To: Seeking the truth
BUMP.
Today is 10/7 and the three month anniversary of the London Bombings on 7/7.
9 posted on
10/07/2005 8:20:30 AM PDT by
Constitution Day
(When life gives you lemons, just shut up and eat your damn lemons.)
To: Constitution Day
>Today is 10/7 and the three month anniversary of the London Bombings on 7/7.<
Isn't it also the 4th anniversary of the US' attack on the Taliban?
25 posted on
10/07/2005 8:24:39 AM PDT by
Darnright
(Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic.)
To: Constitution Day
October 07, 2001:
On my orders, the United States military has begun strikes against al-Qa'eda terrorist training camps and military installations of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. - President George W. Bush
Sept 11 News
Also:
I was told on another thread that today is also the anniversary of that Battle of Lepanto, which drove the Muslims out of Europe and essentially kept them out for 400+ years.
Prayers up that this is just a coincidence and nothing happens today...anywhere.
To: Constitution Day
And if you add 10 and 7 you get 17 which is just 2 less than 19 which was the number of hijackers on 9/11 which also has a 9 and an 11. If fact today could be thought of as two months prior to Pearl Harbor day which is sure to bring out all those vengeful Japanese tourists looking to detonate themselves. As you know they invented this type of thing.....
Sorry to be rude but every thread has somebody looking for connections based on dates and numbers. Worry over coincidence will make for many a sleepless night.
39 posted on
10/07/2005 8:28:27 AM PDT by
dmartin
(Who Dares Wins)
To: Constitution Day
"...and the three month anniversary..." From dictionary.com:
an·ni·ver·sa·ry Audio pronunciation of "anniversary" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (n-vûrs-r) n. pl. an·ni·ver·sa·ries
- The annually recurring date of a past event, especially one of historical, national, or personal importance: a wedding anniversary; the anniversary of the founding of Rome.
- A celebration commemorating such a date.
[Middle English anniversarie, from Medieval Latin (dis) anniversria, anniversary (day), from Latin, feminine of anniversrius, returning yearly : annus, year; see at- in Indo-European Roots + versus, past participle of vertere, to turn; see wer-2 in Indo-European Roots.]
There is nothing "annual" about a three month period of time.
I hate that! Sorry! People did that after 9/11 talking about the "1 week anniversary" and so on of 9/11.
92 posted on
10/07/2005 9:05:31 AM PDT by
DaGman
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