Wars of the Anunnaki: Nuclear Self-Destruction in Ancient Sumer
Z**X
Hardy Offers A Bold, Though-Provoking & Reasonable Argument Of War In Ancient Antiquity
Wars Of The Anunnaki by Chris H. Hardy Ph.D is a masterly analysis of part of the hidden history that's been kept from humanity.The author's main premise is that many thousands of years ago an ancient war took place in our planet with advanced weapons. An ancient war that involved nuclear weapons during part of the pyramid wars. To buttress this premise the author highlights various locales that were targets within the ancient war such as Sodom, Gomorrah. Further, Hardy uses sources such as texts like the Nippur Lament, and the Hindu Mahabharata and many others to make her case as sound as possible.The author also notes that lunatic Nergal, with the support of Enlil and more, made it a point of using at minimum 7 nukes to lay waste to those that wish to follow their own path and are deemed inferior to the "gods".As Hardy mentions, Enki, one of the 'Gods', voiced concern over the use of these Awesome Weapons:"...the lands would make desolate, the people will make perish."[sic][P171]Another intriguing detail is that of the Sinai plain, where the author suspects there's evidence of nuclear weapons use. The author mentions Zecharia Sitchin's thoughts on the matter:"Sitchin attests that the Sinai plain shows an enormous elongated scar, visible from the sky alone, and blackened as if by an immense heat: "The great place ( the spaceport and launching strips in the plain) was never to be seen again...but the scare made in the face of the earth that awesome day can still be seen to this very day".[P175]For those skeptical of the author's claims, it's important to note that the claims are not just stated because of the translations of tablets/texts. Hardy also uses other intriguing information such as the fact that the places where nuclear weapons might have been used rarely, if ever, have meteor craters. This is vital because this is one of the main 'facts' paraded by the establishment, but holds no credence whatsoever.Furthermore, as the author saliently states:"The Libyan Desert Glass (so hard and so pure it is used to make blades), comes from hundreds of square kilometers of glass sheets and shards in the Great Sand Sea in western Egypt, strewn in two large spots. Given the very explicit accounts we have from ancient texts, we certainly cannot avoid the much more plausible (and rational) explanations implying nuclear or other powerful weapons used in very ancient warfare. "As if that were not enough, the author homes in on the vitrified remains of the ziggurat at Birs Nimrod (Borsippa). Taking into account some of David Childress' information from Technology of the Gods:"The ruins crowned by a mass of vitrified brickwork, actual clay bricks fused together by intense. heat"[P189-190].Which is quite synchronistic. Why? Because as ancient texts show:"Borsippa was the city of Nabu, son of Marduk, and both were targets of the war that lead to the nuking of the Jordan plain."[P190]What a coincidence...Moving on, although certainly a notable part of the story, this book by Hardy isn't just about Nuclear Weapons.Throughout the book Hardy focuses greatly on a comprehensive detailed analysis of ancient texts in order to narrow down what took place with the Anunnaki leadership which lead to such ancient devastation . Not only that, but the author also uses Semantics Field Theory [SFT] in order to analyze in depth much of the information that's been taken as matter-of-fact regarding The Book [the Bible] in relation to ancient history, and does a convincing case of outlining how there were various narrators that were responsible for different layers within it.Hardy's cognizant of how The Book has played an integral part - for better and worse - to mold the type of society we live in. Knowing this, she's made it a point to make sure her interpretation is as correct as possible given how much trauma has been spawned from ancient dogma that was blindly followed and rarely questioned.From the role the Anunnaki played in bringing about civilization, to how the development of humanity was subverted by Enlil and his kith and kin, to the psychological impact humanity has dealt with due to the institutional dogma that's been passed down authoritatively, the author attempts to leave no stone unturned in her quest for what ancient history really was.As an open-minded skeptic, am very appreciative of her work because regardless of what one thinks of it, its sourced to the hilt, and its rather reasonable given the enormous body of data that keeps growing to buttress the fact that something intriguing and very nefarious did take place in our ancient history.Wars Of The Anunnaki offers an apt description of what possibly could have taken place given the wide amount of evidence that keeps being unearthed. Couple with the author's relentless search for truth, and her quite wide-ranging and yet incisive questions throughout the tome, the book offers a solid foundation for the possibility of ancient wars in humanity's past.If only a fraction of what the author attests is true, then ancient history as we know it is vastly different than what the conventional establishment would have you believe. And the more time passes, the more it appears that this is not only possible, but very likely. The fact that the author's approach is sound, rational and methodical makes this book that much more thought-provoking.This is the type of book whose data should be openly debated in the mainstream, but never will be. That being the case, it's up to inquiring individuals to educate themselves into the possibilities that the mainstream establishment will not touch, and this book sets out to do just that, educate individuals into a large part of our missing history that's in great part responsible for how society is today.Interested parties in the subject matter can also delve into the important works of:Giza Death StarGiza Death Star DeployedThe Giza Death Star Destroyed: The Ancient War for Future Science (Giza Death Star Trilogy)The Giza Power Plant : Technologies of Ancient EgyptTechnology of the Gods: The Incredible Sciences of the AncientsHope that helps inquiring minds.Kindest Regards,Zy Marquiez[...]
D**J
Easy to read & understand
The media could not be loaded. This is one of the BEST books I’ve read on this subject! It was not one I would have necessarily chosen from the title but the reviews persuaded me. I would have to say, it was more about the Anunnaki & their coming to Earth & starting a civilization here than about their wars. THERE IS SO MUCH INFORMATION IN THIS BOOK! And there is a glossary to look up words & many detailed explanations. If you’re already diving into this subject, or maybe even if you’re not, you will love this book. It took me almost a month to get through this book but only because I made so many notes & took time to absorb & study what I had read.
A**N
Religious dogma has served to deliberately erase our knowledge of Earth's true history
Webster’s Dictionary defines “semantics” as “the science of meanings” and as “pertaining to meaning in language.” Our author, Chris Hardy, has her Ph.D. in psychological anthropology, and her method is to analyze the semantic fields revealed in groups of words, and, as she adds, “the specific worldview of their author.” She made an in-depth analysis of the Book of Genesis Garden of Eden text in her previous book, DNA of the Gods, and she carries it forward in this present offering to further strengthen her argument that “there are two distinct semantic fields interwoven in the Genesis text, reflecting values, worldviews, beliefs, behaviors, and dogmas that are totally distinct and pertain to widely different cultures and epochs.”The first semantic field she identifies as being in clear accord with the ancient Sumerian tablets with which we are familiar from the work of Zecharia Sitchin. It “states facts and events in an informational, detailed manner, without judging.” She calls it the “Informational Framework (or IF).” The second semantic style she says is “loaded with moral judgements and is intent on attributing responsibility to earthlings, while defending what is deemed the ‘just’ and ‘righteous’ wrath of the deity---thus giving plausible reasons for the punishments he imposes on them.” She calls it the “Moralistic Framework (or MF).” In this book, she goes on to analyze in this manner such Genesis stories as that of the Babel tower and of Lot and his family.What Dr. Hardy has found is that the Book of Genesis, if not the entire old Testament, was written over a very long period of time by different individuals and taken from other texts that are far more ancient. It is quite probable that meanings have changed, and that, most importantly, the intent of many of the stories has been tampered with. Hardy focuses on the Sumerian legends of the Anunnaki and their “gods” and finds direct parallels between those narratives and the Genesis accounts. Her psychological study is quite detailed, but it’s important for the reader to stick with her line of thinking through the early part of the book in order to appreciate her conclusions.We begin to identify the Old Testament wrathful God “Yahweh” clearly with the Anunnaki “god” Enlil, and we see his counterpart brother “god” Enki as the champion of the hybrid earthlings he has created. The Genesis story line is now decipherable in a clear context as it has heretofore not been. We see that there was, indeed, a power battle between the factions of the two brothers and that it involved some sort of weapons of mass destruction, possibly nuclear.For instance, we learn it has long been a mistranslation from Hebrew to say that Lot’s wife turned into a pillar of “salt”. The correct interpretation of the word is that she turned into a pillar of “vapor”! This and many other mistranslations and misunderstandings of the Old Testament texts point to the very probable use of nuclear weapons. Hardy even shows that the scorched Sinai Peninsula of today, areas of vitrified stone or glass in India, Libya, and France, some of the ancient sacred writings of India, as well as the buried remains of still radioactive humans in other parts of the world attest to this fact. And, this agrees with the findings of physicist John E. Brandenburg and researcher Joseph P. Farrell in such writings of theirs as Death on Mars, The Cosmic War, The Giza Death Star, and others. And, it explains more recent archaeological findings of vast underground complexes and shelters such as those in Cappadocia in Turkey and at Gobekli Tepe.If we look at many Biblical narratives in light of the existence of very advanced technologies extant in the distant past, the stories take on different meanings. What becomes entirely plausible are descriptions of interplanetary travel, genetic engineering and cloning, instantaneous distant communication, the use of electronic “chips” (magical amulets) to control various operating systems, underground or well-protected control centers (holies of holies), DNA manipulation (serpent configuration and the Tree of Life), the actual repositioning of planets, oracles and incantations, control of the weather, satellites and drones, and much more.What we can take away from Hardy’s analysis is that it is miraculous the human race has been able to overcome through the scientific method the good-evil polarity foisted upon us by religious dogma. That dogma has served to deliberately erase and obliterate our species’ and our planet’s true history. Our author shows us through her intense psychological analysis that the forbearers who created us had both positive and negative emotions generating love as well as extreme conflict. They were not some all-powerful, immaterial, god whose earthly subjects were only valid in the lineage that came from Abraham, as scriptures from all three western monotheistic religions would have us believe. Two key words that must be recognized by all who read the Old Testament are “The Elohim”. They denote a plural god, not a singular one! Gnostic texts like The Hypostasis of the Archons (Reality of the Rulers), discovered as one of the lost gospels in Nag Hammadi, Egypt, in 1945, now become quite understandable.We get the objective truth from Hardy’s careful investigation of the Biblical texts using Semantic Field Theory and psychological analysis. We find there is “a definite editing and wholly added narrative with extremely biased preconceptions and whose aim is to construct a dogma---religious, moral, societal…and ethnical….the Catholic dogma---a whole set of beliefs tied up to form a strict corpus of dogma that will serve afterward as measures to sort out and weigh the true Catholics from the heretics, the pagans, the “not-us,” and that will introduce an overlay of the contempt for women shown by the sole Deity.”However, Dr. Hardy concludes on a positive note by reminding us that, “despite recent devastating wars and onslaught on sacred sites by extremist brands of religions that, strangely, have targeted precisely the ancient Sumerian and Assyrian museums and artifacts, we are at the threshold of a qualitative leap in human consciousness, a leap of major proportion.” One opportunity to help insure that leap continues to progress is available to the reader by way of this important new book.This review first appeared in New Dawn magazine, Issue No. 159.
J**L
Enlightening
My take: the ancient gods were no more than space pirates who stumbled on our little planet, exploited it for minerals, and enslaved the locals. Once they had a population of slaves to exploit, they became playboys and playgirls, raping and killing at will and fighting amongst themselves for,power and influence. They were the Udays and Husays of ancient times, and we are forever scarred for their unwholesome activities here. Enlil was no more and no less than a psychopathic god, completely devoid of morality or conscience. We continue to suffer from their legacy. Next time they come around, one can only hope that we have enough advanced weaponry to make them suffer for their trouble. I hope I’m around to throw a few lightning bolts at the culprits myself. ]
W**X
WARS OF THE ANNUNAKI
WOW!!!WHAT A READ!!!IT IS A BLUNT REVIEW OF “THE BOOK”, AKA., OUR BIBLE ,IN TERM OF WHOSE STORY IT IS REALLY ABOUT!!!IT IS ABOUT HISTORY, I REALLY MEAN “HIS” STORY!!!!NOW YOU MUST ASK, “WHO IS ‘HE’”???THE ANSWER TO THAT QUESTION MAKES THIS BOOK A MUST READ!!!AN OUTSTANDING JOB CHRIS, WELL DONE!!!
T**N
Very intresting
Liked subject matter.
A**E
A great body of information
The best book about Annunaki history that I’ve read so far. And I’ve read quite a few. Great analysis too.
S**.
Interesting Book!
Chris Hardy is doing a good job by analysing old Mesopotamian Texts and revealing the true narrative of those. Even though the only problem is that she is mainly basing her work on the translation of Sitchin, who is not familiar with the real grammar rules by using simple a word for word translation. Overall it doesn't change the subject by changing the narrative in its basic information. But it gives of course a platform for academic criticism. The same goes for bible texts, which she should have used in their original Hebrew language, as there is a huge difference between the already translated ones. In this case it would have made a difference as it would have changed her analysis, putting all the unnecessary moralistic and subjective framework away which was definitely added in past times by the Christian Church. On one hand it underlines her intent to show the manipulation but on the other it would have been a better comparative to the old Mesopotamian texts, showing clearly that the old testament is based on them and that calling those texts a myth goes straight against those taking the bible literally.
M**Z
Read Sitchen first
This book might make sense if you previously read Sitchen. The professor appears to have been given the choice to publish or perish and unfortunately published. It is a preachy diatribe with a deficiency of periods. The variety of opinions ventured are not informative. Readability-ZERO.
J**O
Book for Zecharia Sitchin's readers
The book is about the genre of Zecharia Sitchin and ment for readers of Sitchin's books. For them it is most interesting. The topics here concerning tings we have learned about christianity are most important. Now it is up to the reader what to believe in.
D**H
Our occupied history denied
Well written in the style and composition of Sitchin. Just confirms everything I've read from similar authors and their perspective of ancient history.
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