The first section of "The Sheet Theory Of History", February 2025, is "CAMBODIA IN THE 1970S". This gives us some insight into the recent border clashes between Cambodia and Thailand. Cambodia is the modern incarnation of the Khmer Empire, which occupied much more land than the modern country does. Cambodia has never forgotten the Khmer Empire and it's territory. The reign of the Khmer Rouge, in the latter 1970s, was a murderous attempt to return the country to the glory days of the empire, but it's Communist ideology was nothing more than what I describe as a "sheet". The border issue then was with Vietnam, to the east of Cambodia. The Khmer Rouge knew that the southern part of Vietnam used to belong to the Khmer Empire. Border clashes began and it was the resulting war that drove the Khmer Rouge from power. The recent border clashes were on the other side of Cambodia, with Thailand, but followed the same principle, land that Cambodians know used to belong to the Khmer Empire.
There is a lot of speculation about what the motive of Bryan Kohberger could have been in the brutal murder of the four students in Idaho. What I cannot see has been pointed out is that this case is strikingly similar to that of Richard Speck, who murdered student nurses in 1966. As a criminology student, Bryan Kohberger must have heard about this case. It looks like he was trying to copy it. The knife, the way he was caught, and the ultimate confession were very similar, except that Richard Speck was identified by his fingerprints in the days long before DNA testing.
The Bible states that there will be an increase in earthquakes, in diverse places, in the Last Days of the world. This is explained in the posting "The End Of The World As We Know It". The earthquake this week, in the far north of Russia, didn't do a lot of damage but was one of the few most powerful quakes ever recorded and there was a tsunami warning for the west coast of North and South America.
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