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  • Reply to: What Happened to the Sunken City of Cuba?   2 weeks 5 days ago
    Comment Author: Stephen L. Rush

    Attributing the sunken Cuban city to Atlantis is in my view coattail scholarship and attempts to ride fame - as is attempted by nearly every archaeological research. This site bears no resemblance to Plato's account, and it is well established that the Morrocan Eye of the Saharah is the likely candidate, with Santorini isle a passable second. However in a scholarly approach, the straight lines in the rock are unmistakably human in development, and it's existence hundreds of meters below expected exposure doesn't discount subsidence, cataclysmic and/or sea level changes. Dating this to 50,000 years is a weak affair, as we have no direct evidence of a carbon based date, and Younger Dryas astroidal impact could have collapsed hidden tectonic or other underwater structures underneath.

  • Reply to: What Happened to the Sunken City of Cuba?   2 weeks 5 days ago
    Comment Author: Stephen L. Rush

    Attributing the sunken Cuban city to Atlantis is in my view coattail scholarship and attempts to ride fame - as is attempted by nearly every archaeological research. This site bears no resemblance to Plato's account, and it is well established that the Morrocan Eye of the Saharah is the likely candidate, with Santorini isle a passable second. However in a scholarly approach, the straight lines in the rock are unmistakably human in development, and it's existence hundreds of meters below expected exposure doesn't discount subsidence, cataclysmic and/or sea level changes. Dating this to 50,000 years is a weak affair, as we have no direct evidence of a carbon based date, and Younger Dryas astroidal impact could have collapsed hidden tectonic or other underwater structures underneath.

  • Reply to: Ancient Healing Methods Offer an Alternative Paradigm in Health   3 weeks 1 day ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    I once told a specialist I had a distinct medical condition. He told me the condition didn't exist and ridiculed it.

    I have since learnt that the complaint was not only recognised but an 'alternative' treatment was available, thanks to old Russian research.

    I asked another specialist, a very friendly one, if a particular pathogen was implicated in a rather vague but common disease. i received a defensive answer which I had no need of, for I already knew the correct answer. Contrary to what I was told by the specialist, such a link had been studied. The positive results were available on the net. Why were they not pursued?

    Well, quite frankly, to do so would have been at odds with the policies of those behind modern medicine. The pharmaceutical industry started with the petroleum industry. Mass-producing synthetic chemicals cheaply was possible thanks to the second-most ubiquitous liquid on the planet, in petroleum.

    Yet, the historical strings that pull the big pharma puppets (which most doctors are) can be traced beyond the early petroleum industry bigwigs, back to the Synagogue of Satan.

    The hardcore adherents of the Satanic religion use alternative medicine, but they don't want others joining in
    Thus, it is demonised by their big tech companies which are, in truth, censorship enforcers, and by the media and health department etc guidelines which they control.

    One such guideline states that a particular herbal medicine used for millennia will have implications for your body's dealing with a controversial new virus. This is a deliberate half-truth. In reality, the herbal medicine helps the sufferer to overcome the virus. This is how language is used to spread official disinformation, whereby a cure becomes something not to trusted simply by leaving out the most relevant parts, such as the part about it actually working.

    This is not the sum total of such messing with the availability of alternative medicine, however. The links between alternative medicine and what I, as Christian, would describe as alternative religions are promoted by shadowy forces for their purposes.

    The Synagogue of Satan don't want the masses to be well. But far more than that, they especially don't want the masses to be well Christians.

    As a Christian, I give the religious links a wide berth, but not the alternative medicine. I just study the latter closely and cautiously and, when unsure, use my God-given intuition.

  • Reply to: technical problem   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    Hii everyone

    I was also facing the same issue.Thanks for solving my problem. Now It's fixed 

     

  • Reply to: Which Culture Sparks Your Curiosity?   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    Hii everyone

    If I were an archaeologist, I study Maya culture in depth.The Maya, with its intricate architecture, advanced knowledge of astronomy, sophisticated hieroglyphic writing system, and enigmatic collapse, presents a captivating puzzle waiting to be unraveled.

     Maya culture's rich tapestry of art, science, and history inspires me to delve deeper into their world, uncovering the secrets of this enigmatic civilization and gaining a better understanding of humanity's shared past.

     

  • Reply to: Which Culture Sparks Your Curiosity?   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    Hii everyone

    If I were an archaeologist, I study Maya culture in depth.The Maya, with its intricate architecture, advanced knowledge of astronomy, sophisticated hieroglyphic writing system, and enigmatic collapse, presents a captivating puzzle waiting to be unraveled.

     Maya culture's rich tapestry of art, science, and history inspires me to delve deeper into their world, uncovering the secrets of this enigmatic civilization and gaining a better understanding of humanity's shared past.

     

  • Reply to: Please introduce yourself   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    hii everyone  My name is Magha and I am a software engineer . I work in Accenture company. I have good knowledge of cyber security and  cloud software.  I have joined this group for sharing my knowlage.I enjoyed joining the group

  • Reply to: The Babel Texts   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    As far as I know, ancient texts and stories often contain references to astronomical phenomena and mathematical concepts, providing evidence of the importance of these topics in ancient cultures. Myths, legends, and religious texts often include astronomical symbolism and mathematical symbolism.

    Ancient mapmaking further demonstrates the interconnectedness of mathematics, astronomy, and ancient texts. Maps from ancient times reveal an integration of astronomical observations and geographical knowledge, often depicting terrestrial features as well as celestial bodies. These maps not only served practical purposes of navigation and exploration but also had cultural and religious significance.
    From ancient texts and stories we come to know about many things of earlier times like lanuage, texts are informative for us.

        The connections between mathematics, astronomy, ancient texts and stories, and ancient mapmaking highlight the sophisticated knowledge and intellectual achievements of ancient civilizations.

  • Reply to: The Kolbrin   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: megha rawat

    The book you have shared is really good thanks for sharing this. 

  • Reply to: Bronze Age Burial Study Links Peoples of Britain and Luxembourg   3 weeks 2 days ago
    Comment Author: Nicko4404

    So the possibility that the deaths of the co burials could've happened at different times hasn't been considered? For example, mother dies, then three years later three yo then buried with her, mother providing guidance and company in the afterlife. That scenario has to be a strong possibility

  • Reply to: Captain Boycott's Abuse of Irish Farmers Sparked the Term “Boycott”   3 weeks 3 days ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The narrative of relatively modern Irish history is one of Irish peasantry pitted against British imperialism. However, the peasantry were mere pawns.

    British imperialism was a tool of Satanic forces. However, social-justice-championing Jesuit Catholicism, which took strong root in rural Ireland, was another tool of the same Satanic forces. Such Satanic forces regularly control both apparently opposing sides which are presented to a naïve public as the only options.

    Thus, the idea of a "boycott" bringing about lasting social change and justice is equally naïve. Divide and conquer tactics require division. Division is created, then capitalised upon.

    The reaction to injustice can then be channelled off to set up situations for ongoing control and further injustice. That is the true legacy that continues to resonate to this day, where collective action is routinely corralled into collecting around forces which are not what they seem.

    Ultimately, the Satanic forces behind social injustice know there shall be resistance, so they ensure that such resistance is never given free reign, just an appearance of it.

  • Reply to: What Really Happened to the Canaanites? (Video)   3 weeks 3 days ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "Some scholars propose that the Israelites gradually integrated into Canaanite society, adopting aspects of their language, customs, and religious practices over time."

    "According to the Old Testament, the Israelites perceived the Canaanites as morally corrupt, engaging in practices such as idol worship, divination, and even child sacrifice..."

    These two sentences are, in truth, not unconnected

  • Reply to: The Last of the Siberian Unicorns: What Happened to the Beasts of Legend?   3 weeks 3 days ago
    Comment Author: jasatambahfollower

    rhinoceros like unicorn, this is Some animal species appear and others disappear 

  • Reply to: Five Fascinating Mysteries About Prehistoric Australia (Video)   3 weeks 6 days ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    If any historian is unsure of how Aboriginal history is now totally political, he or she does not want to know.

    Webster's dictionary states that a Murrayian is "a member of an almost extinct ethnic group of southeastern Australia."

    They're not close to extinction. Nor are they restricted to the south-east. One Murrayian widow complained frequently about Captain Cook stealing Aboriginal land, yet could not leave her welfare money lying around her house without young men from her community helping themselves in the belief that what's hers is theirs. No charges have ever been laid, of course.

    The irony is, as Murrayians, all in this community are descendants of land-stealers, murderers and rapists. In that sense, they are no different. Who alive today is not thus?

    I welcome Aboriginal people telling their history. But if it's not the whole uncensored truth it isn't their history. Sanitised or pretend versions are simply the product of well-packaged lies.

  • Reply to: Five Fascinating Mysteries About Prehistoric Australia (Video)   3 weeks 6 days ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Why paedophilia, infanticide, wife-beating, loaning a wife out to a welcome visitor and various other documented, unsavoury traditional practises are not to be discussed is no mystery.

    Those who run Australia from the outside, whom I coukd have joined (so I know they exist), use Aboriginal activism to help destroy Australia from the inside. For example, Uluru is now much more sacred than it was back in the mid 20th century. This is driven by the media, historians, schools and academia.

    History is often about the winners fabricating events. The idea of Aboriginal Australians as always victims is naïve or disingenuous. Some Aboriginal activists are known Satanists. They use their "communities" for their own purposes. They have no personal advantage in advantaging their communities. They personally are advantaged by disadvantaging them.

    In many cases, all disadvantaged remote communities are offered is perpetual welfare, bad diets, poor health care (some were forcibly vaccinated against their will) and a narrative of their history which is not even true, sometimes told by famous 'Aboriginal' persons who have no actual Aboriginal ancestry at all, yet claim it anyway.

    The tri-hybrid theory of Australian Aboriginality of a century ago has never been disproved. Yet, why we are not allowed to discuss that is another non-mystery.

    The second Australians genocided the first Australians, but it wasn't the British who were responsible (as brutish as some Brits could be). It was the ancestors of most Aboriginal activists today and their ancestors' victims have been written out of history having become too inconvenient to the plans of the ruling global elites.

  • Reply to: How Did Europe Step Into the Modern Era? (Video)   4 weeks 1 hour ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "The Medici family, prominent patrons of the arts, played a pivotal role in fostering the flourishing of artistic genius..."

    A cynic might say it was a pity they didn't spend more time fostering their own honesty and integrity.

  • Reply to: Fairy Rings, Stonehenge and Gravity Vortices   4 weeks 2 hours ago
    Comment Author: cockybullet

    I just discovered this now, Daniel

  • Reply to: The History of Shipbuilding As We Know It   1 month 9 hours ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    If one accepts that Noah built an ark, this theory of progression gets turned on its head.

  • Reply to: The Lost Treasure of the Knights Templar (Video)   1 month 9 hours ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The demise of the Knights Templar is overstated. They are a yet living example of how forms of Christianity can be subverted by the Devil himself.

    However, the muddying of these waters by popular fiction has, very successfully, prevented many from seeing this truth.

  • Reply to: Best Books on Comparative Mythology and Folklore   1 month 9 hours ago
    Comment Author: editmere

    "The Hero with a Thousand Faces" by Joseph Campbell - While you mentioned you've read most of Campbell's works, this seminal book remains a cornerstone in the study of comparative mythology and is worth revisiting if you haven't read it yet. 

    "Mythology: The Illustrated Anthology of World Myth and Storytelling" edited by C. Scott Littleton - This comprehensive anthology provides a wide-ranging overview of myths from cultures around the world, offering insights into common themes and motifs.

    "The Oxford Companion to World Mythology" by David Leeming - A thorough reference guide that explores myths and mythological figures from various cultures, providing in-depth analysis and context.

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