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and had several mouthfuls and it was a little bit garbled, so I'd just like to make my message <br />today a little bit more, a little bit more concise then last time. And, I don't want to repeat what I <br />already said, so—and, I'm not prepared or have written anything or thought about what I would <br />say to you a little bit, so I just want to say a little bit about water. <br />First of all, do any of you know how much water there is in our solar system for example? Or in <br />our galaxy? Does anybody know? Nobody knows the volume of water. We know that water <br />goes through transformations and things like that and the natural processes, but there's the same <br />amount of water, I believe, here today that there's ever been since water was first manifested in <br />this place, okay, where we dwell as creatures. And, so the water volume has probably not <br />changed in my opinion. That's not scientific, just my view, but regardless, water is a finite <br />resource. Water is sacred, and by sacred as I understand [inaudible] is we've been blessed here <br />in these islands with an abundance of fresh water. <br />The arctic tractor which travels from the far north in the frozen north brings pristine, fresh <br />ancient ice melt at the bottom of the ocean in a river that flows to these islands and, in fact, I <br />think they're trying to harvest it in Kona if they're not doing it already. But, we have this <br />abundance of water, yet water is not free of being altered or changed, so we know from research <br />and from a lot of resources that water is affected by many things. <br />But, what I really wanted to say is that we are very much water as we all know. Water is not just <br />in the ground or falling from the sky. Water is in everything. It's in everything, okay? The <br />water has rivers and the streams and lakes far below the surface. The rivers and lakes and <br />streams are on the surface. The rivers, lakes, and streams are above the surface. They're in the <br />sky, in the atmosphere. They're moving. <br />I was ridiculed recently. It was funny. I was ridiculed recently by a comment I made on line <br />about the, about this issue, but it was mostly about, it was specifically about the waters of the <br />Amazon. Okay, so, the water, the evaporation process. It goes up, the clouds form, they travel, <br />and the idea was that the person that was ridiculing me saying that the water goes all over. I said <br />no it remains in the Amazon for the most part. No, no, no, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm insane, <br />you know water moves all, yeah, but that's true, but let me tell you something. Recently, some <br />scientists put out the thing and it's, you know, I just had to laugh because I already knew this. <br />The water rises, it moves to the east of the Andes, it freezes, and returns back into the basin. The <br />water of the Amazon remains in the Amazon, okay? So, the water, the water in Hawaii should <br />remain in Hawaii. <br />I believe that the, exactly opposite our planet, is Okavango Swamp which is an enormous <br />freshwater source. It's the largest inland water, freshwater delta in the world I believe. And, it's <br />exactly opposite. If you take a magic rod and drove it through the planet, it's exactly opposite. <br />It's in the southern hemisphere. If you tilted Okavango up and tilted Hawaii down, we're <br />actually on the equator, so it matches a point in South America and a point in Sulawesi which <br />will not shift, but if you actually would rotate the planet up to its actual, to equator, the equator <br />runs right between Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa, the, the neutral zone. Hawaii is a very special <br />place. Hawaii has been inundated in many ways for, not just with the rival but western, but, you <br />know, in many, in many times in the past, so, what we need to do now, it's not about <br />EXHIBIT C <br />14 <br />