Magnetic Pole Movement

North and South



The core of the Earth is revolving closer and closer to the crust of the Earth faster, to the 85th° latitude- 235° longitude, right over Alaska. There is no panic that an iron ball the size of the Moon will crash out of the Earth there. Are scientists stupid, saying the Earth's core can't hit the Earth's top, Science keeping disaster a secret? I will have to change the agenda of science, draft work forces needed for industry and decide as a dictator from the choices for the public good, while hiring able American workers. Studies in a "waite and see" quagmire leaves no time for waiting to replace "the system" by legal means. Only the military can see a need for my dictatorship, as The American People's Third Party, so I can establish my said government system, for only American Citizens, during a huge deportation and nationalizing conflict.

Warmth in Alaska unwanted
Social, ecological upheaval created

By Timothy Egan
New York Times

ANCHOR POINT, Alaska ---
To live in Alaska, where the average temperature has risen about 7 degrees over the past 30 years, means learning to cope with a landscape that can sink, catch fire or break apart in the turn of a season.
In the village of Shishmaref, on the Chukchi Sea just south of the Arctic Circle, it means high water eating away so many houses and buildings that people will vote next month on moving inland.
In Barrow, the northernmost city in North America, it means coping with mosquitoes in a place where they once were non-existent, and rescuing hunters trapped on breakaway ice at a time of year when such things once were unheard of.

Hydraulic jacks handy
In Fairbanks, where wildfires have been burning off and on since mid-May, it means living with hydraulic jacks to keep houses from slouching and buckling on foundations that used to be frozen all year. Permafrost, they say, is no longer permanent.
Here on the Kenai Peninsula, a recreation wonderland a few hours' drive from Anchorage, it means living in a 4 million-acre spruce forest that has been killed by beetles, the largest loss of trees to insects ever recorded in North America, federal officials say. Government scientists tied the event to rising temperatures, which allow the beetles to reproduce at twice their normal rate.
In Alaska, mean temperatures have risen by 5 degrees in summer and 10 degrees in winter since the 1970's, federal officials say.
The leading Republican in the state, Sen. Ted Stevens, says that no place is experiencing more startling changes from rising temperatures than Alaska.
The social costs of higher temperatures have been mostly negative, people here say. The Bush administration report, which was drafted by the Environmental Protection Agency, also found few positives to Alaska's thermal rise. But it said climate change would bring a longer growing season and open ice-frozen seas in the Arctic for shipping.
"There can no longer be any doubt that major changes in the climate have occurred in recent decades in the region, with visible and measurable consequences," the government concluded in the report to the United Nations last month.
It does not take much to find those consequences in a state with 40 percent of the nation's surface water and 63 percent of its wetlands.

'Profound' occurrence
Here on the Kenai Peninsula, a forest nearly twice the size of Yellowstone National Park is in the last phases of a graphic death, Century-old spruce trees stand silvered and cinnamon-colored as they bleed sap.
Climate models predict Alaskan temperatures will continue to rise over this century, by up to 18 degrees.
"We've had so many strange events, things are so different than they used to be, that I think most Alaskans now believe something profound is going on," said Dr. Glenn Juday, an authority on climate change at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks. "We're experiencing indisputable climate warming. The positive changes from this take a long time, but the negative changes are happening real fast."

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