Guidestones Struck Down

Georgia Guidestones Rubble

Posts about spiritual warfare, politics, and high strangeness are among the most popular on this blog. Today we have a story that combines all three.

First, for those who didn’t yet know, the controversial Georgia Guidestones have been destroyed.

Here’s a video of the explosion.

For a while after the news broke, it was unknown whether the blast that damaged the monument and precipitated its full demolition was planned by authorities or an act of vandalism.

Reports from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation confirm the latter.

Georgia authorities on Thursday released a video showing someone leaving an explosive device next to a rural monument conservative Christians criticized as satanic and others dubbed “America’s Stonehenge” that heavily damaged the pillars so much so that they were demolished.

The Georgia Guidestones monument near Elberton was damaged by an explosive device, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said, and later knocked down “for safety reasons,” leaving a pile of rubble in a picture that investigators published.

Surveillance footage showed a sharp explosion blowing one panel to rubble just after 4 a.m. Investigators also released video of a silver sedan leaving the monument.

The fleeing car is also shown in the video above.

But why would someone want to destroy the Guidestones? Was the monument dedicated to Confederate officers? Did it advocate regressive beliefs?

Quite the contrary.

The 16-foot-high panels bore a 10-part message in eight different languages with guidance for living in an “age of reason.” One part called for keeping world population at 500 million or below, while another calls to “guide reproduction wisely — improving fitness and diversity.”

Here’s more on the Guidestrones’ history from the Elbert County Chamber of Commerce.

Joe Fendley, president of Elbert Granite Finishing Company, Inc. in Elberton, Georgia was approached by a neatly dressed man who wanted to buy a monument. The middle-aged man who identified himself as Mr. Robert C. Christian said he wanted to know the cost of building a monument to the conservation of mankind and began telling Fendley what type of monument he wanted. Christian outlines the size in metric measurements. No monument of this kind had ever been quarried in Elberton, which was to explain why the price quoted could only be an estimate and not one guaranteed, as is the normal practice. Mr. Christian agreed to the quoted price. Christian, during his visit with Fendley, explained that he represented a “small group of loyal Americans who believe in God.“* He said they lived outside of Georgia and wanted to “leave a message for future generations.“* After leaving Fendley’s office, Christian went to the Granite City Bank to meet with Wyatt C. Martin. Christian informed Martin about his plans and the group he was associated with, had planned this monument for 20 years. He said the group wished to remain anonymous and revealed to Martin that his real name was not Robert Christian, it was a pseudonym chosen because of his Christian beliefs. After being sworn to secrecy, Christian told Martin his real name, and some other personal information so Martin could investigate him properly before the project began. To this day, Wyatt Martin is the only one who knows Christian’s real name. The prototype that Christian brought to Fendley resembled the infamous Stonehenge Monument in England. Pyramid Blue Granite from Pyramid Quarry was chosen for the monument. Each piece weighed approximately 28 tons, making this project to become one of the most challenging projects to be worked on in Elberton. Charlie Clamp was the sandblaster chosen to etch the “message”, which was more than 4,000 individual letters.

Apologies for the wall of text. The Elbert County Chamber could use a web site editor.

Anyway, here’s the full message:

“Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature; Guide reproduction wisely, improving fitness and diversity; Unite humanity with a living new language; Rule passion, faith, tradition, and all things with tempered reason; Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts; Let all nations rule internally, resolving external disputes in a world court; Avoid petty laws and useless officials; Balance personal rights with social duties; Prize truth, beauty, love … seeking harmony with the infinite; Be not a cancer on earth — leave room for nature — leave room for nature.”

It’s understandable that the Guidestones would attract a fair amount of criticism. Not the least of which came from Georgia gubernatorial candidate Kandiss Taylor, who made a campaign promise to remove the monument.

“God is God all by Himself. He can do ANYTHING He wants to do. That includes striking down Satanic Guidestones,” Taylor tweeted Wednesday.

Were the Guidestones a product of Satanism? They did advocate some form of eugenics, which the Church condemns. The rest sounds like syncretistic New Age claptrap and facile platitudes.

I do not advocate the unauthorized destruction of private or public property. That said, the Death Cult initiated the current round of political iconoclasm. It shouldn’t surprise anyone, least of all them, if counterculture dissidents respond in kind.

This post started with the observation that politics, spiritual warfare, and high strangeness overlapped in this instance. Expect to see more of that in coming years.

And make sure to prepare accordingly.

Don't Give Money to People Who Hate You

22 Comments

  1. Rannos

    Oh I expected you to have more to say about this incident

  2. “Leave room for nature”, “under 500million” is the inversion of Genesis 1:28: ‘Then God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”’

    This is just the start of some basic Christian deconstruction. Create NewSpeak to unite the world. Subordinate faith to “tempered reason”. Resolve conflict in a “world court”. Jettison the concept of inalienable rights by balancing them “with social duties”. (This is how Trudeau Sr. managed to backdoor the Canadian Charter of Rights; ye olde notwithstanding clauses.) This is a laundry list of NWO desires. Note that the creator mentions God but not the Savior, akin to certain people Jesus told, “ye are of your father the devil.”

    • D Cal

      “This is not a precept, as some Protestant controvertists would have it, but a blessing, rendering them fruitful; for God had said the same words to the fishes, and birds, (ver. 22) who were incapable of receiving a precept.”

      http://drbo.org/chapter/01001.htm

      Notice how we also received this blessing before the fall of creation—when we inhabited a literal paradise.

  3. Adam Bruneau

    Even though it starts off demanding billions of people removed from the Earth, the last line is the most disturbing to me, both in considering humans “a cancer on the earth” and the repetitive – robotic, NPC-like, purely insane – insistence on “leave room for nature”.

  4. Rudolph Harrier

    Looking through the reporting on this, it’s easy to make a theory on what happened.

    It’s a false flag.

    The stories on the destruction talk about how it was proceeded by “right-wing conspiracy theorists” wanting the guide stones destroyed. The gubernatorial candidate Kandiss Taylor gets called out particularly frequently. Second most frequent link is to, of course, blame Trump due to an meme image of him with dynamite at the site (which I had never seen before but every reporter somehow knew about simultaneously.)

    It’s possible that it really was the work of someone who hated the satanic messages of the monuments and reporters only colluded in the wake of the events, but things are a bit too on the nose for me to believe that the story on how to report the destruction wasn’t written before the event happened.

    • Andrew Phillips

      I see your point, but I have to wonder, assuming it is a false flag event, what they were hoping to accomplish. If it was, they chose a fairly obscure target. If the purpose of a false flag is to provoke outrage that can then be directed in a specific way, who would get bent out of shape about this particular event?

      • Rudolph Harrier

        I don’t think it’s meant for national outrage. I suspect that the target is just Kandiss Taylor, who made destroying the Georgia Guidestones a political promise. I don’t know if the guidestones are beloved locally, but they are at least known and they can say “look at the terrorist actions that Taylor advocated for/possibly organized?” Attacks against Mark Dice, Donald Trump, Alex Jones, etc. seem much more half-hearted and opportunistic than the main narrative.

        Though I will admit I am not sure what the purpose of discrediting Taylor at this point is, since she already lost the primary. Maybe she is causing trouble for the local GOP establishment in some other way, or maybe she started saying some things that they would prefer people not look into. Either way the purpose would be to poison her in the eyes of Georgia normies, not to condemn her nationwide.

        • Anti-Rationalist

          If it’s a false flag, the powers that be have to deal with unintended consequence of increased morale for those who believe in the true, the good, and the beautiful.

          In their haste to take down one local troublemaker, they galvanize and motivate the nation (Or even nations)

    • Be careful about predicating reason, or even coherence, of the Death Cultists. Their de fide response is to blame Trump for everything from gang shootings to unseasonable weather.

      The Guidestones weren’t on the radar of Cult shock troops like Antifa and BLM, which consist of Millennials for the most part. Instead, the monument was more of a Q Boomer hobbyhorse. In this case, the latter seems as likely a culprit as the former.

  5. Andrew Phillips

    The interesting thing to me is that the flash I would expect from an explosion happens near the light in the background, rather than in the middle of the dust cloud produced by the explosion. It’s as if the light was shooting at the monument, which seems pretty far-fetched. The only military lasers I can remember hearing about were experimental, and about the size of a jumbo jet. Based on the amount of dust and lack of flash at the slab, the effect seems more kinetic than explosive. OTOH, I am not at all an expert on explosives, so I could be very, very wrong here.

  6. Popster

    Anagram for “Robert C. Christian” is

    “Rich bettors’ cairn”

    Guess somebody lost a bet?

    • Luke West

      My first guess as to the choice of R.C. Christian for the pseudonym is some sect or group of Rosicrucianism.

      The alleged founder of Rosicrucianism is Christian Rosenkreuz, or Rosy Cross: R.C.

  7. NLR

    This is definitely a strange event.

    I don’t think that the guidestones were actually an Establishment project, though. Not that their message is good, but just that the people (or person, I forget which) who gave the money didn’t have any real power other than being wealthy; they weren’t connected to anything else. One reason is that I found the information on Jimmy Akin’s show about the guidestones convincing. But also, the stones are too dramatic, too blatant.

    The powers that be prefer to do things deniably, like the EU parliament building and Pieter Brueghel’s tower of Babel. Yes, you can see the resemblance and yes, someone dug up the old pamphlet with Brughel’s tower on it, but it’s still deniable enough that someone who wants to be skeptical can be.

    • Here’s a pointer for fedposting with more subtlety: Start with your badge number next time.

  8. Luke West

    This is such an interesting development. Is this another sign of spring in the White Witch’s winter, with Aslan on the move? I hope so and pray that it is so. The guidestones’ message had all the insipid evil, disguised as ‘Can’t we all just get along’-ness, that the Boomer Not-so-crypto-Marxist anthem ‘Imagine’ has.

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