Timothy Alberino
๐ค PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, there's a debris field between Mars and Jupiter, and that debris field, to me, I've done a lot of research into this, I think that debris, there's a ring of debris, I think that that is the residue of a planet.
And I think that you can, and I do this in my book, Birthright, you can trace in the biblical narrative, in the oracles of the Old Testament, you can trace this narrative in which I believe there's references to this planet that was destroyed. And it was destroyed in a great conflict that unfolded in the solar system previous to the creation of mankind.
And I think that you can, and I do this in my book, Birthright, you can trace in the biblical narrative, in the oracles of the Old Testament, you can trace this narrative in which I believe there's references to this planet that was destroyed. And it was destroyed in a great conflict that unfolded in the solar system previous to the creation of mankind.
And I think that you can, and I do this in my book, Birthright, you can trace in the biblical narrative, in the oracles of the Old Testament, you can trace this narrative in which I believe there's references to this planet that was destroyed. And it was destroyed in a great conflict that unfolded in the solar system previous to the creation of mankind.
And I believe that the planet, and I know this, if there's Christians listening to this podcast, they're gonna be thinking, what in the world is he talking about? But there's a reference, there are references to Rahab. Rahab. Rahab, and I think that this is a planet that was crushed like a vessel of clay, broken like a vessel of clay, that God crushed Rahab and he smote the dragon.
And I believe that the planet, and I know this, if there's Christians listening to this podcast, they're gonna be thinking, what in the world is he talking about? But there's a reference, there are references to Rahab. Rahab. Rahab, and I think that this is a planet that was crushed like a vessel of clay, broken like a vessel of clay, that God crushed Rahab and he smote the dragon.
And I believe that the planet, and I know this, if there's Christians listening to this podcast, they're gonna be thinking, what in the world is he talking about? But there's a reference, there are references to Rahab. Rahab. Rahab, and I think that this is a planet that was crushed like a vessel of clay, broken like a vessel of clay, that God crushed Rahab and he smote the dragon.
And there's these very interesting veiled references in the Old Testament, quite a few of them, that, again, I believe are intimations of this cosmic conflict that erupted in the cosmos in a pre-Adamic context previous to the creation of mankind on planet Earth.
And there's these very interesting veiled references in the Old Testament, quite a few of them, that, again, I believe are intimations of this cosmic conflict that erupted in the cosmos in a pre-Adamic context previous to the creation of mankind on planet Earth.
And there's these very interesting veiled references in the Old Testament, quite a few of them, that, again, I believe are intimations of this cosmic conflict that erupted in the cosmos in a pre-Adamic context previous to the creation of mankind on planet Earth.
We start all over like children, as the priest of Sais told Solon of Athens. We have to begin again as children. And by the way...
We start all over like children, as the priest of Sais told Solon of Athens. We have to begin again as children. And by the way...
We start all over like children, as the priest of Sais told Solon of Athens. We have to begin again as children. And by the way...
So I think, to sum this up, I think that the that this planet Rahab, again, that once existed between Mars and Jupiter imploded or exploded. And the argument, the scientific argument against this is that there's not enough residue there. There's not enough debris to account for a planet. But there's been some papers published recently. Could be a moon. Well, there's, okay, that's possible.
So I think, to sum this up, I think that the that this planet Rahab, again, that once existed between Mars and Jupiter imploded or exploded. And the argument, the scientific argument against this is that there's not enough residue there. There's not enough debris to account for a planet. But there's been some papers published recently. Could be a moon. Well, there's, okay, that's possible.
So I think, to sum this up, I think that the that this planet Rahab, again, that once existed between Mars and Jupiter imploded or exploded. And the argument, the scientific argument against this is that there's not enough residue there. There's not enough debris to account for a planet. But there's been some papers published recently. Could be a moon. Well, there's, okay, that's possible.
There's been some papers published recently that make the argument, and I can't reference those papers exactly right now, I don't recall the titles of them, that do make the argument that there is enough debris there because a lot of it would have been instantly vaporized.
There's been some papers published recently that make the argument, and I can't reference those papers exactly right now, I don't recall the titles of them, that do make the argument that there is enough debris there because a lot of it would have been instantly vaporized.
There's been some papers published recently that make the argument, and I can't reference those papers exactly right now, I don't recall the titles of them, that do make the argument that there is enough debris there because a lot of it would have been instantly vaporized.
Most of the mass, according to this paper I read, most of the mass of a planet, if a planet explodes, that's an unimaginable phenomenon. That's an unimaginable explosion, the explosion of a planet. The heat that would be generated, the energy would vaporize most of the matter. And then it could throw off far into outer space, you know, huge chunks that go way out there.