The FALSE NEW AGE MOVEMENT…

(See: Metatron, Channeling, Questions for Discernment)

The Anunnaki-dominated New Age pseudo-ascension” spiritual movement (most of it inspired by the “Templar Melchizedek” false ascension teachings of Anunnaki’s Thoth, pre-Emerald Covenant Enoch, “Archangel Michael & Friends,” “Jehovah,” “Maitreya,” “Lord Melchizedek and spiritual hierarchy”, the Urantia etc…) inherently promotes a fear-based paradigm of “Light, Love and Pretend Away the Darkness (everything is all right)” dogma. (See: Intruders)

The Illuminati races within the infrastructure of the covertly metaphysically motivated Illuminati World Management Team, who serve as Fallen Angelic puppets, are being “played on” and manipulated by fear of personal survival and a desire for acquisition of power to prevent pain and create personal pleasure. (See: One World Order)

These are the same motivations behind the actions of the “spiritual” peoples of traditional New Age affiliation, who think worshiping an ancient book, or surrendering personal power to an external “God,”ET,” “Angel” or “Channel” is the ultimate expression of spiritual development and will “make everything all right.”

(See: Metatronic Broadcasting Station)

Fear, the “Pleasure-Pain Principle” and Disinformation are the common control elements by which the Illuminati and Humans become easily misled into surrendering their power to something outside of themselves.

Once this outside source has your power, compliance with the approval of that source becomes, implicitly, the only way to feel empowered.

(Voyagers II – Page 400)

Don’t talk to aliens, warns Stephen Hawking

THE aliens are out there and Earth had better watch out, at least according to Stephen Hawking. He has suggested that extraterrestrials are almost certain to exist — but that instead of seeking them out, humanity should be doing all it that can to avoid any contact.

The suggestions come in a new documentary series in which Hawking, one of the world’s leading scientists, will set out his latest thinking on some of the universe’s greatest mysteries.

Alien life, he will suggest, is almost certain to exist in many other parts of the universe: not just in planets, but perhaps in the centre of stars or even floating in interplanetary space.

Hawking’s logic on aliens is, for him, unusually simple. The universe, he points out, has 100 billion galaxies, each containing hundreds of millions of stars. In such a big place, Earth is unlikely to be the only planet where life has evolved.

“To my mathematical brain, the numbers alone make thinking about aliens perfectly rational,” he said. “The real challenge is to work out what aliens might actually be like.”

The answer, he suggests, is that most of it will be the equivalent of microbes or simple animals — the sort of life that has dominated Earth for most of its history.

One scene in his documentary for the Discovery Channel shows herds of two-legged herbivores browsing on an alien cliff-face where they are picked off by flying, yellow lizard-like predators. Another shows glowing fluorescent aquatic animals forming vast shoals in the oceans thought to underlie the thick ice coating Europa, one of the moons of Jupiter.

Such scenes are speculative, but Hawking uses them to lead on to a serious point: that a few life forms could be intelligent and pose a threat. Hawking believes that contact with such a species could be devastating for humanity.

He suggests that aliens might simply raid Earth for its resources and then move on: “We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet. I imagine they might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonise whatever planets they can reach.”

He concludes that trying to make contact with alien races is “a little too risky”. He said: “If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn’t turn out very well for the Native Americans.”

The completion of the documentary marks a triumph for Hawking, now 68, who is paralysed by motor neurone disease and has very limited powers of communication. The project took him and his producers three years, during which he insisted on rewriting large chunks of the script and checking the filming.

John Smithson, executive producer for Discovery, said: “He wanted to make a programme that was entertaining for a general audience as well as scientific and that’s a tough job, given the complexity of the ideas involved.”

Hawking has suggested the possibility of alien life before but his views have been clarified by a series of scientific breakthroughs, such as the discovery, since 1995, of more than 450 planets orbiting distant stars, showing that planets are a common phenomenon.

So far, all the new planets found have been far larger than Earth, but only because the telescopes used to detect them are not sensitive enough to detect Earth-sized bodies at such distances.

Another breakthrough is the discovery that life on Earth has proven able to colonise its most extreme environments. If life can survive and evolve there, scientists reason, then perhaps nowhere is out of bounds.

Hawking’s belief in aliens places him in good scientific company. In his recent Wonders of the Solar System BBC series, Professor Brian Cox backed the idea, too, suggesting Mars, Europa and Titan, a moon of Saturn, as likely places to look.

Similarly, Lord Rees, the astronomer royal, warned in a lecture earlier this year that aliens might prove to be beyond human understanding.

“I suspect there could be life and intelligence out there in forms we can’t conceive,” he said. “Just as a chimpanzee can’t understand quantum theory, it could be there are aspects of reality that are beyond the capacity of our brains.”

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/space/article7107207.ece

Evo Morales and the Revolutionary Politics of Mother Earth

TIQUIPAYA, Bolivia, Apr 21 (New America Media) – Bolivian President Evo Morales seems testier today than when he told me during a 2007 interview, “For 500 years, we have had patience.”

The urgency felt by Morales and the more than 15,000 people from 150 nations attending the World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth (CMPCC) was evident from the first sentences uttered by the host and convener of this unprecedented gathering in Tiquipaya, a small town just north of Cochabamba, home of the historic “water war” that helped sweep Morales into power.

In a 21st century twist on “Revolución o Muerte” (Revolution or Death), the slogan that powered Latin American revolutionary movements of the 60s and 70s, the generally soft-spoken Morales opened the conference by shouting “Planeta o Muerte!” (Planet or Death). Morales’ slogan drew raucous responses from the diverse and mostly dark-skinned crowd filling a stadium that bore more flags of indigenous nations than it did of nation states like Bolivia. Having sung just prior to Morales’ invocation the song “Oye amigo tu tierra está en peligro,” (Listen friend, your earth is in danger), a variation on the Spanish-language version of “The people united will never be defeated,” the crowd was ready to accept Morales’ challenge to forge “a new planetary paradigm to save the Earth.”

Morales’ choice of opening words as well as his convening of this unprecedented global mobilization represents more than a greening of revolutionary movements or a revolutionizing of green movements. It is something even more ambitious: inspiring a new era in hemispheric and global politics, one that fuses the best of indigenous, leftist, labor, environmentalist and other movements in the effort to save Pachamama (Mother Earth). The welcome from the president of the Plurinational State of Bulibiya (Bolivia in Quechua) also marks another stage in the remarkable rise of an indigenous former coca-grower and immigrant (Morales migrated to Argentina in his youth) who has become the de-facto leader of this hybrid global movement that links the rights of humans to what organizers have coined the “universal rights of Mother Earth.”

“Without equilibrium between people, there will be no equilibrium between humans and nature,” said Morales, who proposed the CMPCC after what he and all attendees here consider the failure of the top-down driven Copenhagen round of climate talks to secure commitments to emissions reductions that would keep temperature rises to less than 2 degrees centigrade. The unapologetically anti-capitalist philosophy, program and approach of the alternative climate summit and Morales (i.e., “Either capitalism dies or Mother Earth dies”) stand in direct conflict with the approach taken by the leaders of industrial nations at Copenhagen. Critics came to Tiquipaya, a suburb of Cochabamba, out of dismay with the “Copenhagen consensus,” which was brokered behind closed doors and rapidly ratified with little time for discussion and no connection to issues being discussed here: climate migration, agriculture and food sovereignty, climate debt, indigenous peoples and 14 other issues organizers say they will push during the next round of UN-sponsored climate talks taking place in Mexico this November.

Also reflecting the alternative cosmovisión (world view) of the burgeoning movement are proposals for the creation of, among other things, a climate justice tribunal that would establish an international legal framework to criminalize and punish those perpetrating climate crimes against the rights of Mother Earth and humanity. Filling the air of Tiquipaya and rooting all of the proposals of the CMPCC is what writer Eduardo Galeano called in a statement read by the Uruguayan ambassador to Bolivia, “the voices of the past that speak to the future.”

Sponsoring a conference with the radical approach of the CMPCC puts Morales, the first indigenous head of state in Bolivia, a majority-indigenous country, in direct conflict with another head of state whose election marked a historic political and racial shift, Barack Obama, who also played an active role in the Copenhagen “consensus.”

“The failure of Copenhagen caused Evo Morales and other leaders on climate change to call for the (CMPCC) conference,” said Lim Li Lin, senior legal and environment researcher at the Third World Network, a global rights group based in Malaysia. “By leading Copenhagen, Obama helped provide a platform for the alternative leadership of the movement led by President Morales.”

The growing conflict between the political interests and agendas embodied by Obama and Morales was on full display recently when the United States decided to cut aid for climate change to Bolivia, Ecuador and other countries opposed to the Copenhagen accord. Representatives of some of the governments attending the conference also told me that the Obama administration and other industrialized nations were applying pressure on countries not to attend the CMPCC. Though he may not intend it, Morales’ leadership of the revolutionary movement for the rights of Mother Earth also appears to be overshadowing, at least momentarily, the hemispheric and global left leadership of his ally and fellow conference attendee, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who has received similar treatment from the Obama administration.

Bursting with enthusiasm under the blaring hot sun filling the stadium that shook with chants of “Ole, Ole, Ole, Ole, Evo, Evo,” Marcelina Vargas, a Quechua-speaking member of the Peasant Confederation of Peru, accepted Morales’ Planeta o Muerte (Kay Pa Chachu o wanyuychu in Quechua). “For our people, for everybody, water is life. In Peru, we’re defending Pachamama (Mother Earth) from companies with U.S. and Canadian investments, companies that are contaminating our water,” said Vargas, who wore one of the ubiquitous hats and ponchos seen throughout the region. “Evo is an expression of our movement and I feel happy he’s helping the world see our ways.”

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/oneworld/20100422/wl_oneworld/world3693331271949889

100% UFO @Ostend, Belgium

First video is taken around 21.10. @ Ostend near the casino. People  form Ostend will recognize the place. It is taken @ a hotel Thermae Palace. Watch it.

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Now here it comes. Video below is taken @ 21.20. 10 minutes later when I went to my home @ Spuikom. A lake. The direction I filmed the Light Spot is very very different than the first one. This cannot be debunked! That thing moved and moved very very quickly. I did not noticed when it moved but it moved without doubt.

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Blessings,

Koen