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								by Fenton » Thu Sep 19, 2019 8:45 am
			
			
			
			
			It's been a while since I updated my findings about the Star Civilisation, so here's a brief outline of where I'm at;
The StarCiv lived in a totally different reality paradigm to ourselves. They were well aware of the nature of existence on Earth - that everything is transitory and can change dramatically at any moment - and as a global society, had come to terms with this. To this end, they built a world that was in many ways far simpler than our own, yet used technologies to achieve their goals that were more advanced than are widely known today. They had an understanding of how to work with nature, rather than bend it to their will. They created a world of stunning beauty, built to last, to leave to their children, knowing that come what may, they had selflessly contributed to making every other sentient being's time alive as comfortable as possible. It was a very, very different paradigm to the one we have today - so much so that it is difficult to believe that such a mindset existed at all.
Their constructions were built with the pride inherent in a job well done. The massive fortifications associated with starforts have been mistakenly ascribed to war by ourselves - but they were not to defend against each other, but against the forces of Nature herself. Their cities were linked by an extensive system of canals which served as a transport and communication network - and also as feed system for the magnificent field systems, which were designed to provide not just food, but also energy. Many of the canal systems are still in worldwide use today, many of the larger became our 'rivers', many lay derelict and many were repurposed as roads - by our civilisation. They surrounded their star cities with immense gardens, so that each day they might awake and be reminded of how staggeringly lucky they were to be alive to witness such beauty. These gardens, laid out in geometric patterns, formed the basis for many street layouts in our own subsequently expanding towns and cities. Beyond the gardens that surrounded the starcity lay the satellite buildings that ringed the city, the larger the city, the more satellites are present. The use for these mysterious buildings is not understood, but they may have been focus points for an energy generating field system, because they appear to radiate away from, or toward, each starcity.
There is so much evidence for all this, that the question arises - is this hidden from us, or do we hide it from ourselves?
The change in mindset required to accept that we live in highly unstable and unpredictable reality does not come easy. For instance, we push the dinosaurs out to 65 millions ago - a time so long ago that it is literally unimaginable to comprehend. It's so long ago, it doesn't matter to us. It gives us comfort that things happen very. very slowly in terms of history - but what if it's a lie, a lie that we tell ourselves to make it easier to sleep at night?
Whatever happened to destroy the Starciv, happened no later than 600 years ago. The 'dark' age of 1000 years may only have been decades long. History as we are taught it, is bunk - an almost complete fabrication, using many of the Starciv's monuments and relics as examples of fictitious cultures created to explain away all the inconsistances that these supoosed cultures present. But why the fabrication - is it maliciously implemented to retain control over our civilisation, or do we simply accept the stories because they are so much more comfortable to accept than the truth? Maybe, both.
The Starciv has raised a serious question in my mind about our ability to cope with truth. Truth can be profound - but what if the truth is something we wish we didn't know? Are we better to not know? We live in a reality of self and instant gratification - is this the balancing opposing reality of what came before - the Starciv - and are we locked into it, with no way out? Is it our destiny?
I wonder if this why the Starciv has not been 'seen' before. It poses many questions that may best be left unanswered - to be pondered by only the most resiliant minds, that seek truth above all else. Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on your viewpoint - I find myself in the truthseeker camp.