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:
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.
I'm glad you're going down this string of thought.
What if instead of electricity or hydraulics, we had a system of vibration?
Lead tubes filled with mercury being vibrated like electrons are vibrated by alternating current.
The vibrations send out a frequency, and a portion of mercury in a resonant-sensitive apparatus would vibrate at the same frequency, with no wires or connection points necessary.
Such a system applies the phenomena of sympathetic resonance, where plucking one of two strings tuned to the same frequency will cause the other string to vibrate in sympathy.
Mercury is a "fatty" liquid -- which is to say it is the most dense of all room temperature liquids. That density makes it the ideal conduit for large-scale resonance with minimal loss.
Now does it make sense why SO MUCH mercury is often isolated beneath ancient structures?
I'm not saying I believe this theory wholeheartedly, but it at the very least seems plausible, and jives with what Nikola Tesla suggested was possible.
It is amazing and the more I dig, the more I believe that we are closer to understanding just how advance the ancients (or not so ancients) were. Think of how clean and free this energy would be and the health benefits of these healing frequencies! It is very exciting to come to this realization after you get through the murk of being lied to about what our history really was. If you look at the repetitive perfection of the intricacies of these ancient buildings that are carved into granite and other hard stones, it had to be done by means of ultra powerful frequencies using hydropower and magnetic energy. Like watching water reacting to a song with high bass or range. It is so fascinating!
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.
https://medium.com/konsiteo-today/shinbashira-pagodas-exceptional-earthquake-resistance-9d7e3eac1d6d
In Japan, they developed large towers designed to slide and wobble in order to contain and disperse the seismic energies of the earth evenly, thereby avoiding disaster.
Within them is a large, central column that bears the brunt of all the seismic forces, and as it sways back and forth, it slowly releases the impulses felt within the tower at a steady rate.
It's not a far stretch to realize you can harness that energy, and find a way to release it out of the central column in a large burst.
By matching the resonant frequency of the pillar, like a large tuning fork, it's plausible you can tap into the energy of the pillar, like a massive sympathetic string.
...
I'm not gonna rule out that there may be similar technology having been employed in many grand cathedrals scattered across the world, whose true function has been lost by intentional obfuscation or simply by neglect.
They used very particular types of stone, and some not readily local. Stone is actually a fantastic conduit for seismic forces -- every bit as much as glass or crystal can be, depending on scale. The harder a substance is, the more readily able it is to propagate a force throughout it. This resistance to morphing is actually what allows the piezoelectricity of crystals to produce an impulse in quartz-crystal watches. You would, however, need some way to tap into the charge being produced, whether by a catalyst of some sort (the bells) or some other apparatus.
...
It's just a thought I had, and I'm not beholden to it. But these are the tidbits I've picked up which have informed my hypothesis, which is why I offered it up for discussion.
And the giant archways that are actually enormous horseshoe magnets.
I too am a fan of EwarAnon, great series!
It was excellent and resonated with me like the final placement in a 1000-piece puzzle. I actually teared-up several times in it because it was so beautifully done.