The Twin Towers of Babel

Those who remember the transition from the 20th to the 21st century will remember what was then dubbed, ‘the millennium bug’. Nobody quite knew how it would manifest itself. Would it crash the world’s computers because their clocks had not been told about centuries? Would aircraft be stranded in the sky until they run out of fuel and fall like stricken angels?

As it happens, nothing happened…or did it? Perhaps we should have been more prudent because on September 11th 2001, something momentous and unexpected did happen. The two towers of the World Trade Centre and two other buildings were attacked using hijacked aircraft.

picture credit: Esquire.com

Was this the millennial disaster foreseen in Mayan calendars? Perhaps the millennial bug laid an egg at the end of the year 2000, which hatched nine months later? Whatever the timing, stay with me, because this speculation becomes more intriguing.

In the murder scene on a theatre stage, a door opens and the victim enters. The other actor on stage raises a gun and shoots the victim dead. All eyes are on the murderer and the rest of the play runs it’s course. However, the play would have been a lot shorter, if the detective had shrewdly asked this question;

Who opened the door to let the victim-to-be in?

This is a sure fire way to investigate tragic events and find the conspirators supporting the shooter. In the case of the twin towers, the door was opened by whoever ordered the fighter jets to be on exercise hundreds of miles from the city they normally protected. In the case of the death of the Princess of Wales, the door was opened by whoever ordered the CCTV cameras to be disabled and the ambulance to stop on the way to the hospital.

Whoever conceived and executed these and similar tragic events is not the subject of this essay. What interests me here is the question of what happened to the collective consciousness of mankind after 9/11, that is, as we pivoted into the new millennium?

Suddenly, the United States of America changed status from being free from the horrors of global terrorism to being a perceived victim of global terrorism. Whatever you believe happened what is more important here is what is perceived to have happened, on the world stage. The revenge game that followed was then ‘justified’. Certain countries and their dictators were delivered a dose of ‘shock and awe’ by the mighty USA armed services and their allies. This of course, continues in Afghanistan and several countries to this day.

How ironic, it seems to me, that Saddam Hussein’s summer palace looks out over the present ruins of Ancient Babylon.

Looking back in time, you might still be wondering what has been achieved by the various USA and coalition invasions of sovereign states? Suddenly the cowboy in the white hat is doing things only the black hats try to get away with. Who are the good guys and who the bad guys? Why is Saudi Arabia, (a state run by medieval Wahhabi clerics with the nod of royals) still an ally of the USA? We all know the reason for that question but see little offered in answer.

The world has tipped on it’s head. Shadows have been filled with light and light has filled with shadows. Everything and nothing can be believed as ‘true’. We don’t trust each other any more.

It is the area of ‘communication’ that this confusion is most evident today. The Tarot card from the Major Arcana depicts an uncanny picture of the Tower;

picture credit: Crone Confidence

Think back briefly to the story in the Old Testament when man developed new technology. In ancient Babylon the early mighty towers or Ziggurats were built from unbaked mud bricks. Then something extraordinary was discovered. The verses specifically state;

‘and they said to one another, go to, make brick and burn them thoroughly. And they had brick for stone and slime had they for mortar.’

This new technology was specifically conceived by human rather than Divine consciousness. This was a fatal transgression from God’s will. God conceived that an already proud human race would become uncontrollably self centred and conceited, or as Flavius Josephus put it in the 1st century A.D, man committed the deadly sin of pride.

The Tower of Babylon was proposed by academics to be an attempt to connect humans with Heaven, but in my view the opposite is more likely. Towers, or pyramids were built by corrupted nations in order to commit ritual sacrifice of humans, as in the Mayan and Aztec civilisations. The towers were for black, not white, magic. The smell of blood was to attract power from other dimensions in the same way sharks converge on a meat feast in water.

This evil was countered by the Almighty very subtley, so the Bible tells us. Before the building of the Tower of Babel humans spoke and thought with ‘one voice’. They understood each other using a common language for the common good. The ‘correction’ for the sin of pride delivered to humanity by God, was for them no longer to understand one another.

Start examining our recent history from the same perspective. What happened after 9 September 2001? The new technology of computing and it’s changeling*, artificial intelligence, has introduced multiple forms of communication to the common man. Whether in the grasslands of central Africa or the underground stations of New York, people can talk to each other using micro computers posing as telephones.

Note: *definition of changeling; ‘in pre-modern European folklore an infant or magical creature that was secretly exchanged for a human infant…the exchanged infants were thought to be those of fairies, sprites or trolls…demons, devils or witches’.

The potentiality of this freedom of communication however, has not lead to a ‘greater good’ in my view.

The rise of rival messaging, speech and video communication applications is changing humanity radically. Young people are checking their phones on average every ten minutes. Their ‘reality’ is entering syberspace.

Typed messages replace face to face communication between friends over a relaxing cup of coffee. Misunderstandings on a colossal scale now haunt humanity every second of the day. You cannot switch off your phone even when you asleep.

‘I sent you a message, didn’t you see it?’

‘Where was that? A text?

‘No’

‘An email?’

‘No’

‘Oh, Messenger?’

‘No’

‘WhatsApp?

‘Did you check your answer phone?’

‘I have two phones, which one?’

‘The one in my contacts…I can’t be sure.’

Compounding this floundering potential for constructive communication is it’s opposite, so called ‘fake news’. Not only pictures and speech can be altered for malign purposes, but now videos of well known figures talking, can be convincingly created using artificial intelligence. Who is telling the truth?; is the question on everyone’s lips. AI just smiles devilishly at the camera.

The result of all of this, is a level of stress and anxiety probably never experienced before… except perhaps after a large construction project in ancient Babylon was reduced to rubble by a freak thunder storm.

Thunder bolts descended from anvil shape thunder clouds turning fired clay bricks into dust. From that time, people entered a thought scape of confusion.

Today, are our small voices more powerful than the technology that is overtaking us? Are we all currently being churned into dust by the real Millennium Bug?

Whose’s Afraid of the Big Bad Conspiracy?

The Gunpowder Plot was possibly conceived and attempted by a group of provincial Catholics in England against King James I. They met secretly to plan an execution of the protestant King by blowing up the House of Lords. The plot was thrawted on the 5th November 1605.

The Cambridge English Disctionary defines a ‘plot’ as;

‘a secret plan made by several people to do something that is wrong, harmful, or not legal

We might then define a plot as; ‘a plan with evil intent’. But in the 1960’s a new word was used to define a plot; ‘conspiracy’.

The Cambridge English Dictionary now defines ‘conspiracy’ as;

‘the activity of secretlyplanning with other people to do something bad or illegal: ‘

The difference between a plot and a conspiracy is not clear from these simple definitions.

Please bear with the writer for one final definition as this essay is building up to something which affects us all. What is meant by the term ‘conspiracy theory’ and should we dismiss such theories as ‘conspiracies’?

The Cambridge English Dictionary definition of a theory is;

‘a formal statement of the rules on which a subject of study is based or of ideas that are suggested to explain a fact or e7*-89vent or, more generally, an opinion or explanation: ‘

A conspiracy theory is therefore not a description of truth, although some may take it to be so. It is a ‘suggestion’ which is being applied to explain facts. This may be in a way previously discounted as new facts emerge or are reinterpreted.

Conspiracy theorists are easy prey for derision because of this confusion between a theoretical and and accurate description of an event. Wikipedia describes this well;

‘The term (conspiracy theory) has a negative connotation, implying that the appeal to a conspiracy is based on prejudice or insufficient evidence.’

The notion of a conspiracy theory has itself become the subject of biased logic, when it is derided out of hand without a fair hearing. An example might be it’s use as a term of derision by the United States CIA. They used and perhaps coined it, to discredit disbelievers in the findings of the Warren Commision. This was set up to investigate the assasination of President Robert Kennedy.

The use of the term as an emotional form of ‘mud slinging’ by those convinced to be on the side of rational argument, shows how the accusers can sometimes be as misguided as those they accuse of bias.

When bad things happen, such as a plane crash, there is often ambiguity due to the absence of information from a thorough investigation. Theorists have to match a set of facts with a most likely explanation of what happened.

During the sequential investigation process, various theories will adapt to facts. Eventually investigators will propose a theory that fits the facts more closely than previous theories.

Scientists produce theories which are reviewed by their peers and proven beyond doubt before being adopted as a scientific ‘law’. Einstien’s Special Theory of Relativity is a good example of a theory that could not be proven in his time. Einstien used mathematics to determine the proof of his theories but because the technology of the era was not able to test the theory by experiment, it was long after his death before his theories were proven.

Is it fair that conspiracy theories are given a reputation for being innacurate merely for being supposed to be conspiracy theories. The use of the term as derision is in itself troubling because logically, there is only ever one correct interpretation of events and a so called ‘conspiracy theory’ may be that one. Just as aircrash investigators reach a logical explanation of events so may conspiracy theories, eventually be revealed as true.

The State, or organisation within a State, which attempts to deny events that the theorists are getting right, puts loses trust.

Conspiracy Theories gain considerable credence by focusing on events for which there is no evidence to disprove the theory. For instance, you might suggest that Aliens are already on the planet Earth and have been for a very long time. The subject is so ‘taboo’ in modern societies that governments conspicuously share very little of what they know. Rationalisations are made to ‘explain away’ what witnesses have observed as being something else. For instance a moving light in the sky is explained to be a ‘weather baloon’. If the serving press officer admits on You Tube decades later that this was what he was told to say rather than the truth about a real crashed Alien craft, who are the public to believe?

We live in a time when information is being smoke screened as ‘fake’. We do not know what to believe. It used to be that books and newspapers, that is the written word, were trusted to report the truth. Authors and journalists would lose their reputations and careers if they printed as facts, something which was not from mulitiple, trusted sources. Since the rise of the internet and the general ease of access to all kinds of ‘information’, it is hard to determine between the real, the fake and the absurd.

This phenomenon has been compounded by a growing public distrust in ‘experts’. This is despite the fact that the training and experience of experts means they are right most of the time. After a small amount of research, it is possible to believe you have discovered a truth. What is commonly discovered is that after a large amount of research, you begin to doubt.

Conspiracy theories suffer from this ‘instant expert’ phenomenon and exploit the doubt of reasonably minded people. Complex events, such as the events of 9/11, require observers to be air traffic controllers, communication experts, pilots, air force strategists, architects, engineers, demolition experts, emergency reponse planners and practioners, intelligence officers, politicians, journalists and investigators. There are certainly more areas of experties than these but the point is that investigating the event and it’s motives are highly complex and require meticulously unravelling. Complexity can itself become a smokescreen to baffle the casual observer.

Even simple questions such as, ‘how could two aircraft be used to bring down three buildings?’ are ignored. When there is a pronounced silence from people who should and might know, or worse they start disappearing, citizens should become suspicious.

Fortunately the so called ‘free world’ is open to scrutiny at many levels and Freedom of Information Acts in countries like the USA and UK testify to this. However when clauses are written into these Acts that prevent the release of information publicly for ‘reasons of national security’ there is a window for suspicion to open.

The whole story around ‘Wikileaks’ is a testament to how there will always be room for alternative intepretations of facts or what is termed, ‘my version of the facts’.

picture credit The Westar Institute

If your government derides conspiratorial theories just for being ‘conspiracies’, ask yourself the question, who is hiding what? Perhaps by hiding the truth harm is being caused to citizens of that country? If your government acts in secret and causes harm to it’s populations by an act or ommission or failure to be timely in either or both, is that a plan, plot or a conspiracy?

For instance:why is the Gunpowder Plot so called? Gunpowder is inanimate and does not plot. Surely this was a conspiracy planned by the Spanish Catholic monarchy against the Protestant English monarchy? Or are we not meant to say that?