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Reported from Steve Quayle:
-
Sun's
String of Fury Continues as 7th Major Flare Erupts (September
12, 2005)
- An ongoing series of seven major solar flares, including two on
Saturday, could disrupt communications on Earth and generate
colorful sky shows for people at high northern latitudes for the
next several days. Even more serious effects are possible early in
the week. The spate of activity from the Sun is being generated by a
large sunspot named 798. Sunspots are cooler and darker regions of
pent-up magnetic activity. When they unleash their energy, it's a
bit like the top coming off a shaken champagne bottle. The sunspot
is just rotating into view, so its energy has been directed sideways
and not directly at Earth. In coming days, if more major flares
erupt as forecasters expect, they'll head right at us and radio
blackouts, cell phone dropouts and other communications disruptions
are more likely, scientists said. Solar flares send radiation to
Earth in about 8 minutes. Hours later, clouds of charged particles
can engulf the planet. If the magnetic field of a storm is oriented
opposite to our planet's protective magnetic field, gaps are created
and radiation leaks to the planet's surface, potentially threatening
astronauts aboard the International Space Station, sometimes
shorting out satellites, and even causing terrestrial power grids to
trip. Solar activity is at "very high levels," according
to NOAA's Space Environment Center (SEC). There have been seven
major flares in recent days, including a tremendous X-17 eruption
Wednesday. An event Friday evening was an X-6. On Saturday, an X-1
and an X-2 erupted. Even an X-1 can cause severe disruptions. The
largest flare in modern times was recorded in November 2003 and was
estimated to be an X-40. It, too, was on the limb of the Sun and so
its full impact was not felt on Earth. That flare was part of an
unprecedented series of 10 major flares within two weeks; at least
one Earth-orbiting satellite was disabled and one instrument aboard
a Mars-orbiting craft was knocked offline. This week's series is the
most impressive since then.
more...
-
The
Coming Christian Persecutions and Revival (September
12, 2005)
- This
is a Prophetic Word To Western-nized Christians All Around The World
-
Weather
Modification a Long-Established, Though Secretive, Reality (September
12, 2005)
- New legislation not designed to foster
pleasant or productive weather, but planned as tool of weaponized
weather control, already well tested and in use since 1976. Amateur
and hostile weather-makers alike likely to lose their technology to
the military. It’s late fall of 2004. Fred McKenna* surveys his
beloved radionics equipment with sorrow. “I am expecting a visit
from the boys in black,” he sighs to me. Because he has been
engaged in storm mitigation and deflection, he’s sure that
military and other authorities know of his location and activities.
Fred has already begun to dispose of the reagents, the active
principle used for the “broadcast” of specific corrective
energies to persons or the environment. By transferring their
activity to the land itself, he hopes this might at least protect a
passive aspect of his operation. But he fears that the machines
themselves may no longer be in his possession by the end of the
following year.
more...
-
Further
fuel protests threatened (September
12, 2005)
- Organisers of the 2000 fuel protest, which caused severe
disruption when refineries were blocked, say they will act again if
fuel tax is not cut. Fuel Lobby made the announcement as the price
of unleaded petrol rose to more than £1 a litre in parts of the UK
as a result of Hurricane Katrina. The group says all UK refineries
will be blocked from 0600 BST on 14 September unless price cuts are
made. The Treasury said cutting tax would not solve the problem of
high oil prices. 'Inadvertent rises'
A week-long campaign of picketing refineries and depots by
thousands of hauliers and farmers in 2000 caused major shortages and
was thought to have cost British business £1bn.
more...
-
Interview
With Thomas Horn, Controversial Author of The Ahriman Gate (September
12, 2005)
- How does one go from exorcist to ufologist? I
found Tom Horn to be an interesting man; an enigma who
assuredly knows more than he's saying. Though right now he's saying
a lot!
more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Israeli
Troops Leave Gaza, Palestinians Move In (September
12, 2005)
- "This is a day of happiness and joy that the Palestinian
people have not witnessed for a century," President Mahmoud
Abbas told reporters in Gaza City. Attacking symbols of the hated
Israeli presence, youths smashed and set ablaze several of the
synagogues left behind in the 21 evacuated enclaves, the first
settlements Israel has abandoned on land the Palestinians want for a
state. Some Palestinians, chanting "Allahu Akhbar" (God is
greatest), brandished pictures of fighters killed in an uprising.
Some kissed the ground. Others scampered down to pristine
Mediterranean beaches they could not reach for years. "Today is
the happiest day in my life," said Jawal Abu Lafi, 50, after
praying amid the rubble of one former settlement. Tanks and armored
vehicles trundled out of Gaza into Israel after the army issued its
final withdrawal order to complete Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
plan for "disengaging" from conflict with the
Palestinians. "We are leaving with our heads high," said
army chief of staff Dan Halutz at a flag-lowering ceremony on
Sunday. Flares fired by Israeli troops and fireworks launched by
celebrating Palestinians illuminated the desert strip that has been
scene of some of the bloodiest fighting since peace talks failed in
2000. "We will begin a new life, a life that is empty of fear
and occupation," said one woman as celebratory gunfire mingled
with joyful ululation. While welcoming the pullout, the Palestinian
Authority fears Sharon is trading Gaza, home to 1.4 million
Palestinians, for permanent hold on larger areas of the occupied
West Bank where 245,000 Jewish settlers live isolated from 2.4
million Arabs. Gaza and the West Bank were captured in the 1967 war.
more...
- Palestinians
Torch Synagogues in Former Gaza Settlements (September
12, 2005)
- Palestinians also set fire to synagogues in the evacuated
settlements of Netzarim and Kfar Darom. In one of the synagogues,
gunmen climbed on the roof and waved flags of militant groups,
including Hamas, shouting "God is great." Hours earlier,
the Palestinian Interior Ministry spokesman said the Palestinian
Authority would destroy the synagogues left behind in Gaza by
evacuating IDF troops. All remaining buildings in the evacuated
Jewish settlements would be destroyed except for the hothouses, the
spokesman, Tawfiq Abu Khoussa, told The Associated Press. Earlier in
the day, the Israeli government voted not to demolish the
synagogues. The Palestinians expressed dismay at the Israeli
decision, saying it puts them in an impossible position because they
may be criticized for destroying houses of worship but at the same
time they need the space for their development plans for post-Israel
Gaza. "It's better for us and for you to destory the
synagogues," Jibril Rajoub, the PA chairman's security adviser,
told Israel Radio on Sunday. "I think the synagogues are
symbols of the occupation." more...
- Gaza
synagogues face likely desecration (September
12, 2005)
- With the Israeli government yesterday voting against the
demolition of Gaza's synagogues ahead of Israel's final pullout from
the area later today, the Palestinian Authority is "not
confident" it can protect the holy structures from desecration
and "doesn't want to deal with the problem," chief
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told WorldNetDaily. Sources say
the synagogues may be turned into Palestinian medical clinics and
libraries in an effort to avert desecrations. "We of course
have the highest respect for Judaism and the Jewish religion, but we
cannot guarantee the synagogues won't be desecrated," said
Erekat, speaking by cell phone from Gaza City. "We are very
upset at Israel about this decision to throw their problems on us.
They are trying to make us look like barbarians and now we're stuck
in a situation about whether to protect. We're damned if we do and
damned if we don't." more...
- Strong
earthquake rocks tsunami-ravaged Aceh (September
12, 2005)
- A strong earthquake rocked Indonesia's tsunami-battered Aceh
province on Saturday, causing residents to flee their homes in
panic. The magnitude-5.8 earthquake was centered under the Indian
Ocean, about 20 miles northwest of the province capital Banda Aceh,
said Sutiono, an official at the Jakarta office of Meteorological
and Geophysical Agency. The tremor occurred some 20 miles beneath
the Earth's surface, added Sutiono, who goes by a single name.
Officials at the local geophysical office in Banda Aceh said the
quake lasted about one minute. Residents of the city ran out of
their homes in panic after the tremor jolted them awake, Sutiono
said. Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, is prone to
seismic upheaval due to its location on the Pacific ``Ring of
Fire.'' A magnitude 9 earthquake and subsequent tsunami on Dec. 26
killed more than 131,000 people in Indonesia and left a half-million
homeless, mostly in Aceh.
- A
Qassam missile was fired from Gaza Strip two hours after Israeli
troops handed the territory over to the Palestinian Authority (September
12, 2005)
- As Israeli troops redeployed in new lines outside Gaza during the
night, howling Palestinian mobs made bonfires of the Gaza synagogues
and public buildings left behind. Abu Mazen’s security men stood
by. They also watched Hamas and Jihad Islami gunmen overrun the
flattened former Israeli locations and hoist their flags over the
rubble. The IDF earlier bulldozed the homes of 8,500 Israelis and
military bases in the Gaza Strip but Israeli ministers balked at
ordering Israeli troops to destroy synagogues in deference to the
rabbis’ prohibition. Under Jewish law, places of worship retain
their sanctity even after ritual articles are removed and were
clearly marked as holy places in English and Arabic. Gaza commander
Aviv Cochavi was the last Israeli soldier to depart the Gaza Strip.
He drove through the Kissufim crossing and shut the gateway down for
the last time.
- Palestinian
PM says can end chaos in Gaza by Jan (September
12, 2005)
- Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas pledged "to control the
chaos in Gaza" by the end of the year in an interview published
on Monday that coincided with the completion of an Israeli pullout
from the territory. But Abbas told the Italian daily Corriere della
Sera, one of whose reporters was abducted but quickly released by
gunmen in Gaza on Saturday, that he would not try to disarm the
powerful militant group Hamas to assert Palestinian Authority
control. "There is no point at the moment, it would be a
useless step that would be destined to start a civil war,"
Abbas said, despite a call in a U.S.-backed peace "road
map" for the Palestinian Authority to confiscate "illegal
weapons". For its part, Israel has ignored the road map's call
for a halt to Jewish settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank.
"Give me until the end of the year and I will be able to
control the chaos in Gaza," Abbas said. "Now that the
Israeli pullout is completed, we will be able to better deal with
the problem." He noted that Hamas, which is dedicated to the
destruction of the Jewish state, would take part for the first time
in a Palestinian legislative election, slated for January 25, and
"if this happens, they will very soon not need weapons".
Abbas praised Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for having taken a
"very important and courageous step" in removing 8,500
Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip. But he warned Sharon against
trying to trade Gaza, home to 1.4 million Palestinians, for a
permanent hold on larger areas of the occupied West Bank where
245,000 Jewish settlers live isolated from 2.4 million Arabs. more...
- Iran
jubilant about Katrina (September 12, 2005)
- Iran, which has experimented with missile detonations that can
create nuclear electromagnetic pulse attacks capable of crippling
U.S. electrical grids and computer technology, is taking notice of
the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina. Iran's Revolutionary
Guards conclude the deadly storm has exposed America's strategic
vulnerabilities, according to reports today on the Ansa-e Hezbollah
website. "The mismanagement and the mishandling of the acute
psychological problems brought about by Hurricane Katrina clearly
showed that others can, at any given time, create a devastated war
zone in any part of the U.S.," said Brigadier General Masoud
Jazayeri, the official spokesman of the Revolutionary Guard. The
Revolutionary Guards' spokesman said the U.S.' inability to end the
insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan showed the "weakness of
America's defense and state departments, as well as its intelligence
and security apparatus." "If the U.S. attacks Iran, each
of America's states will face a crisis the size of Katrina," he
said, referring to the massive hurricane which hit the southern
coast of the United States. "The smallest mistake by America in
this regard will result in every single state in that country
turning into a disaster zone." The Iranian war planners believe
the U.S. can be defeated in a confrontation with Iran. more...
e-mail: watchmanbiblestudy comcast.net
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