Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired Table './thoth_sunthoth/nuke_session' is marked as crashed and should be repaired
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New World Order Astrologers |
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By T. Stokes - Used with full permission
If you believe the publicity machine, Louis De Wohl was the wartime astrologer employed by the British government to inform them, what advice the astrologer Karl Ernst Krafft was giving the Third Reich, and how astrology helped Do Wohl win the war for Britain.
We really have only his own written record on this, and history must dictate a closer look and a re-appraisal. Born Ludwig Von Wohl, on Jan 24th 1903 in Berlin, he like many Jews got into banking but his heart was in acting, he eventually found his way into writing small film scripts, and came to Britain as a Hungarian refugee, to offer his services, posing as one of Hitler’s astrologers, he claimed inside knowledge of Third Reich generals, and was taken on in Churchill’s Black team of occultists, eventually promoted to his own suite at the luxurious Grosvenor House Hotel in Park lane in 1940, and asked to produce horoscopes for both battle outcomes and the German high command.
Posted by THoTH on Thursday, January 03, 2008 @ 14:58:03 CST
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The Astrologer |
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Article Source
Why’s life so gloomy when Saturn’s around? Why do star signs begin at birth? And when will Librans get a break? Neil Spencer has the answers.
Astrology pages are different. Commonly, they are the only part of a magazine written in the second person, where the ’I’ of the columnist and the ’they’ of the feature writer are replaced by the ’you’ of the reader, the star of the ’your stars’ show.
As a sun sign astrologer of several years, I often feel that I’m having a conversation with my readers. It’s an odd, one-sided conversation, but I try to talk to, rather than at, the long-suffering Cancerians, Capricorns and the rest (most signs feel they are long-suffering, except perhaps Leos). I couldn’t possibly do the purring intimacy perfected by the late, much emulated Patric Walker. I’m more of a pull-the-reader’s-leg astrologer.
Posted by Angel on Monday, July 25, 2005 @ 01:00:00 CDT
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Horoscopes a load of hogwash |
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Source
The Russian astrologist Marina Bai has decided she has had enough. She is suing Nasa because it has with its bombardment of Tempel 1 comet allegedly destroyed her "spiritual rights" and her daily horoscope to predict how the comet would influence earthlings' lives.
The strange and weird thing is not that Bai is seriously believing this to be true, but that many of the people who believe the nonsense she and other astrologers predict about the future, agree with her vision of our cosmological world.
And in this vision there is no place for science and scientific thinking. The vehement and scientifically ignorant reaction to my column last week on the World Summit of Evolution by anti-evolutionists, is a good illustration of this.
Posted by evadatam5150 on Friday, July 08, 2005 @ 12:42:58 CDT
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Psychic TV `rumpologist' becomes huge hit on Spanish-language TV |
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SOURCE
It's 10 minutes before the show goes live on the air, and nobody predicted the developing dilemma. The show's gossip reporter is having second thoughts about dropping his pants on live television to have his buttocks read by local television psychic Professor Jose Miranda.
"What about reading it over my underwear?" asks the reporter, clearly upset and looking very serious.
"I can't see the lines. How do you expect me to give a reading?" the oracle answers, just as serious. "I have to see the lines."
Following an ardent debate, the producers of the phenomenally popular and raunchy late-night talk show La Cosa Nostra on Spanish-language WJAN-TV Channel 41 finally conclude Miranda must ascertain somebody else's future.
Posted by evadatam5150 on Tuesday, December 21, 2004 @ 01:27:06 CST
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Do Moon Phases affect us? |
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Article Source

The myth that lunar phases spawn erratic behavior and drive people to lunacy has burrowed deep into the human psyche for thousands of years.
Farmers plant crops according to lunar phases, some women believe they menstruate by the moon, while some religious groups plan ceremonies around it. The concept has been around since Babylonian stargazers were plotting everyone’s fate under night skies. Even a hundred years ago, murderers in England could bargain for a lighter sentence if they did their killing under a full moon. One of those lucky son of a guns was Charles Hyde, who inspired a well-known book by Robert Louis Stevenson. And don’t forget the “Son of Sam” serial killer David Berkowitz, who murdered five out of his eight victims under a full moon.
With an avalanche of cultural history like this, there has to be something to the ancient superstition. Probably. Maybe. Hopefully. With all the free press media give the moon, one might expect the cops and hospitals to have press kits ready and waiting. Not exactly. Richland EMS spokesman George Rice says he’ll be just as busy under this full moon as a new one, and that there isn’t much talk on his crew about the moon. “We’re always responding to a large number of incidents,” he says. “On some occasions, we’re even busier during the day than we are at night.” Richland coroner Gary Watts says he’ll expect business as usual. “I wish the case was that we were only busy on full moons,” he says, adding that he’d heard of the urban legend but never put much stock in it.
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Posted by Carlisleboy on Tuesday, July 06, 2004 @ 10:25:00 CDT
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