UFO's or missiles being sighted and the need to keep public panic down, those in the know when sunrise or
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta11.htm[2/5/2012 9:56:31 AM]
ZetaTalk: Slowing Confusion
sunset times are adjusted are mum. Should an old chart emerge, anyone making a fuss is accused of fraud, and
the matter is dropped. Thus, a large percentage of the public watching for a late sunset or sunrise is mislead,
because they have checked in with the Navy, once again.
Star Charts
The moment when the Solstice, or Equinox, is determined is done so via a long tube at a fixed place on the
Earth, looking at the Stars. When a particular guiding star is precisely overhead, then the seasonal passage is
determined. Can the general public use this method to determine a slowing rotation? Hardly. Clear skies are
required, a broad knowledge of the stars so that knowing just which stars are steady and which seemingly
change position based on the Earth's motion is required, and any change in minutes using such a method would
not show up unless the tube were so narrow as to make operating it difficult. Thus, the odds are against such a
method being used to determine slowing despite an altered clock or altered sunrise/sunset times. Until slowing
by hours occurs, the anticipated constellation overhead will not be a clue. Thus, a public determined to measure
slowing outside of the information sources provided by the Navy, the time of day and the sunrise/sunset times,
by checking against the stars, will find themselves stymied.
Daily Variances
Since the stage has been set, the Atlantic Rift magnetized so that it is loath to leave Planet X when facing it,
would there be steady slowdown in rotation? Planet X grabs the Atlantic Rift, holding back rotation of the crust
momentarily so that a pileup occurs in the forward momentum of the crust, agascerbating the compression zone
around the Pacific Rim so that Global Quakes begin there and spread forward to the Atlantic Rift which is held,
momentarily, from continuing to rotate. At the same time, as tension is relieved in the Pacific Rim, the stretch
zone east of the Atlantic Rift can be pulled forward, causing minor adjustments in the crust there. What happens
to the Atlantic Rift as it proceeds to disappear round to the dark side of the Earth? It is tugged back, creating a
late sunset or sunrise for those in a position to take a measure at that time, but by the same token when the
Atlantic Rift emerges from the dark side and is tugged forward by Planet X, it gains momentum, thus confusing
the situation. Thus, those taking daily measures may find a late sunset and sunrise but not finding a correlation
in a late noon, and assume no slowdown when the precursor has started, a strong grab of the Rift!
Latitude/Hemisphere Differences
Until Planet X, in its approach, comes near enough to the Earth to be discerned as a separate entity from the
Sun, it will confuse the slowing rotation issue by adding its reflected and generated light to the Sun's. Being just
below the Ecliptic, for those in both hemispheres, Planet X makes the Sun appear to be further south. Where
during its rise to the Ecliptic, it pushed light rays from the Sun away by a broadside of gravity particles, and
later pulled the Sun's light rays toward it as it moved closer and was a greater gravity draw, now that it floats
just under the Ecliptic, the confusion is due to it seeming to be the Sun. For those in the Southern Hemisphere,
sunlight thus comes early and lingers later, as Planet X is in view when the Sun is not, being south of the Ecliptic
and coming from a Southern Constellation. For those in the Northern Hemisphere only those close to the
Equator will get this effect. Thus, statistics from varying latitudes or hemisphere will differ, creating a climate of
doubt.
What should those determined to get an early measure of slowing rotation do, in the face of this confusion? Use a
manual clock, not one set behind the scenes by the Navy. Avoid published sunrise and sunset times that are data
secured from the Navy. Make a marker to determine high noon and sunset and sunrise times, and keep daily records.
Do not be discouraged by a day when variances occur, as even the weather and particles in the atmosphere can
interfere with light direction. You will find your personal daily measures beginning to show slowing outside of the
slight changes expected for the seasons, day to day. You will get personal confirmation that several minutes a day are
being lost, in increasing increments. You can measure the rate of increase, and project when this will become hours a
day, anticipating the rapid slowdown to a stop that spells problems with travel or escape to safe locations.
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ZetaTalk: Slowing Determination
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ZetaTalk: Slowing Determination
written Oct 14, 2003, during Lou Gentile live radio
The Zetas stated that there will be a late sunrise followed by a late sunset, the next day perhaps sunset 2 hours late
and then within 36 hours you have rotation stopping. We’ve been checking Slowing since June 13th and we advise
people to set a noon marker because that alters the least when you go through the seasons. Right not in the Northern
Hemisphere the days are shortening, but they are shortening at the beginning and the end and the noon marker
basically has very little motion. What we’ve found is that we have the globe increasing rotation, I call it rotational
surging, where the Atlantic Rift is gripped by Planet X, has been for a couple months now. When it comes around on
the Dawn side, as the globe is turning, Planet X grabs it and pulls the crust toward it. Then it is at the Face point,
it’s facing, and it wants it to stay there because our Atlantic Rift is a type of magnet and it wants it lined up with the
core. As it tried to move around and continue and go round the side at the Dusk it pulls it back. So we’ve got a guy
in central Siberia who reports that his noon is 61 minutes early, our timekeeper in Virginia says its a minute late or a minute early, we move across the continent and we’re getting about 20 minutes late in Wisconsin and Missouri,
and go over more toward the West Coast and they’re 76 minutes late. So how is someone going to determine that 2
hour late sundown?
Nancy
In this regard we are looking for the change, the rapid change for any given timekeeper. Those who have been using
manual clocks have noted that we are already 15, 20, 25 minutes late, depending on their notes, slower, the atomic
clock clicking along and changing so that this is not apparent to people who are looking at their clocks and the