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Philadelphia-The Fighting Old-World-Tartarian City

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Lucius Aurelian

Lucius Aurelian

Күн бұрын

#oldworld #tartaria #philadelphia
An exploration into the city of Philadelphia considering its unique history as the original capitol of the United States. This city radiates Old-World architecture in many buildings. It seems easier to explain given the longer official historical timeline of its development. However, many of the buildings we look at were supposedly constructed in the 19th to the early 20th century. Was the famed City Hall perhaps a considered "designated" location for the United States capitol?
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#oldworld #tartaria #philadelphia

Пікірлер: 269
@frankcasey7423
@frankcasey7423 Жыл бұрын
As a Philadelphia Police Officer when we go to court we have to go to city hall to clock in at court attendance which is located on the ground floor in the building before we go across the street to the Criminal Justice Center to our courtrooms, but up to the early 90’s we would have court in city hall. There’s multiple courtrooms inside city hall. Including the Mayor of the city’s office. You can actually take a very small elevator in the center of the building that holds I believe about 3-4 people at the most, shoulder to shoulder to an observation deck at the bottom of William Penn’s feet and there’s a 360 degree view of the city. On the elevator ride up you can see the marble staircase that wraps around the inside of the tower and goes all the way up to some point just below where the statue begins and then they have wooden ladders that go the remaining way. And one time when I had time to kill time before court I was talking to one of the Maintenance workers at city hall and we started talking about the history of the building and how old it was and he took me and my partner to the “basement” area where they were working and there was a wall that partially broken through or partially ripped down and it was all old red brick and there was a tunnel that went down quite a ways and they had put up a bunch of drop lights and I remember I couldn’t see the end of it, it was that long. He said there were multiple tunnels that ran under city hall as well the concourse for the subway train that drops you off at city hall. I highly recommend visiting if you ever get a chance, there’s a lot of history to be seen here in the city. Take care! Frank from Philadelphia, PA.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much Frank for sharing these wonderful observations! I am looking to get there in person soon to have a closer look.
@frankcasey7423
@frankcasey7423 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 your very welcome! Definitely a lot to see. Just found your channel and subscribed too. Great work!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@frankcasey7423 Thank you very much and Welcome!
@LEaSy
@LEaSy Жыл бұрын
There is a tunnel that runs from the Masonic temple to the Art Museum as well. Whyy did s documentary on Philadelphia and abdandon subway/nuclear rooms under the city
@frankcasey7423
@frankcasey7423 Жыл бұрын
@@LEaSy nice! I’ll have to check into that and I’ll see if I can find the video too, definitely sounds interesting! Thank you!
@MariannaKatz17
@MariannaKatz17 Жыл бұрын
Please don't let people tell you that we have building standards and safety regulations today. Modern code has been designed more to appease builders and make it cheaper for them, and not for safety. That would be fire code. I'm a building inspector. Thanks for your video! I love them and they make my day!
@hawaiiguykailua6928
@hawaiiguykailua6928 Жыл бұрын
It's all about corporate cash in building codes. Like suffocating buildings in weather wrap, kills the building and the poor children/adults forced to go to school and or work in them. They are toxic mold incubator boxes with an initial "green energy" label.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
I just find it comical it is a reason given for why we could achieve more in the past. :) You are most welcome and thank you!
@maggot5693
@maggot5693 Жыл бұрын
Last week I was on a ladder pulling a rope up with a 20 litre bucket full of concrete ,, about 60 time's... It wasn't my job an the concrete pump had left,,,, health an safety rep was there
@coreyleavell6921
@coreyleavell6921 Жыл бұрын
I have to agree. I was an environmental inspector. Above-ground fuel tanks have way more regulations than underground tanks. Why? It's too hard to check underground. No shit.
@ovechkin100
@ovechkin100 6 ай бұрын
so true. my company stopped using plywoods on the homes they build, and literally sheet the exterior walls with tentest.... imagine your house walls having, cheap plastic siding, paper wrap, insulation, a sheet of tentest, and another batt of insulation and then drywall, in a stick frame structure. Its incredible how cheap our buildings are compared to these, yet we still cannot come close to the finesse in these buildings, and scale.
@seandavidt3538
@seandavidt3538 Жыл бұрын
A few other areas that defy their explanation in Philadelphia include the Waterworks facility on the Schuykill River behind the Art Museum, the Grand Masonic Temple directly across the street from City Hall (public tours are available and recommended), Fort Mifflin (which is an obvious Star Fort), Kelpius Cave in Wissahickon State Park (the park has many unusual features including dolmens, standing stones and carved out ‘caves’) Laurel Hill Cemetery, Girard College and the Please Touch Museum (Memorial Hall) in Fairmount Park. Anyone interested in Alternative History should definitely look into these places
@oldworldex
@oldworldex Жыл бұрын
I think you're on to something about this being the old world capitol. In all my explorations on the continent, Philadelphia has proven to be the most majestic thus far. I happen to have a file in the works on this location as well. As always more questions than answers are raised as we focus the crosshairs on a topic/location in this field of research. Always enjoy your take Aurelian...
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you much OWE. It is the first building that really hit me as hard or harder than the Iowa State Capitol. I have decided it warrants an on the ground follow up. I hope all is going well. I loved the Wichita exploration you did.
@RonCobb-co6dr
@RonCobb-co6dr Жыл бұрын
While you're at it, compiling the evidence, it would be interesting to say the least if someone, like yourself with an eye for certain things, to start a file on reoccurring items. Like some of the faces, statues, columns, larger brick work for instance, that adorn soo many of these buildings just above the entrance. It would be nice to be able to say: they used a form of geopoly material to cookie cutter the lying share of these things world wide. I can see it, proof would be good for our future arguments.
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
@@RonCobb-co6dr Good idea there is just so much damn stuff to document in so many different areas it’s insane.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
Too many questions would have been asked about the architecture in Philly. Why Madison not Milwaukee ? Sacramento not San Francisco ?. Rocky (1976) the scene where Stallone jogs to the city hall, up ancient stairs, is simply awesome.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone still believe Abraham Lincoln grew up in a log cabin, in the same state where the Chicago Federal Building once stood?
@anthonycastro0796
@anthonycastro0796 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are officially "morning coffee only" level ❤. Your transition from the outside impression to the inside details of the building was PERFECT. I agree, the interior detail alone conveys a completely different story. And like another said, when you factor in the multiple buildings being built at the time, the amount of different places these different buildings were constructed, the amount of skilled labor, the logistics of supplying materials...Hilarious😂
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. We are always so impressed (rightfully so) with the exterior that we can overlook how much more difficult yet ornate the interior can be. No one ever shows construction photos of the foundation or interiors. I guess it is just too boring to show. :)
@xenomorpher5458
@xenomorpher5458 Жыл бұрын
That pole is a Old electrical pole. Each of those "knobs" had a glass topper which "insulated" the wrapped wire and ran to a different building. We later learned to simplify the line being ran but it used to be much more complex. When i was living in Pennsylvania we moved into a building with a collection of twenty of them in the basement that we cleaned up and my mother sold off to collectors for roughly twenty bucks a piece. This was in Hazleton. There was also a building that my stepfathers mother bought which needed repair but had three floors and a massive basement which had a ballroom and two ballet studios on the top floor with locked closets holding stuff from the Sons of liberty that had been left there for who knows how long. They could have been left there since then or placed in there sometime later and forgotten but there had been four muskets with bayonets, a old bible several metals, a flag and other items.
@jwick1215
@jwick1215 10 ай бұрын
Glad to see you did a piece on Philadelphia, having had the opportunity to live there when i was younger and work at city hall i can tell you that in my non professional opinion that building is extremely old maybe 300 yrs or older In fact the center of city hall in the court yard was a brass zodiac sun dial which was adorned with many strange looking colorful symbols. Its diamiator from what i can remember was at least 30 feet or larger. Hundreds of people walked over it everyday as did i with no sign of weat and tear. At some point it was removed ot covered over. Now a very corny compass of some kind lays in its place. The sub basement now thats a whole other story trust me the feeling of dreed will come over you if you ever go down there.....✌️
@fredwilliams9237
@fredwilliams9237 Жыл бұрын
Another Gem…. There’s underground rivers under fairmount park, especially where Memorial Hall is. My colleague owns half of the structures around fairmount park in West Philly. He hired divers to see what was under his properties.
@valeriedixon6567
@valeriedixon6567 Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in philadelphia, Pa. I absolutely love this building. ❤
@cjtrickstar6060
@cjtrickstar6060 Жыл бұрын
The Ritz Carlton is next to this. It's an old world forum building. Huge! Also 30th st station is obscenely big. Awe striking train station
@brianodonnell7076
@brianodonnell7076 8 ай бұрын
As a builder of 30 years of very high end homes in the Chicago area, I can tell you there is a page for every detail, and some houses I've built, the plans become cumbersome, and I build stations throughout houses where trades can review these voluminous plans. The plans for a building like this should be on display at the Smithsonian. Where are they? Are we supposed to believe the created all the detail on site? The tradesmen just filled in the blanks of the 2 elevations? The narratives never add up. This is an incredible structure.
@fernandoscrenci4874
@fernandoscrenci4874 Жыл бұрын
Great Work on the Historical history of Philadelphia buildings !!!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it.
@pvsnrj
@pvsnrj Жыл бұрын
Sir thank you for this great narrative you shared with the world of Digital economic order that is emerging. As a civil and Ocean engineering background we have great feelings about history and Philadelphia. Thank you
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You are most welcome!
@brandons7272
@brandons7272 Жыл бұрын
It's insane you go over there and it's not like oh I'm going to go look at this one little thing that's so Grand and beautiful! No! No that couldn't be farther from the truth!! Literally everywhere you look is just insane architecture! It just keeps going and going and going! It is freaking everywhere!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Once one is able to see beyond the conditioned monotony of life it is quite astounding.
@mtbeech7296
@mtbeech7296 Жыл бұрын
It is an absolute gem of a building and requires hours of research. It was too costly to demolish really shows the level of construction! WAY WAY above what we are able to build.
@JeffEdington
@JeffEdington Жыл бұрын
Other channels with big sponsors put out one 10-15 minute video a week and you produce 20-30 minutes of gold 5 times a week!
@gumbojones3133
@gumbojones3133 5 ай бұрын
I am going on a trip to Philadelphia next weekend. Can't wait to see all the beautiful architecture. This video helped me plan what I want to see, thank you LA!
@mudphloodphilly2456
@mudphloodphilly2456 Жыл бұрын
By far the best representation of old world Philadelphia I've seen and I've seen them all not one negative comment on the city's long list of current and not so current happenings is classy and par for your productions much appreciated can't wait till part two thru ten I've got tons of info and pics of churches , schools , train stations , homes, castles and mounds with mansions atop them just recently read about the Chinese wall that was there and parts are said to still be standing and just built over because they couldn't get it all down. Long way from William Penns men living in caves along the Delaware river decades after arrival. Thanks for incredibly interesting content once again my friend
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You are most welcome, and I try to look beyond what we are always told to look at. :)
@rsalese44
@rsalese44 Жыл бұрын
I’ve spent a lot of time in Philadelphia. The state of decay of some of the neighborhoods is sad. But when you look, the buildings are clearly old world
@lelecoleman8472
@lelecoleman8472 Жыл бұрын
You should of seen it in the 90's. It was bombed out.. Its way better now
@beyondthemudflood
@beyondthemudflood Жыл бұрын
The William Penn statue presents an interesting perspective. There are pictures of that statue on the ground before it was raised with people standing around it. If in fact that picture is real and unaltered, we can draw a few conclusions. First, I don't believe our current civilization built it, which means they didn't raise it on the building either. So we can conclude that picture is from the prior civilization or reset. We can also conclude those people in the picture are from before the last reset. We know the statue is 37 feet tall from base to top. Using an online scale tool we can calculate some of the men in that photo are over 6'6" inches tall. Very tall for the time period we are told it is from. Not exactly precise or conclusive, but an interesting thought experiment.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It definitely adds to the mystery instead of providing quick answers. Great post!
@cee_dot_610
@cee_dot_610 Жыл бұрын
Based off everything you said, we can also conclude the person depicted in the statue is NOT the William Penn we’ve been told it is.
@shentsaceve5642
@shentsaceve5642 Жыл бұрын
Oof... you didn't throw in the Memorial Hall complex that is just across the river from the Museum of Art. THAT place is just as mysteriously astounding & just as fascinating. Otherwise, this was an awesome video. I am very curious as to what Philadelphia was (and the whole world, for that matter) back when it was all something else. And also very curious as to what the beings of that time did in all of these (and long gone & forgotten) buildings. Did they just hang out?!?! All of these huge, beautiful buildings with many, many rooms... wtf did they do in them?!?!?! So many questions, because I intuitively get that this was all something else before the parasites infected everything.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
There is no way I would try to put that in the same video with the city hall. I will get to it.
@shentsaceve5642
@shentsaceve5642 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 haha, ok! Glad I came across your channel today; instant sub. And you speak clearly & concisely... AND, unlike practically everyone else with a channel, you don't use filler words "uh" every other word NOR do you click your tongue incessantly every other sentence. I think it is some sort of memetics going on where everyone mimics each other; kind of like the girls all mimic each other with the uptalk(?) & that annoying "froggy" voice.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@shentsaceve5642 Thank you very much and welcome! I came into looking at this city thinking it would be 2-3 videos to cover it all properly and I found out that estimate was quite wrong. :)
@kevinchambers1101
@kevinchambers1101 Жыл бұрын
When I was young, center city Philadelphia was a beautiful city with a lot of old-world charm. Sadly, the city hired Bacon, a city planner who destroyed a lot of the cities charm.
@tyleranderson4852
@tyleranderson4852 Жыл бұрын
Another great video! I have been really thinking about the sheer number of skilled workers needed to build something like this. Now multiply that number by at least 100 , and that would be a very conservative estimate just for a 10 year period in this city’s history. Now do that for every other city that was built during the exact same time period and the number would be impossible. There is no way that there would have been that many skilled workers available, a mere 20-30 years after the civil war when we are told upwards of 620k people died. A majority of them working age and prime age to father children. It is probably the reason for the orphan trains to build up the population in these frontiers at the time. But no mention of how the skills were learned in mass.Another possibility i was thinking about was why we were told the west was all small wooden buildings around this time frame but in reality there were many fully brick and stone structures . It seems to be that they built the shacks around the existing structures until they could figure out how to rebuild them or demolish them. Literally “founding “them .
@shentsaceve5642
@shentsaceve5642 Жыл бұрын
Spot on. One of the many, many pieces of evidence that there was/is something else going on is that they would need so many skilled workers in those time periods, all over this country at the same time AND all over the world at that very same time!!! Just the sheer amount of architects, stone/metal sculptors working around the clock elsewhere - long before construction would begin and then hauling all of the works to the site; let alone all of the *ahem* masons & engineers needed to set every stone & statue perfectly in their places is further proof to me that something else has been going on in our past.
@lv_lambo3162
@lv_lambo3162 Жыл бұрын
My middle school teacher would literally take us to all these historical buildings/sites once a week. I love my city! Also our downtown/Center City was actually in the Germantown section of the city when Philly was the capital and they eventually moved it to downtown/center city later.
@reneehicks4629
@reneehicks4629 Жыл бұрын
I never knew that and I grew up in Gtown thought I knew the history. I know Pres.Washington lived in Gtown.
@lv_lambo3162
@lv_lambo3162 Жыл бұрын
@@reneehicks4629 yup…. We actually visited the house he lived in. My mom and Dad from uptown. It’s a lot of history there
@donnamariefarrell533
@donnamariefarrell533 8 ай бұрын
Living in Philadelphia, ive always lived city hall, its a little grungy but the interior details are georous. Stunning details ,woodwork and tiles
@gmh.
@gmh. Жыл бұрын
Ive not been to Philly but i did go to DC recently and explored its architecture. It has many incredible buildings beyond the capitol mall, but the Washington monument, Lincoln memorial and capitol building layout could be the reason it was chosen. It is so amazingly grand that it wouldve been difficult to explain it otherwise. Of course they couldve knocked it down but what a waste it wouldve been of the world's most amazing obelisk. Surrounding the mall are massive stone buildings covering full city blocks inscribed with: department of agriculture etc, which seem excessive but give the strong impression of heady importance and deific government.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
I have been there and that is true. I was looking at it from the perspective of the historical narrative that Philly is where the United States truly started. The fact that it was moved indicates someone changed their mind about where it should be. There were clearly many options.
@gmh.
@gmh. Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 but WAS it ever in Philly or are they just trying to make the narrative seem complicated? I live in SF and the narrative over here is stupid AF
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@gmh. They roll hard with the Philly narrative. I think the real story is hinted in what remains. There are few buildings that match the city hall in Philly.
@lelecoleman8472
@lelecoleman8472 Жыл бұрын
The digging in the street most likely was putting in water transportation systems etc. Also laying tracks. Philly was full of tracks when I was a kid, which is now mostly all covered.
@maggot5693
@maggot5693 Жыл бұрын
Length, width, depth So 100 foot x 100 foot x 8 foot deep Into cubic metres is 2265.34 5 - 7 cube is the delivery of truck bowl Cant reverse to close to hole with that weight, so probably long shoots,, Got to be vibrated,,,,has to be 24 hour pour,,, or 2 full days just pouring concrete into a hole.. Then ya batcher gotta keep up.. Modern batch plant today,,1 week notice for 100 cube delivery,,,, thats a big day to An theres a big cage of steel in there They can float an move ,,,
@RM-kc6qk
@RM-kc6qk Жыл бұрын
It's mind blowing that the capital building was being built at the same time as settlers were living in cabins in Kansas and Missouri and the beginning of the ponyexpress
@waifofwallstreet
@waifofwallstreet 2 ай бұрын
have you heard of europe
@angelicamonk7058
@angelicamonk7058 Жыл бұрын
The walls are 20 feet thick!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Impossible to tear down but somehow so easy to build....
@k2smd
@k2smd Жыл бұрын
Directly across the street from City Hall is the Masonic Temple...imagine that. It houses lots of photographs of City Hall's construction, including the very large timber cranes on top being powered by mules, lifting things, including the statue
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, Philadelphia has so much old world stuff it’s insane! 💯💯💯
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
I estimate to cover just the basics of everything there I could do 240 minutes of video and still not be close to scratching the surface.
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Yes indeed, I live here like I said but do you have any tips on how I can search for more stuff in Philadelphia?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@CreamyVuitton You want to find other locations that haven't been explored yet?
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Yes well I mean I can see the difference in buildings literally all over the city there’s still so many huge red brick buildings as well as incredible cathedrals and churches and stone buildings but I guess I’m asking like is there anything I can research online to find even more stuff rather than just aimlessly walking until I notice an old world structure. And by the way I’ve noticed on top of mostly all the row homes and houses especially around in Frankford/Kensington area they all have very similar ornamentation that I feel like we’re already here as well, literally one of the houses a few doors down from me has two columns on their front porch and this isn’t in a nice area by any means, it just gives me a feeling that a lot of the residential places were already here as well, obviously you understand this from seeing so many old pictures from any place that looks like the streets and sidewalks were already built out.
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I can also do some boots on the ground for any type of pictures or whatever you would want/need for any future projects just to let you know.
@scottbaker-ScottyB
@scottbaker-ScottyB Жыл бұрын
There pillars may indicate esoterically the guarding angels of Heaven. As above so below.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
I like that perspective.
@nyquil762
@nyquil762 Жыл бұрын
All I can say is wow and thank you.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You are most welcome and thank you.
@QuaaludeCharlie
@QuaaludeCharlie Жыл бұрын
I am Impressed . a Very good Video .
@OttoChenault
@OttoChenault Жыл бұрын
Congratulations L.A. , I think you found a photo of an Actual Civil War battle , frame 7:50 ! Certainly looks like destruction of some kind. Strange they would move the Capitol closer to the Atlantic from which their enemies ,the British could invade and burn down. Also the move towards the Mason Dixon Line occurred prior to the War of Northern aggression. They took Virginia and carved out an independent Occult district, then split the rest in two. Your right, the interiors of these buildings tell all. Thanks for another great dig!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Otto, great to hear from you!
@OttoChenault
@OttoChenault Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 ❤️
@scottbaker-ScottyB
@scottbaker-ScottyB Жыл бұрын
The scaffolding is always a bluur meaning possibility an add on the original photograph and also the people look penciled in for added fake drama.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Always on those roofs as though falling was never a concern.
@Market_Theory
@Market_Theory Жыл бұрын
Wow, this makes me want to go explore Philadelphia. Amazing
@CreamyVuitton
@CreamyVuitton Жыл бұрын
I’ve lived here my whole life it is mind blowing
@nobleharvey9935
@nobleharvey9935 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely gorgeous. Makes me want to redecorate my lowly, humble abode. I need crayons to do it though 😊 thanx ❤️ it's a keeper!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You are most welcome!
@michaelbryan6091
@michaelbryan6091 Жыл бұрын
When I look at the 30th street station I get an eerie feeling of the temple of Osiris in abydos
@RestoringReality
@RestoringReality Жыл бұрын
Viewers suggest it's insulting for you to ask questions about these structures? I say let them be insulted. Frankly I'm insulted that I'm expect to swallow the shi+ that I'm being fed about these same structures.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It seems to be the same individual because the wording is always the same. I like to remind everyone it is best to think for ourselves.
@PillarsAndPowerlines
@PillarsAndPowerlines Жыл бұрын
Excellent research! I’m glad you pointed out the fake construction photos, and how even if a photo is fake, hints of truth can still be seen in them. 1000% so true beautiful video 👏
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@ishko108
@ishko108 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for another great video Aurelian. You did it faster than even I expected. I don't think anyone could call you lazy for sure. You're just churning 'em out like there's no tomorrow. And we're grateful, yes we are. Yet I'm irritated to no end by occasional mainstream narrative defenders that stumble unto your channel and wonder why you're so "snarky" etc. You should just accept the narrative and ask no questions, because obviously reality is what they see and say it is. Textbooks are the truth. Questions? We don't need no stinkin' questions!!! This proves you don't do your research right! Seriously.... They must have it so easy, living a life where they just accept everything at face value, because why in the world would anyone lie about anything of history? Or manipulate information to stay in power? God forbid. Frankly, I wish there was a way to explain to them in ways they could understand. But like they say, you can't wake a man who's pretending to sleep... Can't wait for you to return from Philly and share new stuff with us. God bless.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It is really one individual because the stated points are always exactly the same. I don't even think about it as I have heard much worse from people in authority over matters much more miniscule. Thank you very much and I always greatly appreciate your mindset.
@ishko108
@ishko108 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 thank you very much. It's great to have such rapport, especially in these matters.
@ishko108
@ishko108 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I greatly appreciate your appreciation.
@Reignforest87
@Reignforest87 Жыл бұрын
@@ishko108 We all have our own psychological blocks to overcome. I like meeting disagreeable people bc its an opportunity to practice talking points. However I understand many are just not ready. This information has the potential to cause trauma for some. If they truly understood it for what it was they wouldn't be able to manage their daily lives.
@ygagarin5572
@ygagarin5572 Жыл бұрын
An answer to a question "Can we build something like that today?" may be the Cathedral of Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. Yes, we can. But it took over 100 years to build it. Still, a lot of stuff had to be realized with the high-rise cranes and modern computer technologies like computer design. Based on that, we can guess that the same kind of technologies were used for the old-Tartarian style buildings.
@McCTruth1
@McCTruth1 Жыл бұрын
It’s all Freemasonic/luciferian, I had access to city hall all rooms, basement etc and buildings near by for years. The Freemasonic temple across the street has an underground tunnel to city hall. I never accessed it cause I would have had to cut the pad lock on the giant iron gate in the old city hall basement. There are tunnels underground that lead all the way down the park way to the old Philadelphia water works. I can only imagine the tunnels to where and why!
@Reignforest87
@Reignforest87 Жыл бұрын
Just bc that's what it is now doesn't mean that's what it used to be.
@McCTruth1
@McCTruth1 Жыл бұрын
@@Reignforest87 no that’s exactly what it used to be. It can be seen in the architecture and depictions of images if you have eyes to see. This country was founded by Freemasons if you know True history. 2 Corinthians 11:14-15 Bless you all in Truth.
@nikkig9630
@nikkig9630 Жыл бұрын
Great video!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@lelecoleman8472
@lelecoleman8472 Жыл бұрын
Philly and New York have a tight history together. Philly also has little ellis island on Delaware Ave and Washington Ave where immigrants that built this city flooded in.
@irishsetter1972
@irishsetter1972 3 ай бұрын
The Fisher Fine Arts Library was designed by Frank Furness, who designed a lot of these ornate buildings that are no longer there, because tastes changed over time and they were knocked down. Very few remain, but the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is one of them just north of C.H. on Broad. There may be drawings that exist, but a lot of times in old buildings, they're lost over time. UPenn keeps a pretty good archive of their building construction drawings, but I doubt the city has kept as good a record.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 3 ай бұрын
The city has a lot of company in exercising that trait.
@cavemanhorticulture5973
@cavemanhorticulture5973 Жыл бұрын
The parliament building in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada has all sorts of occult symbols of the old world embedded into the building. Winnipeg was supposed to be the capitol city of Canada at its conception. A student of the University of Winnipeg at one time gave guided tours.
@markdbey
@markdbey Жыл бұрын
Amazing how the colonists (who were former slaves to Britain) were poor and in full war with Britain until 1783 but in 100 years they had the finance to build buildings with such splendor ALL OVER the United States. At heights that would be UNIMAGINABLE without cranes and or power tools… Amazing…🙄
@truthseeker383
@truthseeker383 Жыл бұрын
Good stuff, keep it coming
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@grainofsand7841
@grainofsand7841 28 күн бұрын
That 3rd empire french renaissance revival building. The one standing directly in the middle of a bunch of other buildings. It looks incredibly similar to the Biltmore house.
@afrohawk
@afrohawk Жыл бұрын
I call this building "Superman's Castle". It's otherwordly!
@Boston_Shovinstuff
@Boston_Shovinstuff 11 ай бұрын
Boston here ... Great research bud ! I havent seen anyone in this field do a video on my city . The Hyde Park neigborhood is insane (part of Boston where I grew up) . Mayby , just mayby you could look into it ? p
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 11 ай бұрын
Hmm why not? ;)
@Boston_Shovinstuff
@Boston_Shovinstuff 11 ай бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 * crisp high five * I was a roofer in Harvard (Cambridge) and with MIT ... the years being there and places / spaces us workers had access too ... the things Ive seen just blew my mind . I always knew something was weird , growing up with regular houses next to these massive stone , decorative buildings with incredible architecture ?! Anywho , God Bless bud and that would be amazing if I saw a Boston video .
@aydrianindigo7015
@aydrianindigo7015 3 ай бұрын
People had told me that they dont make these types od buildings anymore because theyre "hard to maintain" and it "would cost too much to make them"
@susanholbrook4185
@susanholbrook4185 Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@fredwilliams9237
@fredwilliams9237 Жыл бұрын
Should do a video on all the antennas on the New York high rises.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
There is a lot to cover with NYC.
@jacobbrassard2776
@jacobbrassard2776 Жыл бұрын
look at the sagrada Familia in Barcelona that’s what an other worldly buildings are. Or look at the Bund in Shanghai. Those are built in living memory and are even more impressive. Crazy how they built this buildings back then.
@seyronabbott6001
@seyronabbott6001 5 ай бұрын
City Hall is some sort of weird mashup of Civic Building, Museum and with the jaw dropping, dramatic splendor of some of those interiors - film soundstage.😮
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 5 ай бұрын
It could be alone those lines....
@dougbrzeczek8655
@dougbrzeczek8655 Жыл бұрын
I seriously think when you see a city was founded date...that it actually means it was found at said date. If that makes sense
@im3phirebird81
@im3phirebird81 Жыл бұрын
One of the reasons the capital was moved was to bring it to Virgin(ia) Mary(land)... Find the inverse pentagram stretching across Washington DC with the white house at the lowest tip.
@irishsetter1972
@irishsetter1972 3 ай бұрын
The view of the "phantom tower" is looking east from Market St. The tower is on the north (left in the photo) side.
@kyle6781
@kyle6781 Жыл бұрын
I love when our sports teams get to the championships they put a jersey on penn you can see all up and down broad street #goeagles
@richardrodda6456
@richardrodda6456 Жыл бұрын
Great Video! Thanks you for waking people up
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@adambomb8324
@adambomb8324 Жыл бұрын
Of course the city hall tower construction details caught my attention for some reason. Small details, if it is true, but going with the narrative... the tower: built with wrought iron frame, with cast iron plates electroplated with copper and coated in aluminum? Wtf is that all about? Supposedly for structural integrity to hold the weight of that megalithic statue or is it some sort of antique-tech? Idk. Did they use a zeppelin to lift the statue? At some point the his-story becomes very mythical. So lets just go with a "mythical" standpoint and go with your description of "other worldly" - if God created everything in this realm from the perfect human body to the Fibonacci sequence showing up in all forms throughout nature and the way everything is symbiotic, why would He stop at mother nature? Why would He not continue to finish building this realm out and decorate it with these grand structures? Ok, its a mythical theory that seems plausible... So for all of the people saying its disrespectful to the architects of that time. Is it not more disrespectful to not give credit where credit is due? As always, just trying to think outside of the box... I do admit that Chat-time With Carl was missed 😂😂
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
He will be back. He has a debate scheduled in the near future. Honestly, I don't wonder if there is a lot of truth to what you stated or perhaps it goes back to humans having more capability than we can imagine now.
@adambomb8324
@adambomb8324 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 could be where the phrase "God given talent" came from...
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
I want to see what the original toilets looked like. The images inside solidify my belief that this was created by the Saints, who had no physical limitations, during the millennial reign of Christ,.and that this is not a myth. The Narrative of Adam and Eve in the garden is simplistic. Many believe that all the trillions of bricks that can't be explained and blocks came with everything else maybe even star forts, Aqueduct and River systems.
@lindadiggs6420
@lindadiggs6420 Жыл бұрын
How about the term "founding fathers"?Hmmm. It's a shame how they transformed the wheel of the zodiac in the courtyard into a compass. Incidentally Billy was living in caves along the Delaware River when he first got here. He thought city hall was a castle or a fort.
@marcellasimerly8233
@marcellasimerly8233 Жыл бұрын
1755 there was a massive Earthquake and concoment Portugal, a Tsunami that hit the ENTIRE Atlantic coast line. That includes Philadelphia. It was in mud. New York New Amsterdam mud flooded. Buried. So few records available. Great job.
@Sandbarfight
@Sandbarfight Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
You are most welcome.
@goose33
@goose33 6 ай бұрын
Scranton PA is a big one
@Agapy8888
@Agapy8888 Жыл бұрын
The buildings were never built by the horse and buggy era. Capacitors for electricity. These buildings are all over the flat earth. Who built them?
@AWikkedMoon
@AWikkedMoon Жыл бұрын
You are never seeing construction of these way old buildings. You are seeing the destruction of them. Pay attention to how high the floors are. They were made by and for taller people, average height 9 feet tall. Masonry can last for thousands of years. Example, the ancient pyramids. All that the founders who found them did, was take off the antiquity and make them look more plane. They put a high window over the top of the main entrance doors and made them shorter, and moved the door handle lower.
@kubrickenigma7977
@kubrickenigma7977 Жыл бұрын
I'm catching on to your hints at not only photo-manipulation, but... the use of miniatures and biggatures... the Vanilla Sky (poem & movie ref., I think) in all these historical photos becomes increasingly odd... From where was the marble sourced? Who were the craftsmen and contractors? Wouldn't there be official records, receipts, log books, etc?!
@jamessconiers1968
@jamessconiers1968 Жыл бұрын
Everybody is so creative!
@mickphilly101
@mickphilly101 Жыл бұрын
Gathering from your many open ended questions regarding the shift of capitol cities, your questions elude to a theory that Old City Philadelphia was a center of a thriving free and advanced American society that was overtaken at some point in the 1800s and the new sovereignty in control moved headquarters to DC? The old architecture was built by Giants and perhaps they were wiped out by cataclysm and the ensuing British Colonists claimed the Giants architecture.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It is something along those lines. Giants or some people with an incredible building capability. This is a lot of theory and conjecture to fill in what we don't know.
@mickphilly101
@mickphilly101 Жыл бұрын
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I still am pondering on the reasons why they would move the capitol to DC. If most of the old architecture in DC was claimed as well?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@mickphilly101 It is a good question. It depends how much you see other symbols in DC and if you do the choice to move becomes clearer. However, it could simply be as we are told, and they really decided to just build a capital out there.
@chiselprep
@chiselprep 22 күн бұрын
They used primitive scaffolding. And the craftsman of the time were just SPECIAL. They overdosed on the concrete and bricks and got to work. We're socialized different now and the crafts weren't passed down correctly.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 22 күн бұрын
We also needed the craft of logistics passed down.
@chiselprep
@chiselprep 22 күн бұрын
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I definitely see what ur trying to convey and it absolutely seems peculiar how they don't build edifice like these any longer or as durable
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 21 күн бұрын
We seemed to do more before we had paved highways and motorized transport.
@gryph70
@gryph70 Жыл бұрын
That big archway looked almost like an Airship hangar.. phonetic origins of the cities nomenclature is interesting.
@pagerhoads1531
@pagerhoads1531 Жыл бұрын
Even more disrespectful to not photograph the construction of the planned tallest building of the time and the accomplishments of the builders, unless they weren't really the builders........
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
*Ding* As Jon Levi likes to say. :)
@ashleybones3556
@ashleybones3556 10 ай бұрын
Hyatts that we built 50 years ago have to be gutted and remodeled. Brutalist to ultramodern
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 10 ай бұрын
Post-Modernity?? ;)
@JohnTaylor-fh4et
@JohnTaylor-fh4et Жыл бұрын
Why are we the ONLY creature on this planet that pays "rent"? Are buildings with rooms in short supply?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Always we are told.
@JohnTaylor-fh4et
@JohnTaylor-fh4et Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 kind of like their just making it up as they go along.
@kyle6781
@kyle6781 Жыл бұрын
What to see some magic? Take the frankford-market train to somerset or alleghany.Alleghany.. absolutely majestic
@meredithg227
@meredithg227 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@Jawnwickk
@Jawnwickk Жыл бұрын
A theory I have on why “old world” style buildings aren’t built anymore is, a lot of these constructions were used as employment opportunities to stimulate local economy and to get federal funding. The used to design the largest most complicated things they could to make it take as much resources and time as reasonably possible. The Hoover damn, or the Manhattan project are examples. They built entire mini cities around both of those projects. This “tactic” for job creation isn’t really used anymore because the economy is different with globalization, centrals banks and millions more citizens in the United States. We still use “infrastructure investment for job creation obviously, but now we building a bunch of easy to build things all over the place instead of complicated, massive constructions.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
That is a new one I must say.
@Jawnwickk
@Jawnwickk Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 That, or the design language is just out of style 😅
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
@@Jawnwickk Probably!
@jordanolafson80
@jordanolafson80 10 ай бұрын
My personal opinion of alledgedlly millions of people being sent from Africa,China,England,Ireland,Scotland etc to the Americas,Australia,South Africa,New Zealand etc and only a few hundred years ago built all those bueatiful old world buildings no way they were already there and if the people werent already there themselves than they were refugees, asylum seekers,or ex prisoners of war that came out of the Tartarian Empire whether the war that ended the Tartarian Empire was from a civil war or a rival regime overthrown the Capitals and the past knowledge of Tartaria was forbidden to talk about i think those World Fairs from the 1700's to the early 1900's was where they held workshop/seminars on the laws of the new regime or a dualistic regime that got together and fought the Empire and if you notice all around the world in politics there is mainly two parties or regiems that fight to be elected presidency/govenment so when you hear the word World War 1 or 2 its not technically the first two world wars its just the two main wars since the the old world fell and the reasons behind these wars was to destroy and cover up more about the old world if only people knew what Hiroshima and Nagasaki looked like before the Atom bombs were dropped they would be surprised buildings were almost identical to the Americas
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 10 ай бұрын
Oh, some of those buildings still endure.
@loneshark87
@loneshark87 Жыл бұрын
The pole in the picture is how they ran telephone or telegraph lines
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
There is a reason why we call the earlier eras the Golden Age, and perhaps the first era itself was ten times longer than all the other eras put together. I am glad you brought that up because that is always a recurring theme in many legends, myths, and even fictional accounts where you have a first era that is something beyond dreams and declining eras that follow.
@Delcoboxing
@Delcoboxing 8 ай бұрын
So… I’m a union carpenter that has worked in Philadelphia for 24 years now… I spent over a year renovating areas of city hall. That being said ,your correct about the attention to detail and some of the amazing craftsmanship that went into city hall and even the other buildings you have displayed and went into the history of. Good job on showing some of this magnificent structures that were constructed in a time period where they put so much into unique details they you don’t see today. And the reason you don’t see them today is because you’ll never hear of a building taking 30 years to build…. Not much more to your “conspiracy” narrative you’re pushing here. We can certainly build the same exact way they did then and even complete the buildings faster then they did 100 years ago but that’s not what people care about anymore. The world is in a hurry for everything so you’ll never see a building like city hall built again. To add to your content and a historical fact about city hall is that even by the time they finished city hall it was considered “outdated” because of the 40 or so years it took for design/construction etc. But enjoyed the video and glad to see that you did your homework but the “conspiracy” angle I don’t understand.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 8 ай бұрын
Thank you. Where in the video was the word "conspiracy" used?
@Delcoboxing
@Delcoboxing 8 ай бұрын
Maybe I used the wrong word … your correct that word wasn’t used. My apologies, but you are skeptical of how these building were constructed. Unless I misunderstood you all together. But that being said there is a blueprint/sketch of one of the potential plans to get William Penn on the top of the building that is displayed if you take the tour to the observation deck at city hall. It’s a ramp starting where Temple university is currently all the way to city hall. They did not use this method but it was considered… apparently they broke him into sections and used a crane then welded him back together. I do agree with you on the fact that more photos and blueprints should be available and not sure why they don’t have them or at least don’t make them public , that is strange.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 8 ай бұрын
@@Delcoboxing I always say it maybe as we are told but why is it hard to verify that which should be simple to verify?
@bearchrist2513
@bearchrist2513 Жыл бұрын
just pressed play hoping there is a love park segment
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
There are probably 3-4 more videos to do this city justice or start too. I am going there for an on-site exploration.
@1ofthesonsoflight
@1ofthesonsoflight Жыл бұрын
What were the building made of that we see because ……….25 Rue Franklin in Paris, France In 1904, the first concrete high-rise building was constructed in Cincinnati, Ohio. It stands 16 stories or 210 feet tall. Historical
@alllivesmatter8581
@alllivesmatter8581 Жыл бұрын
If you look closely it almost seems like the photos ov city hall are actually ov a miniature model depicting the construction ....
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Another reason I want to get on-site to have a look.
@MRptwrench
@MRptwrench Жыл бұрын
I don't have to "wonder why THEY moved the capital from (my beloved Philly) to D.C. ." I can find The Residence Act of July 16,1790 and read how it was done to "appease pro-slavery states who feared a northern capital being to sympathetic to abolitionists." Conspiracy theories in the very beginning of a video.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Full trust and faith in the fidelity and integrity of the government in this comment.
@charleswagner284
@charleswagner284 Жыл бұрын
No mention of the Girard College buildings?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Those are part of exploring boots on the ground.
@seyronabbott6001
@seyronabbott6001 5 ай бұрын
I've been wondering the true history of that place myself.
@kilometersnoblue4311
@kilometersnoblue4311 Жыл бұрын
Do they have the pictures of foundation stones or laying of the corner stone or perhaps maybe them breaking ground which has always been a historical event for the building?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It is very hard to locate those types of photos. There are always photos showing scaffolding and the tower still being built.
@kilometersnoblue4311
@kilometersnoblue4311 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 imma be honest homie, I see the 214 and if we are both Dallas locals we should link so I can pick your brain in person over some fat bowls of bud. Also mad respect for replying. And on the note of how hard the photos are to get, that seems odd that would be rare yet scaffolding would be kept in prime condition as far as images. Also maybe question is off topic but the sky all seems the same, very limited cloud cover. Is it fake? Would be interesting to look up weather of days and see what it was supposed to be via a farmers almanac and historical records. A lot of these images with the sky either don’t pick up clouds very well or they feel fake due to the lack of clouds. Part of me wants to blame the technology but then again some details are crystal clear and some aren’t in the same photograph. Also the fact we build on top of our old buildings like the Mayans and Aztecs is sus af.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
My pleasure, I always try to respond to thoughtful comments. The 214 refers to the supposed birth year of the Roman Emperor who seems to have accomplished miracles in five short years. I am not from Dallas, but I will be doing some explorations there as Texas has a lot of unique anomalies as well.
@kilometersnoblue4311
@kilometersnoblue4311 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 rock wall is a 20 minute drive from my apartment
@DaEagles71024
@DaEagles71024 Жыл бұрын
Freemasons… they damn near built Philly/DC/NY.
@merredithannhansen3765
@merredithannhansen3765 Жыл бұрын
picture looks altered.
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
Which one? Several do look altered which is why I am going in person in a few weeks.
@Zoie3x8
@Zoie3x8 Жыл бұрын
"could we build buildings like this today ?" Lucius often asks. well, being that im something of a fan of architecture's and older architectural methods, i would say :: yes, we could build atleast kind of, or mostly (?) like this (of what we see of tartarian architectures) if we REALLY-REALLY-REALLY wanted to - and we weren't endlessly harassed by all manner of pencil-pusher code-enforcers, mercenary-like contractors who are paid to one-and-done it, and gleefully street-judge-like police looking to make their arrest quotas, to (to the tune of William Tell Overture) */get-it-up, get-it-up, get-it-up-Up-UP, hurry-it-up, hurry-it-up, hurry-it-up-Up-UP, OR ELSE, you go straight to jail !!/* and force us to build it as cheap and as fast as possible, and as cheap as possible, and as cheap as possible yet again.
@tjsmith5477
@tjsmith5477 10 ай бұрын
Those poles seem to show up in lot of old photos What are they?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 10 ай бұрын
Great question.
@coryl6548
@coryl6548 Жыл бұрын
Indeed the structures are too incredible. They do not at all fit into the current reality set up by the system. The level of skill necessary to design and buld such structures would in my humble opinion be too advanced for the supposed level of technology from the noted eras. The level of precision alone is a give away. But then what do I know!?!
@pauliedibbs9028
@pauliedibbs9028 Жыл бұрын
Would you consider the "World's Columbian Exposition" aka "Chicago World Fair of 1893" the pinnacle (and possibly end) of the old world in the US?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
I believe the Old World ended long before this event. This was a showcase of what remained and initial indoctrination for what the society would become in the 20th century.
@pauliedibbs9028
@pauliedibbs9028 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 that makes much more sense, thank you!
@ishko108
@ishko108 Жыл бұрын
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 according to the jillion hidden history YT videos we've seen so far, that statement makes the most sense.
@hawaiiguykailua6928
@hawaiiguykailua6928 Жыл бұрын
The photo at 7:55 looks like they took it from a Fringe episode moment where they steal buildings from alternate universe:)
@tribeoflightband8145
@tribeoflightband8145 Жыл бұрын
13:20 wow I had no idea that it was originally on the ground in those times, I assumed that statue was already on top. Does that mean they still had the technology at that time that the previous civilization had?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
That photo is very questionable for some reasons.
@onyx91977
@onyx91977 Жыл бұрын
11:23 have you been able to find a better quality image of the two figurines? They don’t look like the traditional figurines that can be seen with the naked eye. 🤔
@Restitutor_Orbis_214
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Жыл бұрын
It is hard with some of the records, I am going in person in a few weeks and will inquire in person. :) There is a lot more to cover on this incredible city.
@ernestined.lawrence9514
@ernestined.lawrence9514 Жыл бұрын
Different, but an American city? I can recall hearing it’s the city of brotherly love? A diversity of epic proportions? Eagles? Is it? In Kingston it’s well strung out, more than strung up Jamaican ties? Is there more to Philly than the naked eye can see? In VA they are more strung out than up! Is there more to Confederates than Tubman could learn? Strings and rope fiber is a diverse way for forensics to identify people who die mysteriously like those “freeman” wit Tubman, that led to liberty and war in Philadelphia and according to the Quakers, righteousness? It seems like the hummingbird and the Holy Ghost share common grounds, here on earth! In Philly? Don’t you agree Philly?
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