Two Great Redirects: How History Was Bent Away From Truth
- Bill Dandie

- Nov 22
- 3 min read
Updated: 3 days ago
Across the long arc of human history, there are moments—redirects—where the path of collective understanding was bent, re‑shaped, or buried. These redirects didn’t just alter events; they altered the story we were allowed to remember. And because humanity is forgetful by nature, we often live inside narratives that were engineered for us rather than inherited from truth.
Two redirects stand out above all others.
1. The Redirect of Yeshua and Mary Magdalene
The story we know about Yeshua today is not the story that once lived among his followers.

Yeshua came not to create a religion but to remind us of what we had forgotten—that the kingdom is within, that we are creators, that truth is carried by direct experience. In the canonical gospels this message is veiled behind parables, but in the Gnostic texts—like the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary, and the Nag Hammadi library—his voice is startlingly clear. Here, Yeshua speaks as a teacher of inner knowing, a guide of consciousness, not the founder of an institution.
Then came the first great redirect.
Rome—masters of suppression, violence, and control—reshaped the entire story. A crucifixion? Perhaps. But the cross was transformed into an instrument of fear, a tool to pull devotion outward instead of inward. The empire selected the texts, refined the dogma, and began a centuries‑long erasure of the original message: Know yourself, and you will remember God.
Mary Magdalene suffered the same. Rome reduced her from apostle and spiritual equal to “prostitute” and “madwoman,” effectively demoting the Divine Feminine and silencing the lineage she carried. This wasn’t an accident. It was part of the redirect—part of the empire’s need to maintain hierarchy, patriarchy, and control.
The result? A false story became the dominant story, and the true teaching slipped underground.
2. The Redirect of Nikola Tesla and Wardenclyffe
Centuries later, another figure arrived—different era, different mission, but the same pattern.

Nikola Tesla: a technical mystic, a kind of scientific messiah whose purpose was to awaken a future built on abundance instead of scarcity. At Wardenclyffe he envisioned wireless, free energy for the entire world. No meters. No monopolies. No financial gates around the life‑force of the planet.
But where Rome used violence, the new empire—finance—used a different weapon.
J.P. Morgan understood that free energy meant the collapse of an economic structure that depended on control. So instead of the sword, he used the cut. He withdrew funding. He shut the doors. He starved the vision. And Wardenclyffe fell—not because it didn’t work, but because it worked too well for those who needed scarcity to remain the rule.

Tesla’s mission, like Yeshua’s, was redirected.
A truth meant to liberate humanity was buried beneath profit, industry, and the story we were told to accept: that energy must be owned, controlled, measured, and sold back to us.
The Pattern of Redirects
Two figures separated by two thousand years.
Two missions meant to elevate human consciousness.
Two stories rewritten by power.
Rome suppressed a spiritual awakening.
Morgan suppressed a technological one.
Both redirects functioned the same way:
Erase the true message
Replace it with a manageable narrative
Ensure humanity forgets what it once knew
When you trace these patterns through history, a simple truth emerges:

The greatest threats to power are not weapons—they are ideas that free people.
Yeshua reminded us of the inner kingdom.
Tesla attempted to free the outer world.
Both tried to dissolve dependence.
Both were silenced by systems that required it.
Remembering What Was Redirected
We live today inside the results of these two redirections—a world built on forgetting. But the original messages still rise. They appear in the cracks of scripture, in the hidden gospels, in Tesla’s notebooks, in every modern awakening, every intuitive spark, every person who asks, “What if the story we were given isn’t the real story?”

The redirects shaped the world we inherited.
But rediscovering the origin—what Yeshua taught, what Mary embodied, what Tesla envisioned—allows us to shape the world that comes next.
And perhaps that is why these truths resurface now:
To remind us that the path can always be un‑redirected.


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