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NEW STAR PARTY - BRIEFING NSP03 THE HISTORY OF ALIEN INTERVENTION |
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| SCOTTISH ANDREW | ||
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‘TALK TO THE HAND …’Mayor of L.A. Arnie Schwarzenegger in the film TERMINATOR 3 The activities of a
‘Hidden Hand’ that intervenes and steers human history is a recurring
complaint amongst hard done by humans. One may find reference
to it in modern conspiracy legends and myths penned by e.g. Trevor
Ravenscroft in his ‘Spear of Destiny’, or Roberts and Gilbertson’s
‘The Dark Gods’, however, merely recycling historical rumour – often
within the context of self-referential non-academic bibliographies is
ultimately fruitless. Having operated as an
Ethnologist within the conspiracy community and having studied numerous
amazing and difficult to substantiate events, it is refreshing to find
that had I merely continued with a standard academic education at the
UK’s OPEN UNIVERSITY, I would have discovered what the academics already
knew – there’s nothing as strange as History. OU COURSE AT308
provided two textbooks on ‘Pre-industrial Cities and
Technologies’ edited by Chant and Goodman, 1999 CE. From these various
academic works, the editors drew upon the efforts of Social historians,
Technologists, Archaeologists and other Scientists to assemble a History
of Technology. The three examples cited
here in this paper however, disown the other academic comment and course
material supplied and deployed around these textbooks in other pamphlets
etc as content intended to emphasise the Open Universities’ own
distinctive agenda in the social sciences as opposed to some other UK
Universities specialist leanings in e.g. Philosophy, which can compete in
the same scientific publications market for shelf-room in bookshops. The two course textbooks
on ‘Pre-industrial Cities and Technology’ are definitive and
sufficient enough to supply all the material that I needed to write very
good course essays with. Any material quoted is
representative of the ideologies that are said therein by this teaching
University to give shape and form to the dilemmas of history that retarded
the evolution of science and technology on this planet. This very popular Open
University Course AT308 has
been very thoroughly researched and discussed and has retained its
rigorous framework for technological evolution on this planet throughout
the 2001 CE deployment of the contradictory and refutational
archaeological data of Michael Cremo, in his startling publication ‘The
hidden history of the Human Race.’ This amazing compilation
of archaeological finds presented without spin and with recourse to
professional scientific method could not have left even the subscribers to
Charles Fort with a sceptical overview of history. Although Charles
Fort’s collection of strange paranormal absurdities as witnessed can be
dismissed as relative hear-say, the archaeological finds as presented by
Cremo were thoroughly researched by the professional scientists who found
them and carry the weight of scientific legitimacy and falsifiability. The Open University does
pay attention to such developments. Recent AT308 Course
updates in 2003 CE included the finding of a very large submersed
agricultural settlement in the Indian Ocean. The alleged contradiction it
provided to the paradigm supplied by V G Childe’s theory of ‘urban
revolution’ – an expansion driven along a militaristic infrastructure
from the Tigris and Euphrates basin, propagated by the continuity of trade
and ideologies was dismissed. Although the submerged
buildings in the Indian Ocean were numerous and ordered, seasonal
cultivation and pastoral needs did not particularly endear a fixed
locality to inhabitants in need of food and water throughout the entire
year in ancient times. This could also be deduced from the presence of
tartan amongst red-haired mummies in Dolmens in northern China. People
were prepared to ‘shop around’ for a good meal and beverage and place
to chill in those days. The alleged city in the
Indian ocean was downgraded by the OU to a mere agricultural settlement as
the morphology of the settlement and therefore its implied
functions, as deduced from the oceanographic scans did not
immediately confer upon it the status of a specialised and diverse place
of; trade, skills, manufacture and habitation. Presumably the restaurant
and shipwright signage was a bit barnacled. Open University Course
AT308, therefore, is a source of technological history that can be defined
as a tool for upwardly mobile education that is both stable, and able –
a definition in common with the cruise-liner ‘Titanic’. The three examples of
academic breakage that illustrate an insufficiency in scientific reason to
account for the total failure of reality come from 3 continents and
civilised epochs. 1.
CHINA 2.
EUROPE 3.
SOUTH AMERICA 1. The slow boat from
China. China, from around the
time that the Huns, Goths etc were finishing off Rome circa 500 CE
although also experiencing the wrath of Kublai Khan in the north of China
– began a tangential approach to Civilisation that incorporated a more
spiritual cosmology within the approach of civilised values to community
and society. Drawing also on Indian
mathematics and astrological expertise, many important cultural exchanges
took place between India and China that included the import of;
architectural idiom, gunpowder components such as saltpetre,
decimalisation and absolute zero. [Chant and Goodman 1999,
p. 271] India therefore, was an
important supplier of religious values, images and ideas, of opulent
religious ideologies, ostentatious displays of wealth and empire. i.e. a
good place to borrow some gold from in the event of a crisis. The industrialisation of
China was fraught with destructive and recurring rebellion and war, but in
the main, the vast country of 4.3 million square miles was well served by
extensive use of river and canal navigation and a very large stock of
boats and ships over a period of 1500 years from 500 CE. Frequent wars amongst
warlords with the resources and aspirations to build and rebuild and
relocate huge capital cities would have created a frequent need to
replenish treasure stocks for mercenary campaigns and the industries
needed to supply them. Although it could be
said that the ‘silk road’ an 8000 kilometre road running from Chang’
an in west China to Baghdad and Persia through the central Asian city of
Samarakand through the Gobi desert in northern Tibet was the domain of the
Mongol Hordes and blocked the opportunity to trade in the Mediterranean by
overland commerce, the same could not be said of the far easier journey
south around the Malaysian Peninsula and into the Indian ocean. Consider that from the
comfort of one’s own expeditionary fleet, and borne south by favourable
currents and winds, there would be no absence of supplies such as fresh
water on the far shorter route to the places of known treasure. It is strange therefore
to consider that from e.g. the Sui and Tang Dynasties circa 479 CE right
up to the Ming and Ch’ing Dynasties circa 1840 CE that this in fact, did
not happen. It may be that various
aspects of the bad things from the east intimidated the ancient warlords
of China e.g. Jesuit priests, Marco Polo (1271-1295 CE), or the Black
Death 1347 CE but that the
origins of rich Indian treasure would not have escaped any well organised
imperialist of those eras. Whilst the Emperor Yong
Le, in the early 15th century sent naval expeditions into the
Indian Ocean to trade with India and explore east Africa, warmongering was
rather restricted presumably because of the possibility of an Indian
alliance with Mongols. The practise of even
politically correct Emperors and warlords outsourcing new resources
stopped around 1433 CE. [Chant and Goodman 1999,
p. 289] relate, however, that ‘ some civil servants .. disgusted by
alien .. government, withdrew from public life.’ [Chant and Goodman
1999, p. 291] continue by saying that ‘Historians have documented new
Mongol threats from the north and steep increases in the cost of timber
needed for shipbuilding to explain the end of naval exploration. They have
noted political infighting associated with relocation of the capital…’
‘It is hard to escape the view, however, that something deeper than
politics and the price of timber was at issue. For the governing class to
turn its back so abruptly on the rest of the world, and also to lose
interest in science and mathematics, suggests a shift in values and a
defensive, unadventurous outlook.’ [Chant and Goodman 1999,
p. 282] The Chinese navy, founded in 1132 CE, had sailing ships and also
paddle-powered and sail-less top armoured attack craft that could travel
and manoeuvre independent of wind direction and also move in reverse. All
naval vessels were equipped to catapult gunpowder bombs into the enemy.
Cannonade were also in use against the Mongol hordes as early as the 12th
and 13th centuries and would also have been available for
military ships. Although the Chinese
navy failed the stop the 18th and 19th century
European expeditions from e.g. the Dutch East India Company and then the
English East India Company, there appears to be no reason whatsoever for
the superior Chinese navy not to have over-ran the Indian Ocean, the
Persian Gulf and the continent of Africa in its quest for the resources
that could keep the empire defended, or some warlord in a mercenary
campaign in the intervening 600 years after the founding of the navy and
the recognition of its uses. The only academic
explanation for the non-conquest and non-exploitation of the Indian ocean,
the Arabian gulf and East Africa offered by leading academics is of a
‘defensive and unadventurous’ outlook
to which [Mr Regis Huc in Chant C, 1999, p. 216] would add ..
‘patient and resigned shopkeeper mentality.’ The Chinese (warlords)
in their quest for the gold and treasure etc that would fuel their
ambitions of conquest, conspiracy and defence never thought about the
possibilities for conquest using the abundant surplus of shipping and the
proven expertise available to use it. The non-use of a proven
resource base in India over a period of 700 years for the financing of
huge mercenary campaigns e.g. against the Tartar and Mongol hordes, or
White Lotus rebellion, because a gold hungry warlord was too lazy to send
one of many thousands of ships from this vast continent to re-explore the
proven treasure centres of India is ludicrous. 2. ‘A Horse, a horse, my Kingdom for a Horse
…’ [Shakespeare
W, King Richard III, Act 5 Scene 4.] From ancient
Sumer c.a. 3500 BCE, it took 4000 years into Europe to discover how
to harness a horse for heavy loads and heavy plough by adapting an ox
harness. Getting a new take on
the yoke harness used for Oxen such that a collar harness could be
attached to another draft animal with less muscles in front of the
windpipe appeared to be impossibly hard. The sort of difficult
discovery civilisation makes once it starts using hot drinks in the cold
jars it used to drink from. Taking 4000 years to get
a handle on a horse and how it breathes, however is a bit of a stretch of
credibility. The excuse of
‘unfamiliarity with horse anatomy’ by Burford doesn’t wear in any of
those war zones whatsoever. The introduction of the
heavy plough in northern Europe in the 10th century CE created
the agricultural surplus necessary for the beginnings of; trade,
specialisation and urban revolution that became the European Renaissance
in the 15th century. This inability to
comprehend a horse over 4000 years delayed intensive cultivation and
intensive social and scientific urbanisation, industrialisation and
scientific invention by at least 400 years in Middle Ages Europe. It was approximately 400
years after the introduction of the use of draft horses on the heavy
plough that the Renaissance took place in Europe. [Burford A, in Chant
1999 page 29] and [White L, in Chant 1999, p 99]. Warring nobles, Goths,
Huns, Mongols, Kings, Queens etc from about the time of the fall of Rome
c.a. 500 CE would have been requiring supplies and heavy transport to
conduct their campaigns often in the most difficult of terrain that could
not always be accessed by porter or river transport. In the absence of
Oxen, siege engines such as; ballista, rams, trebuchets etc and other
applications of woodland for military use would have needed use of much of
the spare horses from the numerous fallen in those battles. 500 years of stupidity
before someone effectively straps up a horse doesn’t seem credible. Campaign after campaign,
army after army, necessity after necessity, battle after battle, retreat
after retreat, sagacious investigation of supply logistics from everyone
who has ever seen, eaten, butchered, harnessed, shod, ridden and or
collided with a horse later, and in 500 years cannot devise a contraption
to allow it to pull a heavy load without choking. A bit much considering
scorched earth warfare between petty nobles and highly organised armies
probably required burger king ox steak cuisine and an overwhelming need to
get half a ton of arrows etc. to
point B from whatever stronghold it was required to over-winter in. Regardless of who ate
the local Oxen, with hundreds of years of recurrent necessity in anarchic
Eurasia [e.g. 600 CE – 1400CE], and always plenty of unoccupied medium
cavalry horses to use, in tens of thousands of combat dilemmas the
military hierarchy were totally unable to harness a horse to a cart
without strangling it or to invent a better harness to solve matters of
large scale life and death than the Ox harness used in ancient Sumer and
Rome. There were 20th
century schools of military thought that suggested that war was a driving
factor in the evolution of human industry, and would cite the benefits of
the cold war and the nuclear arms race as an influential factor in e.g.
the electronics industry. The arms race in the 20th
century also became the space race and the subsequent development of
super-light and super-tough alloys, plastics and fabrics and the process
of miniaturisation could be seen to bring household benefits in;
television technology, cold weather gear etc. That however, does not
take it away from the middle ages of Europe and their own early modern
ways of thinking. Burford in Chant 1999,
p36, relates that oxen were sufficient for Rome, but had clearly forgotten
that it was the sight of massed horseman using short composite horse bow
that had seared its way across the static impediments to warfare created
by Roman thinking all over northern Eurasia. From then on, efficient
mobilisation of arms and resources would be the best response to such
threats, as hard-hitting light cavalry could get everywhere at short
notice. Whereas the era of the
beef burger drive thru had clearly commenced – people in the dark ages
clearly knew what a horse was and how it could be variously used. 3. Getting stoned in South America. The sites and structures
of the ancient Mayan civilisation in South America are impressive indeed.
As are the number of new age
beliefs attributed to the accuracy of sunspot predictions, the mathematics
of Mayan chaos theory and other aspects of astronomy and science that seem
to show, according to irrational ‘hippy’ beliefs, a penchant for
design that would have got them all jobs with the George Lucas Star wars
films at Hollywood. Much as I rather
empathise with the sentiment of such imagery of perhaps a golden bee that
looks like an aerodynamic 20th century jet fighter in a ‘Von
Daniken’ book – the very thought that petroleum engines and
considerations of atmospheric friction appeared to be touted as evidence
of space faring beliefs, enabled me to ignore those crystal skulls and
other such at least for the time being until I could discover what it was
that the population of the Mayan Empire actually did for a living. The impractical new age
of the 20th century never actually did any meaningful work and
seemed to assume that neither did their spaced out space brother
counterparts from ancient but spacey south America. Myself, obviously being
more of a practical sort, reckoned that such a magnificent achievement as
building walls on those mountainsides that had polygonal 50 - 100 tonne
blocks with angular sides that could have made a very challenging xmas
party game by ronco toys – would have been hard even with the tools,
metals and technologies available to the concurrent pyramid and temple
builders of; Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece and Rome. To assemble the;
geometric, asymmetric, many sided, irregular, shapes and forms from which
those massive walls at Cuzco and Sacsahuaman were made would take; cutting
tools, hoists, ramps, pulleys, metal smelting and mining and a
mathematical precision of such finesse that even today in the 3rd
millennium of humanity on this planets surface, one still could not insert
a razor blade between them. Had I only but known -
for the hardest edged tools that the Mayans possessed was allegedly
obsidian – a volcanic glass that could be splintered to cut meat and
textiles, and the bronze Aztec blades later used against Cortez, the
conquistador. Neither bronze or
obsidian are hard enough to provide an impact on the metamorphic volcanic
rocks of the Andes mountain chain – and whereas there may be local and
regional variation within the static and drift geology, no skills within
the construction industry were cited in Chant and Goodman 1999, pps.
242-251 as being able to make the tools that could cut those rocks to such
precise geometric shapes. Muscle power and earthen ramps by default were
cited as the cause of these incredible and massive and precise and ornate
structures. Worse still, it was with
the utmost horror that I came to a shuddering stop at p. 251 of Chant and
Goodman 1999. I can only quote
verbatim what I saw there ….. ‘There are strong
similarities to the Egyptian pyramids. Like the Pharaohs, the Incas
imposed a system of compulsory labour on tens of thousands of captives.
They hauled huge boulders from quarries as in ancient Egypt, used log
rollers, inclined planes and bronze crowbars to move them. The precise
shaping and fitting is thought to have been achieved by the constant
pounding of boulders by harder stones, a continuous action maintained by a
force of thousands of labourers working in shifts (Gasparini and Margioles,
1980, p324:Hardoy,1973. p.465. ) I can buy the quarry
stuff where-by banging wedges into sandstone and limestone in e.g. Egypt
one could isolate and dislocate a large rough hewn boulder for subsequent
refinement and roll it away o rollers etc and haul it up a ramp. Also the
geology of the Andean mountain chain, although predominately Igneous and
metamorphic rock suggests that there was plenty of available materials to
use of roughly equivalent hardness to make both tools and building
materials out of. However the organisation
required to pound these massive and hard boulders into the precise
polygonal shapes we today see as precisely fitting would have taken
immense effort by the use of skills even if most of the civilian
population worked along side the captives. [e.g. as in the Chinese canal
system upgrade near 9th century Tang Dynasty, Chang’ an] Given the hand tools used
were of roughly equivalent hardness or even harder than the boulders,
the rocks themselves would be in constant use and not much more than another
factor of 10 or 20 % harder than the construction material. Not being
diamonds, they would need constant replacement too if used ceaselessly
by thousands and thousands of labourers, skilled and unskilled. Given that there was no
substance harder than this cutting tool and that the cutting tool was an
arbitrary shaped rock of useful size, shape and weight for use in this
sort of construction, it would mean that the supervisors on these projects
would need a relative army of tool searchers to acquire tools of the right
size and weight. As the local stone tools
got used up, gradually, the search would have to widen to keep an army of
thousands and thousands of workers working efficiently in shifts and
moderately supplied with food and water. Not every stone found
that was hard enough could be of use to deliver efficient craftsmanship The logistics of such
an undertaking beggar belief. If the hand-tools sourced were too soft
or too heavy or too bulky, then the project I am aware of the
Scottish saying that ‘a bad workman always blames his tools’ but then
at the same time – not everyone was born to cut surfaces in rock like
they were brain surgeons. Perhaps it was the
jealous cynic in me – but that’s a lot of guys standing around with a
sore arm for days on end being unable to eat. I suppose that they would
not come to any ‘arm. However, the crème de
la crème of anaemic academic investigation still sticks with the heavy
rock theory instead of taking the light sabre approach for the 21st
century. In conclusion it is my
belief that the human academic paradigm cannot adequately explain or
account for the distribution and assets of ancient civilisation on this
planets surface.
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