In Star Trek lore, a Starfleet Academy student named James T. Kirk was scheduled to face an unrecoverable disaster scenario known as the "
Kobayashi Maru." The test was to see how the individual would handle command during an escalating disaster even past the point of complete failure. The computer simulation was rigged such that no matter what
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The Wingmakers material is interesting, but the personages I have encountered so far, on via Skype, the other via scrutiny of the interviews, are both human and prone to error. James in fact in his most recent interview not only contradicted his earlier interviews (which are in alignment with what I know) and began to toe the Enlilite line. Oh shit. So I backed off that, hard.
I have heard of Barbara Hand Clow by reputation but have not read her books. Pleiadeans and Anunaki are different forms of humanoid and have quite different cultures. The Pleiadeans are members of the Great Council, the Anunaki are not, and the Anunaki consider the Pleiadeans to be an impractical people, much given to arts that will not ensure their long-term survival should a selector event come to their worlds like one came to the Anunaki homeworlds. In short, the Pleiadeans may know the history, but may not interpret it correctly.
My keeper of the Library friend was quite different from Mr. Atoz. He looked to be around 30, with dark hair and eyes and a broad bone structure rather like Commander Chakotay of Voyager but with fair skin and a kinder face. He also turned up in my reality many years before Voyager was even conceived. The library I saw had no time-portal features to it other than a table that you could use to scry very small geographic areas, such as to view historical events. You could not step through or send anything through.
The Book of An, truly written, would be interesting because it would document the learning process of a being who is NOT a god, but who plays one and who attracts and then savagely rejects a being who rather more closely resembles a true god, but who doesn't even think in those terms and doesn't think he should, either. An descended into power-madness for a long time, invented war and most of the "sins" and it wasn't until the days of be-with-us (Anunaki on Earth) did he start to realize the negative effects of his delusion. If my source is correct, he was murdered before he had a chance to correct most of his mistakes. Of course, that just means he had to take a different body, which may well put him here on Earth in human bodies...learning.
I am not aware of Kyle Griffin or his book; the closest match I could find was a book of the same name by a Charles Williams. I haven't read any Zechariah Sitchin, either, although I did take a look at his web site on the behest of my "god friend" when we wanted to give me a lesson in how humans misinterprest stuff they don't understand.
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