
Crimson Suppository
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Crimson Suppository
@FactsRedpill
Airline Pilot | Rancher | Retired Air Force Fighter Pilot | Aerospace Engineer |Hook ‘em🤘| Bitcoin | Kaspa







Significant ice core data over for the past three million years confirm that major cooling takes place 'without' the influence of CO2. Two new papers published in Nature (March 17-18, 2026) found that CO2 levels played no part in the cooling and were stable and largely unchanging. This finding runs counter to climate change dogma that CO2 levels drive all climate change. The onset of ice age conditions did not come from atmospheric CO2 effects at all, but from deep ocean cooling that preceded the ice ages. The core of the findings from Allan Hills blue ice samples, reveal that the long-term cooling of the last 3 million years happened with only a modest decline in greenhouse gases. Researchers used noble gas ratios (Argon, Krypton and Xenon) trapped in the ice which specifically reflected ocean temperatures. They showed the ocean cooled by 2C to 2.5C - independently of major CO2 shifts. The data show CO2 levels remained relatively stable (broadly below 300 ppm) even as the planet underwent massive cooling and the formation of the northern hemisphere's Arctic ice sheets. Instead of CO2 driving every turn, climate responds to small nudges in ocean circulation and reflectivity (albedo), which then push the system across a threshold. This means the cooling was from changes in total solar irradiance or orbital positioning (the Milankovitch cycles) and oceanic inertia. This is the 'flywheel effect', where the ocean redistributes heat over thousand-year scales, regardless of the thin film of the atmosphere.







🚨 Are We Living Inside a Giant Cosmic Bubble? Scientists Just Raised a Chilling Question… What if the universe around us isn’t as normal as we thought? New astronomical observations suggest that Earth — along with our entire galaxy — may be sitting inside a vast cosmic region where matter is unusually scarce. Scientists call it a cosmic void, but headlines are calling it something far more unsettling: a giant “bubble” in space. This invisible region could stretch billions of light-years across, silently shaping how fast the universe appears to expand when we measure it from Earth. Nothing is collapsing. Nothing is trapping us. Yet this quiet emptiness might be bending our view of reality itself. Could this hidden structure explain one of astronomy’s biggest mysteries — why the universe’s expansion rate doesn’t agree with itself? The idea is still debated, but one thing is certain: space may not be as uniform as it looks, and our place in the cosmos might be far stranger than we ever imagined. 🌠






great, i have to pay to cancel my adobe subscription most pathetic way to get me to keep my subscription lol

Iran new Armed Forces spokesperson is a 1st Lt. 🤨
















