"Relative Time"
William S. Stoertz
November 11, 1997
Moscow, Russia
(5:33 am)
WS -- Now I want to talk to You about what I really wanted to
talk with You about. Does history disappear?
HF -- Not if you record it. Anyway, it's recorded spiritually.
Events involving people. Other things more or less.
WS -- How about astronomical events?
HF -- The stars are "right there". (Not .... thousand light years
away) See, practically you deal with them in that sense: "Now
there has been an explosion in the Crab Nebula...." Although it
is thousands of light years away. And it makes sense.
WS -- We know the reality: of course they are thousands of light
years away. Now, another question: What about the fact that a
signal traveling to the Moon takes one second, and then traveling
back takes another second. What does that mean?
HF -- Yes, it does. So what?
WS -- The Moon is now, and alive, right?
HF -- Right.
WS -- So if I go there, I am now, right?
HF -- No; you are one second back in time, relative to the earth.
WS -- When the earth sees you (on the Moon), you are "now". But
then the response comes back at least 2 seconds later. What does
that mean?
HF -- It means the earth is one second back in time from the
person on the Moon, and then the Moon is one second back in time
from the person on the earth.
WS -- So the total is two seconds apart (two seconds travel time).
HF -- Yes. Actually, it doesn't matter. Only according to your
construct. Everything is running on different times -- to a much
greater degree. Go to the Middle East, for example, and see. Or
Latin America. Or Appalachia.
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