Rat in the Hat
Gold Member
- Mar 31, 2010
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Hi Ast:
Very soon we're told.
Mind you, I've tracked comets years before they ever became visible to the naked eye but apparently this brown dwarf is special. It's really really close but so very very dark. I can see asteroids further away. But this thing is special in some way that they can't describe.
This class of failed star does not emit light like our Sun, because the mass is simply too low. However, the brown dwarf does emit protons and sub-atomic particles that keep the giant super cold and so cold as to absorb light. If you look at the lower left of Orion's belt, the brown dwarf is sitting inside a massive gravity well that bends light around the dwarf; so you see the stars behind it. The dwarf will become visible when exposed sufficiently to the solar winds with enough energy to overcome the natural cloak surrounding Nibiru.
We will know in the middle of March if the ELEnin Comet is NASA Psyop cover for a brown dwarf OR NOT, because that is the time of the first conjunction taken from the NASA orbit data. I hope nothing happens! I would rather eat crow than go through the earth change event associated with the approach of a massive brown dwarf in our inner solar system. The problem is that the earth changes (earthquakes, volcanoes, etc.) are getting worse each time the Earth rotates and Nibiru gravity gets a better hold on the rising magma coming to the surface.
Terral
Oh. My. God.
It's Romulan!!!!
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p.s. Buy Silver!!!!!