09-08-2025, 12:51 PM
(09-08-2025, 12:29 PM)rickymouse Wrote: A guy I know who made documentaries for PBS and did lots of on site visits to these places and other people interested in this stuff that belong to the ancient artifact preservation society had pictures of these buildings they too,. It is not myth, and if you know the names of the buildings you can find the evidence.
But lots in the archeology community do not talk about this, because saying things that are not acceptable for the consensus of the time we live in would lose their reputation...so they do not say anything if it goies against the grain.
Once you have the names of the buildings, then you can google them and see the artwork on them, one has a bunch of naked people carved out of stone on the walls, the brits never destroyed that building for some reason, it is intreging. and the sculpturing is real good, and over two thousand years old on that one.
WE aren't going to the conference this year either, after covid we only went to one, and I miss going to them. They had soime good speakers at them, Lee Pennington used to make documentaries, and a few others had their own tv shows for years who were there speaking. some have died, I hope to see Lee again before he kicks the bucket too, maybe we will go down for a day of the conference just to see those people we got to know pretty well over the years.
I don't know what happened to all my notes on the names of the structures I viewed on line, I actually wrote those down. There is lots of evidence of hot air balloons being used in those areas. But none of it seems to be accepted because it is hard to get access to stuff from China, because they know that people cart it off..
Pictures would be great to see.
But the ones pertaining to the likes of the Tatarian empire mythology.
Well, when you plug those pictures touted as evidence into Google Lens.
It tends to debunk them rather sharpish.
And show them up for what they really are.
Shame you are going to miss your conference this year
It would be tremendous if China were really to open up to the public and the likes of real archaeology and digs.
I mean, who would not wish to see what is in the first emperor's tomb for a start?
"Yet so it is, we see the illiterate bulk of mankind that walk the high-road of plain common sense, and are governed by the dictates of nature, for the most part easy and undisturbed. To them nothing that is familiar appears unaccountable or difficult to comprehend."



