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  • Reply to: The Lost Treasure of the Knights Templar (Video)   1 month 1 day 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 1 day 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.

  • Reply to: Craniums and Controversies of the Chachapoya Cloud Warriors   1 month 1 day ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "Unfortunately, academic and scientific authorities are desperately evading these analyses, since bringing them to light would be catastrophic to the human history narrative they have been peddling for the past two centuries."

    Much of accepted history is false. There are many such avenues of study which are not travelled, because they may lead to conclusions that the global elites are not in favour of.

  • Reply to: Judaic Devastation: The Bar Kokhba Revolt’s Tragic Legacy (Video)   1 month 6 days ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The problems there today stem from those who the New Testament describes accurately as Jews who are not Jews but, rather, the Synagogue of Satan. Hamas leadership is not unrelated to the same Synagogue of Satan, which includes leadership from many faiths all pretending to be that which they are not.

    The war in the Holy Land is Devil's chess, whereby the high-ranking pieces are kept safe, while the pawns are slaughtered. The pawns are the targets, not the kings.

    It is naïve to merely think that the Jews of the Holy Land 1900 years ago were the direct ancestors of many of those of there today. It is also naïve to merely believe that because there is a war with apparently two sides that at the leadership level those two sides cannot actually be on the same side.

    The Devil deceives and most have no clue how much they are deceived. Nor that the Devil even exists.

    Much of history is false. Much of the news is false too.

  • Reply to: Rare ‘Slave Bible’ Was A Powerful Mind Control Device and Spreader of Fake News   1 month 6 days ago
    Comment Author: AVINASH 13807

    What an idea of British who used Bible for own purposes. A fake Bible is still inspiring lesson for Negro population. British had used missionaries for own purposes and for own benefit. They have managed Whole propoganda and rescue her empire from local inhabitants.

  • Reply to: Ancient Botanical Medicine Was Driven By Taste and Smell, Study Finds   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Most plants with historical medicinal use have never been studied properly. Those studies which are undertaken with positive results, are written up in papers stating potential for therapeutic use and recommending further study. This further study rarely happens. Such papers tend to join the large pile of other such papers gathering dust.

    Academia places restraints on such papers and these restraints suit the pharmaceutical industry admirably. Whilst one may well understand the extreme caution surrounding plants without historical medicinal use, regarding efficacy, safety or both, those plants that have such historical medicinal use are somewhat known quantities.

    The pharmaceutical industry knows many plants are effective medicines and more than a few can cure some cancers. However, the industry is run by über-capitalists for their benefit, not ours.

    Indeed, this is only part of the truth. The vaccines rolled out by the pharmaceutical industry are often, effectively, bioweapons designed to make a percentage of recipients sick. Targets include adrenal glands, thyroids, and areas prone to cancer. This has been so since well back into last century, although it has since accelerated.

    I, personally undertaking medical self-experimentation, have come down with shingles and a life-threatening episode similar to snakebite and funnelweb spiderbite from vaccines.

    The naïve believe that the pharmaceutical industry is there for their protection, as are vaccines. Whilst one should be cautious about embracing older medical theories such as the four humours, or embracing the religious aspects of Eastern herbal use, one should be equally cautious about modern medicine.

    I am reminded of two stories from the lives of people I know. In the first, a sick greyhound was diagnosed with not long to live. It was put in a pen to see out its last few days. A pumpkin squash vine was growing on the fence and the greyhound ate all of the vine that it could. The dog's recovery was as rapid as it was unexpected. It was unlikely to have been coincidental.

    In the second, someone deficient in pregnenolone, a precursor chemical to some bodily hormones, upon receiving it in an hour of need developed an immediate desire to eat butter on its own. This may seem as odd as a dog eating a pumpkin vine, but cholesterol is another precursor to hormone production and butter contains cholesterol.

    Indeed, the demonisation of all cholesterol, prevalent in the latter half of last century coincided with the vaccine roll-out. This was not a coincidence.

    I would rather trust taste than the pharmaceutical industry.

  • Reply to: Does Bimini Road Lead to The Lost Civilization of Atlantis?   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Rod Martin Jr.

    How many structures in the world are made from natural materials? Perhaps we could say “all of them,” with a generous definition of “natural.” But even with a conservative definition, we have to realize that dismissal based on the materials used is a weak argument, at best.

     

    Not only were leveling blocks placed under some of the beachrock stones, but the orientation of stones is varied. Beachrock forms with a bias toward the sea side of formation. The Bimini structure has stones which are aligned naturally with this bias, but many stones which are at right angles or 180 degrees opposite of this alignment. That the skeptics avoided these facts only shows their clear bias against the evidence.

     

    Atlantis? Plato hinted that Atlantis (if it existed) had colonies in the islands of the Great (unnamed) Continent. Though the Bimini structure came too late to have been a part of an Atlantean colony (sea level was far lower 9600 BC), it could have been used by the children of Atlantis.

  • Reply to: Brain’s Evolutionary Explosion Linked to Ancient Retrovirus Infection   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: George Metaxas

    If increase in myelination was at the root of nervous system evolution, it would have concerned most of the animals, thus it doesn’t (of its own) explain how the specific creature that eventually became a human, was differentiated.

  • Reply to: A Brief History of Homosexuality in Rome (Video)   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The prohibition of homosexuality in the Pagan Roman army was one of the furthering of domination.

    Rank in the army meant the possibility of dominating a subordinate in a homosexuality relationship existed there. However, that opened up the possibility of the famous unity of the legions being undermined.

    Thus, it was deemed necessary to outlaw one form of domination in order to preserve another. It was a matter of priorities, not morality.

    Rome had very little morality.

  • Reply to: A Brief History of Homosexuality in Rome (Video)   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Had a Roman citizen freed his male slave before beginning a sexual relationship with him, there may have been some case for it not being rape.

    However, a Roman citizen was very unlikely to do that, as the dominance and submission in the unequal relationship involving a slave is exactly what justified it in the morality or, rather, immorality of Pagan Roman society.

    In other words, they most practised homosexuality when it was rape or effectively so.

    The MeToo generation tend to gloss over this, thus exposing the hypocrisy caused by their woke dogma.

    There is right and there is wrong. Using a position of power for sexual domination is palpably wrong. It cannot be right, no matter how one seeks to justify it.

    Most people are blind to just how prevalent such misuse of power is, however. Indeed, many would be horrified to learn the truth. But that's okay. They have no intention of learning it. They're too cowardly.

    To those who believe in the right of dominance over submission, cowardice is a form of consent.

    In that respect, not much has changed. Nor will it, until God changes it, for humanity has been proven largely incapable of cleaning itself of such sin. Humanity lacks the willpower to do so. Too many seek a comfortable life over a righteous one.

  • Reply to: Brain’s Evolutionary Explosion Linked to Ancient Retrovirus Infection   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "The study has implications for how scientists understand how ancient retrovirus infections could have affected evolution of the brain and other physical traits."

    To be truly accurate, one must replace "understand" with "research" or "study". The understanding bit is highly questionable.

    Had a fraction of the trillions that have been spent on furthering evolutionary theory been spent on attempting to disprove it instead, we may well have progressed.

    As it is, evolutionary research is stuck in the same old process of attempting to explain the inexplicable. As such, it makes a mockery of many modern Atheists who say they have no religion, but to whom Darwin is god.

    Darwin was, himself, not an Atheist most likely. The evidence points to the Devil being his god.

    However, as people believe just what they want to believe, such is an unwelcome possibility. Far better it is to use retroviruses to attempt to explain some of the inexplicable...

  • Reply to: A Brief History of Homosexuality in Rome (Video)   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Ancient Greece was a hotbed of homosexuality and Rome had its roots in Greece (no puns intended).

    The dichotomy between Ancient Rome and the Christianity that would eventually take root there may be explained by Paganism.

    Paganism is simply an alternative to God provided by the Devil. As such, it is opposite to true Christianity. It has become fashionable to gloss over any sexual relations between a Roman citizen and his male slave. From a Pagan Roman perspective, this was purely the domination of a subordinate.

    The same is used as a justification for paedophilia, something I have been unfortunate enough to experience. It is a disgusting practice and one the Devil is very fond of. Ancient Greece and paedophilia were very much bedfellows. Even calling it "paedophilia" is a deception. There is no love involved.

    I would suggest that whenever a Roman citizen had sexual relations with his male slave, there was no real love involved there either. There were just property rights.

    Is not glossing over that sin itself a sin? Or do we not worry about such things any longer?

  • Reply to: Archaeologists Unearth Largest Roman Legion Base in Israel   1 month 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The Western Wall where worship occurs in Jerusalem today is not that of the ruined Jewish temple, as is claimed, but of the ruins of another Roman fortress.

  • Reply to: How Many People Are Actually Related to Genghis Khan? (Video)   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    We are all descended from murderers. If one gets excited at being a descendent of an infamous murderer, one should simply grow up.

  • Reply to: Advanced Amazonian Agriculturalists Intentionally Created ‘Terra Preta’ Thousands of Years Ago   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Adding carbon to the soil aids plant growth. Attempting to lower carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere negatively affects plant growth and does nothing for reducing temperatures. In fact, if one truly wants to reduce temperatures, aiding plant growth is an effective way of doing this. Thus, releasing carbon dioxide is not necessarily bad.

    Global warming is a Satanist scam and that is bad. Indeed, it is truly evil.

  • Reply to: Who Was Thomas Aquinas and Why Is He Mentioned So Often?   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    When an anti-heritical saint is himself influenced heavily by Pagan philosophy, a Latin saying could come to mind.

    Namely, "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?"

  • Reply to: Who Was Thomas Aquinas and Why Is He Mentioned So Often?   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The Inquisition was underway when Aquinas joined the Dominican order. The order that Aquinas devoted his life to was devoted to and quite probably initiated for the very purpose of rooting out opposition to corruption within the Catholic Church

    Aquinas himself wrote, "As for heretics, their sin deserves banishment, not only from the Church by excommunication, but also from this world by death."

  • Reply to: Who Was Thomas Aquinas and Why Is He Mentioned So Often?   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The Inquisition was underway when Aquinas joined the Dominican order. The order that Aquinas devoted his life to was devoted to and quite probably initiated for the very purpose of rooting out opposition to corruption within the Catholic Church

    Aquinas himself wrote, "As for heretics, their sin deserves banishment, not only from the Church by excommunication, but also from this world by death."

  • Reply to: Who Was Thomas Aquinas and Why Is He Mentioned So Often?   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The Inquisition was underway when Aquinas joined the Dominican order. The order that Aquinas devoted his life to was devoted to and quite probably initiated for the very purpose of rooting out opposition to corruption within the Catholic Church

    Aquinas himself wrote, "As for heretics, their sin deserves banishment, not only from the Church by excommunication, but also from this world by death."

  • Reply to: The Five Worst Jobs on a Pirate Ship... (Video)   1 month 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Sgt Slotter

    I love this website and love reading in general. I'm here every day of the week though i don't often log in. I lost my hearing roughly 15 years ago so that love of reading really pays off these days. You guys have some great authors here at Ancient Origins though i have a hard time considering someone an author if they depend so heavily on the works of others, videos at that. This basically amounts to nothing short of plagiarism and at least a little credit should be given to the person that put in the real work. Another thing to consider is the future. Once these videos are no longer available at the link presented in these posts which is more common than most would assume, this site is going to wind up with a ton of empty content. I've been biting my tongue for a while now and felt that needed to be addressed.

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