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Re: Hi Nancy :-))


In Article <9brt5t$144$1@news1.xs4all.nl> Jos wrote:
> Another question perhaps(?): what stops the earth from turning.
> Earth has mass and speed, and will therefore try to keep turning...
> Also, this turning would interfere with the magnetic force that
> tries to shift the pole (like in a gyroscope).

Rotation stops for some days prior to the shift because the hardened
lava in the Atlantic Rift has more iron in it, is more magnetically
attracted to another big magnet (Planet X), than other parts of the
core.  Here’s what ZetaTalk states in the Stop Rotation piece:

    At first, your planet Earth reacts by additional swirling about in
    matter deep within its core. In the final days, as the giant comet
    begins passing between the Earth and its Sun, total interference
    occurs. The Earth slows in its rotation, and actually stops. ... This
    is recorded in written history and spoken folklore, worldwide, as
    a long day or night. The period of time, due to the lack of
    mechanical clocks, was not measurable, but the humans who
    experienced this described this as anywhere from a few hours to
    several days. The latter is more correct. Rotation also stops
    because the magnetic influence of the giant comet ... has essentially
    gripped the Earth.

    The dynamics in place as the 12th Planet approaches during the
    last few days before the coming pole shift are such that rotation stops
    with a predictable part of the Earth facing the approaching [Planet X]
    - the mid-Atlantic Ocean off the eastern seaboard of the United States.
    This part of the globe is centered between land masses that are fairly
    neutral in magnetic polarization, but lines up over former lava flows
    from the renting apart of the continents, the mid-Atlantic rift. The 
    Pacific trench does not carry the same appeal, as it lies deeper under
    the water and its characteristics differ in composition from the
    newer magma that has arisen during continental drift. Magma
    bubbling up in the Pacific is more diffuse than the magma bubbling
    up in the Atlantic, centered in the rift. Thus, the Atlantic lava beds
    are gripped, facing the Sun, facing the approaching 12th Planet
    coming up from the South along the rift, and causing both Europe,
    the Americas, and Africa to be on the long day side of the Earth.
        ZetaTalk™