Some info:
"Sunspot activity since 1956 - a wet year in Australia. The next cycle is going to be even weaker than the current one which is going to have enormous implications for our changing climate. Drier in Aus, colder for most of the world. With the hemisphere fading and our magnetosphere weakening and moving toward reversal, we also have record high cosmic ray bombardment. This will alter the jetstreams (as we're already seeing), produce more storms, more cloud cover and increased albedo (cooler planet), more volcanism, and probably more earthquakes as well. Reduced crop yields, increased food prices, etc. This is why it is so terrible that people believe we are on planet being warmed by CO2. It simply isn't happening and very few people understand the magnitude of what will unfold. About every 12,000 years we go through this, and most times, civilisations end. We are no exception. " —
Clinton Hurst
"Approaching an all time record for days without sunspots. Currently at third on the list. This is going to bring more cold, more storms, more volcanism. The magnetosphere is continually declining, the heliosphere is weak, and as a result we are being hit by more cosmic rays than at any time since records began. The climate is certainly changing, but it has nothing to do with CO2. It is much bigger than that, and so many people are focused precisely on the wrong problem. This is really going to cause terrible problems in the coming years. Many people won't survive this. " — Clinton Hurst
"Another spotless day on our sun... and looking very quiet this next week. I think we will easily have 270 or more spotless days this year... today is number 259. That will be the most in over a century... Welcome to the Grand Solar Minimum! " (Dec. 7, 2019) —
Beyond the Matrix
And finally, I came across this article that somewhat supports the above statement (Oct. 28, 2019)
THE SUN HAS BEEN SPOTLESS FOR A TOTAL OF 224 DAYS IN 2019, AND COUNTING… LOOMING GRAND SOLAR MINIMUM
"During periods of low solar activity, such as the deep solar minimum we’re in now, the Sun will often be devoid of sunspots." ... "
As of Oct 28, the current stretch of days without any observable spots has reached 25, making for a total of 224 spotless days in 2019 so far (or 74%). This means that 2019 has now surpassed the 222 spotless days observed in 2018, with more than 2 months to go.
2019 even looks set to eclipse 2008’s total of 269 spotless days (or 73%), when the Sun had just gone through it’s weakest solar cycle, and consequently deepest solar minimum, of the past 100+ years:"