The countries that will fare the best, and have the strongest dollar, are those that will have the least severe impact from
crop shortages or the inability of commerce to proceed.
Japan has a broad reach, tentacles into all other countries and banking systems. It would not be allowed to fail if others
were failing, simply because it would drag the others down. However, as the island itself does not produce much of its
raw materials but requires them to be imported, when it becomes a time when no one has money to buy manufactured
goods, the imports will suffer, and there will be much inner turmoil on the island. The yen is likely to suffer against
the dollar in this regard. China will be severely impacted. It already has trouble feeding its populace, and where the
China bear was about to roar, it will shrivel down to the mew of a kitten and not again be heard from.
The US and some countries in Europe are attempting to maintain their strong hold based on their rich resources. This
may or may not succeed, but will probably keep them, in the case of the US, somewhat head and shoulders above the
others, so that as they all are sinking you will still see the head of the US above. The grain belt, and the agriculture
from the southeast is varied enough to give them a leg to stand on. In many cases in Europe, the population is pushing
the limits of what the land can sustain, and they will suffer in the same way that Japan may suffer.
Third world countries that are suffering from crop shortages because of drought or deluges, will find that they become
a non-entity and experience in essence the dark ages of commerce rapidly, retreating backward to a level they were 50
to 100 years ago, as though their progress had never occurred. The desert areas will essentially not be heard from, the
Sudan, Iraq and Iran. Starvation will be great and media coverage little. Other than some saber rattling as they fall into
a death march into starvation, they will not be a player.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/poleshft/p114.htm[2/5/2012 9:55:03 AM]
ZetaTalk: Mayan Calendar
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The Mayan calendar is not so much incorrect as misunderstood. The calendar is derived from calendars and plotting
methods left behind by the hominoid visitors from the 12th Planet. There are and were many calendars in operation,
the western calendar of 365 days with an occasional leap year is only
to one calendar method, do not always line up exactly when translated to another calendar. However, the primary
difficulty in interpreting the Mayan calendar is determining the correct starting point. One may be accurate in
calculating the number of days, months, and years between events, but unless the starting point is
end point is questionable. Thus there are various interpretations on when the Mayan calendar
obviously coincides with the coming millennium. We have given the correct dates for the return of the 12th Planet as
the year 2003 [Note: see 2003 Date explanation] for the devastating first pass. All other dates are incorrect.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/poleshft/p57.htm[2/5/2012 9:55:03 AM]
ZetaTalk: May 5, 2000
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Periodically the planets in orbit around the Earth's Sun near each other during their sojourns, and at rare times they
appear to stretch in a line out from the Sun, gravitationally pulling on the Earth, some humans suspect, from both
sides. Does this affect the Earth? Well of course it does, and if the influence had left much of an impression on
mankind this would be recorded as a regular event. Tides are a little stronger, and the Earth's orbit is a tad more
pronounced on one side, but except for astronomers, mankind is blissfully unaware. Will the coming alignment cause a
pole shift, the weight of the ice laden poles pulling toward the lineup of outer planets? This silly argument is not even
logical, and is given weight only because the true cause of pole shifts, the 12th Planet, is out of view between
cataclysms and generally forgotten. Survivors, picking up the pieces and trying not to starve to death, had more on
their minds than recording the event in more than verbal horror stories told to one another when seeking solace.
The gravity pull of the giant gaseous planets, even when they line up and all pull like so many men along a rope in a
tug-of-war, is a fraction of a fraction of the gravity pull of the Sun. During half the year an ice laden pole on one side
of the Earth or the other is leaning toward the Sun, and if inclined to move the crust of the Earth toward a gravity pull,
balance? A simple calculation on the structure of the surface of the Earth would show that land masses such as the
combined mass of Russia and China or such major continents as Africa or the Americas, made of thick rock and
soaring mountains in places,