- Joined
- Aug 31, 2020
- Messages
- 76
- Reaction score
- 608
Hollywood Babylon by Kenneth Anger (above) is a book, first published in 1965, that recounts several sordid scandals from the early years of the movie industry. However, Anger was not the first to suggest this conjunction of themes. The film industry in Hollywood had created a Babylonian image for itself from the get-go. The two great symbols of Babylon, the lion (below) and the Ishtar gate, were adopted not only by individual studios in Hollywood but by the movie industry and the city in general.
One of the first epic Hollywood films, D.W. Griffith's Intolerance (below, left), was built around an enormous and realistic-looking Ishtar gate. Another epic film, Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments (below, right), used the massive Egyptian ruins lying in the California dunes for its outdoor shots. After the the filming wrapped the crew apparently just dumped everything in the sand and went home.
An organization called The Dunes Center has been excavating the ruins for decades. Per the San Luis Obispo Tribune:
For more than 90 years, the set for Cecil B. DeMille’s silent film “The Ten Commandments” has been buried in the shifting sands of the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes.
Archeologists have been slowly unearthing the set for years, and now the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes Center is ready to present their latest findings..
The nonprofit organization will unveil a giant, terracotta-colored sphinx head and other treasures at the Sphinx and Drinks gala, auction and artifact debut on July 21.
“It’s already the largest event the Dunes Center has had and there’s a lot of excitement around it,” executive director Doug Jenzen said.
A similar Ishtar gate stands at the intersection of Hollywood and Highland in the center of town (below).
But those are just replica ruins, you say. The real stuff is in Iraq, right?
I don't think so. Everything the public knows about ancient Egypt and Babylon is derived from the discoveries made by guys like Jean-François Champollion (below, left) and Robert Koldewey (below, center). They're the ones responsible for the official mythology. Do they look truthworthy to you?
I guess they must have injured themselves doing all that digging out in the desert. Why else would they be posing with their hands stuffed sideways through their shirts like imbeciles? Oh, right, because they're lying Freemason retards. What a surprise!
On the other hand, the professional historians, the ones who aren't in on the joke, strive in vain to graft the traditional threads of history onto these conspiratorial innovations. But because they are unwilling to examine the presuppositions of the official narrative, they are reduced to laughable bouts of special pleading as in the excerpt below.
No, the Babylonian Empire was in reality situated in the American Southwest and extended well past Hollywood, which is really just a neighborhood in Los Angeles.
Most people, if they have given any thought to the matter, imagine that the eponymous "angels" of this metropolis are the benevolent sort that help baseball teams win the pennant or go bicycling with Nicholas Cage. But in fact Los Angeles are the twin fallen angels Harut and Marut of Babylonian lore which are described in the Quaran as "masters of evil."
Let's talk a bit more about Babylonian architecture. One of the things that pops up in all the traditional historical descriptions of Babylon is The Citadel, which some identify as the Palace of Sargon II. In fact, this famous building is just outside downtown LA, at 100 Citadel Drive in the city of Commerce. It currently hosts an outlet mall.
There are plenty of other buildings that evince Babylonian (or Egyptian) heritage in Los Angeles, including the two theaters pictured below.
These are generally attributed to the same roster of fake architects and given construction dates in the early twentieth-century--but good luck finding photos of their being built!
Old newspapers abound with reports of relics and ruins in the American Southwest. (I have more to say on this topic in my article on Fernando Cortes if you're interested.)
Yes, there were camels in America.
Above: two other well-known princes of Bel-Air, a community named after Babylonian leaders (Bel, or Baal = "Lord").
Finally, let me say here that although I've been focusing mostly on Babylon in this write-up, I place each of the two empires interlocking Babylon--Egypt and Assyria--as well as what is traditionally called "The Holy Land," on the American continent as well (which latter claim is corroborated by Time Magazine below).
In plain sight.