jfh (11 May 2013)
"To: Charles  Re: Cobwebs in the sky  -- I found"


Mark Beginning of Hopi End Times Prophecy

 Prophecy

 

In the last scene of the 1982 documentary Koyaanisqatsi, which is a Hopi word meaning ‘life out of balance’, the translation of the Hopi prophecies that were sung during the film are displayed, which includes the following:  “Near the Day of Purification, there will be cobwebs spun back and forth in the sky.”

The phrase “cobwebs spun back and forth in the sky” seems to paint a clear image of the chemtrails that we frequently see in our skies.  The Day of Purification refers to the Hopi prophecy that predicts that the Earth is going to go through a great purification that includes a period of destruction culminating in either a total rebirth or total annihilation depending upon the choices made by humanity.

A new documentary movie called “What in the World Are They Spraying” provides evidence that cloud seeding (chemtrails) began around 1990 in an effort to curb global warming. According to the documentary, the chemtrails have been devastating to crops, wildlife, and human health. 

If the Hopi prophecy regarding “cobwebs spun back and forth in the sky” is referring to chemtrails, then the cloud seeding effort that began twenty years ago was an indication that the Day of Purification is near. And if the Hopi prophecy is true, then by now (20 years later) the period of destruction must be getting really close or perhaps it has already begun.

2010 has already had a raft of disasters, both natural and manmade. Here’s a partial list of the major disasters: the Gulf oil spill, the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull, the eruption of Mount Merapi, the drought and dust storms in China, the Ugandan landslide, the Gansu mudslide, the Kohistan avalanche, the Kyzyl-Agash Dam failure, Tropical Storm Matthew, and Hurricanes Earl, Igor, and Otto.

In addition, Earthquakes in 2010 have resulted in nearly 250,000 fatalities. There have been 14 earthquakes of a magnitude 7.0 or greater so far in 2010 including the following (with the magnitude in parenthesis): Maule region, Chile (8.8); Sumatra, Indonesia (7.7); Nicobar Islands, India (7.5); Baja California, Mexico (7.2); and the Haiti (7.0) earthquake that alone killed approximately 230,000.