo. same electrical principles as a function electric generator. you move a ferrous material you get a field

2020-03-15 00:54:58 UTC  

THAT'S WHAT A FUCKING ELECTRIC MACHINE DOES!

2020-03-15 00:55:05 UTC  

And what do you think is going to happen if it reverses? It's not going to do shit on the surface you retard