How did all this come about? Largely, it was due to our finding a secret code, which led us step-by-step to the gynocratic ideal. We initially discovered this ancient code – lost for millennia – during our research into female-dominated civilizations. We weren’t looking for anything out of the ordinary – just details of the original cult of Cybele, who was ideal for a figurehead for a modern gynocracy. Our researches led us to examine the details of the temple to Cybele before it was destroyed. We noticed the triangular shape of its compound, or campus, and were just mildly curious.
As our researches progressed, we noticed a number of amazing co-incidences. Triangles, or three-sided shapes, continued to appear, and we came to wonder whether there was any significance therein. In the artefacts we saw of the women urinating on the men, especially the rather graphic one of the Lurs woman, we discovered a proliferation of triangles. Close examination of scene depicted in the bronze pinhead will show that there are no fewer than nine triangle shapes in the scene – all of them connected to the bodily position of the woman. Clearly there was a message meant to be portrayed by this depiction.
In Chaldean beliefs, nine was the number of the Deity, and so when they invented their system of Numerology, they omitted the number 9 out of respect to the Deity. It was there, but not shown. Surely, we thought, there must be some significance in this. Eventually, we saw the connection.
Our minds were led to the legend of Cybele and her lover Attis, who castrated himself in remorse because he had betrayed her in a love triangle. His was the model that all Gallae followed, in that they castrated themselves and became women. There were therefore three genders in the legend: male, female and transsexual. Perhaps this was what the proliferation of triangles was meant to indicate. This in itself did not seem to be of any significance, until we connected it with the I Ching, the ancient Chinese Book of Changes, which we had previously studied at great length. It was an apt recollection; changing gender, albeit by castration, was indeed a change – one of monumental proportions,
A brief explanation of the I Ching is needed here. In 3322BC the Chinese emperor Fu-his combined joined and broken lines to form what are know as trigrams. There are 8 ways in which joined and broken lines can be joined, as shown in the diagram below. To each of the trigrams were given attributes – gender, element, and material.
Many years later, towards the end of the Shang dynasty, the emperor in Yu-li in the province of Ho-nan imprisoned the founder of the subsequent Chou dynasty King Wen. Not having much to do with his time, King Wen spent the best part of two years combining the eight trigrams to form hexagrams – six-lined figures. Using all the available permutations, he came up with 64 hexagrams. These were subsequently used as a form of divination, by the process either of casting 49 yarrow stalks, or throwing three coins six times in order to create the relevant hexagram. ...................... continued
Ref: EB-011
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