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Adventure Into the Weird Part 5Gabriel World Posted on April 23,2014 Chronicles Part 5 If this is your first time here, you should first scroll down until you get to the title “Adventure Into the Weird”. It is the start of this series. This series is not so much of an adventure as it is just descriptions of what has been passed on to me through dreams. The visions and revelations come to me from an unknown race. I have named them the Gabriel because of how I interpreted the pictorial of their description. No vocalization is in these dreams, only mental images that I try to decipher. Some of my interpretations may not be correct but it is all I have to work with. It is only because of the persistence of these nighttime images that I write them down at all. My descriptions are not meant to try and sell you on them, but instead, just record them for any value they may contain. A side note to answer one of those questions that so many of you have asked. Please bear in mind that I am no scientist, but the described birthing machines maintain purity with respect to the traits deemed acceptable by the Gabriel. The best information sorting through their communications and research is that they manage to control the active proteins in their DNA by manipulating them using RNA. Their abilities include using RNA to build specific proteins and insert them into the DNA. These are really remarkable machines as they serve to eliminate the unwanted traits that would otherwise show up without this control. The then fertilized egg is put back into the female for development and birth. The Gabriel were not always interstellar (faster than light) travelers. There was a period in their development that they were classic generational voyagers. Most of their voyages were for the purpose of colonizing. Before they had long life capabilities, they went in search of new worlds trusting in the generations that would be born during their transit. Along their journey, they set up semaphores for relaying their progress back to their home world. Even using radio signals that approached the speed of light, many of their transmissions took years to arrive. Two way communications was not possible in any real time sequence. Only narratives of progress from the colonists and from the home world, the colonist received messages containing scientific advances that might be useful. The ships were not slow, but their speed was restricted by the sophistication of their scanning detectors which enabled the colonists to detect and have time to dodge any potential cosmic debris. Several ships were lost due to collisions with undetected objects in their path during the early days of exploration. It was the distance and poor communication between the home world and these colonized worlds that brought about the trouble. Whenever a colonizing ship left the home world, supply ships for them would be launched regularly to make sure that the colonists would have what they needed after their arrival at any prospective planet. This arrangement worked out well in the beginning. The struggling colonists needed those supplies for survival until they could get things going on their new world. Some of the new colonies didn’t make it and perished while others thrived. Any livable world would typically have multiple colonies. It should have been foreseen – the different colonies would start squabbling with each other over the supply shipments. Their squabbling led to conflicts and most of the time one colony would prove the stronger and take over. Other results ended with several colonies staking out their territory and defending it. These outcomes were not planned but were very instructive to the Gabriel about colonizing. One of their conclusions was that different colonies on the same world actually strengthened these settlers and gave them a rallying point that bound them together. In the years that followed, the home world for the Gabriel was also undergoing changes. Supplying the colonies became a political issue because of its cost. As new leaders assumed their roles, they called for a cessation of the supply shipments. The colonies were left on their own. Communications also slowed as the links were weak to begin with and the time involved in sending and receiving a message made effective communication impractical. Any expressions of time by me in these writings are only guesses. I never was able to piece together those images meant for relating time. So suffice it to say that after a long period, the Gabriel discovered a non-biological diet that satisfied them physically and slowed down the aging process. This was an important development as it meant that a single generation could make long voyages. The voyages themselves were still aggravatingly long. Speed was still a concern because of the occasional debris found in space. The large debris could be detected easily and avoided; but it was the smaller stuff that wreaked havoc on their ships when travelling at high rates of speed. Their discovery of a way to control the bindings of atoms was crucial. By being able to control the attraction of the discrete fields that made up matter, they could in effect control mass. Interstellar flight became possible because of their ability to control the effective attraction of the basic fields that make up atoms and the affinity that atoms have for each other. As I keep reiterating, these developments did not come about over night. It took them a long time to develop a method of shielding their ships from the debris of space. The shield that they devised used the same technology that they used to control mass. They were able to cast a strong negative field that extended far in front of the vessel. I take their word for it as I have no other point of reference or background in such matters. But these were important advances because now they could reconnect with their colonies in a much more timely way. Earth was one of their early colonies and when they tried reconnecting, they found a much regressed civilization. In the next episode I will describe what they found on Earth and how they set about to change the conditions here. Part 6 is just around the corner, we will speak again, soon.
Robert can be reached via Email: Support Modern Conservatism!
"Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement." -
Unknown, quoted by Jim Horning, Will Rogers and others" Top of Page |
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Chronicles Part 5
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