Here's an interesting fact. What would you guess the odds are, of all three of NASA's primary North American facilities, taking direct hits by HISTORIC tropical systems in only three years?
These were not glancing blows.
1) Hurricane Katrina - Stennis Space Center - 2005(LA-MS coastal border)
2) Tropical Storm Fay - sat and spun on top of Cape Canaveral for 3 days in 2008
3) Hurricane Ike - made a direct hit on Mission Control in 2008
What are the odds?
Watch the video below, which contain detailed information about the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season, as well as the events I describe above. Pay close attention to that radioactive isotope, uploaded on March 1, 2011 .... because it accurately predicts that a nuclear wind would appear this year, and it is depicted moving directly over Port-au-Prince, as if to deliberately connect the two disaster types.
The description on YouTube contains dated references for the annotations and prior predictions. They are backed up by other dated sources, including the image host.
If you calculate the odds of this curious NASA coincidence alone, it's interesting, but if you begin multiplying the interconnected odds of someone predicting these events, as statistics require, they begin to grow into very large numbers.
Here's a bonus, because what you saw above is just the tip of an iceberg that very few people have seen, and even fewer comprehend the gravity of.
Note: You may find that poison mass forecast, of particular interest.
"In the last days perilous times will come, for men shall have a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof." 2Tim3
What does this have to do with ET or UFOs? Shouldn't this be in the conspiracy section or something?
The argument begs the question. What power could possibly do this? If it isn't human power, then what is it?
A "conspiracy" involves the power of men.
Perhaps I should have entitled the thread .... "NASA under attack by mysterious power beyond their control?"
Common sense should tell you the odds are very much against this happening. So what is it?
That's the question I'm asking. No human could cause a tropical system to sit on top of Cape Canaveral and spin for three days, could they? What could do that, especially after a map appears the year before, saying that the area will be hit in a unique way. "Torrential, and the number 4"
Here are links to the original posts, supporting just one of the arguments. See if you can figure it out. Good luck calling it a conspiracy of men.
Ground zero for the rebuilt Tower of Babel on earth. It's also a warning that this area is a target of the Destroying Angel in the coming year.
Note: [Fay sat on top of Cape Canaveral] for 3 days in 2008, dumping torrential rainfall on the facility. It's also the only tropical system to ever make landfall on a state [in four separate places.] It was very unusual. The top video has a clip of Fay, just sitting there ... spinning.
As the question, how many wings does a bumble bee have?
Life is a hideous business, and from the background behind what we know of it peer daemoniacal hints of truth which make it sometimes a thousandfold more hideous.
"Clark, you can't save the world. All you'll end up with is a messiah complex and a lot of enemies." -Lex Luthor Smallville
Posted 13 April 2011 - 10:52 PM
tipotep, on 13 April 2011 - 10:27 PM, said:
So your telling us that aliens are making tropical storms and are using them as attack weapons ?
Oh my head is starting to hurt
TiP.
I'm as confused as you are TipoTep. I'm just like this emoticon right known. I'm still scratching my head at Raptorswitness post.
Edited by Ryinrea, 13 April 2011 - 10:53 PM.
Quote
There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or business man and they are stupid!"
HAARP is a diversion here. It's a red herring, and comes up every time I mention this curious coincidence.
However, even if you believe that HAARP is being used to affect the weather, it could not steer hurricanes to make landfall in such a precise way. That is far beyond its capability, and anyone who bothers to study how it works, would quickly realize this. That is, if they understood what they were reading to begin with.
It has capability, especially to heat the ionosphere, but that's a far cry from directionally steering huge columns of rotating air, and Ike was the largest windstorm to ever hit the United States in terms of total energy at the surface. Never in the history of the United States has a storm accomplished what hurricane Ike did. It knocked out power to hundreds of thousands in the Ohio Valley, many for two weeks, and that's a long ways from Houston.
Rarely will you ever hear much discussed about how unusual hurricane Ike was, but Dr. Greg Forbes of the Weather Channel summed it up pretty good.
"I cannot recall a more extensive swath of damaging winds from any storm! It's not unusual to have wind damage for a few hundred miles inland of a hurricane making landfall. But this swath of damage wound up being about 1600 miles long along the dog-legged path, and about an average of 200 miles wide! Within the swath lies an incredible scene of widespread trees and power lines downed, some falling onto homes and vehicles. Some buildings collapsed or lost roofs from the winds alone."
I guess we can shut down meteorology globally now.
Ohh well, lets chill out
Things are what they are. - Me Reality can't be debunked. That's the beauty of it. - Capeo 'If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.' - Sir Isaac Newton. "Let me repeat the lesson learned from the Sturrock scientific review panel: Pack up your old data and forget it. Ufology needs new data, new cases, new rigorous and scientific methodologies if it hopes ever to get out of its pit." Ed Stewart. Youtube is the last refuge of the ignorant and is more often used for disinformation than genuine research. There is a REASON for PEER REVIEW... - Chrlzs.
Where does one get certified as an "Ancient Astronaut Theorist" or "Cryptozoologist?"
Posted 14 April 2011 - 02:32 AM
Ermm...I live and work right where your triangle of doom is drawn. Do a little historical search regarding the frequency of hurricane strikes. While 2004 was an unusual year it wasn't a devestating event by any means. Not only do I live 15 miles from KSC and at the time I was actually working at KSC I assure you the worst the disaster brought was some flooding and power outages (from a comfort standpoint it was horrific - middle of summer and 80-90 percent humidity and billions of mosquitos). There were some structures on the beaches that took a beating. The Vehicle Assembly Building has a few panels pulled off as well but no serious damage. There was only one building where the orbiters are process that had any read damage. I cannot recall the name of the building but it is where they repair and manufacture the 'blankets' for the shuttles.
So your telling us that aliens are making tropical storms and are using them as attack weapons ?
Oh my head is starting to hurt
TiP.
I'm saying is that the odds are very much against three direct hits in three years, and the math will bear this out. The maps drawn ahead of time will also, add greatly to these odds.
Edited by Raptor Witness, 14 April 2011 - 05:10 AM.
"In the last days perilous times will come, for men shall have a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof." 2Tim3
Raptor Witness, on 14 April 2011 - 04:28 AM, said:
I'm saying is that the odds are very much against three direct hits, in three years, and the math will bear this out. The maps drawn ahead of time add greatly to these odds.
Im afraid that odds have nothing to do with natural events , as Esoteric Toad pointed out the damage was very minimal, what good did this " alien cyclone terrorist attack " do ?
TiP.
Archaeology is the search for fact... not truth. - Indiana Jones .
Raptor Witness, on 14 April 2011 - 12:09 AM, said:
It has capability, especially to heat the ionosphere, but that's a far cry from directionally steering huge columns of rotating air, and Ike was the largest windstorm to ever hit the United States in terms of total energy at the surface. Never in the history of the United States has a storm accomplished what hurricane Ike did. It knocked out power to hundreds of thousands in the Ohio Valley, many for two weeks, and that's a long ways from Houston.
Rarely will you ever hear much discussed about how unusual hurricane Ike was, but Dr. Greg Forbes of the Weather Channel summed it up pretty good.
Well, it wasn't that precise a weapon, then, was it? If the (I presume is what we're getting at) ETs wanted to sabotage NASA, surely they could think of something much more efficient and precise than this technique.
Life is a hideous business, and from the background behind what we know of it peer daemoniacal hints of truth which make it sometimes a thousandfold more hideous.