Friday, October 13, 2006

From the Second Book of Moses, Called Exodus:



20:5 Thou shalt not bow down thyself unto them, nor serve them, for I Jehovah thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, upon the third and upon the fourth generation of them that hate me,

Bow Down to God. Not to humans. God is not at all happy with humans worshipping each other.

Worship God.

20:6 and showing lovingkindness unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments.

20:8 Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.


Waiting for Sunday to Drown


Sundays are very important in the Apocalypse. It's the Holy Day.

You might recall the Christmas Tsunami from 2004.
That happened on a Sunday.

Revelations


With their meanings:


4:3 There was a rainbow around the throne, like an emerald to look at.

Gay Pride is the Rainbow Flag.

4:4 Around the throne were twenty-four thrones. On the thrones were twenty-four elders sitting, dressed in white garments, with crowns of gold on their heads.

When I wrote those 7 seals, I was 24. The white is Purity. Gold is the God connection. You’ll see Tori Amos lyrics have a lot of ‘Gold’ references in there. That’s what that is all about.

4:5 Out of the throne proceed lightnings, sounds, and thunders. There were seven lamps of fire burning before his throne, which are the seven Spirits of God.

Thunder all around the place – it’s the Apocalypse and all. My 7 tattoos are the seven Spirits of God.

4:6 Before the throne was something like a sea of glass, similar to crystal. In the midst of the throne, and around the throne were four living creatures full of eyes before and behind.

The sea of glass is the internet. It’s where everyone in the world can see what’s happening all over the world, all from their little spot, wherever they may be.

The 4 living creatures are the 4 years since I wrote those Seals. The 4 years that this has been ‘alive’, since then.

Now, I’m 28. 24 + 4.

Well, just so you know, I’ll only be 28 until December 2nd. Here’s another Revelation.

12:2 She was with child. She cried out in pain, laboring to give birth.

12/2/1977. That’s when I was born.

So there’s some of the Revelations explained to you there.
These Revs have been the most accurate thing out there, let me tell you. I’ve never actually ever seen anything more accurate in my little life. I’m blown away by them always.

You have to know that I won’t be 28 when December 2nd comes around. This is very important to know. The numbers haven’t let me down yet, and I don’t believe they will let me down this time either.

The storms right now are very cold ones – Record breaking ones and the rest.
The summer was one of the hottest on record, and this is starting off as the coldest, with the earliest snowfall.

When it gets so very hot, people can find some ice or shade or a fan. When it gets so very cold, this is when the misery really sets in. When you can’t find heat in the freezing cold, then that’s when it gets deadly. I can show you another dream I had a few weeks ago.

Copy-Paste:

I was walking through the streets here, and they were mainly empty – downtown. Some people were wandering around aimlessly and afraid – it was freezing, and the police or whoever weren’t there to help out, noone was building up baracdes for the tides that were coming in – the city was becoming immersed in water completely, and everyone’s house was being eaten up, and it was freezing.

I had a couple of keys in my pocket though, and I knew I could help some people out. I begin walking with a woman, I tell her that I can figure something out here…

Then we come across 4 children, and they’re scared, just standing there. 3 girls and a boy, from ages maybe 14 – 7. They were just standing there freezing, ice drips even on their noses. All of the other people were wandering, sort of trying to find answers, trying to find help, and these 4 looked so confused and freezing. Like they were forgotten.

I said to them, “you guys need to keep moving. If you stand there, you’re going to freeze to death. Your blood will stop flowing, and you’ll die. You have to keep moving, it will keep you warmer, keep you alive”.

I have to help them, I can’t just let them sit there and freeze to death. I tell them to come with me, and we walk through this small tunnel, just trying to find the right place to get them to, some way to help them. In this tunnel, I look around and there’s shelving units on each side, higher up. They’re maybe 3’ X 3’, and some are filled with towels. Some people are near some of the shelving units, others are not occupied. It’s a dark wood in there, but it’s warmer. It’s like a homeless hangout, but it’s warmer there.

I get to the end of this area, and there’s a guy standing there, who sort of runs the place. The kids pass me up and they’re outside again, but I talk to the guy who’s running it. I say, “what’s the deal here, how can I get something together for these kids. They’re so cold, they need some shelter here”.
He tells me that if I walk to another man a bit further, that’s where I pay for a unit. The shelving units are $100 each, and then you sort of own them forever. Well, great deal, right? Then this guy hands me his money. He’s playing cards, gambling, but he hands me a $100 bill, and some $20’s, some $10’s. Just asks me to give him the change when it’s all through.

I then go to the kids, and say “is this okay with you, would you be happy with that? It’s way warmer in there, and it’s something that will keep you safe”. The oldest one, one of the girls, she is all about it – just to have somewhere to take her shoes off, and relax a bit. Somewhere to call ‘home’.

I go to the guy that you pay for this. He says that it’s $100, but that’s only for a month’s time. A month is not forever, very different in comparison, but it’s better than nothing at all, and we agree to pay the guy $100 for the month.

We walk down the hall to get to their new shelving unit, we pay the guy, and the kids have some warmer, cleaner clothes on now. They’re happy. They’re safe.

That’s my dream that I remembered so clearly. I woke up just now and wrote it down so I wouldn’t forget it.



I had this dream on September 22nd. That’s the date it says in my files.


Early snow breaks records



Snowfall moves across central USA, brings early start to holiday season
In a year that has been the warmest on record, the first winter storm of the season brought record early snowfall Thursday to parts of Michigan and Illinois. Chicago saw its earliest snowfall since record-keeping began in 1871, according to the National Weather Service.
"It just reminds me of the holidays coming up," said Wisconsin native Kris Koller, 25, who works from home in downtown Chicago. "It makes me happy."

According to the National Climatic Data Center, September was the first month with below-average temperatures nationally since August 2004. Even so, January to September has been the warmest such year-to-date period on record.

The sudden polar air mass prompted freeze warnings and frost advisories Thursday from eastern Colorado to western Pennsylvania. Cool weather was forecast for New York City today. "This is a heavy-duty, just-like-the-olden-days, early-season outbreak of cold," said Atlanta meteorologist Paul Kocin, co-author of Northeast Snowstorms. "It's going to send a pretty remarkable chill through (much) of the central and eastern part of the country."

The storm brought more than an inch of snow to the Grand Rapids area, breaking a 97-year-old record for snow accumulation for Oct. 12.

Parts of the Keweenaw Peninsula in Michigan received a foot of snow. Detroit received 0.2 inches, marking the earliest snowfall for the city. Flint, Mich., had 1.6 inches of snow — its earliest on record.

Tim Halbach, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Romeoville, Ill., said Chicago's 0.3 inches of snow beat the previous early snowfall by six days. He blamed a "pretty strong low-pressure system up in Canada that's rotating."


Record snowfall leaves thousands without power in western New York
NEW YORK (AFP) - An early snow storm caused havoc in western New York state, with record flurries leaving roads blocked, power lines down and hundreds of thousands without electricity, officials said.

The Buffalo area, near the border with Canada, on Friday saw the heaviest snowfall for a single October day since 1870, when recordkeeping began, meteorologists at the National Weather Service said, as snow continued to fall.

Parts of the region had seen up to 60 centimetres (two feet) of snow by early Friday, with up to 12 centimetres more expected, they said.

Dennis Michalski from the State Emergency Management Office said many roads had been closed, people were being advised not to travel and states of emergency had been declared in some local areas.

Power companies believed an estimated 250,000 homes and businesses were without electricity, National Grid spokesman Alberto Bianchetti said, without being able to say how many people that likely represented.

Michalski said emergency crews were out trying to assess the extent of the damage and could not say when power would be restored.

National Weather Service meteorologist Dennis Feltgen said the snow storm would not have caused such disruption if it had struck later in the month.

"This is an unusually heavy snowfall, and if this were in a couple of weeks, it wouldn't be so bad, but the problem we have right now is all the leaves are still on the tress," he said.

"As a result, the trees are coming down," he added. "Not only do we have blocked roads, but we've got downed power lines, and it's a mess."

He described the storm as "extremely unusual" for October.

"We've got record snow, trees and power lines down, and snow is still in progress. Otherwise, it's a wonderful day in the neighbourhood," he said.



Chris Moose, NYSEG employee, cuts wires to remove a broken pole from Gunnville Road after a rare early October snowstorm that buried parts of the Great Lakes region under as much as 2 feet of snow, in Clarence, N.Y., a suburb of Buffalo, Friday Oct. 13, 2006. (AP Photo/David Duprey)


Downed trees block a street in Buffalo, N.Y , Friday, Oct. 13, 2006. Up to two feet of snow from an extraordinary fall storm closed roads, cut power to some 350,000 customers and left this city paralyzed as officials banned driving in the region Friday. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Record-breaking N.Y. snow leaves 3 dead
BUFFALO, N.Y. - Buffalo lay all but paralyzed Friday after a record-breaking early snowstorm whited-out the brilliant colors of fall, buried pumpkins and apples and caught this city world-famous for its wintry weather flat-flooted. At least three deaths were blamed on the storm.

The heavy, wet snow snapped tree limbs all over western New York, leaving some 350,000 homes and businesses without power.

A state of emergency was in effect across the region, banning all nonessential travel. Branches and power lines lay draped across cars and houses, and normally busy downtown streets were still, blanketed by up to two feet of snow.

"I thought it was kind of pretty but eerie," said Ann Goff, who walked to her job at a Buffalo supermarket in the middle of the night. "It was scary listening to the cracking of the branches."

The snow, delivered in a fury of thunder and lightning, blanketed Buffalo and surrounding areas Thursday night and early Friday. A 105-mile stretch of the New York State Thruway was closed for hours, and food and water had to be delivered by snowmobile to stranded motorists.

The storm buried pumpkins and apples just before a busy picking weekend, but the quickly melting snow is not expected to cause damage, New York Farm Bureau spokesman Peter Gregg said.

At the Seven Seas Sailing School on Lake Erie, boats were encrusted in ice.

In some of the city's Victorian-era neighborhoods, oaks, maples, magnolias — some of which have withstood a century of the harshest elements — were bowed or broken.

"Our street looked like it was hit by a hurricane.

It looks like the apocalypse.

It's unreal," said Matthew Colken. "One hundred-year-old trees are down."

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