(06-12-2017, 12:30 AM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote: @"Ninurta"
Okay, tell me something Daddy... seeing flying saucers and gray aliens on a wall from over 14,000 years isn't enough to make you think...'hmm... well, maybe.' ????
If that's not what the drawing is, tell me what you think it is.
I can't tell you what I think they are, because I have no idea what they are. I do know that "signs" like those appear in several other caves, and there is spin on the internet to make them "flying saucers", just as there is spin from the other side to make them some sort of arcane "signs" - in my opinion, each of those explanations is as unlikely as the other. I don't believe they are esoteric "signs" any more than I believe they are "flying saucers".
They are clearly, to me, concrete "somethings", but if they are in combination with Streiber-esque "gray aliens", then they are not likely flying saucers.
It's difficult to put my thoughts on this matter into words. Some times, there seem to be no words. It is just as likely, or perhaps more so, that these beings are interdimensional travelers, "demons", time travelers, or something else the possibility of which has yet to be discovered as it is that they are "aliens". One possibility is just as likely as any of the others. It's even just as likely that a time-traveler who looked nothing like these "aliens" dropped a copy of "Communion" on his travels in the paleolithic from which the images were made when a cave-person found the strange and incomprehensible (to him) object (which we, 14 to 20 thousand years later call a "book") laying around with the cover picture on it.
I just don't know what it is, and so cannot say what I think it is, because I don't.
In other words, it doesn't matter what I think it is. It just IS, and needs no explanation from me.
.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.
Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’
Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’