“We are a species with amnesia.”
Graham Hancock says a massive forgotten chapter of human history was destroyed by a global cataclysm.
We’ve been told civilization only started around 6,000 years ago. But Hancock argues there’s strong evidence of a sophisticated lost civilization at least 20,000 years ago — a golden age with “no violence, no cruelty,” where great healers and sages flourished.
The ancient myths record a gigantic cataclysm — a great flood told in hundreds of cultures, from Noah to Atlantis — that almost completely wiped out the human race.
“We have forgotten something very important in our own past.”
According to Graham Hancock, archaeology has “failed miserably in providing a nurturing satisfying answer to the questions we all have.”
Graham Hancock: "There was a lost advanced civilization over 20,000 years ago that was nearly erased by a global cataclysm around 12,800 years ago."
He describes how myths of a great flood and Atlantis-like stories worldwide point to the Younger Dryas event, a sudden comet impact or cosmic catastrophe that reset humanity, wiping out megafauna and advanced societies.
What if everything we think we know about human history is wrong?
He told Diary of a CEO how survivors may have passed down knowledge to emerging cultures, encoded in sites like the Great Pyramid and ancient maps showing continents unknown at the time.
It feels like Earth was designed perfectly for us, rain falling from the sky, food growing from the ground, yet somehow we’ve built a world where people need good credit scores, multiple jobs, and 40-hour workweeks just to survive
“This work does not comfort; it reveals and it challenges. It does not reassure; it strips away illusion and pulls no punches. Read on only if you are prepared to confront the possibility that much of what is assumed to be permanent is not -- and that mankind may not occupy the privileged position he has long presumed.”
-- Roger Cunningham, The @EthicalSkeptic, page 2, Inversion - ECDO Theory
Inversion — ECDO Theory
The Hidden Mechanism Driving Cataclysm, Cultural Tradition, and Climate
By Roger B. Cunningham (@EthicalSkeptic)
https://t.co/SNHOrPZl8u
https://t.co/ACj6oDImov
Rape victims are often accused of adultery under Sharia law if they report being raped by married Muslim men.
Here is a shocking example:
A 13-year-old girl in Somalia was raped by a married Muslim man. Instead of punishing the rapist, an Islamic Sharia court sentenced the little girl to death. The Muslim rapist accused her of “seducing” him by appearing in public, and the court agreed — convicting her of adultery.
Hundreds of Muslim men gathered to stone her to death as an offering to Allah.
They laughed, cheered and shouted “Allahu Akbar” as she screamed in agony until her last breath. Not one man stepped forward to save the 13-year-old rape victim.
Everyone in the village heard her cries for help before the execution. Instead of intervening, they tied her hands behind her back and chained her feet. The local imam directed the men to dig a hole and bury her up to her waist so she could not move or dodge the stones aimed at her head.
For hours before and during the stoning she begged for mercy, looking toward her neighbors, her father, and every Muslim man taking part. Until her final breath she cried out, but no one rescued her. Of the hundreds of men present, none showed compassion.
The participants gladly joined this Islamic act of worship, ignoring her pleas and rejoicing with “Allahu Akbar” while brutally killing her.
This is not an isolated barbaric act.
This is Sharia law in practice — where the victim is punished and the rapist protected if he is married.
Not all cultures are equal.
Some protect the innocent.
Islam punishes the raped girl and calls it justice.
The West keeps importing this ideology while pretending it is compatible with our values.
It is not.
Share this. The world must see the true face of Sharia and stop the denial.
In 1967, Margaret Heckler was elected to Congress. She was a practicing lawyer. She still couldn't get a line of credit in her own name. A sitting member of the United States Congress needed a male co-signer to borrow money.
She joined the Banking Committee specifically to fix this. She arranged meetings with CEOs at JP Morgan, Chase, and Wells Fargo. Their concern? Women might not pay their bills.
It took seven more years. Before the Equal Credit Opportunity Act passed in 1974, a single woman needed her father or brother to co-sign loans even if she out-earned them. A married woman needed her husband's permission for a bank account, a credit card, or a mortgage. A widow with perfect payment history could be denied credit because her husband was dead.
That was 52 years ago. Your mother was probably already alive.
The timeline gets worse from there. Marital rape wasn't criminalized in all 50 states until 1993. Some states still treat it differently in sentencing. South Carolina requires married women to prove a threat of physical violence within 30 days of an assault before pursuing a case.
1974 feels like ancient history until you realize the country spent another 19 years debating whether a husband raping his wife was a crime.