Working wisely with Azrael, the angel of DEATH.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Baluchistan & the Demon Whore

Two 6.4 magnitude quakes have hit Baluchistan, on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border, in the last 24 hours. Hundreds feared dead. Thousands of lives have been affected. Just one more tragedy to afflict this blighted, war-torn area.

The culprit this time is the demon whore Lilith. As the mythology goes, she was the first wife of Adam who refused to submit to his authority. She rebelled and went off to join the demons with whom she copulated and spawned a devil's brood. Lilith has been rehabilitated by the 20th century feminist movement, and is now an icon of liberated women, representing the archetypal revolutionary working to overthrow the patriarchy.

Astrology, however, contues to take a dim view of Lilith. In astrology, the mythology around Lilith has been correlated with the Black Moon - the empty focus of the Moon's elliptical orbit about the Earth. In geocentric longitude, this is the same as the theoretical apogee. So, both astronomical constructs - the empty focus and the apogee - are known as Black Moon Lilith to astrologers.

It is no surprise that she is complicit in this latest disaster to befall Baluchistan, given her evil nature. She crops up in major earthquakes, more often than one would expect of such minor role in the astrological theatre. In this latest incident, she uniquely and clearly identifies the Quetta area as the site of a tragedy on October 28/29 2008.

The question is, why did an astrologer not predict this event in advance? Answer: because no one was looking.

There are two ways to look. You can try to predict the next major erthquake by spending your life scanning astrological patterns all over the globe - but this is like searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack. (And we all need to make a living.) Or you can confine your searches to a single country/province, such as Baluchistan and focus your efforts there. This latter option is far more feasible and easier to do.

Had anyone been focusing on Baluchistan between August and October 2008, the quake could have been predicted in the space of half-an-hour.

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