Missed the Kosmogonia Launch Event? The full recording is right here. Click the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBSIg5a7PGM&t=4s
He walks through a pattern that spans continents and millennia. Europe, Central America, North America, Asia, China, Australia. Each region preserves its own version of catastrophe arriving from above. These are not isolated myths or coincidental folklore. They represent independent cultural memories, separated by oceans and thousands of years, yet describing the same fundamental event: disaster emanating from the sky.
What he finds remarkable is not just the existence of these traditions, but their persistence. Generations passed these stories down with enough consistency that modern institutions like NASA can now reference them as part of the historical record. The question he poses is simple but profound: how does a myth survive that long, across that many cultures, unless it is anchored to something real? The global distribution of comet disaster traditions suggests a shared human experience, one violent enough to be remembered and retold long after the event itself faded from living memory.