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NEXUS MAGAZINE Volume 17, Number 2 FEBRUARY - MARCH 2010, PUBLISHED BY NEXUS Magazine Pty Ltd, ABN 80 003 6ll 434 EDITOR Duncan M. Roads CO-EDITOR Catherine Simons ASSISTANT EDITOR/SUB-EDITOR Ruth Parnell OFFICE ADMIN/EDITORS' ASSISTANTS Jenny Hawke; Susie Foster MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Richard Giles; Susie Foster WEB MISTRESS Jenny Hawke CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE Philip Coppens; Captain John Hoyte; David Wilcock; Andrew Gavin Marshall; Lawrence Broxmeyer, MD; Bryan Strohm; Louis Proud; Jason Offutt; Linda Moulton Howe CARTOONS Phil Somerville COVER GRAPHIC Jeff Edis, jeff_edis@hotmail.com PRINTING Beaudesert Times, Queensland, Australia AUSTRALIAN DISTRIBUTION Newsagents Direct Distribution HEAD OFFICE - All Correspondence PO Box 30, Mapleton, Qld 4560, Australia. Tel: (07) 5442 9280; Fax: (07) 5442 9381 Website: http://www.nexusmagazine.com NZ OFFICE: RD 2, Kaeo, Northland. Tel: +64 (0)9 4085 1963; Email: nexusnz@xtra.co.nz USA OFFICE: PO Box 1248, Walterboro, SC 29488. Email: nexususa@earthlink.net UK OFFICE: 55 Queens Rd, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RHI9 IBG. nexus@ukoffice.u-net.com EUROPE OFFICE: Postbus 10681, 1001 ER Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Email: nexus@fsf.nl STATEMENT OF PURPOSE NEXUS recognises that humanity is undergoing a massive transformation. With this in mind, NEXUS seeks to provide ‘hard-to-get’ information so as to assist people through these changes. NEXUS is not linked to any religious, philosophical or political ideology or organisation. PERMISSION-TO-REPRODUCE POLICY While reproduction and dissemination of the information in NEXUS is actively encouraged, anyone caught making a buck out of it, without our express permission, will be in trouble when we catch them! Editorial elcome to another ground-breaking issue of NEXUS. | still cannot quite believe that it is 2010 and that the world hasn't been through all the catastrophic planetary changes that were predicted. | was first exposed to alternative information about the world when | was an impressionable teenager—and, as many readers will know, the decade of the 970s was just as rife with doom-and-gloom predictions as today is with rophecies about 2012 and the Mayan end times. Back then, the prophets and visionaries were predicting catastrophic Earth changes due to what was called "The Jupiter Effect". Like now, many people actually wanted to see half the world's opulation wiped out in a single cataclysm—with the deserving survivors being rewarded with a new age of peace and harmony. Like now, the 1970s also saw a wave of global government/New World Order conspiracy theories, as readers of None Dare Call It Conspiracy will remember. And even though information about UFOs and ETs has "evolved", so to speak, the 970s had plenty of contactee groups waiting to be "lifted up" as some sort of reward, while the rest of mankind reaped the results of their addiction to materialism and greed—and suffered the expected Earth changes. t seems that nothing has really changed, except the speed at which such ideas and rumours are communicated, thanks to the Internet. After all, if not for the nternet we would not have had the "Climategate" evidence to show that the establishment's "consensus" about global warming is wrong and is based on abricated information. If you missed what Climategate was all about, read our article in this edition. Basically, lots of top scientists got caught conspiring to abricate scientific evidence showing that man-made gases cause climate change. Some say it's the biggest scientific scandal in history, yet it hardly made an impression on the mainstream thinking on the subject. Another topic that was barely followed up by the mass media was the appearance of a huge spiral in the sky above Norway in December. If you haven't ooked it up on the Internet, then do so right now. The mainstream explanation or the apparition is that it was a failed Russian missile test—which upon even cursory examination is obviously wrong. At the time of going to press, the best explanation is that the spiral, with its final wormhole phase, was generated by a HAARP-type facility in Norway, as you will read in the extract we publish here. e drums of war are beating once again, with Iran still in the firing line. This ime, however, many people think that an attack on Iran will trigger the big one: World War III. To see what has changed since the last escalation of threats, read Andrew Marshall's article here. As mentioned two editions ago, the health problems caused by breathing toxic umes in aircraft cabins deserve more attention. "Aerotoxic syndrome" is the name coined by a group of scientists back in 1999, and we hope that exposure of this information leads to better safety standards to relieve aircrew and passengers. The article on lightning in this edition arrived like a bolt out of the blue. (Sorry, couldn't resist that!) Seriously though, this is a really fascinating topic and there are many mysteries about this phenomenon that remain unsolved. For example, the chance of a person being hit once in their life is extremely remote, and being hit twice would be like winning the lottery twice—but what about the guy who was struck seven times over the course of his life? Speaking of strange things, | wonder how many readers have heard of the "black- eyed kids" phenomenon? A few years ago | started noticing reports and accounts of this from people with no exposure to previous information on the subject, and the similarities of the encounters reveal that this is a genuine phenomenon—but, again, one with more questions than answers. May the new year bring you great rewards—and more great NEXUS reading! Duncan Volume 17, Number 2 FEBRUARY - MARCH 2010, EDITOR Duncan M. Roads CO-EDITOR Catherine Simons OFFICE ADMIN/EDITORS' ASSISTANTS Jenny Hawke; Susie Foster MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Richard Giles; Susie Foster WEB MISTRESS Jenny Hawke CARTOONS Phil Somerville COVER GRAPHIC Jeff Edis, jeff_edis@hotmail.com PRINTING Heaueleait Tilia, »Quaauemnd Australia WARRANTY AND INDEMNITY Advertisers upon and by lodging material with the Publisher for publication or authorising or approving of the publication of any material INDEMNIFY the Publisher and its servants and agents against all liability claims or proceedings whatsoever arising an the publication and without limiting the generality of the foregoing to indemnify each a them in relation to defamation, slander of title, breach of copyright, infringement of trademarks or names of publication titles, unfair competition or trade practices, royalties or violation of rights or privacy AND WARRANT ae the material complies with all relevant laws and regulations and that its publication will not give rise to any rights against or abilities in the Publisher, its servants or agents and in particular that nothing therein is capable of being misleading or deceptive or otherwise in breach of the Part V of the Trade Practices Act 1974. All expressions of opinion are published on the basis that they are not to be regarded as expressing the opinion of the Publisher or its servants or agents. Editorial advice is not specific and readers are advised to seek profes- sional help for individual problems. The anneNen reserves the right to refuse any advertising material for any reason. © NEXUS New Times 1987-2010 2 «NEXUS ASSISTANT EDITOR/SUB-EDITOR Ruth Parnell FEBRUARY - MARCH 2010 www.nexusmagazine.com