UFOs, the Collins’ Elite, and the Ancient Scripture Conundrum
By Pavel Ibarra Meda
As we go deeper into the UFO mystery during these wild times, it is always interesting to see the many open fronts there have been for millennia investigating phenomena that have shaped human culture for generations. The world’s first control systems from this iteration of human civilization were organized religions, which became a reality once Judaism started picking up steam between the 20th and the 18th Century B.C. All of those books share some common tropes that originate from an even more ancient text known as the Sumerian tablets. They all share the same flood myth, and they all have representations of giant hybrids (Nephilim). However, the most important aspect of these scriptures is precisely what has been misinterpreted rather than translated directly from the source. Originally, the first ancient scripture that was written came in the form of ancient Aramaic. The problem here is that every single ancient scripture that originated from there is more an interpretation rather than an actual translation.
Abrahamic Religions originated from a fallacy
This is where it gets tricky, especially within the context of the millennia-old conflict that persists to this day between all of the Abrahamic religions. All sides have been bickering about details of historical accounts they are taking from interpreted texts. None of them have been translated accurately; perhaps the most accurate is the Greek text, but that one is arguably the most controversial of them all. If you don’t believe me, look at the translations Philologist Dr. Ammon Hillman, PhD talks about in his own translation. During his interview on the Danny Jones podcast, he made plenty of dogmatic folks angry because his translation of the ancient text left a horrible impression of Jesus Christ as a figure. However, his angle in philology comes from an ancient Roman pharmacology perspective, which he also mixed with his studies. If you want to read a less-rated R version of these translations, perhaps the most accurate translation in modern times comes from Italian former Vatican translator Mauro Biglino. When Mauro was tasked to translate the Aramaic texts, the Vatican officials didn’t imagine his translations would be so controversial.
In his multiple translated books, Biglino talks about the word Elohim as a plural rather than a singular. Meaning that the ancient text interpretation from the Torah, the Quran, and the Christian Bible peddle a monotheistic religion when the actual text talks about multiple gods instead of one. From that fact alone, we can already assume that other parts of these texts were also interpreted rather than translated to each religion’s convenience. Hence, I say these Abrahamic religions originated from a fallacy. If we take the actual translation from Biglino’s work and attempt to go deeper into the lore of those ancient texts, perhaps these Elohim were many instead of one, and they all had this nature to them that could be regarded as God-like abilities. What I want to know is what the Collins’ Elite know about these ancient texts that they are not telling the public.
To those who don’t know, the Collins Elite is an alleged group of elites who are high up in government or corporation positions and have been investigating UFOs for decades. The kicker is that they have a dogmatic approach to their investigation and believe these ancient scriptures are tied to the UFO Phenomenon. You will generally find many of them within major corporations, Congress, NASA, the Intelligence Community, and even the military-industrial complex. Not all of them are necessarily Christian, but they are all motivated by these ancient scriptures. It’s about time we demanded they come forward and lay all their cards on the table. Even people who don’t share their beliefs have a right to know where their fear of the UFO phenomenon comes from.
Pavel Ibarra Meda is an investigative journalist and host of Psicoactivo on KGRAdb. https://allmylinks.com/pavelanche