Graham Hancock: "There was a lost advanced civilization over 20,000 years ago that was nearly erased by a global cataclysm around 12,800 years ago."
He describes how myths of a great flood and Atlantis-like stories worldwide point to the Younger Dryas event, a sudden comet impact or cosmic catastrophe that reset humanity, wiping out megafauna and advanced societies.
What if everything we think we know about human history is wrong?
He told Diary of a CEO how survivors may have passed down knowledge to emerging cultures, encoded in sites like the Great Pyramid and ancient maps showing continents unknown at the time.
Graham Hancock: "The Great Pyramid is encoded with advanced astronomical knowledge that shouldn't exist for its time."
Its height multiplied by 43,200 gives the polar radius of the Earth. Its base perimeter multiplied by the same factor gives the equatorial circumference. Archaeologists call it coincidence, but that specific scale of 1 to 43,200 appears in ancient mythology worldwide as multiples of 72, tied to the precession of the equinoxes.
"This cannot be accidental... It's a deliberate choice."
This monument sits at latitude 30, one third from the North Pole to the equator, locked into the true dimensions of our planet with precision that challenges everything we think we know about ancient capabilities.
The Unsolved Mystery Of The Great Pyramid leaves us wondering what else our ancestors understood.
"Fuck the American government."
That's John Kiriakou — a former CIA officer who pled guilty to leaking the identity of a covert operative, now drawing a paycheck from Putin as a host for RT.
Tucker and half the podcast circuit keep booking him. The op is not hard to see
This unique cafe in Vietnam lets diners sit amongst pools of koi carp as they eat their meals.
The King Koi Coffee Garden in in Ho Chi Minh has tables and chairs submerged into a lake where 3,000 koi swim in and among customers.
This is an absolutely massive deal.
The fact that Austin got this and Dallas wasn’t even in consideration should make the Dallas business community pause.