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Electricity is the cause of global warming

Arrow Creek letter writer John Faller's theory on global warming starts with electricity...

To the Editor:

My theory on global warming starts with electricity. Alternating current (AC) all goes to the ground, where it meets with the water. With water being a conductor of electricity, it picks up the electricity and carries it to the ocean with a speed of 186,000 miles a second. It is almost there instantly.

What affirmed my theory was a report by David Spence of CTV Calgary about the power poles on the street in Calgary being splashed by vehicles. The salt water spray from the street suddenly caused the poles to burst into flames. That’s what happens when AC electricity meets with salt water.

When you put AC current into salt water, it heats up very quickly. As it gets warmer, all the warmth rises, so you will have all the warm water at the top and you will have an area of warm air above the ocean, the ocean breeze being the male and water being the female. Water is made up of molecules, with each molecule having a hole in it, which is where it stores the oxygen.

It is essential to keep water supplied with oxygen. Without oxygen, all the animals and organisms in the water could not survive. With ocean breezes blowing, it has to push the warm air out of the way to get to the water, which in turn causes very high pressure. The pressure is constantly building up as it crosses the ocean, and when it hits land, all the pressure is suddenly released, causing tornadoes and destruction.

As far as the Arctic ice, it is not melting from the atmosphere. It is melting because of the ocean’s warm water. It is melting down below and losing the footings, so when it can no longer hold on, it breaks loose and floats away. If it was caused by the atmosphere, it would be melting from the top down. It would melt where it is and not float away.

There is so much electricity in the ocean that the Americans have found a way to recover it. They have units four miles off the coast of California that pick up the electricity and with a large cable take it to the shore where they power many homes.

The ocean is crying out for help and no one is listening.

John N. Faller

Arrow Creek