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POPSfrom the Sacred Text Archive: Prophecy & Divination texts
What does the future hold? This is one of the big questions we'd all like answered. This page has links to resources at sacred-texts that relate to prophecy and divination. Prophecy The Prophecies of Nostradamus by Nostradamus. The complete predictions of Nostradamus both in English and Old French, with a biography of Nostradamus and some notes about the events of 9/11. Nostradamus: The Man Who Saw Through Time by Lee McCann . A biography and historical novel of Nostradamus, with many interpreted quatrains, written during World War II. The Oracles of Nostradamus by Charles A. Ward . The complete text of one of the best books about Nostradamus ever written. The Sibylline Oracles Tr. by Milton S. Terry . Read the mysterious (purported) predictions of the Roman Sibylline Oracle. The Book of Revelation-The most famous Christian prophecy. The Prophecies of Paracelsus by Paracelsus, tr. by J.K . The alchemist and esoteric philosopher issued a set of
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POPSBaguio Teachers' Camp a trivia about Baguio Teachers' Camp, the Baguio Teachers' Camp is a celebration of the history of Philippine Education which has become the symbolism of the Filipino people's emancipation and freedom from the tyranny of colonialism.
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POPSTHE TAKEOVER OF PLANET EARTH: Project Camelot interviews Jordan Maxwell
-- The dire conclusions Jordan has reached are mitigated by his own fascinating personal story: that he was groomed and prepared for his current role by nothing less than a group of benevolent ETs - one of whom he met in person in the guise of the father of a girl he met when he was just 19. He was explicitly told by this remarkable (but very ordinarily human-looking) man - who told him details of his life that no-one could possibly know - that he would have a very important job to do later, in years to come. It is very clear that he is doing that job right now. -- In this video Jordan goes places in his testimony that he has not spoken about publicly before in any venue. The reptilians are real, he states: to support this, he recounts a fascinating and extraordinary story told to him of one woman's first-hand experience as a young girl on a US Air Force base. He talks about the reality (and return) of the Anunnaki. And he cites Masonic symbolism, that is to be found in ancient tex
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POPSBombing the Moon Gives A New Meaning to Lunatics So how much does a metaphor weigh? A lot more than NASA thinks. The first man on the moon wasn't an American or a Russian, it was The Man in the Moon we all saw when we were kids, and somebody older showed him to us. That's the first man on the moon, her permanent resident, and now he's got a NASA rocket at his backside... They used to call the mentally ill lunatics. But now I wonder who the real lunatics are. And if there is water on the moon, what are we going to do with it? Grow moon-corn for ethanol until we kill the Earth? Such a great article it touched something, it really touched something more beautiful than finding water on the moon.
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POPSThe Symbolism of the Bended Knee Seriously though, does anyone know what the kneeling is supposed to symbolize? "A gesture of surrender".... doesn't that sound romantic? .:) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boeA_yf-qso
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POPSDan Brown's New Book Highlights Freemasonry in Washington D.C. The Founders and Washington D.C.'s symbolic construction. Much truth included in Brown's new fiction. The National Geographic article shows the Scottish Rite Temple, which shows the incorporation of Jewish-Egyptian symbolism that looks almost Pharoah-like in their superstition. (Jewish because there is an "Ark of the Covenant" inside the temple). Note the inclusion of factor-11 numerology in what they do, as in the 33-degree. Thomas Paine wrote that Freemasonry traces back to Druidism.
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POPSWhitman quote & image
American poet Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, is a collection of poems notable for its frank delight in and praise of the senses, during a time when such candid displays were considered immoral. Where much previous poetry, especially English, relied on symbolism, allegory, and meditation on the religious and spiritual, Leaves of Grass exalted the body and the material world. Whitman was inspired to begin Leaves of Grass after reading an essay by Ralph Waldo Emerson which expressed a need for a uniquely American poet. When the book was first published, Whitman sent a copy to Emerson, whose praiseful letter of response helped launch the book to success. Whitman’s hero, Abraham Lincoln, read and enjoyed an early version of Leaves of Grass. Despite such high recommendations, Whitman faced charges of obscenity and immorality for his work, but this only led to increased popularity of the book. Whitman continually revised and republished Leaves of Grass throughout his lifetime, notably
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POPSHow To Kill New York SEPTEMBER 16, 2009: FBI agents with bomb-sniffing dogs Wednesday raided the Colorado apartment of an Afghan national linked to Al Qaeda and a plot to attack the New York City subway system.... In the past three days, the NYPD increased its attention to the subway system and its 5.2 million daily riders. Officers were warned to keep an eye out for vans near transportation hubs such as Grand Central, police sources said. The safety zone around subway and commuter stations also was expanded by two blocks, the sources said. Interesting little thought exercise - done in 2004
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POPS The Cult of Iconography People obsessed with their own image expect some opposition. But there is one thing the true narcissist cannot tolerate… LOL ! This ( LOL ! ) is the killer ap. I wouldn’t worry about the Joker poster so much, Mr. President. But if this ( LOL ! ) catches on, and your policies are reduced to three-letter ridicule ( LOL ! )… well, sir, then you are in real trouble.
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POPSMayan Crop circle? I came across this while researching into Mayan symbolism, I know there is a lot of debate over whether Crop Circles are man made or otherwise. But it doesn't detract from the fact that it is incredibly intricate on a vast scale and visually stunning.
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POPSObamas tour slavers’ fort in ‘painful’ Ghana visit
This was the end of the President's recent overseas trip, first to Russia, then to the G8 in Italy, a visit to the Pope, then to the slave fortress. This clip has a wide range of pro and con and hostile international comments. Europeans seem very touchy and defensive about having it pointed out that slavery was not a U.S. invention. But the symbolism of the moment is not lost of hundreds of millions of blacks worldwide: For centuries they were treated like *hit and considered savage, half-humans and now one of their own returns, leader of one of the most powerful nations in world history. His message of "tough love," surprised several (but it's one of his themes), his idea of attacking the roots of the problem rather than the symptoms quite wise, and the comparisons (and differences) to The Holocaust we hear about every week rather illuminating. He got a few extra billion bucks for Africa out of the G8 and got back to the treaty with Russia to reduce nuke weapons. No
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POPSThe Art of Annie Truxell Annie Truxell’s work is difficult to categorize. She does not fit neatly into the pigeonholes established by the best known trends of her generation: the Abstract Expressionists, the Pop artists, the New Realists yet her work encapsulates a little of all these themes