“Depend upon it, sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.”
Samuel Johnson
Many in dissident circles are attracted to unconventional theories that wildly conflict with what the big bland mass of people in the middle of the Bell Curve unquestionably accepts as truth. It runs the gamut – from ethnic blood libels and the nefarious creation of the Federal Reserve to the missing people in national parks (see the work of David Paulides) and the real stories behind the architectural calamities in Oklahoma City and NYC.
Some of these stories are more important than others with many seeming to have a tantalizing but an illusive common thread connecting them.
The ancient races and the peopling of the Americas is indeed interesting. The truth would no doubt upset both the sentiments and possibly even the political arrangements with tribes in North America. Consider the ancient lost race of pygmies in Tennessee, which has overwhelming evidence to support it. Take a look beyond the conventional sources and understand what the DNA of the Anasazi and Zuni Indians might mean. Central and South America conceal truths that also might ding the national pride and group identities of many if fully explored and exposed. (There are remote mountain villages in the Andes where idiosyncratic customs, dress, language, and even village names are linked to particular villages in China, suggesting regular travel even colonization centuries before the timeline permits.)
Narrative upsetting revisions are contained by our rulers for obvious reasons. Consider recent truths that have escaped and that are now radically changing the conversation. Circa 2015, several important papers were published using genetics to prove the origins and character of early human migration, who shares and who does not share common ancestry, plus quite a bit more. In a sane world, this information would have already forced immediate policy changes. This rapidly accelerating area of research is, of course, being censored, but the damage has been done; out of Africa fables have been exploded, biological proof explaining racial differences has entered mainstream discussions…none of it is going away.
Truths like these do matter. But in a grander context, maybe not so much.
There’s a whole other class of fringe topics out there that are not quite as popular among the conspiratorial minded, largely because they involve complicated data and it can get tedious. Climate change broadly falls into this category. However, there is a field adjacent to climate change that has been strongly suppressed for decades, but which is now resurgent. This other discipline arguably is the biggest missing puzzle piece of all because it cuts across all the other mysteries, including our history, anthropology, and man’s collective myths and religions.
I’ve been pulling on this thread for years and I try to remain skeptical because, as with any unconventional idea, it is wise to intentionally practice cool objectivity to prevent overreaction and spiraling.
Unlike my rants with those occasionally trapped in a room with me where I can expound on the validity of secret societies, the likelihood of Atlantis, and the proof of malevolent spirits possessing people, I have never spoken about this particular subject because I genuinely believe it would greatly upset people who don’t already have a disbelieving posture. If this sounds like state justification for withholding sensitive information to not “panic the Bell Curve,” I suppose it is.
So dear reader, I’m trusting if you’re reading Identity Dixie, you’re already pacing sufficiently and will do your own research and soberly accept, reject, or choose to monitor.
Catastrophism…What If?
Catastrophism is a sensitive subject. Often it is too closely associated or conflated with some variant of either Creationism or things that sound too pseudo-science for intelligent people to even slow down to consider (Planet X and Nibiru).
Thanks to his appearances on Joe Rogan, Randall Carlson has probably done more than any other person to reintroduce people to the idea that there are predictable and recurring catastrophic events on earth. These events explain our geography, planet’s behavior, and shared stories more convincingly and with more compelling data than anything you’ve seen in a textbook or university classroom over the last 75 years trying to explain the same things.
But Carlson has some idiosyncratic takes and in graduating from him to look more seriously into proving or disproving catastrophe theories, I was introduced to a whole new level of understanding with Ben Davidson and the team at the unfortunately named, Suspicious 0bservers.
With daily (it really is too much) reporting and analysis of the global weather, space, and geological observation centers (government, private, academic), they have reframed Catastrophism into the couldn’t-be-more-serious science that unifies all the forces acting on the planet: solar cycles, geomagnetic cycles, pole reversals, the fluctuation in earth’s rotational speed (yes, it’s a thing), the hugely important role of interplanetary dust, and the interrelated dynamics of a half dozen other forces that are measured and observed. Mainstream scientists are taking note and being forced to engage. This is one of the controlled narratives “they” definitely don’t want to escape.
The concern with all this, and which Davidson and team have been challenging peers and others to pay attention to, is that literally every marker in this complicated interplay is pointing to something very big already underway and which is beginning to seriously wind up.
Bottomline Up Front
While it is true, “…Of that day and hour no one knoweth,” the evidence seems to be uncomfortably mounting that we might at least, “knoweth the month.”
There are a great many rather serious people, not cranks or doom-grifters, who think The End is 20-30 years away.
As the earth’s continuing magnetic field weakens, and coinciding (among other bad things) with the extraordinary scale of a 12,000 year solar discharge event, there will be civilizationally damaging effects that will occur even before the full impact of the solar induced disaster somewhere around 2040-50.
The finale could include unimaginable earthquakes, volcanoes, and crustal shifts that will probably send mile-high continent-sweeping waves across the globe. Sudden glaciation of the kind that flash-froze mammoths is likely. Most people will be outright killed. Many surviving will actually lose their minds in terror. Starvation will fate most of whoever is left.
And yet, as has happened over and over, a remnant of mankind will survive and they will tell about it.
These are the recurring events that inform the pictographs on canyon walls around the world and our common stories of floods, fire from the sky, and the sun and earth appearing to stand still.
It just so happens that the Appalachians, sections in the Rockies, and the Mongolian plateau are the few places you want to be, not just because of the elevation, but because their river systems have established drainage back to the sea.
It would be impossible to talk about world-ending cataclysms without factoring in the baggage of all the kooks clouding our opinions or the desensitization to information like this after decades of wading through bogus and real conspiracy theories. It is impossible to not be jaded or to prevent our personal biases from keeping us objective yet open.
And with this topic, there unavoidably comes an unhealthy dose of speculation along the lines of not only do governments know, but how looming catastrophe explains why the vast underground tunnel systems exist, why we’re accelerating our space-based aspirations and plans for habitats (Musk predicts he will rocket people to Mars in less than ten years), and why we’re being distracted and divided by ginned-up crises. Let’s not forget the possibility that there is a vaccine related culling of the population taking place and what role 5G may play in the near future. And what about the Chan Thomas book classified by the CIA talking about this very subject of recurring global catastrophe?
You get it. Who the hell knows?
This geeky end-of-year documentary by Ben Davidson is more than enough to familiarize yourself.
What Do You Do With This?
I’ve always appreciated the Samuel Johnson quote at the beginning. I’ve had several incidents and come-to-Jesus moments in life. They’ve helped sharpen my focus, actions, and how I spend my remaining time. In each of these, like the man in Mark 9:24, my faith has been both tested and has matured, “I believe; help my unbelief.”
Entertaining this possibility, like being given a terminal diagnosis, a lot of issues and conspiratorial theories become irrelevancies. If the planet has indeed already entered into its next major catastrophe cycle and this will become plainly observable as soon as 2040, my biggest concern will not be merely surviving, but that my beloved, my children, and that I have remained faithful and that we are prepared in the only way that ultimately matters.
‘Cause down in Alabama, you can run, but you sure can’t hide.
Great links. Thanks.
I’m familiar with Ben Davidson’s channel. I look at the world through a biblical lens, and I believe the great flood was the first catastrophe humanity experienced. That the pictographs and cave drawings represent those experiences. But I also believe before God created humanity there was another world here, with dinosaurs and mammoths, etc. There is no doubt they were destroyed by cosmic events as described by Davidson.
I believe we are headed for a time the Bible describes as so tumultuous that if He does not come back, no flesh will be left alive. That islands will move away, that earthquakes will occur in ‘diverse places’. That a giant mountain sized asteroid called Wormwood will crash into the ocean, that the stars will fall from heaven like a ripe fig tree.
The Book of Daniel, Revelation and Christ’s prophecies in Matthew seem to corroborate this theory nicely. Interestingly the idea that mankind gets 6,000 years and God gets 1,000 for His kingdom, per Biblical genealogy and dating, 6,000 years will tick around the year A.D. 2032.
I believe the 2030s is it. 2040s at the latest for us, gents. But Christ is returning. As is stated in the videos, “No fear.”