05-12-2016, 12:24 PM
DREAM: Lady Bug President in South America woes abound! 2014-10-04
10/3/2014 8:00pm A South American “Lady Bug” Queen, or President is driving uphill through a Maize field full of corn, she is visited by an alien. (The alien in this dream is a metaphor for fear and powerlessness.) Her uphill struggles with the Maize or Corn (GMO or bad yielding harvest, leaving her people starving) will be on display for the entire world to see. It will be hidden though, the attempts on her life from foreign powers, men (Praying mantis) want to squash and eat the lady bug.
This dream is in the data base...
NEWS: Dilma Rousseff: 'I'm the victim of a great injustice'
http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/12/americas/b...index.html
Suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff didn't mince words as she began the fight of her political life Thursday. "It's a coup," she told reporters, speaking out publicly for the first time since senators voted to begin an impeachment trial against her.
It took Brazil's Senate about 20 hours of debate to reach a decisive result early Thursday: The country's first female president must step aside while the trial gets underway. It took Rousseff less than an hour to make two speeches slamming the vote: One to reporters inside the presidential palace, and one to crowds outside after she was kicked out. "I'm the victim of a great injustice," Rousseff told cheering supporters.
10/3/2014 8:00pm A South American “Lady Bug” Queen, or President is driving uphill through a Maize field full of corn, she is visited by an alien. (The alien in this dream is a metaphor for fear and powerlessness.) Her uphill struggles with the Maize or Corn (GMO or bad yielding harvest, leaving her people starving) will be on display for the entire world to see. It will be hidden though, the attempts on her life from foreign powers, men (Praying mantis) want to squash and eat the lady bug.
This dream is in the data base...
NEWS: Dilma Rousseff: 'I'm the victim of a great injustice'
http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/12/americas/b...index.html
Suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff didn't mince words as she began the fight of her political life Thursday. "It's a coup," she told reporters, speaking out publicly for the first time since senators voted to begin an impeachment trial against her.
It took Brazil's Senate about 20 hours of debate to reach a decisive result early Thursday: The country's first female president must step aside while the trial gets underway. It took Rousseff less than an hour to make two speeches slamming the vote: One to reporters inside the presidential palace, and one to crowds outside after she was kicked out. "I'm the victim of a great injustice," Rousseff told cheering supporters.