DISCLAIMER: None of the information I share on this site is my own. I simply try to collect the best rumors and information I feel applies to a given day’s news and information that I hear or read about the "New Iraqi Dinar". Those I do speak with, I trust. So, any personal phone calls that I share on the blog, I have reason to believe they are sincere in their intent, and I believe they are in some way connected to those who do know what is going on. As for myself, I am connected to no “source”, just to those who tell me they are. I will never reveal a “contact” of mine, or their “source” for the purpose of giving more grounds or proof of their claims. Just take everything as a rumor and allow it to reveal itself over time. I have no hidden agenda for posting what I deem to be worthy reading. I’m just trying to make this difficult ride easier to follow for my family, friends, acquaintances, and anyone they deem to share this site with. I wish you all the very best! I hope this ride will end soon. It has definitely taken its toll… – Dinar Daddy

Monday, December 28, 2009

YOU WILL SEE A BLUE MOON ON THIS NEW YEAR'S EVE

Tuesday, December 29, 2009 8:22 IST (((The RIVER Floweth!)))

http://www.dnaindia.com/scitech/report_you-will-see-a-blue-moon-on-this-new-year-s-eve_1328591


Suriname: If you can take a break from all that New Year's Eve revelry on Thursday, take a look up in the sky. A second full moon in a calendar month will appear in the night sky, an occurrence known as a blue moon. You may also want to see.

A blue moon comes every two-and-a-half years on average, but this will be the first time since 1990 that it will coincide with New Year's Eve. The event will not happen again till 2028. "While everyone's celebrating they should also take a moment and look up into the night sky," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted astronomer David Reneke, who is associated with the Australasian Science magazine, as saying. Instead of turning blue, Reneke said, the moon, if anything, could turn red when viewed from cities because of the filter effect of fireworks smoke. So, he said, the best way to view the moon in its pristine state was to get away from the city lights.

But, Reneke said, the eruption in 1883 of the Krakatoa--a volcanic island in the Sunda Strait between the islands of Java and Sumatra in Indonesia--spilled so much dust into the atmosphere that for two years afterwards, the moon took on a bluish hue.

'Blue moon' has become a metaphor for a rare event, as encapsulated in the phrase 'once in a blue moon'. The earliest record of the expression dates back to 1528. A pamphlet criticising the English clergy read: "If they say the moon is blue, we must believe that it is true." Another interpretation suggests 'blue moon' originates from the English meaning of 'belewe'--which can mean 'colour' or 'betrayer'.

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