On the left we have a picture of ruins of an ancient city, and on the right we have a picture of a computer motherboard....
(media.greatawakening.win)
Other Topic
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (115)
sorted by:
See Christopher Dunn's writings on ancient uses for the pyramids at Giza.
A family friend said he looked the Pyramids as well, and suggested that they probably had several notable uses, but most of all they were a set of prospecting and land surveying compasses.
For example, at any point around the Valley of Kings in Egypt, all the tombs are scattered in craggy rocks and ravines. There appears to be no indication how they ensured one grave plot didn't intersect with another's grave plot. This applies to any land plotting, not just the graves, mind you.
By having a large pyramidical structure amidst the valley, which you can see from any decent vantage point, you can calculate the surface area of each side of the pyramid and discern your relative location depending on the ratio of one triangle's visual surface area compared to the other.
As you physically move around the pyramid, you get a different perspective and one side of the pyramid grows in relative area while the other shrinks. Set up a stand that holds a paper in front of the pyramid, trace around the white limestone that used to be on the pyramid and would pierce through the translucent papyrus, and then calculate the surface areas of each triangle. Take the ratio, and you know the exact radial degree you are from the pyramid's center-point, the Keystone on top.
You can calculate the distance, then, by comparing the ratio of size between two or more of the pyramids.
Then, knowing the direction of the sun gives you a North, South, East, and West direction as well as knowing the relative location to the Nile, and BAM, you can pinpoint exactly where you are relative to the Pyramid.
Don't forget the domed resonators of tartaria which still spinkle the land under the guise of Gothic architecute
Here's a thought:
What if gothic structures act as large batteries? Slowly building up charge and taking in Earth frequencies.
Then, maybe ringing the bells that are often situated atop them discharges the battery and sends an impulse throughout the air and land.
For what reason? Well, it depends on who built it and why.
I believe everything that we consider old world architecture had a purpose of supplying and distribution of electricity and well-being. Water and mercury were also major factors in these systems. Recently, stores of mercury were found underneath ancient ruins in Mexico. Of course mainstream historians cannot explain why, but a few digs into our stolen history and one can start piecing the evidence together.
There used to be a person on Twitter (I got banned from there long ago) who thought places like modern stadiums act as batteries even down to the spiral walkways used to enter them.
And the giant archways that are actually enormous horseshoe magnets.
I too am a fan of EwarAnon, great series!
You're right.
I'm just using notable landmarks as an example of their use so people can understand how the system would function.
Campbell, West, Dunn, many many others have done lifetimes worth of work on the subject.
Cleopatra's needle could be said to be like a stick to locate by.
The pyramids were 'self-locators' for sure.....as 'navel of the world'. It also functioned as initiation chambers, a magical display of how things connect by form, sound, substance, measurement, color, gas, light, etc etc etc. The measurements involved are also a type of schooling in Divine Geometry with the Golden Ratio and Fibonacci sequence, with the 'gods' taking their names from the gematric equivalent of the numbers that denote their 'position' or meaning within the pantheon.
Also could generate sounds or waves in the ELF variety.
The earliest sanscrit description of war has an army forced to its knees and losing their bowels due to a sound from the pyramids.
Now called The Brown Sound................for reasons.