Stuart Talbott: Electric Enceladus Shocks Scientists | Thunderbolts

For over fifty years, Saturn and Jupiter have provided extraordinary laboratories in space for testing the core tenets of the Electric Universe Model of Cosmology.

In 1979, Voyager 1 captured the first images of Jupiter’s moon Io which revealed filamentary structures exploding hundreds of kilometers into space. Mainstream science concluded they were produced by volcanism—however, Peratt and Destler proved Io’s plumes could only be explained as a plasma discharge in their breakthrough peer-reviewed paper in 1987.

A similar mystery has recently unfolded on Saturn’s Enceladus when filamentary plumes are observed exploding from the surface of this moon. Alas, institutionalized science continues to insist that volcanism—now called cryovolcanism—is the only possible explanation.

Independent researcher Stuart Talbott describes how Enceladus is emblematic of the theoretical crisis at the heart of cosmology—impairment to recognize indisputable evidence.