[TimeStar] Krsanna theory of everything!

Bernie bernie2t at telstra.com
Wed Jun 22 16:52:02 EDT 2005


Hey Krsanna -

My tongue may be in my cheek, but I love your sentence

  "  American theories have always been relatively disconnected from 
global relatedness of tectonics events.  "

Take off the last 3 words and I think perhaps you've nailed a lot of 
the world's current problems in one sentence!

But keep smiling anyway......

Bernie.





>The test is to extract data from bias, including "scientific" 
>gibberish and especially what "everybody" know.  The TimeStar 
>forecast for numbers and magnitudes of earthquakes and volcanoes to 
>increase in the eastern U.S., between the Eastern Seaboard and New 
>Madrid Fault, was posted in March 2005.  These areas would be 
>affected AFTER large events in the North Pacific after the Sumtra 
>quake in December 2004. 
>
>I did not realize the extent of continuing activity that would occur 
>in the Indian Ocean after the Sumatra quake, but that only lengthens 
>the time of the sequence and does not necessarily change its order. 
>These events will occur over four year, until 2008.
>
>Big quakes in the Pacific started June 13, 2005, 7 days after a new 
>moon and 9 days before a full moon.  The big quakes started outside 
>the windows syzygy forecasts for lunar cycles, as had other very 
>large events in recent years.  This does not mean that these 
>earthquake cycles are not related to lunar cycles, but it does mean 
>that the syzygy interpretation misses the mark on many big events.
>
>Most discussion about the 7.2 quake off California's coast was so 
>shallow that it entirely overlooked the 7.8 quake near Chile and a 
>6.9 quake in Alaska within 36 hours of the California quake.  The 
>article in question at least recognized a relationship between these 
>three large events and the rest of the continent, specifically the 
>New Madrid Fault. 
>
>A theory that recognizes the connectedness of events globally, like 
>the Russian theories do, interests me.  American theories have 
>always been relatively disconnected from global relatedness of 
>tectonics events.



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