<Like previously said, it's a pre-Golden Age myth carried somewhat into the Golden Age. Obviously it was popular enough to have locations dedicated to it in space.
Unless the Hive, Cabal, Darkness, Traveler, or Vex have been to Earth before there is no reason to speculate so much on Nezarec. He is a falsehood. If he ends up being anything, literally anything, noteworthy it's probably just some Jovian.>
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I just find it kinda weird that he/it has at least 3 tombs dedicated to that name. If it really is a pre-Golden Age myth, there’s obviously some truth to that myth for it to last that long, much less it’s name seep into today’s Golden Age.
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<It's really not surprising for a myth to last a long time. For the longest time people believed that the Earth was the center of the system. For the longest time, people believed in multiple deities. For ages now, people have believed in one God and fought each other because there was something slightly different in their holy text. People actually take Scientology SERIOUSLY.>
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But the fact that this myth has not been challenged for a good amount of centuries, and their Tombs not taken down, leads me to believe that the Tombs actually have something to do with a being named Nezarec.
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<How do you know how many centuries? It could've been just one. Petra says that the Golden Age lasted until 2-thousand-and-whatever. That suggests it was before 2100. Plus, Christianity and Islam right now are two of the most popular religions and they still have places of worship and holy sites everywhere.>
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But if this is a pre-Golden Age myth, and the temples (I’m assuming)/Tombs are still up, wouldn’t there be a reason to tear down Tombs that belong to a cult of some kind? And the fact that the 4th Tomb is referred to as the fourth, that would mean 3 others have been found, would it not? That would mean that the Tombs had been there for some time, at least past the Traveler. It has been a couple centuries since the Traveler created the Guardians, after all.
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<Do you give me reason to tear down any religious ideologies people have?>
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If it was about summoning a god-tornado that had cursed some people in the Middle-East to go mad, [i]and[/i] this tornado was directly related to pain, and suffering, and had no redeeming quality of following it besides the potential destruction of Earth, Yes. I would probably tear it down if I had the choice.