Georgia Guidestones 2014 (Banned on Blogger)
The Georgia Guidestones monument is one the most mysterious constructions on Earth, at least among constructions as new as it is. It stands on top of a prominent rise alongside a main road a few miles north of Elberton, Georgia USA and its origins are surrounded in controversy and enigma. Nobody knows who was behind it. We only know that in 1979 a local firm of granite masons was hired to build the monument by a man calling himself “RC Christian”. This Mr Christian was clearly very rich because the project was an expensive one; the only problem is that RC Christian wasn’t his real name. Nobody knows who his real name is and his identity remains unknown to this day. The Georgia Guidestones are over nineteen feet high, made of granite and are manifestly inspired by the ancient Neolithic monuments of Europe. They consist of four upright oblong slabs, aligned to the points of the compass like ancient megalithic sites often are, and a central pillar on top of which is a square capstone. A short distance away is an additional block with an English inscription outlining some basic, but also cryptic and incomplete, information about the structure; it includes the slogan: Let these be guidestones to an Age of Reason. This block also announces that a time capsule is buried beneath the monument, but the instructions given about when it should be unearthed are unfinished. Nobody knows what is inside the alleged time capsule nor is there any evidence that anything is buried at the site. However, it is the main inscription on the upright slabs that is the most contentious and relevant part of this issue. It is a list of ten clauses which form some kind of revolutionary constitution for how the world should be governed, according to the author. It reads as follows:
Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
Guide reproduction wisely, improving fitness and diversity.
Unite humanity with a living new language. Rule passion, faith, tradition and all things with tempered reason.
Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
Let all nations rule internally, resolving external disputes in a world court.
Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
Balance personal rights with social duties.
Prize truth, beauty, love, seeking harmony with the infinite.
Be not a cancer on the earth- leave room for nature, leave room for nature.
The list is repeated eight times in eight of the world’s principle languages: English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese and Russian.
Some of the clauses sound undeniably progressive, but others are more loaded and could indeed have very sinister implications. The Georgia Guidestones were unveiled in March 1980 and quickly became very popular with New Age believers, liberal political activists and environmentalists. Several weddings have been held there. Yoko Ono called the site "a stirring call to rational thinking". However the conspiratorial activist Mark Dice considers them “The Ten Commandments of the Antichrist!” and has asked that the Elbert County authorities, who own the site today, demolish it. I myself find the Georgia Guidestones deeply unsettling and malevolent. Even the superficially benign proclamations when applied practically can only result in a world of very authoritarian global government with extremely limited independence for nations, communities and individuals. The statements relating to population levels and reproduction are a very blatant incitement to a massive forced human cull and eugenics; see here for more details: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/bases-project-live-in-london.html. It has been described as a "blueprint for the New World Order", and to be honest, if it’s not intended that way it still might as well be. The strange thing is that since it was erected thirty-four years ago there have been some alterations which are as surreptitious as the original working. Most notably in 2009 somebody fitted a corner placard on one of the uprights. This was later inscribed with the numbers 20 and 14. What does this mean? Could it mean the year 2014? Well, that is the year at the time of writing; does this mean some major event is due to happen this year? The Elbert County authorities have now removed the placard, but in doing so they revealed it to be a cuboid block with a longer hidden inscription. The whole of it now reads: 8 16 20 14 MM JAM. This is meaningless; could it be a message in code? If so can the code be broken? If the row of numbers 8 16 20 14 refer to the 16th of August 2014 then that date has already passed… thankfully. Who put that extra piece on the Guidestones, and why? Was it “RC Christian” back again or somebody else operating independently? There are no answers here, only more questions. See: http://beforeitsnews.com/economy/2014/09/breaking-georgia-guide-stones-2014-stone-removed-revealing-additional-engravings-2662980.html.