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Its the very first Spring Day and Happy New Year's Day those of Southern

Hemisphere origin, geographically.

Once more, Happy New Year, it's the return of the Spring Equinox. The fact that our
ancestors marked September 23rd as the start of their year is a testament to the
scientific greatness. Sept 23 is the first day after the Spring Equinox which is
Sept 22. The day where 3 topical zones of Earth/Geb (Cancer, Equatorial, Capricorn)
experience the same amount of daylight & night hours and the Sun begins to move
below the equator towards Capricorn. Since Cape Town lies below the Capricorn
region. Zulus and Xhosas called the day following the equinox as "intwasahlobo" and
celebrated it. Though today intwasahlobo is associated with the whole Spring
season. Sept 23 is also 1 day before King Shaka's Day (24 Sept.) which is a South
African holiday called Heritage Day

Let's talk about the Pagan New Year's Day for a minute, before we get there, we
have to go in detail with New Year's Eve first, December 31st.
New Year's Eve is evening or time period immediately before an event, January 1st
(Pagan New Year's Day). It is the last day of the Western modern calendar known as
the Gregorian Calendar which has ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with Africa, period.

Then you get to New Year's Day. Mind you, it was never January 1st, you have been
fooled. This is where April fools come from. The New Year is not in Winter in the
northern hemisphere or Summer in the southern. But it determined by the return of
the SUN. So the New Year evidently starts in the very first day of Spring
(depending on which hemisphere you're in), when life returns.

How Your New Year started before the return of the Sun (Nothern hemisphere) and
after the return of the Sun (Southern Hemisphere). Before we talk about that, know
that a day doesn't start at 00:00. The average sunrise starts at 5am to 7am, so at
6am you should be starting a new day. You should be able to see the sun
(Heru/HORus) rise at the HORison.. So if you go six hours back, you're at 00:00. So
that's 1/4 of the time on the Clock. Now, if you go from March (Spring, New Year's
Day and return of the equinox) to January (Pagan New Year's Day) in the Nothern
Hemisphere and from September (Spring, New Year's Day and return of the equinox) to
January (Pagan New Year's Day) in the Southern Hemisphere, they set you back 1/4 of
the seasons of the year in the Northern Hemisphere and set us forward 1/4 of the
seasons of the year in Southern Hemisphere. In the Northern, they reversed time on
you. In the Southern, they forwarded time on us, a quarter of a year. That's one
of the reasons we're out of sync with nature and unaligned completely.

Pagan New Year's Day (January 1st) is their celebration of the New Year upon the
"Gregorian Calendar" which is named after "Pope Gregory XII" and is allegorically
in dated alignment with so fictional death of Jesus.

Let's get to the Julian Calendar because that's where the Gregorian Calendar came
from. The Julian Calendar was originally used by the Romans which contained ten
months and based on the lunar/moon cycles. The months January and February didn't
exist until they were added by Roman Emperor Julius Caesar in 45BC.

The Julian Calendar was introduced in 45BC by Julius Caesar which not only added
two months but also changed the month at the time, Quantillis into July to honor
himself and later when he died, Emperor Augustus with his ego, also changed
Sextillis into August to also honor himself. Julius Caesar also changes the lengths
of the days causing the year to be 365 days & *6 hours*. The 6 hours is important
because it's going to lead to the Gregorian Calendar. The first ever New Year's Day
that was celebrated in history of history in January 1st was in Rome in 153BC.
Julius Caesar instituted January 1st as the New Year to honor The Roman God of
beginnings in Time, *Janus*. Janus's statues and monuments illustrate him to be
two-faced, and is symbolic to past and future..
The Gregorian Calendar was Created and named after Pope Gregory XII in 1582BC in
order to so called "Rectify" the Julian Calendar. Now, the rectification was Pope
Gregory felt like the extra 6 hours in the year was incorrect. All he did was to
take out the 6 hours out and made the year an exact 365 day long year. Which is
also incorrect. Every other continent was still cerebrating New Year's Day and
Christmas in March/September and Dec/June with respect of hemispheres.

The British were celebrating New Year's in March, but from 1752, they adopted the
Gregorian Calendar.

Answer me this, how the hell can it when the Sun is at its furthest from earth
considered to be a New Year's Day? They're bringing you into a time period where
you're the furthest from the creator, on a celestial level being Ra. The winter
solstice in the Northern hemisphere is farthest from the Sun and this when they
chose to bring in your New Year at. That's no New Year, that's the worst time of
the year you can be in if your in the Northern Hemisphere.

The British later adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1752

Not only you're celebrating New Year's in the wrong seasons and times, now you're
going New York Time Square to watch the ball drop.. Mind you, the Romans never
celebrated New Year's with a ball drop bur they're the ones who made New Year's on
January 1st. The practice of dropping the ball was created by a Jewish called Jacob
Starr in 1907. The Ball Drop is a term and a negative canitation. The definition of
dropping the ball is to fail at one's responsibilities or duties or to make a
mistake especially at a very critical point when the result is very negative.
Hence, when somebody tells you, you dropped the ball. So you unknowingly go to Time
Square in New York to be symbolically and ritualistically reminded how DUMBED DOWN
you are by DROPPING THE BALL. These Jews let you know every year that they're
getting one up on your ass. Do you give a damn? No. Why? Think all of the so-called
holidays you acknowledging, Easter, Halloween, etc. and Christmas which is the
last holiday of the year, guess what do they tell you? Damn, you still "Dropping
the Ball". .

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