07 March, 2022

Why haven't we done it in the road?

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Just a note on the "History project," I may have figured out a large part of the basic source of the conspiracies I'm trying to figure out.  It's fairly simple, so even if I'm wrong on the specifics, it does strike me as being basically correct.

I ran into the Eleusinian Mysteries which were popular in ancient Greece.  To a large extent, they were mysteries so little is known about them to this day.  But to another large extent, they were well-known, civic events for Athenians and other Greeks of their time.  There were basically two mysteries, the Lesser Mystery which explained the misery for our soul of being in our body and the Greater Mystery, some sort of truth about our souls in the world and the hereafter.

Plato said "The ultimate design of the Mysteries was to lead us back to the principles from which we descended, a perfect enjoyment of intellectual [spiritual] good."  That's an example of how this wasn't a major conspiracy only a few people knew about it.  It did become forbidden to include anyone didn't speak Greek, but everybody was allowed to join, even slaves.

Basically it sounds like an excuse for religious orgies.  They might have even been intoxicated, if you can believe that.

The premise came from around 1500BC, worshiping Demeter and her daughter Persephone.  Mother goddesses who represent the seasons, that's a fairly obvious place to start a religion.  It should also be noted that Persephone's father was also her uncle, Demeter's brother Zeus.  Then Persephone's other uncle Hades was hot for her and kidnapped her to take her underground which made Demeter sad, and that's ultimately why the seasons were created.

Well, that explains everything, no further questions.

This is what I mean by having basically the right idea even if I'm wrong on the details.  It's goddess-worship, it explains the seasons, it's not like people at the time knew anything about nature and it includes the incest that was so popular for most of history.  And I'm coming to the theory that this is basically the source of whatever evil is trying to rip us apart.  Even if I'm wrong about the Mysteries and the Zeus/Hades/Demeter threesome, it still basically falls into line with the 'that's what leftists are into' category.

Remember, it wasn't all that long ago that we finally realized women can't get pregnant if men don't give them sperm.  It's safe to assume women figured it out much earlier.  If they don't have sex, they don't get pregnant and then they have nobody to feed them when they're old.  Men just want sex so they didn't give it any further thought and women kept it secret for as long as possible.

This would be important as a basis for goddess-worship.  Eventually men did figure it out, then were able to start writing laws and building cities, but the goddess-worship stayed around for a long time.  Frankly, it's probably never left.  This particular version, the Eleusinian Mysteries, doesn't seem to have spread so far around the continent - except centuries later as history - but the basic concept was probably worldwide.

There are other famous names who obviously knew what was going on, this religion lasted for well over a thousand years, but the ones that stuck out most to me started with Augustus.  He was initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries just after the Battle of Actium in 31BC, which is essentially where he won his war against Mark Anthony and Cleopatra.  They would still last for a while longer but their army was abandoning them and the ending was obvious by this point.

And this is when Augustus (not yet using that name) joins this long-running religion?  Maybe he did it to get through negotiations of forming the Roman Empire, maybe he was a deeply-believing mystic, maybe he just wanted to get laid after the battle, but *this* is when he learned the mysteries?  He's now in charge, to the extent there was an organized religion here, they'd take him to the top right away.  They might be hoping he'd return the favor.

Remember, it was during Augustus' time as Emperor that God decided Jesus Christ would be born, and what relationship do they have?  [I really don't think Jesus is God's son but obviously God has been willing to permit that belief for two thousand years so it's kind of a moot point.]

The other major name I noticed was Emperor Hadrian.  I noticed that he was the first emperor to really start reorganizing the government, he's possibly the only emperor that really travelled all over the empire and went through the Mysteries while he passed through Athens.  He also crushed some Jews in revolt but did maintain the new rule of not persecuting Christians just because they were Christian, there had to be an actual reason.  This may be the first major example of accusers having to *prove* that a crime was committed before the accused can be punished.

A few decades after Hadrian, the Mysteries started breaking down, partially because other emperors were really into this Christianity thing, possibly others were attacking as well.  That's really not clear but there's a reason they're still called "mysteries."

A couple later emperors did try to bring the Mysteries back but they were basically gone.  Officially anyway, goddess-worship never seems to get too far away.  I do find it hard to believe that whatever secrets they had are totally gone.  That would explain the sort of 'conspiracy' I'm looking for.  And again, even if I'm wrong on these details, you can probably see my point, this is what The Enemy is going for whether they realize it or not.

Gotta admit, I'm tempted to say I've figured it all out as much as I needed to, the only part left is still trying to explain the 'why.'

One more point, I was wondering where this might have came from.  Athens probably didn't just wake up one day a few thousand years ago with this nifty idea.  They may have gotten the basic concepts from Egypt but they also came up with their own specifically Greek details, notably Demeter and Persephone.  

Then I thought of Crete, the Minoan civilization.  It was clearly one of the most advanced societies of its time but we don't know much about it because we still can't read their writing.  But they had writing and they were obviously capable of getting around the Mediterranean, being roughly halfway between Greece and Egypt.

The civilization fell apart, the most common theory is that a volcano went off (@1500BC) and that was basically it.  People might not have fled immediately but they started getting out.  Even though it had been founded long before, within a century after the volcano, Athens had become the major hotspot.  And that was around the time that the Eleusinian Mysteries officially started.

I made all this up, no doubt about that, but it does sound roughly accurate, right?  Early goddess-worshipers, with or without influence from Egypt (or Mohenjo-Daro), developed the Greek myths as we know them, formed one of the major societies of the millennium, but they were trying to get by without men in charge so it fell apart like the others.  They fled to Greece and started it again, much more successfully, reaching the top of the brand-new Roman Empire only to find the new religion dominated.  So again they fell apart and had to try again.

From there it's even more of a guess.  Their mentality always seems to be feudalism so they had that going for them even without goddess-worship, but Christianity inspired more progress which led to more exploration and even more progress.

Since the mysteries were never known, they were easy to ignore.  The most obvious objection to my theory that I can think of is 'why wouldn't this ever be known about before in all these centuries?'  I can't be the first person who thought of it.  Goddess-worship has always been an obvious enemy of mankind.  Does it matter whether the first attempt came from Greece, Egypt, Crete or Lower Slobbovia?

No, not really.  Maybe it's just useful for a simple explanation.  Meanwhile, there's still the 'why?'

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