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Saturday, 20 June 2026

Hunter-Gatherer, Or?

 

February 20, 2022

Human history—boy, is it a mess. On one hand, we have people like myself promoting the idea that intelligent life began around 350,000 years ago. On the other, we’re told that we evolved from volcanic mud puddles, with chains of enzymes eventually combining to form intelligence. The truth likely lies somewhere in between. Yes, our planet was seeded with life through a process called panspermia. Yes, ancient proteins, enzymes, and other organic compounds may have formed in volcanic mud pools—and yes, we evolved from there. But only up to a certain point.

We also know that Earth was seeded with life early in the Solar System’s formation. That life, according to some theories, came from a planet that formed outside our local region of space. Life had already developed on that planet in humanoid form, and those beings were at least a million years ahead of us on the evolutionary ladder. We developed independently from that seeding until we became bipedal, semi-intelligent hominids. Then these more advanced humanoids—what some call the Annunaki—arrived on Earth and created us by combining their DNA with ours, essentially jump starting our evolution. This intervention has left us endlessly confused about our origins and identity.

Except, of course, for certain religious institutions—like the Evangelical Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky. Most paleontologists, by contrast, agree that humanity’s “cradle of creation” was the Great Rift Valley, which stretches from Djibouti in the north to Tanzania in the south, with nearly half of it located in Ethiopia. From there, early humans migrated out of Africa into the Middle East and beyond.

There’s still a great deal of mystery surrounding hominid history: the origins of beings like the “Hobbits of Indonesia,” why both Neanderthals and Homo sapiens created cave art over 250,000 years ago, and why some Homo sapiens carry Neanderthal DNA. Setting those questions aside, we know the Annunaki are said to have arrived on Earth around 432,000 years ago, and that we were created approximately 300,000 years ago. This matches up with many archaeological dates for both Neanderthal and Homo sapiens settlements.

Although we can’t be absolutely certain, in one ancient image there appears to be a figure standing near an authority figure, with conical, tree-shaped objects arranged on a tray. This imagery is common in Egyptian art and is believed to represent Shem-an-na—the so-called "cakes" of MFKZT.

Wait—authority figure? We just jumped from ancient Neanderthals to...who exactly? This is where things get murky, entering the realm of what probably was.

Verifiable human history, as some claim, begins about 300,000 years ago with our creation by the Annunaki—those humanoids from another world. This creation supposedly took place in the Abzu (Africa), the realm of Enki. For the first 250,000 years of our existence—perhaps a better word is bondage—we were brutally treated by our creators. We were slaves, laboring naked before them. Although Enki, his sister Ninkharsag, and many of the 600 Annunaki eventually developed respect or even affection for us, we were still seen as tools—objects to be used and abused.

Humans as tools. For the entire time that the Annunaki were with us, we were slaves for them. For the most part, our treatment was harsh, but fair. After Unapishtim's (Noah) flood, kingship was lowered from heaven, and conditions for us improved marginally. He was our first human true Grail king, beginning the long tradition of service to the people.

Most scholars only recognize Sumerian history starting about 6,000 years ago, so there’s clearly a massive timescale discrepancy here. But that’s less of a problem when the Sumerian King List is taken literally, which places our history tens or even hundreds of thousands of years deeper into the past. Enki was reportedly proud of his creation—us. It’s very likely we were initially kept in pens for observation before being assigned to various Annunaki work sites. Enlil, for example, was eager to use us in Sumer—the original Garden of Eden.

So how do we get from slaves in the garden to hunter-gatherer Neanderthals dwelling in caves?

There are several theories, but I prefer two in particular. The first suggests that the pens were overcrowded and conditions were so intolerable that we escaped, eventually learning to survive off the land. Even the Bible hints at this—referencing drought, disease, and climate change as driving forces behind early migration.

The second theory proposes that the Annunaki organized expeditions that included dozens of us as laborers, hunters, sex slaves, or timekeepers while they scouted for valuable minerals. In either case—whether we escaped or became nomadic workers—our spirituality was influenced by the Annage (another term for the Annunaki).

Take the swastika, for instance. It’s a stylized cross whose first recorded appearance dates to around 3,000 BCE. It had nothing to do with Christianity and was originally meant to represent the Annage’s home planet—Nibiru. Across both Neanderthal and early Homo sapiens societies, the core of spiritual belief was earthbound and energy-based.And that, surprisingly, is the same truth we are rediscovering today: You and I—we are made of light and energy.



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