The resulting geomagnetic storm reached severe (G4) status, causing communications disruptions around the world and increasing the potential for major earthquakes.
It's worth noting that this peak in the solar cycle has come earlier than originally predicted, and as solar activity decreases, so do temperatures on Earth.
As we have mentioned many times before, the climate and Earth changes are strongly influenced by solar activity and the electrical interaction between our star and the Earth. And it's interesting to observe that even when the sun is at its peak, we see record snow and low temperatures around the world:
- California: 10.5 feet of snow after massive blizzard.
- Colorado: Mid-March storm dumps up to 5 feet of snow.
- North Platte, Nebraska: Record snowfall with 17.4 inches in one day.
- Newfoundland, Canada: Storm dumps up to 2 feet of snow.
- Afif, Saudi Arabia: Desert covered in hail or snow in rare event.
- Southern Spain: Snow falls on Malaga following a dramatic drop in temperatures overnight
- Portugal: 86°F (30°C) to snowfall in a matter of hours.
- Indonesia: Flash floods, landslides wreak havoc - 26 dead, 11 missing, over 80,000 evacuated.
- Madagascar: At least 18 dead as Cyclone Gamane strikes - more than 20,000 displaced.
- Kazakhstan: Spring floods trigger evacuation of 10,000 people.
- Fiji: 16 inches of rain in 24 hours
- Southern France: A foot of rain in 48 hours.
Or watch it on Rumble or Dailymotion.
To understand what's going on, check out our book explaining how all these events are part of a natural climate shift, and why it is taking place now: Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection
Check out previous installments in this series - now translated into multiple languages - here.
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"Tennessee Governor Bill Lee has now signed legislation into law that bans any form of climate engineering operations over the State of Tennessee. Courageous Tennessee lawmakers in the Senate and House had previously passed the legislation which put it on the governor's desk, it has now been signed into law. Though other states have tried, Tennessee has succeeded due to their solid, straightforward and simple bill. Now other states can follow suit by utilizing the Tennessee legislation as a template for their own. The following is an excerpt from the legislation that is now the law:
"Prohibits the intentional injection, release, or dispersion, by any means, of chemicals, chemical compounds, substances, or apparatus within the borders of this state into the atmosphere with the express purpose of affecting temperature, weather, or the intensity of the sunlight."
We need every state in America to follow what Tennessee has now successfully accomplished." -Dane Wigington