Anonymous ID: 02cf5e Jan. 29, 2020, 2:20 a.m. No.7952524   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>7952389 (PB)

>>7952453 (PB)

>Mindblowing.

>The Cabal had a long term plan.

>They got too sure of themselves.

>The obvious precision and planning here on the part of /our guys/ puts the awe, in awesome

Nice posts fren. Rest well.

 

>>7952452 (PB)

>A GOOD AMERICAN

Archiving offline, watching now.

Thinthread answered right at the start.

Same will Bill, it was the building jumpers that really pulled at my strings, one of the times I wept after realizing the truth - watching that.

Anonymous ID: 02cf5e Jan. 29, 2020, 2:42 a.m. No.7952597   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2604

>>7952535

ty for your fight in this silent war anon!

And for your service.

 

>>7952544 when I saw, with their mocking, it was striking how they completely underestimate how much people truly abhor arrogance.

 

>>7952572 stawp acting so pissy. Too early for me anon.

Also, it was the co-opting of masonry and other secret societies. The infiltration and subversion of them, that led to this. In and of themselves, they were of a different purpose. Will give some example sauce in a bit.

 

>>7952550

BAKER NOTABLE

Calling out for note-taker / baker.

Anonymous ID: 02cf5e Jan. 29, 2020, 2:52 a.m. No.7952626   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2639 >>2661

>>7952589

>We "start" our research at Ra the Egyptian God (the owls), and Druids (y heads), the ancient Celts.

Agree. I think more broadly, the Atlanteans and earlier "Land of Mu" (a more civil and noble global culture) are important.

Most of the symbology is the same today.

Have read Augustus Le Plongeon, and especially the British military officer and traveler James Churchward.

 

Interesting, just looking at the Wiki page, and they mock Churchward (more Lemonheads). His work is quite good actually.

 

I actually believe the following is more true, than false.

https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Mu

Origins of the idea

The idea originated in the 19th century, when Augustus Le Plongeon, a British "amateur archaeologist", claimed that he had translated Mayan writings describing an unnamed lost continent in the Atlantic Ocean, namely Atlantis. According to him, after the continent sank, refugees founded the civilizations of Ancient Egypt and the Yucatan Peninsula. Le Plongeon got the name "Mu" from the earlier work of Charles ร‰tienne Brasseur de Bourbourg, whose attempts at translating a Mayan codex led him to believe that this was the name of a land lost in a catastrophe.

Tall tales by Churchward

In the early 20th century, the name was recycled by the British military officer and traveler James Churchward, who used it for an alleged sunken continent in the Pacific. His "theory" relies on the tablets he has found in a temple (the name of which he suspiciously doesn't give) in India, that he has translated from the ancient Naga-Maya language (which doesn't exist) that he supposedly learned from an Indian monk.

According to him, Mu was placed between the Americas and Asia, and it was bigger than Australia, and there was a highly developed civilization before it sunk by an earthquake or flood about 12 thousand years ago. Polynesia, Micronesia, Melanesia, Fiji and the Easter Island are supposedly its remnants.

I found out that the civilisation of Mu absolutely existed before the civilisations of Greece, Chaldea, Babel, Persia, Egypt and Hindu. I indubitably discovered that this lost continent ranged from some place north of Hawaii to Fiji and the Easter Island, and was the first place that the humanity lived in. I learned that the land has sunken by great earthquakes and was destroyed in a whirl of water and fire.

In later years, Churchward has worked on tablets that have been found in another suspiciously unnamed temple in Mexico. According to him, those tablets, which were written in the same Naga-Maya language (which still doesn't exist) were telling the stories of how the people escaped from their continent because it was sinking. According to him, the tablets were 12 thousand years old, older than Ancient Greece. The fact that the concept of continents didn't exist until the times of the Ancient Greeks makes the story even more believable.[citation NOT needed]

And the thought that the Turkic Uighur Empire, which appeared at the 8th century, about 10700 years later than the sinking of Mu, was one of their colonies. They probably must've had time travel too[citation NOT needed], for this to actually happen.

Religion

His crazy quotes about the Genesis;

The story of Genesis in Bible โ€“ the myth of 7 days and nights โ€“ doesn't come from the folks of Nile or the Euphrates valley, but from the now-sunken continent of Mu

Anonymous ID: 02cf5e Jan. 29, 2020, 3:02 a.m. No.7952661   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>7952589

The Lemurians are where it gets fuzzier for me. Blends in with Mu, but seems earlier, more foundational.

 

>>7952626

Churchward sauce:

https://www.sacred-texts.com/atl/ssm/index.htm

 

Ahh, just look at some of the symbols.

https://www.sacred-texts.com/atl/ssm/ssm06.htm#img_06000

 

The scarab beetle is important.

This is all the same process, using vibration and other elements, for creation of new life forms. The caduceus.

Not going to go down this path this morning. Have previously, see cap for starters.

Anonymous ID: 02cf5e Jan. 29, 2020, 3:09 a.m. No.7952701   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3165

>>7952614

>There was no adam and eve, but Cro-Magnon and Neanderthal.

Regarding the two species, reminds me of a book I read maybe 25yrs ago. Might have been a Crighton or similar. Scenario where they were having run-in with each other.

In general, agreed, more on point than off.

>>7952639

>Was there an ancient civilization on the lower shore of the Med sea, when it began to flood?

Likely. Also cultures in South America and elsewhere.

The second Eqypt, think it was Lower Egypt, I think was in the present US, Memphis area perhaps.

Mined ore in Ohio.

There was an older culture here before the American Indians.

There has been more than one great flood, earlier Epochs.