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The Cosmic War: Interplanetary Warfare, Modern Physics and Ancient Texts

Page 44

by Joseph P. Farrell


  124

  Other legends also point to Jupiter and Saturn as being implicated in the events.

  125

  Immanuel Velikovsky, Worlds in Collision, Dell, 1971, p. 59.

  126

  Alan Alford, The Atlantis Secret, p. 264.

  127

  Velikovsky, Worlds in Collision, p. 59.

  128

  Ibid.

  129

  Alan Alford, The Atlantis Secret, p. v, emphasis added.

  130

  Alford, The Atlantis Secret, p. 159.

  131

  Ibid.

  132

  Ibid., p. 194.

  133

  Alford, When the Gods Came Down, p. 114.

  134

  Ibid., p. 120, citing A. Heidel, The Gilgamesh Epic and Old Testament Parallels, pp. 17-18.

  135

  Alford, When the Gods Came Down, p. 126.

  136

  Ibid., p. 179, emphasis in the original.

  137

  Ibid., p. 245.

  138

  Alford, When the Gods Came Down, p. 370.

  139

  Alford, When the Gods Came Down, p. 37.

  140

  Ibid, p. 70, italicized emphasis original, bold and italicized emphasis added.

  141

  Q.v. my Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 33-34.

  142

  Talbott and Thornhill, Thunderbolts of the Gods, p. 79.

  143

  One must mention the various attempts to bridge this gap via the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of Ilya Prigogine and various chaos theorists, who cite the examples of various systems, including plasma systems, to self-organize under extreme conditions of non-equilibrium. Such attempts may provide an adequate theoretical foundation to bridge this gap physically, but they still do not dispense with the textual component of the problem, for as LaViolette and others have noted, there is ample paleographical and textual evidence to suggest that the a sophisticated physics might once have been in existence in paleoancient times. Q.v. my Giza Death Star, pp. 38-110, Giza Death Star Deployed, pp. 60-76, and Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp 21-52, 99-174, 222- 246. These attempts to explain this celestial “gap” theory only highlight the fact, in a very sophisticated and subtle way, that there may have once been a similarly sophisticated physics. And that, of course, only raises the problem of a lost Very High Civilization in a new guise.

  144

  Consider just the differences between scholarly and well-argued interpretations of such ancient myths as Sitchin‘s, Santillana-Dechind’s (Hamlet’s Mill), Van Flandern’s, LaViollette’s, Gardner’s, and Alford’s.

  145

  Joseph P. Farrell, The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 49-50

  146

  Stephen Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants: Master Builders of Prehistoric and Ancient Civilizations, p. 182.

  147

  Saint Augusine (of Hippo), “Concerning the long life of men before the flood, and the greater size of their bodies,” Chapter XI, pp. 322-325, cited in Stephen Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants: Master Builders of Prehistoric and Ancient Civilizations, pp. 250-251.

  148

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 250.

  149

  Ibid.

  150

  An early Latin ecclesiastical writer.

  151

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 236, citing Paul Pezron, Antiquities of Nations, pp. 74- 75.

  152

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 239. 1 cite Quayle’s work as the primary source for this material since Pezron’s work is more difficult to obtain.

  153

  Ibid., p. 240.

  154

  Ibid.

  155

  Ibid., p. 241.

  156

  Ibid., p. 241, citing Pezron, p, 51.

  157

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 213.

  158

  John F Healy, trans. and ed., Pliny the Elder — Natural History — A Selection (Penguin Books).

  159

  Quayle, op cit., p. 214.

  160

  Quayle, op cit., p. 216.

  161

  Ibid., p. 217.

  162

  Ibid., p. 231.

  163

  Ibid., p. 232.

  164

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 235.

  165

  Ibid., p. 190.

  166

  Ibid., p. 197.

  167

  Ibid., pp. 197-198.

  168

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 198.

  169

  Ibid., p. 191, citing David Hatcher Childress, Lost Cities of North America, Adventures Unlimited Press, p. 509.

  170

  Ibid., citing Childress, Lost Cities of North America, Adventures Unlimited Press, p. 509.

  171

  Ibid., p. 192, citing Historical Collections of Ohio in Two Volumes, (Noble County Ohio) pp. 350-351.

  172

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 192, citing Chicago Record, October 24, 1895.

  173

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 192, citing The Humboldt Star, May 13, 1928, and Childress, Lost Cities of North America, p. 193.

  174

  Ibid., p. 193, citing Childress, p. 526.

  175

  Numbers, 13:32.

  176

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 200.

  177

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 208.

  178

  Ibid.

  179

  Ibid.

  180

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 93.

  181

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 195, citing Childress, Lost Cities of North America, p. 353.

  182

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 196, citing John J. Miller, “Roots — Deep Ones,” National Review, June 9-10, 2001.

  183

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 204, emphasis added.

  184

  Quayle, op. cit., p. 194, emphasis added.

  185

  Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time (Boston: Gambit Incorporated, 1969), p. 262.

  186

  Paul LaViolette, The Talk of the Galaxy: An ET Message for Us? (Alexandria, VA: Starlane Publications, 2000), p. 15.

  187

  James M. McCanney, Atlantis to Tesla: The Kolbrin Connection: The Science of Atlantis and Tesla are Rediscovered, Giving a Unique Untold View of Life on the Lost Continent, Ancient Space Craft Design, Unlimited Electrical Power, and the Secret Societies (Minneapolis, Minnesota: jmmccanneyscience.com press, 2003), p. 29.

  188

  Q.v., The Giza Death Star, pp. 66-110, The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 196-245.

  189

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 5.

  190

  Ibid.

  191

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, pp. 56-57, emphasis added.

  192

  Ibid., p. 64. Their remarks here were said specifically in reference to Stoic physics, but understood as a symbol for the “archaic cosmological view” as a whole.

  193

  Ibid.

  194

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, p. 58.

  195

  Q.v. my the Giza Death Star, chapter three, “The Paleography of Paleophysics.

  196

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, p. 235, emphasis added.

  197

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 232.

  198

  Ibid.

  199

  Q.v. my The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 37-52.

  200

  Ibid.,

  201

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 262.

  202

  Ibid., p. 78.

  203

  Enki, the Babylonian name.

  204

  Yima, the Persian-Zoroastrian name.

  205

  Freyr, the Norse name. />
  206

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 153.

  207

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 154, emphasis added.

  208

  Ibid, p. 156.

  209

  Ibid.

  210

  It should be noted that the Hindu epics are full of references to the divine “arrows” and “thunderbolts,” e.g., the thunderbolt of Indra. Q.v. De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 166.

  211

  In this respect, De Santillana and Von Dechind understand the Era epic of Mesopotamia to refer precisely to a celestial Deluge. Q.v. Hamlet’s Mill, p. 323. And there are any number of references in Alford to “waters in the heavens.:

  212

  James M. McCanney, Atlantis to Tesla: The Kolbrin Connection, p. 13.

  213

  James M. McCanney, Atlantis to Tesla: The Kolbrin Connection, p. 13. He also states immediately afterward, without offering any substantiation, that tehse same intelligence people “are the same people who sponsor secret missions to Mars and who are in charge of absconding with priceless archaeological treasures from around the world in search of ancient technologies...”

  214

  Paul La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 1.

  215

  Ibid.

  216

  Ibid., p. 2.

  217

  Ibid.

  218

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 3, emphasis added by La Violette. 35 Ibid., p. 8.

  219

  LaViolette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 15.

  220

  Ibid., p. 16.

  221

  Ibid.

  222

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 17.

  223

  Ibid., p. 19, emphasis added.

  224

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 22, emphasis in the original.

  225

  Ibid., p. 22.

  226

  Ibid., pp. 24-25, emphasis in the original.

  227

  Ibid., pp. 29-30.

  228

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 33, emphasis added.

  229

  Ibid., pp. 33-34.

  230

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 34, emphasis added.

  231

  As I note in my work The Giza Death Star, Nikola Tesla noticed a similar effect of these electro-acoustic or electrical longitudinal waves, in that they would travel through shielding of all sorts with very little diminution of force or dispersion of energy.

  232

  La Violette, op. cit., p. 35.

  233

  This phenomenon I chose to call “electro-acoustic”, and Tesla often referred to it by a variety of names.

  234

  LaViolette, op. cit., p. 35.

  235

  Laviolette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 35.

  236

  Ibid., pp. 39-40.

  237

  LaViolette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 48.

  238

  De Santillana and Von Dechind, Hamlet’s Mill, p. 166.

  239

  The Tower of Babel is discussed elsewhere in this book, and in my Giza Death Star Destroyed, 77-78.

  240

  LaViolette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 65.

  241

  Ibid., p. 66.

  242

  Ibid.

  243

  Ibid, emphasis added.

  244

  LaViolette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 95.

  245

  Ibid. p. 120.

  246

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 121, emphasis added.

  247

  Ibid., p. 127, emphasis added.

  248

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 132, emphasis added.

  249

  And the Nazi one, for readers of my book The SS Brotherhood of the Bell will recall the late war German radar wave-mixing experiments on their nonlinear Radar Absorbent Material. The major difference between the German experiments and the modem one is that the German radars were not cohered.

  250

  As noted in chapter two, p. 46, Bearden indicates that any large mass is a natural resonator of scalar waves.

  251

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy, p. 132.

  252

  La Violette, The Talk of the Galaxy. 132-134, emphasis in the original.

  253

  The Mahabharata, trans. Krishna Dharma, p. 402.

  254

  Ibid., p. 590.

  255

  E. A. E. Reymond, The Mythical Origin of the Egyptian Temple (Manchester University Press, 1969), p. 229.

  256

  Andrew Collins, Gods of Eden: Egypt’s Lost Legacy and the Genesis of Civilization (Bear and Co., 2002), p. 37.

  257

  Ibid., p. 93.

  258

  Stephanie Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 3.

  259

  Ibid., p. 9.

  260

  Ibid., p. 10.

  261

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 12.

  262

  Ibid., p. 14.

  263

  Ibid., p. 4.

  264

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 15.

  265

  Ibid., p. 15.

  266

  Ibid., p. 4.

  267

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 16.

  268

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 18.

  269

  Ibid., p. 5.

  270

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 19.

  271

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, pp. 20-21.

  272

  Ibid., p. 26.

  273

  Igigi is the term for mankind.

  274

  He: reading the text carefully, it is unclear whether “he” refers to Enki, or to the new worker, or to both.

  275

  Presumably the chain of the gods having to labor so hard prior to the hybrid’s creation.

  276

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 27.

  277

  “Your people,” i.e., the hybrid human race.

  278

  As will be seen in the next chapter, Erakal is another name for the god Nergal.

  279

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia. pp. 28-29. As will also be seen in the next chapter, there is some basis for the idea that Nergal and Ninurta might be closely associated or even assimilated.

  280

  Ibid., pp. 29-30.

  281

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 31.

  282

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, pp. 287-288.

  283

  Ibid., p. 289.

  284

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 290, emphasis added.

  285

  Enuma Elish, ed. L. W. King, M.A., F.S.A, Vol. I I(London: Luzac and Co., 1902), p. 3, Tablet 1, p.3(the numbers of verses are from the edition cited.)

  286

  The Giza Death Star, pp. 38-41.

  287

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 1, p. 7.

  288

  Ibid., Tablet 1, p. 11.

  289

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 1, p. 17, emphasis added.

  290

  Ibid., Tablet 1, p. 19, emphasis added.

  291

  Similar hybrids have been seriously proposed for various purposes in modem literature, including military uses. This “genetic state of affairs” of creating or mingling various species is one reason given in the Old Testament for the Flood for the destruction of the world, since the “gods” had descended to earth and sired children with humans. It is suggested again as a possible motivation for the 2nd world-wide destruction by Christ: “As in the days of Noah...”.
r />   292

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 1, 0. 21, emphasis added, q.v. also Tablet 2: vv. 43- 45, p. 29.

  293

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 4:, p. 59.

  294

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 61.

  295

  Enuma Elish. Tablet 4, p. 61.

  296

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 61, emphasis added.

  297

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 63, emphasis added.

  298

  q.v. Zechariah Sitchin, The Wars of Gods and Men, (Avon Books), pp. 163-172. See also the first book in this series, The Giza Death Star, pp. 45-56.

  299

  The Giza Death Star, pp. 95-96

  300

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 4, p. 65, emphasis added.

  301

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 67.

  302

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 69.

  303

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 71, emphasis added.

  304

  Enuma Elish, Tablet 4: vv. 105-112, p. 73.

  305

  Ibid., Tablet 4, p. 75.

  306

  Ibid., p. 77.

  307

  As was seen in chapter five and the pulsar grid of La Violette, such a physics would seem to exist.

  308

  The subject of a solar system catastrophe and the immediate need for the surviving civilizations to quickly and easily re-measure astronomical data, and to be able to teach simple people how to build such observatories, is the subject of a fascinating book by Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas called Uriel’s Machine: Uncovering the Secrets of Stonehenge, Noah’s Flood, and the Dawn of Civilization.

  309

  The significance of this point may be lost unless one realizes that in many seminaries, as a component of learning “biblical criticism,” for example, or as a component of ancient comparative religions courses, the Enuma Elish and epics such as Gilgamesh are used to point out the similarities of the Biblical with the Babylonian accounts, and in some instances, to posit the reliance of the former upon the latter. However, if the Enuma Elish is not understood as a creation epic disguised in a war metaphor, but as a very real account of a very real war, the comparison would seem to collapse. As will be apparent in a subsequent chapter, there is another way of viewing the Sumerian and Biblical traditions as components of a whole.

  310

  The clear association of Marduk and Ninurta with the Great Pyramid was one feature of Sitchin’s reading of the Lugal-e.

  311

  Joseph P. Farrell, The Giza Death Star Deployed, pp. 37-49.

  312

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 291.

  313

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 291.

  314

  Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, pp. 291-292

  315

  Ibid., p. 292. Perhaps instead of “be obscured’ one might say ”will stop“, indicating the cessation of life to be brought about by this new deluge.

 

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