I like many others have run down many rabbit holes and one that keeps sticking at me is Tartaria. Was this empire real? Was there a great reset? Was WW1 used to destroy evidence of the empire? Why is the flag of the Rothschilds a knight stabbing a griffin and the flag of Tartaria a yellow flag with a griffin on it?
To me, it seems entirely plausible that we are living in some sort of weird post-reset civilization. It only takes a couple of generations for people to lose their freedom. How many does it take to wipe an Empire from existence?
I remember studying about the Tartan Empire so it was a real thing...
...I don't know about the advanced technology and mud flood theories....
The orphanages and orphan trains, ships etc. In London in the 1880s+ there were dozens of orphanages, but in each orphanage there were thousands of children. The mud floods intrigue me too.
I'm also intrigued by the number of "Insane Asylums", built during the formative years of the US. Why the need for these huge, elaborate structures in a fledgling country with a fairly small population? These places were built in about the mid-1800s in places with very low population density. Many in the Midwest and Southern states. Like their own little cities. If you like rabbit holes, just google images for these places. They're massive.
Yes there is one still standing in central Illinois in a town called Lincoln. It had many names but I believe it’s most well known as the Lincoln State School. It’s massive; it had it own power generation and was essentially its own self sustaining town within the town. Lots of evidence that horrible things were taking place there. For certain there was a massive eugenics program there prior to WWII, that is public information and has been written about at length. Most/all of the locals who knew are now dead and it’s difficult to get anyone to talk about it today.
There is a huge cemetery that adjoins the property on one side, a casual drive through it will show you hundreds, maybe thousands, of children and young adults that died all within specific time frames. Many people have speculated that the grounds of the property have at least as many dead buried in unmarked graves. The state owns the massive property, does nothing with it, and it’s a felony to step foot on it (although loads of explorers still do ofc). My personal belief is that the state of IL blows millions of tax dollars per year to maintain and cordon off the property because that is less of a problem than allowing it to be purchased and then new owners to uncover what’s been literally buried all over it.
It’s a very interesting rabbit hole to go down.
Super interesting!!
Thanks for the info! I believe that's one of the facilities that I have a photograph of. There are many throughout the US. I'm always amazed at how huge, and expensive they must have been to build. Not to mention many were built before there was any real infrastructure, and no real way to get all the material there other than horse and cart.
Edit: in that very same town, there was a 2nd gigantic institution owned and run by the international order of odd fellows. Most of that one is gone today but there still stands a smaller campus of buildings, still owned by IOOF. That whole town is a freemason den and imo highly suspicious. Worth the visit if you live in the midwest and like to investigate this kind of thing.
Yes. I’ve seen many videos on the asylums and the orphanages. It’s no accident that history is being wiped by the cabal. What do we call it today? Disinformation information? And the likes of countries in the EU and Canada are bringing in laws if you just talk about info. they don’t want you repeating.
And they are always super haunted. Makes you wonder what went on there.
Yup. But even more than the hauntings, I'm amazed at how huge and expensive they must have been to build. Plus, where were they getting all the people to fill them? These places had interiors to rival palaces. Why??
The first insane asylum in the US:
"Eastern State Hospital is a psychiatric hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia. Built in 1773, it was the first public facility in the present-day United States constructed solely for the care and treatment of the mentally ill. The original building had burned but was reconstructed in 1985."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_State_Hospital_(Virginia)