Re: [FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...'
Rick Archer wrote: > From: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com [mailto:fairfieldl...@yahoogroups.com] > On Behalf Of Robert > Sent: Tuesday, August 04, 2009 2:04 PM > To: fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com > Subject: [FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...' > > > Earthquake currently scheduled on Saturday, August 8th, 2009... > Send prayers to California... > Pray for the Governor...and his wife... > Pray for even Charlie Manson... > Pray, for Peace... > > Scheduled? By whom? Says who? If you're sure about this, there must be some > way you can play the stock market to get fabulously wealthy. Robert got his dates and his California wrong. It was scheduled for yesterday in Baja California. ;-)
RE: [FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...'
From: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com [mailto:fairfieldl...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Robert Sent: Tuesday, August 04, 2009 2:04 PM To: fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com Subject: [FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...' Earthquake currently scheduled on Saturday, August 8th, 2009... Send prayers to California... Pray for the Governor...and his wife... Pray for even Charlie Manson... Pray, for Peace... Scheduled? By whom? Says who? If you're sure about this, there must be some way you can play the stock market to get fabulously wealthy.
[FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...'
Earthquake currently scheduled on Saturday, August 8th, 2009... Send prayers to California... Pray for the Governor...and his wife... Pray for even Charlie Manson... Pray, for Peace... r.g.
[FairfieldLife] California Dreamin'
California legislators have until midnight to come up with a budget. If that doesn't happen all hell will break loose. At the moment it looks like they're not going to make it. The state is broke. What people are talking about are the enormous pensions that are being paid out to state employees? Wouldn't you love to retire on a $150K a year? For probably doing a job about anyone could do? I may have to look for a new state or country or planet to escape being taxed to death. People are uptight now but just wait until tomorrow. Maybe we should have American Revolution II on the 4th? They ought to be hot for it!
[FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'...'
Hello everyone, The Eloheim channeling of June 3, 2009 focused on the energies of June 2009. Eloheim has been telling us for some weeks now that June would be a powerful month of transformation. This week they explained that the openings of June will allow us to start living from our Soul's perspective. This video is a portion of their opening talk where they share some of the ways things will change as we start living from our Soul's perspective. Here are some quotes from the clip: Everything becomes brand new because nothing has been experienced in this way. It is bit like saying you have run around this entire lifetime with a blindfold on. When you take off the blindfold everything is new. Opening up to seeing things in a new way. You have to continue to allow this transformed state presence in your system. You are in a place where continuing in the habitual reactions….is just no longer as interesting as it used to be and it is certainly nowhere near as interesting as your Soul's perspective is. It is your birthright to live in Grace, Ease, and Bliss. If you are receiving this message by email and don't see the video below, please visit http://eloheim.info/wordpress/?p=1029 to see it. Eloheim is channeled weekly in Sonoma, CA. Our events are open to the public. Admission to the weekly events is by donation. Private sessions by phone or in person are also available. Please contact eloheimchan...@... or visit http://eloheim.info/ for details.
[FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin?'
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA - December 8, 2008 (OWSweather.com) Rare 50 year Arctic Blast Sets Sights On Southern California. Possible historical cold air mass... With a week away, and a sure sign of things to come, OWSweather.com is making preparations on the server to handle the traffic from this next event. UJEAS is in line with the majority if not all the other models in keeping a near historical arctic air mass into the Southern California region. With a warm November, Southern California is finally ready for cold storms to make their way in. Resort level snow will be likely next week, and in pretty hefty amounts if things stay on track. OWSweather.com Meteorologist Kevin Martin predicts a 50 year event. While Martin is usually conservative on these events, the pattern highly favors it. "We are in a pre-1950 type pattern, "said Martin. "We know we are due for a winter storm sometime this year. The type we may be dealing with will be ranked up there with the known years before 1950, which set record low daytime temperatures into the forecast region. With this, may come low elevation snow." Forecaster Cameron Venable is seeing very cold temperatures in the Los Angeles areas as well. Torrance is not usually known for winter weather, thus making this an interesting event for Venable to track. "Temperatures in Siberia, Russia will be -81 degrees this week, "said Martin. "With those type of temperatures the arctic air mass has to spill somewhere. Our answer of the exact track will become more clear this week. All residents in the mountain communities should prepare this week for very cold, winter weather, with snow." Indications are a second, colder storm could hit near the 18th-22nd time-frame. The details on that will have to be sorted out. OWSweather.com staff More information: www.OWSweather.com
[FairfieldLife] 'California Dreamin'
Southern California turns out to vote: undeterred by rain and long lines Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times Voters line up in front of the Watts Towers polling place just before the polls open this morning. Lines grow throughout the morning, and voters circle blocks to find parking. Many note a feeling of history in the making as they head to the polls. By Joanna Lin and Kimi Yoshino 11:47 AM PST, November 4, 2008 As early-morning rain gave way to blue skies, Southern California voters converged in long lines, circled for blocks to find an election-day parking space and talked of history in the making. Quintessential L.A. scenes abounded: More than 100 people stood in line at the Venice Beach Lifeguard Station, steps from the Pacific Ocean, to cast their ballot. Some voters spotted celebrities. "How I Met Your Mother" star Neil Patrick Harris stood in a half-hour line in Sherman Oaks. And on downtown's Skid Row, voters waited outside the Los Angeles Mission, serving as a precinct for the first time. Many said this election seemed different. Special. Mark Lescroart, a neuroscience grad student at USC, stepped outside his Silver Lake home early this morning, raised his camera to the horizon and snapped a photo of the sunrise. He wanted to immortalize the first light of what he hoped would be a new era: "It felt like history to me." At the Allesandro School on Riverside Drive, where he voted for Barack Obama, he also took pictures of his voter's guide and a sign that announced in six languages the location of the polling place. "Bush's presidency sort of coincided with my political awakening," he said, noting that he cast his first vote in 2000. "It's been pretty awful and today, this is something to be happy about." Lines at polling places in predominantly African American neighborhoods were particularly long as generations of voters arrived, many bringing their children and grandchildren with them to witness the event. At the Audubon Middle School in Baldwin Hills, where more than 300 people had lined up to vote, Michelle Ellison, 47, waited with her 5-year-old grandson Dilan. "I want him to understand this is history being made," she said. "It's beautiful." Some people abandoned routines to stand in line. Inglewood resident Alice Williams wanted to vote in person because "people fought for me to wait in this line," she said. "I'm voting." Eric Khamvongsa, a Laotian immigrant and Long Beach resident, has been a citizen since 1988, but voted for the first time Tuesday. Maria Gonzalez, a woman in her mid-50s, became a citizen this summer after years as a legal resident, in part to ensure she could vote this election. She arrived at her precinct in Inglewood with her husband and one of her daughters even before the polls opened. "Nosotros queremos cambio," she said. "We want change." In Orange County, Colleen Cross, 53, left her job as principal of Garden Grove High School to drive to the Registrar's office because she lost her mail-in ballot. "I've turned my house and work upside-down to try to find that ballot for a week," Cross said. But not voting was not an option. "I'm conservative, and family values are important to me," Cross said. "I see the country taking a real liberal swing and it scares me to death." Election Protection, a national non-partisan voter assistance group, reported scattered problems as Los Angeles-area polling places opened this morning. Ballots and voting machines arrived late; some didn't work at all. And power was disrupted temporarily to at least four polling places in South Los Angeles. In San Francisco, shortly after 7 a.m., the line snaked nearly a full block outside a fire-station polling place in San Francisco's Nob Hill neighborhood. Two hours later, as voters sipped coffee, read magazines and chatted on cellphones in the chilly morning sunshine, poll workers ran out of ballots. "People were patient, but they wanted to know how long it would be," said Donna Siekel, 39. "I already had mine. . . . We wanted to come vote in person because it's more fun, more of an event." Within 10 minutes or so, a bright blue van sped up, resupplied the precinct and voting began again. Even before polling places opened at 7, Los Angeles County voters had already broken a record, with a 14% voter turnout in early ballots alone, said Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder Dean Logan. With mail-in ballots and early in-person voting at the registrar's Norwalk office, more than 625,000 ballots have been cast. The early-voter turnout in Orange County was even larger: a record-breaking 29% before election day. In Los Angeles County, the nation's largest single voting district, more than 4.3 million people have registered to vote, beating a previous record of 4.14 million set in 2002, according to statistics from the registrar's office. About 3.9 million were registered to vote before the 2004 presidential election,