Additional Egypt Tour this year! Primordial Egypt with UnchartedX and Yousef Awyan – October 2022

Good news for anyone wanting to visit Egypt this year! I will be joining my good friend, expert guide and stonemason Yousef Awyan for an additional trip to Egypt in October of this year!

All details, registration, and the full itinerary can be found at the Khemitology website here: https://www.khemitology.com/primordial-egypt-tour/

For registration, use the registration link on the same site, here: https://www.khemitology.com/tour-registration/ – just select ‘Primordial Egypt’ from the drop down list.

With the November UnchartedX tour sold out months ago (and a waitlist of interested people), Yousef invited me to come on his October Egypt tour, an offer than I gladly accepted! This will give anyone who is keen to visit Egypt this year with us a chance to do so. Prices in Egypt are going up due to inflation, so the best time to go on a bucket list adventure like this falls into the ‘as soon as possible’ category.

This trip is similar to the one I have planned for November, but not exactly the same. It includes visits to many of the same sites, and (my favorite part) a 4 night Nile Cruise. We’re using a different hotel in Cairo, and there are less special permissions, which is reflected in the lower price for this October tour. We will end the trip with a Private Visit into the Great Pyramid, with all the chambers open for a full exploration, something not to be missed.

Please note that the new Grand Museum is not expected to be open until November – but we will visit the amazing Cairo Museum, one of the highlights of any visit to Egypt and long established as one of the best museums in the world.

6 thoughts on “Additional Egypt Tour this year! Primordial Egypt with UnchartedX and Yousef Awyan – October 2022”

  1. I watched one of your videos last night for the first time. It was amazing to hear someone who’s thinking much the same things about the catastrophic events and lost history relating to the Younger Dryas I’ve been thinking for more than a decade now. We couldn’t be more in agreement if we were two choir boys standing shoulder to shoulder reading, and singing from the same book In your Video, you described a kind of impact-related firestorm. Now that piqued my interest! Because I think I may be able to shed some light on that subject.
    I’ve been studying a place in the western foothills of California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains for more than ten years now that, judging from the condition, and mass movements of the blast-affected materials alone, was a multiple fragment airburst explosion that would make the Tunguska blast pale by comparison. And if the very same kind of event were to happen today it would be city killer.
    Here in California, we have a seven thousand-year hiatus in human occupation showing up in the archeological record. I think I know what happened to those folks. And it wasn’t pretty!
    If you’d like to compare notes Let me know.

    1. I remember years ago finding a website that detailed the evidence for air burst impacts on some of the small ranges and mountain tops around northern california. It was geologically oriented, lots of blast affected materials that also had charring effects. I’ve never been able to find that site since, I wrote to Graham Hancock about it back in the day. Might try to find that email…

  2. Ben,
    I heard you on the tin foil hat podcast the other day, I can’t help but to constantly be annoyed by not hearing you knowledgeably include factual biblical history included within your presentations & expert knowledge base of unexplained ancient history. As a person that hasn’t been brain trained by an influencing peer/s on the mainstream history about the true story of humanity, when I hear you do a presentation, & the one glaring area of your oration which is holding you down, prevents you from growing intellectually on the subject of history. Im not saying you have to believe in God, or Jesus, but you can’t deny that there is something in your own mind that you can’t quite put your finger on that seems to be missing in the conversations you have that seems to keep you from painting a complete picture of humanity’s past. Adding expert level learned true biblical knowledge to any talk of history could help you to become a unrivaled intellectual giant on the subject of ancient history. There are mentally stunted people out there that treat religion as a myth, that is a trained behavior which can only be put in someone brain. You are a person who’s traveled to so many locations worldwide like you have should poses an unrivaled knowledge base on biblical history that’s been proven to be true. In just a person who’s deeply interested and a fan of everything your doing and exploring I want to watch you continue to grow. Don’t let academia, or any other person influence the truth that you know from seeing and being at a place can’t be denied. Tell man’s complete story, believing in God, based on things you’ve seen first hand that prove his existence, only strengthens your abilities as a professional.

    1. So you’re ‘constantly annoyed’ that I don’t say things that conform to your personal beliefs and world view, got it.

      Perhaps those beliefs and world view might be different if you were born, say as a little girl in Mogadishu, or as anyone in the period of 4,000-300,000 years ago, into any number of ancient civilizations, or other cultures, with other beliefs. If you were, do you think you would hold the same beliefs that you do today? The honest answer to that should tell you something about how we acquire such beliefs.

      Are the untold legions of the dead or those who don’t believe in a particular flavor of ‘man-in-the-sky’ similarly doomed to the same ‘mentally stunted’ label? I can’t help but notice the irony of calling non-belief a ‘trained behavior,’ when the general modus operandi of every religion invented, since cave men first stubbed a toe on a tree or saw lightning in the sky, has been to ‘get em while they’re young.’

      This ‘true biblical knowledge’ that you speak of, and the book that it comes from, is no different to any of the claims made by an endless number of cults throughout history – cults enabled by preying on basic human instincts (like being afraid of the dark, or of death) and leveraging tribal instincts to be part of a group, and to define the ‘other.’ Endless suffering, wars and death has been the result of such beliefs and cults throughout history – and is a pattern that continues into today. One of my favorite people ever, Christopher Hitchins, eloquently explains these facts in any number of books or lectures that I’d highly encourage anyone to read. (in fact I think im gonna write a post here about him shortly).

      If you think you need ‘god’ to define morals, or the fear of some omnipresent, ever-watching deity who both loves you but will burn you forever (if you work on Sundays or something) in order to know the difference between right and wrong then frankly, you’re a broken human being. This is the great excuse made by religious defenders, and it’s bunk. Many good men have been atheists, and many (many!) evil men have been fervently religious. Our modern sun cult of Christianity is no different from its many predecessors, and was in fact cobbled together from several similar, older sun cults, by men seeking power, wealth and control. As it has ever been.

      While the bible is an interesting ancient document, and useful in determining events that happened in the middle east a couple thousand years ago (see the recent paper on biblical Sodom), it’s hardly a guiding light on the history of civilization, nor (in countless examples I could make) has it specifically ‘proven to be true.’ Quite the opposite. I have read it, and it’s got some interesting bits. The Old Testament in particular, as it traces it’s roots far further back, and I’ve talked about it in several videos (you might want to watch the one about Gods, Myths and the Younger Dryas Catacylsm… or maybe you might not.)

      Now of course everyone should be free to believe (or to not believe) in whatever they want, it’s certainly a principle that I hold to, and lucky us we live in the west where freedom of religion is a thing. Me, I wasn’t raised into a faith, something for which I’ll forever be grateful for. So I’d like to think I can look at historical documents like the bible in the same light that I do others of its ilk – with rational logic, guided by my own experiences and understanding of how the world works. I totally respect it if you have a different view, but, at least in my opinion, ‘Mans complete story’ and the ‘truth that I know from seeing and being in places’ has very little to do with the last couple thousands years of a fairly popular western sun cult and the disjointed, 2000 year old scribblings of it’s architects.

  3. Hello,

    Speaking of ancient Egypt. Anyone looked at Sodium Sulfate salt as a media that soften granite. Egyptians had copper, rope, leather, sand, water, wood and sodium sulfate plus bodies to build what they built. The answers lie someplace within these items.IMHO

    Love your work on YouTube

  4. Hi Ben, I’m CJ, I’ve been watching your youtube clips for as as long as I can remember, all great and hopefully academia will wake up and re-visit its original finding and open its eye’s to the fact that they may be a few years out on their original dates of archaeological artefacts.
    I’m from an engineering background and have notice a bit of a puzzle surrounding all of the same objects, ( supposedly made by hand but clearly made on a lathe ) and tonight watching the same clip, another obvious object, you show in a display cabinet, that confounds common sense.
    I wouldn’t of wanted to have wasted your time with one question, but with two clear techniques in doubt, I’d like to tell you in person, or a member of your team.
    Looking forward to a reply, Take care, stay safe and enjoy your travels.
    Kind regards, Chris Mac. UK.

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