What made Jupiter flip and Saturn tilt in the heavens? (Video below)
According to Nancy Lieder of ZetaTalk, Jupiter and Saturn are dealing with not only the Sun’s magnetic field lines, but also with a magnetic field blast from Planet X. Lieder says Planet X is in the first of two 270-degree rolls, swinging its North Pole horizontally outward away from the Sun’s South Pole. First it will point toward Jupiter and Saturn and then toward Earth in the "Last Weeks."
Lieder and the Zetas explain:
Since March 2003, Jupiter has shown itself vulnerable to the magnetic blast coming from the North Pole of Planet X. At that time, Planet X was just entering the inner solar system and was pointing its North Pole toward the Sun’s South Pole going end-to-end with the Sun. This was a direct tilt in the direction of Jupiter, which reacted by a tilt itself. Both Jupiter and Saturn are in magnetic opposition to the Sun, which means they are allowing magnetons to flow in their tops and out their bottoms. They themselves are not magnetic planets and do not generate a magnetic field. By being in opposition, there merely present the least resistance to the flow of magnetons in the Sun’s field.
Read more at ZetaTalk earth and ZetaTalk science.
Lieder posted a blog about significant proof of the presence of Planet X in the solar system. In it she says there are groups claiming (based on experience) that some of the planets in our solar system have begun to experience radical pole shifts. Of course, after postings to that effect, many stellar databases have been changed or blocked with the imaging denied by observatories.
This is similar to the dumbing-down of the public attempted by USGS, where reports of earthquakes on its website are either reported at much lower magnitudes than actually occur or completely dropped from the reports.
Suggestion, if you find a bit of particularly interesting information or pictures that have to do with Planet X and the Pole Shift on a website, be sure to make a copy of it because in all probability it will not be there the next time you look for it.






