Re: Planet X: Alternative Explanation 2
You're going to be accused of being my straight-man, Michael. It's a
planet, acting like a comet.
In Article <3B82CD96.48A5A8FC@earthlink.net> Michael Cunningham wrote:
>> Regarding the accuracy of our prediction, late spring, early
>> summer, in the year 2003. This cannot be pinned down to
>> the day. Where the comet and the Earth are interacting, and
>> in proximity of each other...
>>
>> The Earth will go through physical cataclysms in the near
>> future. ... There is truth in the rumors of what is called
>> [Planet X], a giant comet.
>
> Ok, now I'm confused! It's a planet, now it's a comet, then it's a planet.
The periodic Earth cataclysms caused by [Planet X] have been
in place for eons, since the Earth was cold and without life. ...
The Earth was cold as the Sun had not yet lit. ... [Planet X], or
giant comet, assumed its orbit around the Sun due to
gravitational and motion issues, which were at play coming out
of what some Earthlings refer to as the big bang. This was in
fact only a little bang, a local affair, however. The orbit of
[Planet X] is long and narrow. This is not dependent on
gravitational and orbital matters within your Solar System,
but on a larger scheme, which causes the trip back into your
Solar System to be but a minor part of the itinerary. Why does
[Planet X] swing so far away from your Solar System, and why
bother to return, having done so? There is a balance between
the attraction of your Sun and another, unseen by you but
nevertheless present and in force. [Planet X] travels
interminably between these two forces, not able to settle on an
orbit around just one because of the momentum and path it
originally took. It is caught. The path of [Planet X] is such
that it spends most of its life out in dark space, slowly moving
from one giant tug to another. As it approaches one of these
giants, your Sun being one, it picks up speed, and reaches a
maximum speed as it passes the attraction. Having passed, it
now has double the gravitational attraction on one side, and
quickly switches back in the other direction, zooming just as
rapidly much along the path it just took. Out in space again,
caught between the two giants that dominate its life, it settles
down to a sedate few thousand years, only to zip around the
Sun's counterpart in a like manner and head back toward your
Solar System.
ZetaTalk, [Planet X]