Monday, October 15, 2012

Pre Christmas jitters


It's nice to hear some states are straightening themselves out at the local level, like Montana with its creative health-care provider cost-cutting measures and North Dakota's much lauded public banking. As they should, the federal government and supreme court are giving progressive states the room to zoom ahead, like in Vermont where they'll have the first single payer health care system in the nation by 2017. When Reagan opened the deregulation flood gates and Clinton prodded the citizens of the earth to take baby steps with globalization, multinationals carved out cross border invincibility, so now Jim Cramer can rightly insist the public has to make a deal to stimulate job creators... and what liberties will we have to sacrifice into the inferno to get a 3% tax hike? Let's face it, these are no longer the days when FDR could campaign in Hartford Conn. with "My friends, I want you to know that if you vote for me, the insurance companies will fail" (thanks to Ed Asner for that gem of a quote).

I don't think the next bubble is going to be the bond market, which'll look like a burst of farts next to the erosion in trust and massive feelings of betrayal towards federal governments; a balloon that's whizzing around as it collapses, punctured by every war, banking and housing crisis. MInd you, the bubble is bouncing in our typically strange climate where 50% of the populace would usher in a fossil fuel abuser and the other half is finding everything out.

Case in point: Darrell Issa putzing around in his 'investigation' of the Benghazi embassy murders, shockingly sidestepping the real cause of the Libyan Green Resistance's combat against colonization and subjugation by NATO... it takes dizzying hypocrisy to probe for clues in the government's failure to protect the embassy and ignore what anyone who can use the internet has already figured out.

 And for perspective, the Arab debacle actually pales next to the PR nightmare created by climate modification machinations. I have a book published in mid 2012 called "Engineering the Climate: The Ethics of Solar Radiation Management", in which philosophers decorticate the arguments for and against SRM, aka aerosol chemtrails. The major premise of the book is that SRM is only at the research stage and hasn't been implemented yet... another massive deception which makes so-called scientists and social thinkers look like human ashtrays for their industrial owners. And their figurehead, geo-engineer David Keith is begging for sympathy in the face of death threats, saying in essence "Don't shoot me, I'm only the engineer!" The book is chock full of moral hazard arguments using lots of big words to defend indigenous rights, developing nations' rights and even non-human species' rights... while blissfully ignoring that big business just doesn't give a fuck. So, in the midst of worldwide hysterics with chemtrails disgust, is this how we introduce the public to the global warming panacea of solar radiation management?


Brisbane 09/08/2012


Judging by what we've seen so far, one wonders how our crafty leaders are going to explain away the potential for destructive climate manipulation?

Next in our super typhoon parade comes cat 5 monster Jelawat (by the way I think I got the answer to je la what ... more later.) Jelawat slammed into Kadena air force base like Bolaven, Sanba, last year's Muifa, 2007's Man-yi and 2003's Maemi. (Ma aime me! Ma loves me.)

Dr. Masters showed us a feature in the eye of Jelawat which he had never seen before in all his years of observation. In my opinion the line marking the eyebrow of Jel's eye looks like a HAARP signature.



On Sept. 28th, Dr. Masters wrote:

A Jelawat mystery

"Jelawat has had a classic appearance on satellite imagery during its long stint as a Super Typhoon, with a large symmetric eye surrounded by intense thunderstorms with very cold cloud tops. However, at two points in its life--for several hours on September 25 (Figure 2), and again near 08 UTC September 27--both visible and infrared satellite images showed a very odd boundary extending north-northwestwards from the northeast side of the eye for about 50 miles. I've never seen any such feature in a tropical cyclone, and am a loss to explain what is going on. The typhoon was not close enough to any land areas for this to be a topographic effect, and there wasn't any obvious dry air or significant wind shear that could have caused a perturbation like this."

A couple days earlier on Sept. 25th he showed us another still from the eye of Jelawat. It l
ooks like a backwards 6. In calculus the backwards 6 signifies a partial derivative, which is featured in the Euler equations describing how the velocity, pressure and density of a moving fluid are related. Solutions to the Euler equations of fluid dynamics provide a means to study physical phenomena, including hurricanes. I was never really attracted to math so I can't draw any further conclusions, but I noticed the S in the eye of Sanba was backwards too... this could be a simple case of the mark of the beast.




It also looks like the Fibonacci spiral design, which I noticed Sept. 26th in grand scale looming over Alaska.





Jelawat's regional name was Lawin. Those in the Philippines, Japan and China who are constantly subjected to typhoons must feel as though they are reeling under the hand of the law. Jelawat passed over Fukushima as a tropical storm on Sept 30th, and on October 1st northeastern Japan suffered a 6.2 magnitude earthquake, for good measure. Now that's Lawin'. These days we're observing typhoon Prapiroon, name meaning 'God of rain' as it spins in the vicinity of Okinawa and the Japanese mainland.

Here's a hula for ya' featuring typhoon Songda...



Besides the partially acknowledged HAARPings going on, there's also the climate controlled emotional backlash from the election worth noting. Last time we talked about Isaac heading for Tampa and New Orleans. He eventually tried to come back out into the Gulf, where they gave him a 40% chance of redeveloping into tropical storm Nadine - nay dean - get rid of the top guy. As has been the trend in the Gulf and Atlantic, the storm was zombified... but a couple days later on Sept. 8th, as top guy Obama surged after the Republican convention, a line of severe thunderstorms known as a derecho - the echo - formed in the Northeast, and two exceptional tornadoes struck Breezy Point and Canarsie... in Brooklyn of all places. His surge is a 'canard, see?' ...that's the breezy point. The wave that was to become Nadine rolled off of Africa on Sept 7th. She later became the 5th longest living named storm in history, active for 23 days until the early morning of Oct. 4th... during which time Obama was a virtual shoo-in to be re-elected. Dr. Masters hit on all the adjectives, calling her "The interminable, long-lived, pesky, persistent, perpetual, never-say-die, tenacious, non-stop, I'm-not-dead-yet, Energizer-bunny-like Methuselah of Atlantic tropical cyclones". On Sept. 20th, she hit a town in the Azores called Castelo Branco, translated to white castle, and spawned a child named Karin - carin', which caused major flooding damage in the UK. In the beginning I was wondering whether to include these poetic name sparks... Hurricane Michael - 'my call' tipped the scale, so here they are. It's also interesting to note that tropical storm Oscar - oh scar! was named on Oct 3 at 11:00 pm EDT, exactly when Obama was figuratively wounded in the debate. These days we're having more severe weather with hurricane force winds in the plains and midwest, and the Weather Channel plans to name snow storms, so the fun goes on...



Nadine's track


Which brings us to this month's list of personal synchronicities. When we left off on Sept. 21st, Je la wat - 'I what her?' had me wondering how Bill feels about seeing weather synchs since we started in 2007... The very next day, up popped Miriam in the east Pacific - merry am! Soon followed by typhoon Ewiniar - you win I are - I love that one! I even like 'ewe in I are'. Then mysterious tropical storm Norman came up - nor man? Still trying to figure out the origin of the magic... I had to beam down to earth soon after for some scary periodontal surgery in Puerto Rico, the closest place to have the complicated procedure. Severe tropical storm Maliksi - mal eek see - reflected my feelings of apprehension as to how bad the malaise would be; eek, we'll have to see, especially in light of my hypersensitivity. Oct. 2nd on the morning of the first surgery I found severe tropical storm Gaemi, Jah aime me, to calm my nerves; I'd like to share this sweet name with you. Of course on the second day of the double surgical ordeals, we had Oh scar which was right on for me as well as Obama. I came home on the 4th, and by the 6th the after effects coupled with a bad reaction to antibiotics took me to the brink of a total meltdown. I'd been through this before so I knew I had to gain back my strength or else suffer long term consequences. The storm that day was Olivia - Oh live ya! It was that bad. I finished the antibiotics and rested most of the week; now I feel entirely better. I had all four quadrants done. The problem was that my bite wasn't well honed. We took care of that and now my bite is formidable! Check out some pictures from Puerto Rico, taken before the surgery.

Ongoing hurricane Paul also evoked some chuckles, as I'd just seen the movie Paul with Seth Rogan as the lovable alien. Paul was the name I identified my angel with before he switched his name to Bill following hurricane Omar, so Paul the extra-terrestrial hit home with me. I find it funny that in the movie Paul is a stonehead ET. On the internet you get warnings about public relations campaigns coming straight from the feds to endear the green buggers to the kids, with characters like the yep yep Sesame Street Martians, Teletubbies and now Paul.

Cat 3 tropical cyclone Anaïs is the second earliest storm to form so early in the Southwest Indian Ocean. Here's an animated gif flashback in homage to the Goddess of Love.





So now we're up to tropical storm Patty which formed on the eve of my brother Patrick's visit to St. Maarten. Previously we agreed he would manage my finances. The day after we discussed payment for the surgery, a crop circle showed up in the suburbs of Columbus, Ohio where he lives, only the second one in the States this year. In the description of its youtube video are the words "Thanks for your help Patrick".


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Irix_arAKrI

While on the subject of crop circles, one just came out yesterday. It's a gorgeous creation... reminds me of the court jester's hat...








...And drumroll, ladies and gentlemen... we were hit by Rafael! The big concrete house behind me blocked the wind coming from the south.





It was kind of funny 'cause I molested that word in my mind to try to figure it out. Rafale in french means blustery, as in rain squall, and the cistern was near empty so we islanders appreciate the rain. Rafael also means 'God heals' in Hebrew... that's nice. It's only after the tropical storm changed course and came straight at me that I finally got the clue: 'R afa elle'. Are after me? Right afta I incubated that one I saw typhoon Maria. Ma ria - Ma laughed in french, and still am. Speaking of which, we have lots of catching up to do!





In parting, we're closing in on the 21st of December! Imagine what a paino in the asso this Christmas will be if we don't get the great pole shift we've hyped to the hilt... I'm still optimistic for now, so watch out science, religion, rationalists and atheists - there's going to be a new way of seeing things!