“Approximately every 80 years, a faint 10th magnitude star in the constellation of Corona Borealis dramatically increases its brightness. This star, T CrB, is known as a recurrent nova and last flared in 1946, peaking at magnitude 2.0, temporarily making it one of the 50 brightest stars in the night sky.

At 10:00 A.M. September 17 2023, I found this article on Facebook. WTF! Most all hippies and Christians will ignore my claim Iam a Comet King. They do this because they have agendas that involve the Mass Mind. Hippies want more marijuana to be made legal, and Christians want to help King Jesus rule America – in proxy!
My ex-friend, Mark Gall finally came out and gave me a critique of my blog, and said I began “acting odd” For years, he and his friends went along with my study – that Dan Brown -ripped! Being kin to a fictional Jesus was just fine – as long as there were millions to be had from fictional, books and movies! I was allowed to become a millionaire, but, not allowed to suggest I am – THE REAL MESSIAH, or a REAL CANDIDATE FOR THE – Real Crowned Savior-King!
For thirty years Gall and I argued about the Zionists of Israel. He called me a “Nazi”. After being titled “odd” in his e-mail, I told him I was going to write a short story about…..The Odd Little Jew! He ended our friendship and blocked my email’s. Here’s Gall’s Vita. He had his reputation to protect. His real friends began to ask questions – especially his friends in Isreal!
https://pages.uoregon.edu/mgall/vita.htm
John Presco ‘Northern King of The Arora Borealis’
Born October 8, 1946

King John with Slug Queen and Three Percenters
SEPTEMBER 11, 2023
A medieval manuscript likely hides a record of an impending recurrent nova
by Jon Voisey, Universe Today

Approximately every 80 years, a faint 10th magnitude star in the constellation of Corona Borealis dramatically increases its brightness. This star, T CrB, is known as a recurrent nova and last flared in 1946, peaking at magnitude 2.0, temporarily making it one of the 50 brightest stars in the night sky.
Aside from the 1946 eruption, the only other confirmed observation of this star’s outburst was in 1866. But new research published on the arXiv preprint server by Dr. Bradley Schaefer suggests that a medieval monk may have spied T CrB brightening in 1217.
In medieval monasteries, monks would regularly keep chronicles—a list of notable events that happened throughout the year. In 1217, the abbot of Ursberg Abbey (in southern Germany, west of Augsberg) was Burchard. In the chronicle for that year, he wrote:
“In the autumn season of [1217], in the early evening, a wonderful sign was seen in a certain star in the west. This star was located a little west of south, in what astrologers call Ariadne’s Crown [Corona Borealis]. As we ourselves have observed, it was originally a faint star that, for a time, shone with great light, and then returned to its original faintness. There was also a very bright ray reaching up the sky, like a large tall beam. This was seen for many days that autumn.”
But was this “wonderful sign” a nova, or one of many other types of transient events that could grace the night sky?
Schaefer first rules out the possibility that the event could have been a supernova, as any supernova visible to the naked eye and that recent would leave an easily detectable remnant. For example, the remnant associated with a supernova in 1054 is the Crab Nebula, easily visible with even small telescopes.
Several older supernovae also have remnants associated with them (although sometimes the identification is uncertain, as the historical record was not sufficiently precise on the location in the sky of the object). Since no such remnant is found in this region of the sky, Schaefer concludes that the eruption must not have been particularly destructive.
Similarly, Schaefer deems a supernova unlikely, as such an event would have been visible for several weeks. However, Burchard describes it as only being visible for “many days” which is more in line with T CrB’s average visibility of about seven days.

But was the observation a misidentification of a bright planet? Also impossible, as Corona Borealis is 45º away from the ecliptic and no naked-eye planet strays that far from this plane of the solar system.
Perhaps a comet? This hypothesis has some merit, as comets are more frequent than such novae. Another chronicle from Saint Stephani monastery describes a possible comet in the same year, but does not give any indication as to what season or where in the sky.
Even the notion that this other chronicle did describe a comet is in doubt, as the terminology used is vague. The author described it as a “stella comes” where “comes” is generally used as a title for a Count, although there is another instance in the same chronicle where the same phrase is used to describe another transient event in 1208, associating it with an ill omen. Rather, comets were generally described as a “tailed star,” “torch-like star,” or a “star of death.” Thus, the language used is ambiguous at best.
Another argument against the cometary hypothesis is the association of a positive omen with this star’s appearance. Historically, comets were taken as negative omens, associated with death and the fall of kingdoms.
Schaefer also discusses a possible sighting of T CrB in 1787. This potential sighting comes from a catalog of stars published in 1789 by the English astronomer Francis Wollaston. In it, Wollaston lists a star near the coordinates for T CrB. While he doesn’t specify a magnitude, the catalog has a limiting magnitude of 7.8—meaning that, if the star was indeed T CrB, it must have been observed during an eruption.
Could Wollaston have made an error? Possibly, but unlikely, Schaefer concludes. Wollaston did incorrectly identify the star as one from a catalog by William Herschel: V 75. However, Herschel described this star as being part of an arc of three stars and 1º from T CrB. This description does not match well with Wollaston’s coordinates and most likely describes the star HD 143707. Indeed, there are no other stars of a similar magnitude within the error range described by Wollston.
Again, Schaefer considers and discounts other possibilities. He rejects a comet as unlikely, as Wollaston was a trained observer who was familiar with comets. Asteroids so far from the ecliptic could never be so bright. A recent supernova would remain a bright X-ray source to this day. An error in the measurement of another star giving such precise coordinates for the location for T CrB Schaefer estimates at approximately 8.5 in 10 million. Faced with no viable alternative, Schaefer concludes that Wollaston likely caught T CrB at the end of an eruption, recorded its position accurately, and misidentified it as star V 75 from Herschel’s catalog.
As for the next eruption of T CrB, the star recently began dropping in brightness, which was observed to happen in 1945 approximately eight months prior to its eruption. If this behavior repeats itself again, Schaefer predicts the star should brighten again in the early spring of 2024, becoming the brightest nova since CP Puppis erupted in 1942.
Dragon and Comet Born
Posted on February 23, 2014 by Royal Rosamond Press





The Seer who saw my death said this;
“People come into your being and take, take, take! You are powerless to stop them. I don’t know why.”
In 1970 there were two very beautiful women in my life, Christine Rosamond Benton, and Rena Easton. They came into my being, and took. I did not want to stop them if I could. I could not, because the Avatar was working directly with them. I was just the Messenger – of course! When you die, and come back, you are an Angel. Rena almost figured that out on Christmas Day. Her card was dropping little green stars upon her words.
Jon The Messenger
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/08/11/born-under-a-shower-of-stars/
I was born October 8, 1946 two minutes after the sun set. An amazing star-shower was suddenly visible. The nurses in the maternity ward bid my mother to come to the window and look, but, was too spent having just delivered me.
Rosemary said she had a vision while she was giving birth to me, she telling herself she must not forget it. She forgot.
Rosemary named me after John the Baptist because she believed I was born on the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur. I was born three days after Yom Kippur.
When my Astrologer began her five hour (recorded) reading of my chart, she began
with these words;
“Jon, I have never seen a chart like yours, never knew it was possible. It
begins where all charts in theory begin, on the exact cusp of Pisces and Aries..
For this reason I had to move up the time of your birth ten minutes, or in
theory, you were not born. As it is now, you barely escaped becoming a veritable
prisoner in this lifetime, that is, all the information you came here to share.”
I believe I was born to die, and when I did, my clock was readjusted so my information could be set free. My astrologer said I am of the great Scorpion Scholars of the Biblical Wilderness who sting themselves in order to induce a near-death experience and behold the Creator, if only for a little while.
The large painting I did of Rena had her standing on a grassy hill after the sun
had set and the evening sky was a rainbow with stars coming out in the thalo
blue. There was a crescent moon cradling a star. Rena was wearing a thalo blue
cape the color of Carla Bruni’s sweater. I painted stars along the edge. For two
months I have been thinking of posting this photo, for the entity I saw was
wearing a thalo blue robe and had jet black hair filled with tiny stars like
diamonds.
My freed information needed the imput of female information. When our hands touched in the total darkness an amazing download began. It was and electrical experience.
Rena and I spent six weeks together. We never listened to a radio, watched TV..
or went to a movie. We had no friends. We had no electricity, and lived by
candlelight. But what we did every night on our mountain top, was watch the
sunset, and the gods paint the sky with stars. And then we went to be bed, and
in each other’s arms we dreamt a dream of long ago. And we go wherever the stars
took us that night.
Jon Gregory Presco
The October Draconids, in the past also unofficially known as the Giacobinids, are a meteor shower whose parent body is the periodic comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner. Almost all meteors which fall towards Earth ablate long before reaching its surface. The Draconids are best viewed after sunset in an area with a clear dark sky.
The 1933[1][2] and 1946[2] Draconids had Zenithal Hourly Rates of thousands of meteors visible per hour, among the most impressive meteor storms of the 20th century. Rare outbursts in activity can occur when the Earth travels through a denser part of the cometary debris stream; for example, in 1998, rates suddenly spiked[3][4] and spiked again (less spectacularly) in 2005.[5] A Draconid meteor outburst occurred[6] as expected[7][8][9] on 2011 October 8, though a waxing gibbous Moon reduced the number of meteors observed visually. During the 2012 shower radar observations detected up to 1000 meteors per hour. The 2012 outburst may have been caused by the narrow trail of dust and debris left behind by the parent comet in 1959.[10]
The Draconids get their name from the constellation Draco, the Dragon.
In 1933 and 1946, the Draconid outbursts were major – observers reported an astounding rate of 20,000 shooting stars an hour. An Irish astronomer described the 1933 episode like a flurry of snowflakes.
http://earthsky.org/tonight/legendary-draconids-boom-or-bust
The King’s Walk – Springfield Oregon
Posted on August 12, 2019 by Royal Rosamond Press



Opinions are like assholes. Everyone’s got one. But, sometimes a man must walk alone. Jesus carried his cross all alone, for a little while, after being thoroughly shamed and humiliated. But, someone stepped in and gave him a hand.
The biggest complaint I am reading from the followers of the Three Percenters, is there was not enough REAL Jesus talk. I only found out I am highly qualified to be a LEADER of the Three Percenters, if, I can only get my loyalties straight. I thought real Patriots fought King George and his need for his subjects to be loyal to him?
I own thirty-two years of sobriety. Here is what it says on our birthday coins;
“Unto thyself be true!”
I’m going to make The King’s Walk in Springfield an annual event. Bring your crown.
King John


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