Earth's Crust Shifting: 3/4 Million Train Derailment Hits on Google in Past Month
From <jadinardo@optonline.net>
Date Sunday, September 4, 2011 10:49 am
To SurvivePX@yahoogroups.com ,
One month ago, I posted this report, below, showing around 374,000 google hits on the term "TRAIN DERAILMENT" just over the prior one month period. Today, the number of hits on that same term has nearly doubled for the latest 30-day period.
Earth's crust is rapidly destabilizing. Prepare to witness and experience building failures worldwide, and gas main breaks, sparkinginfernos such as the one in San Bruno, California. Also, prepare for water main breaks, causing major flooding with water shortages. Prepare for highway and railway dislocations, with consequent shortages of food and other vital goods. Prepare for societal chaos. This time, I'm saving today's google hit page, just to prove that it now reads "740,000 hits," because one month from now, it will likely be much higher. We can shun, but we cannot run, so we had better think about what to do.
John
----- Original Message -----
From <jadinardo@optonline.net>
Date Sun, 07 Aug 2011 00:01:59 GMT
To SurvivePX@yahoogroups.com,
Subject Earth's Crust Shifting: 1/3 Million Train Derailment Hits on Google in Past Month
Earth's crust is shifting. I wonder why? Could it be that Earth's mostly molten iron core is being heated up, causing magma plumes to billow up through the molten rock mantle to impinge on the crust of the Earth? Why . . . that makes no sense at all, unless you're a scientist studying the unprecedented shifts in the magnetic poles, the seabed eruptions, the wildest weather in recorded history, the greatest earthquake activity in recorded history, the greatest volcanic activity in recorded history, and on and on. Look at this: over a third of a million google hits on the term "TRAIN DERAILMENT," just in the past month! This many train derailments suggests that the ground is shifting.
John
Replies
Sure thing. Would sinkholes also fit into that category?
You know, you're right. We should track them all and then total them, because all of them add up to earth movement for whatever reason. And that is the larger picture. Why? Because it would include smaller, as well as larger, movements.
Cheryl,
Thanks for picking up on the issue of water main and gas main breaks. Yes, the google hit count
of these types of incidents should be tracked monthly, so as to paint the ongoing picture of these
squeaks and creaks in Earth's crust, which are precursors to the catastrophic geological
displacements -- earthquakes, landslides, methane bursts, and volcanic eruptions.
I don't know if freight trains use electronic instrumentation like metrolinks disneyland-type monorails, but if they do then the CME's certainly could be messing with their brains. If we see train derailments in areas that have power outages, like yesterday's outage from AZ to San Diego, etc., then that would answer that question.
I would say that number of derailments on google is still a good, quick and easy way to track changes in the ground, in general. The earth is shifting, whether by tectonic plate movement or shrinkage due to heat and drought. Trying to track them individually is nigh impossible.
On a related note, I did a search for water main breaks and saw there were too many to count. I then found a site that shows the aggregate (US only): http://www.watermainbreakclock.com/. Perhaps there is a site that tracks train derailments; I haven't had time to research it. Water mains breakage obviously, like derailments, show earth movement too; same with ruptured gas lines.
Thanks, Alex and John, for a very good discussion. This makes us more aware as we pass through hot/dry places to respect (give lots of distance) between the train gates/tracks and us.
On that note John,
Anyone and everyone traveling Northeast please be extra careful up in NY and PA
Alex,
You have a good point there regarding heat causing deformations in train tracks. Now that you mention it,
the heat and the severe drought cause the ground to shrink, and this would cause tracks to sink down
under the weight of the trains. Likewise, with water-logged soil.
Alex Cortes said:
Kim,
Can you check youtube for other reports of such rumblings? Maybe others in our group would
like to do the same, and then post links to any eyewitness videos they may have discovered.