Chapter Five
The Death of a God
As was stated at the start of this work, in attempting to gain a complete picture of our past and
find the key to our future all pieces of the puzzle must be examined, no matter how small or
obscure they may seem to be.
In keeping with that view we must now pause for a brief moment and turn our eyes to our
nearest celestial neighbor, the planet known to the ancient Sumerians as Lahmu and to the Greeks
as the celestial God of War. The planet we now call Mars.
The Broken God
In an amazing demonstration of Yale taught intelligence George Walker Bush made following
statement on August 11th 1994: “Mars is essentially in the same orbit as the Earth. Mars is
somewhat the same distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen pictures where
there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen
that means we can breathe”
In actual fact Mars today, is a barren wasteland. It is an inhospitable windswept rock with a
poisonous butterscotch colored atmosphere of mostly C02 and Methane stretched thinly over a
dusty reddish landscape. The question is how could it be so inhospitable when the Earth its
neighbor is just the opposite?
Some may not know this but our enigmatic celestial neighbor does have a slight atmosphere
(not breathable) and a north polar ice cap that scientists have proven to be frozen CO2 and water.
Yes that right, water. Pure, drinkable, life giving H2O exists on Mars, frozen at its North Pole
(fig.87a) quite a lot too as can be seen in this 3d image (fig.87b). Get yourself a telescope it’s
quite easy to see. Mars has a south polar ice cap too but that is said to be all frozen CO2 and there
are further indications of a certain amount of moisture existing in the atmosphere as the North
Polar Ice Cap undergoes some quite drastic seasonal changes (fig.87c).
Mars also bears some dramatic evidence of former ocean beds, vast river systems and a period
of catastrophic global flooding. Of course the planet is barren, dry and windswept now but the
evidence still remains. Everywhere across the surface we can still observe the signs of rivers,
lakes and even islands. In fact all the telltale signs of water erosion are still very easy to see on
the planets surface today (fig.88).