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			by 
			John Kaminski8-3-5
 
			from
			
			Rense Website 
				
				Once you base your whole life 
				striving on a desperate lie, and try to implement that lie, you 
				instrument your own undoing.  
				- Ernest Becker 
				The Denial of Death 
				 
			It’s like taking candy away from a baby. 
			The candy’s no good for the kid, but it will take him many years and 
			much learning to realize the favor you did for him. In the meantime 
			he’ll whine about how mean you were and how wrong it was to do that. 
			But when he’s a healthy adult, because of the very thing you took 
			away, he may actually develop the judgment and wisdom to thank you 
			for what you did. In any case, he’ll be much healthier. 
 So too with beliefs.
 
			  
			If you believe in magic, that some special 
			phrase will keep you safe from harm in all situations and even 
			immunize you from death, you can’t help but fail to perceive the 
			true reality of the world before your eyes - that all things must 
			pass, even though subtle aspects of us may journey onward through 
			our offspring. 
 It’s a beautiful system when you think about it, one that governs 
			every living thing in the known universe. And every living thing is 
			more than satisfied with it - in fact, prospers in its vital joy 
			because of it - except one. Us.
 
 Humans, normally very discerning in every aspect of their infinitely 
			varied lives, possess absolutely no standards at all when it comes 
			to one subject - death. It is often said that instinct is stronger 
			than reason, and in all the realms of human endeavor, nowhere is 
			this more evident than in the amusingly inventive strategies humans 
			develop to pretend they don’t really die.
 
 The second most common human trait after survival is the urge to 
			prosper and be secure, so it should come as no surprise that, very 
			early on in our history, perceptive and enterprising people, upon 
			recognizing this universal human need to deny that we die, rushed to 
			develop and market products that satisfied the public demand to 
			alleviate this fear. Every culture ever known to man left 
			significant traces of this spiritual commerce.
 
 You know the argument. Can we live our lives and accept that nothing 
			follows? Or must we deceive ourselves and invent, with the power of 
			our infinite imaginations, a way past this daunting wall of 
			mortality. Well, the answer’s in, and the human species has clearly 
			opted for the improvable hope.
 
			  
			But exactly what is the price of this 
			willful self-deception? 
 This is no attempt to demean many thousands of years of honest 
			effort by sincere people to distill lessons essential to healthy 
			living into practical codes of conduct that reinforce the cause of 
			harmony and provide useful paths to peace of mind. But given the 
			nature of our affliction, of the terror of death we all have that 
			needs to be repressed for our own tranquility, it is not difficult 
			to understand how those who wield these secret formulas for 
			happiness might just be tempted to exploit them for their own 
			selfish purposes. It’s called the temptation of power, and I don’t 
			think I need to explain it to you.
 
 Furthermore, given that this problem has a higher priority than any 
			other we face in our entire lives, and also that to each of us, the 
			effectiveness of the cure is far more important than the actual 
			legitimacy of the method, this leaves us - as we know from history - 
			with a situation ripe for exploitation.
 
 Lastly, there is the little matter of actually knowing the secrets 
			of the universe. This we consign to the province of priests, and we 
			pay them to make us happy, to make up a story that ties up all these 
			loose, bleak ends which we don’t want to think about. But what if 
			these beliefs hurt us in ways we don’t realize. Even as they may 
			make us comfortable with simple tales that magically explain 
			everything,
 
				
					
					
					do we really understand what the concepts of 
					communion 
			and resurrection really mean in terms of how we relate to our 
			neighbors and our world? 
					
					what is the danger when logic is subsumed 
			by the magic of religious belief?  
			First, we must understand the process by which people think. 
 There is alluring evidence that ancient cultures actually possessed 
			much more realistic religions than our own contemporary society. And 
			they were developed by studying the sky. During the day, it was 
			obvious that all life depended on the beneficent properties of the 
			Sun. And during the fearful night, humans studied the stars for 
			their cues to survival, and projected their own thoughts onto these 
			phenomena. These two things form the basis of all existing 
			religions, according to 
			
			Acharya S.
 
 How do people think?
 
			  
			We anthropomorphize everything. It is how we 
			learned to understand things. We talk to our plants and our stuffed 
			animals. We give them names. Thus is it has always been, with all 
			perceived phenomena. This is how stars became people, or at least 
			animals. From Amun Ra, piloting his boat of heaven across the sky 
			all those centuries ago, to the Great Bear, whom we still see every 
			night. 
 The Sun became Krishna. The moon Inanna. Their setting and 
			disappearance created new gods reborn daily, or monthly or yearly. 
			They all got names, different ones, depending on where you lived. Osiris. Tammuz. Orpheus. Mithra. Millions of names. Millennia 
			passed. One day, after thousands of years of war and peace, of 
			fighting and loving, of civilizations rising and falling, suddenly, 
			after a Roman conclave of regional movers and shakers, the approved 
			deity’s name became Jesus. And 
			
			he was still the Sun, and his 
			disciples were the stars (the twelve signs of the Zodiac, actually).
 
 Or so Acharya says, and I believe her. Why? Because it’s logical. 
			It’s actual history. And though still myth, it is empirical rather 
			than manipulative, a causative explanation rather than the magic 
			trick of some unfathomable man who showed up one day and claimed he 
			was God to people who wrote it all down and put it in a book called 
			the Bible.
 
 That’s the short version. The long version is two thousand years of 
			suppressed scholarship, kept secret because it simply didn’t gibe 
			with the propaganda organized religions produce to attract and 
			addict adherents to their own particular interpretation of cosmic 
			events and everyday life. But this more scientific explanation has 
			always been out there, and reasonable, thinking people, who aren’t 
			blinded by their own fear and cowed by their own self-inflicted 
			spiritual gurus, have always known about it.
 
 And Acharya S. has gathered it, folded it neatly and logically into 
			two encyclopedic volumes of scholarly excellence. These are titled 
			"
			
            	
            
			The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold" (1999) and 
			"Suns of God: Krishna, Buddha and Christ Unveiled" 
			(2004).
 
			
			Look at the world today. Endless wars, festering hatreds, a 
			multitude of government lies telling us the world is one way when we 
			suspect that’s not really the way it is. We should listen to our own 
			voices and not blindly accept the smug statements of "authority" 
			figures. How did we learn to do that? Guess. Just take a wild guess.
 
 This story is not about taking your God away. Only an idiot would 
			insist that men created the sunset, the orbits of the planets, or 
			baby drool. This story is about analyzing the terminology you use to 
			explain the way you see your life and the universe. And most of all, 
			it is about the lies we have been told to keep us in our mental 
			chains while those who control us - our preachers, priests, 
			rabbis, 
			mullahs, lamas and other assorted "holy" men - reinforce 
			fear, abet 
			slaughter, and profit mightily from the conspicuous lies that they 
			promote as sacred gospel.
 
 Sorry to be so blunt. You need to pay attention to this. The future 
			of human society depends on your understanding what you are reading 
			at this moment, and even that is kind of an understatement.
 
 To our contemporary Christianized Western minds, the most 
			astonishing thing Acharya S. proves beyond doubt in her two 
			scholarly tomes is that the much-revered personality known as Jesus 
			Christ is a completely contrived fictional character, and that 
			Christianity has no substance whatsoever that was not stolen - 
			created whole cloth out of pagan myths and traditions - from many of 
			the world’s more ancient religions.
 
 How does she prove this?
 
				
				* By telling you about the many 
				other "saviors" who existed prior to the creation of 
				Jesus, many 
				of whom were born in late December of virgin mothers and were of 
				divine origin, most of whom performed miracles, held high 
				morals, healed the sick, were the catalysts for salvation, were 
				called "Savior" or "Redeemer," and were crucified; whose legends 
				all contain elements that were later plagiarized by unscrupulous 
				Roman plutocrats when they got together to construct the Jesus 
				myth as a method to usurp and unify preexisting creeds to better 
				control their diverse and obstreperous masses. 
 * By analyzing all the contributions of known writers of that 
				ancient time, through decades of study of the works of skeptical 
				historians who have been researching this hoax for centuries, 
				and observing that virtually none of these early historians ever 
				mentions Christ or Christians, except for the works of a special 
				few, and deeper analysis reveals these works to have been 
				tinkered with, or outright fabricated, for the benefit of the 
				manipulative politicians who created the most powerful mind-lock 
				human society has ever known.
 
 * And by providing a detailed and accurate portrait of the 
				actual evolution of religious myth, with a clear explanation of 
				how all messiahs are merely anthropomorphic representations of 
				the Sun, and how all the other mythological supporting 
				characters, particularly when they are described in groups of 
				12, are merely personalities projected onto the stars.
 
			This, not the debunking of the Jesus 
			myth, is the overarching value of the book, and makes Acharya, in my 
			sincere estimation, the ranking religious philosopher of our age, 
			simply because she cuts through the sanctimonious crap and deals 
			empirically and forthrightly with the facts. 
 But more than that, in this age of deliberate disinformation and
			mass mind control, the works of Acharya provide those who wish to 
			think deeply about the nature of the human condition with a 
			startling survey of priestly misbehavior and deliberate deception, 
			which is what religion really is - a magic show that exploits 
			people’s need for answers to unanswerable questions.
 
 As such, her works furnish us with an essential tool to help us 
			understand why we are powerless against an onslaught of facile mass 
			media that keep telling us things we know are not true. What the 
			state does the church first perfected with threats, violence, and 
			forcing us to believe in our inmost hearts things that were never 
			true.
 
 But it’s the Jesus argument that gets everybody’s attention.
 
 Or, as Acharya puts it,
 
				
				" ... there is no evidence for the 
				historicity of the Christian founder, that the earliest 
				Christian proponents were as a whole either utterly credulous or 
				astoundingly deceitful, and that said ’defenders of the faith’ 
				were compelled under incessant charges of fraud to admit that 
				Christianity was a rehash of older religions."  
			Let’s start with legendary figures of 
			far greater antiquity whose attributes appear to uncannily resemble 
			the much later legend known as Jesus Christ.  
				
				"The Jesus story incorporated 
				elements from the tales of other deities recorded in this 
				widespread area of the ancient world, including several of the 
				following world saviors, most or all of whom predate the 
				Christian myth," Acharya writes.  
			These include (and I’ll edit this list, 
			because it’s very long)  
				
					
						
						
						Adad and Marduk of Assyria
						
						Adonis, Aesclepius, Apollo, 
						Dionysus, Heracles, and Zeus of Greece
						
						Alcides of Thebes, divine 
						redeemer born of a virgin around 1200 BCE
						
						Attis of Phyrgia
						
						Bal or Bel of 
						Babylon/Phoenicia
						
						Buddha and Krishna of India
						
						Hermes of Egypt/Greece
						
						Hesus of the Druids
						
						Horus, Osiris, and Serapis 
						of Egypt
						
						Indra of Tibet/India
						
						Ieo of China
						
						Issa of Arabia, born of the 
						Virgin Mary in 400 BCE
						
						Jupiter/Jove of Rome
						
						Mithra of Persia/India
						
						Odin/Wodin/Woden/Wotan of 
						Scandinavia
						
						Prometheus of 
						Caucasus/Greece
						
						Quetzalcoatl of Mexico
						
						Salivahana of southern 
						India, "who was a divine child, born of a virgin, and 
						son of a carpenter" 
						
						Tammuz of Syria, the savior 
						god worshipped in Jerusalem
						
						Thor of the Gauls
						
						Zoroaster of Persia 
			Attis of Phrygia was born on December 25 
			of the Virgin Nana, and considered the savior who was slain for the 
			salvation of mankind. His body as bread was eaten by his 
			worshippers. He was crucified on a tree, descended into the 
			underworld and was resurrected annually on March 25 as the "most 
			high god," many centuries before Christianity was invented. 
 Buddha was born on December 25 of the virgin Maya, and his birth was 
			accompanied by a special star, wise men and angels. He was baptized 
			in water with the holy ghost present. He was resurrected and will 
			return in the "latter days" to judge all men. His legends extend 
			back more than a thousand years before Christ.
 
 The Greek god of wine was actually a savior (as any drinker will 
			tell you). Dionysus, born of a virgin, who rode in a triumphal 
			procession on an ass, is considered by some scholars as the 
			prototype of Christ.
 
 The real model for all saviors, according to Acharya, was the 
			Egyptian god Osiris. Quoting Barbara Walker, from "The Women’s 
			Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets":
 
				
				Of all the savior gods worshipped at the beginning of the Christian 
			era, Osiris may have contributed more details to the evolving 
				Christ 
			figure than any other. Already very old in Egypt, Osiris was 
			identified with nearly every other Egyptian god and was on the way 
			to absorbing them all. He had well over 200 divine names. 
				   
				He was called the Lord of Lords,
				King of 
			Kings, God of Gods. He was the Resurrection and the Life, the Good 
			Shepherd, Eternity and Everlastingness, "the god who made men and 
			women to be born again." (Sir Wallis) Budge (once the preeminent 
			Egyptologist) says,  
					
					"From first to last, Osiris was to the Egyptians 
			the god-man who suffered, and died, and rose again, and reigned 
			eternally in heaven. They believed that they would inherit eternal 
			life, just as he had done ...  
			Some claim Osiris lived up to 22,000 years ago. 
			 
			  
			Acharya writes:
			 
				
				As Col. James Churchward naively 
				exclaims, "The teachings of Osiris and Jesus are wonderfully 
				alike. Many passages are identically the same, word for word."
				 
			Acharya also exhaustively compares the 
			details of Krishna and Mithra, as well as Prometheus, 
			Quetzalcoatl, 
			and Serapis. The reader soon begins to realize that all these 
			stories the same.  
			  
			Conclusion? 
 It is evident that  
			Jesus Christ is a mythical character based on 
			these various ubiquitous godmen and universal saviors who were part 
			of the ancient world for thousands of years prior to the Christian 
			era.
 
 Now, once you realize that, you know you have to prepare for the 
			onslaught of true believers, who, when you mention that Jesus
			was a 
			fictional character, are going to come at you with every verbal 
			weapon they have retained during their misguided and propagandized 
			lives.
 
 The Bible is not a valid historical document. It is work of 
			political and philosophical propaganda, designed to deceive and 
			control, and take advantage of people’s need to have answers to 
			questions that really have no answers, as far as human perception is 
			concerned.
 
 Often, fundamentalist Christians try to cite classical historical 
			sources to buttress their unshakable belief that Jesus resurrected 
			and (according to 
			
			George Bush
			and the neocons) will return one day 
			to blow up Jerusalem and lead his followers to a pleasant 
			destination in the sky.
 
 This may be the most valuable aspect of Acharya’s work. She 
			considers the name of every known historian of the period and 
			explains why what Christian fanatics insist they said can’t possibly 
			be accurate.
 
 Using thousands of footnotes from serious scholars over the many 
			centuries, Acharya deftly explains all the revisions, interpolations 
			and forgeries that allow some of the diehard faithful to argue that 
			there actually is historical evidence of the existence of Jesus - 
			when in fact there is not.
 
 All the great first century historians - Pliny the Elder and 
			Younger, Suetonius, Dio Chrysostom, Livy, 
			Petronius, Plutarch, 
			Seneca and many others whose works are still extant - never make any 
			mention of the founder of Christianity.
 
 Even though he lived in Jerusalem during the time Jesus was supposed 
			to have existed, the well-known Jewish philosopher Philo Judaeus of 
			Alexandria never mentions Christ or Christianity
			even once.
 
			  
			Acharya 
			quotes religious scholar John Remsburg about Philo:  
				
				He was there when the crucifixion 
				with its attendant earthquake, supernatural darkness, and 
				resurrection of the dead took place, and in the presence of many 
				witnesses ascended into heaven. These marvelous events which 
				must have filled the world with amazement, had they really 
				occurred, were unknown to him.    
				The well-traveled Philo had pleaded 
				the Jewish cause in Rome, knew of Pilate, the Essenes and the 
				Therapeuts, yet never once mentioned Jesus or Christians. 
				 
			As Acharya surmised:  
				
				"One would think that if ... Jesus 
				had suddenly appeared in Philo’s homeland, during his life, when 
				he was a sentient adult, Philo would not only have noticed but 
				would have jumped for joy, and written reams about the glorious 
				event, seeing the promises and prophecies of Israel fulfilled. 
				It could not be more obvious that nothing of the sort happened 
				during Philo’s lifetime."  
			But most Christian apologists don’t even 
			know about Philo. The one historian they most often use to 
			legitimize their claims that Jesus Christ was an actual historical 
			personage is 
			
			Flavius Josephus. And Acharya devotes a considerable 
			amount of space demolishing those claims. 
 Josephus (37-95 CE) is the most famous Jewish historian of the time.
			Acharya writes:
 
				
				... in the entire work of Josephus, 
				which constitute many volumes of great detail encompassing 
				centuries of history, there is no mention of Paul or the 
				Christians, and there are only two brief paragraphs that purport 
				to relate to Jesus. Although much has been made of these 
				"references," they have been dismissed by scholars and Christian 
				apologists alike as forgeries ...  
			Many scholars investigating the matter 
			believe that single mention of Jesus in all of the works Josephus 
			was forged - interpolated - centuries later by an unscrupulous 
			Christian named Bishop Eusebius. 
 In her second book, Acharya recounts the analysis of Bible expert 
			Dr. Nathaniel Lardner (1684-1768):
 
				
				Mattathias, the father of Josephus, 
				must have been a witness to the miracles which are said to have 
				been performed by Jesus, and Josephus was born within two years 
				after the crucifixion, yet in all the works he says nothing 
				whatever about the life or death of Jesus Christ; as for the 
				interpolated passage it is now universally acknowledged to be a 
				forgery.  
			But perhaps the most curious episode 
			Acharya covers involves the Roman historian Tacitus, whose oft-cited 
			passage about Nero persecuting the Christians is revealed as a 
			fraud. And that leads to an interesting story so typical of the 
			questionable construction of the Christian myth. 
 It seems that this particular mention by Tacitus, who lived in the 
			first century CE, does not appear in literature until the 15th 
			century, because numerous scholars have noted that not even the most 
			ardent Christian apologists ever mentioned it until then. But that’s 
			not the worst part.
 
 Perhaps the quintessential bogus reproduction of a classical source 
			for devious Christian purposes resides the famous passage in "The 
			Annals" by Tacitus that describes Nero blaming Christians for the 
			burning of Rome. Unfortunately for the Roman church’s propaganda 
			machine, numerous experts have deduced that since neither Eusebius 
			nor Tertullian nor any of the other devoted church fathers knew of 
			the existence of this passage - because they surely would have 
			mentioned it because it was so vividly sympathetic to their cause - 
			it is likely that this entire book - The Annals of Tacitus, which is 
			a staple of some classical libraries - is a 15th century 
			forgery 
			about a 1st century event meant to improve the nonexistent 
			historical veracity of the Christian church.
 
 But the history of real religion, ah, that’s a different and happier 
			story. Acharya quotes Indian scholar S. B. Roy from his "Prehistoric 
			Lunar Astronomy":
 
				
				To the ancients ... heaven was the 
				land of gods and mystery. The sky - the Dyaus of the Rig Veda - 
				was itself living. The stars were the abodes of the gods. The 
				shining stars were indeed themselves luminous gods. Astronomy 
				was the knowledge of not of heavenly bodies, but of heavenly 
				beings. 
 "Astronomical or astrotheological knowledge reaches back to the 
				dawn of humanity, appearing widespread and becoming highly 
				developed over a period of millennia,"
 
			...Acharya writes, and after 
				a thorough examination of the subject, concludes:  
				
				The church fathers and other 
					Christian writers also acknowledged this astrotheology and 
					its antiquity, but denigrated it as much as possible. Why? 
					... the knowledge about astrotheology would reveal the 
					Christians’ own religion to be Pagan in virtually every 
					significant aspect .... the restoration of this knowledge is 
					not to be despaired but rejoiced. 
 
			Summation
 The Christian religion - as well as its monotheistic cousins, 
			Judaism and Islam - are all based on primitive vestiges from a dim 
			past that certainly most of their adherents do not adequately 
			understand and doubtless many of its top officials do not 
			comprehend, either. These are cannibalism and child sacrifice.
 
 The tangent to cannibalism can be clearly seen in the act of Holy 
			Communion, in which the faithful are urged to swallow "the body of 
			Christ." The example of child sacrifice occurs in the myth of "God" 
			supposed sending his only son into the corporeal realm only to be 
			tortured and murdered. This has always sounded to me like deep cover 
			conditioning to indoctrinate believing dupes into being willing to 
			die, or sending their children off to die, for their blessed 
			country.
 
 I don’t know of any literature that adequately analyzes the 
			psychological ramifications of these two symbolically barbaric acts. 
			But I do know that billions of people have participated in these 
			crazed rituals and based their lives on the veneration of them. And 
			we see too clearly the results of the belief paradigm in the 
			senseless murder of billions over the century generated by the blind 
			and savage faith in this supposedly holy cause.
 
 Though there are infinite examples, the two that initially come to 
			mind are the centuries of slaughter in the Western hemisphere by 
			Spanish conquistadores and British pioneers who regarded 
			different-looking fellow humans as mere animals eligible for 
			thoughtless extermination. And now, there are the perverse rape-murders of innocent 
			Iraqis by drug-addled and 
			
			uranium-poisoned 
			American, British and Israeli heroes. Same ballgame, different day - 
			every single bit of it directly attributable to this bloodthirsty 
			Judeo-Christian legacy.
 
 And I also know one other important thing in these matters. When you 
			live your life convinced that reality is a certain way and base your 
			life on it, your life will turn out to be exactly what you believe. 
			I believe there is a direct connection between the great Christian 
			lie that you will survive death if you do what the priest says, and 
			the everpresent reality of violence in the world.
 
 The church teaches you to believe in the infallibility of what its 
			leaders say, and to follow their orders no matter what, or you will 
			roast in the fires of hell. History shows us, clearly, that no 
			matter what denomination, the church fathers have lied terribly and 
			caused billions of needless deaths. This lying, sanctimoniously 
			emulated by government leaders - be they kings or presidents - has 
			transferred this supernatural authority to the secular realm, and 
			allowed our leaders to dupe their populations into endless killing 
			for what our leaders said was right, but for what were ultimately 
			deceitful reasons because they were based on deliberate lies. Just 
			like the Christian religion, and its monotheistic cousins.
 
 The population’s willingness to believe these lies relates directly 
			to what their holy men told them - believe this, or you will suffer 
			in hell for eternity.
 
			What you believe is what you become, and this attitude engendered by 
			the Christian church and its maniacal monotheistic counterparts 
			have, with their transparent lies that have been swallowed by 
			millions of gullible people, lived up to the impotent threats of 
			their insincere promises by creating hell on earth to convince you 
			that they are right.
 
 This holy mindlock has never been more obvious - nor more lethal - 
			than it is today, in the year 2005, in which 
			
			a despotic U.S. 
			president who insists he talks to God has killed and is killing 
			hundreds of thousands people all over the world, for reasons that 
			anyone with a whit of sense knows are lies.
 
 The two voluminous, solidly referenced works of the woman known only 
			as Acharya S - "The Christ Conspiracy" and "Suns of God" - provide a 
			valuable first step for many bewildered believers who have come to 
			disbelieve the doubletalk of their religious leaders in detoxifying 
			the self-deceptive misinformation that most of us have been 
			bombarded with throughout our lives.
 
 This knowledge has always been known, but it has been suppressed by 
			the spin machine that organized religion, conferring its corrupt 
			grace on tyrants for centuries, has always censored. The real 
			picture of our misguided Christian believer was probably best 
			expressed by St. Augustine himself all those long and agonizing 
			years ago, in this passage recounted by Acharya S:
 
				
				... one of the most famed and 
				respected Christian doctors was St. Augustine, who "stakes his 
				eternal salvation" on his assertion that he preached the gospel 
				to "a whole nation of men and women, who had no heads, but had 
				their eyes in their bosoms."  
			Footnote
 
			  
			Just who exactly is 
			
			Acharya S
			and 
			why is she so hard to find?  
			  
			Really, it’s because of the persecution 
			she has been forced to endure because of her work. Right now, not 
			even her publisher knows where she is. She has gone underground 
			after several unpleasant incidents during the past few years, one of 
			which was the kidnapping of her son, a crime that was happily 
			resolved after some period of intense stress that may have involved 
			a well-known New Age guru. 
 A study in contradictions, Acharya S is obviously a nom de 
			plume for an archeologist, historian, mythologist and linguist who 
			has the qualifications, courage, and integrity to so professionally 
			and thoroughly debunk the collective religious spin machine. But to 
			talk to Acharya S is markedly different than reading her 
			work, about the like the difference between a biker chick and a 
			college professor, leading some to speculate if the rough-edged 
			radical and the creator of the meticulously argued and scholarly 
			tomes which bear her name are actually the same person.
 
 Nevertheless, her two meticulously footnoted books present the lay 
			reader and professional historian alike with a stark assessment of 
			the outright lies 
			the Christian church has told about its namesake. 
			You can order the books from
			
			http://www.adventuresunlimitedpress.com/ 
			or find out more about Acharya at
			
			http://truthbeknown.com/
 
 If you read these books, it’s extremely doubtful you’ll ever go to 
			church again. And if you do, you must carry with you the 
			reverberating question:
 
				
				What happens to you when you know that what 
			you have believed in the deepest recesses of your own heart is 
			false? 
			All this time, in the name of a bogus magic formula stolen from 
			others and renamed with lie upon lie, billions have been 
			slaughtered, and billions more about to be.  
			  
			Open your eyes, for the 
			real God’s sake, for the beauty of this universe that gives us life, 
			that does not distinguish between man or beast, but gives everything 
			that breathes this exquisite gift, with only one, single string 
			attached - a string attached to everything that lives.  
			  
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