Between the Lines - Martin C. Winer the Lines with Martin C. Winer … seeing through the media you...

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Transcript of Between the Lines - Martin C. Winer the Lines with Martin C. Winer … seeing through the media you...

Between the Lines

with Martin C. Winer

… seeing through the media you view

Dr Donald N. Yates

Dr Donald N. Yates

Donald N. Yates, Ph.D. is principal

investigator, owner and founder of DNA

Testing Systems. He is Choctaw-Cherokee

and has a doctorate in classical studies from

the University of North Carolina at Chapel

Hill. Contributing to his expertise is a lifelong

interest in genealogy research plus a 10-year

position at the biotechnology company Miles

Laboratories (now Bayer Corp.). He has

published widely in medieval history and

Native American studies. His books include

The Bear Went over the Mountain and When

Scotland Was Jewish (with Elizabeth C.

Hirschman).

Los Lunas Decalogue Stone

• A stone in Los Lunas, New Mexico which bears a Phoenician (ancient Hebrew) inscription of the Ten Commandments (The Decalogue). The stone was first translated by Dr. Robert Pfeiffer of Harvard in 1949 and was confirmed to be a slightly truncated form of the Ten Commandments.

Dr Cyrus Gordon

• Dr. Cyrus Gordon head of the Department of Mediterranean Studies at Brandeis University (1956-1974) and an expert in ancient Semitic languages wrote:

• “We are not dealing with a modern forgery. It has been there as far back as the local inhabitants (Indian as well as White) knew. The Whites have witnessed it since about 1800. The Indians call the place “The Cliff of the Strange Writings””.

The Bat Creek Stone

(“comet for the Jews” – Bar Kochba revolt slogan)

Popul Vuh – Torah Similarities

See… The Nexus Spoken Language: During Pre-Columbian Times : David Allen Deal

Tacos and Manna

See… The Nexus Spoken Language: The Link Between the Mayan and Semitic, During Pre-Columbian Times : David Allen Deal

After Fourty Years - Canaan

See… The Nexus Spoken Language:

The Link Between the Mayan and Semitic,

During Pre-Columbian Times : David Allen Deal

Flag of Mexico

Flag of Mexico

Tamale – A Blintze

America

• Next, the name „America‟: Conventional history holds that the name was inspired by Amerigo Vespucci; not so says Deal. When the Spanish crew of Columbus‟ fourth voyage was coasting Nicaragua, they invited some Mayan natives aboard. The crew asked the Maya the name of the place as they motioned to the mountain tops. The Maya assumed they were referring only to the mountain tops and answered “Amerik”. They Hispanized the name exchanging a „c‟ for a „k‟ and adding „a‟. It has been America ever since. But Amerik has a Hebrew origin. „Ameer Rik‟: summit of a mountain, emptiness.

Ma’agan Michael Ship

Kabalistic Symbols Near

Los Lunas

Petroglyph near the Los Lunas Decalogue Stone depicting

the Torah, ‘Merkabah’ and ‘Sefirot’

Effect of View on Research

Type of Researcher Odds the Tomb was Jesus’A historian with strict Christian beliefs, believing Jesus ascended to heaven

impossible (there would be no tomb with remains if Jesus ascended to heaven)

A historian leaning against the tomb being Jesus’ tomb

1:5,000,000

A ‘typical’ historian 1:19,000A historian leaning towards the tomb Jesus’ tomb

1:1,100

A historian who desperately wanted the tomb to be Jesus’ tomb

1:18

Diffusionism vs Isolationism

• “The Vatican has been long accused of keeping artifacts and ancient books in their vast cellars, without allowing the outside world access to them. … Sadly, there is overwhelming evidence that something very similar is happening with the Smithsonian Institution. The Smithsonian [, under Major John Wesley Powell,] began to promote the idea that Native Americans, at that time being exterminated in the Indian Wars, were descended from advanced civilizations and were worthy of respect and protection. They also began a program of suppressing any archaeological evidence that lent credence to the school of thought known as Diffusionism, a school which believes that throughout history there has been widespread dispersion of culture and civilization via contact by ship and major trade routes. The Smithsonian opted for the opposite school, known as Isolationism. Isolationism holds that most civilizations are isolated from each other and that there has been very little contact between them, especially those that are separated by bodies of water. In this intellectual war that started in the 1880s, it was held that even contact between the civilizations of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys were rare…”

• Jonathan Eisen, Suppressed Inventions, Berkley Trade, p 215

Benedict Arias Montanus (1500’s)