Shasta wrote:
When I entered Kashmir, I had no idea about DNA testing as a possible research tool. It was suggested that someone outside the Valley politics would have more luck and a warmer reception among the locals.. Due to Islamic law, only a family member would have the right to ask for such tests....and that is when it became imperative to include my own Merovingian descent in the DNA-bloodline quest. This helped establish a tentative relationship with Yuz Asaf and a valid reason for my request...Thus, my bloodline became imperative to this entire project in India...it was never about "playing to an audience" in the aftermath of "The DaVinci Code" dramas....but about establishing my own personal connection that would validate opening the tomb for DNA testing, and yet conform to Islamic religious requirements..
So is this your subtle way of telling us that you have a Y-chromosome and are, in fact, a man?
You know how DNA analysis works, Sue. Maybe you're playing off the hope that some of the more "gullible" posters here don't know the difference between Y-DNA and mtDNA and will laud you as a "grail child" but I think everyone here is way beyond that level of ignorance by now.
Shasta wrote:
Now regarding the allusion to "another author" who touted this theme, I would remind you all that it was taken directly from my forum...a place where I freely discussed this project with others...precisely because I have a valid bloodline established back through the Des Marets to the first Merovingian kings of Jerusalem.
Hey Sue, look at this:
These are returns from a relationship calculator on a genealogical database I use, for two ancestors of mine in the database (one paternal, one maternal) showing lines of descent from Clovis I, the gateway ancestor to the Merovingian dynasty:
Relationship
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is a descendant of the 29th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 9 branches: click here.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 30th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 72 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 31st generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 413 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 32nd generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 2,344 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 33rd generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 8,615 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 34th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 19,052 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 35th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 26,627 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 36th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 24,998 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 37th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 15,190 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 38th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 5,861 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 39th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 1,308 branches: click here to see the first one.
Jean de Foix-Carmaing, vicomte de Caraman is also a descendant of the 40th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 184 branches: click here to see the first one.
Total: 104,673 relationship linksRelationship
William Warren is a descendant of the 35th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 12 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 36th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 941 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 37th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 7,074 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 38th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 23,158 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 39th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 47,331 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 40th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 61,416 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 41st generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 55,079 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 42nd generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 35,204 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 43rd generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 15,981 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 44th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 5,811 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 45th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 2,306 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 46th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 1,006 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 47th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 299 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 48th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 63 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 49th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 20 branches: click here to see the first one.
William Warren is also a descendant of the 50th generation of Clovis Ier le Grand (Mérovingiens), roi des Francs.
* 4 branches: click here.
Total: 255,705 relationship linksA combined total of
360,378 links of descent from Clovis I - 88,664 of which run through Dagobert II. And that's just from two lines in the span of 40-50 generations. But do you know what my percentage of consanguinity is? 0%. Do you know why? Because not one of these lines is direct male to male from beginning to end. Every chain is broken by a female. There is no possible way one could ever look at Clovis' Y-DNA and mine and conclude that we're even related. And I
have a Y-chromosome that could potentially be compared to a sample from Clovis, something that you, as a woman, lack in your chemical makeup. You couldn't even establish a Y-link to your own father
because you do not have a Y-chromosome.
Do you really think that even the most uninformed yet rationally sane adult couldn't grasp that simple, basic concept? Do you not understand that this is why you aren't taken seriously? The only possible way you could use DNA to provide a link between you and Clovis (or Jesus/Yuz Asaf, for that matter) would be if you could document a complete, unbroken, female-to-female line of descent from Clovis' mother or sister.
And I'll let you in on a little secret, Sue (and not for the first time either) - with at least 360,378
known links to Clovis, I am no stand-out in the Merovingian descent department. Anyone with even a dollop of European ancestry, princes and peasants alike, can trace their descent to at least one medieval monarch with Merovingian antecedents. That includes everyone on this list. That includes anyone you might encounter on the street today, tomorrow, or any other day. So congratulations, Sue, you can save yourself a boatload of money and effort - you ARE a Merovingian descendant, just like everyone else. The statistical odds guarantee it.
Shasta wrote:
I am sorry that I gave so much away publicly before I had published all the information in my book. That enabled others to outright steal it and ruch to publishers, and that's exactly what happened.
The other author in question (who should be familiar to everyone on this forum by now) has never, to my knowledge, claimed descent from "Yuz Asaf" or suggested her own imagined "grail lineage" originated in, or even passed through, Kashmir. Her story is quite different in every detail than yours, though they're both well-grounded in wishful thinking and presumptions of certainty that "fans" will never ask the hard questions that could blow your "claims" to smithereens. You seem to think you have some sort of proprietary rights over the concept of a potential physical bloodline descending from Jesus Christ. I'm afraid that construct was already published years ago by Baigent, Lincoln and Leigh - and when they tried to pursue damages against another author for co-opting their "thematic architecture" they were told in no uncertain terms that they had no legal leg to stand on. Twice.
Shasta wrote:
I did in fact start a lawsuite, but lacking funds, I filed the intial court papers myself and did it wrong. When I plunked down nearly ten thousand dollars to an attorney, I found out, too late, that I filed the initial papers wrong, and did not include enough information....I would lose the case, and my home and all future publishing rights to the lawyers.....And so I withdrew and have not been able to resume since then,. The lawyers wanted me to sign over all my property rights to them in lieu of their heavy fees, and I did not want to do that....and so the court case ended and the "perpetrator" won by default...It hurt. Believe me, it hurt deeply..my entire family was upset with me for providing the opportunity at my forum to have the concept stolen on several levels..every time I read some of my thoughts and words in someone else's book (s) , I cried for my own trusting foolishness..
I was there, Sue - remember? Let me offer you
my interpretation. You were harassing the other author on multiple forums and on Amazon alleging that she plagiarized your work, which caused her to get her attorney to send you a cease-and-desist order on pain of a defamation suit for failure to comply. You tried to file a counter-suit yourself, without aid of legal advice, and when the situation snowballed and you had to seek the advice of counsel, you were advised to drop it before you got yourself into more trouble than you could argue your way out of. Remember how you used to fax me pages and pages of legal material? Remember that I gave you the same advice for free that you wound up paying an attorney to tell you? I wasn't about to get dragged into your legal hurricane because I no longer trusted you to leave me out of it after demonstrating to me very plainly that you simply weren't listening. That's why I cut off communication. You're dangerous, Sue, not because of some sinister plot to silence your bloodline claims but because you don't know when to quit. There comes a point where your pissing contests put you in the line of fire for litigation, and I certainly hope you don't really believe that it was your lack of financial resources that stood in the path of "justice" for you. It was the fact that you had no case, you were harassing someone for no qualified reason, and you wouldn't listen when you were told you were heading for calamity.
Shasta wrote:
There is absolutely nothing wrong or ego-centric in including the facts about my bloodline ..it is vital and necessary if I am to continue with this research..and gives me the entire reason for doing so.
I'd written previously that you were starting to remind me of that other author. I retract that statement - you've far surpassed her
Shasta wrote:
Furthermore, there are hundreds, if not thousands of Des Marets worldwide who are a part of this...I am not standing here alone......
I certainly hope for your sake that none of them are following your performance here.
Shasta wrote:
I make no claims to be unique in any way. As has been said so often, if Jesus has descendents, then they may number in the thousands or even in the millions today...Yes.
Try billions. Statistically, anyone and everyone living in the 1st century CE is either the ancestor of everyone living today, or no-one at all. There is no middle ground.
Shasta wrote:
And most of them are my cousins, watching carefully everything that I do to help this project forward. If I lie, if I fail, if I muck up, then I shame not only myself, but many others as well...and I dont want to do that.
That would actually be for them to determine, not you.
Shasta wrote:
I was hoping to bring respectability and common sense back to research into bloodlines....
You can start by offering a convincing explanation about how your DNA claims are actually feasible. Good luck with that.
Shasta wrote:
The theory is a good one, and I found supporting evidence for a son of Jesus named Eli-Kim (Alain) in India...however, Magdalene was NOT their mother, which puts me in direct contradiction with those of the Magdalene camp.....we need to bring common sense back into this research that has been sullied by frauds and greed and nonsense...
Oh, lady - you've got a lot of nerve, I'll give you that!
Shasta wrote:
I think it is important historically if we can do this, then let's give it a try....It's a lot more solid proof than false genealogy papers like Michael LaFosse produced, or the planting of false evidence and tombs like the recent farce that was exposed here...and a heck of a lot better than the histrionics of a certain middle-aged menopausal woman having hot flashes and visions that she declared as holiness and mystical bloodlines, based on her wishful thinking after getting the idea from my forum .....

Shasta wrote:
I am willing to bet on the DNA as the proof we need.....this CAN be done. There are so many potential sites we can retrieve DNA from....graves of Hebrew Patriarchs in the Holy Land, Egyptian pharaohs (some of whom were thought to be Hebrew Kings) and perhaps one day even DNA from the Shroud of Turin! The prominent DNA Haplo Group of Central Asia (including Hebrews) is not Semitic or Asian, but Indo-European variants of R-1, and I believe this will prove to be the DNA of Jesus as well.....
Do you know what would be the result of multiple extractions of a common haplogroup? Do you know what could be discerned from that? Presumption of an unknown and unidentifiable common ancestor who lived tens of thousands of years ago.
Shasta wrote:
We have to start somewhere.
I'd suggest that you start by learning about what can and cannot be evidenced from DNA, but I'm quite certain that in reality you already know this. So I'd make the same suggestion to anyone reading this who isn't clear on the particulars themselves.
Shasta wrote:
I am taking it back, owning it as its originator, and certainly hoping for eventual success.There are so many ways to approach this for starters, not limited to "royal" Merovingian bloodlines. I should think that anyone interested in bloodlines would be excited to know that such a project is possible.....if for no other reason than to disprove the theory of the tomb of Jesus in Kashmir. One way or another, such a project would be a solid step forward for any serious researcher....
Serious researchers would recognize the flaws in your logic immediately.
TCP