Yes, here is my 2 cents worth. The difference in the Moon's speed is an artifact of the coordinate transformation from HC to GC ( or the reverse). The plenum is invariant in this transform. EG: A rider standing in a moving train drops a book. The other passengers see it drop straight down, but people on the platform see it move on a longer path, a parabola, but hit the floor at the same time as the train riders. The platform people say the book moved faster, because it traveled a greater distance in the same time. Logically, the book doesn't have two different intrinsic speeds - the difference arises from the relative motion. Note that the path(trajectory), distance and, in general, time are different in the two systems, but events in space-time are consistent ( book leaves rider hand in both systems, book hits floor at same place in the train in both systems) This example is a simple transform from a linear moving system to a stationary one - a Galilean transform. The HC to GC transform is more complex, requiring a change in origin from Sun to Earth (translation), then a rotation of the origin coordinates every 24 hours. So there's no change in the properties of space - the plenum - just a mathematical change in view for the observer. Pax Christi, Robert > -----Original Message----- > From: geocentrism-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:geocentrism-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Dr. Neville Jones > Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2005 7:32 PM > To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [geocentrism] Re: Moon landings? > > > Hi Gary, > > To answer your question, below, if the plenum is frictionless, > then it cannot be differential. (Robert may correct me on this, > because he seems to have some ideas that may be relevant here.) > > As I understand it from the work I have been doing on Geocentric > Universe 2005, the Moon's PATH goes around at the rate of the > firmament, but the Moon travels ALONG THE PATH at a particular > rate. This explains simply how the Moon (or anything else, for > that matter) can go at a different rate than the stars. > > As an aside, at the time of the end, the Moon will turn to blood. > Real blood, just like the Nile did when Moses dipped his staff > into it. When that happens, we may actually see the Moon's path > being traced out in the sky with blood. One of the signs in > heaven, perhaps? > > Neville. > > Gary Shelton <garylshelton@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Dr. Jones, > > If the plenum affects material objects, then why does the moon > orbit slower > than the sun around the earth in the GC system? Is the plenum > differential, > as it were? > > Gary Shelton > > --------------------------------- > ALL-NEW Yahoo! Messenger - all new features - even more fun! > > >