Yes, we are seeing major climatic events taking place, but we are also seeing the magnetic poles appear to be moving towards a reversal, and we are seeing earthquakes increase more than ten fold as well as volcanoes. None of that can be explained by "climate change" (the hoax formerly known as Global Warming). Something major is taking place, they know it is coming, they are terrified, so much so they actually suggest blocking out the sun, and yet, they are afraid to tell you what it is. Billionaire bunkers are selling like hotcakes with orders up 1,000% and people like Bill Gates becoming the biggest landowner in the US.Major events happening all over the world right now
https://news.sky.com/story/europe-h...ering-temperatures-to-last-two-weeks-12920226
Plus
Italy no longer has four seasons'
By Hannah Thomas-Peter, climate change and energy correspondent
In Italy today, the number of cities on red alert for extreme heat has climbed from 10 to 15.
Snowball Earth:Tobewholeagain , please get some real data from reputable sources, not from the WEF or forbes magazine articles they play the globalization game, you have been mislead!
Blessings.
the snowball earth theory is interesting, thanks for posting, I will look into it.Snowball Earth:
planet was covered in ice Ancient rocks suggest that ice entirely covered our planet on at least two occasions. This theory may help explain the rise of complex life that followed.
By Laura Poppick | Published: April 5, 2019
NASA
The Earth has endured many changes in its 4.5-billion-year history, with some tumultuous twists and turns along the way. One especially dramatic episode appears to have come between 700 million and 600 million years ago, when scientists think ice smothered the entire planet, from the poles to the equator — twice in quick succession.
Drawing on evidence across multiple continents, scientists say these Snowball Earth events may have paved the way for the Cambrian explosion of life that followed — the period when complex, multicellular organisms began to diversify and spread across the planet.
https://tinyurl.com/2uac5xrf
in going to help you about a bit.Snowball Earth:
planet was covered in ice Ancient rocks suggest that ice entirely covered our planet on at least two occasions. This theory may help explain the rise of complex life that followed.
By Laura Poppick | Published: April 5, 2019
NASA
The Earth has endured many changes in its 4.5-billion-year history, with some tumultuous twists and turns along the way. One especially dramatic episode appears to have come between 700 million and 600 million years ago, when scientists think ice smothered the entire planet, from the poles to the equator — twice in quick succession.
Drawing on evidence across multiple continents, scientists say these Snowball Earth events may have paved the way for the Cambrian explosion of life that followed — the period when complex, multicellular organisms began to diversify and spread across the planet.
https://tinyurl.com/2uac5xrf
I believe God created us in his image to evolve into something greater than the sum of its partsDo you believe in creation or evolution?
agreed it could be the Atlantic rift at the sea bed is going through changes again if runs right round the world.The biggest change coming our way is the warming of our oceans.
As the ocean warms it releases more water into the atmosphere.
This water becomes clouds that block the sun’s worming rays.
This results in a drastic cooling of our oceans bringing our planet into an ice age into the here and now.
How does climate change affect oceans and marine life?
The ocean plays a major role in climate dynamics: 83% of the global carbon cycle is circulated through the ocean. It has absorbed 93% of the excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions since the 1970s.
The ocean is home to between 500,000 and 10 million marine species, contributing enormously to the biodiversity of our planet.
https://tinyurl.com/5n6c92v2
Confronting Climate Change
TAKING THE OCEAN INTO ACCOUNT IS CRITICAL FOR SUCCESSFULLY ADDRESSING CLIMATE CHANGE, AND ADDRESSING CLIMATE CHANGE IS CRITICAL FOR THE FUTURE OF THE OCEAN.
https://tinyurl.com/422eahwy
Data from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows that the average global sea surface temperature – the temperature of the upper few metres of the ocean – has increased by approximately 0.13°C per decade over the past 100 years. A 2012 paper published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters revealed that the deep ocean is also affected, with one third of the excess heat absorbed 700 m below the sea surface. Modelling studies published in IPCC’s 2013 Report predict that there is likely to be an increase in mean global ocean temperature of 1-4oC by 2100.
https://tinyurl.com/3euvjbt7
This would be easy enough to prove, simply determine how fast the sea floor is spreading and if it has speeded up, meaning more tectonic activity. We know we have had a massive increase in earthquakes and volcanoes so it is certainly possible.agreed it could be the Atlantic rift at the sea bed is going through changes again if runs right round the world.
It believed lava came out all over the world that warmed the oceans in the days of Noah, causing a massive ice age
agreed there was three volcanoes in quick succession on December the 22nd 2022 all within one week, one being the biggest volcano in the world,This would be easy enough to prove, simply determine how fast the sea floor is spreading and if it has speeded up, meaning more tectonic activity. We know we have had a massive increase in earthquakes and volcanoes so it is certainly possible.

Death certificates list pollution as cause of death? And 64,000?The longer we take, the more people will die’ - missed promises leave Britain suffering more from heatwaves and fires, nature chief says
"It is about the need for us to run fast towards a much better future," campaigner Craig Bennett said.
By Victoria Seabrook, Climate reporter @SeabrookClimate
Wednesday 19 July 2023 03:44, UK
Broni Lloyd-Edwards![]()
More people will die, more homes will burn, more crops will wither and heatwaves will be harder to bear in Britain until the government delivers outstanding pledges on nature, one of the country's leading environmentalists has said.
The "promises, pledges and rhetoric" of the Conservative government over the last 13 years has "far outpaced" what it's actually doing, according to Craig Bennett, chief executive of the Wildlife Trusts, a federation of 46 conservation charities.
The long-time campaigner pointed to air pollution, which prematurely kills 64,000 people every year in the UK, according to parliamentary figures, and which can be tackled by things like cutting emissions and planting trees.
"The longer we take on that, very simply, the more people die... And perhaps we need to get better at stating it in those terms," he said in an outspoken interview with Sky News.
It comes as the Environmental Audit Committee of MPs today warned government tree-planting is hitting less than half its annual targets.
But the government has cut carbon dioxide emissions by 44%, faster than any other G7 country.
It said it is "going further and faster on nature than any other" - and is spending billions in the process.
I don't quite know how the statistics are worked out this moment,Death certificates list pollution as cause of death? And 64,000?
How exactly does one die by pollution?
While on the subject: why when I'm outside and it's 95 degrees I am told it feels like 105 degrees. It feels the same to me as the day before when it was also 95 degrees?