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UFO - Do you believe?
Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/16/2007 Posts: 1,320
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Kratos wrote:Kratos wrote:Mtu Biz wrote:Kratos wrote:Mtu Biz wrote:I've read a stranger one.
The thiaoouba prophecy.
How did you come by this book and what were you looking for? Well, I was doing some 'research' on the human aura.. when i stumbled upon the story of Michel Desmarquet... Ive just finished reading the book and well..... like the book says read it "three times". Am still not sure what to make of it. Its like being introduced to something you suspect but are not sure of and the ramifications of such beliefs are immense and scary; to put it humanly  . I will be back here with a few observations and understanding of the book maybe you can engage me on your thoughts as well. Interesting read, very interesting A few observations.... Human beings are almost inherently predisposed to accept fear of the unknown since, it "works better" for us. Consider that this book is an actual representation of a true event. This would mean that we are living a lie and a really big one huh! From my own observation and from what i discerned from the book is that we also limit ourselves beyond what we perceive we can achieve. The best example of this is by watching a baby going through the development cycles, the older they get the more fearful they become. That's why its much harder for a grown up to learn how to swim, ride a bicycle or even driver a car. The younger you are the easier it is to "accept" new challenges with far much less fear. In one of the threads here someone asked why UFO's have not been seen in Africa....well I wouldn't have an answer for that but I would pose the question, why then would "we Africans" then comfortably ACCEPT and be indoctrinated to a religion brought by the same white man? I think its very obvious for humanity at the moment to see how we have radically developed technologically in a very short time span of 150 years. Did we have help, a nudge in the right direction? Can you imagine that 20 years ago very few Africans if any (I use Africans to stress my point) had ever conceived the idea that we would one day talk on mobile phones like we do now? By the way how comes we Africans are not known to have discovered/invented any major technological breakthroughs? I digress. "You don't know what you don't know" Found it quite interesting as well. The parts i found quite intriguing have to do with ancient human civilizations.. Specifically the Mu civilization...from where the Egyptians and Maya find their roots.. you don't want to google it Like the chap in the Maisha ni Mteremko thread says... this is the most uncivilized time in human history...(where it takes 30 years for a smart person to own a house)
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/4/2013 Posts: 255
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I'm currently reading the Thiaoouba Prophecy. It's interesting so far. It's obviously fiction.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 9/19/2011 Posts: 1,694
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its2013 wrote:I'm currently reading the Thiaoouba Prophecy. It's interesting so far. It's obviously fiction. Finish reading it first before forming the opinion. Am not saying its factual but keep your mind open, then read the postscript. “People will believe a big lie sooner than a little one, and if you repeat it frequently enough, people will sooner or later believe it.” ― Walter C. Langer
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/4/2013 Posts: 255
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Kratos wrote:its2013 wrote:I'm currently reading the Thiaoouba Prophecy. It's interesting so far. It's obviously fiction. Finish reading it first before forming the opinion. Am not saying its factual but keep your mind open, then read the postscript. It's my nightcap reading for this week. I'll make sure I finish it soon.. though I'm not seeing myself re-reading it thrice as advised  Btw, I'd started off with a youtube video of the first 3 pages but the background music creeped me out so I opted for pdf
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/4/2013 Posts: 255
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I started out expecting it to be just another odd story but, this book (The Thiaoouba Prophecy) is quite something. I'd recommend to anyone who keeps an open mind and appreciates reading. I know I said I'd read it only once but now I think I'd like to read it again when I get a free weekend or something.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/16/2007 Posts: 1,320
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its2013 wrote:I started out expecting it to be just another odd story but, this book (The Thiaoouba Prophecy) is quite something. I'd recommend to anyone who keeps an open mind and appreciates reading. I know I said I'd read it only once but now I think I'd like to read it again when I get a free weekend or something. Your change of tone is quite dramatic.
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/4/2013 Posts: 255
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Mtu Biz wrote:its2013 wrote:I started out expecting it to be just another odd story but, this book (The Thiaoouba Prophecy) is quite something. I'd recommend to anyone who keeps an open mind and appreciates reading. I know I said I'd read it only once but now I think I'd like to read it again when I get a free weekend or something. Your change of tone is quite dramatic. That's because I enjoyed it when I didn't expect to  . It's got very vivid descriptions and the narration is good. But I still don't think it is factual and even when you search the internet for some more information regarding his allegations from other sources - such as gigantism in the parrot fish of the pacific ocean - you don't find it matching his.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 4/1/2009 Posts: 1,885
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its2013 wrote:Mtu Biz wrote:its2013 wrote:I started out expecting it to be just another odd story but, this book (The Thiaoouba Prophecy) is quite something. I'd recommend to anyone who keeps an open mind and appreciates reading. I know I said I'd read it only once but now I think I'd like to read it again when I get a free weekend or something. Your change of tone is quite dramatic. That's because I enjoyed it when I didn't expect to  . It's got very vivid descriptions and the narration is good. But I still don't think it is factual and even when you search the internet for some more information regarding his allegations from other sources - such as gigantism in the parrot fish of the pacific ocean - you don't find it matching his. it is clearly a work of fiction. and to exonerate himself he dumbs it down. read a few pages and the following came out. they say roaches can survive a nuclear blast so if writing about a civilisation devastated by the nuclear blast why not mention big roach survivors. and yeah such a planet ought to to have familiar land masses. a space craft that can travel faster than light. so as not to get tied up with scientific facts, claim that the knowledge of how fast was denied to him. parallel universe where you don't eat, time does not move, cant feel pain but can die etc. a great alien race which could not communicate with neanderthals and or reason with them so had to kill them yet was able to telepathically communicate with their females or something.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/16/2007 Posts: 1,320
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/20/2007 Posts: 4,432
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The Thiaoouba Prophecy is a must read for students of the belief that life cannot be all about man. There is a book, whose name I can never seem to remember. Michel's book is earily similar. It's a book I doubt the likes of Mukiri and Alphdoti would pass page 4. Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
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Rank: Member Joined: 1/4/2013 Posts: 255
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mkenyan wrote:its2013 wrote:Mtu Biz wrote:its2013 wrote:I started out expecting it to be just another odd story but, this book (The Thiaoouba Prophecy) is quite something. I'd recommend to anyone who keeps an open mind and appreciates reading. I know I said I'd read it only once but now I think I'd like to read it again when I get a free weekend or something. Your change of tone is quite dramatic. That's because I enjoyed it when I didn't expect to  . It's got very vivid descriptions and the narration is good. But I still don't think it is factual and even when you search the internet for some more information regarding his allegations from other sources - such as gigantism in the parrot fish of the pacific ocean - you don't find it matching his. it is clearly a work of fiction. and to exonerate himself he dumbs it down. read a few pages and the following came out. they say roaches can survive a nuclear blast so if writing about a civilisation devastated by the nuclear blast why not mention big roach survivors. and yeah such a planet ought to to have familiar land masses. a space craft that can travel faster than light. so as not to get tied up with scientific facts, claim that the knowledge of how fast was denied to him. parallel universe where you don't eat, time does not move, cant feel pain but can die etc. a great alien race which could not communicate with neanderthals and or reason with them so had to kill them yet was able to telepathically communicate with their females or something. You point it out so well. There were very many points where I rolled my eyes and just wanted to stop reading in the first half till I realised he had a moral he was trying to teach through the story.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 6/20/2008 Posts: 6,275 Location: Kenya
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alma wrote:The Thiaoouba Prophecy is a must read for students of the belief that life cannot be all about man.
There is a book, whose name I can never seem to remember. Michel's book is earily similar. It's a book I doubt the likes of Mukiri and Alphdoti would pass page 4. @alma you underestimate people  But you are right, at my age, I don't have the "patience" anymore, but back in the days, at your age, I read stuff my friend! Talk of Cosmos & other Science, Interviews, Enterprenuership, then to Business & Economics Books, then to Languages, then Marketing stuff, then Agriculture and mechanics stuff, then History, then Religion... Back in University and about 5 to 10 years after University, I used to 'drink' these books. Those days when I used to sleep until 11am on weekends! For example, I used to read a novel in days, the 200 page in one day... and the thick Robert Ludlum kind in a week. But you know what? I stopped Novels completely, now I can't go through page 1! I never read motivational stuff because I stumbled into one crazy book called "Shut Up and Stop Whining..", which changed my view on motivational stuff! Nowadays I don't have time. I just do Reference stuff, Biography, documentaries... All old stuff now locked in book shelf covered in dust now. What I keep in my glass book shelf are current interesting stuff, like Quran, Hadith, Bible, some Business books, Financial book, some Farming reference, some scholars books, Encyclopaedia, Dictionaries of different languages, a couple of religious material, etc
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/19/2013 Posts: 2,552
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'It was us': CIA 'fesses up on UFO sightings in 1950-60sQuote: This week, the CIA took to social media to claim responsibility for at least half of UFO sightings in the 1950s and 60s.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 9/23/2009 Posts: 8,083 Location: Enk are Nyirobi
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What about the other 50%? Life is short. Live passionately.
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Rank: User Joined: 8/15/2013 Posts: 13,237 Location: Vacuum
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will the world ever catch up with US in space exploration? If in late 50s and early 60s they could develop the U-2sto fly at an altitude of 74000 feet when the fighter jets could only manage 40,000 feet what about now? Quote:High-altitude testing of the U-2 soon led to an unexpected side effect -- a tremendous increase in reports of unidentified flying objects. In the mid-1950s, most commercial airliners flew at altitudes between 10,000 and 20,000 feet, and military aircraft, like the B-47s and B-57s, operated at altitudes below 40,000 feet. Consequently, once U-2s started flying at altitudes above 60,000 feet, air-traffic controllers began receiving increasing numbers of UFO reports. "At this time, no one believed manned flight was possible above 60,000 feet, so no one expected to see an object so high in the sky. "U-2 and later OXCART flights accounted for more than one-half of all UFO reports during the late 1950s and most of the 1960s. The US might be responsible for the mysterious disappearance of MH170If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
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