“Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” — George Orwell
Music: Aphrodite's Child – The Four Horsemen (HQ) – YouTube
Do you have a psychopath in your life? The best way to find out is read my book. BOOK *FREE* Download – Psychopath In Your Life4
Support is Appreciated: Support the Show – Psychopath In Your Life
Tune in: Podcast Links – Psychopath In Your Life
TOP PODS – Psychopath In Your Life
Google Maps My HOME Address: 309 E. Klug Avenue, Norfolk, NE 68701 SMART Meters & Timelines – Psychopath In Your Life

What is the “Target Zone”?
When we look at the Pan-Arab-color states as a single map, we see that this zone covers some of the most historically and spiritually significant land on Earth — and some of the deepest repositories of ancient knowledge.
Mesopotamia (Iraq):
The cradle of civilization — home to Sumer, Akkad, Babylon, and Assyria. This is where writing, law codes, and the first cities were born. Countless cuneiform tablets, ziggurats, and libraries once stood here, many looted, destroyed, or scattered during modern wars.
Levant (Syria, Palestine, Jordan):
Birthplace of Judaism, Christianity, and early Islam. Also home to the Canaanites, Phoenicians, and Hittites — civilizations whose records sometimes contradict or complicate official religious narratives. This region contains sites like Jerusalem, Jericho, Ugarit, and Ebla.
Sinai & Arabia:
Linked to early Abrahamic traditions and prophetic narratives. Includes Nabataean culture (Petra), pre-Islamic trade routes, and religious shrines that predate Islam but were later incorporated into its tradition.
Sudan & Nubia:
Seat of the ancient Kingdom of Kush, which rivaled Egypt and even ruled it during the 25th Dynasty. Contains pyramids, temples, and records of African dynastic history that remain under-studied and at risk.
Western Sahara & North Africa:
Home to Berber heritage, prehistoric rock art, and megalithic sites that predate recorded history. Much of this evidence remains poorly excavated or hidden due to ongoing instability.
Pan-Arab Colors, Symbolism, Khazars, and the Four Horsemen
Introduction
This report explores the intersection of history, symbolism, and geopolitics — from the Pan-Arab flag colors and the Sykes–Picot partition to the idea of war as a ritual used to bury history. It also examines the Khazar legacy, the Pentagon’s symbolic shape, and the persistent conflicts in the Middle East.

The Pan-Arab Flag Template
Origin:
The black–white–green–red combination first appeared in the Flag of the Arab Revolt (1916), designed by Sir Mark Sykes (UK) to rally Arabs against the Ottoman Empire during World War I.
Design:
Horizontal black–green–white stripes with a red triangle at the hoist.
Purpose:
Symbolized Arab unity and independence but kept the revolt under Allied guidance.
Legacy:
After WWI, Britain and France repurposed the color scheme for the new states they carved out:
-
Jordan (Transjordan, British protectorate)
-
Iraq (British mandate)
-
Palestinian nationalist groups
-
Later: Syria, Kuwait, UAE, Sudan, Western Sahara
The four colors became a shared visual code for Arab nationalism.
The Star and Crescent: Ancient Symbol, Modern Use
Pre-Islamic Origins:
-
Mesopotamian & Anatolian use of the crescent for the moon god Sin
-
Byzantine use of the crescent as a protective emblem
-
Ottoman adoption after 1453, pairing it with a star
Modern Symbolism:
The star and crescent became shorthand for Islam and appear on many flags that also use the Pan-Arab colors.
Sykes–Picot and the Carve-Up of the Middle East
Goal: Divide Ottoman lands into French and British zones of influence.
Result:
-
Iraq → British mandate, Hashemite monarchy
-
Transjordan → British protectorate
-
Syria & Lebanon → French mandates
-
Palestine → British mandate, leading to partition and conflict
Borders were drawn for imperial convenience, and the colors helped brand these states as “Arab” while keeping them manageable.
Wars in the Pan-Arab Flag Zone
These countries have seen nearly constant intervention:
-
Iraq: 1920 revolt, 1941 coup, Gulf War 1991, US-UK invasion 2003
-
Syria: French crackdowns, coups, civil war 2011–present
-
Palestine/Israel: Continuous conflict since 1948
-
Kuwait: 1990 Iraqi invasion, Operation Desert Storm
-
Sudan: Civil wars, Darfur genocide, 2011 secession
The Pentagon and the Pentagram
Geometric Connection:
A pentagram always contains a pentagon at its center. The Pentagon building is the “heart” of such a star if one is drawn around it.
Symbolism of the Pentagram:
Historically seen as a symbol of balance, harmony, or protection — but when inverted, used in occult ritual to symbolize chaos or dark forces.
The Pentagon as Symbol:
Built in WWII as a five-sided fortress, it has been interpreted as a symbolic center of global war power.

Department of War vs. Department of Defense
Historically, the U.S. had a Department of War until 1947, when it became the Department of Defense to project a defensive image.
If the name is shifting back to Department of War, it signals open acknowledgment of permanent conflict.
The Trump Connection:
Trump promised peace and signed the Abraham Accords, yet U.S. troops remained in the Middle East and military budgets grew.
Such a renaming could mark the formalization of endless war rather than its conclusion.
Why the Coincidence Feels Intentional
-
Same colors, designed in 1916 to unify Arabs under Allied direction
-
Same geography: the Sykes–Picot zone
-
Same century of wars: colonial suppression, coups, Cold War proxy battles, modern interventions
The flags seem to mark the very areas where wars never stop — almost like targets on a map.
Khazars, Symbolism, and the Revenge Narrative
Legacy:
The Khazar Khaganate (7th–10th c.) controlled trade routes between the Black and Caspian Seas. Some theories suggest their descendants sought influence in Europe and the Middle East.
Color Symbolism:
Red, green, white, black — colors found in steppe banners and later Pan-Arab flags.
Interpreting the Pattern:
The adoption of these colors could be read as branding the battlefield, keeping alive a centuries-old contest between Turkic/Khazar memory and the Arab world.
Flags as Targets:
If viewed symbolically, the flags are bullseyes — marking which lands are to remain in conflict.
War as Historical Erasure
War destroys archives, scatters populations, and rewrites history:
-
Mesopotamia’s libraries and ziggurats looted or bombed
-
Babylon damaged during military occupation
-
Palmyra’s ruins destroyed during Syria’s war
-
Nubian sites endangered in Sudan’s conflicts
Perpetual instability prevents excavation and research, ensuring some histories remain hidden.
The Specificity of the Target Zone
The Pan-Arab color belt contains humanity’s oldest centers:
-
Mesopotamia (Baghdad, Babylon, Nineveh)
-
Levant (Jerusalem, Jericho, Ugarit)
-
Arabia and Sinai (Nabataean, pre-Islamic culture)
-
Sudan/Nubia (Kushite pyramids)
-
Western Sahara (prehistoric rock art)
It is as if this strip of land is under a “perpetual state of excavation by war.”
The Four Horsemen and Color Parallels
The Book of Revelation lists:
-
White Horse: conquest
-
Red Horse: war
-
Black Horse: famine/economic collapse
-
Pale (green) Horse: death and pestilence
These align uncannily with the Pan-Arab flag colors — red, black, white, and green — as if the flags themselves forecast endless cycles of conquest, war, famine, and death.
Gypsies and Horses
Romani (Gypsies) historically:
-
Were expert horse traders, breeders, and handlers
-
Traveled in horse-drawn caravans (vardos)
-
Valued horses as wealth and cultural pride
-
Remain associated with horse fairs (e.g. Appleby Horse Fair)
The symbolism of horses ties into the Four Horsemen — freedom, movement, and also judgment.
Conclusion
When all the elements are placed together — the Pan-Arab colors, the Sykes–Picot borders, the Khazar connection, the Pentagon’s shape, the Department of War language, the Four Horsemen symbolism — a consistent picture emerges.
It suggests that this region has been deliberately marked, destabilized, and kept in conflict for over a century, possibly to suppress or control its deep history. Whether seen as geopolitics, ritual, or mythic reenactment, the pattern is too specific to dismiss as coincidence.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
![Trollskull Alley Noire [ENG/ITA] - Dungeon Masters Guild | Dungeon ...](https://i.gyazo.com/925f17d2d8dcfd72e12804aab661f5f2.png)





