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When the Sun Goes Silent

Graph depicting NOAA-aligned solar cycle sunspot activity from 1990 to 2040, showing sunspot numbers over the years.

Why NOAA’s Sunspot Prediction Should Terrify the World

In the shadows of the mainstream climate narrative — filled with fears of overheating, carbon overload, and global boiling — lies a quiet admission from one of the most established scientific institutions in the world: NOAA predicts a complete drop-off of sunspots beginning around 2030. Yet NOAA still insists global warming is a threat.

This sunspot prediction is not just a data point. It’s a cosmic alarm bell but no one is listening. Sunspots are visible markers of solar activity. More sunspots mean more solar radiation — more warmth, and more energy reaching the Earth. A decline, especially as steep and prolonged as NOAA forecasts, signals that we are entering a profound solar minimum.

And if history teaches us anything, this is not a benign trend. During the Maunder Minimum (1645–1715), sunspot activity dropped off for decades. What followed was the Little Ice Age — a period of global cooling that froze rivers, shortened growing seasons, collapsed food systems and contributed to widespread famine, disease, and unrest. The Thames in London froze. Crops failed in Europe. Millions suffered — not from warming, but from cold.

Now, in the 21st century, while politicians and pundits scream about CO₂, NOAA is quietly pointing to the star of the show: the Sun itself. If the sun goes quiet, so does the Earth’s climate.

CONTINUE READING ON DR. SIRCUS

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