The Georgia Guidestones 10 commandments
An interesting article originally written in 2010. The guidestones were destroyed with explosive devices in 2022.
The impressive megalith erected thirty years ago in the southern United States has still not revealed its mystery. Who is the sponsor, and what is its purpose?
The strangest monument in the United States stands in northeast Georgia, on a desolate mound. Five imposing blocks of polished granite, drawing a star, rise towards the sky. When one approaches this construction, one immediately thinks of the megalithic site of Stonehenge, in Great Britain, or of thedisturbing monolith from the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. Erected in 1980, these pale gray blocks peacefully await the end of the world.
The Georgia Guidestones [literally, “Guiding Stones of Georgia”], as they are called, are a mystery: no one knows who commissioned the work or why. The only indications of its origin are a plaque placed nearby on the ground (she specifies the dimensions and explains the meaning of a series of notches and orifices corresponding to the movements of the sun and the stars) and instructions engraved directly in the rock. These instructions are given in eight languages and testify to a unique new age ideology. Some are vaguely eugenics (“Direct reproduction wisely – so as to improve health and diversity”), others advocate dyed-in-the-wool hippie mysticism (“Appreciate truth – beauty – love – seeking harmony with infinity”). The Guidestones, it is more often thought, are meant to show survivors of an upcoming apocalypse the way forward in trying to put civilization back together. But this idea is not to everyone's taste. A few days before my visit, the monument had been smeared with paint, and slogans like “Death to the New World Order” had been spray-painted on it. It is the first act of serious vandalism in the history of the Guidestones, but not the first manifestation of hostility towards them. For more than thirty years, this strange structure erected in the middle of the Bible Belt ["belt of the Bible", name given to the southeastern states of the United States, where there is a high proportion of fundamentalist Christians] has aroused reactions which range from wonder to horror. His followers (including Yoko Ono) praise his messages as appeals to rationalism, similar to Thomas Paine's treatise " The Age of Reason ". When its detractors see in it the ten commandments of the Antichrist.
Whoever built the Guidestones knew what they were doing: it is an expertly designed structure that follows the sun perfectly. And which, thanks to a carefully maintained aura of mystery, exerts an infinite fascination. The story of the Georgia Guidestones begins on a Friday afternoon in June 1979: an elegant gray-haired gentleman walks into the headquarters of the granite-cutting company Elberton Granite Finishing, where he introduces himself as Robert C. Christian. He says he represents “a small group of good Americans” who are planning the creation of a monument of unusual size and complexity. If Robert C. Christian came to Elberton, the granite capital of the world, it is because he is convinced that the region's quarries produce the finest stone in the world.
“I have a freak here who wants an insane monument”
Joe Fendley, general manager of Elberton Granite, nods absently. But, when Christian begins to describe to him what he has in mind, he interrupts what he is doing. For not only does his visitor ask for stones such as have never been quarried in the county, but he also wants them to be cut, polished and assembled in such a way as to form a sort of gigantic astronomical instrument.
But for what purpose? asks Fendley. Robert C. Christian explains that the structure he envisions will serve as a compass, calendar and clock. It will also have to be engraved with a set of instructions in eight of the most spoken languages in the world. And it must be able to resist the worst catastrophes, so that a decimated humanity can use these directives to rebuild a civilization better than the one which is about to destroy itself.
Fendley is now deceased, but a journalist from an Atlanta television station was able to collect his testimony shortly after the construction of the Guidestones. "I thought, 'I'm dealing with a weirdo. How to put it out?' The business manager then tries to discourage his visitor by giving him a price several times higher than that of all the sites carried out by his company. You need special tools, heavy equipment, and call on outside consultants, he explains. But Robert C. Christian just nods his head and asks how long the construction will take. Six months at least, Fendley ventures. In any case, he adds, if only to study a project of this magnitude, he needs financial guarantees. When Christian asks him if there is a banker in town he trusts, Fendley sees an opportunity to get rid of the intruder: he sends him to Wyatt Martin, the director of the Granite City Bank.
Wyatt Martin (the only person in Elberton, along with Fendley, to have met RC Christian) is now 78 years old. “Fendley called me and said, 'I've got a lunatic here who wants an insane monument.' But, when I saw the guy arrive, he was wearing a very elegant, very expensive suit, which made me take him a little more seriously. And then, he spoke well, he was obviously someone of a certain level. Naturally, Wyatt Martin is surprised when the man tells him that "RC Christian" is a pseudonym. His group has been nurturing this project in secret for twenty years, he explains, and he wishes to remain anonymous forever. “When he told me about their project, I almost fell over, remembers Wyatt Martin. I told him, 'Might as well throw the money away.' He just looked at me, shaking his head, as if feeling a bit sorry for me, and said, 'You don't understand.' »
Wyatt Martin leads Christian to the town square, where stands an imposing Bicentennial fountain [of the independence of the United States] commissioned by the municipality, whose thirteen granite panels, arranged in a circle, represent the original thirteen colonies. “I told him it was the most important project ever undertaken in the area and that it was out of all proportion to what he was talking about. It didn't seem to bother him. Christian promises to return the following Monday; he charters a plane and spends the weekend scouting from the air. "From there, I started to half-believe him," recalls Wyatt Martin.
When Christian goes to the bank again on Monday, the banker explains to him that he cannot start the procedure without knowing his true identity and obtaining the guarantee that he is solvent. The two men finally come to an agreement: Christian will reveal his real name to him on the condition that Wyatt agrees to be his only intermediary, to sign a confidentiality agreement under which he will never reveal the information to a living soul and he will destroy all documents and archives once the work has been completed. “He told me that he would transfer the amount from different banks in the country, says Wyatt Martin. He made it clear to me that he does not take the issue of secrecy lightly.”
Before leaving Elberton, Christian met Fendley again, to whom he gave a shoebox containing a wooden model of the desired monument, accompanied by specifications of a good ten pages. Fendley accepts the model and the document, but he is still skeptical. The following Friday, Wyatt Martin announces to him by telephone that he has just received a transfer of 10 dollars. From then on, the entrepreneur gets to work and asks no more questions. “My dad loved a challenge,” recalls his daughter, Melissa Fendley Caruso. "He said it was the most ambitious project in the history of Elbert County."
Construction of the Guidestones begins later that summer. Joe Fendley and Wyatt Martin helped Christian find a suitable site in Elbert County: a knoll overlooking the pastures of a sprawling farm, with a 360-degree view. For 5 dollars, its owner, Wayne Mullinex, sells a plot of just over 000 hectares. In addition to the money, Christian grants Mullinex and his children lifelong grazing rights for the cattle, and Mullinex's construction company is responsible for laying the foundations of the monument.
Once the land is purchased, the future of the Tone Guides is assured. Christian takes leave of Fendley. "You'll never see me again," he said before walking out, without even a handshake. From then on, Christian will only communicate with Wyatt Martin. He wrote to him a few weeks later to ask him to transfer ownership of the land and the monument to the county of Elbert, which is still the owner today: the mysterious building owner thinks that the pride of the citizens will take care of it with time to protect the Guidestones. “Mr. Christian's letters each time came from different cities,” says Martin. He never posted twice from the same place.”
The astronomical specifications for the Guidestones are so complex that Fendley has to secure the services of an astronomer from the University of Georgia. The four outer stones must be oriented according to the annual course of the sun. On the central column, two elements require careful calibration: an opening through which the North Star will be permanently visible, and a slit that must align with the position of the rising sun on solstice and equinox days. The capstone is characterized by a 2 centimeter hole through which a ray of sunlight must pass each day at noon and fall on the current date indicated on the central stone.
The most remarkable feature of the monument nevertheless remains its ten precepts engraved on both sides of the outer stones in eight languages: English, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Arabic, Hebrew, Hindi and Swahili. Some sort of mission statement (“May these stones guide us to an age of reason”) is also to be engraved on the sides of the capstone in Egyptian hieroglyphs, ancient Greek, Sanskrit and Babylonian cuneiform characters. The translations, some provided by the United Nations (especially for dead languages), are stenciled on the stone, then engraved with a sandblaster.
The craftsman was distracted by strange music and confused voices.
The monument will cause controversy even before it is completed. The first rumor was peddled by members of the Elberton Granite Industrial Association, jealous of the attention one of theirs received: it was Joe Fendley who was behind it all, they said, with the complicity of his friend the banker Wyatt Martin. The gossip is so pernicious that the two men agree to submit to the lie detector. The rumor died down when the local newspaper, The Elberton Star, reported that they had both passed the test, but this media coverage sparked new grievances. When the content of the inscriptions began to spread, recalls Wyatt Martin, even people he considered his friends asked him why he agreed to perform the work of the Evil One. James Travenstead, a local pastor, predicts that “occult groups” will be pouring in and warns: “One day a sacrifice will take place here.” As for those who are more for the project, they are put off by the words of Charlie Clamp, the craftsman responsible for engraving the characters on the stones: he spent hours there, he says, and was constantly distracted of his task by “strange music and confused voices”. The inauguration, on March 22, 1980, is a celebration for the whole city. Constituency Congressman Doug Barnard speaks to 400 people who flocked to the hill, including television crews from Atlanta. Elberton soon became a tourist destination, and people came from all over the world to see the Guidestones. “We had visitors from Japan, China, India, everywhere, who wanted to go up to see the monument,” says Wyatt Martin. In the spring of 2005, National Geographic Traveler magazine mentioned the Georgia Guidestones in its guide to Appalachia.
“Govern all things by reason and moderation”
But the inscriptions on the stones disturb more than one visitor. Precept number 1 immediately casts a chill: “Keep humanity under the bar of 500 million individuals in constant balance with nature.” At the time, the planet had 4,5 billion human beings, which means that 8 out of 9 had to be eliminated (today it would be around 12 out of 13). And this instruction is recalled and developed in precept number 2: “Direct reproduction wisely – so as to improve health and diversity.” No need to be particularly imaginative to draw a parallel with the eugenic practices of the Nazis, among others. Instruction number 3 enjoins humanity to unite behind a new living language: this is what makes the pastors of the region shudder, who know well that, according to Revelation, a common language and a world government make part of the achievements of the Antichrist.
Precept number 4 (“Govern passion – faith – tradition – and all things by moderation and reason”) is equally distasteful to Christians attached to the absolute primacy of faith. By comparison, the other six are simply boring moralism: “Protect peoples and nations with just laws and just courts. Let all nations govern themselves and resolve external disputes before a world tribunal. Avoid petty laws and unnecessary officials. Maintain the balance between individual rights and social duties. Appreciate truth – beauty – love – seeking harmony with infinity. Don't be a cancer to the Earth - make room for nature - make room for nature.”
As locals question the validity of these commandments, Pastor Travenstead's dire predictions seem to be coming true. A group of Atlanta witches hold weekend sabbats at the foot of the Guidestones to perform various pagan rituals (“dances, songs, that sort of thing,” says Wyatt Martin) and even, on one occasion, a marriage ceremony between wizards. No human being is sacrificed on the granite altar, but rumor has it that chickens are decapitated there.
A high-ranking member of a "Luciferian secret society"
Visitors continue to flock, but after several fruitless investigations into the true identity of RC Christian, the media eventually lose interest in the place. A revival of curiosity took place in 1993, when Yoko Ono recorded for an album in tribute to the avant-garde composer John Cage a piece entitled Georgia Stone, in which she chanted almost word for word the tenth and last precept: “ Don't be a cancer to the Earth - make room for nature - make room for nature.” During all this time, Robert C. Christian remained in contact with Wyatt Martin, so much so that between the two men was born a true epistolary friendship.
The Robert C. Christian mystery and lack of information about the true meaning of the Guidestones has naturally inflamed conspiracy theorists and "investigators" of all stripes. No wonder that, thirty years later, the curious still crowd in front of the monument to try to fill the void with various and varied hypotheses.
Among them is Mark Dice, author of a book called The Resistance Manifesto. Since 2005, this man has demanded that the Guidestones be “broken into millions of pieces”. According to him, the monument has "a deep satanic origin", a claim that has earned him media attention. RC Christian, he claims, was a high-ranking member of a “secret Luciferian society” spearheading the new world order. “The elite are working on the development in the coming decades of life-extending technologies that will put an end to aging, says Mark Dice, and they fear that with a planet as densely populated as today the masses only use the resources it wants to reserve for itself. The Guidestones are the Ten Commandments of the New World Order. They are also a way for the elite to laugh at the expense of the uninformed masses: their agenda is crystal clear, and these zombies don't even realize it.”
Mark Dice's performance only heightened interest in the Georgia Guidestones. And attract new visitors, further dissuading Elbert County officials from getting rid of their area's one big tourist asset. Phyllis Brooks, who heads the county's Chamber of Commerce, said she was horrified when last November the Guide stones were vandalized for the first time in their history. If Mark Dice denies being involved in the case, he seems to be the inspiration: the messages sprayed on the stone said “Jesus will defeat you, dirty Satanists” or “No to the world government”. Other tags proclaimed that the attacks of September 11, 2001 were the work of the American government and that Barack Obama was Muslim.
Wyatt Martin winces every time he hears Dice talk about "secret Luciferian society" about the Guidestones. Although in disagreement, he admits to having no certainty. “All I can tell you is that Mr. Christian has always struck me as a very decent and very honest guy.”
Naturally, Mark Dice is far from the only one with his theory on the Guide stones. Jay Weidner, a former Seattle radio host turned conspiracy theorist, has spent considerable time and energy crafting one of the most prized hypotheses. For him, Christian and his associates were Rosicrucians, members of the mystical order of the Rose-Croix, a secret society which appeared in Germany in the late Middle Ages which claimed to know about the nature, the universe and the spirituality of the esoteric truths beyond ordinary mortals. RC Christian's name, argues Jay Weidner, is a tribute to Christian Rosenkreutz, the mythical figure believed to be the legendary founder of the Rose-Croix in the XIVe century. The cult of secrecy, he continues, has always characterized the Rosicrucians, who made themselves known at the beginning of the XVIIe century by two anonymous manifestos which caused a sensation throughout Europe, even if no one has ever been able to identify a single member of this secret society. In fact, if the precepts engraved on the Guidestones are in flagrant contradiction with Christian eschatology, they stick quite well to the principles of the Rose-Croix, which emphasize reason and advocate harmony with nature.
"I can't say anything, I made a promise"
Jay Weidner also has a theory about the purpose of the Guidestones. A specialist in the hermetic and alchemical traditions that gave birth to the Rose-Croix, he is convinced that, for generations, the Order has transmitted knowledge of a solar cycle culminating every thirteen thousand years. During this cyclical peak, gigantic coronal mass ejections are expected to devastate the Earth. In the meantime, Weidner believes, the secret organization behind the Guidestones is orchestrating a "planetary chaos" that began with the recent collapse of the US financial system and will eventually result in severe disruptions to oil and gas supplies. foodstuffs, large-scale riots and ethnic wars around the world, culminating in December 21, 2012 – the Great Event. “They want to decrease the population, assures Jay Weidner, and this is how they think to achieve it. The Guidestones are there to instruct the survivors.”
Informed of Weidner's ideas, Wyatt Martin shakes his head: it's “the kind of thing that makes me want to say everything I know”. The Banker has long since retired and no longer lives in Elberton, but he remains the official (and sole) keeper of the Guidestones' secret. "But I can't say anything", hastens to add the old gentleman. "I made a promise." Wyatt Martin has also pledged to destroy all traces of his dealings with Robert C. Christian – but he hasn't kept that promise, not yet. In the back of his garage, a large plastic crate (the padded suitcase of an IBM computer he bought in 1983) contains all of the Guidestone-related documents that have passed through his hands, including Christian's letters.
For years, Wyatt Martin thought he might write a book, but now he knows he won't. Nor will he allow me to peek into his archives. When I ask him if he's ready to take what he knows to the grave, he says that's exactly what Christian wanted him to do. “He never stopped saying that his identity and his origin should remain secret. He said that's how mysteries work. To keep people interested, you have to reveal very little to them.”
Source: Ten commandments for the post-disaster?
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Open Question:
"The impressive megalith erected thirty years ago in the southern United States has still not revealed its mystery. Who is the sponsor, and what is its purpose?"
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Only carefully BRAINWASHED westerners, fail to answer this question !
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Any mediocre "medical detective" - AFTER four years of "DEEP STATE" deception on the origins & the purpose of Covid-19 / SARS-Cov-2 - will tell you, this is the order of the day from all those CRIMINALS in power, WHO DREAM TO CREATE A GLOBAL DICTATORSHIP, AS DESCRIBED BY BY THE "GREAT RESET" OF KLAUS SCHWAB, and all the other "leading" Psychopath's, that fall for his Marxist & CRIMINAL Dystopia . . .
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Mankind has not learned yet - to differentiate between SANITY & INSANITY - so once again, we are led by a bunch of crazy PSYCHOPATHS.
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Any real Psychopath is an INSANE being, led by his MENTAL desire to harm & to destroy - which is in exact opposition to about 98% of the world's population - who are guided by their mutual intention to SURVIVE.
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As "We The People" do not like INSANITY & PSYCHOPATHS - the only real problem is their often fantastic ability for CAMOUFLAGE - like for example the highly talented mass-murderer & vaccine-killer Bill Gates, who poses as a "Philanthropist", and tries to scare the shit out of everyone, by falsely claiming the world is "overpopulated". . . !
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We need to wake up to the reality of our problems & start to educate ourselves - on HOW TO DETECT THE TRUE "CAUSE", BEHIND ALL THOSE CRAZY "EFFECTS" - like mass-murder in wars, mass-murder from starvation, mass-murder from scientific suppression of the freedom of individual choice & mass-murder by vaccination.