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Ark News and Musings
#1
Good News! If you like apocalyptic horror shows, the Ark was apparently remote viewed by the CIA... because for some reason that was important in 1988.

And for this thread, I'm going to assume this is real and remote viewer No. 032 saw something in their meditation-like projection of arab consciousness.

https://m.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeol...dium=obbow

Quote:"The target is a container. The container contains another container inside it," Remote Viewer No. 032 stated, according to the New York Post. The remote viewer further described the object as being "hidden—subterranean, dark, and wet," indicating the concealed nature of its location.

The viewer perceived the presence of protective entities, warning that anyone attempting unauthorized access to the Ark would be "destroyed by the protectors of the container by a force unknown to us." Additionally, Remote Viewer No. 032 suggested that the site was populated by Arabic-speaking individuals dressed in all white, with visuals indicating the presence of mosque domes, as reported by Insider Paper.

Well that's easy to guess.

I'm gonna guess it's here:

[Image: Screenshot_20250328_030358_Maps.jpg]

Just seems like that's the place Arabs would take it. And if that's too easy, it's definitely Saudi Arabia. All the royalty oil ones like wearing white, but I'm not seeing it in Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, UAE, or even Jordan.

I think it's just a box. While there might be an artifact of biblical significance inside it, it could also be the original Al Capone ganster vault. Or something like Joseph's Smith's biblical plates in a tophat.

Exodus is such a badly written narrative if you take it literally. If wandering the desert is a metaphor for "splitting off from The Canaanites and coming up with a language exactly comparable to Phoenician, and turning Baal into Yahweh, I'm for the narrative.

But how can you get lost for 40 years on a peninsula the size of West Virginia bordered on almost all sides by water?

It takes about 2 weeks at 15 miles a day to walk across the 200 mile length West Virginia. Just really screwed up of any living god to lead 'Moses' in circles in a relatively small area for decades.

And because I don't buy the Exodus story for the MANY historical, geographical, and chronological problems, all associated vessels containing divine sky food, a flower stick, and some tablets from the time they got lost in the desert is very hard to believe.

I'm wondering what it is the Saudi's actually have. It's probably taboo to the point nobody shall look upon it. Only guard it. The fear of the force that guards it could just be the viewer picking up on the belief of those who watch it?

And like the pyramids, they'll never let science touch it's hands upon their antiquity if it contradicts their story.

A scientist might, you know, not even be the least bit superstitious about what could happen if you open it. Or scan it using modern technology.

As far as remote viewing and it's sister phenomenon astral projection, I draw no difference between these psychics and Buddhists meditating.

While I don't believe in anything truly astral or divine, I believe in electromagnetism. I believe is resonant frequencies and ionization. I believe in Delta, Theta, and occasionally Alpha waves in the extremely low hertz range.

Or in 90s Hippie terms.

You're a transistor
Lightening resistor
Conducting to the Mother Star
That's what you are




Only that "mother star" in my opinion does NOT EXIST OUTSIDE our material universe. Its in our time/space. As brainwaves are indeed bound by the forces of our phenomenal existence.

No one agrees with me on this either. Not expecting that to change.

Last Edit:

Quote:Bonus Experiment For Your Next Party:

It helps when people are drunk, they do it so much better.

Have person one (doesn't need to be intoxicated) go into a separate room and pick a single object to stare at..

Have person two try to draw what person one is looking at.

The results will astound you and make you a believer in a psychic interconnected existence.

Explanations for the how and why may vary.
[Image: New-sig-V6.68.jpg][Image: Screenshot_20250212_223830_Sketchbook.jpg]



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#2
I was just flipping through my archeological youtube videos and apparently the found the ark, intact. They did not say is it was the Ark of the Convenant, just the Ark, whatever that means.

What will the find next? And to boot, this is not headline news.
"The real trouble with reality is that there is no background music." Anonymous

Plato's Chariot Allegory
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#3
(03-28-2025, 10:14 PM)quintessentone Wrote: I was just flipping through my archeological youtube videos and apparently the found the ark, intact. They did not say is it was the Ark of the Convenant, just the Ark, whatever that means.

What will the find next? And to boot, this is not headline news.

In regard to the signature on your post, I always though that they could make a superhero movie where the hero has a power where they guess what is going to happen because they can hear the background music.

Tongue
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#4
(03-31-2025, 05:50 PM)chr0naut Wrote: In regard to the signature on your post, I always though that they could make a superhero movie where the hero has a power where they guess what is going to happen because they can hear the background music.

Tongue

They sort of already did make a movie somewhat relating to that concept, that being 'Unbreakable' starring Bruce Willis. Instead of hearing people's background psychological music, he can read people's thoughts or know intuitively what evil people are up to via enhanced ESP from a car accident.  Anyway, as usual, we digress.
"The real trouble with reality is that there is no background music." Anonymous

Plato's Chariot Allegory
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#5
(04-01-2025, 06:40 AM)quintessentone Wrote: They sort of already did make a movie somewhat relating to that concept, that being 'Unbreakable' starring Bruce Willis. Instead of hearing people's background psychological music, he can read people's thoughts or know intuitively what evil people are up to via enhanced ESP from a car accident.  Anyway, as usual, we digress.

Actually, "Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist" was almost that, but without the superhero bit. Fun series, too.
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#6
Are we talking about the Ark of the Covenant Noah's zoological cruise ship or superhero movies...

https://x.com/i/grok/share/oWaY8w9Zr3rVDButv9fDG8ldV
Quote: The current location of the Ark of the Covenant remains one of history’s enduring mysteries, with no definitive evidence pinpointing its whereabouts as of April 1, 2025. The Ark, described in the Bible as a sacred chest containing the tablets of the Ten Commandments, was last definitively mentioned in scripture around 587 BCE, when the Babylonians, led by Nebuchadnezzar II, sacked Jerusalem and destroyed Solomon’s Temple, where it was housed. Since then, its fate has been the subject of speculation, religious tradition, and archaeological debate, but no concrete proof has emerged.
Leading Theories
  1. Ethiopia - Church of St. Mary of Zion, Aksum
    • One of the most prominent claims comes from Ethiopian tradition, which asserts that the Ark was taken to Ethiopia by Menelik I, the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. It is said to reside in the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in Aksum, guarded by a single priest known as the "Guardian of the Ark." The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church maintains this belief, but no outsider has been allowed to verify it. Scholars remain skeptical due to the lack of physical evidence and the story’s reliance on the Kebra Nagast, a 13th-century text blending history and legend.
  2. Under the Temple Mount, Jerusalem
    • Some Jewish and Christian traditions suggest the Ark was hidden beneath the Temple Mount before or during the Babylonian siege. The Bible (2 Chronicles 35:3) mentions King Josiah ordering Levites to place the Ark in the Temple, and later rabbinical sources, like the Mishnah, hint at secret chambers where it might have been concealed. Excavations are prohibited due to the site’s religious and political sensitivity, leaving this theory untested.
  3. Mount Nebo, Jordan
    • The apocryphal book of 2 Maccabees (2:4-8) claims the prophet Jeremiah hid the Ark in a cave on Mount Nebo (or a nearby peak) before Jerusalem’s fall, to protect it from the Babylonians. This location, overlooking the Dead Sea, has been searched sporadically, but no significant findings have confirmed the Ark’s presence.
  4. Lost or Destroyed
    • A more secular view posits that the Ark was either looted by the Babylonians in 587 BCE and melted down for its gold or destroyed during the Temple’s destruction. The absence of any mention in Babylonian records, which meticulously cataloged spoils, weakens the looting theory, but natural decay or deliberate concealment remain plausible.
  5. Other Speculations
    • Alternative theories include locations like a cave near Qumran (near the Dead Sea Scrolls site), a hiding place in Yemen tied to ancient Jewish migrations, or even under British or Templar control (e.g., the Languedoc region of France or Scotland’s Rosslyn Chapel). These ideas, often popularized by media like Raiders of the Lost Ark, lack credible historical backing.
Current Status
No archaeological expedition, modern technology (e.g., ground-penetrating radar), or declassified record as of April 1, 2025, has located the Ark. Claims on X and fringe websites occasionally surface—some alleging it’s in a Vatican vault or a U.S. military base—but these are unsubstantiated. The most rigorous investigations, such as those by Israeli archaeologists or Ethiopian researchers, have yielded no results accessible to the public. The Ark’s small size (approximately 45 x 27 x 27 inches, per Exodus 25:10) and the passage of over 2,600 years make its survival and discovery increasingly unlikely without a major breakthrough.
In short, the Ark of the Covenant’s location is unknown. The Ethiopian claim is the most persistent, but without verification, it remains as speculative as the others. It could be hidden, destroyed, or lost to time—history offers no clear answer yet.
His mind was not for rent to any god or government, always hopeful yet discontent. Knows changes aren't permanent, but change is ....                                                                                                                   
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Neil Ellwood Peart  
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