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Cally Starforth's avatar

Hey, Eppy nice to hear from you, thanks. Its possible he was William Wallace and others have been mentioned, there are so many figures in myth that we will probably never know if they actually existed. Jesus Christ of Nazareth being one.

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THE ARTILECT's avatar

Thanks,Cally - some deep diving there! But we can always go deeper... to find bits of comet! I am a student of catastrophism, and have republished all the books - and made a first edition of the final manuscript (the acquiring of which involved reluctant Templars) - of Comyns Beaumont, the unacknowledged source for much of Velikovsky's work.

The beauty of CB, who was, incidentally, the uncle of Daphne Du Maurier, is that he does not shrink from questioning the locations of ancient myth and biblical stories (the accounts of the wars of the Jews in the case of the OT, and the blended stories of a Scottish rebel and a comet in the case of the NT). Whereas Velikovsky leaves them in the middle east, CB takes them back to their origins in what is now, post-cataclysm, the British Isles., but was formerly part of a large landmass (undersea remnants of which are documented), broken off at the time of the arrival of what he describes as a comet which arrived in the midst of a major war, almost three and a half thousand years ago.

Timescales and geography make eminent sense once the events are correctly placed. Ancient maps of Jerusalem, for example. do not tally with its alleged coordinates., but match exactly with the city of Edinburgh.

It requires a huge leap initially but once the whole picture is seen, it cannot be unseen, and world events ALL make sense - especially the proxy religious wars and the deep involvement of Britain and Rome.

For political skin-saving purposes, York-born Constantine sent his mother, a devout actual Christian with British roots (for the original religion was here) to what is now regarded as the Holy Land to 'discover' 'relics' - including a piece of the 'true cross' - in the places where churchmen sent out with her had conveniently placed them. All this for geopolitical purposes, as Constantine needed a capital in that region for the empire to continue, since things were not going too well over here. Something was required in order for it all to be held together and the power remain with the Romans (who had been one party in the ancient wars, who had left for warmer climes after the impact, and later returned to try to regain their power).

The Council of Nicaea - which took place a stone's throw from Brussels, incidentally - made a new religion to mask the old one, by combining the NEO-appeasing Roman religion (gods were meteor fragments, and the true story of Simon Bar Cochbar, a SCOTTISH rebel (depicted on Roman coins discovered in Scotland which had a thistle on the back) who was crucified on Corstorphine Hill in Edinburgh, not far from Arthur's Seat, the original Mount of Olives (the weather was warmer before the comet!).

Northumberland was the original Palestine, making the tree-felling more significant than ever. And yes, the sycamore has been a sacred tree with great healing properties and huge symbolic significance for ages. Because of this great significance it is often deliberately confused with other trees more suited to warmer climes to make the stories fit, albeit uncomfortably; it's quite amusing to see the contortions required to get so many British trees shoe-horned into the desert - the Oaks of Mamre/Oaks of Abraham, for example.

So the symbolism and significance of the recent tree-culling are much greater than anyone is currently daring to admit.They were building back better then, just like today.

Are they showing they don't care any more about that history? Because we're all useless eaters now and must have one health between us and worship the bots (still made of meteoric rock) and play video games to keep our vibrations in the toilet - where they can be collected and analysed for dissident spread?

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