What has been your favorite rabbit hole to explore since you’ve awoken? Looking for ideas and also genuinely curious!
🗣️ DISCUSSION 💬
I’m genuinely curious what interesting rabbit holes have been explored by other anons and which ones still keep you going back for more.
I do not think Tartaria is involved in America. I have seen insufficient reasonable evidence that supports that assertion. I don't think the architecture attributed to Tartary (in America) is Tartarian. The assumption is that the people of that period couldn't have, or wouldn't have been motivated to build those things. I don't think that is true. I think they very well could have, and were motivated to do so. I suggest AEWAR's channel, especially his work the past couple months, that support those statements. He presents very good arguments/evidence. He is a former "American Tartaria" investigator that has taken a new turn in his research. His new research is more in alignment with what I have found by digging a little deeper than most "Tartarian truthers" go, and it looks like he is headed towards the Roman Catholic Church and the freemasons as the motivators and creators of 18th and 19th century American (believed to be Tartarian) architecture.
One of the biggest protests I have with the Tartarian narrative is the belief that they died out in the 19th century and were part of America at that time. While I think it's true that they were largely diminished by the 19th century, I think their final demise was in the 20th century, which I will show evidence for. I think they had substantially shrunk in the early 18th century, all but wiped out by that time (compared to their former glory), and would almost certainly not have possibly been any part of "America" in the 18th or 19th centuries, no matter what else may be true about their involvement here.
I will definitely look into that channel. Lots of intrigue but always the same players.
Thoughts on Fomenko? And if you haven't actually read his works directly, don't bother to debunk lol
I have not read his work. It looks interesting, I will have a look.
I'm not sure what "don't bother to debunk" means. Does that mean if my work does not align with his that it must be wrong? If that is what you mean, I would suggest that it is foolish to put too much faith in any researcher. The Truth is whatever It Is. It is the effort of debate enjoined in earnest by independent researchers, the Gestalt of Many Minds, that gets us closer to the Truth. It is not found in the works of a single individual, no matter how smart they are, nor how much their beliefs align with yours.
Actually no that's not what I mean by that. It's frustrating that literally every single person who tries to debunk Fomenko always starts "I haven't actually read any of his trash, but..." like, his work is so in depth, nuanced and utterly thrilling, and unveils a completely alternative chronological paradigm, that it's impossible to critique unless you take the time to take him seriously first.
Heck, I almost want to spend a year debunking it simply because I don't WANT it to be true.
If he's right, were in the 9th century ad right now. The shroud of Turin is indeed Christ and is indeed from the supposed 12th century, because he makes a damn strong case that Christ happened about 800 years ago.
Google Fomenko pdf and you can get most of his translations free. Also, Fomenko archive to get the first four major works in his History Fiction or Science series
Wait, is that what I said? Is that even remotely close to what I said?
Is that even on the same fucking continent to what I said?
If you're going to start complaining, at least pretend to have heard what someone said before climbing a wall so that when you jump off with a sword in your hands you will have more force to cut someone's head off.
Seriously, if you want to communicate you need to listen to what someone actually says.
I said it was interesting. If I thought it was in any way important (whether or not it was true) I would look into it. Maybe at some point I will and I appreciate you bringing it to my attention because when I said "it looks interesting," I meant it.
At the moment however, I have much bigger fish to fry. Yes, bigger than a potentially missing thousand years.
Some old maps are very hard to explain, with names of US cities before they were even founded (DC, San Fransisco to name 2)
I'm not a big details guy but big picture guy and wont be coming out with a report. To me it seems freemasonry hijacked tartarian "churches" after a mud flood probay because those buildings were too large to easily destroy. The name freemason could even eludes to free buildings that they inheireted. It would of course be written in the history books that the freemason Roman catholics would claim these buildings as their own.
But that's why I love this place, we can all agree to disagree on the heresay evidence we've cultivated, because ultimately we were not there, the the books we are reading have been written by somebody else, not ourselves. Places we've never been. We are all chasing the dragon of historical enlightenment. I do appreciate your perspective and look forward to the report.
Can you point me to a map that has DC before it was founded? San Fransisco was a "mission" (which means large buildings and supporting population) long before it was a city proper.
Apologies I wasn't able to find anything. I think my mind jumped to conclusions thinking Nurembega was DC when that's not the case.
I appreciate the effort. That would have been interesting. According to my research it's even more fun than it being a "city." It was a land called Rome, with Seven Hills, On the Tibur, Owned by Pope, Francis (note the comma).
This land was 400 acres. I mapped out the dimensions (given in old timey measurements in the link above) and it contains most of the Capitol Mall, the White House, the Federal Reserve, and all sorts of other interesting D.C. establishments in that area. I think the Washington Monument is on the southeast corner of it (or close to it). It was given to the U.S. Government so the masons could build their pentagonal spell forms out of it.
All roads lead to Rome.