It was a toss-up tonight, as I wait for my online gaming maintenance period to end, whether I would talk about god or the climate. Well, it turns out they are kind of related, so we’ll start with god and, if I run out of things to say, I will move on to climate.
I will place this image here as a marker, because actually I don’t have a picture of god. There are no such satisfactory images – so why do people insist on the use of unambiguously fraudulent pictures to represent a supposedly invisible or racially incorrect entity who, if they suddenly appeared today, nobody would recognise?
I will refer back to this image later.
In my previous post yesterday, I spoke a lot about god or gods, and I want to make it clear that none of those references, I think, was concerned with or about some invisible personage or entity. There may have been, in fact I think there were, such references in the Hermetic Texts linked and/or quoted. Every mention of ‘god’ I personally made, was about a once (and maybe still) living person of flesh, bone and blood – as we are. For example, Hermes, or Ningishzidda, or any of the other names I mentioned – and there are many more Hermes references in other cultures around the world, as recorded in the Encyclopedia Iranica ‘Hermes’ entry. Learned people those Iranians, don’t underestimate them – probably brighter than most in the west.
Hermes, while depicted in various guises (with an Ibis head in Egypt), was an Anunnaki traveller to our planet – one of 600 such beings – and in whose image we are made. Now, I don’t know about you, but I don’t have an Ibis head. And I suspect neither did he. And allowing for the wide variety of human visages and physiques, I suspect there were a variety of Anunnaki bodies. The main thing to note here is that those folk, whom we and people all around the world refer to as ‘gods’, were actually living beings. Some of them were born here, on Earth, to full Anunnaki parents, while others were the product of ’god’/human relations (after humans were eventually given the capability to procreate). They ate and drank like we do (they were prolific eaters). They made love like we do (they were prolific sexual athletes – both male and female). They fought and argued like we do. They even killed each other, just like we do. All that is not surprising really since they made us to be like themselves. In the initial experiment they used some of the DNA of one young ‘god’ (who was sacrificed for the purpose) but after procreation became possible, well, nature took its course, and many versions of demi-gods were the result. It may be that after 2,500 years since they (presumably only the remaining full Anunnaki) left for other parts (subject for another day), the Anunnaki blood lines in today’s humans is wearing pretty thin. Although it is not beyond possibility that some stronger lines have retained their heritage. Could this be the source of certain ‘elite’ groups or families, who hold the reins of global control? I’m not saying it is, in fact I doubt it very much. But you never know.
Anyway,on to the main thing I wanted to discuss.
Ok, so these ‘gods’ were not actual gods, but people. Where they came from, how they got here, does not have to factor into that situation at all. They are called ‘gods’ but they are/were not gods.
But they themselves, if we take the Hermetic Texts as genuine conversations between the ‘gods’, actually believed in some God who was more powerful than they were – and therefore infinitely more powerful than we are (they having the knowledge and therefore the power to do things that we will never be able to do – like build pyramids, and levitate huge monoliths). So, there is another question to ponder. If the gods humans worship and serve are not really gods, but there is actually a real god (which they claimed to fully understand), who or what is that God? They had the answer to that question, and I am going to do my best to relate that answer to you.
But alas! Maintenance time is over, and I have a little gaming to do before bed. I will post this now, and come back to it in the morning.


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