In WWII, short wave radio was the main means of communication and coordination for armies. At this time, the RCA (Radio Corporation of America) knew that sunspots were connected to short-wave radio interference. The American government obviously did not want to risk a communications blackout during crucial operations so they tasked John Nelson of the RCA with figuring out the coorelation between the two.
John Nelson did indeed find that sunspots caused electromagnetic interference but something else also has that effect and to a much greater extent; planetary alignment. He found that when planeta were aligned at 90 and 180 degrees with each other with the sun as the focal point, it would cause measurable electromagnetic interference far greater than what sunspots could produce. The more planets involved, the greater the effect.
https://youtu.be/-jtqMGKaw6c This video goes into an explanation of the topic (about halfway through) and also includes some interesting bits on numerical patterns I think you guys would find related.
John Nelson's findings were, of course, shunned by the "scientific community" but not one of the clowns ever actually put out anything to disprove anything he said.
So, who cares and what does this have to do with an internet shutdown? Well, guess what's coming up right around the corner? That's right, a significant planetary alignment, 5 planets in fact.
Am I completely convinced of this? Hardly. BUT, there has been a weird uptick recently in chatter about internet and power grid blackouts. In fact, recently the FDA made a PSA about fake news, how to identify it, and how to not fall for it and the example they decided to use? A tweet from someone about how the internet is about to go down. Why did they pick that specific topic? Dunno, coincidence maybe? Why is the Food and Drug Administration doing PSAs about misinformation and, if they were going to do one, why would it be about an internet blackout and not about something tangentially related to food and/or drugs?
Coded message? A warning? Preemptively making it a joke so normies don't take it seriously?
Thoughts?
interesting, thanks for sharing