“Run from what’s comfortable. Forget safety. Live where you fear to live. Destroy your reputation. Be notorious. I have tried prudent planning long enough. From now on I’ll be mad.”
“Britain, the best of islands, is situated in the Western Ocean, between France and Ireland, being eight hundred miles long, and two hundred broad. It produces everything that is useful to man, with a plenty that never fails. It abounds with all kinds of metal, and has plains of large extent, and hills fit for the finest […]
I’m still going backwards with this True History of the British Isles. The end of the debunking debacle came when I realised just how many silly so-and-so’s were galloping around the 12th century only to meet a fatal stray arrow. How careless! The most famous is King Harold at Hastings. Then you have William Rufus, […]
I have a certain article about British History that I’ve been, desperately, trying to debunk for months. That’ll have been a big, fat failure on my part then! Heyho. When something makes sense, it makes sense. End of. Now, I’m NO high-falutin’ expert but after a few years researching the 12th century, I have a […]
I was going to give a summary of the soi-disant Mongol-Tartar Yoke but just reading through the mainstream stuff….blah,blah,blaaaaah. You can look it up easy enough. The long and the short of it is that the Mongol-Tartars were evil, murdering thieving s-o-b’s who placed this yoke of fear on all who got in their way. […]
I have had this book – How to Read a Church by Richard Taylor – forever and a day. No idea why but…! On the first page he says: “As we will see, early Christians did not meet in buildings dedicated to worship, but in common meeting places or one another’s homes. The word ‘church’ […]
What are those Arches of Triumph all about? Research is showing that unlike the True History we are constantly hand-fed, they are in fact great big Tartarian signatures. In the 13/14th century, when Genghis Khan and his brother, Batu Khan, expanded the Empire across the world, every major city that came under their wing was […]
Nope…I don’t know either. But I’m beginning to realise that the Tartarians did, in fact, build some All?) of the world’s most famous Labyrinths. I’ve been reading Herodotus, Book Two, Egypt. (Yawn!) He says of the famous Egyptian Labyrinth, which surpassed the pyramids: “It has twelve covered courts — six in a row facing north, […]
Everyone interested in this particular field of research knows that something very strange and disturbing happened to us all in the first half of the 19th century. The years 1800-1850 seem the most bizarre and enigmatic. I’ve been around Tartaria long enough to know the significance of 1775. It was a date I didn’t want […]
This drawing shows an empty, barely inhabited San Francisco in 1848. Then – magically – after just 10 years… San Fran (1858) is a busy, bustling port and city. Yes, I know. They are just drawings but these drawings appeared in books. They were the mass-mind-control section of the massive re-writing of American History […]
The Treaty of Tordesillas is a bit of an historical anomaly. It makes no sense. Why…or rather…How could Portugal and Castile, with the help of Rodrigo Borgia (Pope Alexander VI) divide the whole world between themselves? So they draw a line on a map, running through the Atlantic from north to south. East of the […]
Kulturkreis: “The Kulturkreis (roughly, “culture circle” or “cultural field”) school was a central idea of the early 20th-century Austrian school of anthropology that sought to redirect the discipline away from the quest for an underlying, universal human nature toward a concern with the particular histories of individual societies. It was the notion of a culture complex as […]