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November 15, 2025 • 76 mins
This thought-provoking book presents a radically revised version of human prehistory. In a departure from previous works in this area, which have compiled puzzling phenomena and speculative ideas, this volume - the first in a series of four - provides a coherent and conclusive framework that offers a better understanding of our collective prehistoric history. Many events from a bygone era that are often dismissed as myth or fringe theory are investigated through the lens of mathematics and the natural sciences. The result is a compelling concept that challenges entrenched beliefs and sheds new light on distant past of humanity.

Adopting a multidisciplinary approach, the place of humankind in nature and the cosmos is explored. In particular, this book provides answers to the question of whether humans are solely the product of natural evolution or if genetic engineering has influenced our development. It critically reinterprets the global spread of humanity, particularly the settlement of the Americas, in light of the latest findings from field research. In addition, it examines the astonishing mathematical and scientific knowledge of ancient civilizations, which reveals how little we truly understand about prehistory. The insights presented call for a paradigm shift in how we perceive our origins and evolution. Readers seeking a deeper and more nuanced understanding of history will find this a stimulating and transformative view.

Aloys Eiling was born on 2 Oct. 1952 in Reken, Germany. He graduated from Gymnasium with a focus on ancient languages and history. He later went on to study physics and astronomy. He completed his studies with a doctorate in 1981 at the University of Bochum. In his professional career, he worked for 35 years in the chemical industry. After 17 years as a laboratory and department head in Central Research, he managed global Business Units in some major chemical companies. After his retirement in 2016, he published various books using natural science to elucidate his different perspective on prehistory.

https://grahamhancock.com/author/aloys-eiling/

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Okay, we're in the middle of November. What the heck happened?

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Man, It seems like we just started and we are
going to be flying to Guatemala City at the end
of the month. Everyone gathers, some explorers gather with me
in Guatemala City for twelve to thirteen day discovery of
some of the most amazing may insights in the world.

(00:44):
And we're talking to Call and Elmador and some other
smaller sites. But we don't really know the inception date
for these places because they're extremely old. And what a
lot of people don't recognize is that when the conquistadors
the Spanish arrived to the New World, which is North America,

(01:07):
Mexico and Central America, what they were looking at were
the descendants of the great builders of these cities like
t Call. And I didn't recognize this until I was
mentored by an elder, a man named Humbat's Men. I
talk about him in my upcoming book, The Mayan Controversy,

(01:30):
and he told me that what we experience, or what
the Spanish experienced, were not only the descendants, but they
had evolved into sacrificial blood sports, human sacrifice and so forth,
and so on because they didn't have any guidance and

(01:51):
the great minds behind these ancient cities. This was a
whole different type of a person. There was a whole
different type of Homo sapien. In fact, it's widely thought
that what the archaeological community looks at today isn't anything
close to what the people were who actually designed and engineered.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Many of the Great cities. This is a true The
Maya are a true pyramid culture, and it's beginning to
show that we need to be more cognizant of unseen
forces like telluric energy. I talk about tleric feels all
the time we had Christine on the program. Chris is
talking about tleric energy coming out of the Great Pyramid.

(02:40):
The ancient Egyptians, the Dynastic, prior to the Dynastics, the
pre Dynastic people were very astute at collecting, energizing, and
disseminating energy. We don't know how it was distributed because
there's nothing left of any of the transferred devices. If

(03:01):
they were coils, or if they were two's, if they
were stone, we don't know. So advanced to our understanding
of science that we can only guess now, but we
do know from the little bit we've obtained that the
Maya not only were a pyramid culture, but according to

(03:22):
a number of elders at their capacity, at the highest capacity,
there were over fifty five thousand pyramid cities from Honduras
to the middle of Mexico that would be the Yucatan Peninsula. Hey,
this is cliff from Earth ancients and today we are

(03:42):
going to discover the genius of the Maya in their
books which are otherwise known as codises. And I've had
a chance to see and we've talked to Ed Barnhardt,
doctor Barnhardt about thirty or so known excavation of cities
that are considered Maya in Mexico, in Central America. But

(04:07):
if there were fifty five thousand, that's a scratch, that's
a tip of the iceberg. That's one percent or less.
And that's not even talking, that's not even considering what
this lightar scan unveiled back in twenty eighteen when they
scanned the Guatemalan biosphere and found sixty thousand, six zero

(04:30):
three three zero zero zero unknown communities, civic areas, pyramids
and so on that have never never been seen before.
And one of the things by the way that a
lot of people don't know about is there are very
unusual shaped pyramids and temples, which represents a whole different

(04:52):
aspect of the Maya. Now, a lot of people believe
in what we're told by the archaeological community is that
the ma are approximately three thousand years old. Well, I've
been going to Yucatan and to Mexico for over three decades,
and I have to tell you, not only does that

(05:12):
not make sense when you look at the great age
of many of these buildings, but the oral traditions, the
traditions that have been handed down revealed that the Maya
congregated as a collective and this is a multi racial,
multi ethnic group of people that gathered from all parts

(05:34):
of the different all parts of the planet, Africa, Asia,
Europe well pleasant day or Europe, Middle East, and whatever
is in Southeast Asia. These are the people that gathered
probably over twelve thousand or more years ago. The elders
tell me it's about twenty to twenty eight thousand years

(05:58):
as close to that as they can get. But I
don't know. I mean, there's just no writing. And we
do know of the thousands of codises that were once
available a complete library. Only four books are left and
that's all we got. And that leads me to today's show.

(06:18):
Today's program is a discussion a decipherment of these codises
and most notably the Brogaia Codex, which is in Europe,
and how it actually describes machines and biology and calindrical

(06:40):
data reading. This is why a lot of the Maya
are considered daykeepers, because they're calindrical calendar masters, calendar scientists,
and they can tell what time of the year to
plant their crops. In fact, some of the more fine
tune daykeepers were used and they would tell a newly

(07:02):
married couple or a couple that wanted to have a child,
what time of year, what day, if possible, to conceive
a child, and what would what the child would turn
out to be if they did it on this date
as close as possible, what they could what they could
predict that the child would would grow up to be,

(07:23):
what their role in life would be. So these codises
that we have left to us are brilliant, but the
most important thing, and I don't remember if you if
you guys, if you remember, about seven years ago, we
had Jim o'caonhn who was a forensic engineer on he

(07:44):
wrote a book on the Maya, and he was told
about in the nineteen sixties when he was down there,
that most of the codses, in fact all of them,
all of the codises are translated from technical manuals, and
these manuals were used for observing planets for crop development.

(08:10):
They were the last vestiges of the brilliant ancestors of
the Maya. This is going to be important look at
what we can expect. And as we look at these
courtisies a little better, we can begin to introduce artificial
intelligence as it's tweaked in such a way, and this

(08:32):
will also help us gain great leaps in terms of decipherment.
And this is the big problem we have with Maya
hieroglyssics decipherment. And this is the problem I have with
the archaeological communities. They did not in the late nineteen
fifties and sixties confer with the elders and with the

(08:56):
daykeepers of the time. They decided to go alone. And
these Western scientists were working at the best they can
to decipher the hieroglyphics. But if you don't work with
the people that are still alive, I mean what the
hell what are you doing? So today we're gonna learn
about a number of aspects of these courtises, why they

(09:18):
are important, the scientific data behind these codises, and what
we can learn by the sipherment. So today's program is
a true prehistory. And my guest is Aloy's eyeling. Hey,

(09:39):
the seventh annual Grand Egyptian Tour is coming up. We
have Mohammad and Nohah, bring him with us. We're going
to be visiting Tennis, Egypt, which is very very old.
We don't know what happened there. It looks like a
catastrophic event happened. It has megalithic structures, statues, and some

(10:00):
large pieces strewed around Muhammad. What do we know about Tennis?
What makes it so unique?

Speaker 3 (10:06):
What we know about Tennis unfortunately so little, but it
is so little inconvenior with the importance and the greatness
of Tennis. But for us it is very high level
of information. Number one, what we know that Tennis was
a great center of knowledge in ancient Egypt. It was

(10:27):
the big city receiving all the travelers and immigrants and
visitors to Egypt from the northeast part of Egypt. They
come across Sinai. The second thing about Tennis that there
was a massive size tembile or I can call it
big town. We call it temble dedicated to Amonra. This

(10:52):
tembile or this village, if I can call it, this
way was completely built out of rose granite fromas one.
You know what, people don't know that there was more
than twelve obelisks in Tennis, maybe more, but the remains
some of them still in good condition, but all of
them are laying on the ground. The one they took

(11:14):
it to the Grand Museum, the one in front of
the main gate of the Grand Museum is from Tennis,
and the one in Tarry Square now is from Tennis.
So there are about ten obelisks or eight obelisks still
there at Tennis. So the story is very strange because
we expected even if the temple was in bad condition,

(11:36):
we expected more ruins, to see more cat ORed blocks,
but we found only few. But we found the biggest.
By the way, there are remains of blocks weighing more
than two hundred ton and three hundred ton we found
the foot of a statue. According to the dimension of

(11:56):
the foot, the statue would be more than fifteen hundred ton.
The foot is like a car size.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Okay, so we don't know what happened exactly. It must
be something very strong hit tennis and hit that temple
and it causes it caused great damage, like great exublusion
happened inside the temple and caused that all the pieces
are scattered on a distance maybe like three or four

(12:25):
kilometers wide.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Amazing.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
When people go to tennis, they're going to feel the
magic and they feel the dips of the history of tennis.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
I join us. It's going to be April twenty eight
through May tenth. For all the details and the itinerary,
go to Earth Agents dot com Forward Slash Tours. We

(13:25):
have a returning guest this week. He has written a
number of articles in the Graham Hancock website. His name
is Elloye's Ealing and he is a German. He's actually retired.
He's a former chemical researcher. But he's written extensively about
prehistory and he has a new book out called The

(13:45):
True Er Prehistory, The True or Prehistory, An Unofficial History
of Human Man and Earth. It's volume one. And what
is unique about this book is that he is very
much focused on prehistory and our missing prehistory. In other words,
we have a lot of guesses on what has taken place,

(14:11):
but as a researcher, like many of us, we filled
there's a huge void in our understanding of the of
the past. So we're gonna learn a little bit about
this new book, the Truer Prehistory in our interview today.
So hey, elloy, welcome back to Earth. Anxient is great

(14:32):
to have you, okayver, Yeah, what influenced you to write
this book? Was it a combination of the articles that
you had written, or was there something that you discovered
that you felt needed to be presented in a book.

Speaker 4 (14:48):
Okay, maybe just for introduction to But then I retired,
I decided to go into the prehistory and to get
a better understanding of what was the real ire the
past of man. And I checked various sources, and one

(15:10):
of the sources, by chance, these codexes in Mexico from
the attack time before the Spanish coced the country, and
it really struck me like like lightning when I when
I suddenly realized, hey, this is something which is biochemistry.
It's it's not some fancy mouse or some fancy uh

(15:35):
pictures of quality or some nonsense. This is really not
an really science. And so I started to dig deeper
and deeper deeper, and in fact I attended even for
two years lectures in biochemistry as to local university, just
to get a better understanding of what was was inside.

(15:58):
And as I proceeded, I really realized this is is
not superficial, it's really in depth scientific. What is shown there. Obviously,
the the pictures, they are not according to our way
to formulate chemistry. So they do not write merelylecules or

(16:20):
some form. They do it in a way which is
more I think, adapted to their culture. And one has
to do, I think, to recognize that the original books
are lost, they're gun for a long time, so what
be looking at are copies, copies of something from long

(16:41):
gone gun times. And these copies they were adjusted to
what the people in their daily life, daily life experience,
and so one has to look behind the curtain sometimes.
But if you do so, then you really get struck
what is in there. So it's not let's a simple chemistry,

(17:03):
it is it is something for example, which was in
in recently in twenty two, a Nobel price was given
to the person who who invented this kind of of
modification of DNA, and this is something nobody can imagine.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
Are you talking about Crisper.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Yeah, Chrisper, exactly, Chrisper. And this is an idea to
really to tune DNA. What maybe just to explain if
you if you want to tune DNA, one has to
imagine that the length of this DNI and DNA strand
is about two meters two meters, and if you blow

(17:50):
up the sickness to the sickness of an hair, the
length of that strand increases to one hundred miles almost
And to tune pinpointing the exact position, you have to
do it by the inch, So that means you have
to address a position on the strength of one hundred

(18:11):
miles to an inch accuracy. And this is unbelievable how
they do it and how they learn to do it.
And one of these techniques techniques is Crisper Cuss. And
you find an exact replication of Crisper Cuss also in
the codexes in the in the in one picture of

(18:34):
the codex Borgia, you have exactly a mimicry of this
modern presentation to an engine representation. And in these cases
you can even look at the strand and how it's
it's attached to the substrate and things like that, so
it's it's maybe not obvious, but if you understand what

(18:58):
is shown, then it became obvious. And I have also
you are to stress that the pictures are not isolated.
So there's picture here, pictures there, and fragments and you
have to sort it and put it together a book.
So you find everything in it. Molecuts, you find DNA,

(19:20):
you find aeron a, you find how to do a
modification of DNA. You have all these deep in depths
in promation in these various pictures. So it's a book
of genetics, it's not. And codecs of some mad guys,
which I think this is really pity the Spanish at

(19:44):
that time that didn't know what they had in hand,
so they burned maybe ninety nine percent of what they found,
and only a very little of the book survives. And
this one was by chance the batary of the Vatican
in Rome, and there it was stored on a very good,

(20:07):
nice conditions and it survived. And so we can have
this for an example what was known to our interests.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
Want to I want to talk a little bit about
the these codises, because I have studied the Dresden codis
a little bit. But the one you're talking about, the
Borgaia code.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
Example, okay in German d SA Borgia, I do not know.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
Huh. Years ago I interviewed an engineer who had spoken
to an elder in Yucatan, Mexico, and this elder Maya,
said that they had these coduses had been reproduced from
technical manuals, and this is exactly what you believe. But

(20:56):
the problem is that in the interpretation sometimes it doesn't
make a lot of sense because they didn't understand what
they were writing down. But if we go back to
the beginning, how old do you think these Mesoamerican cultures are?
Are they are they are these books in their libraries
or are they Are they being handed down by their

(21:21):
earlier generations?

Speaker 4 (21:24):
Yeah, it's a generation task, so I think it's it's
thousands of years ago. But it was that important for
these people that they continued to copy, copy and copy,
and this copying was done in a very accurate manner.
They did not lose the content. Maybe they changed a
bit the kind how they drew, the different glues and

(21:47):
the different equipment and machines, but basically they kept the
content and they caught at Bodia itself. It dates from
the beginning of the sixteenth fifteenth century, so it's fairly new,
but it's just a copy, and I think it was
it was a tough poof for the priests, so they

(22:10):
did it to the best of their capabilities to keep
all the signs and all the information accurate and not
to miss any any dot or something like that. And
if you go into it, you really find, for example,
the number of amino acids you which are in human

(22:30):
life or in early in the earthly life anyway, twenty
two amino acids are involved in billing you and me
and everybody's and everything on earth. And exactly you find
twenty two gloves in this codex Botia, not twenty not
twenty five, twenty two. And then the other stop board

(22:53):
is if you look at cups or at some some
machinery and equipment, then they always find signs. In four
they knew about the setup of the DNA. You have
four different molecules so called nuclear teeds, which build the DNA,

(23:16):
and they, as we also do it. They just use
different colors to present each of it. And so you
can really sometimes just replicate easily what it's thrown there
and what it's shown today. And I'm fairly sure they
were more advanced than we are. So what is the

(23:37):
state of the art in DNI DNA biochemistry is to
build artificial DNA. This is maybe the top of the
of the art for the moment. And you find machines
in these core exportia for example, but also in cordext
Cavaticanos pulosen survived, which really have one hundred percent fit

(24:04):
to what we do today. So you have the same
set up, you you have the same piping, the same flasks.
It's unbelievable how similar it is. But this is not
that surprising because if you if you're restricted to do something,
then the physical and chemical necessities they force you to

(24:28):
do it in the same way. And therefore the similarity
is for me another proof that my interpretation is a
correct one. Right, so and and okay, and it's unbelievable.
I only can can suggest and advise you take a
deeper look and understand, and that in the book I

(24:49):
always try to do it. I show the morons doing
the modern waded out of then it and the Mexican way,
how they did do it. And then if you have
this one to one comparson, you easily understand this is
not by chance. This is in depth knowledge for what issues.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
So were they genetically and I couldn't believe in the beginning.

Speaker 4 (25:15):
I was struck.

Speaker 1 (25:16):
Were they genetically enhancing Homo sapien? Or are you suggesting
in the interpretation of the Borgaea codecs that they are
showing how humans were created?

Speaker 4 (25:31):
Yeah, I think this is maybe a little far fetching.
I cannot say that it was really creating men. There
are few drawings. They'll see that a child is coming
out of a box or things like that, or they okay,
this might somehow replicate the Yeah, the syentess of creation

(25:56):
of men. But the basic is that you find the
biochemistry which is mandatory to do this. So maybe they created.
But here it goes one step deeper and further it
says how they did do it? Not like in in
Suma or in in Mesopotamia, you have these news from

(26:17):
some gods who did some work to produce artificial Are
servants of slaves to ah to to do the the
for for for their daily life? Yeah, it's it's more
the scientific explication. How there else knowledge existed which allowed

(26:44):
them to do this. There is no spelling. The whole
Code Act is not a single line of a number
of any writing, nothing. It's only pictures. And so you
never can say okay, and there was a drawing and
say okay, yeah, we do this or that and this
make this or that. But this is missing. It's just

(27:06):
a selection of drawings and of logic set up, how
to produce DNA, how to combine it, how to modify it.
Everything is found in a little different way, but still visible.
How they understood it, and this is magic, This is

(27:28):
really magic how they did do it. And they were
advanced in compared it to us. Obviously they had synthesizing
machines which did automatically what today is done in the
tedious work in laboratories, so they were really at more advance.

(27:48):
And I have to admit I cannot understand all the drawings.
Maybe I understand ninety percent, but ten percent I do
not understand. And this is maybe because also we do
not know yet what's say I do ex there, so
that we that we are behind it. We can only
understand what we know ourself, but we cannot interpret something

(28:11):
which is out of the school for the moment.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
We're gonna take a short commercial break to allow our
sponsors to identify themselves, and we will return shortly with
my guest today, Alloys Eileen, coming to us from Germany
and discussing his latest book, A True Prehistory. Will be

(28:39):
right back.

Speaker 5 (28:44):
Hey, stick to the code with the coast of my
pros and don't play about her.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
Rum's on the switch of the floe, sell on No.

Speaker 5 (28:49):
We can give exits notion in love with the kid,
doman his god us packet for calling and bring me
no clothes. That's it. I'm coping of fill up the
rit meta hip from the netta. You know it's the
twitch quick quick, so I know it's the g After
we to meet up with the friends, they're like, what
happened you blowing and cracking nick game? But the coach
and the glitch. Yeah, I was outside so long, got
frost by. I ain't never stopped, no way, got foresight.
I'll be on tour, my bros. No tour guy pet

(29:10):
the floor and the dog get oh my soon as
they called my hey, yeah, she said, I look like
oh gez. But this ain't shortline, Moatop said, I'm at
the art and get them.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
My guess today is alloy ealing. He has written a
new book called The True Prehistory. This is a look
at the various courtises that are left to us by
various cultures, most notably the Maya and the Aztec in
meso America. Are there any other codices in any part

(29:42):
of the world that are similar to the meso American books?

Speaker 4 (29:46):
No? No, maybe there there are these tablets of summer
that they will find. Uh yeah. Also also the the epics,
in addition that.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
The epic Yoga.

Speaker 4 (30:00):
M hm, the epicsh yeah, no, not gevis It's it's
older it books. You know, arahass is one name and
the other isn't super upper gosted title. But there was
this goddess Ninhu Sangha and she would created man by
whatever means. And interesting is that this child has a

(30:25):
very tiny piece of hair on its head and the
same child is shown in the codex makes a similarity,
which is again astonishing. Looks like that the information was global,
that there was not only in Mexican. They took the
best records. They continued to to have an unbroken history.

(30:46):
In this drawing in Mesopotamia, there are just fragments or
in the Bible, there are fragments left of what was done.
It's it's it's it's almost said, compared to thoughts that
what the codex is show, But the codexes they are
struck of luck. I could not believed that something took

(31:08):
records from millennia and just kept everything in such a
preceis precise way, and we have to be it's obviously
they did not do get biochemistry. No Maya person or
somebody else had an idea about biochemistry. This was just
for them and cultural heredy. They heredy they want to keep.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
So you're saying that these books, these courtses are just
the native's history and that the Maya did not use
genetic engineering.

Speaker 4 (31:45):
No not, I don't think so. So they were just
people who did took the records, who had said something
you herod inherently inherited from formal people or from former civilis.
They maybe from aliens. This is not possible to desire

(32:06):
how they got these information. They just kept it. They
did not have the machine and the equipment. One has
to recognize at that time the Maya that they lived
almost in Stone Age civilization, so there was a little
copper of use. But mist was made by wood or
by stone, And if you look at the complexity of

(32:29):
the equipment and the machinery shown in these codexes, it's
absolutely impossible to produce something like that by use of
wood or by use of stone. They'll find, for example,
scales which looked like a micromat's crew. This makes sense
if you want to do biochemistry and need to portion

(32:52):
or to add the right component at the right place
in the right moment, but you cannot do it in
a in a laboratory of stock in casement. Impossible, impossible.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
I want to talk to you and get your opinion
about another area that you talk about, which is UH
calindrical studies, but also planet movements. There's a great deal
of detail on the Moon and the Venus, uh orbits
and movements. It seems like somebody was actually in a

(33:28):
craft because they have such accurate readings of the calendar
or the movements of Venus and Mar and the Moon.
How would they know some such great detail about the
the movements of those planets.

Speaker 4 (33:43):
Yeah, so this this is another miracle. And in that case,
there are other records from India, from ancient India which
is similar in quality. I'm but this is a personal theory.
I do not know if it's true, but I think
that our planetary system had a high civilization on Venus,

(34:05):
and Venus in a cosmic disaster got struck by a
moon like moon sized microplanet planet, a small planet, and
it transformed the planet and wiped out every life on
this planet and the people from all the inhabitants from Venus,

(34:26):
they came to Earth and they were the bringer of culture,
the bringer of technology, and they commanded biochemistry and other
things that did also space traveling and things like that.
So wea just ah the aftermaths of a long gun

(34:46):
civilization in this planetary system. So this makes explains also
why Venus has such a high importance in Maya culture.
So they their calendar is not only based on the
Sun and the Moon, is also based on Venus. And
to me, the best explanation is that the the inhabitant

(35:11):
of Venus who's succeeded to save their life on Earth,
that they kept their memory of their gun time also
so that Venus became for them something like like a
memory of a of a gun area.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 4 (35:30):
But I do I don't like that the idea that
the planetary system was messed up in total. So this
is This is also one of the problems. A lot
of people talking about astronomy and and hip prehistory have
little knowledge in in astronomy and in physics, and so

(35:51):
they come up with his funny ideas and they're they're, yeah,
I'm a physicist by education, and I worked in a
chem company and then I'd attended lectures in chemistry, so
I know a bit about what is possible and what
is not possible. And everything I write in my books

(36:15):
I propose is on solid based physics or solid based chemistry.
Is nothing invented or funny singing or some crazy ideas.
Everything is based on what we know or today and
keep for sure. And this I think it's also a

(36:38):
difference to a lot of other people. They just make
guesses what could be have been in the past, and
how to explain this or that tablet or this or
that epics, but they cannot onto the basics. For example,

(37:01):
Willy Kovskiel, I think you know him and other people
strange ideas about Yeah, sorry, but but he he was
not an expert, so he was he was just fancy

(37:21):
guy who had nonsense ideas. And this is something I
don't like. Even if you do alternative prehistory, alternative science
or fringe science or whatever you would call it, you
need to stick to what is known. You need to
stick to mathematics. You need to still stick to physics.

(37:42):
You need to know the possibilities of chemistry. You cannot
invent something which is out of nature. It has to
everything has to be normal. And the proposal I mag
they are normal in principle it could have been in
this way without to turn to hyperspace or something other

(38:06):
ideas nobody knows is they exist. That all everything is
explicable in the framework of our scientific knowledge. And this
is an important point for me, that we keep stick
to what is possible and not come up with crazy ideas.
Then you can explain everything, but you cannot prove it.

(38:29):
And I think this is also important. But I did
do when I interpreted the cod it is I tried
to prove what was in I'd don't just make some
funny comments to say, Okay, yere DNA there this or that. No,
I try to complete a ceasis and to prove it,

(38:51):
and I think I succeeded in doing so. Maybe others
have a different opinion. Official scientists about this matter. Maybe
you know as well. Usually they don't like the idea,
so they they feel unhippy to discuss these topics.

Speaker 1 (39:08):
You can't talk about ancient prehistory with any more clarity
than cave people with modern sciences, they just they can't.
Their education blocks their thinking. And I have this issue
with archaeologist you. You can't talk about prehistory to them

(39:30):
with any level of sophistication because they.

Speaker 4 (39:33):
Just they just it's a pity. But this is the truth. Yeah,
and it's dessinally in the US. I think you should
know better. All this Clovis theory about the settlement of
the America, it's it's complete nonsense. And this is it's
not proven that America was settled already fifty seventy thousand
years ago by humans, and so they stick. But even

(39:56):
in these days you find then you professors will stick
to this nonsense because they want to believe in it.
They do not accept what is nowadays proven from excavations
but also from from from real from real proof that

(40:21):
they don't like. They stick to the old fashioned way.
And unfortunately this is not only in Archielotry. I tried
to discuss the matter of these coolities with a German
professor of biochemistry, and okay, he said, very nice, very

(40:41):
interesting correspondences, very interesting, but I do not believe.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
Yeah, that's tough. Talk a little bit about the time period,
if you would, alone, of the Venetian civilization and following
the destruction, how they populated Earth.

Speaker 4 (41:05):
Yeah, okay, I think that there is as a sequence
of events. To my understanding, the first event was that
a minor sound, a small sun that it crossed pass
through the through our planetary system. And this was about

(41:31):
forty thousand years ago. And again there are good reasons
why I believe in this. It's not just nons just idea.
It's it's again, it's also in the records and in
the fossils you can you can find evidence for this.
And the second great event was that the Earth captured

(41:55):
the Moon. I think this is what we discussed last
time in our interview. This was about twelve thousand, thirteen
thousand years ago, maybe fifteen thousand years ago, but that
it was what Platon called the Atlantis story. And then
there is an event which is really outstanding also in
the records of the ancient civilizations, and this is the

(42:18):
lighting up of Venus three thousand, four hundred or three thousand,
five hundred forty four, I don't know the except year,
but it doesn't matter. About two thousand, five hundred BC,
Venus flashed up. Nobody knows why, but I think this

(42:38):
was the moment when this giant asteroid or minor planet
smashed into Venus and just transformed it into its today's status.
And at that time a few of the Venus inhabitants
lived on Earth or had did did space travel or

(43:01):
things like that. So they escaped the unnuhilation of Venus.
And this was three thousand, four hundred and this fit's
also this the the records of the first civilizations on Earth.
Maybe they knew about this upcoming event and try to
escape Earth, which was the the only their planet they

(43:25):
could they could come go too. And if you look
at at some statutes and in Zuma or also in
other areas, so reptile you eat like yeah, I don't know, beings,

(43:46):
I don't know if maybe and they have these slid eyes,
they have this flat head, they have the the big
big and flat hat and say they look some are
like like like a reptively eat being and to be
it's probably that the Venus people looked like these these figurines,

(44:11):
or had that the periods of these figurines, because again,
these figurines, they are too abundant on Earth in two
various places. You find them at the same time about
four thousand to three thousand BC in Siberia in East Siberia.

(44:32):
You find them in Mesopotamia, and you find them in Europe.
And this is for classical a relogy, impossible that there
was an exchange of information between these areas. And they
look too much alike. Everybody the same appearance of these.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
Yeah, we're going to take a short commercial break to
allow our sponsors to identify themselves, and we will return
shortly with my guests today always Eileen discussing his new book,
The True Prehistory, will be right back. Images from doctor

(45:58):
Ealing's book The True Prehistory will be available on the
Facebook page Go to Earth Ancients, Go to Facebook. We'll
also have a few of the photos on Instagram. And
you got to look closely at the representations of the
various technologies as the Mesoamerican Shaman reproduce them on these tablets.

(46:22):
These coatises quite quite startling and very very unique. Yeah,
they look like reptiles. You you actually have live in
their book. You have a statue of Pristina from Courcy
of which is dated of four thousand BC.

Speaker 4 (46:42):
Yeah, exactly, the sameta, and you find them also in Sibirriga.
And so this again is a global occurrence of something
which is classically not extra cable. So I think the
my my idea to have I've written a book about

(47:04):
tour history as some background. I don't say that I
know what the true history is, but I think what
I propose is at least as well founded as that
what today is told us by official accareotriggy of historical

(47:25):
You know these these megal lid structures and and all
these stuff. It's it's again not explicable how these people
were able to lift and to transport stones of one
thousand tom's weight. There is something what is missing in
the explanation. And just to not to discuss it or

(47:48):
just to say it's of not interesting, I think this
is this is really non scientific behavior. You have to
try to find the answer and not to to avoid
any any discus or any close or look at these problems.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
Are you suggesting that the Venetians were the ones who
created the Homo sapien sapien or do you think it
was another E. T race?

Speaker 4 (48:15):
No, I think the better reptilid. It makes it makes
more sense. And these people that they did a lot
they let's say that they refined some savage Homo species
to create Homo sapiens us, or just for example. Another

(48:35):
unbelievable situation is if you look at the languages of
the world, you can date them back and say, okay,
at that at that time they were common, so they've
broke away from each other. And you can determine by
going to the back when this happened, and all this
ends up about forty thousand BC. That means it looks

(48:59):
like like that forty thousand BC, there was a language
everybody on Earth was speaking. All all men had the
same language. This is unbelievable because at that time they
were spread all around the world. Why one language for
everyone on the world. The only expectation is aliens came

(49:24):
in and gave language to men. Man was not capable
to speak before. And this is also genetically interesting because
there is a specific gene this makes us able to speak.
If you miss this gene, and there are some people

(49:44):
who miss it, they cannot speak. It's not because they
don't want it, just because they miss the gene who
takes care about speaking and to meet this also the
explication by apes. An ape is not capable to speak,
he can learn, he is smart to a certain degree.

(50:04):
There was even an example that an ape was able
to drive the car or things like that, but never
an ape learned to speak. And because he didn't, because
he is missing this gene. And fc aliens came in
and just created this gene or introduced this gene in

(50:25):
the human gene. Men started speaking. And that is one
puzzle piece in a big puzzle. But all these puzzle pieces, say,
fit together, and it makes human. The creation the creature

(50:47):
of aliens, and I think forty thousand PC is a
good number. Then there was little exchange. So they settled
on earth. Also the Venetians they and but also they
they use these almost spacious for just to to grow

(51:09):
crop for example, cereals or crop. They there were lazy guys.
I think this is something one is recognized. And so
they they had a lower case and they mutilated. They
didn't like to work all day, and so they're they

(51:29):
created men. And why why do I believe in this
This is because the wild form of these cereals, they
are not existing in the areas where they perst grown
as a commercial cereal. They are from Himalaya, from southern Africa,

(51:50):
and all of a sudden they become high yield crop
and high yield cereal in Mesopotamia. Unbelievable. How could this happen.
The The idea is some alien brought it from these places,
did some genetic engineering on it and making them high
yield crop. And again this fits. They they needed food,

(52:15):
specific food because they metabolism was different from ours, Venus
is different from both different from Earth. So they they
they produced their food according according to their need and
nan was just just a nice add on. So they
did not do it because they liked us that much
and want to do something good to the to the

(52:40):
earthly beings. It was it was sheer need they was
to do that. And this also explains why they didn't
show any respect to the humans. If you look at
the old epics, you find that the the gods they
behaved very rude and very strict to men. Death was

(53:03):
a common experience, so they if if somebody was not
obedient enough, he got killed, no problem. They had no
real relations. They had maybe to us the same relation
as we have to our chicken, something like that. So

(53:25):
if somebody died or the somebody was killed, that didn't matter.
It was just theyse because it took twenty years to
grow another one in exchange. But this was the worst
of what they could see as problem.

Speaker 1 (53:41):
Can you tell us a little bit about what looks
like experiments, because in your book you describe these long
headed humans that you know, and you give some example
the achinotin as one and others. Were they actual et hybrids?
Are actual or genetic experiments? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (54:06):
Maybe both. I think if if if you look at
the at the literature, you offend. So this is maybe
the black hairs or they were black from the experils.
I do not know. So they were the blacks. And
obviously the gods had a h need of a hierarchy
also in their slave system, so they want somebody to

(54:28):
rule the other. So the common laborer was lower cased
and then the net that need somebody in between who
just directed and controlled the workers for them. And I
think these long headed h paros and and and and chiefs,

(54:48):
they were the They were bridging the gap between the
lower cased people and the gods. So also in the
Bible you can read that the God she had action
arrange with some of the selected people. So with with Adam,

(55:09):
even with Abrahm and others, they they had direct relations.
They talked to each other. There was not something like today,
I never met a god. Maybe I did not even
meet an angel. I think it's the same rules for you.
But but in former times the relation was close. So
they didn't like it asra, but they needed it ultra

(55:31):
each other and the God had the God said the
long headed persons. This makes the sense, well, it makes
them easily different common people as the as the beliefs
or something. Work was done properly and that everybody was
obedient and that they worked hard and things like that.

(55:54):
So this also makes expelicable. Why why a normal thinking
being should decide to to grow crop. It's it's a
it's a disaster if you if you just live from
your environment, you have worked for three to four hours

(56:15):
a day. But if you start to become a farmer,
all of a sudden, you work ten hours a day
and and ninety of the time you are not direct
access to the food. You you just start to grow it.
You have to sew it, you have to to produce

(56:38):
the corn, you have to mill it, and all this stuff.
It's it's it's a disaster. No clear minded man would
do so by free will. And if you if you
look in the in the indigenous people in Norgenia or
in Africa or whatever, nobody has the idea to start

(57:00):
growing crops. This is something which needs external advice, somebody
who says you have to do so, then maybe they start,
but out of themselves. I do not see why. Okay,
but this is a very big, fragmented discussion. But you see,

(57:22):
I really try to dig deeper and to get them
a really conclusive picture. Not to have an idea. Here
is a big stone, and there is some funny muse
or things like that. But my idea is really to
come up with something consistent. Maybe this makes me unique,

(57:43):
maybe crazy, I do not know, but at least I try.
No I was.

Speaker 1 (57:49):
I was fascinated by your look at these courtices and
reconstructing what you think is the machines of genome splicing
and so forth and so on. We're going to take

(58:10):
a short commercial break to allow our sponsors to identify
themselves and we'll return shortly with my guests today Alloy's
Ailing discussing his latest book, The True Prehistory, will be
right back with you. My guess today is Alloys Evening.

(59:11):
He has written a new book called The True Prehistory,
and it includes documents, in fact, interpretations of codises that
show machinery, machines that are for biological change, for genetic
genome splicing and other technologies. Now, one of the things

(59:33):
I thought was also interesting is you talk about the
Poopa Vu, which is the Sacred Maya book, and in
it you claim there's a story of the creation of man.
Talk about that because I I don't remember that part,
but maybe I'm just not reading it.

Speaker 4 (59:49):
Yeah, but this is this is a very simple story.
It's it's similar to the Bible. Well, this is nothing
about biochemistry or things like that. This is uh a
fairy tale, I would say. So this is the deep
they they got, said the creating men, out of using

(01:00:11):
wood and clay and so and say. They had different
failures and they started in you. So this this is
something which is maybe more a fairy tale invented later
on sus h as in neither Apodamia or in the Bible.
This is this is not which you have to take

(01:00:32):
two series. It's maybe just a faint remnants of of
of something which was known but which was losing and
concreteness as time passed by, so you can look at
it at some things are interesting. For example, there's also

(01:00:53):
interesting that some gods are descending from heaven by using
robes or things like that makes sense. Again, if you
do space travel, you have somehow to have something like
a space elevator, otherwise you would't work, so you have
to an orbitor and then you have have some elevator

(01:01:17):
to go up and down to move heavy loads and
to have really exchange of goods and so honoreds of force.
And this is something which for me is also a
nice historic event they kept record of.

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Amazing. The book's called the True Prehistory and Unofficial History
of Heaven, Man and Earth. And my guest today has
been Alloy Eiling. What is what is your thinking? Because
this is book one or volume one, do you have
more that you're uncovering?

Speaker 4 (01:01:58):
Can you please repeat you You've were blocked for a moments,
so I.

Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
Was just wondering, this is book or volume one, do
you have new volumes of other prehistory discoveries that you've made.

Speaker 4 (01:02:13):
Yeah, In total, the plan is to have four books,
four books in total. I'm more or less finished this,
but jacks them out for it takes the time. But
so we have in total four books, and in total
it's about one thousand and two hundred pages. And these
are written and they are also published in German. So
if you like, you can read the book in German.

(01:02:35):
But okay, yeah, yeah, donnik, maybe you're you're interested in
German or.

Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
I have ancestry there and relatives, but I don't speak
the language anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:02:45):
Yeah, yeah, for all Americans do they only have English
as the native language. Okay, so yeah, So the other
one is the next one is going to discuss the
topic of this minor sun which passes through the planetary
system and just causes some distortion and causes some havuk

(01:03:11):
to the planetary organ of it. So this is the
next one, and then a third one is going to
discuss the Venetians and the fate of Venus and how
everything happened with this planet and how space travel came
about and what was in and what was good for it.

(01:03:35):
And the fourth volume is about the Moon capture. This
is the other highlight in my alternative history or prehistory,
that the moon is a fairly young companion of Earth.
It's only thirteen thousand years old. And this explains again

(01:03:56):
a lot X explains for also, for example, why America
was all of a sudden free from man and free
from large animals. I don't know if you ever checked
the history of the Americans, but it's funny. All the

(01:04:16):
big stiles animals in South America, they are gone, all
of a sudden, they are gone. And then in the
in the end, and in the there are mud flows
and stick like that. The old continent looks like inclined.
In the west, it was elevated. In the east it

(01:04:37):
was lowered. And this inclination you even can today see
it if you if you look at the geological map.
And and so the moon capture is the second highlight
in my in my alternative history, and all this, Yeah,
then that this makes the final comment that I say, okay,

(01:05:00):
and this is what man is today. We have a moon,
and it was a hard time. And in particularly I
think it's important to know how how many risks exist
in our in our lives, so we do not need
atomic bombs. Yeah, the sustain universe itself is a very

(01:05:23):
dangerous place.

Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
M hmm.

Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
All of a sudden everything can happen, and that's right,
gamma ray or something and then super and nova or
a lot of possibilities which can kill us in a moment.

Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
Let me ask you another question real quickly before I
let you go, and that is the codex verdicus. You
believe there's a chemical synthesis machine. And when you say that,
is that codecs similar to the others where we're looking
at drawings or representations of machinery.

Speaker 4 (01:06:03):
I think they compliment each other to a certain degree
that they have this similar or maybe the same content.
And I think this is also natural. If creation was
of that importance to the priests in the Maya civilization
or in earlier civilizations, then all the the or most
of the qualities should deal with this topic. And in fact,

(01:06:28):
you find surprising exact replications of how proteins are built,
so you can really see how the double strand of
the DNA is separated into two single strands, and one
of these single stands, the so called aaron a, is

(01:06:50):
used in a ribosome, which is again the unbelievable complicated
enzon a catalyst and in this is the amino acids
are linked to each other to build a protein.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
This is.

Speaker 4 (01:07:11):
This is one of the biggest miracle in life. The
ribosome is such a complicated molecule and to produce it,
it's made out of proteins. But it's also the only
machine in our body, machine in our body which is
capable to produce proteins. That means a machine which is

(01:07:34):
only capable to produce the equipment or the parts for itself.
And so this is this is a circulus vitosis. It's impossible.
And there there we need a creator and not an alien.
But in that case we need somebody who is steering life.
In total. Though I'm not an atheist, I really believe

(01:07:57):
in God, and I think this is a an egg
of God that life exists, otherwise it would not be possible.

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
Fantastic. I want to mention to our listeners that the
book The True Prehistory is now available on Amazon and
it's the English version, but also it's been translated from
the original which is in German, so you can get
the German German or in.

Speaker 4 (01:08:24):
Line is Dead Boy again. The line book deb Sorrey the.

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
Book's available in English.

Speaker 4 (01:08:30):
Now, yes, that's right, it's a in English and since
the beginning of November, I sink, so you can buy it.
I do not know what's the prize in dollars is
it's ninety nineteen Europe and you can also buy it
as an ebook for a far lower price in euro

(01:08:54):
it's four and dollar issume five something like that.

Speaker 1 (01:08:59):
Yeahographs are excellent. Yeah. Where does the Bourguee Codex result is? That?
Is it in Spain or in the Vatican?

Speaker 4 (01:09:11):
Now everything okay? In that everything is in the Vatican
Museum in Rome. So I think there's little in Spain,
maybe a few one but not the important one. The
important one ones uh in the Vatican, and one is
surprisingly indrast in Germany. I do not know why, but

(01:09:34):
there is the so called Codex trist in this and
this is the codex which deals with calendar and time
conting and things like that. So this is in Germany,
in Resting City, in Saxonia, and most of the other
cod it says, which deal with this creation and with

(01:09:55):
biochemistry and these things, they are in Rome, but I
think they are not for the public. So I don't
think you can go there and have a look at it,
but you can find it in the internet. Fantastic, so
no problem, there's an internet website is shown, big expectation.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Hmm, Hellois, thank you for joining me. Much luck on
this new book. And uh, let's uh see what else
comes out of your writing in the future. Looking forward
to it.

Speaker 4 (01:10:34):
Oh, okay, if it was the honor to speak to you,
and yeah, if you have another interesting topic you think
it's worse. Who disgusting me? Please let me know.

Speaker 1 (01:10:53):
This is the first theory I've heard about the codices
that gets in the technical diearys, schematics for machines, genome
splicing and such. And this is from somebody who sees
this kind of documentation all the time. That's our guest today.

(01:11:15):
And this book is unique because he actually shows the
codus in its full color, and next to it he'll
show the modern version of it. And it's remarkable and
it's something I have not heard of before. And I
can see why he was published on the Graham Hancock website.

(01:11:36):
But more importantly, Graham felt strong enough to have help
him publish the book in its entirety. So I'm going
to take a closer look at it. I looked at
the first part of it. The other thing that's interesting
that we didn't have time to discuss is the fact
that his belief is that Homo sapeiy and sapient us

(01:11:58):
we are genetically engineered. We are not well, I mean,
we're native to Earth, but we have the genetic complements
of ets off world types. And you know, and when
I hear this kind of thing, you gotta wonder, what
are all these UAPs doing? What what is all this
activity going on? Are these anything to do with our past?

(01:12:23):
And I'm beginning to think it might be possible. So
get the book. It's just come out, A True Prehistory,
And you can see it's a red cover and there's
a there's an interesting graphic on the on the cover.
It's one of the codis pages. A True Prehistory, a

(01:12:44):
unofficial history of Heaven, Man and Earth. I think we're
gonna hear more about this in the coming weeks, months, years,
because you know, these are the only documents we have
from Ice age or even before that culture. Is it Atlantis,

(01:13:05):
I don't know, but it's very sophisticated Maya. It's the
fine the founders, it's the established Maya who came and
settled in present day Mexican Mexico. That was fun. Hey,
if you're enjoying Earth Ancient's Destiny and Earth Ancients Special Edition,

(01:13:29):
please consider becoming a subscriber for as little as five
dollars a month. You can support the work we do
on these podcasts, and we do have expenses. And to
become a subscriber, go to Patreon it's pa t r
eon dot com, Forward Slash Earth Ancients and subscribe. We
got a whole library of gifts for you in the

(01:13:53):
form of digital e books, and all you gotta do
is when you register, you go right into the library,
select a couple of books, check them out. Now they're
digital books, which means they sit and reside on your
computer desktop. But you have an amazing selection of ancient history, UFO, UAP,

(01:14:16):
paranormal and such types of material books that you can
choose from. So to become subscriber and check that out,
go to Patreon dot com Forward Slash Earth Ancients. All right,
that's it for this program. I want to think my

(01:14:37):
guest today Alloys Airing, coming to us from Germany. As
always the team of Gaeltour, Mark Foster and Feya Parvar.
You guys rock all right, take care of you, will
and we will talk to you next time

Speaker 5 (01:15:15):
In
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