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    Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment

    Carol
    Carol
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    Posts : 32882
    Join date : 2010-04-07
    Location : Hawaii

    Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment Empty Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment

    Post  Carol Sun Feb 16, 2020 7:16 am


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXRw8YspHrw&feature=emb_logo
    Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment
    (Celeste Solum 1/5)

    Celeste Solum author of Electromagnetic Radiation Protection Solutions and David DuByne from ADAPT 2030 discuss hardening your home during unseasonable cold and possible safe locations across the planet during the Grand Solar Minimum so you can protect your families during these changing times.

    •What is Your Skill Set to Prepare for the Grand Solar Minimum
    •Sudden Stratospheric Warming Event the beginning of 2020 to cool the N. Hemisphere
    •Getting a plant to protect perrenial plants from unseasonable cold / indoor Tower Garden
    •Pipes begin to freeze in the SE USA as they are not deep enough in the ground
    •Head to the basement in a blizzard or freeze event power outage
    •Different water bodies and rivers will freeze winter 2019-2020
    •Possible safe zones during the Grand Solar Minimum
    •Stranded crops in Canada and delayed planting 2020 forecast already
    •Will political instability cease when food becomes the most valuable commodity on the planet


    _________________
    What is life?
    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

    With deepest respect ~ Aloha & Mahalo, Carol
    Carol
    Carol
    Admin
    Admin


    Posts : 32882
    Join date : 2010-04-07
    Location : Hawaii

    Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment Empty Re: Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment

    Post  Carol Sun Feb 16, 2020 9:07 am

    Cold will push down into panhandle of America (2 feet deep frozen ground), Midwest, Eastcoast, Scandinavian countries. The river Themes will not freeze but off the east coast see ice cover early in the season.

    Transcript:

    I hope we can talk a little bit about maybe some timelines and you know everybody's talking about the weather and the changes and that's great but maybe we could talk today a little bit more about how to prepare for a few of these things that are coming up because everybody has a skill set currently that you can use to be able to prepare something for these changes coming there's nobody that I know that doesn't have a skill set that can't use that we've learned through our lives just basically walking around that we can truly get ready and when you get ready in the mind it seems that things are just a little more doable. They're just a little more containable you think a little bit differently, acted a little bit differently. So if you have a whole crew of people, or a whole community around you that's prepared some what the moves from A to B are going to be so much smoother than they would be of just as chaotic ness of having to start from square zero with nothing versus what we're talking about today's some of the changes and maybe some of the simple solutions that we can all implement. Well we do have something that's breaking right now that you're only about the stratospheric event tell us about that. Yeah first, uh the mainstream media is gonna try to run with this because it's a warming event but it's happening up at the ten millibar level way up in the atmosphere at 30,000 feet, but they're trying to now claim that global warming is causing the sudden stratospheric warming event although this is a regular thing it used to happen now here's the projection of where we're going in the future and what has happened in the past.

    The southern hemisphere it rarely happens and it happened this year and it's only the second time in the last 120 years that it's happened in the southern hemisphere. It does happen. It's incredibly rare down there incredibly intense that that really froze out New Zealand parts of Australia, Tasmania but our northern here hemispheric, or the sudden stratospheric warming used to occur about once every three years and then in 1950s and 40s when you go back 20s, 30s, 40s it would occur but once every seven years, but since say the 1980s until just a few years ago was about once every three years. Now it's occurring every single year and so when the mainstream media comes out and tries to blame co2 on the sudden stratospheric warming and warming up in the ten millibar levels where this thing is pegged at and we're looking up in that the jet stream level there where airplanes fly they're trying to say that
    it's gonna be a co2 based thing. You bad human. We need more global taxes to stop. I don't care how much tax you put at this thing it's never gonna stop. These events they're natural but what that means is there's a forty degrees Celsius increase in temperature up. At that incredibly high level in our sky and what it does it has a dome pusci pact which that heat will displace the whole entire Arctic airmass. Literally everything at North is going to be pushed off center about 10 to 15 degrees latitude. Possibly more this one's going to be an extreme it's one of the most intense that they've ever seen.

    So they're expecting 20 to 30 degree Fahrenheit below normal temperatures in the UK and Sweden and when we get in here to do not States this cold is going to push all the way down into the panhandle of Florida.

    Now this is not going to be a single one or two day then. This is a multi-week in a month six-week event. So the temperatures that we're going to start experiencing all the way through the beginning of the year are going to be abnormally cold. Caveat, on the west coast of the US it's going to remain the same temperatures may be a little bit above normal but as we get into the Midwest and almost all of Canada everything over to the east coast and down south into the southeast us all the Scandinavian countries parts of Spain, France, England, Central Europe really going to get chilly there. So keep that on your you know moving forward as to the they're gonna have to try to explain it away and of course the word 'warming'i's in the title, hence they're going to try to peg it on you and co2, but it's the
    Sun. Absolutely. I know and I just looked at and we're supposed to be hovering around coasts, below zero, but very little precipitation, so I'm seeing that places are getting dumped with precipitation - but as far as this neck of the woods - we're not getting the precipitation, but we are getting the bitter cold.

    Unseasonably, as they would say below zero cold and i guess my concern for those of us that are farmers, grow our food, is any of us have perennial plants and you don't have the sewer? is very insulating and if you don't have that insulation, people that have established perennial plants trees, they get their root systems can freeze in these people able to grow temperatures and that's when you start seeing plants and so you know this is another factor that we're gonna have to look at next year that we don't haven't experienced before.

    I was gonna say, you know, Martin Armstrong just did a really good article, but he dug up an enormous amount of information of handwriting's from people that would be famous through our history. Here in the United States, politically about what they'd seen in farming conditions down in Virginia and what is now Washington DC. In that whole area the ground froze to 2 feet deep down there during this time so they were saying it was as hard as concrete. Up to 2 feet down. Now you got to think back and when you come down in Louisiana Mississippi, they only put the pipes a few feet down and we already saw last year and this year pipes breaking, freezing. Millions and millions and millions of dollars of broken infrastructure due to frozen pipes. They're just not used to these temperatures but here we're talking about extreme cold. So what's something that you could do to prepare for this because you have to think like the responders would think or the people in the you know.

    Celeste, you would know better than I. In the FEMA community here when it's going to get extreme cold you know what are some things that people could prep out for.

    My first thing is you know more firewood, more food. different things, get insulation in your home or be able to block off some windows, or some kind of draught points. Because everybody knows their homes or their apartments. forever they're living, where you know some cold air seeps. Might be coming in the thermostat adjustments and everybody else is going to be doing the same thing. Drawing more electricity to keep their homes heated. Warmer. I mean it's just something you can do in your own house by cooking something on the stove, or how do you retain heat. There's just an enormous amount of things to think about for home heating, and and if your electricity were to turn off during this time due to overdraw on the grid, like did happen in Canada, where do you go what's gonna happen. I'm gonna say head to the basement because that's the
    08:12
    warmest place to be. That retaining wall of 10 feet deep down there is gonna keep some heat and your above-ground structure is gonna get really cold, but I think you could survive in the basement and that's just one of the basic techniques of cold weather winter survival on a power out. Just head to the basement but do you know any other ideas of what people could do to keep their homes ready. So if you do heat with wood and you have multiple levels to your home then you want to go to the next level above where your heat source is. So like I don't heat my upstairs. I'm on the level of people, so I've got plants and stuff growing up.

    I never have to heat it is the heat rises, so if you are heating, it's like a woods, you can go up to the attic or the second floor, or whatever unless your stove is in basements. I know how their wood stoves in the basement and you're fine the main look or effects love up but heat does rise. just but yes went down in a bass that you have that moderate he
    09:25
    doctor of because most basements are
    09:29
    it's partially underground and you know
    09:32
    even if it's two three feet
    09:34
    maybe some I'm sure more if you're on a
    09:36
    hillside or whatever so they you've got
    09:39
    that mop rating it's gonna be you stay
    09:41
    about the 50s create more and you were
    09:45
    talking something that there's business
    09:48
    gonna be like a two hundred there's
    09:50
    something something that's like a two
    09:52
    hundred year event what is that yeah
    09:56
    what is that we only have historical
    09:57
    writings to go by and when Franklin and
    10:01
    and Jefferson were writing about their
    10:03
    accounts of you know the crop conditions
    10:05
    at the time and how cold that ground
    10:07
    became and you know when you think about
    10:09
    Virginia and Tennessee you're thinking
    10:11
    pretty far south North Carolina two foot
    10:14
    deep frozen ground to the to the
    10:17
    consistency of concrete that is a very
    10:20
    deep freeze we have never experienced
    10:21
    anything and also I might either want to
    10:23
    throw something in here I was speaking
    10:25
    to a gentleman was telling me about the
    10:28
    Potomac River
    10:28
    I said yeah the Potomac that's where you
    10:31
    know they dragged the cannons across
    10:32
    during the Revolutionary War because it
    10:35
    froze over so thickly that they could
    10:37
    take horseback wagons and cannons across
    10:39
    and then he said to me oh did you see
    10:41
    what's happening to the Potomac this
    10:42
    year and I said no I were not really I
    10:44
    was thinking it was a big flowing river
    10:45
    and he's like check out this video where
    10:49
    somebody walked it the entire width of
    10:52
    the river and only ever got to about
    10:53
    need and maybe thigh deep so if the
    10:56
    water levels already this low for this
    10:58
    year and it hasn't really rained that
    11:00
    much to have her since to refill the
    11:01
    river a water body that deep is going to
    11:05
    freeze much much much faster
    11:07
    solid completely than something that's
    11:09
    20 feet deep that's flowing so again we
    11:12
    can start to see some of these repeats
    11:13
    in history the River Thames is not going
    11:16
    to freeze because it's been dredged out
    11:18
    since the time of the ice bears so when
    11:20
    we come back you know we got two
    11:21
    different sets of history going on here
    11:23
    both in the States and over in Europe so
    11:26
    look for different water bodies to
    11:27
    freeze and especially you know the bays
    11:31
    in the u.s. going out off the east coast
    11:33
    if it does get that cold for this
    11:35
    prolonged period of time for weeks
    11:36
    you're gonna start to see a lot of ice
    11:38
    cover really quickly well early into the
    11:40
    season you know is that the reason that
    11:42
    other countries are you know
    11:44
    commissioning more and more icebreakers
    11:45
    in the US is lagging behind with a
    11:47
    couple broken down ones and you know
    11:49
    ones that were shipped in between
    11:50
    hemispheres to run missions for the
    11:54
    climate scientists I don't know about
    11:56
    yeah when we look back in history I
    11:58
    think since we haven't seen it and we
    12:00
    really don't have records the only thing
    12:03
    we can do is use the accounts of people
    12:04
    that we would trust in history because
    12:06
    people were literally beyond reproach
    12:08
    and they were much more trusted in the
    12:12
    writings at that point you know when you
    12:14
    go back to different parts in history it
    12:16
    was just a whole different context on
    12:18
    what you wrote and what was believable
    12:20
    versus today in the media I would much
    12:23
    prefer to read something from 150 years
    12:26
    ago 200 250 years ago in terms of
    12:29
    exploration or just accounts of on the
    12:31
    ground versus you know today has
    12:33
    manipulated narratives so some things
    12:38
    because I deal with minus 50 degrees
    12:41
    here in Montana and I know that not
    12:44
    everybody is going to experience minus
    12:46
    50 but if you do get around freezing to
    12:54
    feet you're gonna have to implement some
    12:56
    of these things yourself you're gonna
    12:58
    have to excuse me pay particular
    13:01
    attention to your pipes and what I do is
    13:04
    I open up like my bathroom cabinet doors
    13:08
    and anything you want open you want to
    13:14
    heat service if you have electricity but
    13:16
    a little space heater there um and then
    13:20
    also turn
    13:21
    water now a very interesting experience
    13:24
    laughter it wasn't - it was - Turkey but
    13:30
    no I did those things the pipe still
    13:33
    froze and don't let that discourage you
    13:36
    what I did was I have a wood stove and
    13:40
    then I have a fireplace with a wood
    13:42
    insert I got both those cranked up I
    13:45
    think it was like 90 degrees in the
    13:47
    house and after about five or six hours
    13:50
    the pipes did unfreeze
    13:52
    but this happening this is the first
    13:55
    time that's ever happened so it didn't
    13:57
    you could have - 50 thought I was doing
    13:59
    it at minus 30 and I thought this is
    14:02
    some new the ground is colder and so I
    14:08
    think gonna see this again this year so
    14:11
    it's just some ideas of what you can do
    14:16
    protect your pipes
    14:18
    some people can use there's a tape that
    14:24
    a heat that you can put around your
    14:26
    pipes but you know that's only effective
    14:29
    if you can have power so you know you're
    14:33
    gonna have to develop a contingency plan
    14:36
    for water if their bites do these and
    14:39
    not only your water but also your faced
    14:43
    and drink water social servers they need
    14:47
    to really think about everybody should
    14:49
    have some water stored just you know for
    14:53
    yourself in your pets you have pets
    14:56
    just in case white sugary for a period
    14:59
    of time and and then have a waste
    15:04
    containment set up in case something
    15:07
    happens in that life as simple as a
    15:10
    5-gallon bucket on and leaf bags a
    15:14
    toilet seat and you can store feces
    15:21
    separate and ensure your and in plants
    15:25
    whatever if you want it's something
    15:27
    about but those are just some ideas so
    15:31
    my questions for you
    15:35
    our artless mutual listeners and they
    15:40
    are chomping at the bit to know haha
    15:42
    chomp away
    15:43
    so hey chomp away at five wait this is
    15:46
    life so if anybody out there in the
    15:49
    audience has questions feel free to ask
    15:52
    and we'll get these questions to us so
    15:56
    what are the cheapest agents in Europe
    16:01
    if your research and understanding of
    16:04
    the many different factors that are
    16:07
    coming down as far as cosmic terrestrial
    16:10
    Earth changes even political so what
    16:14
    would you say the two things twenty well
    16:18
    in terms of weather safety North Africa
    16:23
    you know Tunisia somewhere around there
    16:26
    Morocco because even during the maunder
    16:29
    minimum they were still crop growing
    16:30
    regions and when we go back to the Roman
    16:32
    grain growing areas you know say two
    16:34
    thousand years ago those have gone
    16:37
    through had gone through several you
    16:40
    know grand solar minimums with the
    16:41
    Romans in charge still growing grains
    16:42
    down there while the rest of Europe
    16:44
    froze more north
    16:45
    safety-wise politically you know people
    16:49
    with different risk assessments as well
    16:51
    I looked at the the sea surface
    16:54
    temperatures in the Mediterranean just
    16:56
    today on the west right near the left
    16:59
    side are going west of Italy over out to
    17:01
    the you know Straits there at Gibraltar
    17:03
    incredibly cold a couple degrees Celsius
    17:06
    below normal but when you get over
    17:07
    toward Turkey that heat is there and
    17:10
    they're expecting because of the heating
    17:11
    water with some of these massive storms
    17:13
    that will be coming through to get
    17:15
    excessive snows through Turkey and when
    17:17
    you start talking to look about in
    17:19
    Central Asia
    17:20
    places in the caucuses you know water
    17:24
    bodies regulate heat a lot more than
    17:26
    would be a central if you're getting a
    17:27
    continental weather system versus an
    17:30
    ocean weather system but you look up in
    17:33
    the UK and England and that sort of
    17:34
    thing often to Denmark the water
    17:37
    currents are behaving a little
    17:38
    differently coming out of the Atlantic
    17:39
    Ocean to so we're getting a lot of
    17:42
    changes and again the first thing you
    17:44
    think about is your risk assessment of
    17:47
    what's risky
    17:48
    for you or what's not risky because I
    17:51
    could say go to this place like North
    17:53
    Africa do you feel safe going to Tunisia
    17:56
    or Morocco a lot of people would say no
    18:00
    a lot of people would say yes there's
    18:01
    abundant opportunity there depends how
    18:04
    you want to take it on can you work with
    18:07
    the local population there can you learn
    18:09
    the language can you blend with the
    18:11
    customs can you adopt to the food can
    18:14
    you change a little bit of lifestyle
    18:16
    because you're not gonna be able to
    18:17
    drink alcohol if you're in Tunisia and
    18:19
    Morocco and if you do it's gonna be very
    18:21
    few and far between so if you're used to
    18:23
    having a lot of alcohol all the time
    18:25
    beers wines and things you're gonna have
    18:27
    to shop you're gonna that's gonna be a
    18:28
    shift you know other places that you
    18:31
    might want to look at again Adriatic Sea
    18:32
    areas I'm a fan of Croatia because
    18:35
    looking back in the history there you
    18:37
    know that little bit of water is able to
    18:39
    keep things quite a bit warmer than the
    18:41
    rest of Europe just because of that
    18:42
    heating effect off that little sea in
    18:44
    there although we traveled in Croatia in
    18:47
    it was about 20 degrees Fahrenheit below
    18:49
    normal last year one of Christmas in New
    18:51
    Year's when we went there and traveling
    18:53
    but predominantly everybody says it
    18:56
    stays incredibly warm compared to the
    18:58
    rest of Europe that's why a lot of
    19:00
    people like to go down on holiday right
    19:02
    along that coast there all the way down
    19:03
    into Montenegro etc because that's a
    19:06
    microclimate by itself not the food
    19:09
    amazing people and it's still very
    19:11
    European style but I have a few other
    19:13
    Nuggets that I've been trying to look at
    19:15
    as well the Ukraine now again you know a
    19:19
    city the people pedasi talking about the
    19:21
    Ukraine he's got but again it's all
    19:24
    about risk assessment and understand
    19:25
    that that's going to become another
    19:27
    breadbasket during the times of famine
    19:31
    around the other parts of the planet
    19:32
    that is gonna grow an enormous amount of
    19:35
    food they're gonna actually bring up
    19:37
    their production over the next couple of
    19:38
    years and I saw them trying to do it
    19:40
    this year they increase their planted
    19:41
    acreage by 6%
    19:43
    although the yield amount pretty much
    19:46
    came to the same because the the kernel
    19:48
    size and the tonnage per acre was less
    19:50
    than previous years so you know they had
    19:53
    all these bumper crops of how many tons
    19:55
    per acre
    19:55
    well nature's throwing us a little bit
    19:58
    reducing the amount of tonnage per acre
    19:59
    so they're bringing on more acres to try
    20:01
    to
    20:02
    pull it out now at some point they're
    20:03
    gonna overcome that the equilibrium and
    20:06
    they still can bring on another 25
    20:08
    percent of the country and obviously you
    20:10
    see right now a rush is going in the
    20:12
    Ural Mountains going offline but
    20:14
    Ukraine's still coming online
    20:15
    Myanmar still coming online they are
    20:18
    only using last time I looked about 40
    20:20
    percent of their total arable land forty
    20:22
    to forty five percent so Myanmar can
    20:25
    bring up another doubling and it used to
    20:27
    grow more rice than China during the
    20:29
    1960's tropical temperate low population
    20:34
    but when you go to places like Indonesia
    20:36
    not a good place to go to overpopulated
    20:40
    just not enough room to maneuver in that
    20:43
    society because foreigners are already
    20:46
    pretty much on the edge of not being
    20:48
    welcomed anyway and when I say that it's
    20:51
    because they have been overrun with
    20:53
    people take advantage in the business
    20:55
    situation so also in a risk assessment
    20:57
    you need to look through history and see
    21:00
    how countries have been treated or
    21:02
    treated or cheated both in terms of
    21:05
    business and the workings of the world
    21:08
    and how accepting they're going to be
    21:10
    for you or others to come down there
    21:12
    with your ideas that have put their
    21:15
    countries into duress for decades or
    21:18
    longer now there's a lot of things to
    21:20
    weigh up but just in terms of weather
    21:22
    you know I'm looking at places like
    21:24
    Myanmar Ukraine Morocco Tunisia Croatia
    21:28
    these kind of areas I know you asked for
    21:30
    two but those are the ones I've been
    21:32
    looking at that in terms of increasing
    21:34
    crop production that are going to stay
    21:35
    relatively warm in the winters
    21:37
    comparatively where other places are
    21:39
    absolutely going to get frozen let's say
    21:43
    okay so as far as the United States what
    21:47
    do you think would be the best place in
    21:49
    the States
    21:50
    Florida desert Southwest Arizona New
    21:54
    Mexico those kind of places further
    21:56
    south definitely further south because
    22:00
    you look at Canada and you know how many
    22:03
    acres did they leave stranded this year
    22:04
    for crops I think they just left this is
    22:06
    in Alberta alone just one province up
    22:09
    there they left five million acres on
    22:11
    harvested because it's under snow now
    22:14
    they're hoping that they can leave it
    22:16
    until next year in the spring and then
    22:18
    harvest it but that's five million acres
    22:20
    they didn't harvest that they grew this
    22:22
    year so you know I was talking to you
    22:24
    and asking you questions about burned
    22:25
    down and you seem to know a lot about
    22:27
    you know putting on the herbicides that
    22:30
    kill the rest of the weeds after the
    22:32
    burned after the harvest for burn down
    22:33
    they're not even going to be able to
    22:36
    really get the fields ready because how
    22:38
    do you go from harvest burn down and
    22:42
    replanting in a matter of weeks you just
    22:44
    can't do that it's not physically
    22:46
    feasibly possible to do it so they
    22:49
    either take a complete loss until that
    22:51
    under or they harvest it and then they
    22:54
    plant incredibly late layer you know be
    22:56
    talking some of these 6-8 weeks past the
    22:58
    regular planting dates so I don't know
    23:00
    at the further south you can go the
    23:03
    better so given your understanding of
    23:07
    like the grand solar minimum the
    23:09
    collapse of makings of fear and other
    23:14
    situations that we've got going on what
    23:18
    do you do if people didn't move what's
    23:22
    what are the Hurricanes gonna be like
    23:24
    are we going to have these big boys
    23:26
    laying multiple class by brigades that
    23:30
    are going to kind of take out Florida
    23:33
    maybe for Gulf area and Texas that's an
    23:38
    unknown because those are cyclical as
    23:40
    well you look at some of the biggest
    23:41
    hurricanes and record in history those
    23:43
    occurred in the 1930s on the last heat
    23:45
    spike we had some of the biggest
    23:48
    hurricanes since that time in this
    23:50
    current heat spike Katrina being one you
    23:52
    know there's a whole list of those you
    23:54
    would know all of them far better than I
    23:55
    but when you start to take a look at the
    23:57
    cyclic activity and massive category 5
    23:59
    hurricanes they seem to occur on these
    24:01
    giant spikes of heat that we had in our
    24:04
    planet here in the last let's say at
    24:06
    least these two instances in the last
    24:07
    hundred years 1930s and now but now
    24:11
    we're cooling so we'll the Hurricanes
    24:13
    dissipate in strength there could be
    24:16
    more low formation tropical activity but
    24:18
    it won't be the supergiant's that you're
    24:20
    talking about because they do seem to be
    24:22
    cyclical along with the rises in ocean
    24:25
    temperatures not only Pacific but the
    24:27
    Atlantic the Earth's temperatures
    24:29
    the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation
    24:31
    amo that's going cold on its 60-year
    24:33
    phase right now anyway so it's slated to
    24:36
    be cooling for the next 30 years on a
    24:38
    natural cycle I mean they've mapped this
    24:39
    thing since what 1600s when they were
    24:42
    trying to test water temperatures and
    24:44
    then fully into the 1800s when they used
    24:46
    to do a lot more boat traffic they
    24:47
    should drag thermometers behind the
    24:49
    boats and get all kind of different
    24:50
    readings out of that so that's a well
    24:52
    mapped cycle for hundreds of years what
    24:54
    about South America is there a safer
    24:57
    place and no that's like would you go to
    24:59
    the Andes or Brazil in the Amazon what's
    25:04
    your take I don't know again my
    25:07
    political risk assessment yeah
    25:08
    everybody's got different political risk
    25:10
    like if you speak Portuguese or speak
    25:12
    Spanish you're gonna be way better off
    25:15
    than somebody who knows nothing and then
    25:17
    trying to rock down there and just set
    25:18
    up everything up and you know it's very
    25:20
    tumultuous with governments look at all
    25:22
    the protests are happening across the
    25:24
    continent down there what's our five
    25:26
    countries now trying to change the
    25:28
    government due to increasing food and
    25:30
    fuel prices I mean it you always see
    25:32
    changes of governments down there we've
    25:34
    seen that since we were kids I mean a
    25:35
    flip flop flip flop flip flop flip flop
    25:37
    at what point maybe they flip and they
    25:40
    go all foreigners out but what if you
    25:42
    set everything up for the 10 years
    25:43
    getting ready for this event and they're
    25:45
    like get out so I don't really know I
    25:48
    haven't been focusing too much Venezuela
    25:51
    is another one I knew Michael Venezuela
    25:54
    what is this guy talking about
    25:56
    I realized Venezuela is the breadbasket
    25:59
    of South America period I think that
    26:02
    there's why there's so much interest in
    26:04
    it and why there's so much political
    26:05
    instability being forced into that place
    26:07
    is to try to make some regime change so
    26:10
    we can get a hold I'm not saying we as
    26:12
    the United States but other governments
    26:14
    around the world can get a foothold in
    26:16
    there because that is another place that
    26:17
    can increase its food production by 75%
    26:20
    and the amount of grain and food they
    26:23
    can put out of there would supply part
    26:25
    of the United States for sure supply
    26:27
    parts of other South America for sure
    26:29
    supply definitely parts of China for
    26:32
    sure so take a look who's down there
    26:34
    politically and see how much food they
    26:36
    can start to grow again but in terms of
    26:38
    the it's tropical it's right near the
    26:40
    equator there
    26:43
    puts Wario belt if you will and it can
    26:46
    increase a lot of thing it's just
    26:47
    politically unstable at the moment and
    26:49
    you know before all the political
    26:51
    instability was one of the friendliest
    26:52
    country's most amazing people you'd ever
    26:54
    want to meet and all my friends used to
    26:56
    travel there but man need to go down
    26:57
    there you need to go down and I never
    26:58
    win I should have gone you know but uh
    27:01
    it would definitely be on my to-do and
    27:04
    check out this again you know how will
    27:08
    things politically start to to become
    27:09
    stable again when the food losses across
    27:12
    the other parts of the planet start to
    27:14
    show themselves while these politically
    27:16
    instable in stable area suddenly become
    27:19
    rock-solid politically because then the
    27:21
    food becomes the most valuable commodity
    27:23
    on the planet so then you start to think
    27:25
    about this kinda risk assessment as well
    27:26
    how welcome me will they be to outsiders
    27:29
    to come into their country ten or twenty
    27:32
    of us not a problem
    27:34
    twenty million big problem this is what
    27:38
    we're talking about billions of people
    27:40
    moving around the planet bill Yun's
    27:43
    so you got to think about the upset a
    27:45
    hundred million people want to come into
    27:46
    a new country that's a no-go even ten
    27:49
    twenty million people into Venezuela
    27:50
    would be like alright we're locking the
    27:52
    border off here nobody's coming in this
    27:53
    time yeah so I guess that we're talking
    27:59
    about Europe so like it Sweden and
    28:03
    Norway and Denmark and those areas were
    28:06
    there climate refugees did people beat
    28:11
    that area like some hunter and I'm you
    28:16
    know I do I did a little bit of research
    28:19
    on that and I have some specific numbers
    28:21
    for you Norway because they have the
    28:24
    Atlantic current up there they were able
    28:26
    to keep their ports open and pretty much
    28:28
    ice-free even during the winters I mean
    28:30
    they would get the pack ice that would
    28:31
    come in but again pack ice comes it's
    28:33
    like sand on a beach it comes it goes
    28:35
    they were able to get deliveries in they
    28:37
    weren't socked in completely for like
    28:38
    nine months of ice bound but when the
    28:42
    maunder minimum came that that's exactly
    28:44
    what happened they got iced in every
    28:45
    single summer or every single winter for
    28:48
    more than six months they couldn't get
    28:49
    any deliveries zero when they used to be
    28:52
    able to get some in it during you know
    28:53
    to bring resupplies there was weighed
    28:55
    offshore until the pack ice move
    28:56
    come in and they go back out again the
    28:59
    city is emptied out 90% nine zero for
    29:03
    sale people left up there yeah there was
    29:04
    just nothing they couldn't survive but
    29:07
    the 1600s we didn't have international
    29:08
    shipping we didn't have international
    29:10
    communications there's a lot more thing
    29:12
    they didn't have the roads that we have
    29:14
    now you know there's just a lot of
    29:16
    things they did not have back at that
    29:18
    point but when they came back and say
    29:21
    it's circa 1710 but Norway Sweden and
    29:24
    Finland had emptied out somewhere around
    29:26
    nine zero ninety percent so they came
    29:28
    back to nearly empty cities and it was a
    29:30
    great opportunity to repopulate and you
    29:32
    know people would come back and they're
    29:34
    like I think this is our family's
    29:35
    property but the house fell down because
    29:36
    nobody cared for it for 70 years and it
    29:38
    was made of wood got a couple big you
    29:39
    know pilings in the middle there
    29:41
    otherwise there was massive population
    29:44
    migration during that time massive so
    29:47
    people again you know they didn't have
    29:48
    electricity they didn't have central
    29:51
    power central heating there's a lot of
    29:53
    things we have today that they didn't
    29:55
    have that made those conditions back
    29:56
    then much much much more unbearable and
    29:59
    unlivable than we do today
    30:01
    so like trying to compare that time in
    30:03
    the 1670s or 1650s in Norway with what
    30:07
    we have now in 2019 or 20 in Norway they
    30:10
    got geothermal power up there I mean it
    30:12
    is an entirely different animal marching
    30:14
    into this thing but I do think that
    30:16
    there still will be population migration
    30:19
    when food becomes the most valuable
    30:21
    commodity and countries can't grow the
    30:23
    food for their export revenue anymore
    30:25
    and then things I think will change that
    30:27
    more economic refugee I think then you
    30:29
    would it gets too cold refugee unless
    30:32
    the power grids start to go down year
    30:35
    after year after year during the winters
    30:36
    and people just start freezing in their
    30:38
    homes and they're like you know we can't
    30:40
    do it for the third year in a row we'regonna have to leave now

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    Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment Empty Re: Possible Safe Zones During the Grand Solar Minimum Risk Assessment

    Post  Swanny Sun Feb 16, 2020 12:26 pm

    I've listened to a bit of it. When does he say this freeze will happen?

    Ah I see he's talking about this winter. Good news for us plumbers, plenty of frozen pipes Cool

      Current date/time is Fri Nov 15, 2024 4:48 am