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Post by LorrB on Aug 24, 2011 8:32:41 GMT 9.5
It's way out there, but it made me laugh, even if you're right.... Must go in and check the satellite pics. Isn't the Internet amazing!
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Post by cwhite on Aug 24, 2011 9:26:53 GMT 9.5
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Post by LorrB on Aug 24, 2011 9:42:14 GMT 9.5
omg! ;D ;D ;D I had a giggle when you made your post, but I didn't realise just how bizarre it all really is. Whoever set up the airport had a sense of humour, or something. If you google one can clearly see that Pena Boulevard could just as well be Penis Boulevard, with add ons. The other thing that really stood out for me was the purposeful way the various thoroughfares were named. Service Road, Vandriver Road. That made me wonder why other major thoroughfares are called New Castle Street and Oak Hill Road. There could well be a new castle on a hill full of oaks at the end of Pena Blv... but... The Freemasons are featured in the airport dedication stone Freemasons are assoc with Knights Templar, Knights Templar are assoc with Scotland and the Sinclair family The Sinclair family took something on Oak Island in Nova Scotia in 1398/9 Masonic artifacts were recovered from the sitewww.csicop.org/si/show/secrets_of_oak_islandNew Castle? Montsegur? The fables Grail Castle? Montségur is often named as a candidate for the Holy Grail castle — and indeed there are linguistic similarities in the Grail romance Parzival (circa 1200–1210) written by Wolfram von Eschenbach. In Parzival, the grail castle is called Monsalvat, similar to Montségur and with the same meaning: "safe mountain, secure mountain." The name of Raymond de Péreille, the actual historic seigneur of Montségur, has a slight similarity to the protagonist of Eschenbach's epic, the knight Parzival. In Jüngerer Titurel (1272) by Albrecht von Scharfenberg, another Grail epic, the first king of the Holy Grail is named Perilla.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monts%C3%A9gur
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Post by LorrB on Aug 24, 2011 9:48:00 GMT 9.5
1398/9 ?! (I'm reading thoughts ) Ears of corn A possible carving of Indian corn/maize?Rosslyn Chapel also contains carvings of what some writers suggest could be ears of new world corn or maize from the Americas. This crop was unknown in Europe at the time of the chapel's construction, and was not cultivated there until several hundred years later.
Also the indigenous population of Oak Island know an aweful lot about masonry. Stories passed down the generations.
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Post by LorrB on Aug 24, 2011 9:50:12 GMT 9.5
I checked out the population for Denver... and very surprised to see that it was under 600,000 people - about half the size of little old Adelaide.
The airport is HUGE for such a small population.
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Post by cwhite on Aug 24, 2011 10:01:12 GMT 9.5
"The Freemasons are featured in the airport dedication stone Freemasons are assoc with Knights Templar"
It kinda correlates with a fascination I have with the Hopi Tribe (which is not located far from the airport).
Google "Hopi prophecy stone", you'll be amazed (if you see what I see...)
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Post by Henka on Aug 24, 2011 14:36:15 GMT 9.5
I checked out the population for Denver... and very surprised to see that it was under 600,000 people - about half the size of little old Adelaide. The airport is HUGE for such a small population. It's an international airport. It's not just for Denver. It's a major regional hub. Occam's Razor again.
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Post by LorrB on Aug 24, 2011 16:09:02 GMT 9.5
Ah - the difference between the States and Australia.
Our large cities are few and far between, and the between space is sparsely populated.
22,820,000 for a country just a tad smaller than Brazil.
Love it!
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Post by Henka on Aug 24, 2011 21:15:33 GMT 9.5
Ah - the difference between the States and Australia. Our large cities are few and far between, and the between space is sparsely populated. 22,820,000 for a country just a tad smaller than Brazil. Love it! That's because everything there is poison, and the countryside is infested with Drop-Bears!
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Post by cwhite on Aug 26, 2011 23:01:20 GMT 9.5
Pena Blvd / E. 78th Ave......
Just found out "pena" is latin for household gods. 78 kinda looks like 2 balls and a cane.....
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Post by Henka on Aug 27, 2011 2:50:21 GMT 9.5
Pena Blvd / E. 78th Ave...... Just found out "pena" is latin for household gods. No it isn't, its Latin for penalty, punishment; revenge. You really need to research a bit better. Kinda, if you hold your head just right, stick out your tongue, and expect to find such symbolism where there is none...
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Post by cwhite on Aug 27, 2011 3:32:00 GMT 9.5
Once again I feel the cut of Occams Razor.... I'll do better research...
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Post by cwhite on Aug 27, 2011 3:38:25 GMT 9.5
typo. household goods. not gods. ~ the definition you provided better fits my theory anyways.
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Post by cwhite on Aug 28, 2011 12:27:17 GMT 9.5
There is also a blue mustang at the entrance. Its been referred to as "Satan's Steed", "Blue Devil Horse" and "Bluecifer". I think it was suppose to represent Sagittarius (hence the dark blue color).
Except he lost his humanity....
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Post by cwhite on Aug 29, 2011 7:17:49 GMT 9.5
And instead of pointing at the creator, he's turned his back on him.
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Post by cwhite on Sept 6, 2011 3:00:50 GMT 9.5
I stated earlier in this thread that I assumed that the reference to "white metal" on the floor was to Iridium. I now think that it may be a reference to Palladium (another white metal). And the Order of the Palladium....
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Post by LorrB on Sept 6, 2011 8:19:01 GMT 9.5
Pena Blvd / E. 78th Ave...... Just found out "pena" is latin for household gods. No it isn't, its Latin for penalty, punishment; revenge. You really need to research a bit better. Penalty Blvd. Punishment Blvd. Revenge Blvd. Odd name for a main thoroughfare don't you think?
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Post by LorrB on Sept 6, 2011 8:37:42 GMT 9.5
I stated earlier in this thread that I assumed that the reference to "white metal" on the floor was to Iridium. I now think that it may be a reference to Palladium (another white metal). And the Order of the Palladium.... I've never heard of this Order.. so did a quick check Said to have been a Masonic order, also entitled the Sovereign-Council of Wisdom, founded in Paris on May 20, 1737. It initiated women under the name of "Companions of Penelope." As proof of its existence, Jean Marie Ragon, the Masonic antiquary, published its ritual.
The "Palladium" was also one name used by Leo Taxil (Gabriel Jogand-Pagés) to refer to the Masonic order he made a part of his 1880s hoax, which was aimed at showing that the Roman Catholic Church secretly sponsored freemasonry.
Read more: www.answers.com/topic/order-of-palladium#ixzz1X7aKK8zN
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Post by LorrB on Sept 6, 2011 8:42:56 GMT 9.5
Now there is one Gabriel (Leo Taxil) that didn't do much good for anyone.. Set out to make fools of the Catholic Church and the superstitious but probably did more harm to Freemasonry than anything else. Leo Taxil /Gabriel-Antoine Jogand-Pages
In 1881, a young anti-clericalist named Gabriel-Antoine Jogand-Pages was made a Freemason. Within a year, he resigned from Masonry, converted to Catholicism, and began one of the most notorious propaganda campaigns in the history of Occultism. Under the pseudonym of Leo Taxil, Jogand published a number of books and articles in which he "proved" that Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism, Martinism and other similar organizations were utterly satanic in nature, and posed a dire threat to Christian European civilization. According to Taxil, all such organizations were secretly controlled by the mysterious "Order of the Palladium," a ruthless, terrible and extremely secretive body within the heart of Freemasonry which worshipped the Devil with inhuman rites and received commands directly from the Prince of Darkness himself. The Palladists were allegedly headed by Albert Pike, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, and a High Priestess named Diana Vaughan. Miss Vaughan, a direct descendant of the 17th century Rosicrucian and Alchemist Thomas Vaughan, had been corresponding with Taxil. Her heart had evidently been softened by one too many child sacrifices, and she had secretly written to Taxil to inquire about how she might be saved. Her correspondence also revealed many shocking secrets of the devilish world of the Masonic Inner Circle: luciferian symbolism contained in seemingly innocent emblems and phrases; gruesome human sacrifices and obscene phallic orgies conducted in hidden chambers of infernal worship carved beneath the Rock of Gibraltar; and terrifying conspiracies for world satanic domination.
Needless to say, Jogand/Taxil's works became quite popular. They rapidly gained him the notice and smug patronage of the Roman Catholic Church, and he even obtained an official audience with Pope Leo XIII in 1887.
Ultimately, Miss Vaughan, by then world-famous, decided once and for all to renounce Satan and convert to Catholicism. The Church eagerly anticipated her public introduction, which Jogand/Taxil scheduled for April 19, 1897. To a lecture hall filled with Catholic Clergy and Freemasons, Jogand revealed that Diana Vaughan was none other than his secretary, but that there was no point in introducing her, because she had never been a High Priestess of the Palladists. In fact, there had never been an Order of the Palladium. He, Gabriel Jogand, had fabricated the entire story as a monumental joke at the expense of the Church. He had remained a faithful anti-clericalist all along. The Masons present found this revelation intensely amusing. The Catholic clergy present did not. Fortunately for the proprietors of the lecture hall, the police were summoned before a full-scale riot had broken out.
Jogand's success had been due, primarily, to his journalistic flair and to the credibility he enjoyed as a result of his enormous erudition; however, another significant factor in his success was his shrewd recruitment of a number of strategic, and totally unwitting, collaborators.
www.greatdreams.com/jogand.htm
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Post by LorrB on Sept 6, 2011 8:57:20 GMT 9.5
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