Saturday, January 15, 2011

Early Sunrise In Greenland

The Daily Mail reported this morning that the sun rose two days early "in Greenland". Dashing to Google to further explore the phenomena, it was apparent that sympathies ought be extended to the two experts whose names appeared in the article. They've been used to give credence to yet another new age hooker.

This story led me to think about how it is nearly impossible for the average person to make heads or tails of ANYTHING written which is beyond the scope of an ordinary education. You know - the public education that taught Americans that Columbus discovered a land occupied by savage pagans which Europeans subsequently transformed into the Land Of The Free And The Home Of The Brave under the principle of Manifest Destiny and who, after warring amongst themselves over the disposition of enslaved Africans that God said could be captured and abused in furtherance of their project, have since determined to make the whole planet (one quadrant at a time) safe for democracy. Every American with a public school education knows this tune by heart.

How the hell can someone with a such an educational handicap be expected to decipher the information that's deigned to print? They can't. I've been trying to catch up with the truth since my first boss/mentor 35 years ago and I still find myself wandering around through galleries of smoke and mirrors offered by the well-educated and well-informed. That's why conspiracy and gossip are attractive, sometimes there's as much truth buried in these writings as there is in the professional proclamations. All avenues of discovery - in the legal sense of the word - are worth a tour if one has the time and inclination. And time is what is required, don't let them kid you about Google and it's Number One resource, Wiki.

Columbus did not discover America.

A small hamlet in Greenland saw an early sunrise. This was found on Page 5 on Google, following all the repeaters of the Daily Mail headline.

And, speaking of repeaters, I say once again that the Golden Age Project is a fine place to visit - no conspiracy and no gossip either - for some common sense and researched clues to human origins. They are offering Laurence Gardner's posthumous work, The Origin of God, which I'm reading. You'll never guess what I discovered when checking one of his references in the Bible. My eyes went beyond the reference needed for Gardner's work and I spotted this favorite of shepherds and flocks across the believing planet:


Woman had not yet been created when this commandment was issued. Because the text is positioned before the creation of the woman and because it says "commanded the man" rather than 'commanded them both', I assume that Adam passed the information on to his wife. There's no proof otherwise. Who's to say Adam's relay of this message to Eve carried equal force and weight as the original commandment issued by God?