Russell
"The two directions of the static universe are East and West. They are static because they are spherical. They follow curved planes of unchanging equipotential pressures, such as the contour of the earth or sun or of the orbits of planets or floating clouds. East and West do not oppose each other. Each arrives at its own starting point without change of potential. (Fig. 32)
North and South, on the contrary, diametrically oppose each other. They are constantly changing. They seek opposite directions, each passing through the other in opposite spiral lanes; each interchanging with the other as it passes; each voiding the other through that interchange, and each becoming the other because of it. (Fig. 33)
East-West spherical planes form the axes of light waves from which the dynamic universe extends its gyroscopic wave, radially, at amplitudes of ninety degrees and also its other gyroscopic octave tones at the varying degrees of pressures where the elements of matter are formed.
East-West spherical planes are also the fulcrums of wave levers which curve gravity as they pump high potential into low to expand solids into the gases of space, and low potential into high to compress light waves into the solids of earths. (Fig. 34) [Walter Russell, The Secret of Light, pages 239-240]
See Also