The Inuits are indigenous people that have inhabited the arctic regions of the U.S., Canada, and Greenland for over 1,000 years. Their lives have depended on being able to correctly forecast the weather, using skills passed down through generations.
Although their forecasting has been historically accurate, in the past 20 years something has run amok with their ability to predict the weather. The old weather signals don’t seem to indicate what they used to.
The Inuit claim that the Earth has ‘shifted’, or as they put it ‘wobbled’, and they are warning NASA about it.
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Absolutely. I’ll be the head of the organization. I will be looking for two qualified assistants…..
Ha!
well some of the Public … I have seen the trails for years , always happens right before some type of weather front comes in … never fails
Don’t be a heretic brother.. don’t be a GW denier……. everything political, economical, financial, China’s aggression, ISIS is all caused by GW.
one needs to be named Robert … so I can ask for$#%&!@*from P.R.I.C.K. … I could be the second one (or another Johnson) …So they can ask for Big Johnson ๐
DEFINITELY A POLE SHIFT, possibly due to incoming Rogue Planetary system
Doesnt account for the earth being overly warm, and not to mention the solar sytem as a whole.
They’re right. It is shifting. ~1 degree every 20 years in some places. The magnetic lines shift with them. Geology 101.
So …the pole shift do to climate change do to global warming? So all the big frigging earthquakes he talked of in the beginning of the article have nothing to do with it? I’m confused.
We also have an inner pole that that switches back and forth. The inner and outer poles help keep each other stabilized causing a Dynamo effect. Every so-many million years they completely switch, this South pole will be North pole. Magnetically, what we think of as North pole is actually magnetic south pole. The North pole of your compass is attracted to the south pole. Opposites attract.
Cartographic ally speaking, we call that magnetic pole North, though.