Nature's Cycles Affect Every Living Thing HD

13.06.2016
Edward R. Dewey, who worked for US President Hoover in the 1930s was a pioneer in the discovery of natures cycles. They affect business, the markets, and so much more. In the Great Depression, President Hoover asked Edward Dewey, who at the time was the Chief Economic Analyst at the Department of Commerce, to figure out why the US continually experienced economic booms and busts. In the 1800s and early 1900s, there were eight economic downturns of varying degrees. Dewey devoted the rest of his life to uncovering and understanding cycles. He found that the Canadian Lynx followed an abundance pattern of exactly 9.6 years. For over two hundred years, they’ve prospered and then died off in a regular rhythm. The coyote, red fox, fisher, marten, wolf, mink, and skunk have the same abundance patterns. The chinch bug, which frequents much of the US Midwest, has a similar pattern—at its height swelling to as much as 70 million per acre down to just 1600 per square foot at the bottom. The lemming, that little six inch rodent found in Norway, has a 3.86 year life pattern. Every 3.86 years, they come down from the hills, destroy everything in site and don’t stop when they gets to the sea. .. and end up drowning. A few who remain behind for some unknown reason start up the next herd which, right on schedule, heads to the sea all over again. What creates these cycles that seem apparent in every living thing? Professor Frank Brown at Northwestern University tried an experiment with oysters. These oysters would open their valves in sync with the changing tides, in other words with the moon, as they lay in along the Connecticut seashore. He gathered up a bunch of them and took them to his lab in Illinois, almost 1000 miles away. He kept them in salt water in covered containers in the dark and for a few days, they continued their usual routine. But two weeks later, they were opening and closing their valves to the rhythm of the moon in Illinois! Sunspot activity also moves in cycles—11.2 years. Alexander Chizhevsky, a Russian scientist, studied the statistics and histories of seventy-two countries and found a Human Excitability Factor that coincides with the solar peaks. Wars, revolutions, airplane crashes, migrations, and other major events tend to happen with maximum sunspot activity. Here’s an example of the cycle peak around 2001. You can see that the toppling of the World Trade Center in New York took place at a sunspot spike right at the top of that cycle. There’s an eighteen and a half year cycle in real estate. This one’s quite well known and influences both activity and prices. We’re experiencing a peak right now around the world, and expecting a crash very soon with a bottom about 2020. The real estate cycle coincides with the lunar nodal cycle, a period of 18.6 years in which for half of that time the moon is below the equator as it revolves around the Earth and above it for the rest. It’s also a rainfall and drought cycle—9 years of each.

Похожие видео