We Stand On Guard For Thee
…. BRAZIL
Elizabeth May/ Bev Oda
Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang
TELEPHONE: 1 … 613 … 258 … 2893
Glen Kealey, National President
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity (CIPI)
We Stand On Guard For Thee
…. BRAZIL
Elizabeth May/ Bev Oda
Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang
TELEPHONE: 1 … 613 … 258 … 2893
Glen Kealey, National President
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity (CIPI)
ANGEL OF CREATION 81
Search for the meadow key…the grassland leading to the Fifth and Sixth dimensions
Dr. Wilder Penfield, of the Montreal Neurological Institute which he founded on behalf of our world controllers, made some very interesting discoveries there, not the least of which was….that each individual’s recombinant DNA has a distinct “telephone number”.
By using the proper “timing benchmarks”, specialized computers that “speak the scientific language of DNA” can be programmed to activate contact with a person’s specific memories, and when necessary retrieve them, much as one retrieves a specific scene located on a video tape or disk.
Unfortunately for scientists, most people alive on the planet today are descendants of the original gypsy ROMA wanderers who were “engineered” after the last ice age, and therefore, have no recorded memories prior to that time. Yet, a very few people alive on Earth today, however, are descendants of the Cro-Magnons whose recorded memories do extend beyond the last ice age, to approximately 40,000 B.C..
Jennifer Kealey is one of these, along with her current husband, Glen Kealey.
This is why she, like he, was “re-animated” from a coprolite base (her in 1955), by Dr. Penfield and his associates.
Her DNA was then “programmed”, through a process styled RITUAL Social Engineering known only to Ecclesiastic Freemasonry, with the real life BENCHMARKS that allow for an easy retrieval of some of her very ancient memories.
Jennifer Kealey is a very special lady, with very special “connections”.
Glen Kealey
The black and gold design on the flag is the coat of arms of the Calvert family. It was granted to George Calvert as a reward for his storming a fortification during a battle (the vertical bars approximate the bars of the palisade). The red and white design is the coat of arms of the Crossland family, the family of Calvert's mother, and features a cross bottony. Since George Calvert's mother was an heiress, he was entitled to use both coats of arms in his banner.Institutions and government agencies with an interest in research and development located in Maryland include the WELL EQUIPPED Johns Hopkins University, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, more than one campus of the University System of Maryland, Goddard Space Flight Center, the United States Census Bureau, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Celera Genomics company, Human Genome Sciences (HGS),the J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), and MedImmune - recently purchased by AstraZeneca.
In 1847, Blessed Theresa and five companion sisters traveled to the United States to aid German immigrants, especially girls and women. That same year, the sisters staffed schools in three German parishes in Baltimore, Maryland: St. James, St. Michael, and St. Alphonsus, as well as opening the Institute of Notre Dame, a private school for German girls. Eventually the Congregation spread across the United States and into Canada, ultimately forming 8 North American Provinces. More than 3,500 School Sisters of Notre Dame work in thirty-six countries in Europe, North America, Latin America, Asia, Africa and Oceania.
678 members of the order in the U.S. are participating in the Nun Study, a longitudinal study of aging and Alzheimer's disease initiated in 1986. The homogeneous life style of the nuns makes them an ideal study population. Convent archives have been made available to investigators as a resource on the history of participants. Of the 677 nuns which include Sister Kathleen Treanor, 93 and Sister Antoine Daniel, 96, only 61 surviving nuns recently completed their last rounds of intellectual and physical tests for the Nun Study. The nuns decided to donate their brains to science. They acknowledged the success to Dr. David Snowdon, epidemiology professor of University of Minnesota in 1986. In 1992, he administered annual memory and cognitive tests to 678 nuns ranging in age from 75 to 102
Ballet is a formalized kind of performance dance, which originated in the Italian Renaissance courts of the 15th century, and which was further developed in France, England, and Russia as a concert dance form. The early portions preceded the invention of the proscenium stage and were presented in large chambers with most of the audience seated on tiers or galleries on three sides of the dancing floor. It has since become a highly technical form of dance with its own vocabulary. It is primarily performed with the accompaniment of classical music and has been influential as a form of dance globally. Ballet has been taught in ballet schools around the world, which use their own cultures and societies to inform the art. Ballet dance works (ballets) are choreographed and performed by trained artists, include mime and acting, and are set to music (usually orchestral but occasionally vocal). It is a poised style of dance that incorporates the foundational techniques for many other dance forms.
Classical ballet is the most methodical of the ballet styles; it adheres to traditional ballet technique. There are variations relating to area of origin, such as Russian ballet, French ballet, Danish Bournonville ballet and Italian ballet, although most ballet of the last two centuries is ultimately founded on the teachings of Blasis. The most well-known styles of ballet are the Russian Method, the Italian Method, the Danish Method, the Balanchine Method or New York City Ballet Method, and the Royal Academy of Dance and Royal Ballet School methods, derived from the Cecchetti method, created in England. The first pointe shoes were actually regular ballet slippers that were heavily darned at the tip. It would allow the girl to briefly stand on her toes to appear weightless. It was later converted to the hard box that is used today.
Classical ballet adheres to these rules:
This genre of dance is very hard to master and requires much practice. It is best known in the form of Late Romantic Ballet or Ballet Blanc, which preoccupies itself with the female dancer to the exclusion of almost all else, focusing on pointe work, flowing, precise acrobatic movements, and often presenting the dancers in the conventional short white French tutu. Later developments include expressionist ballet, Neoclassical ballet, and elements of Modern dance.
In Slavic folklore, the Firebird (Russian: жар-пти́ца, zhar-ptitsa, literally ember bird from птица bird Old Russian жар ember) is a magical glowing bird from a faraway land, which is both a blessing and a bringer of doom to its captor.
The Firebird is described as a large bird with majestic plumage that glows brightly emitting red, orange, and yellow light, like a bonfire that is just past the turbulent flame. The feathers do not cease glowing if removed, and one feather can light a large room if not concealed. In later iconography, the form of the Firebird is usually that of a smallish fire-colored peacock, complete with a crest on its head and tail feathers with glowing "eyes".
A typical role of the Firebird in fairy tales is as an object of a difficult quest. The quest is usually initiated by finding a lost tail feather, at which point the hero sets out to find and capture the live bird, sometimes of his own accord, but usually on the bidding of a father or king. The Firebird is a marvel, highly coveted, but the hero, initially charmed by the wonder of the feather, eventually blames it for his troubles.
The Firebird tales follow the classical scheme of fairy tale, with the feather serving as a premonition of a hard journey, with magical helpers met on the way who help in travel and capture of the Bird, and returning from the faraway land with the prize. The most popular version is found in the tale of Ivan Tsarevich and the Grey Wolf.
The story of the Firebird quest has inspired literary works, including "The Little Humpback Horse" by Pyotr Yershov. Composer Igor Stravinsky achieved early success with a large-scale ballet score called The Firebird.
The Firebird concept has parallels in Iranian legends of magical birds, in the Brothers Grimm fairy tale about The Golden Bird, and related Russian magical birds like the Sirin. The story of the quest itself is closely paralleled by Armenian Hazaran Blbul. In the Armenian tale, however, the bird does not glow, but rather makes the land bloom through its song. In Czech folklore, it is called Pták Ohnivák (Fire-like Bird) and appears, for example, in a Karel Jaromír Erben fairy tale, also as an object of a difficult quest. Moreover, in the beginning of this fairy tale, the bird steals magical golden apples belonging to a king and is therefore pursued by the king's servants in order to protect the precious apples.
The Baltimore Oriole (Icterus galbula) is a small icterid blackbird that averages 18 cm long and weighs 34 g. This bird received its name from the fact that the male's colors resemble those on the coat-of-arms of Lord Baltimore.
The colour vert has been adopted as a symbol of the Muslim faith and is one of the Pan-Arab colors. As a result, many Islamic countries have a national flag containing a green stripe or have a flag with a green background. Vert is also common among the national flags of African countries; green is one of the Pan-African colours. Other countries have used the colour vert in their flags to represent the "greenness" of their lands and abundance of their nation.
The shortest blazon in the English language is "Vert", which is the blazon of the arms of Pupellin and the flag of Libya.
Vert is said to represent the following:
Aka: SHANIA MARK TWAIN
Bereitschaftspotential (1965) – Readiness Potential
CONTINGENT NEGATIVE VARIATION
Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang
TELEPHONE: 1 … 613 … 258 … 2893
Glen E. P. Kealey, National President (Muffin Man, Drury Lane)
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity
PLEASE CALL HOME
GLEN
Oxford on Rideau
TELEPHONE: 1 …. 613 …. 258 …. 2893
Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang
BOURNE IN A MISSION CRAFT – BRED ON A VIATOR RAFT
Not going along with Frieda’s “Final Viking War”
Cain’s clay soldier me? Never, never more;
I’ve contracted to Creation’s “Criminal Court of Last Recombination”
Sworn to Observe – ANALYSE – Conclude, eternally
I will go AFT….with the FLOW….down the SHAFTS,
Past the funeral pyre knees
‘till I stand hard on Vic’s ten toes.
Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang
TELEPHONE: 1 … 613 … 258 … 2893
Glen Kealey, National President
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity
On March 13th, 2011 in south-west Japan, the Shinmoedake volcano in the Kirishima range erupts after two weeks of no activity.
In January 2011, the Shinmoedake volcano erupted for the first time in 52 years - sending ash and rock flying for miles. Thousands were told to temporarily evacuate the area, but the volcano seemed to settle and there was only mild activity until the 1st of March, where it ceased any activity.
However, the volcano erupted again - sending ash and rock 4 kilometres into the air, creating a giant ash cloud against the blue sky of the south-west. The Shinmoedake volcano is 4,689-feet tall, and towers over many communities.
An official from the Kirishima range has said it is not immediately known if the volcano is a direct result of the 8.9 earthquake and the following aftershocks on the 11th of March that has triggered the volcano to burst into life again, however most fear that if the shifting tectonic plates are the cause, the volcano situation could worsen very quickly.
January Shinmoedake Eruption
In January, the eruption of ash and cloud triggered an ash warning for places above 25,000 feet, and the areas 2km around the volcano were evacuated.
The eruption also led to the cancellation of international flights, and also of nearby highways and railways. A Level 3 warning was issued for the areas around the Shinmoedake volcano, which remained until its second eruption in March.
When the volcano in question first erupted, it was reported that there was no magma movement beneath the surface, and that means it is unlikely to lead to a full-scale eruption. However, volcanologists are now worried that the moving tectonic plates have forced magma to build in Shinmoedake and will cause a premature eruption that was unpredicted. Out of all the volcanoes in the Kirishima range, the Shinmoedake volcano is the most active.
The History of the Kirishima Range
The Kirishima Range has had numerous eruptions for hundreds of years, the first ones can be traced back to 742. More recently, in 1959 there was a phreatic explosion, and then a mild eruption in 1991 after a series of earthquakes in the area. Also in August 2008, there was another minor eruption - however, this was not from Shinmoedake.
From this information it seems the range has been affected previously from earthquakes - whether the 8.9 earthquake diaster will lead to a chain reaction, it is yet to be discovered.
Sources