Three Bad Bitches: Killer Katrina, Evil Maria, & Hysterical Ophelia



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "Doc"
Date: 10 Sep 2005 03:00:58 AM
Object: Three Bad Bitches: Killer Katrina, Evil Maria, & Hysterical Ophelia

The next hurricane to head for the USA is called Ophelia. The name is
identified with a hysterical character in Hamlet. Read what the name is
all about (further down). Don't you find it incredibly coincidental (?)
that the madness, the hysteria, panic, the social breakdown, following
he
Katrina calamity...is what we're seeing in the NO area -- and across the
nation? And Ophelia is one of the moons of Uranus -- a planet in
astrology that can portend catastrophe, revolution, suddenness,
eccentricity (among others features).

To put it quite simply: Ophelia is the poster girl of hysteria. Her

character epitomizes the passionate, young, beautiful woman pressured by
society to the point of a mental breakdown. Originally, hysteria was
thought to originate in the womb, and was often thought to be solved by
childbirth. In 1870 it was Jean Martin Charcot, father of neurology, who
first brought hysteria out of superstition and speculation and into the
scientific realm. He believed hysteria to be a "real organic disease,
transmitted genetically and associated with presumptive but unidentified
changes in nervous tissue" ("Chronology," 1870). Although modern
medicine
does not recognize "hysteria" today, Charcot helped to de-demonize
hysteria with his scientific approach. He attributed hysteria to many of
the medieval accounts of demonic possession and witchcraft. According to
the ASAP Dictionary of Anxiety and Panic Disorders, by the late
nineteenth
century, "The disorder called hysteria became a major focus of
scientific
inquiry. The term hysteria was so commonly understood at the time that
no
one had actually taken the trouble to define it systematically" (1870).

Ophelia too was thought to be "hysterical," and in the nineteenth
century
her character came to represent the "disease." According to Georgianna
Ziegler, author of Shakespeare's Unruly Women, "Later in the [19th]
century, when photography became the vogue, young women in insane
asylums
were posed as Ophelia in photographic portraits" (71). The example on
the
left, a photograph of Dr. Hugh Diamond's patient taken in the 1850's, is
one such portrait (Rusche). The flower garland was perhaps the most
popular symbol for Ophelia.

This hysterical aspect to Ophelia is probably why the French romantics
were so attracted to her.

Note: the large French population in New Orleans. !!!
Consider the Redbone prophecy of The Witch Queen of New Orleans
(separate
thread), and the meaning of Maria --

Variant for Mary (Latin) "star of the sea", used in English-speaking
countries in the 18th century, and popular with both Spanish and
non-Spanish cultures. Revived in the 20th century due to the popularity
of
"West Side Story", with its famous ballad "Maria." Marie, the French
variant, was the preferred form of Mary in England until about the time
of
the Reformation. Mariah (ma-RYE-ah) has greatly increased in popularity,
due to singer Mariah Carey. Maria and Marie are very often blended with
other names and suffixes. Manon, Mari, Maribel, Marisa, Mia, and
Ria. Singer Maria Muldaur; TV journalist Maria Shriver.
Variants: Maree, Mariah, Marialena, Marialinda, Marialisa, Marie,
Marieanne, Marielena, Marietta, Mariette, Marika, Marja, Marya, Mayra,
Mayria, Moraiah, Moriah

Note a 'star' as typically drawn has five points -- the same as the
satanic symbol and Israel's star of david. !!!! It is the name of
Jesus's mother -- the moral opposite of the witch queen of evil, Marie.

As you can see, Maria, the next hurricane after Katrina, also has a
variant, Mariah, as in the famous song, They Call The Wind Mariah (see
lyrics at end), and Mariah Carey, who had a mental breakdown recently.
Carey is afro-american, and most of the victims were, too.
Maria immediately starts to form in Atlantic as Katrina pushes inland.
It is the
manifestation of the evil witch queen. The name Katrina (variant of
Katherine, and meaning "pure") used the naive, innocent 'pure'
Katherine/Katrina to get revenge, but the bewitched Katrina thought she
was only doing good, instead. She was cruelly manipulated and corrupted
by Marie, or Maria.

As an angry, depressed Katrina blew herself out across the inland

USA, she was dropping huge torrents of shameful tears as she gradually
evaporated into history. She knew she'd been fooled by the evil Marie,
and was now a hated mass murderer. Her soul was condemned to hell. Marie
had her sinister
victory. She'd corrupted innocence, destroyed its soul, and punished the
people of New Orleans. She'd caused an entire nation to erupt into
heated derision, and had struck a heavy blow against its governmental
credibility and capability. She'd crushed the pretzel bag of its
national leader.


Lyrics: (They Call The Wind Mariah) - Sam Cooke
Way out west, they got a name
For rain and wind and fire
The rain is Tess, the fire's joe and
They call the wind Mariah
O no, Mariah blows the stars around
And sends the clouds a-flying
Mariah makes the mountain sounds
Like folks were up there dying
Mariah, They call the wind Mariah
Now before I knew Mariahs name
And heard her wail and whining
I had a girl and she had me
And the sun was always shining
O, but then one day I left my girl
I left her far behind me
And now I'm lost, I'm oh so lost
Not even God can find me
Mariah, O, Mariah, They call the wind Mariah
I hear they got a name for rain
and wind and fire only
but when you're lost and all alone
there ain't no words but lonely
And I'm a lost and lonely man
Without a star to guide me
Mariah, blow your love to me
I need my girl beside me
He, Mariah, O, Mariah
I'm lonely can't you see
Mariah, O, Mariah
Please blow my love to me
Mariah, blow my love to me
.

User: "CourtneyLuv"

Title: Re: Three Bad Bitches: Killer Katrina, Evil Maria, & Hysterical Ophelia 11 Sep 2005 02:32:20 AM
And I thought I was a bad *****...heeheehee...shiiit...
Courtney
"Doc" <bushelsofbushrot@HellsHereNow.com> wrote in message
news:dfu3rr01ge8@enews2.newsguy.com...


The next hurricane to head for the USA is called Ophelia. The name is
identified with a hysterical character in Hamlet. Read what the name is
all about (further down). Don't you find it incredibly coincidental (?)
that the madness, the hysteria, panic, the social breakdown, following
he
Katrina calamity...is what we're seeing in the NO area -- and across
the
nation? And Ophelia is one of the moons of Uranus -- a planet in
astrology that can portend catastrophe, revolution, suddenness,
eccentricity (among others features).


To put it quite simply: Ophelia is the poster girl of hysteria. Her

character epitomizes the passionate, young, beautiful woman pressured
by
society to the point of a mental breakdown. Originally, hysteria was
thought to originate in the womb, and was often thought to be solved by
childbirth. In 1870 it was Jean Martin Charcot, father of neurology,
who
first brought hysteria out of superstition and speculation and into the
scientific realm. He believed hysteria to be a "real organic disease,
transmitted genetically and associated with presumptive but
unidentified
changes in nervous tissue" ("Chronology," 1870). Although modern
medicine
does not recognize "hysteria" today, Charcot helped to de-demonize
hysteria with his scientific approach. He attributed hysteria to many
of
the medieval accounts of demonic possession and witchcraft. According
to
the ASAP Dictionary of Anxiety and Panic Disorders, by the late
nineteenth
century, "The disorder called hysteria became a major focus of
scientific
inquiry. The term hysteria was so commonly understood at the time that
no
one had actually taken the trouble to define it systematically" (1870).

Ophelia too was thought to be "hysterical," and in the nineteenth
century
her character came to represent the "disease." According to Georgianna
Ziegler, author of Shakespeare's Unruly Women, "Later in the [19th]
century, when photography became the vogue, young women in insane
asylums
were posed as Ophelia in photographic portraits" (71). The example on
the
left, a photograph of Dr. Hugh Diamond's patient taken in the 1850's,
is
one such portrait (Rusche). The flower garland was perhaps the most
popular symbol for Ophelia.

This hysterical aspect to Ophelia is probably why the French romantics
were so attracted to her.

Note: the large French population in New Orleans. !!!


Consider the Redbone prophecy of The Witch Queen of New Orleans
(separate
thread), and the meaning of Maria --

Variant for Mary (Latin) "star of the sea", used in English-speaking
countries in the 18th century, and popular with both Spanish and
non-Spanish cultures. Revived in the 20th century due to the popularity
of
"West Side Story", with its famous ballad "Maria." Marie, the French
variant, was the preferred form of Mary in England until about the time
of
the Reformation. Mariah (ma-RYE-ah) has greatly increased in
popularity,
due to singer Mariah Carey. Maria and Marie are very often blended with
other names and suffixes. Manon, Mari, Maribel, Marisa, Mia, and
Ria. Singer Maria Muldaur; TV journalist Maria Shriver.
Variants: Maree, Mariah, Marialena, Marialinda, Marialisa, Marie,
Marieanne, Marielena, Marietta, Mariette, Marika, Marja, Marya, Mayra,
Mayria, Moraiah, Moriah

Note a 'star' as typically drawn has five points -- the same as the
satanic symbol and Israel's star of david. !!!! It is the name of
Jesus's mother -- the moral opposite of the witch queen of evil, Marie.

As you can see, Maria, the next hurricane after Katrina, also has a
variant, Mariah, as in the famous song, They Call The Wind Mariah (see
lyrics at end), and Mariah Carey, who had a mental breakdown
recently.
Carey is afro-american, and most of the victims were, too.


Maria immediately starts to form in Atlantic as Katrina pushes inland.
It is the
manifestation of the evil witch queen. The name Katrina (variant of
Katherine, and meaning "pure") used the naive, innocent 'pure'
Katherine/Katrina to get revenge, but the bewitched Katrina thought she
was only doing good, instead. She was cruelly manipulated and corrupted
by Marie, or Maria.


As an angry, depressed Katrina blew herself out across the inland

USA, she was dropping huge torrents of shameful tears as she gradually
evaporated into history. She knew she'd been fooled by the evil Marie,
and was now a hated mass murderer. Her soul was condemned to hell.
Marie had her sinister
victory. She'd corrupted innocence, destroyed its soul, and punished
the
people of New Orleans. She'd caused an entire nation to erupt into
heated derision, and had struck a heavy blow against its governmental
credibility and capability. She'd crushed the pretzel bag of its
national leader.


Lyrics: (They Call The Wind Mariah) - Sam Cooke

Way out west, they got a name
For rain and wind and fire
The rain is Tess, the fire's joe and
They call the wind Mariah

O no, Mariah blows the stars around
And sends the clouds a-flying
Mariah makes the mountain sounds
Like folks were up there dying
Mariah, They call the wind Mariah

Now before I knew Mariahs name
And heard her wail and whining
I had a girl and she had me
And the sun was always shining
O, but then one day I left my girl
I left her far behind me
And now I'm lost, I'm oh so lost
Not even God can find me

Mariah, O, Mariah, They call the wind Mariah
I hear they got a name for rain
and wind and fire only
but when you're lost and all alone
there ain't no words but lonely
And I'm a lost and lonely man
Without a star to guide me
Mariah, blow your love to me
I need my girl beside me
He, Mariah, O, Mariah
I'm lonely can't you see
Mariah, O, Mariah
Please blow my love to me
Mariah, blow my love to me




.

User: "OzarkBilly"

Title: Re: Three Bad Bitches: Killer Katrina, Evil Maria, & Hysterical Ophelia 10 Sep 2005 10:05:26 AM
ah reckons yer losin' yer goddadburn mind, Doc. ah was talkin' t'Rush, mah
one-legged rooster, an' he's of a mind thet yo' ain't got all yer marbles.
Yo' gotta stop reckonin' about hurricanes as wimmen folk on account o'
they ain't pow'ful wimmen. They blow a lot o'wind, like Pansy Fin'us, mah
ol' galfriend used t'do. She so smelled up mah shack thet ah plum c'dn't
breath' fine. She used t'eat nothin' but goddadburn beans an' hamhocks.
Make a pow'ful stink! Fry mah hide! 'Ceptin' thet, these hyar hurricanes
ain't wimmen, Doc. Yo' need a long ress an' some fine ol' Raccoon
Lightnin' t'ease up yer mind, cuss it all t' tarnation.
OzarkBilly
"Doc" <bushelsofbushrot@HellsHereNow.com> wrote in message
news:dfu3rr01ge8@enews2.newsguy.com...


The next hurricane to head for the USA is called Ophelia. The name is
identified with a hysterical character in Hamlet. Read what the name is
all about (further down). Don't you find it incredibly coincidental (?)
that the madness, the hysteria, panic, the social breakdown, following
he
Katrina calamity...is what we're seeing in the NO area -- and across
the
nation? And Ophelia is one of the moons of Uranus -- a planet in
astrology that can portend catastrophe, revolution, suddenness,
eccentricity (among others features).


To put it quite simply: Ophelia is the poster girl of hysteria. Her

character epitomizes the passionate, young, beautiful woman pressured
by
society to the point of a mental breakdown. Originally, hysteria was
thought to originate in the womb, and was often thought to be solved by
childbirth. In 1870 it was Jean Martin Charcot, father of neurology,
who
first brought hysteria out of superstition and speculation and into the
scientific realm. He believed hysteria to be a "real organic disease,
transmitted genetically and associated with presumptive but
unidentified
changes in nervous tissue" ("Chronology," 1870). Although modern
medicine
does not recognize "hysteria" today, Charcot helped to de-demonize
hysteria with his scientific approach. He attributed hysteria to many
of
the medieval accounts of demonic possession and witchcraft. According
to
the ASAP Dictionary of Anxiety and Panic Disorders, by the late
nineteenth
century, "The disorder called hysteria became a major focus of
scientific
inquiry. The term hysteria was so commonly understood at the time that
no
one had actually taken the trouble to define it systematically" (1870).

Ophelia too was thought to be "hysterical," and in the nineteenth
century
her character came to represent the "disease." According to Georgianna
Ziegler, author of Shakespeare's Unruly Women, "Later in the [19th]
century, when photography became the vogue, young women in insane
asylums
were posed as Ophelia in photographic portraits" (71). The example on
the
left, a photograph of Dr. Hugh Diamond's patient taken in the 1850's,
is
one such portrait (Rusche). The flower garland was perhaps the most
popular symbol for Ophelia.

This hysterical aspect to Ophelia is probably why the French romantics
were so attracted to her.

Note: the large French population in New Orleans. !!!


Consider the Redbone prophecy of The Witch Queen of New Orleans
(separate
thread), and the meaning of Maria --

Variant for Mary (Latin) "star of the sea", used in English-speaking
countries in the 18th century, and popular with both Spanish and
non-Spanish cultures. Revived in the 20th century due to the popularity
of
"West Side Story", with its famous ballad "Maria." Marie, the French
variant, was the preferred form of Mary in England until about the time
of
the Reformation. Mariah (ma-RYE-ah) has greatly increased in
popularity,
due to singer Mariah Carey. Maria and Marie are very often blended with
other names and suffixes. Manon, Mari, Maribel, Marisa, Mia, and
Ria. Singer Maria Muldaur; TV journalist Maria Shriver.
Variants: Maree, Mariah, Marialena, Marialinda, Marialisa, Marie,
Marieanne, Marielena, Marietta, Mariette, Marika, Marja, Marya, Mayra,
Mayria, Moraiah, Moriah

Note a 'star' as typically drawn has five points -- the same as the
satanic symbol and Israel's star of david. !!!! It is the name of
Jesus's mother -- the moral opposite of the witch queen of evil, Marie.

As you can see, Maria, the next hurricane after Katrina, also has a
variant, Mariah, as in the famous song, They Call The Wind Mariah (see
lyrics at end), and Mariah Carey, who had a mental breakdown
recently.
Carey is afro-american, and most of the victims were, too.


Maria immediately starts to form in Atlantic as Katrina pushes inland.
It is the
manifestation of the evil witch queen. The name Katrina (variant of
Katherine, and meaning "pure") used the naive, innocent 'pure'
Katherine/Katrina to get revenge, but the bewitched Katrina thought she
was only doing good, instead. She was cruelly manipulated and corrupted
by Marie, or Maria.


As an angry, depressed Katrina blew herself out across the inland

USA, she was dropping huge torrents of shameful tears as she gradually
evaporated into history. She knew she'd been fooled by the evil Marie,
and was now a hated mass murderer. Her soul was condemned to hell.
Marie had her sinister
victory. She'd corrupted innocence, destroyed its soul, and punished
the
people of New Orleans. She'd caused an entire nation to erupt into
heated derision, and had struck a heavy blow against its governmental
credibility and capability. She'd crushed the pretzel bag of its
national leader.


Lyrics: (They Call The Wind Mariah) - Sam Cooke

Way out west, they got a name
For rain and wind and fire
The rain is Tess, the fire's joe and
They call the wind Mariah

O no, Mariah blows the stars around
And sends the clouds a-flying
Mariah makes the mountain sounds
Like folks were up there dying
Mariah, They call the wind Mariah

Now before I knew Mariahs name
And heard her wail and whining
I had a girl and she had me
And the sun was always shining
O, but then one day I left my girl
I left her far behind me
And now I'm lost, I'm oh so lost
Not even God can find me

Mariah, O, Mariah, They call the wind Mariah
I hear they got a name for rain
and wind and fire only
but when you're lost and all alone
there ain't no words but lonely
And I'm a lost and lonely man
Without a star to guide me
Mariah, blow your love to me
I need my girl beside me
He, Mariah, O, Mariah
I'm lonely can't you see
Mariah, O, Mariah
Please blow my love to me
Mariah, blow my love to me




.


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