Why do etymologists think that so many words originated from Latin roots?
Why did Rome persecute Christians for the first few hundred years before flip flopping to adopt Christianity?
Why do all roads lead to Rome?
Roman hegemons created the Latin iron curtain of etymology for the same reason they killed off all of the most accurate early Christian preachers and for the same reason they built roads all over: they wanted to sweep away the truth and centralize authority for themselves.
Christ traveled during the missing years from the canonical gospels. Note: “canonical” means the same thing as “fiat”. Roman hegemons didn’t want people to follow “the way” which meant abiding the Golden Rule, i.e. loving your neighbors as yourself. To do that requires learning the words and the ways of others, e.g. the Druids, the Egyptians, the Hindus, and the Buddhists.
Roads made it easier for Rome to march, conquer, and destroy evidence of Christ’s travels. The Latin iron curtain made it easier for Rome to masquerade as the Walmart of etymology, i.e. “one stop shopping. Rome didn’t adopt Christianity; they hijacked and distorted it.
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Oh, dang... Are we quantum entangled? This is soooo related to the note I was apparently tapping out at exactly the same time as you wrote this. Brb, goons link them
Very related! And at the same time! Same wavelength!
Why do etymologists think that so many words originated from Latin roots?
Why did Rome persecute Christians for the first few hundred years before flip flopping to adopt Christianity?
Why do all roads lead to Rome?
Roman hegemons created the Latin iron curtain of etymology for the same reason they killed off all of the most accurate early Christian preachers and for the same reason they built roads all over: they wanted to sweep away the truth and centralize authority for themselves.
Christ traveled during the missing years from the canonical gospels. Note: “canonical” means the same thing as “fiat”. Roman hegemons didn’t want people to follow “the way” which meant abiding the Golden Rule, i.e. loving your neighbors as yourself. To do that requires learning the words and the ways of others, e.g. the Druids, the Egyptians, the Hindus, and the Buddhists.
Roads made it easier for Rome to march, conquer, and destroy evidence of Christ’s travels. The Latin iron curtain made it easier for Rome to masquerade as the Walmart of etymology, i.e. “one stop shopping. Rome didn’t adopt Christianity; they hijacked and distorted it.
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Anarchy : an (opposed to, negation) + archy (rulers, rulership, authority, hierarchy)
The false church tried to erase the 300 years after Christ. They want you to think Christianity began in 325 AD and **_how dare you_** for questioning it. What was in those 300 years? Thanks to archaeological discoveries, we know.
One of this key features was resistance of the "archons" - the rulers. Roman governors were literally called archons, but there are several metaphysical versions that different groups posited to be in existence.
What matters is, in the **_original_** Christianity, closer to the living teachings of the Christ, anarchism wasn't optional. There were no statist Christians. The Roman state eventually hijacked it and then murdered the churches who resisted. If you want to understand how the world got to its current state, understanding the erased 300 years is essential, even if you're not Christian. A Christian who is not an anarchist is actually just confused. And, ironically, as Paul says - God is not the author of confusion.
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🎯
The poet Ovid
Care to elaborate?
It’s been 20 years since I last read Ovid.
Ovid's Metamorphosis sounds like one of the influences for the bible
Written in 8CE.
I have no trouble buying that the early parts of Metamorphoses are consistent with some of the stories from Genesis, but as @npub1qcnu...u2np pointed out, Ovid wrote that in 8 CE whereas Moses most likely wrote Genesis well over a thousand years before Christ.
I think the consistencies are very important. They're not only consistent with each other, they're consistent with the Kolbrin, the Epic of Gilgamesh, and other sources.
In the book I'm writing, I offer insights into the story of Adam and Eve, the great flood stories, and the Tower of Babel. I still have work to do on it but I've got over 200 pages written up and almost none of it is AI generated. I'm hoping to finish it this year.
You're entitled to have that option.
As a poet and a developer who loosely understands information theory, I will firmly attest the bible is based on norman, italic and Islamic poetry as late as the 13C.
I am well aware
Did mouse's people have a culture of epic poetry? I didn't know.
I will be interested in reading them. Please list some examples.
I keep ignorantly paraphrasing French Hermetic alchemists from 100+ years ago.
I called it the Latin iron curtain.
Is this coincidence or consilience?
“Latin, a shameless synthesis of rudimentary Asian languages, but a simple intermediary in linguistics, a kind of curtain drawn on the world scene, was a vast trick favoured by a phonetics different from ours, which concealed its looting…”
-A. Champrosay, Les Illuminé de Cabarose (The Illuminated of Cabarose)
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