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Dave Damaso posted an update 8 years, 4 months ago
Hi Guys, I hope you are enjoying the holidays.
I have recently found this link (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1y8N0ePuF8) that suggest the pyramids were built using water, animal skins, papyrus, and pressurized water shafts. Now assuming the Giza Death Star theory is true then are the evidence of water shafts, goat skins, and timbers compliment the theory that advance beings instructed the primitives (our ancestors) to build a super weapon with tools (advance tools we didn’t find yet) including the primitive tools (ones we did find so far)?
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Hi Dave. Did Darpa Derpa use apes to construct Haarp? Do you make a miltary class, “super weapon” by beating on it with rocks and chisels? Would you take the risk that one of the apes doesnt ‘break’ the weapon?
Personally.. I’d use the best skilled labour.. the brightest scientists… the best quality material money can buy.. ah wait.. we dont know if money existed back then… what do you think Dave?
Well, if you ever worked with stone you’ll know it takes more than goat skins and copper tools to build a pyramid. We’re all laboring under a huge misconception: that of evolution from the lower to the higher. It’s the other way around! Man was never primitive. We’re primitive now!
Kahlypso and Anders, good point. I guess the problem I have is the base assumption that some advance equipment should have been found if they were even used by advanced beings at all. For example, in the Star Wars context let’s say we were archaeologist on the planet Tatooine or even plant Endor. Would we not at least find an AT-AT, a crashed TIE fighter, or a piece of the death star itself?
It happened a long time ago Dave 🙂 All the metal rusts and oxidizes.. even ti tanium will eventually wear out after a million years of desertstorm. The only things left to puzzle over will be the empty jedi temple made out of stone. and those lightsabre crystals maybe… if we’re really lucky, those will have been used by a primitive local race to decorate statues and get cla ssed as religious relics by those guys ascendants a few thousand years on.. who knows.. its wild out there.. But its fun to wonder.
Good point about the tools. But, they might be gone as Kahlypso suggests, or they might have been so different that we wouldn’t recognise them. Perhaps a simple crystal was all it took to cut stone with a focused beam of light? Either way, the toolmarks are h
there. Look at this interesting comparison between old and modern stone quarries:
https://youtu.be/0XhdckpIf6U