Man in America Podcast

The World's Fairs are one of those hidden history subjects where the more you look, the more questions pile up. Gleaming palaces raised in months and demolished in months. Two hundred thousand children with no record of where their parents went. Many researchers connect all of this to Tartaria. I’m not here to hand you a verdict. Join me live and decide for yourself.

 

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What is Man in America Podcast?

Seth Holehouse is a TV personality, YouTuber, podcaster, and patriot who became a household name in 2020 after his video exposing election fraud was tweeted, shared, uploaded, and pinned by President Donald Trump — reaching hundreds of millions worldwide.

Titled The Plot to Steal America, the video was created with a mission to warn Americans about the communist threat to our nation—a mission that’s been at the forefront of Seth’s life for nearly two decades.

After 10 years behind the scenes at The Epoch Times, launching his own show was the logical next step. Since its debut, Seth’s show “Man in America” has garnered 1M+ viewers on a monthly basis as his commitment to bring hope to patriots and to fight communism and socialism grows daily. His guests have included Peter Navarro, Kash Patel, Senator Wendy Rogers, General Michael Flynn, and General Robert Spalding.

He is also a regular speaker at the “ReAwaken America Tour” alongside Eric Trump, Mike Lindell, Gen. Flynn.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to Man in America, a voice of reason in a world gone mad. I'm your host, Seth Hulghouse, and thank you so much for joining me live tonight for Sunday with Seth. Today, we have, I'd say, what would be a really fun show, to be to be doing together tonight. I wasn't really feeling like covering the news, so I just wanna kind of just go completely, to, you know, left field to just have some fun. So that's what we'll be doing tonight.

Speaker 1:

We're gonna be talking about what you might call hidden history, asking the questions of was there a, you know, civilization or multiple civilizations that may have been even more advanced than our civilization that were before us that's being is that being hidden from us? What's the timeline look like? And so we'll be asking a lot of questions like this, and I'm not gonna pretend to be an expert on this subject. It's something that fascinates me. I've got a lot of books on it.

Speaker 1:

I've watched a lot of my lunch break on YouTube. And so the purpose of today's show is not to go deep into any one area, but just to ask questions together. And that's what I love doing. I love finding a topic, whether it's an assassination or a war or a policy or something we've taught supposedly in schools. And I love just taking it apart piece by piece and asking questions and saying, well, okay, if that happened, then what led to that?

Speaker 1:

And oftentimes, that's how I get to what I believe to be a closer version of the truth, even though we live in a world of lies, is just through asking questions. And so that's what we're gonna do tonight. We're gonna be taking a look at the World's Fairs in particular. That's kind of the main, chunk of today's show, but then looking at Orphan Trains, Cabbage Patch Kids, you know, just a whole variety of things, the Insane Asylums, and a lot more. So this will be a enjoyable show.

Speaker 1:

Just to remind you, if you're in the chat live, thank you. I've got Rumble and YouTube chats that'll be pulling up throughout the show. Thank you for being here live. And also for YouTube, if there's new people on YouTube, it seems like there's been a shift with our, my YouTube channel that it's actually starting to open up more. My channel was suppressed for a really, really long time, I think, probably from the very beginning.

Speaker 1:

But somehow, we've been growing. A big thanks to my producer and her team, Kaye, but also something's changing. And so we're getting a lot of new people coming on YouTube. I think we added 10,000 new subscribers in the past month alone on YouTube. So this is exciting.

Speaker 1:

So if you're here on YouTube, thank you for joining. I'm glad to have you here. And before we jump in episode, just a quick reminder, make sure that you hit subscribe, make sure you hit the thumbs up button, leave a comment, whether you agree, disagree, you know, hate me, it doesn't really matter. Leave your comments. I love reading them.

Speaker 1:

And also wanna remind you that every show that I do is a podcast as well. So if you want the audio only version, just go to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etcetera. Search for Man in America. You'll find me there. And if you already are if you're already listening on Apple Podcasts, I have a special message for anybody listening on Apple Podcasts.

Speaker 1:

If you wanna make my day, just go leave a review on there. Actually, our podcast numbers are growing as well. I was looking at that, before the show and seeing that on on Apple Podcasts in particular, we're we're actually going up in numbers in there, which is great. So if you're watching or listening on Apple Podcasts, go leave a review. It helps their algorithm to reach more people.

Speaker 1:

And that's it. So thank you. Let's go ahead and dive in. Actually, before we we dive right in, I'll just pull up the chats real quick just to give a quick hello. Looks like the YouTube chat is still waking up.

Speaker 1:

That's okay. Got a few people on there. So hope you see some of our good, good friends. Yeah. Philip Palmer, one of my favorite subjects.

Speaker 1:

And also, you know, just let me know what you think about this kind of content. Because I've thought for a while about maybe doing a different channel on hidden history or doing some series on it. I saw you know, I'd love to see what you think though, because it's outside the normal, you know, kind of perspective of data centers and censorship and the deep state and all that. It kinda ties into it a little bit. But I'd love to hear your feedback specifically on an episode like this, which is not about analyzing current events or anything, it's actually looking deep into our history.

Speaker 1:

So, again, I look forward to seeing your feedback on that. Over to Rumble. Yeah, Rumble is just popping and booming as as normal. Yeah, see, Jay Smear, I love my lunch break on YouTube. Yep, shout out to my lunch break.

Speaker 1:

Yes, he's he's a great, great YouTube channel. Yeah, Jilly Bean, I talk about your show on YouTube. Thank you. I love I love I love all of you all. Thank you.

Speaker 1:

Pmax seventeen sixty five just says q. Not sure what you mean by that. Maybe you're a q guy. If so, maybe you'll, I'll rough your feathers a little bit. We'll see.

Speaker 1:

So, okay. Anyway, let's go and just dive in. Excuse me. Sorry, my throat's a little scratchy, as usual. I go clear voice spray.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So jumping in, I've got a little I mean, I've got a little bit of a presentation to give you tonight. It's kind of loose, which is how I do things, But let's go just jump right in though. Okay. So let's let's let's just take a look.

Speaker 1:

So I wanna start with the world's fairs because the world's fairs, these are these are the things that make the least sense. When you look at the World's Fairs, and I'll get into it, this is the area of our history that, to me, is kind of, like, the most head scratching it's like, okay, you're lying about something, and it's really obvious that you're lying about something and you're covering up. Like, that's what the world's fairs are. So let's just kinda get into an overview of, okay, what were the world's fairs? So these were, they run around the world, but it was specifically the, you know, the the big ones that we focus on, what they're ones in America.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So it's America's great expositions where they razed entire cities of these marble white palaces, drew tens of millions of visitors, and then they vanished overnight. Okay? So this is the official story. So the official story, okay, is that from the eighteen seventies to nineteen tens or so, The US hosted a string of enormous international expositions.

Speaker 1:

So each one was a temporary kinda instant city of grand halls, domes, lagoons, gardens that were built to celebrate national anniversaries and to show off the newest technology of the age. So they were where the public first saw the telephone, the Ferris wheel, you know, large scale lighting, motion pictures, a lot of inventions were, you know, kind of featured at the world's fairs. Crowds came by the millions, you know, traveling across the country or international even to to, you know, kind of walk the grounds and look at stuff. So the scale was, like, massive. Okay?

Speaker 1:

So the biggest fairs covered over a thousand acres and contained more buildings than many real cities of the air. So this is the official story. Okay? Let me just find a picture of a let me find a picture of a okay. So this right here is a picture of the Chicago.

Speaker 1:

Right? It was called the White City. So this is a picture of the, Chicago World's Fair exhibition. Okay? Which I'll get I'll get back into that.

Speaker 1:

This is a map of the World's Fair that was in Buffalo, New York. So the and this was literally these this was a standing kinda city. Okay? Like, look at the scale of this. And I've I've a lot of pictures to show you.

Speaker 1:

So the official story though, okay, let's take a picture let's take a look at, okay, some of these buildings. Right? Okay. This right here was the the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition. This is nineteen o four.

Speaker 1:

The official story is that they built all of these buildings over the course of, like, one to three years, and that they used this stuff called staff, which was like a plaster. It was kind of fibrous, you know, with with different kinds of materials, but and then they used, like, wood frames and metal frames. So the the story is that they built these massive cities, so so sometimes over a thousand acres, over the course of one to three years using, kind of fake materials, not using marble, limestone, etcetera, but using plaster. And they create these massive cities just to have these World's Fairs exhibitions for maybe six months, and then they destroyed the whole thing. Okay?

Speaker 1:

So this is literally the official story. And if you search for Tartaria World's Fairs, you're gonna find tons of articles debunking it. They call it the QAnon of architecture. They're calling it the conspiracy theory. So they really attack this idea that these fairs were anything but what they were.

Speaker 1:

But even with the without getting into the strange details of it, the fact that they built these massive, massive cities with these towering structures, I've got photographs of them, and they but then they just destroyed them all. It's just like, it doesn't add up. It's gets very strange. So let me go back to my little presentation here. Okay.

Speaker 1:

So, again, these palaces were built from the stuff called staff. Right? It was a cheap moldable mix of plaster, cement, and fiber, typically jute or hemp, over a wood and iron frame. So despite looking like permanent stone, they were designed as temporary structures. Construction typically was eighteen months to three years, even for hundreds of buildings.

Speaker 1:

Right? It's kinda wild. And then once a fair closed, the buildings were demolished almost entirely, usually within a single season. Like, they had these specialized firms that would come in and just wreck and just destroy the entire fair. And then, like, you know, kinda sell it for scrap metal.

Speaker 1:

But then there's only but then what's interesting though is that's it'll be getting into this, is that a couple buildings would would kinda survive. So they'd build these fake buildings, but then some of the buildings they'd built supposedly the real buildings, they're still standing today. But those are the ones that they built for real. Okay. Which we'll get into that.

Speaker 1:

So let's just take a look at a handful of the major US fairs. So in 1876, they had the Centennial Exhibition. Right? So, again, this is a hundred years after 1776. Okay?

Speaker 1:

Now this exhibition was was built on 285 acres. It had over 200 buildings. It took eighteen months alone to build the main hall. So this was the first official US World's Fair, which is marking a hundred years of independence. So its main exhibition building was the largest building in the world at that time, but then it sold for scrap in 1881.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So they literally built the world's largest building, okay, at that time for some temporary fair that may have lasted less than a year. Okay? Look at the building. Let's see.

Speaker 1:

I think I have this is okay. This is a postcard image of the building. So they literally built this building in the late eighteen hundreds. Look at the size of this thing. It was the world's largest building at that time.

Speaker 1:

They built it for this fair, and then they destroyed it, and they sold it off for scrap metal. Okay? So that doesn't make much sense to me. Why? Okay?

Speaker 1:

That's a lot of work. Even if it was a fake even if it was made out of cardboard, it's a lot of work. But going back into, okay, kinda looking. So this that was a centennial exhibition. Okay?

Speaker 1:

So, the next one was 1893. This is kind of like the the the famous one people talk about when you talk about these World's Fairs. This was the the they called the World's Columbian Exhibition, aka the White City. This is in Chicago in 1893. So it was built across 690 acres, and it had about 200 buildings.

Speaker 1:

And it took about two years. Okay. So think about this. Okay. We're talking late eighteen hundreds.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So they didn't have any of the equipment that we use to build things. They didn't have excavators. They didn't have bolover bulldozers. Even the rail system was was still at that time.

Speaker 1:

We had a rail system, but it wasn't nearly what we have, obviously, today. So but think about this. Right? Your your main tool that you're using, you're you're using shovels, you're using horse and carts to pull things, railway. And so, supposedly, they built this and I'll show you a picture of this.

Speaker 1:

Right? So telling us that it took about two years to build this entire exhibition, which is almost 700 acres with 200 buildings. Okay? So look at this. This right here was is a picture, right, from the exhibition.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So, let's just look at this picture alone. Let's just do let's just analyze it a little bit. They're saying okay. Actually, I'll show you this.

Speaker 1:

Here's another person another view. This is another view of the same, not the exact same location, but this is again, this is also showing the World's Fair in Chicago. So they're telling us that they built all of this in two years, in the late eighteen hundreds, with no modern construction equipment. But the thing is is it's not just the buildings. Right?

Speaker 1:

So the say these were cardboard buildings, or as I say, plaster buildings. Like, think about all the land work involved. Think about the excavation just to create a lake like this, to to do all of this. Because you can see the architecture is built around the water. So that's mean, that's a lot of work just just to get the land ready.

Speaker 1:

Okay. Look at this again right here. Like, so you're telling me all these steps and fountains and these bridges, this is all just plaster? Okay? It just I don't know.

Speaker 1:

To me, it doesn't really add up. There's something off, which I'll be get I'll be getting into the idea of what was really going on because it's really, really interesting. And again, I'm not here to tell you this is the truth or this is what's happening. I'm just asking questions, and I'm looking for answers that make sense. And the answers that make the most sense about explaining these fairs is not the official narrative, and we'll be getting into that.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So this is, again, this is Chicago's, white city. I mean, look look at the scale of this. Like, this is, like, this is more impressive than Washington DC. Like, this is absolutely incredible that they've got here, the fountains and everything.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So that was the that's Chicago. Okay. That's the White City. So okay.

Speaker 1:

This was the most famous of all. Okay. This is the gleaming white staff palaces with a uniform 60 foot, cornice line. But there's still a palace of fine arts, and now the which is now the museum of science and industry that's still up from it, which is we'll get into that. Okay.

Speaker 1:

So next is Buffalo. So Buffalo, their fair was called the Rainbow City. It was in nineteen o one, and it was three fifty acres, and supposedly it was built in twenty months. Okay, just check this out. Let's go into the Rainbow City.

Speaker 1:

Okay, this right here, this is a map of the exposition. Okay, so they're trying to convince us, The the the official story, right, unless you're some crazy, you know, crack job conspiracy theorist like me, the official story is that they built this entire thing in twenty months so they could hold a fair here, and then they're gonna just demolish it all after, say, six or twelve months after they're finished using it. That's the official story. And you're you're crazy if you question that official story. Let's take a look at some of the the actual details of the buildings here.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So there's the map we just looked at. Now the whole thing was lit up, keep in mind. Okay? So they had electricity at that time.

Speaker 1:

So all of the building they had millions of light bulbs, and all of the buildings were completely, electrified with electricity. They'd light up at night. Okay? I mean, look at this right here. Look at the look at this image.

Speaker 1:

I mean, this is an actual picture. This I think was the Hall Of Music, that big kind of domed hall in the middle there, or sorry, in the front. People were lining up to go to some event there in the Hall Of Music. So this was this is part so again, keep in mind, okay, this is the big map. So what we're what we're viewing right here, think, is maybe one of these little buildings in here.

Speaker 1:

That's all. So when you look at this oops, sorry. Different one right here. You look at that building. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think that's that's this one of these buildings right here. So look at and look at the details. So again, they're telling us that that that this entire complex, which was spanning hundreds and hundreds of acres with over a 100 buildings, that they build it in twenty months. Like, I don't know. Maybe maybe I'm just too skeptical and I'm too conspiratorial, but that doesn't make sense at all.

Speaker 1:

Like, it doesn't make sense at all. But continuing. Okay? So that that was in Buffalo. Okay?

Speaker 1:

Now continuing here. So then we had the the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. It gets crazier. So the Louis the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition Exhibition was 1,200 acres. Okay?

Speaker 1:

1,200 acres with over 1,500 buildings. Okay? So 12 acre sorry, 1,200 acres with over one and a half thousand buildings with 75 miles of roads and walkways. So they built this all probably in about a about two or three years. They built this entire thing just to put on some world fair and and show people inventions, and then they're just gonna demolish the whole thing.

Speaker 1:

Okay. Let's let's okay. Here's some pictures. This these are pictures from the Louisiana exhibition. Okay.

Speaker 1:

The Louisiana Purchase exhibition. I mean, look at the scale of this. Okay. Look at this. Look at these guy.

Speaker 1:

Look at this little guy here. Look how small he is. Look at these people. Look at the size of that building. Look how small a person is next to these columns.

Speaker 1:

I mean, and these weren't just these weren't just by kind of, you know, kind of brutalist modern buildings. I mean, these are beautiful buildings with sculptures and look at the work up top. So they're trying to tell us that they built a 1,200 acre complex of these buildings right here that we're looking at with 75 miles of walkways. And look at the landscaping, fully landscaped. Think about the the grading, even the land grading to prepare for this.

Speaker 1:

I mean, even in modern America, if if people were gonna build this, it it would take years and years to build this. You know, 1,200 acres over 1,500 buildings. I mean, at this obelisk right here. Look at the scale of that obelisk. And you can see too, had look at these light bulbs, right?

Speaker 1:

So the whole these things were electrified. They had light bulbs, street lamps. And this is a real photograph taken. Okay, this is again, this is the Louisiana, Purchase Exhibition. Here's another picture.

Speaker 1:

Like, beautiful canal. So you're telling me that for some temporary fair, they literally cut out rivers. They they they, like, built canals and lined the canals with with plaster. They built bridges, bridges that would somehow support people walking over them. And they did all of this in two years.

Speaker 1:

Something is really, really, really suspicious here. Here's another picture. And look at these grand fountains and massive buildings. And here's another one. Look at the size of this.

Speaker 1:

And one last one here. I mean, just look even think about the land. Think about the process of grading all this land. So, you know, I do work around my house. I'm just, you know, finishing building a waterfall, and I can, you know, like, land work is not easy.

Speaker 1:

Right? Whether you're develop you're building a house or, you know, you get to bring you know, people come in for a couple of weeks sometimes with with, you know, bulldozers and excavators and all this. And so this is there's I don't know. There's this it seems so, like, silly that this is the official story, this is all just fake. That they faked all of this, and then they just destroyed it.

Speaker 1:

It it just doesn't make sense at all. Okay. So continuing. So that was the Louisiana Purchase exhibition. Okay?

Speaker 1:

So this is the largest fair ever to be built at that point. Palaces the size of several city blocks each. Supposedly they're all made of like fake plaster. It says the palace of architecture alone covered 23 acres, a 23 acre built. I think actually that this image I showed you, wrong one, I think that this might have been the Palace Of Agriculture.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So, yeah, I don't buy it. Okay, continuing. The next one, the Panama Pacific International Exhibition. Okay, so this was in, San Francisco, yeah, in 1915.

Speaker 1:

And they said that it was so it was open for ten months, and then they just destroyed the whole thing. 636 acres. The crown jewel of it was this building, called the let's see. I got it pulled over here real quick. The Tower Of Jewels.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so this is the Tower Of Jewels. This is at night when it was lit up. So the whole thing was lit up. And here is a daytime picture. This is an actual photograph from this exhibition.

Speaker 1:

And so, now again, think about, like, think about what America was like at that time. According to you know, I grew up watching Little House on the Prairie. Right? You're thinking, eighteen hundreds. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You have some bigger cities, but you're still, like, you're still crossing the the country either on a train or you're doing, like, covered wagon with horses, and you're using shovels. May you know, you might I think they had steam engines at the time. But, anyway, like, you're telling me that they built this structure out of plaster just for some world's fair, and then they were going to just demolish it? It it it just it doesn't make sense at all. Now, let's kind of explore the idea of what was really going on there, okay?

Speaker 1:

So the other angle. Okay, let's flip it around. So the pattern is always the same. It's these enormous ornate stone looking buildings that are they appear, they get photographed, they draw millions of people, and then they get erased. They get they get basically wiped off the face of the earth.

Speaker 1:

But here's the question. Okay? And this this right here, and I don't have the answer to it, but to me, this is the question that makes sense. What if these buildings were never built for the fairs at all, but what if these were already standing and they're left behind by an earlier civilization? Okay?

Speaker 1:

So in this perspective, these fairs weren't a celebration, they were the cover story. This public, you know, spectacle that was staged to explain why all these grand structures exists, and then they were they were destroyed. Okay? And it's true also true. If if they were truly so cheap and temporary, why spend so much money and effort to completely tear them down?

Speaker 1:

It's also a lot of work. And, also, one of their questions is that the survivors, right, the surviving buildings are the puzzles. Right? Because there's a handful of buildings that are still standing that were supposedly some of the buildings in these fairs, but they the architects built those ones as the real versions, and those ones are still standing, and they're still in use today. But, again, going back to this question, this I mean, to me, this is the question, and, you know, and I'm not gonna try to give you the answers to it.

Speaker 1:

I'm not gonna go into the details of it. I'll probably do some more shows on this depending on how the feedback is, right? But what if, okay, what if all these buildings were actually what if this is where it gets kind of crazy, let's pull up all these pictures, right? Look at like this right here, or this. Like, what if this was a civilization that was on the American Continent, when it was a previous kind of era of humanity that was in America?

Speaker 1:

Right? We're talking in the eighteen hundreds that now I'm not sure in terms of the timeline of what happened to whoever actually built these, I don't know. Right? I I I'm not, you know, I'm not gonna try to, you know, get into that because once you start asking these questions, it's it's so far reaching. Right?

Speaker 1:

It's like, okay. Who were they? Where'd they come from? You know, was and and there's a lot of explanations to that, but that that's much, much deeper research. There's this whole volumes of research on this.

Speaker 1:

But the idea, though, is that what if what these buildings were, these all these World's Fairs buildings that we're looking at. Right? What if these buildings were actually from a civilization that existed here in America? What if the whole idea that Christopher Columbus just sailed across the world, he discovered this beautiful land of America that just had these native Americans running around with kind of bow and arrows and hunting buffalo and riding horses and sleeping in tepees. Like, that's the history that we've been told.

Speaker 1:

We've been told that basically before Columbus came, before the whites colonized America, that America was just, you know, a bunch of Indians running around, killing each other, and and and trying to live in harmony the best they could. That's the way they've told us. But what if that what if that entire story is a lie? I mean, think about modern day America now, or it's just the world right now. Right?

Speaker 1:

Even an event that happened six months ago can be completely changed and covered up. Right? Like, look at Charlie Kirk assassination as an example. Right? Now it's like you have this kind of fringe group of people that are on in some part, they're still questioning things, but the official story is already in the books.

Speaker 1:

Right? Lone gunner. Here's the story. Okay. FBI says this is true.

Speaker 1:

Move on. Right? That was this was less than a year ago, if I remember correctly. Yeah. And so now look at say, go back to 09:11.

Speaker 1:

Right? Then 09:11, it's like they just glossed over that. It's like, oh, here's the official story in the books. Even go out to World War two. Right?

Speaker 1:

If you go and start looking deep enough, you'll find out there's a lot of lies about these wars, a lot of lies about what was happening in World War two. So the idea that they could they could create a lie we're talking about, you know, one hundred and fifty years ago, right? Over one hundred years ago, it'd be very easy for them to create a new version of history that they do all the time, right? So that they can do it for ten years ago, they could do it for a 100 ago, very easily. And so that's why that's kind of fascinating to me because, you know, in this process, you know, and I'm sure you're kind of going through the same process too, it's this process of awakening, of realizing that all these things that you thought were true around you are actually lies.

Speaker 1:

Right? It's this understanding that you kind of come to this place where you realize that, wow, we we live in a world where we have this kind of manufactured reality surrounding us, that we're told what our history is. We're told what happens with politics. We're told, you know, how the human body works. We're told, you know, pharmaceutical, you know, kind of narratives.

Speaker 1:

Like, we live in a world where, like, we're literally it's it's like we're we're in this this matrix, I guess you could say, where the world around us is there there's so little truth, and they've hidden so much. I mean, get know, to the Smithsonian, you start looking at the Nephilim, you start looking at the giants, you look at, you know, ancient architecture, all these different things, previous civilizations of man, that whoever the controllers are, that if he's okay, were they were they in control in the eighteen hundreds? Most likely, my research has pointed to the fact that they're they've been in control for a very, very long time, in fact. But the idea that these evil people who've been controlling our society and control so many things around us right now, they've been in control for a very, very, very long time, you could say that it would be potentially feasible that they've created a completely alternate version of history that's being sold to us. Right?

Speaker 1:

They're telling us that we evolved from, you know, from monkeys. They're telling us that they put a lander on the moon. You know, they're telling us all these things that and for a lot of people, they just believe them. But when you start to peel away some of the different lies and and the cracks in the narratives, you start to realize that, wow. It's like, what what is actually real?

Speaker 1:

And so some people might say, you know, okay. Hey. Okay, Seth. Yeah. You questioned big pharma.

Speaker 1:

You questioned the government, but now you're questioning this Tartaria stuff and the World's Fairs, and you're kinda gone off the deep end. It's like, well, if they're lying to us about what happened yesterday in in Iran, you think they're gonna tell us the truth about what happened a hundred and fifty years ago? Right? So that's so this is kind of the idea. Right?

Speaker 1:

Is that the idea is that now whether, you know, there's different kind of ways you look at it, whether this was kind what this was the Tartarians, whether it was I I don't know the specifics on that, and we're not gonna be getting into it in today's show. But when I look at all these pictures, and I and I look at this and I compare it with the story that they're telling us about these World's Fairs, to me, it makes a lot more sense that these structures were already there. That there was some sort of a very advanced civilization living in America that was wiped out. Now, again, I don't know whether you get into the mud floods or there's different, you know, kind of ideas about what wiped out this civilization, But to me, that story makes more sense when I piece it all together, is that this civilization now there's a lot of information that they supposedly had the ability to harness energy. So, like, you know, Tesla with ether, if you look at a lot of the buildings, you see a lot of these same kind of, design themes too, the domes, the spires.

Speaker 1:

So there's lot of information that kinda goes into talking about how they had diff different abilities to harness energy. So, you know, these are things that for the current controllers, the elites that govern this world, that rule so much of, you know, the world that we see, they don't want us to know that this is potentially our real history. Right? Because, I mean, look, I'm an American, and, you know, I I've tried so hard to to kind of dig into my roots, and my roots go back into, you know, kind of Scotch Irish, and and my parents came out, you know, kind of part German. But, you know, a lot of us are rootless.

Speaker 1:

Imagine you discovered imagine you discovered that this idea that, okay, ancient Rome with, like, the Colosseum and you have these buildings. It's like, well, what if something like that existed in America? And it the a lot of these buildings were still standing even, you know, a hundred years ago. But then if you think about the idea though, okay, so the why okay. Why the whole plot with the World's Fairs is because if you're looking at how you can write the history for this, like, how do you just how do you wipe out this previous civilization, This civilization that would show humans that they are far more capable than they want us to believe.

Speaker 1:

Right? How would you wipe this civilization out and get away with it? And the World's Fairs, I mean, it's kind of a brilliant idea, is that you create these World's Fairs. You invite all these people to visit these huge cities. You tell everyone there.

Speaker 1:

Now I think may maybe people knew they were real at that time. It's hard to say. You know? And people they say, oh, it's all plaster, you could probably walk up and start knocking on a a, you know, a big old kind of limestone column and realize it wasn't plaster. But, I mean, to to in in terms of the history books, it's a really easy explanation as to what happened to all this architecture to say, oh, it that wasn't real architecture.

Speaker 1:

Those weren't real buildings and real cities that already existed in America. Those were just fake ones that we built and we tore we tore down. And then there were all these big fires, like the Chicago fire, which destroyed all these buildings, and there were all these fires around that time and all these really magnificent buildings just burned down. It's a it's a pretty, it's a pretty easy narrative if you think about it. Let pop over to the comments.

Speaker 1:

I'd love to see what what everyone's, saying over here. Yeah. There you go. Kimberly on YouTube. Seth, they have lied to us about everything.

Speaker 1:

I mean everything. The truth will set you free. I agree. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Missouri man, Oregon energy. Yeah, I've got a cloud buster. I gotta, put it back up. But, yeah, I've looked into Oregon, certainly.

Speaker 1:

So, actually, here's something interesting. You So, I'm bring this up. So, Missouri man, you say Oregon energy, but then he says, natives always spoke of buildings of the ancients where night never was. So here's the cool thing. You mentioned the natives.

Speaker 1:

Okay? And so you mentioned the natives. So there's something I wanna kind of show you. Let's see. Where did it right here.

Speaker 1:

Nope. Not yet. Not there. Where was it? The post.

Speaker 1:

Let me let me one second. Let me find this window real quick, because I wanna show you something about the native okay. So now again, take this all with a grain of salt. Okay? But there's a book that this guy describes it, this guy Ben Worman or Wehrman.

Speaker 1:

Okay? So there's this book, which I'm gonna show you the pages of it. Okay? It says book because you you okay. You ask yourself, because I saw some mention saying, you know, my my grandparents were alive during the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. And then this is this is a thing is, like, kinda getting into how would they make this information change? How would they disappear as this information? It's it's a good question. I wanna look at this because you'd think, okay.

Speaker 1:

Well, if the Native Americans were around, which they were, wouldn't they have some interaction with this civilization? So this is an interesting thing. So there's this woman, her I'm not gonna pronounce her Indian name. Alright? Lucy Thompson.

Speaker 1:

She wrote a book just called To the American Indian. So she is pardon me. She's a highly renowned historian of the Yurok Indian tribe, which is a subgroup of a tribe in Northern California. And in this book she wrote, she details a highly advanced race of people that already inhabited North America when the Indians arrived. Okay.

Speaker 1:

So sorry, let me spray my throat real quick. Okay. So, is actually, this is her book. Okay, this is, beginning of chapter four. Traditions of the ancient white people.

Speaker 1:

Now keep in mind, this book was written in what was it? Where did she write this book? I'll find out. Okay. But she says, when the Indians first made their appearance on the Klamath River, it was already inhabited by a white race of people known among us as the Wagas.

Speaker 1:

These white people were found to inhabit the entire continent and were a highly moral and civilized race. They heartily welcomed the Indians to their country and taught us all their arts and sciences. The Indians recognized the rights of these ancient people as the first possessors of the soil and no difficulties ever arose between the two people. Okay. And she's describing, you know, the the life with them, right?

Speaker 1:

You know, talking about how they this had this golden age of happiness. And so Anyway, and then they left, right? So she doesn't get into it in particular, but she goes on and on, she gets into Giants and other things in here too, but again, you know, there if you start looking, if you start digging, you can find some of this older information that's been passed down. Okay? So let me go back over to the, the chats.

Speaker 1:

Okay. Yeah, Rumble, you're looking at what, over, you know, over 5,000 over on Rumble. Good to see you all on Rumble. Actually, didn't check how many are over on YouTube. Let me see.

Speaker 1:

And see if hopefully, this doesn't start playing. One second. Just gonna check out our YouTube crowd. Yeah, almost 300 on YouTube. Hey, good.

Speaker 1:

Hello, YouTube people. So Yeah. Yep. Okay. I mean, it's it's great.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it seems like I mean, it seems like most of you that are watching this show are are, you know yeah. Pretty, on the same point with me. Yeah, the the Smithsonian, yeah, that's a whole different you know? Yeah. They're just they're just like the Men in Black.

Speaker 1:

They show up, and they make sure they erase whatever history, right, whatever you think you find. So okay. Anyway, continuing. Now I've got a couple of different videos. Let me see if I'll I'll pull I have a few different videos to show you.

Speaker 1:

Then we're gonna be talking about the Orphan Trains, the Insane Asylums. Not not as as in detail as the, the World's Fairs. Let me find my other links here. Let's see. So here's okay.

Speaker 1:

Here's a little video I found. Just, you know, these are just a couple different videos that they summarize, they kind of they say some of the similar things I'm talking about, but, you know, just hear it from someone else. So this is a video, it's a minute and thirty seconds. This is specifically about the Chicago World's Fair. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Let me play this for you. It's, again, it's a minute and a half, And it has it has audio narration for the podcast listeners, but there's pictures you won't be able to see.

Speaker 2:

This was Paradise Lost, the eighteen ninety three Chicago World's Fair. Over 690 acres, 27,000,000 visitors in a six month span, over 200 buildings built in less than two years. If that would be true, that would be an average of about buildings a month they would need to pull out. Not to mention the massive canal system, all the facilities, all the full grown trees and shrubbery, the Palace of Fine Arts, or as it's known today, the Museum of Science and Industry is one of the only remnants left of this beautiful fair. I believe these were anything but temporary.

Speaker 2:

The only construction I believe was done was renovations of the old world ruins that were already there. Maybe slap some new white paint on it and call it go to present the narrative to the new inheritors on the land. 22,000,000 brainwashed masses ready to go back home and spread the narrative. And after they tore down this massive fair that only lasted six months, they had another one next year in San Francisco. They were a yearly occurrence, they say.

Speaker 2:

To me, these impossibilities prove history is nothing more than a set of lies agreed upon. Question everything, friends. Until next time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. I I like this guy's little presentation there. But so I also wanna bring up the, the Capitol Buildings. Okay? So this is part of this the overall idea of this, is that a lot of so if you look at America, right, so obviously, you know, we're we're we're born and we're raised, and you you see, okay, that's the what's the White House?

Speaker 1:

That's the Capitol Building. That's the Lincoln Memorial. And you don't think much of these things because it's just like, Oh, that's just how it is. But if if I'm looking at objectively, looking at the architecture, and looking at, you know, especially getting getting the capital buildings, it's like, yeah, why is it that all these government buildings have this really impressive Romanesque architecture? It like, it doesn't it doesn't it doesn't make sense.

Speaker 1:

Right? Especially if you look at some of these these capital buildings, and I'll show some pictures of them. They were built in, like, the late seventeen eighteen hundred sorry, late eighteen hundreds. And yet in those regions, they they had these small little towns, and they had these giant capital buildings. And so this is also part of the idea with this is that the they didn't destroy all of the architecture, but actually some of the buildings they kept, but they turned into government buildings.

Speaker 1:

So let's just I wanna pull up just a let's see. Just okay, here's just a website, just looking at a handful of different Capitol buildings. Okay? So you look at that. Okay, this is Colorado.

Speaker 1:

Okay. Like, you know, pretty impressive. You see it again, it's the same style architecture, like Idaho. I mean, again, you we grew up you know, we're used to this look, but if you look at it from this new framing and you ask yourself, What if this building was already there? Right?

Speaker 1:

What if this building wasn't built by the Americans in the late eighteen hundreds? What if they discovered this building, or took over it, or whatever, and then it became a government property, and that's why it's still standing. Okay, that's that. Okay, here, see which one is this? This Georgia.

Speaker 1:

And some of these, I mean, some of these are really impressive. There's Illinois, Kansas. Again, it's like, this architecture doesn't exist in America, really. Alright. So where'd this where'd this all come from?

Speaker 1:

This Kentucky, Missouri. I mean, like, look at this thing. Like, that's like this is just the Missouri State Capitol Building. Okay. There's New York, Arkansas, Indiana.

Speaker 1:

I mean, connect and look at this. It's like looks like it's a castle looks like it's something out of like old Russia or something. Yeah, this is the Capitol Building and okay there's Mississippi, I think it's Iowa. I think Iowa is the most impressive one. Also, Texas.

Speaker 1:

That's Hawaii, it's more contemporary. West Virginia, Minnesota. Yeah, look at Texas. Holy smokes, look at the size of this thing. It's like, you're telling me that, like, like, that we built this?

Speaker 1:

And maybe we did. I I I don't know. I I just don't know. But I look at this, and it's just like, you look at this compared you know, look at this with the World's Fair information, with all this other stuff, and there's part of me that thinks that, gosh, it kind of makes sense that this building was already there. And that this, you know, race before us, it was highly skilled, far more advanced than us.

Speaker 1:

They're the ones that build it. We just we kind of we claimed it. Right? Then look at this right here. This is I think this is Iowa.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Iowa. Like, you know, in the in the in the '18 you know, I think it was about the eighteen seventies. I mean, Iowa was was just imagine it's a little farming community. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

This this was the capital building. This is, like, massive, massive, massive building with these these beautiful domes and spires and columns. And they built this, like, using a horse and buggy to move these rocks around, and using hand chisels and shovels to excavate, and I don't know. It just doesn't seem to add up. It doesn't seem to add up.

Speaker 1:

And so, yeah, just question everything. But now I wanna talk a little bit about two of the other parts of this. Right? One is the insane asylums, and I'm not gonna go heavy into it, and then the CABG, patch kids, the orphan trains. I've got a little video.

Speaker 1:

Let me see. Let me pull this up for you. Yeah. I'm gonna start this beginning of this. It's a twenty minute video.

Speaker 1:

It'll look like the first minute or so. Again, this is from Ben, Werman over on on Twitter, who I I rec actually, he follows me. Oh, cool. Shout out to Ben. Ben, if you're watching this, shout out to mister Ben Werman, who he follows me over there.

Speaker 1:

So I'll I'll send this over to him. Anyway, so just watch this. Okay? This this is getting into the this is getting into the insane asylums. Right?

Speaker 1:

Because I'll I'll I'll play the video for it. I'm gonna play it, make it maybe one or two minutes of it, and then we'll talk about it.

Speaker 3:

Why did insane asylums suddenly explode across the Western world in the mid eighteen hundreds? Between 1845 and 1890, massive psychiatric institutions rose in nearly every major city, enormous stone complexes built with impossible speed and filled almost immediately. Patient records are thin, testimonies vanished, stories dismissed as madness before they were heard. The official explanation is humanitarian reform, the rise of moral treatment, industrialization causing mental strain. But there's another possibility, one never taught, a recent global catastrophe, a lost world quietly erased and rebranded as myth.

Speaker 3:

If such an event occurred there would have been survivors, people whose memories didn't match the new official story. So the question is this, were the asylums really built to heal or to disappear those who remembered what came before? In 1800, there were perhaps a dozen dedicated psychiatric institutions in all of North America. By 1880, there were over 300. In Britain, the number jumped from around 20 to over 120 in the same period.

Speaker 3:

France, Germany, Russia, the pattern repeats with unsettling precision. Italy, Spain, the Austro Hungarian territories all experiencing the same explosive growth in psychiatric infrastructure within the same compressed timeframe. This raises a simple but critical question. Where did all these patients come from? The standard answer points to urbanization, poverty, the pressures of modern life, industrial capitalism driving people mad, the dissolution of traditional community structures leaving vulnerable people without support, but here's where it gets strange, the asylum boom doesn't correlate neatly with industrialization, it happens earlier in some places, later in others, rural areas with minimal industrial development built asylums just as large as those in Manchester or New York.

Speaker 3:

Small towns, places with populations of 15,000 or 20,000, constructed institutions designed to hold 2,000 patients. Communities with no factories, no urban density, no apparent source for mass mental illness, 2,000 patients from towns of 20,000. The math breaks unless some

Speaker 1:

So I'll I'll stop there. But, again, if you're getting into the idea of of what happened, how did they change this, narrative, I there's a again, there's a very strange correlation with these booms and these insane asylums. And and these were big, big buildings, right? So here's a picture of let's see. This is the Trans Allegheny Lunatic Asylum.

Speaker 1:

Right? This one right here. This is one of the largest that was built. So, again, they they had these these massive, massive insane asylums, but, like, why? I mean, it just yeah.

Speaker 1:

Again, it just doesn't really make sense. And, you know, there might be different kind of ideas and and theories that explain it, But when you look at it, again, I I I try to try to I really try to when I'm trying to analyze this information, I do my best to to really zoom out and just kinda piece everything together. And I I don't I don't come to this absolute truth answer. Okay. This is exactly what happened.

Speaker 1:

But if you look at the patterns, you look at, again, these patterns that were across the world, similar things happening, I think that there's something I think there's a lot about the history of this world that is just being that is is an absolute lie. And were the insane asylums, were those part of the process of kind of expunging and removing this information from people of the older generations? Potentially. I don't know. But also, you have then the orphan trains.

Speaker 1:

This is also another weird thing with this that just doesn't again, you kind of add it up with everything else, and it just doesn't make a lot of sense. I've got another little video to show you let me pull it up here on the, Orphan Trains. Let's see. Okay, so here we go. I'll play about a minute or so of this.

Speaker 1:

I'm not sure who these people are. I guess it's actually another post from, Ben Worman. Actually, so this is he says, Okay, this is a crash course from this guy. Okay. So this this is the guy.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna follow him. I'm gonna follow you, buddy. So I guess this is, from his podcast. But again, I'm gonna play about a minute and a half of this because he does a good job of just kind of highlighting some of these these, orphan train things and talk about this, but just check this out. This is also very strange.

Speaker 1:

I don't know.

Speaker 4:

I wanna say between 1860 and 1920, there was 250,000 orphans being shipped around the country on trains in America. Like the Cabbage Patch Kids? Well, yeah. That's when you get into some weirder stuff where you just see all this this art of kids being running Cabbage Patches, not just like the dolls, but if that's where it comes from, is on these old postcards and just this art, they're showing kids being plugged out of out of cabbage.

Speaker 5:

Right.

Speaker 4:

And people, like, fishing kids out of lakes and Yeah. Pulling them out of wells. It's like the weirdest things. Then you get into, like, the world fairs as you were saying before. They have these incubator babies where they had exhibitions, where they had all these preemies in these little, I don't know, incubator kind of things.

Speaker 4:

It's like it's the weirdest thing you've ever seen. But for some reason, like, you have all these aristocrats going to these things and being in awe of premature babies. It's it's bizarre. It's it's it's a little bit grotesque.

Speaker 5:

I wonder if one of if these resets were like, they got too it got too crazy. So let's just reset everybody.

Speaker 4:

It seems like that the story of America is mostly a lie, at least the expansion

Speaker 5:

of it. Yeah.

Speaker 4:

So we were saying, so what about these cities that were quote unquote founded in the eighteen fifties or the eighteen seventies? What if they did just find cities? Like, who would live there? Who would do all the work there? Is it possible that that's why they shipped kids across the country

Speaker 1:

Oh,

Speaker 4:

to do the work. To potentially be the worker class and these are the people who are gonna eventually populate it? Because if you really think about the logistics of it, how does it make any sense at all that you would take orphans from the East Coast and just ship them out West? To do what? And who's taking care of them?

Speaker 4:

That sounds like a lot of 250,000 kids?

Speaker 5:

Yeah. Who's feeding them? Who's

Speaker 4:

yeah. You think about that, I wanna say in '8 in the eighteen hundreds, there was only 80,000,000 people, I think, in America in that range. So you think about like the amount of people it would be like 250,000 when the population is is is Lower. Yeah. And so you had at the same time, you had a 150,000 people in insane asylums in The United States.

Speaker 4:

Now there's like orphanages as they once were do not exist anymore.

Speaker 5:

I wonder if the Asylums people were people that were protesting them changing everything and the great reset and saying, uh-uh. I don't agree with this. And they said, well, you're gonna go get locked up.

Speaker 4:

Well, it's possible. One thing we've have wondered is, like, are these are the parents of the kids? You know, a 150,000 parents potentially Insane Asylums, 250,000 orphans?

Speaker 1:

Too coincidental. Anyway, so, you know, good, interesting information there that, again, just kinda adds to the story, adds to the complexity. So I've got one one final video I'm gonna show you, and then I'm just gonna I'll play this. It's it's a minute long. I will play this for you, and then we'll get into just kinda chatting and everything, because that's the the main chunk of information.

Speaker 1:

So this is just just again, this is just kind of an overview, just talking about a lot of things I've been covering tonight. Just what this is a a minute and two seconds long.

Speaker 6:

They're hiding the true answer to this question from us. How did people who used horses and buggies constructed gigantic intricate buildings like these? They supposedly only had hammers, hand saws, and basic tools. Does that make sense to you? Look at these massive structures and ask yourself, how did they accomplish all this with such simple tools?

Speaker 6:

It makes you question whether our historical timeline is accurate or if something is being hidden from us. It gets even scarier. What if the dates on these buildings are wrong? What if that one isn't really a one? Our history could be off by a thousand years.

Speaker 6:

So who built these detailed structures? Have you heard of Tartaria? Tartaria is a colossal empire that conveniently gets left out of mainstream history, but you can never truly erase history as many references can be found in old maps and documents. Tartaria was a highly advanced civilization with technology and knowledge far beyond what we can imagine. They have credited to have built the Great Wall Of China and many of these intricate buildings pictured earlier.

Speaker 6:

Do you think Tartaria holds the secret to a lost part of our history?

Speaker 1:

Again, good overview. Good the thing is is that I I don't spend all my time on this information because I find it so fascinating, but it it doesn't really it it doesn't really fix to the today. Right? And so that's why, you know, I'm not just doing only this. You know, I'm really focused on solutions, focused on, you know, geopolitics, all these things because I wanna understand our current world.

Speaker 1:

But I think the more we know about our history, the more we can make sense of what's happening right now. And and I just find this fascinating. It's not just and this is just one small slice of, I think, what what what you'd call hidden history. If you get into the Nephilim, the Anunnaki, the giants, the the pyramids, the great flood, I mean, there's so much information out there. And so many things that that you can see have just been absolutely hidden from us.

Speaker 1:

And so, again, reminding you to to let me know in the comments or leave a comment, you you know, whether you're live chatting or in in the comments at, you know, post show. Let me know what you think about these topics. Do would you love to see me do more of this information? I'm not changing the the DNA and the the foundation of Man in America, but if you want me to occasionally do some more shows like this, let me know because I I would like to. Because to be honest, I find this stuff a lot more fun and exciting than looking into, you know, Epstein blackmail rings with politicians and children.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it's important to cover that stuff, but there's something that's kind of refreshing and exciting digging into this this kind of hidden history. So, yeah, let me know what you think. So let me jump over to the to the, the chats. Also, just a a quick, just a quick kinda update on the ARC. Like, we're we're, like, we're getting very, very, very, very close with the ARC.

Speaker 1:

We're I think maybe in the next twenty four hours, we're starting beta testing, meaning that beta testing mean people can actually come in. We have a few kind of select users that are gonna start actually testing the site. So we're still, like, working nonstop, especially my wife, Kate, she's upstairs right now working on it. She'll probably work till one or two in the morning on it tonight. But so we're still going full speed ahead with the ARC.

Speaker 1:

So if you're on the wait list, I know that you've been waiting so patiently, and I appreciate that. And so just expect in the next week or two a lot more announcements coming out. And so we're just we're we're we're at the very, very, very, very, very we're at the one yard line. So, anyway, okay. So thank you.

Speaker 1:

So Ohmes on Rumble says, have Michelle Gibson on as a guest. So Kay, if want you if you wanna save her name, we can add that. So yes. Yes. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. JN over on Rumble says, yes, please do more. Yeah. You know, I actually yeah. Lima Bill still needs to do a movie about hidden history.

Speaker 1:

I didn't know, actually. I agree. Because I I've I've kinda looked at this a lot, and and I you you can't find a single documentary that explains this. I find that a lot of the documentaries on this, like, they get too into the weeds, and they're hard to watch. So maybe, you know, maybe we'll put together maybe we do, like, a mini series on these, like, a kind of, like, a documentary mini series on, I see someone mentioned at Grand Canyon.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. The Grand Canyon, that's a whole there's a lot of there's some there's some, fun stuff there. Yeah. Grand Canyon getting into, like, what was really going on there. You know, yeah, Grand Canyon is one.

Speaker 1:

There's there's so many things. Yeah. Blimps, the airships, the zeppelins, like, that's a whole thing, looking at the airships and and, like, that's yeah. The bells. Right?

Speaker 1:

I've been wanting to do a show on the the bells and, like, the how they got rid of all the bells at one point in history. You know, yeah, mudflood. There's some there's some cool stuff on this. Yeah. And so I'm sure so, know, Kay, I'm sure you're seeing all these comments too, so you can kinda you can kinda gauge the, you know, gauge this information, and kinda get a get a pulse.

Speaker 1:

Yep. So, Doug over on Rumble, these topics need to be discussed more often. Yeah. Funny. Ricey says, you are our new history teacher.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Maybe. I I guess I I kinda look like one of those old history teachers that's kinda sitting in the in, like, the classroom. But I'd be a terrible teacher, though. I I hate schools.

Speaker 1:

Though I I homeschool. I'll I'll be the homeschool history teacher. Yeah. Let's see what's happening over on, YouTube. Yeah, a lot of action over on YouTube, too.

Speaker 1:

Great. Oh, yes. Thank you for interviewing Morley Robbins. Yes, thank you. Interesting, Danielle says, My grandfather was at one of the world's fairs, And you have a glass hatchet.

Speaker 1:

That's cool. Trying to get Stephanie Seneff to interview about glyphosate. Yeah, so Kay, maybe if I'll write her name. I think actually, we talked about her, actually. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. I yeah. We we deserve to know the truth of our history. I I agree. That's the thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. How wars fit in with the reset, yeah, from Susan over on on, YouTube. Yep. Yeah. It seems like the it seems like you'd be like, looking at the comments, you all really enjoy this information.

Speaker 1:

And I I do too. Like, I'm really fascinated with this stuff. I'd love to go in, yeah, the civil war and yeah, there's so much stuff on this. There's so much stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. The Great Pyramids. Yeah. There's a whole host of stuff in the pyramids. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

This this loving yeah. My lunch break. Yeah. My I I reached out to my my lunch break to see if he wanted to do an interview. I never heard back from him.

Speaker 1:

I'm not sure if he does interviews. I I haven't seen him do any interviews. But, yeah, he's great. My lunch break over on YouTube. Yes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, good conversation over here. Actually there's one other video. Let me see if I if give me a second, I'm gonna look through and find it. I've had one other video that I wanted. I didn't save it for this episode in particular, but it was one that I thought was interesting.

Speaker 1:

It was a guy that was on Joe Rogan. Yeah, here we go. So, I think that we're trying to get him on for an interview. He might be kind of difficult to access. So, this is a guy this is he's a screenwriter named Roger Avery.

Speaker 1:

Okay? I wanna play this for you really quickly because it really again, it kinda fits into this. So this is a it's about two and a half minutes long. So I'll play this for you. Okay?

Speaker 1:

Here's interesting things to say.

Speaker 7:

It's all fake. I don't think that any history before 1600 I think everything has been falsified before the year 1600.

Speaker 5:

How so?

Speaker 7:

Well, there's this guy, Anatoly Fomenko, who's a Russian mathematician and historian, and he wrote a book called the new chronology. It's actually a series of books. It's like six volumes, and I've read them all. And and and and and also his addendum book, The New Chronology. He has an addendum book about it.

Speaker 7:

And he basically says that all of history has been changed. About a thousand years have been added to the timeline in order to justify land claims, and those land claims largely have to do with Eurasian the Eurasian horde and the elimination of the Eurasian horde by collusion between, you know, the Vatican, the Romanovs, the

Speaker 5:

So you mean, like, the Mongols and the Huns?

Speaker 7:

Yeah. There was a and if you look on very, very old maps, you see that there used to be a country called Tartaria

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 7:

That was that was in existence. And at a certain point, they wiped them out. And so his theory and it's just a theory. It's just a posit. But when you see how history is constantly being rewritten in real time, it's not so hard to believe.

Speaker 7:

And then he uses, you know, astronomical evidence and, you know, mathematically kind of proves it. And he basically says that let's see if I can get this right. That Rome and Greece and, you know, those and Egypt were actually active till around 1600, and that Rome actually fell around 1600. So kind of imagine or more like late fourteen hundreds, 1492.

Speaker 5:

Opposed to what's the conventional timeline?

Speaker 7:

About a thousand years before. And so and so, you know, if you can wrap your head around it, the Salem witch trials took place around the same time as the Inquisition. Columbus was discovering America around the time Rome fell and that all of this was designed to justify and or to, erase this entire civilization from history.

Speaker 1:

So that's that's interesting because from what he said and, actually, so the the the author that he talked about that wrote those books, I've I've been trying to track those books down. They're not really that easy to find, but this, Russian mathematician, he's he's slandered he's slandered pretty heavily. He's kind of a quack conspiracy theorist, of course, they call him. But he that's where a lot of this information has come from, is he pieced together this information and wrote this huge series, on on this on this topic. But with what he was just saying in that video I just played you, this guy, about how that supposedly so if they basically erased a thousand years, and that Roman fell fallen in, like, the sixteen hundreds or late fifteen hundreds or so, and so that Columbus discovered America.

Speaker 1:

So maybe, again, if these timelines are all kind of out of whack, maybe a lot of these buildings that we're looking at, right, so maybe a lot of this, a lot of these buildings were actually not that that looks a little more definitely more modern. But it's kind of like, what if these were actually part of the in a a Roman empire? That the timeline has been changed. It's it was lied. And that they they basically that this was here before.

Speaker 1:

Like, if Rome fell at that time, then maybe these were part of Roman architecture. I mean, I don't know. Right? I they don't look like something that these guy these kind of people built with shovels and horses. So, anyway, the it's interesting stuff.

Speaker 1:

It's to say the least, it is it's very interesting, information. I love going down these rabbit holes. It's yeah. It's just it's just fascinating. It sucks.

Speaker 1:

It sucks that so much has been hidden from us, but it also it you know, it's kinda like as a kid, like, you know, my daughter June, she's five. When her favorite idea is finding treasure. Right? She, we live in the woods, and she'll go out and just dig in the woods. And she'll come back with, like, a bone.

Speaker 1:

She'll be like, oh, I found a bone. It's her treasure. Because she and she loves the idea of just treasure hunting. I think it's it's part of the like, what's innate to all of us. We love this idea of exploration.

Speaker 1:

And in an age where nothing is new, there's no culture that hasn't been broadcast all over social media, whatever, the idea that we can still discover something hidden, something that was not just hidden, but something that was intentionally hidden from us. And then a entire kind of envelope of lies was created to surround us, to prevent us from seeing that hidden thing, it's kind of a cool process, and I really enjoy it. I like going into this. So, anyway, yeah. I saw someone else had asked about, I think it was over on YouTube, it was asking about the ARC.

Speaker 1:

Look, if you've emailed us, I've got your email. A lot of people we've got, I think, close to 14,000 people on the waiting list, and a lot of people were emailing. So they wanted to get in on the first kind of round of things with the ARC. So if you emailed, I've got your email saved. You're kind of, you're in the in group, so you don't have to worry about it.

Speaker 1:

You'll be hearing from us within the next week or two. Like that's, I think that's around where we're at the timeline. So just, yeah, thank you for your patience on the Arc. It's something that we're looking forward to. So, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Okay. Well, think that well, actually, let me go check and see if I've got any questions that Kay set aside for me. One second, let me pull up my Okay, let me see here. I'm looking through some questions that that, So, Jurawai on Rumble says, Seth, please go back further in time. Petra, Tuanaku, fifteen thousand AD.

Speaker 1:

I'd love to start looking at this stuff. And I've seen that a handful of you have recommended people, and maybe, hopefully, Kaye, you're capturing some of these names. Someone said there's a guy named, like, Exploring World History, I think, that they said did interviews. Yeah. Old World Exploration on YouTube.

Speaker 1:

I guess, does interviews. That's from Susan over on YouTube. So, we'll check him out. Yeah, I love I love the feedback too. I've got some just some, you know, I'll pull these are some comments that Kay has set aside for me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Yeah. Glad yeah. Great. Good feedback.

Speaker 1:

I I appreciate this. Because obviously, you know, I I do what matters to me, but I also wanna make sure that I'm producing content, I'm covering topics that, are things that you're interested in as well. So, like, Bacon Commander on YouTube. Awesome. Love your name.

Speaker 1:

I had bacon for breakfast today. So thank you. Blue Wolf, good evening, Seth. Great to see you. Just stopping in briefly.

Speaker 1:

Still getting used to used to you having a Sunday night live show and making change on my end so I can join you while you're live. Well, thank you for making thank you for doing that. Electricity, I think that in terms of how to live with electricity, I think there's there's already electricity in America. I think that was, sometime mid-1800s, I think, when they first I researched it a little before, but I forgot it now. So yeah.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, so I just, you know, wanna thank everyone for being here. Yeah, Atlantis, yeah, that's a good one, too. Kind of diving into Atlantis would be a lot of fun. I really like this stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Then you get into the ice wall, and there's some interesting stuff with that, too. Getting into Antarctica, there's just there's so much interesting stuff to go out there and look at. Okay, let's check out over on YouTube. I love seeing how active YouTube is, it's great. We've got around 300 over on YouTube.

Speaker 1:

Let's see, Rumble, we're at Oh, yes, almost six and a half thousand on Rumble. So, great crowd. Thank you, everyone, for being here. Yeah. Yeah, there we go.

Speaker 1:

I see someone mentioning Dave, maybe you're mentioning Flat Earth Dave. I did a three hour interview with him a couple years ago. Fascinating guy. Yeah, guy. So, okay, well, think that we're gonna start winding down.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I really yeah, thank you, my savior JC, such a great show tonight. Yeah, thank you. I I enjoyed this. I I really, really enjoyed this. Yeah, Nephilim.

Speaker 1:

I love to do some stuff on the Nephilim. Yeah. Mhmm. Yeah, there's a good one. Let's see.

Speaker 1:

EJC, Missy Mom, over on, Rumble. Well, if if I can make you feel less wacky, great. I I I feel like I'm a pretty wacky guy. Oh, thank you, Tomahawk. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Uh-huh. Yeah. Take the girls for ice cream on me. I will, actually. Thank you, Tomahawk.

Speaker 1:

And, so Friday night is always our movie night for the kids, and they get ice cream. And so, yeah, thank you. I really appreciate that. I'm gonna screenshot that one, so I can show it to the girl my little my little ones. Thank you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Atlantis. Yeah, hello there. Yeah, so he says, Glad to hear YouTubers are waking up. Yeah, it's interesting. Yeah, I love seeing it.

Speaker 1:

Actually, YouTube is I'm glad that something is opening up on YouTube. Actually, lot of credit goes to Kay and her team doing amazing work over there. But, yeah. Yeah. My Savior, Seth put out some homeschool stuff, links or something.

Speaker 1:

Once I eventually, will. I'll start covering more of that. Right now, my girls are two and five, so we're not really doing, we're not really doing, like, the more structured homeschool. Homeschool is just, Hey, let's go play in the woods together. Let's go build a fort in the woods.

Speaker 1:

That's my homeschool. Hello there, says, You're a calming voice. Thank you. I appreciate that. Yeah, thank you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay. See the Gobekki Tepe, I've been seeing that pop up. Let's see, oh yeah, that was the, Okay, I'll look at that. Yeah, the ancient architecture in Turkey. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Great. Yeah, we're gonna go back over and say to YouTube. Yeah. Alright. Well, thank you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Thank you, everyone, for being here. Okay, so, LTK Winters on YouTube says, Seth, if you can have Dan Duvall on about, pre pre edemic history. Okay. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So, Kay, if you'll write that name down. Kay, we've gotten some good names. We've got some great leads here. And and then, look, know the YouTube crowd is very awake. I know.

Speaker 1:

I know. I know you are. I think the key is that people are finding me now on YouTube. Right? And YouTube is a lot of people that aren't awake.

Speaker 1:

Right? So over on Rumble, most people on Rumble are pretty kind of aware. I mean, there's there's I I kinda speak loosely about that. But there's a lot of people on YouTube that don't come across this stuff very often. And I and I know that there's some really good channels on YouTube, and I'm not kind of, I'm not, you know, kinda cracking down on YouTube.

Speaker 1:

I'm not kind of bashing YouTube. I think there's a lot of amazing people on YouTube, some good channels, a lot of good stuff like this on YouTube. So yeah. Okay, well, yeah, Jack Krause, I think, I've been trying to get him on. Doctor doctor Jack Krause.

Speaker 1:

I've been trying to get him on. Not easy. Not easy to get him on. But I'm trying. So okay.

Speaker 1:

Well, I think that I think that that's yeah. I think that's it for tonight. Just a reminder, so I talked about the Arc. If you want to so the Arc, to give you the the really quick kind of pitch for it. So what what it is we're building is it's basically, it's a private social media platform that we're building.

Speaker 1:

Completely private, members only. It's gonna have a whole host of amazing stuff. It a lot of it is really built upon kind of building your own arc. So preparedness topics, gardening. But more importantly, it's about building relationships with people.

Speaker 1:

So we have, like, you know, we have local little chapters and everything, and, you know, there's a lot going into it. So if you want to join the wait list for the ARC, just go to buildthearc.com. Right? It says buildthearc, arkarc, buildthearc.com to join the waiting list. Right now, I mentioned we're about 14,000 people on the waiting list, and we're just, we're trying, like, we're working so hard to get it ready for you.

Speaker 1:

So that's coming very, very soon. Very, very, very soon. So, okay. Also, Brooks says, No to Duvall. Okay, so what?

Speaker 1:

Hey, thank you. We'll make sure we vet him as a guest, as a potential guest. Alright, so YouTube, good night everyone, YouTube. Yeah. Yeah, thank you, everybody.

Speaker 1:

Oh, thank you, Alpine Retreat. Yeah. I love how long it takes you to end a show. LOL, I'm as reluctant as you are. Thank you all.

Speaker 1:

Thank you again for all your work. A great community we have here. It is. It's a great community, isn't it? Like, it's you know, you're a bunch of really wonderful people.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, honestly, like, I I feel just like, you look at a lot of these chats on these channels, and it's everyone's arguing, and they're they're, like, swearing, and, I I just see this. It's like, this is a wonderful discussion. Yeah, it's a wonderful discussion. Just good people. Yeah, good, good people.

Speaker 1:

I really appreciate you all being here. So that's it. Man, make sure, you share the video. If you're watching it, make sure you share it with someone. That always helps.

Speaker 1:

And, yeah, all that good stuff. So thank you all. Have a beautiful and wonderful night. We have some really good interviews. I've actually I've got an interview, with John Hamer coming out.

Speaker 1:

He's the guy that wrote, actually, this

Speaker 6:

so

Speaker 1:

he's the author this is one of his books. He wrote The Falsification of History, The Falsification of Science, like, guy. I've got his interview coming out, maybe this week even. Had a great discussion with him. So, anyway, so John Hayward interview is coming out, and, yeah, we have a lot a lot of good stuff coming on.

Speaker 1:

Let's do a segment on beard grooming. Actually, yeah, Sourmectin. Actually, I I did I did trim my beard up a little before the show tonight. It was getting kind of unruly. It was a little bit too much.

Speaker 1:

So yeah. Alright. Well, thank you, everyone. Have a wonderful night. Take care.

Speaker 1:

God bless. I'll see you soon. Make sure you hit that like button. Make sure you leave a comment. Make sure you follow the channel.

Speaker 1:

If you're listening on Apple Podcasts, or if you have an account with Apple Podcasts, you wanna do me a favor, go leave a good review on there. It really helps me out. And, that's it. Yeah, Stella. Seth, I love your positivity.

Speaker 1:

It's just how I am. I'm I'm just like, my house could burn down, knock on wood, and I'll be like, it's okay. We're gonna build a new one. Right? It's just it's how how you live.

Speaker 1:

Also, Hemp Carr, thank you very much for that donation. Yes, thank you. So, alright. Yeah, Benda Rocks, good to see you here, buddy, too. Alright, thank you everyone.

Speaker 1:

Have a wonderful, wonderful evening. I'll see you next time.