Tuesday, July 1, 2014

33 74 | Is Hurricane Arthur the Workings of HAARP? | 33m/s = 74mph


The first named storm of the 2014 season is named 'Arthur'.  It is said that if it makes landfall with 74 mph (or 33 meters/second) or greater winds, it will be classified as a "hurricane".
  • Arthur = 1+9+2+8+3+9 = 32
  • Arthur = 1+18+20+8+21+18 = 86
  • America = 1+4+5+9+9+3+1 = 32
Here is the hype from CNN on what is brewing in the Atlantic, and currently threatening Delaware to North Carolina
Grand Bahama Island saw sustained winds of 47 mph and a gust of 61 mph on Tuesday, according to the Miami-based hurricane center. Such winds may be the least of the worries for the Caribbean island chain, parts of which could end up drenched in 6 inches of rain through Wednesday.
Interestingly enough, Ashley Fantz and Ed Payne are the CNN authors for this article on .  Why this is curious is because of their name numerology and the fact that both Ashley Fantz and Ed Payne are authors on what I'll refer to as "hoax-a-licious" articles.
  • Ed Payne = 5+4+7+1+7+5+5 = 34, reduces to 7
  • Ashley Fantz = 1+1+8+3+5+7+6+1+5+2+8 = 47
After reading the article, I became curious about the qualification for a hurricane of 74 mph winds or greater.  As a result, I looked up the scale for such qualifications.  The scale is titled the Saffir-Simpson scale.  It is as follows.
  • Saffir = 1+1+6+6+9+9 = 32
  • Simpson 1+9+4+7+1+6+5 = 33
  • Isn't that curious?  The scale name is 32-33...
 
Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale
CategoryWind speeds
Five≥70 m/s, ≥137 knots
≥157 mph, ≥252 km/h
Four58–70 m/s, 113–136 knots
130–156 mph, 209–251 km/h
Three50–58 m/s, 96–112 knots
111–129 mph, 178–208 km/h
Two43–49 m/s, 83–95 knots
96–110 mph, 154–177 km/h
One33–42 m/s, 64–82 knots
74–95 mph, 119–153 km/h
Additional classifications
Tropical
storm
18–32 m/s, 35–63 knots
39–73 mph, 63–118 km/h
Tropical
depression
<17 m/s, <34 knots
< 38 mph, <62 km/h
 
The scale features curious numerology; the naked eye sees 113, 96, 111, 110, 33-42, 74, 119, 39 and more.  Perhaps within this information is truth in the relevance of where these numbers originate from.
 
Let us close with this thought:  The conversion of 33 meters/seconds is 74 miles per hour.  Is it possible to believe this is how the US measurement system was made?


Please also read about El Nino and Monsoons, their "33" numerology, and their admitted relationship with "Jesus Christ" by the inventor of the term.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.