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Archive for the tag “galaxies”

Wormholes Now Splitting Apart

David “Nino” Rodriguez interviews Alex Collier on the war between evil and good new reshaping the planet. Collier has been talking about The X Files since long before The X Files existed. He is especially knowledgeable on how the battle isn’t just restricted to the planet Earth, but extends out into other planets and galaxies.

Here, he predicts a new gold standard is coming, replacing the fiat currency printed like pixie dust around the globe. He says the United States has vast gold holdings, including a secret cache seized from the Philippines, where it had been buried by the Japanese. They had stolen the gold from China over the years of World War II.

Collier explains about the wormholes or portals allowing travel between Earth and other galaxies. There used to be eight of these wormholes, but only three can still operate. As the galaxies have gotten older, they keep expanding and moving further apart — so the connections are not as smooth or stable as they used to be.

He also talks about the alternate civilizations existing within the Earth. This is one reason why we are not permitted free travel in Antarctica.

Shutting Down The Jumpgates

Gene Decode offers an update on the global battle between White Hats and Dark Hats to control the world’s underground bases and jumpgates. Jumpgates are essentially portals through which humans — or space aliens,  even animals or cars — can jump through space and time, traveling to other such portals. These portals can be located elsewhere on Earth or on distant planets, moons, even galaxies far, far away.

For many years, White Hats have been engaged in a war against the Cabal to shut down traffic through portals or at least to place that traffic under the control of the White Hats. The purpose of these battles is two-fold. We do not want belligerent space aliens — say species such as mantids — being transported to Earth to wage war against us. We also do not want open portals that can be used by criminals on Earth to escape justice and flee elsewhere rather than pay for their crimes.

Among the key jumpgate sites Gene Decode discusses are: CERN in Switzerland, the Vatican in Vatican City  and the Svalbard Islands in Norway, Dulce, the Denver International Airport and Area 51 in the United States, Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, Antarctica and Pine Gap in Australia. These are not the only jumpgates. These portals exist in ancient archaeological locales, including the Giza Plateau.

Some of these sites are now fully under White Hat control, but not all of them. As the sites fall from the Dark Hats, “a lot of the Hollywood cabal are trying to get away before the P. Diddy thing comes up, because it’s going to be toast for them” especially as more news emerges surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s adrenochrome crowd. Gene Decode is interviewed here by James Rink in a SuperSoldier talk.

Existence Isn’t Random

Your existence isn’t random—and the mysteries of the human body are proof.

Uncover all the secrets in this episode with Rob Counts from Edge of Wonder.

A human eye looks just like a galaxy or nebula. But the further up you go in size—and the further down you go, too—creation becomes one big, mysterious fractal of smaller objects precisely reflecting larger ones in the universe. Celestial bodies like planets in space, the human body on Earth, and subatomic particles in smaller dimensions have bizarre connections we’re only just beginning to discover. And it all points to amazing conclusions about humanity itself you’ll have to see to believe.

No Photographs Of Earth

Why are there no photographs of Earth? Conspiracy Music Guru gives us his thought-provoking perspective in his musical rendition of  “No Photographs Of Earth.” Video courtesy of GreatAwakening.World.

Decode: Deception Off the Charts

Gene Decode says the level of deception in our world is off the charts. Appearing on the Patriot Streetfighter podcast with Scott McKay, Decode says, “Creation is infinite, like God. So there’s an infinite number of beings, some of them billions of years ahead of us (technology wise).”

He says NASA has actually plotted 600,000 million galaxies and there are millions of planets alone in the Milky Way Galaxy. On top of that, Decode says, we’ve been lied to about the number of planets in our solar system, “We have 11 planets at third density,” he says. “And by the time you add up first, second, third, fourth and fifth densities, you have 90.”

McKay and Decode also talk submarine waterways that come off the coast and dock as far inland as Missouri, how we’re still stuck in the technology of the late-19th century and about beings, including our future selves, are so advanced, they now communicate beyond telepathy, employing mind thoughts. Decode wraps up the podcast with a stunning update on the Afghanistan chaos.

2020 Not So Bad For Science

While 2020 left a lot to be desired for many of us, it wasn’t such a bad year in science. Last year, scientists found ludicrously fast stars, ancient galaxy clusters and developed a camera that could change how we study the night sky.

The fast star–S4714– was perhaps the most intriguing discovery. It was spotted at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy traveling ludicrously fast, like 85 millions kilometers per hour, or 8 percent the speed of light. A star that fast could leave Earth on a Monday and arrive at Pluto on a Wednesday night. Tune in to more discoveries in this episode of SciShow.

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More Galaxies Than We Thought

The total number of galaxies in the visible, observable universe is much higher than we thought. Surprisingly, if you began a raw count of one galaxy per second right now, you probably would reach about three billion near the end of your life.

Common knowledge in the scientific world puts the inexact number of galaxies at around 100 to 400  billion, not counting those in the invisible universe that is beyond our reach. And this idea of an observable universe is important, because the cosmos is expanding and what once were the edges are now disappearing beyond our view.

Although there are galaxies beyond our reach that we will never observe, we have our hands full with those we can view. And, scientists note, they come in a variety of shapes and sizes. Here’s more with Anton Petrov.

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Creepiest Place in the Universe

Bootes Void, without a doubt, is the darkest, loneliest and largest place in the universe, with the exception, perhaps, of the cold spot. Also labeled The Great Void, Bootes Void is an enormous expanse of empty space in the middle of the Bootes Constellation, extending 350 light years in diameter.

An expanse of this size should usually contain tens of thousands of galaxies and trillions of stars. But the Bootes Void is basically a patch of nothing smack in the middle of the universe–no particles, no molecules, no noise, no dust, no rocks. While the mystery has baffled scientists for decades, theories abound.

Could this expanse be the other side of a black hole-turned-wormhole? Or home to the most powerful virus in the universe? Or perhaps a universal alien civilization that controls all the energy from its host star? Tune into Sea for more.

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The 13 Billion-Year-Old Photo

In the last 30 years, the Hubble Telescope has taken millions of incredible photos of distant stars and galaxies. But Hubble’s best images have come and gone, and the world’s most famous telescope will sadly come to an end in the not-to-distant future. This episode of Primal Space looks at how Hubble managed to capture an image of the most distant galaxy in the known universe, located 32 billion light-years away.

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Trillions of Galaxies in Universe

The Milky Way Galaxy is our cosmic home, but we are definitely not alone in the observable universe. With the help of the revolutionary Hubble telescope, astronomers took their first deep look at the universe in 1995 and revealed a mind-blowing estimate of 120 billion galaxies. With the advanced technology of the Hubble and other telescopes, a new analysis of deep space has led astronomers to revise that estimate 10 fold into the trillions, since 90 percent of the galaxies in the universe are too faint and too far away for the current generation of telescopes to observe. Tune in to the full story presented by Videos From Space.

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