What is the Tower of Babel really representing?

The Tower of Babel receives only a brief mention in the Cosmic Agency transcripts, but Yazhi Swaruu places it within a specific and revealing context.

A Planetary Reset Metaphor

In a discussion about the 3D Matrix, planetary resets, and the cyclical nature of civilisation control, Yazhi describes the Tower of Babel story as part of a recurring pattern reflected in the Old Testament — alongside the flood narrative — of civilisations being separated and their shared knowledge erased whenever the number of awakened individuals exceeds a certain limit (116, Yazhi Swaruu).

She states that this pattern is cyclical, has happened countless times before, and is recorded in virtually all ancient cultures whose writings survive. Different traditions give it different names: the 25,000-year cycles, the Mayan Calendar, the Kali Yuga. However, Yazhi specifies that these resets do not happen at fixed intervals but rather every time the awakened population exceeds a threshold that threatens the control system (116, Yazhi Swaruu).

The Tower of Babel, in this reading, is not about a literal tower or a divine punishment for human arrogance. It represents the deliberate fragmentation of human civilisation — the separation of peoples, the introduction of different languages and cultures, and the erasure of what came before — as a control mechanism. The "confusing of languages" is a metaphor for the systematic destruction of shared knowledge and communication that occurs during each planetary reset.

This interpretation is consistent with the broader Taygetan description of how resets work: those who begin to awaken or refuse to cooperate with the Matrix are removed through mass events — negative events such as wars, "natural" disasters, and engineered social disruptions. The Tower of Babel story encodes one such historical reset within the familiar framework of biblical narrative (116, Yazhi Swaruu).


Sources: Transcript 116 (Yazhi Swaruu)