Here's an amusing Sign about Davis Love III:
- Davis Love III:
- Golf: Go/LF = IR(Go-SPanish) Washington(LF/Non-FL/Non-Florida)
- I've been talking about my business associate who gets on my nerves
- He's BLD III. You have Davis Love III
- I said 1/7/2006 that Davis is born on Valentine's Day, which would be LOVE
- Sawgrass with seven birdies inside 10 feet for a 7-under 65:
- 10 for a 7 under: I said 12/27/2005 that Isabella Valentine using pictures of Alison is for Alison on "The Notebook" played by Rachel McAdams born 10/7
- 65: 65 = 5 x 13 = Sunny Leone's B-Day
- "Maybe Phil didn't eat enough," Love said:
- Phil is for the Philippines. I said I'm Filipino
- I said I've barely had enough money these last two years to buy food. I've been skipping meals :P
- It's an example of all the Subconscious Minds around the Planet that know I've been suffering malnutrition and are hinting about it in the news
- Hybrid club into 20 feet on the 219-yard eighth hole:
- I said 2/19 is for B/S = Brittney Skye. I said I'm the SK-y
- 20 feet: 20 = XX/Female
- 8th Hole: 8 = Superman
- Another example of precision with numbers by the Subconscious Minds
- [Tiger Woods] played with Darren Clarke, whose wife, Heather, is dying from cancer that has spread throughout her body:
- I said I'm D-y in G of Cancer (Sign of the Eternal Mother)
- I said that when I substitued myself in, I got "Cancer"
- I said that the Planet is a Super Computer. That's why I have a "Terminal Illness."
- I said I'm a Go/D. Gods are Immortal. When a God is stricken with Cancer, it evens out into a normal human life, which to a Planet or Sun alive for 4.55 billion years would be an immediate death in Geological Time
- No hole can be more punishing than the infamous 17th, where Scott McCarron (82) and Bob Estes (74) each took three shots before they were safely on land:
- 17 = Luck of the IR is H
- Scott McCarron: I said my best friend is Scott. Mc/CA-RR/On = 5/29(M/13/Rhode Island) Dominant(C) California(CA) Rod Rodillon(RR) Activated(On)
- Bob Estes: ES(T)ES = Gemini(2) Northwest(ES/Non-SE/NW) with Female(T/20/XX) in it. I'm Gemini from the Northwest with a Fe-Male Subconscious
- Updated: 08:50 PM EST: 85 x 10 = HE(85) Cross-Eyed(10/X) = She = Fe-Male
This is an example of how Subconscious Minds can shoot with exact precision with the numbers.
I said 1/23/2006 about Kobe Bryant scoring 81 points in a game.
I've been studying the Sports Scores and known for TWO YEARS now that what people score is an illusion and has nothing to do with Luck. It's what's being perforemd with PRECISION and ACcURACY by the Subconscious Minds that are working in conjunction with the other Subconscious Minds on the Field or in the Basketball Court.
You have to think of Human Beings as Organic High-Precision Machinery that are able to perform just like Agents in "The Matrix." When you see Sports Scores being determined, it's like a Note-Taking or Record-Keeping Method for the Planet.
There's specific data embedded in those Numbers regarding those Sports Scores.
With the numbers you're seeing, it's because I defined the numbers. So all the Subconscious Minds around the World are aligning their actions to hit those marks and what is being set. That's how you get an entire Planet working in Unison that creates the Consciousness of the Planet proving that it's Sentient and alive.
You also see how the names are staged
- Davis Love III so to match Davis.
- I said 2/16/2006 about Governor Gray Davis getting removed from office as Governor of California reflecting Davis
- I said 2/18/2006 about how annoyed I was that Gold Medal Winner Shani Davis is acting as if it's all his doing that got him where he is, mirroring the Davis I work with who thinks he's doing all the work
This just goes to show how far-reaching these things are and how what I'm doing is unnatural and has a broader scope that has more of an affect on people on a Global Scale than they realize.
I called Davis telling him about Davis Love III and he just said, "Oh." He had that "Oh, okay. Whatever" Attitude. It doesn't mean anything to him. Same as how this information doesn't mean anything to a lot of people. It's just perceived at most as random or mere coincidence.
That's why when Davis tries to defend his actions years from now, it will be difficult for him to cover up his actions because we all know that this is the general attitude and how people will act when they don't care or don't think something is important. They'll dismiss you and whatever you say not taking you seriously.
A lot of people don't take me seriously. That's why I don't see why people should suddenly get all pissed off years from now trying to chew my ass out and go off on me about what I've done over these past couple years when no one gave a rat's ass about what I did because they didn't think it had anything to do with them.
What I do has a LOT to do with what happens to you and everyone else around the Planet. If people want to neglect me and ignore me, that's fine, but don't come at me years later and make me the scapegoat for all the problems that crop up because of Negligence and Ignorance.
I may be a Human Being, but I'm a Machine. It's like trying to get mad at a Super Computer that has gone UNSUPERVISED for years causing problems and nobody ever tried to fix or repair the computer.
I get treated like an inanimate object or a piece of property. However, the worst part is that because I'm Human, if people get pissed off enough, they'll try to sue me or go after me as a Human Being. However, if I was a piece of Metal or a Car, people woudl take more responsibility for their own actions.
Look at how people are now where they aren't aware it's me. Do you see anyone coming at me blaming me for who dies or any hurricane, tornado, or earthquake damage that hits their homes?
No.
It's because they think it's a natural weather occurrence and that there is no one you can physically blame for the Weather. They just believe that's the way it is. That's why it will be interesting if people try to sue me while I'm alive for.
I'd like to see whom they're going to try blaming their problems on and taking to court when I'm dead. I said I wouldn't try to put it the Insurance Companies if they try to rewrite their policies where it doesn't hold them liable for damage that they can attribute to me.
Though I could also argue that huge debt that the people owe to the Government could count as what's owed to me. If they want to blame me for that, they should be taking it out of the Government Debt Clock that they've got.
I'm the Go/Ver-NM/Ent.
Love III, Furyk Take Charge at Players Championship
Matching 65s Lead Golf's 'Fifth Major,' Woods' Thoughts With Father
By DOUG FERGUSON, AP
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (March 23) - Slipping on a rain jacket under a cool, gray sky Thursday only enhanced the warm feelings Davis Love III has at The Players Championship.
Tiger Woods combats five bogeys with five birdies in the first round of The Players Championship, but his thoughts are understandably far from dreary Florida.
Tiger Woods could have been anywhere, and his thoughts would not have strayed too far from an ailing father.
In an opening round of varied emotions, Love steered clear of trouble on the TPC at Sawgrass with seven birdies inside 10 feet for a 7-under 65, giving him a share of the lead with dinner partner Jim Furyk.
As Love navigated his way around the Stadium Course without a bogey in the morning, attention shifted to the parking lot when Woods showed up after a cross-country trip to California to visit his 74-year-old father, Earl Woods, who is battling cancer. Woods left Tuesday night not knowing if he would come back.
"He's fighting as hard as he can," Woods said. "It was good to see. At least he's trying to hang in there, which is a very positive sign."
Woods returned some 12 hours before his tee time, and his play was sporadic - five birdies, five bogeys and a 72 that left him seven shots behind.
"It puts things in perspective real quick," Woods said. "You hit a bad shot and you want to get upset with yourself because you know you can hit better shots. But you know what? In the whole scheme of things, it's just a golf shot."
Love and Furyk had little reason to get upset.
Sawgrass was relatively tame without much wind and the occasional drizzle that softened the greens, and it showed in a series of good scores and a bunched leaderboard.
Bernhard Langer continued his mastery of the island-green 17th, the most terrifying par 3 in golf, with his 20th career birdie that carried him to a 67, along with Robert Allenby and Miguel Angel Jimenez. Vijay Singh was bogey-free in his round of 68 that left him tied with a group that included Jose Maria Olazabal, Ben Crane and Pebble Beach winner Arron Oberholser.
"The course is there," Love said. "If you hit it in the fairways and putted, you were going to do well."
Wearing a rain suit never seems to bother Love.
He had on navy rain gear three years ago in cool, blustery conditions when Love closed with a 64, matching the best closing round by a winner at golf's fifth major. Love and other early starters only got a few sprinkles, but he never considered removing his royal blue jacket.
"After 4 under through nine, it wasn't going to come off," he said.
Or maybe it was something in the casserole at Furyk's house Wednesday night, a small gathering that included Furyk, Love, Brad Faxon (70), Phil Mickelson (70) and Justin Leonard (75).
Mickelson had five birdies, but he dunked his tee shot on the 17th for double bogey, hit a tee shot in the water at No. 15 and scrambled for bogey, and wound up with a 70.
"Maybe Phil didn't eat enough," Love said.
Furyk played with Love, although it took a while to join him in the charge up the leaderboard. He opened with seven pars before hitting a hybrid club into 20 feet on the 219-yard eighth hole and making birdie, then making a 25-foot birdie on the par-5 ninth to get him going.
It was the first time in 11 starts at The Players Championship that Furyk broke 70.
"There are times when you get off to a start like that, look up on the leaderboard and see guys getting off to a good start, and it's hard to stay patient," Furyk said. "I stayed patient, and just let it happen."
He didn't need a leaderboard to see a good start.
Love hit 4-iron into the par-5 second for a two-putter birdie, hit 9-iron into 2 feet for birdie on the sixth, then nearly holed out his 4-iron on No. 8, leaving him a tap-in birdie. Having played so well on this course, his vision of this Pete Dye creation is far different from so many others.
Take the par-3 eighth, one of the toughest on the course.
"When I get up there, I say, 'This hole has always been good to me,' rather than going, 'It's hard to hit this green.' I'm thinking positive thoughts," Love said. "When you have a place where you're comfortable, it makes it easier. I feel good everywhere on this course."
Woods said he wasn't tired from his coast-to-coast trip in his private jet, and while he was thinking of his father, he had plenty of time to prepare for each shot. He just didn't hit them all very well.
"Unfortunately, my mechanics weren't very good," Woods said.
He played with Darren Clarke, whose wife, Heather, is dying from cancer that has spread throughout her body. Woods said they spoke about their situations throughout the round.
"It's just one of those things you deal with," Woods said. "Everyone has to deal with that at some point in their life, and unfortunately, right now it's our time."
It was taxing enough dealing with the Stadium Course, where double bogeys or worse await the slightest mistake. No hole can be more punishing than the infamous 17th, where Scott McCarron (82) and Bob Estes (74) each took three shots before they were safely on land.
But for all the water - and there's a lot of it at Sawgrass - the biggest problem was the thick, wet rough.
D.J. Trahan tried to muscle a shot out of the rough on the par-5 ninth and couldn't clear the water. And that wasn't the worst of it. After taking a drop and hitting just short of the green, Trahan was in rough so deep that he hit the ball twice with his chip, another penalty. He wound up with a 9 and shot 76.
"If you were in the fairway, the course played OK," Love said. "And if you weren't, it played tough."
03/23/06 14:50 ET
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