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?
Mudfloods is bullshit. There were people around the world as of 200 years ago who were trained in ancient building techniques, it was not the tartarian empire.
Have you watched the video Tartaria Mud Flood?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wpb_ySCL4ZQ
There are so many images of huge buildings, castles, and monuments that are partially buried in the mud. This is world wide. Check it out and tell me what makes sense to you, because none of it does to me.
It's even stranger than mud floods or an ancient tartarian empire in North America.
The spherical earth is an expanding condition and the Sumerians (via the Welsh) inhabited North America 800 years ago. The same knowledge as the cathedral builders of that time.
The earth is EXPANDING, not mudflooding.
https://youtu.be/Othb0xsvZb4
Expanding earth does make a lot of sense to me too!
I don't disagree that the earth may be expanding, but that would have nothing to do with why many places all over the globe experienced an event that submerged all of the standing buildings in 10-30 feet deep of mud.
Why do you think the expanding earth theory could explain the mud event?
Soil is nothing but heavily weathered minerals. A lot of time in the earths history for rock to decay. Continents breaking apart caused massive floods. Ripe for muddy conditions.
Yes... expanding earth is interesting, just looking at how coastlines that dovetail together. I'm not convinced expanding earth explains sunken buildings though, because the ground would have to go through liquifaction to do that.