Negative. They also represent PHALLIS worship.the Phallus goes back
Osiris was chopped up by his brother Set & his body parts were spread across the Kingdom. isis found all the pieces except his penis. Isis made one of gold & had sex with the body, and immaculately conceived Tammuz.
Masons wear aprons over their genitalia
To cover up their penises; an Eye overlays their penis - they are in a sex cult & the āGā stands for gnosis / Generation.
The penis is to them, what the across is
To Christians.
Obelisks are everywhere. Large and small. From every city in the world to even small outback Australian towns. While there are seemingly insignificant representations of them as boundaries they are more often than not, focal points. Oft times in the middle of intersections of well worn transportation routes. Also often found as the centre piece of a square, memorial, park or business district. Many of them have strange folklore histories that clearly don't fit into the official narrative and are more than likely remnants of something much older... Many of them (large and small) are also found to be in straight line and perpendicular alignments with the oldest domed buildings, so called bandstands and cathedrals.
There is a LOT more to obelisks than many realise.
Obelisks simply represent a boundary. Hence why you will see them at borders and at graves.
Negative. They also represent PHALLIS worship.the Phallus goes back Osiris was chopped up by his brother Set & his body parts were spread across the Kingdom. isis found all the pieces except his penis. Isis made one of gold & had sex with the body, and immaculately conceived Tammuz.
Masons wear aprons over their genitalia To cover up their penises; an Eye overlays their penis - they are in a sex cult & the āGā stands for gnosis / Generation.
The penis is to them, what the across is To Christians.
Obelisks are everywhere. Large and small. From every city in the world to even small outback Australian towns. While there are seemingly insignificant representations of them as boundaries they are more often than not, focal points. Oft times in the middle of intersections of well worn transportation routes. Also often found as the centre piece of a square, memorial, park or business district. Many of them have strange folklore histories that clearly don't fit into the official narrative and are more than likely remnants of something much older... Many of them (large and small) are also found to be in straight line and perpendicular alignments with the oldest domed buildings, so called bandstands and cathedrals.
There is a LOT more to obelisks than many realise.
Obelisks are not "simply" boundary markers.