“… a leading scholar of South American antiquity believes the Inca did have a form of non-verbal communication written in an encoded language similar to the binary code of today's computers. Gary Urton, professor of anthropology at Harvard University, has re-analysed the complicated knotted strings of the Inca - decorative objects called khipu - and found they contain a seven-bit binary code capable of conveying more than 1,500 separate units of information.”
This next quote is taken from a whistleblower site on the Web, the article dealt with Antarctica and some fishy things going on there at Lake Vostok, so please forgive the choppiness of my excerpting.
“But members of the archaeological community in the Near East point out that Serghetti is also one of the Vatican's top linguists… Serghetti first made waves as a linguist in the late 1990s when she presented a universal translator software application at a United Nations Earth Summit. Building on the work of Bolivian mathematician Ivan Buzman de Rojas, Serghetti used the ancient Aymará language of the Andes to translate English into more than 26 languages.
‘The rigid, logical structure of Aymará itself is ideal for transformation into computer algorithm,’ she said at the time. ‘Its syntactical rules can be spelled out in the kind of algebraic shorthand that computers understand.’
Since then the U.S. National Security Agency has been trying to get its hands on Serghetti's system, according to one codebreaker from Britain's MI-6 intelligence branch who tried and failed to recruit Serghetti. ‘The Aymará language is so pure that the NSA suspects it didn't just evolve like other languages but was constructed from scratch,’ the MI-6 source said. {A Sacerdotal language like Hebrew, used by the university chaos science types?}
In fact, the earliest Aymará myth says that after the Great Flood, strangers attempted to build a city on Lake Titicaca -- Tiahuanaco with its great Temple of the Sun – but suddenly abandoned it and disappeared.
According to legend, they came from the lost island paradise of "Aztlan," the Aztec version of Atlantis. ‘In other words,’ said one Meso-American linguist, speaking on condition of anonymity, ‘Sister Serghetti may well know the language of the Atlanteans.’”
Author of Diverse Druids Columnist for The ES Press Magazine Guest 'expert' at World-Mysteries.com |
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