DoUwant2go2Heaven
New member
VIBE;c-9949672 said:"I should've said before.."
before? you tried to make a false claim to correlate w your view so you can make a point about signs, don't squirm out of that now..
This only confirms the premise of the rarity of total solar eclipses happening over mainlands instead of out over the water which usually happens. Since the earth is mostly water anyways. Hallelujah!
The National Eclipse will be a “rare” event. The word “rare” is a relative term. Its meaning depends on the context in which it’s used. A total solar eclipse isn’t a particularly rare event when you consider that one happens someplace on Earth about once every 18 months. If you wanted to, and if you had the resources to do so, you could see dozens of them in a lifetime. What most people would consider rare is the occurrence of a total solar eclipse for any one spot on Earth. It’s been calculated that, on average, a total solar eclipse can be seen from the same place only once every 375 years, although the time span can also be much more or much less. So, will the National Eclipse be a “rare” event? Not for the planet. But maybe for your city. Let’s just try to keep things in perspective.
The National Eclipse will be the first total solar eclipse in the U.S. since 1918. This is a fallacy that’s been spreading online by way of several recent news stories. Of course, this spawns more news stories, and on and on we go. In fact, the National Eclipse on August 21 will be the sixteenth total solar eclipse visible in the U.S. since 1918, ten of which occurred in the contiguous 48 states. So, where does the confusion come from and what does 1918 have to do with anything? 1918 was the last time a total solar eclipse crossed the U.S. from coast to coast, which the National Eclipse will also do. This has led to a lot of talk about the 1918 eclipse in particular, and some people have jumped to the conclusion that that eclipse was also the last one to occur in the U.S. Not so. Just ask those who witnessed totality in the Hawaiian Islands in 1991 or in the Pacific Northwest in 1979.
Nah. The point is still valid! The sign is rare! Which was always my point! The whole premise was the rarity of a total solar eclipse happening that traverses a land mass from coast to coast!
1. This hasn't happened in 99 years for America!
2. The last time a total solar eclipse happened for America and only touched America was "before" 1776!
3. So the premise is valid!
Oh and then to have another total solar eclipse in 7 years that literally makes an X over America? When the rarity of total solar eclipses has already been proven?
This is a SIGN no matter what anybody says!

You know about the number 7 @VIBE
God is speaking. Amen.