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Colonial History
Difference Between Minare and Human Civilizations

Difference Between Minare and Human Civilizations

At the time, the Minare did not understand how Human civilization worked.

Minare civilization has an overall basic hierarchy. At the bottom there’s the common citizenry, then above them are the guardians, then the champions, then the priesthood, and finally an individual ruling xamium at the very top. Though the rough translation of their hierarchal system is ‘kingdom,’ the xamium is the oldest out of their community who acts as its guru. These gurus are seen as beings directly connected to the order of the cosmos and dictates as such. The title of their community’s priests share the xamium’s primary name, while the community shares the xamium’s surname. Once the ruler dies, the next oldest still alive within that community becomes the replacement, which then causes the priestly titles and community name to accommodate the new regime change. Each kingdom has its own xamium that rules its people absolutely, and this tradition has continued with the most current kingdoms on Irrdnis to this day.

Human civilization has never had a comprehensive form. They can range from strict top-down command structures run by an elite, to loose webs controlled by the consent of all common members. In the past there were kingdoms, but there were also chiefdoms, republics, dictatorships, direct democracies, theocracies, representative democracies, oligarchies, social democracies, etcetera. There are smaller communities within these systems, which could possibly harbor their own smaller communities and so forth. Even then, these smaller communities house their own parties, factions, cliques, and sub-cultures with their own systems.

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What the crew of explorers didn’t know was that their host was the United States, and “Randee Willkoks” is actually Randy Wilcox; a member of a small obscure club within a sub-culture of the United States that believed in and investigated the existence of life outside of their planet. We only know of this club because of the role it plays and the record of its existence, thanks to the unpublished memoirs of one of its members, Bruno DeJesus.

First of two born to Mr. Humberto DeJesus and Dr. Tea Sanchez in Western Massachusetts, of the state of Massachusetts, in the United States. He moved to the US state of Florida where he got his higher learning at a small college. Once he graduated, he moved out of state and gradually made his way to the community of Franklin, where he joined the Amateur UFO and ET Researchers Club (aka AUER Club). The club consisted of DeJesus, Randy Wilcox, Mike Taggert, Darla Greene, and Calvin Kinski.