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jedimonk
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p/tartaria
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10/23/2025, 7:51:25 PM
Evidence
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thoughtcriminal_1984
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10/23/2025, 8:12:36 PM
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Can't resist.... sorry, not sorry...  😂😂😂
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jedimonk
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10/23/2025, 10:35:21 PM
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That is funny! but not the answer I was looking for. Is it real or some endless time consuming worm whole that leads to no-where?
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thoughtcriminal_1984
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10/23/2025, 11:32:39 PM
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I haven't gone deep into it personally, mainly due to more pressing issues or subjects. The things I'd start looking at, although not necessarily "Tartaria" specific, but I definitely think part of the story... Zeppelins, the fact we had electric cars, trams etc, back then, that all somehow, just went away, to be replaced by at the time a more controllable source of energy... these being brought back around now, isn't just because they were just thought about a few years back, it's the deliberate reimerging of old stolen technology. Remember the empires that were destroyed last century.
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jedimonk
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10/24/2025, 1:49:32 AM
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Yes, just before the next reset. We are being managed
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thoughtcriminal_1984
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10/24/2025, 9:09:31 AM
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Another couple of things to look into, mercury technology and what they used to do with radioactive stuff. Here's a little taste...  Makes you wonder why they restrict these things so much, while also destroying or hoarding whatever supplies we had/have....
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thoughtcriminal_1984
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10/24/2025, 9:21:15 AM
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The video shows modern uses, either stretch your imagination to think how it could or was used back in the day or better still look into the old shit, it won't be as easy to find, but stuff Marie Curie did was some of the best known groundbreaking stuff of the time. Marie Curie was a Polish-born physicist and chemist who conducted groundbreaking research on radioactivity. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win two Nobel Prizes, and the only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different scientific fields—physics and chemistry. During World War I, she developed mobile X-ray units for use on the front lines. - **Pioneering research**: Curie coined the term "radioactivity" and, with her husband Pierre, discovered the elements radium and polonium. - **Nobel Prizes**: She won the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics and the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. - **Academic firsts**: She was the first woman to become a professor at the University of Paris (the Sorbonne) and the first woman to earn a Ph.D. in France. - **Medical advancements**: Her work was crucial to the development of X-rays in surgery, and she organized mobile X-ray units to help diagnose soldiers during World War I. Early life and education - Born Maria Skłodowska in Warsaw, Poland, in 1867. - Moved to Paris to study at the Sorbonne because women were not allowed to attend university in Poland at the time. - Met and married physicist Pierre Curie, with whom she collaborated scientifically. Legacy - **Scientific contributions**: Her work on radioactivity laid the foundation for nuclear physics and led to the development of cancer treatments. - **Health effects**: The constant exposure to radioactive materials she worked with ultimately contributed to her death from aplastic anemia in 1934. Her notebooks and papers from that period are still highly radioactive and are stored in lead-lined boxes. - **Enduring impact**: The [Marie Curie cancer research and care charity](https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-samsung-rvo1&sca_esv=4c6e5173cbbd1641&q=Marie+Curie+cancer+research+and+care+charity&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwisxJ3Fv7yQAxUXWUEAHQS2HrMQxccNegUI4AIQAQ&mstk=AUtExfCjyVEiAYXbu3PAhNCa4zGHDH-W-qXhOPLFOJ3UWg-fpmxAbXCVIuc5HBR72dMy-c8NqdzFcT3ztpdLf2Z86Znp3bWIxbQtujZ0SZIFZEqUPalWo1UixXBs4hCDZk-ciYI&csui=3) continues to carry on her work and support patients with terminal illnesses.
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saarnok
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10/23/2025, 10:59:57 PM
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You're serious? Okay. Near as I can tell this is "We wuz kangz" for white people and in my conspiracy theory wired brain it's an effort to distract from the fact that we used to be able to get things done back when we had a gold standard and the country was run by people who worked for a living. The "evidence" is generally cool looking buildings built a long time ago coupled with structures that have been partially buried along with maps that show an AREA as "Tartary" or some similar term. And, it's entirely true that LOTS of cities are partially buried which owes to the fact that earlier cities grew with no attention to drainage and were subsequently changed to accommodate modern sewage systems. In some cases the buildings were actually jacked up and new foundations poured, in others the buildings were partially buried and upper floors became more or less ground floors. Also, some of the old building were truly massive structures build around paradigms of design that didn't readily accommodate water, sewer, air conditioning and so on, and tragically needed torn down to make way for modern structures implementing these features. Beyond that, early design features of really expensive buildings were to take advantage of natural cooling from partial basements, but with enough window exposure to access enough air and light to enhance comfort. Basically, it's just interpreting old things from a modern perspective without realizing our modern perspectives have nothing to do with how designers of the day thought. And, I suspect there's at most, two guys, working for the government who have the job of promoting this distraction. But, I love the videos which feature some of the most fabulous architecture of the past.
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jedimonk
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10/24/2025, 1:56:26 AM
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The world fairs are very interesting. Why build them and tear them down, it makes no sense. And the tech, they have zero point free energy.
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saarnok
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10/24/2025, 1:28:05 PM
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Yeah. It's true they don't, from our perspective. There was a video I'd probably have a lot of trouble finding where a guy explained the world fairs plausibly. The basic idea is the scheme to get a lot of money flowing into an area, plus a little bread and circuses, but mostly they generally wiped out the existing naturally evolved neighborhoods and replaced them with eye catching structures, generally only for a year or two. Very few of the structures were made to last, regardless how awesome they look on the surface. They built facades that were mostly plaster and used steel frames which could be repurposed. These projects were part of the "City Beautiful" movement which is in a sense a French concept owing to Baron Haussmann’s redesign of Paris under Napoleon III from the 1850's through 1870. Daniel H. Burnham would use this styling to design several World Fairs/Exhibitions including the first in Chicago (The White City) and eventually the redesign of Washington D.C. Some things, like the D.C. redesign would be essentially permanent, while others were not and never were intended to last more than a year or two. Part of the "conspiracy theory" is the "great fires" that ravaged cities on a fairly regular basis, owing to lack of planning and lack of any real fire safety building codes. I have a multivolume "Cyclopedia of construction" from... I think it's 1921 or so. The design of homes from a modern perspective is that they were made to be burned. Absolutely no thought went into preventing fire transmission through the structure and entirely by accident they were presenting a "new" design intended to stop mice which also (though they never mentioned it) prevented air flow and slowed the spread of fire. Also "new" was the use of poured concrete foundations. Before planning, cities simply went up in as economic a fashion as possible. Builders inevitably chose to build more rather than to build safer and "fireproofing" was one of the things not really taken into account until Burnham added it to his buildings. There are LOTS of really implausible things about that period of history, not because they didn't make sense at the time, but because they don't make sense from our point of view. Part of the way this "theory" sells to young people is because of how little organic connection this generation has to the past. I knew a man personally who knew a Civil War Veteran. My grandparents lived from the early 1900's and grew up with people who lived through the late 1800's. My grandmother taught her kids history, but only included up to "The World War", which was how far history had progressed when she gave up her teaching job to marry my grandfather. WWII was yet to happen. I can tell you how much their generation saw of the remnants of Tartaria: Not one bit of it. If you want to learn about this subject, you should be searching for "City Beautiful" and Burnham for information. There are numerous books available which range from less than $20 to several hundred. But, there's plenty of [information](https://www.britannica.com/topic/City-Beautiful-movement) online.
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jedimonk
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10/23/2025, 10:32:45 PM
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Haha
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drewmac
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10/23/2025, 9:08:48 PM
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👌
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