On Sunday morning, in June of 1933, Brother Branham had a series of seven visions that he prophesied would take place before the end of the world. The Lord spoke to him, saying that the coming of the Lord was drawing nigh. But before He came, seven major events would transpire. The seven visions were as follows:
1.Mussolini would invade Ethiopia and that nation would "fall at his steps," but he would come to a horrible end with his own people turning on him.
2.An Austrian by the name of Adolph Hitler would rise up as dictator over Germany, and that he would draw the world into war. It showed the Siegfried line and how our troops would have a terrible time to overcome it. Then it showed that Hitler would come to a mysterious end.
3.There would be three great "ISMS": Facism, Nazism, Communism, but the first two would be swallowed up into the third. The voice admonished, "WATCH RUSSIA, WATCH RUSSIA. Keep your eye on the King of the North."
4.The fourth vision showed the great advances in science that would come after the second world war. It was headed up in the vision of a plastic bubble-topped car that was running down beautiful highways under remote control so that people appeared seated in this car without a steering wheel and they were playing some sort of a game to amuse themselves.
5.The fifth vision had to do with the moral problem of our age, centering mostly around women. God showed Brother Branham that women began to be out of their place with the granting of the vote. Then they cut off their hair, which signified that they were no longer under the authority of a man but insisted on either equal rights, or in most cases, more than equal rights. She adopted men's clothing and went into a state of undress, until the last picture he saw was a woman naked except for a little fig leaf type apron. With this vision he saw the terrible perversion and moral plight of the whole world.
6.In the sixth vision there arose up in America a most beautiful, but cruel woman. She held the people in her complete power. Brother Branham believed that this was the rise of the Roman Catholic Church, though he knew it could possibly be a vision of some woman rising in great power in America due to a popular vote by women.
7.In the last vision, he heard a most terrible explosion. As he turned to look, Brother Branham saw nothing but debris, craters, and smoke all over the land of America.
Brother Branham pointed out in 1961 that the driverless, egg-shaped car as spoken of in the fourth vision was seen in Popular Mechanics magazine. Even though that vision was fulfilled, research on these cars has continued, until today, when that car can now be found on the American roads. The following is an article published on AOL News, October 10, 2010.
Google Reveals Its Robot Cars Are Among Us
(Oct. 10) -- With little fanfare other than a post on Google's official blog, the search engine giant announced that it has been testing robotic cars on U.S. city streets, apparently without anybody noticing. Describing it as a "first in robotics research," Google says the self-driving cars -- modified Prius vehicles -- have already traveled more than 140,000 miles.
"Our automated cars, manned by trained operators, just drove from our Mountain View campus to our Santa Monica office and on to Hollywood Boulevard," the Saturday blog post reads. "They've driven down Lombard Street, crossed the Golden Gate bridge, navigated the Pacific Coast Highway, and even made it all the way around Lake Tahoe."
Google has been testing robotic cars on U.S. streets, the company said in a blog post on Saturday. Here, one of the unmanned vehicles in shown.
The cars operated autonomously as they navigated their way down roads and highways, but a driver able to take over control was in the vehicle at all times as a safety precaution. The vehicles were equipped with a complex array of sensors and cameras that allowed them to "see" and steer around obstacles, including other cars on the road.
As part of the project, Google apparently put together a dream team of robotics researchers drawing from participants in a Pentagon-sponsored robot road race conducted in 2007. That competition, part of a series of robot races called the Grand Challenge, was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and involved driving unmanned cars across an urban-style course in Victorville, Calif.
A Carnegie Mellon team won the 2007 competition using a Chevy Tahoe. Google says it drew on on several DARPA participants -- including a leader for the Carnegie Mellon team -- for its robotic car work. The motivation behind its driverless car experiment is to reduce the number of road accidents and increase energy efficiency, the company says.
Although Google says it coordinated its robotic cars with local police, no previous public mention has been made of the plan. Google, in the meantime is not revealing what it's next step will be for the robotic vehicles.