middle east predictions
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middle east predictions

Is this new conflict in the middle east the prediction of Armageddon in the Bible code?
no
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Epicenter 2.0: Why the Current Rumblings in the Middle East Will Change Your Future
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DescriptionIn his first groundbreaking nonfiction book, now with updated content, New York Times best-selling author Joel C. Rosenberg takes readers on an unforgettable journey through prophecy and current event |
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Victuum
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DescriptionVictuum is based on a true story of a young girl’s odyssey in psychic discovery. Her psychic development epitomizes with the encounter of an outer-planetary being. Part I reveals the child’s immediate environment in Oxnard, California... |
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The Future of the Middle East: Predictions |
DescriptionA series of predictions about the Middle East in fifty years. |
xpmedia: 2010 Predictions: Middle East









It is a disturbing prediction, but it is only a prediction, and it could be nothing more than disinformation designed to frighten people into thinking that this is definitely going to happen.
For example, Professor D. Hesse at Pierce Law School stated that states passing resolutions to secede or declare sovereignty is meaningless, because that would allow counties to disregard state laws, and cities to disregard county laws. He does not understand that the states created the federal government, and the Constitution provides specific limitations on what that federal government can do. When the federal government exceeds the limitations put on it by the Constitution, the states have the power to remove themselves from its control, or, if enough states get together, to dismantle the federal government. Counties and cities do not have the same capability, because they were not set up the same way.
So, the fact is that just because someone says something is illegal does not make it so, and just because someone makes a predicition does not make it true.
I would suggest, though, that we each do all we can to stop the progress of this kind of thing. How about a flood of letters calling for Obama to step down? A legislator in one of the states that has a resolution of sovereignty moving through its legislature said that he has received over 250 emails supporting this resolution, where normally, he receives about 10 emails about any particular bill. So, it doesn't necessarily take that many emails to wake someone up. Obama may want to be a dictator, but if he understands that trying to do so will cost him his job, he might not be so enthusiastic to do so.