
THE HIGHLY ELECTR0-MAGNETIC HIDEOUT

THE RYTHMATIC 9 YEAR HEARTBEAT OF CHANGE
A DISCOVERY LINKED TO THE PRIME SEQUENCE
WHICH BEGAN WHEN I SAW 144 AND 153 WERE 9
APART, AND ARE DIVIDABLE BY 9.
Subtracting 9 years at a time from 2034 creates a remarkably rhythmic cycle through history. This specific sequence hits several "turning point" years that defined modern technology, political boundaries, and human rights.
The timeline below highlights the most standout milestones along this 9-year pattern, tracing back to the signing of the Magna Carta.
The Digital & Modern Era
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2034: (Future) Projected target for various space agency Mars missions.
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2025: (Upcoming) Predicted to be a significant year for AI integration and the "halfway point" of the 2020s.
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2016: The Year of Political Shocks. The UK voted for Brexit, and Donald Trump was elected U.S. President.
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2007: The Mobile Revolution. Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone, fundamentally changing how the world interacts with technology.
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1998: The Information Age. Google was founded, and the Good Friday Agreement brought peace to Northern Ireland.
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1989: The Fall of the Wall. The Berlin Wall fell, signaling the end of the Cold War. It was also the year of the Tiananmen Square protests.1
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1980: The Reagan Era. Ronald Reagan was elected, the Rubik's Cube went global, and John Lennon was tragically assassinated.
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1971: Economic Shift. President Nixon ended the Gold Standard (the "Nixon Shock"), and the Intel 4004, the first microprocessor, was released.
The Mid-20th Century & World Wars
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1962: The Brink of War. The Cuban Missile Crisis brought the world closer to nuclear war than ever before.
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1953: The Blueprint of Life. Watson and Crick discovered the double helix structure of DNA. In politics, Joseph Stalin died, and the Korean War reached an armistice.
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1944: D-Day. The Allied forces invaded Normandy, marking the beginning of the end for Nazi Germany in WWII.
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1935: Social Safety Nets. The U.S. passed the Social Security Act; meanwhile, the game Monopoly was released to the public.
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1926: The Television & a Queen. John Logie Baird gave the first public demonstration of a television. It was also the birth year of Queen Elizabeth II.
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1917: Revolution & War.2 The Russian Revolution began, and the United States officially entered World War I.
The 19th Century: Expansion & Conflict
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1908: The People’s Car. Henry Ford produced the first Model T, and the mysterious Tunguska event occurred in Siberia.
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1899: The Boer War. The Second Boer War began in South Africa, and Aspirin was patented by Bayer.
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1890: The Closing of the Frontier. The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred, and Yosemite was established as a National Park.
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1881: Assassination & Outlaws. U.S. President James A. Garfield was assassinated, and the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral took place.
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1872: The First National Park. Yellowstone was established as the world’s first National Park.
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1863: Freedom & Gettysburg. Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address and issued the Emancipation Proclamation.
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1854: The Grand Old Party. The Republican Party was founded in the U.S. to combat the expansion of slavery.
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1845: Texas Annexation.3 The United States annexed Texas, leading toward the Mexican-American War.
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1836: The Alamo. The legendary Battle of the Alamo took place in San Antonio.
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1827: The End of an Era. The death of Ludwig van Beethoven.
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1818: Gothic Horror. Mary Shelley published "Frankenstein."
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1809: A Double Birth. Both Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin were born on February 12th of this year.
The Enlightenment & Colonial Era
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1800: Capital City. The U.S. government officially moved from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C.
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1791: The Bill of Rights. The first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution were officially ratified.
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1773: The Boston Tea Party. American colonists threw British tea into the harbor, a major catalyst for the American Revolution.
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1755: The Great Lisbon Earthquake. One of the deadliest earthquakes in history, which profoundly influenced Enlightenment philosophy.
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1710: Modern Copyright. The Statute of Anne, the first true copyright law, was enacted in Great Britain.
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1692: Salem Witch Trials. The infamous witchcraft trials began in Massachusetts.
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1620: The Pilgrims. The Mayflower landed at Plymouth Rock.
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1611: The King James Bible. The first edition of the King James Version of the Bible was published.
Ancient & Medieval Anchors
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1521: The Fall of Tenochtitlan. Hernán Cortés conquered the Aztec capital. In Europe, Martin Luther was declared an outlaw at the Diet of Worms.
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1440: The Printing Press. Johannes Gutenberg invented the moveable-type printing press (approximate date), arguably the most important invention of the millennium.
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1215: Magna Carta. King John of England signed the "Great Charter," establishing the principle that everyone, including the king, is subject to the law.
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1206: The Mongol Empire. Temujin was proclaimed Genghis Khan, ruler of all Mongols, beginning the largest contiguous land empire in history.
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2027: BIBLICAL RAPTURE # 1, BEGINNING OF THE 7 YEAR TRIBULATION IS NOT IN THE SEQUENCE OF 9, BUT
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2034: IS ; 7 YEARS OF TRIBULATION AFTER 5.7.2027 BRINGS US TO 8.28.2034, which is oddly inside the Leo sign when the Lord our Savior Yeshua was born. Judgement day.