Doq Holliday @doqholliday
27 March, 01:49
I could be totally off on this, but if you connect the dots of mass snowfall, colder temps and northern lights showing up as far south as Arizona, it seems like the pole shift has happened or is happening.

Does this mean we will see the ice caps melt soon?

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KungFu Kelly donated @KungfuKelly
27 March, 02:33
In response Doq Holliday to his Publication
If the shift happened, wouldn't the stars be out of place?
Big Dipper is still where it's always been.

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Water Mark @Watermark
The pole is slowly shifting but hasn't 'flipped' (and likely won't for a decade or more). It is the magnetic field which is moving - not the planet.

The stars won't change position unless the planetary axis shifts. Some believe this is possible but if it is true, it isn't really a survivable scenario. So don't worry about it.
04:19 PM - Mar 27, 2023 (E)
In response KungFu Kelly to her Publication
Only people mentioned by Watermark in this post can reply
Former [Corn Pop] Farmer @Corstruction
27 March, 11:57
In response Water Mark to his Publication
Where I'm at the big/little Dipper shifted 30 degrees last year & then shifted again about 15 degrees again back toward their original location. A small circle but the Midwest is a small sphere where all of the Popeye's are working overtime to take down our deep state.

See what I did there?

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Water Mark @Watermark
28 March, 10:52
In response Former [Corn Pop] Farmer to her Publication
I guess I don't 'see what you did there', Farmer.

I'm really bad at understanding sarcasm, especially written, and friends often have to explain their jokes to me. Sorry.

The location of the constellations in our sky relative to our local horizon varies by the season because what constellations are visible at a certain time of day changes due to the relative location of the sun. Spring stars are still present in Fall, they're just washed out by the brightness of the sun during the day.

It is normal and predictable, just like the sun rises at a higher latitude in summer and a lower in winter because of the axial tilt of Earth relative to its orbital plain around the sun.

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