ZetaTalk 8/15/1995:
      The Earth, Sun, and 12th Planet will
        thus Form a Triangle in the Earth's orbital plane with a 23°
        angle at the Earth, an 18° angle at the Sun, and a 139° angle at the 12th Planet. It is at this
        point, essentially, that the 12th Planet is closest to the Earth, as
        with the angle of entry into the Earth's orbital plane being 32°
        at this point, the 12th Planet essentially dives up through the Earth's
        orbital plane and quickly passes on.
      
      ZetaTalk 8/15/1995:
      The Earth's orbit forms a plane. The
        Moon's orbit forms a plane that bisects the Earth's orbit in a fixed
        place twice a year. Planet X's orbit, coming and going, forms a plane
        that also bisects the Earth's orbital plane. Planet X's orbital plane
        can be calculated if points are taken on the other two planes and used
        as a reference. The Earth's distance from the Sun is known. Take the
        placement of the Earth at the two points where the Moon's orbital plane
        lines up. Use these two points as two of three points in a triangle. The
        third point in an equilateral triangle will be on the plane of the 12th
        Planet's orbit.
      
      ZetaTalk 6/25/2004:
      Planet X does more than one 270° roll,
        as the fastest way to align itself again with magnetic flow lines after
        piercing the Ecliptic, as implied in Eastfield, the second roll
        culminating in the passage where the visible presence of Planet X
        increases enormously during the week of rotation stoppage. The timeline
        implies a position of Planet X prior to the passage that include angles
        of 45° on either side and a 180° reversal in between.
      
      ZetaTalk 2/5/2005:
        Currently, Planet X is not quite
        at the mid-point between the Earth and the Sun, very close to the
        Ecliptic or the Sun’s middle, and consequently you cannot see it because
        it’s like a dull fuzz ball in front of the Sun and reflects back the
        light that hits the dust cloud so intensely that it’s a terrific glare.
        If you were on the Sun’s side, looking at it, you’d be blinded, but if
        you’re on the Earth side, looking at it, it looks like a gray fuzz ball.
        So that’s where it is, and it has progressed from being below the
        Ecliptic in December of 2003 and down near the Sun’s South Pole, to
        rising up to the Ecliptic, from the right to the left as we have
        described in its retrograde orbit.
    
ZetaTalk 4/21/2006:
      The N Pole is not yet pointing to the
        right. It's no longer pointing toward the Sun's S Pole and is certainly
        not yet pointing toward us. We would state about 28°. 
      
      ZetaTalk 9/23/2006:
      Since the tail blows out from the N
        Pole, the degree of turn in the 270° roll can be determined, and appears
        about 80°.
      
      ZetaTalk 10/21/2006:
      Planet X is closer to a 90° turn,
        pointing not at the Sun or the Earth but sideways. 
      
      ZetaTalk 2/3/2007:
      We reported recently that Planet X was
        at the 135° point, and it has not progressed past a degree or two beyond
        that. This is not a lineal process, as is it also lifting up to
        encounter the Ecliptic backwash, and fights at times in a virtual
        plateau.
    
ZetaTalk 7/7/2007:
      The Eastfield crop circle implies that
        Planet X draws near, then retreats, then draws near again during a
        severe wobble. Then draws the Earth close during the rotation stoppage
      
      ZetaTalk 2/2/2008:
      As it pierces the ecliptic, Planet X is
        upright, having completed its first 270° roll, but quickly gyrates to
        position along the Sun's magnetic flow lines above the ecliptic. It
        suddenly does a second 270° roll, at first trying to stand virtually
        upside down in alignment with the magnetic flow lines, which results in
        a 90° turn of the N Pole toward the Sun. But because Planet X is at this
        time rapidly shooting out of the solar system at an upward angle, it
        then rolls sideways 180° to point its N Pole outward into space. It is
        these gyrations which cause the pole shift in Earth, as the N Pole of
        Planet X picks up the S Pole of Earth and pulls it upward as it passes.
      
      ZetaTalk 8/9/2008:
      The pole shift happens when Planet X is
        free to leave the solar system, having at last crossed over the
        ecliptic. Planet X has up until this point been fighting the backwash of
        particles returning to the Sun at the ecliptic. Once into the realm of
        the magnetic field on the northern side of the ecliptic, Planet X
        rapidly aligns with these magnetic field lines with another 270°, this
        one rapid, and zooms out of the solar system. It is the second 270° roll
        that in fact causes the pole shift. We have not detailed this, other
        than to mention a dual 270° roll.
      
      ZetaTalk 1/21/2009:
      We have nothing new to add to our prior
        statements. Planet X is outbound from the Sun, moving in the direction
        of Earth which is trapped in front of it. We stated sometime past that
        by the time of the pole shift that Earth would be pushed back in her
        orbit to the August position. It has not left the September position.
      
      ZetaTalk 3/21/2009:
      The week when the Earth has stopped
        rotation and is drawn closer to Planet X is a time when both the Earth
        and Planet X are standing upright, N Poles pointing up, S Poles pointing
        down. This is the point where Planet X is piercing the Ecliptic. The
        pole shift is caused because once past that point, Planet X points its N
        Pole outward during its second 270° roll, and it is that point when the
        hour of the shift occurs for the Earth. Planet X then seems to almost
        disappear, leaving the vicinity rapidly.
      
      ZetaTalk 1/27/2010:
      We have stated that under normal
        circumstances for Planet X and its entourage, the large Moons in the
        swirls are no further from Planet X than 5 million miles. Thus, at the
        moment of passage when the Earth is pulled toward Planet X so as to be
        as close as 14 million miles, these moons will not be a danger to Earth.
      
      ZetaTalk 3/29/2010:
      The near presence during the last weeks,
        when the Earth is in such a magnetic grip that rotation slows to a stop
        and the Earth is drawn closer to Planet X by almost 30 million miles,
        does more than present a show to those on Earth watching in fascination
        and horror.
      
      ZetaTalk 4/10/2010:
      The Dark Twin has pushed back, slightly
        away from the Sun, to avoid crowding the Earth, in the same manner that
        the Earth has pushed back in her orbit to avoid the approaching Planet
        X. The Dark Twin has pushed back outside their shared orbit, so the
        opportunities for reflected sunlight to reach the Earth have increased.
      
      ZetaTalk 6/8/2010:
      Planet X deals with the press of
        magnetons coming from the Sun's N Pole by flipping 180° degrees,
        pointing its S Pole upward, as the S Pole of magnets is an intake. At
        this point it is starting to float over the head of the hapless Earth.
        As it puts distance between itself and the Sun, the Sun's magnetic field
        has less dominance, and Planet X wants to return to a side-by-side
        arrangement with the Sun. It begins this by bringing its N Pole sharply
        upward during a process that only progresses 90° degrees before Planet X
        is traveling so rapidly out of the solar system that its alignment with
        the Sun is no longer relevant.
      
      ZetaTalk 7/3/2010:
      We gave a statement on how close the
        Earth and Planet X would come to each other at the point of passage -14
        million miles. We have also stated that the Earth is drawn in toward
        Planet X during the week of rotation stoppage, by some 30 million miles.
        But we did not state that the Earth was drawn 30 million miles closer to
        the Sun. It is clear that the Earth will have pulled as far to the left
        as possible, to escape the magnetic hosing coming from the N Pole of
        Planet X which is otherwise pointed toward the Earth. This hosing is
        what drives the Earth to flop on its side, lean to the left, and swing
        away into 3 days of darkness prior to rotation stoppage. Today, Planet X
        is within the orbit of Venus. 
      
      ZetaTalk 8/14/2010:
      What starts the process of the last
        weeks, with all their extreme gyrations, is a threshold being crossed. 
        Venus escapes the cup. The Dark Twin escapes the cup. And the dance of
        many becomes a deadlock grip by Planet X on the Earth. It is no longer
        an issue of the Earth wobble or temporary leans to the left or into
        opposition sufficing.  When Venus and the Dark Twin escape from the cup,
        the particle crowding is suddenly eased, allowing Planet X to come
        forward toward the Earth. The Earth's first evasion is to tilt her N
        Pole away from the oncoming Planet X to such a degree, and so violently,
        that she leans all the way over to the left and then rebounds as a
        reaction all the way to the right. This is the severe wobble. 
      
      ZetaTalk 9/4/2010:
      We have referred to the Point of Passage
        as equivalent to the point where Planet X pierces the Ecliptic, as in
        the early days of ZetaTalk this was understood to be the point where the
        pole shift is about to happen. In later detail, the last weeks,
        encompassing approximately 7 weeks in all, is shown to fall somewhat to
        either side of the point where Planet X is exactly at the Ecliptic. In
        that we were speaking in general terms early in the ZetaTalk saga, and
        have lately been far more explicit. As rotation is slowing on Earth,
        Planet X begins its second 270° roll. At first, this starts slowly, with
        Planet X rising above the Ecliptic, moving into the realm of the Sun's
        magnetic field above the Ecliptic. It moves rapidly, while beginning its
        second 270° roll, closing the distance between the Earth and itself
        while at the same time rising above the Ecliptic. 
      
      ZetaTalk 6/6/2012:
      Planet X first crossed Earth’s orbit in
        December, 2003 when the Earth encountered Planet X, halted her orbit due
        to this massive presence, and has subsequently been pushed back in her
        orbit by the retrograde motion of Planet X to what would normally be
        Earth’s August position. 
      
      ZetaTalk 12/1/2012:
      We will not detail the drama that will
        take place between the present and the Last Weeks, when the deadlock
        will suddenly be broken. At that time, Venus and the Dark Twin escape
        from the cup, allowing the final gyrations between Planet X and the
        Earth to begin. We have stated that Planet X will draw the Earth some 30
        million miles closer to it in the Last Weeks, though this will be
        primarily a sideways motion, not toward the Sun.  Earth at this point is
        pressed as far to the left as possible, pressed into the Lean to the
        Left and the Severe Wobble. This does not place the Earth in danger of
        contact with Planet X or its Moon Swirls, as it still remains some 14
        million miles from Planet X and the moons in the Moon Swirls remain no
        further than 5 million miles from Planet X. 
      
      ZetaTalk 12/15/2012:
      Planet X undergoes its second 270°
        roll prior to the Last Weeks, as when it pierces the Ecliptic it is
        forced to throw its S Pole upward, going into opposition along the Sun's
        magnetic flow lines above the Ecliptic. When Planet X itself goes into
        opposition, it is snapped back closer to the Sun, as it is now not
        resisting the N Pole of the Sun, and can tolerate the stronger flow of
        magnetons in the field closer to the Sun. Magnetic fields both push away
        and draw bodies closer, so this should not be an astonishing fact. The
        sequence of events is thus: