(In what seems like a follow-up
to Omal’s discussion on the photon
cloud, he now updates our planet’s
passage through after over a year. We
also cover the ozone layer and its
effects as we move on the weather
patterns that are related to a great
combination of factors such as solar
events and space events. Some of the
significant events he mentioned related
to Atlantis, the Incas and ancient Rome.)
Omal:
greetings and felicitations.
Russ: greetings Omal.
Omal: greetings Russ, greetings
Skip.
Skip: good evening Omal.
Omal: okay, how is everything?
Russ: spectacular.
Omal: and how are you doing Skip?
Skip: great but I’m getting
better.
Omal: that is good. Okay, let us
get down to business and start
discussing upcoming events and
occurrences and also past events.
We will start in the past and
proceed into the present and then
finally, hopefully into the
future. Okay, first of all let’s
go over the past three weeks and
the occurrences that have happened
within those last three weeks. Let
us travel back a little bit
further to approximately a year
ago when a similar spate of
communiqués were released with the
various situations going on in
other parts of the world and some
also being similar parts of the
world. It appears to be a cycle
that takes place in early
September and goes right through
getting progressively worse until
it gets the point where it becomes
necessary to monitor. As we have
seen this year compared to last
year, this is far worse. In
previous years it appears to be a
continual trend on an upward level
of aggressive actions, political
unrest, social and economic unrest
and also planetary unrest. The
reasons why the planetary crusts
and shifts occur more frequently
in the later part of your year is
as you approach closer to the Sun
on the cycle which during your
winter you’re actually closer to
the Sun than you are during the
summer. The pull seems to be more
intense at this time. The photon
cloud certainly has played a part
in this and it seems to me that
the increased gravitational
effects have been more pronounced
recently. This is also part of, if
you study closely, you will notice
that this plays very much into
sunspot cycles. Also the effect of
these earthquakes do have a social
and economic nature attached to
them making the struggle even
harder. You will notice in
manufacturing parts of your world
an increase in prices. If you look
at various events going on right
now in the present, you’ll notice
that there has been a lot of
precipitation activity in North
Carolina, first of all from
hurricane Floyd and now from
hurricane or tropical storm Irene
has dumped a lot of water on these
producing areas which in turn has
a economic effect which would be?
Russ: higher prices.
Omal: that is correct which in
turn puts a burden on the
production and the retail side.
Russ:
hmm.
Omal:
okay, let us
progress, let
us answer more
questions
please.
Russ:
okay, you
mentioned the
photon cloud
and that's
something that
we haven’t
really dealt
with in a long
time but it’s
something since you
brought it up, worthy
to explore just
a little bit.
Omal:
okay.
Russ:
at that time
when we last
discussed it
we were on the
fringes of it
and it’s been
approximately
about a year
since then
that we
discussed it….
Omal:
uh-huh.
Russ:
and I’m
curious as to
how much of
that cloud are
we starting to
really fully
get into now?
Omal:
you’re
starting to
see more
denser
patches,
you’re still
certainly very
much on the
fringe of it
but it is
certainly more
further in than
you were last
year and
therefore like
a cloud where
you first get
into the
fringes and it
is very light
and wispy and
you can still
see around
you, you’re
now into
patches where
it is more
dense and you
cannot see out
of but a few
moments pass and you're
into a more
wispy area
progressing
into a more
denser area.
Russ:
okay, as such,
the results
and changes
that might
occur because
of this?
Omal:
I believe we
covered them
pretty
extensively
when we were
discussing it
about a year
ago when we
initially
started discussing
it.
Russ: I
was going to
use that
on
the website, I
can’t remember
what I wrote
down now.
Omal:
ahh, you do
not have shall
I say
long-term
memory?
Russ:
I only have
short-term
memory.
(Skip
chuckles)
Omal:
ahh, I see
humor going
backwards and
forwards.
Okay, more questions please?
Skip: yeah, yeah, yeah I have one.
We have destroyed or punched a
hole in our own ionosphere…..
Omal: uh-huh.
Skip: I've heard reports from
different sources within the last
six, eight months that it’s slowly
closing itself back up, is this
true?
Omal: that is correct.
Skip: okay, then that means that
the Freon isn’t being discharged
like it was years ago?
Omal: that is correct.
Skip: okay, all right, I just
wanted to verify that.
Omal: now something that I may add
to that is that the ozone does
regenerate itself. Ozone at a
lower level is a health problem,
high up it is a protectorate. So
the ozone that you generate that
adds into such things as smog is
actual fact something that is
being generated and repaired.
However there is a natural cycle
involving the hole in the ozone
layer over Antarctica, it will
decrease and increase. For your
species to be concerned about it
is very wise to be concerned about
it however the knowledge that you
have of the natural cycle of the
hole in the ozone layer over
Antarctica only covers maybe 30
years, 40 years at most. So you
really don’t know the cycle and
the long-term effects that are
being attributed to the ozone
layer. Now too much ozone in your
atmosphere is again a problem. Do
you know what happens if you have
too much ozone in your upper
atmosphere?
Skip: it probably replaces the
oxygen.
Omal: up at that altitude that is
not a problem.
Skip: oh okay.
Omal: you do not go that high.
Skip: okay.
Russ: start to block solar
radiation more?
Omal: it does the opposite, it
traps it.
Russ: hmm.
Skip: oh, that’s why we’re getting
the UV rays heavier, heavier.
Omal: because it is again part of
the natural cycle.
Skip: uh-hmm.
Omal: it gets thicker and denser
and then it thins out and moves
around and there are quite a few
different things that go on with
the ozone layer that you’re not
fully aware of. As I stated, you
have at most 40 years worth of
knowledge on what the ozone
actually does.
Skip: in other words, it acts like
a magnifier……excuse me, I didn’t
mean to…..
Omal: oh certainly.
Skip: it acts like a magnifier.
Omal: in one way yes.
Skip: huh, okay that makes sense.
Omal: just as you start to name
phenomena using Latin names, I
don’t mean you personally but I
mean your local scienity. Such
things as El Niño and La Niña are
pretty new terms in your
vocabulary that until recently
weren’t understood or even named
so you had four dry years of
extremely dry weather where you
had a drought. Conversely you had
a number of years where you had a
wet period and high precipitation.
These are not new phenomena,
they’re just old names being
revised to replace phenomena that
was, “okay it was a bad winter, it
was a good winter, it was a dry
winter, it was a wet winter.” Now
it is looked upon as new
terminology and something worth
studying.
Russ: hmm.
Skip: inventing new words for old
terms.
Omal: more old terms, the El Niño
and La Niña are terms that were
introduced by the Hispanics when
they came from Spain into the
new....what you call the New
World.
Skip: uh-huh, we are the New World
yeah.
Omal: so it is something that if
you were...if the indigenous
aboriginals of your area had kept
written records of climate,
temperature, precipitation and so
on, you would see a very distinct
and definite pattern after all. A
lot of the civilizations that have
been around, if their records had
survived, you would have two,
3,000 years worth of records which
would give you a very interesting
pattern that would be worth
studying and analyzing and seeing
the regular cycles. Those cycles
are not clockwork regular but they
are within five years of a cycle
which over two to three thousand
years, is fairly regular. Okay,
any more questions?
Russ: uh-huh. Since we’re on
cycles, one quick question on that
is, are we at the point of a cycle
where had we better records we can
keep more track of this but
through the civilizations since
the dawn of man where social
phenomenon, I mean natural
phenomena set off social pressures
that have either increased or
decreased the population’s ability
to deal with it where you see
civilizations go under or build up
due to natural phenomenon and the
pressures held back by that. Are
we like unconsciously or
subconsciously feeling those
pressures again as the cycle
reaches its point?
Omal: certainly, certainly. If you
had extensive records for the last
let us say 5,000 years of natural
events, space events, solar
events, you would see that there
is a definite cycle and
civilizations either flourish or
become extinct on how they handle
those events. If you were to take
something like the events of
Atlantis, you would see that there
are certainly very interesting
cycles that a civilization if it
survives becomes much, much
stronger. Conversely, if the
civilization is hit by it and is
weakened, eventually the
civilization fades away and
becomes extinct. They’re not just
natural phenomenon. If you take
for example the Incan Empire, as
soon as they had contact with the
Western world, they had serious
problems and eventually it became
an extinct civilization.
Russ: couldn’t handle the
pressure. Then what about with
Rome with like say Pompeii?
Pompeii happened just about the
last part of Rome.
Omal: yes that certainly had an
interesting factor in it. It
happened in I believe 75 A.D.
which definitely wasn’t the end of
Rome.
Russ: right.
Omal: Rome flourished for another
couple hundred years. The rot that
was causing the problem for Rome
had already started at that point,
this was just a factor that
occurred and caused problems later
on. Certainly there were a number
of very prominent and well-to-do
individuals that were caught in
both the catastrophe at Pompeii
and Herculaneum which did play a
part in the more widespread
corruption that developed later
on.
Russ: hmm, okay. Well done, thank
you. Thanks Omal.
Omal: not a problem. No more
questions?
Skip: no.......
Russ: no.
Skip: not for me, thank you.
Omal: okay, live long, prosper
and, I will be back.
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