| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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30-Fold Earthquake Impact
00:02:25
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| All these things, the blood moons. | |
| Forgive me, I'm jumping around a little bit, but have you read what the scientists are saying? | |
| I turned on, when I was on the air, I was right over here, and I was teaching this generator. | |
| And by the way, they'll be gone in a few days. | |
| We had two ships come in almost back to back, and so they're all going to be gone again. | |
| If you want the generator, the price has got to go up in a few weeks. | |
| It just has to. | |
| But I turned on the TV to demonstrate you can watch your big screen TV on this generator. | |
| And there was one, it was Fox News, I believe, and the announcer was talking about the Pacific Northwest earthquake that the scientists now say could come at any minute. | |
| That's right. | |
| And it is, Zach, this is the big one. | |
| It's over 9 points. | |
| Yes. | |
| Is that am I right, or am I just making this up? | |
| In fact, it's the Cascadia fault. | |
| In fact, I don't know if it's a very good thing. | |
| You're so smart. | |
| No, if you would actually, most people don't realize this, but you know, like they think of like 10 to the 5th power, 10 to the 6th power. | |
| They think of earthquake numbering is that same way. | |
| That's not true. | |
| The difference between an earthquake of a 7.0 and an 8.0 is 30-fold. | |
| The difference between a 7. | |
| Which would be 300 times. | |
| 30 times as strong. | |
| It'd be 30 times as strong. | |
| And so from a 7 to a 9 is 900 times stronger because the difference between a 7 and 8 is 30, and the difference between an 8 and a 9 is another 30-fold. | |
| So it's 30-fold times 30-fold. | |
| A 9 is so great. | |
| In fact, it actually changed the tilt of the earth. | |
| A 9 actually affects the tilt of the earth. | |
| That's right. | |
| You know, I actually have an article from Fox News that talks about this. | |
| And it says, a new report predicts that a mega-earthquake could kill and destroy a sizable portion of the Pacific Northwest. | |
| Even more disturbing, it's overdue. | |
| The last one was more than 300 years ago, around the year 1700, when a quake there sent a 600-foot wave of water all the way to Japan. | |
| You know, there's actually an expert, his name is Mr. Kaku, a physicist and professor at the City College of New York. | |