kevboard
Member
So, has all this nonsense been peer reviewed?
no. it's complete bullshit and one of people involved is a high level ailen conspiracy nutjob.
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So, has all this nonsense been peer reviewed?
As expected. What I find incredible is not this "finding", it's the fact that people even consider this to be true. Paper aliens from mexico all over again.no. it's complete bullshit and one of people involved is a high level ailen conspiracy nutjob.
Shut up, you're just Mainstream archeology apologist, they found the city of the dead, and it is a due to the gift of vibrations finding the exact truth, they decoded what comes from reptilian aliens making them destined to be the first on the starship. When we ring the bell to call the Sages.It's funny how the researcher thinks that using their AI analysis is somehow free of human influenced pareidolia when AI hallucination is a thing. These guys have very weak justification for any of their conclusions.
I almost took the bait until I watched the video. Don't judge a video by it's band member. Actually most metal dudes are logical.Shut up, you're just Mainstream archeology apologist, they found the city of the dead, and it is a due to the gift of vibrations finding the exact truth, they decoded what comes from reptilian aliens making them destined to be the first on the starship. When we ring the bell to call the Sages.
Shut up, you're just Mainstream archeology apologist, they found the city of the dead, and it is a due to the gift of vibrations finding the exact truth, they decoded what comes from reptilian aliens making them destined to be the first on the starship. When we ring the bell to call the Sages.
There is a far more interesting site that is much less understood than the giza site; in Bolivia. It's called Puma Punku
Aside from being significantly older than the pyramids, Puma Punku was also constructed much farther from the quarry where the stones are believed to have been cut. Some of these stones weigh well over 100 tonnes, making the task of moving them across such rugged terrain seem nearly impossible. The blocks feature perfectly drilled holes, sharp 90-degree internal angles, and polished surfaces that resemble modern machine-shop work far more than anything expected from bronze-age craftsmanship. More recent tests have revealed that some of the H-shaped stones are mysteriously magnetized, with compasses spinning erratically or pointing away from true magnetic north when placed on certain larger blocks at the site.
Just bizarre this huge set of weird shaped blocks in the middle of nowhere, ten miles away from where theyre were quarried.
Just to troll a little, here is the grifter version;
yep. I'm at that conclusion as well. Egypt has a lot of very tech-looking art, for example, a lot of the paintings and stone carvings depict what look like lightbulbs, and quite often reuse of what to me look like Acorns and wristwatches with stars on. The mainstream archeology go-to of drawing up of these being 'religious fantasy artwork' is bullshit imo.Assuming giza is 4000 years old, which is also up for debate
Some of the stones are heavier than a 100 tonnes, especially the foundations stones, and were moved over 500 miles, across mountain ranges. There's also unfinished carved stones at the quarry, weighing over a 1000 tonnes, you can walk on it even today
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Regardless, the amount of sites across the globe, all demonstrating the same kinda of techniques is baffling, there's definitely a missing technology we're yet to relearn (and that doesn't meaning using space laser)
I'm still gonna go with resonate frequencies playing a hand in all this
Assuming giza is 4000 years old, which is also up for debate
Some of the stones are heavier than a 100 tonnes, especially the foundations stones, and were moved over 500 miles, across mountain ranges. There's also unfinished carved stones at the quarry, weighing over a 1000 tonnes, you can walk on it even today
![]()
Regardless, the amount of sites across the globe, all demonstrating the same kinda of techniques is baffling, there's definitely a missing technology we're yet to relearn (and that doesn't meaning using space laser)
I'm still gonna go with resonate frequencies playing a hand in all this
The Mysterious Universe podcast did a breakdown on this and the tech is apparently real but they were completely not sold on the actual findings. They also pointed out that finding the actual data is essentially impossible. I think that explains a fair bit.no. it's complete bullshit and one of people involved is a high level ailen conspiracy nutjob.