1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:05,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:05,080 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 2: And welcome back to Coast to Coast George and ore 3 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:10,760 Speaker 2: with you. Mark Lerner graduated from Michigan State University with 4 00:00:10,920 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 2: high honors with a Bachelor of Arts degree in social science. 5 00:00:14,560 --> 00:00:17,599 Speaker 2: In nineteen seventy two. He completed an intensive one year 6 00:00:17,640 --> 00:00:21,840 Speaker 2: training course and professional astrology and he was hooked hearing 7 00:00:21,880 --> 00:00:25,239 Speaker 2: how they summoned other dimensions to grow thriving gardens in 8 00:00:25,280 --> 00:00:29,320 Speaker 2: the barren soils of northern Scotland. Mark joined the Finehorm 9 00:00:29,360 --> 00:00:33,640 Speaker 2: community in nineteen seventy six. His book includes Welcome the 10 00:00:33,680 --> 00:00:38,400 Speaker 2: Planet Earth. His magazine is GPS Astrology and his website 11 00:00:38,479 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 2: is linked up at Coast tocoastam dot com. Mark, welcome back, 12 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:43,040 Speaker 2: my friend. How are you. 13 00:00:43,880 --> 00:00:46,200 Speaker 3: I'm great, Thanks for having me on tonight. 14 00:00:46,280 --> 00:00:50,559 Speaker 2: George, you are what we call an expert in Earth astrology. 15 00:00:50,680 --> 00:00:52,080 Speaker 2: Tell us a little bit about that. 16 00:00:52,880 --> 00:00:56,880 Speaker 3: Well. When I began Welcome planat Earth, which was a newsletter, 17 00:00:57,160 --> 00:01:00,640 Speaker 3: newspaper and magazine from nineteen eighty one to two two thousand, 18 00:01:02,200 --> 00:01:04,880 Speaker 3: again the name that has been used for hundreds of 19 00:01:04,959 --> 00:01:09,400 Speaker 3: years and Europe and America about Earth astrology was the 20 00:01:09,440 --> 00:01:12,440 Speaker 3: word mundane. And of course now we talked about this 21 00:01:12,600 --> 00:01:15,240 Speaker 3: last time when I was on with you and everybody 22 00:01:15,520 --> 00:01:18,759 Speaker 3: in June, that word now is kind of whole, huh. 23 00:01:18,800 --> 00:01:23,160 Speaker 3: But it never was that way. But fundamentally, Earth astrology 24 00:01:23,520 --> 00:01:27,080 Speaker 3: is the astrology of eclipses, the beginning of seasons, what 25 00:01:27,120 --> 00:01:31,120 Speaker 3: we call the equinoxes, and solstices, new moons, full moons, 26 00:01:31,720 --> 00:01:35,800 Speaker 3: war leaders. It's basically looking at, in fact, every state 27 00:01:35,840 --> 00:01:38,399 Speaker 3: of the Union, I mean here in the United States, 28 00:01:38,600 --> 00:01:42,240 Speaker 3: all of us listening here and anywhere around the world. 29 00:01:42,400 --> 00:01:46,119 Speaker 3: Every country has a birth chart, every state, even every 30 00:01:46,160 --> 00:01:49,760 Speaker 3: city and town. Sometimes they're hard to find, but every 31 00:01:49,840 --> 00:01:52,360 Speaker 3: state in the United States, for instance, when it entered 32 00:01:52,400 --> 00:01:55,480 Speaker 3: the Union, that's a chart, and a lot of you 33 00:01:55,560 --> 00:01:59,200 Speaker 3: out there are living in states where maybe the state 34 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:03,440 Speaker 3: chart and your personal birth chart can be compatible or incompatible. 35 00:02:03,760 --> 00:02:05,320 Speaker 3: Because I get a lot of people, there's what we 36 00:02:05,400 --> 00:02:09,240 Speaker 3: call astracryptography, which has been developed the last forty years. 37 00:02:09,240 --> 00:02:13,120 Speaker 3: So even whether you're living in your own birth town 38 00:02:13,280 --> 00:02:16,920 Speaker 3: or you've moved away, sometimes people are not living exactly 39 00:02:17,200 --> 00:02:20,240 Speaker 3: in the best situations and other people are. 40 00:02:21,160 --> 00:02:24,120 Speaker 2: What's the significance of full moons. We've got the harvest 41 00:02:24,160 --> 00:02:24,800 Speaker 2: moon tonight. 42 00:02:25,560 --> 00:02:27,880 Speaker 3: Okay, so yeah, I mean this is one of the 43 00:02:27,960 --> 00:02:31,880 Speaker 3: rare times where I'm actually on within a couple hours 44 00:02:32,320 --> 00:02:35,800 Speaker 3: of a full moon. So this is what they call 45 00:02:35,840 --> 00:02:40,359 Speaker 3: it supermoon. That only means it's not really all that significant. 46 00:02:40,480 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 3: It's just that certain months we always have a full moon. 47 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,120 Speaker 3: Sometimes it's a total lunar eclipse or partial lunar eclipse. 48 00:02:47,760 --> 00:02:50,480 Speaker 3: So every twenty nine days there's a full moon. If 49 00:02:50,520 --> 00:02:55,760 Speaker 3: the moon is what we call hereagy closest to the Earth, 50 00:02:56,160 --> 00:02:58,600 Speaker 3: the moon is not always the same distance from us, 51 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:04,000 Speaker 3: then the moon looks you see, whereas at Apigee. In fact, 52 00:03:04,040 --> 00:03:07,040 Speaker 3: this is what's going to happen at this solar eclipse. 53 00:03:07,040 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 3: We'll call it annular solar eclipse. Many many were Sinners 54 00:03:10,919 --> 00:03:14,400 Speaker 3: have now heard about the one on October fourteenth, which 55 00:03:14,440 --> 00:03:18,560 Speaker 3: is not total, and that's because the moon is at Apigee. 56 00:03:18,639 --> 00:03:22,400 Speaker 3: It's it's further away from the Earth. So when you 57 00:03:22,520 --> 00:03:25,320 Speaker 3: hear or you go online to Nassa whatever it is 58 00:03:25,360 --> 00:03:28,440 Speaker 3: and want to hear about it and read about the 59 00:03:28,480 --> 00:03:32,399 Speaker 3: annular solar eclipse October fourteenth, they'll call it a ring 60 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:36,400 Speaker 3: of fire because what's happening, and again everybody's got to 61 00:03:36,440 --> 00:03:39,760 Speaker 3: take the usual precautions. Just like with the total solar eclipse, 62 00:03:39,800 --> 00:03:41,880 Speaker 3: you can't stare at the Sun, so you got to, 63 00:03:42,040 --> 00:03:44,800 Speaker 3: you know, figure out a way not to directly look 64 00:03:44,800 --> 00:03:47,800 Speaker 3: at the Sun. So just keep in mind that sometimes 65 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:51,840 Speaker 3: the moon is closer and sometimes it's further away. Full 66 00:03:51,960 --> 00:03:55,440 Speaker 3: moons though you know for hundreds, if not several thousand 67 00:03:55,520 --> 00:03:58,920 Speaker 3: years in astrology and astronomy, you know, this is like 68 00:03:58,960 --> 00:04:01,240 Speaker 3: when we get all the idea about where wolves and 69 00:04:01,360 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 3: animals getting all kind of crazy because the Sun and 70 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:09,080 Speaker 3: the Moon are tugging at the Earth and the same 71 00:04:09,120 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 3: thing really at new moons and solar eclipses, whether they're total, 72 00:04:13,200 --> 00:04:15,720 Speaker 3: annual or partial, then you get the Sun and the 73 00:04:15,720 --> 00:04:18,400 Speaker 3: Moon on one side of the Earth. So this is 74 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:22,680 Speaker 3: why eclipses they're very powerful. In astrology, we call the 75 00:04:22,680 --> 00:04:26,320 Speaker 3: Sun moon the two lights. So they're fundamentally like in 76 00:04:26,560 --> 00:04:29,119 Speaker 3: everyone's charts, we have a Sun and we have a moon, 77 00:04:29,600 --> 00:04:32,039 Speaker 3: and sometimes the moon is more powerful and the moon 78 00:04:32,160 --> 00:04:35,720 Speaker 3: sign in people's charts. People need to understand that the 79 00:04:35,760 --> 00:04:39,160 Speaker 3: moon is incredibly significant and we're much more than our 80 00:04:39,200 --> 00:04:39,880 Speaker 3: sun signs. 81 00:04:40,360 --> 00:04:43,560 Speaker 2: Mark. Is it unusual to have two eclipses even though 82 00:04:43,600 --> 00:04:49,040 Speaker 2: it's a lunar and solar eclipse in the October No, I. 83 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:52,680 Speaker 3: Mean it is what happens every year, is they start shifting. 84 00:04:53,640 --> 00:04:56,520 Speaker 3: Get this I was reading up on. I mean, I 85 00:04:56,600 --> 00:04:59,279 Speaker 3: have these classes just so everybody knows that I've talked 86 00:04:59,320 --> 00:05:01,760 Speaker 3: for a lo long time. There's thirty six of them 87 00:05:02,160 --> 00:05:05,800 Speaker 3: in the advanced series. I have a whole lesson hour 88 00:05:05,920 --> 00:05:09,159 Speaker 3: lesson and all kinds of notes about eclipses and fixed 89 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:14,920 Speaker 3: stars and even heliocentric astrology and so on. But I 90 00:05:15,040 --> 00:05:18,600 Speaker 3: looked at the Britannica about how frequent we get eclipses. 91 00:05:19,000 --> 00:05:21,680 Speaker 3: You can get two to five solar eclipses in a year. 92 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:26,120 Speaker 3: You can get two lunar eclipses, but they shift from 93 00:05:26,200 --> 00:05:30,520 Speaker 3: one month to another, so yes, it is unusual to 94 00:05:30,600 --> 00:05:33,719 Speaker 3: have them in October. The other thing is sometimes you 95 00:05:33,720 --> 00:05:36,240 Speaker 3: can have a year where there is no lunar eclipses, 96 00:05:36,400 --> 00:05:39,599 Speaker 3: either full or partial. But we always have a couple 97 00:05:39,600 --> 00:05:43,000 Speaker 3: of solar eclipses. And one of the things, George, the 98 00:05:43,040 --> 00:05:46,280 Speaker 3: maximum is five, and in nineteen thirty five there were 99 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:49,960 Speaker 3: five solar eclipses, and according to the Britannica, the next 100 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:53,200 Speaker 3: time we'll have that number will be in two thousand, 101 00:05:53,640 --> 00:05:57,919 Speaker 3: two hundred and six like two hundred and sixty or 102 00:05:58,080 --> 00:06:01,520 Speaker 3: set two hundred and sixty US years later. That's how 103 00:06:01,600 --> 00:06:04,440 Speaker 3: infrequent it is to have five solar eclipses in a year. 104 00:06:05,080 --> 00:06:08,640 Speaker 2: Unusual. I've talked to Glynnis mccancer numbers lady, I'll ask 105 00:06:08,720 --> 00:06:12,080 Speaker 2: you to mark. You're the astrologer. What is it about 106 00:06:12,320 --> 00:06:16,080 Speaker 2: numbers and celestial patterns that determine our outcome? 107 00:06:17,640 --> 00:06:23,400 Speaker 3: Well, you know, yeah, I mean numerology astrology Toureau of Jemetria, 108 00:06:23,640 --> 00:06:27,080 Speaker 3: going back to the Bible, for instance, the Hebrew alphabet 109 00:06:27,320 --> 00:06:30,960 Speaker 3: with a pictorial alphabet. Our English alphabet is actually connected 110 00:06:31,000 --> 00:06:33,719 Speaker 3: to all that. That's what we know. Like for instance, 111 00:06:33,720 --> 00:06:36,800 Speaker 3: in English, the letter A is the first number, so 112 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:44,120 Speaker 3: that generally, using regular numerology, A has a one value quantitatively, 113 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:48,320 Speaker 3: but it's more qualitatively whether in a person's name, and 114 00:06:48,360 --> 00:06:51,240 Speaker 3: an A could be like a numerology, you could have 115 00:06:51,320 --> 00:06:53,880 Speaker 3: a long A or a short short A. You know, 116 00:06:53,960 --> 00:06:58,479 Speaker 3: some people's names begin with the power of valves. B 117 00:06:58,760 --> 00:07:01,359 Speaker 3: is the second letter, that's two, and so on, these 118 00:07:01,440 --> 00:07:05,320 Speaker 3: three and so on. So numerology often we're working with 119 00:07:05,480 --> 00:07:09,800 Speaker 3: people's names, and of course we all have the numbers 120 00:07:09,840 --> 00:07:13,680 Speaker 3: of Let's say somebody is born the twelfth month December, 121 00:07:13,680 --> 00:07:17,280 Speaker 3: so there's a twelve era whatever day, fifteenth, eighth, and 122 00:07:17,320 --> 00:07:19,440 Speaker 3: so on, and then you have digits for your year. 123 00:07:20,240 --> 00:07:22,520 Speaker 3: So when Glynnis is on and you know, I've been 124 00:07:22,560 --> 00:07:26,520 Speaker 3: doing this myself for decades. Numerology is the foundation point 125 00:07:26,520 --> 00:07:30,280 Speaker 3: of astrology because everything in all of our charts, the 126 00:07:30,400 --> 00:07:33,520 Speaker 3: Sun is in one degree. Out of three hundred and 127 00:07:33,520 --> 00:07:37,520 Speaker 3: sixty of our charts. The circular chart. Most of the 128 00:07:37,560 --> 00:07:40,720 Speaker 3: people listening have seen their charts or hear about it. 129 00:07:41,160 --> 00:07:45,239 Speaker 3: There's twelve signs each time is thirty degrees of space. 130 00:07:45,440 --> 00:07:47,760 Speaker 3: If you multiply thirty times twelve, you get the three 131 00:07:47,840 --> 00:07:50,920 Speaker 3: hundred and sixty degrees of the zodiac and of a circle. 132 00:07:51,320 --> 00:07:54,120 Speaker 3: And so we all have the Sun at a particular 133 00:07:54,240 --> 00:07:57,040 Speaker 3: degree that has a number and a value. The same 134 00:07:57,080 --> 00:08:00,560 Speaker 3: thing with the moon, Mercury, Venus, the eight main planets, 135 00:08:01,040 --> 00:08:03,760 Speaker 3: and if you work with asteroids, which I do, and 136 00:08:04,240 --> 00:08:07,480 Speaker 3: the planet Hiron which was covered nineteen seventy seven, and 137 00:08:07,520 --> 00:08:11,080 Speaker 3: then you work with mathematical alignments like a grand triangle 138 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:15,200 Speaker 3: or a square or oppositions, they're part of what we 139 00:08:15,280 --> 00:08:19,240 Speaker 3: call aspects and astrology. So everything is part of the 140 00:08:19,320 --> 00:08:23,200 Speaker 3: great geometry of the heavens and what we all learned 141 00:08:23,240 --> 00:08:26,520 Speaker 3: when we were studying geometry in high school. But I 142 00:08:26,560 --> 00:08:30,880 Speaker 3: loved those classes and somehow I made it to studying astrology, 143 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:32,400 Speaker 3: which is like cosmic. 144 00:08:31,960 --> 00:08:36,400 Speaker 2: Geometry astrologically speaking, mark when there's a full moon, what 145 00:08:36,440 --> 00:08:37,800 Speaker 2: does that mean to us? 146 00:08:38,280 --> 00:08:41,520 Speaker 3: Well, what's happened is that again, if we go back 147 00:08:41,640 --> 00:08:46,600 Speaker 3: hundreds of years, it was lily put this way. Humanity 148 00:08:47,120 --> 00:08:51,000 Speaker 3: was used to this kind of thing all over the world. Now, 149 00:08:51,080 --> 00:08:55,480 Speaker 3: if you have been a cloudy sky or training, the 150 00:08:55,520 --> 00:08:57,439 Speaker 3: moon will be out there, but you're not going to 151 00:08:57,480 --> 00:09:00,920 Speaker 3: be able to see it full. But it's such a reality, 152 00:09:01,440 --> 00:09:04,880 Speaker 3: So I think, I'm sure there's so many books about 153 00:09:04,920 --> 00:09:10,040 Speaker 3: how we get mythologies and how ancient peoples, for instance, 154 00:09:10,040 --> 00:09:13,800 Speaker 3: they would get their shamans and so on because astrology 155 00:09:13,840 --> 00:09:16,840 Speaker 3: and astronomy and looking at the heavens. And we even 156 00:09:16,960 --> 00:09:21,840 Speaker 3: have calculations going back several thousand years to the Middle East, India, China, 157 00:09:21,880 --> 00:09:27,200 Speaker 3: all over the world where astrologer astronomers were watching, say, 158 00:09:27,360 --> 00:09:31,960 Speaker 3: Jupiter Saturn conjunctions every twenty years. As far as the 159 00:09:32,040 --> 00:09:37,160 Speaker 3: full moon is, it does disturb, shall we say, the atmosphere, 160 00:09:37,280 --> 00:09:40,640 Speaker 3: you know, animals, birds and so on. So that's why 161 00:09:40,720 --> 00:09:43,160 Speaker 3: there's been so many movies, you know, particularly in the 162 00:09:43,200 --> 00:09:47,040 Speaker 3: recent years, about you know, zombies and were wolves and 163 00:09:47,160 --> 00:09:51,720 Speaker 3: strange behavior. Because what's happening again, like before, when the 164 00:09:51,760 --> 00:09:56,280 Speaker 3: moon is full, the sun and the moon are tugging 165 00:09:56,360 --> 00:09:59,040 Speaker 3: at the earth, just like the tides, and that has 166 00:09:59,080 --> 00:10:02,360 Speaker 3: an impact on all of our lives. Okay, so, but 167 00:10:02,480 --> 00:10:05,040 Speaker 3: in the ancient world, the thing is, as the moon 168 00:10:05,120 --> 00:10:08,640 Speaker 3: keeps changing its phases, the full moon was always important. 169 00:10:08,760 --> 00:10:10,560 Speaker 3: And this is important for us to think about in 170 00:10:10,559 --> 00:10:12,600 Speaker 3: the ancient world because so many of us live in 171 00:10:12,640 --> 00:10:16,240 Speaker 3: these you know well, with cities with artificial light, that 172 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:19,320 Speaker 3: this is how people needed to protect themselves, you know, 173 00:10:19,480 --> 00:10:23,160 Speaker 3: from enemies and so on. You'd have people guarding your 174 00:10:23,600 --> 00:10:26,120 Speaker 3: town and so on to make sure somebody didn't attack you. 175 00:10:26,160 --> 00:10:28,200 Speaker 3: And if the moon was full, you could see things, 176 00:10:28,640 --> 00:10:34,440 Speaker 3: you know, when when when Seal Team six took down 177 00:10:34,440 --> 00:10:36,920 Speaker 3: of Sonda Laden as example, I think there's that movie 178 00:10:37,080 --> 00:10:41,360 Speaker 3: zero Dark thirty, A lot of this stuff happened still 179 00:10:42,240 --> 00:10:44,640 Speaker 3: and you know, I mean these are warfare things that 180 00:10:44,679 --> 00:10:47,440 Speaker 3: are really shocking. But having studied so much history and 181 00:10:47,520 --> 00:10:50,840 Speaker 3: current events, they didn't just go in there, you know, 182 00:10:50,960 --> 00:10:54,199 Speaker 3: to this unusual area, you know, during during a bright 183 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:57,280 Speaker 3: sunny day. I mean a lot of this is like 184 00:10:57,400 --> 00:10:59,800 Speaker 3: all planned, and you know, they don't tell us about this. 185 00:11:00,080 --> 00:11:03,520 Speaker 3: Defense departments so on to go in when people are 186 00:11:03,559 --> 00:11:06,200 Speaker 3: asleep and there isn't a moon like what we call 187 00:11:06,280 --> 00:11:08,880 Speaker 3: the dark of the moon just before a new moon, 188 00:11:09,200 --> 00:11:12,440 Speaker 3: in order to you know, obscure helicopters or whatever it may. 189 00:11:12,280 --> 00:11:16,880 Speaker 2: Be, mark any news on the outer reaching planets and 190 00:11:17,000 --> 00:11:20,240 Speaker 2: these other celestial objects out there in the Solar system. 191 00:11:20,720 --> 00:11:23,920 Speaker 3: Well, yeah, this is there's a combination of things that's 192 00:11:24,040 --> 00:11:26,680 Speaker 3: very disturbing. You know, we all think we're sort of 193 00:11:27,040 --> 00:11:30,000 Speaker 3: out of that horrible COVID situation, and of course many 194 00:11:30,080 --> 00:11:32,679 Speaker 3: of us are reading. Okay, there are these different variants. 195 00:11:32,720 --> 00:11:36,280 Speaker 3: You know, how serious is it. Everybody's got different opinions. Oh, 196 00:11:36,320 --> 00:11:39,240 Speaker 3: it's more like the flu. Other people have come down 197 00:11:39,240 --> 00:11:42,480 Speaker 3: with it, and depending on people's health, you know, it 198 00:11:42,520 --> 00:11:44,840 Speaker 3: can be very serious. Now here's where I wanted to 199 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:47,599 Speaker 3: mention this. There's a planet cool Ears. Okay, it was 200 00:11:47,640 --> 00:11:50,760 Speaker 3: discovered in two thousand and five. It has a cycle 201 00:11:50,760 --> 00:11:53,320 Speaker 3: of five hundred and fifty nine years. It's one of 202 00:11:53,360 --> 00:11:57,920 Speaker 3: these planets beyond Pluto now on October twentieth and twenty first, 203 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:02,120 Speaker 3: right between these two eclipses, Okay, the October fourteenth annular 204 00:12:02,160 --> 00:12:06,920 Speaker 3: solar eclipse which is actually coming through Oregon, Nevada, New 205 00:12:07,000 --> 00:12:12,319 Speaker 3: Mexico through San Antonio, Texas goes into Mexico. That particular 206 00:12:12,520 --> 00:12:15,520 Speaker 3: eclipse is on the fourteenth. The other one, I definitely 207 00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:18,120 Speaker 3: want to talk to everybody about October twenty eighth, which 208 00:12:18,160 --> 00:12:21,240 Speaker 3: is a partial lunar eclipse, because that's connecting to the 209 00:12:21,280 --> 00:12:24,800 Speaker 3: great Stock Market crash in New York from nineteen twenty nine. 210 00:12:24,880 --> 00:12:28,520 Speaker 3: So I want to mention that fairly soon here. But 211 00:12:29,000 --> 00:12:31,559 Speaker 3: ere If and the nose of the Moon. A lot 212 00:12:31,600 --> 00:12:34,560 Speaker 3: of people know their charts through these two horseshoe figures. 213 00:12:34,559 --> 00:12:37,760 Speaker 3: It has to do with the fate destiny points as 214 00:12:37,800 --> 00:12:41,280 Speaker 3: the Moon and the Earth and the Sun coordinate. And 215 00:12:41,320 --> 00:12:46,560 Speaker 3: what's happening is Eres, this faraway planet. In mythology, this 216 00:12:46,640 --> 00:12:50,200 Speaker 3: planet was named after the sister of Mars. She was 217 00:12:50,280 --> 00:12:53,240 Speaker 3: the one in mythology who created in a sense, was 218 00:12:53,280 --> 00:12:56,160 Speaker 3: the catalyst for the Trojan War because she wasn't invited 219 00:12:56,200 --> 00:12:59,719 Speaker 3: to a particular marriage. And these mythologies are part of 220 00:12:59,760 --> 00:13:02,600 Speaker 3: these planets. And the other thing I wanted to say 221 00:13:02,679 --> 00:13:07,000 Speaker 3: is now the World Health Organization and the CDC have allowed, 222 00:13:07,160 --> 00:13:13,200 Speaker 3: if not encouraged, particularly a biologist in Ontario, Canada, to 223 00:13:13,280 --> 00:13:17,120 Speaker 3: come up with names instead of the variants. Because when 224 00:13:17,160 --> 00:13:19,560 Speaker 3: somebody says, well, we've got to be a two point 225 00:13:19,640 --> 00:13:21,920 Speaker 3: whatever it is, so many people are like, oh, there 226 00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:24,360 Speaker 3: they go again, you know, with these weird Greek names. 227 00:13:24,800 --> 00:13:28,480 Speaker 3: So now they're naming and one of these variants is 228 00:13:28,559 --> 00:13:32,040 Speaker 3: named Erius, you see, and we're going to have eurus 229 00:13:32,160 --> 00:13:36,360 Speaker 3: very powerfully situated. And that worries me. You see that 230 00:13:36,679 --> 00:13:40,560 Speaker 3: a biologist or an astronomer will sort of connect up 231 00:13:40,640 --> 00:13:45,040 Speaker 3: something and then say, oh, here's the latest COVID kind 232 00:13:45,080 --> 00:13:48,480 Speaker 3: of thing. It's a long story, but just people are 233 00:13:48,480 --> 00:13:52,520 Speaker 3: going to see these names like our Taurus, foreign as Parola, 234 00:13:53,240 --> 00:13:56,760 Speaker 3: these different little cutesy names. I don't think they should 235 00:13:56,760 --> 00:13:58,880 Speaker 3: be doing this, you know what I mean, They're they're 236 00:13:58,960 --> 00:14:03,040 Speaker 3: naming virus. Is that you can't see after celestial bodies. 237 00:14:03,679 --> 00:14:05,400 Speaker 2: That's kind of silly, isn't. 238 00:14:05,200 --> 00:14:08,880 Speaker 3: It's it's silly. Look The thing is they don't know 239 00:14:08,880 --> 00:14:10,920 Speaker 3: what they're doing. You see. This is part of the problem. 240 00:14:10,920 --> 00:14:14,160 Speaker 3: Even with these names like Eris or Sedna and so on. Now, 241 00:14:14,240 --> 00:14:17,559 Speaker 3: some of these planets that are being discovered by it, 242 00:14:17,720 --> 00:14:21,280 Speaker 3: I mean there's some great astronomers Mike Brown, Chad to Heal. 243 00:14:21,560 --> 00:14:22,960 Speaker 3: I don't know if they've ever been on your show. 244 00:14:23,000 --> 00:14:26,120 Speaker 3: You know, these astronomers that are finding all these planets right, 245 00:14:26,160 --> 00:14:28,440 Speaker 3: you know, beyond Pluto. There's a whole bunch of them. 246 00:14:28,800 --> 00:14:33,160 Speaker 3: And when people order, if they they order my consultations, 247 00:14:33,160 --> 00:14:35,360 Speaker 3: if they want to know about where Eris is or said, 248 00:14:35,680 --> 00:14:38,360 Speaker 3: you know, I'll tell them. But the thing is because 249 00:14:38,400 --> 00:14:41,040 Speaker 3: they have powerful forces. But it is very silly, and 250 00:14:41,080 --> 00:14:43,200 Speaker 3: it's not just silly. I think it's very dangerous. 251 00:14:43,520 --> 00:14:46,760 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 252 00:14:46,800 --> 00:14:50,040 Speaker 1: one am Eastern, and go to Coast to coastam dot 253 00:14:50,080 --> 00:14:50,880 Speaker 1: com for more