Two Bald Eagles, Locked in Combat, Crash

PerihelionX

Padawan Learner
The Greeks, Romans, and other Euro-Mediterranean cultures were particularly aware of bird omens. Perhaps it was mere superstition, however, I think they would have found this portentous:

http://www.grindtv.com/outdoor/nature/post/two-bald-eagles-in-air-battle-crash-land-at-airport/
 
They have landed on SOTT as well (taken from another source):

http://www.sott.net/article/261864-Fighting-eagles-crash-land-on-Minnesota-airport-runway
 
I would say that was pretty portentous.

Did you know that when Julius Caesar launched his civil war, the Bull was put on the standards of his legions?
 
Laura said:
I would say that was pretty portentous.

Did you know that when Julius Caesar launched his civil war, the Bull was put on the standards of his legions?

OK Laura you got me curious. I did a search for the significance of the bull symbol in relation to Caesar and didn't find anything more than that it was a common emblem of his legions, as you've said. I found that Julius had a certain attachment to the cult of Venus, and during the period of the civil war Venus was Ascendent in the constellation of Taurus. Your statement seemed to be connected to omens or portents. Did Caesar witness an omen which inspired the bull symbol?
 
I too am most curious; I boldly assume this is a comment reflective of Laura's current work on the next volume/s of CaTHoM - and there she is no doubt exploring the converging paths leading from the constellation Taurus to comets to the Bull slaying of Mithras to the envelopment of our consciousness by the great Lie.

If we are lucky Laura will no doubt develop her comment further (time permitting!). I have long been drawn to the trail of clues that leads from the neolithic caves of Europe to the fatal slaying of the great bull at the 'last supper' of Mithras, and so eagerly await further developments of her brilliant deciphering - in particular was Caesar's Bull symbol a sign of creativity or of entropy; (the great divide over which the bull image was been pulled this way and that in the latter years of its rule of some 20,000 years or more)? I suspect the latter but I await with bated breath... :D
 
PerihelionX said:
Laura said:
I would say that was pretty portentous.

Did you know that when Julius Caesar launched his civil war, the Bull was put on the standards of his legions?

OK Laura you got me curious. I did a search for the significance of the bull symbol in relation to Caesar and didn't find anything more than that it was a common emblem of his legions, as you've said. I found that Julius had a certain attachment to the cult of Venus, and during the period of the civil war Venus was Ascendent in the constellation of Taurus. Your statement seemed to be connected to omens or portents. Did Caesar witness an omen which inspired the bull symbol?

Maybe it has to do with the eagle being the symbol of the United States. So two eagles fighting it out might relate in some way to infighting in the US in relation to Julius Caesar, civil war and using the bull?
 
Did a oogle search: "Julius Caesar Bull symbol"

Wiki: _https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_legions

Scroll down to Emblem:

"
* Emblem

Legions often sported more than one emblem at the same time, and occasionally changed them. Legions raised by Caesar mostly carried a bull emblem originally; those of Augustus mostly a Capricorn
"
Astrological sign, osit
 
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