Posted on 09/19/2022 6:53:07 AM PDT by SJackson
Thanks to yefragetuwrabrumuy for the article.
ping
Clearly shows a space craft beaming them down.
PINGGGGGGG!......................
There was an interview of Elon Musk by some middle eastern interviewers before a big audience of middle eastern rulers. The interviewer asked musk about space aliens. he prefaced his question by saying that in the middle east among moslems, adam and eve are thought to be space aliens. (Musk wasn’t a big fan of space alien speculation.)
Then there is this very disappointing bit...
Unfortunately, some items were stolen before the resealing was completed, according to IAA head Eli Eskozido.How can can the warmist green kooks explain that this cave is not under water?“Shortly before the cave was sealed, and despite guarding it, a number of archaeological items were stolen from the cave, and the matter is under investigation,” he said in a statement.
Amazing that we have not found stuff like this in the americas
We called it Navi Rubin in 1961. Roman shards were there for the picking. Just down from the Koor.
Unfortunately, some phones were smashed and drives were wiped.
Despite being guarded a number of items were stolen?
Smh
Jeffrey Epstien’s prison guards were employed there.
https://cdn.jwplayer.com/previews/J565hflq
Thanks for the pings!
Jar Jars?
One of *those* topics.
245. Tiles of buildings erected by Ramses II (in Kantir) which have Greek letters on the back, are products of Greek laborers in the service of the pharaoh. The letters are genuine Greek letters of the sixth century.Theses for the Reconstruction of Ancient History | Immanuel Velikovsky (1945)
A couple of the guards have new cars now.
Way cool.
[snip] The translation of the Seventy (Septuagint) calls Beth-Shan by the name of Scythopolis;(4) so do Josephus(5) and Eusebius.(6) Georgius Syncellus,(7) the Byzantine chronologist, explained that the use of the name Scythopolis for Beth-Shan was due to the presence of Scythians, who had remained there from among the invading hordes in the days of Psammetichos.
As has been said above, Beth-Shan was besieged and occupied by Seti, and his steles and the graves of the Greek mercenaries who served with him were discovered there. Ramses II, his successor, also occupied Beth-Shan for some time, but no vestiges have been found there of Egyptian kings of later times. The conventional chronology compelled the archaeologists of Beth-Shan to conclude that after Seti and Ramses II the city was practically uninhabited until the time of the Neo-Babylonian Empire in the seventh century, although from the Scriptures we know that Beth-Shan was an important city in the days of Judges and Kings.
Seti-meri-en-Ptah Men-maat-Re, who left his steles in Beth-Shan, was Psammetichos of Herodotus. It was the seventh century. [/snip]The Assyrian Conquest: The End of Nineveh | Immanuel Velikovsky
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