Cuneiform exists that dates about 2,000 years older than the oldest Hebrew inscriptions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumerian_language
I know this guy may have been part of a group that spend thousands of hours of research....but, I have done hundreds of hours research studying in a seminary school. Of course, I disagree. Ancient alphabets originated from cymatics, or sound vibrations--You should be able to see the character you say. When you say a word the word and alphabet should be easily identified--there weren't any spelling contests not like speaking and writing French. The alphabetical sound of either a character or word can be visually replicated with sound or more modern means using a computer. Another brief point: Some of the pictograms aren't shapes of natural items, they are shapes that you'd see from electricity--something arcing or something controlled and viewed in a plasma chamber. If you were to study into Hebrew, you'll see many words that would indicate something technical in nature listed as from an "unused word". Doug is a smart man but for this lecture he is simply being a Parrot, an ugly one.
The first alphabet is the Paleo alphabet, found in European and North American cave paintings, totalling 32 characters.
Its immediate descendant is the Phoenician alphabet, which was introduced to Europe at Rhodes. It traveled across the Atlantic with the descendants of "Atlantis", the ancient North American White civilization that was mostly destroyed by the YD impact flooding 10,000 years ago.
You're way off with your assumptions
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23230990-700-in-search-of-the-very-first-coded-symbols/
One of us is. "Petzinger alphabet" will help you out if you're into improving your knowledge.
https://th.bing.com/th/id/R.bffe322fc8cc9a91a8642fb711d0d683?rik=loo1h66m7MZs1Q&pid=ImgRaw
That is interesting. Thanks for the links.
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