Planet X: SOLAR SYSTEM Resonance
In Article: <[email protected]> Charlene wrote:
> Any object large enough and close enough to
> cause the effects she described would be visible
> to the naked eye ... It would also have affected
> the orbits of other planets. It hasn't.
Good question!
The magnetic field of Earth is weakening, since a
strong point estimated to be 2,000 years ago. Deep
earthquakes which rose almost exponentially between
1985 and 1995 have locked down the plates of Earth,
such that quakes in one plate ricochet to another place,
and this process and be charted from quake statistics.
The weather on Earth has gone from being a bit wild
to breaking records regularly to being so bizarre that
broken records are never mentioned anymore. More
volcanoes are active on Earth than at any time in the
memory of man. And though the oceans are heating
from the bottom up, and glaciers are retreating at an
astonishing pace. The Earths rotation is slowing,
such that the full moon seems now to come early. But
is it just the Earth that is affected by the movement of
Planet X toward the solar system, after its long stay at
essentially the mid-point between its two foci?
From Mars, the Earth would appear to be quiescent,
as few of these symptoms would be visible from space.
Melting ice is noticeable, and this has been noted on
Europa, a moon of Jupiter. A slowing rotation would
also be noticeable, but until this becomes extreme
would be hard to measure from a distance. What
effects can be expected, in the planets that share the
solar system with Earth, as Planet X approaches?
- Mercury, as Earth, has a magnetic core, and tilts in
the same direction as Earth. Were Planet X to pass
within 14 million miles of Mercury, as it is
projected to pass Earth in 2003, Mercury would
experience a pole shift, though there is no life on
that dead planet to care. Likewise, a slowing rotation
would occur on Mercury, due to the magnetic
interference of Planet X during its approach.
- Mars has given evidence of past pole shifts, as your
scientists are aware from NASA reports. Is it being
affected during the coming approach? In the past,
when the Sun had more mass, Planet X passed
through the Asteroid Belt, creating the accidents that
the litter in this belt attests to. When passing closer
to Mars, then a warm planet with a molten core, pole
shifting on occasion happened to Mars, but its
distance from such trauma now is what makes it
attractive as a shift-evacuation point by NASA and
the elite who control and dominate NASA.
- Perturbations in the orbits of the outer planets will
be palpable during the passage. Those planets on
the approach side will linger, and those attempting
to leave or arrive at the approach side will slow or
speed up in their orbits due to the additional gravity
tug. Being determined by multiple factors, orbits
will not CHANGE, beyond temporary perturbations
in their speed, in the main. Unless literally bumped
out of their orbits, planets tend to return after
perturbation to their normal pace around the Sun,
and return to their normal rotation pace, because of
the many factors influencing orbit and rotation.
ZetaTalk