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Re: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo research

Oct 24, 2008 08:16 AM
by Augoeides-222


Anton
    Well Bob Dean is a relatively respected personage in the UFO Arena but I can't see the basis for Nibiru as he speaks of it in present time. There are so many Astronomical Observatory's in many different nations, some of which would not necessarily squash knowledge of the presence of Niburu as related by Bob Dean and would surely make public announcement. 
   There is according to Paval Smutny a former NASA Space Scientist, who specialized in Deep Space Communication and Orbital Mechanics as his primary NASA work an ancient record that describes it. He, in his personal studies relates a history of Nibiru  (Nemesis, Phaeton, 12th Planet etc.) where it only makes a close approach proximate to the Earth a small number of times in every Solar Year (25,920 Years ( or 1 Cycle of the Constellational Zodiac). Pavel Smutny now lives in Slovakia if I recall correctly. If you Google his name you will find his several websites that related his findings in regard to Nibiru. Also Google Dendara and the Senmut Temple, and The Darmer Pallete. In his description he extracts from the Egyptian record the approach , path and periodocity of the 12th Planet. He has, in my view one of the most interesting study to show actual 12th Planet supported by alledged knowledge of the ancients which he thoroughly diagrammatically presents on his webpages.

    I in my own view, have entertained a possibility that the 12th Planet may have made close approach during the second middle period of Tiahuanacu (15,450 BC ) as Bellamy and Allen have shown the catastrophic record of the passage engravened upon the andesite artifacts of Tiahuanacu. This occasion set in the mind of man a subconscious memory of the traumatic terror that prevailed consequential to the passage and capture of one of the 12th Planets Minor satellites and it's eventual disintetagration and rain of it's pieces on the earth and is portrayed as the celestial dragon belching fire and brimstone in the sky. The story of Osiris's battle with Typhon (the forces of space) and his being dismembered and his body parts scattered on the earth, with the lamenting Isis unable to find his "organ" of regeneration (the core of the minor satellite the fled into space when relieved of it's outer shells during the catastrophe. Osiris was a Lunar Diety figure of the Egyptians..

Regards, 
John

PS: Thanks for the Bob Dean links for his interview videos.
-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "Anton Rozman" <anton_rozman@yahoo.com> 
Hi all,

Maybe here is a little bigger picture:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbgHyrmgRZM

Best regards,
Anton

--- In theos-talk@yahoogroups.com, Cass Silva <silva_cass@...> wrote:
>
> Also it will prove that we are the ancestors of the apes and not 
the other way around - can you expand on the heliosphere
> 
> Cass
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ________________________________
> From: Martin <Mvandertak@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Thursday, 23 October, 2008 7:03:37 PM
> Subject: Re: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo 
research
> 
> 
> I wonder if the Solar Lords will dig this, they didn't in 
Atlantis...the sun is btw very quiet at the moment and its 
heliosphere has shrunk more than 25% the last 25 years...this could 
mean part destruction of this earth by cosmic fire.
> 
> --- On Thu, 10/23/08, nhcareyta <nhcareyta@yahoo. com.au> wrote:
> From: nhcareyta <nhcareyta@yahoo. com.au>
> Subject: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo research
> To: theos-talk@yahoogro ups.com
> Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 4:49 AM
> 
> Britain's lower house of parliament has approved legislation 
allowing 
> 
> scientists to create animal-human embryos for medical research, in 
> 
> the biggest shake-up of embryology laws in two decades.
> 
> Despite opposition from religious and pro-life groups, MPs in the 
> 
> House of Commons today backed the Human Embryology and 
Fertilisation 
> 
> Bill by 355 votes to 129. 
> 
> It will now go to a vote in the House of Lords, and could be law by 
> 
> November.
> 
> The wide-ranging bill, which has been debated for months, would 
also 
> 
> allow "saviour siblings" - children created as a close genetic 
match 
> 
> for a sick brother or sister so their genetic material can help 
treat 
> 
> them.
> 
> In addition, it gives lesbians and single women easier access to in-
> 
> vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment by removing requirements for 
> 
> clinics to consider a child's need for a father.
> 
> Health Minister Dawn Primarolo told MPs the bill was about helping 
> 
> the one in seven couples who needed fertility assistance, and about 
> 
> research to deal with diseases such as Alzheimer's, which affects 
> 
> 350,000 Britons.
> 
> Hybrid embryos, created by inserting the nuclei of a human cell 
into 
> 
> an animal egg, can ensure a more plentiful supply of stem cells for 
> 
> use in research into treating conditions like Alzheimer's and 
> 
> Parkinson's.
> 
> "It is about research to deal with the dreadful diseases and the 
> 
> debilitating attacks on their health from which many in our society 
> 
> suffer," the minister told MPs.
> 
> "The bill is about combining science with an ethical framework that 
> 
> works on behalf of humankind."
> 
> Prime Minister Gordon Brown is a strong defender of the measures, 
> 
> saying Britain owes it to future generations. His son Fraser has 
> 
> cystic fibrosis, a disease that could one day benefit from embryo 
> 
> research.
> 
> However, 16 MPs from his ruling Labour party, including former 
> 
> minister Ruth Kelly, a staunch Catholic who quit the government 
this 
> 
> month, voted against the bill and religious groups warned it was 
the 
> 
> next step on a "slippery slope".
> 
> Nadine Dorries, a member of the opposition Conservative Party, told 
> 
> her fellow MPs that loopholes in the legislation raised the 
> 
> possibility of scientists attempting cross-breeding between humans 
> 
> and animals.
> 
> "Of all the experimental possibilities debated in the course of 
this 
> 
> bill, surely none is quite so utterly repulsive as the possibility 
of 
> 
> seeking to inseminate animals with human sperm," she said.
> 
> The debate was overshadowed by complaints from all sides that the 
> 
> government had blocked a discussion on reforming the abortion laws. 
> 
> Ministers suggested they did not think the current bill was the 
right 
> 
> time to do this.
> 
> -AFP
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Make the switch to the world&#39;s best email. Get Yahoo!7 
Mail! http://au.yahoo.com/y7mail
> 
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>


 

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