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Date: 21 Mar 2006 10:57:26
From: Beach Bounty
Subject: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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View toward horizon from 42=B0N 83=B0W, azimuth 45=B0 (NE) Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:47 UTC Explain symbols in the map. Pan leftClick in map to aim telescope.Pan right View sky map for this observing site. =A0Right AscensionDeclinationDistance (AU)From 42=B0N 83=B0W:AltitudeAzimuthSun0h 3m 13s+0=B0 20.9'0.99641.399-38.476UpMercury22h 58m 12s-4=B0 44.3'0.64242.090-15.620UpVenus21h 5m 0s-14=B0 25.2'0.65131.51019.088UpMoon17h 0m 15s-27=B0 48.2'59.5 ER-10.05261.457SetMars5h 1m 41s+24=B0 30.8'1.5457.586-116.318UpJupiter15h 5m 19s-16=B0 3.6'4.706-22.93888.672SetSaturn8h 28m 24s+19=B0 50.1'8.531-23.697-153.359SetUranus22h 54m 13s-7=B0 47.7'21.01739.274-13.581UpNeptune21h 25m 13s-15=B0 20.9'30.78931.64813.257UpPluto17h 46m 11s-15=B0 49.2'31.0005.93762.455Up Azimuth in the above table follows the astronomical convention: zero degrees is South with positive angles toward the West and negative angles toward the East. Back to Horizon Views =A0=A0Up to Your Sky =A0=A0Credits =A0=A0Customise =A0=A0Help by John Walker Images produced by Your Sky are in the public domain and may be used in any manner without permission, restriction, attribution, or compensation. Back links to Your Sky are welcome. View toward horizon from 42=B0N 83=B0W, azimuth 225=B0 (SW) Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:45 UTC =A0Right AscensionDeclinationDistance (AU)From 42=B0N 83=B0W:AltitudeAzimuthSun0h 3m 12s+0=B0 20.9'0.99641.096-39.240UpMercury22h 58m 12s-4=B0 44.2'0.64241.957-16.477UpVenus21h 5m 0s-14=B0 25.2'0.65131.66518.372UpMoon17h 0m 8s-27=B0 48.0'59.5 ER-9.64361.080SetMars5h 1m 40s+24=B0 30.8'1.5457.153-116.725UpJupiter15h 5m 20s-16=B0 3.6'4.706-22.45488.241SetSaturn8h 28m 24s+19=B0 50.1'8.531-23.912-153.987SetUranus22h 54m 13s-7=B0 47.7'21.01739.157-14.400UpNeptune21h 25m 13s-15=B0 20.9'30.78931.75612.529UpPluto17h 46m 11s-15=B0 49.2'31.0006.36561.995Up Azimuth in the above table follows the astronomical convention: zero degrees is South with positive angles toward the West and negative angles toward the East. all I saying rec running. right now. we in the shits................. 42=B0N,83=B0W 90=B0N,180=B0 90=B0lat, 3rd planet from the Sun. Milky Way, Orion arm. U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron Bottum of Lake Huron.
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Date: 21 Mar 2006 11:19:43
From:
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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PSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSYCHO! On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 10:57:26 -0500, settings555@webtv.net (Beach Bounty) wrote: >View toward horizon from 42°N 83°W, azimuth 45° (NE) >Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:47 UTC >Explain symbols in the map. >Pan leftClick in map to aim telescope.Pan right >View sky map for this observing site. > > > Right >AscensionDeclinationDistance >(AU)From 42°N 83°W:AltitudeAzimuthSun0h 3m 13s+0° >20.9'0.99641.399-38.476UpMercury22h 58m 12s-4° >44.3'0.64242.090-15.620UpVenus21h 5m 0s-14° >25.2'0.65131.51019.088UpMoon17h 0m 15s-27° 48.2'59.5 >ER-10.05261.457SetMars5h 1m 41s+24° >30.8'1.5457.586-116.318UpJupiter15h 5m 19s-16° >3.6'4.706-22.93888.672SetSaturn8h 28m 24s+19° >50.1'8.531-23.697-153.359SetUranus22h 54m 13s-7° >47.7'21.01739.274-13.581UpNeptune21h 25m 13s-15° >20.9'30.78931.64813.257UpPluto17h 46m 11s-15° 49.2'31.0005.93762.455Up >Azimuth in the above table follows the astronomical convention: zero >degrees is South with positive angles toward the West and negative >angles toward the East. >Back to Horizon Views Up to Your Sky Credits Customise > Help >by John Walker > >Images produced by Your Sky are in the public domain and may be used in >any manner without permission, restriction, attribution, or >compensation. Back links to Your Sky are welcome. > > >View toward horizon from 42°N 83°W, azimuth 225° (SW) >Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:45 UTC > > Right >AscensionDeclinationDistance >(AU)From 42°N 83°W:AltitudeAzimuthSun0h 3m 12s+0° >20.9'0.99641.096-39.240UpMercury22h 58m 12s-4° >44.2'0.64241.957-16.477UpVenus21h 5m 0s-14° >25.2'0.65131.66518.372UpMoon17h 0m 8s-27° 48.0'59.5 >ER-9.64361.080SetMars5h 1m 40s+24° 30.8'1.5457.153-116.725UpJupiter15h >5m 20s-16° 3.6'4.706-22.45488.241SetSaturn8h 28m 24s+19° >50.1'8.531-23.912-153.987SetUranus22h 54m 13s-7° >47.7'21.01739.157-14.400UpNeptune21h 25m 13s-15° >20.9'30.78931.75612.529UpPluto17h 46m 11s-15° 49.2'31.0006.36561.995Up >Azimuth in the above table follows the astronomical convention: zero >degrees is South with positive angles toward the West and negative >angles toward the East. > > >all I saying rec running. right now. >we in the shits................. > > 42°N,83°W 90°N,180° 90°lat, > 3rd planet from the Sun. > Milky Way, Orion arm. > U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron > Bottum of Lake Huron.
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Date: 21 Mar 2006 13:33:28
From: ActionBill@gmail.com
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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Beach Bounty wrote: > View toward horizon from 42=B0N 83=B0W, azimuth 45=B0 (NE) > all I saying rec running. right now. > we in the shits................. > > 42=B0N,83=B0W 90=B0N,180=B0 90=B0lat, > 3rd planet from the Sun. > Milky Way, Orion arm. > U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron > Bottum of Lake Huron. I try very hard to understand your posts. True to form this one lost me somwhere between Pluto and the bottom of Lake Huron.
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Date: 21 Mar 2006 16:49:29
From:
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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On 21 Mar 2006 13:33:28 -0800, "ActionBill@gmail.com" <ActionBill@gmail.com > wrote: > >Beach Bounty wrote: >> View toward horizon from 42°N 83°W, azimuth 45° (NE) >> all I saying rec running. right now. >> we in the shits................. >> >> 42°N,83°W 90°N,180° 90°lat, >> 3rd planet from the Sun. >> Milky Way, Orion arm. >> U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron >> Bottum of Lake Huron. > >I try very hard to understand your posts. True to form this one lost me >somwhere between Pluto and the bottom of Lake Huron. It's a good thing he and Twittering idiot don't read each others posts. They'd fall in love, marry, and never post on the web again.
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Date: 22 Mar 2006 08:00:30
From: Beach Bounty
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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only not running related. sagittarius to south 0=B0 The Great Attractor Caption and credit It may not just be Chiron that makes Sagittarius so intense, unusual and worldly/unworldly. Today's truly strange installment may suggest what does, and suggest why, if Chiron has an affinity to Sagittarius, it's as powerful a planet as it appears to be. when the sun is south............. The Earth and Sun are now aligning in the direction of the midpoint of Sagittarius, halfway between Scorpio and Capricorn. Among the many strange marvels of the sign that contains the galactic center is another galactic point called the Great Attractor, located at about Sagittarius 14 degrees and two minutes. As I write, the Sun is at Sagittarius 14 degrees and one minute. It's probably best if I leave it to astronomers to begin the discussion of what the Great Attractor is, or seems to be, and then move into the astrology. According to the University of Illinois Cosmos in a Computer web page, "The Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies [Andromeda is our nearest galactic neighbor, not counting our own sub-galaxies, or clusters] are the dominant structures in a galaxy cluster called the Local Group which is, in turn, an outlying member of the Virgo supercluster. Andromeda -- about 2.2 million light-years from the Milky Way -- is speeding toward our galaxy at 200,000 miles per hour. This motion can only be accounted for by gravitational attraction, even though the mass that we can observe is not nearly great enough to exert that kind of pull. The only thing that could explain the movement of Andromeda is the gravitational pull of a lot of unseen mass -- perhaps the equivalent of 10 Milky Way-size galaxies -- lying between the two galaxies." Okay, interesting enough. Some invisible "thing" with the gravitational force of an object with a mass ten times our own galaxy is drawing the Milky Way and Andromeda together, and it's believed that the two galaxies will eventually collide. But now consider this. "Furthermore," the authors continue, "our entire Local Group is hurtling toward the center of the Virgo cluster at one million miles per hour. The Virgo cluster lies some 50 million light years from Earth. Only the central region is shown [in the photograph] above, containing two giant elliptical galaxies, M84 and M86. The visible part of the cluster is but a small portion of what seems to be out there. Nevertheless, the Virgo Cluster, along with several other large clusters, are in turn speeding towards a gigantic unseen mass named The Great Attractor." [For more astronomical information, use these links for a Quicktime movie, or a much smaller sound file (both of the same interview with Jeremiah Ostriker of Princeton University) that describe this phenomenon. This link, to Scientific American's site, tells more of the story, as does this link at Astronomy Picture of the Day.] How the senses deceive us. We can see nothing there, visibly. But our instruments tell us that everything is moving toward it -- a million galaxies, if you can imagine such a thing -- and that it's emitting a simultaneous broadcast of infrared, ultraviolet, x-ray and gamma ray radiation, among many other frequencies of the spectrum. "It's demonstrably more like a quasar than black hole," says Philip Sedgwick, the Arizona-based Centaur astrologer and one of the few people who has researched the psychodynamics of the Great Attractor as it shows up in the charts of his clients. "It doesn't appear to be punching a hole into another dimension, but rather, it allows us to see around things." In other words, its massive gravitational force bends spacetime so profoundly that we can get a view around the back of the universe. "It allows you to see around the bend. It clears the way. It's almost as if you're moving around behind something. "Nobody knows what it is, or why everything is drawing to it. This thing is prodigious. It's the largest thing that I know of, that they [astronomers] know of. They can't really see anything out there. So what is it? We don't know. The point itself retreats from us, but everything is following it, in hot pursuit." Sedgwick, a Scorpio, adds, "It is the ultimate Sagittarian statement of leave me alone, don't crowd my space, coming into the most extreme." People born with the Sun, Moon, ascendant or another important planet close to, or aspecting, this point will often find that they have a polarizing effect on people around them, making unusually close friends and intense enemies as well. They can give the impression that they hold the key to the mystery of the universe, correctly or not. "The perception is that people on the Great Attractor have unusual appeal or potency. They find themselves in vast circles, accidentally. Or they have impacted masses of people and think they have created no influence in their lives whatsoever," he said. The current Saturn-Pluto opposition has come within two degrees of this point since late July. "With Pluto having been there, and with Saturn about to finish it off, people with this point prominent in their charts are maturing into a calling, as it were. They are discovering what their calling is," he said. He added that it's often prominent in the charts of people who feel as if they are in some way alien from the rest of the human race, even literally. Elian Gonzolez, for example, was born Dec. 5 and his Sun is right there. As Pluto went over the degree recently, the house where he lived in Miami was turned into a museum, and in that city he's held with the reverence of the baby Jesus. Mohammed Atta, the pilot who flew Flight 11 into the World Trade Center, was detained in Miami at the same time on immigration charges, and was then released. "But in addition, these are people who feel alienated and yet they bring in different levels of consciousness, and this is why," Sedgwick said. Among its more noteworthy subjects is Walt Disney. In the astrological community, one of its most prominent spokesmen, Rob Hand, is born with the Sun conjunct this point as well. If you know your chart, check for planets in the middle degrees of any sign, but principally a fire sign or a mutable sign, to see whether you have a major aspect to the Great Attractor. << Prior
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Date: 22 Mar 2006 08:29:43
From:
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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PSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSYCHO! On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 08:00:30 -0500, settings555@webtv.net (Beach Bounty) wrote: >only not running related. > > >sagittarius to south 0° > >The Great Attractor >Caption and credit >It may not just be Chiron that makes Sagittarius so intense, unusual and >worldly/unworldly. Today's truly strange installment may suggest what >does, and suggest why, if Chiron has an affinity to Sagittarius, it's as >powerful a planet as it appears to be. >when the sun is south............. > >The Earth and Sun are now aligning in the direction of the midpoint of >Sagittarius, halfway between Scorpio and Capricorn. Among the many >strange marvels of the sign that contains the galactic center is another >galactic point called the Great Attractor, located at about Sagittarius >14 degrees and two minutes. As I write, the Sun is at Sagittarius 14 >degrees and one minute. >It's probably best if I leave it to astronomers to begin the discussion >of what the Great Attractor is, or seems to be, and then move into the >astrology. > > > >According to the University of Illinois Cosmos in a Computer web page, >"The Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies [Andromeda is our nearest galactic >neighbor, not counting our own sub-galaxies, or clusters] are the >dominant structures in a galaxy cluster called the Local Group which is, >in turn, an outlying member of the Virgo supercluster. Andromeda -- >about 2.2 million light-years from the Milky Way -- is speeding toward >our galaxy at 200,000 miles per hour. This motion can only be accounted >for by gravitational attraction, even though the mass that we can >observe is not nearly great enough to exert that kind of pull. The only >thing that could explain the movement of Andromeda is the gravitational >pull of a lot of unseen mass -- perhaps the equivalent of 10 Milky >Way-size galaxies -- lying between the two galaxies." >Okay, interesting enough. Some invisible "thing" with the gravitational >force of an object with a mass ten times our own galaxy is drawing the >Milky Way and Andromeda together, and it's believed that the two >galaxies will eventually collide. >But now consider this. >"Furthermore," the authors continue, "our entire Local Group is hurtling >toward the center of the Virgo cluster at one million miles per hour. >The Virgo cluster lies some 50 million light years from Earth. Only the >central region is shown [in the photograph] above, containing two giant >elliptical galaxies, M84 and M86. The visible part of the cluster is but >a small portion of what seems to be out there. Nevertheless, the Virgo >Cluster, along with several other large clusters, are in turn speeding >towards a gigantic unseen mass named The Great Attractor." > >[For more astronomical information, use these links for a Quicktime >movie, or a much smaller sound file (both of the same interview with >Jeremiah Ostriker of Princeton University) that describe this >phenomenon. This link, to Scientific American's site, tells more of the >story, as does this link at Astronomy Picture of the Day.] >How the senses deceive us. We can see nothing there, visibly. But our >instruments tell us that everything is moving toward it -- a million >galaxies, if you can imagine such a thing -- and that it's emitting a >simultaneous broadcast of infrared, ultraviolet, x-ray and gamma ray >radiation, among many other frequencies of the spectrum. >"It's demonstrably more like a quasar than black hole," says Philip >Sedgwick, the Arizona-based Centaur astrologer and one of the few people >who has researched the psychodynamics of the Great Attractor as it shows >up in the charts of his clients. >"It doesn't appear to be punching a hole into another dimension, but >rather, it allows us to see around things." In other words, its massive >gravitational force bends spacetime so profoundly that we can get a view >around the back of the universe. "It allows you to see around the bend. >It clears the way. It's almost as if you're moving around behind >something. >"Nobody knows what it is, or why everything is drawing to it. This thing >is prodigious. It's the largest thing that I know of, that they >[astronomers] know of. They can't really see anything out there. So what >is it? We don't know. The point itself retreats from us, but everything >is following it, in hot pursuit." >Sedgwick, a Scorpio, adds, "It is the ultimate Sagittarian statement of >leave me alone, don't crowd my space, coming into the most extreme." >People born with the Sun, Moon, ascendant or another important planet >close to, or aspecting, this point will often find that they have a >polarizing effect on people around them, making unusually close friends >and intense enemies as well. They can give the impression that they hold >the key to the mystery of the universe, correctly or not. >"The perception is that people on the Great Attractor have unusual >appeal or potency. They find themselves in vast circles, accidentally. >Or they have impacted masses of people and think they have created no >influence in their lives whatsoever," he said. >The current Saturn-Pluto opposition has come within two degrees of this >point since late July. "With Pluto having been there, and with Saturn >about to finish it off, people with this point prominent in their charts >are maturing into a calling, as it were. They are discovering what their >calling is," he said. >He added that it's often prominent in the charts of people who feel as >if they are in some way alien from the rest of the human race, even >literally. Elian Gonzolez, for example, was born Dec. 5 and his Sun is >right there. As Pluto went over the degree recently, the house where he >lived in Miami was turned into a museum, and in that city he's held with >the reverence of the baby Jesus. Mohammed Atta, the pilot who flew >Flight 11 into the World Trade Center, was detained in Miami at the same >time on immigration charges, and was then released. >"But in addition, these are people who feel alienated and yet they bring >in different levels of consciousness, and this is why," Sedgwick said. >Among its more noteworthy subjects is Walt Disney. In the astrological >community, one of its most prominent spokesmen, Rob Hand, is born with >the Sun conjunct this point as well. >If you know your chart, check for planets in the middle degrees of any >sign, but principally a fire sign or a mutable sign, to see whether you >have a major aspect to the Great Attractor. ><< Prior
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Date: 22 Mar 2006 13:05:30
From: ActionBill@gmail.com
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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Beach Bounty wrote: > View toward horizon from 42=B0N 83=B0W, azimuth 45=B0 (NE) > Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:47 UTC <snip >Edited to improve load time</snip> > all I saying rec running. right now. > we in the shits................. > > 42=B0N,83=B0W 90=B0N,180=B0 90=B0lat, > 3rd planet from the Sun. > Milky Way, Orion arm. > U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron > Bottum of Lake Huron. Unless you're a female stargazer the thought of looking at Uranus through a high power telescope repulses me.
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Date: 06 Apr 2006 10:53:21
From: ActionBill@gmail.com
Subject: Re: mars pluto opps.pluto saturn. every 33 years war happens
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Beach Bounty wrote: > View toward horizon from 42=B0N 83=B0W, azimuth 45=B0 (NE) > Tue 2006 Mar 21 15:47 UTC................. > all I saying rec running. right now. > we in the shits................. > > 42=B0N,83=B0W 90=B0N,180=B0 90=B0lat, > 3rd planet from the Sun. > Milky Way, Orion arm. > U.S.A., Michigan. west of Port Huron > Bottum of Lake Huron. I try to understand your posts but somewhere between Pluto and the bottom of Lake Huron you lost me.
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