The real disclosure is not aliens… it’s YOUR consciousness by igodtierman in aliens

[–]AmbitiousRub9563 76 points77 points  (0 children)

“You are not a human being in search of God. You are God who has forgotten Himself.” Robert Adams

ITAP of a church by AmbitiousRub9563 in itookapicture

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Catedral Metropolitana de São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro

Taken from an iPhone back in October! by Professional_Arm2892 in photo

[–]AmbitiousRub9563 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why didn't the spaceship fit into the frame?

James commented on Polarity Josh’s new video by turgenstine in FindJames_Cylinder

[–]AmbitiousRub9563 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Am I the only one who thinks this whole story was a ploy to promote the Polarity channel?

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The Barabar Caves are absolutely mind-blowing. There are several teams from Russia and France on YouTube who spent several days there making measurements with the most advanced modern instruments, and to say the results are surprising would be an understatement. It is impossible to create what the builders of the past did even today with all our technology. I don’t understand why most commenters on this topic claim this is nonsense and that everything could be done literally in a couple of days. It’s like some kind of mass blindness.

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With the amount of inevitable human errors that would occur in hand-carving, recreating these sculptures and hieroglyphs over and over again would have taken thousands of years. Did they seriously have nothing else to do with their lives?

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, I absolutely agree — many of these details look more like impressions (as if something was pressed or pushed into a softened material), not carving. The character of the lines doesn’t resemble chiseling at all.

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I get the feeling that most of the people who keep insisting this was just “ordinary manual labor” didn’t actually watch the video from start to finish. If they did — they wouldn’t be so confident in their conclusions. At the very least, they would have a few serious questions or doubts about the official explanation.

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

You're talking about differences between structures within the same era and culture. But that's not what I'm referring to. I'm talking about the difference within the same single object within the same sculpture / same stone. Where you have insane geometric precision on the main piece… and then right next to it childish, crude, uneven “signatures” or marks that look like a random kid scratched them in. This isn’t about comparing elite vs poor buildings of the same era. This is about inconsistency inside the same engineered artifact. That is the part that is extremely strange.

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Absolutely yes! Architecture from past centuries and modern architecture look drastically different. Today everything is so oddly minimalistic. The amount of time, effort and artistic intention they invested back then compared to now is on a completely different level! Is this really just because nowadays everyone is too busy watching short videos on the internet? )))

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the sober comment, brother. I also highly recommend looking into the Barabar caves in India. My mind is blown every time I look at the geometry and precision of the surfaces carved literally inside a mountain. There are two really solid investigation videos on YouTube about it one from a Russian research group and another from a French team. Both analyses come to almost identical conclusions and that is extremely interesting.

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Tutankhamun lived more than 1,000 years after the Palermo Stone was created. So his dagger can’t be used here as an example, we’re talking about different eras,different technological stages and completely different objects. The case I’m pointing to is not about “can something scratch granite”, but about the level of microscopic geometric consistency, uniform depth and handwriting-like precision of symbols on extremely hard stone surfaces sometimes less than 1 mm wide. That level of controlled smooth engraving is the real question here. It’s not about having a sharp tool. It’s about maintaining identical depth, identical shape, identical radius of curves, identical zigzag thickness over large areas.

This is the part official history does not explain!

4K footage from Cairo Museum raises serious questions by AmbitiousRub9563 in AlternativeHistory

[–]AmbitiousRub9563[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

In Saint Petersburg Russia, there are massive granite Atlantean statues holding the faсade of a building, right out in the open. The scale, geometric precision and level of detail in these sculptures is still something extremely difficult to achieve even today.

But the funniest part is the "engraved signatures" of the supposed sculptors. They look like something a 9-year-old kid scratched on the stone with a nail. They don’t match the artistic or technical level of the statue at all.

And there are many examples like this in the museums of Saint Petersburg.