~~ Quakes Surging --> Sun's Gravity Sucking in Baby Star ~~ 
 
There is an increasing possibility of mass death in the 
tri-state area surrounding New York City. 
 
The U.S.G.S. and N.A.S.A. know that earth traumas are 
intensifying, because they know of the intensifying gravitational
and electromagnetic forces now being exerted upon Earth by an 
incoming brown dwarf star, which N.A.S.A. knows is being sucked  
in by the enormous gravitational force field of our Sun.  
 
Consequently, the people of the greater New York City area are 
in danger of death by leukemia from the Indian Point Nuclear reactor, 
located atop the juncture of several earthquake faults. As this brown 
dwarf star nears the inner Solar System, on its loop-around the Sun, 
its gravitational and electromagnetic force fields will provoke 
greater earthquake activity. We must somehow get the attention of
anti-nuclear citizen activist groups in the greater 
New York/New Jersey/Connecticut area. This nuclear reactor sits upon  
the juncture of several earthquake faults. 
 
THE INDIAN POINT REACTOR MUST BE SHUT DOWN NOW, due to the 
external force fields of this Sun-drawn brown dwarf star, the discovery 
of which was heralded by the nation's largest newspaper, The New York 
Times. See a photocopy of the actual New York Times report. 
John DiNardo 
http://yowusa.com/planetx/2009/planetx-2009-02a/1.shtml
 
http://www.earth.columbia.edu/articles/view/2235
~~ THE EARTH INSTITUTE, Columbia University, New York City
Press Release:  Aug. 21, 2008
EARTHQUAKES MAY ENDGANGER NEW YORK MORE THAN THOUGHT,
SAYS STUDY. INDIAN POINT NUCLEAR POWER PLANT SEEN AS
PARTICULAR RISK.
[Abstract]: A study by a group of prominent seismologists suggests
that a pattern of subtle but active faults makes the risk of earthquakes
to the New York City area substantially greater than formerly believed.
Among other things, they say that the controversial Indian Point nuclear
power plants, 24 miles north of the city, sit astride the previously
unidentified intersection of two active seismic zones. The paper appears
in the current issue of the Bulletin of the Seismological Society
of America.

3-16-11