“Then God said, "Let us make man in our image, in our likeness…” Genesis 1:26
We see them on the walls of the pyramids, in Greek myths, in the drawings of the Aztecs, and in the statues of gods of the ancient Near East. Throughout the ancient world of paganism, the gods revealed themselves as hybrids between various animals or animals and humans. This was not only how the gods revealed themselves but also often what the gods themselves created with their magic and their curses. These “chimeras” terrorized the human race. For example, there was the Minotaur (half human half bull) that was created by Poseidon to punish the people of Crete for their king’s failure to sacrifice a bull. The Minotaur went on to devour humans as his nourishment. And of course there is the Chimera itself the offspring of Typhoeus (a storm-giant) and Ekhidna (a she-dragon with the head and breast of a woman and the tail of a coiling serpent) who ravaged the countryside of Lykia in Anatolia. Then there was Medusa who was cursed by the goddess Minerva and became intertwined with serpents to destroy any human that would look upon her. Throughout history these gods either appear as hybrid beings or create hybrid beings. Twisting creation to something horrific and destructive.
Tales of these chimeras terrified the ancients.
And these stories will find an echo in the current work of the some of the most elite and well-funded laboratories in the world. Scientists are using human stem cells (often taken from aborted fetuses) to build modern day chimeras.
Soviet scientist Vladimir Demikhov is one of the most respected scientists of the 20th century. He was given awards by the Soviets - including a USSR State Prize and the Order of Merit for the Fatherland. He is known as a pioneer in the field of transplanting. In1937, he performed the first cardiac assist device. In 1946 he performed the first intrathoracic heterotopic heart transplant. In 1948 he performed the first liver transplant. In 1953, he performed the first successful experimental coronary artery bypass operation. Then things got weird. In 1954, he performed the first head transplant when he took two dogs and combined them into one. This uncanny and horrific (and cruel) experiment conducted in a soviet lab was successful (at least for a few days). Whether he knew it or not, Demikhov had created something very similar to Cerberus, the “hound of hell,” the multi-headed dog that guarded the gates of the Underworld to prevent the dead from leaving.
In 1970, American neurosurgeon Dr. Robert White, inspired by Demikhov, decided to transplant the head of a monkey. He had to sever the spine at the neck so the monkey was left paralyzed but for a while (9 days) it survived. Critics called the experiment barbaric but this didn’t slow White down who sought to do it on humans (even practicing on cadavers in the morgue).
In 1997, Harvard surgeons Joseph and his brother Charles Vacanti had an idea. They thought it might be good to create human body parts in a lab. The problem was getting it to grow. To solve the problem, they implanted the shape of a human ear in the back of a mouse.
More recently, efforts to combine humans and animals have been practiced using cells from aborted babies. In 2017, scientists at the Salk Institute in San Diego, California announced that they had created a pig-human hybrid that they described as a “chimera.”
In 2019, Japan announced that they would allow human animal hybrid experiments. The stated goal was to enable research that could develop sources of organs for transplant. Funding was given to a Japanese stem-cell scientist, Hiromitsu Nakauchi, who leads teams at the University of Tokyo and Stanford University in California. He stated his intention to “grow human cells in mouse and rat embryos and then transplant those embryos into surrogate animals.” This directive by Japan was the first since a ban on the practice was overturned earlier that same year.
In 2020, researchers from the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center announced that they had created a “mouse embryo that’s part human.” The scientists called the creation a human-animal chimera - a single organism that’s made up of a mouse embryo combined with human stem cells that as a single entity has both mouse cells and human cells.
In 2023, it came to light that the National Institute of Health (NIH) was funding strange experiments on aborted babies including a University of Pittsburgh's study that involved the harvesting of aborted baby parts - from six to 42 weeks gestation - and grafting scalps of aborted babies onto lab rats.
I start a lot of what I write with “assuming you are not a materialist.” I do this because very few people claim to be atheistic materialists but most people (including Christians) are functional materialists. They might theoretically believe that there is such thing as God or the spirit realm but in practice we assume material explanations for everything.
If you don’t believe in the existence of some other realm (a spirit realm) where real entities exist, stop reading here. Go back and read my book “The Return of the Dragon” (happy to get you a free copy if you like). But nothing in the rest of this will make sense to you if you are not in agreement there.
And this is an important thing for us to be clear on. If we believe that there is another dimension in which real entities exist (let’s call it the aerial realm), then we can talk about who these entities are, what they are like, what they want, and the effect that they have on people. That was the subject of The Return of the Dragon and will be the point of this post. In that book, I wrote about how entities in the other dimension have long been accessed using drugs but I also talked about how a variety of non-drug related practices (meditation, rhythmic drumming/dancing, etc) have given similar visions.
In my more recent writings, I have spoken in depth about how those participating in occult practices (including drug use) have led many of the developments in technology and science. Throughout the development of science and technology some of the most seminal thinkers practiced the occult, took psychedelics, and engaged in efforts to contact the spirit realm. What if they were successful? Many of them certainly claimed to have been. Now, assuming they were successful in their efforts - actually contacting those entities and powers they sought to contact - wouldn’t we expect technological “advancements” to forward the goals of these entities?
And people that see these entities, often depict them as animal human hybrids. Consider the words of author Graham Hancock discussing his interaction with interdimensional beings,
“Very commonly these entities appear as serpents or as serpent human hybrids. Mother Ayahuasca herself…is frequently depicted as a serpent… I have met her in this form many times.”
I have argued that maybe the gods of old - so often human animal hybrids - were real visions of a real other dimension. As shocking as this claim might be, it is at least potentially consistent with every major religion, philosophy and even quantum physics. It is possible and as I have argued via the evidence available to us, it is likely. And so we see that this field of science that was so deeply influenced by these efforts to reach this other dimension that is now mixing humans and animals. Is this all a coincidence? Or is it a bringing into this world something that we once thought only the stuff of mythology? Are the ancient gods once again starting to make chimeras? And if so, what will the effect on humanity be?
God created humans in his own image. Are the entities now attempting to do the same?
In the very least, the entities want us to debase ourselves and God’s creation.
I got George Orwell on the network just yesterday. Apparently he did the prone sleep+hands up/forward. As I suspected, 1984 really is a gangsta's paradise (similar to today's Cuba).