15 Replies to “It’s Probably Nothing”

  1. Why don’t you spend two hours talking about something that could be adequately covered in a quarter of the time?

    Why I hate podcasts.

    1. I agree. I would rather read about a topic than listen to someone literally droning on about it. Now they have commercials too.

    2. I hate podcasts. I can skim through an article much more quickly than any podcast. Weinstein and Peterson are the worst of the yacky bunch. They get off on the sound of their own voice.

      1. Worse are the people that linked dump about 43 hours of podcasts and you tube videos every day with no description except must watch!

    3. They literally put me to sleep. But I admit, I was up at 4:30am to watch the Man City/Fulham match … so I was a little sleepy to begin with

    4. I used to enjoy that old TV show, Flipper. The acting was so good. They had excellent podcasts!

  2. Ben Davidson is an American version of a cuckoo clock when referring to a 6,000 year magnetic pole shift. He references a guy named Chan Thomas who wrote “The Adam and Eve Story” in 1961, a book that was kept classified by the CIA until a sanitized version was released in 2013. Chan claims every 5,000 years or so, the “geophysical poles” (whatever the hell they are) shift 90 degrees so that the polar regions become equatorial and equatorial become polar. Other than 0% evidence for this, it’s a cool story. About 6,000 years ago all the Asians froze to death. Velikovsky on LSD.

    Let’s pretend the geophysical poles represent the spin axis of the Earth. Every 6,000 years this axis swings 90 degrees and rips up the mountains and oceans with it. A great Sunday morning story at 11:00 am 100 years ago maybe.

    https://exopolitics.org/massive-pole-shifts-are-cyclic-according-to-declassified-cia-document/

    1. I’ll give Ben THIS compliment … right from the start he said this kind of huge solar event is “rare” … that it happens about every 20 years (i.e. not that rare). The media have lost their minds over this flare up. It’s Armageddon according to the oh-so-trustworthy media. Yet I distinctly remember as a kid in about the summer of 1967 seeing the northern lights really brightly in the San Francisco Bay Area.

      Calm the eff down! We’re not all gonna dieeeeeee … or have the skin start melting off our heads.

  3. The problem with predicting the end of modern civilization due to a crash of the electrical grid is, either you are right and can’t get any credit, or you’re wrong and look like an idiot. So why bother?

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