Space
Travelers and the Genesis of the Human Form
by
Joan d'Arc
| |
Description:
Can Darwinian evolution prove we are alone in the
universe? This book looks at anthropomorphic artifacts
on Mars and the Moon which are evidence that we are
not alone, even in our own solar system. In addition,
Darwinian evolution is shown to be a highly touted
philosophy, not an empirical science, of Western materialism,
which cannot be used to argue that mankind is alone
in the Universe. Humans did not accidently climb out
of the pond scum of our local habitat. Indeed Earth
may be a controlled DNA repository for the ongoing
creation and dissemination of life forms, including
the human form. This book looks at ancient myths which
describe the human form as common in the universe,
rather than being a local, Earth-based, one of a kind
anomaly. In essence, Darwianian evolution serves to
keep us unaware of our true ancestry from the "sky"
rather than from the "water." This book shows the
reader how we have been hoodwinked by materialist
philosophies, paraded as science, into believing we
exist in an isolated consciousness in an isolated
oasis, closed off from the larger family of man.
See
Reviews Below! |
Space
Travelers and The Genesis of the Human Form AND
Phenomenal
World
Review
by Jaye C. Beldo (LoneNutter@aol.com)
If she wanted,
Joan could probably spring us all from this earth prison/breeding
farm if she somehow could get to Galactic Central's Supreme
Court and its Deep Space Nine to represent us and present
her case for our liberation. If an ultra-dimensional troublemaker
such as myself was ever arrested and charged with crimes
against the consensus reality engineers at large, I'd probably
hire Joan d'Arc for a lawyer. Chances are, she would get
the case thrown out of court instantly if she presented
to the judge and jury the arguments she convincingly articulates
in her recent books Space Travelers and the Genesis of
Human Form and Phenomenal World.
The coeditor
of the ever tenacious and popular Paranoia magazine
(having celebrated their 10 year anniversary recently),
Joan offers the court a very rich and rewarding experience
in terms of how she has deftly woven together a vast multidimensional
tapestry, using the warp and woof of mind control, lucid
dreams, astral travel, remote viewing ETs/UFOs and other
'fringe' manifestations of consciousness to do so.
In Phenomenal
World, Joan presents us with one of the most thorough
and wide ranging comparisons of the various philosophies
concerning the nature of consciousness I've ever come across
in one book. From Sartre's existentialism to the implicate
nether worlds of Nick Herbert, Jack Sarfatti and others,
her tome is a much welcome panorama for any serious paranormal
researcher who doesn't have the time or patience to plow
through a plethora of conspiracy books in order to grasp
exactly what is going on in the ever shifting, shimmering
world of alternative realities.
Citing the observations
of post-quantum physicists, philosophers such as Edmund
Husserl, the very Politically Incorrect Martin Heidegger
and others who have seriously questioned the 'three dimensions
only' model, the author subtly removes herself and through
a kind of rare (albeit very welcome) aesthetic distance,
allows the reader to come to their own conclusions as to
what the verdict should be. One glance at the bibliography
in both of Ms. d'Arc's books will tip the reader off as
to just how sufficiently informed she really is to present
her line of defense to the jury.
In this book,
I especially admire the author's treatment of L. Ron Hubbard,
the man with the indelibly dubious reputation (as brought
to light in John Carter's book Sex and Rockets).
Initially, Scientology was probably a very effective tool
to obtain mental and spiritual health, if not complete liberation
from the matrix of manipulation and control. However, negative
forces in the form of various occult and intelligence agencies,
governmental and otherwise, stepped in to use it for their
own short-sighted, delusional purposes. Such malignant colonization
of potentially liberating means by negative forces has become
so widespread that it would be hard to dismiss these intrusions
as paranoid fancy or merely anomalous phenomena after reading
Phenomenal World.
In Space
Travelers and the Genesis of the Human Form (Part 1
of the two books although I found that they can be read
in either sequence), Joan furthers her abilities as a trans-dimensional
lawyer by challenging the galactic game wardens who have
been keeping vibrational tabs on human DNA since Sumerian
days of yore, if not longer. She provides multiplex evidence
of extraterrestrial visitations to Earth as well as a vast
and well-orchestrated cover-up by various government agencies
fearful of such information being leaked to the general
public, who would probably benefit profoundly from finally
knowing the truth. If she wanted, Joan could probably spring
us all from this earth prison/breeding farm if she somehow
could get to Galactic Central's Supreme Court and its Deep
Space Nine to represent us and present her case for our
liberation.
I particularly
enjoy the thoroughness of research in Space Travelers
found in the chapters on the ever controversial topic of
evolution and the continued promotion of such an effective
retardant as Darwinism (evolutionary, social, spiritual
and otherwise), in spite of emergence and pervasion of evidence
to the contrary. As the author pointed out the many holes
in the Darwinian scheme of 'natural selection,' linear evolution
and other contrivances, I was reminded of those fish symbols,
found on the back of cars, with tails and legs on them and
the word 'Darwin' within the fish's body. How ironic that
the intended lampooning of a religious symbol and what it
represents backfires when one considers that Darwinism is
just as narrow minded, dogmatic and fundamentalist as institutionalized
Christianity.
I'm not much
of a fan of UFO literature (I have yet to see one of the
damn things or a grey alien for that matter). However, there
are some genuinely eerie parts to Space Travelers,
at least enough to raise the hackles on this rather jaded
conspiracy book reviewer. I could not help but get drawn
into d'Arc's inclusion of information pertaining to the
possible Masonic ritual sacrifice of Apollo astronauts.
Gus Grissom, one of the Apollo 1 astronauts that died in
a space capsule fire on January 27, 1967, was a 33 degree
Freemason. Apparently during the fire, Alnitak in Orion's
belt was at 33 degrees. Also the UN Space Treaty of 1967
was being signed in the White House during this staged disaster,
no doubt as a prelude of things to come (Challenger?).
Such celestial
synchronicities cannot be ignored and should naturally raise
suspicions in anyone wary of NASA's role in the universal
scheme of things. Having a 7-21 birthday myself, I became
most intrigued by the 7-20-69 Apollo 11 moon landing, the
first landing on Mars on 7-20-76, JFK Jr.'s and three civilians
'burial' at sea on 7-21-99, as well as the anniversary of
Ted Kennedy/Chappaquiddick which falls on or near the 7-20
date as well. I've been putting a message out to the universe
to provide me with a coherent answer to these synchronicities
and why I chose to incarnate on the 7-21 date, but so far
my higher self is not giving me any insights at all. I did
have a psychic tell me that I was originally from Orion
so maybe that has something to do with it. Perhaps a rereading
of Space Travelers will shed further light on this
mystery and heighten my awareness to future cabals within
NASA and other space agencies, known and unknown.
Space Travelers
and Phenomenal World are required reading for anyone
who wants to get a clear bead on such convoluted, deliberately
skewed and shrouded topics as ETIs, our sky-born (rather
than water) ancestry, proof of intelligent life beyond the
Milky Way and other controversial topics. After studying
these books, you may very well be able to defend yourself
in the materialist/reductionist/positivist courts of law
which still persist in spite of trans-dimensionality, parallel
universes and other non-local opportunities at hand. If
you want to hyper-accelerate your spiritual evolution, I
highly recommend Joan's books indeed.
As a benign
coda to this review, I'd like to quote Joan's dedication
in Phenomenal World: "This book is dedicated to mind
control victims and ritually-abused children, whose pain
should remain our pain and whose battle should remain our
battle until human beings learn to create only free energy
and white magic."
Dear readers,
please consider this review as a whole hearted endorsement
of this dedication! For a free catalogue of The Book Tree's
other compelling offerings, call 1(800) 700-TREE or visit
their website at: www.thebooktree.com.
Jaye
C. Beldo writes for The Konformist, ViewZone,
Paranoia and other venues on and off line.
He has appeared on radio stations such as 93.3 The Planet
in South Carolina, KSCO in Santa Cruz, KAEP 105.7 F.M. in
Washington State, WZEE 104.1 Wisconsin, WZKG in Chicago
and many others. He and his work will be featured in the
near future on The Daily Show television program.
He can be reached at: lonenutter@aol.com.
Review
by Eugenia Macer-Story
Read this book.
It may cause you to change your "earthbound thinking." In
her discussion of Neanderthal man, author Joan d'Arc makes
an important point about "prehistory". We do not actually
know for sure what happened on planet Earth eons ago and
our various systems of understanding the history of this
planet are jig-sawed together from a variety of fossils
and artifacts, which by serendipity happened to be the artifacts
located by university professors and acknowledged authors.
Beyond this scattering of information, a cultural selection
no more universally valid than the winning lotto tickets
of a sweepstakes are valid in culturally representing the
population of the area in which the sweepstakes was held,
there are other bits and pieces of valid information which
do not conform to any of the historical interpretations
in the academic and/or popular publications canon. Because
only the available artifacts and fossils have been used
to build Darwin's "theory of evolution", the simple journalistic
observations of author Joan d'Arc serve to call the absolute
acceptance of this theory into question. In similar fashion,
her observations on documented systems of "space travel",
genetics and political "causality" which lie outside the
accepted canon of academic literature are excellent journalism
oriented toward the liberation of the reader's mind. Read
this book. It may cause you to change your "earthbound thinking."
Space
Travelers and the Genesis of the Human Form - booktree.com
review