Secret HistoryS


Info

First Director-General of UNESCO was an advocate of global population control, eugenics

From the ancient Acropolis in Athens, to the city in the sky in Peru; the only time many people hear about UNESCO - the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization - is in relation to their world heritage programme. What must be documented however, are the views and opinions of UNESCO's first Director-General, Julian Huxley.

Julian Huxley
Born in London in 1887, Huxley (pictured to the left) was an evolutionary biologist, philosopher, author and internationalist, who served as the head of UNESCO from 1946 to 1948. The brother of Brave New World author, Aldous Huxley, and the grandson of "Darwin's bulldog," Thomas Henry Huxley, the former UNESCO chief was from a family deeply entrenched within the British elite. Huxley was also a founding member of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), in addition to being an influential figure in popularising the movement of transhumanism.

But what most concerns us here is his devotion to the religion of the global elite; namely eugenics. Huxley was a prominent member of the British Eugenics Society, serving both as vice-president and president of the society in his lifetime. He wrote numerous essays throughout his life, writing extensively on eugenics and the need to depopulate the planet. In a 1964 essay titled: The Humanist Frame, the former UNESCO head reveals his desire to decrease the global population:
"The world has to achieve the difficult task of reversing the direction of its thought about population. It has to begin thinking that our aim should be not increase but decrease - immediate decrease in the rate of population-growth; and in the long run, decrease in the absolute number of people in the world."

Comment: For further reading:



Info

Archaeologists have made a sinister discovery: 3,000-year-old skeleton of teenager found among animal remains on mountain once worshiped as birthplace of Zeus

Greece
Archaeologists have made a sinister discovery at the top of a Greek mountain which might corroborate one of the darkest legends of antiquity.

Excavations this summer on Mount Lykaion, once worshipped as the birthplace of the god Zeus, uncovered the 3,000-year-old skeleton of a teenager amid a mound of ashes built up over a millennium from sacrificed animals.

Greece's Culture Ministry said Wednesday that the skeleton, probably of an adolescent boy, was found in the heart of the 30-meter (100-foot) broad ash altar, next to a man-made stone platform.

Map

First Americans took coastal route to get to North America

American immigration map
© Willerslev et alThe first humans to populate North America probably got there by traveling along the coast, new research suggests. The ice free passageway in the interior of the continent probably didn't support vegetation or wildlife necessary to sustain the long voyage.
The first Americans may have traveled to their new home along the coast, new research suggests.

The findings clash with long-held views that the first Americans traveled through the interior of the continent from Siberia into North America, as textbooks have taught for decades. The new study reveals that a huge chunk of the interior land route was either devoid of food or sunk beneath a forbidding lake for hundreds of years after people from the Clovis culture showed up in the Southwest.

"It would have been a real barrier to cross," said study co-author Eske Willerslev, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Cambridge in England.

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Cassiopaea

Symbols of Transition: Shifting sands unveil 'stick man' petroglyphs on Hawaii beach

petroglyph hawaii
Archaeologists in Hawaii have unearthed what have been described as a rare series of petroglyphs created by aboriginal inhabitants of the Waianae coast. The rock art is believed to be over 400 years old.

The petroglyphs, which are images carved into rock, were found along the coast after shifting sands revealed at least 10 figures etched into the sandstone underneath stretching over 60 feet of beach.

The discovery was an accident, being spotted by Lonnie Watson and Mark Louvier, a Texas couple who were just walking the beach to watch the sunset last month.

Comment: These are not unique to Hawaii:

petroglyphs plasma
© thunderbolts.info
Such petroglyphs/cave art have been found all over the world. Thunderbolts Project researchers, whom we believe are on the right track, have put together a compelling case for these being representations of classic plasma 'z-pinch' formations, which likely appeared in the sky, to the astonishment of people on the ground, at times of global upheaval/climate shift. Check out the Thunderbolts documentary 'Symbols of an Alien Sky'.

Excerpt:




Sun

Solar storm almost started WWIII in 1967

View of the Sun on May 23, 1967
© NSOA view of the Sun on May 23, 1967, in a narrow visible wavelength of light called Hydrogen-alpha. The bright region in the top center region of brightness shows the area where the large flare occurred.
The Cold War was filled with nuclear annihilation close-calls: There was the '62 Cuban Missile Crisis, the NORAD Computer Glitch in '70, the Nuclear False Alarm of 1983, and likely many we'll never know about. But there's one incident that has gone under the radar for decades. A new paper to be published in the journal Space Weather finally paints a detailed portrait of a 1967 solar storm that almost spurred the U.S. Air Force to attack the Soviet Union and potential ignite World War III.

Here's the deal: On May 23, 1967, the United States noticed its surveillance radars the near poles were jamming up. Naturally, defense officials assumed it was the Soviet Union preparing to attack American soil — so the Air Force began to make its own preparations to strike the Russians.

Problem was, the Russians were not to blame. The culpable party was the sun, which was in the midst of a particularly nasty solar storm. When the sun is producing major flares, the resulting energy can charge up nearby particles and cause electromagnetic disturbances that affect the ionosphere — the part of the Earth's atmosphere that helps propagate radio wave emissions over large distances.

Although solar activity was still not widely understood, by the 1950s the U.S. military knew how eruptions on the surface the sun could hamper communications on Earth. By the following decade, the Air Force established the Air Weather Service to regularly monitor the sun for solar flares.

Comment: Think it couldn't happen today? Think again! Out of any of the 'nuclear war' scenarios currently being thrown around, this reminder from 1967 may very well be repeated sans 'cooler heads prevailing'. This story provides a glimpse into the paranoid hubris of our leaders and touches on their blind reaction to a 'cosmic threat'. In today's atmosphere of US-driven rabid fear and paranoia towards Russia, how do you think our fearful leaders would respond when something wicked this way comes.


Colosseum

Archaeologists discover ancient magic spells on site of Roman city

Inscriptions etched on tiny rolls of gold and silver found alongside skeletons of people buried almost 2,000 years ago
serbia
© Djordje Kojadinovic/ReutersChief archaeologist Miomir Korać displays one of the gold rolls covered in symbols and writing.
Archaeologists in Serbia are trying to decipher magic spells etched on to tiny rolls of gold and silver that have been found alongside skeletons of humans buried almost 2,000 years ago.

"The alphabet is Greek, that much we know. The language is Aramaic - it's a Middle Eastern mystery to us," said Miomir Korać, the chief archaeologist at the site.

The skeletons were discovered at the foot of a massive coal-fired power station in Kostolac, north-eastern Serbia, where searches are being carried out before another unit of the electricity plant is built on the site of an ancient Roman city, Viminacium.

Magnify

3,000 year old thread and bobbin found at Bronze Age village excavation

Ancient thread and bobbin
© Cambridge Archaeological UnitThread wrapped around a bobbin was exceptionally well preserved; the archaeologists described it as looking "almost new."
An unusually delicate pair of artifacts recently emerged from a dig site in the United Kingdom: a tiny ball of thread and another length of thread wound around a bobbin. Both are estimated to be approximately 3,000 years old.

The fragile fiber objects appeared during the excavation of a Bronze Age village near what is now Petersborough, in eastern England. The location, known as Must Farm, is thought to have been abandoned suddenly after a fire decimated the settlement thousands of years ago. Many everyday objects were left behind, and are now being discovered and brought to light for the first time.

Archaeologists working on the project shared images of the thread ball and bobbin on the project's Facebook page. That generated a discussion thread (naturally) that drew dozens of questions and comments from curious readers, though in-depth analysis of the finds is yet to come.

The photo of the first fiber object, a miniscule thread ball that still appears to be neatly wound, was posted on July 21, and the archaeologists described its condition as "amazing." They explained that the thread was probably so well preserved because it was made of plant fiber, "likely flax or nettle," that carbonized in the fire and then became waterlogged — a process that helped protect it.

Comment: Bronze Age discovery: A 3000-year-old community has been unearthed


Info

Maya site uncovered in Belize, yields "snake dynasty" hieroglyphic panels

Xunantunich
© Jaime Awe Xunantunich, in western Belize, where archaeologists found a tomb and hieroglyphic panels depicting the history of the ‘snake dynasty’.
Archaeologists have uncovered what may be the largest royal tomb found in more than a century of work on Maya ruins in Belize, along with a puzzling set of hieroglyphic panels that provide clues to a "snake dynasty" that conquered many of its neighbors some 1,300 years ago.

The tomb was unearthed at the ruins of Xunantunich, a city on the Mopan river in western Belize that served as a ceremonial center in the final centuries of Maya dominance around 600 to 800AD. Archaeologists found the chamber 16ft to 26ft below ground, where it had been hidden under more than a millennium of dirt and debris.

Researchers found the tomb as they excavated a central stairway of a large structure: within were the remains of a male adult, somewhere between 20 and 30 years old, lying supine with his head to the south.

The archaeologist Jaime Awe said preliminary analysis by osteologists found the man was athletic and "quite muscular" at his death, and that more analysis should provide clues about his identity, health and cause of death.

In the grave, archaeologists also found jaguar and deer bones, six jade beads, possibly from a necklace, 13 obsidian blades and 36 ceramic vessels. At the base of the stairway, they found two offering caches that had nine obsidian and 28 chert flints and eccentrics - chipped artefacts that are carved into the shapes of animals, leaves or other symbols.

"It certainly has been a great field season for us," said Awe, who led a team from his own school, Northern Arizona University, and the Belize Institute of Archaeology.

Cloud Lightning

The history of the park ranger hit by lightning 7 — or was it 8 — times?

Sullivan Roy Cleveland Sullivan
Sullivan Roy Cleveland Sullivan
In 1977 there was a mobile home off Route 340 near Dooms strangely covered with 12 lightning rods, affixed to all four corners of the trailer, on the TV antenna, the electric meter and in six of the taller nearby trees. Each was heavy gauge no. 6 copper wire, grounded on spikes sunk seven feet in the ground.

There was good reason for this eccentric arrangement; the trailer owner, retired Shenandoah Park Ranger Roy C. Sullivan, had already been struck by lightning seven times, and still had one more to go, earning a dubious world record that stands today.

"Some people are allergic to flowers," Sullivan told a Waynesboro News-Virginian reporter in June, 1977, "but I'm allergic to lightning."

Born February, 1912 in Greene County, Sullivan's legacy began in the 1920s. As he helped his father cut wheat, lightning struck his scythe, knocking him to the ground and setting the field on fire.

He had no idea what was still to come.

Roy Sullivan’s grave in Augusta County.
© Findagrave.comRoy Sullivan’s grave in Augusta County.

Bad Guys

The hidden history of Congo's uranium: Stolen by the Americans to destroy Hiroshima

HIROSHIMA
Since the first use of a nuclear weapon in Hiroshima 71 years ago today, on Aug. 6, 1945, the story of where the uranium for the bomb came from and the covert operation the U.S. employed to secure it has been little known.

That is until the publication next week in the United States of a new book, Spies in the Congo, by British researcher Susan Williams (Public Affairs Books, New York), which unveils for the first time the detailed story of the deep cover race between the Americans and the Nazis to get their hands on the deadliest metal on earth.

At the outset of World War II, when the U.S. launched the extraordinarily secret Manhattan Project, uranium from North America and most of the rest of the world was less than one percent enriched and considered inadequate to build the first atom bombs. But there was one mine in the world where, through a freak of nature, the ore contained up to an unheard of 75% enriched uranium: Shinkolobwe mine in the present-day Democratic Republic of Congo.