posted ago by Koanic ago by Koanic +6 / -4

Table of Contents

  1. Calalus colony
  2. Brazilian anomaly
  3. What about smallpox?
  4. Romans in 800s AD!?
    1. Illuminati jargon
    2. Desperate diaspora
  5. Transpacific crossing
    1. Secret circumnavigation
    2. Arizona's rivers
  6. Coverup and Quarantine
  7. Sitchin's hybrids
  8. The Ship
  9. Dead men tell no tales

Calalus colony

Over the last 17 years, anonymous posts on forums about the Superstition Mountains of Arizona have been hinting at the existence of a Roman colony: Calalus, the unknown land.

Wikipedia decries the Tucson Artifacts as a hoax; however they match other local archaeological evidence. The Tucson localwiki offers some of the inscription text, which matches the story told by the anonymous posters: That the Tucson Artifacts were cast in lead and inscribed as a memorial by those fleeing the downfall of Calalus. Those whose world is ending wish to remember, and to be remembered. This emotion is vividly present in the inscriptions, whose shape is a memorial of their faith and deeds.

PIC: Tucson Artifact lead crosses

The site is allegedly a gold mine that has been exploited by multiple civilizations, including Atlantis, the island that sunk in the middle of the Atlantic. You may recall Sitchin saying humans were genetically engineered to mine gold for the "sky gods". That's not exactly right, but there's a reason gold is always money. This explains why both the Atlanteans and the Roman Illuminati were willing to travel to the ends of the Earth for a useless soft metal. It can be traded for some very nice ET toys. Interstellar anthropologist Yajweh has details.

(Yes, gold is an excellent conductor. Which is why Romans were mining it despite having little use for it besides the money bubble, which is ultimately inflated by ET use for precisely that conductivity, among other properties. They also like copper.)

By 790 AD, the Romans established a colony in Arizona to mine gold deposits originally discovered by Atlanteans. An Atlantean complex under the Coronado mesa contains a library that will rewrite history, carved in copper and gold plates. The map room shows the poles free of ice. The missing sections of Plato's Critias describe this library and the route to it, which the Romans followed to rediscover it. The location was a state secret.

The colony only lasted about 110 years. Around 900 AD, an Indian slave revolt exterminated the Romans. The Romans scuttled their treasure ship in the Salt River at its intersection with Fish Creek, to deny the enemy powerful Atlantean artifacts in its hold.

Some of the artifacts on board can be misused as WMDs. This is a common issue with such artifacts; the real cause of the invasion of Iraq was to secure similarly-dangerous artifacts found at a dig in the city of Ur.

Such artifacts cannot be safely forgotten, so the Watchers have guarded the location of the ship ever since… until now. It is visible on ground-penetrating radar, buried in sedimentary rock 15 feet below the river bottom, and accessible via cave.

At extermination, Calalus casualties were quoted in the 1k range, race not specified. Enough to leave some traces if you know where to look, but nothing so obvious as aqueducts and amphitheaters.

Brazilian anomaly

Those who find it incredible that a Roman ship could navigate to Arizona should consider whether the discovery of a similar Roman ship in Brazil was suppressed:

If the Brazilian government is telling the truth, why ban further underwater exploration of the bay? Why not have local government-approved salvage divers recover any gold aboard? If certain secretive Romans achieved transoceanic travel well before the Age of Discovery, would that suggest the existence of an esoteric group that retained knowledge older than the official history of human civilization? Why are there pyramids all around the world? How would a global prehistoric civilization maintain contact between its far-flung outposts? Using modern knowledge, it is possible to cross the Atlantic in a kayak.

Why he kayaked across the Atlantic at 70 (for the third time) | NYT Mag

Objection: "Why wouldn't they just take the treasure and leave the ship in the Atlantic?"

Maybe the Brazilian Navy did exactly that. The question is, why secretly?

Perhaps there is a habit of covering up evidence of Atlantean megalithic civilization in South America, when it threatens to expose the politically-inconvenient color of their hair. Perhaps there are ethnically-similar Illuminati living there today underground, so to speak, who would prefer to remain preposterous. Some even speculate that Hitler settled in Argentina.

What about smallpox?

If the Romans came to Arizona in 790, why didn't they bring smallpox? Clearly the Indians had no immunity to it when the Conquistadors arrived in the 1500s.

Well, plagues likely did assist the initial Roman invasion around 790. By the time of Colombus in 1492, Europe would've evolved new variants of disease to devastate the Indians again. Eurasia evolves diseases faster than the Americas due to Eurasia having wide contiguous biomes at the same latitude and higher population density due to technology.

Some plagues, such as smallpox, would've died out on the Roman ships during the long journey around Africa and across the Pacific. Others germs might have found little purchase in Arizona due to sunshine and low population density.

The history of European plagues in the Americas demonstrates the importance of transporting an infected person close to the Indians to cause an epidemic. Despite the severity of regional epidemics, they burn themselves out instead of sweeping the continent. Take smallpox, for example:

The Story Of… Smallpox – and other Deadly Eurasian Germs | Guns, Germs and Steel

Smallpox is believed to have arrived in the Americas in 1520 on a Spanish ship sailing from Cuba, carried by an infected African slave.

Smallpox epidemic ravages Native Americans on the northwest coast of North America in the 1770s. | History Link

1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic | Wikipedia

The 1837 Great Plains smallpox epidemic spanned 1836 through 1840, but reached its height after the spring of 1837 when an American Fur Company steamboat, the S.S. St. Peter, carried infected people and supplies into the Missouri Valley.

Smallpox was too devastating to spread continent-wide. It was a highly-visible and lethal infection. As a result, it burned itself out repeatedly.

Probably the major initial plague vector into North American Indian territory was malnourished white bondservants being shipped transatlantic as pathogen incubators and then worked to death on American soil. By contrast, the Romans used local slaves at Calalus.

Calalus had a small European population, so I doubt the colony could incubate plagues effectively. It would reach herd immunity too quickly.

I'm sure there was a plague effect from the Roman arrival, but nothing that would render impossible subsequent confirmed history. The Vikings also visited North America, yet did not inoculate the Americas to European plagues.

The Calalus colony only lasted about 110 years, from 790 to 900 AD. Perhaps that's how long it took for the local Indians to recover from the plague and mount a counter-attack.

Romans in 800s AD!?

Illuminati jargon

When Illuminati leakers say "Rome", they mean their understanding of Rome, not ours.

Illuminati leakers tend to speak publicly in an allusive, anonymous, ephemeral and cryptic manner. For example, Russia is often referred to as the "3rd Rome". It is annoying, but not as annoying as the consequences they face if they don't.

By Illuminati, I mean bloodlines with esoteric gnosis and psychic abilities: illumined ones. Rome certainly had them; that's why Rome ruled. Expressions such as "the Third Rome" emphasize their continuity of rule, albeit not by the same families. Illuminati is a category of person, not an organization.

The Sasquatch Message to Humanity by Sunbow gives the most complete account of the varied origins of the Illuminati or ruling hybrid bloodlines. The Farsight Institute remote viewing of the crucifixion corroborates that Pilate was psychic. Ibanian interstellar anthropologist Yajweh discusses the Roman Illuminati tangentially on Soundcloud.

Objection: "The Illuminati was founded in 1776 by Adam Weishaupt… there’s literally nothing in the historical record prior."

Perhaps the name was coined then. However, "Illuminati" is a category of person that long predates Weishaupt. The term is viewed as ironic by some in the greater galaxy, who consider our various bloodline elites the furthest thing from enlightened. Unfortunately, I do not know of a better term from our perspective.

Weishaupt was the Count of Saint-Germain and founder of the Bavarian Illuminati, thus "Illuminati" is a good modern name for the secret elite, Black Nobility, ruling bloodlines, etc. I like that the term includes those who work for them (with varying degrees of awareness). Membership is more of a gradient.

That there is some vast Illuminati conspiracy is a popular belief that makes the term easily understood by laymen. Therefore I have departed from my more exacting sources in employing the vernacular. None of them refer to the bloodline elites as "Illuminati", but the names they use are longer and too nuanced for this introductory essay. The terms tend to emphasize a galactic perspective involving ET hierarchies that is beyond the scope.

Desperate diaspora

The Roman colony of Calalus existed in Arizona by 790 to about 900 AD.

Due to Muslim expansion in the 600s AD, Byzantium lost her route to India via the Red Sea. In the 700s, Byzantium lost most of her territory in Italy, keeping only a foothold in the south.

As the remnants of the Roman Empire were squeezed on land between stronger powers, she resorted to extreme long-distance colonization, a desperate gambit resembling the esoteric efforts of the doomed 3rd Reich.

Calalus was founded in the 700s, and the earliest date on the Tucson Artifacts is 790. Charlemagne crossed the Alps in 773, prompting Adelchis to flee to Constantinople and plead for assistance.

Perhaps Roman Illuminati bluebloods were driven by Charlemagne's conquests in Italy to escape to the New World. The date of the "collapse" of the Western Roman Empire is debatable and mostly academic. Those who rule behind the scenes may have remained in power. However, Charlemagne's alliance with the pope altered the balance of power between competing Illuminati bloodlines, making the Roman Illuminati desperate enough to try a longshot.

Thus the Calalus colonists were likely Roman refugees from Charlemagne and Jewish-Christian refugees from Muslim conquest, seeking the New World using Atlantean maps found in the library of Constantinople, outfitted by and allied with besieged Byzantium.

The Imperial Library of Constantinople, in the capital city of the Byzantine Empire, was the last of the great libraries of the ancient world. Long after the destruction of the Great Library of Alexandria and the other ancient libraries, it preserved the knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Romans for almost 1,000 years.[1] A series of unintentional fires over the years and wartime damage, including the raids of the Fourth Crusade in 1204, impacted the building itself and its contents. While there were many reports of texts surviving into the Ottoman era, no substantive portion of the library has ever been recovered. The library was founded by Constantius II (reigned 337–361 AD), who established a scriptorium so that the surviving works of Greek literature could be copied for preservation. The Emperor Valens in 372 employed four Greek and three Latin scribes. The majority of Greek classics known today are known through Byzantine copies originating from the Imperial Library of Constantinople.

Imperial Library of Constantinople | Wikipedia

Shipping gold from Arizona to the Mediterranean is insane in 800 AD. But adopting a maritime existence with Arizona as the new base is relatively reasonable. The gold can be traded for manufactured goods from China or India to supply the colony.

More importantly, knowledge is power. The colonists were seeking the lost Atlantean library as much as the adjacent gold mine. Had they relied less on slave labor, a new Rome might've arisen in North America centuries before Columbus set sail, and ruled the world instead of the British Empire.

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