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Over the last 7 days, several solar flares and CMEs (coronal mass ejections) have set off from the Sun as part of Cycle 24 continues towards its apex or maximum. My research over the last 13 years, have pointed to the Sun as the main cause of cyclical natural disasters.

Since the publishing of my two books: Solar Rain: The Earth Changes Have Begun and Global Warming: A Convenient Disguise, the world's leading scientific bodies - such as NASA, NOAA and ESA have come on-board supporting my 1998 "Equation."

Beginning yesterday, six US states were hit with 'extreme weather' in the form of tornadoes, straight-line winds, micro-burst, and wind shears. The states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama S. Carolina, N. Carolina and Georgia suffered at least six deaths, numerous injuries, and severely damaged buildings.

At least six people were killed and dozens more injured as a storm system that spawned several possible tornadoes moved across the Southeast on Wednesday.

Suspected tornadoes were reported in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and South Carolina. Dozens of homes and buildings were damaged, and thousands of people were without power as trees and power lines were downed.

In South Carolina, three people were killed and five injured when a likely tornado swept through a rural community near Rock Hill, about 20 miles south of Charlotte, N.C. In north Georgia, a man was killed when a tree fell on his sport-utility vehicle. Authorities also said an adult and child were killed in central North Carolina.

In eastern Alabama, a suspected twister splintered trees and demolished mobile homes at a pair of housing parks near Auburn University. Fewer than seven months ago, a tornado roared past the campus of the University of Alabama in the western part of the state.

Wednesday's storms were the worst bout of weather for the state since about 250 people were killed during the tornado outbreak in April. Both campuses were spared major damage this time.
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In Rock Hill, Simone Moore told the Herald newspaper she was sitting on her back porch when she saw the tornado touch down and then quickly move back up. She said after the storm passed, she noticed a nearby trailer had vanished.

"Everything's gone," Ms. Moore said. "Even the cows in the pasture."

Trees fell on homes in southeastern Mississippi, where Jones County emergency director Don McKinnon said some people were briefly trapped. Mobile homes were tossed off their foundations. In all, 15 people were hurt in the area.

At least 10 people were injured when a possible tornado ripped through an area south of Lexington in North Carolina, destroying one building, damaging several others and leaving thousands without electricity.

Forecasters said a cold front stretching from the Gulf of Mexico to the Northeast was to blame. Temperatures dropped in some areas from the low 70s to the 50s as the front passed, and winds gusted to near 30 miles an hour.

Damage was reported in several parts of Alabama. In Sumter County, in the west-central part of the state, an elderly woman was in her home as a tree crashed into it. She had to be taken to the hospital.

In Tuscaloosa, home of the University of Alabama, the day was a reminder of the threat of violent weather for communities still recovering from the April tornadoes.

"It makes you sit up on the edge of the chair a little more," said Tom Perryman, who works for the school system in Tuscaloosa County, which was hard-hit in April.

In southern Louisiana, a suspected tornado hit a neighborhood in Houma, splintering a home. Crews helped clean up storm debris near a school and the Red Cross sent workers to help with damage assessments.

The paragraph below is in-part, the reason why geo-scientists and astro-scientists from all parts of the world have allowed me into their guarded halls to conduct research for my books. I would say the majority of scientists who study the Heavens (astro) and the Earth (geo) have re-directed their attention to a Sun-Earth connection as the major cause of natural disasters.

In my November 15th 2011 newsletter titled - " Texas, Oklahoma, Tennessee - Is New Madrid Next? Is Solar Activity is Cause?" I wrote the following: "A Nov. 14th long far-ranging halo cme has the potential to set off level 5+ geomagnetic storms within 72 hours. Watch for severe extreme weather. This includes earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricanes, tornadoes, unusual rapid temperature shifts."

Here is the statement from the National Weather Service as to the cause of recent storms: "Temperatures dropped in some areas from the low 70s to the 50s as the front passed, and winds gusted to near 30 miles an hour were to blame.

Equation:

Sunspots = Solar Flares (charged particles) = Magnetic Field Shift = Shifting Ocean and Jet Stream Currents = Extreme Weather and Human Disruption (mitch battros 1998).