Saturday, 30 May 2026

Where Do We Really Come From?

 
A friend of mine has just published a new book. JJ Aldren is a regular delegate at the Bases Project conferences; and, as a result, is willing to look at ideas most other people do not. In fact she states that the book is written for "the kind of thinker who asks big questions." Where Do We Really Come From tells the story of the earth, including natural human history, from a perspective few scientists take seriously; but, as the author puts it, "the way you (the open-minded readers) think may be closer to the original design of humans than most people realize." In prehistoric times beings from another planet landed here. They are recorded by mythology all over the world, but we know them best by the Sumerian legend translated by Zecharia Sitchin, the Anunnaki. Their mission was to mine gold, a mineral which is essential to the survival of their homeworld. They used human slave labour to help them. It's strange that to this day gold is seen as a special element, particularly by elite bloodlines. This is despite it being useless for any practical purpose in construction or engineering; it's too heavy and soft, a bit like lead. Traces of this ancient mining operation can be found all over the globe, especially in southern Africa. Michael Tellinger has worked hard to unearth them. Amazingly, the local Zulu culture also records this myth, even though they developed thousands of miles away from the Sumerian lands and the two peoples never met each other. The only major difference is they give the aliens a different name, Chitauri, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLpOKCt1liQ. According this notion, modern Homo sapiens did not exist on the earth until we were bred and genetically engineered for mining and other drudgery our ET masters demanded. There's distinct evidence for our evolution not fitting in to normal biological theories; the way we walk upright, our unique flat feet, our skin being more like a pig's than an ape's, our external nose etc. The author postulates that some people have brains more akin to our natural form than the artificial one, people with "disorders" like autism.
 
You might wonder what the Anunnaki did after they extracted all the gold they needed from the earth. Well, they didn't all just go home to their own planet, some of them stayed here and became our rulers. They are sexually compatible with humans and we can produce offspring together. This could mean we have a common ancestry much further back in time. The Anunnaki are from much closer to the earth than most other aliens. Their planet is said to be the solar system, although it has a very eccentric and distant orbit and so cannot be observed through telescopes most of the time. These hybrid children are called Nephilim in the bible. Another important source is the Book of Enoch, a fascinating ancient text which also records human and ET contact in the ancient world. It was preserved by the Ethiopian Jewish priesthood (they also may have the Ark of the Covenant, see: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2016/08/programme-202-podcast-ark-of-covenant.html). It was not permitted in most canonized bibles, outside the Ethiopian church, following the Council of Nicea. It is not in any versions of the Torah; but it can be found in some bibles as a footnote, the "Apocrypha". The author considers this editing out suspicious, an early example of censorship. The biblical Nephilim are said to be the royal bloodlines, even as recently as King Charles III. Unlike the House of Windsor, the Ethiopian monarchy claims openly and proudly to be descended from ET's. It's interesting that the bible itself, an anthology of stories written by hundreds of people, many of whom lived in different parts of the world two millennia apart, is a bastardized fake, a plagiarism of much older stories. The book then addresses the future; where do we go from here on planet earth? Where Do We Really Come From by JJ Aldren is a short book, more a pamphlet; you can read it within an hour; but it is very knowledge dense. It is well worth its cover price, I'd say. I think it would serve a good introduction to esoteric worldviews of our past and the author suggests further reading. It would make the ideal gift for the "woo curious" friend or family member in your life, if you're lucky enough to have one. It can be purchased at all good bookshops and, of course, Amazon, see: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Where-Do-We-Really-Come/dp/B0GZCD2JRV.

4 comments:

Missing Trillions said...

I'm familiar with the narrative supported by this book and it amazes me that so many conspiracy aware people have been taken in by it. Nothing about it makes any sense whatsoever and it doesn't begin to withstand either scholastic or scientific scrutiny. Your attachment to it is like a Christian's attachment to his Bible, one of blind faith.

To give just one illustration of how it makes no sense, the amount of gold on Earth is miniscule in comparison to the gold available in higher concentrations in the vastness of the Kuyper Belt and the Oort Cloud from where an advanced ET civilisation could extract it much more easily without tangling with the Earth's gravity well and atmosphere.

Humans may well be enslaved by others but the slave masters are cryptoterrestrials from here, not somewhere else.

Ben Emlyn-Jones said...

I disagree, MT. After studying David Icke, Brian Desborough, the people JJ names and many others, I think there's something to it. Such comparative mythology must have an objective basis. The gold on earth might be different because of its isotopic ratio.

Missing Trillions said...

One of the tenets of history is that, all else being equal, the oldest sources offer the weakest evidence. Here you are basing conclusions on sources of extreme antiquity and for which the motivation is uncertain (the extent to which it was ever intended to be a factual account, hence your reference to it as a myth). Several myths have versions in multiple locations. This points to the people in those places spreading from a common location of origin or to there being some sort of cultural or commercial exchange between them in the past. It doesn't provide evidence of the truth of the myth itself.

Gold is a monoisotopic element. It has only one stable isotope.

Ben Emlyn-Jones said...

I can't think of an answer to that right now, MT. It's a bit subject. I'll have to get back to you later.