https://endoftheamericandream.com/some-really-weird-things-are-starting-to-happen-up-in-the-heavens/
Let me give you an example. On November 8th, we will witness a total lunar eclipse on election day for the first time in the entire history of the United States…
For the first time in US history, a total lunar eclipse will take place on election day, beginning and ending before the polling stations open. The next time a total lunar eclipse will happen on election day will be in 372 years on Tuesday, November 8, 2394.
The eclipse will begin at 5:16 a.m. EST and ends at 6:41 a.m., for a total duration of about 85 minutes.
In addition, we are being told that this total lunar eclipse will be a “blood moon”…
A lunar eclipse takes place when the earth is between the sun and the moon, and the moon passes through the earth’s shadow. In this case, the earth’s shadow will block out 97% of the moon’s surface. This eclipse will be a “blood moon”, the result of atmospheric conditions that give the moon a reddish tint rather than black when it moves into the shadow. The red color comes from some of the sunlight passing through Earth’s atmosphere where it gets bent and colors like blue or green are filtered out, leaving behind longer wavelengths like the color red.
Blood moons are often associated with war, but that doesn’t mean that a major war is about to erupt.
However, it is also interesting to note that a planet that was named after Rome’s pagan god of war is also making news.
According to Forbes, the planet Mars will soon “appear to go backwards”…
The fourth planet Mars will soon shine brighter than the night sky’s brightest star—Sirius—but during its entire “opposition” period it will be doing something that’s hard to grasp. It will appear to go backwards.
As of today Mars will reverse its apparent west-to-east movement in the night sky and begin moving from east-to-west against the background stars.
This is referred to as “retrograde motion”, but Mars will not actually be changing direction.
The truth is that it will only appear to be moving backwards because of our point of view…
Mars in retrograde is all only about perspective.
Earth orbits the Sun closer than the Mars. “Earth is moving faster around the Sun—taking 364-and-a-bit days to Mars’ 687 days—so from our point of view, as we come round the Sun, Mars is ahead of us in the sky,” said Dr. Simon Morden, planetary geologist and author of a new book The Red Planet: A Natural History of Mars (find a review here). “As we catch-up and go past it, it looks like it’s starting to go backwards.”