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Mexico Removes All COVID-19 Entry Requirements Including Health Form
Thursday, 20 January 2022 09:22 Published in NewsMexico—the world’s most popular travel destination throughout the COVID-19 pandemic—has now dropped all COVID-19 entry requirements as of January 1, 2022. El Salvador was the world’s first nation to drop all COVID-19 entry requirements in November 2021, with Mexico now joining El Salvador as the world’s second nation to drop all covid-related entry restrictions.
Unlike most of the world, Mexico has kept its borders open throughout the whole pandemic. As a result, it’s become the world’s most popular destination since 2020.
Pleiades star system. The lizard people came from the star system depicted on the stone!
Wednesday, 19 January 2022 08:20 Published in NewsThis is a 30lb stone that was brought into my gallery by a local man. It had been in his fathers house for 80 years. His father is dead now and he didn’t know what to do with it. He left it with me and I called the state of New Mexico.
Two archeologists came to look at it. It is 500 to 1000 years old and the rock is local. I thought they would take it if it was real but they did not.
A few weeks later an Apache elder saw at and told me that it is a story stone. It was taken from place to place to tell a story. He said that this depicts the lizard people who’s came and taught them wisdom. The lizard people came from the star system depicted on the stone and their home is on a planet circling the star touching the large lizards tail. When you look it up on a star map it is the Pleiades star system.
This stone still sits in my gallery. It is not for sale. I do not consider it mine. Someday it will find another place to tell its story.
Archaeologists stunned at 'startling' Stonehenge discovery: 'First united cultural events'
Friday, 14 January 2022 12:54 Published in NewsThe remarkable story of Stonehenge, one of the UK’s most iconic historical landmarks, will be told at a large exhibition at the British Museum, due to open in February. More than 250 objects are being loaned to the museum from institutions across six European nations and across the UK, in a bid to give context to the time in which it was built, some 4,500 years ago. The era marked a period of enormous social and technological change.