Anonymous ID: 0df304 May 4, 2020, 5:48 p.m. No.9031471   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1492 >>1516 >>1637

>>9031435

The WW vibrations, I assume, is what was meant.

But I could be wrong. There was moar to that story, and most of us will probably never know.

We'll just pretend like it was the Mayan Apocalypse, so we can give the new-agers some to be all like WHOAman about

Anonymous ID: 0df304 May 4, 2020, 6:09 p.m. No.9031689   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9031516

I don't think you understand what I maeant.

I wasn't writing off the event as new age bull shit.

It's sheople's reaction to things they don't comprehend but want to feel cool or hip or whatever it is that makes normies feel normie inside.

 

Earth's natural frequencies are studied, but when someone who doesn't necessarily know te subjects involved, and they wish to learn, when one searches for answers, they typically get flooded with "new-age" "trends" (It's really bull shit. I'm trying to be nice, but we all know it's hippie bull shit), instead of factual information. There in lies the problem. When one wishes to learn, there is no one capable of teaching. Yet, someone everyone keeps walking around like they know everything ever, because "smart phone good".

 

So, I hope that cleared up any issues in regards to that which you thought I may have dismissed. The "event" itself may have been testing of top secret technological capabilities, for all we know. It's just as likely that, if not moar, than a "natural" occurrence. The natural aspect of Earth's Electromagnetic activity is beyond fascinating, but often considered a slide when brought up amidst /qresearch/. Still, I think it's incredibly important that we do study those types of things because all Life on Earth kind of depends on it. And if we don't understand the mechanisms, there's a serious chance we as a species could get caught completely off-guard in a very not cool way.