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Hi everyone,

Here are the links for the recent Aus-Asia-Am group discussion on The Secret History of the World and How to Get Out Alive by Laura Knight-Jadczyk.

Here's the video of the last meeting
The audio
And the folder
And the slide show


We will finish Chapter 7 for our next workshop at 6 pm Sydney AEST time (GMT+11).

See you all then!

___________________________________________________________________________________________
Below are the links to what we discussed:

Pierre's article on flasah-frozen mammoths:

Graham Hancock on Joe Rogan, discussing Piri Reis map ~ video 5 minutes
Hancock on Joe Rogan, discussing diving off coast of Yonaguni ~ 7 minutes
International date line goes through the Diomede islands

Session 6 July 2024- Humanity having long lifespans due to genetics, and different conditions on the planet (gravity, atmosphere etc.):
(L) Well, let's try to ask it in a simpler way, that's a little convoluted. Okay. So, the basic question would be, did any ancient people, kings or otherwise, live extraordinarily long lives compared to modern man?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) Were some of them kings?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) And these were what we would consider to be fully humans?

A: Yes.

Q: (Chu) What factors made them live that long?

A: Genetics mainly.


Q: (L) So there were people who carried these extreme longevity genetics. Is that it?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) And where did those genetics come from?

A: Kantek mainly.

Q: (L) Do any modern people carry some of those genetics, whether in an upregulated or not condition?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) I'm assuming that for those extreme lifespans, they are not upregulated.

A: Yes.

Q: (L) Okay. So, is it possible under some circumstances for those genes to be activated in modern man?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) Did changes in the Earth itself, say the atmosphere, the gravity, electromagnetism or some other factors, have anything to do with downregulating those types of genes?

A: Yes.


Q: (L) Okay. Can anybody think of anything else? Yes, no, maybe?

(Joe) How long are we talking about?

(L) Oh yeah. How long are we talking about in terms of lifespans?

A: Up to 8k years maximum.

Q: (Several people) Wow!

(Scottie) That's crazy.

(Z...) Z... here. Can we ask if they can maybe give us some pointers on how we could upregulate those genes?

A: Wait for the wave to do its work, but in the meantime continue to network about health.

Q: (L) Okay. You said up to 8,000 years max, but what was the average?

A: 2500 years.


Q: (Joe) How many people are we talking about, who manifested this?

(L) Okay. Out of the population, how many people...?

(Niall) As a percentage.

(L) Yeah, as a percentage.

A: 7.

Q: (L) Percent?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) So that would be kind of similar to the distribution of longevity genes nowadays.

(Joe) How long ago did the last person live who had these genes upregulated? When was the last such person alive?

A: 13 kya.

Q: (Niall) Younger Dryas, the last Ice Age.


(Chu) Was the growth rate also slowed down, or did they grow up and then spend...? Because you'd have to be a child for like 500 years if you're going to live for 2,500.

A: Not a child exactly. But plasticity was prolonged.

Q: (Joe) So these people must have been quite remarkable to the normies in their society, then. I mean, people would have known them and said, "Hey, you're not aging, and I'm 80 now. I was a child when you were a child, but you still look like you're 25". I mean, that would be weird.

A: Others lived proportionally longer.

Q: (Joe) So this was at a time when everyone had longer lifespans than they do today?


A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) These are just exceptional people.

(Andromeda) Like the difference between somebody now who lives to maybe 85, and another who lives to be 120.

(L) Yeah. My uncle Bert lived to be 103, and he smoked cigars every day, ate biscuits and bacon every day of his life.

(Niall) Does this account for why they could build such vast stone structures during one lifespan?

A: Apples and oranges.

(Joe) We're talking about different tech for building those structures, right?

(L) Yeah. I think that maybe their lifespans, that wasn't relevant to...

(PoB) What was the average lifespan of the people who didn't have these genetics at the time?

A: 800 years.


Q: (Niall) That's ridiculously long!

(Andromeda) Wow. Maybe that's why they had all that tech. They had time to figure stuff out.

(L) Yeah, lives are just too short to figure everything out. I mean, I've worked like a freaking slave for nearly all of my life, and I am only aware of how much I don't know.

(Joe) So why then are peoples’ lives today so much shorter than they were then?

A: Changes in Earth and DNA.


Q: (Gaby) It's all different.

(L) Well, if you think about it, we've talked about dinosaurs and how... I mean, just think about how huge they grew.

(Andromeda) Gravity would have been different...

(L) Gravity had to be different, the atmosphere had to be different. I mean, how long did it take them to grow to those humongous sizes? I mean, I don't know if anybody is spending time looking at dinosaurs, but I've spent a lot of time looking at dinosaurs. And I really love it when they do the picture of the dinosaur and then they put a picture of a human next to them, so you can see the scale of these things. And I mean, how the heck...? Like the Brontosaurus. He's got this long skinny neck, and he's got this big mound of a body, and these legs bigger than elephants, of course, because they are way bigger than elephants, and they got this little mouth! I mean, how did they consume enough food...?

(Andromeda) Especially vegetation.

Q: (L) ...to serve their nutritional needs to grow, much less, to get around and support themselves, and do anything, and especially if they were supposedly cold-blooded? It's just staggering.

(Joe) Do people today have past lives that go back to that time?

A: Yes.

Ryan shared a link for Graham Hancock on Ancient Civilisations
Beorn shares Cs Session 22 October 2008, about monsters in caves in Malta:
Laura said:
(L) A****** also asks: Are there monsters in caves all over the world?

A: No, not every one. P4 P3 P2 monsters are most usual.

Q: (L) What is a P4 P3 P2 monster?

A: Species designation.

Q: (L) Species designation by whom? Maybe I don't want to know!

A: Their creators aka 4D.

Q: (L) Was this little monster that we got this picture of that was supposed to be in the Cheddar caves, was that one of these P4 P3 P2 monsters?

A: P3

Q: (L) Aaah! Creepy! Are P3 or P4 worse or creepier?

A: Depends on your perspective.

Q: (A*****) Are there monsters in the caves in Malta too?

A: Oh, yes.

Ryan mentions thread A desiccated Mediterranean Sea and the "Pillars of Hercules"
 
I actually saw the invite when I got home last night, but didn't have the energy to stay up another 3 hours past midnight, although I was curious.
 
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