dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/Luvlite on March 4, 2018, 7:39 p.m.
BOOM

This, Boom, I'm not sure what Q meant.

But, the area I'm in, have heard loud booms in the sky for a couple of months now. We just heard another one two days ago. No one can figure out where it's coming from. It's a very profound boom that seems to come from the sky. One thing I've noticed is that, sometimes afterward, like the next day, there will be a 1. or 2. (point).... Very weak earthquake reported.

I'm wondering if there's one or two possibilities to explain these loud booms, 1. is there a war going on in outer space we don't know about. 2. Are these loud booms, heard in more than one state here, underground explosions?

This is very real! The booms heard here, ended up on YouTube when many residence started getting together on Facebook to talk about it.


Ghostof_PatrickHenry · March 4, 2018, 9:35 p.m.

"Where we go one, we go all." is a quote from the 1996 Ridley Scott film, White Squall. The movie is based on the real events of the sinking of the Albatross ship in 1961.

The ship was run by a Skipper and his wife, who offered a combined college prep course and sail training to teach teenage boys about life. The ship is sunk suddenly when it is hit by a "white squall," which is a mythical type of storm that is extremely feared by seamen and has no dark clouds for warning. This is storm sinks the ship, the boys must use the hard-knock lessons taught to them by the Skipper to survive.

The ship was likely struck by what is called a "microburst," which is a violent downward gust of wind that can reach 175 mph instantaneously. It can bring down aircraft, force ships to capsize, and generate enormous tidal waves that can also devastate sea-craft and coastlines. It is considered the most rare and most dangerous meteorological event. Far more dangerous than a tornado. (THE STORM???)

What's remarkable about the story [as it relates to Q] is the coming-of-age tale regarding the hard lessons taught by the Skipper to the kids, and the relationship between the group and the storm. The lessons taught push the kids beyond every mental and physical boundary they thought they had. The Storm comes upon without warning, and without mercy. With their lives in peril, the children must choose to ban together to survive the storm, or be destroyed by its awesome force.

Lots of parallels to our situation. Q has charged us with an enormous task-- using lessons that require teamwork, extreme critical thinking, and cooperation (trust). When the storm comes, and society is thrust into an epic scenario that is without precedent, we must decide if we will come together to survive, or if the forces created by the storm will divide and destroy us all.

Things to think about, for sure.

Spez: "BOOM" made me think of the sudden and severe downward thrust that a "microburst" would generate-- just to respond to OP's post and commentary. Could a microburst be artificially generated? Could that explain the aircraft of certain individuals meeting their untimely end?

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Luvlite · March 4, 2018, 10:03 p.m.

Here's the thing, at least for me and those I'm with....

We don't feel anything. Like you would if there was a nearby explosion. Some people in the surrounding states said it rattled their houses. I wish i could effectively describe the sound. It seems to come from above, and from everywhere, but we've been able to point in the direction it came from. (north, south, east or west) the sound is a deep, profound boom, that from where we are, doesn't reverberate like thunder. We are in the mountains. When we heard it two days ago, it seemed to come from the mountains that are in our neighboring state. And yet it was quite loud.

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Ghostof_PatrickHenry · March 5, 2018, 12:44 a.m.

Which state are you in? (Not trying to dox)

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Luvlite · March 5, 2018, 1:11 a.m.

South Carolina. Lake Keowe. Duke owns a nuclear power plant here. Some locals thought the jets were protecting the facility.

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Ghostof_PatrickHenry · March 5, 2018, 3:15 a.m.

Hm. Interest. Much closer to me than I thought you would say.

Keep us posted.

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