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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 31, 2017 15:59:23 GMT
As I already have suggested, the earth is wobbling on its axis. And it is no secret, although the transgender bathroom issue is deemed more important by the mass media. As for 34 degrees, I don't know, but it's enough for me to notice. In case you missed it from one of my earlier threads, the position of the moon as seen by me isn't always out of it's normal place. Sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't.....because of the earth's axial wobble.....which I have mentioned on previous occasions. Let me show you how you can prove yourself that you are wrong... Take a compass, every and any night you care to... Find your nocturnal celestial pole (Polaris in northern hemisphere will do, bit more work with Crux Australis in southern hemisphere, but you'll cope)... Write down the compass bearing where it is located every single time... Repeat as often as you like... Through first hand experience, you will learn that the Earth is NOT wobbling on it's axis 👍 As you probably already know, magnetic North has been shifting south for years. And as you certainly know, the magnetic poles have no bearing on this discussion. I am referring to an axial shift.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 31, 2017 16:02:09 GMT
That's libel, man, and it isn't funny. Nearly everything I say is twisted by you, and you seem to think that people are obligated to believe it just because you repeated it enough times, but they aren't. You seem to think the same thing. No, sir. I share what I know with those whom I care about. No one is obligated to believe it, least of all those whom I don't care about. Thanks for bumping the thread, even if that's all you had to say.
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Father Jack
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Post by Father Jack on Mar 31, 2017 16:04:02 GMT
Let me show you how you can prove yourself that you are wrong... Take a compass, every and any night you care to... Find your nocturnal celestial pole (Polaris in northern hemisphere will do, bit more work with Crux Australis in southern hemisphere, but you'll cope)... Write down the compass bearing where it is located every single time... Repeat as often as you like... Through first hand experience, you will learn that the Earth is NOT wobbling on it's axis 👍 As you probably already know, magnetic North has been shifting south for years. And as you certainly know, the magnetic poles have no bearing on this discussion. I am referring to an axial shift. and this axial shift miraculously coincides with the natural magnetic polar shifts in the Earth's mantle, so as to keep the circumpolar stars perfectly still? Fuck me, that is some coincidence! I will give you another clue here as well... Look at any good map... Top and centre will be the deviation between true north and magnetic North for a given year, followed by the annual degrees of plus or minus variation, so that you can calibrate a good compass accurately for any given year... If the Earth was wobbling on it's axis, this wouldn't work... but it does! Surprise surprise.
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Post by general313 on Mar 31, 2017 16:08:57 GMT
And surely you have taken into account the seasonal fluctuation of the moon's declination, which makes it 45 degrees lower in the sky in summer than in winter (full moon at midnight)? Read my last reply to 52 Hertz. Which did not answer my question.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 31, 2017 16:25:52 GMT
Read my last reply to 52 Hertz. Which did not answer my question. Your question was silly. Yes, I know the arcs of the sun and moon gradually change with the seasons. I'm 52 years old and I've been experiencing that for a long time.
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Post by general313 on Mar 31, 2017 17:01:14 GMT
Which did not answer my question. Your question was silly. Yes, I know the arcs of the sun and moon gradually change with the seasons. I'm 52 years old and I've been experiencing that for a long time. Sorry if I injected silliness into this very serious thread.
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puvo
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Post by puvo on Apr 1, 2017 1:42:32 GMT
The axial tilt of the Earth varies by just 2.4 degrees over a roughly 40,000 year cycle... We are currently in the middle of this ever so slight Milankovitch Cycle... This slight cyclical tilt causes large climate shifts, tidal variance, and changes in ecological tolerance of species... If a whopping 34 degree shift had happened in either Earth or the moons axial tilt, everything would be in total chaos... not a little bit, but massively... What you are suggesting is total guff. In case you missed it somehow, we are having climate shifts, and the populace is being told that it is caused by excess CO2 production, which is total guff. Russia, China, and India evidently don't believe it, or if they do believe it, they don't care. The 34 degrees is claimed by the video I posted. I haven't measured it myself. I only know what I see. I have lived here for twelve years (thirteen come July) and .I know roughly where the moon should rise and set and roughly how high it should be at its zenith. If the difference was small I wouldn't notice it. Thanks for your interest in the topic. Again, do you know how much overall variance there is supposed to be in moon and rise/set positions through the cycle? (Roughly, as it changes depending where you are, of course) You used to say it should only be about 5 degrees...
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Post by maya55555 on Apr 1, 2017 3:55:27 GMT
pubo
So pray tell; what is your area of expertise, if anything?
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Post by theoncomingstorm on Apr 1, 2017 3:59:11 GMT
pubo
So pray tell; what is your area of expertise, if anything?
You never know, he could be one of those rare geniuses who are experts in psychology, biology, geology, chemistry, physics, astronomy, dentistry, medicine, veterinary medicine, jewelry, wineries, and stock investment.
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puvo
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Post by puvo on Apr 1, 2017 6:00:15 GMT
pubo
So pray tell; what is your area of expertise, if anything?
None of your business, but in terms of the childish "if anything" comment, let's just say it's a 4 year degree plus a two year full time post grad diploma.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Apr 1, 2017 6:09:26 GMT
pubo
So pray tell; what is your area of expertise, if anything?
None of your business, but in terms of the childish "if anything" comment, let's just say it's a 4 year degree plus a two year full time post grad diploma. Gee, they must be for something really outstanding if you can't bring yourself to brag about them.
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puvo
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Post by puvo on Apr 1, 2017 6:59:49 GMT
None of your business, but in terms of the childish "if anything" comment, let's just say it's a 4 year degree plus a two year full time post grad diploma. Gee, they must be for something really outstanding if you can't bring yourself to brag about them. Erjen, I just have decent internet security. If I tell people what they are, then I'm identifiable. But yeah, well respected degree and post grad diploma. You manage to finish high school? I'm assuming it was a struggle.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Apr 1, 2017 7:16:25 GMT
Gee, they must be for something really outstanding if you can't bring yourself to brag about them. Erjen, I just have decent internet security. If I tell people what they are, then I'm identifiable. But yeah, well respected degree and post grad diploma. You manage to finish high school? I'm assuming it was a struggle. Yes, it was. After my sister died I lost interest in everything and flunked three courses in one semester, but the next year I went to night school to make up for it, passed with flying colors, and graduated with my class. Feel free to have yourself a good chuckle over that if you want.
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puvo
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Post by puvo on Apr 1, 2017 7:32:29 GMT
Erjen, I just have decent internet security. If I tell people what they are, then I'm identifiable. But yeah, well respected degree and post grad diploma. You manage to finish high school? I'm assuming it was a struggle. Yes, it was. After my sister died I lost interest in everything and flunked three courses in one semester, but the next year I went to night school to make up for it, passed with flying colors, and graduated with my class. Feel free to have yourself a good chuckle over that if you want. There is nothing to chuckle about, when it comes to your sister dying. You are the one casting aspersions for no reason. Let's just finish it with my qualifications are far ahead of yours.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Apr 1, 2017 7:34:08 GMT
Yes, it was. After my sister died I lost interest in everything and flunked three courses in one semester, but the next year I went to night school to make up for it, passed with flying colors, and graduated with my class. Feel free to have yourself a good chuckle over that if you want. There is nothing to chuckle about, when it comes to your sister dying. You are the one casting aspersions for no reason. Let's just finish it with my qualifications are far ahead of yours. Qualifications in what?
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puvo
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Post by puvo on Apr 1, 2017 8:07:56 GMT
There is nothing to chuckle about, when it comes to your sister dying. You are the one casting aspersions for no reason. Let's just finish it with my qualifications are far ahead of yours. Qualifications in what? A medical field.
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vomisacaasi
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Post by vomisacaasi on Apr 1, 2017 22:15:03 GMT
Not to worry it will be back in its proper place in time for the eclipse in August.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Apr 1, 2017 22:23:37 GMT
In addition to this massive change in the day/night ratio around most of the world, the giant wobble of the Earth's axis will greatly affect the world's tides.
But of course it's very likely that nobody will notice that either. Because absolutely nobody pays attention to the tides. It's not like ships entering and leaving ports need to pay any heed to them or anything.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Apr 1, 2017 22:34:15 GMT
In addition to this massive change in the day/night ratio around most of the world, the giant wobble of the Earth's axis will greatly affect the world's tides. But of course it's very likely that nobody will notice that either. Because absolutely nobody pays attention to the tides. It's not like ships entering and leaving ports need to pay any heed to them or anything. What your evidence that it would greatly affect the tides?
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vomisacaasi
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Post by vomisacaasi on Apr 1, 2017 22:38:49 GMT
Well since the tides are controlled by the actions of the sun and moon a deviation in the orbit of the moon would affect the tides. That is basic science.
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