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Reason: None provided.

Yawn. What. It doesn't not work like that. What. My continent is on a rotating planet. It is not moving continents. Although rifts, earthquakes, and volcanoes occur. The crust moves, and when it does there are consequences, the tectonic plates smash together, and pull away. These are like ripples, affected by many factors. After the continental split occurred, those plates are moving and banging together. The planet is also on a tilt of about 23 degrees from past impact. True North also moves, and has been for a while, and is increasing recently possibly more as our magnetic shield weakens, and as we rotate. Any drift is from our crust and tectonic plates crumpling together and pulling as we rotate affected by the cosmos undoubtedly in Solar cycles, Planetary alignment at 23 degrees, during rotation, and gravitational pulls. Has our planet expanded. No, it's the same circumference regardless.

Expanding, sooner means massive crustal displacement. Where we'd sooner have an extinction cycle. We have crustal displacement anyway, but the Planetary circumference doesn't change, but the plates have moved and are constantly moving. What has changed is the size of our land masses. Example the African Rift happening right now. Where the gobal land mass is much less than it was in the last 100k years. It hasn't expanded. Evidence of this is all across our continental shelves where sea level is much higher than it was then.

Don't worry folks the planet is growing, like a tree. It just needs even more water to expand into space. Because it has all the Stardust.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yawn. What. It doesn't not work like that. What. My continent is on a rotating planet. It is not moving continents. Although rifts, earthquakes, and volcanoes occur. The crust moves, and when it does there are consequences, the tectonic plates smash together, and pull away. These are like ripples, affected by many factors. After the continental split occurred, those plates are moving and banging together. The planet is also on a tilt of about 23 degrees from past impact. True North also moves, and has been for a while, and is increasing recently possibly more as our magnetic shield weakens, and as we rotate. Any drift is from our crust and tectonic plates crumpling together and pulling as we rotate affected by the cosmos undoubtedly in Solar cycles, Planetary alignment at 23 degrees, during rotation, and gravitational pulls. Has our planet expanded. No, it's the same circumference regardless.

Expanding, sooner means massive crustal displacement. Where we'd sooner have an extinction cycle. We have crustal displacement anyway, but the Planetary circumference doesn't change, but the plates have moved and are constantly moving. What has changed is the size of our land masses. Example the African Rift happening right now. Where the gobal land mass is much less than it was in the last 100k years. It hasn't expanded. Evidence of this is all across our continental shelves where sea level is much higher than it was then.

Don't worry folks the planet is growing, like a tree. It just needs even more water to expand into space.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yawn. What. It doesn't not work like that. What. My continent is on a rotating planet. It is not moving continents. Although rifts, earthquakes, and volcanoes occur. The crust moves, and when it does there are consequences, the tectonic plates smash together, and pull away. These are like ripples, affected by many factors. After the continental split occurred, those plates are moving and banging together. The planet is also on a tilt of about 23 degrees from past impact. True North also moves, and has been for a while, and is increasing recently possibly more as our magnetic shield weakens, and as we rotate. Any drift is from our crust and tectonic plates crumpling together and pulling as we rotate affected by the cosmos undoubtedly in Solar cycles, Planetary alignment at 23 degrees, during rotation, and gravitational pulls. Has our planet expanded. No, it's the same circumference regardless.

Expanding, sooner means massive crustal displacement. Where we'd sooner have an extinction cycle. We have crustal displacement anyway, but the Planetary circumference doesn't change, but the plates have moved and are constantly moving. What has changed is the size of our land masses. Example the African Rift happening right now. Where the gobal land mass is much less than it was in the last 100k years. It hasn't expanded. Evidence of this is all across our continental shelves where sea level is much higher than it was then.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yawn. What. It doesn't not work like that. What. My continent is on a rotating planet. It is not moving continents. Although rifts, earthquakes, and volcanoes occur. The crust moves when it does there are consequences, the tectonic plates smash together, and pull away. But these are like ripples. After the continental split occurred, those plates are moving and banging together. The planet is also on a tilt about 23 degrees from past impact. True North also moves, and has been for a while, and is increasing recently possibly more as our magnetic shield weakens, and as we rotate. Any drift is from our crust and tectonic plates crumpling together and pulling as we rotate affected by the cosmos undoubtedly in Solar cycles, Planetary alignment at 23 degrees, during rotation, and pulls. Has our planet expanded. No, it's the same circumference regardless.

Expanding means massive crustal displacement. Where we'd sooner have an extinction cycle. We have displacement anyway, but the Planetary circumference doesn't change, but the plates have moved are moving. What has changed is the size of our land mass. Example the African Rift happening right now. Where the gobal land mass is much less than it was in the last 100k years. It hasn't expanded. Evidence of this is all across our continental shelves where sea level is much higher than it was then.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Yawn. What. It doesn't not work like that. What. My continent is on a rotating planet. It is not moving continents. Although rifts, earthquakes, and volcanoes occur. The crust moves when it does there are consequences, the tectonic plates smash together, and pull away. But these are like ripples. After the continental split occurred, those plates are moving and banging together. The planet is also on a tilt about 23 degrees from past impact. True North also moves, and has been for a while, and is increasing recently possibly more as our magnetic shield weakens, and as we rotate. Any drift is from our crust and tectonic plates crumpling together and pulling as we rotate affected by the cosmos undoubtedly in Solar cycles, Planetary alignment at 23 degrees, during rotation, and pulls. Has our planet expanded. No, it's the same circumference regardless.

Expanding means massive crustal displacement. Where we'd sooner have an extinction cycle. We have displacement anyway. But the Planetary circumference doesn't change. But the plates have moved. What has changed is the size of our land mass. Example the African Rift happening right now. Where the land mass is much less than it was in the last 100k years. It hasn't expanded.

1 year ago
1 score