whichever area of the capital is targeted. Local councils will use transport including trains and
buses to get people away from threatened areas. And they have been instructed to post officials at
stations to shepherd fleeing Londoners to the designated shelters. In the event of a large scale attack
the Army would inevitably be called in to quell mass panic among those heading for the shelters.
Other plans for a mass evacuation of London are believed to include moving the seat of
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta107.htm[2/5/2012 11:41:54 AM]
ZetaTalk: Ships Out to Sea
Government to a secure nuclear bunker in the countryside. Sites for temporary mortuaries are also
being identified. It is not thought there will be any mass leafleting of the public in the event of an
attack. Instead, authorities would rely on radio and television broadcasts to keep the public
informed of any danger as it arose. Ministers are keen that such broadcasts do not "over-
dramatise" the scale of the crisis thereby contributing to mass hysteria.’
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta107.htm[2/5/2012 11:41:54 AM]
ZetaTalk: ISS Evacuation
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ZetaTalk: ISS Evacuation
written Dec 10, 2004
There was a live internet broadcast of a panel answering questions, which I watched. Expedition Team 10
arrived at the Space Station. Why would they not bring enough to last them? Not only that, but Russian
Supply Cargo ships went up there during Expedition Team 9's stay, not one time but twice. Why would
they still not have any food left over? And now, the video has seemingly disappeared. If you go to CNN,
who actually broadcast the video on-line, you'll find nothing of the sort. NASA makes no mention of the
breaking news on their website. All of the members of the panel displayed signs of extreme nervousness, of
worry and of masked sorrow. They were skittish and fidgety, which seasoned public speakers are not. They
could not look in one direction for long. They were lying through their teeth. So what's really going on?
Certain death on the International Space Station lies ahead for any who would remain there during the coming weeks.
This is the analysis, based on the current path of Planet X and its entourage of debris. If fireballs have been screaming
through the atmosphere and thudding to Earth during the past year, the ISS is scarcely immune. These fireballs have
been limply excused by NASA and their cronies as ‘space debris’ from human activity. This is lame excuse #1,
especially when many reports can produce, display, and offer for sale chunks of the debris. Fireballs tearing through
the roof to land in the basement, bouncing off the garage in full view of astonished home owners, zooming past the
head of a homemaker hanging out her wash to be found smoking and imbedded in the toasted lawn nearby. At first
broadly reported as the novelty they were, and then suppressed in the news as are all clues to the presence of Planet X
and its entourage, these fireballs are the reason for the need to evacuate the ISS, and soon.
How can the ISS be evacuated because of lack of food, when the shuttle to evacuate them could bring them food?
Lame excuse #2.
Those at the helm of the cover-up have not released those sworn to silence from their oath, so the news cannot be that
debris, or any hint of a reason that might point to Planet X nearby, is the reason. If the meteors and trash slinging by
the ISS cannot be mentioned, then what? Lack of toilet paper? A sick crew? Wear and tear on the ISS, causing
unexpected breakdown? Lack of food is the least logical reason, yet was chosen. The reason for this is that any other
excuse that might seem more reasonable had an association to the fireballs and meteor issue, which is a forbidden
subject. Yet another death by accident of a van full of JPL and NASA employees just the day before this
announcement was a reminder of what happens when the cover-up is treated lightly. A sick crew implies they are
worried, potentially, so the crew must be strong and happy. Mechanical problems implies the ISS has been beset by
unexpected stress, so despite a recent oxygen leak, the ISS must be in tip-top shape. What’s left? A food shortage,
lack of cargo space, with the astronauts suffering from malnutrition and needing to be returned, and no room on the
shuttle for both a replacement crew and food, so temporarily, the next shuttle up will simply bring the malnourished
crew back to sick bay.
Signs of the Times #1258
Russia Plans to Evacuate ISS Crew Due to Lack of Food [Dec 10]
http://www.mosnews.com 'Provisions for the current crew on the
International Space Station are running low. If for any reason the
cargo spaceship does not deliver containers with products into orbit
before the middle of the next month, perhaps an urgent evacuation of
spacemen working there will be needed. The next delivery is
scheduled for Dec. 24. A spokesman from Mission Control was
quoted by the agency as saying the members of the previous crew
overconsumed their provisions. The current ISS crew consists of Russian cosmonaut Salizhan
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta186.htm[2/5/2012 11:41:55 AM]
ZetaTalk: ISS Evacuation
Sharipov and US astronaut Leroy Chiao.'
[and from another source]
Space Station Crew Forced to Cut Calories [Dec 9]
‘Food is running so low aboard the international space station that flight controllers have
instructed the two crewmen to cut back on calories, at least until a Russian supply ship arrives in a
little over two weeks. If anything goes wrong with the Christmas Day delivery, NASA will have no
choice, given the grounding of its shuttle fleet, but to abandon the station and bring the men home in
early January. The space agency, meanwhile, is drawing up plans to evacuate the orbiting outpost,
in case the Russian rocket carrying the cargo ship explodes during liftoff, or the ship cannot dock
two days later.’
[and from another source]
ISS Crew Redocks Soyuz Spacecraft [Nov 30]
http://www.cnn.com/
‘The tenth crew of the International Space Station made a short spaceflight early Monday to move a
Russian lifeboat to a new docking port and prepare the station for a pair of upcoming spacewalks.
Monday's spaceflight marked the first time the Expedition 10 crew left the ISS unmanned since they