| Topic: |
Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus |
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"=?utf-8?B?LsK3OirCqMKoKjrCty7CtzoqwqjCqCo6wrcuICDimaVUaGUgTGFzdCA5IERhemUgLS0gSE9PUk9PICHCtzoqwqjCqCo6wrcuIOKZpcKpwq7ihKI=?=" |
| Date: |
16 Oct 2006 11:54:02 PM |
| Object: |
Uh-oh, here'z what'z gonna happen very soon, peoplez !!!! |
Gooday peoplez !!!!
I was up at Gembrook (65 km East from Melbourne in the Dandenong
Ranges) for a very luverly lunch today, 5 degrees cooler that the
boring end ot the world sh!thole called
Melbourne, & an American woman said to me "Oooh look, this iz the end
of the line -- I've never seen the end of the line before !!!"
Your Uncle Wally replied to her "Yeah right, whatever !!!" & walked
blissfully away !!
http://images.google.ca/images?q=tbn:W7W6s_IgaXl5XM:http://www.railpage.org.au/pix/steam/NA_Gembrook_2.jpg
http://images.google.ca/images?q=tbn:vYsCtmBXLd7xtM:http://www.puffingbilly.com.au/info/yourtrip/images/gembrook.jpg
http://images.google.ca/images?q=tbn:afFmo1DFCaNVNM:http://www.stayz.com.au/property/image/00/81/35/img103881.jpg
http://images.google.ca/images?q=tbn:pGUTTOb32EWKmM:http://www.railpage.org.au/pix/steam/NA_Gembrook_1.jpg
HOOROO
UNCLE WALLY
============
http://news.google.ca/news?imgefp=BnGN-b7w_wQJ&imgurl=www.mumbaimirror.com/nmirror/Mirror%255C2006%255C10%255C17%255C16%255C1016200622311121810162006222628968%255Cimages%255Cimgm1Tech_1.jpg
http://www.theage.com.au/news/World/N-Korea-may-be-preparing-for-second-test/2006/10/17/1160850898956.html
ps,,SOMEBDODY HERE WAS SAYING ABOUT THE SH!T HITTING THE FAN SOON !
N Korea may be preparing for second test
Email Print Normal font Large font October 17, 2006 - 8:24AM
Advertisement
AdvertisementThe United States, Japan and South Korea say there are
signs North Korea may be preparing to carry out a second nuclear test.
US spy satellites have detected suspicious activity near the site of
Pyongyang's first test that may signal preparations for another test,
US television networks reported.
US officials said they could not be certain of what the North Koreans
were doing in the area, but the activity there could be preparations
for a second nuclear blast, NBC and ABC said.
"US intelligence is not ruling out the possibility of North Korea
conducting another nuclear test. But there isn't any evidence one is
imminent," a US intelligence official said.
Japan's Foreign Minister Taro Aso echoed concerns about a possible
second test saying: "I have received information on that, but can't
disclose the details."
In Seoul, a South Korean government official said: "The government is
aware of signs related to North Korea's possible second nuclear test.
We cannot exclude the possibility of a second test."
But he added there was no firm information on a possible new test.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, on the eve of a trip to the
region to try to stiffen the resolve behind UN sanctions against North
Korea, said she hoped Pyongyang would not conduct a second nuclear
test.
The UN Security Council unanimously adopted a sanctions resolution
against North Korea on Saturday in response to Pyongyang's October 9
nuclear test.
North Korea's ambassador told the council that if the United States
increased pressure on his country, Pyongyang would "continue to take
physical countermeasures considering it as a declaration of war".
Rice dismissed scepticism among some in Washington about China's
commitment to tough action against its communist neighbour.
"I am not concerned that the Chinese are going to turn their backs on
their obligations," she said.
"I don't think they would have voted for a resolution that they did not
intend to carry through on."
US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said China was already
taking action to check goods crossing into North Korea.
"The Chinese now are beginning to stop trucks at the 800-mile (1,400km)
border and inspect all of them," he told CNN.
China has made clear it is worried that tough action could provoke a
collapse of the impoverished and highly militarised state, and its UN
ambassador again clarified the limits of its action on Tuesday.
"Inspections yes, but inspections are different from interception and
interdiction," Ambassador Wang Guangya told reporters, an apparent
reference to stopping cargo at sea, which is one of the UN sanctions
agreed to on Saturday.
Wang said the resolution did not make it mandatory for all nations to
inspect cargo going to and from North Korea. He said states could carry
out such an operation as necessary "in accordance with their national
legal authorities".
The US government confirmed that the October 9 explosion, which
prompted worldwide condemnation and the harsh sanctions regime, was a
nuclear explosion as Pyongyang claimed.
"Analysis of air samples collected on October 11, 2006, detected
radioactive debris which confirms that North Korea conducted an
underground nuclear explosion," the director of national intelligence
said in a statement.
Rice leaves on Wednesday for Tokyo, Seoul, Beijing and Moscow to try to
cement the unified UN approach and edge North Korea back toward
six-party talks aimed at stopping its program to build a nuclear
weapon.
"My goal on this trip is, certainly, to reiterate that we're prepared
to return to the talks. But North Korea also needs to understand ...
that they will pay a price here" because of the test, she said.
US officials also said North Korea must do more than return to the
talks to have the sanctions lifted.
"A return to six-party talks kind of doesn't do it," Ambassador to
Japan Thomas Schieffer said.
Pyongyang had to commit to implementing an agreement from September 19,
2005, in which it promised in principle to scrap its nuclear arms
programs in return for aid, security assurances and promises of better
diplomatic ties.
There were signs the new web of sanctions was starting to be put in
place.
Australia said it was prohibiting all North Korean ships from entering
Australian ports and Japan announced it was extending already harsh
restrictions.
As the US moved to shore up the sanctions, President George W Bush said
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il was "going to have some choices to
make".
"I am deeply concerned about the starvation inside of North Korea. I am
worried about concentration camps inside of North Korea. I am worried
about the human condition inside North Korea," Bush told Fox News
television.
"And we are now making it clear - not just the United States - but
other nations are making it very clear to North Korea that there is a
better way forward. And so, we'll be able to judge his intentions and
his motives as time goes on."
Bush too said he was confident China would enforce the sanctions,
despite Beijing's concerns that aggressive inspection of cargo to and
from North Korea could provoke the regime.
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