The first time I went to Europe, I looked at the huge, castle like buildings and knew something wasn't right. I didn't know what(still don't) but I knew we weren't getting the whole story. I was right.
Each time, it looks like those cities were giants machines aimed at producing adequate energy fields for their inhabitants. Those guys were the masters of cymatics. Who knows what they were capable of with such an understanding and such a technology.
Ya know, if you look at a city from the satellite view, have you ever noticed how they look like a computer board? It startled me the first time I noticed it. I don't really feel like being used as a battery for alien life any more.
Derigables or airships were common and in use broadly in the time of the creation of those magnificent old world buildings. The technology in the material used and the absolute perfection, exquisite architecture and art. The background on all these old world images have the sky whitewashed. I bet their were airships in the sky. I also bet these buildings go a few more levels down and lead to underground tunnels. My hats off to the real geniuses behind that work.
It's interesting to look at the coins from this era also, different style. When I see these type buildings it gives my soul a certain feeling, almost relaxing. Thank you for sharing.
Same for me! When I knew literally NOTHING about old world buildings I could feel them in my soul when I was walking around Manhattan. I still remember how I looked back at the block of old buildings ( just regular six stories apartment buildings) trying to remember this feeling forever ( something very dear to my heart and still mysterious). I didn’t even realize until now that this feeling was coming from those old buildings: I just wanted to remember it forever- and here we are! I still remember it! It’s my treasure! And I won’t lose it ❤
@OlgaMamiacheva it's almost like a coming home and your cat is on your porch kind of feeling. Something just feels really right- it's hard for me to put words on, but I get it just looking at pictures and I'm not into architecture or construction. It's very peculiar.
The Holy Hill Basilica is on one of the highest points in southeastern Wisconsin, an elevation of 1,330 feet above sea level and is surrounded by hundreds of acres of natural forest. Now tell me how they lugged all that brick and marble up a hill that high without a road goibg up it? And how they transported it all through the absolute wilderness? And why did they build it so far from any population? A church needs parishioners! Nobody lived anywhere near there at the time. The area still today is very remote only having a couple state roads running through it basically. Something is very off with the story we are told.
Dafoe actually grew up in Appleton which is about 1 1/2 hours north of Milwaukee. Wiilem did live in Milwaukee for a while for his theater work but then moved to New York.
Ah yes, you really get a sense of the "Historiosity" of the place, perfectly and cromnulently elegantly said sir! Actually, it's pronounced "mill-e-wah-que" which is Algonquin for "the good land.". Also, has anyone exclaimed "DOME!" yet?
I've seen many speculate that "The Old World" timeline is much closer to ours than we think. However, I wonder, going by the Prague Clock, A wheel within a wheel.... they speculate that it takes 2,520 years for the smaller wheel to complete its full circle in the larger wheel. The smaller wheel is the Earth/Land that we know of. Going by that theory, these buildings from the Old World would be 2,520 years old. As the wheel moves, the ice melts in the forward momemtum and freezes on the back side. (They show the melting to promote "Global Warming") So its quite possible that these building were frozen in solid ice for those thousands of years. Thawed out for us to "Found" as we repopulated these lands we know of. "I told you not to wander 'round in the dark I told you 'bout the swans, that they live in the park ...... Yes, I told you that the light goes up and down DON'T YOU NOTICE HOW THE WHEEL GOES ROUND? And you better pick yourself up from the ground Before they bring the curtain down Yes, before they bring the curtain down" - Cream/Eric Clapton (Badge) "Big Wheel keeps on Turning, Proud MARY keeps on burning. Rollin Rollin Rollin....." "Oh the Wheel in the Sky keeps on Turning, don't know where I'll be tomorrow" - Journey (Wheel in the Sky)
The water towers are where they producted musket balls. They would haul molten lead up to the top of the stairs, then drop a measured amount of lead. The hot lead would shape into a ball and cool to a solid on its way down. And that is how musket balls where made.
@@nickieb5297 I believe organs have a frequency that can heal our internal organs. 7 organs,7 chakras, 7 days... something with scales and pitches. Harmonic sounds. Basically Cymantics.
That Yerkes Observatory was featured prominently in a Keanu Reeves movie about harnessing free energy, the movie began in Chicago and went to Yerkes, it's called Chain Reaction and was before The Matrix.
I used to be a traveling salesman as a kid to young adult. My Dad and I went door to door selling farm gates, farm to farm. I think a look at the old world barns in Wisconsin would really surprise you. Some of those farms were founded in the 1600's. Just giving you a heads up.
Awesome work again. I wiuld love to see your take on Suwanee University of the South. Its supposed to be modeled after Oxford but it looks just as old if not older?
It takes over a year to build buildings this size out of modern wood construction. No way all this stone work could be done that quickly with limited populations.
That's the premise....what else does it point to? A great reset...of population replacement..but how.. Like a reset on the Atari console? Interesting stuff
Almost all the older churches in Sarnia Ontario Canada have the same feature: a brand new looking corner “dedication” stone that in almost all cases sticks out like a sore thumb. Mind you, some people could say the same about Sarnia as a whole (sarn hole if you will)
The armory's in Philly look like straight medieval castles. Especially Eastern State Penn. The Freemason temple looks like a church but without a cross. And confirmed tunnels from city hall to Freemason temple. Lots more history mystery and occulted things in Philly.
There are more Canals going all over that branch off the Erie Canal, through the finger lakes, The Oswego Canal, The Black River Canal...that they shut down...of course the re-routed and changed the Canals a bunch...it still doesnt make any sense they had them built before the Suez, before steam power or dynamite.
I didn't notice the " soldier" in the back was actively eating... kinda strange because I've been told it takes so long with shutter speeds they can't catch movement 😅😂
Saint Nazianz Wisconsin is an interesting study. Particularly the Salvatorian Seminary. I've been there for an onsite. It's mystical Catholicism at its finest.
OMG. I live not too far away in Wisconsin. I've never heard of this place and I've always had an interest in architectural history. I looked at photos, and for a place that never had more than a few hundred people living there it certainly ticks all the boxes. Old world seminary with buried windows, St Ambrose Church with stained glass windows, sculptures, and complicated architecture, mysterious landmarks, and all done out in the middle of nowhere in 1898 or so, by just a handful of people who settled there. Huge thanks for this!
@@marciaoh7056 I've been in the old Salvatorian cathedral, and covered all the grounds except the Seminary. Did you find the church graveyard with the creepy doll chapel? It's got markers set up in a circle around it that's really old.
Since you were a teacher maybe you have some avenues to find out some information on how and what they taught these architects and trades on skills to build these structures all over the place in every single city. If that information is no where to be found then maybe they didn’t build them. I personally don’t think so as being in the skilled trades myself for a decade now it just in no way makes sense for the absolute perfection and almost angelic skills and remains timeless. Thanks for the work you do
Another interesting point is that so many sports arised in the 1900s, after the reset and society had stabilised again, "they" introduced many different types of sports, specifically football, every tartarian architectured country all of a sudden had this football game in various forms. Just the same as fires, orphans, gold rushes and the like. Seems the new lords needed a decent Roman style bread and circus to keep everyone distracted and entertained.
With these impressive buildings in North America, how do you account for the lack of interior destruction if it had been buried for an extended period of time? I would assume they'd be full of mould and moisture damage.
Das Konzert von Adel war vor einem Teleskop Alten Gebäude 😅. Also ist so ähnlich wie das hier.Es war nur weiß.Innem drinn war eine Erfindung von Tesler.Ist wie ein Museum.
42:08 okay….so you mentioned Lincoln….I commented on your video mentioning the Ferris wheel and its inventor and how his father was the Founder of my community back in the 1800’s. Knox College (here in the community) was also a site for one Lincoln and Douglas’s’ debates 🤔
1:38 - the wood planks over roads in certain places, make me wonder if it wasn’t to level the road like a viaduct due to the unevenness with the buildings It seems as many cities have viaducts many portly documented like everything else.
Would it make sense that they would cool these structures using the vast tunnel systems to circulate cool air.I know it's Wisconsin but these buildings are in the South as well.
The lionfaced figure at around the the 1:20:00 mark might be a representation of Yaldabaoth. At least that was my initial impression. I think I need to go check this place out. Lake Geneva is not very far from Chicago-land at all.
Its still available to install but it's much, much more expensive than other options. And the maintenance is annoying. Portable radiant space heaters are popular. They are filled with oil though, not water.
@Luscius Aurelian Ever thought of compiling construction dates for a given location over a certain duration, then overlay estimated population/workforce and material production capabities/requirements during those timelines? Outliers could be identified through infrastructure data or estimates. Would be interesting to calculate production requirements to put against construction schedules.
It comes to a point where you can easily show vast inconsistencies such as under a few hundred people constructing an entire city in a few months with no established infrastructure. :)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I'm in eau claire, wisconsin right now. I'm a block from a large church on a hill with two domed towers. I'm sure you could find it easily, it's right in town
Movie Tip - If you haven't covered it, 1989's wacky SLIPSTREAM is worth a look for "old world" themes. Loaded. Bill Paxton & over the top Mark Hamill. Never saw it at the the time, director of the original TRON too.
Produced by Gary Kurtz of Star Wars fame who decided to leave because he felt things were redundant in the Return of the Jedi story. It is a very interesting and unique film if not necessarily a good one in places. :)
May you do a show on Spokane WA it is a unique townit seems to be a giant hill or mountain and a flate area then a huge river it also has Roman temples and more obelisk than Egypt. This city is hiding many secrets
Another great upload, I think the buildings were inherited from the old world... there's no way the 1800s would spend all their time putting rails in the ground to pull carriages by horses. Its backwards in my opinion because rails are very restricted, why not pull a cart that can go anywhere and not be restricted. Unless they made use of what were already in the ground. As you know, steam trams and electric trams existed long ago or maybe even more advanced from a previous civilisation. Nice "A unit" locomotive picture at the station. 👍
Some of these old actors really do have the same archetypal face that reminds me of the old world, like jean luc picard (Patric stewart) and others really remind me of the old world.
On A old Tv show Fringe there is a scene where they reveal an alternate manhattan comes into view and Dr Bell says “The Emipre state building used be originally used as an airship dock” and you can see a huge airship. They were dropping nuggets in that show l.
@@ibonechevarria-o7k to be hugely successful, sure… but Trejo certainly isn’t A-list. Look into how much he does for the community. Also, wouldn’t judge a person by their face or looks.. it’s often the ones who “appear good” that usually aren’t..
Right here in Little Falls MN a small town up North, Theres a Couple Old world structures one of the churches has a Fallout shelter the other has gorgeous Granite pillars, onion domes and an Organ. The history of course says it was Founded and the DMV Building is an Old world it's so weird
Also dude sometimes things are made pretty was because it mattered at one time. Now its just all utilitarian brutalism. sometimes things are made beautiful for their own sake.
i think stadiums were some type of water feature what we use as seats i think were terraced little waterfalls similer to some of the oldest step style dams in usa
Pennsylvania is a burial ground of history. Biggest economy on earth at one time in the early country. So EEIRIE in my home town with UNDER one hundred homes, maybe 165 residents YET 1000+ in cemeteries & there exist #3 cemeteries
UtahVille Pennsylvania... Once was Mount Pleasant -Until it applied for a Post office & found one already registered. YET this town was one of the 1st towns in CENTRAL Pennsylvania. It existed LONG before the current Mount Pleasant (probably 100 years before) I saw maps where in The Clearfield County region.. ONLY #2 towns.. Mt Pleasant(current Utahville) & Clearfield(current county seat)
my family used to go to fox and hounds every year for thanksgiving. food quality got really bad around 2020. newt place. its pronounced hue-bur-tis. but tomato tomahto lol
Willem Dafoe approves of this presentation!!
Thank goodness!! :)
The first time I went to Europe, I looked at the huge, castle like buildings and knew something wasn't right. I didn't know what(still don't) but I knew we weren't getting the whole story. I was right.
Your past life told you you've been here before many times...
Charlie and the chocolate factory effed me up like that
@jshaw4757 Possibly. I don't discount anything anymore.
Or just logic, its not that deep bro@jshaw4757
Thank you for doing Milwaukee!
You covered a lot.
There's so much more they are hiding. So much has already been destoyed.
They tried to destroy Notre Dame de Paris in my country but did not succeed yet.
@@vrbob-ks9kv you live there so you would no better than me, but isn't there more than one notre dame church in france?
Take picture and videos. What a shame.
@@sixmax11yes, there are multiple cathedrals with the name “Notre Dame” but only one, “Notre Dame de Paris”.
Feeling grateful I am the first to watch and comment! I enjoy your work, respect your pov and appreciate the topics u cover! Great job!!!
Oh this is gonna be GREAT!!!
Edit: my first DeFoe flick was Boondocks Saints lol
that was a really curious movie, if memory serves me
@ absolutely insane to say the least lol
My absolute fave is American Psycho but I doubt a cool cat like him ever took a crappy role.....
@@MrSomethingElse bale was so good in that, i forget defoe was also in it
@@sixmax11 I love DeFoe in Shadow of the Vampire lol
Each time, it looks like those cities were giants machines aimed at producing adequate energy fields for their inhabitants. Those guys were the masters of cymatics. Who knows what they were capable of with such an understanding and such a technology.
i used to attend a really old catholic church. the organ music was very relaxing,
almost medicinal.
Stars moved into the sky but were here
Ya know, if you look at a city from the satellite view, have you ever noticed how they look like a computer board? It startled me the first time I noticed it. I don't really feel like being used as a battery for alien life any more.
@@sixmax11 432mhz!
Derigables or airships were common and in use broadly in the time of the creation of those magnificent old world buildings. The technology in the material used and the absolute perfection, exquisite architecture and art. The background on all these old world images have the sky whitewashed. I bet their were airships in the sky. I also bet these buildings go a few more levels down and lead to underground tunnels. My hats off to the real geniuses behind that work.
go to 1:48 in this video. squint your eyes. you can easily begin to understand how lady sky can appear bone white via exposure old or new.
That cartouche tho... gives me the chills... wonder what the inspiration/compulsion was for that...Excellent presentation again! TY LA!
Thank you very much!
Thanks for these
I was waiting for this one!
It's interesting to look at the coins from this era also, different style.
When I see these type buildings it gives my soul a certain feeling, almost relaxing.
Thank you for sharing.
Same for me! When I knew literally NOTHING about old world buildings I could feel them in my soul when I was walking around Manhattan. I still remember how I looked back at the block of old buildings ( just regular six stories apartment buildings) trying to remember this feeling forever ( something very dear to my heart and still mysterious). I didn’t even realize until now that this feeling was coming from those old buildings: I just wanted to remember it forever- and here we are! I still remember it! It’s my treasure! And I won’t lose it ❤
@OlgaMamiacheva it's almost like a coming home and your cat is on your porch kind of feeling. Something just feels really right- it's hard for me to put words on, but I get it just looking at pictures and I'm not into architecture or construction. It's very peculiar.
@ Nicely said ❤️
The Holy Hill Basilica is on
one of the highest points in southeastern Wisconsin, an elevation of 1,330 feet above sea level and is surrounded by hundreds of acres of natural forest.
Now tell me how they lugged all that brick and marble up a hill that high without a road goibg up it? And how they transported it all through the absolute wilderness?
And why did they build it so far from any population? A church needs parishioners! Nobody lived anywhere near there at the time.
The area still today is very remote only having a couple state roads running through it basically.
Something is very off with the story we are told.
Great content. Well done.
Dafoe actually grew up in Appleton which is about 1 1/2 hours north of Milwaukee. Wiilem did live in Milwaukee for a while for his theater work but then moved to New York.
Unless the video was altered beyond my knowledge, it is clearly stated in the Appleton section. ;))
I wish I’d found this channel sooner 😎 I’m glad I subbed, thanks for all your hard work!
These structures are so beautiful, wish i could go back in time to discover the context in which they were built
You and me both!
Excellent storytelling.
Ah yes, you really get a sense of the "Historiosity" of the place, perfectly and cromnulently elegantly said sir! Actually, it's pronounced "mill-e-wah-que" which is Algonquin for "the good land.". Also, has anyone exclaimed "DOME!" yet?
?
@@elizabethvandeventer5487 Elizabeth you need more of Wayne and Garth in your life sister, not to mention Homer...
I've seen many speculate that "The Old World" timeline is much closer to ours than we think.
However, I wonder, going by the Prague Clock, A wheel within a wheel.... they speculate that it takes 2,520 years for the smaller wheel to complete its full circle in the larger wheel.
The smaller wheel is the Earth/Land that we know of.
Going by that theory, these buildings from the Old World would be 2,520 years old.
As the wheel moves, the ice melts in the forward momemtum and freezes on the back side. (They show the melting to promote "Global Warming")
So its quite possible that these building were frozen in solid ice for those thousands of years. Thawed out for us to "Found" as we repopulated these lands we know of.
"I told you not to wander 'round in the dark
I told you 'bout the swans, that they live in the park
......
Yes, I told you that the light goes up and down
DON'T YOU NOTICE HOW THE WHEEL GOES ROUND?
And you better pick yourself up from the ground
Before they bring the curtain down
Yes, before they bring the curtain down" - Cream/Eric Clapton (Badge)
"Big Wheel keeps on Turning, Proud MARY keeps on burning. Rollin Rollin Rollin....."
"Oh the Wheel in the Sky keeps on Turning, don't know where I'll be tomorrow" - Journey (Wheel in the Sky)
the wheels on the bus go round and round, round and round, round and round...
unknown
sorry, you took all the good ones
@@sixmax11
"Too much, Magic Bus" - The Who
"The Magical Mystery Tour is coming to take you Away" - The Beatles
IMO the wheel represents reincarnation
@@SkyeSage17
I think it's both. As the Wheel turns, entire populations and are wiped out, and brought back.
@MusicHoldsTheSecret33
Agreed. Reset and turn the wheels.
Beautiful and so many castles 😊
They are just a little nicer than some. :))
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I will take it.
The water towers are where they producted musket balls. They would haul molten lead up to the top of the stairs, then drop a measured amount of lead. The hot lead would shape into a ball and cool to a solid on its way down. And that is how musket balls where made.
🤣👍
Shot towers....they still have one in nearby Dubuque. It is very-well constructed as it is stated to be over 150 years old.
I really appreciate the background music in the Live Stream ☺️
Agree
Ah, thank you Luna, music definitely adds an environment. :)
Imagine the frequencies that come out of that organ it must be super beautiful in person
@@nickieb5297
I believe organs have a frequency that can heal our internal organs.
7 organs,7 chakras, 7 days... something with scales and pitches. Harmonic sounds. Basically Cymantics.
Definitely something lost with the "fire".
That Yerkes Observatory was featured prominently in a Keanu Reeves movie about harnessing free energy, the movie began in Chicago and went to Yerkes, it's called Chain Reaction and was before The Matrix.
I remember, it didn't get the "push" films typically did at that time.
I used to be a traveling salesman as a kid to young adult. My Dad and I went door to door selling farm gates, farm to farm. I think a look at the old world barns in Wisconsin would really surprise you. Some of those farms were founded in the 1600's. Just giving you a heads up.
Wisconsin Dells has all kinds of thumbnails of the past. Take a boat tour on the Wisconsin River. It's eye opening.
Could you elaborate a bit more my friend, i find it fascinating
Awesome work again. I wiuld love to see your take on Suwanee University of the South. Its supposed to be modeled after Oxford but it looks just as old if not older?
It takes over a year to build buildings this size out of modern wood construction. No way all this stone work could be done that quickly with limited populations.
That's the premise....what else does it point to?
A great reset...of population replacement..but how..
Like a reset on the Atari console?
Interesting stuff
Almost all the older churches in Sarnia Ontario Canada have the same feature: a brand new looking corner “dedication” stone that in almost all cases sticks out like a sore thumb.
Mind you, some people could say the same about Sarnia as a whole (sarn hole if you will)
The armory's in Philly look like straight medieval castles. Especially Eastern State Penn. The Freemason temple looks like a church but without a cross. And confirmed tunnels from city hall to Freemason temple. Lots more history mystery and occulted things in Philly.
That's an excellent comment that's true there will never be a conflict avoided because of lack of funds
The prospect never appears in history or fiction anywhere....let's just take that detail to heart as well.
have you ever looked into cornell or ithaca / finger lakes or cooperstown?
They went out of their way to get rid of The Erie Canal?
There are more Canals going all over that branch off the Erie Canal, through the finger lakes, The Oswego Canal, The Black River Canal...that they shut down...of course the re-routed and changed the Canals a bunch...it still doesnt make any sense they had them built before the Suez, before steam power or dynamite.
Yes, I walked a lot of it in the past. I need to get back there in person.
I didn't notice the " soldier" in the back was actively eating... kinda strange because I've been told it takes so long with shutter speeds they can't catch movement 😅😂
It just seems to depend on the day with the photos of that time frame. ;)
😮 I suddenly feel like riverdancing ! Det Smecker ! Greenly is following the potato you're dragging bud . This is going to be epic
Tell Aunt Dotty Hey! lol 😂
@cathybroughton66 Oh HEY ! You did say we'd run into each other on some of these channels 💪
I had been putting it off far too long Greenly!
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 It was worth the wait bud . Det Alapopskalius would appreciate all the symbology :p
Saint Nazianz Wisconsin is an interesting study. Particularly the Salvatorian Seminary. I've been there for an onsite. It's mystical Catholicism at its finest.
Really it's name is St. 'Nazi'anz. Unbeweavable
@SkyeSage17 It's not pronounced that way though. Nāz-iance is closer. It's an old town, with a crazy backstory.
@@bretthenke9613 seems like all these cities and towns have a crazy back story.
OMG. I live not too far away in Wisconsin. I've never heard of this place and I've always had an interest in architectural history.
I looked at photos, and for a place that never had more than a few hundred people living there it certainly ticks all the boxes.
Old world seminary with buried windows, St Ambrose Church with stained glass windows, sculptures, and complicated architecture, mysterious landmarks, and all done out in the middle of nowhere in 1898 or so, by just a handful of people who settled there.
Huge thanks for this!
@@marciaoh7056 I've been in the old Salvatorian cathedral, and covered all the grounds except the Seminary. Did you find the church graveyard with the creepy doll chapel? It's got markers set up in a circle around it that's really old.
Willuhm De Foe or me: William De Fren. Choose wisely.
The Y tends to stand for Aries and the ram’s horns. Flipped it is Libra’s scales, which is also the peace sign
Im doing cement work in the d found a sphere of limestone from a historic building now it reside in my rock garden
Crazy!
his wiki page says that his given name is, as we believed, william. i'll let you read the "story" about why he is also called willem.
Since you were a teacher maybe you have some avenues to find out some information on how and what they taught these architects and trades on skills to build these structures all over the place in every single city. If that information is no where to be found then maybe they didn’t build them. I personally don’t think so as being in the skilled trades myself for a decade now it just in no way makes sense for the absolute perfection and almost angelic skills and remains timeless. Thanks for the work you do
I am a bit of an exile now but there are ways to look deeper.
Another interesting point is that so many sports arised in the 1900s, after the reset and society had stabilised again, "they" introduced many different types of sports, specifically football, every tartarian architectured country all of a sudden had this football game in various forms. Just the same as fires, orphans, gold rushes and the like. Seems the new lords needed a decent Roman style bread and circus to keep everyone distracted and entertained.
That is a great indicator of how things changed as well.
With these impressive buildings in North America, how do you account for the lack of interior destruction if it had been buried for an extended period of time? I would assume they'd be full of mould and moisture damage.
maybe tupperware was invented much earlier than we thought?
@sixmax11 lol what??
@@rdr21776 it would work. really big tupperware.
@@rdr21776 keeps mold off food
Look what happened to the interior of the church...and others.
1:26:40. those look like some of the dynamo parts they built for Chicago worlds fair🤣
I wonder. ;))))
😅I ❤U Lucius!
Das Konzert von Adel war vor einem Teleskop Alten Gebäude 😅. Also ist so ähnlich wie das hier.Es war nur weiß.Innem drinn war eine Erfindung von Tesler.Ist wie ein Museum.
42:08 okay….so you mentioned Lincoln….I commented on your video mentioning the Ferris wheel and its inventor and how his father was the Founder of my community back in the 1800’s. Knox College (here in the community) was also a site for one Lincoln and Douglas’s’ debates 🤔
The very best US President according to historical and scholarly consensus!
I like Mr dafoe. I think you love saying his name 😉 looking forward to images and sarcasm.
I like to have a good time doing what I do, so yes. ;))
1:38 - the wood planks over roads in certain places, make me wonder if it wasn’t to level the road like a viaduct due to the unevenness with the buildings
It seems as many cities have viaducts many portly documented like everything else.
1:19:10 I figured the Y displayed around the creatures neck was for Yerkes. Ive not yet looked into who Yerkes was tho
Impossible isn’t it lots of old cities in America
Has anyone seen the show "his dark materials" they have a lot of the old world references even have the Tartars
The film did too....
Would it make sense that they would cool these structures using the vast tunnel systems to circulate cool air.I know it's Wisconsin but these buildings are in the South as well.
I was thinking Daniel DeFoe ahead of clicking 😂
burlington iowa is crazzzy
used to work with some folks from wausau, wis. they got some great jokes about iowa cheerleaders.
I took a rear-wheel-drive sports car on "snake alley". ;) It did not go well....
The lionfaced figure at around the the 1:20:00 mark might be a representation of Yaldabaoth. At least that was my initial impression. I think I need to go check this place out. Lake Geneva is not very far from Chicago-land at all.
That area was, how shall we say, the place one would go to be less constrained about four years ago. :))
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 at that time I was going to the Pacific northwest and I gotta say Wyoming felt very unconstrained
Why don't we use radiated heat? They still do in Europe, especially Italy❤
Too much money to rob people blind with gas companies
Its still available to install but it's much, much more expensive than other options. And the maintenance is annoying.
Portable radiant space heaters are popular. They are filled with oil though, not water.
It is only for some locations....interesting isn't it?
I wonder if some of the copper domes served the same purpose as bells?
@Luscius Aurelian Ever thought of compiling construction dates for a given location over a certain duration, then overlay estimated population/workforce and material production capabities/requirements during those timelines? Outliers could be identified through infrastructure data or estimates. Would be interesting to calculate production requirements to put against construction schedules.
It comes to a point where you can easily show vast inconsistencies such as under a few hundred people constructing an entire city in a few months with no established infrastructure. :)
❤❤❤❤❤
“I seen it! Yer fond of me lobster!”
When did post offices 1st arrive in the country?
I'm here in Wisconsin. There's scaffolding all over the whatever, castle gym
That sounds about right.....
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I'm in eau claire, wisconsin right now. I'm a block from a large church on a hill with two domed towers. I'm sure you could find it easily, it's right in town
1:50:00 thats bascom hall, isn't it?
Those portajohn toilet things are probably those early phone booths the cops would use to be in touch with dispatchers they were roaming around town
Movie Tip - If you haven't covered it, 1989's wacky SLIPSTREAM is worth a look for "old world" themes. Loaded. Bill Paxton & over the top Mark Hamill. Never saw it at the the time, director of the original TRON too.
Produced by Gary Kurtz of Star Wars fame who decided to leave because he felt things were redundant in the Return of the Jedi story. It is a very interesting and unique film if not necessarily a good one in places. :)
May you do a show on Spokane WA it is a unique townit seems to be a giant hill or mountain and a flate area then a huge river it also has Roman temples and more obelisk than Egypt. This city is hiding many secrets
Another great upload, I think the buildings were inherited from the old world... there's no way the 1800s would spend all their time putting rails in the ground to pull carriages by horses. Its backwards in my opinion because rails are very restricted, why not pull a cart that can go anywhere and not be restricted. Unless they made use of what were already in the ground. As you know, steam trams and electric trams existed long ago or maybe even more advanced from a previous civilisation. Nice "A unit" locomotive picture at the station. 👍
Or why they built submarines to fight in the civil war lol…
Where were the power plants for all these power lines and trolley systems?
@GardenerEarthGuy the church's!
@@GardenerEarthGuy probably were most of these buildings we look back upon today!
at 1:11 my question is, "where are the cranes?". at this stage of construction, they should be still there.
Some of these old actors really do have the same archetypal face that reminds me of the old world, like jean luc picard (Patric stewart) and others really remind me of the old world.
Those buildings look old already in those pictures more like ancient
Another strange little consistent detail.
Did they use “airships” to construct these cities? Seemingly likely.
it's probably how they got the 'birdseye' views
On A old Tv show Fringe there is a scene where they reveal an alternate manhattan comes into view and Dr Bell says “The Emipre state building used be originally used as an airship dock” and you can see a huge airship. They were dropping nuggets in that show l.
Capital building reminds me of a electric company..the cross like structure used to mean energy electricity..
As for 'restoration', well after WW2 and even up until Regan, taxes were 90-70% for the top rates, so recycling had great value 'elsewhere'..
That was called trickle down economics.😐
Funny how vastly different economic approaches and ideologies somehow yield similar percentages...
Watch Hill Rhode Island is filled with old world beach mansions too
Well...its about time.
But America had no 🏇 no cattle remember that.
Donkeys Inc.
Nor horses either originally....
Vanilla Skies parts of building roof missing old photographs?
Yerkes observatory says established 1892 another one of those words like founded ☹️
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All actors are sellouts in on it with no exception.Dafoe's mean looking face is a giveaway.
I agree most actors are rather tasteless irl but DeFoe is actually an exception… him and Danny Trejo.
@@pauliedibbs9028Nah. You gotta be in the "select" club and serve you know who to be able to live it up.
@@ibonechevarria-o7k to be hugely successful, sure… but Trejo certainly isn’t A-list. Look into how much he does for the community.
Also, wouldn’t judge a person by their face or looks.. it’s often the ones who “appear good” that usually aren’t..
Merily Performers and portrayers on the whirld's stage. Each another's audience among the gilded age...Rush
All inverts too. Witchcraft .
The engraving of the title on the observatory looks crappy compared to the impeccable stone work elsewhere.
Yes, that is seen all too often.
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Let me guess, the school for the deaf was built next to railroad tracks?
Well actually......
This one is so much better-
You aren't giggling
OOOOH the excessive belly laughing is during live streaming comment banter.. I see.
You ever seen the movie Abraham Lincoln vampire hunter 🤔 kinda makes you wonder what was really going on back then
I did, on a lost bet....it definitely alludes to more bizarre Victorian times...
37.18 mins in, state fair picture , are they giants on the right hand side?
Right here in Little Falls MN a small town up North, Theres a Couple Old world structures one of the churches has a Fallout shelter
the other has gorgeous Granite pillars, onion domes and an Organ.
The history of course says it was Founded
and the DMV Building is an Old world it's so weird
And Auto-focus. Both by Paul Shrader.
Flight Of the Intruder!
Al Bundy was supposed to be in it, then we got Fred Dalton Thompson....
Also dude sometimes things are made pretty was because it mattered at one time. Now its just all utilitarian brutalism. sometimes things are made beautiful for their own sake.
I can't shake the feeling you're trying to say something here.
☀️
i think stadiums were some type of water feature what we use as seats i think were terraced little waterfalls similer to some of the oldest step style dams in usa
Pennsylvania is a burial ground of history.
Biggest economy on earth at one time in the early country.
So EEIRIE in my home town with UNDER one hundred homes, maybe 165 residents YET 1000+ in cemeteries & there exist #3 cemeteries
UtahVille Pennsylvania... Once was Mount Pleasant -Until it applied for a Post office & found one already registered. YET this town was one of the 1st towns in CENTRAL Pennsylvania. It existed LONG before the current Mount Pleasant (probably 100 years before) I saw maps where in The Clearfield County region.. ONLY #2 towns.. Mt Pleasant(current Utahville) & Clearfield(current county seat)
Richie Fonze and Willy hanging in Milwaukee
Roosevelt? Minus 10 historical points deducted. Otherwise, great stuff.
That is a high compliment to me now. :)
my family used to go to fox and hounds every year for thanksgiving. food quality got really bad around 2020. newt place. its pronounced hue-bur-tis. but tomato tomahto lol
I like poking fun at pronunciations because they seem to change more frequently than we tend to be aware about. :)
Light Sleeper under seen.
streets of fire is 'alt history' so is lighthouse and poor things
What ? His name is Willem !
Professional name, he was born William.
Billy the friend