View Full Version : What was causing all the earthquakes?
Zell
December 2nd, 2011, 02:48 PM
I don't understand that part.
GNTLGNT
December 4th, 2011, 06:46 PM
I'm just guessin', it was when seats were taken...
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010/11/09/article-1328160-05EEF2B30000044D-858_468x343.jpg
bryantburnette
December 5th, 2011, 03:27 PM
My theory is that in the new version of reality Jake created, something prevented Roland from being able to stop the fall of the Tower, and that the earthquakes are part of the process of the fabric of reality ripping itself apart. Mr. King has said that he intentionally didn't link the two stories (11/22/63 and The Dark Tower), but I'm not buying it, personally. :smile2:
~Ally~
December 5th, 2011, 07:20 PM
I'm just guessin', it was when seats were taken...
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010/11/09/article-1328160-05EEF2B30000044D-858_468x343.jpg
Hmm, I don't recall giving you permission to use my picture...:umm:
guido tkp
December 5th, 2011, 10:26 PM
roland-shmoland...there was ample, and easy opportunity for king to tie in anything he wanted...he doesn't need, at this late stage, to get all hocusy-pocusy about it...like we'd all be fooled !!
of course, why, after saying before that everything in every book is connected, he did not...that's another conspiracy theory, right ?
didn't portal boy say something like each trip is not a complete reset..and each trip that changed things twisted life, the universe and everything more and more...and some trips twisted it all the hades...and who knew what might happen when it got twisted too much...(now we might have a clue !)
what if...'11/22/63' is to 'the dark tower' what 'the regulators' is to 'desperation'
jchanic
December 6th, 2011, 10:30 AM
Back to the original question. My feeling was that the number of atomic/hydrogen bomb explosions that occurred caused a number of faults in the earth's crust, creating the earthquakes. Maybe junk science, but who knows?
John
melindaville
December 6th, 2011, 11:18 AM
I thought it had something to do with the Yellow Card Man saying that if Jake messed up too many strings, reality itself would cease to exist. I thought the earthquakes were tied to the reality of the world--that reality itself was imploding/exploding.
I would have thought it was due to the drastic changes that occurred due to the politics involved with the EPA--except that the first earthquake occurred before Jake returned to 2011. That's why I think it was due to reality being threatened.
Sigmund
December 6th, 2011, 11:52 AM
I thought that it was because the bigger the changes you make in the past the bigger reality/world/fate would rebel.
Peace.
GNTLGNT
December 6th, 2011, 12:39 PM
Hmm, I don't recall giving you permission to use my picture...:umm:
You were drunk.....
~Ally~
December 6th, 2011, 07:32 PM
You were drunk.....
Tell me something new...:devil:
glyde69
December 8th, 2011, 06:08 AM
I thought that it was because the bigger the changes you make in the past the bigger reality/world/fate would rebel.
Peace.
Exactly what I thought. Then one huge earthquake led to tons more(along with all the other crazy stuff that happened post JFK being alive).
fushingfeef
December 15th, 2011, 08:16 AM
Aside from the nature of reality being damaged by all the different (and paradoxical) strings that Jake/George had created, I think it also had to do with the harmony (and disharmony) of history causing actual waves or vibrations. I think there was a passage about wavelengths being thrown off by large changes that theorized on this a bit. There also seemed to a sense that history has a system of checks and balances, so if a significant event like the JFK assassination was prevented, there had to be another bad event to balance things out.
lazysean
December 15th, 2011, 02:22 PM
I thought it had something to do with the Yellow Card Man saying that if Jake messed up too many strings, reality itself would cease to exist.
This was basically how I understood it. That having too many strings was too much for the Yellow/Orange/Green Card Man to keep track of, and reality was getting sort of "tangled." What I didn't understand, then, was how going back again and resetting (most) things was supposed to fix it? Wouldn't that just add yet another string to the mess without actually untangling anything?
fushingfeef
December 19th, 2011, 08:44 AM
I think by going back to 1958 and doing nothing to change the future, and then immediately returning to the future, that weakens (or even erases) all the other strings and strengthens the original string that would have happened if you had never gone back to the past to begin with.
Chris1974100
November 20th, 2012, 06:36 AM
Hmm good theory bro
champ1966
November 20th, 2012, 11:25 AM
I thought it was down to the butterfly effect,and also by saving JFK the Vietnam war didn't happen and time being obdurate the non loss of life had to be made up somewhere.Hence all the deaths from earthquakes
Chessie
January 30th, 2013, 01:11 PM
I thought of the timeline as a string stretching from the beginning to the end of time.
You are at a point along the string which is 2013. If youu go back in time, the green-yellow-red card man has to 'save' the time so you can go back. Sort of like tying the string around a peg. The more you change things in the past, the harder it is for the green-yellow-red card man to keep the string on the peg.
Jake changed the past and the string popped of the peg causing the earthquakes. Jake returned to a future that wasn't 'his' future since the string had moved.
When he returned to the past, the new orange-card man was able to put the string back on the proper peg.
Does that make sense?
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