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Aug. 17, 2015 - Jim Bakker Show
02:26
Cascadia Fault: A Mega-Quake Is Overdue
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Time Text
30-Fold Earthquake Impact 00:02:25
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.
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