
February 4, 2002: Edgar Cayce and the Mound Builders - Dr. Gregory Little | Nuclear Reactors - Scott Portzline
The conversation turns to the massive earthworks scattered across the eastern United States, structures so enormous they could contain multiple Great Pyramids. Dr. Little describes the Newark, Ohio circle and octagon, a complex that perfectly predicts lunar movements over an 18.61-year cycle, and the 11 miles of earthen embankments at Poverty Point, Louisiana, built in 2,500 B.C. He argues these were spiritual machines designed to open portals between worlds.
Dr. Little also demonstrates the piezoelectric properties of crystals, prompting Art to try rubbing quartz together in a dark room during the broadcast. The discussion touches on Edgar Cayce's Hall of Records, the battle between the Sons of Belial and the Children of the Law of One, and the nature of heaven and hell as positions on the electromagnetic spectrum.
Key Moments
The 'Clovis Mafia' war inside archaeology: Little opens by describing an ugly internal war in academic archaeology - younger researchers openly hoping older 'Clovis mafia' supporters will simply die so the field can move on, while those same Clovis defenders still control the journals, textbooks and grants and refuse to revise.
Cayce's pre-Columbian America: 50,000 BC and the Sons of Belial: Little summarizes Edgar Cayce's history of America: people arriving from Lemuria/Mu around 50,000 BC, multiple migration waves, and an early war between the Children of the Law of One and the Sons of Belial - a power-and-pleasure cult Cayce explicitly tied to the biblical Baal and warned was still active today.
Pre-Clovis evidence and 57 million pre-Columbian Americans: Little says DNA analysis has now confirmed Cayce's migration patterns, and Monte Verde and other digs broke the Clovis barrier - archaeologists admit they 'didn't go any lower because we knew there couldn't be anything there.' Even conservative texts (Folsom & Folsom) put the pre-Columbian Americas at over 57 million people.
200,000 mounds, 33-foot earthworks, 'magic machines': Little reveals that the Smithsonian originally cataloged 200,000 mounds across the eastern half of the U.S. before farmers and Mississippi levee crews destroyed most of them. He describes the surviving Newark, Ohio earthworks - a circle and octagon connected by parallel walls 56 miles long with embankments up to 33 feet - as 'spiritual magic machines.'
Newark mound predicts the moon for 18.61 years; Hall of Records in Guatemala: The largest Newark, Ohio earthwork perfectly tracks the 18.61-year lunar standstill cycle, and Orion's Belt aligns with mounds across the United States and Central America just as it does at Giza. Little ties this to Cayce's prediction of three Halls of Records - Egypt, Bimini, and a Central American one Brigham Young University has been digging at Piedras Negras, Guatemala.
