Small typo in new Connecting the Dots

Seamus

Ambassador
Ambassador
FOTCM Member
Skimming the new connecting the dots I noticed a small typo in the second paragraph.

Particularly disastrous was the chain reaction ignited by BP's ecocide in the Gulf of Mexico - courtesy of corporate psychopathy and the complicity of our governments - this festering wound might yet contributing significantly to tipping the global climate into an ice age by disrupting ocean currents and, in turn, wind currents.

Really nice integration of photos and videos. Looking forward to giving it a closer read and to part 2! Thanks for all of your hard work. :flowers:
 
One other typo:

[quote author= Connecting the Dots]
To this we must add the consequences for the economy of Japan and the world. Who will buy Japanese foodstuffs now? This is one more deadweight placed on the tipping scales of the global food crisis. How suddenly things can turn from normal to very bad, don't you think? Now imagine if instead of an earthquake in the wrong place we had, say, a comet exploding inn the atmosphere and its fragments raining over large population centers..[/quote]

BTW, it's nice to see this series back!
 
Thanks, those two and some other were caught in a late proof, but don't hesitate to point out others so we can correct them.
 
Another:

[quote author=Connecting the Dots]
Though it has taken Fukushima to catapult the issue of radioactive toxins onto the front pages, the problem has been growing all around us for the past 60 years - and not just through the building of nuclear power plants, but also from the more than 2,000 nuclear nuclear test explosions which have been conducted since 1945. [/quote]
 
And another:

[quote author=Connecting the Dots]
Dr. Helen Caldicott, a long-time opponet of nuclear power, in an interview with CNN two weeks after the earthquake, was asked about the risks to the people in the immediate area to the accident at Fukushima: [/quote]
 
Great article. I am still reading it. Thank you, Sott editors.

(i think )another small typo error : there'is a caption on the Pakistan flood video "Pakistan food victims wait for food and shelter". I think it should be flood victims.
 
un chien anadolu said:
Great article. I am still reading it. Thank you, Sott editors.

(i think )another small typo error : there'is a caption on the Pakistan flood video "Pakistan food victims wait for food and shelter". I think it should be flood victims.

That one can't be changed because it is in the original video - but thanks anyway! :)
 
I gave the article a closer read this morning and found a couple more small errors.

In terms of flooding, the worst hit country was Pakistan, which saw a third of its territory submerged and more than four million people affected, in a catastrophe that was rated by the worst humanitarian crisis it has had to deal with.

In the caption of the Jupiter image.
Jupiter seen in three bands of infrared (left), with an overly of 5-micron thermal infrared (center) and on the same night in visible light (small inset at right).

Second point in McCanney's list of possible effects that can occur before the actual close passage of "Planet-X"
Degradation of complete elimination of infrastructures and facilities

From the closing remarks
Besides, unless your brain already turned to tapioca from believing lies, if you'll take a long and hard look around you, it will become clear that our world is in extremely dire state,


I have a couple of thoughts/questions as well.

The increase in extreme weather events noted above can be understood in the context of theories that take cosmic events into account. One such theory by James McCanney proposes that electromagnetic interaction between the planets, moons, comets and the Sun result in tremendous discharges of energy which directly impact our weather. Sott editor RyanX made the case for a cosmic connection to Earth Changes in January and February 2011 as follows:

Recent events provide us with a great case study of the cosmic forces that may lie behind large storms such as cyclones, hurricanes, blizzards and much more. The recent events I speak of include the major blizzard that swept across the Midwestern and Eastern US as well as the punishment Cyclone Yasi inflicted on eastern Australia earlier last week.

Is anyone working on a statistical analysis to test this hypothesis? If there is data on major storms, and earthquakes, like the chart mentioned in the article and data on the paths of known comets, the orbit of the moon and related solar storms, we could look for trends and test for significance. I could be wrong, but it seems like this kind of data is readily available and difficult to tamper with. Any thoughts?
 
I'm currently reading it and noticed that on some articels this shows up "Article not found!".

this are the ones I found (they are in this order from the start until the end of the article):

a fleet , 20,000 soldiers , "special relief envoys" , "disaster relief scenario" , took control , pretext ,
Dr. Helen Caldicott , According to him
 
I gave the article a closer read this morning and found a couple more small errors.

Thanks! Fixed.

I'm currently reading it and noticed that on some articels this shows up "Article not found!".

Oh yes, thanks for the reminder. As Sott switched into the New Sott, some articles were archived, so we may need to unarchive them manually.
 
At the SOTT.net link to the "BBC advertisement" the video is no longer available due to a terminated youtube account.
 
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