Whenever some mainstream media source claims that something has been debunked, it is cause to be curious and do a little bit of digging for oneself. Such is the mystery of Gobekli Tepe, an ancient archeological site in Turkey which contains megalithic stones and carved tablets dating over 11,000 years old. In the case of this particular story, what has been supposedly “debunked” is a theory that this site was created and populated by an ancient alien race who were destroyed by a comet, due to lack of physical evidence to prove this. There may or may not be evidence that is discoverable to explain what happened to the people of this time, but at the end of the day….does that even matter?
What is interesting to me are the details of what is found here at Gobekli Tepe, rather than the speculative wars over who is right. The details are fascinating, particularly when you look at the carved pictures in the standing tablets.
This picture of what resembles a pocket book has been found all over the world, and has been dated to numerous different time periods in history.
The Olmecs of Mexico carried this pocket book during about 600 B.C:
Also in Mesopotamia in the first several centuries B.C……Assyria, Sumer, Babylonia, Shinar, Egypt (from the Louvre Museum’s collection):
In Africa, in Ecuador, in New Zealand…..and considering how many recent photos of ancient pyramids and other artifacts that can be found all across China despite the environment of secrecy that has worked hard to keep this and all other information hidden, most likely the far East as well.
Essentially, this handbag has turned up in pictures all over the world on every continent, on preserved records that have been carbon-dated to span thousands of years.
You can find symbols that repeat themselves, over and over in these preserved records, which is evidence in and of itself of a common origin shared by those who lived in every corner of the globe for hundreds of generations.
Like Gobekli Tepe, Ojuelos de Jalisco, Mexico was a discovery that has caused a great deal of speculation, curiosity, and analysis ….and interestingly “debunked” by mainstream authoritexpertise as a “hoax”. In the late nineties, a retired military doctor, Dr. Pablo Enrique Garcia Sanchez, discovered a stone artifact near El Toro with carved markings that resembled Mayan art. People living in the area told Dr. Garcia that local farmers and ranchers had been finding similar artifacts in the area since the early 1900’s. The doctor went on to form an organization to research and study the artifacts, called Nahui Ollin; the group catalogued over four hundred unique artifacts in the local area.
The gray aliens with their large eyes look startlingly like the Aztec and Mayan artwork that is very prevalent in that region. About ten years ago on a trip to Cancun, I bought a hand-carved jaguar mask, which hung on my living room wall until I moved (it is now somewhere in the storage unit); the shape of the eyes and the features were very similar. Coincidence or does modern-day South American art reveal something that we have taken for granted without ever questioning?
And ……Flying saucers and scarobs? How interesting that scarobs are typically associated with ancient Egypt….and that many of the pictures on tablets, walls and artifacts found all across the globe; Turkey, Mesopotamia, Europe, middle-East, the Americas also depict flying saucers. There have even been pictures of the same animal-headed humanoids that are associated with the Egyptian Pantheon on artifacts discovered in Ojuelos de Jalisco. Here, on a wall in Egypt:
And within Hieroglyphs:
And on tablets:
Even found on the continent of Africa:
What does this all mean? It is either an elaborate, global hoax that involved the large-scale planting of fake evidence to confuse people for some reason known only to the perpetrators….or proof that ancient civillizations of the world were all somehow connected, casting yet more questions about the stories that we grew up listening to about supposed world history; stories from our religions and what we were taught in school.
If nothing else, it’s food for thought.
To be perfectly transparent; none of this was even on my radar prior to early 2023, when I met a man who was an amateur archeologist, treasure hunter and a consultant for a North American archeological journal. With his highly analytical mind and a history of insomnia, he had charted ancient burial mounds all across America on google Earth, and he was up to his neck in research about Ojuelos de Jalisco. He was just starting to acquire artifacts when we first met, and soon ended up taking out a home equity loan against his house in order to fill an entire room full of artifacts pulled out of the Earth at the two primary digs at Jalisco, and couldn’t wait to examine each of them as they arrived, one at a time. It was a truly fascinating experience to go through with him, as I got to hear his interpretation and pay attention to the details that he was so focused on. The handbag of the alien gods was a huge eye-opener; he was able to get his hands on a bag-shaped artifact that contained multiple carved images of scarobs and animal-headed people. It was large, weighed a couple of pounds, and glowed a lumanescent greenish color in the dark.
I’ve not seen him nor spoken to him in more than a year, but I will never forget that experience, nor tamp down the curiosity that awoke in me as I my eyes were opened to these amazing things. It seems to me that everything must all be connected. Hopefully, we will learn what that connection is, but for now…..one only has to look around at all the discoveries and begin to ask the questions. The Earth is a big place, but maybe it’s much smaller than we originally realized.
My one thought is the pocketbook is a portable battery. The gods bore great gifts, and energy would be the most precious, along with knowledge how to utilize it.
All so amazing. All the ‘handbags’ look alike! I have always been fascinated by all that we cannot see and now so many mysteries of the past that we weren’t here to see! Incredibly fascinating.