Kim Jong Un Triggers An Earthquake – Will There Be More?

Kim touches off an H-bomb:

North Korea seems to have carried out a nuclear test Sunday, South Korea’s military said, citing an unusual seismic activity in the vicinity of the North’s nuclear test site.

The 5.6 magnitude “artificial earthquake” that happened in the Punggye-ri area at around 12:20 p.m. is “presumed” to be from the North’s sixth nuclear test, the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) announced.

It added all South Korean troops have been put on high alert.

South Korea’s presidential office Cheong Wa Dae immediately convened a National Security Council meeting on the issue.

Hours earlier, North Korea claimed that it has developed a hydrogen bomb that can be loaded into a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

Notice, previous, far more minor tests may have jarred that Ring of Fire fault line causing slippage, possibly setting off quakes in Japan weeks later.

One day after the October 9th, 2006 North Korean nuke test, Japan had a 6.0 magnitude earthquake hit off Honshu, and about a month later an 8.4 followed on, with a tsunami. I wondered back then if there might be any relation between nuclear level agitation of the region’s ground (or even a shock wave spreading out and traveling down to the far side of the earth and then reverberating back up and re-concentrating), and a minor shifting in the tectonic plates that might weaken any forces holding back a release of built up tension and energy. Supposedly the earth is like a drop of water suspended in zero gravity, from the perspective of shock waves.

Now that fault line just got jiggled enough to possibly allow some slippage, concentrating and building stress elsewhere along it.

If Japan or South Korea experience major quakes on the next two weeks, and thousands of citizens die, that could be an unavoidable force driving us to initiate a war with the North. If that happens, the question then is whether China gets in or not.

We are probably safe from war for now. Amygdalae are too deadened from the resource glut produced by debt spending to need to kill someone to blow off steam. But add amygdala to this mix, and we would already be in North Korea taking Jong-Un out.

When the Apocalypse starts, Jong-Un will either knock off the hijinks, or he will be dealt with quickly by someone.

Tell others about r/K Theory, because we are only waiting on Amygdala.

This entry was posted in Amygdala, ITZ, K-stimuli, Politics, Psychology, War. Bookmark the permalink.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Joe Goebbels
Joe Goebbels
7 years ago

I’m calling Fake News on this. I’ve seen NK’s population & scientists. They all seem to be male and light-skinned.
With this lack of diversity, they’d lack the empathy & brainpower to achieve the complex science necessary to launch such a sophisticated bomb. The fine fresh flava of black women is absolutely essential to do empathetic physics. I saw a Hollywood fil on how da sistahz developed the atom bomb.

bob sykes
bob sykes
7 years ago

North Korea is under the protection of China. China has repeatedly and publicly stated that they would defend North Korea against an American attack. Russia has backed them. It is also clear that both South Korea and Japan are opposed to an American attack on the North, and they might prevent the US from using its bases on their territory.

Kim plainly has the upper hand here, and we will have to negotiate our way out of this mess. I was a freshman in college when the Cuban missile crisis broke out. Kennedy and Khrushchev were able to find a diplomatic solution. I’m not sure the current American Deep State can. A war in East Asia would end the US as a superpower.

Pitcrew
Pitcrew
7 years ago

North Korea can’t produce enough heavy water for a bomb like that. The deuterium for it was likely supplied in the form of Lithium-deuteride by an outside power. My money is on China, and the Norks are a nuclear pawn on the Superpower chessboard.

trackback
7 years ago

[…] I had posted here regarding previous earthquake activity following on after North Korean nuclear testing. […]

trackback
7 years ago

[…] I had posted here regarding previous earthquake activity following on after North Korean nuclear testing. […]