Every four years, like clockwork, the debate over Nibiru’s existence starts anew, especially among so-called “conspiracy theorists” and the debunkers who follow in their footsteps. According to the largely untrustworthy Wikipedia, The Nibiru cataclysm is a supposed disastrous encounter between the Earth and a large planetary object (either a collision or a near-miss) which certain groups believe will take place in the early 21st century. Believers in this doomsday event usually refer to this object asPlanet X or Nibiru[1].
The “cataclysm” concept was first posited by a dubious source, Nancy Leider, who describes herself as a contactee with the ability to receive messages from extraterrestrials from the Zeta Reticuli star system through an implant in her brain. She states that she was chosen to warn mankind that the object would sweep through the inner Solar System in May 2003 (though that date was later postponed) causing Earth to undergo a physical pole shift that would destroy most of humanity. Her questionable claims, in concert with Zecharia Sitchin’s translation of Sumerian scriptures, sparked the Nibiru craze that exists to this day.
Vetting Nibiru researchers is a daunting task; every legitimate Nibiru story or photograph spawns a myriad of hoaxes that spread like wildfire across the internet. And every legitimate Nibiru sighting is quickly discredited by government sponsored paid shills and NASA disinformation agents, organizations desperate to conceal Nibiru’s existence until the last possible moment. Supporters claim to have seen it, though many sightings turn out to be photographs of lens flares, street lamps, or atmospheric aberrations. Debunkers are quick to argue: “If it’s there, why can’t we see it? Why didn’t it arrive in 2004, 2008, 2012?”
Naturally, mixed views create controversy. Despite the verbal wrangling, and that Nibiru did not wreak havoc in 2004, 2008, or 2012, a preponderance of evidence suggests Nibiru indeed exists and will, at some time, cause enormous problems for earth.
In 2010, an ominous YouTube video posted by a user calling himself “NibiruShock” provided the world with the first substantiated images of the Nibiru System. These images were substantiated by Marshall Masters, a former Science Features Editor for CNN and Planet X researcher. The persona known as “NibiruShock” was proven to be Professor Ronald Jason Patrick, a scientist who worked at the Australian Astronomical Observatory, who, ironically, died in an airline crash earlier this year.
Astute internet astronomers noticed that Google had intentionally “blacked out” parts of its Google Sky application to hide Nibiru’s position from the public.
And there is no denying the suspicious and untimely deaths of many credible scientists who either got too close to “the real information” or announced an intention to go public with their Nibiru research. Robert Sutton Harrington, who worked as an astronomer at the United States Naval Observatory, was the first victim of the Nibiru cover-up. Carol W. Ambruster, 69, a retired professor of astronomy, and Eugene Shoemaker were later added to the growing list of Nibiru researches to perish mysteriously.
Our own interviews with astronomers Eugene Ricks and Dr. Ronald Shimschuck, both of whom worked at NASA, bolster evidence for Nibiru’s existence. As has been widely reported across the internet, Dr. Ronald Shimschuck mysteriously vanished during a recorded interview between himself and YouTube truth-seeker Steve Olson. Having facilitated that interview, we feel partly responsible for whatever fate may have befallen Dr. Shimschuck.
Which brings us to the crux of this article. The featured image, displayed again below, surfaced on a newly discovered website, drshimschuck.com. The website contains only the image and the cryptic message “More information to follow.”
Someonesbones.com has not heard from Dr. Ronald Shimschuck since his disappearance, and thus cannot establish the veracity of the aforementioned website. At this time we don’t know if it was created by Dr. Shimschuck, another entity supporting him, or if it’s part of an elaborate disinformation campaign against him.