2.5 tons per stone would be a piece of cake. And the Egyptians were one of the earliest known users of pulleys. The rest is pretty easy with a bunch of slave labor.
What people don’t understand is that it only takes one or two smart people. Start with a large pulley system. A sand and hide saw. Water for precision surface leveling. Etc.
Sorry, but the precise cutting and placing of stones and the sheer size and weight of the blocks used in some of these ancient sites don’t allow for that type equipment. Baalbek, Gobekli Tepe are just a few.
What's the official narrative?
Humans have only been here 6,000 years or something?
Maybe the Smithsonian will go there with the rest of the UNESCO jackals a phuck it up "real good" so we'll never know.
Interesting they sat on this discovery for 3 years before releasing it to the world the minute the JFK Files dropped...
What are the chances?
You're on target.
From Greg Reese... (less than 5 minutes)
https://rumble.com/v6qu6bu-sar-scan-of-khafre-pyramid-shows-huge-underground-structures.html?e9s=src_v1_ucp
What is this from? Who are the two people having this conversation?
The who is not as important as the what. It's a conversation between myself and my computer.
2.5 tons per stone would be a piece of cake. And the Egyptians were one of the earliest known users of pulleys. The rest is pretty easy with a bunch of slave labor.
What people don’t understand is that it only takes one or two smart people. Start with a large pulley system. A sand and hide saw. Water for precision surface leveling. Etc.
Hahahaha
Sorry, but the precise cutting and placing of stones and the sheer size and weight of the blocks used in some of these ancient sites don’t allow for that type equipment. Baalbek, Gobekli Tepe are just a few.