Retarded fucking video casually states as fact that the Swedes had hydro power in the 1200s, therefore Tom Bombadil (hill, water, and wood) represents hydro power. I would ask if you are really this gullible, but...
A brief internet search finds that the Han Dynasty in China conceived of hydropower over 2000 years ago.
Typically when we think of hydropower, we think of hydroelectricity. The concept of the water wheel is an ancient one that only recently (historically) was modified for use in the industrial revolution.
I think the spirit of the video was in shedding light on the Cabal's dislike of independence and self sufficiency. We can all be like Tom Bombadil if we choose, and live apart from the Cabal. The Cabal only has power over us if we choose to allow them to.
The carefree jolly Tom symbolizes what humanity will become once we are freed from the clutches of the Cabal's Central Banking system.
He specifically mention the Swedes, not the Chinese. Even if someone conceived of such a thing somewhere in the distant past, you cant say hill, water, and wood meant hydroelectric power to Tolkien, when almost nobody even knew about such things at that time. The metaphor would be meaningless to literally everyone, hence it is not what he meant, obviously.
Hydropower. Not hydroelectric power. You’re conflating the two.
Originally, the mills in the industrial revolution ran on straight water-to-wheel-to-belt-to-machine water power. Which really isn’t all that complicated. Water wheels were used to power saw mills and grist mills for even longer.
It wasn’t until Edison like a hundred or so years later that mills converted to hydroelectric.
Retarded fucking video casually states as fact that the Swedes had hydro power in the 1200s, therefore Tom Bombadil (hill, water, and wood) represents hydro power. I would ask if you are really this gullible, but...
A brief internet search finds that the Han Dynasty in China conceived of hydropower over 2000 years ago.
Typically when we think of hydropower, we think of hydroelectricity. The concept of the water wheel is an ancient one that only recently (historically) was modified for use in the industrial revolution.
I think the spirit of the video was in shedding light on the Cabal's dislike of independence and self sufficiency. We can all be like Tom Bombadil if we choose, and live apart from the Cabal. The Cabal only has power over us if we choose to allow them to.
The carefree jolly Tom symbolizes what humanity will become once we are freed from the clutches of the Cabal's Central Banking system.
https://www.hydropower.org/iha/discover-history-of-hydropower
https://fuergy.com/blog/the-early-history-of-water-power#:~:text=The%20earliest%20known%20version%20of,in%20southern%20Europe%20and%20China.
He specifically mention the Swedes, not the Chinese. Even if someone conceived of such a thing somewhere in the distant past, you cant say hill, water, and wood meant hydroelectric power to Tolkien, when almost nobody even knew about such things at that time. The metaphor would be meaningless to literally everyone, hence it is not what he meant, obviously.
Hydropower. Not hydroelectric power. You’re conflating the two.
Originally, the mills in the industrial revolution ran on straight water-to-wheel-to-belt-to-machine water power. Which really isn’t all that complicated. Water wheels were used to power saw mills and grist mills for even longer.
It wasn’t until Edison like a hundred or so years later that mills converted to hydroelectric.
No, you know I meant electricity