Ruth Leedy Carr

Maryland City, Maryland May 9, 2025 (Issuewire.com) The destruction of northern Europe and Japan, as predicted by a mysterious voice speaking through the medium Edgar Cayce, launched Ruth Leedy Carr in 1980 on a long investigation. If a geologist really believed Cayce's prediction of an Earth axis shift was likely to be fulfilled soon by a geomagnetic field reversal, why did he not announce that openly? Why did he insist on anonymity when being interviewed for Jess Stearn's bestseller Edgar Cayce: The Sleeping Prophet? Why did he not point out that the force shifting the axis would have to be the solar wind as funneled to new magnetic polar sites? Later, Carr wondered why a Scientific American article of December 1989 gave great detail about the approach of a geomagnetic field reversal without mentioning that this rare seismic event was believed to be a cataclysm that could result in extinctions and perhaps an axis shift. The Cayce prophecies themselves were not clear on important points. What was meant by saying "His Light will be seen again in the clouds" around the time of a coming axis shift?

On reading about the hollow Earth theory, Carr realized that the planet's central sun, shining up into the clouds through polar openings newly relocated by centrifugal force in an axis shift, would fulfill that prophecy about "His Light." She realized she had stumbled onto a theory of the Second Coming of Christ. Under this theory, Christ was a symbolic figure of the inner sun, an idea consistent with grail traditions, and so he was able to predict a polar hole shift in language that people could hold onto safely until a later time when that dangerous and terrifying secret would have to be revealed publicly.

NASA has now tacitly admitted that the protruding blobs of polar light on Mars which were identified for decades as ice, were not ice at all. NASA's announcement that water has been detected near the poles of Mars in the form of wet rocks was notable because of the lack of any mention of an ice cap. So George Gamow's unsupported assertion in A Planet Called Earth is now out the window. A series of Mariner 7 photos of Mars from Aug. 4, 1969, clearly show a southern light cap on the night side, which would be even more obvious if the day-night border near the "cap" had not been artificially obscured. These photos appeared in Space Science and Astronomy (Page), Guide to Mars (Moore, 1978), the Encyclopedia Britannica (1974), and Pictorial Guide to the Planets (Jackson, title page). An inquiry to NASA about the night-side light by Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, on Carr's behalf, was met with a no comment and a discussion of other evidence. In effect, that series of NASA photos was a demonstration by scientists that they have been obligated to lie about the structure of Mars.

"Mars be hollow." This anagram message is from "Hober Mallows," a pluralized name in Foundation's Edge referring back to the Hober Mallow of Isaac Asimov's novel Foundation. Every letter is used exactly once in this message, and the character himself represents a planet as its head of state. Neat as this message was, Carr knew that proving its validity, and the validity of scores of others like it, was impossible. She went looking for a reliable coded message. In a list of letters adjacent to commas, apostrophes, and single quotation marks (all identical marks) from "Frustration" in Asimov's Gold collection, she found three names from his novel Nemesis, where a secret star heads for Earth. She added "Celts" and "die" from the list to make the following riddle: "Merry, Tessa, Ranay, Celts die." The anagram message here could be:

"A cataclysm is near. Celts and Danes and all near Denmark may die." The validity of this cannot be proven, but it is special because there is no doubt that it was derived from an authentic secret message delivered by a scientific expert.

In his novel Contact, Carl Sagan told us "Eye R not free" by means of the prisoner's name "Tyrone Free." Likewise, in "Mentor First" from the Norby novels, Asimov appears to have said: "I'm not free. It mortifies me." Sagan's book title Broca's Brain, sounds like "Broke his brain," and his character's name, "Ian Broderick," can spell "Brain could be broken and I could die." A doomsday prophet from his novel has a name that can spell "Earth axis shift" as well as "field reversal." In "Stefan Alexeivich Baruda," it appears Sagan was saying:

"Ruth Anne Leedi understands that a field reversal shall cause the Earth's axis to be shifted by the sun in the near future (in five to seven decades)." It seems clear that a message of this nature would be unlikely to arise by accident. Likewise, Asimov could not accidentally have put two linked names in "Perfectly Formal" (Gold) that both can spell: "Planet Earth be hollow."

About the Author:

Ruth Leedy Carr attended Indiana University, where she majored in journalism and psychology and covered stories in many scientific fields. She has written eight books on polar hole shifting, of which two Floria Benton books were republished by Saucerian Press. She was proclaimed by UFO researcher William L. Moore to be the world's foremost proponent of the hollow Earth theory.

This book can be purchased on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and many other distribution channels worldwide.

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Polar Hole Light in Europe

Source :Atticus Publishing

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