It is currently Wed May 01, 2024 10:27 pm



Post new topic This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 970 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39  Next
 The Golden Thread, Volume 4.6 2009 
Author Message
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Apr 05, 2009 9:25 am
Posts: 6274
Location: Timeline 39, Earth-Moon L1 Lagrange point
Post 
else:
MJ + Prince Diana + the Moon
Goro Adachi Style...

http://www.goroadachi.com/etemenanki/moonwalker.htm

_________________
--
Remember: this whole thing is about self-responsibility, self-rule and self choice.
Überm Sternenzelt richtet Gott, wie wir gerichtet.


Tue Jul 07, 2009 8:58 am
Profile WWW
Truth Seeker

Joined: Sat Jul 04, 2009 7:47 am
Posts: 2
Location: Devon
Post posts not getting through
Mailer deamon has said Hi. This is the qmail-send program at yahoo.com.
I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following addresses.
This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.

<Admin>:
Sorry, I wasn't able to establish an SMTP connection. (#4.4.1)
I'm not going to try again; this message has been in the queue too long.

--- Below this line is a copy of the message.
can you help ??
my email address is- janetbestwick@yahoo.co.uk

_________________
janet


Tue Jul 07, 2009 9:48 am
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
Dex wrote:
recall15 wrote:
Quote:
IMO
It's possible they're multi-functioning cloaking probe vehicles. They serve many monitoring purposes.
The craft appeared trans-dimensional allowing a doorway for the Orbs to transpose through. Why there were so many of them.

Dex
_________________
"The problems that exist in the world today cannot be solved by the level of thinking that
created them." Albert Einstein

Dex:

This is the right time to "recorded" locations, populations, and places on Earth before the "Great Accident" according to these book... ,then things will start to change...


Recall

In books?
Look for the places being shown via UFO sightings? Can you elaborate anything more about this? Or do you mean something else?

I use to warn... Bishop, Ca., that if they see an increase of Balls of light sightings in their area, they might want to evacuate temporarily. They were, in those days, experiencing magma build-up near Mammoth Lakes and right under the main highway.
It was estimated that if it did blow would it take out all of Bishop.
It became a personal concern of mine. As a matter of fact, that pretty much describes what I use to do with the Government an and an ET assignment. Warnings of impending danger. Terrorist, Earthquakes many more things that all came to pass. Some classified.
I quit in 1986, after Chernobyl.

True story, can be confirmed.
So, I don't doubt it being a possibility. It's that this recent video too few are aware if that be their intent for the showing. Please share with us what you know about this? It sure is important.

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 10:46 am
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
Moderator

Double posting..What happened to the edit button?
Please erase first posting to Recall.

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 10:49 am
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
(Note: Sky, are you aware of this website?)

From Dee
SAUFOR

Crop Circles in South Africa

See, e.g., _http://saufor.http://sahttp://saufor.
http://saufor.com/2008/10/crop-circles-in-south-africa/

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 10:59 am
Profile
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
An so it begins???

Is this why the PTB have stopped the scientific communitty from tracking near earth objects?

Prediction..

We'll start to see alot more of these type of stories.

Shady



Quote:
Meteor lights up Mid-Atlantic area's skies
Published on 07-07-2009

Source: Baltimore Sun

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryla ... 1919.story

Scores of people in Maryland and Pennsylvania who lingered outdoors into the early morning hours Monday were startled by the brilliant flash of a meteor that soared over the Mid-Atlantic states.

Many more were rattled in their beds by the sonic boom that followed the flash. Sam Luther witnessed both events from a camp on the Susquehanna River near Delta, Pa.

"We were sitting by the campfire on the river talking when the entire sky lit up for 3-5 seconds," he said in a post to The Baltimore Sun's Weather Blog. "It was as if it were daylight outside. ... Approximately 60-90 seconds after the sky had lit up, we heard a thunderous series of sonic boom sounds accompanied by tremors."

Both phenomena were almost certainly caused by the entry of a relatively large meteor into the Earth's atmosphere. To produce a fireball bright enough to attract widespread attention, geologists say, the meteor would have to be perhaps a few yards in diameter.

Based on readers' descriptions, the object flew roughly south to north over Central Maryland and southern Pennsylvania before vaporizing about 1:10 a.m.

"They're all pieces of space debris," bits of rock or dust from comets or asteroids, said Jim O'Leary, director of the Maryland Science Center's Davis Planetarium. "Most of them are very tiny," but thanks to the tremendous speed with which they enter the atmosphere, they can burn up with a tremendous flash of light. "They can also produce sonic booms."

While many occur unnoticed in daylight, or over the ocean, "to see one over your area is a rare and special occurrence."

A Weather Blog poster named Diane was outside her home near Port Deposit when the fireball appeared. "The whole yard lit up. I looked up to the sky to see a huge fireball with a long trail. It made no noise until about 30 seconds later, at that point there was a loud boom followed by the whole house shaking. ... I will never forget this amazing and a little scary sighting."



Tue Jul 07, 2009 11:14 am
Profile
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
Oh lookie! Even the Pope is calling for a New World Order...


Why isn't this a surprise? He was a Hitler Youth Member in his earlier days..


Shady


Quote:
Pope Calls For New Financial Order - Stronger UN
Published on 07-07-2009 Email To Friend Print Version

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Source: Bloomberg

Pope Benedict XVI called for a new financial order with “real teeth” as Group of Eight leaders prepare to discuss ways out of the worst recession since World War II.

“Profit is useful if it serves as a means toward an end,” he wrote in a letter to Catholic bishops worldwide published today. “Once profit becomes the exclusive goal, if it is produced by improper means and without the common good as its ultimate end, it risks destroying wealth and creating poverty.” The encyclical, the third of his papacy, is entitled “Caritas in Veritate,” which in Latin means “charity in truth.”

The pope’s reflections on capitalism were two years in the making and publication was held up when the credit crunch crippled the world economy. Benedict said last month the crisis shows “how the economic and financial paradigms that have been dominant in recent years must be rethought.”

The German-born pontiff touched on many themes that will be discussed by the leaders of the largest economies, including “protection of the environment.” He will have his first meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama at the end of the three-day summit, which starts in L’Aquila, Italy, tomorrow.

Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti said Nov. 20 that the pope was the first to predict the crisis in the global financial system, referring to a “prophecy” in a paper Benedict wrote when he was a cardinal. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict in April 2005.

Economy and Ethics

Ratzinger in 1985 presented a paper entitled “Market Economy and Ethics” at a Rome event dedicated to the Church and the economy. He said a decline in ethics “can actually cause the laws of the market to collapse.”

Pope Benedict has made frequent comments on the economy since the beginning of the financial crisis. In an Oct. 7 speech, he reflected on crashing markets and concluded that “money vanishes, it is nothing” and warned that “the only solid reality is the word of God.”

The Vatican’s official newspaper, l’Osservatore Romano, on the same day criticized the free-market model for having “grown too much and badly in the past two decades.”

An encyclical is the most authoritative document a pontiff can write. It takes the form of a letter to bishops and is meant to give guidelines from the papacy to the more than one billion Catholics across the world.

To contact the reporter on this story: Flavia Krause-Jackson in Rome at fjackson@bloomberg.net


Tue Jul 07, 2009 11:24 am
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Apr 05, 2009 9:25 am
Posts: 6274
Location: Timeline 39, Earth-Moon L1 Lagrange point
Post 
Right, Dex, but the warning messages -the telephatic ones -/Blue-white light flases are only for the people on these locations... When the tail of Nibiru cause Quakes in the 6.5/6.2 weeks patters from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean:
-we will see what will happen next...

_________________
--
Remember: this whole thing is about self-responsibility, self-rule and self choice.
Überm Sternenzelt richtet Gott, wie wir gerichtet.


Tue Jul 07, 2009 11:33 am
Profile WWW
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
Quote:

http://www.vanityfair.com/style/feature ... ntPage=all


Environment

An undated photograph from inside the Bohemian Grove; John 'Jock' Hooper, club member turned redwood crusader.

Left, an undated photograph from inside the Bohemian Grove. Right, John “Jock” Hooper, club member turned redwood crusader. Portrait by Karen Kuehn.

Bohemian Tragedy

Members of the ultra-exclusive Bohemian Club—2,500 of America’s richest, most conservative men, including Henry Kissinger, George H. W. Bush, and a passel of Bechtels, Basses, and Rockefellers—are known to urinate freely against the ancient redwoods that cover their 2,700-acre property. Have they been chopping down the trees as well? According to one former member turned whistle-blower, the San Francisco–based society may have logged some of its old-growth forest. Drawing on his own Ivy League ties, the author investigates, with a daring sortie into the ceremonial kickoff of the Bohemians’ annual encampment.
by Alex Shoumatoff May 2009

A sign posted at the Bohemian Grove’s entrance, circa 1977. Photograph by Larry Kramer.

A VF.com exclusive: "A Guide to the Bohemian Grove."

Is this really what I want to be doing? Sneaking into the exclusive Bohemian Grove, on the Saturday night when roughly 2,500 of America’s richest, mostly right-wing Republicans are kicking off their annual July “encampment”? The members of the San Francisco–based Bohemian Club are mostly all here, partying boisterously in this primeval stand of gargantuan redwoods 75 miles north of the city, or will be during the next 16 days. Over the years all the usual suspects have made appearances: Rumsfeld, Kissinger, two former C.I.A. directors (including Papa Bush), the masters of war and the oilgarchs, the Bechtels and the Basses, the board members of top military contractors—such as Halliburton, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and the Carlyle Group—Rockefellers, Morgans, captains of industry and C.E.O.’s across the spectrum of American capitalism. The interlocking corporate web—cemented by prep-school, college, and golf-club affiliations, blood, marriage, and mutual self-interest—that makes up the American ruling class. Many of the guys, in other words, who have been running the country into the ground and ripping us off for decades.

The summer high jinks begin, as they have for more than 100 years, with a macabre, hokey ceremony—with Druidic, Masonic, Ku Klux Klan, and Aryan forest-worship overtones—called the Cremation of Care, which is starting in 40 minutes down by the lake. I squeeze through a hole in a chain-link fence onto the 2,700-acre property and follow an old overgrown railroad bed. To my left, below a dense tangle of California bay laurel, big-leaf maple, and understory shrubs, the muddy-green Russian River is sliding by. I didn’t see any posting on that side of the property, but I know I am trespassing.

While many in the world see this gathering of the military-industrial high command as the bad guys—a sort of rogue state operating outside the constraints of democratic institutions, a favorite watering hole for what Peter Phillips, a Sonoma State University sociologist who has published extensively on the Bohemian Club, calls “the global dominance group”—this is not how the members imagine themselves. They see themselves as the moral underpinnings of America’s greatness, whose central tenets are the Protestant work ethic: work hard and prosper and you’ll get into that great club in the sky. The Bohemian Club is like the Opus Dei of the Protestant American establishment. Very few Jews have made it in, and even fewer blacks.

The encampment is more of a drunken blowout and an opportunity for bonding than a serious roundtable like Davos, although there is a series of lakeside talks that are enlightening about what the government has up its sleeve for the upcoming year. Kissinger is a perennial favorite. His speech nine years ago, “Do We Need a Foreign Policy?,” was music to the ears of the Bush administration. In 1942, Edward Teller is said to have planned the Manhattan Project here. There’s a lot of dark history in this forest retreat. It’s rumored that during the presidency of Gerald Ford one Grove employee was a charming, impeccably mannered ex-Nazi, who used to drive around in a jeep that had the decal—a palm tree with a swastika on it—of Rommel’s Africa campaign, which he had served in. Ford made him take it off.

The majority of activities take place in the 109-acre main grove, in about 120 separate rustic camps nestled under the biggest, most ancient redwoods on the property. Each member is assigned to a camp. The fanciest one is Mandalay. Then Hill Billies. Other camps have names like Derelicts, Five Easy Pieces, Poison Oak, Rattlers. Herbert Hoover, an enthusiastic Grover, called it “the greatest men’s party on earth.” Aside from the prostitutes who are rumored to be visited by randy Grovers at local bars and motels, it’s a guys-only affair, and, historically, there’s always been talk of buggery in the dappled shadows under the redwoods, particularly at Highlanders, perhaps simply because members wear kilts and nothing underneath. Richard Nixon (a member of Cave Man camp), whose 1967 lakeside talk kicked off his successful run for the presidency, was caught on one of his Oval Office tapes describing the Grove as “the most faggy goddamned thing you could ever imagine.”

Another hallmark of the encampment is the promiscuous micturition—guys standing up to the redwoods and relieving themselves everywhere you look. Maybe they’re trying to symbolically assert their primacy over nature. But the amount of drinking that goes on, plus the fact that many members are elderly and likely have prostate problems and can’t make it back to their camp fast enough, also plays a role in what has become, if not a formal ritual, a group-reinforcing collective activity. It must be said, to be fair to the old Wasp establishment, that the club has a rich history full of decent members with refined social graces. Mark Twain and the acerbic misanthrope Ambrose Bierce were early members. So was the socialist Jack London, who wrote a clairvoyant novel called Before Adam, about a time when humanity was ruled by a small group of idiots who were destroying the world.

I am here to investigate reports that the Bohemians have been desecrating their own bower. That nothing is sacred with these guys anymore. Everything is fair game. But how could the Bohemian Club, where California’s forest-preservation movement began, be logging its own land, which includes the largest stand of old-growth redwoods in Sonoma County? That’s what it did quietly from 1984 to 2005—11 million board feet, roughly 11,000 prime redwoods and Douglas firs. I imagine they don’t need the money. It costs $25,000 to join the club and $5,000 a year after that. A 150-foot redwood with a 27-inch D.B.H. (diameter at breast height) fetches only $850 these days, and a similar-size Douglas fir $450. Critics say to sacrifice these jewels for such small change is unconscionable. And for the last three years they have been trying to double the harvest.

To me, redwoods are like whales. At this point, they shouldn’t be harvested under any circumstances. Virgin, old-growth redwoods are growing on only 4 to 5 percent of their original range, a 450-mile band along the Pacific coast, from Big Sur to southern Oregon. They are the tallest and among the most massive (sequoias beat them there, but they are not as tall) and longest-living organisms on earth. Some individual trees have been here for 3,000 years.

The family that redwoods belong to, the Taxodiaceae, is 250 million years old. We humans appeared less than half a million years ago. There were redwoods when Tyrannosaurus rex was the top dog and everything was gigantic. Sixty million years ago, there were more than 40 species in the Taxodiaceae, and their forests blanketed much of the world. Today, only three remain: the coastal redwood; the sequoia, in the southern Sierra Nevada; and the dawn redwood, in one valley in China. The biggest redwoods are up in Humboldt County, reaching 375 feet—about 35 stories. In my mind, redwoods are among the planet’s greatest glories, and all that are left should be protected.

My plan is to take in the Cremation of Care, to get a sense of what the club is all about, and tomorrow I’ll bushwhack into the forest to see what they have been doing to it and what they’re planning to do. Maybe after the ceremony, I’ll do some camp-hopping and try to talk to some members.

The security has been beefed up since 9/11, and the guards reportedly include retired C.I.A. and F.B.I. agents, practiced at spotting infiltrators. But having grown up and been educated with the old blue-blooded ruling class, I have the preppy drawl, and I know the dress code for such occasions: haute rustic. Ecco hiking shoes, Brooks Brothers khaki pants, a light-green Ralph Lauren Polo golf shirt, a blue Pebble Beach rain shell, and a blue Tilley’s safari jacket. My hair and beard are cut short and neatly trimmed. I told my Czech barber in Montreal to make me look like a Republican. She had no idea what I was talking about, but I could pass for the brother of H. R. Haldeman.
The Unbohemian

I was alerted to the logging in the Grove by my college classmate, John C. Hooper (or Jock, as I always called him), who was until a few years ago an enthusiastic, fourth-generation Bohemian Club member, and is now one of the strongest voices against the Grove’s forestry practices. Jock is old California money. His mother’s family had a 2,000-acre ranch an hour north of San Francisco, and his father’s family had a smaller spread an hour south. The Hoopers came from Maine in the 19th century and prospered, first in the lumber business, then banking.

After serving as a first lieutenant in the Army Adjutant General Corps during Vietnam, instead of becoming a diplomat, as he had planned, he ended up, in the spirit of the 60s, becoming an organic farmer. He and his wife, Molly, have a 330-acre organic farm called Oz up in Mendocino County, three hours north of the Grove. It used to be a hippie commune. Old geodesic domes lie in ruins in the woods, which have some huge Douglas firs and redwoods, which Jock does harvest, selling the wood to a local lumber company. A club spokesman says this fact compromises Jock’s position against their plans: “Mr. Hooper feels it is appropriate to log trees at an aggressive rate for his own personal gain while objecting to the Bohemian Club’s attempt to responsibly manage its own forest.” Jock says that he cuts very selectively and sustainably. He’s no hippie tree hugger. He and Molly are more like hip American landed gentry. Jock supervises the operation in a beret and black Wellingtons. They seem almost to belong in an earlier era.

Jack London, an early Grover, in 1904. From the Bancroft Library/University of California, Berkeley.

Apart from running Oz, Jock has devoted himself to preserving California’s extraordinary natural bounty. He helped write the regulations implementing the National Forest Management Act of 1976 and, while heading the Sierra Club’s national-forest-management program in the early 80s, was the principal author of A Conservationist’s Guide to National Forest Management. He’s the vice-chair of the California Tahoe Conservancy, and spends a couple of days a month up at Tahoe, doing what he can to alleviate that once gin-clear body of water’s massive problems. He’s also on an advisory board of the 23,000-acre Garcia Forest, which is near Oz and just sold $2 million worth of carbon credits, in the form of trees that will never be cut, to Pacific Gas and Electric to offset its emissions, and $3 million worth to Goldman Sachs, which will broker it to other big polluters.

Jock’s great-grandfather, grandfather, and uncle were all members of the Bohemian Club. His grandfather—who has a large redwood grove in San Mateo, California, named after him—used to take him up to the Grove when he was a boy during the off-season, open up the camp, and cook some stew on the woodstove while Jock poked around in the woods. The spell the towering redwoods cast on him was permanent.

In 1999, Jock joined the club. The waiting list was 15 years long, and it still is. Twenty thousand “men of talent” are supposedly waiting to join, although some say the club, like many venerable old men’s clubs, is having trouble attracting younger members. He joined Five Easy Pieces. Music and theatricals, including elaborate productions in makeup and drag, are a big part of the festivities. “Sometimes the homoerotic themes can get weird,” one member told me. Great jam sessions at one camp or another last late into the night. Steve Miller is a member. He wears dark suits and looks like a hedge-fund manager until he straps on his guitar. Two former members of the Grateful Dead, Mickey Hart and Bob Weir, are members—entertainment providers are fast-tracked. Hart is in the posh Hill Billies camp, with Rumsfeld, longtime Grove father figure Walter Cronkite, Papa Bush, and Christopher Buckley (whose father, William F., was also a Hill Billy, hard as that is to imagine). Weir is in Rattlers. Strange bedfellows, one would think. Weir and Hart played a benefit concert for Barack Obama last year, and the Grove of the Old Trees, a 28-acre redwood stand in Occidental, California, was saved from the ax a few years ago thanks in part to the passionate activism of Mickey’s wife, Caryl, who was re-appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger to the California State Parks Commission.

Relatively few of the members ever venture outside the 109-acre main grove into the rest of the 2,700-acre forest, and Jock was one of them. Much of it had been logged in the 19th century and was in healthy stages of recuperation. Jock had a 1942 aerial photo that showed nine outlying stands and clumps of old-growth redwood that the early loggers had missed, and every time he visited the Grove he would hike out to one or two of them to see what they were like. In 2001 he reached the largest one, 54-acre Bull Barn, which the club’s trail map describes as containing “the finest hillside stand of old-growth redwood in the Grove.” In the heart of it he found that several dozen of the most awesome and enormous trees had been marked for cutting, with blue lines painted around their trunks. There must be some mistake, he thought. Who would cut these trees? Outside the main stand of Bull Barn, Jock says, he found freshly cut stumps of Doug fir and second-growth redwood. Someone was logging the Grove.

Jock brought his discovery to the attention of the Grove Committee and the club’s president and told them about the other old-growth stands on the property. As a new member, he was deferential and almost apologetic: “Gentlemen, I feel presumptuous in the extreme in bringing these matters to your attention. However, we would all hate to lose an irreplaceable part of our Grove, and I would personally hate to feel that a destructive timber-harvest operation went ahead because I did not get around to writing this letter.” He added that he “would be pleased to meet with the committee and serve in any capacity which helps protect our forest legacy.”

Through a friend, Jock was politely told that he was not on the board and to mind his own business, but the Grove Committee voted to cancel the 2001 harvest until the matter was looked into. In 2002, cutting resumed, not in Bull Barn, but old-growth redwoods were felled elsewhere. Jock learned that, every year since 1984, 500,000 board feet of fir and redwood (most not old-growth) had been logged from remote parts of the property, unbeknownst to all but a few members, if any. He was flabbergasted. He thought, This has to stop immediately, and told other members who he knew would be as upset as he was. At the end of 2002, he presented to the committee a paper called “Whither the Grove? The Future of Bohemia’s Forestland,” and distributed it to interested members. In May of the following year, John Bickel, the club’s president, wrote him a letter saying, “We have received complaints from members that you are sending unsolicited views contrary to our timber management plan which is in effect. This promotes disharmony in the club. In a word, it is ‘unbohemian.’”

In the Bohemian Club, “bohemian” means something completely different from the free-living, poverty-stricken artist that the word usually conjures. It means toeing the party line, United We Stand. Unbohemian means being disloyal, betraying the pact, the global-dominance group. It’s the worst thing a member can be called.

These attempts to deter him only made him dig in. In September 2003 he circulated “Impacts of Logging on the Bohemian Grove: The Future of the Forestland of Bohemia,” the third and most sharply worded of his occasional correspondences to the club leadership and interested members. He pointed out that with the 247-acre harvest in Bull Barn nearing completion (its central old-growth redwood stand was not touched), and the 235-acre harvest in nearby Kitchen Creek about to begin, “a naturally recovering redwood and Douglas fir forest is being transformed into … a tree farm. If this continues the Grove will no longer be a place of wonder and inspiration, a place for spiritual fulfillment, for education and oneness with Nature.”

In January 2004, the chairman of the Grove Committee responded, “We have devoted extensive time to the issues you have raised. For over a year they have been an agenda item for almost all our meetings. And our decision is that our forest management practices will remain in effect.”

Still trying to work with the committee, Jock showed them photos he had taken in Kitchen Creek of old-growth redwoods marked for cutting, but this only earned him another reprimand, for violating the rule against taking photographs outside your camp. The club manager tried to get Jock’s hiking privileges revoked. Jock replied that it was inappropriate for an employee of the club to prevent a member from walking.

Club etiquette fell by the wayside, and it began to get nasty. Jock couldn’t understand why they were doing this. And what happened to the money the logging had so far netted? The club insists that the millions of dollars made from the timber harvests was all put toward the management of the forest. But, according to Jock, the forest outside the main grove was in terrible shape. Hiking trails had been turned into logging roads, footbridges had been bulldozed and not repaired, and there was massive erosion in some places, some of it washing down into the Russian River, which once hosted the most abundant spawning runs of coho and king salmon and steelhead in California.

Up to now, the logging had been done on the basis of renewable three-year Timber Harvesting Plans (T.H.P.’s), issued by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire. But Jock discovered that the Grove was applying for a Non-industrial Timber Management Plan (N.T.M.P.), a permanent permit that would allow the yield to be more than doubled to 1.13 million board feet, going up to 1.8 million by the end of the cycle, to be harvested on a rotating 15-year basis. He got a copy of the application and was alarmed to see that the club hadn’t even acknowledged any old-growth stands—that section of the application was left mostly blank, with only a short quote noting that “the property has no special or unique values.”

Cutting old-growth redwoods on your property is not illegal, but if the stand is 20 acres or more, there are strict guidelines. California Fish and Game has to come in and make sure there are no endangered species. There are few restrictions at all when it comes to cutting second-growth redwoods, some of which have gotten so big that they are indistinguishable from old-growth trees. As a result, old-growth is sometimes cut under the radar. But many Californians love the charismatic trees and are almost fanatically protective of them, and when word gets out that old-growth redwoods are going to be cut, they become very obstreperous.

Plaque outside the Bohemian Club’s San Francisco clubhouse. Photograph by Karen Kuehn.

A fellow club member smuggled Jock an internal report from the Grove’s forester, Edward Tunheim, that concluded the N.T.M.P. was not going to fly, because only properties of 2,500 acres or less of timbered land were eligible. The Tunheim report, which put that figure at 2,501, also said that the new harvest plan was not sustainable and that 500,000 board feet was the maximum that could be cut a year without damaging the forest. Tunheim was soon replaced by a new forester, Nick Kent, who went along with the Grove’s plan. Kent says that Tunheim had overestimated the timbered acreage and underestimated the harvestable acreage and that his proposal of sustainable harvest “was based on limited or no management” of nearly 1,000 acres that could be logged.

In 2004, Jock came to the conclusion that, as he told me, “club leadership had no particular interest in protecting this gorgeous property,” and he resigned from the club to fight for the trees. It was not an easy decision for him, because he loved the camaraderie of Bohemia. But soon he had formed a new club, the Bohemian Redwood Rescue Club, with eight activists and local residents.

The Rescue Club’s biggest victory so far, besides preventing any harvesting for the last three years, has been to save the old-growth redwoods in Bull Barn and Hollowtree, which the Grove’s leadership, after resisting every step of the way, finally agreed not to touch in perpetuity. But there are still thousands of redwoods and Douglas firs that the Grove is applying to cut, and the leadership is intent on going ahead with it.

In January 2008 the Bohemian Club announced that it was going to give the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation the 109-acre main grove and 54 nearby acres as a conservation easement. A Grove captain, Pat Gilligan, was on the elk foundation’s board. The Rescue Club’s lawyer, Paul Carroll, a veteran of many California environmental wars, sees this as a clever ploy to get the size of the property down to where it qualifies for an N.T.M.P. He wrote the club’s president, Jay Mancini, who had taken over in 2005, that this was a cynical and inappropriate use of a conservation easement to facilitate commercial exploitation, and not at all what it is intended for, and he promised to fight it.
When Flacks Attack

In late spring, I left a message for Mancini at the Bohemians’ stately clubhouse, in San Francisco, and a few days later got a call from Charlie Goodyear, who said he was working for Sam Singer, who was handling the Grove’s media requests. Charlie belongs to the family that used to own the San Francisco Chronicle, and Jock told me that he was a good guy. Singer & Associates’ Web site says the firm does among other things “hands-on … crisis communications for some of the nation’s leading corporations.” It takes care of the P.R. fallout from situations like layoffs, bankruptcy, or an explosion at a factory.

Last year Singer was hired by the San Francisco Zoo in the wake of the mauling of a 17-year-old by one of its tigers. Chevron had hired Singer to help it deflect responsibility for the cleanup of the massive toxic contamination from 356 wells that had been drilled in the Ecuadoran Amazon, and to question the reputations of two rain-forest activists, Pablo Fajardo and Luis Yanze, who were trying to hold Chevron accountable for it. (Fajardo’s heroic David-and-Goliath struggle was profiled in the May 2007 issue of Vanity Fair by William Langewiesche.) Sam Singer paints Jock as “a disgruntled former member who doesn’t want a single tree cut.” (Jock maintains all he wants is for the timber in the Grove to be managed according to accepted scientific practices. His big concern, he says, is about sustainability.)

I met Charlie at his office, and we had a conference call with Singer. I told them that I had learned about the logging controversy from Jock, who was an old Harvard classmate, and I was fully aware of his point of view and needed to hear the club’s side of the story. There’s good forestry and bad forestry, and maybe what the club wants to do is perfectly reasonable, but I would like to find out for myself.

Charlie said that the chances of getting a tour of the Grove were slim to none, but he would put in the request. He maintained that only 10 percent of the trees on the property are redwoods. (This contradicts Tunheim’s assessment that 60 percent of the board-footage in the Grove is redwood, which was included in one version of the N.T.M.P. application.) He said he thought Jock’s problem with the Grove was political, not with the forestry plan. “He’s made it his personal crusade to impose his will on the club,” he said. “There’s a level of obsessive-compulsiveness Jock has about this that’s not healthy for him.”

Singer, on the speakerphone, said the first thing I should do is go to Cal Fire’s office in Santa Rosa and look at the public record. The N.T.M.P. application (which I had, but which, as the club was in the process of preparing another revision, was obsolete) was on file there along with all the endorsements it had received. He gave me the names and numbers of two of Cal Fire’s bureaucrats to get in touch with. I should also talk to Nick Kent, the Grove’s current forester, Singer said.

When I then told him I’d rather not talk to the people who are doing publicity for the club, but directly to Mr. Mancini and the club’s management, Singer shot back, “I don’t do fucking publicity. I do public affairs. I’m not trying to sell you a bill of goods. There is no flackery here. We handle difficult issues for people. The issue here is how to preserve the Grove, and Jock and his merry band have acted in an ungentlemanly manner and gotten the members angry.”

It was worth a try, but I was unable to get Singer and Goodyear on board.

Two weeks later, the editor of Vanity Fair received a letter from Singer requesting, “in the strongest possible terms,” that I be removed from the story because I was a friend of Jock’s and that was a conflict of interest that violated journalistic ethics and would reflect badly on the magazine. (It would have been a conflict of interest if I hadn’t disclosed the relationship, but I had been completely open about my friendship with Jock.)

I sent Singer an e-mail that said, Nice try, but if you think I’m going to be taken off this story, it isn’t going to happen, and it was only because I am rigorous about being objective that I had contacted him. Singer fired off another letter to the magazine accusing me of “threatening” them. He closed by saying, “In the 21st Century, these are not the actions of a credible and responsible journalist.”

That’s when I decided to sneak in.
Fire on the Mountain

A few hundred yards into the property, I enter a stand of astounding redwoods. The trees are not old-growth, but, having sprouted in a thick layer of soil that slumped down from Lookout Mountain after the savage logging in the 1890s, they are already just as tall and thick. It’s so dark beneath them that little is growing besides chest-high sword ferns and huge clovers known as redwood sorrel. A few shafts of dusty light, in which small white moths are shimmering, have broken through the canopy, lighting up the open, needle-strewn floor like flashlight beams. My eyes widen as they take in, right next to my left shoe, a 10-inch banana slug, shiny, moist, and green with black spots.

The canopy starts at about 200 feet up and is so thick I can’t see how tall the trees are, but they look like they go up much higher. What happens with redwoods is that eventually the lead shoot, after extending straight up for several hundred years and feet, breaks off. Lateral shoots sprout below it and bend up toward the light, forming a torch-like tangle of interlacing needle-feathered branches. The flora and fauna of this rarefied, epiphytic mini-ecosystem, one of the last to be gotten to by scientists, include specialized creatures like the clouded salamander and the red tree vole, a minute crustacean related to the lobster, lichens, mosses, and two endangered bird species, the northern spotted owl and the marbled murrelet.

Two owls’ nests have been found on the property, and two more just off it. The hunt for them by California Fish and Game (which has been doing its job, although a critical report of the N.T.M.P. by its field biologist was politicized by the club) has contributed to the lengthy N.T.M.P. review process. Ironically, the Bohemian Club’s totem is the owl.

The most far-out thing about redwoods is that they don’t just stand there passively in their rain forest. They actually create it. Each of the millions of narrow, pointed needles in their crowns acts like a miniature condensation panel, capturing the fog that blows in off the Pacific. When their moisture reaches a critical point, the crowns cut loose with drenching downpours, even when the sky is cloudless and there are drought conditions nearby. A relatively small, 100-foot redwood can capture the equivalent of four inches of rain in a single dry evening. Large redwoods release hundreds of gallons daily, twice the average water used by a household of three. These regular precipitation events keep the forest perpetually damp and play a key role in protecting the coast from drought and fire. Fire is very rare in a mature redwood stand. Sometimes a fire will blow in from the neighboring chaparral, but it quickly loses velocity and strength in the moist, open understory, where there is little fuel to keep it going. The thick, fibrous bark of the redwoods is fire-resistant. The flames almost never reach the crowns of the trees, 200 feet up. They are usually stifled by the moisture in the air long before then.

Grovers gather at an encampment in 1941. William Randolph Hearst is fifth from left, seated.

One of the justifications Mancini, Kent, Singer, and the Grove Committee are using to obtain the new N.T.M.P. is that the big trees have to be thinned to reduce the danger of crown fire. There is, in fact, a direct connection between the new, ambitious timber-harvest plan (and the way it’s being represented as good for the forest) and the Bush administration’s “healthy-forest initiative,” which had been using fire-hazard reduction as the reason to cut trees in our national forests. The most conspicuous authority on the Grove’s forest-management plan and a proponent of the Bush initiative is Thomas Bonnicksen, professor emeritus of forest science at Texas A&M University. Bonnicksen has a big following at the club and spoke at the Bohemians’ San Francisco clubhouse last year in response to the intense criticism of the plan.

But Rule No. 1 of sustainable, responsible forestry is you do not take out the biggest, strongest trees, according to Jock and other critics. This is counter to the practice known as “high-grading.” Instead, you cull the weaker stems, and if you’re worried about fire, you clear out the understory. This is a big concern in the Grove at the moment, because there are some 25,000 dead tan oaks in its understory, killed by a fungal blight known as “sudden oak death,” which has swept across Northern California in the last five years, and with their shriveled dry leaves they are like tinderboxes. If fire is the worry, shouldn’t the priority be to take them out? Removal of trees for a noncommercial purpose does not require an N.T.M.P. Mancini and his supporters are saying that what they want to do is to restore the original redwood forest, but this is sort of like the famous Vietnam quote about how we had to destroy the village in order to save it. Cutting big redwoods isn’t the way to restore a redwood forest, say the Grove’s critics; it sets back its recovery however many years the trees have been growing. At the time, Mancini et al. were saying that none of the big redwoods would be touched, but now they acknowledge that in areas of “dense crowding … a few large trees are harvested to increase growth potential and health of the remaining largest redwood trees.”

Charlie Goodyear also told me that there are 100 big trees per acre in the Grove, a density that increases the risk of crown fire and has to be reduced. But what I can see growing on the slopes of Lookout Mountain, which rise steeply from the riverbank, is way below that, 10 to 15 per acre max. Mancini has been taking local residents and influential environmentalists to the top of Lookout, where there are almost no redwoods. The sun, soil, and moisture conditions on hilltops are generally not favorable for redwoods. Most of them grow down in canyons. So Mancini was able to say—I got this from someone who took the local-resident tour—“See how few redwoods there are outside the main grove? Only 20 percent of the big trees in the Grove are redwoods.” Charlie told me 10 percent, and Sam Singer, in his last letter to the magazine, wrote, “Old growth redwood … comprise 5 percent or less of the total trees at Bohemian Grove.” Another figure he has briefed the media with is that only 1.5 percent of the trees in the Grove are going to be cut. What has already been done appears to be “really shitty forestry,” says a former valet at one of the camps, one of two people I spoke with who have gone out and seen it. “They just laid waste to Kitchen Creek”—site of the last T.H.P. harvest. The other, a local resident, says he found big redwoods in draws marked for cutting.

The top of Lookout, my informant told me, looked more like a park than a forest, because most of the big firs had been taken out, several within the last few years. Mancini portrayed it as typical of the rest of the property. (There are actually six different forest types on it, some of them dominated by redwoods.) This is what we’re up against if we’re going to restore the redwood forest that used to be here, Mancini told the tour, waving at the dense jungle of understory trees and shrubs that had shot up in the absence of the big trees. “We have to clear out the dead tan oak and the rest of this stuff. It’s very labor-intensive and expensive. It’s going to cost $7,000 an acre, so to finance it we have to take out a few big trees.”

That’s the other new rationale for the N.T.M.P. It’s like Tanzania’s wildlife service selling permits, at thousands of dollars a pop, to blow away an elephant or a lion in order to finance its elephant-and-lion-protection program. Why not just charge the members $80 a year?

Mancini told the local-resident tour that the annual timber harvest is going to be scaled down to about 750,000 board feet, but this is still “dead on arrival,” as far as Jock is concerned. “It’s like negotiating how many military bases you are going to be allowed to keep in Iraq,” he told me. “They start with a high figure, a million board feet and counting, as a bargaining position, so we can feel O.K. with their upping the harvest by 100 to 150 percent. But look at the damage that the past harvests have done.”

This is exactly what I am planning to do. Tomorrow, if all goes well, I am going to hike to the scene of the last timber harvest, which was in 2005, at Kitchen Creek. The former valet, who liked to walk in the woods, stumbled onto it and told me it was a massacre: “It turned my stomach, and my whole attitude about the club, that it could be letting this happen.” From there I will go to Bull Barn and Mount Heller, where the first harvest under the N.T.M.P. is slated to take place. This should take four to six hours, during which I’d be able to survey enough terrain to form a ballpark impression of how many big redwoods there are overall.

As I continue toward the Cremation of Care, I can’t help but think it’s in the interests of California that these trees continue to live, so they can remove carbon and water vapor from the atmosphere and mitigate global warming. They are worth more, actually, standing. So why doesn’t the Grove get a conservation easement for the entire property, then sell carbon credits, emissions offsets, for all the trees? They could in fact make a lot more money than they would from cutting them. But they don’t want to do that. Caryl Hart reportedly floated that idea and got nowhere. The latest version of the club’s N.T.M.P. states that they have no interest in exploring this option. Nick Kent says that “preserving dense second-growth forests in their current condition would not be the best way of restoring the forest or making greater contributions to carbon sequestration.”
Penetrating the Old-Boy Network

I proceed warily up the river toward the main grove. Above the swimming hole is a guardhouse, which I avoid by scrambling up the steep side of Lookout Mountain on a skidding trail. The trail is flagged with ribbons. It looks like it’s going to be brought back into use. One member of the Bohemian Redwood Rescue Club, who has been living nearby for the last 18 years, told me that every year during the off-season, after the encampment, when the members had all left, there was a constant stream of trucks with “big-ass trees” driving right out of the club’s front gate. This trail is not that old. It must have been put in during one of the recent harvests.

The trail comes out onto Osprey View Road, which I follow down for several hundred yards until, abruptly, right below me is the main grove. The sound of raucous male laughter drifts up from the camps, which are staggered on the steep slopes of a deep canyon, from which titan redwoods are rising.

A cook in the kitchen of one of the camps looks up and spots me, and studies me curiously. I give him a reassuring smile, and the cook, apparently deciding that I must be a member, coming back from a hike up Lookout, returns his attention to whatever he is whipping up on the stove. The road bends to the right, and I take a little footpath that winds down to the canyon floor, passing several empty camps on the way. Most of the members are having dinner in the main dining hall, on the other side of the Grove, past the lake. In a few minutes they will all pour out and sit on the lawn in front of the lake and the Cremation will begin.

Several small groups are already making their way along Edwards Road, passing one humongous redwood after another, to the lake, and I fall in with them. After a few minutes we reach the lake, which was donated, along with the original sewage system, by the Bechtel family. The lake is small, an acre or so, and on the other side of it a looming four-story statue of an owl casts its reflection on the water. The statue is a little creepy. It has a slightly diabolical vibe. It was sculpted by Haig Patigian, a great pal of Jock’s great-grandfather’s. In front of the Owl there is a stage. This is where the effigy of a child called Dull Care will soon be mock-sacrificed by a group of men wearing red robes with sharp-pointed hoods, then placed in a little boat with a carved skull on the tip of its prow, set on fire, and sent across the lake.

Bohemian Grove memorabilia. Photograph by Karen Kuehn/memorabilia courtesy of Mary Moore.

I’m a little early. Only a dozen men are sitting on the lawn. Dinner has not yet let out. Two rows of blue canvas folding chairs have been set up facing the lake. Only one elderly gentleman has arrived, so I plunk myself down two chairs away from him. It turns out he is the retired coach of the U.C. Davis football team. We talk football. I tell him about the crucial sack my son, a six-foot-six-inch defensive end for the Yale Bulldogs, made during the 2003 Harvard-Yale game. He says Davis plays in Division I-AA, same as the Ivy League. He couldn’t be nicer. “You sure have a good time in here,” I say as I study the program for this year’s encampment, and the old coach says with a blissed-out smile, “Yes, we sure do.”

All kinds of events have been lined up: on the great pop hits of World War II, Gypsy music, mushrooms, Hollywood and its global audience, Sam Cooke, National Geographic’s Genographic Project, Cajun music. The talks at the lake and the museum reflect the growing anxiety in the Grove: “America, We Have a Problem,” by Bohemian Norman Augustine; “The Future Isn’t What It Used to Be,” by Ken Jowitt. Other offerings: “The Role of Nuclear in America’s Energy Choices”; “Always Present—The Role of Religion in American Politics”; “Past Ideals—Future Strategy,” by James Billington, Bohemian and the Librarian of Congress. Tony Snow, a Bohemian and one of George W. Bush’s more effective press secretaries, is scheduled to talk about “Life in the Press Room,” but he will die today, I will find out later, after a prolonged battle with colon cancer. They must not have been able to change the program.

Two talks are relevant to the logging controversy: “Protecting Your Right to a Grove Shower [i.e., fog-drip precipitation],” by Jack Blackwell, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation’s vice president of lands and conservation. (This is about the controversial conservation easement for the main grove.) And “Tomorrow’s Grove in Progress,” by Ralph Osterling, the original proponent of taking a more hands-on, commercial approach to managing the club’s timber assets. Another man, in his 40s and extremely obese, sits down in the row in front of us. He gives me an icy look, then turns to the retired coach and says, “Isn’t it nice that there is a section only for the members.” Not picking up on what he’s driving at, I try to break the ice with him and make stabs at conversation. “I hear McCain might be coming next weekend,” I say, and he says, “There is no way McCain would come here, ever.” Right behind me, two men are relieving themselves on some redwood roots.

At this point an ancient trembling man, supported by a man in his 20s, makes his way to the long wooden bench I have just noticed in front of the canvas chairs and sits down. The obese man greets him obsequiously (“Mr. Bass, come and sit closer so I can talk to you”) and freezes me out. I finally realize that I have made a terrible faux pas and sat down in the V.I.P. section, reserved for the most venerable old Grovers, and get up and say, “Well, I guess I’ll be moving along. Awfully nice to meet you.”
Suitcase on the Loose

As I turn to leave, I am accosted by a man with a mustache, who is wearing a plasticized identification card around his neck. He asks me, very politely, “Excuse me, sir, are you a member?” I say no, I’m a guest. “May I see your chit?”—something guests are issued at the front gate and are supposed to have with them at all times. I say I’m afraid I’ve left it at the camp. “Which camp is that?” Midway, I tell him. “And who are you a guest of?” Laney Thornton, I say with just the right amount of haughty irritation. “Excuse me, who?” Laney Thornton, I repeat, enunciating each syllable slowly and succinctly.

(Laney, a member, doesn’t know about this. We haven’t laid eyes on each other in 40 years, but we were on The Harvard Lampoon together, and I’m sure he won’t mind a good prank for a good cause. Or maybe he will.)

“And may I have your name, sir,” the guard continues. Roger Austin, I tell him. (Roger was a kid I grew up with in the 50s and the name has just the right Anglo-Saxon ring to it. He died of a heart attack 20 years ago.)

The security guard is beginning to think I could be for real. “If you’ll just have a seat on the lawn here, sir, while we do our thing,” he says, and starts to transmit the information on a walkie-talkie.

While he is scrunched over his receiver, I crawl along on the grass ever so discreetly for about 50 feet, slowly get up, and nonchalantly walk around the lake, past the band shell, where a large orchestra is tuning up, and behind the Owl, and steal a glance behind me. He’s following me. But when I get all the way around the lake, passing a group of young men in maroon elf costumes, tights and all, and start back up Edwards Road, I turn and he’s gone. I reach the path I came down on and take it back up to Osprey View Road undetected.

At this point, I could leave the Grove, bag the Cremation of Care, and still salvage tomorrow’s bushwhack, and no one would be the wiser, but I start thinking how I’ve gone to all this trouble, and I’d at least like to catch a glimpse of the ceremony. Maybe if I continue on Osprey View until I get above the lake, I can watch it from there, and maybe even, after it’s over, circulate among the camps.

Great. No one is up here, I tell myself, but just as I am approaching the lake, I round a bend, and there are four guards standing in the road. They see me. Not good. What would anybody be doing up here when the Cremation is about to begin? There is nothing to do but to continue. “Evening, gentlemen,” I say with a congenial smile. “I seem to have overshot the path down to the lake. Could you possibly point me in its direction?” One of the guards asks me my name and radios it in, and I can hear a voice on the other end, saying, “We just had a query for Roger Austin down at the lake 15 minutes ago.”

After what seems like an eternity, during which I am thinking my goose is cooked, the guard gets a transmission which I can’t hear, and tells me, “It’s all right, Mr. Austin, you’re cleared,” and shows me a path down to the lake, which I take. Then I realize that the other security guard is going to be waiting for me at the bottom. Down below, hundreds of men are sitting on the lawn. The Cremation is getting under way. I duck between two redwoods, thinking I will lie low until the coast is clear, but then a flashlight shines on me. One of the guards spotted me from above. It’s like that moment in a nightmare where you’re chased by some monster into a room with no exit, and the monster closes in and you wake up in a cold sweat, breathing heavily.

The guard takes me back up to the road, and I come clean. “My name is not Roger Austin. I’m a journalist, and I’m here just trying to do my job, like you are. I’m just trying to get a sense of what this place is all about, and if you like I will leave the property immediately.”

A golf cart arrives, and the guard from the lake, who has walked up the path, sits beside me as I am taken to a little conference room in the office building of the club, where the guard tells me to empty all my pockets.

The club manager, Matthew Oggero, arrives. He appears to be in a foul mood. I tell him my name, and he says, “I know. Vanity Fair.”

It seems they had been expecting me.

Oggero takes my notes and photocopies them, and a red-haired deputy sheriff pats me down and cuffs me. A young employee of the club takes pictures of me with my rain shell folded up and showing my potbelly, which is actually not that bad these days. I’m six feet, 225 pounds—par for a sybaritic 61-year-old. (This humiliating Abu Ghraib portfolio is later distributed, undoubtedly by Sam Singer, to media outlets, among them an army of right-wing knucklehead bloggers, who post it all over the Web. The story makes the New York Post’s “Page Six” and the San Francisco Chronicle.)

The Dining Circle, 1924. From the Bancroft Library/University of California, Berkeley.

My treatment in that little conference room was legally questionable, as was the distribution of the humiliating pictures. The whole arrest wasn’t handled properly, according to my local lawyer; if you are caught trespassing on property that isn’t posted, you don’t even have to give your name, and all they can do is tell you to leave immediately, and if you do so, end of story. I should have told them my name was Suitcase, the name I perform music under. It would have gotten a lot of publicity for my new CD, Suitcase on the Loose, now available online.

Many people thought what I had done was just great. Later another cop observed, shaking his head, after I told him why I had no choice but to go into the Grove because I had a strong suspicion of criminality and was being given false information, “These elites get away with everything.” And a local businesswoman said, after the Chronicle came out with its story about my arrest, “Make them walk the straight path. Don’t let them walk the crooked path.”
Lipstick on a Corpse

A simple case of trespassing, by someone who had no criminal record and was cooperative and did no damage to the property, was not going to bring me any jail time, although it took six hours to get bailed out. I was told that if I ever set foot in the Grove again I’d really be in trouble. My case was transferred to Adult Diversion Services, an alternative to the judicial-system setup for misdemeanor offenses. With the intention of avoiding criminal charges, I have to write a monthly report on how I’m doing, whatever I feel like writing, for four months.

A supper menu from 1897. From the Bancroft Library/University of California, Berkeley.

So the opportunity to see Bull Barn, Kitchen Creek, and Mount Heller didn’t pan out. I wasn’t going to be able to get an idea of how many big redwoods there are on the property. But you can see the damage to Kitchen Creek, still horrendous after three years, on Google Earth. And there is a way of using infra-red to sense vegetation types by satellite. The conservationist Iain Douglas-Hamilton is using it to understand the movements of radio-collared elephants in Kenya, so an aerial census of the redwoods and a computation of their density per acre should be possible.

I spent four hours at Cal Fire’s Santa Rosa offices going over the club’s old T.H.P.’s and the latest N.T.M.P.’s on file. The last T.H.P., for Kitchen Creek in 2005, which the former valet had described as a massacre, had been signed off on. The director had certified that all requirements of the Forest Practice Act and rules of the Board of Forestry and Forest Protection had been complied with and “no violations were observed during the inspection.”

“Very rarely does Cal Fire issue a violation, and only after we rub their nose in it,” Rick Coates, the executive director of Forest Unlimited and a veteran of many redwood battles, told me. “They let the landowner determine what is sustainable. It’s all a joke, a bad joke, a lot of paperwork that means nothing.”

For the next eight months Jock and his merry band waited for the new, revised N.T.M.P. It was reportedly hung up by the Grove’s lawyers, who were trying to make the language of the conservation-easement conveyance, which the Rescue Club was fighting, unassailable. Apparently there was an internal debate on the elk foundation board about accepting the conveyance.

Meanwhile, copies of the new N.T.M.P. were circulated among a few selected opinion-makers and received some important endorsements. Among them was that of Stephen Sillett, the pioneering ecologist of redwood crowns and tree-climbing madman celebrated in Richard Preston’s 2007 book, The Wild Trees. Sillett holds the Kenneth L. Fisher chair in Redwood Forest Ecology established in 2006 at Humboldt State University. Fisher, a Bohemian, runs a huge hedge fund, writes a column for Forbes, and is outspokenly pro-logging. Sillett’s letter said that the Grove has already planted 60,000 redwood saplings. Bob Weir, of the Grateful Dead, has also written glowingly in the new N.T.M.P.’s favor, and I spoke twice with Caryl Hart, and she defended it both times and tried to persuade me that there wasn’t really a story in this little contretemps. Caryl did make the valid point that when the crown is opened and sunlight strikes the saplings that have sprouted in circular patterns called “fairy rings” around old stumps, and from fallen stems on the forest floor, they take off and start to grow in leaps and bounds. But more often, according to Philip Rundel, a professor of biology at U.C.L.A., who has written in opposition to the last N.T.M.P., the sunlight causes an explosion of other understory vegetation, including flammable shrubs—as the jungly, big, treeless top of Lookout Mountain illustrates dramatically.

According to copies of its I.R.S. statements posted on a Web site tracking nonprofits, the Bohemian Club has been operating in the red, reporting gross losses of $600,000 in 2005 and $290,000 in 2006. This is about what they have not been making since the harvests were suspended, so maybe one motive for cutting the trees is simply to keep the club up and running. But couldn’t this be achieved by minimally increasing dues on its members?

This February, the Bohemian Club finally submitted the new N.T.M.P. to Cal Fire. For Jock, it was not good news: the club is asking for a permit to cut 875,000 board feet a year to start with, rising over time to 1.7 million board feet. During a 20-year cycle every stand that is not protected would be hit. The operation would cut up to 40 percent of the conifers over 24 inches D.B.H. After the first cycle is complete, they would go in and cut a similar percentage of trees in another rotation. This is a little lower than the previous application, but it is still, Jock tells me, “commercial timber harvesting disguised as fire-hazard reduction.” He calls it “lipstick on a corpse.”

The very day the N.T.M.P. was made publicly available, Rick Coates got a letter from the I.R.S. asking him to provide all kinds of tax documents for his outfit, Forest Unlimited, which has tax-exempt 501(c)3 status and through which Jock flows all donations for his own effort. They also asked for Coates’s donor list, which he’s reluctant to divulge, because some contributors donated money on the condition of anonymity. And, he says, the I.R.S. asked for all of Forest Unlimited’s e-mails and correspondence, which he considers protected by the First Amendment. His accountant told him it’s a lot more than the feds usually ask for in an audit. The timing is probably a coincidence, but some opponents of the Grove’s forestry plans believe it’s a creepy indication of how far the web of collusion might spread.

Alex Shoumatoff is a Vanity Fair contributing editor.

Print E-Mail RSS Share Yahoo! Buzz


Tue Jul 07, 2009 11:44 am
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
recall15 wrote:
Right, Dex, but the warning messages -the telephatic ones -/Blue-white light flases are only for the people on these locations... When the tail of Nibiru cause Quakes in the 6.5/6.2 weeks patters from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean:
-we will see what will happen next...


I'm not sure what you mean Recall... are you refering to the personal read out? The blue and white light energy flashes that are seen through our eyes? Or, something else? Very few are aware of this.

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 12:44 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
Thank you for posting the Meteorite news Shady. I wonder if it related to the fire ball, swallow, and barrier crop circle? I wonder if the barrier (field) represented the sonic boom?
Are we being helped by intelligence redirecting the fire ball's to impact in unpopulated area's? Hmm

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 1:05 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
mjc

With the recent videos and the sphere dispensing craft I think we can safely assume the swallows in the crop circles with trailing sphere's you recently posted would impalpably confirm it.
I wonder what Star group is being depicted?
Now that the question arises, can it be answered in a crop circle?
Can any of our questions be answered in a crop circle?

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 1:36 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Apr 05, 2009 9:25 am
Posts: 6274
Location: Timeline 39, Earth-Moon L1 Lagrange point
Post 
Dex wrote:
recall15 wrote:
Right, Dex, but the warning messages -the telephatic ones -/Blue-white light flases are only for the people on these locations... When the tail of Nibiru cause Quakes in the 6.5/6.2 weeks patters from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean:
-we will see what will happen next...


I'm not sure what you mean Recall... are you refering to the personal read out? The blue and white light energy flashes that are seen through our eyes? Or, something else? Very few are aware of this.

Dex
No, is not a Personal reading..., yes i´m aware...

Meanwhile Could be this a Precursor?

Pole Quakes:

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2009iubh.php
Event Data:

Magnitude 5.9
Date-Time

* Tuesday, July 07, 2009 at 19:11:45 UTC
* Tuesday, July 07, 2009 at 02:11:45 PM at epicenter
* Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location 75.325°N, 72.312°W
Depth 10 km (6.2 miles) set by location program
Region BAFFIN BAY
Distances 170 km (105 miles) SW of Qaanaaq (Thule), Greenland
315 km (195 miles) ESE of Grise Fiord, Nunavut, Canada
1455 km (910 miles) NNW of NUUK (GODTHAB), Greenland
3330 km (2070 miles) N of Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 3.8 km (2.4 miles); depth fixed by location program
Parameters NST=216, Nph=216, Dmin=>999 km, Rmss=0.98 sec, Gp= 58°,
M-type=teleseismic moment magnitude (Mw), Version=R
Source

* USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)

Yet another Sphere footage:

Image

http://www.disclose.tv/viewvideo/26126/BIG_BIG_UFO_FLYING_LOW_AND_SLOW_3RD_JULY_2009

_________________
--
Remember: this whole thing is about self-responsibility, self-rule and self choice.
Überm Sternenzelt richtet Gott, wie wir gerichtet.


Tue Jul 07, 2009 1:42 pm
Profile WWW
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
Breaking At Godlikeporductions News!!

Ummm looks like the crop circles were a warning after all.



http://www.gympietimes.com.au/story/200 ... int/#print

Quote:
Sun's storms set to intensify

Rebekah Polley | 7th July 2009


Craig Warhurst

ASTRONOMERS are claiming that Earth is witnessing the biggest and most powerful Sunspot ever seen and the sunspot is yet to peak in intensity.

A sunspot is a magnetic storm on the surface of the sun and the area of the spot is colder than the normal surface.

The normal surface is about 5000 degrees, the temperature of a sunspot is about 3000 degrees.

The size of a sunspot varies, ranging from the size of the moon to 65 times larger than the size of earth and lasts for about a month then fades away.

This newest sunspot is thought to be 60 to 80 times the size of Earth and has occurred on the side of the sun, which is in view of Australia.

Wappa Falls Observatory head astronomer Owen Bennedick describes the sunspot shape like the letter S and thinks it to be approximately 150,000 km long and 30,000 km wide.

“It's flares have not yet been measured,” Owen Bennedick said, “but it is like hundreds of thousands of hydrogen bombs.”

The flares have been so bright that NASA has had trouble taking accurate pictures of the sunspot.

Mr Bennedick said the sunspot is still growing in intensity but predicts it could climax by today.

The sunspot will cause the Earth's atmosphere to heat up, potentially creating problems to powerlines, radio transmitters and delicate equipment such as mobile phones and computers.

Mr Bennedick suggests powerline filters be installed on computers and people should put on extra sunscreen.

Sunspots appear on the sun in cycles, occurring every 11 years, the current cycle has four years until it reaches it peak.

The last sunspot happened two years ago and was the most powerful flare yet measuring x28.

Most sunspot flares measure around x12 which is still considered powerful.

The Sunspot two years ago was 45 times larger than the earth and lasted for 45 days.

Since that sunspot, no more had been seen until Sunday, this latest one considered the most powerful yet.

The Wappa Falls Observatory is in the process of installing a new 12 inch telescope which will allow a greater view of the sky.

The new telescope was bought in honour of Kerry Mounter who recently passed away.

Mr Mounter was an inspiration to all who worked at the Wappa Falls Observatory. The telescope will be dedicated to his memory.



Tue Jul 07, 2009 2:13 pm
Profile
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
Quote:
http://www.ufoblogger.blogspot.com/


Sun Spot approx 100 times size of earth found and looks similar to crop circle, July 7, 2009

Sun Spot approx 70 times size of earth found and looks similar to crop circle, July 7, 2009

* Earth Magnetosphere,Sun Solar Storm and Web Bot, Crop circles predictions July 7, 2009


July 7, 2009 : ASTRONOMERS are claiming that Earth is witnessing the biggest and most powerful Sunspot ever seen and the sunspot is yet to peak in intensity.

A sunspot is a magnetic storm on the surface of the sun and the area of the spot is colder than the normal surface.The normal surface is about 5000 degrees, the temperature of a sunspot is about 3000 degrees.

The size of a sunspot varies, ranging from the size of the moon to 100 times larger than the size of earth and lasts for about a month then fades away.

This newest sunspot is thought to be 100 times the size of Earth and has occurred on the side of the sun, which is in view of Australia.

Wappa Falls Observatory head astronomer Owen Bennedick describes the sunspot shape like the letter S and thinks it to be approximately 150,000 km long and 30,000 km wide.

According to Audrey UFO Blogger reader "latest Sun Spot looks similar to crop circle found here in English farm."

Image

Image

Image

NASA official image direct link : http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/rea ... atest.html
Crop Circle More Images Here

http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2009 ... l2009.html

In another latest crop circle prediction incident, 1st image down below crop circle appeared in English field prior to earth Magnetosphere hit by charge particle simulation seen in 2nd image down below is taken from from ACE database:

Image

Image

The bottom line is that a crop circle predicted a sunspot/solar flare on July 7, 2009 and that not one person on Earth can predict or know that ahead of time. The fact that the sunspot was seen even look similar to crop circle , and a POSSIBLE c-class flare may happen, is personally enough for us. we do not care who/what is sending these messages -- I believe they are important.

We think before people start stating things as facts, and calling people crazy for considering alternative methods of communication, they should start looking at all the crazy, but possibly nonetheless TRUE, ideas that they believe.



Tue Jul 07, 2009 2:20 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
Things are heating up. It's possible, the sphere's are monitoring labs. Jim said he was told as we approach the 'Null Zone' the sun would increase in sun spot and solar flaring activity. The solar radiation, ultra-violet etc,..kick off of extra amounts of energy would be received by the Northern and Southern polar axis.
The pressuring energy build up would cause a lot of strain with the shell and mantle. The earth's way of releasing the pressure build up is through earthquakes, volcanic pinches, super storms etc,..He said eventually we'd have earthquakes in the magnitude of 12...I wonder if the sliding mantle danger results in a pole shift.
He was told a lot about these upcoming changes during his contact in space.

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 3:55 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Wed Jun 10, 2009 6:06 am
Posts: 640
Location: Music of the Spheres
Post 
Hi, Shady –

You quoted another writer:
Quote:
This newest sunspot is thought to be 100 times the size of Earth and has occurred on the side of the sun, which is in view of Australia.


I agree that the magnitude of some of the numbers related to a solar flare are impressive and even scary, i.e. one “ordinary” solar flare is equal to the 100 times the diameter of our entire planet. It kind of humbles us, doesn’t it?

And while I share the awe at these impressive numbers, it is useful to remember that the “really big stuff” – like the ‘Class X’ solar flares in 2003 (which we did experience and mostly survived http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_Blackout_of_2003…) was at the conclusion of the last solar cycle. A really, really “Carrington Event” is several orders of magnitude greater (What is a “Carrington Event”?) than what we’re looking at right now, as far as we know, magnetosphere breach notwithstanding. These presently qualify as Class B & C flares – ordinary, by any previous telling, so far.

I hasten to add that I am not by any means an expert here, only an interested general reader!

But my own personal interpretation here is:

• This event could signal the start of the next solar flare cycle, but – more importantly –
• We’re learning something about how to “speak ET”…..
• And we need to stay tuned!

Cheers and best regards,
Selene


Tue Jul 07, 2009 5:18 pm
Profile
GT Truther

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:08 pm
Posts: 5708
Post 
What's even more scary is that just this past March and April NASA and JPL reported that for some un explainable reason the Earth's protective Earth's Magnetic Shield is at its lowest strength in history possibly gearing up for next magnetic pole shift.

It is Earth's magnetic shield that protects us from the Solar Winds and Solar Radiation from the Solar Flares and Storms. Thus we get Northern Lights as the Solar Radiation hits our magnetic shield.

With the Magnetic Shield being deeply weak.. If we get hit with this Solar Storm..

Bye bye electrical grid Northern Hemisphere.. Bye bye most complex electronics, planes will literally drop from the skies.. AND entire countries in the Northern Hemisphere getting hit with high doses of Solar Radiation...

Worst Case..


Shady




Selene wrote:
Hi, Shady –

You quoted another writer:
Quote:
This newest sunspot is thought to be 100 times the size of Earth and has occurred on the side of the sun, which is in view of Australia.


I agree that the magnitude of some of the numbers related to a solar flare are impressive and even scary, i.e. one “ordinary” solar flare is equal to the 100 times the diameter of our entire planet. It kind of humbles us, doesn’t it?

And while I share the awe at these impressive numbers, it is useful to remember that the “really big stuff” – like the ‘Class X’ solar flares in 2003 (which we did experience and mostly survived http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_Blackout_of_2003…) was at the conclusion of the last solar cycle. A really, really “Carrington Event” is several orders of magnitude greater (What is a “Carrington Event”?) than what we’re looking at right now, as far as we know, magnetosphere breach notwithstanding. These presently qualify as Class B & C flares – ordinary, by any previous telling, so far.

I hasten to add that I am not by any means an expert here, only an interested general reader!

But my own personal interpretation here is:

• This event could signal the start of the next solar flare cycle, but – more importantly –
• We’re learning something about how to “speak ET”…..
• And we need to stay tuned!

Cheers and best regards,
Selene


Tue Jul 07, 2009 5:34 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Wed Jun 10, 2009 6:06 am
Posts: 640
Location: Music of the Spheres
Post 
Hi, Shady -

I agree totally - the breach in the magnetosphere is a huge imponderable: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/16dec_giantbreach.htm

But, given that we don't really know enough about it - that is, we have only recently started paying attention/had instrumentation to measure, etc. - and that it is entirely possible that these breaches have happened many times before in our history, without our knowing how often or how much.... I truly don't know what to make of it, or how the two fit together.

There is much that we need to learn....

Regards, Selene


Tue Jul 07, 2009 6:49 pm
Profile
Truth Seeker

Joined: Sun Jun 28, 2009 10:47 am
Posts: 85
Location: near a body of water in Olathe, Kansas
Post 
Dex you are clearly not in touch with the red. And I am clearly not in touch with the blue ones as you are. Although I have heard on a very few occasions this very human sounding being who begins his sentences with phrases like, "as a matter of fact...." This crop circle is an easy one for those in touch with the red ones.


Dex wrote:
From Dee
Whew, what does this one mean?
(Note: I want to chime in my opinion I have about this one. It looks like these birds are symbolizing craft and in this one, I feel the great ball is being led or trailing behind the swallow...I hope this isn't a warning like the one in the book "Secret of the Saucers?"...hopefully only a Coronal discharge depiction? Can the in between depiction be a tractor field pulling the fire ball or a barrier to prevent harmful radiation if the crop circle is depicting a Coronal discharge? ..Dex)

Image

West Down Gallops, nr Beckhampton, Wiltshire. Reported 4th July.
_http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2009/westdown/westdown2009.html_
http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2009 ... n2009.html
http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2009 ... 2009e.html
----------------------------------------------------------

_________________
"...you don't tug on superman's cape, you don't spit in the wind, you don't pull the mask off the old lone ranger, and you don't mess around with Dex"


Tue Jul 07, 2009 7:12 pm
Profile
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 9:38 pm
Posts: 3209
Location: "Consulting the Oracles"
Post 
Aquaman

Crop Circle interpretations for me is pure guess work.
I'm not pinned down to any selective grouping.
I have been in introduced to quite a few species connected with the Keys. My special initiation was with the Whole Light Beings.
I have not chosen to join a particular specie intelligence for assignments in this lifetime or for the continuing lifetimes in this below. There have been a few offerings. This time around, I'm becoming a free Being through the grace of the Inner Lord of Light and by the judgements of the Son of man that witnesses our sincerity and work while in this world.

Can you tell us something about the reds and the blues you apparently have knowledge about. It sounds interesting.
I would also appreciate you're telling me who you are over at the p4c so I don't mistakenly offend you with interruptions or remarks I may want to reply too.

Dex

_________________
Extraterrestrial's said to Alex..."The love that you withhold is the pain that you carry lifetime after lifetime".


Tue Jul 07, 2009 9:07 pm
Profile
Moderator
User avatar

Joined: Thu Feb 28, 2008 6:55 am
Posts: 3770
Location: 30 clicks N of 3030
Post The Sun
Dex wrote:
Things are heating up. It's possible, the sphere's are monitoring labs. Jim said he was told as we approach the 'Null Zone' the sun would increase in sun spot and solar flaring activity. The solar radiation, ultra-violet etc,..kick off of extra amounts of energy would be received by the Northern and Southern polar axis.
The pressuring energy build up would cause a lot of strain with the shell and mantle. The earth's way of releasing the pressure build up is through earthquakes, volcanic pinches, super storms etc,..He said eventually we'd have earthquakes in the magnitude of 12...I wonder if the sliding mantle danger results in a pole shift.
He was told a lot about these upcoming changes during his contact in space.

Dex



It's All about the Sun!

I agree with your supposition Dex, Jim saw the Knowing twice in New York recently and had much to comment on it. I guess the time is getting near. But then a potential time line cursor of 2024 as an horizon event does not make sense in all of this? We are known to be inside the variable time/space anomaly right now, so I guess all the investigations going on will tell.

Shady - your findings are so cool - http://www.ufoblogger.blogspot.com/ - thanks for that story! Just more evidence...

Also your comments: quote - "What's even more scary is that just this past March and April NASA and JPL reported that for some un explainable reason the Earth's protective Earth's Magnetic Shield is at its lowest strength in history possibly gearing up for next magnetic pole shift.

It is Earth's magnetic shield that protects us from the Solar Winds and Solar Radiation from the Solar Flares and Storms. Thus we get Northern Lights as the Solar Radiation hits our magnetic shield.

With the Magnetic Shield being deeply weak.. If we get hit with this Solar Storm..

Bye bye electrical grid Northern Hemisphere.. Bye bye most complex electronics, planes will literally drop from the skies.. AND entire countries in the Northern Hemisphere getting hit with high doses of Solar Radiation...

Worst Case.. " - are very apt imo but I consider it to be much worse than that. It is time we all learn about the coming Arc's of Light which will protect certain areas on the planet...

In South Africa, we have started work on the grid point where we suspect such a place to be.

Sky

_________________
We all have the choice to exercise Free Will.
amor vincit omnia
"Ignis Natura Renovatur Integram"


Wed Jul 08, 2009 1:14 am
Profile WWW
GT Truther
User avatar

Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 11:15 am
Posts: 2580
Location: ALIVE
Post 
aquaman417 wrote:
Dex you are clearly not in touch with the red. And I am clearly not in touch with the blue ones as you are.
......
Dex wrote:
From Dee
.......
Image

West Down Gallops, nr Beckhampton, Wiltshire. Reported 4th July.
.....
http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2009 ... 2009e.html
----------------------------------------------------------


On this planet we have a choice of being in the red camp or the blue camp.
STS or STO, but the game is much more complicated than that which I can explain.

The crop circle I am thinking is a description that we are getting help by have the space between us and the Sun knotted to lessen the impact of the solar event.

I want to thank those that are helping us and the communication that we are receiving.

Higher Power thank you for your blessing, Praise to the Creator.


Wed Jul 08, 2009 1:20 am
Profile
Truth Seeker

Joined: Sun Jun 28, 2009 10:47 am
Posts: 85
Location: near a body of water in Olathe, Kansas
Post 
I can not tell you anything about the blues. I don't repeat what I hear at times because I don't know if it is true or not. But you have said before that you are in touch with the blue entities although I can't recall exactly what you called them. Many of the crop circles I do not understand and have learned much for reading others interpretations of them. But there are usually a few every year that have meanings that I can clearly see in them. One was the dragonfly and also this one. You notice the bottom part of the picture has a counter clockwise rotation and the upper part has a clockwise rotation....I can not talk about this not because I consider you to be swine or a dog. But there are those who listen, and I'm not referring to anyone here, who build themselves up as experts who rip off my words and ideas and generally confuse everybody else once they've butchered my words and ideas and made them their own. After they rip me off they say things like, "...Well who did you steal it from?" or "....We both had the exact same idea at the same time..." And they justify themselves by claiming that they have researched this stuff for many years and therefore they should have the right to bring this stuff forward. It happens most times when I bring forth a point of view that others have not even thought of.

I'm not going to tell you who I am over there at P4C. Over there I can say what I think without being censored and as long as I can do that I don't care if you chime in. Cause I can put you in your place there as do many others there.



Dex wrote:
Aquaman

Crop Circle interpretations for me is pure guess work.
I'm not pinned down to any selective grouping.
I have been in introduced to quite a few species connected with the Keys. My special initiation was with the Whole Light Beings.
I have not chosen to join a particular specie intelligence for assignments in this lifetime or for the continuing lifetimes in this below. There have been a few offerings. This time around, I'm becoming a free Being through the grace of the Inner Lord of Light and by the judgements of the Son of man that witnesses our sincerity and work while in this world.

Can you tell us something about the reds and the blues you apparently have knowledge about. It sounds interesting.
I would also appreciate you're telling me who you are over at the p4c so I don't mistakenly offend you with interruptions or remarks I may want to reply too.

Dex

_________________
"...you don't tug on superman's cape, you don't spit in the wind, you don't pull the mask off the old lone ranger, and you don't mess around with Dex"


Wed Jul 08, 2009 1:53 am
Profile
Moderator
User avatar

Joined: Thu Feb 28, 2008 6:55 am
Posts: 3770
Location: 30 clicks N of 3030
Post 
Bravo mountaintiger7

I am in absolute agreement with your statement. It is important that we prepare ourselves for what is coming and also those around us. Amazing - as I am writing this I have small flashes of light going off momentarily in my lower eyes. There is hope for humanity that have chosen to be chosen and if we open ourselves for the communication, we can receive what is necessary from the Higher Source and all the Helpers.

Sky

_________________
We all have the choice to exercise Free Will.
amor vincit omnia
"Ignis Natura Renovatur Integram"


Wed Jul 08, 2009 1:54 am
Profile WWW
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 970 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39  Next


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Jump to:  
cron
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group.
Designed by Vjacheslav Trushkin for Free Forums/DivisionCore.