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Survivalists in Florida

May 19, 2012 – 11:49 pm | One Comment

Great article in the Miami New Times last week, profiling preppers and survivalists like these folk:
Jorge Villa – after a terrifying experience during Hurricane Andrew he devised his own bunkers, and sells them to folk – some of whom are worried about the end of the Mayan calendar – via his business U.S. Bunkers
Neal Wiseman – moderates a group called the South Florida Survivalist Network, and has a year’s worth of food stored for his family, should the need arise:

Chris Petrovich – prepper for 25 years. He has helped others “cache extra fuel and food, stashed in public-storage units and underground, at intervals on an 800-to-1,200-mile path out of Florida. Amid darkness and chaos, skirting burning sugarcane fields and accidents and roadblocks, they’ll drive from cache to cache toward a secret inland hiding spot, exhausting the last available remnants of the petroleum age.”
While Petrovich himself plans on staying, I agree with …

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Home » Mayan Calendar, Supernova

Spooky Action from Supernova in 3113BC?

Submitted by Robert Bast on February 22, 2009 – 11:15 amOne Comment

Swiss physicists have unleashed a large-scale experiment that proves what Einstein described as “spooky action at a distance.” Although this has been proven previously, this is the first time it has been shown to work over a long distance.

From Geneva they sent a pair of photons along fiber-optic cables, one to each village. When they measured one photon upon its arrival, the other changed instantaneously —though it was 11 miles away. This weird linkage, called quantum entanglement, raises exotic possibilities like teleportation. When two particles are entangled, the measurement of one immediately affects the other, no matter how distant.

…One might assume that one particle sent an ultrafast signal to its partner, says physicist Nicolas Gisin, a member of the University of Geneva team. If that were true, the quantum communiqué would have traveled at more than 10,000 times the speed of light, something difficult to reconcile with the known laws of physics.

The story is one of the top 100 science stories of 2008, as recently judged by Discover magazine.

I find this topic interesting because it is the foundation of one of the more bizarre ideas I have had for 2012 – perhaps the 2012 event was not predicted by the Mayans, but rather seen. If information can travel faster than light, yet the damage a supernova can cause will travel just under the speed of light, the news could get here thousands of years beforehand.

Therefore it might be possible to deduce, if the information arrived in 3113BC, and the damage will arrive in 2012AD, how far away the object is, and possibly identify it.

Free eBook - 2012 Facts and Myths - by Robert Bast. Don't Be Deceived!

One Comment »

  • kate sisco says:

    This experiment has made it into history and there are books written about it; the one I read went into depth ( I slogged through it) and the upshot was that they would have to be exact twins, and hence not transferable to tech. Plus I suspect that this effect is only replicatable as a specific time here on Earth, like now same as ‘discovering’ our gravity well verifying relativity. Seems like now is the time and you should wonder why specifically now.
    Possibly there is an energy source, those pesky neutrinos, at work. And if so, possibly they are energizing Fluff and Fluff is compressing Sol’s heliosphere down to just a few close orbits. What might science accomplish in a compressed atmosphere (coutesy of Fluff)?

    Where did this energy come from and when might it suddenly depart?

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