The Thunderbolts are wedged between a rock and a hard place.
First, their Electric Universe negates the Atom and, by extension, nuclear bombs.
Can they also, in one fell swoop, sweep away Nasa's astronomy and the space program? Yes, I guess, if a worldwide reset were engineered.
I know that mudfloods are the reset du jour on forums.
Let's not forget resets by fire from the skies.
The following excerpt comes from a long and remarkable article about the Comet Biela conflagration that destroyed thousands of acres in the Midwest in 1871.
It was not as horrendous as some comerary insults recorded by Velikovsky, who claimed that Comet Venus was born from the head of her father, Jupiter. She ravaged the earth on a regular basis until she settled into a quiet orbit as a planet.
Comet Biela and Mrs. O’Leary’s Cow | Cassiopaea
The flames that consumed a great part of Chicago were of an unusual character and produced extraordinary effects. They absolutely melted the hardest building-stone, which had previously been considered fire-proof. Iron, glass, granite, were fused and run together into grotesque conglomerates, as if they had been put through a blast-furnace. No kind of material could stand its breath for a moment.
I quote again from Sheahan & Upton’s work:
“The huge stone and brick structures melted before the fierceness of the flames as a snow-flake melts and disappears in water, and almost as quickly. Six-story buildings would take fire and disappear for ever from sight in five minutes by the watch… The fire also doubled on its track at the great Union Depot and burned half a mile southward in the very teeth of the gale – a gale which blew a perfect tornado, and in which no vessel could have lived on the lake… Strange, fantastic fires of blue, red, and green played along the cornices of buildings” [“History of the Chicago Fire” 85, 86].
Hon. William B. Ogden wrote at the time:
“The fire was accompanied by the fiercest tornado of wind ever known to blow here” [Ibid 87].
“The most striking peculiarity of the fire was its intense heat. Nothing exposed to it escaped. Amid the hundreds of acres left bare there is not to be found a piece of wood of any description, and, unlike most fires, it left nothing half burned… The fire swept the streets of all the ordinary dust and rubbish, consuming it instantly” [Ibid 119].
The Athens marble burned like coal!
“The intensity of the heat may be judged, and the thorough combustion of everything wooden may be understood, when we state that in the yard of one of the large agricultural-implement factories was stacked some hundreds of tons of pig-iron. This iron was two hundred feet from any building. To the south of it was the river, one hundred and fifty feet wide. No large building but the factory was in the immediate vicinity of the fire. Yet, so great was the heat, that this pile of iron melted and run, and is now in one large and nearly solid mass” [Ibid 121].