a. Revisionist History
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"Not trusting the government does not make you a conspiracy theorist. It makes you a history buff." - Unknown
"..all great events have been distorted, most of the important causes concealed... If the history of England is ever written by one who has the knowledge and the courage, the world would be astonished. " - Benjamin Disraeli, Prime Minister of Great Britain
"I do not think it is an exaggeration to say history is largely a history of inflation, usually inflations engineered by governments for the gain of governments." - F. A. Hayek
”If history has shown us anything it is that every government has and eventually will turn on its own people.” - Unknown
"The textbooks we read from in school were produced by Robert Maxwell, father of Ghislane Maxwell." - Unknown, on Robert Maxwell owning McGraw Hill publishing most of the history textbooks used in the US
"McGraw-Hill Inc., long the subject of takeover speculation, quieted those rumors somewhat yesterday when it said it had signed a standstill agreement with Robert Maxwell, the British entrepreneur whose empire includes Macmillan Inc., and would form a joint publishing venture with him. On the news, McGraw-Hill stock plunged $5.75, to $69, on the New York Stock Exchange. Under the agreement, McGraw-Hill and Macmillan will combine elementary, secondary and educational publishing holdings into a joint venture." - Unknown
"Don't throw your old encyclopaedias out. One day they will be your children's and grandchildren only link to a reasonable recounting of the past." - Unknown
"History as we know it is just [made up by] a corporation and not real." - Ayob Nazir
"You can’t understand what’s happening now if you don’t understand what happened then." - James Delingpole
"History is mankind’s greatest invention." - Unknown
"Whoever controls that past controls the future." - Orwell
“That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that history has to teach.” ― Aldous Huxley
"History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of man." - Godzilla, Blue Oyster Cult
"Those who do not know history are doomed to repeat it." - George Santayana
"History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes." - Mark Twain
“History is a set of lies agreed upon“. - Napoleon Bonaparte
"Half of writing history is hiding the truth." - Unknown
"You either understand history or you trust the government. You can't do both." - Unknown
"It’s a curious fact that of all the disciplines, it seems that history more than philosophy or economics determines people’s political views. We might consider this unfair. We might think that economics has more to say about what people should think about competition and antitrust, philosophy has more to say about what people should think about natural rights. But in fact, most often it seems that its history - or interpretations of history - that will influence the positions that people take." - Ralph Raico
“To destroy a people, you must first sever their roots." - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
"A tree with shallow roots is easy to rip from the ground." - Unknown
"The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history." - Unknown
"A people that take no pride in the noble achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered with pride by their descendants"- Macaulay
“Someone once wrote: 'God cannot alter the past, only historians can!' It is certainly not possible for historians to know about the 'smoke-filled' rooms where the future is planned unless they are made privy to the future history being planned there. Therefore, most historians report the historical events without really knowing how the events were created. In addition, those who plan the wars, depressions and other human calamities do not want the truth about their planning activities known. So the Revisionist Historians (those who seek the true causes of the historical events) must pursue the truth through the concealed accesses to the events of the past as seen by those who were there and have recorded their knowledge of the event as they remember it. These sources are generally hidden from the general public, but they do exist” – A. Ralph Epperson, The Unseen Hand on Revisionist History
"Step 1) Identify behaviors that were once accepted but no longer.
Step 2) Find some figure from the past that is inconvenient and you want to erase
Step 3) Identify now-problematic behaviors the figure may have been engaging in
Step 4) Tar figure's reputation
Truly Orwellian" - @alexandrosM on the Telegraph newspaper being 'ratiod' on X for saying George Orwell was 'sadistic, misogynistic, homophobic and sometimes violent'
"Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered." - George Orwell
"Part of humanity's problem is we’ve got amnesia. That, after all, is the whole point of Orwell’s Memory Hole, the invention of an alternative history of the recent past that contradicts our own memories and invites us to believe that we are crazy or obsessed or otherwise thinking about things that truly do not matter. This is why the Memory Hole was so important in Orwell’s book. It becomes a means by which the population is controlled in its thinking and therefore in its psychological capacity to resist the next round of impositions." - Unknown on Memory Holes
"People who invite us to forget are more than likely up to no good. It’s not just that they want to replace a real narrative with a false one. They want history to start over at any given moment so that we are more easy to manipulate in the future. In this way, we have entered into an age of amnesia with a ruling class that wants everyone to forget the wisdom of the past and even the events of recent history, to forgive but mostly to forget and move on like good little pawns in their game. Just do what we are told and forget everything else." - Unknown
People often learn what happened and when, without learning how and why. Knowing how and why events unfold is the key to unlocking our past.
"The major events of the past, the wars, the depressions and the revolutions, have been planned years in advance by an international conspiracy. This view is called the Conspiratorial View of History, and is definitely not the view held by the majority of historians today. The more traditional view is called The Accidental View of History, and it holds that no one really knows why events happen--they just do." - Ralph Epperson, The Unseen Hand on Conspiratorial vs. Accidental History
"If someone was famous. They were famous for a reason. They were put there by someone." - Unknown
"It's beyond absurd to think rich and powerful people are ineffective in maintaining power through conspiracies." - Unknown
b. Antiqui-Tech
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"Civilization has been wiped out many times. The evidence is all around us, you just have to know where to look." - Unknown
"The technology we have today is simply reinvented old tech that hasn't been 'discovered' yet." - Unknown
"The Centennial Light is the world's longest-lasting light bulb, burning since 1901, and almost never turned off. It is located at 4550 East Avenue, Livermore, California, and maintained by the Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department. Due to its longevity, the bulb has been noted by The Guinness Book of World Records, Ripley's Believe It or Not!, and General Electric. It was manufactured in Shelby, Ohio, by the Shelby Electric Company in the late 1890s; many just like it still exist and can be found functioning." - Wikipedia, if incandescent light bulbs can last over 100 years why isn't anyone working on this?!
"The Phoebus cartel was an oligopoly that controlled the manufacture and sale of incandescent light bulbs... The cartel lowered operational costs and worked to standardize the life expectancy of light bulbs at 1,000 hours (down from 2,500 hours)." - Wikipedia
c. Great Fires
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"Great fires - Mostly occurred in America. Reduced buildings to rubble and left trees and utility poles standing. Stone buildings don't burn (they have scorch marks). Bombs and earthquakes reduce buildings to rubble not fires. These are but a few. There are many, many more:
1) Chicago, IL - 1871 - 17,000 buildings + 300 people - 'The avenue was a scene of desolation. The storm of falling fire seemed to increase every second, and it was as much as we could do to protect ourselves from the burning rain and guide the horse through the flying people and hurrying vehicles. Looking back through Washington Street toward the Opera House, I saw smoke and flames pouring out of State Street, from the very point we had just left, and the intervening space was filled with the whirling embers that beat against the houses and covered the roofs and window-sills. It seemed like a tornado of fire.' - Alexander Frear, New York World-Herald, October 15, 1871
2) Port Huron Fire, MI - 1871 -2.5m acres + 500 people - 'One speculation, first suggested in 1883, is that the simultaneous fires across the Midwest were caused by the impact of fragments from Comet Biela. The theory was revived in a 1985 book and investigated in a 2004 paper to the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The key hypothesis is that methane from the comet provided the fuel for fires across the region to flare out of control.' - Wikipedia
3) Peshtigo, WI - 1871 - 1.5m acres + 1200-2400 people (800 in Peshtigo) - only 1 building survived - 'Terance Kelly, his wife, and four children lived in the upper Sugar Bush. When the fire came with the terrible wind and smoke, the family became separated. Voices could not be heard above the roar of the fire. Mr. Kelly had a child in his arms, as did Mrs. Kelly. The other two children clung to each other. In search for safety, each group lost track of the others. The next day, Mr. Kelly and a child were found dead nearly a mile from his farm. The mother and another child were safe. The other children, a boy and a girl, five, were found sleeping in each others arms near the farm. The house, barn, and all the outbuildings had burned to the ground.' - Gravestone of Kelly Family at Peshtigo Cemetery
4) Boston, MA - 1872 - 812 structures and 20 people - warehouse fire and horses who work for fire department were all conveniently sick at the time so they couldn't put the fire out. The fire spared trees and utility poles, but leaves the city in complete rubble." - Wikipedia
d. Mud Flood
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"Cities are not Built. They were Founded. Foundlings. Found cities. Found lands." - ImprobableDreamer
"So why were all the windows bricked up? And why were all the stairwells closed off and the doors nailed shut? This property was built in 1900 and is undergoing renovations. During the demo phase of the project we have discovered hidden rooms. Hidden stairwells behind walls. Areas not found on the original prints of the property." - ImprobableDreamer
Great Floods (Aka the Tartarian mudfloods) - Occurred worldwide. If you look closely at almost any old building you'll often see the first floor is partly underground or that there windows in the basement (who builds windows in the basement?!). We are standing on the remains of something that was. Many people will tell you this never happened, but the evidence is all around us. A few cities with famous undergrounds include:
"1) Boston, MA - Abandoned subway tunnels - oldest in the country. Many of the passageways are sealed, and they often lead to forgotten relics such as the Scollay Under station and the former underground rapid transit yard at Harvard. Other interesting treasures found in the depths include mosaic-tiled station signs, rusty tracks,
2) Brooklyn, NY - Abandoned subway tunnels under Atlantic Ave - When steam locomotives were banned in 1861, the tunnel entrances were sealed and everyone forgot about the tunnel AND steam locomotives. According to lore, there's a train engine buried down there, too.
3) Chicago, IL - Many, many tunnels - Chicago has both Boston and Brooklyn beat with SIX different sets of "left behind" holes in the ground: the Pedway, CTA tunnels, cable car tunnels, freight tunnels, water tunnels, and "The Deep Tunnel." (Please stop smirking.) The cable car tunnels pre-date the "L," are 60 feet below ground, and went unused after the city switched to elevated trains to get over drawbridges (circa 1906).
4) Dallas, TX - Underground rail and freight tunnels - Back in the roaring '20s, these rail tunnels were used to conveniently transport merchandise between the Santa Fe Freight Terminal and the Fashion District... they're now a civic joke and hindering actual street-level development.
5) Detroit, MI - Prohibition/Underground Railroad tunnel - Detroit loves its booze (yeah, Stroh's!), and it's perfectly logical that many of Motor City's speakeasies had escape tunnels during that stupid time when booze was illegal.
6) Indianapolis, IN - Market St catacombs - Lurking below Indy's historic City Market is a series of catacombs once used as "cold" storage to keep perishables fresh before refrigeration existed. (And also health codes.) The brick-arched construction is reminiscent of ancient Rome, and some of the passageways are still in good shape for being 130+ years old.
7) Los Angeles, CA - Prohibition tunnels - There are 11 miles of old tunnels under LA, and they should be honored for supporting the City of Angels for so long. They were first employed as service tunnels, then Prohibition happened and they were used to transfer liquor to speakeasies like King Eddy Saloon. (True story: the mayor's office ran the supply chain.) Apparently, if you go behind the Hall of Records on Temple Street, there's an elevator that will take you down there... LA also has abandoned subway and equestrian tunnels, but most of these subterranean passageways have been sealed due to being, umm, unsafe." - Erik Christensen Huffington Post - 14 American Cities With Crazy Underground Tunnel Systems
"The reason for the resets... They genetically modify us so we turn into different beings. We used to be much different than we are today. They also tell us that all of that DNA that stores the ancestors memories is junk so we don't look into it. They also put RNA and DNA blockers on the genetic chain so it turns off a bunch of our DNA. This limits our lifespan, intelligence, mellination and much more. But like I said, lucky enough for us, we always end up remembering. Because all that DNA is still there. And some of us even know how to turn it back on and access those memories. And what happens every now and then is there is a critical mass of rememberance which then automatically leads to us turning our superpowers back on. It always starts with one person and then electrically activates other people to start rembering as well. They start tapping into these memories and then they start telling other people about it. Meanwhile that morphogenitic field is being activated to turn all of us back on so we can wake up. Their only answer to this is to wipe out civilization, burn all the books in the library, re-write history, and throw anyone that disagrees into an insane asylum. This is what happened during the Tartarian mudfloods. The reason that our captives keep doing these resets like the Tartarian mudflood and the 2030 Great Reset is that eventually we always remember. Fortunately for us our book of life, or DNA, has all the old chapters still written in it. And they don't know how to get those chapters out." - Unknown
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