That’s simply not a god I would follow. I don’t believe the "God" of the Old Testament was the ultimate creator. I view those figures as men who were perceived as gods, plural. No true creator of the universe would demand gold, cattle, and women.
Because of that, I’m not the right person to ask about the traditional Christian view of Christ. While I've researched it, it doesn't align with my worldview. I follow a Gnostic path, which views Jesus and his teachings through a completely different, mystical lens.
If you're levering and chiseling 2.3 million stones over 25 years, where are the millions of broken copper chisel bits and shattered wooden levers? Wally worked on a flat concrete pad in Michigan. Scaling that up to a brutal limestone desert is a totally different beast.
Then there's the biggest red flag: the Egyptians were obsessive bureaucrats who wrote down everything. We have ancient logs for beer rations, tax arguments, and cattle counts. You’re telling me they documented a boat captain's lunch but just "forgot" to write down the engineering blueprint for the greatest monument on Earth? BS. If they pulled this off with a tiny crew and a few clever tricks, they would’ve plastered that brag everywhere.
Wally didn't solve the pyramids because his backyard experiment ignored real world logistics. But his hypothesis is still miles better than the garbage traditional academia feeds us with those ridiculous, mile long straight ramps that would require more material than the actual pyramid.
He didn't give us the exact answer, but he proved we constantly underestimate ancient human ingenuity. The truth is probably a wild mix of water logistics, internal ramps, and leverage tricks we haven’t unlocked yet.
If you're levering and chiseling 2.3 million stones over 25 years, where are the millions of broken copper chisel bits and shattered wooden levers? Wally worked on a flat concrete pad in Michigan. Scaling that up to a brutal limestone desert is a totally different beast.
Then there's the biggest red flag: the Egyptians were obsessive bureaucrats who wrote down everything. We have ancient logs for beer rations, tax arguments, and cattle counts. You’re telling me they documented a boat captain's lunch but just "forgot" to write down the engineering blueprint for the greatest monument on Earth? BS. If they pulled this off with a tiny crew and a few clever tricks, they would’ve plastered that brag everywhere.
Wally didn't solve the pyramids because his backyard experiment ignored real world logistics. But his hypothesis is still miles better than the garbage traditional academia feeds us with those ridiculous, mile long straight ramps that would require more material than the actual pyramid.
He didn't give us the exact answer, but he proved we constantly underestimate ancient human ingenuity. The truth is probably a wild mix of water logistics, internal ramps, and leverage tricks we haven’t unlocked yet.
The Bible remains a valuable historical account, reminding us that neither time nor our history is strictly linear. Fables, myths, and legends were labeled as 'fake' simply because they didn’t fit into a tightly controlled narrative box. I only bring up the Bible because of its massive impact on society. I’m not a religious man; I’m a historian who knows we’ve been lied to. This has absolutely nothing to do with organized religion.
The mainstream narrative slapped an Inca label on it because that's the neatest filing cabinet they have, but the math doesn't check out. The Inca were master stonemasons with split-face, polygonal blocks, but this hyper-precise, subtractive scoop out of living limestone bedrock is a totally different technological signature. It's an older, megalithic substrate. Besides, bare rock cannot be carbon-dated. Every age you have ever read for this carving is an assumption stacked on a guess, based entirely on whatever organic trash or pottery shards someone found in the dirt nearby. If I drop a soda can next to the Great Pyramid, that doesn't mean it was built in the nineties.
If you view the world through the deep, pre-Indo-European memory of ancient, cyclical epochs, history doesn't move in a straight line. It breathes in massive cycles where empires rise, fall, and get ground into dust, leaving only stones to whisper to the next age. Merging a crescent moon into the eye of a stone puma isn't just a pretty design. In the oldest worldviews, the puma is the raw, subterranean power of the earth, and the moon is the keeper of cosmic rhythm and water. Driving seven mathematically perfect steps along that six-foot curve creates a functional, physical ladder meant to bridge worlds, mapping the planetary spheres or the shifts of the earth's axis.
If this belongs to a forgotten epoch, maybe prior to the catastrophic melts at the end of the last ice age, twelve thousand feet up wasn't just a grueling outpost. It was a high-altitude refuge of stability when the lowlands were swallowed by rising seas. Whoever cut this possessed a method of stone manipulation that completely bypassed the need for brute-force percussive tools, leaving behind a permanent geometric anchor to track time. It’s a message cast in limestone, built to survive the turning of the ages and left for whoever was lucky enough to make it through the reset.
High in the Peruvian Andes sits a stone carved with a giant crescent, and nobody alive knows what it was really called.
Locals coined the modern name, Killarumiyoq, the stone of the moon, because the crescent is the first thing you see, yet the original name, like the original purpose, is unknown.
🔹A crescent 6 ft wide
🔹7 steps cut along its curve
🔹Sunk into a rock shaped like a puma
🔹Carved high in the Andes of southern Peru
🔹Mainstream credits the Inca, but rock holds no date
Whoever cut it worked nearly 12,000 ft up, where every breath carries roughly a third less oxygen than at sea level, and still drove 7 even steps through limestone.
Bare rock cannot be carbon dated, so every age you have ever read for this carving is an assumption stacked on a guess.
The stone keeps the shape and gives up nothing else.
So who do you think cut a moon into a puma's eye, when, and perhaps most importantly... Why?
The mainstream narrative slapped an Inca label on it because that's the neatest filing cabinet they have, but the math doesn't check out. The Inca were master stonemasons with split-face, polygonal blocks, but this hyper-precise, subtractive scoop out of living limestone bedrock is a totally different technological signature. It's an older, megalithic substrate. Besides, bare rock cannot be carbon-dated. Every age you have ever read for this carving is an assumption stacked on a guess, based entirely on whatever organic trash or pottery shards someone found in the dirt nearby. If I drop a soda can next to the Great Pyramid, that doesn't mean it was built in the nineties.
If you view the world through the deep, pre-Indo-European memory of ancient, cyclical epochs, history doesn't move in a straight line. It breathes in massive cycles where empires rise, fall, and get ground into dust, leaving only stones to whisper to the next age. Merging a crescent moon into the eye of a stone puma isn't just a pretty design. In the oldest worldviews, the puma is the raw, subterranean power of the earth, and the moon is the keeper of cosmic rhythm and water. Driving seven mathematically perfect steps along that six-foot curve creates a functional, physical ladder meant to bridge worlds, mapping the planetary spheres or the shifts of the earth's axis.
If this belongs to a forgotten epoch, maybe prior to the catastrophic melts at the end of the last ice age, twelve thousand feet up wasn't just a grueling outpost. It was a high-altitude refuge of stability when the lowlands were swallowed by rising seas. Whoever cut this possessed a method of stone manipulation that completely bypassed the need for brute-force percussive tools, leaving behind a permanent geometric anchor to track time. It’s a message cast in limestone, built to survive the turning of the ages and left for whoever was lucky enough to make it through the reset.
Heard Of Skara Brae?
You should have as it changes history.
In 1850, a farmer discovered a hidden village.
Later, it was found to be older than the Great Pyramid of Egypt.
Archaeologists estimate that the village was home to about 100 people.
The village was known as "the Pompeii of Scotland," or Skara Brae. The houses were connected by tunnels, and each house was sealed off with a stone door.
An ancient site on a small island in the Atlantic Ocean, north of Scotland, remains shrouded in mystery to this day.
Overlooking Skyle Bay on the Mainland Island, the largest of the Orkney Islands in the North Sea, once stood the Neolithic settlement of Skara Brae.
According to archaeologists, this settlement consisted of about 10 houses and is believed to have been inhabited by ~3100 BC or perhaps a 1000 years or more earlier.
This represents what may become an even larger site spanning dozens of locations.
Now you know.
I recorded this on my cell phone, and people are saying it is the 'rainbow star' or Sirius. Flat Earthers claim this is proof of a firmament.
For the record, I have never seen anything like this before, and I have been looking at the night sky since I was a kid on my parents' property in rural Utah, and now as an adult on my own property in rural Colorado.
The concept of linear time is a comfortable cage for institutional academia. It demands a tidy, forward-marching narrative where primitive cultures slowly evolve, tools gradually improve, and anomalies are swept under the rug as "ritualistic" or "symbolic" because the alternative upends the established timeline.
The things you find in the Peruvian desert...
What in the world of geoglyphic rebus is that?!
An eye, an anchor and a crash test target?
How would you interepret these geoglyphs?
Filmed in the Ica desert, not too far from the Nasca lines.
Tomorrow I'll post a video of a lost city I filmed on the same day.
Imagine standing in a room where the bass is so deep it vibrates right through your chest. It’s a undeniable reminder that we aren't just solid lumps of matter; we are constantly reacting to the invisible waves around us. This is the heart of cymatics—the stunning study of how sound frequencies shape physical matter into intricate, geometric patterns. If a specific frequency can instantly organize scattered sand into a perfect mandala, it makes you wonder about the water and cells inside our own bodies.
If harmful frequencies can disrupt our equilibrium and cause stress, it only stands to reason that the right frequencies could do the exact opposite. We are essentially walking symphonies, and when an organ like the liver or a kidney falls ill, it's like an instrument going out of tune. So why aren't we using targeted sound waves to tune ourselves back to health and tackle major diseases like cancer?
The exciting truth is that science is actually starting to catch up with this ancient intuition. We already use ultrasound to shatter kidney stones without a single incision, which is pure cymatics in action. Right now, researchers are pioneering high-intensity focused ultrasound to literally blast away tumor cells with hyper-targeted sound waves. The challenge isn't that the concept is wrong; it's that the human body is an incredibly complex orchestra, and finding the exact "solfeggio" or resonant frequency to heal a specific damaged tissue without disrupting the healthy cells next to it requires absolute precision. We are on the cusp of a frontier where medicine looks less like a bottle of pills and more like a finely tuned playlist.
Imagine standing in a room where the bass is so deep it vibrates right through your chest. It’s an undeniable reminder that we aren’t just solid lumps of matter; we are constantly reacting to the invisible waves around us. This is the heart of Cymatics. If a specific frequency can instantly organize scattered sand into a perfect mandala, it makes you wonder about the water and cells inside our own bodies.
If harmful frequencies can disrupt our equilibrium and cause stress, it stands to reason that the right frequencies could do the exact opposite. We are essentially walking symphonies, and when an organ like the liver or kidney falls ill, it’s like an instrument going out of tune. So why aren’t we using targeted sound waves to tune ourselves back to health and tackle major diseases like cancer?
The exciting truth is that science is starting to catch up with this ancient intuition. We already use ultrasound to shatter kidney stones without a single incision, which is pure cymatics in action. Researchers are now pioneering high-intensity focused ultrasound to blast away tumor cells with hyper-targeted sound waves. The challenge isn’t that the concept is wrong; it’s that the human body is an incredibly complex orchestra, and finding the exact “solfeggio” or resonant frequency to heal specific damaged tissue without disrupting healthy cells requires absolute precision. We are on the cusp of a frontier where medicine looks less like a bottle of pills and more like a finely tuned playlist.
Alleged leaked NASA video showing the Black Knight satellite.🧐📷
The "Black Knight satellite" is an ancient, extraterrestrial spacecraft that has been in a polar orbit around Earth for approximately 13,000 years.
NASA says this 1998 video shows a thermal blanket lost during ISS assembly, confirmed by astronaut Jerry Ross.