‘ware the cookies!


What have I gotten myself into? I just sat through a bizarre, rambling, self-congratulory lecture by Scott Wolter (some guy with a fringey History Channel show) that started with the Kensington Runestone — it’s a genuine Viking artifact, don’t you know, staking a land claim for some Catholic order of monks — then wandered over to the Bat Creek stone, a rock with some funny scratches on it unearthed from an Indian mound. The scratches are ancient Hebrew! Wait, no, they’re secret Masonic symbols! Did you know the Cherokee rituals were exact copies of the Knights Templar’s rituals? Yes, they are. Obviously.

Then we got a whole series of photos of Catholic figures and medieval and renaissance paintings and sculptures in which people are making the Masonic gang sign. This one:

image

That’s an “M”. For Mary Magdelene, Jesus’s wife. The Masonic cult spread over to the New World in the first century AD to share the word among the Indians, who happily adopted it. And now it’s everywhere.

image

Oreo cookies bear the sign.

Then to wrap it all up, he goes back to ancient Egypt, the precession of the Equinox, and the signs of the zodiac, which represent major shifts in world cultures, each paradigmatic shift associated with changing which house was represented in the equinox.

People applauded.

Dear god, wasn’t the cookie slide a loud enough cry for help?

Comments

  1. says

    The Masonic cult spread over to the New World in the first century AD to share the word among the Indians, who happily adopted it.

    :suffers a near fatal eyeroll:

    I don’t get the cookie business. Of course, I haven’t spent time poring over the pattern on Oreo cookies. Am I supposed to be all inner Masonic because I’ve eaten the *gasp* cookies?

  2. says

    Um, If the Cherokee were involved with the Masons, I don’t think the Trail of Tears of would have happened.

    With several thousand years of recorded history, its easy to come up with patterns. The trick is to find out if the patterns are really related, or just pareidolia.

  3. Beatrice, an amateur cynic looking for a happy thought says

    I actually have no idea what you just wrote.

    Masons Indians cookies Egypt Jesus… did the guy have a stack of slides, and just picked a couple at random, making up the story on the spot?

  4. magistramarla says

    Yup, this is what the History Channel has devolved into, along with Animal Planet, the Discovery channel, the SciFi Channel and a few other cable channels that started off as decent places to learn something. These used to have programming that we felt could help to make up for the lousy science and history educations that were available in the Texas schools for our younger kids and later our grandson.
    Now these cable channels have dumbed down to the level of Texas education, I suppose for the ratings – sigh.

  5. Sastra says

    The magical mindset is like the spiritual mindset is like the conspiracy mindset: you discover the truth by looking for the underlying connections. There are subtle and secret signs of the Grand Design all around us and only those who are open-minded and sensitive enough to look and interpret them properly will find them. And oh, yeah. It takes humility. And an ability to think outside the box. And a scorn for “experts” who have none of that but only want to protect their turf.

    I have a woo background and woo friends and have read and sat through too many of these Amazing Insights, where superficial similarities are selected out of the noise and massaged into major revelations. If you are “too skeptical” that’s supposed to be a sign that you’re too afraid of the discovery and want to cling to the safety of the old paradigm. Note the subject shift from ‘what’s wrong with the hypothesis’ to ‘what’s wrong with you.

    You’re so judgmental, PZ. Can’t you just nod and admit it as a “possibility?” Believe in possibilities.

  6. robro says

    At least their Oreos are better than the Catholic’s wafers. If you eat enough of them, who knows what you might see.

  7. says

    Carlie:

    But what about the Hydrox ???????

    Masonic wannabes. I mostly eat Oreo knock offs, too. So I suppose I’m safe. Or not. Whatever. Besides, being half Indian, I suppose that means I’m protected. Or targeted. Whatever.

  8. Beatrice, an amateur cynic looking for a happy thought says

    Caine,

    I suppose that means I’m protected. Or targeted. Whatever.

    You suppose. Yeah. That’s what you want us to think.

  9. says

    Beatrice:

    You suppose. Yeah. That’s what you want us to think.

    Well, I’m not Cherokee, so I don’t think I have the superawesome level of oogabooga mind powers. And that whole Knights of whatever business…no women allowed in the Knight business, so…

  10. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    Dang, looks like I missed a chance to offload some hats. They, like the the infamous tin-foil hat, will keep out unwanted skepticism and black-ops agents from any chance of mind control.

    They are made out of the unknown element ghostium, which is supplied by the grey aliens™ from their dark matter mining operations, and the hat is made during a full moon by the Bigfoot™ tribe, listening to the real Elvis croon, backed up by the Pullet Patrol™. The hat is sold with a HPLE cover, which should be removed once placed upon the head, where the ghostium will adhere to the head, but allow for normal grooming operations, like shampooing, combing, hair cutting, brushing, and head scratching. The hats are so thin that you can’t tell they are there, other than the effect on negative thoughts. The hats come with a 30 second warrantee. Side-effects include setting out piles of grog soaked corn when Pullets are seen.

  11. pacal says

    Scott Wolter’s America Unearthed is a steaming pile of crap not much better than Ancient Aliens. Supposidly he spent many years researching the Kensington Rune Stone and has uncovered “new” evidence that it is authentic and carved by French Normans?! He and someone else wrote a huge tome of a book “providing evidence” of all this. In other words it is just another collection of padded fantasy dressed up in pseudo-scholarship.

  12. otrame says

    Reminds me of a book I read that insisted that the pyramids of Mexico were an idea brought over by Egyptians who sailed there and were greeted with open arms and worshiped as gods.

    Of the many reasons he believed this was 1) pyramids are too sophisticated an engineering feat for those simple Native Americans to have developed; 2) both cultures thought the color purple was a symbol of royalty; and (my personal favorite) 3) both cultures used a crescent shape in their iconographies.

    I mean, after all, how could two cultures, thousands of miles and across a great ocean from each other, possibly have come up with that particular shape as an important symbol?

  13. Trebuchet says

    But what about the Hydrox ???????

    Ugh. My mom used to buy those because they were cheaper than Oreos. Oddly, however, Oreos were an imitation of Hydrox, not the other way around! (According to Wikipedia.)

    I watched about half of a Scott Wolter show one time just out fascination to see how much worse it could get. They were diving for a Masonic treasure in somebody-or-other’s old well. They knew the treasure had been there because the dowsing rods pointed straight to it…

  14. says

    …did the guy have a stack of slides, and just picked a couple at random, making up the story on the spot?

    Y’know, if that’s not already a party game, it really should be.

  15. David Marjanović says

    Annnnnnnnd Beatrice wins another thread – twice over! Something isn’t normal here. Perhaps it’s paranormal.

    staking a land claim for some Catholic order of monks

    Wait.

    The Kensington runestone being genuine is one thing. But why in the fuck would it mean something completely different from what it says?

    You can just read it. The script is known and clearly legible, the language is known – look the runes up on Wikipedia, take a dictionary, and there you go!

    *headshake*

  16. awakeinmo says

    I’d be more concerned with the infinite “A”‘s in Morse around the cookie. An atheist conspiracy, perhaps?

  17. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    You can just read it. The script is known and clearly legible, the language is known – look the runes up on Wikipedia, take a dictionary, and there you go!

    David, you, of all people, must know that there is the text, and there is the hidden text. Just look at the US Constitution for an example. There is the text that is read, and then there is the hidden text in the Real Constitution in which the United States of Christian America is proclaimed, where it says that machine guns may be owned by white men of good conservative Christian standing, and that any regulation of business and industry is an attempt to create a Marxist State (Yes, I know that Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto were written a hundred or so years after the Constitution of the United States was written, but that just shows that the Masons (Ball Mason and Lamb Mason jars) were in contact with Time Traveling Monks from Minnesota.). Every document has the obvious words, but reading, shall we say, between the lines, will always show the Truth.

    For instance, the US Army’s First Infantry Division is called the Big Red One. On a qwerty keyboard, the number 1 is directly over the Q, the U is left alone, the S is under the E, and, through similar decipherment, the word QUEEN is spelled out. Which, of course, is a cutlery company in Titusville, Pennsylvania, which is very close to the town where the oil boom started. That first oil well was drilled by Drake, under letter of marque from Queen Elizabeth, in order to extract the necessary chemicals to control the US populace through ChemTrails. The Wright Brothers were, of course, also in on this because they had to invent the airplane to spread the chemtrails using distillates of, what else, oil! (which means my NPS is involved, because on of our units is the Wright Brothers Memorial in North Carolina, and their original bicycle shoppe is also a national park)

    See? Easy.

  18. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    awakeinmo @ 29: Those are actually A’s for Anarchy, not Atheism. Sorry.

  19. Le Chifforobe says

    Al Dente at 17:

    Does anyone know if Bigfoots are attracted to Oreos?

    Bigfoots are attracted to blueberry bagels, if the genetic evidence can be believed…

  20. sowellfan says

    Well obviously oreos are used as a representation of the fact that there’s a hidden truth. You’ve got the outer cookies (i.e. the “outer truth”) that are fairly tasty. But, for someone who’s willing to do a little work to pry those outer layers away, you’ve got a significantly tastier creamy filling (the “inner truth”).

  21. Holms says

    So um. Where exactly is the masonic M on the oreo? The only M-like thing I can see is if we line up those X’s, apply a large amount of generous interpretation to come up with a circular zig zag, and then another dose of generosity to interpret the zig zag as a series of linked M’s.

    It isn’t that fucking idiotic, is it?

  22. dontwantno says

    ogvorbis[] @ 30,31:

    Wow. I guess we know which side of YOUR bread is buttered. From your comment at 30, it is obvious that your eyes have been opened to the real powers in the world. So it can only be malice, not ignorance, when you turn around and help awakeinmo spread this misinformation.

    As you know full well, the Oreo design is further indoctrination by the American Dental Association, the same arm of the World Government that gives us mind-controlling Fluoride in our Water. Those are no mere Morse Code As. As part of that conspiracy, they have imprinted the word “TARTAR” around the rim of the Oreo, as a subliminal inducement to get us to consume YET MORE of their Brain-Puppet Serum. Since you know this and still put out this Red Herring, I can only conclude that you want the Dentists to win.

    If you are not a Dentist yourself, I expect you will be happy to provide the rest of us with peer-reviewed evidence to prove it.

  23. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    Don’tWantNo @ 35:

    Please note that I was not delving into the Oreo Conspiracy, I was merely illustrating for the good doctor how hidden text, hidden meaning, can expand our consciousness.

    I am not now, nor have I ever been, a dentist.

    I am (according to some here) a Carmen Miranda Impersonator. At the very least, I wear a funny hat at work.

  24. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Oggie, how many pineapples and mangoes fit on the brim of your hat?

  25. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    Fine. Please submit form Bu11S(h)1+ with full documentation, a blood sample, a clipping from your sixth toe on your left foot, and three (3) nostril hairs. If this checks out, I will be happy to consider the possibility of responding to query.

  26. Al Dente says

    Ogvorbis @36

    At the very least, I wear a funny hat at work.

    The thick plottens! Everyone knows that NPS rangers wear Smokey the Bear hats. You know who else wears those hats? Army drill sergeants and Marine drill instructors! The function of these people is to indoctrinate innocent young men and women into mindless military robots. I’m just trying to figure out how Oreos fit into this.

  27. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    Al Dente:

    Yes, DI’s do wear campaign hats, but theirs are rotated 45 degrees.

    The function of these people is to indoctrinate innocent young men and women into mindless military robots.

    Been there. Done that. They do not try to create mindless military robots. A DI’s job is change the way that the soldier responds to authority, change the way the soldier processes information, and trains the soldier to speak, hear and respond as a soldier, not a civilian. Different does not mean mindless.

    I’m just trying to figure out how Oreos fit into this.

    That’s the easy part.

    See, Drill Instructor is abreviated ‘DI’ which, backwards, becomes ID, or Intelligent Design. Barbara Streisand’s band in the movie, “A Star is Born”, was called the Oreos. Since Oreo Cookies are, obviously, designed and since intelligent people think that “A Star is Born” is perhaps the most perfect embodiment of the 1970s, it all fits together.

    That said, what the hell am I drinking?

  28. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    And it is Smoky Bear, not Smoky the Bear. And that is USFS, not NPS.

  29. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Oh Oggie, dear, if you insist on being recalcitrant it might behoove you to remember that We Have Our Ways of Knowing. Might you reconsider?

  30. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    No, morgan. Until you submit the proper forms, I cannot release classified information regarding my work with the US Army as a 69CMI.

  31. says

    #28, David Marjanović:

    You haven’t read it carefully enough. There’s a pattern of dots in the runes that also encode the date, and something something something else indicates the date, so the date is repeated THREE times on the stone. Then the account written there references THREE relative physical locations. Also, it’s located on the continental divide, and some European states a few hundred years later would consider a claim at the source of a river to represent a valid claim to the entirety of that river’s drainage. Therefore, it’s a land claim.

    So help me, that’s his actual argument.

    #35, Don’tWantNo (ShortShortMan):

    Wrong. He had a slide in which he showed several companies that had crossed X’s in their logos: Nabisco and Exxon are in cahoots. When he put up that slide, he shook his head and said “Yeah, crazy”, and pointed at the slide like it confirmed that he wasn’t crazy.

  32. ck says

    @Holms,

    Maybe the arrow below the OREO when looked at upside down? I don’t really know myself, but that’s the only “M” I could find.

  33. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Alright. You have been warned. Beware of drones, micro-drones, odd shaped packages with no return address, and far too many people wearing sunglasses indoors. We Have Our Ways.

  34. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    PZed, so are these dots like the ones the Bene Gesserit place on, say, the edge of a leaf in a greenhouse to warn sisters that there is danger? Or am I reading too much into this?

  35. Acolyte of Sagan says

    I might be stating the bleedin’ obvious here, but the photo is upside down, so rather than being an ‘M-for-Mary-mother-of-myth’, he’s making a ‘W-for-weird-people-believe-weird-shit’ symbol.

  36. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    Damnit! Alexandra, you just knocked me gages right off me hat!

    Hi.

  37. Sandy Small says

    Maybe the arrow below the OREO when looked at upside down? I don’t really know myself, but that’s the only “M” I could find.

    That’s because you’re not looking at it with your third eye.

  38. ck says

    You’d like to think that it’s just a stream of “A”s around the Oreo, wouldn’t you. In fact, it spells out “RCCAKRTAR”. Rearrange the letters and you get “TRACK CARR”, a subliminal message to all who consume OREOs to stalk the Carr family members, specifically Emily Carr, who’s works contains hidden messages intended to reveal the nefarious plots of the Illuminati.

  39. ck says

    Sandy Small wrote:

    That’s because you’re not looking at it with your third eye.

    Alright. Let me get my drill. This is gonna hurt, isn’t it?

  40. Al Dente says

    They fit in your mouth, silly.

    Of course! The mouth that’s under the Smokey Bear USFS hat. It all makes sense now. Plus it’s proof that the birthers are right about the 9/11 terrorists killing JFK with chemtrails or something like that. Perhaps the Princes in the Tower fit into this as well. As soon as morgan ?! gets hir security clearance updated we’ll get to the bottom of this.

  41. leftwingfox says

    Sounds like The old BBC series “Connections” hybridized with the Gish Gallop.

    Memetic warfare.

  42. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    No, Al Dente, JFK was killed by Colonel Sanders because he was going to reveal the ten secret herbs and spices of the KFC recipe (one of them is salt, so only ten are really secret).

  43. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    No Og, only nine are secret. Salt and sugar are well known. And just what level is YOUR security clearance?

  44. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    morgan ?!:

    What kind of sugar? See, that is the part that is secret.

    And you don’t have the clearance to know my security clearance. The mere fact that I know about form Bu11S(h)1+ (to be submitted with full orchestration (and four part harmony)) should tell you just how high I am.

  45. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    And there is salt, sugar, savory, sage, white pepper, paprika, henway, and I’m pretty sure some thyme. So that’s 8 that we know. Down to three.

  46. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    I’m pretty sure there is no henway in the secret recipe. If there were, there would be more spice than bird.

  47. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Oggie, Oggie, Oggie… the sugar is High Fructose Corn Syrup. No gawd fearing seasoning would be without it.

  48. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    no, the henway is there. You can taste it on the back of your tongue. Trust me.

    And where is form Bu11S(h)1+ (to be submitted with full orchestration (and four part harmony))?

  49. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    AND, Oggie m’dear, unless you are a castrato, you are not high enough for a really respectable clearance. Myself, I’m a contralto so I surely don’t qualify.

  50. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Or a Contra Tenor, but they are very rare. I think they even stopped offering clearances for them.

  51. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Henway on the back of the tongue would be murder in the first degree.

  52. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    I was a first tenor until I got pneumonia. Now I’m a second tenor, high baritone.

    But I’m talking about how high your security clearance is. You wanna examine my fruits, you need to follow procedure. Just submit form Bu11S(h)1+ (to be submitted with full orchestration (and four part harmony)) and all will be good.

  53. FossilFishy(Anti-Vulcanist) says

    Pishaw, you pikers. My clearance: Fugal Harmony ((A= 439HZ) Mixolydian)

  54. ekwhite says

    I believe the X’s around the edge of the cookie look a bit like Templar crosses Link. Of course, they could just be X’s.

    As far as the Cherokee, my Google fu found a website indicating that there was a Masonic Lodge in the Cherokee nation founded in 1848 Link. So if a little bit of Masonic symbolism snuck into Cherokee tradition over the years, it wouldn’t be surprising. Back in the 18th and 19th century, Freemasonry was quite popular.

    Bottom line – Scott Wolter was taking stuff out of context and weaving huge conspiracy theories. My nephew used to do this about Freemasons all the time, which is why I know so much about it. I had to listen to him go on for hours while I smiled and nodded, or else he would start yelling at me.

  55. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Hee, hee, hee. Oggie, you win. It is seven pm here on the left coast and I have dinner and a movie waiting for me. All is good. And I really am a contralto. Until tomorrow.

  56. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    No form Bu11S(h)1+ (to be submitted with full orchestration (and four part harmony)) ? No soup for you!

  57. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    I accept my just punishment. How about a deal. The full orchestration is a bit much, but the harmony can be managed with several sousaphones and a bagpipe. Deal?

  58. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    morgan:

    In order to get the details on my fruits, I need to see your bona fides. Again, that is form Bu11S(h)1+ (to be submitted with full orchestration (and four part harmony)).

  59. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Oggie honey, I’d really love to see your fruits, but honestly, I don’t think you’ve got anything I haven’t seen before.

  60. morgan ?! epitheting a metaphor says

    Yes I did. Give me some time. I’m filling out the form in fond hope of discovering something new and interesting.

  61. sunsangnim says

    Wait, I’m confused. The Native Americans all learned about Jesus in the first century AD? Is this guy a Mormon? Come to think of it, Mason and Mormon both start with M! The conspiracy deepens!

  62. cicely says

    I am…disturbed…that no one has pointed out the obvious aliens/Atlantis/Oreos connections.

    What’s a henway?

    Like a Steinway, but with less beer.

  63. A Hermit says

    I’ve been re-reading “Foucault’s Pendulum.” I thought Eco had every possible conspiracy theory covered but he missed the Oreo cookie…

  64. had3 says

    FWIW, Bayou Bakery sells a cookie they call a Dat-o that is a gigantic Oreo. It lets me rationalize that I’m only having one cookie. I can stop any time I want, but I’m no quitter.

  65. robro says

    The cross above the Oreo is from the Nabisco logo. It was incorporated into the cookie’s design in 1952. That’s pretty obvious, but the Nabisco logo may have a strange pedigree. Straight from the Ppppfff’s mouth FWIW:

    It has been claimed in company promotional material to be an early European symbol for quality; it may be derived from a medieval Italian printer’s mark that represented “the triumph of the moral and good over the evil and worldly.”

    The rim is supposed to be a wreath, so the boxed cross-like objects could be some kind of leaf.

    Ah! Per the Ppppfff: the Oreo was a rip off of the Sunshine Hydrox. Eat your Hydrox now with pride!

  66. Lyn M: ADM MinTruthiness says

    FossilFishy 72

    Pishaw, you pikers. My clearance: Fugal Harmony ((A= 439HZ) Mixolydian)

    Mine’s about 5’3″, unless I’m in heels.*

    And I would like to point out that Martini & Rossi recently dropped the Rossi part on the main label and use just the Martini. Clearly the company is edging towards using just the M.

    *I know, I know, but I’m so bad at puns that if I didn’t use the bad ones I’d have no puns at all.

  67. Antoine Vekris says

    Caine,
    A comparative study of rats addiction, Oreo vs M&M, should be planned ASAP.
    Does your crew care to be included?

  68. FossilFishy(Anti-Vulcanist) says

    Lyn M 93

    The only bad pun is one that doesn’t provoke a groan. You have nothing to fear on that score. Cheers.

  69. says

    Come to think of it, Mason and Mormon both start with M! The conspiracy deepens!

    Not to mention that the Mormons temple rituals actually are based on Masonic rituals and the Hebrews that traveled to America became the basis for the Indians there. Also, according to Mormonism, the Catholic church is the Whore of Babylon and the church and the Masons have always been at odds.

    The evidence just keeps piling up. Will you still deny the truth, you so-called skeptics?

  70. Lithified Detritus says

    Wolter also did a show a series of shows supporting the premise that much of the copper used by the Minoan culture was actually imported from the Michigan Copper Country.

    A load of nonsense, needless to say.

  71. David Marjanović says

    O hai, Ogvorbis! I maded you an Internet out of lavender cookies, and I did not eated it.

    So help me, that’s his actual argument.

    Impressive.

    I Borked the Cherokee link.

    I was about to say how suspicious that was! :-)

  72. blf says

    The Masonic cult spread over to the New World in the first century AD…

    …which would be a neat trick for multiple reasons, perhaps starting with the probability that masonic cults didn’t exist at the time. As Ye Pfffft! of All Knowledge puts it:

    The earliest masonic texts each contain some sort of a history of the craft, or mystery, of masonry. The oldest known work of this type, The Halliwell Manuscript, or Regius Poem, dating from between 1390 and 1425, has a brief history in its introduction, stating that the “craft of masonry” began with Euclid in Egypt, and came to England in the reign of King Athelstan. Shortly afterwards, the Cooke Manuscript traces masonry to Jabal son of Lamech …, and tells how this knowledge came to Euclid, from him to the Children of Israel (while they were in Egypt), and so on through an elaborate path to Athelstan. This myth formed the basis for subsequent manuscript constitutions, all tracing masonry back to biblical times, and fixing its institutional establishment in England during the reign of Athelstan (927–939).

    The alleged involvement of Euclid is almost certainly an example of backdating and adding the fictional involvement of a well-known ancient respected name. (There is a term for this phenomenon, but I forget what it is.)

    I also wonder why there is no credible trace of anything from the Americas in Europe (presumably) dating to that time.

    General conclusion: Ancient alien astronauts with Oreos, and absolutely bonkers.

  73. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    David:

    O hai, Ogvorbis! I maded you an Internet out of lavender cookies, and I did not eated it.

    Failure to grok in fullness.

    blf:

    (There is a term for this phenomenon, but I forget what it is.)

    Lying.

  74. Ogvorbis: Apologies Available for All! says

    blf:

    I also wonder why there is no credible trace of anything from the Americas in Europe (presumably) dating to that time.

    It was covered up by the Bigfoots as part of the Gray’s experiment.

  75. Tony! The Immorally Inferior Queer Shoop! says

    I’m with Beatrice @4. That stuff does not compute.
    The exchange between morgan and Ogvorbis was far more comprehensible (& entertaining).

  76. blf says

    Lying… Yes. But that also covers a multiple of other lies.
    I was referring to the sort of lies which claim the association/involvement/works/et al of a (usually-)well-known (and typically ancient) person/name. It is quite an ancient form of lying. This sort of lie can make it hard to disentangle the origins of ideas/works/&tc., and (as far as I know) is presumed to be done through a mixture of ignorance and the idea the older something is, the somehow “better” or “truer” it is…

    And it is a form of lying that particularly annoys me.

    Another modern example would be Barton’s bullshite about USAlienstan’s “Founding Fathers” wanting a xiancentric theocracy.

  77. vaiyt says

    The Masonic cult spread over to the New World in the first century AD to share the word among the Indians, who happily adopted it.

    Oh, hey, another attempt by paranormal historians of erasing the agency and originality of work done by indigenous people. Why am I not surprised?

  78. says

    More info on the mormon connection (see #85 and #96 for previous notes on the mormons) and on the generally cult-like obsessions of fringe archaeology:

    Scott Wolter, Burrows Cave, and Christian America …

    [snipped out angels, demons, sacred feminine, Knights Templar, DaVinci Code, et.]

    Holy Grail had a budget of more than $360,000 and received $19,468.57 in funding from Minnesota Film and Television, of which 50% came from tax dollars and the rest from privately-donated matching funds. …

    This involves the so-called Burrows Cave, an “ancient” site that dates all the way back to 1982, when Russell Burrows began hawking artifacts in a faux-Egyptian art style that he claimed to have found in an Illinois cave. When investigators from the Early Sites Research Society tried to pin down the location of the cave and its supposed wonders, they came up empty handed. Burrows refused to tell anyone where the cave is, despite regularly producing phantasmagorical new “artifacts” in a range of ancient art styles. Thousands of such artifacts appeared, and Burrows asserted that $60 million in gold was buried in the cave, which he worried that the Illinois state government would “steal” from him.

    Even Barry Fell recognized that at least one Burrows Cave artifact was a poor copy of an illustration from his own America B.C. (1976), including Fell’s own transcription error!

    Investigators found evidence that the Burrows Cave hoax had ties to Mormon cult archaeology, and some fringe groups suggested that the objects were the fabled Temple Treasure of Solomon, lost when Nebuchadnezzar invaded Jerusalem in 568 BCE. This aligned with Mormon claims that Jews fled Jerusalem and came to America. Among supporters of this view is the neo-Nazi pedophile Frank Joseph, who edited articles about the cave in his magazine Ancient American with funding from Mormon extremists. ….

    Source: http://www.jasoncolavito.com/1/post/2013/03/scott-wolter-burrows-cave-and-christian-america.html

  79. says

    A bit more information concerning the magazine that is the main outlet for Scott Wolter’s papers:

    Ancient American magazine, the alternative history publication put out by Wayne May, the Mormon extremist, and Frank Joseph, the ex-neo-Nazi convicted child predator. Both work to support Mormon narratives that white Europeans were the original inhabitants of America. This same publication has also published Scott Wolter’s papers on the Bat Creek Stone, the Newport Tower Venus “alignments,” and other related subjects that, of course, all serve as “evidence” for pre-Columbian European colonization of America. The magazine is one of Wolter’s primary outlets for his written work.

    Source.

  80. says

    Ex-mormons discuss Glenn Beck’s infatuation with the Bat Creek Stone and with Scott Wolter.

    http://exmormon.org/phorum/read.php?2,93285,93808
    The whole discussion is quite entertaining, and it also offers disturbing evidence of some ex-mormons still being fooled by Wolter, alongside ample evidence of other ex-mormons offering well-sourced counters to the fraud.

    http://exmormon.org/phorum/read.php?2,93285,373646#msg-373646

    http://exmormon.org/phorum/read.php?2,93285,375263#msg-375263

  81. vaiyt says

    Again, I’m not fucking surprised. How can people not see how racism is embedded in the core of paranormal history?

  82. blf says

    How can people not see how racism is embedded in the core of paranormal history?

    Perhaps because it has also been present in reality-based history for a long long time?

    I don’t mean the history of racism, but the racism in history books and teachings.

  83. Lyn M: ADM MinTruthiness says

    blf #100

    (There is a term for this phenomenon, but I forget what it is.)

    Stupidity.

  84. awakeinmo says

    Antoine Vekris @94

    A comparative study of rats addiction, Oreo vs M&M, should be planned ASAP.
    Does your crew care to be included?

    Sorry to shove myself in on the conversation, but I would gladly be involved. I don’t have any rats, but if you are willing to provide the samples for the experiment, I will dress up in a rat suit.

  85. Antoine Vekris says

    It seems that we have a project building up! And maybe the possibility of the weirdest control group ever @115… awakeinmo you are welcome, have you read the modalities of the study?

  86. Acolyte of Sagan says

    (There is a term for this phenomenon, but I forget what it is.)

    Retro-fitted evidence?