--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, I am the eternal <l.shad...@...> wrote:
>     People seem to think that Barack Obama is going to save this country from 
> ruin during this crisis were in. But they are going to be very disappointed 
> because Obama will die suddenly and mysteriously after only a few days in 
> office without really acomplishing much of anything. Other than to raise 
> taxes.                                                                        
>        The bible says in Rev. 17:10 that there are 7 kings 5 are fallen and 1 
> "is"(present tense). I figured out who the first 6 kings were when Geoge W. 
> Bush was President(During his frist term) and i realilized that there were 
> still 5 former pres. still alive at that point in time. They were Ford, 
> Carter, Reagan,  Bush, Clinton. And of course Geoge W. would be #6 who is 
> spoken of in the present tense because of course he was the president then at 
> that point in time, and still is untill Obama becomes king #7 on Jan. 20th.   
>                                                                              
> I saw in 1 of my visions where my wife said to some other women "the 
> president is allready dead". In the vision she was in Fargo, N. Dak. and she 
> was looking in the direction of a plane that had just taken off from the 
> airport in Fargo. I thing that plane might have been airforce 1.              
>                                                                        
> Acording to the catholic bible in Dan. 11 the person who is king or pres. 
> just before the anti-christ comes along will die during a crises. Which is 
> where we are now and its probably going to get worse.                         
>                                                                  I started  
> my web page in 2004.  www.prophetelijahspeaks.freewebspace.com  read the 
> black print.    I knew Who the frist 6 kings were. And i knew that whoever 
> became pres. after Geoge W. Bush would be the 7th king. I thought for sure 
> that people would be smart enough to see that Bush was wrong in going to war 
> in Iraq. And that they would never reelect him, but i was wrong. And after 
> the election i thought forsure that they would wake up and come to there 
> senses and impeach him. But i was wrong again. But now that Obama has been 
> elected i finely know for sure that he is the 7th king the bible speaks of 
> and the 1 my wife spoke of in my vision.                                      
>                                         Also The angel Gabriel told me that 
> Jimmy Carter is the anti-christ. So he will be the 8th king and is also one 
> of the previous 7 kings as it says in Rev.17:10. Gabriel also told me that 
> Jimmy Carter was going to change his name and divorce his wife.               
>                                                                               
>                                                                               
>                                                                               
>                 
> A Jyotish friend of mine cast Obama's chart and tells me he's in grave
> danger.  Details in a few days.
> 
> http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/barackobama/4953523/Barack-Obama-too-tired-to-give-proper-welcome-to-Gordon-Brown.html
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/adh8jv
> 
> 
> Barack Obama 'too tired' to give proper welcome to Gordon Brown
> Barack Obama's offhand approach to Gordon Brown's Washington visit
> last week came about because the president was facing exhaustion over
> America's economic crisis and is unable to focus on foreign affairs,
> the Sunday Telegraph has been told.
> 
> 
> By Tim Shipman in Washington
> Last Updated: 10:03PM GMT 07 Mar 2009
> 
> Sources close to the White House say Mr Obama and his staff have been
> "overwhelmed" by the economic meltdown and have voiced concerns that
> the new president is not getting enough rest.
> 
> British officials, meanwhile, admit that the White House and US State
> Department staff were utterly bemused by complaints that the Prime
> Minister should have been granted full-blown press conference and a
> formal dinner, as has been customary. They concede that Obama aides
> seemed unfamiliar with the expectations that surround a major visit by
> a British prime minister.
> 
> But Washington figures with access to Mr Obama's inner circle
> explained the slight by saying that those high up in the
> administration have had little time to deal with international
> matters, let alone the diplomatic niceties of the special
> relationship.
> 
> Allies of Mr Obama say his weary appearance in the Oval Office with Mr
> Brown illustrates the strain he is now under, and the president's
> surprise at the sheer volume of business that crosses his desk.
> 
> A well-connected Washington figure, who is close to members of Mr
> Obama's inner circle, expressed concern that Mr Obama had failed so
> far to "even fake an interest in foreign policy".
> 
> A British official conceded that the furore surrounding the apparent
> snub to Mr Brown had come as a shock to the White House. "I think it's
> right to say that their focus is elsewhere, on domestic affairs. A
> number of our US interlocutors said they couldn't quite understand the
> British concerns and didn't get what that was all about."
> 
> The American source said: "Obama is overwhelmed. There is a zero sum
> tension between his ability to attend to the economic issues and his
> ability to be a proactive sculptor of the national security agenda.
> 
> "That was the gamble these guys made at the front end of this
> presidency and I think they're finding it a hard thing to do
> everything."
> 
> British diplomats insist the visit was a success, with officials
> getting the chance to develop closer links with Mr Obama's aides. They
> point out that the president has agreed to meet the prime minister for
> further one-to-one talks in London later this month, ahead of the G20
> summit on April 2.
> 
> But they concede that the mood music of the event was at times
> strained. Mr Brown handed over carefully selected gifts, including a
> pen holder made from the wood of a warship that helped stamp out the
> slave trade - a sister ship of the vessel from which timbers were
> taken to build Mr Obama's Oval Office desk. Mr Obama's gift in return,
> a collection of Hollywood film DVDs that could have been bought from
> any high street store, looked like the kind of thing the White House
> might hand out to the visiting head of a minor African state.
> 
> Mr Obama rang Mr Brown as he flew home, in what many suspected was an
> attempt to make amends.
> 
> The real views of many in Obama administration were laid bare by a
> State Department official involved in planning the Brown visit, who
> reacted with fury when questioned by The Sunday Telegraph about why
> the event was so low-key.
> 
> The official dismissed any notion of the special relationship, saying:
> "There's nothing special about Britain. You're just the same as the
> other 190 countries in the world. You shouldn't expect special
> treatment." The apparent lack of attention to detail by the Obama
> administration is indicative of what many believe to be Mr Obama's
> determination to do too much too quickly.
> 
> In addition to passing the largest stimulus package and the largest
> budget in US history, Mr Obama is battling a plummeting stock market,
> the possible bankruptcy of General Motors, and rising unemployment. He
> has also begun historic efforts to achieve universal healthcare,
> overhaul education and begin a green energy revolution all in his
> first 50 days in office.
> 
> The Sunday Telegraph understands that one of Mr Obama's most prominent
> African American backers, whose endorsement he spent two years
> cultivating, has told friends that he detects a weakness in Mr Obama's
> character.
> 
> "The one real serious flaw I see in Barack Obama is that he thinks he
> can manage all this," the well-known figure told a Washington
> official, who spoke to this newspaper. "He's underestimating the flood
> of things that will hit his desk." A Democratic strategist, who is
> friends with several senior White House aides, revealed that the
> president has regularly appeared worn out and drawn during evening
> work sessions with senior staff in the West Wing and has been forced
> to make decisions more quickly than he is comfortable.
> 
> He said that on several occasions the president has had to hurry back
> from eating dinner with his family in the residence and then tucking
> his daughters in to bed, to conduct urgent government business.
> Matters are not helped by the pledge to give up smoking.
> 
> "People say he looks tired more often than they're used to," the
> strategist said. "He's still calm, but there have been flashes of
> irritation when he thinks he's being pushed to make a decision sooner
> than he wants to make it. He looks like he needs a cigarette."
> 
> Mr Obama was teased by the New York Times on Thursday in a front page
> story which claimed to have detected a greater prevalence of grey
> hairs since he entered the White House.
> 
> The Democratic strategist stressed that Mr Obama's plight was nothing
> new. "He knew it was going to be tough; he said as much throughout the
> campaign. But there's a difference between knowing it is going to be
> tough and facing the sheer relentless pressure of it all."
>


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