The RS II
Eli learned to ride a bike easily. He learned to roller blade easily. He learned to ice skate easily. He learned to ski easily. He learns most physical tasks easily.
After WWI Rudolph Hess entered the University of Munich where he studied political science and came under the influence of the Thule Society, a secret anti-Semitic political organization. He joined the Nazi party in 1920 and participated in the Munich Putsch, along with Hitler, on November 9, 1923. He was imprisoned with Hitler in the Landsberg fortress in 1924 and he became Hitler’s closest personal confidant. While in prison, Hess introduced Hitler to Dietrich Eckart, also a member of the Thule Society as well as a member of a secret inner society, the Vril Society. As most are aware, Hitler wrote Mein Kampf while in prison. He dedicated the book to Dietrich Eckart.
The Thule Society was founded in 1918 as an occultist study group for Germanic antiquity. The Thule Society believed a super race had lived in the Northern Countries, near Iceland or Greenland, mentioned by the poet Virgil, and they possessed superhuman powers. (It is interesting to note that when the US set up an air force base in Greenland during WWII they named it Thule Air Force Base.)
The Vril Society was based on information from a book written by Edward Bulwer-Lytton titled, “Vril: The Coming Race,” published in 1870. Some believe it was intended to be a science fiction book. Others took it more literally. The book tells the story of a super race of aliens who were our original ancestors and who may still be on earth today. Vril is supposedly the source of their secret powers.
Whether or not Hitler was ever a member of the Thule Society makes no difference whatsoever. His goal of achieving a race of super humans, his anti-Semitism and even his use of symbols and special words were Thule Society. And there is a remarkable connection between those symbols and words with the Ramayana and the Mahabharata epics.
The word swastika first appears in the Ramayana and Mahabharata. My contemporary copy of the Ramayana from India has a swastika printed on every page. The symbol was scratched on pottery in Mohenjo-daro and Harappa in the Indus Valley where the Aryans, Proto-Indo-Europeans from Persia conquered the indigenous people and established sophisticated cities, agriculture and trade. The symbol was also painted on ancient Sumerian pottery from Ur. The word Aryan first appears in the ancient Indian Rig Veda as “arya’” to describe a conquering race of gods.
When I read Nick Cook’s book, “The Hunt for Zero Point,” in 2002, all the pieces fell together.