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.
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.
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.