Re: Planet X: MAY Coordinates
In Article <tf0ukkkhs2473f@corp.supernews.com> Bob May writes
> Interesting path that this thing is taking!
> Here's the past numbers that are on her website and
> I dare anybody to predict where the supposed planet is
> going. Since the values are small and the time is short,
> a linear plot of the positions will indicate how much all
> this is BS.
You're presuming man's understanding of orbits and comet behavior is
correct for all instances. Man is never wrong? The earth is not flat?
Here's what the Zetas have had to say about the the approach.
When at a distance, ... [Planet X] sweeps before this
energy field as the field passes, moving slightly at these
times to the left, in the same counterclockwise manner
that the other planets do. As [Planet X] approaches, its
reaction to the bulk of the energy field is longer lasting
and begins to produce a retrograde orbit for its approach
to the Sun. Thus, during 1995 through 1998, [Planet X]
will drift left and up toward the elliptic, aligning itself in
the same manner as the planets to the Sun's sweeping arm,
but due to its mobility out in space, its distance from the
Sun, it develops a retrograde orbit and begins to move to
the right, in the manner the ancients recorded.
ZetaTalk in Retrograde Orbit
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s85.htm)
All comets tracked do not have a mass sufficient to
trigger a strong repulsion force in the planets they pass or
the Sun, and thus the humans ephemeris assume the only
elements to consider are the path and the speed. ...
[Planet X] still comes on, full bore, but veers to the side
a bit as it approaches. As it is still picking up speed, the
speed compensates for the repulsion, and the 12th Planet
finds in the last few months that it can now come closer
to the Sun, the repulsion being balanced by the speed.
Thus, when it gets to its maximum speed, entering your
Solar System, it bends in toward your Sun, after having
veered outward slightly, so that the angle is approximately
32 degrees.
ZetaTalk in 32 Degree Angle
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s31.htm)