>>1660375 (lb)
also, this is good.
http://www.whale.to/c/secrets_of_the_cia77.html
>>1660319 (lb)
now that's spoopy
>>1660388
Usually don't engage w/ namefags, but excellent find in the crumbs.
Parolin is in Turin at Bilderberg atm.
>http://catholicherald.co.uk/issues/november-10th-2017/how-cardinal-parolin-won-the-vatican-civil-war/
>http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/pope-francis-and-reform-financial-problems-persist
>http://www.abuseadvocate.com/hypocrisy-catholic-church/
>>1660429
>>1659195 -2087
>https://cruxnow.com/vatican/2018/06/07/vatican-secretary-of-state-attending-elite-bilderberg-meeting/
>>1659294
>>1649948 (pb's)
Want some BOOMS? Ever play Words with Friends?
Try playing ^^^^^^^^ with this Word… then dig on
Ombos, ancient Egyptian City of Gold.
>>1645928
>crumbs 11/22 - relevance to the 'gold, skin of the gods' question?
>>1646286
>A British citizen of Taiwanese origin
>gold-encrusted infant corpses were being offered to wealthy clients via a black magic services website
>>1646220 >Nebu is the Egyptian symbol for gold.
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Nebu
>>1646253
>>1646348 >Ombos anagram = ?
>>1646927
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Naqada
>>1647357 #2072
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Kom_Ombo
>bishopric before the Muslim conquest, and under the name Ombi is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.
Karol Wojtyła (the future Pope John Paul II) was titular bishop of Ombi from 1958 until 1963,
>>1659583 (lb)
lots of controversy & criticism surrounding the Swiss author:
>https://infogalactic.com/info/Erich_von_Däniken
Skimming through book just now & only find 6 brief references to Egypt.
Doesn't seem to be too great of a work of scholarship then, since the ancient Egyptians were obsessed with gold.
This is interesting.
(Paiwan are from Taiwan via Mongolia)
http://egyptian-gods.org/egyptian-symbols-nebu/
The Nebu is the representation of gold in ancient Egyptian symbolism. According to legends, gold is considered as an indestructible metal of heavenly origin.
←- ???
It is often depicted as a collar made of gold whose ends hang on the sides with seven spines dangling from the middle. Alternatively, beads may be seen hanging on its lower edge.
Its divine origin is believed to be from the flesh of the gods and other deities that were believed to be golden. It is associated mostly with the sun god, Ra, making him acquire the epithet “the mountain of gold”.
Its polished surface is often linked to the brilliance of the sun. In the Old Kingdom, the ruling pharaohs were symbolically known as the “Golden Horus”.
During the New Kingdom, the Royal Tomb and burial chamber of the pharaoh was called the “House of Gold”. In ends of the sarcophagus, the goddesses Isis and Nephthys are often seen kneeling on the hieroglyph that meant gold. Hathor is also associated with this symbol with her epithet: “the Golden One”. It is also an important metal in afterlife because it represented immortality.
The ancient Egyptian city of Nebet was also associated with the Nebu before it was changed to Ombos.
>https://mandrake.uk.net/the-bull-of-ombos/
The Bull of Ombos begins with the 19th century discovery of an ancient city near Naqada, Egypt. The city proved to be the capital of the earliest Egyptian state.
The lost city was known to the Greeks as Ombos, the Citadel of Seth. Once ruled by the Hidden God the site had been left to be swallowed by the sands of the desert–the image of the god transformed through later layers of Egyptian power and politics.
As Mr. Morgan notes that most of the knowledge discovered at Ombos was quickly reburied in academic libraries. Bull of Ombos delves into these forbidden areas.
Mr. Morgan painstakingly puts together the intricacies of early Sethian worship and the roll the god played in the Egyptians’ daily lives. He does not shy away from analyzing the more disturbing suggestions of previous archeological conclusions–even hints of cannibalism.
''What I find most unique is that they combine the fastidiousness of an Egyptologist with the experience of a modern occultist.
Certainly Morgan knows his stuff, from Tantra to the modern O.T.O. from pagan and Left Hand Path magick to the Golden Dawn''
I also want to personally thank you for your work . . . you have contributed to my practice and to my Coven’s rituals. – www.cotw.us, a teaching Coven, Denver, Colorado, USA.
>https://amoretmortem.wordpress.com/2015/07/29/the-3rd-epagomenal-day-happy-birthday-beloved-set/
– As a rowdy Storm God, a God of unbridled zeal and dynamism, Set is called upon to do the dirty work, which He executes with gusto.
A quality of magical thinking particular to the ancient Near East was that like should be fought with like, or “evil” against a greater evil.
To quote Egyptologist Geraldine Pinch, “when something chaotic and dangerous had to be overcome, a being who possessed those qualities needed to be enlisted on your side” (Magic in Ancient Egypt 32)
– Red is definitely Set’s color: it’s not just the color of the life force, which, as such, was sacred to the Egyptians (as to the Chinese), but it was also associated with dangerous or unlucky things.
People with red hair were said to be under Set’s influence; this is the origin in the Mediterranean of the belief of redheads as unlucky people (a superstition that survives in modern Greece) and in medieval Europe of red-haired women being witches.
< note to redheadfags.
– Set was associated with gold and iron (which makes STEEL) as metals; one of his epithets is Nubti, the “golden one” because the old Delta mining town with which His cult was established in the Predynastic Era was Nubt (also called Naqada), “the golden city.”
Set embodies takes unbridled life force energy and channels it into:
– Queer sex and the opposition to procreative sexuality and other “natural” processes
– Outsiderhood, dwelling on the periphery (e.g., the desert, foreign lands, etc.) aka "Renegade"
– Power or force (physical and magical): either morally ambivalent or interpreted as “good” or “evil”
– Disturbance of the natural order caused by the activity of these factors.
sound familiar?