483
   Lazslo, Science and the Akashic Field, p. 49.
   484
   Ibid., p. 21.
   485
   Q.v. Tom Bearden, Gravitobiology (Testa Book Co, 1991), pp. 18, 38.
   486
   Tom Bearden, Oblivion: America at the Brink (Cheniere Press, 2005), p. 249, bold and italicized emphasis added. It is worth noting that on p. i of the book, there is the statement “This book is an expanded version of a very close-hold brief provided to a certain Head of State and his Foreign Minister in 2003.”
   487
   E. A. E. Reymond, The Mythical Origins of the Egyptian Temple, p. 18.
   488
   E.A.E. Reymond, The Mythical Origin of the Egyptian Temple, p. 6, emphasis added.
   489
   Ibid., pp. 91-92.
   490
   I should stress that what I am saying does not mean that the entire memory or consciousness of an individual is downloaded, as it were, into a “grating” or interference pattern. Rather, I mean that the generalized gratings for producing certain emotional states in a variety of individuals is what constitutes a grating.
   491
   Regarding “software,” the words of R.A. Boulay should once again be recalled. “In this sense they seemed to be like our modem day computer storage disks and chips. The ME were actually the how-to-manuals of the ancients but embedded in stone.
   “Each ME provided the possessor full authority and power over a certain aspect of life, perhaps by providing essential information and instructions on controlling certain physical equipment. In this respect they may have been control modules use to operate certain pieces of equipment. Some of the ME were called ME-GAL-GAL or “great ME” and were associated with “divine” weapons of mass destruction.” R.A. Boulay, Flying Serpents and Dragons, p., 79.
   492
   Thorkild Jacobsen, The Harps that Once, p. 238.
   493
   Ibid., p. 239, emphasis added.
   494
   Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 291.
   495
   Ibid., p. 292.
   496
   Ibid., p. 293.
   497
   Q.v. Dalley, p. 326
   498
   Bruce Rux, Architects of the Underworld: Unriddling Atlantis, Anomalies of Mars, and the Mystery of the Sphinx (Berkeley: Frog Ltd. 1996), p. 370.
   499
   Ibid., p. 305.
   500
   Ibid., p. 310.
   501
   Q.v. The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 10-20.
   502
   Bruce Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 372.
   503
   Ibid., p. 373.
   504
   Ibid., p. 328.
   505
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 328, emphasis added.
   506
   Ibid., p. 366.
   507
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, pp. 363-364.
   508
   Ibid., p. 362,
   509
   David Hatcher Childress, Lost Cities of North and Central America, p. 220.
   510
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, pp. 362-363.
   511
   Ibid., p. 363.
   512
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 365.
   513
   Ibid.
   514
   In the Andes mountains of Bolivia.
   515
   Ibid., emphasis added.
   516
   Ibid.
   517
   Ibid.
   518
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 365.
   519
   Ibid.
   520
   Ibid., p. 364, emphasis added.
   521
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 378. Budge’s translation differs slightly, saying “As to (the words) ‘that night of the battle,’ they concern the inroad (of the children of impotent revolt) into the eastern part of heaven, whereupon there arose a battle in haven and in all the earth.” (E. A. Wallis Budge, The Egyptian Book of the Dead: (The Papyrus of Ani) Egyptian Text Transliteration and Translation [Dover, 1967], p. 287.)
   522
   The observation is actually originally Alan Alford’s! Q.v. my Giza Death Star Destroyed, p. 28.
   523
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 366, emphasis added.
   524
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p., 366.
   525
   Ibid., p. 367.
   526
   Ibid., p. 369.
   527
   George J. Haas and William R. Saunders, The Cydonia Codex: Reflections from Mars, p. 5. Along with Hoagland’s magnificent study of the Cydonia ruins, The Monuments of Mars: A City on the Edge of Forever, Haas’ and Saunders’ book is one of the most thought-provoking books the author has ever read. Sadly it does not get the attention it deserves.
   528
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 369.
   529
   Ibid., p. 370.
   530
   Ibid.
   531
   Ibid., p. 374.
   532
   Ibid., p. 375, emphasis in the original.
   533
   Note the close resemblance of the term “aker” to the Sumerian term for a pyramid, or ziggurat, “ekur”.
   534
   Ibid., p. 375.
   535
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 375.
   536
   Ibid., emphasis added.
   537
   Q.v. The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp.
   538
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 387.
   539
   www.enterprisemission.com/moonl.htm. Hoagland’s pictures and his extensive commentary simply must be viewed together to obtain their full impact, and hence, no attempt beyond outlining his case is made here. The reader is urged to consult Hoagland’s paper and consider its enormous implications for the cosmic war scenario being developed here.
   540
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 391.
   541
   Ibid., p. 380.
   542
   Q.v. my Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 53-67.
   543
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 390.
   544
   Rux, Architects of the Underworld, p. 377, emphasis added.
   545
   Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception, The Giza Discovery, Part Six, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DomDec6.htm, p. 1 .
   546
   Cited in Peter Goodgame, “The Myth and Religion of Osiris the God, The Giza Discovery. www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/OsirisMyth2.htm, Part Two, p. 8.
   547
   Peter Goodgame, “The Saviors of the Ancient World,” The Giza Discovery, Part Three, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DyingRising3.htm, pp. 13-14.
   548
   Peter Goodgame, “Egypt’s Forgotten Origins,” The Giza Discovery, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/EgyptsOrigins4.htm, p. 3.
   549
   Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception,” The Giza Discovery, Part Six, pp. 1-2.
   550
   Ibid., p. 2.
   551
   Ibid., p. 3.
   552
   Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception,” The Giza Discovery, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DomDec6.htm, p. 3.
   553
   Being personally familiar with most theological literature on this subject, this author would hardly qualify the response of theologians to this verse - from John of Damascus and Ambrose of Milan to Thomas Aquinas - as one of perplexity.
   554
   David Rohl, The Lost Testament, cited in Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception,” The Giza Discovery, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DomDec6.htm
   555
   Q.v. Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception,” The Giza Discovery, Part Six, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DomDec6.htm, pp. 4-5.
   556
   Laurence Gardner
, Genesis of the Grail Kings, p. 316. The entire set of Gardner’s thorough genealogies plus his extensive annotations is found on pp. 316-358.
   557
   Gardner, Genesis of the Grail Kings, p. 317.
   558
   Gardner, Genesis of the Grail Kings, p. 319.
   559
   Peter Goodgame, “Domination by Deception,” The Giza Discovery, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/DomDec6.htm, p. 6.
   560
   Dalley, Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 326.
   561
   All citations in this section are from the Authorized King James version.
   562
   All quotations from the Bible are from the Authorized Version unless otherwise noted. Bold and italics emphasis added.
   563
   Cited in Peter Goodgame, “The Spirit World and Civilization,” The Giza Discovery, p. 13, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/SpiritCiv5.htm.
   564
   Ibid., p. 14.
   565
   Peter Goodgame, “The Spirit World and Civilization,” The Giza Discovery, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/SpiritCiv6.htm, p. 14.
   566
   Ibid., p. 15.
   567
   Ibid., p. 17.
   568
   Ibid., p. 27.
   569
   David Rohl, The Lost Testament, pp. 73-74.
   570
   Q.v. The Giza Death Star Destroyed, p. 77-78.
   571
   Peter Goodgame, “The Second Coming of the Antichrist,” The Giza Discovery, Part Seven, www.redmoonrising.com/Giza/SavDest7.htm, p. 3.
   572
   Stephen Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants: Master Builders of Prehistoric and Ancient Civilizations, p. 30.
   573
   Q.v. Stephen Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants, p. 25.
   574
   Ibid., p. 62.
   575
   Stephen Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants, pp. 52, 53.
   576
   Quayle, Genesis 6 Giants, pp. 52-53.
   577
   Ibid., p. 53.
   578
   Q.v. my The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 31-36.
   579
   Q.v. the Christian Church Father, St. John of Damascus, On the Orthodox Faith, or the mediaeval Latin scholastic, Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica,. Other early Christian authors such as the Apologists or, even better, Origen, speculated that angels had a kind of material existence, but one that was “less dense”, i.e., closer to the original materia prima from which they and the rest of creation were created. To put this metaphysical conception in slightly different, more “physics and mathematics related” terms, such beings were closer in terms of their “topological descent” from this materia prima than more “material” - or to use the terms of this earliest period of metaphysical speculation, more “gross” - creatures such as humans.
   It is interesting to note that, in the Patristic Christian and as well as the early mediaeval Latin traditions, angels inhabit a kind of “hyperdimensional” realm, as “created everlastings,” i.e., as creatures having a temporal beginning, but no end. In this sort of timeless existence, so closely tied to the transmutative aether, there is no distinction between an act of the will and the formation of its habit, a condition that does apply to humans. Thus, angels, on this view, acquire a habit or “impressed dynamic” simultaneously with the first exercise of their will, for good or ill. Extending this line of reasoning, this impressed dynamic conceivably impresses itself in turn on objects that they encounter.
   580
   David Cohen, “Plasma Blobs Hint at New Form of Life,” New Scientist, 17 September, 2003.
   581
   Another obvious implication of such a life form would be that it would be capable of inhabiting worlds not thought to be habitable by human-like life.
   582
   Q.v. Revelations 12:7.
   583
   R.A. Boulay, Flying Serpents and Dragons, p. 41.
   584
   R.A. Boulay, Flying Serpents and Dragons, p. 41.
   585
   From R. A. Boulay’s Flying Serpents and Dragons, p. 44.
   586
   Ibid., p. 45.
   587
   R.A. Boulay, Flying Serpents and Dragons, p. 44. Note, in the second of the above pictographs, the three stars above the snake which appear to be the three stars of the belt in the constellation Orion.
   588
   Ibid.
   589
   R.A. Boulay, Flying Serpents and Dragons, p. 47.
   590
   Ibid., p. 52.
   591
   Isaac Asimov, Intelligent Man’s Guide to Science, p. 108.
   592
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, p. 72,
   593
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, pp. 26-27.
   594
   Ibid., p. 24.
   595
   Vostok was a Russian lunar landing probe.
   596
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, pp. 58-59.
   597
   In my opinion, this is simply an error in transcription, since “steep ridge” could sound like “steep bridge.”
   598
   EVA, that is, extra-vehicular activity.
   599
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, pp. 135-136.
   600
   Ibid., p. 145.
   601
   Don Wilson, Secrets of Our Spaceship Moon, p. 53.
   602
   Q.v. my SS Brotherhood of the Bell, pp. 54-137.
   603
   Don Wilson, Secrets of Our Spaceship Moon, p. 261.
   604
   William L. Brian II, Moongate: Suppressed Findings of the U.S. Space Program, p. 63.
   605
   See also my previous book, The SS Brotherhood of the Bell, pp. 123-128.
   606
   For further discussion of this point, see my previous book, The Giza Death Star Destroyed, pp. 8-9.
   607
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, p. 21.
   608
   Daniel Ross, UFO’s and the Complete Evidence from Space: The Truth about Venus, Mars, and the Moon, p. 100.
   609
   David Hatcher Childress, Extraterrestrial Archeology, p. 80, citing NASA’s “Lunar Orbital Science Visual Observation Site Graphics, Apollo Mission 15, for V-4, Cauchy Rilles region (38.7° E, 9.7° N). Childress’ book is full of photographs of these strange “domes” which are almost perfectly circular objects, often found in the bottom and exact center of smaller craters.
   610
   Daniel Ross, UFO’s and the Complete Evidence from Space, p. 101.
   611
   Ibid., p. 102.
   612
   Daniel Ross, UFOs and the Complete Evidence from Space, p. 103, emphasis in the original.
   613
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, pp. 66-67.
   614
   Ibid., p. 79.
   615
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, p. 99.
   616
   Ibid.
   617
   Ibid.
   618
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, pp. 101-102, citing Popular Science, January, 1972, pp.67-68.
   619
   Ibid., pp. 105-106.
   620
   lbid.,p. p. 125.
   621
   Don Wilson, Our Mysterious Spaceship Moon, p. 95.
   622
   Ibid., p.49.
   623
   Ibid.
   624
   Ibid., p. 50.
   625
   Daniel Ross, UFOs and the Complete Evidence from Space, p. 130.
   626
   Richard C. Hoagland, The Monuments of Mars: A City on the Edge of Forever, Fifth edition, p. 149.
   627
   Richard C. Hoagland, The Monuments of Mars: A City on the Edge of Forever, fifth edition, pp. 112-113.
   628
   See his discussion on pp. 114-117.
   629
   Ho
agland, The Monuments of Mars, p. 126.
   630
   Richard C. Hoagland, The Monuments of Mars, p. 148.
   631
   Hoagland, The Monuments of Mars, pp. 148-149, all emphasis Hoagland’s.
   632
   Thorkild Jacobsen, trans and ed., “The Lugal-e,” in The Harps That Once..., p. 237.
   633
   Ibid., p. 245, emphasis added.
   634
   Mars’ other little satellite is named Deimos, or “Trembling.”
   635
   Cited in my The Giza Death Star Destroyed, p. 54.
   636
   Hoagland, The Monuments of Mars, p. 350, emphasis Hoagland’s.
   637
   Ibid.
   638
   It should be noted that Hoagland is certainly aware of the work of Sitchin. And it should also be pointed out that Hoagland has, on some occasions during radio talk show interviews, alluded to the possibility of a war having been the cause of the destruction of Mars and of the former planet that caused the asteroid belt.
   639
   Richard C. Hoagland, A Moon with a View: Or, What Did Arthur Know...and When Did He Know It? Part 4, p. 2, www.enterprisemission.com/moon4.htm.
   640
   Ibid., Part 1, p. 6, www.enterprisemission.com/moonl.htm.
   641
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part One, p., 7, www.enterprisemission.com/moon1.htm.
   642
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View. Part One. p. 8, www.enterprisemission.com/moonl.htm.
   643
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part Four, pp. 22-23, www.enterprisemission.com/moon4.htm, emphasis Hoagland’s.
   644
   Ibid., p. 23.
   645
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, p. 23, bold and italicized emphasis added, www.enterprisemission.com/moon4.htm.
   646
   Ibid., p. 24, emphasis Hoagland’s.
   647
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, www.enterprisemission.com/moon1.htm. p. 9,
   648
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part Two, pp. 10-11, www.enterprisemission.com/moon2.htm.
   649
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part Two, p. 11, www.enterprisemission.com/moon2.htm.
   650
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part 1, p. 21, emphasis Hoagland’s, www.enterprisemission.com/moon1.htm .
   651
   Ibid., p. 22, emphasis Hoagland’s.
   652
   Ibid., Part 2, p. 26.
   653
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part 2, p. 26, emphasis Hoagland’s, www.enterprisemission.com/moon2.htm.
   654
   Ibid.
   655
   Ibid., p. 27, emphasis Hoagland’s.
   656
   Hoagland, A Moon With A View, Part 6, p. 2, www.enterprisemission.com/moon6.htm.
   657
   Ibid., p. 3. It should be pointed out that our survey here has barely scratched the surface of the detailed analysis that Hoagland gives to this precise point.
   
 
 The Cosmic War: Interplanetary Warfare, Modern Physics and Ancient Texts Page 46