Board Thread:Oblivion/@comment-16047389-20140321200435

So as I'm sure many may have noticed, the Bible of the Deep Ones bears a striking resembalance to the text found in N'Gasta! Kvata! Kvakis!. Some may recall that former of the two books was actually a coded version of text taken from what is believed to be an internet article written in Esperanto (see the Imperial Library article for more details). So I applied the same translations to the Bible of the Deep Ones, and this is what I got:

"the monthly meetings, but naturally also for other current activities lacieto. Not infrequently there's also more diversaspekta material educational or recreational. 

''the internet croak (retletera and versions) are on the one hand alternative channels to distribute the content to the paper croak Croak. But on the other hand the contents to the various versions antauxvible can not and do not even vus always be centprocente the same. In narrow circulating paper for example can publish illustrations, which for copyright reasons not be used on the Internet. Moreover, the low cost online distribution eliminates the spatial constraints and allows a wider content, not to mention gxishora today. ''

These circumstances respeguligxos in the aspect the Kvakoa, who had moreover serve also as a general web ranetoj."

I assume that there is a bit more coding process, or else I just messed up, because some words still didn't translate well. In any case, enough of it was translated for me to make the assumption that the Bible of the Deep Ones gets its text from the same place as N'Gasta! Kvata! Kvakis!, as both share similar coding, translation, and subject matter. Please note that I do not actually speak Esperanto, and I just through this in Google translator and it identified it as such. 