1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:19,580 Hey everyone, we have a really interesting video for you guys today, kind of out there, 2 00:00:19,580 --> 00:00:24,480 but we actually referenced this on Tartaria part 2 and never really explained it. 3 00:00:24,480 --> 00:00:28,380 Before beginning, I just wanted to give a big shout out to Conspiracy RS, we've been 4 00:00:28,380 --> 00:00:32,300 mentioning this video on waste management for years, and we just wanted to have a resource 5 00:00:32,300 --> 00:00:35,660 here on the channel where we can ask these questions and try to understand what's going 6 00:00:35,660 --> 00:00:37,000 on. 7 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:41,200 The reason we're questioning waste management is because throughout the last 300 years, 8 00:00:41,200 --> 00:00:45,560 there have been severe issues with how we manage getting rid of mass amounts of human 9 00:00:45,560 --> 00:00:46,560 waste. 10 00:00:46,560 --> 00:00:51,520 They don't really focus in on this on history class and highlighting how it doesn't really 11 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:57,560 make sense for a people to construct a massive city and then 100 years later realize that 12 00:00:57,560 --> 00:01:02,780 their entire sewage system needed to be reconstructed so that they could properly manage getting 13 00:01:02,780 --> 00:01:06,600 rid of such a large population's excrement. 14 00:01:06,600 --> 00:01:12,600 Just to make clear how important this is, without proper fecal sludge management, it can back 15 00:01:12,600 --> 00:01:16,340 up, get in the water, make people sick. 16 00:01:16,340 --> 00:01:20,280 And so you would think that people who built these large cities would have known that from 17 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:21,820 the get go. 18 00:01:21,820 --> 00:01:27,280 Why was this something that had to be rediscovered or reinvented AFTER people started getting sick 19 00:01:27,280 --> 00:01:29,260 and it becoming a problem? 20 00:01:29,260 --> 00:01:33,780 This will be explained more as we proceed, but for now, let's just start with some well-known 21 00:01:33,780 --> 00:01:37,480 examples of horrible waste management. 22 00:01:37,480 --> 00:01:42,260 The Great Stink of London In 1858, the River Thames got so backed up 23 00:01:42,260 --> 00:01:47,700 with human waste, the disease started to spread prompting action from the government. 24 00:01:47,700 --> 00:01:52,520 There are several illustrations of this and supposedly thousands of people died from cholera. 25 00:01:52,520 --> 00:01:56,840 I wouldn't be surprised if it was even more when you consider other outbreaks and faulty 26 00:01:56,840 --> 00:01:58,920 statistics. 27 00:01:58,920 --> 00:02:04,520 The final number they tell us is 20,000 people died due to the Great Stink. 28 00:02:04,520 --> 00:02:10,780 The scientist Michael Faraday described the situation in a letter to the Times in July 1855. 29 00:02:10,780 --> 00:02:17,000 He dropped pieces of white paper into the river to test the degree of opacity. 30 00:02:17,000 --> 00:02:23,180 His conclusion was, near the bridges, the feculents rolled up in clouds so dense they 31 00:02:23,180 --> 00:02:27,020 were visible at the surface, even in water of this kind. 32 00:02:27,020 --> 00:02:30,440 The smell was very bad and common to the whole of the water. 33 00:02:30,440 --> 00:02:34,940 It was the same as that which now comes up from the gully holes in the streets. 34 00:02:34,940 --> 00:02:38,840 The whole river was for the time a real sewer. 35 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:44,320 The smell of the river was so bad that in 1857, the government poured chalk lime, chloride 36 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:48,080 of lime, and carbolic acid into the river to ease the stench. 37 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:52,900 It seems that the main problem was that during this time, they had begun installing public 38 00:02:52,900 --> 00:02:57,460 flush toilets and so, people were beginning to get these in their households for the first 39 00:02:57,460 --> 00:02:58,520 time. 40 00:02:58,520 --> 00:03:02,620 According to the official history, the first public toilets were not invented until the 41 00:03:02,620 --> 00:03:08,200 1850s, where they were showcased in the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London. 42 00:03:08,200 --> 00:03:13,300 In many of these events of such horrible waste management, such as with the Great Stink, they 43 00:03:13,300 --> 00:03:15,420 want to blame it on hot weather. 44 00:03:15,420 --> 00:03:21,600 But no, it has nothing to do with mass amounts of people flooding their waste into pipes that 45 00:03:21,600 --> 00:03:24,240 are designed only for rainwater. 46 00:03:24,240 --> 00:03:30,020 So it seems that London, from all the history that we know, has never had a good relationship 47 00:03:30,020 --> 00:03:35,240 with waste management as people suspect that it had a role in the plague that wiped out 48 00:03:35,240 --> 00:03:39,460 a quarter of the population in just 18 months in 1665. 49 00:03:39,460 --> 00:03:44,000 So it took until the 19th century for them to start looking into ways of proper waste 50 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:45,000 management. 51 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:49,220 It's interesting that some of these earliest sewers were made of brick, and I wonder if 52 00:03:49,220 --> 00:03:52,940 this is something that was lost or forgotten, but just consider this for later. 53 00:03:52,940 --> 00:03:58,700 The city of London had over 200,000 cesspits that leaked methane gas, which usually caught 54 00:03:58,700 --> 00:04:00,020 fire and or exploded. 55 00:04:00,020 --> 00:04:01,940 So just keep that in mind. 56 00:04:01,940 --> 00:04:07,660 But before we look into other examples, let's take a look at how this worked in America. 57 00:04:07,660 --> 00:04:12,200 So Colonial America used wastewater management where they would literally get rid of the 58 00:04:12,200 --> 00:04:16,880 waste and water together, either through dumping it into the yard, street, gutter, or an open 59 00:04:16,880 --> 00:04:19,220 channel serving as a sewer. 60 00:04:19,220 --> 00:04:24,060 The story goes, this is just how they dealt with things until the 1850s. 61 00:04:24,060 --> 00:04:29,640 The majority of people just accepted the sanitation problems as a necessary part of urban life. 62 00:04:29,640 --> 00:04:34,280 But it wasn't until major epidemics began happening that they decided to start inventing sewage 63 00:04:34,280 --> 00:04:36,380 systems. 64 00:04:36,380 --> 00:04:38,220 So let me get this straight. 65 00:04:38,220 --> 00:04:42,740 This is what Chicago looked like in 1860, and we're supposed to believe that they had 66 00:04:42,740 --> 00:04:48,100 this entire city built out, and they waited a hundred years to even think of proper waste 67 00:04:48,100 --> 00:04:49,100 management? 68 00:04:49,100 --> 00:04:55,260 It's as if large amounts of humans having to empty their bowels never so much as crossed 69 00:04:55,260 --> 00:04:56,260 their minds. 70 00:04:56,260 --> 00:05:01,000 There's a theme that they blame this all on the Asiatic cholera that had been spreading 71 00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:05,880 in other cities around the world at this time, without pointing out what the real cause of 72 00:05:05,880 --> 00:05:07,360 the issue was. 73 00:05:07,360 --> 00:05:09,680 Human waste. 74 00:05:09,680 --> 00:05:12,060 Chicago had no sewers. 75 00:05:12,060 --> 00:05:13,840 What do you mean Asiatic outbreak? 76 00:05:13,840 --> 00:05:19,880 They were dumping their waste on the streets and the Chicago river, and why wouldn't people 77 00:05:19,880 --> 00:05:21,480 start to get sick? 78 00:05:21,480 --> 00:05:26,320 So all their waste was going to Lake Michigan, which multiple cities were getting their water 79 00:05:26,320 --> 00:05:33,820 from, and so this brought deadly contaminants and disease essentially into every household. 80 00:05:33,820 --> 00:05:37,100 And this was not just in Chicago, this was everywhere in the states. 81 00:05:37,100 --> 00:05:41,160 We only know about Chicago and the New York events because those were obviously the biggest 82 00:05:41,160 --> 00:05:45,040 ones, but this happened all over the world during this time. 83 00:05:45,040 --> 00:05:49,180 Because of these outbreaks, the hero or the person responsible with creating the first 84 00:05:49,180 --> 00:05:54,120 comprehensive sewer system in the United States was Ellis Trespro. 85 00:05:54,120 --> 00:05:57,760 This is the engineer that basically fixed all the waste management issues in the United 86 00:05:57,760 --> 00:06:02,780 States with this new system that divided flood water and waste into different systems 87 00:06:02,780 --> 00:06:06,200 and redirected it into the Mississippi river. 88 00:06:06,200 --> 00:06:09,760 That's the thing that you'll see with all these stories is that they never even really 89 00:06:09,760 --> 00:06:13,900 fix it, it's just that they redirect it to some other area that probably causes issues 90 00:06:13,900 --> 00:06:15,640 in other small towns. 91 00:06:15,640 --> 00:06:20,520 Also, Chicago was flooded during this point, which was another reason they needed waste 92 00:06:20,520 --> 00:06:22,120 management. 93 00:06:22,120 --> 00:06:26,080 So it wasn't just swamp water, you know, with the whole story that they had to rise 94 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:30,660 the entire city by 15 feet, it was fecal sludge. 95 00:06:30,660 --> 00:06:36,080 I just find it hard to believe, especially a city with the world fair and all these extravagant 96 00:06:36,080 --> 00:06:37,380 buildings. 97 00:06:37,380 --> 00:06:40,540 How do you mess up that bad when creating a city? 98 00:06:40,540 --> 00:06:44,500 It seems that this is the time after the reset that these cities began to become backed up 99 00:06:44,500 --> 00:06:50,080 from their new inhabitants being unable to discover the proper method of waste management. 100 00:06:50,080 --> 00:06:54,420 You have to consider, why wouldn't this be one of the first things planned for when starting 101 00:06:54,420 --> 00:06:56,200 a city? 102 00:06:56,200 --> 00:07:00,140 You could probably make the argument that millions have died from waste management from the 1600s 103 00:07:00,140 --> 00:07:05,140 to the modern day, from disease outbreaks, to unclean water, to even the famous black 104 00:07:05,140 --> 00:07:07,260 plague being caused by unsanitary habits. 105 00:07:07,260 --> 00:07:12,880 If this is the case, then why wouldn't the masterminds who constructed these cities, many 106 00:07:12,880 --> 00:07:18,160 in Europe being constructed entirely on star forts with sacred geometrical designs, why is 107 00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:21,140 it that they had no concept of waste management? 108 00:07:21,140 --> 00:07:25,320 Could it be that these cities were not designed by who we were taught, and actually, they were 109 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:28,260 found after some type of reset? 110 00:07:28,260 --> 00:07:32,940 After being repopulated, these inhabitants had to rediscover how to grow food, reverse-engineered 111 00:07:32,940 --> 00:07:37,320 leftover inventions, and they also needed to accommodate for their different ways of living. 112 00:07:37,320 --> 00:07:41,760 It could very well be that most of the inhabitants of these cities were orphans, and a ruling 113 00:07:41,760 --> 00:07:46,360 class raised them as the working class, taught them everything they needed to know, and didn't 114 00:07:46,360 --> 00:07:49,900 care one way or another if they were living in filth. 115 00:07:49,900 --> 00:07:54,120 I wouldn't be surprised if the elite class doled out technology to them to give the illusion 116 00:07:54,120 --> 00:08:00,660 of natural progress, despite the obvious signs of advanced civilizations all around them. 117 00:08:00,660 --> 00:08:05,780 I say that because there is a reason that these cities were not designed with sewers. 118 00:08:05,780 --> 00:08:10,580 That's because that's not the most efficient method, and or, it was never needed. 119 00:08:10,580 --> 00:08:15,740 This brings to mind the fact that in the mainstream timeline, the ancient Romans and Greeks had 120 00:08:15,740 --> 00:08:19,020 better waste management than we did in the 1800s. 121 00:08:19,020 --> 00:08:24,260 It was very advanced actually, and the Romans were known to be very hygienic. 122 00:08:24,260 --> 00:08:29,160 Now, have you followed our other stuff when we've brought up the Etruscans before and the 123 00:08:29,160 --> 00:08:34,120 early Greeks being involved with the Druids, well, mainstream history tells us that the 124 00:08:34,120 --> 00:08:38,540 first sewers in Rome were built by these Etruscans. 125 00:08:38,540 --> 00:08:42,500 Now we don't know if these first ones were used for waste. 126 00:08:42,500 --> 00:08:48,300 It could be that they were more for redirecting rainwater, as it may wash away the topsoil, 127 00:08:48,300 --> 00:08:52,120 so that seems to be a good explanation of what the original builders would want in their cities, 128 00:08:52,120 --> 00:08:56,120 a method for redirecting water in efficient matter for all sorts of means. 129 00:08:56,120 --> 00:09:02,960 If this is true, then the Romans had advanced aqueducts that we can't even replicate today. 130 00:09:02,960 --> 00:09:07,180 These would deliver fresh water around the city, and there are even engravings showing 131 00:09:07,180 --> 00:09:08,180 this process. 132 00:09:08,180 --> 00:09:12,800 I remember seeing one picture that showed there was this device above this small little home 133 00:09:12,800 --> 00:09:17,380 showing that there may have been electricity involved in this process. 134 00:09:17,380 --> 00:09:22,620 Another thing to consider is Cloaca Maxima, which again, I do not think was originally intended 135 00:09:22,620 --> 00:09:23,620 for waste. 136 00:09:23,620 --> 00:09:26,440 I mean, look how massive this is. 137 00:09:26,440 --> 00:09:30,480 For water management, I can understand, but it seems that it wasn't until later times 138 00:09:30,480 --> 00:09:34,740 that the aqueducts were then connected to the Cloaca Maxima and it still became unusable 139 00:09:34,740 --> 00:09:36,720 because of the growing population. 140 00:09:36,720 --> 00:09:43,000 It is said that the Cloaca Maxima is the first major sewer system and it was built by the three 141 00:09:43,000 --> 00:09:47,240 Etruscan Kings, which, I don't know, that sounds very interesting. 142 00:09:47,240 --> 00:09:51,920 It was so big that it was large enough for wagons loaded with hay to pass and that it 143 00:09:51,920 --> 00:09:56,680 could transport one million pounds of waste, water, and unwanted goods. 144 00:09:56,680 --> 00:10:01,940 It seems that it wasn't until later that they began creating latrines of all sorts and sizes. 145 00:10:01,940 --> 00:10:05,960 Now a latrine is an outhouse, but it can be anything that basically lets you poop into 146 00:10:05,960 --> 00:10:06,960 a hole. 147 00:10:06,960 --> 00:10:09,080 But what is it really? 148 00:10:09,080 --> 00:10:11,460 It's a waste collector. 149 00:10:11,460 --> 00:10:13,140 Does this really make sense? 150 00:10:13,140 --> 00:10:18,180 Okay, so these advanced Roman architects are going to build these fancy outhomes for pooping 151 00:10:18,180 --> 00:10:22,340 into these holes, it would be very difficult to clean and get out, and or you would have 152 00:10:22,340 --> 00:10:25,540 to constantly keep rebuilding new ones once they filled up. 153 00:10:25,540 --> 00:10:27,620 I just don't think this makes too much sense. 154 00:10:27,620 --> 00:10:31,360 But what if there's a component that we're missing? 155 00:10:31,360 --> 00:10:37,500 Think about it, these are called latrines, or it seems to be very close to lantern, something 156 00:10:37,500 --> 00:10:40,020 that you can ignite. 157 00:10:40,020 --> 00:10:43,780 These are very interesting and they had them all over the ancient world, but what if they 158 00:10:43,780 --> 00:10:46,740 weren't just ancient outhouses? 159 00:10:46,740 --> 00:10:49,520 Now I think there are multiple things going on here. 160 00:10:49,520 --> 00:10:53,700 These could have been made in a later time by new populations after the reset, and or this 161 00:10:53,700 --> 00:10:58,300 was a method that people who originally built these structures used in the process of getting 162 00:10:58,300 --> 00:10:59,740 rid of their waste. 163 00:10:59,740 --> 00:11:05,660 The reason I phrase it that way is because I do believe there are two things going on. 164 00:11:05,660 --> 00:11:11,340 The first being, and I'm not sure the best way to ask this, huh, but did ancient advanced 165 00:11:11,340 --> 00:11:13,500 civilizations really poop? 166 00:11:13,500 --> 00:11:18,660 Now that sounds crazy, and yes there's more to explain as many of these old world buildings 167 00:11:18,660 --> 00:11:22,720 and mansions from around the world actually do not contain bathrooms. 168 00:11:22,720 --> 00:11:26,640 I do believe that this is a possible explanation, and in our ancient past we did not need to 169 00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:29,400 eat in the same way that we do now. 170 00:11:29,400 --> 00:11:33,900 The other explanation that many may find more plausible is that there was some type of ancient 171 00:11:33,900 --> 00:11:38,320 technology for efficiently converting poop into electricity. 172 00:11:38,320 --> 00:11:42,800 And no, I don't think that sounds crazy, as this is what is happening today. 173 00:11:42,800 --> 00:11:47,400 From the BBC, dog poo powers Malvern Hills street lamps. 174 00:11:47,400 --> 00:11:52,340 Quote, dog walkers on the Malvern Hills are being encouraged to drop the waste into an anaerobic 175 00:11:52,340 --> 00:11:56,820 digester which converts it into methane to fuel the lamp. 176 00:11:56,820 --> 00:12:02,260 From the Guardian, Thames water turns to poo power for renewable electricity generation. 177 00:12:02,260 --> 00:12:06,680 Quote, the company estimates that 16% of its electricity needs will be met in the current 178 00:12:06,680 --> 00:12:09,020 financial year by burning sewage flakes. 179 00:12:09,020 --> 00:12:16,900 From the Washington Post, quote, burning humanity's poop could yield up to 9.5 billion. 180 00:12:16,900 --> 00:12:20,740 I could keep going, there are many of these articles, but just type in poop fuel and you'll 181 00:12:20,740 --> 00:12:22,460 get your answer. 182 00:12:22,460 --> 00:12:27,480 Not only is it possible, we know that yes, poop can be turned into energy. 183 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:31,940 Before continuing down that doctrine, let's explore some examples of architecture that you 184 00:12:31,940 --> 00:12:36,980 would think would be constructed with bathrooms or some type of plumbing system, yet they tell 185 00:12:36,980 --> 00:12:41,320 us that the first plumbing systems didn't really come into play until 1850. 186 00:12:41,320 --> 00:12:42,320 1850? 187 00:12:42,320 --> 00:12:47,780 That seems pretty late to just be figuring out plumbing, yet you're building massive 188 00:12:47,780 --> 00:12:50,640 cities all around the United States? 189 00:12:50,640 --> 00:12:51,940 This wasn't new. 190 00:12:51,940 --> 00:12:55,620 These people knew uncleanliness led to disease. 191 00:12:55,620 --> 00:12:57,560 This has been happening for aeons. 192 00:12:57,560 --> 00:12:59,400 It's instinct at this point. 193 00:12:59,400 --> 00:13:04,060 If everyone was so sick and weak, then how the hell did they build these cities? 194 00:13:04,060 --> 00:13:08,940 The excuse is that it's only after these cities started thriving that disease came. 195 00:13:08,940 --> 00:13:14,320 Yet in Europe, we see the same thing around the 1850s with this cholera epidemic. 196 00:13:14,320 --> 00:13:16,020 So no, there's no excuse. 197 00:13:16,020 --> 00:13:20,340 London and France had plenty of time in developing a plumbing system. 198 00:13:20,340 --> 00:13:26,020 In fact, this technology was apparently there in the early 1600s and that's in mainstream 199 00:13:26,020 --> 00:13:27,020 history. 200 00:13:27,020 --> 00:13:32,180 The Palace of Versailles is said to have been built in 1623, first beginning from a hunting 201 00:13:32,180 --> 00:13:33,380 lodge. 202 00:13:33,380 --> 00:13:39,380 And they have this whole story too that Louis XIII was into hunting and he was not fit to 203 00:13:39,380 --> 00:13:44,300 be a king or something about this place being in a wooded wetland, which is kind of interesting. 204 00:13:44,300 --> 00:13:49,180 But there were also many cases of smallpox at this time, which, yes, I believe has to 205 00:13:49,180 --> 00:13:52,360 do with the filth and not some imaginary v-word. 206 00:13:52,360 --> 00:13:55,860 This palace is incredible for this time period it is said to be built. 207 00:13:55,860 --> 00:14:00,260 Not only do the early engravings show that it was built on a star fort, but this looks 208 00:14:00,260 --> 00:14:02,860 like some type of self-contained city. 209 00:14:02,860 --> 00:14:07,780 Kind of like the asylums in America, but mixed in with fancy mansions, possibly some type 210 00:14:07,780 --> 00:14:10,140 of government building from some prior age. 211 00:14:10,140 --> 00:14:14,440 I'll explain more on that shortly when we talk about the Gilded Age. 212 00:14:14,440 --> 00:14:18,260 But the weird thing about this place, well, I mean, there are a bunch of weird things, 213 00:14:18,260 --> 00:14:20,380 but there are no bathrooms. 214 00:14:20,380 --> 00:14:24,220 I mean, look at how huge this place is. 215 00:14:24,220 --> 00:14:29,300 Why is it that with all these massive mansions, essentially, based on the story that they give 216 00:14:29,300 --> 00:14:34,600 us, I mean, so they built this place and then Louis XIII dies and they just left this 217 00:14:34,600 --> 00:14:36,660 place deserted for 10 years? 218 00:14:36,660 --> 00:14:41,620 There was also some type of corruption going on, as it seems Louis XIII had bad monetary 219 00:14:41,620 --> 00:14:44,480 practices, whatever that means. 220 00:14:44,480 --> 00:14:47,920 There was even a supposed battle over this original chateau. 221 00:14:47,920 --> 00:14:49,840 Some type of intense prince battle. 222 00:14:49,840 --> 00:14:54,660 I mean, they're telling you that different parties were fighting over the ownership. 223 00:14:54,660 --> 00:15:00,660 But yeah, this place had over 2,300 rooms, but not one bathroom. 224 00:15:00,660 --> 00:15:06,620 It's also weird how the people of France absolutely hated this place because think about what the 225 00:15:06,620 --> 00:15:08,400 mainline story is saying. 226 00:15:08,400 --> 00:15:13,100 These were rich aristocrats essentially just blowing their money without a care in the world, 227 00:15:13,100 --> 00:15:15,620 while the rest of the population just got the scraps. 228 00:15:15,620 --> 00:15:18,620 Now, I'm sure that did actually happen. 229 00:15:18,620 --> 00:15:27,320 But why is it that the story, every time with these palaces and mansions, is the same thing? 230 00:15:27,320 --> 00:15:28,320 Just seems strange. 231 00:15:28,320 --> 00:15:33,060 I was looking at some of these rooms too, like the king's bedchamber and the queen's apartment 232 00:15:33,060 --> 00:15:37,580 and all, and I just don't believe people actually lived here. 233 00:15:37,580 --> 00:15:41,480 I just highly doubt it, and I mean, look at all this gold. 234 00:15:41,480 --> 00:15:45,720 That's one of the things about Versailles, it has an insane amount of gold unlike any 235 00:15:45,720 --> 00:15:47,760 palace for this time. 236 00:15:47,760 --> 00:15:49,340 Where did they get all this gold? 237 00:15:49,340 --> 00:15:52,980 I'm gonna keep going, but I thought this was interesting as well. 238 00:15:52,980 --> 00:16:00,820 Between 1925 and 1928, American philanthropist John D. Rockefeller gave 2.1 million or 30 million 239 00:16:00,820 --> 00:16:04,140 today to refurbish the palace. 240 00:16:04,140 --> 00:16:05,340 Wait what? 241 00:16:05,340 --> 00:16:07,720 Nothing weird is supposed to be going on here. 242 00:16:07,720 --> 00:16:11,900 Again, same theme, wealthy philanthropists getting involved. 243 00:16:11,900 --> 00:16:16,880 To drive my point home, basically, there are a bunch of weird things about this palace and 244 00:16:16,880 --> 00:16:21,840 its history that does not line up, but not only did it not have bathrooms, which makes 245 00:16:21,840 --> 00:16:26,520 zero sense if this was where all the aristocrats were living with rooms completely gilded in 246 00:16:26,520 --> 00:16:35,140 gold, not only did they 100% have the money to afford building bathrooms, they had the technology. 247 00:16:35,140 --> 00:16:39,520 The first and most important part about this whole palace was the gardens. 248 00:16:39,520 --> 00:16:42,940 For some reason, this was so important to them. 249 00:16:42,940 --> 00:16:49,380 Not only did they need gilded mansions, they needed the most amazing fountains for its time. 250 00:16:49,380 --> 00:16:54,860 So amazing that new technology needed to be invented to facilitate this process. 251 00:16:54,860 --> 00:16:58,420 Forget about inventing a plumbing system or better waste management so that we can all 252 00:16:58,420 --> 00:17:02,800 start to get rid of disease that's been plaguing our civilization. 253 00:17:02,800 --> 00:17:09,180 No, no, let's not do that, let's spend all this effort making massive artistic fountains. 254 00:17:09,180 --> 00:17:14,800 Okay, so we know they spent a bunch of money building this palace with all this golden stuff. 255 00:17:14,800 --> 00:17:21,200 Not only did Louis XIV somehow get all this money to expand his father's chateau, but he also hired 256 00:17:21,200 --> 00:17:28,320 engineers Arnold de Vil and Renquin Solem to just build this machine de Marly, which they say took 257 00:17:28,320 --> 00:17:34,160 30 million dollars to build and they did it in four years. This was a massive advanced hydraulic system 258 00:17:34,160 --> 00:17:40,080 designed to pump water from the seine up a steep elevation to an aqueduct so that it could be used 259 00:17:40,080 --> 00:17:46,400 in the palace of Versailles. They did this, yes all of this, just for the fountains. But they didn't 260 00:17:46,400 --> 00:17:52,560 think to use this technology to get rid of the waste? Before this machine was built, they were literally 261 00:17:52,560 --> 00:17:58,320 taking all the water supply from Paris just to supply these fountains. They realized they needed 262 00:17:58,320 --> 00:18:05,200 more so they built this machine, pumped around 850,000 gallons of water and ironically it still 263 00:18:05,200 --> 00:18:11,680 wasn't enough as they needed four times the amount of water. This machine de Marly is pretty insane too, 264 00:18:11,680 --> 00:18:19,360 it had 14 gigantic wheels and 250 pumps to bring water uphill 600 feet. Now, I don't necessarily think 265 00:18:19,360 --> 00:18:24,720 that this machine is ancient tech. I think it was something designed to try to figure out how to 266 00:18:24,720 --> 00:18:30,320 work with the architecture and technology that was already there, like the fountains, but over time 267 00:18:30,320 --> 00:18:35,680 the machine just started to fail and there wasn't enough water, so I'm not sure if this was really 268 00:18:35,680 --> 00:18:40,880 the original source. But I bring it up because it shows that the technology was there at this time. 269 00:18:41,760 --> 00:18:48,240 So why? Why if they already had so much experience with civil engineering, they understood that sickness 270 00:18:48,240 --> 00:18:54,720 came from filth, the tech was there, they had the money to spend, then why were there so many issues 271 00:18:54,720 --> 00:19:00,560 with waste management? Why were there no bathrooms in this marvelous place? You know what they tell us 272 00:19:00,560 --> 00:19:07,760 in mainstream history? They were just dirty. These aristocrats would relieve themselves in the hallways 273 00:19:07,760 --> 00:19:13,520 or stairwells. I'm reading this article and it's saying that no one bothered to house train the royal 274 00:19:13,520 --> 00:19:19,360 dogs and servants wouldn't even consider cleaning it up. Does that sound right to you? Because for one 275 00:19:19,360 --> 00:19:24,160 moment, let's just forget about whether this palace was capable of being built during this time period 276 00:19:24,160 --> 00:19:31,200 which, possibly, but not by these people. You're saying they spent all this money to build this palace 277 00:19:31,200 --> 00:19:39,200 and just gleefully shat all over the place? Come on, it gets even worse. So I have to be real careful 278 00:19:39,200 --> 00:19:44,160 here. So I don't recommend looking this up, but I think it's crucial to understanding my point. 279 00:19:45,280 --> 00:19:50,800 There's this famous French artist from this very time period and he wasn't just an artist, he was a 280 00:19:50,800 --> 00:19:58,400 nobleman, a revolutionary politician, but he's known because he drew these erotic, almost BDSM type 281 00:19:58,400 --> 00:20:05,200 engravings of these aristocrats basically experimenting with sex in the most foul, extreme way possible. 282 00:20:05,200 --> 00:20:11,920 I mean, I'm being moderate with my descriptions, I kid you not. I literally can't even show them in 283 00:20:11,920 --> 00:20:18,880 this video, just type in Marquis de Sade or Marquis de Sade. I can't even believe that this exists and 284 00:20:19,520 --> 00:20:24,720 people think that these are the same people who built these structures, but it's almost as if they're 285 00:20:24,720 --> 00:20:31,680 just discovering that they have buttholes. Not only that, there's an engraving with these women having 286 00:20:31,680 --> 00:20:37,520 an orgy with a goat. It's extremely graphic, so please forgive me, I can't really show it, but 287 00:20:37,520 --> 00:20:44,560 yes, it is on Google Images. So anyways, yeah, these fountains were amazing. You know, it's also weird 288 00:20:44,560 --> 00:20:51,200 that they call Louis XIV the Sun King, but yeah, he needed to have these amazing fountains with all this 289 00:20:51,200 --> 00:20:57,520 deep symbolism ingrained. He was a man of science, yet they were cool with just going to the bathroom, 290 00:20:57,520 --> 00:21:03,520 right in the halls. To move on, this is not the only instance of these palaces having no bathrooms. 291 00:21:04,560 --> 00:21:10,320 Buckingham Palace is said to have 78 bathrooms if you look this up, but they won't tell you that this 292 00:21:10,320 --> 00:21:17,040 wasn't originally the case. These were added later. I mean, there are 775 rooms. If you have that many 293 00:21:17,040 --> 00:21:22,240 people, you need more bathrooms. Not only that, but those are for staff and royalty, but visitors don't 294 00:21:22,240 --> 00:21:27,680 have access to a single toilet in the palace. You really have to think about this. These palaces are 295 00:21:27,680 --> 00:21:33,200 conceptualized by and for these wealthy aristocrats, and I mean, you're going to be having thousands of 296 00:21:33,200 --> 00:21:40,160 people in here supposedly eating very extravagant food every single day. They didn't consider where the 297 00:21:40,160 --> 00:21:46,240 food ended. Think about how much waste that is, how disgusting these palaces were during this period, 298 00:21:46,240 --> 00:21:52,240 and that's not me saying that. That's mainstream history. They say it's just because it was just a dark age. 299 00:21:52,240 --> 00:21:57,440 I mean, many of these palaces were being created during the renaissance period, the age of enlightenment, 300 00:21:57,440 --> 00:22:01,920 the age of invention, science, yet they couldn't figure out bathrooms, and they were cool with it. 301 00:22:02,480 --> 00:22:07,280 People were getting sick, and they weren't smart enough to figure out that maybe it had something to do with poop. 302 00:22:08,080 --> 00:22:12,160 I could keep going and showing you multiple examples of palaces like this, but to sum it up, 303 00:22:12,800 --> 00:22:18,160 if you look at these palaces from around the 16th to 18th centuries, they have this weird theme of 304 00:22:18,160 --> 00:22:24,320 being overly extravagant, spiritually and symbolically aligned, yet they don't have proper waste 305 00:22:24,320 --> 00:22:30,320 management in the elite that mainstream history tells us built these buildings were okay with just 306 00:22:30,320 --> 00:22:36,400 allowing their occupants to poop all over their beautiful creation. Or maybe there's something else 307 00:22:36,400 --> 00:22:42,000 going on. Now before we get to that, this brings us to the Gilded Age, because it's not just what 308 00:22:42,000 --> 00:22:48,000 these European palaces in from the 19th and early 20th century, we have another strange theme that 309 00:22:48,000 --> 00:22:54,640 pops up in America. You have all these rich mansions or palaces being built that look very 310 00:22:54,640 --> 00:23:01,120 similar to the palaces in Europe. They're all a part of this Gilded Age, or really, another piece of 311 00:23:01,120 --> 00:23:07,520 propaganda that was sold to us from historical writers like Mark Twain, under the guise of fighting 312 00:23:07,520 --> 00:23:12,880 against corruption. Or was it just another Marxist attempt to persuade the populace into accepting 313 00:23:12,880 --> 00:23:19,360 their new overlords? Real quick to explain that, Mark Twain was a fake. First off, his real name 314 00:23:19,360 --> 00:23:25,040 was Samuel Longhorn Clemens and he was a slaveholder, so he grew his way to riches, probably because of 315 00:23:25,040 --> 00:23:30,160 his family, right? He was literally a symbol of the American dream. Then out of nowhere, towards the end 316 00:23:30,160 --> 00:23:36,800 of his life, he becomes this huge critic of these capitalists, as if he wasn't one of them. Anyways, 317 00:23:36,800 --> 00:23:41,680 yes, basically, these wealthy capitalists, the robber barons, and I know they say that because 318 00:23:41,680 --> 00:23:46,000 they're stealing wealth, but I don't think that's the only thing they stole. So yeah, we're talking 319 00:23:46,000 --> 00:23:53,920 Rockefellers, Carnegie, JP Morgan, Henry Ford, Vanderbelts, and many other families that most of them were not 320 00:23:53,920 --> 00:23:59,120 even American. They were plants and connected with secret societies in Europe. Not only that, but they were 321 00:23:59,120 --> 00:24:04,880 connected to famous writers as well, such as HG Wells and the Fabian Society. They created our 322 00:24:04,880 --> 00:24:11,440 entire world view. They wanted us to see them as wealthy capitalists because that was really a lie. 323 00:24:11,440 --> 00:24:18,080 That was crony capitalism. They were plants. They were hijackers. And how, if you look into this whole 324 00:24:18,080 --> 00:24:23,680 gilded age and robber baron fiasco, you see that they all started spending a bunch of money on these 325 00:24:23,680 --> 00:24:30,400 enormous mansions, some of which have never really been replicated today. These buildings contain 326 00:24:30,400 --> 00:24:35,920 these amazing, expensive artworks. And I know these people were rich, but where did they get all this 327 00:24:35,920 --> 00:24:41,520 money from? There's also evidence to support that many of these old buildings had some type of special 328 00:24:41,520 --> 00:24:47,760 tech that was lost. The fireplaces in these buildings do not seem to be for burning wood, 329 00:24:47,760 --> 00:24:53,440 being as extravagant as they are. There are always these strange devices that are seen in these older 330 00:24:53,440 --> 00:24:58,880 fireplaces from this gilded age time period. Were these some type of heating system that came with 331 00:24:58,880 --> 00:25:04,800 the original building and so, after being repurposed, they began burning wood and just ruining these 332 00:25:04,800 --> 00:25:10,960 places? Now, it's not to say that some of these buildings may have been truly built at this time. 333 00:25:11,920 --> 00:25:16,640 Even though these building techniques are ancient, in some cases it is fully possible with the right 334 00:25:16,640 --> 00:25:22,400 resources to construct some of these buildings. But in the large majority of the cases, many aspects 335 00:25:22,400 --> 00:25:27,280 of the story do not line up, and these buildings may not be ancient, but it's possible that they were 336 00:25:27,280 --> 00:25:32,960 not built in the fashion that we have been told. I think it's odd that so many of these photos had 337 00:25:32,960 --> 00:25:38,640 vanilla skies and that compositing and photo manipulation was actually a crucial part of the 338 00:25:38,640 --> 00:25:44,080 process. It was just called photo retouching back then. But you don't think they can do this with 339 00:25:44,080 --> 00:25:50,080 architecture? Absolutely. And if we consider what we know about the history of waste management and 340 00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:55,520 these robber barons, it's very possible that there was some sort of hijacking that took place. 341 00:25:56,400 --> 00:26:02,160 In the official narrative, it even tells us that these European palaces had multiple battles taking 342 00:26:02,160 --> 00:26:07,120 place over the ownership of the buildings. How do we know that the winners didn't just make up some 343 00:26:07,120 --> 00:26:12,720 history? Well, one good example, and there are several that would each make their own good videos, but 344 00:26:13,360 --> 00:26:18,560 many of these buildings were demolished. And there were several of these on the famous 5th avenue, 345 00:26:18,560 --> 00:26:24,320 the Vanderbilt mansions. I bring this up because not only is this very European looking, but the 346 00:26:24,320 --> 00:26:30,240 amount of art and wealth put into this place is insane. It was a massive French Renaissance palace 347 00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:38,240 called Petit Chateau. Hmm. Interesting. The Vanderbilts had hundreds of properties. I really don't buy 348 00:26:38,240 --> 00:26:42,960 the official narrative at all. When you look at 5th avenue, right? This is also where St. Patrick's 349 00:26:42,960 --> 00:26:49,680 Cathedral is. If you're one of those, but they're construction photos, people. Yeah, I know. There isn't 350 00:26:49,680 --> 00:26:55,520 that much though. The spires weren't added until 1930. And whenever you see these posed construction photos, 351 00:26:55,520 --> 00:27:02,800 you know something's up. Who knows? But it's very odd, and I'm sure they could add on and built on top 352 00:27:02,800 --> 00:27:08,400 of these structures, but it's always the same thing of showing it once it's already been constructed. 353 00:27:09,120 --> 00:27:13,920 Why aren't these photos better preserved if these people were so wealthy? I'm talking insane wealthy. 354 00:27:14,640 --> 00:27:20,640 The Vanderbilts were far richer than anyone today. William received almost 100 million or I think 3 355 00:27:20,640 --> 00:27:26,960 billion dollars, but the difference is no one back then had anything near this amount of wealth except royalty 356 00:27:26,960 --> 00:27:32,400 in other countries. Which again, is why the history regarding these families are so suspect. 357 00:27:33,280 --> 00:27:38,080 There's actually a lot to this Vanderbilt story that may be outside the scope of this one video, 358 00:27:38,080 --> 00:27:43,760 but this is a good foreshadowing to our next video that I promise you, I think you guys will really enjoy. 359 00:27:44,640 --> 00:27:48,720 We're going to go visit the biggest one, that's all I'll say. But back to what I was saying about the 360 00:27:48,720 --> 00:27:53,920 different possibilities as to what's going on here with waste management, I do believe it's a little 361 00:27:53,920 --> 00:27:59,120 bit of both scenarios. There must have been a time in our development where we do not need to poop. 362 00:27:59,120 --> 00:28:04,160 Now of course, this is coming from a spiritual cosmological view, not the modern view of 363 00:28:04,160 --> 00:28:10,400 evolution that says our consciousness formed after matter. No, this idea that we came from spirit and 364 00:28:10,400 --> 00:28:17,200 slowly became material or devolved over time. We first became harmonious with nature, the first age, 365 00:28:17,200 --> 00:28:22,480 or the fey people, the androgynous spirit beings, the blue beings that were in harmony with forest. 366 00:28:23,600 --> 00:28:28,960 Of course, I'm talking before Atlantis and very early astral human stages of development. 367 00:28:28,960 --> 00:28:33,520 But over time, after the deluge, it would make sense that things were more material, 368 00:28:33,520 --> 00:28:39,760 and so humans began to eat and poop. At first, being that after the deluge, the main people building 369 00:28:39,760 --> 00:28:46,000 these architectures were the druids, Aryans, or the teachers after Atlantis, which yes, 370 00:28:46,000 --> 00:28:50,720 included all varieties of people. They began building these architectures, but they possessed 371 00:28:50,720 --> 00:28:55,920 some technology for converting their poop into an energy source, keeping their cities clean, 372 00:28:55,920 --> 00:29:00,880 and this would also give them a good renewable resource. This is the intelligence I would expect 373 00:29:00,880 --> 00:29:06,320 from the mines behind these palaces. All it would take is these latrines or 374 00:29:06,320 --> 00:29:11,440 lanterns that can collect a vast amount of fecal matter and then convert the methane or gas into a 375 00:29:11,440 --> 00:29:15,920 fuel source. Don't think it's that advanced of a tech and this would be another fuel source that 376 00:29:15,920 --> 00:29:22,000 they would have access to. Maybe this is what they did for a while, possibly then learning about 377 00:29:22,000 --> 00:29:26,960 aether technology and atmospheric electricity, which then could have been another factor involving 378 00:29:26,960 --> 00:29:33,920 the cataclysms occurring during this time. After the cataclysms, people began moving into these cities, 379 00:29:33,920 --> 00:29:40,240 as in with Europe, they started to reverse engineer these leftover cities, but the only difference is 380 00:29:40,240 --> 00:29:46,240 that because of these cataclysms, these survivors that found these cities were of a different culture 381 00:29:46,240 --> 00:29:52,800 and had resulted in eating flesh and were cannibals. This is the true history of meat eating, 382 00:29:52,800 --> 00:29:58,240 it began with cannibalism, not the need for hunting. If you were that primitive that you have 383 00:29:58,240 --> 00:30:04,080 to survive off the hunt, then what happens when there's nothing to hunt? Most tribes resorted to 384 00:30:04,080 --> 00:30:11,360 cannibalism. So, this concept of eating flesh got introduced into these cities. You had these people 385 00:30:11,360 --> 00:30:17,440 literally farming thousands of animals, they moved in a populous of people or orphans into these cities, 386 00:30:17,440 --> 00:30:21,520 and the aristocrats would just sit on top while they shat in these hijacked palaces from a recent 387 00:30:21,520 --> 00:30:27,760 civilization. They then tainted not only the entire city with fecal matter, but then they destroyed the 388 00:30:27,760 --> 00:30:33,200 water source. It really makes no sense if you think about it. It's literally impossible to create 389 00:30:33,200 --> 00:30:40,160 a functioning society in the way that they tell us without proper hygiene. Yet, they were just living 390 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:47,440 this way for the last 2000 years, but the Romans had it figured out. That makes sense. Not only that, 391 00:30:47,440 --> 00:30:53,920 but toxic poop became problematic in other ways. They began taking this toxic poop that not only was 392 00:30:53,920 --> 00:31:00,000 causing cholera everywhere, but they would take the sewage sludge from the cities and create these 393 00:31:00,000 --> 00:31:06,240 sewage farms for using these poops to fertilize the population's food supply. You don't think that 394 00:31:06,240 --> 00:31:12,960 has an energetic effect on the foods that we eat? If you bring in all that we said about the United States, 395 00:31:14,080 --> 00:31:19,200 none of these cities were designed with plumbing or waste management in mind. They had to reinvent it 396 00:31:19,200 --> 00:31:25,600 after the 1850s, which just shows that they had no clue what they were doing. I don't see the sudden 397 00:31:25,600 --> 00:31:30,880 rise in city population being an appropriate argument as the level of architecture, science, 398 00:31:30,880 --> 00:31:36,720 and tech being developed at this time does not align with their inability to properly design and set up 399 00:31:36,720 --> 00:31:43,200 these cities. It actually makes more sense that these cities were founded upon older foundations and 400 00:31:43,200 --> 00:31:48,880 slowly, piece by piece, they made modifications. Have you seen Tartaria Explained on Underground Cities? 401 00:31:49,200 --> 00:31:55,600 Almost every American city has an entire underground component or old city beneath the modern one. 402 00:31:56,160 --> 00:32:01,760 Just like Futurama, the next civilization builds on top of the old. I think it's not too crazy to 403 00:32:01,760 --> 00:32:06,240 think that there would be some sort of cultural amnesia that goes over along with something like 404 00:32:06,240 --> 00:32:13,520 a cataclysm, especially if there are more children than adults left over. So you tell me, what do you 405 00:32:13,520 --> 00:32:20,320 think? Was there a time where humans didn't have to poop? Why do these palaces not have bathrooms and 406 00:32:20,320 --> 00:32:27,280 why were these aristocrats pooping in the hallways? Was there possibly a way that they could use poop as 407 00:32:27,280 --> 00:32:33,040 a fuel source? I hope you guys are having a good week and if you guys could come hang out with us in 408 00:32:33,040 --> 00:32:38,480 the discord, it would be super cool. We sometimes do movie nights and it's honestly a great resource 409 00:32:38,480 --> 00:32:44,320 for collecting ideas and just staying connected. It's okay if you don't know anything about discord, 410 00:32:44,320 --> 00:32:49,280 just download it, send me a message and it will literally explain everything. But yeah, you can do 411 00:32:49,280 --> 00:32:54,000 everything from your phone or browser, just come into the server, ask us questions directly, it's the 412 00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:59,120 easiest way to get in contact with us and to assist in growing the community. Sending you guys a bunch of 413 00:32:59,120 --> 00:33:06,480 love and all we can help is that our minds may be unveiled. Let go of everything you think to be 414 00:33:06,480 --> 00:33:18,400 true. Relax the mind and ask the question, do I truly understand what this reality is?