The Variable Sun and Its Effects on Earth

The message has been loud and clear for many years—a community of scientists insisting that human activity is warming our planet, taking humanity to the edge of a precipice. Ben Davidson But now, as science begins to understand earth’s place in the electric solar system, the meaning of the present warming plateau becomes clearer. 

The Earth-Sun connection, together with the Sun’s galactic environment, can help to explain climate extremes of every kind. Today, new voices and new perspectives are bridging the theoretical gaps, and independent investigations have reached some startling conclusions. No one can know the future, but some of the electrical changes in our solar system could point to catastrophic change on the horizon.

Closing remarks

Climate extremes of every kind and having surveyed just about every argument in this climate change arena I am left to put my money on those climate extremes, back and forth, faster and faster and to greater extremes first and foremost. But to put me on the spot, force me choose between one of the extremes as the more likely future that we are going to see here on earth in the near term the evidence suggests it is going to be the cold.

Whether it’s a late frost that destroys states worth of crops or whether they’re forced to wait months to plant something.

If we go into that grand [solar] minimum and that pattern begins, it is unlikely to change for decades. Perhaps our current temperature focus requires calibration; perhaps something is amiss in science and that notion that something is amiss in science is like second nature to a far larger portion of your professors and publishers than you might imagine. 

From winning the 2013 Nobel Prize to boycotting major journals. Why? The charge? They obscure the scientific process; they push researchers into popular directions so they can bolster their own readership and viewership of their own publications.

That they have tyrannical publishing rules that restrict the researchers’ right to share their own work and that they have a host of other issues, including one that has recently led to what is inarguably one of the most embarrassing things in the history of science. A computer programme developed at MIT, designed to scour the internet for scholarly articles and create intelligent “looking” papers based on things that look like they should go together. It just randomly scoured and pulled together what the computer – the people who made this computer programme themselves – called gibberish papers.

Now, it created literally hundreds, hundreds of these gibberish papers and so many of them got published that one of these prankster PhDs at MIT who used a fake name under which to publish got him to be the 21st most cited scientist in the world!

That’s 15 better than Albert Einstein!

He didn’t exist, he had no real research and in fact that computer programme was so far from being ultimately sophisticated that when one of those prankster PhDs at MIT took a look at what the computers had given them they said ‘this is too unbelievable, this is never going to work, we are going to have to rewrite almost every single abstract’ and that they did, but that’s all they did and that’s all they needed to get published. There was no real review, nothing. If you’d like to look for this, internet search for ‘journal retracts gibberish papers’ you’ll find it’s not just one journal affected by this.

What’s the point? Yeah, maybe something is amiss in science.

There is plenty of focus on global warming, human emission/mitigation, and saving the planet. I wouldn’t argue for doing away with those. Especially the focus on how humans are poisoning the earth. However, for those who can see the gaps in climate understanding, for those who recognise the misguided current temperature focus – you know the road to revelation may just require gloves and a hat, the path forward is clear: eyes open, no fear

*****

Ben Davidson is the researcher behind the Suspicious0bserver channel on YouTube, a channel that has rocketed in only 2 years to over 28 million views with 2 million added a month. Ben was classically trained in law and legal research, before taking up independent research in diverse sciences. His online presence has been a constant source of data dissemination, inspiring public interest in a variety of scientific fields, including the ‘electric universe’ theories. Ben focuses on the daily solar environment and the electromagnetic interactions between the sun, earth, and the galaxy. It was this interdisciplinary “due diligence” that led him to the surprising conclusions he will present at the conference.

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