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We Forgot the Sun Rules

© David Moorhead — July 2007

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Staying Awake wouldn’t be so persistent if daily reports on the Sun’s most recent activities were given as much media time as is purchased for brazen corporate commercials, as well as for retailers’ outrageous blurbs suggesting humans’ choices for stopping climate changes.

How does the Sun rule? Above all, whose hubristic report claims to have figured out how to help the Sun stop a climate from changing? Are we taxpaying hirelings silly enough to imagine corporations could force a climate to change or stop?

Tell me, which climate are we talking about; how long will we enjoy the comforts of the new climate before we have to change the climate again to meet our farcical demands?

Are hurricanes and strong winter storms themselves reasons for alarming media propaganda? Aren’t volcanic activities and earthquake occurrences also ways atmospheres and oceanic systems compensate for naturally unbalanced energy distributions?

The Sun and Earth work together in sweeping cycles to balance biomes’ environments over decades and centuries. Staying Awake ezine helps some of us put together pieces of the puzzle.

We Earthlings have been trained recently to believe too much carbon dioxide (CO2) causes quickened rises in temperatures. But some scientists, who apparently aren’t entirely tethered to corporations, tell us ice core samplings demonstrate carbon dioxide lags, not leads, temperature changes by as much as 800 years.

Myriad temperature and climate cycle probabilities point to the Sun, which impacts the Pacific Ocean’s warming cycles (El Niño) and cooling cycles (El Niña). As the Sun warms itself, so is Earth warmed from solar flares flung from more sunspots. Solar winds and geomagnetic forces impact Earth’s clouds. Low clouds lead to cooling whereas decreased cloudiness tends to warm temperatures.

Earthlings can do little if anything to alter what is perceived as the balancing of our planet’s environments. If there’s any forthcoming disaster, it’s neither atmospheric nor environmental; it’s watching citizens grovel to politicians’ despicable delusions. One day we’ll be forced to remember that we forgot the Sun rules Planet Earth—not corporations, nor our choices for altering climates.

Our constant curiosity is key
to watching what’s being created.
~ David Moorhead