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Re: I Spoke to Nancy Online and all I got was this Lousy T-Shirt!


In Article  <5lIV7.3692$LK2.753578@news20.bellglobal.com> Greg Neill wrote:
> 4.  Nancy claims that the planet is due in under two 
>     years, yet its current distance is still none times 
>     the distance of Pluto.  It would need to maintain 
>     an average speed of some three million kilometers 
>     per hour in order to keep its deadline.  How can 
>     such a fast moving object be in a repeating, closed
>     orbit?

Indeed, how could it go that fast during a PASSAGE, and endure all the
friction from space!  And how could it go fast, and then slow down! 
Earth to Greg, hello!  There is no friction in space, and things do
speed up and slow down again, as in your car when you go with gravity
downhill, and slow down again going uphill.  I believe this was
discussed thorougly in the Boy is that Sucker MOVING thread a few months
ago.  From existing ZetaTalk. 

    Speed, in space, is a relative thing. Your 
    submarines move more slowly than your cars 
    because they deal with less drag. Likewise, objects 
    shot into space or incoming feel little distress 
    when out where the atmosphere is negligible, and 
    tend to heat up and burn when in the thick of Earth's 
    atmosphere. Thus, objects in space have no ill 
    effects from a high speed, other than what they 
    might encounter. What might that be, in the case 
    of Planet X, which we have described as traversing
    the solar system from one side of Saturn's orbit to 
    the other in 3 short months.

  Gravity draw from the Sun 
    Human scientists who deal with gravity as 
    some mysterious "force", unexplained except 
    by the math that describes it, would be boggled by 
    the path of Planet X we have described. An object 
    comes on, and depending upon its speed it will
    either pass by a gravity draw, with an "escape 
    velosity", or be drawn in to crash, ultimately, on 
    the surface of the gravity draw or into some sort 
    of circular or eliptical orbit. So the theory goes. 
    Apply the particle explanation to the force of 
    gravity, as we have described it, and you have 
    another scenario, which by the way explains why 
    your Moon remains UP there when according to 
    Newton it should not. Planet X is, of course, 
    drawn by the gravity pull of the Sun, and thus its 
    periodic passage. But it is also pushed away by 
    the gravity particle streams emitted by the Sun, 
    which can be described as a fire hose of force, 
    meeting the fire hose of force from Planet X 
    itself. They buffer away from each other, forcing
    the speeding Planet X to bypass the Sun, at a 
    distance based on its mass and the mass of the 
    Sun. The reducing mass of the Sun explains why 
    Planet X is coming closer, during its passage, at
    the present time, than its past passage which 
    were through the Asteroid Belt. 
      
  Perturbations from Earth or Other Planets 
    This is a variable that depends on speed as well
    as mass. By the time Planet X enters the solar 
    system, its speed toward the Sun ensure that it 
    will move past any other planet, including 
    Jupiter, that it may come close to. Should Jupiter 
    stand directly in the path of Planet X during a 
    passage, this would case a perturbation on other
    planets that would temporarily change their 
    paths, but they would both resume essentially 
    the same orbit or path after the encounter. The 
    speed of Planet X ensures this, as does the 
    significant mass of both these planets. Were 
    Planet X to encounter a smaller object, such as 
    occurred in the Asteroid Belt in the past, it would 
    either be treated like a meteor or if large enough
    to engage the Repulsion Force of gravity, 
    become a moon satellite of Planet X as many 
    objects have. The pelting to pieces that occured 
    in the Asteroid Belt was due to collisions of 
    objects not of significant size to invoke the 
    Repulsion Force. Small planets, passing close
    to Planet X during its high-speed passage, might
    become a satellite moon, or be pelted to pieces 
    by one of Planet X's trailing moons, though this
    has by change not occurred except in the heavily 
    crowded Asteroid Belt, which contained some 
    24 planets and various moons of same prior to
    the past passages. 
      
  Solar Wind 
    The effect on Planet X is, as with meteors entering 
    your atmosphere, peripheral, so that the outer edges 
    of the atmosphere are altered, peeled off in the worst
    case, and need to be rebuilt from the oceans that 
    cover most of Planet X. This same atmosphere 
    rebuilding occurs after the passage on Earth, from 
    its oceans, as we have described. Temporarily, the 
    clouds are lower on Earth, but the adjustment is 
    remarkably quick, so that survivors are unaware of
    anything other than a lower cloud cover during the 
    first few months.
        ZetaTalk™, Speed