posted on Sep, 21 2023 @ 08:39 AM
a reply to:
kwakakev
The only motivation I can see for a community to commit the energy required for a project like the Giza Pyramids is to leave a mark for where they are
from.
Lets say you just arrived on a new planet with a colony ship. There is going to be all kinds of cool tools in the workshop to get you that far. What
kind of thing would you build to be a reminder that survives the test of time? The design fits perfect, along with much other of its engineering
details. In time the expertise to fix those cool tools was lost, but a lot of its architectural style and culture remained. Is that Ark still humming
away somewhere?
Personally? Grown buildings that'll stand the test if time. Something that is 100% replicable in nature but absolutely constructed by intelligent
means. Think crystal palace built by geothermal processes or the likes. In other words an example of knowledge that unmistakably exemplifies
understanding beyond anything on offer. The Egyptians didn't necessarily do that with the Pyramids, even if it wasn't the Egyptians that built them
they are capable of being understood by humans. Other civilisations demonstrated similar capabilities when it comes to astronomy and construction.
The one that worries me, what is going on with the collective consciousness for the Klingon language to emerge? Is this some kind of heads up that it
is a jungle out there for any to get involved in space travel?
Who knows?
Maybe it's just us beyond the projection? I'm doubtful of that and I don't discount the potential of faith and all that manifestation malarkey. For me
the constellations, constructions, stories and faith only ever made sense when I fundamentally understood the earth's movements in relation to the
stars and celestial bodies, earlier cultures were built around either navigation or calender keeping. The Pleiades is ½ of the ecliptical golden gate
with the other half being Hyades. All the planets pass through this "gate" including the moon although the moon deviates a lot. My point being with
that is all the buildings of the past, all the alignments and "time keeping" skills point to a 100% human origin when it comes to culture and
understanding.
I'd have a similar line if reasoning with technology too. Maybe the origins of our knowledge isn't rooted in navigation or time keeping just like say
the origins of the transistor didn't come from a happy mistake or a fundamental understanding of physics. The input could be alien... In the end it
becomes human. It's that whole input and output of data thing and it needs to be computed into human understanding. When I really think about that I
end up wondering if that's why threads like this exist or the whole of ufology in general.
Demanding nuts and bolts from mere ideas and concepts. I say mere because science will always scoff at works of cultural faith and again if you go
asking an aboriginal Australian who knows their history and culture about aliens and constellations in the sky then they may feel inclined to correct
you on their own beliefs. I'd imagine that's a similar process throughout the ages and cultures too.
Do you know what I'm getting at with all this? I find it fascinating why some jump to aliens or even angels and demons. Anyways my hat goes off to
anyone trying to be objective in the world of ufology. It takes something special to remain objective without being dismissive. They must know 99% of
it is bs and the rest is well, alarming. I mean people suspect governments know and have knew the reality for a long time yet the public has some
amazing tech at their hands and we're still scratching our heads. I mean my own government says "UFOs" pose no significant threat to airspace... I
cannot fathom how they know a UFO doesn't have Russian markings on the side. Beyond that? Who knows...