13 Vile Vortices devil triangles around the world

3 months ago
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Vile Vortices

Vile Vortices are devil triangles around the world to control all weather, water, and atmosphere. by the devil democrat party

13 Vile Vortices including Alaska

the Bermuda Triangle, right? Well, did you know that there are 11 other mysterious places where ships and planes simply seem to vanish? These 12 places are collectively called the Vile Vortices,

Ivan T. Sanderson was a biologist, writer, animal enthusiast, and huge fan of all things paranormal. He would go on expeditions and record what he saw and experienced in drawings, reports, and even photographs, and for fun he even dabbled in science fiction. In his travels and studies during the early 70s, he began to notice that there were specific regions where things seemed to go strange, where planes and people seemed to disappear, and where UFO sightings seemed to take place. He then mapped these 12 most paranormally-active areas and named them the Vile Vortices.

These vortices are: Bermuda Triangle, the
Algerian Megaliths, the city of Mohenjo Daro, the Hamakulia Volcano east of Hawaii, Japan the "Devil's Sea," the South Atlantic Anomaly, the Wharton Basin, the Easter Island megaliths, East of Rio de Janeiro, the Loyalty Islands, the North Pole, and the South Pole.

That's because half are distributed above the equator and half are distributed below the equator. In fact, five are along the Tropic of Capricorn, and five are along the Tropic of Cancer, with only the North and South Pole not being along those lines, meaning the vortices are mostly located near warm, tropical climates. They're also evenly spread out distance-wise, which investigators have suggested prove there is something logical and mathematical to the chaos.

Sanderson and other paranormal theorists had a few ideas on what exactly caused all of these places to be in order. One such idea involved Ley Lines, or the idea that important places and manmade objects line up because of spiritual energy or earthly feng shui. Other theories have more to do with subtle matter energy or electro-magnetic aberration, which is an idea involving geometric patterns actually addressed by Plato thousands of years ago.

Japan takes their Devil's Sea pretty seriously. After all, the area is steeped in ancient lore dating back all the way to 1000 BC. The ancient Chinese believed that there was a massive dragon in the sea in that region that pulled ships to their death in the 1200s. Even Kublai Kahn's military forces fell prey to the Devil's Sea. While most people stopped believing that as time passed, that didn't stop ships from vanishing or sinking without a trace.

All this finally culminated in 1952, when a research vessel, the Kaio Maru No. 5 set out to look into the strange phenomenon of the area. Unfortunately they didn't get any answers. Instead, the ship and its crew of 31 mysteriously disappeared. In response, the Japanese government declared the Devil's Sea unsafe for research ships and transporting.

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