Morten St. George is an ancient astronaut investigator, amateur archaeologist, amateur astronomer, author of several alien-related articles, author of the book Incantaton of the Law Againt Inept Critics, and creator of two ancient astronaut websites:Ancient Astronaut Theory and the Spanish-language La Profecía: El libro profético de un antiguo astronauta. He is also a Kabbalist and creator of the French-language website Nostradamus et la Kabbale.
Recent Activity
The author argues that the inability of Nostradamus proponents to provide an accurate prediction of an event before the occurrence of that event discredits the prophecies as whole. Current predictions of a terror attack on the 2012 Olympics are viewed as the prophecies' last chance.
The British tax code of the 1970s is analyzed and reviewed for ideas on how to reduce the high unemployment rate in contemporary America. Arguments center around job-creation incentives for the rich.
Much of what we know and believe about Nostradamus and his prophecies is claimed to be mythology, pure fiction created by charlatans decades after the seer's death. This article considers an alternative history that may come closer to the truth.
A common misconception among many people is that the news media, including newspapers, radio, and TV, is fair and objective and will report to them anything and everything that they should know about. Nothing could be further from the truth. The fact is that it takes lots of money to own a news media entity, that is to say, their owners are wealthy, and, naturally, wealthy people hire journalists and newscasters who support their interests.
The author critiques Stephen Hawking's irrational fear of aliens, arguing that if aliens were ever capable of reaching Earth, they would more likely come as friends rather than as predators.
The author provides evidence of a direct connection between the sky god of Tiwanaku, physically present in the Andes during early medieval times, and some of the Nostradamus prophecies, which were published in France nearly a thousand years later.
The author argues that the mysterious Nazca Lines in the Peruvian desert were made to attract, entertain, and guide the sky god of Tiwanaku. Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco in Spanish) was a city in the Bolivian highlands that existed contemporaneously with the Nazca civilization of Peru.
The author reviews the archaeological record of the Andes and finds strong correlations between the sky god of Tiwanaku, ancient city of Bolivia, and the Nazca Lines of Peru. He concludes that the mysterious lines are merely the product of a sky-god religion brought to Nazca by a Tiwanaku missionary.
This article summarizes the thematic content of the thirty-two Nostradamus prophecies that were known in mystic circles as the Paths of Wisdom. Years of investigation unwinding the cryptic writings of medieval mystics reveal that these thirty-two prophecies stood among one hundred prophecies that formed the Book of Light, and the idea of extracting thirty-two of them as Paths of Wisdom came from a book known as the Book of Creation.
The author evaluates the Nostradamus prophecies on the basis of odds against coincidental fulfillment. He concludes that it is no longer a question of whether the future was foreseen but rather a question on how it was foreseen.


