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Originally posted by Pelvi
I'm going to be very disappointed if it did just break into pieces.. I atleast wanted 3 days of darkness I was going to throw a 3 day party
Originally posted by Greensage
reply to post by lkpuede
You have a distorted sense of reality when it comes to what the Prophesy entails! The Hopi are just as much a victim of "Society" as we all are, maybe perhaps more so since all Native Americans were placed in situations beyond their control.
As for Today's Native "plight", this might be a foundation of which we all recognize regardless of race, creed, or color, in any neighborhood. Wake up!
I think your statement is generalized aimed at disarming the "Truth" rather than enlightening this thread! Seriously, think about the Hopi, think about the Navajo, think about any other indigenous population who has been forced to endure a lifestyle which is not Native, then think about your statement and realize you are not able to make a rational judgment based on your biased nature.
Sorry, but you are wrong, the Prophesy has nothing to do with the situation of Society but the situation of a Natural cycle of Change. To not recognize that Mankind has gone through the Ages and how each Age represents itself is a failing on your part; because that is what the Blue Star is telling us, as he is the "messenger" or "harbinger" of what is to come, not the Hopi People and certainly not you!
Originally posted by Phage
Maybe the next time around (11,000 years or so) not this time.
Originally posted by WhiteHat
Ouch! This must hurt!
Now I would give anything to see the faces of the Elenin-Nibiru-end-of-the-world supporters; there it goes the last hope
Is this confirmed somewhere else?edit on 29-8-2011 by WhiteHat because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by SaturnFX
Originally posted by MajorKarma
Time continues to speed up and nothing has been fixed; just delayed.
This worried me, so I timed time
Glad to report that 10 seconds still takes 10 seconds.
I checked this by watching a second clock, and making sure it didn't skip a second or two...I did a control also by having a broken watch there.
the results were that the seconds didn't skip any seconds, and the broken watch is still broken...I guess time decided to slow down to time again during this experiment...so will check later on to confirm...also if someone else could reproduce these results, that would be helpful.
Originally posted by ElevenFlint
reply to post by SaturnFX
Mate, no offence, but you are kidding, right? I hope so, because you should know that if the spacetime curvature changes it affects everything on Earth - that means all people and all clocks. So you and every clock on Earth will still perceive the second as a normal second no matter if it has speeded up. Ever heard of relativity?edit on 30-8-2011 by ElevenFlint because: (no reason given)edit on 30-8-2011 by ElevenFlint because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Akasirus
Originally posted by SaturnFX
Originally posted by MajorKarma
Time continues to speed up and nothing has been fixed; just delayed.
This worried me, so I timed time
Glad to report that 10 seconds still takes 10 seconds.
I checked this by watching a second clock, and making sure it didn't skip a second or two...I did a control also by having a broken watch there.
the results were that the seconds didn't skip any seconds, and the broken watch is still broken...I guess time decided to slow down to time again during this experiment...so will check later on to confirm...also if someone else could reproduce these results, that would be helpful.
There is no way to determine whether time is speeding up or not, because we don't have any other reference point. Watches are just a model to represent time, they are not time itself. If time was running faster your watch would also run faster, but since time is relative you would perceive it the same. The only way to measure changes in time is a fixed frame of reference with which to compare it to.
I don't know where this claim is coming from though, it seems quite without reason or logic, but without any way to tell, who knows? Even if we had a fixed frame of reference, due to the nature of relativity it would appear as if that frame was slowing down, instead of us speeding up, so I don't see what difference it would make.