AugustaJulia

That's interesting. But why do you say "before Egypt"? Wasn't Egypt one of the oldest civilizations? First Mespotamia, 10 or so thousand years ago, and then Egypt, 7 or so thousand years ago. Of corse, the same truth could have been revealed to different civilizations at different times. I was just thinking that to an ancient man spirals are not as commonnly seen in nature as other shapes. One thing where yóu see it, for example, is a vortex made by circling water.

redditsuckz

Its in the eye of Horus;

http://i.imgur.com/nh1rjVc.jpg

http://i.imgur.com/Dakh25B.jpg

Aleister Crowely said we were in the Age of Horus from info that was given to him by some alien through channeling;

http://weekinweird.com/2012/12/01/sirius-business-aleister-crowley-extraterrestrial-medium/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeon_%28Thelema%29

Basically an age of do whatever the fuck you want. And crowley decided to use that

They are worshiping Egyptian gods and goddesses

https://voat.co/v/pizzagate/1510413/7957415

https://voat.co/v/pizzagate/1510413/8067476

3141592653

Spirals are Everywhere. Our galaxy is a spiral!

AugustaJulia

They didn't know that in ancient Egypt.

archons

How do you even know that?

equineluvr

Roots are in ancient Egypt, but it was popularized by the homo Greeks. Alefantis relates strongly to both Greek and Roman roots and has stated publicly that he IS Pan, the Greek god.

Vigilia_Procuratio

Alright, edited...

There's clearly something about his name, something about the elephant .

Before I start let me point this out: the letters b , f , p and v can seemingly be interchangeable when it comes to ancient languages, possibly due to diversities in dialect which were not widely established and thus not present in written form (the same can be said of vowels as well, and it's worth bearing in mind that I don't think there was a written form of vowels at the time of Aramaic). With that in mind, ban , fan and pan , as well as bal , fal and pal , could mean the same things (even with different vowels). What I'm suggesting is that Pan , the Greek God, could actually be pronounced as fan . Thus, the phan part of the word elephant could be extremely relevant.

Now, for Aramaic the word אבר (ever) is as close a translation as I can muster when taking the Ancient Egyptian form for elephant , which phonetically I believe would be ebur . Now take for example the word phallic , which has obvious connotations. Now consider that the elephant's trunk could look like a ginormous penis. So what does אבר translate to exactly? Penis , of course. Thus, the elephant was possibly named in such a way by the Ancient Egyptians because its trunk resembles a penis.

Now consider that the word pan translates in some languages to bread . Pal and fen also seem to relate to hay and straw . A lot of language seems to link back to agriculture one way or the other, so this isn't surprising. Some words link to the bull along the lines, and bulls were used extensively for ploughing the fields. As it happens, one of many Semitic words for the bull is פר (par), and then there is בר (bar) which means grain . Now, the thing about bread is that it comes from cereal, which is a tall grass - the relevance here is that tall grass, well, stands tall of course, so that's in a erect manner. In fact, phalaris is indeed a type of barley (which by the way contains DMT, just thought I'd mention that).

If anybody needs a little more convincing, read this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalaris

Phalaris was renowned for his excessive cruelty. Among his alleged atrocities is cannibalism: he was said to have eaten suckling babies.

Therefore, I don't think it's Pan who's of concern here, it's Phalaris .

Now that is what I'd call fucked up .

Vigilia_Procuratio

Alright, I just wrote a load of stuff. I'm editing it for clarity.