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The below conversation was written to entertain and to stimulate ideas on a forum long time ago.  It's not serious science. It does reflect some of my convictions, though.

Fido-UFO / Date: 22 Sep 95 10:05:06 To: Michael D.

Sweet Sixteen

Subj: Pyramidiocy - Nasca, Baalbek, Coral Castle.

-=> Quoting Michael Danehy to JM <=- -=> Quoting Jiri M to All <=-

JM> Why do so many dwell on the idea that Nasca stands or falls on the local spaceport hypothesis. The length of the perfectly straight lines would indicate to me that fast orbiting vehicles could take good bearings from these to other places all over our planet....

MD> "What does God need of a starship?"

Dunno. To be a mote in God's eye?

MD> "What do advanced aliens need of a spaceport?"

Let's see what you have to say. By me, a first class spaceport requires a bar with genuine Czech beer, made in Pilsen and Budweiss. (V V)<-<cheers>

MD> The skeptics, of course, consider the "spaceport" theory to be
ridiculous. It is _the believers_ who have suggested that "Well gee,
those Nasca lines are probably spaceports!", but luckily the skepti-
bunkers are right here to point out the obvious inconsistency and laugh.

In my opinion, it's the skeptics, who always return to this fallacy. Every day, they celebrate a new anniversary of their victory in the battle of Daniken's 'alien spaceport' at Nazca.
How out of date...
My work has imbued the figures with new magic. You've seen the gifs.

MD> If that old USAF handbook is correct and the UFOs of today are
the mythical "fireballs" and "flaming chariots" of ancient times -- as most
ancient astronaut proponents sincerely believe -- then surely the B.C.
aliens would have landed and flown back to their mothership at will.
No spaceports needed.

This is your Arbitrary version of what the aliens were like. For the sake of arbitrariness, neither did they need any motherships. You conferred a commuter status upon them. But, why should they be commuters? Are you a commuter? That explains it.

MD> Yet, the believers are so quick to alienize _every_ extraordinary thing (eg. pyramids,
wheels within wheels, big monkeys, etc...) that they lose all judgement. Incredible.

JM>_ The length of the perfectly straight lines would indicate to me
JM>
that fast orbiting vehicles could take good bearings from these to
JM> other places all over our planet.

MD> I give you credit. This is certainly a more rational theory than that silly "spaceport" nonsense.

Actually, even slow moving archaeologists might be able to take
good bearings from these to other places all over our planet...

<snip>

MD> Where is the evidence that alien super-beings lifted those stone blocks?

Right there, of course. And it won't go away, either. Perhaps, the stone movers were alien, perhaps they were Atlantean. Perhaps, the Atlanteans had their technology from aliens,
perhaps not. But Somebody had moved those blocks!
We know that all the world's debunkers tethered together to the stone known as Hadjar el Gouble, still couldn't move it by Low-Tech. Conclusion: It was moved by some kind of High-Tech. Right?

MD> If aliens did lift those blocks then how?

Help me categorize and solve the ancient pictorial-geometrical time capsules, which are unsolved on our hands, and we may learn the method. I think that the message Is there.

MD> Take a look at the past megalithic accomplishments of man:
MD> The Pyramids, Stonehenge, Corral Castle...

Yeh, and Sacsayhuaman, Macchu Picchu, Tiahuanaco, etc. Isn't it funny by the standards of linearly primitive darwinism that the further we go back, the bigger the stone blocks get? Is this not inside out?

Re: Coral Castle. - "Edward Leedskalnin, I presume". And how many Aliens working with him silently, all night long? <Grin> A ninety-pound man. You know the story... My wrinkle is that when querried as to how he accomplished his incredible feats, he said:

"I did it for my sweet sixteen".

Everybody thinks that he meant his nostalgic love, a girl who would always be sixteen in his memory..  * Yet, 16 happens to give the first two digits of the Phi-ratio, (also Divine Proportion, Golden Section, Golden Mean.) The Pythagoreans called it simply the Section. This ratio is also the principle behind the five-pointed star, a naturally magical form, which BTW, the satanists are trying to have to thems- elves, so demonstrably, but which is manifestly the sweet' organizing principle of so much life around us, and in us. As such, it must belong to God the Creator, rather than Satan the Destroyer. Sorry, for this over-reaction to your quip, religion is off topic here [Fidonet-UFO].
In memory of Leedskalnin, a good man, I call the Phi-ratio - the Sweet Sixteen... (At least this one time:)
Leedskalnin had harnessed the full potential of this sweet,
somehow. At least - that is the clue he gives. Can you see it that way?
The same clue that the Knights Templar indicate in their constructions re: the Holy Grail - the San Greal - the Golden Fleece. The center of the Templars' activities was Chateau Rennes, located in the same area of France, as La Marche with its 14,000 years old Science-Art exploits on the Phi-ratio, or Sweet-Sixteen...
Hmm, quite a coincidence, wouldn't U say? (!!!) Anyway, the question to
Leedskalnin was How - not - Whom for. But he had to make his answer a riddle,
so he said: For his sweet...

Naturally, to him it was a holy (sweet) symbol of all Goodness.


I did it for my "Sweet" Sixteen

I did it for my "Mean" Sixteen

I did it for my "Sweet Mean"?

I did it for my Golden Mean? .... (Phi-ratio = 1.6 ***etc.)

(chorus) - Oh, mah Sweet Sixteen 

( continued in part two - GP's Ramp 'Theory' Refuted )            Discussion Forum
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