bghilliotti@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> VISION of the USA
>
>
> Sometime around the middle to latter part of January, 2004, I was shown
>
> a vision of the United States. This view of the nation was from a
> position well above the surface of the earth, out over the Gulf of
> Mexico and southwest of the state of Florida. Shortly after this vision
>
> began, I watched as an arm stretched down to the earth from behind me
> and off to my right. The state of Florida was grasped by the hand at
> the end of this arm. Florida was swiftly lifted up from the earth while
>
> pulling the rest of the United States up after it. It was as though the
>
> state of Florida served as a handle or grip for the purpose of lifting
> up the rest of the nation. As swiftly as Florida and the rest of the
> nation was lifted up, it was slammed back down in it's original
> position, with the rest of the nation following suit. It was a scene
> not unlike watching a rug being shaken out or "the board of education
> being applied to the seat of knowledge," if you will. As the rest of
> the nation came slamming back into it's original position, I watched as
>
> shockwaves quickly traveled out from a point in the central part of the
>
> nation. As I looked at these waves rolling through the land in all
> directions, I recognized that they were emanating from what appeared to
>
> be the Kansas City area. I watched as the shockwaves reached the
> borders of the land and like waves in a pool hitting the walls of the
> pool, they began rebounding back toward the point of origin. Once these
>
> waves reached their point of origin, the vision ended.
>
>
> -Rick Churder Mar 21, 2004
>
>
> ===================================================================
>
>
>
> I understand the meaning of this vision. God will seek to destroy the
> US ecnonmy by continuously battering the Gulf Coast region and its
> extensive oil production infrastructure with exceptionally powerfull
> hurricanes. If Americans want to get out of control with building
> homes, destroying natural habitat...
>
>
> Pacific Salmon habitat protection plan curtailed
>
>
> Homebuilders association wins suit against restrictions
>
>
> http://159.54.226.83/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050813/BUSINESS/508...
>
>
>
> "70,000 homes? Not so fast, say activist groups"
>
>
> Central Florida's real-estate boom is delivering plans for
> mega-developments at a pace not seen in nearly two decades.
>
>
> But there is growing fear that the developments are sowing the seeds of
>
> sprawl, surging toward some of the region's most prized wetlands and
> landscapes.
>
>
> "There are market forces that are going to wipe out these areas," said
> Clay Henderson, an environmental lawyer and former president of the
> Florida Audubon Society.
>
>
> http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl-asecgrowingbigger28082805aug28,0,1...
>
>
>
> ...this is God's answer. I bet he's pretty angry that we feel more
> im****tant than wetland and riprarian habitats and the creatures that
> are sustained by them.
>
>
> If Americans keep this economic pattern up whereby a real-estate
> inductrial complex economy helps some people keep getting richer,
> driving up the costs of living up for everyone, and leaves other people
>
> behind getting poorer and poorer and festering in squalor, more
> hurricane Katrina's will be God's answer. If America keeps this up,
> whereby property taxes go up so high that a middle class small business
>
> owner doesn't have a chance, God will cause more hurrican Katrina's. If
>
> America keeps up this highly consumptive way of life, using foreign
> neo-slave labor to make goods cheaper there, economically displacing
> people at home through out sourced job loss, this is God's answer. And
> if stupid think they can borrow alot so they can buy alot and use
> climbing home prices as a backdrop, which only puts more strain on
> global resources like oil, this is God's answer. These speculators
> buying up homes and flipping them out, making finding a decent place to
>
> stay, which should be available to all honest, hard working, God
> fearing men, so difficult that only the laziest and richest can afford
> it...well, keep up this suffering you are causing for a quick buck and
> the next hurricane Katrina will probably have sustained winds of
> atleast 190 mph. And just because there are low interest rates thanks
> to China buying alot of US T-bonds, and you have a lot of money, this
> doesn't mean, my fellow Americans, you can push people around and do
> whatever you want to by forcing socio-economically undesirable people
> to sell their homes at a low balled price through a socio-economic
> cleanisng process called emminent domain. Keep this up and God will
> send so many more hurricane Katrinas that there will no next to no oil
> production and processing in the Gulf.
>
>
> Because God is going to keep sending these hurricane Katrinas, and the
> price of oil climbs, it will eventaully effect the consumption power of
>
> even the richest people in America. This tax on consumption, brought
> about by the wisest God, will cause inflation and slow the economy
> down. And once the US economy slows down, foreign lenders are not going
>
> buy up US T-bonds anymore. Why should they? There is no more growth
> acitivity potential there anymore. And interest rates will rise. And
> these people who are still paying off the hundreds of thousands they
> borrowed in mortages, or out on their credit card because they felt
> that their rising home values would cover it, well these people are
> fools because interest rates are going to go up, and it will be pretty
> painful to be in debt at that moment. We'll see how much your false
> sense of security stands up to reality once everyone who went by this
> real-estate appreciation security blanket now have a sudden desire to
> sell their homes in the face of rising interest rates, and how little
> they will get from their homes due to the depreciation of real estate
> resulting from the great sell off. Man I feel sorry for those people
> who will have to heat up their McMansions this winter.
>
>
> And the value of the dollar will decline as the trade defficit
> increases. Americans will still have to maintain current comsumption
> levels but at higher energy/production costs. Even neo-slave labor in
> China may become expensive. I do not think fat laden celluloids
> otherwise known as Americans who are used to living in artificial
> climate controlled environments for the past 90 years will be very
> capable of weathering the storm. But your great grandmother could. It
> will be pleasant to see your suffer. Some of you may even start killing
>
> eachother in your low suffering capacity levels. I think it will be
> funny to see it.
>
>
> And hurricane Katrinas will still keep coming. God's wisdom is
> astounding.
>
>
> $100-A-Barrel Crude? Painful For Everyone
>
>
> http://www.courant.com/business/hc-oil0830.artaug30,0,3960821.story
>
>
> And the public sector at all levels will also face financial woes as
> the price of oil climbs. How long can we be spending theoretical money
> and run up state, federal, and local budget deficets? Should we be
> using theoretical, Chinese recylced money to spur real estate (and
> other) inflation? Won't matter anyway since the other defecit will get
>
> the dollar falling faster. So they go to cut back on public spending,
> including things like public healthcare for the poor and elderly,
> social security, public education funding, public housing, etc. The
> first people to suffer will be the very poor. And they will eventually
> start a backlash. It will begin in the mid west. That is what was meant
>
> by the "shockwaves from the central part of the nation".
>
>
> "Medicaid cutbacks painful as US states push reforms"
>
>
> http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N31553784.htm
>
>
> Rust & Rage in the Heartland
>
>
> http://www.thenation.com/doc/20040920/maharidge
>
>
> Doesn't surpise me that domestic methamphetimine production is highest
> in the midwest.
>
>
> Stopping Meth Labs in the Midwest
>
>
> http://www.kci.org/meth_info/hidta.htm
>
>
> Just a matter of time before these hate groups will tap into the
> domestic meth prodcution market to fund themselves.
>
>
> "Strategic Southern Silence"
>
>
> http://www.visioncircle.org/archive/003524.html
>
>
> "Yesterday, the Aryan Nations made local headlines here in KC. It seems
>
> they were intent on making Kansas City Kansas their new National
> Headquarters. It's the allure of the Kansas gun shows which along with
> Mississipi shows account for the majority of guns sold that are used in
>
> crimes in the U.S., and, are a major recruitment funnel for white
> terrorists."
>
>
> "As a methamphetamine, trans****tation (air/rail/trucking)hub, and,
> rural poor white disaffected youth hub, the location is perfect. I'll
> give em credit for logistical smarts too. Coupled with the new NASCAR
> track and mega-Cabelas in KCK - there's the demographic fluctuation
> cover of big American tourism that'll screen their comings and goings
> and provide additional feeder flux like they were never able to obtain
> in rural Pennsylvania or Idaho."
>
>
> What did you say? I was having problems hearing you over the sounds of
> the next hurricane Katrina just in coming soon...
>
>
> Oh, you said wanted to flood the rapidly expanding unskilled/working
> poor sectors of the US job market with more immigrants. That's all
> right. Be sure to take your heart medication though once you have to
> get out of your car at gun point at a national guard check point on the
>
> way to W*l-M*rt for a car search. They put these security check points
> in place in light of recent Nigerian style ethnic sub conflicts
> amoungst African American and Hispanic urban immigrant poor.
>
>
> Residents, officials trade frustrations
>
>
> VIOLENCE: Riverside should do more, say Eastside neighbors. Police ask
> for more cooperation.
>
>
> 01:18 AM PDT on Tuesday, August 9, 2005
>
>
> By SARAH BURGE / The Press-Enterprise
>
>
> RIVERSIDE - As city officials, police and more than 100 community
> members gathered at an Eastside restaurant Monday night to discuss the
> recent spate of gang violence, someone was in the parking lot sla****ng
> tires.
>
>
> Susan Medina, owner of Zacatecas Restaurant on University Avenue,
> hosted the community meeting to discuss the shootings that have
> terrorized the Eastside this summer. The Eastside Think Tank, a
> grass-roots community organization, planned the event.
>
>
> Medina said two cars' tires were slashed in her parking lot, and she
> had received an anonymous call earlier in the day telling her to cancel
>
> the event.
>
>
> "They said this is not neutral ground," Medina said.
>
>
> Over the past few months, at least a dozen people, not all of them gang
>
> members, have been shot in suspected black vs. Latino gang violence. On
>
> Saturday, four people were shot in two incidents.
>
>
> A Nigerian man visiting from Oklahoma was in critical condition after
> he was shot without provocation across the street from the restaurant,
> police said.
>
>
> At Monday's meeting, Mayor Ron Loveridge said, "Too often we've
> gathered here with the same kind of anger. I'm not sure what thinking
> out of the box is. But it's probably time to do that."
>
>
> Loveridge and Deputy Chief Andy Pytlak assured the crowd that the
> Police Department has a suppression effort in the works.
>
>
> Pytlak acknowledged that the violence had risen to an unconscionable
> level. He said the department has concentrated its patrols by uniformed
>
> officers in the area. Such a high-visibility crackdown, he said, should
>
> help to "keep gang members' heads down for a while."
>
>
> Pytlak said the extra patrols will continue for at least a month.
>
>
> "There are people on the Eastside who are even afraid to come out of
> their doors," said Woodie Rucker-Hughes, president of the Riverside
> branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
> People and a Think Tank member.
>
>
> Another Think Tank member, Riverside Community College Trustee Mary
> Figueroa, said, "It doesn't matter now whether you're involved in a
> gang." What matters, Figueroa said, "is the color of our skin."
>
>
> She and others at the meeting blasted city leaders for displaying
> "selective outrage." Figueroa said the Wednesday shooting of an
> 11-year-old neighborhood girl caught in gang crossfire wasn't quite
> enough to generate widespread anger. It took a tourist getting shot on
> the Eastside to really get people's attention, Figueroa said.
>
>
> "What I don't want to hear is 'the community needs to step up to the
> plate,' " Figueroa said. "We do," she added, demanding more action from
>
> the city.
>
>
> Lifelong Eastside resident Valerie Silva said she wonders whether
> there's really anything that residents can do.
>
>
> "Do you get involved?" she asked. "Do you not get involved? Is it too
> dangerous?"
>
>
> Lt. Alex Tortes, the Eastside area commander, said Monday morning,
> "It's the wild, wild West out there."
>
>
> Tortes said the community will have to share information with police if
>
> they want to catch the shooters.
>
>
> "They're not people coming from outside the community," Tortes said.
> "They're family members."
>
>
> Hey, watach out for that flying branch, you stupid ****ing celluloid
> American evolutionary dead end sub-species. You got to stay vigilant
> here, since his judgement will come more suddenly and suprisingly than
> a thief in the night...
>
>
> Now, did you say that one way to reduce oil prices is by relying on
> domestic sources? Well, I do not think that there is enough domestic
> combustible fuel sources in America that could make much a difference
> ****elding us from global supply and demand market foeces. But you
> really have to ask is wether the state federal relation strains are
> really worth it. I guess you can always get what you want by divide and
>
> conquer bribery, but is the divisiveness really worth it?
>
>
> US ranchers, greens team to slow Rockies drilling
>
>
> http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/20139/newsDate/13-...
>
>
>
> Fury on the frontier of energy drilling
>
>
> http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0308/p01s01-ussc.html
>
>
> Energy bill helps business, hurts states
>
>
> http://connecticutblog.blogspot.com/2005/08/energy-bill-helps-busines...
>
>
>
> "President Bush today has signed a blank check to the energy industry
> - stripping state authority over the siting of massive projects such
> as Islander East and Broadwater," Blumenthal said. "The stakes for
> Connecticut are huge - virtual emasculation of power over energy
> projects that impact our environment, economy and public health."
>
>
> Blumenthal vowed to resist efforts to undermine state regulatory
> authority in federal court. "States still have rights and we will use
> them to fight this battle with every ounce of our legal energy," he
> said.
>
>
> "Split-estate rebellion: Ranchers take on energy developers"
>
>
> http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=15260
>
>
> The power struggle between landowners and industry is raging in states
> throughout the West. Some states, including North Dakota, Montana,
> Oklahoma and Texas, require energy companies to compensate landowners
> for damage. But in Western states, the oil and gas industry has so far
> managed to shoot down bills that would obligate it to negotiate with
> landowners, says Kevin Williams, a Colorado field organizer for the
> Western Organization of Resource Councils, a community action group.
>
>
> The struggle in Wyoming seems to be inspiring lawmakers in other
> Western states, however.
>
>
> "Feds oppose state's effort to empower landowners"
>
>
> http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=15721
>
>
> Wyoming's new "split-estate" law was meant to give property owners
> more control over energy development on land where the underlying
> minerals are owned by someone else, usually the federal government.
> Now, the law has hit a huge obstacle - the Bush administration.
>
>
> Years of lobbying by ranchers and environmentalists persuaded the
> Legislature to pass the law in February (HCN, 2/7/05: Split-estate
> rebellion: Ranchers take on energy developers). It was intended to help
>
> landowners protect about 12.5 million acres of private land on which
> the federal Bureau of Land Management controls the vast majority of oil
>
> and gas leasing.
>
>
> The state split-estate law holds energy companies to much tougher
> standards than does the BLM. It requires companies to pay landowners
> for any loss of income or "loss of land value" caused by drilling, for
> instance. That broad definition covers impacts to all aspects of
> ranching and farming, as well as to dude ranches, bed-and-breakfasts,
> and hunting and fi****ng operations, says Laurie Goodman, president of
> the Landowners Association of Wyoming, which pushed for the law.
>
>
> Well, you fat ****, you better go and see what remains of your ****ing
> McMansion. By the way, I hope ypu get bitten by a West Nile Virus
> Moquito bred in the flood waters. I hate you and I hate America. I do
> not think even your Jewish grandfather knew someone could hate more.
> But it's not just a Jewish thing, its a **** America and all of
> humanity thing. I hope West Nile cases go 65% now and people get sick
> across America becuase of the flooding. And I hope that insurance
> companies have to sell of their big bond holdings to pay off their
> hurricane insurance claims, causing interest rates for bonds to rise
> and interest rates across the board to rise. I hope that makes your
> debt situation even more misrable for your ruined home. Keep coming,
> Katrina, keep coming.
>
>
> __
> __/
> \ \/
>
>
> The triple 7 swatstika, the symbol of God's wrath. We have seen the
> passsing of the seven seals, the seven trumpets, and now we shall soon
> bear witness to the pouring of the seventh bowl.
>
>
> **** THE WH*RE OF BABYLON!!! READ REVELATION 18 NOW YOU ****ING ROACH
> WORMS.
>
Why is it when God sends a disaster to muslims lands, he kills hundreds
and hundreds of thousands but when the USA has disasters, he only kills
0 to a 50 or so?


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