Chitauri

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Chitauri is a term of Bantu/Nguni linguistic origin, used to describe shape-shifting reptoids, 'the family of the Serpent', believed to exist in parallel with man, 'the children of Adam'. Though this theme is prevalent within the oral and written traditions of several cultures, the use of this word to describe this phenomenon is common in the work of Zulu elder Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa.[1]

The recent proliferation of this word into popular usage can be attributed to B.Sun and Nota, citizens of the Divided Kingdom Republic, primarily through their expansion of the word's use to encompass all facets of what they see as the synthetic non-reality of day-to-day 21st Century life. They allege that modern man, by succumbing to his 'Chitauri' instincts, is now trapped in a spiralling cycle of 're-creation,' in which he disassembles, and attempts to improve, a world he is not responsible for creating in the first place. Hence, by this thinking, 'modern life', particularly Western Civilisation, including all its knowledge, routine, and even vocabulary, can be seen as 'Chitauri,' that is, a ball of nonsensical but elaborately constructed confusion.[citation needed]

B.Sun and Nota, like Credo, generally assert that whichever way one looks at it, mankind’s current state of affairs is as a result of their being trapped mostly in enslavement to their 'Chitauri' instincts. As a result the world is imbalanced in favour of the reptoid nature, while the population is being conditioned to believe and accept that this state of affairs is the only possibility.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Radio interview with Credo Mutwa