Ancient Roman Road at Iowa?! - Buried at Dubuque

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Hidden Truth Hidden Truth

Hidden Truth Hidden Truth

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@brownknightr2208
@brownknightr2208 11 ай бұрын
excellent work boots on the ground
@ewindfeld9735
@ewindfeld9735 11 ай бұрын
These Buildings are in every City on the North American Continent, I've been to Edmonton Alberta, to Conroe and Dallas Texas, to Vancouver BC Canada, to St John New Brunswick, to Toronto, to Ottawa, to the Giant Farm Houses I see when I drive anywhere. Slate Shingles, Red or Yellow Brick, 10 to 12 foot ceilings, floor to ceiling Windows, Giant Windows, very expensive windows today! Don't get me started on the Trim in these houses, Hard wood Floors, 1 foot tall Baseboard, made of real wood. Way back from the Road, have you ever built a new House, huge cost is to run electricity from the road to the House. Beautiful Houses, You should do one on the Big Brick Farm houses. Love the Videos. Like, Subscribed.
@luxuriousfir
@luxuriousfir 11 ай бұрын
I said it before and I'll say it again! Man you are doing awesome work! We are out here rooting for you! Godspeed Brother!
@kurtremislettmyr7108
@kurtremislettmyr7108 11 ай бұрын
The state of the loading ramp on the first building you showed, clearly demonstrates the difference in material quality. These buildings were really made to last.
@yochanan770
@yochanan770 4 ай бұрын
My dude. Dubuque is built on limestone. The built foundations above street level like that because it's not easy to mine out limestone. And being that close to the hillside, yes soil builds up and adds an inch of soil every decade or so. Given that most of these houses have 150 yrs of settling and deposition, it's not surprising that they look to be 4ft lower than usual.
@alidaderocchis7333
@alidaderocchis7333 11 ай бұрын
These are ancient buildings. Anybody with an eye can see they were built a very long time ago and not what the narrative would imply.
@daveeboney7089
@daveeboney7089 11 ай бұрын
The first red building still has its capacitors on the top of the building. So many of your building are identicle to what we have in ever town and city in the UK. Its great to see other parts of the world are exactly the same as here in the UK regarding mud flood and pre victorian power.👍👍 Even your churches/energy devices are identicle in design and I talk to a lad in Canada and the churches are exactly the same design there also.
@MrDavidrex
@MrDavidrex 11 ай бұрын
Well that’s where we learned it hundreds of years ago. Those old timers were tuff artists. Stay safe.
@eazypeazy33
@eazypeazy33 11 ай бұрын
Scottish Freemasonry? lol They invented almost everything
@valiente252
@valiente252 11 ай бұрын
If SF was known as Phantom City by the early settler's you have to think how long did these homes sit abandoned? What caused humanity in those days to be dislodged to other parts of the world without the ability to know your surroundings until the 1800's hundreds? Was there a race back in the days to reclaimed these territories? How long did these homes sit empty? 100 years 200 years, 300 years 400 years 500 years?
@MindControlledSheepie
@MindControlledSheepie 11 ай бұрын
I like what youre doing here with boots on the ground.
@danteberry6047
@danteberry6047 11 ай бұрын
Red bricks resemble cells within this body…makes sense the bricks would be able to hold a charge, as human cells store energy and produce energy
@1-daydecorating8
@1-daydecorating8 11 ай бұрын
What a remarkable building with such detail. Beautiful! You would think if it were built in the 1800's they would have kept it a simple as possible. I'd love to see this being built.
@EtherealVirago
@EtherealVirago 4 ай бұрын
There’s literally pictures of some of these buildings being built, and I promise, they aren’t ancient.
@TS-yf2zf
@TS-yf2zf 11 ай бұрын
I have a background in foundations. Admittedly I'm in Australia but the concept is the same. People seem to be forgetting about the sheer weight in those constructions...... The answers all lay in the foundations as there's absolutely no information how they achieved it. Somehow they had knowledge of earth removal, soil types & compaction (which raises a bunch of other questions)
@ascension6699
@ascension6699 11 ай бұрын
Modern buildings pour concrete footers. To have limestone blocks is insane. Especially how flat on top and bottom they are. Makes you wonder if those stones go across the whole floor.
@DrewishBear
@DrewishBear 11 ай бұрын
It’s old world concrete-geopolymer. Most of the local old “quarries” around the country are just where they removed the castles built over springs. The limestone for this geopolymer was quarried in Kansas City, New York, and Alabama. I’m guessing there are more giant abandoned old-world limestone mines but those are three I know of.
@corex72
@corex72 11 ай бұрын
Would have been building on bedrock.
@qua7771
@qua7771 10 ай бұрын
They built on top of preexisting structures.
@pennytine3657
@pennytine3657 4 ай бұрын
⁠There are limestone quarries still operating in Iowa that have been open since the 1840s. One of them is located on a highway that takes you straight to Dubuque. Given the amount of stone here, it seems plausible that it would be used.
@eazypeazy33
@eazypeazy33 11 ай бұрын
Must say, that is a beautiful, mysterious little town. I live right along the river near New Orleans.
@SavageHistory
@SavageHistory 11 ай бұрын
i took some pictures of Oklahoma city yesterday and windows below ground are everywhere and also these crazy domed buildings
@karencontestabile6064
@karencontestabile6064 11 ай бұрын
❤️❤️❤️ Thanks for another great video of Old America.
@cooldogsofwv
@cooldogsofwv 11 ай бұрын
Great video! Beautiful buildings! Thanks for your boots on the ground, very informative!
@kingchakazulu7762
@kingchakazulu7762 11 ай бұрын
Your boots on the ground are the best in the business.
@wesporter2176
@wesporter2176 11 ай бұрын
Have you seen I am Kairos? He found a huge cliff of melted bricks in San Francisco!
@kingchakazulu7762
@kingchakazulu7762 11 ай бұрын
@@wesporter2176 I'll have to check it out, thanks.
@mattgould8592
@mattgould8592 11 ай бұрын
You are doing great! It is obvious to anyone that these buildings have purposes that we are yet to rediscover.
@rendergartenarts
@rendergartenarts 11 ай бұрын
8:24 These look like Geopolymers that weren't vibrated
@Gold_gyrl
@Gold_gyrl 11 ай бұрын
This is perfection this masonry work is absolutely perfection no way this could be done today too much ignorance in the world, take focus and skill.
@Hans-de8du
@Hans-de8du 11 ай бұрын
Great stuff! Thank you!
@DTrompl
@DTrompl 11 ай бұрын
Great videos! I just found your channel and have come to the same conclusions of the Old World and our time line. Thanks again for your research...
@karinadsouza4929
@karinadsouza4929 11 ай бұрын
Not only beautifully constructed stonework buildings, but mysterious constructions like San Francisco Bridge, Mt. Rushmore, several pyramids around the world including Antarctica (not only Egypt), etc.
@wesporter2176
@wesporter2176 11 ай бұрын
So I'm pretty much onboard with most of what these "Tartaria" people are saying however there is one major thing that puzzles me and doesn't fit with these theories if someone can explain this I'd appreciate it. If these buildings were really buried in a mud flood then why are the current main entrances just as beautiful and elaborate as the rest of the structure? It stands to reason that if the ground is much higher now then when they were first built these grand entrances would have been buried as well... correct? Therefore they must have been built after the mud flood, however it's also said that nobody could do this kind of work in an era with just horses and buggys and no power tools or heavy equipment.
@carsyncruz
@carsyncruz 11 ай бұрын
I think it matters which building. Not every building would have been flooded the same. Some entrances probably weren’t covered some were. When you take a place like this along the Mississippi River, we probably did build up around those houses and street levels, because it’s a known fact the Mississippi flooded middle America in 1812 when there was a massive earthquake on the new Madrid fault line which runs under and along the river, and in the late 1920’s or early 1930’s. The lower levels of those buildings and houses, always have stairs up to the entrance that cover the original. Also if they are going to add another floor to an existing structure, that might be some of the reason why some of the bottom floor or windows appear covered, they would need to build a stronger base around it to support the taller structure. So not always is it mudflood, but clearly these channels are onto something.
@luxuriousfir
@luxuriousfir 11 ай бұрын
Awesome work.
@subvertedworld
@subvertedworld 11 ай бұрын
The "I"887 on the first building was pretty obvious. The last church, look at the symbol around the steeple on the sign next to it. It's like an energy charge!
@SavageHistory
@SavageHistory 11 ай бұрын
you could see machining marks on the bricks @9:56 in the corner, that went across multiple layers of brick meaning the bricks could have been laid then finished, you could take measurements of the marks and calculate the size of the tool
@nathanjohnson6416
@nathanjohnson6416 11 ай бұрын
Was it swirl marks you saw?
@kcmk4
@kcmk4 11 ай бұрын
Come to Waterloo/Cedar Falls! Same here! We are off the Cedar River! Look into the yearly tour of the buried Main Street in Independence (There is also an asylum there) !
@nathanjohnson6416
@nathanjohnson6416 11 ай бұрын
I live in iowa and my work has me bouncing around the state like a ping pong ball. I see so many little towns that have interesting buildings like this and wonder how and why they built them. Doesnt see to make sense sometimes economicly
@SkyDiverCanada
@SkyDiverCanada 11 ай бұрын
This is fantastic boots on the ground!
@leek5682
@leek5682 11 ай бұрын
You can explain to an extent how a lot of buildings are "covered" by dirt/mud by the building actually sinking. If the ground is wet enough buildings do in reality sink and suffer structural damage as a result. However, nothing I've heard yet explains how the buildings were constructed. That knowledge seems to have been selectively forgotten.
@JessiQT17
@JessiQT17 11 ай бұрын
KEEP SHOWING THE TRUTH!!
@Utoob360
@Utoob360 11 ай бұрын
You have SOO much more to explore in this town! Built on Seven Hills…
@joelyons3713
@joelyons3713 11 ай бұрын
Interesting. Those basement windows are very curious. Possibly the structure’s sank from settling? And didn’t the entire city of Chicago have to be lifted at some point in the past to install drainage?
@zenbonimusic7308
@zenbonimusic7308 4 ай бұрын
More likely that street level has just gotten higher. It was common practice to repave over the old road for decades. Buildings do tend to sink and settle. But the vast majority of Iowa land is limestone. Easy to build on and with.
@nelsonortiz583
@nelsonortiz583 11 ай бұрын
I only can imagine how the inside look like...no room for mistakes and no detail is spare
@magenta4443
@magenta4443 6 ай бұрын
Enjoy all your discoveries and reveals! In Dubuque, I've always been struck at the extreme amount of red-brick buildings throughout the city.
@keding9159
@keding9159 11 ай бұрын
Impressive buildings. Something I noted, these buildings had a purpose and yet they clearly didn't route the water off the roofs as we do based on the added rain spouts. Were they collecting water or did the builders not take runoff into account?
@billywhite1362
@billywhite1362 11 ай бұрын
Great work, much appreciated.
@jimdillinger7757
@jimdillinger7757 11 ай бұрын
Excellent adventure, we have the same structures exactly all over Britain and Ireland, the brick business would have been the best business to be in way back then.
@lauralauren6432
@lauralauren6432 10 ай бұрын
Amazing. This is The best video ive seen about The underground floors and ive seen a LOT. GREAT WORK AND THANK YOU
@SavageHistory
@SavageHistory 11 ай бұрын
i was thinking about the progeny of stem walls, in general, probably came from the the mostly buried buildings/walls of the old world
@BlackestSheepBobBarker333
@BlackestSheepBobBarker333 11 ай бұрын
Check out Burlington, Davenport and Clinton.
@savvyheart369
@savvyheart369 5 ай бұрын
Yes! Many catholic "churches" in Clinton, Iowa have been torn down. Just to name a couple, St Mary's & St Patrick's, both beautiful red brick buildings...gone. The only HUGE remaining church that the citizens fought to keep is in the Lyons north end, St. Irenaeus, (pronounced saint "arnez") which is constructed of limestone blocks with double steeples. Completely unused & sitting there utterly deteriorating. During Christmas, their midnight mass was always so spectacular. No longer an active church, completely deserted. 😢 What exactly was this extraordinary building before being changed to a catholic church? There is also a huge old Masonic lodge in that same area no longer being used...that I know of.
@K.I.M.7777
@K.I.M.7777 11 ай бұрын
Every single church here in Ottawa (city), Ontario (Province) Canada (Country), has the exact same style of windows. Ottawa is the Nation of Canada's, Capital. And, Parliament Hill also has the same style of windows! American has the US Capitol Building in Washington, DC, and Canada has Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario. Impossible for all these buildings all over the world to have the same build style. No such thing as a coincidence. Even in Russia. It's all over. What's frustrating is how are we supposed to know where we are or what this is, when we don't even know what this is or where we are. So much is being kept. What are they hiding. Whatever it is, it must be powerful, otherwise why all the secrets about it and the cover ups!?
@theawkwardobserver8757
@theawkwardobserver8757 11 ай бұрын
Some of these buildings,usually the ones that were changed to churches,could produce healing frequencies,which were transmitted via resonance.The different frequency patterns,which were displayed in the stained glass windows, were the "billboards" of the day.Different frequencies,different treatment.People could choose what they wanted.The massive building blocks on that road are a smoking gun,to say the least .Great research and ,once again, excellent vid.
@tp3u
@tp3u 4 ай бұрын
Excuse me what?
@blackfeather777
@blackfeather777 11 ай бұрын
That cymatic window on the church is a "clock" or symbol of the zodiac. It's marks the 12 hours in half a day, symbolizing the 12 signs of the zodiac and 12 months of the year that the sun passes through. The 4 leaf clover in the center representing the cross of the zodiac and the four seasons.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 11 ай бұрын
They're trying to tell us Iowa had 2.3 million people in 1900. 🤣🤣🤣
@pennytine3657
@pennytine3657 4 ай бұрын
Iowa has been losing population for generations. The amount of towns that died off 70+ years ago is quite astounding.
@EricPepe
@EricPepe 11 ай бұрын
all the buildings are connected to the tunnels
@jimw7916
@jimw7916 11 ай бұрын
The address on that church was "101"
@MindControlledSheepie
@MindControlledSheepie 11 ай бұрын
welcome to room 101!
@DrewishBear
@DrewishBear 11 ай бұрын
Dalmatians? I’m lost
@bill7320
@bill7320 5 ай бұрын
In the novel 1984, Room 101 was a torture chamber. ​@@DrewishBear
@BlackestSheepBobBarker333
@BlackestSheepBobBarker333 11 ай бұрын
Hey, you're right in my backyard!
@jsharrad79
@jsharrad79 3 ай бұрын
I lived at the top of that really steep street 10 years ago :D
@mikeshell4214
@mikeshell4214 11 ай бұрын
Great video as always!!! I noticed the fleur-di lis symbols on the huge (bronze?) doors. I read somewhere that symbol goes way back to ancient Egypt. I believe any symbol that came from ancient Egypt can not be good. I had a couple of iron fleur-di lis as decorative pieces in my house. I decided it was best to destroy them and get rid of them. There are many negative/satanic symbols everywhere right under our noses and we don't even notice.
@zenbonimusic7308
@zenbonimusic7308 4 ай бұрын
The fleur di lis (literally "lilly" in French) is a heraldic symbol that dates to the new testament and originally related to Christ who was "born in the beauty of the lilies". It's prevalence in this area of the US is due to its use in French culture and royal heraldry. This territory belonged to France before it was sold to the United States. Other cities like New Orleans and Saint Louis also had French influence. Even the name Dubuque is from a French Canadian Fur trader, Julien Dubuque.
@tp3u
@tp3u 4 ай бұрын
@@zenbonimusic7308 thank you, fellow sensible human. It’s like everyone else is a hoodoo weirdo. Did you see the resonance bs? What’s with that!
@MariannaKatz17
@MariannaKatz17 10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I was in Dubuque last year and it was trippy! Mudflood stuff everywhere. It was nuts. The court house was wild too. There are six or seven Catholic Churches that look like cathedrals. The town never had over 70K minus the college students because there are 4 small colleges in town.
@SrdjanBasaric-w2s
@SrdjanBasaric-w2s 11 ай бұрын
This pattern with a stone foundation is Russian, or more precisely, Siberian. Three rows of stones are enough for the building to never draw moisture from the ground. All these buildings that you have shown are of very dubious origin, architecturally and constructionally.
@pinkiesue849
@pinkiesue849 11 ай бұрын
10 foot tall ceilings would accommodate a 9ft giant. Just observing. Dubuque would not be far by boat to St Louis and Cahokia...could these buildings be from that civilization...
@Utoob360
@Utoob360 11 ай бұрын
Across the river in East Dubuque, Illinois are mounds which giants were removed. The Smithsonian is imbedded in Dubuque.
@conniepritchardreinhardt9978
@conniepritchardreinhardt9978 2 ай бұрын
Wow. There is a church going up Methodist hollow in mc Gregor Iowa you should look at. A long with some of the buildings on the north end of town. They were there before 1860 for sure.
@austinmorris981
@austinmorris981 10 ай бұрын
The run-down brick houses made me especially sad, because there are similar old neighborhoods in the city where I live, where you can see this same architectural style, with the houses built up on hills above the road with walls against the sidewalk. No one builds anything like that today.
@1f-noise
@1f-noise 11 ай бұрын
I can't believe they are man-made!
@mikekushner9436
@mikekushner9436 10 ай бұрын
Im a brick layer and I can say it’s easy as crap to do straight lines but All the curves , turrets , spiral brick structures that pop out of the building are medevial techniques…….what I believe is that medevial Europeans have been in usa long before Columbus if you look at the history of England etc. the Saxon’s (Germans ) came and conquered them ……..notice the German architecture in usa for instance the Kennedy center in dc was orihanlly a castle like brewery German ……only when ww2 and nazi propaganda they said they have to destroy all German things in usa
@debtipka
@debtipka 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing us a factual, rational view of the true reality. If I allow my mind to wander about all the possibilities... it's sort of like we're living in a Twilight Zone episode.
@WilliamRossReinhardt
@WilliamRossReinhardt 9 ай бұрын
My thoughts too!
@toniasalways
@toniasalways 4 ай бұрын
Dubuque is right on the Mississsippi River. The Mississippi River floods every year. Houses built above flood stage would not be under water. Dubuque is located on limestone cliffs. A little research would have clarified all his speculation.
@jeffblanchard1451
@jeffblanchard1451 11 ай бұрын
Amen brother! Praise Yahusha in his mighty Name!!! 0:00
@VenturaIT
@VenturaIT 11 ай бұрын
That church (101) has different lower level stone around the front door than the rest of the building, you said it was all the same... wasn't all the same... I moved from the midwest to California and the history books say California is as old or older than most of the midwest, but there are no old buildings like this in Ventura, but they are all over the midwest and it's obvious just by looking at the houses and buildings which area is older.
@MarySonatore
@MarySonatore 10 ай бұрын
What do you think about an “older” clapboard exterior home (1870 ish) with brick foundation/cellar on a corner raised hill with retaining walls? “Cellar” has half underground windows and high ceilings 😮 Home is a mansard style with slate side decorative roof.
@shawnybee
@shawnybee 9 ай бұрын
Absolutely enjoy every video you put out... Keep it going 😊
@jiayouchinese
@jiayouchinese 9 ай бұрын
There are catacombs all over under Dubuque. I used to live there.
@annlyon.2040
@annlyon.2040 11 ай бұрын
Do you watch Paul Cook ? I think those big stones where made , a kind of cement. I forgot the name but he can tell you. Same with the pyramids
@zenbonimusic7308
@zenbonimusic7308 4 ай бұрын
A really cool thing about those blocks is that they are limestone! You can find limestone all over the state and there are quarrys for it all over too. The process by which limestone forms is actually pretty similar to concrete, however, our limestone is due to an ancient sea that used to cover the interior of north America. Cool stuff!
@jannhebrank
@jannhebrank 6 ай бұрын
there are several towns which have these old buildings,,,,,Quad Cities has alot
@JourneyOfStrength
@JourneyOfStrength 11 ай бұрын
Pyramid with all seeing eye over three arches.
@victorponce7238
@victorponce7238 10 ай бұрын
Man you cover some good topics. Lots of questions about these buildings. The foundations are weird. Made of huge blocks too. How were they transported? Hmmm
@zenbonimusic7308
@zenbonimusic7308 4 ай бұрын
Short answer is boats! Debuque is on the Mississippi River and was a popular port town for trade with other French cities to the south like Saint Louis and New Orleans. Also, the limestone used is found all over the states of Iowa and other bordering states like Wisconsin and Illinois and is a soft stone that is easy to work with. I have carved many stones just like those even with simple hand tools! Great question.
@erinevans9113
@erinevans9113 11 ай бұрын
Wonderful evidence
@MrSomethingElse
@MrSomethingElse 9 ай бұрын
BRO! Great Work!
@TheHebrewHouseofDavid
@TheHebrewHouseofDavid 11 ай бұрын
He’s saying “built up”, but it’s dug out & some were Not dug out!
@half-a-man8182
@half-a-man8182 6 ай бұрын
Where is the ancient Roman Road?
@MrSomethingElse
@MrSomethingElse 9 ай бұрын
And Jeepers spoke... "Bring me a million bricks, and I shalt rob the people"
@armorvestrus4119
@armorvestrus4119 8 ай бұрын
I have come to believe that the larger stone and marble buildings are mainly from the Millennial Kingdom and the red brick buildings may have came afterward and appear more man made. However, this may be wrong seeing they suffered being mud flooded. It the time lines were not so dubis it might be easier to determined.
@jeremykieffer7660
@jeremykieffer7660 11 ай бұрын
My home town!!! :)
@binaryflat
@binaryflat 10 ай бұрын
These buildings survived the event, as they are built to be forever buildings, unlike the stick builds we build today... Today's homes will be easy to wipe away. The Three Little Pigs crosses my mind.
@bsa6255
@bsa6255 11 ай бұрын
Thanks again for another great video that tells the real truth. I never saw churches this way and did not realize that they were built by creatures other than by man. It seems logical that there is something electrical about churches, because they could not have been built by man there at least must have been some other alien or ancient civilization to help man build these beautiful buildings. I figure that if they were a electrical building they could have powered a powerful civilization or something like that and maybe they could even powered an underground community. What they tell us these days I don't believe any of it because everything is very liberal and all those educated people think they know everything and we don't know nothing well your videos are real refreshing and real.
@toddmoses7585
@toddmoses7585 11 ай бұрын
I agree. It’s just remarkable about how little we know about the past. What an amazing conspiracy.
@TheHebrewHouseofDavid
@TheHebrewHouseofDavid 11 ай бұрын
They Couldn’t Move those stones in the 1800’s.
@zenbonimusic7308
@zenbonimusic7308 4 ай бұрын
They could! They used boats and trains mostly. I have personally seen huge stone blocks be moved by simple machines like levers and wheels. Really cool stuff if you look into the actual techniques used.
@dward218
@dward218 6 ай бұрын
This is amusing. Most of dubuque was replaced after the great frog hail of 1883. Unlike galena il we lost all our greek revival architecture due to that storm, A Hail so large it killed people and destroyed many buildings. It was likely a tornado. As for the buildings dubuque was a lumber town in the Victorian Era and was rolling in money. So much so its still full of people living off the fortunes of their relatives from that Era. The brick commercial buildings- Many have serious structural issues and are not super safe. Because of their historic nature they're still around inspite of the fact that many should be torn down. Lots of rotten timber lintels(yes timber lintels) holding up failing 4 story brick walls.... mold and rot everywhere, disintintegrating limestone, etc. It's a big problem dubuque wants to revitalize down town but each building needs millions in restoration work.
@dward218
@dward218 6 ай бұрын
Also those buildings were built with native limestone first from a quarry off of 22nd st. Then later from quarries a bit further west of town. It's the only area of the midwest with still intact lime kilns and the only area of Iowa with fine quality building limestone. Much limestone was also shipped to Chicago to build there. The dubuque pink brick was from brick kilns in dubuque using local clays you can't find outside the city. Once the kilns closed they filled in the source for the brick and over built the area. The reason you can't get that brick anymore. Lots of great 19th century history in dubuque. You show a road off of hill street with limestone block lining the edge. That block came from a cut across the street... in winter you can see that they quarried that bluff extensively. Simple matter to drag it across the street in place. Must have been some VIPs up that street to justify building that road.
@Utoob360
@Utoob360 11 ай бұрын
Is that your white vehicle getting ticketed, the meter maids are stealthy and quick in Dubuque!!
@Gold_gyrl
@Gold_gyrl 11 ай бұрын
Did you peep the pyramid with the eye in the middle of it on this red brick building?? wow
@donaldrodriguez8134
@donaldrodriguez8134 5 күн бұрын
🚒🚒🚒 it Also looks like Christ had a lot of the foundations of the homes Reinforced maybe in anticipation of the Mud Flood event .
@Kayak_Casey
@Kayak_Casey 11 ай бұрын
Keep Making Videos!!!
@meltedinvertedrealm
@meltedinvertedrealm 11 ай бұрын
All electrical heat damaged bricks. Look at the foundation's and walls, heat changing the states of matter in the bricks making them blocks and rocks. #meltology
@rafaelnacho2618
@rafaelnacho2618 11 ай бұрын
Yay🎉
@MauriceLuckerson
@MauriceLuckerson 11 ай бұрын
He needs drone...this...Plante has lies on top of lies
@StAnthonyss
@StAnthonyss 3 ай бұрын
im starting to think some of these buildings stood 1000 years with christ -
@corex72
@corex72 11 ай бұрын
That’s not special brick work really. On the church.
@dawnviggiano1820
@dawnviggiano1820 11 ай бұрын
Look into soil liquefaction caused by earth quakes as was prophesied would happen during the great tribulation which I believe already past. The book of Amos speaks twice about what would happen to the land during this period. I believe we live during what the Book of Revelation refers to as "Satans Little Season" 1,000 plus years AFTER the tribulation. The prophet Daniel revealed that during this period Satan would think to change the times and ordinances. So basically we don't know when or where we live.
@ET-sp6qm
@ET-sp6qm 11 ай бұрын
Liquefaction
@jannhebrank
@jannhebrank 6 ай бұрын
it wasnt ,,,,lol dirt land build upt. It was dug out of the basement when the house was built and not hauled away and the streets were dug down. You might want to go to the library and educate yourself a bit before you make another video.
@kurtremislettmyr7108
@kurtremislettmyr7108 11 ай бұрын
the dirt that raised the ground level could have come floating in the air, or been tossed by some kind of explosion .
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