Lisa's intuition happens to be in line with some remote viewing data posted by Dr. Courtney Brown this summer at
http://www.farsight.org/demo/Demo2008/LAX1.html. He does not project a specific event date but does give a time frame of late in the year / before December 1. Much of the data focused on the LAX airport area and suggested a big seismic event near there.
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RESULTS
Essentially, for Target 25, Darryl Smith's data suggest the aftermath of what appears to be an earthquake. There is no sign of the airport in the data, and taken at face value, the data may suggest that the airport sinks into the sea. There is currently no way to know if this is an exaggeration of what may or may not actually happen, of course. Of the remaining sessions, Dick Allgire's session most closely supports this same theme. Pat Sage's data also support the idea of faulting vertical movement of land, and the terrain seems so destroyed that it resembles natural features. Sita Seery's session seems to support the idea of cracking or breaking base surfaces leading to profound loss. The data for Maria Naulty and Viewer 423 are more difficult to interpret and they probably should be considered "misses." But the data from these two viewers stand out in that they do not reflect a city environment of any sort. Sometimes viewers have difficulty viewing profoundly disturbing targets, and this may be what happened in these two cases. Thus, we have two highly explicit sessions that appear correspondent with a significant seismic event involving the LAX area of Los Angeles, two sessions that are supportive of this theme, and two sessions that appear to be misses.
The next step is to re-target the Los Angeles International Airport with the same viewers, but using a different target time. In this case the decision was made to target LAX at the moment of greatest activity in changing the fundamental character of this target from the way it exists on 19 June 2008 to the way it exists on 1 December 2008. The hope was that such a target specification would allow us to see what apparently destroys LAX. This new tasking is accomplished as Target 27.
With Target 27, Darryl Smith does an excellent job describing some prominent structures of LAX, especially focusing on the repeated dome topology. This establishes that the airport still exists at the time of the event, and this suggests that the event itself may destroy the airport. But Darryl's data do not capture the activity involved in the event itself. On the other hand, the Dick Allgire's session clearly contains a great deal of data that suggest a massive seismic event, including people holding fabric rings that might be used to catch people leaping from buildings. His data also contain elements that suggest that some structures collapse completely. Sita Seery's data support the idea of structures falling on people. Pat Sage's data suggest the aftermath of a disaster. Viewer 423's data support the idea of masses of people immobilized on the base surface between structures, as one would expect during a major seismic event in which people did not know where to go for safety. Maria Naulty's data are more difficult to interpret, but they do capture the idea of mountains in the background, structures in the foreground, and a beach, all appropriate for Los Angeles.
In combination, these sessions seem to support the hypothesis of a significant seismic event in Los Angeles sometime before 1 December 2008. While other types of phenomena could conceivably produce the remote-viewing results obtained by the viewers, such as a major terrorist event involving a nuclear device or a huge explosion from some other cause, it is probably logical to argue that seismic activity is the more likely causative agent. These remote-viewing data do not contain elements that suggest explosions. But they do contain elements that suggest structures falling down and the ground shifting. Moreover, Los Angeles is well-known to be an area susceptible to seismic events both large and small, and these remote-viewing data appear consistent with such a class of events. Thus, when identifying a cause of change, we can speak only probabilistically. But the probabilities seem to aim in the direction of a seismic event.
If It Happens
When? Assuming that the remote-viewing data are correct (and again, we are assuming it in order to discuss it, not certifying it), then the 1 December 2008 data suggest that the seismic event occurs significantly prior to that date. Indeed, it appears that by 1 December 2008, the scene is relatively calm, with police carefully marking dangerous areas to walk. This would suggest that the earthquake happens a few months prior to that date, possibly as early as the summer months. Here is a possible probability approximation for this event given these data:
How bad? Remote-viewing data are not always accurate. Sometimes viewers exaggerate when they perceive bad things. On the other hand, sometimes viewers do just the opposite and downplay what appears to be a tragedy. On the surface, these data in combination suggest a huge seismic event that may destroy much of Los Angeles. Indeed, these data suggest that some of the area around Los Angeles may sink into the sea. In some areas near LAX, that would be an approximate 36 meter drop. This would be extraordinary if it actually did happen. Most major seismic events involve plate movements of only one or two meters, often in a lateral direction. Thus, it is not easy to interpret these data directly. We will simply have to wait to see if there even is a seismic event at all, and if there is, we will then see how bad it is and know how to evaluate the remote-viewing data. Remember, this is still a scientific experiment, not a pronouncement of certainty. We could be wrong and the seismic event may not even happen. If a major seismic event does not happen in the Los Angeles area prior to 1 December 2008, then we will use this information to try to better understand the limits of the remote-viewing phenomenon as we currently understand it.