I would argue that this is as much conjecture / speculation as the theorists who believe we are about to experience the pole shift.
However, in saying "as much", I do recognize that those theorists are probably using 100% conjecture / speculation in their thesis. For example, I've listened to / watched Suspicious Observers since around 2013, which used to be primarily about solar activity and predicting earthquakes, etc., and because solar activity is a hammer and a nail is a solar event, then everything must be a nail (solar event). So when news of the Chan Thomas book, "The Adam and Eve Story" came out, end it described a solar event, then surely this had to be the thing that was going to happen and surely it was going to happen within our lifetimes, because of course if the world we know was gonna end after all these thousands of years then it would happen within the next 20 years. Confirmation bias sets in and suddenly everything points to this conclusion. And then the date passes and everybody forgets about it and then does the same thing again with something else.
BTW, it's funny that every time we discover some kind of ancient cyclical disaster the last time it happened happens to be exactly the same as the cycle time. For example, "the Yellowstone super volcano erupts every 600,000 years, and the last time it erupted was 600,000 years ago!!!"
I would argue that this is as much conjecture / speculation as the theorists who believe we are about to experience the pole shift.
However, in saying "as much", I do recognize that those theorists are probably using 100% conjecture / speculation in their thesis. For example, I've listened to / watched Suspicious Observers since around 2013, which used to be primarily about solar activity and predicting earthquakes, etc., and because solar activity is a hammer and a nail is a solar event, then everything must be a nail (solar event). So when news of the Chan Thomas book, "The Adam and Eve Story" came out, end it described a solar event, then surely this had to be the thing that was going to happen and surely it was going to happen within our lifetimes, because of course if the world we know was gonna end after all these thousands of years then it would happen within the next 20 years. Confirmation bias sets in and suddenly everything points to this conclusion. And then the date passes and everybody forgets about it and then does the same thing again with something else.
BTW, it's funny that every time we discover some kind of ancient cyclical disaster the last time it happened happens to be exactly the same as the cycle time. For example, "the Yellowstone super volcano erupts every 600,000 years, and the last time it erupted was 600,000 years ago!!!"