Thursday, December 4, 2008

The Destroyer

Speaking of Nuberu, ancient Sumer's earth-like planet in close orbit about our sun Sol's mysterious brown-dwarf companion (a Jupiter-size body called "the Destroyer" in creation myths based on priestly sky-watchers' millennia-long "portent astronomy"): By Hubble telescope and earlier observations, binary stars make up eight out of ten (80%) of all galactic systems. Due to its distance and eccentric orbit, Nuberu's unobserved --conventionally unsuspected-- parent sun approaches Sol only at intervals of 3,600 years. When this occurs we might expect all manner of periodic disturbances, ranging from orbital and Oort Cloud perturbations to climatic, volcanic, and other geophysical effects on Earth.

Interestingly, an esoteric Dark Age work known as the Kolbrin (Culbrian) Bible, said to have been salvaged from Glastonbury Abbey following an arson attack in AD 1184, collects secular historical accounts of worldwide cataclysms datable by Sumerian cuneiform to about 5200 BC. As recounted by Kolbrin's 6-book Egyptian Texts, these events were followed 3,600 years later by Pharaoh's biblical Ten Plagues recounted as divine retribution in the Old Testament's Book of Exodus (c. 1600 BC). Tying Moses to New Testament prophesies, Kolbrin preserves a 5-book set of Celtic Texts in form of a "survivors' diary" rather than a revelation, extrapolating from Exodus and the later Crucifixion to an end-of-days scenario set thirty-six hundred years after Pharaoh's troubles, i.e. in this, our early 21st Century AD.

Well, now! Most dime-a-dozen Doomsday forecasts do not cite Sumerian portent-astronomy from c. 5200 BC in context of Egypt's Ten Mosaic Plagues, nor are they Dark Age manuscripts traceable to 12th Century monastic libraries. Moreover, for Kolbrin purposes Glastonbury Abbey seems singularly a propos. Founded in the mid-6th Century,
endowed by Kings of Wessex from AD 712, this "rich and powerful" community in Somersetshire had compiled legends of King Arthur and the Holy Grail for centuries before the Conquest. The Abbey's famed collections extended far-afield, most certainly to Alexandrine and Syriac repositories where Sumerian records of interest would remain semi-intact.

The plot thickens. In Crop Circle Connector, a major archive source despite certain, um, credulous or even conspiricist tendencies, an article by one Marshall Masters dated 07/26/2008 discusses a "Planet X / Nibiru" (sic) circle that appeared in Avebury, Wiltshire (U.K.) on 07/15/2008, ten days before (qv). On the basis of this quite elaborate, large-scale diagram, Masters asserts that during the Winter Solstice of 2012 planetary alignments "clearly indicate" that our ninth planet Pluto is poised for violent expulsion from the solar system. This could occur only in context of a major gravitational anomaly such as Sumer's dark Destroyer swinging close to Sol again with Nuberu in tow. Whatever earthly disruptions follow, they are sure to be unpleasant, sweetheart.

Strangely enough, December 22, 2012 is the date specified by Aztec and Mayan astrologic/zodiacal canons for the 26,000-year completion of a Great Cycle, when Earth's precession comes full-circle to "fold the page again." Various New Age doom-sayers have exploited this sophisticated Long Count calendar (which employs zero in its positional notation) to independently predict Earthly disasters ranging from magnetic-reversal to Pole shifts, even plate-tectonic upheavals due to a "galactic realignment" casting Sol off-balance from the Milky Way's vast plane-of-the-ecliptic.

Since Meso-American and Aztec cultures perished many centuries ago, their forecasts are certainly disinterested. Even so, an unseen brown-dwarf Destroyer in
an eccentric 3,600-hundred year orbit about Sol impinging on Earth coincident with these antique Codices' 26,000-year calendrical cycle seems far-fetched. But viewed in conjunction with recent Crop Circles, Glastonbury's Kolbrin Bible, and cuneiform astronomical records of Sumer, major upheavals would have ample precedent. Hogwash, say all reputable commentators.

It had better be.

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