If Earth lost gravity for seven seconds, you wouldn’t float peacefully above your kitchen floor.
Every ocean on the planet would simultaneously abandon its basin, and the atmosphere would begin dispersing into space.
The viral claim about August 12, 2026 is not being seriously examined by scientists as a genuine possibility. It is being seriously dismantled. Gravity is not a setting that toggles. It emerges from the mass of Earth itself, roughly 6 septillion kilograms of rock, iron, and molten metal pulling everything toward its center at 9.8 meters per second squared. That force does not schedule interruptions, and no known force in the universe can suspend it temporarily without destroying the planet entirely in the process.
For gravity to pause even briefly, Earth’s mass would have to vanish, not merely reduce. No planetary alignment, solar flare, or astronomical configuration on any known calendar produces that outcome. The planets are tracked with enough mathematical precision that a gravitational disruption of this magnitude on a specific future date would already appear in orbital calculations made today. Nothing points to August 12.
What scientists genuinely investigate regarding gravitational anomalies involves gravitational waves, ripples in spacetime produced by colliding black holes and neutron stars billions of light years away. LIGO first detected them in 2015. Those waves stretch and compress spacetime by distances smaller than a single proton. You would not feel them. You would absolutely not float.
The reason this hoax returns every few years under different dates is simple psychology. Weightlessness is one of the most viscerally appealing ideas the human brain generates. It reads as total freedom, freedom from everything, literally. The body wants it to be real, so the mind lowers its verification threshold and shares the claim before examining it.
The universe runs on math, and the math on this one closed a long time ago.
L’Aventure commence aujourd’hui, avec la première moitié de ce second volet. C’est un bonheur, après des mois d’écriture, un tournage avec presque 80 comédiens dans plusieurs pays qui a couvert les 4 saisons, le travail avec les équipes d’image, de son, d’effets spéciaux (...)
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NEW: NASA has increased the chance a major asteroid smashes into Earth in 2032, now giving it a 3.1% chance, up from 2.6% last week.
NASA says the odds the asteroid hits Earth is 1 in 32. It is big enough to wipe out an entire city.
The large cities with the highest risk are Bogotá, Abidjan, Lagos, Khartoum, Mumbai, Kolkata and Dhaka.
According to experts, the 177-foot diameter asteroid would release 8 megatons of energy on impact, 500 times the energy released by the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
NASA has successfully tested asteroid deflection technologies. China will also be testing its own technology on a small asteroid in 2027.
"This is not a crisis at this point in time. This is not the dinosaur killer. This is not the planet killer. This is at most dangerous for a city," said the head of the European Space Agency's planetary defense office, Richard Moissl.
Eighty years ago today, over 7,000 prisoners of the German Nazi camp #Auschwitz, including some 700 children, were liberated by the soldiers of the Soviet Army.
1,689 days of murder, pain, suffering, and humiliation were over.
Today, we all remember. We must keep remembering.