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May 26, 1998: Weather & Planetary Changes - Richard C. Hoagland
Published 2 years ago
Description
Art Bell welcomes Richard C. Hoagland for a wide-ranging discussion connecting weather anomalies, volcanic activity, school violence, and animal behavior through the lens of hyperdimensional physics. Hoagland argues that the geometry discovered at Cydonia on Mars points to a century-old branch of physics pioneered by Maxwell and Kelvin, suggesting that energy from higher dimensions flows into our reality through rotating planetary bodies and their changing configurations.
Hoagland presents laboratory evidence that the gravitational constant, long assumed to be fixed, has shown measurable deviations of six-tenths of one percent across experiments conducted in New Zealand and Germany. He contends that if fundamental constants like gravity are not truly constant, then cosmological models built on those assumptions, including redshift-based distance measurements and dark matter theory, may be fundamentally flawed. He also questions whether the December gamma ray burst was truly 12 billion light years away.
Connecting these ideas to current events, Hoagland notes that Popocatepetl volcano sits precisely at 19.5 degrees latitude, the key angle predicted by his model for peak hyperdimensional energy transfer. He suggests that rising sea levels, intensifying hurricanes, El Nino, and even unusual animal behavior are all manifestations of a long-period cycle driven by undiscovered outer planets approaching a peak configuration.
Hoagland presents laboratory evidence that the gravitational constant, long assumed to be fixed, has shown measurable deviations of six-tenths of one percent across experiments conducted in New Zealand and Germany. He contends that if fundamental constants like gravity are not truly constant, then cosmological models built on those assumptions, including redshift-based distance measurements and dark matter theory, may be fundamentally flawed. He also questions whether the December gamma ray burst was truly 12 billion light years away.
Connecting these ideas to current events, Hoagland notes that Popocatepetl volcano sits precisely at 19.5 degrees latitude, the key angle predicted by his model for peak hyperdimensional energy transfer. He suggests that rising sea levels, intensifying hurricanes, El Nino, and even unusual animal behavior are all manifestations of a long-period cycle driven by undiscovered outer planets approaching a peak configuration.