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Post by H. İhsan Erkoç on Jun 6, 2009 13:58:38 GMT 3
Perhaps some people confuse the two vastly different terms Mongolian and Mongoloid.
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Post by Subu'atai on Jun 6, 2009 17:38:02 GMT 3
During the great shifts of the continents, there were no human beings in the World. Do we really know that? Still, I'm rather scratchy scratchy over this.
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Post by sarmat on Jun 6, 2009 19:15:27 GMT 3
I believe it is because of the culture. I'm not sure of the term I believe it is called structural violence where a culture promotes certain believes to keep a status quo. In fact you would discover very interesting parallels with Native American if you studied indigenous cultures of Siberia.
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Post by hjernespiser on Jun 7, 2009 3:06:26 GMT 3
Hrm, I had to look up what structural violence is and I'm not sure how it relates to keeping a status quo.
As for science: "We are always saying one thing and then changing it saying oh, we were mistaken." That's because that's the nature of science. Science is a tool, not an end to a means. I think that's the biggest misunderstanding that people have about science. We say something is one way because the evidence we have supports a certain theory best. When someone finds some better evidence and creates a new theory that others agree with, a new consensus is formed and the old theory is thrown out.
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Post by H. İhsan Erkoç on Jun 7, 2009 15:11:17 GMT 3
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Post by hjernespiser on Jun 8, 2009 2:32:57 GMT 3
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Post by hjernespiser on Jun 8, 2009 2:44:06 GMT 3
Hey, how about the Arvisura? www.c3.hu/~szinjaz/summar.htm"This word is the title of a huge manuscript written by Zoltán Pál, who became shaman during the World War II. He regularly fell into trance and then put down what he was „dictated“ during the trance. From these fragments we can read the story of the Hungarians and their relatives in the past six thousand years." Or read first page of www.amazon.com/History-Earth-Cosmos-Geza-Kisteleki/dp/963061748XI saw something awhile ago in English about Arvisura... can't find it now. It's supposedly related with Lemuria. Ah, here. After playing a bit with Google search options, found some more info in English... faroutliers.blogspot.com/2005/04/minority-huns-in-hungary-ancient-huns.html"we pyramid-building Huns have distant relatives even in Hawaii," Novák said, noting the theory that the Huns sprung from a since-vanished island near Hawaii called Ataisz roughly 5,000 years before the birth of Christ." "The Arvisura history begins with the sunken ancient homeland of Ataisz, which land is similar to Plato's written description of Atlantis, but is still not one and the same. According to the saga, or legend ("rege"), it is from here (Ataisz) that the Huns came to be in Ordosz by way of Mesopotamia, where, in 4040, before recorded time, they formed the association of the 24 tribes. The "Palocok Regevilaga" ['legendary bollocks'--tr.] concisely describes the 24 Hun tribes' lives nation by nation, from about 4040 b.c. all the way to King Matthias, including Maria Theresa. This enormous span of masterwork takes into account thousands of years in listing in chronological order all of those events which brought into being today's world that surrounds us, although in a way, or to some extent (nemikepp), from a different foundation than we were able to learn in school."
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Post by H. İhsan Erkoç on Jun 8, 2009 10:58:30 GMT 3
Oh Tengri, what the hell are these? ;D ;D ;D ;D
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Post by sarmat on Jun 8, 2009 19:39:01 GMT 3
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Post by hjernespiser on Jun 8, 2009 22:01:42 GMT 3
Oh Tengri, what the hell are these? ;D ;D ;D ;D Some fun late-night reading?
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Post by H. İhsan Erkoç on Jun 9, 2009 0:42:43 GMT 3
Definitely ;D ;D ;D ;D
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Post by Subu'atai on Jun 9, 2009 15:49:31 GMT 3
?!?!?!?!?!
ROFL! You know in real life whenever someone asks me where I'm from, I always reply that "I'm from an island... but it sunk!" Looks like my fiction comes from fact! lol!
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Post by sarmat on Jun 10, 2009 22:38:26 GMT 3
All that BS mamba-jamba looks very funny, of course. But, unfortunately, in the beginning of the last century it was taken very seriously by many and even bacame the direct inspiration for Hitler's racistic ideology. Swastika was taken as a symbol by Nazis from Blavatksky's books as well.
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Post by H. İhsan Erkoç on Jun 11, 2009 4:19:48 GMT 3
That racist-oriented history-writing stuff seems to have been very popular at that time
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Post by arnewise12 on Jun 17, 2009 9:32:32 GMT 3
So its true that the turkic people and the native americans share common ancestry even if it long time ago
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