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Physics of Change will feature information in specific sections each month. The information is intended to inform the readers of this newsletter. However, it is not advice!!  Any decisions made based
on this information are to be done in a self-responsible manner.
Mulai de Guise Publishing, LLC cannot be held responsible for any individual actions based on the information it presents.
~~~October 2007 Edition ~~~

Section 1 - Q & A

Hi Greg, I live on a hill in the country of MI and was thinking of putting in a culvert 8ft by 50ft long and build a underground shelter what do you think of using a culvert to do this? or do you know of something better without a very high price? And going back in time and having a missing object show back where it was, how does this work if someone did this with a person who was killed by going back when as it never happened? Also trying to understand about some incidents where you here of a person that get wrapped up in believing they can fly and end up jumping out of a building and dying like the boy who got involved with game mazes and monsters. He really believed he could fly but it didn't happen. Is it more then intent where training to move into a different part of the brain is needed. I am trying to have a better understanding of theses things.
Thanks,
Alex


Alex-
A culvert is a relatively inexpensive way to get underground. You will need to engineer the doors of your entrance and exit. Ideally, they would be submarine doors with a water-pressure rating. When the 3 degree tilt happens, the water (oceans, lakes, rivers, and streams) is going to slosh over the land like it does in a bathtub. And though the water will recede or if you happen to be in a valley, it can take time for this to happen and you may be under some water for a short period of time. In addition, all air vents or pipes that extend above ground will need to have baffles on them so that they remain secured to the pipe until there is air from within the structure that forces them to open. This will help keep water out of your structure.
A metal box or frame placed under 4 feet or more of dirt will act as a faraday cage and should protect most of your electrical equipment during the intense solar flare activity starting in 2009.
Going back in time is a function of and capability of the midbrain and one being able to access that part of the brain...Remember, the brain is a computer...Input In / Input Out. An adept student in accessing the midbrain could go back in time and re-observe any event, even as dramatic as a killing and Observe it differently. This is of course the advanced usage of this technology. Most people would find this act more difficult because death seems so final. But even the movie, Somewhere In Time, shows how dramatically and completely one can go back in time. Just a movie, you say! If it has been conceived, then it has already been accomplished.
When a person dies because they thought they could fly, they were not actually convinced in the deepest part of their mind that this could happen. Most people who develop the skill of flight would have taken several, if not many, less dangerous flights, e.g., from their door step, and then from the top of their car, etc. until they could fly from the second floor. A one time attempt from the 5th floor of a New York walk-up apartment is not the accustomed first flight scenario, and would not be attempted the first time by someone wanting to master the skill of flight.
Those who attempt one-time big flights have a deeper program that is operating and it is not the developing skill of flight.
In regards to your question about intent, it is more than intent that gets you into a new skill or part of the brain that can do the remarkable. It is knowledge and training, training, and training that gets one to the level of mastery for any skill. A thousand small steps or successes eventually become a huge mastery!!


Will there be enough time for us new students to get prepared for the environmental changes that are on the horizon? Tom

Tom-
There is always enough time when you get busy with what it is you are creating. The mind works in a marvelous way to our benefit when we make a decision. Remember, as Ramtha has said, "God is Decision." What does that mean? That the moment we make a decision that is irrevocable, it is law!! As soon as we say, I am going to be prepared no matter what it takes, your whole life and the environment in which you operate wraps itself around that concept, and TIME must now obey the decision of God, and that decision is that you will be prepared. No other reality can interfere with this law.
This irrevocable decision also works with mastering the disciplines. As I have related in my book, when I was asked a few years ago in Mexico while doing introductory evenings, when did Kenny (Master of Cards) begin seeing through the cards, I answered that it was the moment he decided that he was going to master that discipline no matter what it took or how long it took. That declaration of intent sent a message to his subconscious mind that simply said, "No matter how long it takes, I am going to do this." That message to the subconscious mind means that it is already done in that person's thought. So what happened? He could see through all the cards within three weeks of that decision. Again, time must wrap itself around the irrevocable decision.


ECONOMY

I suggest you subscribe to Kleiner's Korner for a very thorough overview of the current economic situation. www.kleinerskorner.com

US dollar hits fresh lows against major currencies
By Peter Garnham
Published: September 20 2007 11:22 | Last updated: September 20 2007 22:37
The Canadian dollar rose to parity against the US dollar for the first time since 1976, buoyed by soaring oil prices and broad-based weakness in the greenback.

Adam Cole, at RBC Capital Markets, said he expected the Canadian dollar to continue its upward path. "Canada produces the commodities the world wants - it is still the number one commodity play among major currencies."

Gold makes and marks history...
Gold only closed 5 consecutive days with a PM Fix over $700 in 1980 before its rush to all-time highs: 1. January 16, 1980 - 760.00
2. January 17, 1980 - 750.00
3. January 18, 1980 - 835.00
4. January 21, 1980 - 850.00
5. January 22, 1980 - 737.50
Gold closed 6 consecutive days so far with a PM Fix over $700 in 2007:
1.September 7, 2007 - 701.00
2. September 10, 2007 - 703.50
3. September 11, 2007 - 704.15
4. September 12, 2007 - 706.00
5. September 13, 2007 - 704.50
6. September 14, 2007 - 716.35
Gold has continued to close over $700 everyday thereafter. It truly sets a precedent for gold moving forward.


"Gold hits 28-year high after dollar sinks to record lows"

Gold above $732 & climbing, Euro hit $1.40 drops back to $1.39694, Silver cracked $13
http://www.miningweekly.co.za

Oil at $82
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12400801/

And just the tip of the iceberg with subprime foreclosures!!

The six giants of global profits are China, India, Japan, Brazil, Australia … and Canada.

There is nothing, I repeat nothing, that you do every day that is not connected to, or dependent upon, these six countries.

They make the clothes you wear. They answer the phones when you call customer service.

They supply the gas for your car. They build your car. They make the paste in your toothpaste. Some of them even examine your CT scans instead of your doctor.

Quietly, invisibly, they have penetrated every corner of your daily life … except perhaps one: Your portfolio. If you do not hold significant investments related to these six global giants, you are already missing out on an opportunity that comes along (maybe) once every 100 years.

China's stock market, for example, rose 131% in 2006 - nearly ten times more than ours.

Why gold is the investment to own!
by Larry Edelson
How Gold and the Dollar
Got Irrevocably Separated
It's 1947. We're looking into a London office on St. Swithin's Lane. Inside are six members of the London Gold Committee. A bullion expert from N. M. Rothschild & Sons says, "Gentlemen, it is eleven o'clock. We begin." Each member immediately calls his office on a special direct telephone line to determine how much gold is available for sale and how much is bid for.

All heck is breaking loose because there's not enough gold for sale to meet demand. Reason: Investors around the world have been jittery for weeks. They've been watching the U.S.'s financial position deteriorate.

In fact, America's balance sheet is in such terrible shape that Treasury Secretary John Snyder had earlier been forced to announce new bond offerings to help cover the worst budget deficit in the history of the U.S. ($45 billion in the red), not to mention a $247 billion national debt. The official price of gold is $35 an ounce and climbing. It seems like everyone wants the metal. They're worried about the cost of World War II still hanging over the market. They're worried that the value of the U.S. dollar will plummet in international currency markets. Everyone's hanging onto the gold they have, making the market even tighter.

Over the next several months, the buying pressure mounts, driving gold's price up to $43.25, a gain of 23.5%. There are frequent rumors that the U.S. Treasury's stockpiles of gold are dwindling. The squeeze is on!

The bull market in gold lasts until 1951 when Washington announces the so-called Treasury-Federal Reserve Accord, which stipulates that the Treasury and the Federal Reserve will act separately with respect to "dollar policy" and "monetary policy." The agreement effectively begins the process of cutting the link between the dollar and gold.

Twenty years later, the prior agreement on currencies - the Bretton Woods Agreement - was disbanded. Then, in 1973, all ties to gold were officially cut by President Richard Nixon.

The moral of the story - authorities will always opt for a weaker currency when they smell trouble. And boy is there trouble now. Here just three of the problems:

Inflation is rampant: You can see inflation in nearly every major asset - stocks, bonds, and commodities. You can see it in the plunging dollar, an undeniable signal that inflation is bursting to the fore. And you can see it every time you go to the grocery store, buy clothes, or pay for gas.

Washington and Wall Street keep trying to convince us that inflation is "benign." But don't believe them or their manipulated Consumer Price Index (CPI), which leaves out a number of everyday living expenses.

The Federal Reserve no longer controls interest rates: Twenty years ago, the Fed had some say regarding interest rates. But these days, the overwhelming pile-up of debts changes everything. The U.S. government and its agencies owe trillions and trillions of dollars to the rest of the world.

These are huge debts in large, difficult-to-control markets. Add it all up and you'll see that the markets control interest rates - not the Fed. The Fed's rate decisions merely mimic market rates, and "rubber stamp" them.

The dollar is weak in the knees: Look at the value of the paper dollar these days. The greenback is a shadow of its former self. It used to be worth more than six British pounds. Now it's worth roughly half of one!

In fact, the dollar's major trend since early 2002 has been relentlessly down. And there's nothing on the economic horizon right now to change that direction. In short, I don't expect the dollar's pain to stop anytime soon. What does all this mean?

Gold Is Poised to
Rocket Much Higher


For centuries, gold has maintained a basically stable value in terms of purchasing power. And that's why investors pile into the yellow metal whenever other markets look shaky.

Gold is real money. Remember, unlike stocks or bonds, gold has no debts, no earnings, no board of directors, no funny accounting statements, and no obligations to anyone but itself.

Gold is the purest investment in the world. While paper money can be printed or devalued at will, the same cannot be said for gold.
Of course, there isn't much gold to go around. All the gold ever mined in the history of the world (about 151,000 metric tonnes) can fit into a cube measuring only 62.3 feet on each side. And gold production is declining despite today's elevated prices.

Consider this: Over the last ten years, gold production in South Africa has plummeted 50%!
So, the way I see it, plunging production, rising demand, surging inflation, and a lack of investor confidence in the U.S. dollar all add up to one thing - much higher gold prices to come.

I don't know if gold will blast off to new highs today, tomorrow, or next month. But I can tell you this: I think now's the time to buy gold. In my opinion, the yellow metal is in a long-term bull market and headed much higher. In terms of the purchasing power of today's dollars, gold reached $2,176 in 1980. But right now, it's trading at a fraction of this inflation-adjusted high. This alone suggests that gold has much more upside.

Even if gold got halfway to its inflation-adjusted price, it would zoom to more than $1,000 an ounce, a huge gain from current levels. So is gold undervalued? You bet it is! Just to catch up with inflation, it should soar above $2,000 an ounce.

I believe gold is still one of the best bets out there, loaded with huge profit opportunities. No matter what aspect of the market I examine, I see much, much higher prices. And that's why, for me, gold is absolutely the asset to own right now.

$3400 Gold - pipe dream or possibility?
A prediction of $3400 dollar gold within three years should not be discarded as impossible, although hopefully unlikely.

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted: Wednesday , 19 Sep 2007
A short article in today's Times newspaper in the UK recounts that Christopher Wood, chief strategist at big Hong Kong broker CLSA (whose largest shareholder is France's Credit Agricole, the world's 7th largest bank by asset value) feels that "market ructions and a collapse of the dollar could send gold prices to $3,400 an ounce or more in the next three years."

Is this just a euphoric statement by someone carried away as the gold price strengthens above the $700 mark, or worthy of serious consideration? Somewhat frighteningly, perhaps the 'serious consideration' scenario definitely wins out here. $3,400 an ounce is a little less than five times the current gold price level - and price gains of this magnitude have been seen in the base metals and uranium sector over the past three to four years. Admittedly gold is a different animal from the industrial metals where prices have risen on unprecedented demand from countries like China, which had not been predicted and caught the mining sector short. But, Wood argues, as reported in The Times, the scenario could be that investors will soon realize that the subprime crisis is just a currently-visible part of a much wider financial breakdown. This would lead to dollar collapse, in part as a result of the financial marketplace burying its head in the sand and pretending that "bad credit is good credit."

From The Sunday Times
September 16, 2007
Alan Greenspan claims Iraq war was really for oil
Graham Paterson
AMERICA's elder statesman of finance, Alan Greenspan, has shaken the White House by declaring that the prime motive for the war in Iraq was oil. In his long-awaited memoir, to be published this month, Greenspan, a Republican whose 18-year tenure as head of the US Federal Reserve was widely admired, will also deliver a stinging critique of President George W Bush's economic policies.

However, it is his view on the motive for the 2003 Iraq invasion that is likely to provoke the most controversy. "I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil," he says.

Greenspan, 81, is understood to believe that Saddam Hussein posed a threat to the security of oil supplies in the Middle East. Britain and America have always insisted the war had nothing to do with oil. Bush said the aim was to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction and end Saddam's support for terrorism.

Dollar dips below Canadian counterpart
The dollar sank to a record low against the euro Thursday and traded at parity against the Canadian currency for the first time since 1976. The greenback's latest plunge to more than $1.40 to the euro was triggered by the Federal Reserve's half-point interest rate cut earlier this week. By cutting its target for short-term rates, the Fed aims to offset damage to the economy from an ongoing credit crunch.

But lower interest rates make the dollar - and dollar-denominated stocks and bonds - less attractive to global investors. The sinking dollar already is sending ripples through the economy, and worse conditions could lie ahead. "There's still plenty of downside there. We don't really know how far it's going to fall," says economist Nigel Gault of Global Insight.

"Water will become more valuable than gold," is a recent quote from Ramtha.

Former UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali has predicted that "the next war in the Middle East will be fought over water" and his belief that "water will be more important than oil" -- fossil fuels have remained the bigger source of global conflict. But looking out into the future, a growing number of scientists say water is their single biggest concern. Boutros Ghali may live to see his predicted water war...and it could just as easily take place in Africa, Europe or North America as in the Middle East.

According to the UN World Water Development Report, almost 20 percent of the world's population still lacks access to safe drinking water. The statistics are staggering - one billion people without access to clean drinking water. In addition, the UN water report estimates that 30 to 40 percent of water is lost through illegal tapping and leaks. Even in a technological powerhouse like the US, we lose 6 billion gallons each day. According to the American Water Works Association, that's enough to meet the needs of the country's 10 largest cities.

The UN estimates that the world will require twice as much food by 2030, increasing the demand for irrigation which already accounts for 70 percent of water use. Hence, as rainfall patterns shift -- with some areas seeing more rain and some seeing less - many scientists simply see climate change as the straw that ultimately breaks the camel's back.

Here are some important predictions and information from recent RSE newsletters: www.ramtha.com/newsletter

Put Up Seeds for the Days to Come

Ramtha, April 1993:

"You should buy seeds. You should have enough seeds to be able to broadcast for at least six years of gardening. You should have that much seed put up. There will come a time that you will need to broadcast them into the earth, and then you will learn to take the seeds from those things and dry them and put them up. You need to have them on hand."
(Excerpt from: Ramtha, April 14, 1993. Copyright © 1993 JZ Knight)


BBC News, February 9, 2007:

The final design for a 'doomsday' vault that will house seeds from all known varieties of food crops has been unveiled by the Norwegian government. The Svalbard International Seed Vault will be built into a mountainside on a remote island near the North Pole. The vault aims to safeguard the world's agriculture from future catastrophes, such as nuclear war, asteroid strikes and climate change."

CGIAR News Release, May 23, 2007:

"Collect wild crop seeds to protect them from climate change. Climate change is threatening the survival of crops such as the potato and the peanut, say researchers, and there is an urgent need to collect and store seeds from their wild relatives for future food security."

FINANCIAL MARKETS SET TO FALL?

Ramtha, July 22, 2007
"The monetary system is man-made, as you know, and it is controlled. It is about to spill its guts, so to speak. You are not going to be able to count on the stock markets. They are going to fall, have terrible falls, very soon. The world is in for it. The financial systems will have great difficulty before the end of this year."
(Excerpt from: Ramtha in Australia, Q&A July 22, 2007. Copyright © 2007 JZ Knight)

The New York Times, August 10, 2007
"What's been happening in financial markets over the past few days is something that truly scares monetary economists: liquidity has dried up. That is, markets in stuff that is normally traded all the time - in particular, financial instruments backed by home mortgages - have shut down because there are no buyers. The Fed normally responds to economic problems by cutting interest rates. It can also lend money to banks that are short of cash: yesterday the European Central Bank, the Fed's trans-Atlantic counterpart, lent banks $130 billion, saying that it would provide unlimited cash if necessary, and the Fed pumped in $24 billion," quoting Paul Krugman's article "Very Scary Things" in the New York Times.

"WHAT IF THE BRAIN CAN REALLY CREATE
PHYSICAL REALITY"

Embryonic stem cell scientist Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology argues that "maybe the world is the product of one aspect of biology, the mind, and not the other way around. As we have seen, the world appears to be designed for life not just at the microscopic scale of the atom, but at the level of the universe itself. What if this means that instead of infinitesimally tiny particles creating space and time (and making life possible), the brain can really create physical reality." quoting USA TODAY.

Rather Files $70 Million Suit Against CBS
By JACQUES STEINBERG,
The New York Times
Posted: 2007-09-19 17:42:46

(Sept. 19) - Dan Rather, whose career at CBS News ground to an inglorious end 15 months ago over his role in an unsubstantiated report questioning President Bush's Vietnam-era National Guard service, filed a $70 million lawsuit this afternoon against the network, its corporate parent and three of his former superiors.

Mr. Rather, 75, asserts that the network violated his contract by giving him insufficient airtime on "60 Minutes" after forcing him to step down as anchor of the "CBS Evening News" in March 2005. He also contends that the network committed fraud by commissioning a "biased" and incomplete investigation of the flawed Guard broadcast and, in the process, "seriously damaged his reputation."

The suit, which seeks $70 million in damages, names as defendants CBS and its chief executive, Leslie Moonves; Viacom and its executive chairman, Sumner Redstone; and Andrew Heyward, the former president of CBS News.

In the suit, filed this afternoon in State Supreme Court in Manhattan, Mr. Rather charges that CBS and its executives made him "a scapegoat" in an attempt "to pacify the White House," though the formal complaint presents virtually no direct evidence to that effect. To buttress this claim, Mr. Rather quotes the executive who oversaw his regular segment on CBS Radio, telling Mr. Rather in November 2004 that he was losing that slot, effective immediately, because of "pressure from 'the right wing.' "

Could a run on a bank happen in the U.S.?
By David Callaway, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:01 AM ET Sep 20, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- It seems like only a few weeks ago that bankers and financial gurus around the world were confidently predicting that the subprime mortgage mess in the U.S. was a local problem that would not affect the global markets. Then came last Friday, and we all awoke to pictures of British savers lined up in Depression-era, breadline formation to yank their funds out of Northern Rock (UK:NRK) after the British banking company said it needed to be bailed out by the Bank of England. By Monday, people had begun withdrawing money from other British banks, and by the time things calmed down the government had to step in and pledge to stand behind all deposits at Northern Rock.

Our own experts were quick to point out that such a run is unlikely to happen in the U.S., given that we have a different banking system with more extensive guarantees on deposits, etc. Don't bet on it.

The Northern Rock panic is just the latest turn of a global storm whose next direction nobody can predict. Who would have thought it would hit E-Trade Financial Corp. (ETFC), or H&R Block Inc. (HRB), or the German banking system? The amazing growth in the trading of credit and mortgage-backed derivatives over the past 15 years has created a global system by far superior to anything in the past when things are going well, but hugely vulnerable to shock from these little time bombs when things turn sour, as they have in the U.S. real estate market.

TESTIMONIALS

I finished your book while traveling over the last few days. It is a brilliant piece of work in every way. It's clear, substantial, and it appears to be an honest portrayal of your journey, so far. I appreciated especially how you weaved in some personal experiences. Thank you for the gift.
Stephen Middleton.


Hi Greg, I just received your email regarding gold. You are an encyclopedia of information and I so enjoy what you share!
I thought it was time that I took a moment to tell you how much I enjoyed your book "These Things You Shall Do...And Greater". I have only had it for about a month yet it sits on my nightstand and I re-read pages every evening. I have read it front to back 2x now too!
It has been a joy to learn more about you and Ramtha's teachings. I can't wait to attend RSE in the near future. I am making it part of my plans! I would like to share with you a little video I made to help promote your book, as I feel spreading the word and awakening the minds of society is an important issue.
Please let me know if I have your permission to keep it live!!
Again thank you for sharing your remarkable life and truly making a difference in our lives!
Dorothy Minichiello



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