If it doesn’t fit, throw it out!
Posted On: Mar 4th, 2015 at 23:55
United States.
If a discovery doesn’t fit into accepted models it comes under attack from all angles, and any excuse whatsoever to dismiss the findings is used. On the contrary, if a discovery fits into mainstream models it is usually accepted without question.
This happens in all scientific fields and it is known as “knowledge filtering”. The problem with this is that a lot of discoveries get pushed aside and are ignored and for me, after twenty-five years of research in thi…s field, it seems the truth about our origins, human migration and the dating of sites are, in many cases, completely wrong.
This subject is a book in itself and there are many incidences of bizarre findings that are brushed under the carpet. Many archaeologists and geologists have lost their jobs simply because they have published their results and those results don’t fit accepted models.
One of those ideas, which I am also proposing, is that the Americas were populated long before the 14,000-or-so years that the accepted model says. Here is one of a hundred reports of findings that show human beings were in the Americas long before this date. The blade found is similar to Solutrean blades which were used in Europe between 22,000 and 17,000 years ago.
Sooner or later we have to stop knowledge filtering and allow every scientific paper to reach the mainstream. Many of the major breakthroughs in physics were only accepted because Einstein often stepped in and suggested the ideas might be correct… and they turned out to be correct. If Einstein had not lived, we’d still be a hundred years behind in that field.
Today we know very little about our history because of this and I suggest everyone takes mainstream accepted ideas with a pinch of salt at the best of times. There are so many amazing discoveries that have been ignored nut thankfully the Internet is allowing independent researchers to release their findings through alternative media… and to me, they make a lot more sense.
In this article, I agree that the scepticism is worthy as these items were dredged up from the sea and there’s no telling they are related, even though common sense says they are.