Jan. 28, 2021

Critical Thinking Part 3: Tornado Wormhole Theory and the Voorhees Effect

Critical Thinking Part 3:  Tornado Wormhole Theory and the Voorhees Effect
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In this episode, we unravel the mystery of tornado formation that has baffled the scientific community for 138 years.

The podcast cover shows a temperature inversion:  a layer of heavy dry dense cold air crushing down on a layer of yellow, warm, high pressure, wet air.  In this episode, we know what we know about basic chemistry and physics, to discover that tornados are not updrafts of warm air as the scientific community believes, but down drafts of heavy cold air, through a wormhole like penetration from above . . . triggering a second concentric sheathe of latent heat and upward drafting vorticity that surrounds the down flowing wormhole of cold air like angry climbing ivy.

This second concentric vortex of rising air is the "Voorhees Effect" that has mislead science's greatest minds into believing that a tornado is merely an updraft.

Having come to understand what a tornado truly is, only then can we take the most effective steps to protect ourselves from tornado forces--we can fish for tornados, we can bleed energy from their supercells and weaken or preclude their formation entirely.