The Gentle Way Book
2007 PREDICTIONS
TOM T. MOORE
DECEMBER 26, 2006

In my book’s appendix section, which I call “Bonus Points” after the bonus points that my son receives for extra work in college, I devote a few pages to meditation and its benefits. I also give some simple instructions on how to meditate. I explain that I do an “active” meditation as I call it where I ask questions and, most of the time, receive answers. With that in mind, recently I’ve been asking about what’s coming up for us in 2007. I go into more detail in my monthly column I write for the Sedona Journal of Emergence, which will appear in the February issue, but here are some of the predictions I received in meditation—none of which I can guarantee.

1. There will be a person that reveals price fixing in the oil industry, resulting in billions of dollars in fines and billions of dollars in refunds to consumers.
2. There will be a United States plane that will be brought down by terrorists. It will be a smaller jet or turbo prop, but will make people afraid of flying again, costing the airlines millions of dollars.
3. There will be another mine disaster this year.
4. There will be a cruise ship in the Gulf of Mexico, which during a storm will be rammed by another ship—possibly a tanker—with a large loss of life. The radars for the ships will not be working at that moment.
5. The Pacific Rim will experience significant earthquakes in 2007. The United States and North America will not. That’s coming in 2008.
6. Texas and the south plains states will have a wetter than normal 2007.
7. The United States troops in Iraq will have to protect each of the ethnic groups as they move to safer homes in the same cities or different cities, as the country sinks into civil war. Taxpayers in the United States will be paying for this war for “generations.”
8. After a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico strange artifacts will be found in the sands of a South American beach area.
9. A hurricane will strike New Orleans again this year.
10. Tornadoes will be found to be attracted to the magnetic structure of iron and possibly other metals used in the construction of mobile homes. The mobile home industry will try to suppress this information but their efforts will only be successful for a short period of time.


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