Anonymous ID: 56203b May 13, 2022, 5:26 p.m. No.16270169   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0375

Subterranean Reptilians Killed 15 Coal Miners: Declassified Document Reveals Shocking Intel

May 10, 2022

 

Legends of reptilian humanoids have existed for centuries and span nearly every continent on the planet. Ancient cultures that had no contact or communication with one another describe and depict eerily similar entities. Hopi Native Americans speak of revered ‘snake brothers’ who live in underground cities. Aboriginal Creation mythology chronicle Ngiṉṯaka, a colossal perentie lizard. Asian mythology connects royal bloodlines to a race of powerful dragons. Vedic scriptures reference the Naga as a shapeshifting serpentine breed. Zulu shamans believe the world is controlled by the Chitauri, a sinister saurian force. While many skeptics dismiss such accounts as mere fables, others insist the enigmatic species truly exists. A particularly notable proponent happens to be an esteemed federal agency.

 

-An Extraordinary Declassified Document

In 2008 an intriguing file was declassified by the British Ministry of Defense. Titled Unidentified Flying Objects Correspondence, the report contains detailed information regarding ufology. Buried within the 318-page document is a lengthy chapter labeled: THE MYSTERY OF INIQUITY EXPOSED: THE REALITY OF THE SERPENT RACE AND THE SUBTERRAIN ORIGIN OF UFOS. Several astonishing firsthand encounters are described in great detail. One exceptionally terrifying ordeal took place in the blue-collar town of Dixonville, Pennsylvania. In the early 1940s, two mining inspectors received a frantic call about a collapsed shaft. They rushed to the accident site where 15 coal miners were now helplessly trapped. However, what transpired during the rescue mission would haunt both men for the rest of their lives.

 

-Hostile Subterranean Lizard People

Upon descending into the inner Earth’s dark abyss, first responders noticed a broken beam surrounded by fallen rocks and rubble. Laying atop the scattered debris was a lifeless body. Investigators were perplexed by the peculiar arrangement— a cave-in this size would not be large enough to kill someone. Closer inspection of the victim revealed horrifying anomalies. His skin was lacerated with claw-like marks from an unknown predator. As recovery officers cautiously continued exploring, more corpses soon surfaced. The deceased colliers possessed identical gruesome injuries. All had succumbed to these inexplicable wounds. Despite scouring the clandestine labyrinth, several miners were still missing. Additional personnel joined the search party in hopes of retrieving potential survivors.

 

-“Not of this World”

Emergency workers meticulously combed the sprawling tunnel system yet no additional prospectors were uncovered. With each passing hour, crew members began losing hope of finding anyone alive. Despite plummeting morale, the two original inspectors continued their quest. They eventually stumbled upon a mysterious passage within the cavernous lair. After traveling half a mile, an audible rumbling echoed throughout the grotto. A sporadic cave-in left the duo inescapably cornered. Nearby staff heard a thunderous crash and rushed to assist the dredgers. Suddenly one of the claustrophobic men felt “hot breath” on his neck. Panic seized his veins and he was completely paralyzed in fear. Simultaneously, excavators dug feverishly in an attempt to free the desperate pair. Together the team bored through the dense gravel and reached their distressed colleagues. The man’s partner observed what was standing behind his companion. As he saw the enormous scaled creature running away he exclaimed in horror: “that thing was not of this world!”

 

Due to the nature of this incident, it remained classified for nearly 40 years. On July 14, 1974, a regional newspaper published an article about the subterranean massacre. Stranger still, numerous eyewitnesses have experienced similar confrontations for decades. During the 1990s, a former government contractor turned whistleblower publicly revealed shocking intel. He stated that deep underground military bases around the globe house reptilian extraterrestrials. According to the high-ranking insider, these beings are incredibly hostile and consume humans for sustenance. Each year thousands of people go missing without a trace, often under baffling circumstances. Might it be possible that a nefarious race is covertly dwelling in the shadows? Given the recent surge of disclosure and increasingly blatant agenda, society may one day learn the truth about these elusive cryptids.

 

https://downthechupacabrahole.com/2022/05/10/subterranean-reptilians-killed-15-coal-miners-declassified-document-reveals-shocking-intel/

 

The Mystery of Iniquity Exposed: The Reality of the Serpent Race and the Subterrain Origin of UFO's can be found on pages 51 - 81

http://www.theblackvault.com/documents/ufos/UK/Oct2008/defe-24-1955.pdf

Anonymous ID: 56203b May 13, 2022, 6:43 p.m. No.16270624   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16270382

The flag of Sri Lanka (Sinhala: ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ජාතික කොඩිය, romanized: Śrī Laṃkāvē jāthika kodiya; Tamil: இலங்கையின் தேசியக்கொடி, romanized: Ilankaiyin teciyakkoṭi), also called the Sinha Flag or Lion Flag, consists of a golden lion holding a kastane sword in its right fore-paw in a maroon background with four gold bo leaves, one in each corner. This is bordered by gold, and to its left are two vertical stripes of equal size in teal and orange, with the orange stripe closest to the lion. The lion and the maroon background represent the Sinhalese, while the saffron border and four bo leaves represent concepts of mettā, karuṇā, muditā and upekshā respectively. The stripes represent the country's two largest minorities, with the orange representing the Tamils living in Sri Lanka – both the Sri Lankan Tamils and the Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka – and the green stripe representing the Sri Lankan Moors (Muslims of Sri Lanka).

 

It was officially adopted in 1972.

 

-History-

The symbol of a lion in Sri Lankan heraldry dates back to 486 BC, when Vijaya, the first King of Sri Lanka, arrived on the island from India and brought with him a standard depicting a lion.[1][better source needed] The symbol appears to have influenced subsequent monarchs, being used extensively by them and becoming a symbol of freedom and hope. As depicted on a mural in Cave no. 2 at Dambulla Viharaya, King Dutugemunu on his campaign against Ellalan- an invading South Indian ruler- in 162 BC is depicted with a banner containing a lion figure carrying a sword in its right forepaw, a symbol of the Sun and one of the Moon.[1] This flag was known as the only ancient representation of the lion flag of the Sinhalese but in 1957, the lion figure on it was defaced by a vandal.[2]

 

This basic design continued to be in use until 1815, when the Kandyan Convention ended the reign of the country's last native monarch, Sri Vikrama Rajasinha, replacing his royal standard (used as the Flag of the Kingdom of Kandy) with the Union Flag as the nation's accepted flag.[1] The government of British Ceylon later established its own flag, while Sri Vikrama Rajasinha's standard was taken to England and kept at the Royal Hospital Chelsea.[1]

 

As the independence movement in Sri Lanka gained strength in the early 20th century, E. W. Perera and D. R. Wijewardena discovered the original Lioness Flag in Chelsea.[1] A photo of it was published in Dinamina, in a special edition marking a century since the loss of self-rule and Sri Lankan independence.[1] The flag provoked much interest from the public who, for the first time since the fall of the Kandyan Kingdom, had seen its actual design.[1]

 

Member of Parliament for Batticaloa, Mudaliyar A. Sinnalebbe, suggested in Parliament on January 16, 1948, that the Lion Flag should be accepted as the national flag.[3] In 1948, the flag was adopted as the national flag of the Dominion of Ceylon, undergoing two changes: one in 1953 and a redesign in 1972.[1] A notable feature of 1972's adaptation of the Kandyan standard was the replacement of the four spearheads at the flag's corners by four bo leaves, a design choice made under the direction of Nissanka Wijeyeratne, Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Cultural Affairs and Chairman of the National Emblem and Flag Design Committee.[1][

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Sri_Lanka