Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 - let alone cut through rock. > The effect of Atlantis has been on the imagination. > All other evidence language, traded artefacts, outposts > and so on is rather like the effects of the Millennium Virus (remember that) > gone . . . > > Ah well > Welcome to the real world > Lobster O Lobster, yer stringing us along -I am crushed -O that I were... "then crushed" - This is an expression for the disappearance of the structure of your reality through the dominating power of the disclosure of the Essential Oneness." (Journey To The Lord of Power) Perhaps this is why we love our myths, Essential Oneness just doesnt seem to be as much fun. I'd rather see a stone than be One. My stone, my structure O lovely solid rocky ground on which to stand and be. Joyce Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 Hi Lobster, >Thanks for that Dharma. >I hope Atlantis exists. Well, there wouldn't be much left now. But it would be interesting if even ruins could be studied. >I recently saw a program in which genetic DNA from >a yeti hair >from Bhutan (not bear, not ape) was found and analysed. Not ape? Not even close? All reports indicate a hominid. So maybe it wasn't a yeti hair... why did they think so? Ivan Sanderson wrote an interesting book on the yeti/sasquatch... lots of reports and stories from the US, especially the Northwest mountains and forests and the Louisiana bayous. >As you are in UK Not I. I'm in Los Angeles now, originally from Indiana. >I can tell you about a crystal wand (based on Atlantean channeled >technology - that did focus positive ions - as in an ionizer does - using >nothing more than quartz and copper - Interesting... Cayce said the source of their power was large crystals. He seemed to be describing lasers before we had any. He said there is one still existing in a temple off the Yucatan, as I recall... seemed to think it might still be found. >We have a story. Agreed. We have a story. >Think how many other stories we have . . . >Great fun . . . stories . . . Remember how Heinrich Schliemann found Troy? He had an old story about the Trojan War. >>When I was on the copy desk of a city newspaper (late '70s and early '80s), >>we used to read the wires (AP and UP) while waiting for more copy. I >>remember when there was a flurry of stories about a Soviet submarine that >>reported seeing and photographing extensive ruins... stone walls and >>such... somewhere in the Atlantic. The Soviets wouldn't say where the sub >>was, but they said it would be in port in a few days and the photographs >>would be released to the world. Then suddenly the stories stopped, and I >>never heard anything else about it. > >We have more ruins. Hooray. >Secret ruins. More like secret Soviet sub movements... We didn't really expect them to say exactly where their sub was. >We have a conspiracy of silence. >We have a story. >We have nothing. >It always amazes me how crypto-archeology puts >2 and 2 together and gets 5000. It isn't crypto-archeology when the wires run stories of ruins seen and photographed by Soviets, and we sit around hoping for photos good enough for the front page. That was pretty "real-world" to me. As for a "conspiracy of silence," those are your words. All I know is that the stories suddenly stopped and nothing more was heard about the entire thing... but who knows why the Soviets did anything? )) Love, Dharma Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 >Not ape? Not even close? All reports indicate a hominid. So maybe it >wasn't a yeti hair... why did they think so? Well they were brought to a Yeti Lair/nest in the jungles of Bhutan by the Kings Yeti Investigator (they were not called Yetis incidentally). The hair found was sent for analysis and was not clearly a known bear or ape type creature. The DNA expert was not quite sure what it was. >Ivan Sanderson wrote an interesting book on the yeti/sasquatch... lots of >reports and stories from the US, especially the Northwest mountains and >forests and the Louisiana bayous. I remember going to the Natural History museum and seeing a rare creature called an Okapi, which is a cross between a zebra and a giraffe. I was totally amazed by this - but there it was. Strange new creatures are still found, that are truly amazing. There is of course more fun in imagining something . . . What is Big Foot likely to be? A rogue Guru from Outer Space or a type of monkey? > >We have a story. Agreed. We have a story. > >Think how many other stories we have . . . > >Great fun . . . stories . . . > >Remember how Heinrich Schliemann found Troy? He had an old story about the >Trojan War. :-) People should investigate especially when people make fantastic claims. Many are checked and are found to be . . . Not Troy . . . but Toy Story . . . . . . I have noticed that the more details and certainty one states something with the more likely it is to be believed. People can be confronted with facts AND still favour a fantasy. >As for a "conspiracy of silence," those are your words. All I know is that >the stories suddenly stopped and nothing more was heard about the entire >thing... but who knows why the Soviets did anything? )) The point is that something was reported, then the reports stopped. It does not mean anything other than this. I am reminded of someone I knew who managed to look at some fairy photos and as a professional photographer declared them as genuine. (they were fraudalent) Just as scientists declared the 'spirit photos' of spiritualists genuine. People are not always as quick to remember the frauds. We all have a tendency to gullibility. For example Lobster (not real at all) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.