Wednesday, December 22, 2010

New World Order

A friend of mine introduced me to something the other day I honestly never heard of. And it sits only about a little over an hour away from my hometown.

It is known as The Georgia Guidestones.

Now, it's hard to imagine something this significant ever being built in the state of Georgia, but it's there and has been since the late 1970's. Completely finished 5 days before my 3 birthday, on March 22, 1980, this structure stands as a testament to reason.

It lays out 10 guidelines, not commandments like in Moses time, that illustrate the importance of what humanity has been, should be and potentially could one day become...and probably will. Having never heard of this before I decided to research it and find out more about it's construction, where it is located and of course any other information people may have about it.

It was first commissoned by a man named Robert C. Christian, which is readily identified as a pseudonym or alias. The man claimed to be Christian and wanted to create a lasting impression for future generations, with the purpose being for the longevity of humanity. The structure is made of granite with four stones going into the four cardinal directions, North, South, East, West, a central stone and cap stone that some have said weighs 25,000 lbs. Much like Stonehenge in England, the structure stands in the center of an empty field and is welcome to any visitors to come and see. There are security cameras now since the stones have been vandilized in recent years due to conspiracy zealots citing "New World Order" propaganda and everything from the "Anti-Christ's Commandments" to "Death to Smoochie!" Doesn't matter where you go, these people can't be avoided. Especially in the Bible Belt, with pastors citing the end of the world, Revelations, and that anything created by humans being of...THE DEVIL!

But what the structure does represent, in the event of a major worldwide calamity, these stones coud potentially be used as a guide for reconstructing human civilization in the wake of such a disaster. Now, with apocalyptic scenarios abounding due to circumstances such as coments, meteors, solar eruptions, super volcanoes, and of course the 2012 Mayan "prophecies" this structure fuels the fire of the desperate who WANT to see a change in this world because they don't like the way things are now. So there are two extremes for the conspirators: Those for it and those against it. The people in between are too busy dealing with life to care about some rocks in Elberton, Georgia.

But what the message engraved into the stones says it what is more intriguing to me. The 10 guidelines, if taken in the context of a world utterly decimated by some calamity, make sense. If taken as the world is now, yes it could be misinterpreted as a prelude to something Nazi-like. That's why I wanted to learn more about them. I've found out that all 10 commandments are written in 8 different "modern" languages (meaning still in use): English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese, and Russian (which coincidentally represent languages from 8 of the major religious sects of our world, and 8 has long been considered God's number, which is infinity turned on it's side). Also engraved into the capstone of the structure is the following message: "Let these be guidestones to an age of reason." The message is not what is interesting, but that the message is written out on top of the cap stone in four ancient (dead) languages: Babylonian Cuneiform (North), Classical Greek (East), Sanskrit (South), and Egyptian Hieroglphics (West) (Essentially the languages of the once great civilizations of the past who have all met untimely ends).

So you basically have 5 stones that act as a warning to future generations. One stone contains the language of 4 dead civilizations (excluding the one that once was the Roman Empire because technically that civilization still exists, just in a different form--the Dark Ages are the cut off of the Roman Empire with the world of today since the Renaissance, and Roman Latin, a derivative of Greek Latin, inspired the Romance languages of Europe, as well as Asian and eventually the English language we use in the United States today, so it still is very much in use). The rest of the stones are written in "modern" lanuages, derivatives of Roman, and are inscribed witht he following 10 guidelines in succession:

1. Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
2. Guide reproduction wisely improving fitness and diversity.
3. Unite humanity with a living new language.
4. Rule passion, faith, tradition, and all things with tempered reason.
5. Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
6. Let all nations rule internally resolving external disputes in a world court.
7. Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
8. Balance personal rights with social duties.
9. Prize truth, beauty, love, seeking harmony with the infinite.
10. Be not a cancer on the Earth. Leave room for nature. Leave room for nature.

Now these are some very impressive guidelines and the intent to me from just reading over them is not that some evil totalitarian government means to use these guidelines as a ploy to sucker punch the world, all the while building an elaborate stone structure in the middle of nowhere Georgia to tell the whole world their intentions. Of course conspiracy theorist would say that this is the best ploy to dupe the world, by their plans out there in plain sight. I disagree, however. I consider it a warning.

There are any number of ways this could be a warning, but a few spring to mind. The designer of this message intended to convey a since of urgency in a world on the verge of spinning out of control. Consider the times. The late 1970's, and indeed the entire decade of the seventies was a tumultuous time for all. Governments seemed hell bent on stopping the spread of political regimes they considered wrong. Vietnam had only ended a few years earlier, with great loss of life on the part of the United States. The population explosion was well under way. This called for more and more land needed to house so many more lives, further depleting the resources available to nature itself. Human beings were spreading out across the globe in a cancerous-like format and still are today. Courts were unjust, and still are, laws were worthless, and still are, officials were even more worthless, and believe it or not they have gotten worse. But the gravest concern of all at that time, the continuing stand-off between the United States and the Soviet Union in the Cold War Arms Race, that seemed destined for nuclear annihilation.

The person that thought this up saw all of this and considered the possibility, "What if our civilization comes to an end very soon? What if billions die for that cost? Where or what could they turn to for hope that humanity might still go on?" This structure allows for a defunct or destroyed civilization to find it standing tried and true for hundreds if not thousands of years, and provide them with measures to restore civilization in a manner that could prevent the same events from ever happening again. Every civilization on Earth, every single one, has collapsed and rendered humanity helpless with no other recourse but to start over...except one. The current and last civilization that has existed since Christ walked the Earth. Is it possible our current civilization could come to an end by our own means? Absolutely! Will it happen soon? Potentially. Could we recover? Probably not from a nuclear war, but other calamities, yes because we have. We've survived everything the Earth has dished out over the last 2 millions years of our existence, but the one thing we can't survive is our own over indulgence in things we probably SHOULDN'T indulge in. That is the message's intent and desire simply to guide humanity to a place where it can survive for as long as humanly possible. The structure provides an accurate compass, clock and calendar for humanity to decipher once again.

The other avenue of a warning can bring science fiction into the mold. Suppose Robert C. Christian was from the future? Perhaps he has already witnessed the events that lead to the formation of these guidelines in the first place? Now that puts a whole new spin on what is to come if that were the case. Yes it's far fetched, but how do we know? In the age of conspiratoriality, we don't know anything for sure. It's all theories and guess work.

More than likely though, the first warning is what applies and it should be heeded. Scientists claim that the Earth's natural resources can only sustain 10 billion human lives. Currently, the population of the Earth would exceed this mark long before the year 2100. As resources run out, war, famine, plague, and death would ensue. But that's only if we actually reached the year 2100 with the world as it is now. You would have to include political regimes, wars prior to such an event, astronomical events that could "impact" us, perhaps even the Wrath of God Himself.

No one knows what the future holds and any prediction is just a guess. But one thing is for certain, something has to change. How is the real question? The year 2012 is only 2 years away from the fabled date of December 21st. Will that be the day? Will something happen long into the future, long after I am gone and become something my children have to endure? Change is a difficult process and sometimes it costs lives in order to fulfill it. Our world has become complacent and set in its ways. We don't value life as much as we value living. There comes a time where living must mean we cherish the lives we have and not over indulge in that which is unimportant to sustain it. But again, how do you do it?

With warnings like The Georgia Guidestones, it's inevitable we will find out.

As for a "New World Order", sorry conspiracy fans, we already live in one. You're efforts are too late and your misguided claims only help to fuel their mission further, by keeping it alive. Instead of smudging something up that can last longer than your graffiti, maybe you should actually read the message first. Of course, what can you expect in Georgia anyway?