Further Reading

Saturday, 7 August 2010

'Here Comes The Sun'

Some strange things have been happening with the Sun. We have been through a period in which sunspot activity stopped for longer than any living scientist – or anyone else for that matter – has seen.
Sunspots (intense magnetic reactions on the surface of the Sun) and solar activity in general have experienced a long downward trend for most of the first decade of the new century, far longer than predicted or expected, and Marc Hairston, a space physicist at the University of Texas, said last year: ‘This is the lowest we’ve ever seen. We thought we’d be out of it by now, but we’re not.’

The solar wind – streams of particles emitted by the Sun – has also been at its weakest since records began and the Sun’s magnetic axis is reported to be ‘tilted to an unusual degree’. The Sun is changing and when that happens the Earth must change, too, because the Earth is, like the rest of the solar system, part of the Sun’s ‘atmosphere’, in effect ...
... My research over the last few years has increasingly pointed to the fundamental importance of the Sun in human affairs, not only as the obvious source of warmth and light, but for the very information that we decode into this apparently three-dimensional reality – the hologram.
That research, and the synchronicity or ‘language’ of life, has also indicated to me that we are going to experience a great deal of major solar activity in the next few years and the events of this week would suggest that the Sun is now starting to ‘wake up’. (David Icke)