Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Midwestern kids (such as me) descended from Atlantis & Lost Tribes of Israel?

We hear alot of boasting from people descended from "ancient Israelites" who for some reason lacked the ability to understand and follow Christ, about what a special chosen people they are and how the populations containing the descendants of "ancient Israelites" who accepted Christ are junk.

Reminds me of how a long time ago I was "in love" with this girl Linda. She and I were both of midwestern US ancestry. She was thrilled by me the first time we met, and then later she would never smile, would not be my girlfriend, would not marry me. I was mystified. I was emotionally screwed up. No matter what I did I could not get her though I was convinced we were potentially a special couple. I had dreams (long before 1997 discoveries of Greg Little re the Moundbuilders of the US midwest), about how me Linda were in love and holding hands in the shadow of those big circular American Indian burial mounds.

Lately I have heard some rumor that the problem was that Linda's dad (now deceased) would not let me marry her. This news makes me feel angry because all this time she has never even called me, and I never knew her dad was the problem. Seems she is some kind of coward afraid of me. One time I had a dream that her dad was not a human but a used Israeli rifle that nobody wanted.

RE the dream about the American Indian mounds, at the time I had the dream, the academics scoffed at the theories of psychic Edgar Cayce (sometimes my dreams are psychic) that the moundbuilders of the US midwest were descended from people of ancient Atlantis and the Lost Tribes of Israel. But recently, starting in 1997, the scientific world has reduced its level of scorn re Cayce's belief that the moundbuilders of the midwestern US were descending from people of Atlantis and the Lost Tribes of Israel, as you can see from the following quotations:



At the conference Greg outlined Cayce's story of the Moundbuilders and their link with the Lost Tribes of Israel. Not too long after 10,000 B.C. according to Cayce, the Yucatan, Central Mexico, Southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico were fast becoming lands of mixed peoples from around the world. The Incas of Peru were also on the move, journeying north to join in the great Mayan development. According to Cayce, the remnants of Iltar's initial group from Atlantis also journeyed north to become the Mound Builders in the United States along the Mississippi and Ohio valleys. Around 3,000 B.C. Cayce asserted that remnants of the Lost Tribes of Israel also came to this area of the world. Coming first to the "southernmost portions" of the United States, the members of the "Lost Tribes" then moved to the Yucatan merging with the groups already established there. Sometime later, this mixture of people moved north into America eventually becoming the moundbuilders.
-- http://www.cyberspaceorbit.com/areatlanx.htm


A number of academic archaeology textbooks rudely dismiss Edgar Cayce’s pronouncements about ancient history. Cayce was, to them, a “cult archaeologist” — unworthy of further investigation. The authors of those books, all scholars and archaeologists, claim that they have read Cayce’s readings and found them inaccurate, plagiarized, or filled with errors and bizarre claims. In Mound Builders, the authors begin by carefully evaluating the archaeologists’ “scientific” and scholarly assessments of Cayce. What is revealed is every bit as astounding as the claims made by Edgar Cayce himself. Nearly everything about Cayce put forth by the scholars in their books is an outright fabrication or a monumental blunder by these supposed scholars. When confronted by their obvious mistakes, the responses of two of the archaeologists showed how deeply divided their field is today. One fully admitted the mistakes and vowed to change his writings. Another arrogantly refused to change anything despite writing in his book he was dedicated to “truth.”
-- http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0940829363/ref=ase_worldmyster07-20/104-7423489-6387949

Despite the claims of archaeologists, the history of ancient America put forth in Edgar Cayce’s readings has never been tested. Edgar Cayce, America’s famous “Sleeping Prophet,” gave 68 “psychic readings” between 1925 to 1944 that provided information on America’s Mound Builders and ancient American history. These readings have never been thoroughly analyzed and have been largely forgotten. For the first time, Cayce’s statements about ancient America are genuinely compared to current archaeological evidence. The authors relate that they began with a skeptical point of view but the weight of the evidence eventually showed Cayce’s accuracy. Incredibly, nearly everything Cayce related about the Mound Builders and the patterns of migrations to ancient America is true.
-- http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0940829363/ref=ase_worldmyster07-20/104-7423489-6387949

Greg admitted that prior to 1997, virtually none of Cayce's statements about the moundbuilders or ancient American history could have been taken seriously. He also related his earlier skepticism regarding Cayce's outline of history simply because it completely contradicted known archaeological findings. However, since the collapse of the "Clovis First" theory in 1997, an astonishing series of finds have almost totally supported Cayce's statements. For example, 11 sites in the Americas have been dated before Clovis' 9500 B.C. date with several showing occupation dates at 50,000 B.C. Analysis of skulls found in the Americas show evidence of coming from Polynesia, Asia, China, Australia, and Europe.
-- http://www.cyberspaceorbit.com/areatlanx.htm

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