Decoding
Book Resurrects the Ancient Astronaut Theme
Several
decades ago, books by insurance salesman Erich von Daniken caused an international
sensation as he depicted photographs of large-stone edifices hard to believe built
by primitive humans. His dreams of ancient astronauts, however, soon faded into
oblivion as archeologists came up with proof that primitive humans could have
constructed the pyramids and like structures without alien assistance. Nonetheless,
the possibility of other types of evidence for ancient astronauts cannot be discarded.
Overtly
a cryptography and deception tactics book, Morten St. George's Incantation of
the Law Against Inept Critics: A Guide to Cryptic Thinking takes up the ancient
astronaut gauntlet. But there's no stone here. Now, it's not a question of what
the ancient astronauts did, but of what they left behind. Deception cryptography
leads the way. The only known deployment of this unique form of cryptography is
to be found in forty two prophetic stanzas published by Nostradamus in the 16th
century. So was Nostradamus an alien? Hardly, but St. George's book asserts he
was the last guardian of an alien artifact.
What's
the evidence?
First,
a breakthrough decoding of the forty two stanzas in which numerous contemporary
events are not only accurately recounted but also systematically dated. St. George
concludes there is no longer any doubt about whether or not the future was foreseen.
It was, and likewise we are witnessing the powers of a super-civilization.
Second,
the discovery that the forty two stanzas (perceived as a book of divine revelation)
were secretly guarded, known to, and commented upon by a cabalistic sect during
medieval times. St. George says these forty-two revelations predate Nostradamus
by centuries, and now there is a "book of light" in the picture, not
"light" like in "enlightenment" but literally composed of
light, black fire on top of white fire. This describes the artifact that survived
to reach Nostradamus.
Third,
back to the prophecies, which come forth and tell us the name of their author
and when they were written. According to St. George, they were written in the
sixth century, a thousand years before the time of Nostradamus.
Why
is there no record of alien arrival in the sixth century? St. George responded
we are referring to creatures with two arm appendages and four fingers at the
end of each, but other than that, they landed as helmeted aquatics and didn't
remotely look like humans. He says it is a myth that intelligent aliens have to
be hominoids, and it is likewise a myth that the only road to technology is the
road taken by humans. "In the Dark Ages, these aquatics would have been stoned
as demons in most places, and if there were any reference to them, religious censorship
would have obliterated it."
Then,
how do you know that they had four fingers? St. George replied, "I said they
would have been stoned as demons in most places, not in all places. Archaeologists
are far from perfect. They have no idea how to distinguish the drawing of an aquatic
extraterrestrial from the drawing of a masked witchdoctor. Maybe some of them
had suspicions but didn't speak out, fearing for their career or whatever. Extraterrestrial
intelligence and civilizations more advanced than ours are terrifying concepts
for segments of human society."
There
are many unsolved mysteries in world history. Is this another one? St. George
emphatically asserts: "No! These extraterrestrials were no fools. Besides
who and when, the prophecies also tell us where, that is, where they came from."
He says the prophecies provide data for a star arrow rising upwards from southern
skies and for a planetary arrow moving outwards from the solar system, and where
these arrows collide would be the point of contact.