PheonixTheLion wrote:Well Mr. Grondine I am glad someone knows their history.
Yes, it is indeed fortunate someone knows their history, as that is about the only way the soul suckers of the 2012 industry will be stopped. With history, including their own - once properly exposed, they'll be seen exactly for what they are.
PheonixTheLion wrote:and by the way I wasn't refering to the mayans as they were when the Spanish got there I was refering to the Mayans as they were when their civilisation began. At the height of their power if you will. The great cities of the Mayans were built long before all the tribes and nations of the Yucatan Peninsula had degenerated into bloodthirsty savages.
Actually, Phoenix, some Maya cities were built well after the classical period, and just prior to Spanish arrival. The Maya never "degenerated into blood-thirsty savages", and were at the point of abandoning their very rare human sacrifice when blood thirsty savages, the Spanish conquistadors, showed up.
PheonixTheLion wrote: Those are times I speak when I say that so much of their history was lost. If you have more than just one book and or point of view to expouse then I would love to recieve the bibliography at my Email
aarondaniels76aug@yahoo.com.
Sorry, Aaron, but I do have one point of view, a point of view which corresponds to reality; my reporting is known among some people for its lethal accuracy. You can read some of it via the links over in the member's profile section.
As I gifted copies of my book "Man and Impact in the Americas" to major libraries, you can read it for free via interlibrary loan, and then read the works cited there. While it lacks a bibliography as I was hit by a stroke after I finished the manuscript for it, nearly all works used were fully cited. One of the real faults with the book due to my stroke is the lack of citations to all surviving Mayan written works, which I read.
PheonixTheLion wrote: I dont like looking a fool and I should have been more specific about the time frame to which I was refering but I figured that it would have been implied when I mentioned the time of Christ.
Someone once said that it is better to keep one's mouth closed and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. At the time of Christ many of the Maya in their northern areas had not yet fully adopted or implemented the technologies seen in the classical period, which really blossomed several hundred years later in those areas.
Get thee to a library, or amazon.
E.P. Grondine
Man and Impact in the Americas, and
Amazing Stories - a guide inside the fringe
[quote="PheonixTheLion"]Well Mr. Grondine I am glad someone knows their history. [/quote]
Yes, it is indeed fortunate someone knows their history, as that is about the only way the soul suckers of the 2012 industry will be stopped. With history, including their own - once properly exposed, they'll be seen exactly for what they are.
[quote="PheonixTheLion"]and by the way I wasn't refering to the mayans as they were when the Spanish got there I was refering to the Mayans as they were when their civilisation began. At the height of their power if you will. The great cities of the Mayans were built long before all the tribes and nations of the Yucatan Peninsula had degenerated into bloodthirsty savages.
[/quote]
Actually, Phoenix, some Maya cities were built well after the classical period, and just prior to Spanish arrival. The Maya never "degenerated into blood-thirsty savages", and were at the point of abandoning their very rare human sacrifice when blood thirsty savages, the Spanish conquistadors, showed up.
[quote="PheonixTheLion"] Those are times I speak when I say that so much of their history was lost. If you have more than just one book and or point of view to expouse then I would love to recieve the bibliography at my Email aarondaniels76aug@yahoo.com. [/quote]
Sorry, Aaron, but I do have one point of view, a point of view which corresponds to reality; my reporting is known among some people for its lethal accuracy. You can read some of it via the links over in the member's profile section.
As I gifted copies of my book "Man and Impact in the Americas" to major libraries, you can read it for free via interlibrary loan, and then read the works cited there. While it lacks a bibliography as I was hit by a stroke after I finished the manuscript for it, nearly all works used were fully cited. One of the real faults with the book due to my stroke is the lack of citations to all surviving Mayan written works, which I read.
[quote="PheonixTheLion"] I dont like looking a fool and I should have been more specific about the time frame to which I was refering but I figured that it would have been implied when I mentioned the time of Christ.[/quote]
Someone once said that it is better to keep one's mouth closed and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. At the time of Christ many of the Maya in their northern areas had not yet fully adopted or implemented the technologies seen in the classical period, which really blossomed several hundred years later in those areas.
Get thee to a library, or amazon.
E.P. Grondine
Man and Impact in the Americas, and
Amazing Stories - a guide inside the fringe