I'm not too familiar with Clif High's work, but I thought I was a fan based on the headlines I would see pass by. After reading this article concerning material with which I am quite familiar, I now wonder if he's another high-level disinformation agent along the lines of Graham Hancock (and I'm sorry if this comes as news to any of his fans).
If anyone thinks I'm bagging on the subject matter, I'm not. Quite the opposite, in fact. It's some of the most important material you can study to understand the true framework of human history and even what drives current events to this very day. Thus you should be able see why "They" consider it so vital to obfuscate it.
As to the article itself, you should first notice what is there: it's simply a narrative. Does it bear some relationship to the truth? Yes, certainly. It's closer to the truth than thinking some cavemen were running away from lions while trying to invent the wheel. And indeed, aliens were involved.
We should also notice what is not there. No citing of specific evidence, no links to other research or researchers, no argumentation or other demonstration of reasoning. In short, no scholarship or discipline. Does that really sound like someone trying to help push back the frontiers of human knowledge?
Let me interject here a note on scholarship. Almost by definition, scholars should be working at the edges of knowledge, and so they're going to make a lot of mistakes. Therefore, it's not that scholarship is marked by everything they say being correct because they're so expert, it's that a scholar lets you know explicitly where they got their information and how they came to their conclusions. Is Clif doing any of that?
So what's really going on with this article? The events of 6000 years ago were only one of the most recent incidents in the history of the Anunnaki on the Earth. Clif wants you cut off from all that. How far back does it go? The Sumerian King List tells us that they arrived on Earth about 434,000 years ago. The biggest (for us) event since that time was the creation of humans 270,000 years ago. I could amplify, but now I'm wondering if anyone actually made it through this rant.
I'm not too familiar with Clif High's work, but I thought I was a fan based on the headlines I would see pass by. After reading this article concerning material with which I am quite familiar, I now wonder if he's another high-level disinformation agent along the lines of Graham Hancock (and I'm sorry if this comes as news to any of his fans).
If anyone thinks I'm bagging on the subject matter, I'm not. Quite the opposite, in fact. It's some of the most important material you can study to understand the true framework of human history and even what drives current events to this very day. Thus you should be able see why "They" consider it so vital to obfuscate it.
As to the article itself, you should first notice what is there: it's simply a narrative. Does it bear some relationship to the truth? Yes, certainly. It's closer to the truth than thinking some cavemen were running away from lions while trying to invent the wheel. And indeed, aliens were involved.
We should also notice what is not there. No citing of specific evidence, no links to other research or researchers, no argumentation or other demonstration of reasoning. In short, no scholarship or discipline. Does that really sound like someone trying to help push back the frontiers of human knowledge?
Let me interject here a note on scholarship. Almost by definition, scholars should be working at the edges of knowledge, and so they're going to make a lot of mistakes. Therefore, it's not that scholarship is marked by everything they say being correct because they're so expert, it's that a scholar lets you know explicitly where they got their information and how they came to their conclusions. Is Clif doing any of that?
So what's really going on with this article? The events of 6000 years ago were only one of the most recent incidents in the history of the Anunnaki on the Earth. Clif wants you cut off from all that. How far back does it go? The Sumerian King List tells us that they arrived on Earth about 434,000 years ago. The biggest (for us) event since that time was the creation of humans 270,000 years ago. I could amplify, but now I'm wondering if anyone actually made it through this rant.