The Georgia Guidestones’ Creator Revealed?

Seven years ago, I learned about the Georgia Guidestones. Then, almost four years ago, I blogged about it in my old Yahoo blog (now converted to WordPress after Yahoo! ended its blogging service). I wondered who was that Robert C. Christian, the white-haired gentleman, probably a Mason, who helped created and funded the Georgia Guidestones? Enter Van Smith.

Van Smith did a really nice investigative work in his blog, “Decoding the Georgia Guidestones”. He proposed that one of the three men he selected, hypothetically, as the candidate for “Robert C. Christian”. One of the 3 men may turn out to be Ted Turner, the founder of CNN.

Read it all please. Make sure you pay special attention to some particular quotations uttered by well-known people there. ;)

Georgia Guidestones Redux

On this day, a flashback to my old blog from two years ago: my blog on the Georgia Guidestones. In fact, I’d first learned about it almost 5 years ago! A Wikipedia article briefly described how the Georgia Guidestones came to be, first erected north of Elberton, Georgia nearly 28 years ago (March 22, 1980) by a local granite finishing company, following instructions made by a mysterious man named R.C. Christian, sponsored by a small mysterious group of people who paid for it. Carved in eight different languages, there are ten statements on each side of an upright stone with each language (sorry, no ASL).

The first message can be a bit of shock for you but the rest of the messages are sensibly intriguing. However, I don’t have a problem with message no. 7, which is pretty much true with them nowadays. On the other hand, critics called it a Masonic site promoting one world government to be ruled by the Anti-Christ. Still, the whole thing is fascinating to me and I may visit the site of the Georgia Guidestones one day in the future, just to see it all in full glory.

You can see pictures of the Georgia Guidestones taken by others here. One puzzling mystery is the absence of the date of when a time capsule is supposed to be opened six feet under a tablet, seen here in this photo. Make you goes hmm….

The actual premise of the Georgia Guidestones had to do with Thomas Paine’s famous treatise, “The Age of Reason”.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.