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Japanese and Korean dating by blood type

A couple of days ago, I made a number of posts about blood type and likelihood of having been contacted by extraterrestrials. Naturally, this led to exploring more information on blood types.

Do you know that in Japan and Korea, there is a fascination with dating by blood type? Certain ABO blood types are supposed to make better mates from certain blood types than others.

The Great Geek Manual says that:

In Japan, a person’s blood type or ketsu eki gata is a popularly used to determine a person’s temperament, much the way Americans use astrological signs. The difference is that the Japanese take blood types very seriously. Japanese dating services use blood types to make matches. Employers use them to evaluate job applicants. High school students exchange blood types by way of introduction. Sports card include athletes’ blood types prominently alongside more traditional sports statistics.

Japanese Culture 101: Personality by Blood Type

 If you read further into the article, you can look up your own blood type and the description of the kind of person you are supposed to be. I found it fascinating.

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Contactees, blood type, and eye color

Do you ever wonder if you may have been contacted by aliens but buried the memory deep in your subconscious to protect your sanity?

Well, according to the Contactee Blood Types Study by ICAR, you are much less likely to have been contacted by extraterrestrials if you are an A positive blood type than if you are an O negative. If you have green/hazel eye color, you have the eye color of 48% of contactees. In fact, of the 1400 contactees in the study, 70 % were O negative with green/hazel eyes.

Therefore, if the 1400 participants in the above study are any indication of the whole population, if you are a blood type O negative, and have green/hazel eyes, you are the most likely to be a contacteee than a person with any other blood type or eye color.

 

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Have your heard of The Disclosure Project?

I had not heard of The Disclosure Project until a girlfriend telephoned me today and asked me if I had heard of it. She explained that it was a group of prominent people in the government, security forces, and air traffic controllers who claim to have had contact with aliens. Steven M. Greer, a physician who initiated his contact with extraterrestrials, started The Disclosure Project.

According to a Wikipedia article:

The Disclosure Project is a nonprofit research project started by Greer in 1992 that alleges the existence of a US government cover-up of information relating tounidentified flying objects (UFOs). 

Steven M. Greer

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A 2012 video on the Mayan idea of how evil entered the world

I haven’t seen this 2012 video, but you might want to take a look at it. It is part of the March 14, 2008 post at the 2012 Eye of the Shaman website.

I’ve copied a excerpt from description of the video below. It looks interesting.

After the last Sun Age, Hunab Ka, Mayan Sun God banished the Death Lords to Xibalba. When the waters receded they plotted their return. ~ How Evil Entered Our World

 

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Does this work? No, can’t even post now. Weird … Yay, now I can!

If you’ve been following my blog the last couple of days, you probably noticed that I’ve been having problems with my WordPress blog. After doing a simple update of the software, many features didn’t work. Thankfully, posting works fine now that I received some help from James Maduk at MySmallBizU. I really appreciate all the help I’ve received from James. His company not only hosts this blog, but his site also contains over 1000 step-by-step videos on how to do online marketing. If you’re interested in having an online business, I would suggest a good place to start would be with the MySmallBizMap. Great thing is, the MySmallBizMap is free.

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CBCNews article on the ancient Maya and 2012 exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto

Here’s an excerpt from a great article called, “Did the Maya predict the world would end in 2012? Archeologists say Maya made no such prophecy.” The article is from CBCNews. here:

Click on the link above and you’ll be taken to the original article, which is full of information on the ancient Maya and 2012. The article is announcing a Royal Ontario Museum exhibit on the topic.

Here’s the quote:

“In a correlation of the Maya’s long-count calendar to our Western one, the end of this current baktun, the 13th, happens on Dec. 21, 2012 (or Dec. 23. See sidebar).

“The long-count calendar counts the time since creation, which the Maya date to what we would call a day in August 3114 BC.

“Dec. 21 vs. Dec. 23
Dec, 21, 2012 seems to be the most favoured date for when the 13th baktun on the Maya long-count calendar ends. But some sources, including the Royal Ontario Museum, go with Dec. 23.

“The two dates stem from two variations of the most used correlation of our calendar with the Maya’s.

“The ROM’s Justin Jennings said it went with Dec. 23 because, “there’s no evidence that the long count is linked to astronomical cycles” and the curators felt that Dec. 21 feeds into “2012 galactic alignment stuff, which just doesn’t hold water from an astronomy point of view and it does not work for classic Maya literature.”

“Maya expert David Stuart doesn’t care which date people choose but told CBC News that it is a complete coincidence that Dec. 21 will be the winter solstice. “Other baktun endings don’t really fall on important astronomical dates,” he noted.

“Obviously, baktuns have come and gone. This year just happens to be the one when the 13th baktun ends. The 12th baktun ended on Sept. 18, 1618, which was when Europe’s very destructive Thirty Years’ War was just getting started.

“Stuart writes that, “any such statements about the Maya predicting the world’s demise or alternatively, some ‘transformation of consciousness’ in 2012 is, to put it as simply and directly as possible, wrong.”

Did the Maya predict the world would end in 2012? Archeologists say Maya made no such prophecy

In this blog, I’ve written about David Stuart before. He is one of my heroes, because, by a wonderful set of circumstances, his parents were both archeologists and he spend part of his childhood with them at the Mayan ruin of Coba, which is within a half day’s drive from Cancun–I’ve been there twice, and I’ve included it my my travelogue, Yucatan Travel: Cancun to Chichen Itza.

From what I’ve read and seen about David Stuart, he had a Mayan nanny and so became prolific in Mayan. I remember seeing a Public Broadcasting Station special on deciphering the Mayan glyphs, in which David, at an early age–I think 16–was brilliantly decoding glyphs, helped by his fluency in present-day Mayan.

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