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Earth Change Report Nov 03 07
November 02, 2007

The Water Rage Age Is Upon Us

Earth Change Report 016 – Nov 03 2007





"Loved your DVD and my boyfriend Gerrard is very passionate about the message in the DVD… literally watched it like five times in one day. Good stuff Dad." – Jessica.

From The Desk of Michael Knight, Editor, Earth Change Report.

Editors are supposed to be dispassionate objective impartial people. But an email like that at the start of a day tends to bring out the poetic or the heart in a man.

It’s a beautiful day – a hard day on which to stay focused on earth changes.

At this time last year we were heading into Washington state’s wettest November in recorded history.

This year it just may be the exact reverse. No rain expected till almost the middle of the month.

Erratic weather? Yes. But this sort of change is easy to handle. Instead of grey skies and sleeting rain, today the clouds are their unusually fluffy selves against an azure sky. No sign of storms up there.

If you were here you could even see the mountains cloaked in their fall (autumn) transition. Maples and alders are exchanging green leaves for a patchwork of gold and yellow and brown while the willows are losing their leaves to a breeze that is cool but not cold.


On a day like this, you have to wonder why James Gilliland would say in the documentary about his life that benevolent ETs are really concerned about what we’re doing to the environment.

Spiritual ETs no less – far more advanced than us – who would like to help us clean up our planet. Except we keep trying to shoot them down. (More in the DVD – Yours in Broadcast Quality, complete with real ufo video footage…right here).

It’s a pleasant day to visit the sheep and horses. The sheep need a little additional grain going into winter. One of them is due to drop her lambs soon. The rest won’t be bred till next year. So the grain is necessary – along with hay maybe next month - since the best of the grass is long gone and shorter days means little to no growth till April or May at least.

Today the horses had their first flakes of hay for the winter.

As the hay hit the ground Strider – the gelding with a sudden stallion attitude - snarled and bit at Veronica, ripping her new horse blanket, then lashed out with both hind legs. She whinnied and fled while he commandeered the hay.

I’ll deal with him later – when there’s no hay around. I’ve seen guys get kicked feeding out. A horse with his head down in munching mode has no time for his friends.

Which makes you wonder what people will do when food and water become scarce.

Will those who have wisely set aside enough to see them through a rough patch act like Strider? Or will they share – and run out sooner?

Will the Veronicas of the world attack the Striders first?

Would I empty my barn that I stocked full of hay in the summer to feed more than my own horses in the winter?

Very reluctantly. Very selectively. Maybe not at all. After all, everyone else with horses knew winter was coming.

They should’ve stocked up in the summer as well.

I head home, pull into the driveway, flip open the trunk (boot) and remove the torn horse blanket that needs a wash and repair.

As I do, I notice the "scoot pack" – the backpack and boots I put there after reading "Planet X Forecast and 2012 Survival Guide."

I mentally drop a nod of gratitude in the direction of Jacco van der Worp (MSc) Marshall Masters and Janice Manning – the authors who put a decade of work into writing and publishing that book.

Planet X or not, I know my "scoot pack" was useful on my last mountain trail ride. I just robbed the baked beans out of it and threw them in the saddle bags for lunch.

And then I head inside, start the computer, and check the world for earth change news.

Can you believe that in drought-stricken Australia they have coined the term "water rage?"

It’s true. And it has led to the first fatality in a dispute over water. "A 36-year-old man appeared in court charged with murder yesterday after allegedly kicking and punching a retired man to death following a row over watering a garden.

“The drought, the worst for at least a century, has left much of the country a parched dust bowl. . More than three-quarters of New South Wales is in drought, while Victoria has declared 100 per cent of its farmland is affected."



Last week’s ECR included a number of graphics that clearly showed how the coastal areas of the world will fare (badly) as sea levels rise.

That prompted this letter from Heather.

Hi , in your scientific view of the continents regarding the rising water and the regions affected every continent has been shown except Australia and New Zealand??? regards Heather.

Thank you for your observation Heather.

Rising sea levels will naturally affect the coastlines of both countries. If Al Gore is correct, then anything less than 20 meters above sea level at present, is going to be below sea level in future.

Given earthquake activity offshore, both countries are also vulnerable to tsunamis.

My Google Earth research shows Sydney airport virtually at sea level, and Sydney itself not much more than 150ft above the harbor. The land between the two is very low-lying as well. So an earthquake-generated tsunami will be devastating – and rising sea levels could well see most of the area under water, permanently.

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Letters keep coming in, asking about safe places to live in the event of the Atlantic Current stalling.

The documentary shows this happening – and the result will be a Siberian climate throughout Europe, right down to the Pyrenees.

So a subscriber wrote this:

Hi. If you could be so kind just to tell me if there are any fault lines in northern Spain, south of the Pyrenees mountains. Thanks again for everything. - Kate



Not having been to Europe (except for a couple of strange nights in London and that doesn’t count) I feel somewhat inadequate when it comes to answering such a question.

But that passes. The Internet is like an extended brain. Ask it the right questions and you’ll get an appropriate answer.

This is what I found.

Most of that region has historically been extremely stable when it comes to earthquakes.

Nevertheless, the French have done some serious studies in the Pyrenees in recent years because they’ve been planning to build a railway tunnel through the mountains.

So can I be bold enough (or big-headed enough) to say "all’s well?"

I don’t think so, because the only thing about history that has anything to do with the present is that on at least 20 previous occasions there have been episodes of very sudden – yes, abrupt – climate change.

If we accept that these things are indeed likely in the next few years, then we should prepare for whatever those changes might be. We have to choose as best we can from a range of options.

We have to consider tsunamis and earthquakes and terrible storms. All require a somewhat different survival plan.

High (very high) and away from the coastline is best in the event of tsunamis.

Living out of a city is better than being there in an earthquake (or tsunami etc).

A solid shelter is best in an earthquake. Same can be said for riding out storms.

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"Planet X Forecast and 2012 Survival Guide" is a great resource too because it explains how Planet X is heading this way, perturbing the entire solar system prior to some almost mind-boggling effects as it gets closer.

This week, we bring you a remarkable new product about Planet X and 2012.

It is The Home Study System.

This includes The Kolbrin Bible, (an ancient text that records events associated with the last visit of Planet X), plus "Planet X Forecast and 2012 Survival Guide."..as well as a number of CDs that all together will give you the best possible broad spectrum understanding of these critical issues.

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And then there is the matter of the next Solar Maximum – the sun storms that science is telling us are due to start happening very soon.

They could potentially stop every electrical thing on earth from functioning.

(Brad asked some good questions about how this will affect us. I’ll get into that as soon as the research is complete).

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I thought long and hard before including this, then decided it was worth addressing, just once, because it is the only letter so far that has been negative about what we have done and what we are offering.

It is from a person who will no doubt not make plans, not prepare, and therefore is unlikely to see his way through even the smallest of natural disasters.

Nevertheless, he has the right to speak his mind, express his opinion, and make his own choices. It’s his life, after all.

This is it, and my reply.

Daniel writes:

If this information is so crucial to the public, you would be giving it away. what do we always hear about 2012 and the coming times? it's about service to others, as in your fellow man. the problem is, people like you are trying to fill your coffers on the fears of the general public. total waste of money. there is nothing in your presentation that can not be found online or in my local library. your material will never be recommended by me. you have officially entered the "Ed Dames Club".....

Answer:

Personally, I think you have a very naive attitude when you say if this information is so crucial to the public it should be given away. Unrealistic as well. Here’s why.

You have had access to 14 newsletters for nothing. They were written and provided for free over a period of three months.

My subscription list is comprised of people around the world who are like-minded in their desire to learn about the topics dealt with in Earth Change Report, Contact Has Begun, and other products.

In that sense, we are a community with a common interest.

Many have discovered Planet X and 2012 for the first time just recently.

Most have neither the time or experience to go to libraries or spend literally dozens of hours researching on the internet.

Earth Change Report condenses hundreds of researched scientific papers and news reports from around the globe into layman’s language in a newsletter which is specifically intended to provide knowledge and thus allay fearnot promote it or capitalize on it.

Michael Knight

PS – Now that you mention money, I have decided it is time to switch from “free” to “donations.”

I’ll put a donation button on my next newsletter and see just how many people think ECR is worth something. I know many will donate – and I also know some can not afford to. Either way, that’s okay.

PS: I have sent this newsletter, complete with graphics, for the first time in this form.

Please let me know if it has created any problems in your email delivery system.

These newsletters will be archived from now on.

Sincerely.

Michael Knight.

Editor - Earth Change Report.

Director - Contact Has Begun.

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