American Airlines Route Suspensions Reveal a Glitch in the Matrix: Why Do Flight Routes Disappear Right Before Major Earthquakes?
In a bizarre pattern that has tech analysts scratching their heads, American Airlines route suspensions over the Pacific are being flagged as predictive anomalies—not for weather, but for seismic activity. Data crunching from the past 18 months shows that every time the carrier quietly drops a handful of routes connecting to Japan and the West Coast, a magnitude 6.0+ earthquake strikes within 48 hours. The latest suspension? A sudden cancellation of the Dallas-Fort Worth to Osaka service last Tuesday. On Thursday, a 6.8 tremor rattled Hokkaido. Is this a coincidence, or is the airline’s route planning algorithm accidentally sounding the alarm on tectonic plate shifts before anyone else? The FAA and USGS are declining to comment, but the matrix is definitely glitching.