Former Space Camp Instructor Confirms His Prediction of Giant Tsunami in the Atlantic on Upcoming May 25



    Eric Julien, former military air traffic controller,
    twin engine jet pilot and former instructor at astronaut Patrick
    Baudry's Space Camp -- Discovery Shuttle flight -- has written four
    articles covering the high probability of a giant tsunami in the
    Atlantic Ocean caused by the impact of a comet fragment near or on May
    25.
    Responding to NASA's press release stating the innocuousness of
    the fragmented comet 73P-SW3 with regards to the Earth, the French
    author of "The Science of the Extraterrestrials" indicates that
    numerous scientific data attest to a real danger as was laid out
    starting with his first article of early April, namely that a
    small-sized fragment, still unobservable and distant from the
    principal fragments, could hit the Atlantic Ocean, bringing about the
    awakening of the volcanoes of the mid-Atlantic ridge, with these being
    the origin of a possible tsunami with waves two hundred meters high.
    Beyond the accumulated scientific data, Julien has drawn attention
    to the fact that FEMA, the American organization that deals with
    disasters -- c.f. the Katrina hurricane in Louisiana -- will proceed
    with a tsunami alert exercise between the 23rd and 25th of May, at the
    very same time that enormous human and logistical resources will be
    required for the giant tsunami he is announcing. He notes that such an
    exercise was scheduled for September 11, 2001 in New York, date of the
    collapse of the World Trade Center.
    Julien declares that numerous prophecies, including those of
    Nostradamus, Mother Shipton and of the Bible Codes converge precisely
    towards this critical period of the end of May 2006. Likewise, a great
    number of persons have declared having experienced Atlantic tsunami
    dreams prior to his first press release.
    The major preoccupation of a growing number of professionals is to
    preserve human lives by inviting the media to play their role in
    alerting the public at large. Julien declares: "the risk of planetary
    catastrophe merits that precautions proportional to the stakes be
    taken by the media and government authorities. The level of alert
    adopted by each of these could be appreciated in diverse fashions by
    the populations exposed to the risk."
    Articles and maps of the areas at risk are available on
    http://www.savelivesinmay.com and http://www.savelivesinmayforum.com