Jane Evershed True Earth Codex

Jane Evershed True Earth Codex

BREAKING: 3I/Atlas on Collision Course with Earth! So "they" say...

The Propaganda pop-gun is popping, it’s all they have left… Don’t trust the headlines—trust the orbit.

Jane Evershed True Earth Codex's avatar
Jane Evershed True Earth Codex
Nov 07, 2025
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3I/ATLAS Reimagined by Grok: Of course its headed straight for Earth, GASP!

It has begun.
They will try to spook the world into believing 3I/Atlas is barreling straight for Earth.

Why? Because the only major weapon they have left is their propaganda pop-gun. With one memo, their global media syndicate can flip every chyron to BREAKING NEWS: “3I/Atlas ON A COLLISION COURSE WITH EARTH!”

Add a sprinkle of whistleblower and the rumor hardens into viral gospel. These are practiced manipulators. It’s dynamite clickbait, and ratings are their oxygen.

While 3I/Atlas appears to defy the laws of physics, mass media defies the laws of its own demise. This interstellar arrival is the real Source verification — truth streamed through the sky itself.


But here’s the thing: 31/Atlas is NOT barreling straight for Earth. And you can prove that to yourself in two minutes.

Verify it yourself from your hometown (2-minute check)

  1. Set your location. Open a reputable observer tool (for example, TheSkyLive), search “3I/Atlas,” and set it to your town. Check Rise & Set or Finder/Ephemeris for tonight’s path and distance.

  2. Cross-check the numbers. Use the Jet Propulsion Laboratory “Horizons” page to generate an ephemeris for the same dates. You should see a closest approach of about 1.8 × Earth–Sun distance in mid-December 2025.

  3. Peek at the raw observations (optional). The Minor Planet Center posts the time-stamped measurements from independent observatories. Those are the numbers used to compute the orbit you just checked.

Don’t trust headlines—trust the orbit. Public ephemerides place 3I/Atlas about 1.8 × Earth–Sun distance from Earth in mid-December 2025. If that changed, the public numbers would change too.


Hypin’ it!!

Welcome to the rumor reel:
a swirling feed where every headline contradicts the last.

Examples from this week’s carnival:

  • “NASA in Panic! 3I ATLAS Emitting Mysterious Radio Signals—Scientists Fear First Contact!”

  • “Man used CIA remote-viewing to see inside—it’s a ship with five million dormant Draco soldiers!”

  • “BREAKING BOMBSHELL: the CIA / Mossad confirm 3I ATLAS is a gigantic alien spacecraft!”

  • “New Japanese footage leaked—it just turned blue!”

  • “Former intelligence: 3I Atlas is fabricated to keep people in check.”

  • “News anchor: no tail for 3I Atlas—the change is coming very soon…”

Scroll through social media and it’s a dizzying tapestry of contradiction: blue comet, no comet, invasion, hoax, disclosure, distraction.
No cohesion—just an orchestra of algorithms playing fear at full volume.

Here’s the steady note beneath the noise:
3I/Atlas is still tracking on the same wide, open trajectory—about 1.8 × the Earth–Sun distance at closest approach in mid-December 2025.
Nothing in the actual sky matches the panic.

So we laugh, we breathe, and we keep our discernment sharp.
The spectacle is theirs; the stillness is ours.

What the sky data actually says

  • It’s an interstellar visitor. 3I/Atlas is on a one-pass, hyperbolic path through our Solar System. That means it’s passing through once and leaving.

  • Closest approach is still far away. The orbit solutions show its nearest pass in mid-December 2025 at about 1.8 times the distance between Earth and the Sun.
    For those who don’t believe the Sun sits 90 million miles away — it’s still a heckuva long way from Earth!

  • If the path changed, everyone would see it. The orbit is refined from open, time-stamped measurements taken by observatories around the world. Any real change would appear in those public numbers.

Don’t trust headlines—trust the orbit.

Perihelion happens for 3I/Atlas in mid-December 2025 is about 1.8 × the Earth–Sun distance—a very wide miss.
For readers who don’t accept the Sun’s distance figure: it’s still a heckuva long way from Earth.
If that ever changed, the public sky tables would change too.

What “ephemerides” and Perihelion mean

An ephemeris (plural: ephemerides) is simply a time-stamped table showing where an object will appear in the sky at specific times—its direction, height above the horizon, distance, and brightness. These tables are generated directly from real observations gathered worldwide. When new measurements come in, the table updates. So if anything dramatic were happening, you’d see it right there—not in a headline, but in the data.

The word Perihelion means the closest point to the Sun. For 3I/Atlas, that moment came in late October 2025, when it brushed deepest into the Sun’s field. From a Guardian view, that wasn’t a random swing through gravity—it was an energetic synchronization, a moment when the visitor’s ancient frequency touched the Solar Gate to initiate realignment. Astronomers see heat and gas; we feel a pulse of recalibration—the Diamond White Sun breathing recognition back into the field.


Webb 3I/Atlas
Webb Infrared View — August 2025 Credit: European Space Agency / Webb Science Team

Get it out there fast

For people rushing by: No, 3I/Atlas is not on a collision course with Earth. The public sky tables show a closest approach in mid-December 2025 of about one-and-three-quarters the Earth–Sun distance—still a heckuva long way from Earth even if you don’t accept the Sun’s distance figure. If anything truly changed, those orbit tables would change too. Wondering whether it could suddenly turn toward us? Any real shift would show up in the public numbers immediately. Don’t believe the Sun’s distance? You don’t need it—the ratio is what matters: about 1.8 × our Earth–Sun separation, which is very far. Why all the hype then? Because fear sells; calm truth doesn’t.


NOIRLab 3I/Atlas
NOIRLab Capture — July 2025 Credit: NOIRLab / National Science Foundation / AURA

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