Friday, May 22, 2026

Nobody is going to die

In my Mormon-related browsing online, I ran across a photo, which I will not reproduce here, of a man in Mormon Temple clothing -- white clothes with a white cap, and a green apron -- raising his right hand. (Actually, it was a mirror image of a ritual gesture that involves raising the left hand.)

A few minutes later, I clicked for a random /x/ thread (because that's been working pretty well recently) and got this one, with this as the second image:


As I was preparing this post -- downloading the image and all that -- I was listening to a Zion Media video, which I clicked on just because the thumbnail featured the number 666, which has been in the sync stream. The moment I inserted the above picture into the post -- a picture which had caught my eye because of its similarity to Temple clothing and gestures -- the speaker, James Skousen, said the words "temple clothing." This is the whole sentence:

You know, people whine about what they can't eat, about what they should or shouldn't wear, temple clothing, whining about coffee, tea, just whining, generally speaking.

Earlier in the podcast, the host, Shane Baldwin (antimony initials!), pointed out that Skousen believes the "king of Assyria" mentioned in Isaiah is actually someone who is going to arrive in a spaceship this year or next:

SB: Um, and so for everybody who doesn't know, you believe that the king of Assyria is coming in a spaceship.

JS: Yes, absolutely. Yeah, the king of Assyria is not from Earth.

I am currently reading Flying Saucers Have Landed, George Adamski's account of his encounter with what are called "Nordic aliens," who arrived in a spaceship. Here's an example of how aliens of this type are typically portrayed in art:

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