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Saturday, February 1, 2020

iON | Poles of the Earth

Transcribed by Bert.

[February 28, 2015 Part 2 (35:06 mark)]

Eliza: A while ago, iON, you said: “We just extended the polar integers - the half spin now is melting the South Pole pretty rapidly - but nobody seems to be asking questions about that”.

iON: Um-hmm!

Eliza: Can you tell us a little bit more?

iON: Pole to pole, you’re starting to have the connection. The distance between North and South is becoming greater, which is a good day.

Eliza: The distance between North and South is becoming greater?

iON: Yes.

Jean: iON, so the North and South Pole… the distance is getting greater - that means the earth is getting bigger - the planet’s expanding?

iON: No, it does not.

Eliza: How does the distance become greater if the earth still remains the same size?

iON: The poles are not bound to this plane.

[May 12, 2019 01:00 hour (38:31 mark)]
Bob: Well, what is a “plane", then? We’ve got “realm" and “dimension". What’s a “plane"?

iON: Well, OK! Look here! You got… you have an axis of the earth, correct? The poles are flipping, correct? How far does an axis go and still be an axis? Can it be a million light-years from the center point on X and Y? Yes! So, it can be in another… if you’re going to call that another world a billion light-years away or whatever or whatever – that’s not even accurate - the poles are just flipping. So, the longest distance that it can make is the strongest bond of that magnetic charge. But this… there’s no saying that it stops at the… at Alaska - that’s the North Pole, and it goes just a little bit outside of the crust, and that’s it. No, it goes further than that – the axis – axes. Because there’s not a real stick line that you’re… you know… a line running through magnetic North where the actual axis of it is – the pole.

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