I Told You So

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The James Webb Space Telescope has uncovered something profoundly eerie in the depths of the cosmos: vast, synchronized patterns in ancient galaxies that hint at one of the most mind-bending ideas in physics—that our entire universe might be trapped inside a supermassive black hole.

Black Hole @konstructivizm
Posted on X May 21, 2026

I hypothesized this years ago and I told you so then. There were others before me as well, but it is interesting to see direct evidence of it. But, as of yet, I have not seen anyone confirming the aspect of the black hole is pulling us along the time axis of four-dimensional space. There is still time for that.

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7 thoughts on “I Told You So

  1. So it’s turtles all the way down after all, huh? Bertrand Russel might giggle at that.

    • No. That would not make any sense.

      It means we live in an N-dimensional universe where N is greater than or equal to four. String theory requires something like a 10- or 12-dimensional universe.

      • Fifteen or twenty years ago I vaguely remember there being something like eleven dimensions, although my mind is up to its old tricks and I can’t remember where, when, or even who said that. It was not relevant to my life at that time, not that it’s relevant now, but the eleven dimensions is oddly congruent with what physicists believe the mathematics show.

  2. And, once proved – assuming it can be – the questions will be “why?” and “what’s outside the [massive] black hole?”

    From what I’ve read, black holes are not unique occurrences; there appear to be multiples in what we call “our universe.” So, if “our universe” is inside a black hole, it’s not unreasonable to consider that there may be other black holes, also potentially containing universes.

    So, Mike Porter’s “turtles all the way down” may not be as incorrect as first judged; at what point does it stop being “black holes containing universes?” If – and I stress IF – “our” universe is inside a black hole, and we know (or, at least we think we do) “our” universe contains black holes, might those black holes in “our” universe also contain “universes” of some sort, albeit smaller ones? And, if “our” universe is inside a black hole, where, exactly, is that particular black hole housing “our” universe? Perhaps inside a larger black hole, one that contains multiple black holes also containing universes? Not exactly “turtles” but…..

    What would probably help is more information on what, precisely, a black hole actually is, which might also answer the question of why, and how, they exist, and for what purpose.

  3. Since what they’re trying to explain is that too many early galaxies look to be spinning in the same direction… wouldn’t it be just as easy to assume that whatever it was that exploded in the big bang was already spinning before/when it exploded?

    Alternately: since we know gravity bends space-time at a local level, wouldn’t the sum total mass of the universe also bend space-time on a grand scale, thereby changing the ‘shape’ of the universe into one ginormous gravity well, that makes everything behave in a way that hints to, but is not quite the same as a ‘local’ black hole?

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