Change my mind?
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I think the video has a key point about Lilith and the Garden of Eden that is overlooked.
It makes sense that if we are in the "Babylon" system, then it makes sense that Lilith is the "dark mother" that they look up to. If you are going to sell out, it would makes sense to do so in homage to the original "sell out".
But I think the story is deeper than that, and touches on how Lilith may be absent blame (because she never ate from the fruit of the tree of knowledge). Which makes her a rather unique character.
We've certainly seen a rise in occultism, and as part of the revelations we've seen more than enough people out themselves as witches, or warlocks, and that not much has really changed in thousands of years.
I bring it up because I believe Lilith is going to be given a second chance, and that she may even be an "alien" (even Jewish myth supposedly has her being sent to the Pleiades after leaving Earth; the Pleiades supposedly houses friendly races to Earth).
But that's why the owl symbolism is so prevalent. Bohemian's Grove, Drake, etc. It's certainly not Moloch, who isn't represented by an owl. Could be Minerva, and there were cults and sacrifices to Minerva in Greece, but there's not as much evidence for it. It even could be a compound god, like Moloch-Lilith. But if Lilith produces demons, then it would make sense for those that work with demons or are demons to idolize her.
Hmm. Now that wasn't something I had thought of but it might be a valid idea to consider. Bringing RD's lore up again, he mentioned that there's another reptilian race... the Ba'alaket... which are also part of the Consortium. The Ba'alaket's primary traits are being bipedal "dragons" that are primarily feminine/matriarchal. They are natural "shapeshifters" which can exploit sensory illusions to somehow disguise themselves. This is something that other aliens can mimic with technology but it's innate to the Ba'alaket. Garbotalk and RD mention that a lot of the strong female characters in history were somehow connected to them.
The Ba'alaket queen also decided to terraform and colonize Venus recently which I'd reckon should become visible eventually. Garbotalk also mentioned that there's a human sympathy movement among them that's been growing which they symbolize with a red cord around the ankle. I don't know but if your hunch about Lilith is right it might tie in with that thought. One thing I noted is that "reptiliandude" likes to talk about birds... a lot... like these reptilians see them as kin or something. Maybe that's going on here.
From what I recall the "audit" he supposedly did involved one half-Ba'alaket named Shyeejanut. Anyway, that's definitely an interesting thought, too. From what I've heard the Ba'alaket are the big mama bears and protect the species in planets under their territory. The drawback would be that they mollycoddle them to the point they don't really evolve much.
ADDENDUM: Also, one of the defining aspects of the Ba'alaket interpretation of their own garden myth is that they tried to destroy the Tree of Knowledge before God basically told them "come on, ladies... play ball with me here..."
P.S. However, RD did specifically say there are no aliens from the Pleiades and the Kayeen are usually the ones pretending to be Pleiadean... who knows, maybe some of the Ba'alaket are pretending to be Kayeen sometimes?
I think that is part of the "mystique" behind Lilith, because she is a shapeshifter.
Ok, so bear with me on this one...I've had a weird life. I made a rather naive but earnestly thoughtful profile online, and ended up meeting and dating this girl for a bit. She literally went by the screenname Succubuzz on AOL back in the day, and perhaps that should be explanatory enough. Also not a lot of black Jewish girls around (that had a white, Italian godfather that really fit the bill, I shit you not). She actually used to wear purple contacts, and I don't know if you've seen the movie Witches with Anjelica Huston, but their eyes glowed purple when they got all "witchy" (which also had strong and overt sexual and even pedophilic overtones). Pretty creepy part of the movie.
There's far more to that story, but I bring it up because there certainly is blurring between fiction and reality, and it may even be something more subconscious than anyone realizes. Like the inspiration for things may come from other people's lives and their stories (of which we've never had contact).
There was a very interesting girl who made a post on Reddit recently, who claimed to be the one who wrote the Rules of the Internet. The chans are not my ballpark, but man I think she was legit. Her post was about breaking out of MKUltra, oddly enough. She was basically abused and exploited for most of her life. She has strikingly red wavy hair, and when her mom died, a nearby Indian reservation had a ceremony for her, and gave this girl a giant bearskin. In the movie Brave, the main character's mother falls victim to a beastly curse and is turned into a giant bear. The antagonist is also a giant demon bear.
She was fairly convinced that Brave was about her to a large extent, and I don't know if I've seen a more courageous person. Obscene, but courageous.
I know this wasn't the proper response to what you wrote (I'm still looking through RD's stuff), but you did say that the Ba'alaket are the "big mama bears", which I didn't consciously recognize and only noticed on rereading. Pretty neat.
Definitely was the closest hit from what I had seen from this. I don't think the "bees" fit as closely since they're "ace" and the idea of the Kayeen countering their own objectives with feminism dragging Islam up into Sweden seemed silly to me. But if it's a "trap" it makes some sense.
Also, thought of this... RD said the US has become "Babylon" by their rules according to their analog of the "you break it, you buy it" principle.
P.S. The anomaly exists that feminism is also behind abortions and the Ba'alaket are very anti-abortion. That may be Kayeen counter-subversion to try and manipulate it back their way, maybe...
Hey, I've had this random thought before. It seemed strange to me that you rarely saw women speak up about Pizzagate, but it dawned on me as to why.
It's almost just like that mama bear reference. Mothers are innately protective of their own, and while they may get emotional over harm done to other children, deep down they really don't care to an extent, because it's not really kicking in the maternal instincts. I don't think paternal instinct is quite the same, and perhaps the degree of separation makes a difference.
Feminists obviously squelch their maternal qualities, and in doing so may lose their most basic instincts.