Monday, December 7, 2015

December 7, 1945 or 1941 and the WD Gann Map of Time

I should have checked the date, 12/7/1941, against the MOT.  Well, will December 7, 1945 make do?  Where do we find the date of the attack on Pearl Harbor 1941 plus 4 years in the MOT?

We find that it corresponds with the date "December 7" on page 349:


That is the same paragraph discussed regarding the great attack on Detroit in today's earliest post found HERE.

So what do you see above.  Do you see in the right making '12/7/1945' (1941+4)?  Indeed you do.  It is one the first line of the subject paragraph.

Recalling that Wikipedia says more than 2,400 died that day in 1941?  We find this is the 2,459th line of TTTTA counting from the last line of the book upward; hard to say if correct or incorrect.

In the 6th Prophecy of 9/11, the U.S. won the fictional Battle of New York but lost the actual battle of the World Trade Center.  Similarly, the U.S. won the fictional battle of Detroit, but lost the actual battle of Pearl Harbor.  Opposites.

In the 6th Prophecy of 9/11, Robert Gordon heard over the Tel Talk that the enemy planes had departed and, thus the attack began at 8pm at night. In the actual attack on the WTC occurring 9/11, Muhammad Ata's flight departed Logan Airport at 7:49am.  The difference between day and night, exactly 12 hours.  In the fictional battle of Detroit, Robert Gordon realizes the attack begins at 3pm.  In 1945, the first bombing was that of the Arizona which occurred at 8:10am.  A difference of 7 hours.  Afternoon versus morning.  Opposites.

The counterpart of the December 7, 1945 (1941 +4) would be found on the left side of the MOT opposite the dates in December 1945 on the right.  And what might have happened in January 1919, the counterpart month?  The Paris Peace Conference of Allied Victors convened on January 18, 1919 to set the terms of peace to be demanded of the Central Powers.  In 1945 (1941+4), the beginning of a war for the U.S.  In 1919, the end of a war in which the U.S. was involved (WWI substantially ended in 1918, but the Treaty of Versailles monumenting the end of war was not complete until 1919).  Opposites.

Hardly compelling with a 4-year difference but interesting.

Jim Ross

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