Pre-Egyptian Technology Left By an Advanced Civilization That Disappeared

2024 ж. 20 Мам.
1 599 761 Рет қаралды

The concept of an advanced pre-Egyptian civilization, existing before the well-documented dynastic periods of ancient Egypt, is supported by the advanced technological features of sites like the Osireion, Zawyet el Aryan, the Serapeum of Saqqara, and many others. this lost civilization might have had a profound understanding of astronomy, engineering, and mathematics, far beyond what was typical for the time. Evidence suggested includes the alignment of the Giza pyramids with the stars of Orion's Belt, hinting at sophisticated astronomical knowledge, and the remarkable precision in the construction of these pyramids, suggesting advanced architectural and engineering techniques. Additionally, there are discussions about the potential use of advanced tools and methods for cutting and transporting massive stone blocks, which would require a level of technology not conventionally attributed to the ancient Egyptians of the well-known dynastic periods.
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Пікірлер
  • Zahi Hawass is responsible for us STILL being in the dark about all of this. He single-handedly stopped further Egyptian discoveries for almost 3 decades.

    @StrobeFireStudios@StrobeFireStudiosАй бұрын
    • This is true, as Egyptians we have doubts about being corrupt

      @ahmedshaheen_MD@ahmedshaheen_MDАй бұрын
    • Zahi Hawas is a Freemason deciever

      @Trixx-dhm@Trixx-dhmАй бұрын
    • @@ahmedshaheen_MD😊😊

      @claudiosaltara7003@claudiosaltara7003Ай бұрын
    • It doesn’t fit “Egyptology”. The word subsaharan, was created by Egyptologist to seperate Africa into different peoples.

      @user-er6zk5mt6u@user-er6zk5mt6uАй бұрын
    • Thank flob he's 'retired'--such 'experts' are a crock of 💩💩.

      @random22026@random22026Ай бұрын
  • Having worked in a foundry , Images Shown in the thumbnail are for casting gears. A positive of the gear is first created, then using sand and some additives like carbon, you create an inpression to pour the molten metal into. Very simple, they were producing complex metal gears. It's not hard, basic geometry and physics is all that's needed. The base blocks are square to simplify centering. An X corner to corner = dead center. Equil mesurments on 2 sides / 1/2 and a compass = gear

    @joek511@joek5112 ай бұрын
    • Thank You! Very keen insight

      @jamesmaxdavissands@jamesmaxdavissandsАй бұрын
    • Yes I used to be a gear cutter , most were cut from blanks some were cast.

      @whizzer2944@whizzer2944Ай бұрын
    • Thats neat n everything that level of knowledge before the age of the internet was definitely values n highly appreciated,now yours specifically idk u so it wouldnt be fair to label u a "internet educated exclusively" but just going off that piece u wrote the simplicity if it i can confidently label your depth of knowledge same as any human being with access to the internet but thats not a necessarily a bad thing it's just elementary-ish-esque info thats a yearning for more type sh*t,feel me??

      @greggremlin@greggremlin22 күн бұрын
    • I think they were found at the outlet for a drain, there was a megalithic structure with stone slab floor, and under the floor was a drain/gutter path (the paths being around as wide/deep as a red brick) and the outlet was draining into those 'bowls'. Maybe the structure was producing some liquid and it was gathered in the bowl for some purpose, but it could not have been much because the bowls are pretty small. OR yeah they may just be molds for casting gears.

      @lambchop518@lambchop51819 күн бұрын
    • Physics would be unnecessary.

      @ratdad48@ratdad4816 күн бұрын
  • The tour of those beautiful rooms was great. The amount of work that you have put in 😮 is astronomical. I've been following your families journey almost right from the beginning. It has been wonderful to see the growth of your family, and the amount of public support is staggering. Tracy is an amazing woman, and I take my hat off to her. I pray that the Lord will sustain your family as you carry on with the rest of the renovation. I eagerly await the upcoming videos of the restorative work on the rest of the chateaux. Your Aussie friend Jackie. Sending hugs 🤗🤗🤗🙏🙏🙏

    @jacquelinedrury2251@jacquelinedrury2251Ай бұрын
  • this is better than what the history channel used to be

    @wompstopm123@wompstopm123Ай бұрын
    • worse lies are more arrogant

      @rayfighter@rayfighterАй бұрын
    • Cause this channel will feed u lies to keep u entertained

      @wisco9er536@wisco9er536Ай бұрын
    • Yes it is better for retarded minds.The idea that the pyramids were electrical generators used for irrigation it seems to me particularly idiotic. At times the pyramids were built, the idea of electricity did not exist, let alone that it could be used for improving the human life. I wait to hear that the slaves were in fact some kind of electricians employed for the maintenance of the Egyptian public electrical grid.

      @marianslavescu46@marianslavescu46Ай бұрын
    • @@rayfighter can you elaborate? or give a source to a more creditable place?

      @DopeFox@DopeFox28 күн бұрын
    • @@wisco9er536 can you elaborate? or give a source to a more creditable place?

      @DopeFox@DopeFox28 күн бұрын
  • Excellent. very good production. there is not much on YT that gets me to spend nearly 2 continuous hours watching content.

    @jamestwine3591@jamestwine35912 ай бұрын
    • Yes, we have lost the technology of what can be accomplished by 1000 men in a day swinging hammer stones on sticks, stone headed battering rams under an A-frame, the cutting of rock by a pendulum stone on a gin pole, and the flat finish that results from dragging a stone a few Km over a basalt rock surface, how much weight can be pulled on ropes by 6 groups men 4 wide and 24 deep, and so on.

      @Neodymigo@Neodymigo2 ай бұрын
    • You'd enjoy all of the work that Trevor Grassi is doing right now on Egypt! Holy Smokes its exciting!! ❤ I agree & love this comment 👍

      @lisadavie5282@lisadavie52822 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Neodymigo You don't get it, do you?

      @robinharrington8073@robinharrington8073Ай бұрын
    • ​@@robinharrington8073no,he doesn't......not even a little bit.

      @briandaniels2126@briandaniels2126Ай бұрын
    • Best Video I have ever seen and I am 71.

      @zed332l@zed332lАй бұрын
  • This is a pretty well put together survey of evidence of ancient high technology from many sites. It also gives credit to other channels focussing on these mysteries. I’m definitely not a sucker for woo woo theories - seeing all of this put together really strengthens my view that there was a pre-cataclysm high civilisation 12000 years ago…. A good piece of work

    @mattbradbury@mattbradburyАй бұрын
    • I have mostly the same thoughts about this video. Although I was slightly surprised, and slightly disappointed at the same time that it took all of 40 minutes before the first mention of aliens.

      @Solo-Anarchist@Solo-AnarchistАй бұрын
    • 'Pre-cataclysm'? Not even a little: this is centuries old, and more recent than we are led to believe (by those who benefit from not telling us the truth). Nothing 'woo-woo' about it, either: just the result of bad, old-fashioned megalomania, born of hatred, envy, jealousy--the usual suspects.

      @random22026@random22026Ай бұрын
    • Possibly . . . WE actually are the aliens. Think about it. If you stop & ponder silently all the information without succumbing to all the misinformation, slander, & propaganda then common sense should tell you . . . . . . . . (but everyone believes it was Oswald, sorry man, NO!)

      @jamesmaxdavissands@jamesmaxdavissandsАй бұрын
    • Well ok, Based on your comment and the reply it got I'm going to watch this and give a review afterwards. EDIT: Review, You were right. Great video that didn't go over things I'd seen many times. Definitely worth a watch!! Thanks for the suggestion. ;)

      @chefscorner7063@chefscorner7063Ай бұрын
    • @@Solo-Anarchist 👽✌

      @random22026@random22026Ай бұрын
  • It makes you wonder just how much ancient knowledge was really lost when the Great Library at Alexandria burned down.

    @spornbot@spornbotАй бұрын
  • This production is INCREDIBLE. You are doing what i only wish I could! Easily the most coherent and thorough examination of these artifacts and monuments that I've seen to date. Thank you for doing such effective work to illuminate this important subject, too long in the dark. 🌟

    @marsford2716@marsford271623 күн бұрын
  • This is the most fascinating documentary concerning pre-dynastic Egypt that I have ever seen. The research, production and information is exceptional. This documentary pretty much supports the obvious existance of a highly advanced civilization / people / technology that was suddenly destroyed in a major world wide cataclysm towards the end of the last ice age. The ancient Egyptians then later often built upon the ruins of this much more ancient civilization. Similar evidence for this narrative also exist in many other parts of the world

    @brucebertrammcleroth4037@brucebertrammcleroth4037Ай бұрын
    • Toward the end of the geologic Pleistocene Epoch, or also the Ice Ages, there was NO Dramatic event of a Great Flood. What was there was the Element of Fire that melted the global glaciers that ended the Pleistocene Epoch. The Rain of Fire truly represented the catalyst of change that put a stop to the Ice Ages. All ancient savants, sages and philisophers mentioned the destruction of the world from, 1. The element of fire, ending the Pleistocene, 2. The element of water, through the Great Flood thus abolishing the Holocene Epoch about 2,500 BCE. There is NO Such Thing in history, scientifically, mythologically, religiously of a Great Flood about 12,000 years ago, then another Great Flood about 4,500 years ago, these were Complete BULLSHITS, and IDIOTIC CLAIM !! Thanks for reading.

      @rowenbaltazar6102@rowenbaltazar610222 күн бұрын
    • It is also full of BS.

      @wishusknight3009@wishusknight300915 күн бұрын
    • @@wishusknight3009such as??

      @poindextertunes@poindextertunes15 күн бұрын
    • @@poindextertunes About the only thing this entire video got right was the name of the site. After that its all made up nonsense and fantasy.

      @wishusknight3009@wishusknight300915 күн бұрын
    • lol

      @hrimfaxi1@hrimfaxi19 күн бұрын
  • About Osireion: It is a “primary water” well system. The water is coming from the gases in the bedrock. There are tremendous amounts of oxygen and hydrogen stored in rock. This is a known science. Wells have been dug to create water sources this way. The issue with it is how slow the process is. Looks like the ancients knew how to speed the process up through proper hydraulics in their well systems.

    @charlesp7504@charlesp75042 ай бұрын
    • For more info: look up Dr Stephan Riess and primary water.

      @charlesp7504@charlesp75042 ай бұрын
    • The last of the Atlanteans

      @valetta202@valetta2022 ай бұрын
    • I'm 20 minutes in, and I'm absolutely stunned and intrigued! I'd love to visit before I leave this place. There's more in Egypt than meets the eye, obviously.

      @anndriggers6660@anndriggers66602 ай бұрын
    • That is interesting & I had no idea, thank you

      @PentagramDave@PentagramDave2 ай бұрын
    • If it’s just a “well” then why can’t we drain it? Also, I am a retard that knows nothing about wells and how they work lol so please excuse my disability

      @JimmyJamesJimbo@JimmyJamesJimboАй бұрын
  • THIS HAS TO BE THE BEST VIDEO ABOUT THE PYRAMIDS EVER CREATED!

    @FibroMyBro@FibroMyBro27 күн бұрын
    • The documentary "Revelation of the pyramids" is mind blowing too

      @bobrobertson6167@bobrobertson616725 күн бұрын
    • Top 10 for sure. 🎉

      @Nargle19.@Nargle19.24 күн бұрын
    • ​@@bobrobertson6167😊

      @Nargle19.@Nargle19.24 күн бұрын
    • Phffffffff🤣🤣 OK

      @ratdad48@ratdad4816 күн бұрын
    • This documentary is certainly open minded with a filter, but some of the things like the helicopter and other vehicles on the wall we really don't know when they put that there or why. Those could lot more easily be from psychic visions of the future... This documentary is a lot better than a lot out there. It was great to see Ben's work on the vases. There really was a lot of good stuff in there...

      @amind1317@amind13172 күн бұрын
  • The Saqqara bird is just that. A bird. Or more precisely a decoy bird. It was probably one of many laid out near food crops on their posts. The vertical tail allows the wind to turn it's nose in to the wind - the same direction in-flighting birds would approach by. Using these, to lure doves/pigeons in to the crop and where boomerangs and slingshots (both found in Egyptian tombs) would be employed to strike them. The two things most important to older civilisations were food and water and most puzzles are answered by looking through those lens.👍

    @spotontheroad1@spotontheroad118 күн бұрын
  • It reminds of pre-fab homes. They drew up plans and knew exactly how many stones they needed and how to be cut. Even looking at the doorways - those indentations were most likely used to insert a wooden door frame. It is incredible planning. All of that obviously took place in the quarries. Insane.

    @houdinididiit@houdinididiit2 ай бұрын
    • its over 50,000 yrs old.. the flood was 13k ago, when our creators, aliens, the builders, left earth..

      @harrywalker968@harrywalker968Ай бұрын
    • ​@@harrywalker968no it's not, Earth's history is aprox. 6,000 years

      @nicholas919cleare@nicholas919cleareАй бұрын
    • @@nicholas919cleare wait what xD

      @okvis@okvisАй бұрын
    • @@harrywalker968 Do you have any supporting evidence to support your ideas? It's just too plain to state this without any supporting evidence or documentations.

      @V2k2010@V2k2010Ай бұрын
    • Not incredible planning. Here's the kicker: Trial and error. Every structure is going off of the accumulated knowledge and experience by making previous structures and knowing those structures and wanting to improve on them. It wasn't their first rodeo.

      @OceanusHelios@OceanusHeliosАй бұрын
  • I love how they create a flight sim for the wood bird instead of just carving a new one and throwing it out the window.

    @nicholaskonwest4697@nicholaskonwest4697Ай бұрын
    • I think the tail piece didn't exist because it was not made for air but instead submarine use.

      @Jungletrump@JungletrumpАй бұрын
    • LOL... indeed!

      @Dr.Yalex.@Dr.Yalex.Ай бұрын
    • @@Jungletrump it was a child's toy. ... look at the images - they had boomerangs. "Birds fly, they do not swim underwater" PLEASE DISREGARD

      @Dr.Yalex.@Dr.Yalex.Ай бұрын
    • That's because this video is not a true original documentary but a collection of information that is already out there, probably done from someone's study room.

      @nicolaspeters2555@nicolaspeters2555Ай бұрын
    • I could have sworn.They did some form of remote control based on the design of that plane and actually got it to fly.

      @SPHYNX99752@SPHYNX99752Ай бұрын
  • The last portion about the pyramids is astounding and the most down to earth explanation I've come across! Kudos!👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    @elorrep@elorrep23 күн бұрын
  • I'm only 25 minutes into this video!! BRILLIANT. Stating facts, out of the box observation & extrapolated.

    @offthegridgreco@offthegridgreco22 күн бұрын
  • at 1:37:13 while listening to the acoustic resonance, goose bumps took all over my arms. This really is a powerful place. With all that has come up in the last years discoveries, there is strong push back with the scientific community to admit, at least that these monuments are much older then what they were first dated at. Can you imagine how much humanity could be ''liberated'' from those old shakel if we were allowed to research properly the old origins of the earth's inhabitants. May one day the veil be lifted May our Eye be brought to light May we experience the fullness

    @carlstepanian@carlstepanian2 ай бұрын
    • Yes indeed, the ignoring of Scientific, & Geo-Time-Dating is no longer acceptable.

      @fennynough6962@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
    • I don't know why but what you said in those last 3 sentences brought actual chills to my body and especially in my head. Never happened before. So I can only surmise that you said something significant.

      @ChristinaMoody-rp5nk@ChristinaMoody-rp5nkАй бұрын
    • 👍👍👍😀😀😀❤️❤️❤️ Love the discussion here....

      @chadbenson5660@chadbenson5660Ай бұрын
    • have you noticed that there is plaster and bas-reliefs on the Egyptian walls... it is most visible in the part falling off the pillars... and under this plaster there are old walls of a more developed civilization before the flood... I think that many of these buildings were adapted and covered with plaster and paintings, to attribute them to the Pharaohs..... zauważyliście na egipskich ścianach jest tynk i płaskorzeźby .. najbardziej to widać na odpadającym od filarów .... a pod tym tynkiem własnie takie stare mury bardziej rozwiniętej cywilizacji przed potopem .....myślę że sporo tych budowli zaadaptowano pokrywano tynkiem i malowidłami , by przypisać je Faraonom 🤔

      @lusijarplo3050@lusijarplo3050Ай бұрын
    • offer any real prof.

      @mbsnyderc@mbsnydercАй бұрын
  • It's amazing how often these researchers and explorers manage to always seem to run out of money right before they make a discovery.

    @davenorth8922@davenorth8922Ай бұрын
    • Quite simple dear dr. Watson, its when they come too close to the truth, then a furios Zahi Hawass is comming🙂

      @bibihunden@bibihundenАй бұрын
    • well, researchers are always about to make a discovery and they usually run out of money well before anyone knows about it.

      @zvotaisvfi8678@zvotaisvfi8678Ай бұрын
    • Because there was never anything to discover...

      @neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandle@neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandleАй бұрын
    • @@neo-KZheadStoleMyHandle Indeed. Just a bunch of hard work on the part of clever humans who had plenty of time and a massive, very stable, food source.

      @EirikurHallgrimsson@EirikurHallgrimssonАй бұрын
    • lol... bruh, that's not the way it works. they are always raising money to keep going. there is always something more to discover. it is a continuous process of raising money and continuing the archaeology. pretty dumb comment, but it made me laugh.

      @djjeff1727@djjeff1727Ай бұрын
  • i'm following this channel from the beginning. one of the best videos on the ancient egypt {khem} thank you again 🙏❤‍🔥

    @tamir10000@tamir10000Ай бұрын
    • Thank you for your continuous support! 🙏

      @UniverseInsideYou@UniverseInsideYouАй бұрын
  • Most inclusive, broad and well delivered synopsis of pyramids purpose. Great doc, doesn’t come across as hyperbolic. Makes sense that it’s multifaceted. I love the irrigation aspect. That single part is new to me and made this so worth it. Thanks for this contribution. Namaste❤

    @user-lp5xu2wo4x@user-lp5xu2wo4x29 күн бұрын
  • The farther back in time you go, the better the technology. Ancient stuff lasts through earthquakes, typhoons and hurricanes for eons without maintenance, but we cant even figure out how to stop getting potholes all over our roads! 🚚🏎🏍

    @Face761@Face7612 ай бұрын
    • Facts!💫

      @mr.mantra6171@mr.mantra6171Ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @MsRoshniAli@MsRoshniAliАй бұрын
    • Pothole elimination is easy to do;[ just build your roads out of Polygonal. Rose Granite Megablocks]! Lol 😂

      @fennynough6962@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
    • Don't be stupid the reason our roads wear quicker is the volume of traffic not the materials they made of. You also have geology, weather, chemicals even the dust that gets on the road between the tires and asphalt causes wear. Any crack in the surface will allow water under the road then that leads to it expanding and contracting making the sub foundation unstable causing the asphalt to flex and then BAM pothole

      @mikeishome69@mikeishome69Ай бұрын
    • @@fennynough6962 These would crumble under todays traffic loads

      @mikeishome69@mikeishome69Ай бұрын
  • The Osirion must have been a plant where they supplied the surroundings with fresh water. It is ridiculous to tell it was a temple... According to all mainstream archeologists every construction that they cannot explain are temples 🤦🏼‍♀️

    @annelieek1472@annelieek14722 ай бұрын
    • Or sacrificial alters ! .

      @davidbnsmessex.5953@davidbnsmessex.5953Ай бұрын
    • 5,000 years from now, archaeologists who stumble upon the remnants of the Hover Dam will say it was the burial place of our king.

      @Griffix96@Griffix96Ай бұрын
    • no way, ha ha ha @@Griffix96

      @denniscook390@denniscook390Ай бұрын
    • There is no mainstream archeology. All archeologyst make their own theories and confront them. Its because you follow mainstream media.

      @JoSeph-cu2sr@JoSeph-cu2srАй бұрын
    • What, exactly and precisely, do "mainstream archeologists" say? Surely you must know - according to your comment

      @DwayneShaw1@DwayneShaw1Ай бұрын
  • A possible explanation for the guy's eyesight improving was simply because he had spent time out in the desert, not that he drank the water. If you spend time in an environment where your line of sight is limited, your eyes tend to acclimate to that distance, especially for people who are already susceptible to nearsightedness. For intance, if you spend a lot of time indoors, the distance of good sharpness may tap out at around only 20-30 feet or so, and anything farther starts to get a little fuzzy even with glasses. Or, if your normal environment is a city or somewhere where the landscape is really hilly or covered in trees, your line of sight will be blocked somewhat, but the range of sharpness might be far enough way that it doesn't noticeably bother you. A desert has nothing to block your vision all the way to the horizon. A few good weeks or months in a location like that will readjust your distance of sharpness for a while, improving your vision enough to be registered at an eye doctor. It's all about how the tiny eye muscles that control your lenses are able to move. The different distances exercise those muscles in different ways to as they try to achieve focus. How do I know? I've always been a bit nearsighted, but my eyes tanked during lockdown while I had to be inside all day. Ever since then, I've noticed drastic changes in my vision based on the kinds of locations I've been in recently. Being able to go outside at all tends to help somewhat, but we live on the coast, so going to the beach where I can see the horizon helps my eyes the most. I mean, no amount of beach time is going to change the oblong shape of my eyes and cure me completely, but distance gazing is basically physical therapy for your lenses that help train them to cope.

    @izzycurer1260@izzycurer126013 күн бұрын
  • Those stairs are clearly melted just look at the rear of each tread they are raised not worn

    @keithbelcher6352@keithbelcher6352Ай бұрын
    • Do you have any idea of the amount of energy needed to do that?! It's almost like humanity wants nothing to do with being intelligent anymore... This is why we don't look on Earth for intelligent life!

      @Natedawg-xc2pu@Natedawg-xc2pu12 күн бұрын
  • Really well put together video, thank you!

    @AstroTrain100@AstroTrain1002 ай бұрын
  • Tut's iron dagger... It was discovered not too long ago that iron smithing was a common craft thousands of years before what we previously thought, in northern europe before the so called "roman iron age" which occured after the viking age. They unearthed a forge from this, much earlier era, with very clear evidence of iron smithing up in the north of Sweden way ahead of the commonly understood era of humanity's devolopment.

    @MrBern91@MrBern91Ай бұрын
    • TF are you talking about. The vikings came hundreds of years after the decline of the roman empire.

      @datadavis@datadavisАй бұрын
    • @@datadavis The term "viking" is just a word which was created a little later, but the Romans butted heads a lot with the germanic tribes between year 0 - 560ish AD, still the same people, they just didn't have aquired the name "vikings" yet. But this is beyond the point. The point is that during this point in time, these people from the north had access to iron and utilized it well, and that people from our current era managed to unearth an iron forge from a much earlier era than we previously were familiar with when it comes to ironworks...

      @MrBern91@MrBern91Ай бұрын
    • @@MrBern91 no and nonsense.

      @datadavis@datadavisАй бұрын
    • there are tools found that are millions of years old, couldn't care less wtf people say for Egyptians or similar nonsense nations when Europe had it millions of years before and when Serbs aka "Macedons" built an university city so called "Alexandria" next to Egypt as a gift to Egypt and expanding to Africa the knowledge and actual civilized world (unlike the one we have today) to which later the Vatican monkeys destroyed and made up fake people, fake countries and fake stories and how either people were primitive or it is unknown, wtf is what, that people find ... There is more European Serbian root archived in the world then in Europe, ironically where it originate from, since today Vatican is keeping everything away and brainwashed everyone with politics, mainstream media garbage and slavery systems ... enforced by demoncracy and NATO so as their smaller branches, fake religions, extremesits etc that collectively are a distraction and blockage of having an actual coherent life and live the truth Soon as you speak against them they "cancel you" or simply k-ll you ... Happened for centuries and is keep happening.

      @minmogrovingstrongandhealthy@minmogrovingstrongandhealthyАй бұрын
    • @@MrBern91 ironically those same germans meant the same thing that today English word germs means or Serbs have a word grmalji which means dirty deformed people and not just by looks but by mental state too, germ you know what it means ... coincidence? Nope. A nation or lets same "people" didn't exist as Germans, Vikings etc these simply random words for people of organisation or task, work etc, plenty of these fake countries are made up by Vatican and have no sense if you know the actual root European language to which Serbian is still the closest to. All "Slavic" people have words and names to which they don't even know wtf it comes from nor what it actually means. And then I have to take them all seriously including parasitic Vatican itself. So as all these made up people and their stories. F--k em all. If they evolved from monkeys and if they were primitive before then yeah they can have that and keep them for themselves. We actual humans who have basic logic, common sense and instinct know the difference and can put 2 and 2 together to know better then their lies wtf they are desperetly selling. Ukraine means region within one region, ukranian meant border patrol army, yet magically today they are a nation XD Poland means wast field, polak is simply field worker yet today magically they are yet another nation XD Bulgarians originally were mercenaries who were called Vulgari which basically means vulgar. Latins couldn't read properly Cyrillic so they mixed letter cyr "B" (which is V) with latin B and completely messed up the name. From Vulgari into Bulgari hence a Bulgarian was born. List goes on. These use to be simple old Serbian words that have basic meaning, words that you attach to something to give it proper meaning yet Vatican used it all incorectly in their hodge podge effort of making up fake countries and nations who make no sense. Republic Serbian Kraina, perfectly utilize the word Kraina / Ukraina while Ukraina "country" being the same meaning since it was made by the same people it's a simple word that you need to add to something to make it a full meaning, not a nation XD I am a "regioner" YES BUT REGIONER OF WHAT, YOU CLOWNS .... Sadly Ukranians don't know they use to be Serbs and Russians, there is no such thing as ukranian nation. But seem like people don't want to know and rather live in their bubble of lies made up by Vatican and continue to pay tax to Vatican parasites. But hey if they can do it I will too. I will declare independence and stop paying tax, I will call my garden Greenland and the turtles and fish in my pond will be my new nation we will be called Greenlandians ... If we play a game I can play that game too ...

      @minmogrovingstrongandhealthy@minmogrovingstrongandhealthyАй бұрын
  • I love this video especially the last bit about the pyramids, you have now helped me add 2 more books to my long list. Always love learning something new about this place. If money was never an issue I would explore every inch of this still mysterious place

    @vkturbo7676@vkturbo7676Ай бұрын
  • OMG! This is better than tv! What a great episode 👏

    @jimgriffiths9071@jimgriffiths9071Ай бұрын
  • Probably my favourite documentary you have done so far. Just so well put together. Thanks so much!

    @jasonmauza7104@jasonmauza7104Ай бұрын
    • Glad you enjoyed it!

      @UniverseInsideYou@UniverseInsideYouАй бұрын
    • Its still bullshit

      @2911721905@2911721905Ай бұрын
    • @@2911721905 What's the BS in this documentary? I see a lot of things that scientists today cannot explain how were made. That's the only thing they are saying, there is no explanation as to how they made some of these things.

      Ай бұрын
  • why did they not just put diving suits on and go down and see?

    @whisperingwolf8217@whisperingwolf82172 ай бұрын
    • Because it is filled with sand, rocks, and mud, which they are trying to clear out.

      @1800imawake@1800imawake2 ай бұрын
    • Or use a drone…?

      @MoggingMewer@MoggingMewer2 ай бұрын
    • Visibility is zero.

      @donincognito9006@donincognito90062 ай бұрын
    • @@donincognito9006 I am a certified diver use lights

      @whisperingwolf8217@whisperingwolf82172 ай бұрын
    • Sonar... Next problem, please

      @MtHelicon2077@MtHelicon20772 ай бұрын
  • Occom's Razor would suggest the simplest answer to the question of how they moved giant stones hundreds of miles is that they didn't. It is much easier to believe the scientists who said the stones are not from the area are simply wrong. That is the simplest explanation and the only logical one.

    @UltimateAnarchy@UltimateAnarchy7 күн бұрын
    • "Occom's Razor would suggest the simplest answer to the question of how they moved giant stones hundreds of miles is that they didn't" I'd suggest that you don't understand what simplest answer means, or have any great capacity for logical thought at that if you can't see the obvious staring you in the face. The simplest answer is that they - an entire civilisation built around a famous major river system - built boats to transport the stone for those hundreds of miles. The Nile had a branch canal that ended right by the Sphinx and temples at the base of the Giza plateau in ancient times. During flood season which lasted 4 months the entire river was higher, allowing greater access and heavier cargo to be transported. Also - the stone transported hundreds of miles was granite, a tiny fraction of the whole Great Pyramid, less than 1%. The vast lions share of the masonry was coarse limestone excavated only hundreds of meters away on the Giza plateau itself - the pyramids were literally constructed right next to their main source of stone. The rest for the architectural supports and cover stones was fine white limestone from the Tura quarries about 10 km upriver, as supported by the Merer papyrus.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx3 күн бұрын
  • It always come to my mind that they had a way to form the granite in to shape. After looking in the web this answers my thoughts: Granite is an igneous rock, which means it formed from magma, or melted rock. So about first part I would say they could use a way to heat the material into the desired shape.

    @PGala@PGalaАй бұрын
    • Make perfect sense. This would be the answer to my original post above.

      @johntsan742@johntsan742Ай бұрын
  • This was an amazing way to spend 2 hours. Amazing content. Thank you very much. I'm fascinated by the ram pump. The interior of the pyramid never made sense to me until today. Pre-egyption technology

    @patrickames7684@patrickames7684Ай бұрын
    • Never made sense how? It's not technology in the way you are thinking of, it's just experimental architecture. The pyramids show a progression in architectural engineering that is clearly visible once you know what to look for.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx3 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for compiling this together into an easy to understand video

    @8020re@8020reАй бұрын
  • A "resemblance" to modern technology means nothing.

    @baneverything5580@baneverything5580Ай бұрын
  • Incredible documentary! SO glad I found this!

    @perspectivaimporta494@perspectivaimporta494Ай бұрын
  • Our ancestors are a lot more intelligent then we will ever fathom. Modern archeology/historians are either lying or deluded about history and how advanced we were in the past. Question everything!!!!

    @moriorinvictus9054@moriorinvictus9054Ай бұрын
    • Given you don't know jack about fairly recent history, let alone ancient history don't you think that you are being JUST a little arrogant to claim that people who have literally studied and excavated this stuff for their entire working lives know better than you about the subject? The sheer arrogance to think you know better than people with literally decades of knowledge and experience on you is frankly disturbing. Do you think the same thing when a doctor tells you that you need surgery just because you watched a few episodes of ER? Because that's basically what you are doing right here. Questioning everything doesn't make a difference if you have no idea what you are talking about to begin with.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx3 күн бұрын
  • You say that the stones were placed ‘in a desert’, but this is not necessarily so. It has been recorded by satellites that at some period the Sahara was Green, temperate and with rivers running through it and with peoples loving there. It would be interesting to work out just when this would have been.

    @user-pp6jg1kq4i@user-pp6jg1kq4i2 ай бұрын
    • The Sahara desert used to be a sea. There are whale bones in the desert. It would be very interesting to know when that changed, what caused it to change and what the area looked like before it happened.

      @josephr4761@josephr47612 ай бұрын
    • And when they were finished loving each other they could have lived there as well ! .

      @davidbnsmessex.5953@davidbnsmessex.5953Ай бұрын
    • @@davidbnsmessex.5953 🤣😂😆 as they say 'i see what you did there'

      @krystalclear7635@krystalclear7635Ай бұрын
    • About 5500 years ago the climate was wetter a astroid exploding over europa changed the weather all over the world

      @peteduch2151@peteduch2151Ай бұрын
    • Who made the satellites that recorded that 😉

      @paulb1951@paulb1951Ай бұрын
  • This was fantastic! The research and production value are 🌟🌟🌟🌟

    @thekidrobb@thekidrobb24 күн бұрын
  • To all that it may concern.... No predated civilization created all these amazing and fascinating objects..... The ideal, wonderful, and fascinating human being created all that we see.... In the beginning of time, the human being was perfect, pure and much more intelligent than our present human being.... There is no other intelligent civilization that came here in intelligent space ships or any other idea that the current human being may think of.... We were created by someone/something much more intelligent than the current human being... That is how all things were and are created.....

    @eljefetheboss3180@eljefetheboss318023 күн бұрын
  • Top quality video, truly amazing how all the info and clues were gathered and presented here, thank you 🙏

    @susannas158@susannas158Ай бұрын
    • So many uneducated lies in 2 hours 😂😂😂

      @holladiewaldfee7518@holladiewaldfee7518Ай бұрын
    • @@holladiewaldfee7518 What is wrong with you?

      @Greensiteofhell@GreensiteofhellАй бұрын
    • @@Greensiteofhell nothing 😄

      @holladiewaldfee7518@holladiewaldfee7518Ай бұрын
    • @@holladiewaldfee7518troll

      @phildf701@phildf70124 күн бұрын
  • I'm not so sure about the claimed electrical properties, but the Ram Pump makes sense when you consider North Africa goes through a cycle every 26,000 years because of perturbations in the Earth's path, and spin around the Sun that causes a period of desertification. North Africa was once green at the end of the Ice Age that progressed to what it is today, a desert. An advanced human civilization would have genius scientists, and engineers that would of designed mechanisms to keep the water flowing for farmers as the rainfall dwindled each year progressing toward desertification. To prove the pyramids at Giza were pumps, you would have to discover the network of canals, and waterways that were above, and/or below ground that are now under the sand. Very good documentary! I could listen to this stuff all day long!

    @dentonfender6492@dentonfender6492Ай бұрын
    • "An advanced human civilization would have genius scientists, and engineers" Uuuuuuuugggghghghhghghghghgh. Geniuses exist regardless of the state of knowledge or advancement of a given culture - it's a factor of randomness based on countless possible brain development variables. What a civilisation WOULD have is a larger population, which means a greater chance of these randomly occurring geniuses than in a population of merely hundreds (unless selection pressure makes them more common over multiple generations). What we have today in our modern global civilisation of billions is the potential for many, many geniuses per generation with the resources to educate them in whatever they feel the greatest aptitude for.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 күн бұрын
  • What a fabulous 'potted history', thank you for this insight all in one session. More please.

    @learning2curve995@learning2curve99523 күн бұрын
  • The ancient people stood by as the people from the stars ( as they said ) showed them how to use the special tools to produce such beautiful work, smooth walls, huge blocks and so on. These areas should be opened to inspection again for research.

    @jameswulzen590@jameswulzen590Ай бұрын
    • Exactly ! Why everybody doubts we had visits from somwhere else beats me ! Those ancient people even wrote it down and one must be blind with all the evidence found ! They rather believe the Egyptians build those pyramids with copper chisels and hammerstones.... I would love to see those so called historics working on granite with a copper chisel.....

      @cafl9844@cafl984428 күн бұрын
  • Personally i think the Annunaki built all these structures and the Egyptians simply claimed it as theirs

    @mohammadsattar5488@mohammadsattar54882 ай бұрын
    • Thoth was the master architect but yes was Anunnaki/Atlantean.

      @EVIL_ENGINEER.@EVIL_ENGINEER.Ай бұрын
    • Da ?!❤😂

      @attilarza2488@attilarza2488Ай бұрын
    • The Egyptians always refer to the gods of Zep Tepi, the first time. And yes, in reference to the comments above the master architect was probably Thoth, an Atlantean priest King of Annunaki heritage who left Atlantis before the final destruction. The level of sacred geometry built into the great pyramid of Giza is not mentioned. Robert Edward Grant and Graham Hancock have both done some videos on this.

      @JJ-vb3wy@JJ-vb3wyАй бұрын
    • @@JJ-vb3wy Thoth or Enki or some believe to be actually Jesus and the author of the Emerald Tablets has the same events written 3000 years ago that we find in our recent holy scriptures ranging from the flood to reincarnation of the messenger and the same warnings about hell and heaven.

      @mohammadsattar5488@mohammadsattar5488Ай бұрын
  • The modern day problem is, not they built these structures in the past, it's that we can't figure out how they did it, or replicate it in this day.

    @mainid2490@mainid2490Ай бұрын
    • It shows that our most clever of today claim they posses IQ, but rather have IL(intelectual loss)

      @chrisroux8137@chrisroux8137Ай бұрын
    • We can't huh? Go to a local trade school and learn the basics of machine tool technology. After your first few weeks where you are learning bench skills and discover this "advanced technology" is essentially some really clver tricks and proper use of tools of the trade whether those tools are simple or have the benefit of a motor... It is still just tools. When you are done there, go spend time with some actual stonemasons that can do amazing work with chizels and a mallet and some water and ... *gasp* something called GRINDING. When you understand HOW we got to where we are technologically....you'll learn that it really boils down to people with tired backs just looking for the easiest way to do something. Just because you don't know how, and this youtuber made a video like it is a gigantic mystery, doesn't mean that your average hard working sod didn't know how to use tools and produce fine craftsmanship. This is what happens when people grow up in the age of computers and are essentially helpless. They get dumb and unimaginative and can't understand the basics of working with tools and materials.

      @OceanusHelios@OceanusHeliosАй бұрын
    • @@OceanusHelios - that was pretty long winded, just to say, you're right...

      @mainid2490@mainid2490Ай бұрын
    • @@OceanusHelios Yep, it takes a few simple tools, and an insane (by modern standard) amount of time and effort, which is something people just can't comprehend I guess, spending months of your time to make a single block fit where it needs to with just man-power, then start the next one right when you're done for decades of your life. Seriously impressive for the time, but it's wild to me that people think we couldn't build what was built with modern people and tech, we might need a decade or so to get the hang of it again with modern tools since building with perfectly cut granite isn't really something many people know how to do, but we could definitely do it.

      @BilboSwagginsTheThird@BilboSwagginsTheThirdАй бұрын
    • I don't think we could not because we couldn't if we were made to but the financial part of it would break any goverment to to pay for for the results that it was supposedly going to get out of it so how did they afford it back than its truly amazing

      @jacksonmcslapping2937@jacksonmcslapping2937Ай бұрын
  • Amazingly put together, what an eye opener for those willing to listen. Just started getting into ancient histories bout 6 months ago. This is the kind of production that should be shown in schools. Thank you

    @user-jf4dh5du4s@user-jf4dh5du4sАй бұрын
    • Kinda scary to me if you read these comments just how hypnotized the masses are by all this misinformation. To them it's all just a stupid joke for idiots like us who actually can process this information. These sites MUST be hundreds of thousands of years old _ not likely 5 or 10 . . . ridiculous! They actually pointed to us where they came from & where they were headed & strangely enough it seems that both Tesla & Arthur C Clark somehow KNEW this information as well as mildly understood what would happen if you spoke of it outright. Tesla's antennae into the ionosphere was DESTROYED, not under funded before he could prove that "Standing Wave Distribution of Electricity" could serve the entire Earth's population for free . . . Imagine - Where would we be now?

      @jamesmaxdavissands@jamesmaxdavissandsАй бұрын
  • Wow this is amazing stuff, totally subbed too. Great job.

    @emergentform1188@emergentform118815 күн бұрын
  • Both the Zawyet El Aryan and Osireion are most likely pre-flood and definitely much older and advanced than Egyptians. Just like the Olmecs were before Mayan's and Inca's.

    @herensugue@herensugueАй бұрын
    • No

      @busoko_Ismail2468@busoko_Ismail2468Ай бұрын
    • What's this 'flood' you are all obsessed with?

      @littlewink7941@littlewink7941Ай бұрын
    • @@littlewink7941 It's a non existent event that their pseudo history messiahs have convinced them happened.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 күн бұрын
  • 36600 views, 1.3k LIKES. At the very least, the research and cumulating of information piecing together into presentation, IS awe-inspiring. WHERE IS the deserved appreciation to such incredible work and production. Roll eyes up, incredulously!!!

    @deancummings5285@deancummings52852 ай бұрын
  • Excellent video and the search made to do it. My compliments!

    @giovanniguarino9152@giovanniguarino915223 күн бұрын
  • I don't know much of anything but I've never even heard of half these places. Incredible research 👍

    @woonsockettruthseeker9009@woonsockettruthseeker9009Ай бұрын
  • Everything is Energy I just want to share what happens when the human Biofield exchanges current near the Ocean. Going to the beach. This study proposes a physical pathway, namely the flow of electric currents through a grounded human body, specifically when standing barefooted on the beach. It is frequently assumed that the ground is an equipotential surface and therefore any conducting body (e.g. human body) in contact with it becomes part of that equipotential surface Because they are thought to be equal in electric potential, it is thought that there is no potential difference between them. With such assumption, it is not expected that current will flow through that conducting body. However, the natural ground is made up of a mixture of many materials including sand, stones, minerals, organic matter etc. Different materials have different electrical properties (e.g. conductivity, capacitance). Even in a seemingly homogeneous sandy beach, the distribution of these materials are not uniform. The non-uniform distribution of these materials will cause a difference in electric potential between two points on the ground, also known as self-potential This difference may be sufficient to draw a measurable current through the human body. It is known that organisms generate or rely on electric currents and fields at the cellular level. This knowledge may be one reason for the recent revival of the idea of grounding the human body, which involves putting the human body at the same equipotential surface as the ground. Electrostatic build-up and its subsequent discharging disrupts the natural electric field of the human body and this process has been suggested to have an effect on health. Grounding prevents the build-up of excessive electric field in the body due to these factors. It has also been suggested that the free electrons present on the ground will travel up through the human body as electric current whenever an electrical pathway is established between the human body and ground and it has been suggested that this current has a beneficial health effect.

    @lisadavie5282@lisadavie52822 ай бұрын
    • You don't have to go to the beach. It's easier just to shuffle your feet on some shag carpet.

      @Griffix96@Griffix96Ай бұрын
    • Our animating “lifeforce” is of bio-electrical energy. We are a bio-chemical-electrical -physical life force powered by an advanced physic input that winds down like a clock that releases our life force energy back into the cosmos after cessation of life as we know it. It goes back to the Creator.

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
    • The beach/ocean salty environments & their crystaline structure are very conducive to electicity.

      @westwardHo-@westwardHo-Ай бұрын
  • Here’s another question to ponder Look at the handles on these vases. Besides the extreme difficulty putting them there, what were they actually for? Think about the handles on modern jugs or containers, they’re quite different from what we see here. Modern ones are generally for adult hands. But what are these for? They seem to small to be of much use for handling,like no matter what the size of the vase the “handles” are way too small. What about the precise drill hole through them? What was that for? We usually put a hand through or fingers to help use the item. But these are tiny, like for a thin string but for what reason?? This is very strange if you really stop and think about it.

    @Stonecutter334@Stonecutter334Ай бұрын
    • Sir... this is McDonald's... plz, just order what's on the menu

      @frank-696@frank-696Ай бұрын
    • You should check out UnchartedX's videos on the vases, and read Mark Q's article analyzing the geometry of the first vase that was scanned. Mark led a team that determined the geometry of the vase is generated by a series of simple mathematical equations. Encoded in the vase dimensions are extensive use of pi and phi, with most actual dimensions of the vase, including the handles, matching the math model with deviations of a fraction of a percent. That is, many dimensions are accurate to the model within microns, which are thousandths of a mm. Additional scans of additional vases have been carried out nearby to me in Wixom Michigan, at an automotive industry gaging equipment supplier facility, reportedly with equally impressive results. I'm looking forward to seeing a full dump of the latest scanning results.

      @kenpumford754@kenpumford754Ай бұрын
    • It appears that you would not directly touch the vase . . . like a rod with handles would be fitted & then possibly carried by two people carefully. What was in them? Great insight!

      @jamesmaxdavissands@jamesmaxdavissandsАй бұрын
    • they used magic, summoned entities from other dimensions.

      @talashk615@talashk61523 күн бұрын
    • @@jamesmaxdavissands we may never know. The more we see the less we understand.

      @Stonecutter334@Stonecutter33420 күн бұрын
  • I'm thinking we are probably better off not understanding how these ancient people transported incredibly heavy blocks and fitted them together pretty much air-tight. Today's society isn't responsible enough to handle this kind of knowledge.

    @tomcarson8854@tomcarson8854Ай бұрын
    • Wally Wallington

      @davepowell7168@davepowell7168Ай бұрын
    • You might have a point there

      @zodarian6705@zodarian6705Ай бұрын
    • How the stones were moved has been explained by a French architect Jean Pierre Houdin. Watch the video "The Khufu Pyramid Revealed". As far as fitting the stones together, it is very simple. Place one block on the ground, set another block on top of it. Rotate the top block back and forth. Lift the top block and clean the ground powder off. Repeat until, viola, a perfect fit. So simple even a human can figure it out. The is also a video showing a group of men doing just that to prove it so.

      @danabuch324@danabuch324Ай бұрын
    • We are not Allowed to use such knowledge. File your permit!

      @juneyshu6197@juneyshu6197Ай бұрын
    • filling the area around the blocks with water and attaching balasts along with using levers... next question please.

      @wompstopm123@wompstopm12329 күн бұрын
  • As a modern-day stone fabricator. We can cut, grind, polish, and laminate stones. But even with our best laser cutter, water jet cutter, diamond coated drill bit, and diamond coated blades. It is next to impossible to cut a smooth intercepting inside angle corner. Kudos to our ancient "alien" ancestors.

    @johntsan742@johntsan742Ай бұрын
    • Thanks🙂

      @juneyshu6197@juneyshu6197Ай бұрын
    • from an architect perspective, I think that our budgets and deadlines are significantly different from those in Ancient era. But I will join you in admiring the skills of our ancestors, and protest against the naive alien or ancient civilization bullshitting around, because it undermines the greatest method we have for learning how the universe works - the science. And keeps people in a dark, for cheap clicks.

      @rayfighter@rayfighter25 күн бұрын
    • I have been a mason/stone cutter for 40+ years, you are correct that the abilities that they had back then was far superior to our knowledge currently. The one thing they fail to mention in this production is that they are able to measure how fast the older tech was able to cut into the stone, and let me tell you, we do not have even close to the abilities they had then. It is not hard to logically say that whoever built all of this was much more advanced in so many ways compared to what we are today. How long will it be that we create something that will last thousands of years in stone? I will say at the current state of our world wide civilization, it will not happen for hundreds of years yet, if not thousands.

      @godlessevilfeeling@godlessevilfeeling23 күн бұрын
    • We melt metal

      @timpalka959@timpalka95918 күн бұрын
    • Solar lense , make a mold then take smaller pieces of granite melt it down and pour it in the clay mold , for everyone that says it's impossible we do it now with steel plastics everything we make but with giant furnaces . Granite heat to it's melting point when is it cools it is still granite .when we were little kids we took magnifying glasses start a fires and burn to ants they just do it on a bigger scale using mother nature instead of technology that is the problem people need their phones to get from a to b what happens when the polls shift and there is no more technology and we have to going to go back to the ancient way everybody's f***** stop thinking with technology involved and how you can do it old school way Great Wall of China, the Colosseum in Rome,temples in India one more do you think about with the lens glass is made of particles of sand I may be wrong I'm not an expert on making glass

      @timpalka959@timpalka95918 күн бұрын
  • 18:00 Since 1964, the Unfinished Pyramid of Zawyet El-Aryan has been within a restricted military zone, prohibiting further excavations and leading to the unfortunate overbuilding of the surrounding necropolis with military structures. The shaft has even been misused as a local dump. If I am not mistaken the area is no longer a military zone

    @43painter@43painterАй бұрын
    • Done to hide information

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
    • You bet@@jameshhenderson8243

      @random22026@random22026Ай бұрын
    • About what?​@@jameshhenderson8243

      @Zhiivago@Zhiivago28 күн бұрын
    • what military? all countries should send their researchers and UN should allow them

      @talashk615@talashk61523 күн бұрын
    • @@talashk615 Uh no, you don't get to determine what goes on culturally in a sovereign nation. You need to respect the sovereignty of all nations! The intelligent people of Earth don't care about these subjects, we already know as much as we need to...

      @Natedawg-xc2pu@Natedawg-xc2pu12 күн бұрын
  • really nice documantation, no click baiting. with a lot of detailed information. excellent👍

    @severinstirnemann6717@severinstirnemann6717Ай бұрын
  • This is excellent, I like how you're explaining the evidence, and what it means. It's so obvious now.

    @timhouston4470@timhouston447027 күн бұрын
  • once you are done with the childlike wonder & fascination, we are left with a big question: what is with the stalling of information in all these mysterious structures? why does this ...simulation...take us right up to the edge of understanding, only to stall out or hit a wall. usually that wall is, "the country's officials do not allow entrance" or another excuse. it seems as if not having answers is propelling or generating money so officials set boundries. it has been like this for decades. it feels like some sort of reality breakdown. technology is obviously being kept hidden and from my seats in this theater, it looks like they slowly leak this technology over time because a ton of money can be made.

    @an0therdimensi0n99@an0therdimensi0n992 ай бұрын
    • Ci deve essere molto di piu dei soldi !!!

      @sandatoacsen9858@sandatoacsen9858Ай бұрын
    • Knowing that the Egyptians had nothing to do with these Megolithic Structures, is obvious now.

      @fennynough6962@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
    • 👏👏👏yep

      @krystalclear7635@krystalclear7635Ай бұрын
    • We live in a world of lies. This is deliberate.

      @skillmeup53@skillmeup53Ай бұрын
    • @@fennynough6962Wrong again on enlightened one. 😂

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
  • Very well done documentary. Bravo!

    @coreymckown3577@coreymckown35772 ай бұрын
  • Please do more full videos and live videos. They're awesome and very much wanted

    @piccosports@piccosports8 күн бұрын
  • What is very suspicious to me is the slow rolling on all new Egyptian discoveries and sites being excavated. Almost like they want to control any new information or discoveries that may come out from it.

    @julesverne2509@julesverne2509Ай бұрын
    • yes that true, they already know the truth. do you really think they are sitting having tea nope

      @talashk615@talashk61523 күн бұрын
    • obviously you have a very deep understanding how much work is involved in ACTUAL scientific research 🤣

      @J.e.r.o.e.n@J.e.r.o.e.n14 күн бұрын
    • All archaeology is slow lackwit. They started excavating the Minoan site of Akrotiri on the island of Santorini in the 1960s. Today there is less than 10% of the site exposed over half a century later. As for information..... well they tend to conceal information like that in academic publications..... for free no less 😒 Don't blame them because you are either too lazy to seek them out, nor blame them if you are too inept to understand the information contained therein, scientists do not write research papers with the layman in mind and they never will. The sheer amount of lazy, armchair gripping keyboard warriors pissing on people that work their asses off for very little recognition in these comments is sickening to watch. You people should be ashamed of yourselves. Archaeology is neither physically nor academically trivial work - it's very physically demanding and extremely boring, often in circumstances where the local political situation is bordering on military violence at any moment. These people should command your eternal respect, not your derision.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 күн бұрын
  • Ed Malowski has researched these sites and offers the possibility that there is a deep water source in the desert west which has been tapped specifically for the Osirion , not being used for other sites. Ancient Egypt 39,000 BCE.

    @katesisco@katesisco2 ай бұрын
    • who?

      @mikejones9961@mikejones99612 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, 42000 years ago-ish

      @MikeInHalifax@MikeInHalifax2 ай бұрын
    • ​@mikejones9961 who cares!?

      @deancummings5285@deancummings52852 ай бұрын
    • @@deancummings5285 katesisco and Mikeinhalifax, goofy

      @mikejones9961@mikejones99612 ай бұрын
    • There is an old underground river in that area when the desert was an oasis and green.

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
  • This is the best documentary

    @benjaminavery6894@benjaminavery68942 ай бұрын
    • According to them, the Sphinx is made of limestone blocks; it was actually carved from the bedrock.

      @kristjiannne@kristjiannne2 ай бұрын
    • @@kristjiannne 30,000 to 50,000 years agao

      @awokenv7302@awokenv73022 ай бұрын
    • @@awokenv7302😂😂😂 why not 150 Millions of years ago?

      @holladiewaldfee7518@holladiewaldfee7518Ай бұрын
  • The beginning of the human being was much more intelligent. They build with earth, our current human being builds on earth..... Very big difference..... Awaken my fellow brothers and sisters.....

    @eljefetheboss3180@eljefetheboss318023 күн бұрын
  • I disagree regarding the Osiron. Apply Ochams Razor: What's more likely? That the ancient Egyptians had greater capabilities than we thought, or there was a lost civilization with some kind of superior technology? The simplest answer, with the least assumptions is usually the correct answer. 😊

    @owenritz1224@owenritz122424 күн бұрын
    • you know the earth is like 4 billion years old right? 😂 *Occam’s* Razor is a philosophical principal that involves no science whatsoever. It means nothing in this scenario. You might as well said “I’m guessing” lmao

      @poindextertunes@poindextertunes15 күн бұрын
    • @@poindextertunes The age if the earth means nothing when there is zero convincing evidence of your fantasy lost civilization. You just really, really want it to be true. That's where Ocham's Razor comes in. Of course it is not science and I don't know why you think that matters. Ocham's Razor simply says that in explaining a thing, make no more assumptions than absolutely necessary and you will usually be correct. Ancient lost advanced civilizations require many unjustified assumptions, so many that the assertion is little more than magical thinking and far too ridiculous to be taken seriously.

      @owenritz1224@owenritz122415 күн бұрын
  • This was well done. There are so many good ones now. I think it’s time to stop wasting time and energy on arguing about this stuff anymore until academia starts putting forth some actual ways these things could have been done. Diorite balls removing 1000 tons by leaving scoop marks. Something the pounders don’t seem to do today. Give me a break. Enough with the horseshxt. The rest of us need to move on to the next step and support the people looking to get us there.

    @Stonecutter334@Stonecutter3342 ай бұрын
  • The very first photos in the video of the stone bowls with 19 pin holes around them are the bases for djed pillars. The djed pillar was àn old typenof windlass that used ropes to move large stones. There are modern examples of them in use. They provide great mechanical advantage with little work.

    @JJJJspam@JJJJspam2 ай бұрын
  • First time I've seen some of this information. Fascinating.

    @MissL4lly@MissL4llyАй бұрын
  • Amazing job. Well done. You have a new subscriber.

    @segfahlt@segfahltАй бұрын
  • If those gear wheels are as old as the schist disk, that shows they had deferential gearing in ancient Egypt. Different oscillation speeds with the different sizes. I thought they didn't have anything like that?

    @bullionbacked@bullionbackedАй бұрын
  • One idea that struck me is that if they were harnessing water on that scale, it could bridge the gap between geologists saying the Sphinx is older because of erosion, and egyptologists saying the ruins are all much younger. If there was some sort of accident, maybe massive amounts of water could have been released leaving the plateau closer to its current state, without us needing to push it's creation date so far back. Just a thought. I don't think it matters how old it is, my take away from all these interesting ruins around the world is that humanity has been here before, 2024 is not that special of a year to be alive in. Our history is all laid out and ancient myths seem to have had their history laid out as well. I'm not even sure we are meant to break the cycle of collapse. I'm not sure I want to be there if and when it happens. What's our out? Merging with machines on a biochemical level? I'm just not megalomaniacal enough to take that leap.

    @Zmej420BlazeIt@Zmej420BlazeItАй бұрын
    • Enough people on the planet need to have a mindset change in terms of scarcity vs abundance, war and other points that affect how we all go about living. A couple of resources if anyone is interested in more info: Jacque Fresco (founded The Venus Project) and R. Buckminster Fuller.

      @w1975b@w1975bАй бұрын
    • Geologists aren't saying the erosion is sphinx is older because of erosion, but that the sphinx was made from an already eroded land formation

      @caodesignworks2407@caodesignworks240716 күн бұрын
  • Every time I check a statement in videos like this it takes me less than 5 minutes to find a reliable source that gives a good answer that is NOT ancient aliens, mysterious forces or similar. The ancients were smart, resourceful p, and organised. They didn’t need help from Aliens 😡😡😡😀

    @davidtydeman1434@davidtydeman1434Ай бұрын
    • Agreed. People are massively underestimating human ingenuity and skill. Also, just because something isn't recorded or documented doesn't mean it wasn't known or passed down. They had capabilities of drilling, sawing, chiseling, lathes (of some sort), and precision grinding. This much is clearly visible by the artifacts made. A lot of people are ignorant of things like how you can work harder stone by utilizing fracture points and grinding. People made it work. Perhaps some of the techniques were lost, but most can simply be explained by ingenuity and skill.

      @brianhowe201@brianhowe201Ай бұрын
    • He said a previous civilization, not aliens. Although it's unlikely you found a reliable source that gives a good answer when it simply can't be achieved without modern tools, and more likely you were fooled into thinking it was.

      @burtpanzer@burtpanzerАй бұрын
    • Man i was sceptycznie to but when u See Those thing in real life u just cant Imagine how they did it with Mainstream and explanation and Tools they say they used… and Those wases… it is Granite and Look how Perfect, smooth and complex they Are. We underestimate relay humans and civilisation for sure it is true but there Are some exception when simple there is now way of doing something with Tools they have Access To. Noone is Talking about Aliens, but maybe there was civilisation that failed and remains merged with egyptians for example. There Are many plausible explanation but mainstream egyptologists Are just closed to every other explanation then theirs

      @zarombiste9158@zarombiste9158Ай бұрын
    • If the aliens were so smart, how come they had to go and where did they go? And why did they build in the local stone rather than just make everything with better alloys.

      @TheRflynn@TheRflynnАй бұрын
    • @@TheRflynn It wasn't aliens.

      @burtpanzer@burtpanzer16 күн бұрын
  • I would like to throw a theory out there into the universe. Maybe someone else can do the legwork to support it. Let's have a look at the available resources capable of moving 100+ ton blocks of granite. Certainly it is unreasonable to think wood and rope could do the job as the sheer amount of material needed to achieve work on such mass is inconceivable if not impossible. How thick and how long would a rope need to be of natural materials to hoist 100 tons of granite? Or rather the compression strength of woods available? Simply not feasible with these available resources. Even the metals available, copper and brass, could not support such loads. That being said what is left that could handle such weight over distances? I postulate that this is simpler than we expect. Imagine if you will, flooding a huge track of land under several feet of water and then floating the needed blocks from quarry to site with rafts and then simply floating the blocks down into position from the rafts. You would then have transportation and supporting equipment needed to drop the block into place. Once completed, simply drain back the water like a beaver with its dam. Explaining the water marks and possibly even the dessert terrain left behind upon draining. It's certainly easier to move water than it is to move stone. Food for thought.

    @toxok@toxokАй бұрын
  • Inside universe you loves the "Greyunit". Seriously though you guys put some seeerious work into this! I bloody loved it and did not know anything about the chambers below and adjacent the pyramid or the fire damage to the giant statues. This My favourite video you've made it's awesome x

    @jobzagudn@jobzagudn2 ай бұрын
    • Yes, a absolutely brilliant video, best ever!

      @fennynough6962@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
  • This goes to my favorite playlist

    @attilarza2488@attilarza2488Ай бұрын
  • Your Amazing, Thanks For Sharing With Us,I Am In Awe Of Your Adventures. ❤

    @thomasbruder6702@thomasbruder670220 күн бұрын
  • This is - by far - the best program I have ever seen on this topic. All the thoughts I've had for years are addressed here, without prejudice and with logical expertise. I am absolutely thrilled and want more of it. I send my sincere thanks and warmest greetings from Cyprus!

    @niemandschuldet@niemandschuldet26 күн бұрын
  • It's probably something as simple as an ancient elite's underground bunker 🤷‍♀️ they're building them now too! i still believe the people of that time had some kind of technology that softened or displaced rock particles. Sort of like building with a malleable clay

    @artivan111@artivan1112 ай бұрын
  • Notice how some of the doorways have cut set backs into them? Like our doors today Aswell allowing a 'seal' stone to cover and 'lock' it possibly

    @danielthompson3205@danielthompson32052 ай бұрын
    • Or wooden doorway?

      @garychandler4296@garychandler4296Ай бұрын
  • Wow i knew the pyramid had water flowing underneath but i didnt know of the pump and the pulse just like a quartz watch generating electricity

    @hawirawaenga6167@hawirawaenga6167Ай бұрын
  • Extremely well-researched and excellently presented! Many thanks👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻✅️✅️✅️

    @ClaimTheDensity@ClaimTheDensity6 күн бұрын
  • The disk is a grain or seed broadcast spreader. It would hang horizontally on the bottom of a wagon, a hole in the bottom of the wagon would let the seed fall onto the spinning disk which would cast seed (and/or possibly fertilizer) all over the field

    @gregsteele9002@gregsteele9002Ай бұрын
    • Wrong ,too fragile for even that.

      @vangleasen@vangleasenАй бұрын
    • Could've just made it out of wood. Incredibly shaped thin stone disc for a farmers wagon?

      @FLAGMACHINE11@FLAGMACHINE11Ай бұрын
    • That's great. How is it mere thousanths of an inch off perfectly symmetrical on all axes and how was it made? Absolutely not by hand.

      @simonrussell77@simonrussell77Ай бұрын
    • What about the heat or burn marks they mentioned on it? Heat wouldn't be conducive to propagating plants.

      @abrahamlincoln26@abrahamlincoln26Ай бұрын
  • 2:20 black shirt - that's me! :)

    @NickBrown79@NickBrown79Ай бұрын
  • "have led some to speculate" What a tremendously solid intellectual basis shown here.

    @warrentaylor6230@warrentaylor62305 күн бұрын
  • This is a 10/10 video. Well done. Must have taken you 400 hours to do

    @MatthewCashew3@MatthewCashew3Ай бұрын
  • To make granite boxes like that today would involve attaching slabs together using bolts and rods.Not sure how or rather why you would do this from one piece of stone,the work involved would be madness.Definitely unknown tools.

    @EVIL_ENGINEER.@EVIL_ENGINEER.Ай бұрын
    • They did it because it was easy... with whatever tech they had

      @toddwebb9596@toddwebb9596Ай бұрын
    • They had both the knowledge, skills and tools to make what you just saw, otherwise you wouldn't be able to see it.

      @user-vf4pu8qp9d@user-vf4pu8qp9dАй бұрын
    • It is not intended for us to know and understand just yet. We have regressed instead of progressed.

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
    • We are now operating at a lower vibrational frequency than they were.

      @jameshhenderson8243@jameshhenderson8243Ай бұрын
  • Imagine the dude that knocked up that Sacara bird (probably a toy for his kid) knowing we is discussing it thousands of years later😂

    @spence2126@spence2126Ай бұрын
  • Amazing work going though all this. 👍

    @BABS644@BABS64425 күн бұрын
  • Only problem with the pyramids being built for electricity is why. What evidence do we have for them using such electricity? The water pump is also weird since water is very destructive and the vibrations it causes might bring down the pyramid. Did the other 2 pyramids have the same type of tunnels?

    @ktloz2246@ktloz224622 күн бұрын
    • It's pathologically ridiculous too to imply that they went to such an insane effort to build some electrical generator from stone when the most powerful kinetic force of energy in all of Africa is literally running beside the pyramids. aka the river Nile. No one would build a pyramid to generate power when a basic frickin water wheel on the riverside could harness the energy more efficiently.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 күн бұрын
  • You should check out Uncharted X episode about the near perfect stone jars 1:24 that couldn't be made even today. They do all sorts of tests on the same type of jars on uncharted X

    @MAGATRON-DESTROY@MAGATRON-DESTROYАй бұрын
    • Watch this liar Ben? 😂😂😂😂 no thx, I dont wanna be deceived …

      @holladiewaldfee7518@holladiewaldfee7518Ай бұрын
  • Sounds like the Osireion is a fuel rod cooling pool!

    @TheBludgutz@TheBludgutzАй бұрын
  • This is a masterpiece of open-minded thought and research. It is ONLY through such a mindset that we will EVER begin to understand the part of the past that is lost to us - wiped clean by a disaster that, world-wide, took out a civilization that was far, far more proficient at making incredibly durable structures, carved directly into Basalt. The fact that whatever happened wiped out even THESE people, advanced as they were, makes it the most important task that all of humankind should be bending heaven and earth, and working together, to master - and better - the technology they were using, if any of us are to survive as they did. How incredibly advanced they were is made all the more obvious by the fact that so many of their structures, all around the world, survived intact. When it comes our turn to face this cycle of destruction, we will disappear like ants in a flood and volcanos. This civilization, whoever they were, gave this catastrophe a run for its money - and even left us warnings - which, of course, our "experts" completely deny and ignore (even purposely HIDING IT!). If we cannot adapt and learn, we will simply disappear, this time - and it will be the LAST time. Our wood, cement, and metal-and-glass skyscrapers, will disappear like toothpicks in a hurricane - along with every single one of us. Thank you for what you have done, here - it's like a miracle to FINALLY see a stubborn attempt to uncover what is left, and the thorough and honest research that will begin its recovery. I only hope we have time to over-ride the idiotic "pride" of our mainstream "experts," and uncover what they were trying to tell us, and the technology they mastered to build the most durable dwellings and underground cities, seemingly as easy as cutting butter with a hot knife. They did not go down easily, and that is why we are still here.

    @art.is.life.eternal@art.is.life.eternal28 күн бұрын
    • Maybe they brought destruction on themselves, as we are doing too 😈

      @Tjescoo@Tjescoo22 күн бұрын
    • Maybe look into the 138yr cycle of Pheonix Rising. There are a number of writings and history of this cyclical and cosmic to earth event. A great start would be Jason Breshears of Archaix. He shows masses of references, fact and recording that take this particular rabbit hole into clearer spaces UNDERNEATH our known surface. Although it is very possible I bark up the wrong tree with him already being a part of your arsenal of Truthering, and if so, I hope and trust this will aid others.

      @deancummings5285@deancummings528521 күн бұрын
    • Your insightful comment expresses my feelings and thoughts about this remarkable production much better than I could have done. Thank you.

      @KenParsonswasp@KenParsonswasp19 күн бұрын
    • I think that they accomplished this because ALL their people were educated in what they did best, and they worked together. Currently, we have actual savage, uneducated people causing problems that don’t need to exist, and sociopathic/psychopathic leaders that do not care for the well being of their people 😢. I hope humanity can rise above all this nonsense soon, because if we do; we can make heaven on earth!!!

      @Private-wj4nd@Private-wj4nd18 күн бұрын
    • In fact, today we can go a step further and say that we know who built the magnificent megalithic structures at Giza and all over the planet Earth... It is remembered in humans memory because it is not really that excessively old (conditionally speaking because it is within 230,000 years period when "Kingship Crown descended from Heaven to Earth" by Sumerians). To understand this issue, it is necessary to approach the analysis of myths and so-called. "religious books" in a modern way... I suggest, for example, Mr. Mauro Biglino, at least as far as the Old Testament is concerned. Best regards !!!

      @vladomacar1372@vladomacar137217 күн бұрын
  • My father a stone mason and conservator for the British museum after setting up the king Tutankhamen exhibition over 50years ago said to my family facts the Egyptians never built the pyramids they were already there and the sphinx is seriously old and the British museum knows it There is just so much evidence …

    @paulsnook5408@paulsnook5408Күн бұрын
  • What if something like a solar flare (pardon me if my terminology is incorrect for what I'm trying to say), was among the possible cataclysmic events endured by ancient civilizations of Earth?...could that be where the desert glass came from? Could that explain some of the motivations behind some megalithic engineering at some locations across the world? Would the crash of meteorite create desert glass as well source the iron for The Boy King's knives and winged scarab necklace? My mind is wondering through this two hour series of little hints and unanswered questions....

    @JennJenification@JennJenificationАй бұрын
    • some people propose that the desert glass might have been caused by ancient nuclear bombing since nuclear tests in deserts have produced similar looking glass and there are sites around the world that have unusually high radiation levels without obvious explanation, but it could also have been just meteorites, since this kind of glass has also been found close to impact craters. Another thing to consider is that the sahara desert was not a desert at the time of the cataclysm, so whatever caused the glass would have to have happened long before 12,500 years ago, unless the desert formed very quickly and the event was still going on. the glass could be millions of years old or just 12,000.

      @sshreddderr9409@sshreddderr9409Ай бұрын
    • Volcanoes can produce glass, iridium, microdiamonds, etc. Just like meteors make.

      @8arrows@8arrowsАй бұрын
    • Younger Dryas meteor impact 12900 years ago is more likely hypotesis. Looks it up

      @mr.highed8978@mr.highed8978Ай бұрын
    • @@mr.highed8978I think its both of them, cause the burn marks can not be explained with just meteorites. I think it was more like an event that affected large parts of the solar system, possibly it passed through a stream of meteors or something, affecting both earth and the sun, resulting in those outbursts and meteors hitting earth. likely there was a period of smaller meteor impacts, solar outbursts etc. during hundreds or even multiple thousands of years, with some large ones being really devastating and rapidly melting the ice caps. maybe thats why they did so much construction underground during that time period.

      @sshreddderr9409@sshreddderr9409Ай бұрын
    • I've read that desert glass can be created by lightning. Not necessarily nuclear bombing :D

      @Oliwav@OliwavАй бұрын
  • Current thoughts of antiquity historians needs review and rejection that humans 3k years ago had the tools and technology to build such mega structures. These are much older based on erosion and made by a long extinct civilization or outside help. The fact that all tools used but not found suggests to me that maybe there was an alien presence that brought their own tools? Sounds crazy but what other theory makes plausible sense?

    @bobbray9666@bobbray96662 ай бұрын
    • All they needed was wooden wedges and mallets to shape the stone. See Ancient Aliens Debunked the movie. They demonstrate the ancient technique

      @davidlancaster8152@davidlancaster81522 ай бұрын
    • That said, you are correct many of these constructions are older than described and the placing of the stones in situ is still a mystery

      @davidlancaster8152@davidlancaster81522 ай бұрын
    • A complete joke to think the Egyptians built this. People are not opened minded enough to think we had an advanced civilization long ago.

      @kevint10121@kevint101212 ай бұрын
    • Just how long would a wooden tool last trying to shape granent?

      @auggies@auggies2 ай бұрын
    • @@auggies watch Ancient Aliens Debunked the movie

      @davidlancaster8152@davidlancaster8152Ай бұрын
  • One thing I'd like to add is that I remember hearing that many of these sites, all over the world are mostly built with granite or other similar rock known for it's conductive properties. More importantly, most of these structures have been found to be lined underneath with Mica or a combination of materials which are high mica content. Mica is well known for being non-conductive, or an insulator. I saw or read a few documentaries on this phenomenon back in the late 1990s - early 2000s and haven't heard much about it since.

    @abrahamlincoln26@abrahamlincoln26Ай бұрын
    • It’s called burying the knowledge

      @bruceweirich3733@bruceweirich3733Ай бұрын
    • ​@bruceweirich3733 I guess I was trying to hard to allude you to a conclusion, but I wasn't clear enough. So I'll explain the theory differently: With the conductive granite lined mica insulating it from the ground (or other things, like people), on your mind... what modern things do we see every day that uses conductive materials that are insulated to control energy flowing through it? That's right! There are all kinds of things like this. Electric wires. Microchips. Lights. Computers. Etc. Does that make more sense? The interesting thing is that if you look at most of these ancient sites and pyramids and other architecture that we've been calling "temples". If you look at them using an aerial view and x-ray vision, so that you can see all of the pillars and interior rooms inside of these "temples", they look just like our modern microchips. I think that most of them are technology that we've forgotten how to use.

      @abrahamlincoln26@abrahamlincoln26Ай бұрын
    • "are mostly built with granite" Nope. The Giza pyramids are like 99.5+% limestone. "granite or other similar rock known for it's conductive properties" It really isn't. Even if it was especially conductive (which it isn't), the sheer volume of the rock would cause an electrical current to face massive resistance, losing most of the energy to heat. Even gold and copper do not conduct well if the material is as thick and wide as a pyramid block. These are just basic facts of physics and electronics. Jesus the sheer amount of basic scientific ignorance in these comments is like you all skipped half of school - what do they teach you??!?!?!

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 күн бұрын
  • I doubt this water pump idea. The problem here is the lower chamber is highly counterproductive, it even effectively reduces(!) the utility of the pump due to the dampening effect of the compressed air bubble (which reduces the upward pressure and acts as a spring). Hence the pump is most effective if the chamber is always filled with water by 100%, so the ceiling erosion marks of water CONTRADICT the pump theory. (The chamber is not the pressure vessel, as this must be put AFTER the delivery valve and not before it. Even then the ceiling markings do contradict.) Read: Perhaps water was used to create some mechanical pressure pulses this way, but then pumping water was certainly not the purpose. Also those type of water pumps need a very high mass of flowing water (which must drain somewhere) to just transport a very small amount of water upwards, hence it creates a poor pump even with the size of a pyramid. For example you can utilize such pumps to continuously fill some water tower slowly to supply some houses or fountains, but you certainly cannot use it to pump enough water to water vast amounts of dry farmland in a desert or create a small sea. For more see "Hydraulic ram" in Wikipedia.

    @valentinhilbig@valentinhilbigАй бұрын
  • Human brains 🧠 were fundamentally the same then as they are now. Mos of the improvements have been as a result of consistent nutrition, i.e. they were just as intelligent as we are today. Tools don't make the man.👽👽👽👽

    @phil20_20@phil20_20Ай бұрын
    • They likely ate and appreciated real food and ate far less of it, didn't spend their whole life in a hurry while pre-occupied with saving time. Not worrying about what the neighbor thinks about anything, Having tools is one thing, but knowing how they are used quite another.We cannot be very intelligent knowing full well we are destroying the environment, water soil & air on our planet yet we still produce massive non- biodegradable waste, drive our shitbox vehicles daily, consume Coca Cola, energy drinks and sugar based fluids all the while shunning pure water, Play idiotic video games and watch fictionial movies for most our waking or free hours in life. Not much intelligence to find here there folks, just bored consumers supporting another bean counter on the hill.

      @westwardHo-@westwardHo-Ай бұрын
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