Topic: 2004 to 2012 trends
Hello everyone,
I am interested in the broad picture of what people see happening over the next few years. First, I will start from the persepctive of "official science" and say that there is abundant evidence concerning human population growth and human demands on local, regional, and global ecosystems that lead to fraying of these systems. Due to this fraying, there is a real possibility of rapid environmental/social/economic deterioration in the next few decades and possibly within the next few years.
So this possibility is not just based on "intuitive" personal insights. That being said, I am interested in information and perspective that we can get from intuitive insights as I see real limitations in what can be predicted based on rational thinking and modeling alone.
I heard Sean David Morton on the Jan. 31, 2004 edition of Coast to Coast. For those of you who do not know about Coast to Coast it is a radio show hosted by Art Bell and George Noory which I consider to be an interesting resource. The link is www.coasttocoastam.com and for $6.95 a month you can access the past three months of shows via the internet.
So Sean David Morton is known as an intuitive who has apparently had a successful track record predicting such things as earthquakes and stock market trends. He said that he expects the stock market to take a dip in Sep/Oct 2004 and then as an overall trend continue a bull run-up through the summer of 2005 which is followed by a major downturn in Sep/Oct 2005 which is connected to a major economic downturn during the same period.
So these are my questions:
Do people know what we can expect in the next few years?
Are there sources, such as interpreting regional, global, solar system, and galactic cycles that can give us insight into what we can expect during the upcoming period?
Does anyone know anything in specific about Sean David Morton? His web site is http://www.delphiassociates.org/ Is he credible? Has his "successful prediction rate" really been as good as some people seem to claim?
Any input will be appreciated.
Many thanks,
John
