And thank you for the link to the selection of books. In work with us :)
Great stuff Andrew, hopefully you'll share your thoughts about the impact of those novels in the Romantic Fiction thread soon!
And thank you for the link to the selection of books. In work with us :)
Regarding the romance novels ... I've been reluctant to engage in that direction, as I perceive that genre as being, well, kinda girly. This could well just be a program I have, that I should maybe examine. And yet ... really??? Are there no other genres that can provide a similar level of insight into karmic understandings?
"In that period of food shortages, the haplogroup H individuals had a selective advantage over those with other haplogroups, because H is more efficient when obtaining energy from the diet." However, that highly efficient metabolism also generates so-called reactive oxygen species (free radicals, oxygen ions, etc.) unleashing cell dysfunction and apoptosis, which, in the long term, leads to the degradation of cartilage and the development of diseases of a rheumatic type.
Last mammoths plagued by genetic defects
Last mammoths plagued by genetic defects -- Sott.net
Will Dunham
Reuters
Sat, 15 Feb 2020 19:45 UTC
© Albert Protopopov
A mammoth at the Mammoth museum in Yakutsk
The world's last woolly mammoths, sequestered on an Arctic Ocean island outpost, suffered from serious genetic defects caused by generations of inbreeding that may have hampered traits such as sense of smell and male fertility in the doomed population.
Scientists said on Friday that the genome of one of the last mammoths from Wrangel Island off Siberia's coast showed that the population was riddled with deleterious mutations. They resurrected genes from this mammoth in the laboratory to find clues about the demise of this illustrious Ice Age species.
Most woolly mammoths went extinct roughly 10,000 years ago amid a warming climate and widespread human hunting. But isolated populations survived for thousands of years after that on St. Paul Island in the Bering Sea and Wrangel Island in the Arctic Ocean. The Wrangel Island population was the last, disappearing roughly 4,000 years ago.
Comment: Mammoths in Siberia were found to have been flash frozen, meanwhile, they, along with a variety of other mega-fauna, became extinct around the same time. These facts, along with a wealth of other data can be found in Pierre Lescaudron's Of Flash Frozen Mammoths and Cosmic Catastrophes.
The researchers compared the Wrangel Island mammoth's DNA to that of two older mammoths as well three Asian elephants, a close relative. They pinpointed a collection of genetic mutations in the Wrangel Island mammoth and synthesized these genes in the laboratory to test their functionality.
They found problems with genes responsible for sperm production, smell, neurological development and a function involving the hormone insulin that is responsible for permitting glucose in the blood to enter cells to give them energy.
"We can activate those genes in the lab using cell culture and test whether they are functional or not. In this case not," said evolutionary biologist Vincent Lynch of the University at Buffalo in New York, who led the study published in the journal Genome Biology and Evolution.
"Mutations happen all the time. But the population that lived on Wrangel was very small and inbred, which leads to an accumulation of mutations that are normally purged by evolution," Lynch added.
The sperm production-related mutations may have reduced fertility in an already shrinking population. The olfactory mutations may have harmed the ability to forage and to even smell the flowers that made up an important part of their diet.
"Mammoths ate a lot of flowers," Lynch said.
The woolly mammoth, about the size of today's elephants but possessing long brown fur and immense tusks, first appeared about 700,000 years ago in Siberia, expanding through northern Eurasia and North America.
The Wrangel Island mammoth genome was previously mapped using well-preserved DNA from a 4,300-year-old molar. The new study built on previous research pointing to harmful mutations in the Wrangel Island mammoth.
With a population of just a few hundred, generations of mating between related individuals - inbreeding - triggered harmful mutations.
"It is indeed a sad thing," Lynch said. "Mammoths were literally huge and globally distributed, and this massive range was reduced to a tiny island in the Arctic Ocean before their extinction. It should be a warning about the consequences of climate change."
(Joe) Is it true that the really tall giants - like 13 or 15 feet - were they alive under the same gravitational conditions as we have today?
A: Not exactly. Conditions on your planet changed significantly at the time of the destruction of the Roman Empire. Giants from that time forward faced increasingly difficult conditions and survival became untenable.
Q: (L) So there were some still left in pockets, is that it?
A: Yes
Q: (Joe) Those were the ones discovered by explorers after the Dark Ages.
(Chu) Did they have a language we might be familiar with if they lived that recently?
A: Yes
Q: (Chu) Which language?
A: Similar to Basque.
Q: (Andromeda) Like Atlantean.
(Scottie) I think 'hello' was, "Fee-fi-fo-fum"... [laughter]
(L) And their favorite thing to say was, "I smell the blood of an Englishman!"
(Joe) So, gravity was less, let's say, to make it easy for them to...
A: Yes. Also electrical charge of planet.
Q: (L) That reminds me of all the really peculiar electrical phenomena recorded in the ancient Greco-Roman records that seemed to sort of stop when records picked up again after the destruction of the ancient world. But, of course, there were periods when things were really weird even after that. So the people before the end of the Roman Empire were seeing a lot more of our plasma men than we would see nowadays?
A: Yes
Q: (Andromeda) But the giants lived alongside little people then?
A: Yes
Q: (Joe) And was life easier for normal people then, as well?
A: Yes
Q: (L) It had probably been in decline beginning from even earlier periods...
A: Yes
Q: (L) So that was the last big change I guess, something like 540 AD.
(Joe) In the reports of explorers after the Roman Empire going and finding giants and stuff, if they fought with the giants it seems they were relatively easily defeated as they were big and slow.
(L) They probably weren't able to deal with the environmental conditions.
(Andromeda) Were they stupid?
A: Not at first.
Q: (L) But they became stupid as their health declined in the environmental changes?
A: Yes
As Laura wrote in the romance novels thread, those who are most reluctant to read those books may be those who need it the most:Regarding the romance novels ... I've been reluctant to engage in that direction, as I perceive that genre as being, well, kinda girly. This could well just be a program I have, that I should maybe examine. And yet ... really??? Are there no other genres that can provide a similar level of insight into karmic understandings? I usually gravitate more towards histories, or for light reading science fiction or (more infrequently) fantasy. Stuff with a bit of action. It isn't at all clear to me why genres that appeal more to masculine sensibilities cannot also provide a window into the soul and thereby, an avenue to self-reflexive insight. Maybe I'm missing something really obvious, but I'm genuinely curious if romance novels are the only way to do this work, or if it can't be done using other genres as well.
I promise you that it goes far beyond "girly stuff", knights in shining armor and ladies in need of rescuing. Those novels are written by women because women are better with emotional and psychological stuff and at "getting" relationships dynamics (sorry, but that's how it is. Men are better at other stuff), and since a lot of men are a bit "thicker" in that department, they'd certainly benefit from reading those novels, and get a good dose of simple, karmic understandings. Beyond the tacky covers and romantic tropes, it is serious Work and as far as I'm concerned, involves a lot of suffering. Personally, I would never have guessed that it could have such an impact on me (I never read that kind of novels before). I don't know how those authors do it, but personally, it's been a hell of a ride - still ongoing. It's certainly not all rainbow and unicorns and fuzzy feelings (despite the happy endings). At times it feels like confronting your own dirt, shovelling your own s*it and as far as I'm concerned, it's really not pretty. Last night after reading a particular scene, I just had to stop, I wanted to throw the book against the wall and be done with the project. The various emotions that have come up to the surface, oh my… So yeah, try it out: it's "fun"!And it seems to me that those who are most uncomfortable with the process may indeed need it the most. Especially since, as already mentioned, we are in a period of "hyperkinetic sensate" where it seems that even ordinary emotions are amplified.
Interesting connection between "balance" and "General Law". This leaves who decides what is "balance" and what it constitutes? In theory, planet is STS and any STO tries to balances it. Every soul has the free will to choose. Probably it is collective consciousness of the population( as every soul is spark of God/7D) decides what they want for their environment and any thing opposing it considered undesirable.(Joe) In general at different times when you were suffering from different ailments or things... The response was that suffering was necessary to balance the knowledge that was given to the world, or words to that effect. The suffering was necessary as a result of spreading knowledge. I was wondering why that's necessary?
A: Balance.
Q: (Joe) Yeah, right. That's what they said last time. But... When someone works a lot to discover information and share it with the world, they've already suffered to acquire that knowledge. When they spread it, then they're in for another dose it seems.
(L) Is it the spreading that brings the additional suffering?
A: Yes. Think of something like Mouravieff's "General Law".
Q: (L) So in other words, if I just kept it to myself and I didn't create a stir, inciting others to struggle against the General Law, I wouldn't suffer so much?
A: Yes
Q: (Artemis) If you think about it, knowledge and information is like light and truth. Darkness hates light and truth...
(L) Well, my sorrow for the lack of knowledge that others labor under exceeds my concern for my suffering, I think. I would rather do the suffering than to have others suffer. Perhaps I bite off more than I can chew, but so far, I have always thought it was worth it. Okay, anything else?
It is interesting How many weird events can be explained by transdimensional phenomenon and consciousness of the observer.(Joe) That'll do. I'd like to know why the Loch Ness Monster... [laughter] We're going old school! Why is it that the Loch Ness monster and other similar creatures that are said to exist - and which the Cs said exist - have never been seen and documented like other animals that live on this planet?
(Artemis) Didn't they say like they're out of phase with our reality or something?
A: Transdimensional.
Q: (Artemis) They're here but they're not here.
(L) Is it something about the creatures own frequency that causes it to blink in and out of our reality?
A: Yes
Q: (L) Is it living in kind of like a time warp or something like that?
A: Yes
Q: (Joe) Does it have to do with the belief of the observer as well?
A: Yes
Q: (L) Kind of like Flight 19, I guess.
(Joe) Well, they said before about the Loch Ness monster that they were like plesiosaurs left over from the last ice age.
(L) And the last ice age was most likely a different cosmic environment, you know?
(Artemis) Is there a way to free the poor Loch Ness monster?
A: No
Q: (Andromeda) Is he eating well? [laughter]
A: Yes
Q: (Andromeda) What does he eat?
A: Whatever it wants!
Q: (Joe) It eats whatever it wants, including people!
(Andromeda) That's what I was wondering. Does it eat people? [laughter]
(Niall) Andromeda, does he have someone to take him to the vet? [laughter]
A: Mouth too small. Vegetarian for the most part, but not exclusively.
So they lived until very recently. But, scientific priesthood is so arrogant in their "truth", we can't come to a conclusionQ: (Andromeda) But the giants lived alongside little people then?
A: Yes
Q: (Joe) And was life easier for normal people then, as well?
A: Yes
Q: (L) It had probably been in decline beginning from even earlier periods...
A: Yes
Q: (L) So that was the last big change I guess, something like 540 AD.
Fascinating connection between DNA and Information field through EM wave that acts like a fractal. I wondered if each cell connected to information field and soul , there has to be triggers/inputs in specific format. C's said algebra and mathematics etc. In our current technologies, lowest is 0 and 1's and converted to the variables, collections etc. to make interactions easier. It does looks like consciousness's "desire to change" ( from other side 5D or Ether) translated into fractals to impact the DNA.(Pierre) Oh gosh... It was a complex sentence. I won't be able to repeat it... Okay: Given the fractal...
(Chu) You talk, and we'll do the gesture! [laughter]
(Pierre) Given the fractal components of... [laughter]
(Joe) We're trying to help you!!
(L) Would you guys stop doing that! Let him ask the question. [laughter]
(Joe) It increases the signal! [laughter]
(Andromeda) What's your theory about the homeopathic dilution?
(Pierre) Given the fractal dimension of the electromagnetic connection between informational field and human beings, we think that homeopathic solutions gain potency when the succussion and dilution increase because each time you do succussion and dilution, you replicate at a different scale the same geometric signature that IS the connection to this or that part of the information field, hence increasing the potency that is fundamentally just an informational signature that you replicate and amplify at a different scale. You see what I mean? (“Succussion” is when you hit the vial. The energy provided helps to replicate the geometric signature at a different scale.)
(Joe) So start with little... Say they're like hexagons. When you succuss it, you break that one hexagon into five or six smaller versions. And you do it again and again, and eventually you saturate it with the signature of the information…
(Pierre) And since it's a fractal antenna, you receive at each frequency range, you see?
A: Not only that, but also the division is less material and more pure information field "friendly".
It is always better not to take vaccine. If situation demands, it looks we have some choices in US.Q: (Joe) Is there anything wrong with the non-mRNA vaccines? Is there anything bad about them?
A: Safer.
Q: (Pierre) Is the reason why the Western powers want to enforce the mRNA vaccines because they contain obedience sequences?
A: Yes
When it comes to the failure of collective immunity, I am flabbergasted when I see people washing their hands every five minutes. Personally, when I go somewhere where it's mandatory, I usually pretend to wash my hands with their hydroalcoholic gel.
Maybe it's an effect of one or another variants of SARS-CoV-2, yes, although I imagine that exposure to other, earlier viruses (perhaps including the activation of endogenous retroviruses - which are effectively part of a person's genetic makeup) would be involved in their 'shutting off of reality'.It's a far shot and maybe I’ve taken their “Only a little” too literally as opposed to as a 'tongue in cheek' comment, but the no-virus theory is a materialistic one, I wonder if people who bought into it are somehow more conditioned towards materialism - and if this could be a result of getting the negative variant of covid? Maybe apart from making people more submissive it also makes them more materialistic? At least those who were already susceptible to that kind of influence.