Saturday, March 2, 2024

the research regarding almost anything that any of us does helps future mankind

 I find what I'm best at is being what might be called a Synthesist. What I mean by this is I can see divergent things and how they relate to one another. So, in a sense I seem to be a profiling synthesist in analyzing information on almost any subject. I tend to notice things that others might not regarding greatly different subjects.

The part of me that thinks like a builder or an engineer which was what I was trained to think like in my childhood by my father who was valedictorian of his senior High school Class and led to him training me to be an electrician in my teens and me studying computer programming and computer operations in my late teens and early twenties combines with my understanding of psychology from studying to be a psychologist later on in college. Even though I wound up getting married and having a son and having to go to work to support us all by age 26 I have this background which is interesting. Then on top of this I have traveled a lot around the world especially in my 30s to 60s when I could better afford to do this. Before then I mostly traveled the western United States a lot from Montana to New Mexico to California where I mostly grew up to Washington the state and to Hawaii where I lived in 1974 on the big Island and then later I lived on Maui with my family in 1989 and 1990.

What I'm saying here is that each of us that has the time to do research like I do every day should try to publish their research in order to benefit others. 

One cannot predict which facts that people find out will save individuals or the whole human race from extinction.

For example, the computers used to predict the weather better every day save countless lives around the world from Hurricanes, tornadoes and other weather events and earthquake events. So, because we have invented predicting computers of weather events we might not go extinct as a human race during the next few centuries of Global Climate changes.

We might instead find ways to adapt to the changes before we all are gone from the earth.

This is my hope.

It is also my hope that at some point we can technologically fix the earth so we can continue to live here in some way too.

Otherwise the surface of the earth will not be where we can be most of the time and we will have to move underground sort of like prairie dogs or other creatures that live underground when the weather isn't compatible for survival.

I presently see the winds (as a precognitive intuitive) as the one thing humans will have the hardest time with in trying to survive.

It isn't that the winds will be 100 to 500 miles per hour every day. No!

But, even if you have one day a year where winds are 100 to 500 miles per hour every tree and blade of grass and potentially every house made of wood and not metal or cement might be gone. So, you would only need one day a year to be 100 to 500 miles per hour winds to end civilization on the surface of earth potentially in that area of the earth.

Something to think about.

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