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Sunday, August 06, 2006

UFO's or Ball Lightning?

Ministry to investigate UFO light sightings
THE Ministry of Defence (MoD) is to probe UFO sightings over Sunderland and Seaham after mysterious lights appeared in the night sky.
Since the Echo reported the mysterious activity earlier this week we have been contacted by more than 20 readers who witnessed the lights.They all reported seeing bright, orange-coloured orbs floating over East Durham residents and parts of Sunderland. Now, after being contacted by someone who saw nine UFOs in the sky, the MoD is to investigate.
The probe is under way after Seaham couple Harry and Elizabeth McCall filmed the orbs flying over the town last Saturday night.Mr McCall, 67, told the Echo: "They were silent, as if they were floating. There was no noise."It was unbelievaable and until someone convinces me otherwise, they were UFOs."Since then Echo readers from Westlea, Eastlea, Northlea, Deneside, Dalton-le-Dale, and Hollycarrside, in Sunderland, have reported seeing the lights.
http://www.sunderlandtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=1107&ArticleID=1676119
There has also been eye witness report of ball lightning in MO. by local resident morning of Aug. 5th.
Energy was seen around trees and lit up entire inside of home according to source.
Here is what I have found out which may interest you:
First is from a scientific perspective and then the ancient wisdom


BALL LIGHTNING does not look like "lightning." Instead, it usually appears as a mysterious glowing sphere which drifts horizontally through the air.
Ball lightning reportedly takes the form of a short-lived, glowing, floating object often the size and shape of a basketball, but it can also be golf ball sized or smaller. It is sometimes associated with thunderstorms, but unlike lightning flashes arcing between two points, which last a small fraction of a second, ball lightning reportedly lasts many seconds. There have been some reports of production of a similar phenomenon in the laboratory, but some still disagree on whether it is a real phenomenon.
Ball lightning discharges were once thought to be extremely rare occurrences, [1] but recent research shows that a few percent of the US population have been witnesses.
The discharges reportedly appear during thunderstorms, sometimes issuing from a lightning flash, but large numbers of encounters reportedly occur during good weather with no storms within hundreds of miles.
Ball lightning reportedly tends to float (or hover) in the air and take on a ball-like appearance. Its shape has been described as spherical, ovoid, teardrop, or rod-like with one dimension being much larger than the others. The longest dimension reported is between fifteen and forty centimeters. Many are red to yellow in color, sometimes transparent, and some contain radial filaments or sparks. Other colors, such as blue or white occur as well.
Sometimes the discharge is described as being attracted to a certain object, and sometimes as moving randomly. After several seconds the discharge reportedly leaves, disperses, is absorbed into something, or, rarely, vanishes in an explosion.
Ball lightning has been reported in places as diverse as "escorting" World War II bombers, flying alongside their wingtips. Pilots of the time referred to the phenomenon as "foo fighters.", initially believing that the lights were from enemy planes. Other accounts place ball lightning as appearing over a kitchen stove to wandering down the aisle of an airliner. One report described ball lightning engulfing and following a car, causing the electrical supply to overload and fail. Historical and fictional accounts
One of the earliest reported, and most destructive, occurrences is said to have taken place during The Great Thunderstorm at Widecombe-in-the-Moor, Devon, in the United Kingdom, on October 21, 1638. Four people died and around 60 were injured when what appears to have been ball lightning struck a church. Another reference to ball lightning appears in a children's book set in the 1800s by Laura Ingalls Wilder[2]. The books are considered historical fiction, but the author always insisted they were descriptive of actual events in her life. In Wilder's description, three separate balls of lightning appear during a winter blizzard near a cast iron stove in the family's kitchen. They are described as appearing near the stovepipe, then rolling across the floor, only to disappear as the mother chases them with a willow-branch broom.[3]
Notorious British occultist Aleister Crowley also reported witnessing what he referred to as "globular electricity" during a thunderstorm on Lake Pasquaney in New Hampshire in 1916. As related in his Confessions, he was sheltered in a small cottage when he "noticed, with what I can only describe as calm amazement, that a dazzling globe of electric fire, apparently between six and twelve inches in diameter, was stationary about six inches below and to the right of my right knee. As I looked at it, it exploded with a sharp report quite impossible to confuse with the continuous turmoil of the lightning, thunder and hail, or that of the lashed water and smashed wood which was creating a pandemonium outside the cottage. I felt a very slight shock in the middle of my right hand, which was closer to the globe than any other part of my body."[4]
A famous anecdote from 1753 depicts ball lightning as having violent potential. Professor Georg Richmann, of Saint Petersburg, Russia created a kite flying apparatus similar to that built by Benjamin Franklin a year earlier. He was attending a meeting of the Academy of Sciences, when he heard thunder. The Professor ran home with his engraver to capture the event for posterity. While the experiment was underway, ball lightning appeared, collided with Richmann's head and killed him, leaving a red spot. His shoes were blown open, parts of his clothes singed, the engraver knocked out; the doorframe of the room was split, and the door itself torn off its hinges.[5][6]
Quotations
"...Our conclusion is that these fireballs are primarily RF in origin, and not nuclear phenomena..." - Corum
"...No theory of ball lightning exists which can account for both the degree of mobility that the ball exhibits and for the fact that it does not rise...." - Talbot

NOW THIS FROM ANCIENT LEARNING OF THE Anunnaki


Imagine you are Enki learning from a dragon Queen mother, Aide. Here son is how you create life: take lightening, and learn to tie it up in a ball. Something about that first dimple which turns the skinny tornado like lightening bolt into the torus donut - IS when the whip cracks - implosion starts - it becomes "self re-entrant" and self-organizing. And PHIAT LUX - you have LIFE itself. What was a lightening bolt - now appears like a floating ball (really toroidal). Scientists spent lifetimes studying the nature of ball lightning - never imagining that the answer required understanding the origin of life itself as a symmetry turn inside out.
http://www.zayra.de/soulcom/enki/

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