(Neptune), while a smaller planetoid the Sumerians called ‘Gaga’ (Pluto) was in turn born from
Saturn and orbited the ringed planet as its satellite.
According to the texts, at this early time the Earth, as such, had not yet come into being while
all of the existing planets still had erratic and unstable orbits and wandered this way and that, all
greatly affected by each others gravitational pulls.
How many years, things remained in this state is not mentioned in the tale but we are told that
the next thing to occur, and still many, many eons ago, was a ‘celestial invasion’. A large planet
the texts name as ‘Nibiru’ was thrown from its own orbit far out in space and entered in to our
still unstable solar system. It was an event that would eventually prove to be a stabilizing factor
for our system but also one that wrought great havoc among the planets that already orbited our
Sun for as it entered it was also traveling in the opposing direction to the other planets.
The Rogue Planet Nibiru was first attracted into our Solar System by the gravitational pull of
Neptune. Upon its initial entry, the planet was apparently still quite unstable and plastic because
its passage past Neptune caused it to bulge dramatically from one side in the direction of the
planet. Neptune’s gravitational pull also affected its trajectory causing it to curve in towards the
center of our solar system. The next planet it was to pass was Uranus and in doing so it caused
great distress to the planet, upsetting it immensely. The planet ‘bowed to greet him’ (we can see
through our own studies that unlike any other planets, Uranus is in fact, on its side, while its
magnetic field remains vertical. This anomaly is here mentioned and explained by Sumerian
texts). Nibiru’s passage by the planet must have indeed been close because four great chunks
were also torn from Nibiru creating four satellites that orbited about it wildly. The texts name
these four satellites as the four winds: North wind, South wind, East wind and West wind. The
largest of these new satellites was said to be the North wind. Then Nibiru approached Saturn,
passing so close that it actually touched the planets rings, whereby its course was bent even
further inwards by the huge gravitational pull of the giant and was now locked on course towards
the inner planets.
As it passed by first Saturn and then Jupiter the approaching Nibiru had a major influence on
the inner planets, causing massive volcanic activity and very erratic orbital behavior. The massive
gravitational force of the approaching Nibiru caused huge chunks to be wrenched from Tiamat
until the planet had 11 satellites revolving around it. One of them called ‘Kingu’ continued to
attract debris and grow until it had grown to the size of a small planet. Then, pulled by the gravity
of the approaching invader, Kingu left its orbit around Tiamat and began to assume the orbital
characteristics of a planet in its own right, though it still remained close to Tiamat.
Nibiru continued relentlessly on its course, on its way tearing Saturn’s moon, Gaga from the
planets grip. During these close passes three more moons were also wrenched from the body of
Saturn, the texts name them as Evil Wind, Whirl Wind and Matchless Wind.
Nibiru was now surrounded by seven wildly orbiting satellites as the planet then began its
approach towards Tiamat.
As the two planets drew near to each other Tiamat became inexorably drawn by the gravity of
the huge invader and there were massive electrical discharges that began arcing between to two
planets which caused great damage to Tiamat. But then something occurred, perhaps the
electrical arcing provide an ‘electro-magnetic cushion’ of some kind that repelled the two bodies,
but for whatever the reason, Nibiru course became erratic and it did not collide with Tiamat,
however, one of its satellites did. The satellite called Evil Wind plowed straight into Tiamat,
cracking and splitting the planet in two as massive electrical discharges from Nibiru entered deep
into Tiamats core completely extinguishing its life. This is illustrated well by Sitchins own
diagrams (fig.121). Then Nibiru, now inexorably locked into orbit, left the inner planets to begin
its vast elliptical journey around our sun and it was on its second orbit through our solar system
that a further disaster struck.
And, hard as it may be to grasp at first, it is here that the Christian story of Genesis begins and
parallels the Sumerian tale
nextflipdebug2
(nextflipdebug2)
#1