The author, Miles Mathis, criticizes the mainstream scientific community’s handling of sunspot cycle predictions, particularly by the Royal Observatory of Belgium (SILSO). He argues that these institutions are manipulating data through extended smoothing periods to maintain the illusion of accurate predictions, a tactic he claims they used previously to obscure his successful forecast of the last solar minimum.
Mathis contends that organizations like SILSO and NOAA are presenting misleading graphs and shifting their predictions to appear closer to success than they are. He highlights their failure to acknowledge significant discrepancies in their initial predictions and criticizes their logic that prediction methods converge at maximum, suggesting it’s a way to mask their inaccuracies. Mathis asserts that his own predictions, made in February 2020, have consistently proven accurate, including peaks coinciding with Jovian conjunctions and a first peak of 190. He forecasts a trough until January, followed by a second, higher peak of 240 around late 2026, with a lesser peak over 200 in early 2026.
He further points out the mainstream’s failure to recognize the common double-peaked nature of solar cycles, evidenced by historical data from cycles 22, 23, and 24. Mathis believes that rather than acknowledging a probable first peak in mid-2023, SILSO and NOAA are using curve fitting to incorrectly suggest the cycle has already peaked or will peak imminently in October. He also criticizes their cycle length predictions, which he finds too short compared to historical data and his own 13-year cycle prediction.
The author also touches on the enigmatic “Philalethes,” whom he interprets as a figure representing oblivion or an attempt to lull the public back to sleep. He speculates this moniker might refer to Eirenaeus Philalethes, or George Starkey, an American alchemist and contemporary of Isaac Newton. Starkey’s connections to Israel Stoughton, the Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, and Samuel Hartlieb, described as a “superspook,” head of Intelligence, and a Polish Jew from a family of wealthy merchants funded by Cromwell for various projects, are also mentioned.
Summary with Marked Entities:
The author, Miles Mathis, criticizes the mainstream scientific community’s handling of sunspot cycle predictions, particularly by the Royal Observatory of Belgium (SILSO). He argues that these institutions are manipulating data through extended smoothing periods to maintain the illusion of accurate predictions, a tactic he claims they used previously to obscure his successful forecast of the last solar minimum.
Mathis contends that organizations like SILSO and NOAA are presenting misleading graphs and shifting their predictions to appear closer to success than they are. He highlights their failure to acknowledge significant discrepancies in their initial predictions and criticizes their logic that prediction methods converge at maximum, suggesting it’s a way to mask their inaccuracies. Mathis asserts that his own predictions, made in February 2020, have consistently proven accurate, including peaks coinciding with Jovian conjunctions and a first peak of 190. He forecasts a trough until January, followed by a second, higher peak of 240 around late 2026, with a lesser peak over 200 in early 2026.
He further points out the mainstream’s failure to recognize the common double-peaked nature of solar cycles, evidenced by historical data from cycles 22, 23, and 24. Mathis believes that rather than acknowledging a probable first peak in mid-2023, SILSO and NOAA are using curve fitting to incorrectly suggest the cycle has already peaked or will peak imminently in October. He also criticizes their cycle length predictions, which he finds too short compared to historical data and his own 13-year cycle prediction.
The author also touches on the enigmatic “Philalethes”, whom he interprets as a figure representing oblivion or an attempt to lull the public back to sleep. He speculates this moniker might refer to Eirenaeus Philalethes, or George Starkey, an American alchemist and contemporary of Isaac Newton. Starkey’s connections to Israel Stoughton, the Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, and Samuel Hartlieb, described as a “superspook,” head of Intelligence, and a Polish Jew from a family of wealthy merchants funded by Cromwell for various projects, are also mentioned.
List of Marked Entities:
- Miles Mathis
- sunspot cycle
- Royal Observatory of Belgium
- SILSO
- solar minimum
- NOAA
- February 2020
- Jovian conjunctions
- January
- 2026
- solar cycles
- Philalethes
- Eirenaeus Philalethes
- George Starkey
- American
- Isaac Newton
- Israel Stoughton
- Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
- Samuel Hartlieb
- Intelligence
- Polish Jew
- Cromwell