Shift
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Sunflower For the past six years or so I've noticed a few things about the sun.
The first thing I noticed was the intensification of glare on shiny surfaces such as rear windows and chrome trim on cars and trucks is now nearly blinding.
The next thing I noticed was that the sunburns I get are a much fiercer red, deeper in my skin, and longer lasting. These days, my body absorbs enormous amounts of heat within a few minutes after I go outside, and it radiates that heat like a convection oven. I can feel the immense concentration of the sun within my own flesh.
Finally, and probably the observation that clinched it for me, I noticed that water in clear containers grows moss in about a day if left in the sun. I never used to have to cover my water dispenser and other bottles immediately, but now I must or I see a green coating on the walls within a day.
I'm an intuitive rather than scientific person. But no one with a pulse can now argue that global warming is real and intensifying incrementally outside the artificial time frames imposed by man (and by "man" I mean precisely males that have perpetuated patriarchal dominance for the past ten millennia). I suspect that mainstream science has no real grasp of what is actually happening. Scientifc data clearly shows how C02 exacerbates the "problem" of global warming, but it is only one of many factors that have combined into the greater phenomenon.

I'm excited to discover a website that supports what I've intuited for the better part of the past decade. According to several people who have been observing the earth for much longer than that are recording the shifts in energy fields, in the sun's activities, and in underwater volcanic activity that heats up the ocean. The earth is a living, breathing organism affected by the cosmos, and the sooner we all realize that we are part of that organism and all interconnected, the sooner we'll stop fighting wars with each other and begin to shift our attention to a far more harrowing reality: Our Earth could actually become uninhabitable.
The Amazon rainforest is dying at a similar rate that the Earth is heating up. If we lose the Amazon rainforest, we could lose so much oxygen and other unknown factors that compare with human catastrophes like nuclear winter. My best guess is that it's too late to turn this thing around. At any rate, so long as we're focused on war and money and competition and globalization, the Earth continues to die.
And so does the human race.
I didn't mean to be negative, but I don't see much evidence that without intervention we have much of a chance.
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