Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Explaining UFOs, Giants, End Times (audio)
Thursday, September 8, 2011
The Truth About Titans, Giants (video)

There is a growing body of fossil evidence that is hidden away -- except in Central and South America and a jaw and enormous artifacts in the US. Quayle's book LongWalkers explores the story of a fresh redheaded giant with extra digits and two rows of teeth brought out of Afghanistan by the US military.


- Buddhism speaks not only of asuras but also nagas (which can mean reptilian or any massive creature), cannibalistic cave and forest-dwelling ogres (yakkhas), and hungry "ghosts" (pretas and bhumma-devas) who are often chimeras (crossbred animals from bestial acts).

Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Buddhism on "Coast to Coast"

Radical academic Jeffrey Grupp discusses Buddhism, eastern philosophy, evolutionary theory (debunked), and the similarities between religions and their superiority to many of the sciences.
The interview descended into a discussion of something Grupp calls "dark ecstasy," which he admitted not knowing much about except that he had fallen into it when he was obsessed with evolutionary science, atheism, and other mainstream beliefs not supported by religion. This dark ecstasy was a feeling of intense pleasure that one might get from negative and gruesome events (schadenfreude?) But it is important to note because secret societies are exploiting this negative mental state to control the masses.
On a positive note, the interview covered the law(s) of attraction and how individuals can use them for greater freedom and power in their lives."Telementation" (putting oneself into a state by focus and confidence) is a mode of operating in meditation or daily life to bring about desired ends -- whether it is getting a child to clean his/her room or world peace, healing or attaining goals.
Grupp's book Telementation is a short instruction manual on how to carry out the law of attraction with great ease and productivity by directing inner feelings in a specific way. Many students attempting this become frustrated due to their great efforts and poor results. This is remedied by focusing on feelings rather than beliefs.
The law of attraction is then achieved with Zen-like ease and dramatic success. It consequently creates a revolution in life that ends nearly all personal problems. It brings a person back to one's innate, inalienable greatness and poetic inner peace.
It is particularly productive for those who want a simple guidebook on how to carry out Buddhist meditation or Christian spirituality. It is useful for those who have had trouble attaining ecstatic spiritual states, religious experiences through meditation, and for those unable to overcome depression by conventional methods. More
Monday, August 29, 2011
Six-fingered Titans (Giants) among us

Known as "Twenty-Four," in this photo taken Aug. 24, 2011, Yoandri Hernandez Garrido, 37, drinks juice from a coconut in Baracoa, Guantanamo province, Cuba. Hernandez is proud of his extra digits and calls them a blessing, saying they set him apart and enable him to make a living by scrambling up palm trees to cut coconuts and posing for photographs in this eastern Cuban city popular with tourists. Known as polydactyly, Hernandez's condition is relatively common. But it is rare for the extra digits to be so perfect (AP/Javier Galeano).

Lost City of the Grand Canyon
Remarkable Finds Indicate Ancient People Migrated From Orient

The Shrine

Sunday, August 28, 2011
Is Katy Perry (Catty Purry) an ET?




It is like the "days of old" when the Nephilim (the Judeo-Christian "sons of god" or Buddhist devaputras) created "men of renown" (epic heroes) by mating with the "wives of men" (human females).
LYRICS: Katy Perry's "ET" (feat. Kanye West)
- VIDEO: Katy Perry interviewed before 2011 MTV awards
- MTV Katy Perry and Adele steal the show (Billboard)
- Katy Perry set to break Michael Jackson chart record
- VIDEO: Recap of 2010 red carpet VMAs (Hulu)
- Katy Perry wins her first VMA in Hollywood
- Is Justin Bieber a Buddhist?
- VIDEO: Buddhist monk's message to Justin Bieber
- Topless sales thanks to Katy Perry
Friday, July 22, 2011
Saturday, June 25, 2011
There are Giants (Titans) even Now

While all the devas of the Sensual Sphere worlds (which includes Earth, subhuman planes, and lower celestial planes) are subject to the passions to varying degrees, titans (asuras) above all others have become addicted to them, particularly wrath, pride, boasting, and bellicosity.
Because of their passions, rebirth as a titan is considered one of the four unhappy destinations (together with rebirth as an animal, a ghost, or a hellion). The state of a titan is reflected by the mental state of human beings obsessed with force and violence, always looking for an excuse to get into a fight, angry with everyone and unable to maintain calm or resolve disputes peacefully.
In terms of power, titans rank above humans but below most other devas. They live in the area at the foot of Mount Sumeru (either in the region of ancient Sumer, the center of the Sumerian civilization, with earthly access to space or a broadcasting "tower" as in the legend of the "Tower of Babel" according to Wisdom Quarterly, or the highest mountains in the world, the Himalayas, which would place them in the vicinity of Afghanistan as the report that came to author Stephen Quayle's attention).
The titan leaders are called "titan lords" (Pali, asurinda) and there are various according to tribes and factions. Among them are the bow-wielding Dānaveghasa titans and the terrible-faced Kālakañjakas. The principal leaders are Vepacitti, Rāhu (aka Verocana), and Pahārāda.
Myths of the TitansThe titans formerly lived in the space world of the Thirty-Three, Tavatimsa, on a plane level with the peak of Mt. Sumeru, with the other devas of that world. When Sakka became the supreme ruler of that world, the titans celebrated by drinking a lot of sura (beer, although some say gandapāna wine), a liquor so strong that Sakka had forbidden it.
Weakened by their drunkenness, the titans were unable to effectively resist when Sakka had them tossed out of that "heaven" onto this Earth at the base of Sumeru. (This story provides an explanation of their name, a-sura, "no [more] sura"). A tree grows where they landed called Cittapātali, and when the marooned crew saw it blossoming, they realized that it was different from the Pāricchattaka tree growing at home. They knew they had been dispossessed.
They now contemplated revenge in the form of a war in heaven. In armor with weapons, they ascended Mt. Sumeru. Sakka set out to confront them but was forced to retreat because of their numbers.
Passing through the forest where the avian-hybrids (garuḍas) live on his "flying chariot," Sakka saw that his passage was destroying their nests and ordered his "charioteer" [flight crew leader] Mātali to turn back. When the pursuing titans saw Sakka turn about, they felt certain that he must be coming back with an even larger army. So they fled, ceding the ground they had gained.
Despite their many wars, there was eventually a partial peace between the titans and the Tavatimsa devas. This came about because Sakka fell in love with Sujā, the daughter of the titan chief Vepacitti. He had given Sujā the right to choose her own husband at an assembly of the titans. She chose Sakka, who had attended disguised as an aged titan. Vepacitti (a kind of "Lucifer" figure in Buddhism long before Judaism or Christianity came into existence) thus became the father-in-law of Sakka (also called Maghavā, a kind of archangel "Michael" figure). More
- The suggestion is that Sumer and Mesopotamia between ancient India and Judah (Israel/Egypt) all shared similar stories, creation myths, about life on Earth, fallen angels, celestial gods and wars. Buddhism inherited mythology, particularly as filtered through the Brahminical Vedas. The stories are clearly far older than either the Christian or Jewish sacred texts, older even than the ancient Sumerian tablets.
Steve Quayle

The giant has six fingers and six toes and is depicted on the cover of the book as an accurate artist's rendering of the actual event. The pilot revealed to him by phone, Quayle claims, things only someone who was actually there could have possibly known.

The Book
LongWalkers (288 pages, seven full-page illustrations, and a copy of the letter on which the book is based) takes the reader around the world and through time in search of the truth about the returning giants [in Buddhist cosmology the asuras or "titans"]. The story begins in Gaul (109 BC) then shifts to the Grand Canyon Utah (1919), goes around the world with stops in Turkey, Lake Titicaca in Bolivia, Europe, back to the US, Salisbury Plain in England, Neu-Schwabenland in Antarctica, to Egypt, Izamal in Mexico's Yucatan, and finally to San Francisco and Khartoum in Sudan.
Biblical Items Left In
"And it came to pass when the children of men had multiplied, that in those days were born unto them beautiful and comely daughters. And the angels [asuras or akasha-devas], the children of the heaven [devaputras], saw and lusted after them, and said to one another: Come, let us choose us wives [have sex with] from among the children of men and beget us children.
"And they became pregnant and brought forth giants. And when men could no longer sustain them, the giants turned against them and devoured mankind. And they began to sin against birds, and beasts, and reptiles, and fish, and to devour one another's flesh, and drink the blood. Then the earth laid accusation against the lawless ones" (Enoch, 6:1-2, 7:1).
Noah needed an Ark
- Read first chapter of the fictionalized LongWalkers
- Giant human remains (forbidden archeology)
- Giants in the Americas, burying the evidence
- 5 Strange Courting Rituals from Around the World
- Russian blonds wanted for Islamic sexual slavery
- Evidence of North American giants
- Earthquakes around the world (USGS, Caltech)
- Is "God" present in Christian's daily lives?
- Michelle Obama for president rather than killer Barack