Predictions for 2008 eBook
14 pages devoted to the
2008 US ELECTIONS

Sample page
Book details
Buy it
This is a PDF
digital eBook
Friends,
I have lived west of the Cascade mountains in the rain soaked half of Washington State in the Pacific Northwest since January 1986. I have recorded the weather around here for 22 years. It is one of my hobbies. My records and observations over two decades show that the Washington State rain belt's famous drizzle rains of autumn and winter have turned into substantial and sustained downpours, especially in the last several years. The frequency in number of the Puget Sound's wind storms, until recently did not increase, but the time duration lengthened to Wagnerian opera lengths from 1992 to 2002.
The average bad blow up to 1992 was a two-to-three hour venting like Seattlites remember as the Inauguration Day Storm of 21 January 1992. It got the name because 60 and 70 mph gusts pummeled the city and made the Seattle Space Needle twist and shout metal screeches taking place exactly when President Clinton gave his inauguration speech on the steps of the US Capitol building on the opposite coast of the United States.
By the way, the inauguration opened with the strains of the US Marine Band playing the Victorian Era tune-turned-iconic theme of the Monty Python comedy shows. A prescient accident of choice, some might say, for the checkered years of the Clinton administration. Anyway, the windstorm stomped us like one of Terry Guilliam's cut-out cartoon feet dropped on a muddy Puget Sound region through falling trees with a flatulent squash.
My records continued to show one bad windstorm once or twice during the autumn or winter seasons throughout the 1990s; however, the duration of these dramatically increased from two hours on average to 12 hours or more!
After 2005, gale force storms began multiplying and intensifying. From October 2006 through January 2007, my records listed a cluster of devastating windstorms the likes of which compared in intensity and number to a decade's worth of blowouts. It started in February of 2006 with a windstorm blacking out my little village of Langley, WA, for eight hours. Once every winter you can expect that here, but then came violent cloudbursts in May I never before encountered as far back as I began taking records in 1986.
The next rainy season arrived with fury. November 2006 was one of the wettest months in the region's recorded history. Starting with November until January 2007 Mother Nature unloaded FIVE major power-cutting windstorms on us. One December gale knocked power off the grid for around 1.6 million homes in Western Washington. My home was without power for 61.5 hours. The total power outages in Langley from wind damage for an eight-week period starting 15 November 2006 to 10 January 2007 clocked -- with a battery powered clock, that is -- a total of 148 hours of darkness. That is just short of a week of 24-hour days without electricity. And we citizens of Langley had it easy compared to other rural neighborhoods that clocked a month's worth of outages in the same two-month period.
The current rainy season started in October 2007 with the Seattle region slammed by two powerful windstorms, plus the second wettest 48-hour period of rain since the state began recording rainfall over a century ago. A large track of Southeastern Washington State was under water for days when the Chehalis River submerged Interstate 5, cutting off Seattle from Portland for a week or more. Hurricane force winds knocked the power out and devastated the coastal cities of Hoquiam and Aberdeen.
Winter snows in January and February 2008 have interred the Cascade Mountains in a mantle of record-breaking snows. The winds have been less damaging so far this season for little Langley, but we wait for warm spring rains sending an avalanche of snow melt down the river valleys on the mainland east of us.
(Written 17 February 2008)
I do not think now that floods will come there. Floods are inundating vast tracks of Missouri as I finish off this bulletin – the cloudy green and watery tongue of a great breach in a levee filmed from a helicopter lingering in my mind's eye.
The winds of climate change may have spared my corner of the United States as winter here ends, but downtown Atlanta was excoriated by a large tornado last week in a twister season across the plain and southern states that began two months earlier than normal. The super-tornado storm warnings of spring presage a super-hurricane season coming.
(Written on the first full day of spring, 20 March 2008)
--END--
More Political/Social/Earth Changes Predictions
FEEDBACK LINK
Please send your comments to:
JOIN HOGUEPROPHECY BULLETIN
ALL AOL USERS CLICK HERE
Subscribe to Hogueprophecy RSS Feed
If you are already a member, thanks for joining. If not, then I invite you to join. Members of my list will receive one to two free articles each month that assess important developments in the field of prophecy, Nostradamus, earth-and-social changes, political-and-astrological predictions, the science of meditation, and the development of new religions. I will also.keep you informed of my future appearances on national radio, cyber-radio, chat rooms TV shows, as well as announce the publication of new books and e-articles.
Thanks for reading my newsletter and sharing your views.
John Hogue
Rogue Scholar/Author:
NOSTRADAMUS: The War with Iran eBook
Messiahs, The Visions and Prophecies for the Second Coming
The Millennium Book of Prophecy
Nostradamus: The Complete Prophecies
The Last Pope: The Decline and Fall of the Church of Rome
Essential Nostradamus: Prophecies for the 21st Century and Beyond
Snail Mail Address:
John Hogue
C/O
HogueProphecy Bulletins
P.O. Box 666
Langley WA 98260
IMPORTANT REMINDER FOR SUBSCRIBERS
I post HogueProphecy Bulletins in HTML and text formats. You should have received a bulletin posted with the following dates in the last few months: 15 March 2008; 29 February 08, and, 22 February 2008. If you did not receive all of these bulletins then your spam filter or your ISP may see my bulletins as spam and filters them out. If you can, please add my HogueProphecy Bulletins to your 'safe list' and make sure your settings allow receipt of HTML formatted emails. If you use Yahoo, MSN, AOL, Hotmail, Earthlink or other web-based email programs, please enter the HogueProphecy Bulletin address in your personal address book, or filters may prevent you from receiving your mail. Subscribe to our RSS feed, and you will see the new bulletins appear by checking your Live bookmarks in your browser. No need to worry about SPAM. The RSS completely bypasses the spam blocking problem of ISPs.
Find these books
on prophecy: