I can't stop thinking about the massive earthquake that's going to destroy the Earth (or, at least, make it Hell on Earth) this coming Saturday. Not that I even remotely believe it's going to happen, but still, I continue to try to logically construct a scenario where such an earthquake could possibly even exist. And I continue to fail.
I know. Can't make sense out of crazy. But I keep trying.
1) The DoomsdayQuake will begin at the International Date Line and move West.
Directional quake, eh? Nice to know it's not one of those standard quakes, you know, the kind with an epicenter and a spreading radius of shaking/damage. Been there, done that, time for something new. And, really, I suppose an omnipotent god could accomplish that - really, an omnipotent god could just turn the entire planet into sponge cake and we'd all drown in the sticky sweet syrup... which I might have believed more. Interestingly enough, I find my suspension of disbelief is actually easier the further from the truth a story is. Ask me to watch a TV show about traveling through other planets via wormholes? No problem. Show me an episode of CSI where they get DNA from a place someone brushed up against a piece of furniture? Now just you hold on, there, mister!
2) The DoomsdayQuake will hit each place at 6 pm local time
Um, have you looked at a time zone map lately? Here's one I even colored for your convenience:

The time zones are colored, rainbow-style, from right (IDL) to left. I'll just let that sink in for a minute.
We're no longer talking about a giant, rolling earthquake that sweeps the globe. We're talking about a hit-and-miss style earthquake that observes time lines - could you straddle a time line and have one leg shaking and the other not? What about Northern Greenland and Antarctica, where there is no official time? What about the people on the International Space Station? Oh please oh please oh please tell me there's going to be a 'space quake'! What about the precise North and South Poles? What if you're flying? Will departing souls puncture the aircraft causing depressurization? Should people flying on Saturday actually pay attention to the safety lecture on oxygen masks? (I kid, I kid, you should always pay attention)
And they haven't mentioned how long the DoomsdayQuake will last. Will it hit one time zone, shake for twenty minutes, and then there's a forty minute lull before it strikes the next time zone? Will it shake for an hour, then turn off when the next time zone activates? Inquiring minds want to know!
There are lots of other questions to ask, most of which I'm sure are unanswerable, but I really need to get to bed, because I still have a job to go to tomorrow. We tried to lobby for the day off, on account of the end of the world and all, but oddly, they didn't buy it.
I know. Can't make sense out of crazy. But I keep trying.
1) The DoomsdayQuake will begin at the International Date Line and move West.
Directional quake, eh? Nice to know it's not one of those standard quakes, you know, the kind with an epicenter and a spreading radius of shaking/damage. Been there, done that, time for something new. And, really, I suppose an omnipotent god could accomplish that - really, an omnipotent god could just turn the entire planet into sponge cake and we'd all drown in the sticky sweet syrup... which I might have believed more. Interestingly enough, I find my suspension of disbelief is actually easier the further from the truth a story is. Ask me to watch a TV show about traveling through other planets via wormholes? No problem. Show me an episode of CSI where they get DNA from a place someone brushed up against a piece of furniture? Now just you hold on, there, mister!
2) The DoomsdayQuake will hit each place at 6 pm local time
Um, have you looked at a time zone map lately? Here's one I even colored for your convenience:
The time zones are colored, rainbow-style, from right (IDL) to left. I'll just let that sink in for a minute.
We're no longer talking about a giant, rolling earthquake that sweeps the globe. We're talking about a hit-and-miss style earthquake that observes time lines - could you straddle a time line and have one leg shaking and the other not? What about Northern Greenland and Antarctica, where there is no official time? What about the people on the International Space Station? Oh please oh please oh please tell me there's going to be a 'space quake'! What about the precise North and South Poles? What if you're flying? Will departing souls puncture the aircraft causing depressurization? Should people flying on Saturday actually pay attention to the safety lecture on oxygen masks? (I kid, I kid, you should always pay attention)
And they haven't mentioned how long the DoomsdayQuake will last. Will it hit one time zone, shake for twenty minutes, and then there's a forty minute lull before it strikes the next time zone? Will it shake for an hour, then turn off when the next time zone activates? Inquiring minds want to know!
There are lots of other questions to ask, most of which I'm sure are unanswerable, but I really need to get to bed, because I still have a job to go to tomorrow. We tried to lobby for the day off, on account of the end of the world and all, but oddly, they didn't buy it.
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I forgot to mention the DST question! I had that one written down before, and it's a pretty important one to get the answer to...
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Time is an illusion - God's time, doubly so
But, what I think you're discounting is that Time-zones (on the whole) are designed around seasonal permutations. From what I understand, they were designed around an average solar-cycle. So, "people-time" is geocentric, ¿wouldn't god-time be helio-centric? So, we're not talking about 6pm Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), we're talking about 6pm god-time or Sol Median Time (SoMT).
Of course, that still leaves us with the same relative issue of where on the Sun we're measuring time. But, again, we have to look at this from a divine point of view where location is relative (or even meaningless). Gods are omnipresent, so they're working on a universal clock, not a physical clock. We could get into the quandary that even time is a relative construct to a god, but that's belied by the fact that 6pm has already been a divinely set (or, at least, that's one of our premises) so we don't have throw out time entirely.
What I'm thinking is that SoMT is more akin to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) than GMT. God set a timer running down when it was decided the world would end on May 21 at 6pm SoMT and, Deus Vult, thus shall it be. While I have no idea what offset SoMT would take in regards to GMT, it doesn't really matter. While there is "lucky" timezone where 6pm SoMT coincides with 6pm Local Mean Time, it's merely coincidental - though, since we're talking about The Book religions (those based on The Judeo-Christian Bible), I'm guessing it'd be the one over the Fertile Crescent. Either way, it's immaterial.
This all means the SuperQuake could be relatively "normal" in that it has an epicenter, radiates out, and acts as a normal quake, it would just happen to engulf the world in its wake.
What might be more interesting is where that epicenter might be. But, again, given the omnipresent nature of gods, I'd guess it would mostly like originate at the "center" of the planet (oblate spheroid that it might be) and the ripples would hemorrhage upward and crest in the crust and mantle at relative points depending on strata strength, depth, and so on. If there's one thing god seems to show in the Bible, it's that the "normal" rules of physics usually apply, albeit on a much grander and more pointed scale than normal (parting of the Red Sea, the Walls of Jericho, etc.)
¿Ya dig me?