@YIMBYLAND lol. Antartica has no sun compared to space. Your argument dies there. Additionally ice and water provide the harshest condition for humans and robots alike, space is a much easier engineering problem (with today’s tech).
@Sarini44@OMApproach If I understood correctly, the pole reversal would be temporary (<10Y). Temps will drop to -40C in winter, making it very harsh, but if only temporary and with good preparation it could be survivable. Thesis: cold is more survivable than 1km tall water floods, then migrate after.
@ByTheOwl @OMApproach Elevation is not the only important thing. What I’m getting is that you don’t want to be on the landmass where the water will flow towards during the event + a high elevation. The Alps will get more water flooding than India, ie. you’d need to be at a higher elevation there.
@Brendemonium@ericweinstein@grok There’s more than enough proof that there is a ‘situation’ that involves aerial phenomena and currently unexplainable physics and ties to government.
@bryan_johnson Tap water may contain high amounts of estrogens due to birth control hormones. Especially if your tap water comes from municipal recycling plants.
I’ve started writing a book about everything I’ve learned through experimentation over the past year regarding artificial stones and their implications.
The title (drumroll, please!) is The Natron Theory.
Yes, it’s only been a year since I knew nothing else about stones than the old mantra: "granite is one of the hardest stones in the world, resistant to acids, bases, and even prayers".
Except for one thing, of course: the copper chisel. The common secret behind all the marvelous ancient structures is the copper chisel.
To this day, I can’t fully grasp how we didn’t know this— myself included — that granite isn’t some sacred material but a mere chemical compound, its binding agent being silicon dioxide, or quartz.
And its hardness isn’t some miracle, but merely a state of matter. It can be altered chemically, taken apart, and reassembled.
It was just a year ago that I etched my first piece of granite with molten natron in my backyard, and I couldn’t believe my eyes. How on earth did I pull this off? Was it really that simple?
That’s when the crazy rollercoaster began, one I can’t get off of now. It just keeps racing ahead, knocking over everything in its path.
Today, only the most die-hard skeptics deny that the Inca stones are artificial. It’s hard to refute when anyone can produce the same stone at home simply by mixing ash and waterglass.
Where do you get waterglass, you ask? From etching the stone with molten natron, of course. But is that all?
And then suddenly, the pieces started to fall into place: everything is interconnected!
The precision Inca walls, the hundreds of tons of wood ash heaps in a "temple" on the Sinai Peninsula, the world’s salt lakes, medieval deforestation in Europe, the underground cities in Turkey that could house twenty thousand people, the human-sized stone jars in Laos—they’re all pieces of the same puzzle.
If this puzzle had a title, it might be *Once Upon a Time in the Stone Age...*
But not the kind of Stone Age we usually think of, where cavemen bash each other over the head with rocks. No, this was a Stone Age where the most important—perhaps the only—available “hardware” wasn’t iron or steel, but artificial stone. (And wood, of course.)
These were civilizations just like ours, only on a different technological branch, where the only durable building material was artificial stone. A kind of real-life, ancient steampunk.
The temple, the palace, and by necessity, even the machines and factories of that era were made from artificial stone, simply because there were no other materials to build from.
Many of the puzzling “religious” and “burial” structures suddenly make sense once we find their true functions.
As Geoffrey Drum tells us, the pyramids aren’t temples or tombs—they’re chemical factories. Looking for mummies, fancy wall paintings, or statues inside a pyramid makes as much sense as searching for a corpse inside a modern stainless steel winery vat. If there’s a body in there, that’s a serious problem!
But all this came with massive environmental destruction.
Just plot the ancient civilizations on a map in the order they arose, and you’ll see that the history of humanity is also a history of moving northward: Sumerians, Egyptians, Babylonians (Assyrians), Persians, Greeks, Hittites, Romans, and finally Europe.
Who will be brave enough to say that all these ancient civilizations collapsed because the resource demands of their respective technologies destroyed them?
Who wiped out the green Sahara some 6,000 years ago? How and why? And how did the people of Easter Island really destroy themselves? I can tell you—it wasn’t because of shipbuilding.
All in all, it is a fantastic fairy tale, that is actually true.
I’m still working on the book, but it’s already available for pre-order on Amazon: https://t.co/5kx2U6qUIG
(There will also be a paperback version later on.)
@adem2_SOL@solanasniffer Ah man, that’s shit ngl. I read in a Dev Post in the chat that they are fixing this, and sending out the right amount of tokens to the rest that still didn’t get the full airdrop amount, I’d drop a message in the chat and their dms. You should have gotten around 10k MOONKE.