Another
expression of anti-war sentiment by the E.T. crop artists: “NO MORE WAR”
This new
crop picture in France was drawn in the sad memory of many Canadian,
British or German soldiers who died during the Battle of Vimy Ridge, on
April 9-12, 2017 in World War I (please see
www.youtube.com or
the-battle-of-vimy-ridge ).
“By
nightfall on 12 April 1917, the Canadian Corps was in firm control of
the ridge. Their corps suffered 10,602 casualties, as 3,598 killed and
7,004 wounded. The German 6th Army suffered an unknown number of
casualties, with approximately 4,000 men becoming prisoners
of war.”
One hundred
and three years later, one might ask WHY?
The crop
artists told us in Morse code in June of 2014, at Gypsy Lane in England,
on the 70th anniversary of D-day, “NO MORE WAR”
(see
/www.youtube.com ).
The new
image of an “iron cross” was drawn just on the eastern edge of Vimy
Forest, not far from the Canadian National Vimy Memorial, and also close
to several Canadian or British war cemeteries on its western edge, as
shown in two slides below. In the first slide, we can see a schematic,
black-and-white drawing of their new crop circle (outlined in
orange), exactly as it appeared in
the field there on July 5, 2020:

To the left,
we can see the figurative landscape image of a “man” or Sphinx-like
figure looking on, created there by a large group of trees. To the
right, we can see another figurative image of what might be a “man with
his head bowed down in sadness.”
In the
second slide, the same landscape image has been flipped by 180o.
Now we can see on the far right a large “Christian cross”, again made of
trees, which matches to some extent the image of an “iron cross” which
was drawn in crops, a slight distance away to the left:

Our local
human species here on Earth should be able to outgrow such primitive,
barbaric behaviours soon. The crop artists seem to be pledging to help
us.
Red Collie
(Dr. Horace R. Drew) |