I was thinking about gold and why it's valuable. I get it, "dollar will collapse, gold is always valuable," but WHY?
And then I was thinking about the ancient civilizations, the ones pre-flood that were most likely highly advanced.. The ones that most likely were able to tap into frequencies, magnetic fields, and had advanced techniques that was lost to man. Techniques that men like Tesla eventually rediscovered, but cabal agents came and told them away (hence Epstein trolling around MIT, but that's a different topic).
I'm wondering if gold was used as a method to tapping into the power sources in the ancient world. Like, it more efficiently stabilized frequencies and made power a constant in the ancient ancient world. Who knows, I'm riffing here.
We know gold has unique properties when compared to the elements, and we know it's already used in electronics, electrical wiring, dentistry, medicine, and radiation shielding. Perhaps the ancient world harvested it as it expanded their power, and then the Flood hit, people lost the technology, but remembered gols: "it's valuable because our forefathers knew it was valuable, and maybe we'll tap into that so let's keep gathering more gold."
Maybe word-of-mouth and generational story telling eventually forgot how to leverage gold for energy, and it became a relic of the past, still valuable, but the inherent reason was lost.
Gold is highly malleable, electrically conductive and corrosion resistant.
That's really it. Gold is valuable because it meets all the requirements to make a good medium of trade. There's nothing magical about it.
It melts at a relatively low temperature and is softer than most metals, so it can easily be worked into coins or jewelry. It has an attractive color and doesn't tarnish. And it's rare enough to be valuable (water isn't good money because it's too common) but common enough to be used as a currency (platinum isn't good money because it's too rare).
Imagining that gold's history of use as money is based on forgotten magical powers instead of obvious and mundane physical characteristics is like stumbling across some hoofprints and saying "wow, unicorns must be real!" instead of just assuming they're from horses.
Gold is also a hard-limited resource. From what we "know", or believe we know -- because cosmic science, like most science, is never settled -- there is only so much gold on the planet we'll ever have.
Even in ancient times, due to the rarity of gold, this conclusion was easily reached. Also, as you say, its ability to be shaped into jewelry and polished to a good sheen made it valuable even then.
That it is electrically conductive and corrosion resistant (does not oxidize as easily as silver or copper) is another use case that will drive up the value, particularly towards scientific endeavors where gold is necessary for those reasons.
Gold will always have value, silver will always have value, and in a modern world, copper will always have value too.
Certain gemstone material will also always be valuable for certain use cases as well.
Rubies are the thing if you're working with high powered lasers
And diamond tip tools make life easier in masonry trades
Fortunately diamond is not actually that rare, it's just artificially inflated because of jewelry. Go figure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrYB-ZvIuPE
Not really. They never were. High power came from gasdynamic, chemical, and electric/gaseous lasers. Current high-powered lasers use doped glass filaments. And now we know how to make synthetic rubies.
Silver was valuable in the old days because it doesn't oxidize easily either. It does tarnish, but that is a relatively new problem. Silver tarnishes because of sulfur. Sulfur was not in high enough concentrations until the industrial revolution. Prior to this, gold and silver were correlated with the sun and the moon and were both highly valued because they did not break down over time. They seemed to have mystical powers because of their ability to resist chemical interactions with the natural world.
It is also self-defeating to try to fake. The only metals that have close to the same density are either more rare or more difficult to work.
"has value" and "makes good money" are two very different statements.
Aluminum cans ----- more stable than the US dollar.
While it's true that societal consensus plays a role, the value of gold as money is deeply ingrained for more concrete reasons. It is because gold is the element on the periodic table that best satisfies the requirements of the seven key attributes of money. Attributes of Money
Durability: Gold is highly resistant to corrosion and decay, making it enduring as a store of value.
Divisibility: Gold can be easily divided into smaller units without losing its value, facilitating transactions of varying sizes.
Fungibility: All pure gold is essentially the same, ensuring uniformity and interchangeability.
Portability: Gold's high value-to-weight ratio allows for easy transport and storage of wealth.
Recognizability: Its distinctive appearance and widespread recognition make gold easy to identify.
Limited Supply: Gold's scarcity, mined over millennia, maintains its value over time.
Acceptability: Across cultures and centuries, gold has been universally accepted as a medium of exchange. It's color is unique, and it is resistant to fraud and counterfeiting
This is probably the most perfect post I've seen detailing why gold has so long been used as currency.
Seriously, great post.
Obviously, I never took Economics 101. I'm going to have to go look up the difference between money and currency now.
And it's hard to fake. Fake gold is pretty easy to detect.
hard to fake heavy
Thanks. Gold only has "ornamental" value because society says it does.
Is has great material science value.
Same diamonds.
No --- you can make diamonds now
Well, you can "make" gold too (via neutron bombardment) . It's just astronomically cost prohibitive for the amount you get. :)
I think gold was valuable simply because it looks nice. Look at diamonds, they might be the most common thing in the world, with thousands of caves filled with millions of them, but our minds trick us into thinking they must be rare and valuable simply because of how shiny they are. To the point that many people simply can’t ever believe diamonds are super common.
And then con-artist elites just play along with the trickery of our minds. Gold may be just the same.
I don't think we believe diamonds are rare because they're shiny.
We think they're rare because De Beers and the Oppenheimer family have created a fake "shortage" of them. They simply keep the vast majority of them locked up in vaults.
I once read that if those vaults were opened up to the public, everyone on the planet could be wearing diamonds.
Think Jew-elry
Wonder where they came up with the name?
I doubt the name came from the word "jew".
It's more likely it came from the old French term "Jouel", and that word probably came from the Latin term "jocale".
Then you need to look at the etymology of the word "jew". It begins with old Hebrew "Yehudi" and goes through a couple of different transitions through Greek and Latin where it eventually ends up in Old French as "giu". Then it comes into English as "jew".
Both words went through Old French before we eventually ended up with the English variations. So if the term "jewelry" was going to be named after the word "jew", it would have done so well before it filtered down to modern English.
Sometimes we need to remember that the entire world doesn't speak English, and the English terms for both "jewelry" and "jew" are pretty modern terms for words that have existed in various languages for thousands of years.
Well joo might be right ;)
Diamonds > De Beers > Nathan Rothschild. It's fake and manipulated.
Diamonds are super common. My old man worked in a quarry and brought home huge ones all the time. Like multiple carots huge. It's the perfectly clear (no inclusions) and pretty colored ones that are rare. The others go into saw blades and such.
Herkimer Diamonds?
I was thinking the same. Diamonds don't come from quarries, they come from mines, and sometimes, are dredged from offshore deposits in S. Africa. Diamonds aren't as rare as the industry tries to portray, but they certainly aren't found in caves by the thousands, etc.
Yeah, I was involved in the exploration industry, so that jumped out at me. I've actually discovered a kimberlite, although it was just dumb luck not due to any skill.
cool! Where did you discover a kimberlite? I have BS and MS degrees in geology, and have been a "rockhound" since I was a kid, so I'm always interested in mineral collecting sites. My dream dig would be at a place where you can find gem quality tourmalines, but unfortunately, all the sites with that potential seem to be private mines.
The only way to understand this, for people who have never actually held real gold (atleast 22 carat gold), is to walk into a nice jewelry shop and hold some of the jewelry in your own hands, and perhaps try it on yourself or your partner.
Its hard to explain, but there is no denying that there is something about Gold that draws people to it.
No, its definitely not because "society says so". This connection might even be etched into our DNA.
Okay, I can get behind the idea of gold being ditched into our DNA. But then why, and why gold.
My post afirms that it's unique, But I'm trying to understand the deep down reason as to why it's so unique
Gold is found in the human body too, around 200 micrograms, mostly dealing with joints and electrical signals throughout the body. Overall I’m more in the camp of the physical versus the spiritual being more about golds value. Trump certainly likes gold, too
Monoatomic gold! They used to harvest that shit from people like adrenochrome!
Kek
My thought is that it’s tied to its magnetism, (under certain conditions). Also that it was used to perhaps make something similar to the Lovell monotherm.
Gold is diamagnetic, like many other materials and organic tissues.
In diamagnetism, the individual atoms (which have very small magnetic fields) will align their magnetic fields in the opposite direction of the external applied magnetic field. On a macroscopic level, this results in no movement whatsoever.
North poles dont attract north poles. Its why a perpetual motion machine hasnt been made yet.
If gold even had a normal magnetic moment at all, (due to imbalance of electrons), it wouldnt be as high as iron.
Iron is a smaller atom with a few imbalanced electrons (atleast the magnet type), they pack close because their small. High concentrated magnet field.
Gold has the same imbalance but its electron shell is massive compared. Cany pack as many gild in a place as iron. Irons stronger.
Which is precisely why diamagnetic materials are slightly repelled by an external magnetic field. My comment on "no movement whatsoever" is slightly incorrect due to oversimplification.
Magnetic moment refers to the strength and orientation of a magnetic field. I don't think there's such a thing as a "normal" magnetic moment; every substance and every atom is going to have its own unique moment.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/07/160727103434.htm
Could manipulation of this be used in levitation then?
Diamagnetic materials can be used in magnetic levitation, but they serve as stabilizers, not the source of the main lifting force. This link has a good overview:
https://www.physics.ucla.edu/marty/diamag/
Maglev trains operate on similar principles.
As for why gold isn't used, my guess is that it's too rare/is required in other applications, its diamagnetic response isn't strong enough, or that it needs to be kept too cold to make it work. When it comes to magnetic levitation, superconducting materials are the key as they have strong diamagnetic properties. Most of them have to be liquid nitrogen cold though, so the current goal is find room temperature (or close enough) superconductors.
I agree. I was never a gold guy, but a few years ago I decided to buy some bullion and picked up some gold and silver maples. I guess I had never held pure gold before because when I held the gold it immediately struck me as being exceptionally radiant and heavy. There is definitely “something” to it.
I think this thread can be be applied to anything. Why does anything have value? That’s simple, an items value increases based on how much people want it and how hard it is to get. People will always want gold for its beauty, useful properties, and its cultural significance.
Going back to OP’s question and I can get onboard with his hypothesis. I personally believe that in the past they were able to pull energy out of the aether, and distort the gravitational field. Judging by how much the cabal loves and hoards gold, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if gold played a role in facilitating this.
Okay, I can get behind the idea of gold being ditched into our DNA. But then why, and why gold.
My post afirms that it's unique, But I'm trying to understand the deep down reason as to why it's so unique
Beyond the standard reasons? That it is the only metal that has all these attributes:
Shiny and amazing to look at
Does not rust even after long time
Relatively easy metal to handle and make into Jewelry
Available in just enough quantities - not too much to make it worth less, and not too little to make it unaffordable
And this is not even looking into its industrial qualities.
These by itself should tell us why Gold is so unique.
Silver is better.
There's no such thing as an absolute "better", only "better" for specific purposes. If you want to make a knife, they're both terrible: steel is better.
What is silver better at than gold? Are there other purposes for which gold is better than silver?
Silver has several advantages over gold when it comes to industrial uses:
Electrical and Thermal Conductivity: Silver is the best conductor of electricity and thermal energy among all elements, making it indispensable in various electrical and electronic applications. It is used in electrical switches, circuits, and connectors due to its ability to conduct electricity efficiently.
Reflectivity: Silver is an excellent reflector of visible light, which makes it valuable in mirrors, telescopes, and optical instruments. Its high reflectivity also plays a role in solar panels and reflective coatings for windows.
Photography: Silver's light-sensitive properties have been widely used in traditional photography, where silver-based films and papers have been a standard for capturing images.
Batteries: Silver-zinc and silver-cadmium batteries have been used in applications like hearing aids and aircraft. Silver's high energy density and low self-discharge rate make it suitable for long-lasting batteries.
Catalysts: Silver is used as a catalyst in various chemical reactions, particularly in the production of chemicals such as formaldehyde and ethylene oxide.
Antibacterial Properties: Silver ions have natural antibacterial properties, making silver coatings and nanoparticles valuable in medical devices, wound dressings, and water purification systems.
Superconductivity: Silver can exhibit superconducting properties at very low temperatures, which is essential in some scientific and medical applications, like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Well said fren.
Copy pasta from the web lol
Close, but not quite. Gold is actually a slightly better conductor, very slightly. Silver is used in electronics because it is much cheaper, and for all practical purposes as good of a conductor as gold.
Everyone on the web says silver is a better conductor?
https://education.seattlepi.com/gold-vs-silver-conductance-4559.html
I'm so glad you feel that way. I'll trade you silver for whatever gold you have, ounce for ounce.
Silver will tarnish. There are chemicals made of silver like silver nitrate which used to be important in the photographing industry before digital imaging. It is very hard to make chemicals out of gold. The ancients would pan for gold because it was usually in metal form. Most metals are not. Pick up a clump of dirt anywhere on this world and chances are it has Iron & Aluminum in it but you can't see them because there are in other chemicals. Gold is the least reactive metal. I think Platinum is next. A gold coin will be unchanged thought the centuries.
Gold is just dirty silver. 😆
Gold is precipitated sunlight. Sounds woowoo but I like that description.
Gold (the element) is made only in stars I believe. So, yea that's kinda true
-Carl Sagan
Most people dont realize that gold is not from the planet Earth. It was deposited here from a very large explosion a long time ago.
Stars are like neurons. They communicate via light intensity, mass ejections, and explosions sending material and changing gravitational dynamics. We truly live inside the mind of GOD
100%. It doesn't corrode, it is ‘testable’ to validate/verify that is not ‘fake’ without the need for fancy electronics. Gold because of its weight (heavy) and maleability, silver because of its reactive nature with common stuff (reacts fast with sweat - turns black …. Leaves ‘black streaks’)
And that is the true value of gold: nothing else has so many properties of a perfect currency.
U/sleepydude had a couple interesting posts before he moved to his substack you may find worth reading:
https://greatawakening.win/p/12hReR86lE/im-working-on-something-big-will/
https://greatawakening.win/p/12hkTp1pK9/more-proof-adrenochrome-is-a-red/c/
Substack: https://sleepydude.substack.com/p/the-gold-teaser
God's City is made of gold.
Revelation 21:18
I read somewhere that American Indians used a certain seashell as money and the tribe around the Mississippi was the biggest hoarder of them.
Other culture have used seashells. And why not.
During a period of.time in England, at least for tax purposes, sticks were used.
Anything that can be moved, can be used as money. Landtitles, eggs, swords, you name it.
The value May differ. A Philippe patek watch of a couple of thousand dollars may yield only 200 and a rusty gun in Philly.
wam·pum /ˈwämpəm/ noun
small cylindrical beads traditionally made by some North American Indian peoples from shells, strung together and worn as decoration or used as money.
"strings of wampum"
Look into ORMUS, sometimes called ORMES, not sure on the acronym.
Orbitally Rearranged Monoatomic Elements
or something like that.
It mainly refers to gold but it can be done with other metals. Basically there is a chemical process for breaking down the metallic bonds (decentralized electron cloud) in gold so that it is reduced to individual atoms (not sharing electrons). When it's in this form it has properties like being superconducting at room temperature.
You can get it online as a tincture and take it as a supplement. Supposedly cures a lot of things because the gold atoms actually infuse into your cells and the superconductivity helps to connect you to the planet's magnetic field.
...white gold ( ORMUS ) shem-an-na is why we were seeded on this planet to mine it, it supposedly has healing qualities ( energize the body and mind ) when ingested
I saw a video years ago where some explorers were investigating the various pyramids located around the world. Anyway, I can't remember all the details but what stuck with me is the pile of Monoatomic gold they found in one of the inner rooms of one of these pyramids. Just an interesting tidbit that stuck with me.
My issue with using gold as a payment method in a societal meltdown is who exactly is going to be doing things like using it to make jewelry or computer/electronic parts?
That type of industry is going to be shut down for quite a long time if some major crisis occurs where people aren't taking cash money.
Food and medicine are what people will most likely be bartering when the collapse comes. Along with booze and cigarettes. That is going to be what people want/need.
Maybe gold will be useful for reestablishing wealth when society starts to rebuild. But it's basically just a guess when that will happen. It could be years. It could be decades. 🤷
Obviously just my opinion, but if there is some huge thing that happens where people are a) suddenly no longer able to continue making money as before and b) the money system we have now becomes useless, it's going to cause a lot of deaths in a short amount of time.
Remember that the vast majority of the US do not have more than 3 days worth of food in their homes, and are not buying up gold and silver to exchange. So once they run out of food, and are no longer able to buy more, things are going to get really ugly really quickly.
I don't know what percentage of the population is on a maintenance medication for things like heart disease or diabetes, but I'm going to guess it's pretty high seeing as how heart disease is the number 1 killer and diabetes is up there as well. And the majority of people don't have more than a month's supply of medication, they're going to start seeing people die pretty quickly without those drugs. I just don't see Big Pharma and pharmacies staying open with no one being paid.
And then, after we have the first die-off of people from starvation and lack of medication, all the secondary deaths will start. Probably mostly from accidents, infections, etc... People suddenly trying to do things like grow their own food, chop firewood, or any of the other labor-type jobs that people aren't used to doing for themselves because they pay others to do it or there was an alternative before.
And then we have to think of how many people will be murdered for their food and other resources. Especially in the cities where they will all be competing for the limited amount of resources inside the city. People living in rural areas will most likely fare better because a) there aren't as many people and b) they can hunt/grow food more easily.
So I see it taking a long, long time before society rebounds enough where we're going to be able/interested in things like jewelry and computer parts.
If you've got yourself set up to deal with life until that happens and you have gold set aside to re-establish "wealth" during/after society's recovery period, then you are certainly sitting pretty.
But if you're not prepared to survive the stuff that happens before society starts to recover enough to want/need gold that badly, I think that using your resources to just buy gold is short-sighted.
Of course, this is only my opinion. And I certainly don't have a crystal ball telling me what will happen in an event that we've never experienced before.
I just look at how people deal with disasters like hurricanes and realize how truly unprepared most people are for going even a couple of weeks without their usual safety nets.
Thats a bit out there, but gold is extremely useful in the chemical and electronic fields, so it would remain pretty valuable even if we discarded it as a currency right now for, say, bottle caps or acorns
Don't forget that gold is the best conductor of electricity in the world and is also impervious to salt water.
No, silver is a better conductor of electricity than gold. Silver is the most conductive element known, and it has the highest electrical conductivity of any element, with a rating of 63 x 10^6 siemens per meter (S/m). In comparison, gold has a lower electrical conductivity, with a rating of approximately 45 x 10^6 S/m.
Electrical conductivity scale is referenced to copper. Copper represents 1.00 on the scale. Silver sits at 1.05 and gold is third at 0.95. Silver is the best electrical conductor that we have found in natural temperature ranges and it is pretty.😁 silver tarnishes, but does not oxidize. It is more chemically reactive than gold, but not nearly as much as other elements. People say that gold does not react, but of course this isn't true, it just reacts far less than other elements.
...silver has two isotopes ( 107 Ag / 109 Ag ) and there is research pointing to special effects/properties when energized in certain ways
It would in theory make sense. There being an inherent value to Silver, Gold and other precious metals and even Gemstones and why it became the earliest widely accepted medium of exchange between radically different cultures.
There being some inherent intrinsic value or use outside of physical beauty would explain human obsession with them.
And somewhere along the line. The knowledge of “why” those particular metals and gems were valuable was forgotten. All we remembered was that they were valuable and we should gather as much of it as we can find. Even though we don’t remember why it’s valuable.
Thank you, this somewhere's my thoughts very eloquently.
What is the main metal our human blood has in it? Does that suppress our DNA?
What if instead of iron, we had gold?
Iron oxidizes, and matter that oxidize become destroyed and die.
What if "the gods" have gold instead of iron in their blood?
Would they need to breath oxygen, or anything to survive? Would they ever die? Would their intelligence be far higher than modern humans because gold transmits electrical signals far more efficiently than iron?
Why do "they" paint their skin gold? Is it symbolic, or something else?
If you replaced the iron in your blood with gold, you would die in less than 10 minutes. And I’m being generous with that.
That iron is used in hemoglobin, a molecule in your red blood cells that takes oxygen from your lungs. The chemical properties of gold are unsuitable to replace iron in hemoglobin.
No hemoglobin, no oxygen transportation, you suffocate.
I'm not talking about current human genetics, I'm talking other beings and how they may have evolved, not to mention simply supplementing or current bodies with monotonic gold or silver, which has been stripped of our soil through non-rotational farming, meaning we aren't naturally acquiring it anymore.
Better electrical signal transmission in the human body = optimized nervous system = enhanced intelligence and health.
u/#q195 u/#q196
I do not know the answers.
I'll tell you...
The woman's mask is a thin wire mesh with thin fabric on it, so she can see through it.
When the camera flashed, it reflected off her face UNDER the mask...
What do you see???
A demonic face?
Is that what you SEE???
There is a distinct face... But it isn't human. Noteably the eyes.
There is a rain Q posted this and mentioned gold.
What metals perfect against radiation? Lead? Gold?
I see something not human. Care to explain?
Nothing to explain...
What you are seeing is the creature behind the mask.
I believe there is some truth to the Sumerians records of Annunaki that have come here to mine gold on Earth. Michael Tellinger has reported on ancient gold mines from 100's of thousands of yrs ago in S Africa. We have this intrinsic love or attraction to gold from birth it seems. Even thru history, most civilizations respected it, why?
Weren't the Pyramids topped with Gold at one point?
There is evidence that the Pyramids were constructed originally with Alien / Atlantian technology for the purpose of wireless energy transfer in the pre-flood advanced civilization.
Certainly we are being lied to about the story of the Pyramids, so its anyones guess until the Government becomes transparent (Don't hold breath)
To a hungry man, gold is as useless as tits on a bore hog!
That's a naive comment.
a hungry man with gold can exchange it for food etc, in the same way that we use paper money.
Only if those who have food are willing to trade it for gold.
I would be more likely to trade food for ammo or antibiotics
And bourbon. Lots and lots of bourbon.
YES! Preppers, get your mash and distillers ready!
Naive. Kek If there is a shortage of food like they predict, you can eat your gold!
Woman like pretty things and men like women....as the world turns. Hahaha. Other explanations on money requirements are spot on though.
Can't eat it, and it makes poor bullets. I get why people try to obtain it, but when food becomes very scarce, gold might almost become useless to those trying just to survive.
Leviticus says that God gave the knowledge of Gold to Levites. I can believe that by the "knowledge" it was more than just how to make jewelry. I always interpreted it as the knowledge of using it as currency, and financial systems, but perhaps it has a deeper meaning like what you allude to.
Value = work/time
It takes energy and time to extract that gold, therefore you cannot whip up more of it on a whim, making it a good representation of your time and labor.
Gold is valuable because it is rare, fungible, durable, portable and stable. It has unique properties that no other metals have.
All the reasons have been thrashed out, but here's a tidbit. In Plato's account of Atlantis, the Atlanteans supposedly used "orichalcum" as a metallic currency. It was not as valuable as gold. They stopped using it after the mines ran out. The identify of orichalcum has been a mystery ever since.
But there is good reason to think it was an intermetallic compound of copper and gold, called auricupride (Cu3Au), which---interestingly---is sometimes found in nature, and fits the vague description of orichalcum.
(There is also an old monetary metal called "electrum," which is an alloy of silver and gold, and is also found sometimes in nature. There is little doubt about its identify and existence. I have often wondered whether electrum could be a useful metallic currency, as it would straddle the values of silver and gold, potentially being more stable in valuation.)
I aint sayin’ she a gold digger….
Moses and Monoatomic gold.......
Gold without the l is God.
God made man.
In Revelations 21:21 KJV “streets of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass”
So much to consider…
Open up a radio that made from gold and see if all the connections (streets) are gold.
Streets are transportation for what? Multiple things?
So essentially gold was here from God at the beginning and it will be here after this phase of humanity is over. It will exist in Heaven. Pearls too.
••
I thought the Annunaki needed gold mines here in order to keep their atmosphere in tact.
We already live in the Gamma World. WE are the primitive descendants of ancient technowizards
From the latin aurum - of an aura.
Gold was seen as symbolic of the sun and it's powers.
Au / August / Augustus
The opening and closing of the mouth in the vowels A, U. plus (M) or (G) to distinguish male or female, as source of 'the word'.
Gold lasts forever. Make a hollowed out chest of solid gold, and it will not deteriorate for many thousands of years, nor ever corrode. Put something inside it for future generations to find.
The only thing I know for certain is that I don't know anything unless I have personally been involved in the topic. There are many things that I have a high confidence in because of reason and evidence that points in the direction of something being true. Could the fascination with gold be ingrained in us, maybe. What happened 5000 years ago, not certain, but evidence is pointing to some pretty neat stuff. What happened 10k years ago? Even less certain, but still some neat evidence. What happened 100k years ago? I have virtually no evidence and no idea. We can speculate, but it isn't very fruitful to spend too much time on. What needs to be done is find evidence of 10k, 20k, 50k years ago to get an idea of what happened and where we came from. It is important, and perhaps it will be revealed one day. It is an interesting topic for musing, but in the meantime, stock up on gold, silver and everything else you can think of to prepare for hard times. If hard times don't come, you will have prepped for nothing, but you will have something to show for it. If bad juju does go down, you will grateful for the prepped materials and won't be thinking about the frivolous crap you spent your money on instead of preparing for bad times.
https://m.thewire.in/article/the-sciences/iisc-room-temperature-superconductor-gold-silver-magnetic-susceptibility
A pound of gold for a bushel of wheat
Tokens that carry value can be whatever a group decides it to be and the more people who share this value, the better. In some prisons tins of Spam are currency, in past times, Tulip bulbs were a currency. whatever people want to own can be used as a store of value and used for exchange, Gold has fulfilled this role for centuries.
more recently prisoners used cigarettes as money.
Khufu Great Pyramid at Giza was topped with gold for a reason!!
Annunaki allegedly had humans mining the stuff for whatever reasons 3 or 4 thousand years ago. If thr "gods" wanted it, human rulers would want it.
I've heard the same thing. More and more stuff I see, my view of what the world is actually and what all used to be that has been erased is getting crazier and crazier.
The Sumerian "gods" were said to have needed gold and used hominids to mine it for them https://www.afrikaiswoke.com/why-anunnaki-chose-to-mine-gold/.