Tuesday, August 17, 2010

NASA Worried About Solar Storms Predicted by Remote Viewers

Exclusive Interview with Major Ed Dames 

By Laurie Nadel, Ph.D., host of The Dr. Laurie Show


"I never worry about the future. It comes soon enough," Albert Einstein allegedly wrote.


But NASA scientists are not on the same page as Einstein. "As we approach the net peak of solar activity expected in 2013, our nation faces multiplying uncertainties from increasing reliance on space weather-affected technologies," stated a press release issued a meeting of the Space Weather Enterprise Forum met in Washington, D.C. on June 8th.


NASA and The National Academy of Sciences are urging the nation's public utilities and Federal government to create back-up systems for power grids and satellite communications before strikes. NASA predicts that a super storm would strike "like a bolt of lightning" that would change the earth's magnetic field so that everything from car navigation systems, cell phones, computers, banking systems, and air travel would be shot.


In fact, anything that relies on electricity as a power source could be incapacitated within minutes. Not only would the bill to fix the damage cost billions, the loss of electricity around the planet would plunge some societies back to the pre-industrial era.


In league with NASA scientists, New York Times' best-selling author Gregg Braden expects that when the earth completes its transit of the Equator of the Milky Way, sometime between 2013 and 2015, electromagnetic storms and solar flares will destroy power grids and damage communications systems.


READ THE FULL STORY HERE...

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