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HELL YES: The Love of Money Is the Root of All Evil — and Nannar Engineered It That Way

HELL YES: The Love of Money Is the Root of All Evil — and Nannar Engineered It That Way

DISCLOSURE NOW Series | Aquarian Media

Janet Kira Lessin | Research: Claudia Lenore | © 2026 Aquarian Media

“We pay for our abusers to abuse us. We pay our jailers to jail us. And we have done so for six thousand years, convinced the entire time that we are free.”

I dragged the last chair up the stairs by myself.

Two years of work had gone into that dining room set — table first, then four chairs, then the china cabinet, then the curio cabinet, piece by piece on layaway, each acquisition funded by my labor, each one placed with care into the growing constellation of a beautiful room. The last chair, the one with arms, fit exactly into my car, barely. I muscled it up the staircase, set it in the empty spot that had been waiting for it, and stepped back.

The set was complete. The room was gorgeous. I had done it.

I stood there and thought: Nah. That’s not it. I’m still not happy.

My husband at the time came from serious money—the family that donates tens of millions to universities. He believed, with complete conviction, that poor people were poor because they lacked intelligence or a work ethic. He was also one of the most verbally abusive people I have ever known. The beautiful dining room sat in the middle of that reality, changing nothing.

That chair taught me something that took years to articulate fully: the void I was trying to fill with furniture had nothing to do with furniture. Ironically, money promises to fill the emptiness, yet designers specifically created it to generate that same emptiness.

This system is not an accident. It is ancient engineering.

Nannar’s Blueprint

Six thousand years ago in the Sumerian city of Ur, an extraterrestrial administrator named Nannar — son of Enlil, commander of the Anunnaki gold-mining expedition to Earth — received an assignment. His father needed a counter-strategy against the growing influence of Marduk, whose Babylonian empire spread across the ancient Near East. Rather than deploy military force as his brother Ninurta had done, Nannar chose a more elegant instrument: commerce.

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D., drawing on Zecharia Sitchin’s translations of Sumerian clay tablets, documents Nannar’s method in precise detail. Nannar bred sheep that made Ur the wool and garment center of the ancient world. He developed foreign trade by land and by water. He built navigable canals connecting two harbors, separated the temple and palace from the merchant quarters by water, and lined the commercial bank with multistoried white houses along broad, straight streets. The ziggurat — his temple — rose at the center of it all, functioning as treasury, redistribution hub, and debt-recording institution.

The subtitle Sasha gave his Nannar article says everything: “Cultivate commerce to control Earthlings.”

Nannar did not rule through fear. He ruled through prosperity. His Earthlings adored him. That was the genius of it. Enlil controlled through dominance. Marduk controlled through religion. Nannar controlled through the seduction of abundance — an abundance he administered, measured, and ultimately owned. The temple held the records. The priests kept the accounts. Nannar designed the system architecture that merchants used.

The ziggurat was the first central bank.

We paid our abusers to abuse us. We paid our jailers to jail us. And we called it civilization.

The Frequency of Scarcity

Every system encodes a frequency — a vibrational signature that shapes the consciousness of those operating within it. Nannar’s commercial system encoded a specific belief: that sufficiency always requires one more thing.

One more chair, promotion, investment return, one more zero on the account balance.

Jesus named this frequency directly. No one, he said, can serve two masters — you serve either the divine or money, and the one you serve shapes everything about how you move through the world. He watched the wealthy young ruler walk away, sad because he could not release his possessions, and did not chase him. The teacher was walking away.

The mechanism Jesus identified and the one Nannar engineered are the same. Keep human attention anchored to material acquisition, and you keep human consciousness below the threshold where the larger questions become visible. You cannot contemplate the nature of existence, the reality of non-human intelligence, or the engineering of your own consciousness when you live in a state of financial terror. The terror is a feature, not a bug. Nannar’s Ur ran on prosperity. Marduk’s modern iteration runs on debt and scarcity. Both systems share the same foundational logic: humans organized around money do not organize around liberation.

What Desperation Signals

Watch someone sell from a place of financial anxiety, and you watch Nannar’s trap operating in real time.

The desperation broadcasts before the words arrive. Audiences feel it as a frequency shift — the conversation that was flowing toward connection suddenly pivots toward transaction. The host who cannot separate the commercial from the content, who cannot trust that value given freely will return multiplied, who must extract something from every interaction because the fear says there is not enough — that host has swallowed the scarcity program whole.

And the audience, feeling it, retreats. Their lack of engagement stems not from a lack of generosity, but from an unacknowledged sense that they’ve lost their support system. The process of reaping them is underway.

This system is not a judgment of the person. It is a description of the program running through them. The anxiety about money is itself a transmission from a system designed six thousand years ago in the commercial districts of Ur, refined through Babylonian banking, institutionalized through debt-based currency, and now so thoroughly normalized that most people cannot imagine an alternative.

The alternative exists. It always has.

The Counter-Frequency

Abundance thinking is not magical thinking. It does not pretend that water infrastructure does not need repair, or that food does not cost money. It operates at a different level than the material transaction, while fully acknowledging the material reality.

The distinction is this: in scarcity frequency, you give to get. In abundance frequency, you give because giving is the nature of what you are, and you trust — from direct experiential knowing rather than theory — that the flow returns.

Every tradition that predates Nannar’s commercial architecture encodes this knowing. The gift economy. It’s about the potlatch. The land gives, and you reciprocate, thus maintaining the cycle, according to indigenous beliefs. These were not primitive arrangements waiting to be upgraded by currency. They were operating systems built on a different cosmological premise: that existence is generous, that scarcity is an imposition, and that the human purpose is not accumulation but circulation. Enki’s age, the Aquarian era now beginning, carries this frequency. The Anunnaki scholars who track the transition from Marduk’s Kali Yuga to Enki’s Satya Yuga describe it as a shift from extraction to regeneration, from hierarchy to circulation, from debt to gift.

I felt that shift the night I stepped back from the completed dining room set and knew, with total clarity, that the chair was not the answer.

The answer was never in the chair.

The Assignment

What I learned that night — and what years of subsequent experience, ET contact, and direct download have confirmed — is that the retrieval is always possible. What you need already exists in the field. The work is not an acquisition. The work is alignment — tuning your frequency to match what you actually require, releasing the grip of the scarcity program long enough for what is already yours to find its way to you.

This system covers everything from dining room chairs to community water systems. The current monetary system insists that funding for alternative media and other human needs can only be met through its own processes, but this funding actually extends beyond those requirements.

Nannar built a beautiful cage. Marduk refined it into a global prison. But cages require the consent of those inside them — the consent of believing that the walls are real, that the scarcity is permanent, that the only path to sufficiency runs through the system that created the insufficiency.

We pay our abusers for the abuse they inflict. We pay our jailers to jail us. We have done so for six thousand years, convinced the entire time that we are free.

That consent, once withdrawn, changes everything.

Step back. Look at the completed set. Know what you know.

The chair was never it.

Janet Kira Lessin is CEO of Aquarian Media and co-author of NO OTHER GODS: Break the Godspell with Dr. Sasha Alex Lessin. She studied directly with Zecharia Sitchin from 1998 to 2010 and is a lifelong ET contact experiencer. Aquarian Media publishes to Substack, YouTube, and dragonattheendoftime.com.

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