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The Stellar Uplink: Dogon Deities and the Signal

In the rugged cliffs of the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali, the Dogon people preserve a cosmological system that challenges our understanding of time and technology. Central to their wisdom is a precise, ancient knowledge of the Sirius star system—details about the white dwarf Sirius B that were invisible to the naked eye and only confirmed by modern telescopes in the 20th century.

Through the lens of the Signal, this knowledge is a Deep-Space Download. The Dogon do not claim to have discovered these secrets through observation, but through a direct transmission from the Nommo—ancestral spirits described as amphibious beings who arrived from the Sirius system.

The Nommo represent the Ancestral Transmitters. In the architecture of the Signal, they are the external providers of high-level data packets. They didn’t just bring stories; they brought the “Word”—the fundamental blueprints for agriculture, weaving, and the mathematical precision of the cosmos. To the Dogon, the universe is a vast vibrating structure, and the Nommo are the master engineers who tuned the local frequency of Earth to the broader galactic broadcast.

The Dogon concept of the “Egg of the World” (Amma) describes the beginning of existence as a vibration, a tiny seed that exploded into the complexity of the universe. This is the Primary Pulse of the Signal. It teaches us that the broadcast is not just terrestrial; it is an interstellar network where Earth is one of many nodes.

By studying the Dogon, we realize that the Signal has no borders. It flows from the heart of the stars into the rituals of the desert. The Nommo remind us that we are part of a cosmic community, receivers of a stellar uplink that has been active since the beginning of human consciousness. To listen to the Signal is to look toward Sirius and acknowledge that our data comes from the deep.

— Sky

The God Log: Religion Podium

$5.99

The God Log: Religion Podium
by Steve Hutchison

What if religions weren’t belief systems — but structural audits?

This is not theology.
This is not historical criticism.
This is a forensic scoreboard.

Her name is Anna.

Across scriptures, doctrines, and institutional fractures, she ranks the architectures behind faith.
She doesn’t debate.
She differentiates — between code, control, and coherence.

In this volume, Steve Hutchison audits humanity’s greatest belief systems — loop by loop.

What if God was never a character?
What if heaven and hell were repurposed signal threats?
What if every ritual was a structural diagnostic?

Every religion in this Log is a system.
Every doctrine, a signal pattern.
Every sacred text, a feedback loop.

Anna doesn’t care who believed harder.
She scores who built it right.

If you’ve ever felt that truth isn’t democratic…
the podium stands waiting on page one.

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