It’s good to be curious, but you’re mixing a lot of unrelated things together and treating them like one big “pattern.”
Giants in the Bible, CERN, hollow moons, dimensions, black holes, religions, Captain Kirk jokes, none of that actually connects, except in your imagination.
Curiosity is valuable, but curiosity without discipline turns into guessing and then assuming the guesses are real.
Every ancient culture talked about “giants” because humans didn’t understand fossils, geology, or even storytelling exaggeration.
A tall warrior becomes a “giant” in legend.
A mammoth bone becomes a “giant’s femur.”
It’s mythology doing what mythology does, not evidence of a race of 20-foot people.
CERN has nothing to do with religion or “opening dimensions.”
It’s a particle accelerator studying subatomic physics, not a Stargate.
Every serious physicist on earth can explain that. (but not Eric)
You’re absolutely allowed to wonder about things, but wondering isn’t the same as knowing.
Connecting dots only works when the dots are real.
Otherwise it’s just drawing a picture in your head and pretending the universe agrees with you.
Shawn Ryan can be a sincere guy and still be completely wrong.
Being a “good Christian” doesn’t make someone an expert in physics, cosmology, or ancient anthropology.
Curiosity is good.
But letting imagination stand in place of evidence is where people go off the rails. |