The word “lofty” has several meanings:
- Physically High: Towering or reaching a great height (e.g., "lofty mountains").
- Noble/Exalted: Elevated in character, spirit, or status (e.g., "lofty ideals" or "lofty goals").
- Arrogant: Having a haughty or supercilious manner (e.g., "a lofty disregard").
- Textile Term: Full-bodied, firm, and resilient.
Knowing that England is “lofty”… as in further up north…, and because part of the inner twin world’s mandate involves trying to bring to the attention a great looming danger, and that this has to do with the effects of isostatic adjustment, I decided to pose the question for AI to answer: is Great Britain sinking or rising as a result of isostatic adjustment?, and AI’s response:
Great Britain is doing both:the northern part is rising, and the southern part is sinking as a result of a geological process called post-glacial rebound or glacial isostatic adjustment.
This "seesaw" effect is a lingering result of the last Ice Age, which ended about 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.
The Mechanism: A "Seesaw" Effect
- Northern Rising (Rebound): During the last Ice Age, a heavy ice sheet covered Scotland and Northern Britain, pressing the land down into the earth's mantle. Now that the ice has melted, the land is slowly rising back up, similar to a cushion recovering after being sat on.
- Southern Sinking (Subsidence): As the North rises, the South of England acts like the other end of a seesaw, dipping downward.
- The Pivot Point: The pivot point of this movement is generally in the Midlands/North Wales area, with uplift in the north and subsidence in the south.
Key Impacts
- Scotland/North: The land is rising by up to 10 cm per century (roughly 1.5 mm per year in some areas).
- London/South East: The land is sinking at a rate of approximately 2 mm per year, or 20 cm per century.
- Flood Risk: Because the South is sinking, it faces a compounded risk of flooding. The land subsidence (roughly 1 mm per year in the south) adds to the global sea-level rise caused by climate change.
What struck me in regards to the above info, is the use of the word “seesaw”…, because it sounds like “heehaw”, … which has cryptic meaning given the recent and prolific “Ass Theme” pattern cluster . The bray (heehaw) is used to communicate various emotions of the ass or donkey, butt one in particular stands out:
Alert/Warning: They may use this call as an alarm to warn of predators or intruders
Seems fitting — an heehaw concerning a seesaw… or should that be spelled “seasaw”?! England is just a small area of the Eurasian tectonic plate so the seesaw effect there, is the result of Glacial forebulge, that had risen up just outside the Glacier’s edge. The same seesaw effect is occurring with the North American Plate. However, there is another type of seesaw effect that needs to be considered, butt for some reason is not— the seesaw effect created by the bulk of Glacial Ice having been situated further north on the North American plate, means that the bulk of this area is rising via post-glacial-rebound. Now the interesting thing, is that with the massive weight on the Northern end of this plate (see second image below), then the southern areas would have tipped—seesawed upward. This means that the land that tipped upward at the southern reaches of the plate is undergoing post-glacial-refall (I created the term because believe it or not, science has not yet caught up on that… and perhaps they have, … whatever the case, the fact remains that it’s not yet out there. This seesaw effect could have serious devastating effects to millions upon millions of people living along shorelines at the southern edge of the plate— Florida and Cuba to name just two.
The term heehaw breaks down into a cryptic “he haw”… the “he” being a reference to our outer twin patriarchal world, and then “haw” reminding me of another saying— “hum and haw”, that’s used to describe procrastination, delaying or stalling. Haw is defined by etymology as having the early meanings:
Haw (n.)"enclosure," Old English haga "enclosure, fortified enclosure; hedge," from Proto-Germanic *hag- (source also of Old Norse hagi, Old Saxon hago, German Hag "hedge;" Middle Dutch hage, Dutch haag, as in the city name The Hague), from PIE root *kagh- "to catch seize; wickerwork fence" (see hedge (n.), and compare hag). Meaning "fruit of the hawthorn bush" (Old English) is perhaps short for *hægberie.
Haw (v.)"hesitate in speech," 1580s, imitative. Related: Hawed; hawing. The noun in this sense is from c. 1600.
So the over all communication is — the outer twin patriarchal world (us), is stalling about the truth that they need to seize, no longer hesitate on, and so speak about it freely.
And now getting back to Lofty England, note his birth name:
Frank Raymond Wilton "Lofty" England (24 August 1911, Middlesex – 30 May 1995, Austria)
His first name is also a word “frank”— the unabashed verbalized truth— a heehaw warning so we can prepare.
Of course there’s the tv show, Hee Haw, that will factor in, note the cast and crew info:
- Archie Campbell (November 7, 1914 – August 29, 1987) (*call)
- Roy Acuff (September 15, 1903 – November 23, 1992)
- Gordie Tapp (June 4, 1922 – December 18, 2016)
- Grandpa Jones (October 20, 1913 – February 19, 1998)
- Junior Samples (August 10, 1926 – November 13, 1983)
- David "Stringbean" Akeman (June 17, 1915 – November 10, 1973)
- Roni Stoneman (May 5, 1938 – February 22, 2024) (*stan/place, country)
- Lulu Roman (née Hable; May 6, 1946 – April 23, 2025) (*roan)
- Minnie Pearl (Sarah Colley Cannon; October 25, 1912 – March 4, 1996)
- Don Harron (September 19, 1924 – January 17, 2015)
- Mike Snider (born May 30, 1961)
- Frank Peppiatt (March 19, 1927 – November 7, 2012)
- John Aylesworth (August 18, 1928 – July 28, 2010)
- Buck Owens (August 12, 1929 – March 25, 2006) (*owns)
- Roy Clark (April 15, 1933 – November 15, 2018)
Snide (adj.) 1859, thieves' slang, "counterfeit, sham, bad, spurious," a word of unknown origin. Century Dictionary suggests it is a dialectal variant of snithe, itself a dialectal adjective meaning "sharp, cutting," used of the wind, from the Middle English verb snithen "to cut," from Old English snithan, which is cognate with German schneiden.
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