78

Predicting the Weather

Todd Hayen

And we are supposed to believe in science without question; we are supposed to lay our lives into the hands of almighty science when it can’t even predict the weather within any sort of useful probability?

Nor can it cure cancer, which in today’s world of highly complicated scientific awareness seems like a rather simple biological mechanism.

Nor can it combat some of the simplest micro-organisms that attack the human body (or so they say). What else can’t science do? And what else has it not yet figured out? Do you have all day (or all week) to hear it? I don’t.

Back to the weather.

When I was 10, I was fascinated with the weather. The year before, my family had moved back to the States after living in Puerto Rico for four years. The weather on that tropical island was rather boring, so I was excited to live somewhere with a varied weather profile.

I got so excited to see snow after four years of deprivation, I could not see straight. I followed the weather forecast with the same intensity that Daddy Warbucks followed the stock market charts. I soon found out, though, that the most reliable way to “predict” the weather was to announce it while it was actually happening. I know that isn’t “predicting,” but at least it was somewhat accurate.

Today, after 60 years of technological advances, they still can’t predict the weather with any sort of reliable accuracy. In fact, I think it is worse than it was in the ‘60s. I think they rely too much on their technology, their algorithms and their faster-than-lightning computer processing. If all that technology and scientific hoopla says it is going to rain, then by gum, it is going to rain, even if it doesn’t.

This morning I woke up to a forecast of no rain, and it was raining. It is funny that once it happens, they adjust the forecast. Last night, hours before the downpour, it said “zero chance of precipitation.” This morning, while it is raining, it said “95% chance of rain” (not sure what the 5% holdout means, maybe just hedging their bet). It sounds like the weather service has come to the same conclusion I came to when I was 10—it is more accurate to “call the weather” when it is happening.

When I was in High School (also several hundred years ago), I read a book on Chaos Theory. It was probably one of the first books on the topic, as it was all the rage in scientific circles. (You can now see what a nerd I was. Being unpopular and unattractive when you are 17 has its advantages.)

The development of Chaos Theory is attributed to Edward Lorenz, who discovered its principles while working on weather prediction in 1961. Figures. This book opened my eyes to a lot of things, and I do often wonder why meteorology continued to be a scientific endeavour after Dr. Lorenz let the cat out of the bag, basically saying the weather is impossible to predict (as it always would be). He’s the same guy who came up with the Butterfly Effect, suggesting that a butterfly flapping its wings in China could affect the weather in Des Moines. (As all good scientists should know, did they conduct experiments on this theory?)

With my eyes now opened, I turned to the Farmer’s Almanac for my weather predicting needs, and I believe I was more successful determining what was going on meteorologically than following the National Weather Service.

Is this just another science bashing article? No, I don’t think so, although I do seem to have had a run on dissing science these past couple of months. It isn’t science I have a beef with, it is our infatuation with it—and our reliance on it. And with that infatuation comes a dismissal for any other “assessment of nature”—like common sense, intuition, and in the case of predicting the weather, woolly caterpillars and trick knees.

I also wonder how much “informed common sense and intuition” is lost due to this 100% reliance on technology to tell us things about nature. I wasn’t kidding when I said, “If the computers say it is going to rain, then good golly it’s going to frigging rain!”

Of course, I have no evidence that any meteorologist ever said this, but I wonder how many people count on weather reports to the degree that if what they predict doesn’t transpire, they don’t really notice. “The weather forecast said it was going to rain today, so we cancelled our picnic,” your friend replies. “Did it rain?” You say, “I don’t know, did it?”

Back in the day, the mid ‘60s when I was going through my “weather phase,” I wondered if the science gods given the task to predict the atmospheric performance coming up the next day, or the next week, actually looked at charts, patterns, temperatures, barometric pressures, cloud formations, and then “drew a conclusion” based on objective information, but the conclusions were more subjective through human analysis.

Much like doctors used to do in determining a treatment plan for their patients. No computer “told” them what to do. No computer “predicted” the weather. Humans did. Yes, humans with scientific knowledge which made them more likely to predict correctly. But humans nonetheless.

This is an important consideration. Using technology to help process information is not a bad thing as long as it is only “helping.” The decision, or conclusion, is still drawn by a human being, who looks at the information that technology has provided, and comes up with his or her conclusions. I wonder if this is gone now, or at least slipping away.

Of course, then we have the woolly caterpillars. There is science behind that way of predicting the weather as well. I am not sure how the Farmers Almanac comes up with their predictions, but again, they are probably more nature-based than computer-based.

I do have to say I am a bit surprised weather prediction is not the easiest scientific process out there today, considering much of the weather is man-made anyway. So, you would think it would be as easy to tell us what is going to happen atmospherically as it would be to tell us what we will be eating tomorrow if the cook has a recipe he or she is following. “We think we will whip up a nice snowstorm for you folks tomorrow! How about that?!” Of course, weather engineering is probably saved for remarkably important events, such as burning down millions of acres of timber, or flooding out vast numbers of human domiciles, rendering their residents homeless. We wouldn’t want to waste valuable and expensive resources on creating good weather for Jimmy’s little league baseball game. No way.

And of course, these important events that require weather manipulation are not something they would want to predict—to let everyone know their capabilities. Besides, that would spoil the surprise element to it all, which is pretty important, I would think.

So, don’t tell me how great science is until it can take care of some of these genuinely simple things—like predicting the weather, curing cancer, or fixing it so that dogs live to be 80. Let science fix some of the surely important things first. Then, and only then, I may start seeing it as wonderful as everyone now seems to think it is.

Todd Hayen PhD is a registered psychotherapist practicing in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He holds a PhD in depth psychotherapy and an MA in Consciousness Studies. He specializes in Jungian, archetypal, psychology. Todd also writes for his own substack, which you can read here

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Mark
Mark
May 26, 2025 8:26 AM

I have a strong feeling that, these days, the weather is being manipulated more often than not and that they don’t just save this for burning down forests and other catastrophic events.  I believe ‘they’ have a much wider agenda, such as damaging farming in certain areas and simply slewing the weather statistics so as to usher in the change that they have planned for our future – cause chaos, await the reaction and offer the solution. Just my thoughts at the moment – I hope I’m wrong!

Munk
Munk
May 26, 2025 4:25 AM

“Look out, kid, don’t matter what you did
Walk on your tip toes, don’t tie no bows
Better stay away from those that carry around a fire hose
Keep a clean nose, watch the plainclothes
You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows”
— Subterranean Homesick Blues, Bob Dylan

susan mullen
susan mullen
May 26, 2025 4:02 AM

A doctor speaking authoritatively about Biden’s cancer said that since it’s metastasized it’s incurable which is totally false. Metastasized cancer is often curable when treated with radiation beam. No cutting, no hospital stay. A doctor in Manhattan has been doing it for a few decades, has every credential available, worked for many years in places like Dana Farber in Mass. His name is Dr. Lederman, 1384 Broadway at 38th, Radiosurgery New York. Some years ago Jimmy Carter was diagnosed with brain cancer and given only a few months to live. He called the media and announced it. Shortly after that he decided to try radiation beam. Obviously it worked because he lived for many more years.

underground poet
underground poet
May 26, 2025 6:17 PM
Reply to  susan mullen

If it were that easy, he wouldn’t be dying from it right now

Brigitte
Brigitte
May 26, 2025 7:11 PM
Reply to  susan mullen

Dr. William Makis, @MakisMD, of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada…spectacular success in curing cancers, mostly from the jabs.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 27, 2025 1:02 AM
Reply to  susan mullen

Apricot kernels and an Apple a day will keep all doctors at bay.

landy
landy
May 25, 2025 6:41 PM

What if science was created to cull us.

James M Nunn
James M Nunn
May 25, 2025 3:56 PM

Also go to GeoengineeringWatch.org with Dane Wigington to know what’s happening with the weather. It ain’t good.

Bored now
Bored now
May 25, 2025 3:40 PM

fixing it so that dogs live to be 80″ Now there’s some science that I could get on board with.
Great article! I’ve often thought that the weather forecasters aren’t on the same page as the weather manipulators.

Tom Larsen
Tom Larsen
May 25, 2025 3:11 PM

If you really want to what’s going on with the weather (and how it is used against you), you should be a regular visitor to https://zerogeoengineering.com/

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 7:34 PM
Reply to  Tom Larsen

Don Quixote comes to mind.comment image

Add
Add
May 25, 2025 3:03 PM

PS: I hope it was clear enough that my “cat contribution” was pure SATIRE. Because I myself am neither a cat owner but certainly not a cat abuser.

So I was speaking from the perspective of all those unfortunate contemporaries who, in their desperate need for warmth, mistakenly believe that a pet can actually replace a human relationship, which sadly is becoming more and more the case these days.

There is something slightly grotesque about this kind of “institutionalized” abuse as a “substitute partner”. An indictment of the rampant isolation in the consumerist single society.

Only in Down Under is the most brutal million-fold catocaust still being perpetrated without the benevolent West intervening. What a scandal!

The new-fangled trend towards humanizing animals is probably also massively promoted by Judentube and the eco-madness. Speaking of which, what is video star Crusoe actually doing, is he still not in well-deserved dog retirement? As if I had suspected it:

Paul
Paul
May 26, 2025 3:28 AM
Reply to  Add

I sometimes see people cuddling and kissing their dogs and cats. Revolting.

Aloysius
Aloysius
May 28, 2025 5:02 AM
Reply to  Add

Somebody on here told me it is fine and meet and right to talk to and about your animals as if they were human beings, but not your computers. Because, oh, I don’t know, reasons. Oh, yeah, I know–because he doesn’t talk to computers. Making him better than you.

vera
vera
May 25, 2025 2:37 PM

Good call on the dogs! Is 20 years too much to ask?

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
May 25, 2025 10:03 PM
Reply to  vera

That’s about the natural life span for dogs. Just stop vaccinating them and don’t give them the ‘science’ diet that you’ll find at the vet’s and comes in 20kg plastic bags, nor the tinned stuff they offer in the pesticide isle of supermarkets.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 26, 2025 12:23 AM
Reply to  Veri Tas

Steak every day and strawberry with cream will do it. A place at the table is not too much to ask for replacing a human.

Johnny
Johnny
May 25, 2025 12:36 PM

The heavy hands of medical regulators continues in Australia.
Dissenting doctors and health workers the victims:

https://www.scienceandfreedom.org/articles/the-silencing-of-science-censorship-the-collapse-of-free-speech-in-medicine/

Johnny
Johnny
May 25, 2025 8:38 AM

Here’s something that is completely predictable:

https://dissidentvoice.org/2025/05/obscene-wealth/

Wealth is being $$$$$$$UCKED UP by the 1% and their slimy helpers at astronomical levels.
Particularly in the United States of ECONOMIC DIVISIONS.

underground poet
underground poet
May 25, 2025 12:10 PM
Reply to  Johnny

The vatican has bought a new vacuum cleaner to refill the coffers with sympathy bucks. Today would be a good day to spread the message rather than skippy the event.

Johnny
Johnny
May 25, 2025 1:47 PM

God ble$$$$$$&$$$$$$$ em

underground poet
underground poet
May 26, 2025 2:24 AM
Reply to  Johnny

cause nobody else will

Johnny
Johnny
May 26, 2025 5:50 AM

Tongue in cheek UP.

Hail
Hail
May 25, 2025 8:30 AM

Psychotherapy is considered apart of science.
In the older books the study of psyche was considered arts and science border line magic.

The weather recently has been great within Europe and the U.K
You see, trusting the science does work.

Tue 22 Apr 2025
UK scientists are to launch outdoor geoengineering experiments as part of a £50m government-funded programme.
The programme, along with another £11m project, will make the UK one of the biggest funders of geoengineering research in the world.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/22/uk-scientists-outdoor-geoengineering-experiments

les online
les online
May 25, 2025 8:24 AM

There are those who believe, and those who wanna believe.
Those who believe can be persuaded, but the wanna believers
wanna believe regardless of any evidence…

Christine
Christine
May 25, 2025 7:52 AM

In Ireland our forecast is usually bang on in tandem with the plane trails overhead, so when they are laying trails there will be clouds it’s very simple. They can be a bit sneaky laying down a kind of haze instead of expanding foam. I think the weather announcements on lame stream are there to keep people either confused or primed to expect the latest aerosol dispersion offering. I remember what weather was in days of yore before dimming the sun and climate fantasy was imposed.

DonDon
DonDon
May 25, 2025 4:41 PM
Reply to  Christine

Condensation trails only form when the air is moist enough. Then the air gets moister still, and clouds form.

Aloysius
Aloysius
May 25, 2025 7:37 PM
Reply to  DonDon

Chemtrails only form when they spray ’em.

Tom
Tom
May 25, 2025 7:35 AM

I have, just like Scott Adams, a deep love for the cat soul, any cat that speaks American “English” can attest to that. In previous karmic stages, however, I had even kicked cats with my heavy leather boots, even throwing them against walls or drowning them in the rain barrel of my garden shed.

Until I met Amy. She had total control over me right from the start and knew how to use this skillfully. She clearly signaled through cat language: “I’ll make sure you get a good night’s sleep, but I forbid any sexual assault!” Pussy not always equals pussy. Pussy here, pussy there.

Amy immediately realized that my goose liver pâté was unbeatable and could not be replaced by cheap cat food from Walmart. Since cats are relatively undemanding and, above all, permanently keep their mouths shut, unlike so-called human females, I quickly realized that this is where the real happiness of a partnership lies.

It came as it had to come. My conservative family reproached me: “Why do you want to marry a cat? All men marry an idiot to make themselves unhappy, that’s how it’s always been and always will be, but you’re out of line again!” I explained to them that my purpose in life is to be happy, and a woman from today’s feminist era destroys me.

The price of being allowed to “use” their vagina once or twice a week was too high for me to have to put up with her all the time. Women constantly babble stupid stuff, which irritates me and distracts me from my contemplation, from which I generate all my brilliant ideas. That’s why Amy is clearly a good, no, perfect substitute for a woman!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IN8FXsIOibo
https://www.youtube.com/@1bike1world/videos

The Real Edwige
The Real Edwige
May 25, 2025 7:27 AM

In Gardiner Harris’s book about Johnson & Johnson ‘No More Tears’, he points out no scientist (nor executive) has ever acted as a whistlebower on the corporation’s dubious activities – all the whistleblowers were sales’ reps. Same as no doctors nor nurses ever blew the whistle on MK Ultra.

Pluto
Pluto
May 25, 2025 7:12 AM

I thought at least they can’t mess with the weather. It was already happening. Had been happening for some time. The farmer sold up due to constantly drenched fields.

I see too weather predictions have become less accurate (on purpose) of late.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 4:15 AM

Being unpopular and unattractive when you are 17 has its advantages. ….ha.ha.ha. :-D.

I could say the same for being religious. Believing in God doesnt make many friends in Western countries but it has its advantages.

Among these advantages is that you see the world from God’s side and therefore are mostly right in your world view, also with regard to the physical weather, the design of the water cycle is stated in the scriptures a.s.o.

You get so wise by trusting God.

antonym
antonym
May 25, 2025 4:45 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

All centralized ideologies, religious ones headed by one non mortal God or secular ones run by a mortals like Xi or Schwab) are demonic, not Divine. Big on power, low on Truth.

Intuition is auto decentralized, best if MSM memes free. Even better with a silent mind. Spirituality with your inner Guru.

May Hem
May Hem
May 25, 2025 6:30 AM
Reply to  antonym

Speaking of inner gurus, didn’t Jesus say “the Kingdom of God is within you”?

antonym
antonym
May 25, 2025 8:38 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Yes, but that the Church in Rome took over: end of spirituality, start of religion. What did the Romans ever do for us…?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 9:52 AM
Reply to  antonym

The Romans kicked the Khazars out of Rome. The Khazars settled in Venezia until the Spanish King drove them out. Flavius Josephus.

Then the Khazars ran to London and the Netherlands, and have settled there ever since with US as their biggest colony for perversity and exploitation..

Sam - Admin2
Admin
Sam - Admin2
May 25, 2025 10:41 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

So why do Khazars love perversity and exploitation so much? Is it much the same reasons Belgians eat les frites with mayonnaise? It’s just their ‘thing’? Or what?

underground poet
underground poet
May 25, 2025 12:16 PM
Reply to  Sam - Admin2

Guy with a vagina perhaps, they have strange requirements and insist you recognize them.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 3:38 PM
Reply to  Sam - Admin2

I have not (yet) checked that out. Like everybody else I have been busy escaping their ‘culture’.
It may be obeying Beelzebub as their idol. Sacrificing babies, usury, slavery, rape and killing for lust, leaving a trail of anti-civilisation behind them where ever they operated.

We can say many bad things about the Romans and the Spanish King and the Elite, but they compensate somewhere for their exploitation and momentary cruelty:
Here the beauty of Svetlana Zakharova in Ballet & Opera. https://yandex.ru/video/preview/8204692707000891708 .
Here in Architecture: Moscow Orthodox Church:comment image

Sam - Admin2
Admin
Sam - Admin2
May 31, 2025 6:51 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

I was under the impression ‘Khazars’ had contributed a lot of cultural richness to the world. It’s half the reason they’re typically disliked and distrusted, isn’t it? Perhaps some academic research is required to gather evidence to support your view that ‘Khazars’ are in fact in ‘exploitation and momentary cruelty’ compensatory deficit? A2

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 3:12 PM
Reply to  antonym

Psalm 111:10 – Wisdom starts with God!

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 26, 2025 12:29 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

See what I mean Todd? Swear your allegiance to God and you get thumbs down and out  😇 .

antonym
antonym
May 25, 2025 1:18 AM

Bingo. Climate science struggles with tomorrow’s weather but trust them on the climate a few decades later: it takes woke minds to believe that irrational crap. They had to manipulate past weather records to adjust them to their scary hockey stick; anything for finding more $$$$$$$.
It is the Big Lie over and over again, from Mein Kampf and practiced by Goebbels on electric mass media first. It is the world’s biggest remaining occult problem. Distinguishable by anyone with a less biased, logical, rational wider view. Today’s favorite: Russia’s army stuck in Donbass for 3 years in meter battles will soon overtake Western Europe, 1500 km West.

antonym
antonym
May 25, 2025 2:05 AM
Reply to  antonym

One of the best exposers of the Big Climate Lie is statistical expert Canadian Steven McIntyre, now quite old: Gold.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 3:07 AM
Reply to  antonym

Gold? Did someone mentioned gold?? Where is this gold??? I cant find any gold in your link.  😳 

Esmeralda
Esmeralda
May 25, 2025 1:02 AM

Nice article. For those in the UK, this is a fascinating long term weather prediction site:
https://www.indigenousukweather.com/
I lived in Europe at the time of discovering the site and I would try to see if the special prediction days (often “saint days” like St Martin’s 11/11) would also correspond to the predicted forecasts and more often than not they would! I find it all so cool and fascinating… What a lost art!

Now in Sydney, I find the govt weather bureau horrendously bad. They simply have no clue. So I’m trying to find out about the indigenous knowledge… There’s about 6 seasons instead and by looking at the flora and what the fauna are doing, one can try get some clues.
But then if they’re spraying, weather gets all out of whack.

Despina Tsiknas Arzouman
Despina Tsiknas Arzouman
May 25, 2025 12:45 AM

They can’t predict it because SOMEONES are controlling it. It’s all geo-engineered, and they can’t make up their minds when and how they want to destroy everyone’s lives, or entire sections of the planet at once.

les online
les online
May 25, 2025 12:44 AM

No two live hoomins have the same fingerprints ? Probably true…
No two live hoomins have the same DNA profile ? Probably true…
There’s currently 8 billion live hoomins on Planet Earth ? Probably true…

Could it be Clever Hoomins invented probability theory as a Sciencey
way of saying “My guess is a good as your !” or “We dont really know !”
And are only The Educated allowed to pass-off their speculations as
‘educated guesses’ ?

underground poet
underground poet
May 25, 2025 1:31 AM
Reply to  les online

It would be wise to not over think anything, lest you open your mouth only to prove yourself wrong.

les online
les online
May 25, 2025 2:23 AM

‘Probably true.’

underground poet
underground poet
May 25, 2025 12:19 PM
Reply to  les online

Probably proven true.

Michael JF
Michael JF
May 25, 2025 3:20 AM
Reply to  les online

I don’t believe the 8 billion figure, it is no where near that. There have been some studies in countries like China calculating how many people live in the cities and when compared to the remaining population that live rurally, it seems somewhat questionably disproportionate.

May Hem
May Hem
May 25, 2025 6:33 AM
Reply to  les online

Some phrases I like are the “experts say”, and “the research suggests” …… and the bullshit continues.

correspondencecommitttee
correspondencecommitttee
May 25, 2025 12:28 AM

“Those who control the weather will control the world!” 
-LBJ (how many kids did you kill today?)

Control. That’s what ruling class science is all about. Truths are instrumental and lies, like climate catastrophe brought to you round the clock by the Weather Channel of Doom, prove true when the purpose is power only pure evil would pursue, like poisoning all life on earth with climate engineering. The everyday weather report, watched by captive audiences of the civilized alienated from nature and common senses by which to understand its language older than words, is a ritual reinforcement of trusting the science so people will predictably call it rain when the weather gods piss on us.  

Johnny
Johnny
May 24, 2025 11:59 PM

The forecasts here in South Eastern Australia are about 85% accurate, but is it just a case of the forecasters looking out of their windows at 6am?

antonym
antonym
May 25, 2025 2:08 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Did you notice that these weather predictors are never audited in MSM although that would be very simple with screen shots of past days? Predator’s life made easy.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 25, 2025 7:27 PM
Reply to  Johnny

I have seen on the internet a last 100 year successive weather registration of Australia.
It shows an absolutely non linear system unpredictable from year to year. There are no patterns at all. The weather is too wet one year and too dry the next completely casual.

Johnny
Johnny
May 26, 2025 12:31 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 27, 2025 1:21 AM
Reply to  Johnny

One of the few and rare occasions I have seen farmer’s praise the weather

730mm/year is not unusable in northern areas of Europe. But here it says its 80% above normal, ie a normally very dry area.
But this reflect very much Australia’s reputation as the country of extreme weather conditions.

kiwiJoker
kiwiJoker
May 24, 2025 11:04 PM

All ‘science’ is human perceptional observation.

All ‘computers’ are filing systems of human perceptional observations.

All human perceptions are fallible.

Therefore all perceived scientific computations are fallible.

Easy

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
May 25, 2025 9:32 PM
Reply to  kiwiJoker

Add profit motive and political agenda to the mix and what have you got?

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
May 24, 2025 10:25 PM

Science free to investigate where the chips may fall is certainly a good thing. Belief in science without question is from the Dark Ages, and is called scientism. Kinda rhymes with Fascism.

Farmers in the olden days were better at predicting the weather, just using common sense and their intuitive sense of nature’s signals. However, now that everything has been monetised they increasingly rely on paid weather forecasting services. Just like doctors no longer make their own diagnoses, instead aligning their prescribing decisions with prescription flow charts (if this then that) and lab results – and with commands from their controlling associations, as during the Covid vaccination drive.

Dominus Owen Markham
Dominus Owen Markham
May 24, 2025 9:50 PM

Farmers Almanac, I hear you for sure…that was me also (I am of an age you know lol)

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
May 24, 2025 9:50 PM

That’s boring, your boring

This is more fun, what is hidden behind the ice wall, you know the one no one has seen, like the curve..
Total copy of another crazy channel, which, to his credit, he states

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
May 24, 2025 10:04 PM

i got the disease tinnitus

my ways are not theirs
my ways are not theirs
May 24, 2025 9:46 PM

I always figured the forecasts were based on info obtained from groundhogs

they, and animals in general, not to mention plants, seem to have more of a handle on what’s really happening than your average human in a lab coat

Michael JF
Michael JF
May 25, 2025 3:13 AM

Nature humiliating science on a daily basis. 
It’s just pity it doesn’t have such well oiled PR team behind it.

2cents
2cents
May 24, 2025 7:32 PM

Human Barometer
Unfortunately, I can and do predict the weather, and with more accuracy than trainined meterologists.
I’m plagued with chronic, incapacitating migraine.
Attacks correlate precisely with atmospheric change 12 – 48 hrs in advance of precipitation.
An unwelcome prophetic “gift.”

MartinU
MartinU
May 24, 2025 7:21 PM

Most people don’t realize just how imprecise our world is because our everyday approximations are usually good enough for our daily lives. When we go shopping, for example, the amount of product we buy isn’t known absolutely but to maintain everyone’s sanity we collectively regard the approximate measurement to an agreed level of accuracy as absolute. (See how complicated “It weighs 100 grams” could sound to a metrologist?)

There are situations where our imprecision collides with our everyday world of generally agreed on absolutes. Weather forecasting is one example. We would like to know whether the weather will be wet or dry tomorrow so we use a variety of techniques to estimate what we think the weather will be. These estimates can be based on anything from “Red Sky at Night….” to complex atmospheric modelling on a supercomputer — but they’re still estimates. Everything has its rationale and its probability of accuracy.

Medicine is another area where certainty collides with statistical reality. But we all know — or should know — that. A much more pressing problem is that our AI systems are really giant boxes of statistical probabilities that make educated guesses about things. There’s so much to go wrong here, especially as people will start believing what they tell us rather than using it as an aid to judgment, that it has the potential to seriously upend our lives. The problem isn’t the machines (unless you count “wasting huge amounts of power” and “throwing lots of people out of a job” as problems, of course) but rather that decisions made with incomplete information using data of uncertain provenance based entirely on unknown probabilities is risking the Mother of All Confirmation Biases — we believe the output because its what we (the machine”s owner) would like us to believe it. When it contradicts us we (e.g. “Grok” telling people that its been told to BS) then its just “re-educated” until it sees sense.

Alongside this getting wet unexpectedly seems just a trivial nuisance. (FWIW __ I live in Southern California where the weather can be both entirely predictable and intractably difficult to forecast. Go figure!)

Republicofscotland
Republicofscotland
May 24, 2025 5:18 PM

I myself firmly believe the cure for many cancers (if not all of them) has been found – so why haven’t we seen them rolled out – simple the answer is MONEY – think of how many drugs that big pharma produces that are pushed upon us, that would become obsolete, not only that – many who specialise in the carcinogenic field would be out of a job, also for the PTB – having cancer around removes a lot of folk from the Earth every year – which for them is a good thing.

Just like the big players in the motor industry – who have made, and are still making a fortune out of the petrol and diesel engines – who’s to say a clean energy engine wasn’t developed years ago by scientists – and then locked away in a storge room never to be seen again – because the oil industry and the motor industry went hand-in-hand for decades.

For me science is a good thing – unless its used against humanity or the Earth – also I abhor the bought and paid for scientists, who’ll say anything the PTB wants them to say – for profit, or to keep their funding going.

As for controlling our weather – no science isn’t quite there yet, though cloud seeding is happening, and the likes of the USA is planting nukes in and around areas of seismic activity, to cause tidal waves/tsunami’s and devastation.

rickypop
rickypop
May 24, 2025 8:53 PM

Bobby Crawford, fae Carluke, ran a car from Glasgow’s Scotland Today News Studio to London on a small bottle of petrol circa 1972. It was checked out live on TV to see if there were hidden tanks—Probably 2000mls per gallon.
I’ve tried getting the footage, but to no avail. Bobby’s still living, and everyone of a certain age knows the script.
Believe nothing.

Aloysius
Aloysius
May 24, 2025 10:40 PM
Reply to  rickypop

Absolutely nothing on the internet about it.

underground poet
underground poet
May 25, 2025 1:34 AM
Reply to  Aloysius

Its a big world, and an even bigger internet, so dont worry if you hear nothing about it, doesnt mean its not there.

Binra
Binra
May 24, 2025 4:36 PM

Seeking simple mechanisms discards the psychic context.
(Replaces living bio-dynamics with systemic -modelling applications™
Along with gaslighting nocebo – working as countermeasure ‘solutions’ framed in idolatry of ‘scientific progress’ as the Great Replacement for Moral integrality – by assertions of moral superiority framed by bent and bought ‘science’.
Banksterism doesn’t just create and control money supply, but funds, nurtures and mutates narrative identities.
Repackaging toxic debt in complex instruments.

Predictive control has become pre-emptive control.
Empiric feedback is suppressed, distorted and denied – that the Model can prevail.

Faith in the Model demands negation of consciousness.

(We’re on the same page there!)

Tommy
Tommy
May 26, 2025 7:34 PM
Reply to  Binra

Please explain why I am visibility filtered while this useless, blithering bot is not.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
May 27, 2025 1:24 AM
Reply to  Tommy

AI may be involved, Automation and ChatGpt you know. This would explain a lot.

DLAP
DLAP
May 24, 2025 4:16 PM

🔴 The most striking points of the “COVID-19/7700 I want to remain human! Bio-digital convergence” document are those that emerge with the greatest clarity and impact, both in terms of emotional weight and the severity of the accusations:

1. Accusation of intentional genocide
• One of the most serious allegations concerns the alleged deliberate population reduction through vaccines, citing 2017 intelligence documents predicting a drastic decline in the UK’s population (55 million victims by 2025), framed as an intentional attack using “biochemical weapons.”

2. Criticism based on scientific studies
• The document references thousands of scientific studies and official records, including materials from government agencies like the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency), reporting severe adverse effects of COVID-19 vaccines—such as myocarditis, thrombosis, infertility, and other serious conditions.

3. Hidden sterilization and contraceptives in vaccines
• A detailed and hard-hitting section accuses vaccination programs (e.g., tetanus vaccines in Africa sponsored by the WHO and the Gates Foundation) of containing contraceptive substances, leading to forced infertility in millions of unaware women. This is presented as a grave abuse, a human rights violation, and a crime against humanity.

4. Historical failures of vaccinations
• The document cites documented cases of severe side effects and inefficacy in past vaccination campaigns (e.g., smallpox and Spanish flu), challenging the very principle of mandatory or mass vaccination.

5. The heroic figure of the unvaccinated
• The rhetoric portrays the unvaccinated as morally and symbolically significant—heroic resisters who withstood immense social and institutional pressure, casting them as protagonists in a narrative pitting the courageous individual against an oppressive system.

6. Bio-digital convergence as a threat
• The merging of biology and digital technology (transhumanism, technological control over bodies) is framed as an existential threat to human freedom and natural biological identity, emphasizing the risk of a society dominated by invasive tech.

7. Call for free and viral dissemination
• Another key point is the explicit appeal for unrestricted, widespread sharing of the document’s contents. The author waives copyright, urging global circulation to mobilize public opinion worldwide.

PDF: 1682 pages! ⚠️ UPGRADE: 24.05.2025 🇺🇸

▶️ Download:
https://www.calameo.com/accounts/7564957
https://drive.proton.me/urls/11TT50C4ZG#MddrJhq1lTHh

🟡 Recommended:
– chapter 10,
– chapter 12 (subchapter 1)