THE TRUTH ABOUT HELL
No, Hell is not a burning lake of fire. Hell is not inside the Earth, as some xtians have tried to frighten people with. Inside the Earth, we have, beneath the crust, 25 miles down, the lithosphere. This is made up of solid rock. Some xtians seized upon an opportunity, again, playing upon ignorance, to claim that screams were heard, from a hole drilled 9 miles down (corresponding with the 9 gates of Hell) into the Earth by geologists in Siberia. The truth is, the heat melted the microphone, for one, and another is the pressure factor. Ever swim deep under water, even just 6 feet down in a swimming pool? The pressure makes a ringing sound. Getting back to the solid rock of the lithosphere, sound needs oxygen molecules to travel. Try breathing with being totally buried in solid rock.
The xtian concept of Hell is totaly ludicrous. Some of us, who are close to Satan, have seen Hell. We all seem to have had the same experiences. There is no day or night in Hell in the sense that we know it. Hell is like all night, but illuminated by a blue light. Lucifer's real color is blue. I, myself , saw people sitting around a table in a bar there, playing cards. The room was smoke filled, these people, aready being dead, could smoke to their hearts content.
Hell has the capital we know by the name "Pandemonium." Here, there is a huge mountain, that had the top leveled off. On this mountain is where Satan and all the Gods of Hell reside. Satan has his beautiful grand palace there. There are terraces, upon which the other Gods have their palaces and mansions. Below, there is the city. There are huge ampitheaters in Hell, that have been said to "rival the beauty of heaven."
Unlike heaven, where one is fed off of by a parasite "the heavenly host," Hell is all night bars, casinos (run by Mammon), food, sex and fun. People are safe there.
From what I have learned personally, Hell is on another planet. Yes, there are some sulfur pits and some wastelands, but nothing to be afraid of, unless of course, you're an xtian.