"... The lake, which was once connected to the Wisconsin River, is referred to as the ‘Sacred Lake’ or ‘Spirit Lake’ by the Ho-Chunk people who first occupied the land between 12,000 to 16,000 years ago. The Ho-Chunk tribe believes that the lake communicates with them during celebrations. ..."
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Is it in the following article? There seem to be a couple-few interesting candidates for that distinction in this article.
"... The lake, which was once connected to the Wisconsin River, is referred to as the ‘Sacred Lake’ or ‘Spirit Lake’ by the Ho-Chunk people who first occupied the land between 12,000 to 16,000 years ago. The Ho-Chunk tribe believes that the lake communicates with them during celebrations. ..."
Thanks for this, itc. I just finished reading through the last eight pages of TTT's comment history and doing shallow dives down many topics. Just ready to head into Damon and Pythias. I'd just looked into Pythias as the wife of Aristotle, looking for a connection as to why those knights would name themselves after her. (Perhaps they didn't and it was the other P of D&P). Apparently, while on Lesbos, Pythias collected tissue samples and is described as being a biologist and embryologist. That seems to mesh with all this transhumanism. My guess is these inhuman cabalists are and have been experimenting on humans for decades if not centuries.
Thanks for the links. I'll look into them later tonight.
Those posts will provide some answers to some of the questions he poses.
Just ready to head into Damon and Pythias. I'd just looked into Pythias as the wife of Aristotle, looking for a connection as to why those knights would name themselves after her. (Perhaps they didn't and it was the other P of D&P). Apparently, while on Lesbos, Pythias collected tissue samples and is described as being a biologist and embryologist. That seems to mesh with all this transhumanism. My guess is these inhuman cabalists are and have been experimenting on humans for decades if not centuries.
/u/TrustTheTruth could there be a connection between the Knights of Pythias and Pytheas of Massalia, the Greek explorer who introduced the idea of "Thule" by being the first to travel to both Britain and the Arctic circle in "about 330 BC"? The fact that he was the first to travel to the North pole area makes me think about the connections between Racine and Admiral Byrds voyage to the South pole. Is this just a coincidence or is there a connection between the name "Knights of Pythias" and Pytheas of Massalia?
From the brief description in the landmarks article, I don't get the impression the tribe thought of "them" as dangerous. That said, the misunderstanding of advanced technology by a more primitive people could lead, for example, sounds emanating from a body of water in response to some rituals performed there (or near there) to be interpreted as the water communicating with them. As a former scuba diver I can attest that sound travels well enough underwater to be noticeable. My first thought when reading about the lake and tribe was underground activity of some beings being amplified by the lake waters. If I'm not mistaken, the underground tunnels (for slavery escapes from southern states) ran up that far north in that area.
My first thought when reading about the lake and tribe was underground activity of some beings being amplified by the lake waters. If I'm not mistaken, the underground tunnels (for slavery escapes from southern states) ran up that far north in that area.
The underground railroad does extend to those areas. I have a theory that the Native Americans marked entrances into the underground with a "Wakanda" intaglio mound, meaning an inverse mound (hole in the ground) in the shape of a water panther. Wakanda is a complex, multifaceted word meaning both God, witchcraft, and water spirit, and the water spirit in their mythology was a panther that guarded the underworld. So I think there are underground entrance points near any place where the natives had once built an intaglio mound.
There is only one such Wakanda intaglio mound left in the world, which is at Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin but there also used to be one in Milwaukee. A cemetery was built on top of that mound where many of the most elite citizens of Wisconsin are now buried.
That site I linked you to above, https://usa-anti-communist.com/ , is mostly focused on a Witch who lived in Kenosha and possessed the stolen crown of Liechtenstein; her house was on the Rock river that flowed from Fort Atkinson (where the only remaining intaglio mound is today). It was very close to a place called Wauconda, Illinois. Rock Lake also has pyramids underneath it.
Speaking of crowns, just a few days ago a young woman (? I can't tell anymore) from Wisconsin, Grace Stanke, was crowned Miss America 2023 and as part of the pageant segments (talent, I suppose), played what some called a jaw-dropping performance of a Vivaldi piece called. . . Storm. Oh, and this Miss America is going to champion... Climate change issues. (Never ends).
WotW? Devil's Lake?
"... The lake, which was once connected to the Wisconsin River, is referred to as the ‘Sacred Lake’ or ‘Spirit Lake’ by the Ho-Chunk people who first occupied the land between 12,000 to 16,000 years ago. The Ho-Chunk tribe believes that the lake communicates with them during celebrations. ..."
.
Is it in the following article? There seem to be a couple-few interesting candidates for that distinction in this article.
https://nomadsunveiled.com/historic-sites-and-landmarks-in-wisconsin/
What are water spirits?
/u/ThinQ here is some research I've done on waterspirits:
https://hotcakencyclopedia.com/ho.Waterspirits.html
https://hotcakencyclopedia.com/ho.WaterspiritGuardianMound.html
https://communities.win/c/GreatAwakening/p/15HImEpJhp/ny-subway-shooter-lived-in-milwa/c/4OXFI5XdMi1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAStayV-Hyg
Start reading through this guys site, ThinQ
https://usa-anti-communist.com/
Thanks for this, itc. I just finished reading through the last eight pages of TTT's comment history and doing shallow dives down many topics. Just ready to head into Damon and Pythias. I'd just looked into Pythias as the wife of Aristotle, looking for a connection as to why those knights would name themselves after her. (Perhaps they didn't and it was the other P of D&P). Apparently, while on Lesbos, Pythias collected tissue samples and is described as being a biologist and embryologist. That seems to mesh with all this transhumanism. My guess is these inhuman cabalists are and have been experimenting on humans for decades if not centuries.
Thanks for the links. I'll look into them later tonight.
I just posted a ton of research I did on Racine over a few years here:
https://communities.win/c/GreatAwakening/p/16ZXVVkzWY/x/c/4TohtSmcAAJ
Those posts will provide some answers to some of the questions he poses.
/u/TrustTheTruth could there be a connection between the Knights of Pythias and Pytheas of Massalia, the Greek explorer who introduced the idea of "Thule" by being the first to travel to both Britain and the Arctic circle in "about 330 BC"? The fact that he was the first to travel to the North pole area makes me think about the connections between Racine and Admiral Byrds voyage to the South pole. Is this just a coincidence or is there a connection between the name "Knights of Pythias" and Pytheas of Massalia?
Some seem benevolent, others dangerous.
https://www.lenntech.com/water-mythology.htm
.
From the brief description in the landmarks article, I don't get the impression the tribe thought of "them" as dangerous. That said, the misunderstanding of advanced technology by a more primitive people could lead, for example, sounds emanating from a body of water in response to some rituals performed there (or near there) to be interpreted as the water communicating with them. As a former scuba diver I can attest that sound travels well enough underwater to be noticeable. My first thought when reading about the lake and tribe was underground activity of some beings being amplified by the lake waters. If I'm not mistaken, the underground tunnels (for slavery escapes from southern states) ran up that far north in that area.
The underground railroad does extend to those areas. I have a theory that the Native Americans marked entrances into the underground with a "Wakanda" intaglio mound, meaning an inverse mound (hole in the ground) in the shape of a water panther. Wakanda is a complex, multifaceted word meaning both God, witchcraft, and water spirit, and the water spirit in their mythology was a panther that guarded the underworld. So I think there are underground entrance points near any place where the natives had once built an intaglio mound.
There is only one such Wakanda intaglio mound left in the world, which is at Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin but there also used to be one in Milwaukee. A cemetery was built on top of that mound where many of the most elite citizens of Wisconsin are now buried.
That site I linked you to above, https://usa-anti-communist.com/ , is mostly focused on a Witch who lived in Kenosha and possessed the stolen crown of Liechtenstein; her house was on the Rock river that flowed from Fort Atkinson (where the only remaining intaglio mound is today). It was very close to a place called Wauconda, Illinois. Rock Lake also has pyramids underneath it.
Speaking of crowns, just a few days ago a young woman (? I can't tell anymore) from Wisconsin, Grace Stanke, was crowned Miss America 2023 and as part of the pageant segments (talent, I suppose), played what some called a jaw-dropping performance of a Vivaldi piece called. . . Storm. Oh, and this Miss America is going to champion... Climate change issues. (Never ends).
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/miss-america-2023-winner-miss-wisconsin-grace-stanke-reflects-shocking-win