Jack Reacher: MP’s are on the way now.
If it were up to me, I’d just kill you.
It’s just going to keep on ringing.
Sheriff Wood: (Answers phone) Sheriff Raymond Wood.
(To Reacher) Who the hell are you?
Jack Reacher: The guy you didn’t count on.
From the film " Jack Reacher, Never Go Back ", written by Edward Zwick, 2016
(If you haven’t read the first two installments of this series, and would like to, please send me a note at [email protected])
In 950 A.D., Godfroi de Bouillon was born. He would grow up to be King of Jerusalem, and the Founder of Priory of Sion. I bring it up because he was the son of the Neanderthal “Fulk the Black” of Anjou, and Melusine, the human-salamander hybrid that some historians refer to as “the daughter of Satan”.
You might remember Melusine as the split-tailed, Ishtar-retread, human-salamander hybrid gal on the original Starbucks logo:
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Starbucks had to walk the logo back to a more stylized version that partially obscures her split salamander tail, because someone at Corporate overreached. You don’t EVER talk about the salamander thing.
Some instructive data on the salamander bloodline may be found in the article that follows:
The Demon Countess of Anjou
“From the devil they came, to the devil they will go.” – St. Bernard
Her beauty lured the Count of Anjou, Geoffrey Greymantle, into a hasty marriage, although her origins were unknown. She rarely attended Mass, was inattentive in church, and most alarmingly, always left before Communion. When the count ordered some of his men to force her to remain during Communion, she screamed and flew out a window – never to be seen again. She left behind her husband and their son, Fulk Nerr, also known as “Fulk the Black.” Her son’s notoriety and violent temper was seen as proof that his mother had surely been a spawn of the devil.
From this legend, the heirs of Count Geoffrey Greymantle (c. 938-987) were seen as a dangerous and ruthless family with a ferocious temper and an unholy ancestry resulting in paranormal talents on the battlefield.
Geoffrey (1113- 1151) was his father’s oldest son and heir. Little is known of his early years, although contemporary writers described him as tall , handsome, and a ginger ( red-headed ). Much has been said of his temper (in keeping with the legend of demon blood), but he was also educated and well-read. It is said that he loved to read more than to hunt. His quick mind and fiery temper would be a legacy passed to his descendants."
Jeff says, get a load of this:
Pay no attention to the red-haired, parchment-skinned human-salamander hybrid behind the curtain!
The article continues:
Melusine and the House of Anjou (Plantagenet) Narrative:
The fairy, Melusine, was the daughter of the fairy Pressyne and King Elynas of Albany. She became the fairy Queen of the forest of Colombiers in the French region of Poitou [Poitou - Wikipedia]. One day, she and two of her subjects were guarding their sacred fountain when a young man, Raymond of Poitiers, burst out of the forest. Melusine spent the night talking with Raymond, and by dawn, they were betrothed, but with one condition. Melusine requested that Raymond promise that he would never see her on a Saturday. He agreed, and they were married. Melusine brought her husband great wealth and prosperity. She built the fortress of Lusignan so quickly that it appeared to be made by magic. Over time, Melusine built many castles, fortresses, churches, towers and towns, each in a single night, throughout the region. She and Raymond had ten children, but each child was flawed. The eldest had one red eye and one blue eye, the next had an ear larger than the other, another had a lion’s foot growing from his cheek, and another had but one eye. The sixth son was known as Geoffrey-with-the-great tooth, as he had a very large tooth. In spite of the deformities, the children were strong, talented and loved throughout the land.
One day, Raymond’s brother visited him and made Raymond very suspicious about the Saturday activities of his wife. So the next Saturday, Raymond sought his wife, finding her in her bath where he spied on her through a crack in the door. He was horrified to see that she had the body and tail of a serpent from her waist down. He said nothing until the day that their son, Geoffrey-with-the-great tooth, attacked a monastery and killed one hundred monks, including one of his brothers. Raymond accused Melusine of contaminating his line with her serpent nature, thus revealing that he had broken his promise to her.
As a result, Melusine turned into a fifteen-foot serpent , circled the castle three times, wailing piteously, and then flew away. She would return at night to visit her children, then vanish. Raymond was never happy again. Melusine appeared at the castle, wailing, whenever a count of Lusignan was about to die or a new one to be born. I t was said that the noble line which originated with Melusine will reign until the end of the world. Her children included the King of Cyprus, the King of Armenia, the King of Bohemia, the Duke of Luxembourg, and the Lord of Lusignan.
When Count Siegfried of the Ardennes bought the feudal rights to Luxembourg in 963, his name became connected with the local version of Melusine. He also supposedly wed the demoness and this Melusine magically made the castle of Bock appear the morning after their wedding. As a consequence the royal house of Luxembourg also claims descent from the demon countess. Both Martin Luther and Goethe told tales warning of the evils of Melusine, calling her a succubus and worse. In Czech and Slovak, the word meluzína refers to wailing wind, usually in the chimney. This is a reference to the wailing Melusine looking for her lost children.
(The word “salamander” may never be spoken. It’s always covered with memes, usually " serpent " or " dragon ", and, in David Icke’s case, " reptilian ". - ed)
THE CAVE OF THE ‘SWIMMERS’
June 17, 2014 - A chance find in a site known as the Cave of Swimmers adds a colourful twist to an exhibition in Paris celebrating the work of ethnographer Leo Frobenius in raising awareness of the rock art of Africa.
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The human-salamander hybrids depicted on the walls of the cave in the Neanderthal’s signature red ochre are called “swimmers” in all articles. There’s no mention of precisely who made the cave paintings in any of the articles. Their age was originally put forward as 10,000 years.
“The shallow cave’s paintings are about 7,000 years old, give or take a thousand years , and show human figures performing what looks like a kind of Neolithic doggy paddle .”
That means they’re from 6,000 years ago, 4,000 B.C.
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(Note distinctive forked tail. The first picture at the top is the one used in all the media stories. It’s the one that least-obviously features human-salamander hybrids. And notice how they put a helpful dotted-line drawing of the wall art that fakes that they are humans swimming, vs. human-salamander hybrids. The cave was probably wet at the time, and that’s where the people went to commune and worship with them. - ed))
January 14, 2015 - Debate over 7,000-year-old rock art in barren Sahara Desert that may depict people swimming
Phys.org wrote: The Cave of the Swimmers has captivated imaginations ever since it was discovered by the Hungarian explorer László Almásy in 1933. The shallow cave’s paintings are about 7,000 years old, give or take a thousand years, and show human figures performing what looks like a kind of Neolithic doggy paddle .
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, April 5, 2020
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