Victoria Lynn Reis strange comment:
https://archive.is/dKqAu/974f29c6fb218b ... 65f60e.png
Where the werewolves lock themselves up during the full moon?
Victoria once described James Alefantis as "Pan" - frivolous Greek God. Victoria's husband Brian Baker comments just under that James makes him think of pandemonium - all demon place, capital of hell where Satan resides:
https://archive.is/qgmIO/7bff3819056f4c ... 77056f.png
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_(god)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pand%C3%A ... dise_Lost)
That werewolf stuff could be connected to Greek mythology as well and it is directly connected to child sacrifice ->
In the second century BC, the Greek geographer Pausanias related the story of King Lycaon of Arcadia, who was transformed into a wolf because he had sacrificed a child in the altar of Zeus Lycaeus.[9] In the version of the legend told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses,[10] when Zeus visits Lycaon disguised as a common man, Lycaon wants to test if he is really a god. To that end, he kills a Molossian hostage and serve his entrails to Zeus. Disgusted, the god turns Lycaon into a wolf. However, in other accounts of the legend, like that of Apollodorus' Bibliotheca,[11] Zeus blasts him and his sons with thunderbolts as punishment.
Pausanias also relates the story of an Arcadian man called Damarchus of Parrhasia, who was turned into a wolf after tasting the entrails of a human child sacrificed to Zeus Lycaeus. He was restored to human form 10 years later and went on to become an Olympic champion.[12] This tale is also recounted by Pliny the Elder, who calls the man Demaenetus quoting Agriopas.[13] According to Pausanias, this was not a one-off event, but that men have been transformed into wolves during the sacrifices to Zeus Lycaeus since the time of Lycaon. If they abastain of tasting human flesh while being wolves, they would be restored to human form nine years later, but if they do they will remains wolves forever.[9]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werewolf