12:23 as a surgical tech myself, I fully support the arrogant surgeon theory. 50% of our job is soothing adult temper tantrums and slapping their hands when they want to touch something they shouldn't.
I am Ojibwe. Wendigo is the boogie man that our mothers used to threaten us with to get us to be good 😂 BUT, there is also a very good life lesson taught to our ancestors when food was scarce. Our culture honors the sacrifice every living thing makes for our consumption. Basically, if you get so hungry that you kill and eat another person, the human blood on your hands and lips will forever change you. It turns you transparent, inhuman and terrifying. To stoop so low as to turn on your fellow man for your own satisfaction will turn you into something evil. There's so much metaphor in this lore.
@@adurpandya2742 You can be sacrificed against your will. But I see your point, if it is not your will it is nor YOUR sacrifice, but the sacrifice others were willing to make. If you are dead on impact in a plane crash in the middle of nowhere, the people who end up needing to eat you will appreciate YOUR sacrifice even though it was not your will. People will see you as making a sacrifice in the news story, that you died so others could live... not that it was by free will but fate. Fate can make a sacrifice out of any life. You can be fated to make a sacrifice you don't want intend. Like the baby kangaroo the mother lobs at a predator as a diversion tactic (as losing one beats losing them all), the baby didn't make a sacrifice but they were one. And colloquially people would say that they died for their siblings, a selfless sacrifice on their part, dying so others may live. Circle of life is hardcore. It is a semantic argument, I get how saying a gutted deer made a sacrifice is disrespectful. (It can be true though, a mother fighting so that its babies could escape did make a sacrifice in catching all those arrows. I mean it is instinct though, they might not think like that. But those like chimps and dolphins are pretty socially evolved, pretty sure they can make a sacrifice knowingly.) I'm not a hunter despite loving shooting targets. I'd only ever do such in a survival scenario (for the meat as the store... they throw away metric tons of it a day, it is dead anyway... you might as well give the death some meaning in eating or they died for nothing... except ya know money. Safer to over kill at your slaughterhouse than under, if you are under you lose money... if over you lose very little comparatively. Hey... If I was Prezo I'd crack down on the average slaughterhouse... we really do over produce beef especially. The sacrifice of deadly cow farts. They gonna melt the icecaps.
I loved hearing about the Ojibwe stories. My family told me tales that sounded super similar and I always thought it was unfair as a kid that the tribe my family is from never got the recognition in the story retellings. We *are* Ojibwe. Mom and family just always said Chippewa and I never realized until I was in my late teens.
No Lore Lodge episode is complete without an Archie cameo. And to what you said about your credibility, I agree 100%. I find you more credible than others and the reason I have stuck with your channel since episode 5 is because you are willing to except new evidence and let it evolve your theories as well as admit when you get things wrong and actually post redactions about what specifically it was and why that makes your theory incorrect.
You know, sunken eyes, pale skin etc. are all signs of a person with an illness. Perhaps we get primal fear to avoid sick people and becoming infected ourselves. It definitely would have been beneficial trait before advent of modern medicine.
That is a human trait. It’s tied to mate selection, and subconsciously being able to pick up on obvious and not so obvious tells of a sick/diseased individual helps us to avoid the “error” of mating with someone who’s condition would not allow for them to achieve or maintain a pregnancy or produce healthy, hardy offspring.
My father grew up in backwoods Kentucky/Tennessee region. The whole family was from there before they moved further south into Alabama after he left the military. One of his grandparents was a Hatfield. He would tell stories about his father and older relatives taking trips up into the mountains in the fall, before the snows, to drop off supplies to other relatives who refused to ever come down to the towns. What he personally remembered would have been in the 60s through the 80s when he moved away. It was the type of thing that no one but family was allowed to talk about.
I grew up in the foothills of Appalachia in KY. I’ve always heard stories about “those” people & the end of the stories was always “leave those people alone” & “DO NOT GO” to this area or that place because it belongs to “those people” & leave them alone.” I was born in 1967 & my father took off before I could walk. My mother couldn’t get a job without her husband’s permission but she couldn’t get him to sign the forms granting permission because he was gone. It wasn’t until the divorce was final that she was able to get a job. She also couldn’t open a bank account without a man co-signing so my grandfather had to open bank accounts in his name with her as a second person allowed to access the accounts. My great-grandfather had to buy her a house & a car because no one would give her a loan. There was no law against women having any of those things but it was policy for most financial institutions to require a man to co-sign or have his name on the account too. It wasn’t until the mid 1970’s that a federal law was passed that made it illegal for banks, credit unions & loan companies to deny women their own accounts. I was in college in 1988 & one of my classes required 2 person teams to work with the disadvantaged in the area. My partner & I were assigned a young married woman with two young children who lived on one of the Thoroughbred horse farms. The husband worked on the farm & the wife was supposed to work in the owners big house. The problem was the wife was from deep in the hollers of West Virginia & she grew up without reliable electricity & no running water so she didn’t know how to operate basic appliances. It was our job to teach her how to do housework with modern technology & appliances. She had never used a vacuum cleaner or dishwasher. She had been washing clothes in the bathtub. She didn’t know how to use an electric stove or even a gas stove since she grew up with a wood burning stove. She attended a small school in the home of a neighbor & could only read & write on a third grade level because her father believed girls didn’t need to be educated beyond the basics. She literally grew up the way the people of the mid 1800’s lived. It astounded me that we were only 12 years away from the 21st century yet this young woman spend her entire childhood & teenage years living like it was still the 19th century. I’ve often wondered what happened to her.
I grew up in 60's in Middle of Ohio and when my Mother left my father after years of beatings they put it in the local newspaper. She was now a Divorcee and not able to have Tea with the neighbor lady anymore or receive communion in Church. Woman have fought very hard for our rights and there are many trying to claw them back from us. It is a FACT, and just beyond me, that none of our representatives have seen it fit to ratify the ERA. On Kentucky, we had neighbors from there and they were honestly pretty Neanderthal.
I'm the one that asked about book recommendations, first off you said my last name correct the first time! Thank you so much for letting me know about your list on your Amazon store! Didn't know about it til now! Gonna be getting tons of books to get as much information as I can. I'm excited to learn
Deorr Kunz is a toddler that went missing while camping 9 yrs ago in Idaho. If you're interested in a recent case. It could use some new eyeballs on it.
@@RayneLainey that case is so tragic. Really breaks my heart. My oldest nephew, who is actually a rocket scientist, is on the spectrum and is the most precious human. I really feel for Sebastian and I think he was not a priority to anyone. Breaks my heart.
I think most people in the area the family lives in believes the parents are hiding something, or that the grandfather and his "friend" he brought along (who is a registered sex offender) had something to do with it. A lot of folks think the child was never with them that day at all, that something happened to him earlier, likely an accidental death due to negligence, and they covered it up.
@@davidgreen7835 I fell into a deep rabbit hole researching that case. While I suppose it could be anything, that he was never at the camp site explains so much. Or, that he was hurt and transported, and dumped, by his parents on the way to the store for supplies.
Have never seen stairs in the woods, but I have seen a lot of chimneys from old pioneer homes. The brick chimneys are usually still standing even after 100-200 years, long after the rest of the house has fallen down and rotted away.
14:43 glad we're finally talking about the signature of the tracks. All through the Teddy vid, I was left scratching my head every time there was doubt about the shape of the tracks. Two expert hunters and woodsman would at least mention if the tracks didn't seem right for a bear, but they said they were bear tracks, no ambiguity. Yes there's a big question about why they appeared to be on two legs, but there's no "is it a cougar, is it a man" question about it, they were bear tracks
I followed David P and watched all of his movies long before finding your channel. So it was tough to hear you occasionally poo-poo on him, but I stuck with your channel and see the flaws in his case studies that you point out. My biggest issue with him is that his factors for being a special case - near water, separated from the group, near granite.... he may as well said "people being outdoors away from civilization".
Because I'm Irish, I'm like, yeah, that 10% is fairies. Big foot? Fairies. Time warps? Fairies. 'Feral people?' Fairies. Mysterious disappearing caves? Fairies. Aliens? Fairies. Whistling in the woods? Fairies. Tree people. Fairies. It's fairies, people.
I was behind on your content as spent over a week watching Sara Boone's trial. Just watched past two weeks of your content whilst cleaning the house. Thanks for getting me through it!
Just had an idea: lately the algorithm has (to my knowledge) been favoring very long (multi-hour) videos because of an inability to differentiate sleeping "views" from active watchers (very simplified explanation) - you could make 'supercuts' of your videos (maybe entire clusters edited into one video, for example) to try and gain its favor once again.
Regarding the fishing rod (and the lack of any scream/yelp) - it's possible that the boy's panic reflex caused his body to tense and clench so hard that he was unable to let out any sound or to let go of the fishing rod. This sort of muscular tension at the moment of death can carry over into after death... sometimes it's hard to pry objects out of deceased people's hands. And as for the throat clenching so hard that a person can't make any sound let alone a louder one, it's not unusual.
I guess the question is what scared him that badly, i mean maybe that was just his reaction but some other kids go missing, almost literally die, face down bears or cougars, and they dont freeze so hard they die that way. Its just a weird question.
The uncanny valley is one of my favorite topics to talk about and discuss just because we will never know the exact reason we react the way we do to it. Some explanations in the evolutionary psychology side of it include having an aversion to the dead and sick, and pale faces with sunken eyes and exposed teeth do very much resemble a corpse. Other possible explanations include how our ancestors evolved alongside other human races such as homo erectus and homo neanderthalensis, and my personal favorite, baboons. Primates of all species are highly prone to attacking other primates and interspecies conflict is common. Baboons fit the pale face, sharp teeth, and sunken eyes stereotype among uncanny monsters
Think of clowns and why they are scary to some people. Huge red eyes, big teeth and red lips, weird hair, pale face. I could see a deranged baboon in there lol.
@@chab1rd155 It's a nation of 400 million, with over a century of data, for Paulides to draw from. Literally millions of people use national parks each year, parks which include some of the most remote, dangerous areas in the nation. You really expect there to be ZERO unsolved missing person case's, in over a centuryz in a nation that big?!? Paulides has just cherry-picked the MOST "mysterious", difficukt to solve cases; Cases which ARE genuinely puzzling, and may even be impossible to solve.... ...but in a data pool THAT big, it would be far stranger to NOT have any weird, "mysterious", "unsolvable" cases. It's just the law of averages. Pick ANY dataset of that massive size, and you"ll end up with a few hundred/few cases (representing a tiny %age of the whole), that are extremely"mysterious", and hard/impossible to solve It would be more weird/suspect to NOT have a certain number of cases like these; Any organization dealing with THAT many cases, which has a 0% fail ratez at solving cases, is lying/faking data.
@@oneamong5571 Sure. A pioneer, of collating the inevitable, statistically-normal percentage of missing persons cases that are unsolvable, developing an exciting, spooky narrative that implies a connection between these almost-certainly unconnected cases, and using that narrative to sell books/get famous. He's a pioneer, of being an "investigator" who makes his reputation off NOT solving as many cases as possible.
I have no clue if I’m the only one who would be interested in this, but I would absolutely love a crossover between Lore Lodge and Jimmy Akin’s Mysterious World. If that is a thing that can happen, that would be amazing!
@@pineywoodslawandcrimeWe got home to PA tonight :) Gatlinburg was nice, but waaaay too crowded for me. After seeing how huge and wooded/remote the national park is, I understand how people can disappear there. We didn't even have cell service when we were in there.
Roosevelt could have made up the old frontiersman complete with a different age and backstory to further divert suspicion that it happened to him. Saying that it was probably a bear and a cougar could be even more misdirection. "No, that wasn't me, the guy is much older and always lived out here, personally, I think it was 2 animals." Not saying that that is what happened, but that's the lowest level of fabrication I'd employ if I wanted the story to get out without getting back to me.
Ok, sure, he could, but there isn't really all that much evidence that it happened to Roosevelt and he changed the story. So for me, it feels more like changing the evidence to fit a theory than the other way around.
Great show as always. I'm awaiting shoulder surgery as I speak. This 2+ hours was a great, informative, and entertaining distraction. I appreciate all of the hard work you do. ✌️🙂
Dave Paulides will probably sue Lore Lodge. Dave thinks he invented "missing persons" and he gets deeply offended if anyond besides him speaks about missing people.
Its not about missing people Dave owns,but "missing 411" and his creations from it. This guy channel is band camp, then acoustic guitar in his dorm, then all of sudden National Parks Missing 411 content in 2021. You think this guy goes to profit off Pauliedes' work when he was a muppet in band camp in 2013?
@christophershannon8734 Dave gets his panties in a bunch anytime someone does a video on a "missing person". I've seen Dave whine and complain about it so many times it's cringe worthy. A lot of people find him comical, reading letters for his videos about how this person or that person thinks he's "such a good guy". I'll admit, I was a fan of Dave for the 1st year or two, then I read some comments about who he is really is. I didn't want to believe what people were saying about him, so I ignored it for awhile. Then Dave made some comments that led me to believe what the critics were saying might be true. I started researching him, and finally found a forum thread where they had posted a bunch of proof. Don't believe me, just ask him to tell you why he HAD to resign for law enforcement.
@christophershannon8734 I understand what you're saying but there plenty of times he co plains even without someone using "missing 411". He's complained about channels who have never used that.
Missing Enigma just did a video about Stacey Arias case - he went there. There's a lot of ground that look like "trails" but are just the way the terrain is. If she wasn't paying attention to where she was going because she was focused on taking pictures of the lake (which is gorgeous) she could easily have thought she was on the trail when she wasn't. When you see the terrain it's really easy to see how she may have gotten lost.
@@Off-HandedBarrel I made the comment in response to another on string theory. I don’t know why it’s here. I can delete a TH-cam comment? I truly am the unfrozen caveman lawyer. 🤦🏻♀️
Ashton is obnoxious. Not only will he disregard anything that doesn’t fit his narrative, he constantly insults people right out of the gate, and acts like they’re the ones who are being abrasive and disrespectful. He did it to me as well back when this whole thing started (before you guys even made your video on it). Then he banned me instantly just for pointing out the falsehoods regarding the various topics he keeps bringing up.
That’s Ashton Forbes. The guy who started talking about the Malaysian Airlines Flight 370. He blew up on Twitter especially, bringing up a variety of so called “fringe” topics all of which are focused around that flight ultimately. He acts like he’s the first one to ever talk about any of the topics he brings up, and now even acts like he’s an insider on secret science projects (signing NDAs and what not). He delivers zero actual substance on anything he touches. And pretty much makes a farce of any real investigation, whether that’s on “regular” or “alternativ” topics.
Being on site at the Little Big Horn battlefield shows you that Custer was NOT stupid, but Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse were brilliant! The plains tribes knew that land like they knew their eyelids. Custer was arrogant, but not stupid.
Your willingness to be open correction sets your credibility very high, in my book. I remember commenting some time ago here that I thought bigfoot accounts might be feral humans, or wildmen of some kind. It's nice that your thinking seems to be in that same direction. I doubt your thinking was influenced by my comment, but I prefer to think that great minds simply think alike. You have a very principled and professional approach to historical research that I appreciate as a physics undergrad and a Seminary grad with an emphasis on church history. The science of history is something few seem to appreciate. Thanks for the interesting research you do with a high level of integrity.
Hello guys! I want to clarify what holler means. It means holler. Their neighbor is close enough that they could holler to each other. It doesn't mean hollow. Love your videos.
I always listen to the new vids and love to watch and rewatch the older vids and I keep you tube on auto play just in case I fall asleep so that way it will keep going and you still get the views
around the 52:00 mark you bring up the concept of a 16 year old girl emptying her account, most could not even Open an account without either a husband or a father cosigning it so for a withdrawl of that size she'd likely need the same to be with her.
I was a Cub Scout for 3 years and a Boy Scout for 2 and I feel like not only did I learn about the founding history of scouting but we were also assigned extra reading on the topic in the form of the “American boys handy book “ as well as some sort of internal scouting guide to the history of the organization now I was from the inner city and it was the very late 80s to the early 90s (I even remember asking questions for my report on this subject on a list-serve scouting group on my moms 30 lbs Epson “laptop” that had a display that maybe capable of showing 5 lines of text that we accessed via placing the receiver of our rotary phone on a stand and having to dial up via compuserve)
My family is from East Tennessee and it's wild hearing it talked about like a separate country. Seeing the culture shock from the outside is a little comical. Just a touch 😂
I LOVE ARCHIE WITH ALL MY LIFE, he reminds me of my sweet baby Brody, who was also an American Eskimo dog and passed a year ago now 🩷 he was also a very need squeaky cuddly little guy
Idk if it is an actual cluster but can you look at the shear number of people who go missing or found dead in the cascade mountains in Washington state?
Here where I live now, we can renew our registrations with a kiosk in the supermarket (some offices also have drive-thrus). Driver's license and car registration handled by different offices, but lines not too bad. Unlike when I was living in NJ and had to deal with the DMV. Enjoyed the podcast.
So here’s the thing, I don’t know how to do patron at all. I would do it gladly, seriously. But if someone could just type down what I am supposed to do. I’m too old for this crap. I asked my teenaged kids and my 20 year old. They are all too busy to help. If you want to help, I will join patron or whatever it is called. I will pay you money. All you have to do is: 1) just tell me step by step how to sign up. 2) if I am supposed to do something different from there meaning go to a different site or watch these great shows- I will do it. Also, I will bring others with me! My dad and my boyfriend both will probably come once they can figure it out the tech end of it. Don’t hate btw… I was just born before the internet or even computers. So. I’m not as proficient at things such as these.
What you were saying about YT not notifying people of live streams is true, it is something I have been noticing of late. I was on here watching a short videos maybe 5 or 6 minutes and when it ended I had a notification that someone I follow was having a live stream posted 48 minutes ago but the notice had only arrive during the video. When I opened the link the video was one hour a twenty-one or an hour and fifty-one minutes not exactly sure.
I’m pretty inclined to say that someone going missing in the mountains doesn’t count as a mysterious disappearance. You never know what kind of chasms, crevasses, pits or ravines are hiding under all the underbrush. So easy for someone to fall down a gap, have some dirt, stones or plant material fall on them and render them unseeable. Just too easy….
The Theory I personally prescribe to when it comes to the uncanny valley is that it's a survival mechanism to avoid gravely infectious diseases. If a person got so sick they emaciated, got very pale or had an otherwise unnatural colouration or movement, coming close to them could lead to further infection. I.e. Rabies victims For cultures that share stories about a similar type of near-human monster with those kinds of attributes, it's not far-fetched to imagine that some illness might have come forth in the past that presented a certain way and was burned into the collective consciousness of the people, until all that remained were horror stories of people that looked inhuman.
The only issue is the channel seemingly became "debunk paulides" instead of "exploring mysteries." I dont really like david paulides because he includes stories that are almost all explanatory. However theres the handful that i wanted channels to focus on that are truly odd and come up with theories outside bigfoot, aliens, or human interference. The whole idea of rock fields and people falling into caves never to be found is still quite interesting despite nobody actually exploring these in any videos. (Like for example looking at local cave systems and just comparing to a topographical map, idk.)
It's because he has no content of his own. Look at his videos, click oldest, and see how he just straight steals David Pauliedes' work for his own benefit because he has no creations of his own.
Regarding the ghosty show on the other network, check with Eli about whether or not Savannah's show "Ghosted" is also going to be on that network. There's just a few episodes up on YT, but it's probably a good faith kinda thing to check with them.
The missing girl from the 70s that you were talking about, if she had a bank account with money it, depending on the specific year, it was not legal for women to have their own bank account, so it could have been an account that her parents opened with her to keep emergency money or a college fund in. It may not be very pertinent in that case as she probably didn’t actually have access to it without having whoever else was on the bank account with her to make a withdrawal.
Up here in NY specifically upstate the roads where I'm at are terrible & their making stupid discussion with the structure of the roads again by getting rid of some sections that they really shouldn't be it's so stupid
Hey Lads, sorry I missed this stream, my current hyperfixation of painting 40k figures has had me distracted lol. But don’t worry, I still love my favorite niche internet micro celebrities 🤙🤙🤙
Game Wardens absolutely do. Police here will have a GW with them in certain areas for roadblocks. Driver smarts off or the cops suspects something but they can’t search the car, they’ll just get the GW to do it.
I never understood claiming groups as the lost tribes of Israel. I’ve heard people claim black people, Tibetans, Indians, native Americans, Europeans, and last week I heard someone claim Hispanics as the descendants of the lost tribes. It’s just such a weird claim to me, especially when there’s an established history of those people that has them already existing when the lost tribes got lost. I don’t get how people make a full force claim totally serious without knowing anything about it
The thing that really makes me smack my forehead is the mental gymnastics that people go through to ignore what the Bible *clearly says*. The Assyrians, like the Babylonians a few generations later, only took the urban elites for resettlement. The majority of the population was left behind, with some of them intermarrying with the settlers brought in by the Assyrians. This is literally, directly talked about in the book of Ezra. These people became the Samaritans and, through intermarriage with returning exiles, the Galileeans. When the Romans destroyed Judea as an ethnostate inside the Roman Empire in the late 1st century/early 2nd century, they left the rural population alone, as long as they didn’t resist the Roman Army. The “lost tribes of Israel” today live in the Holy Land; some of them are Samaritans, and most of them are Palestinians.
then why does holler have a whole separate definition to hollow, as opposed to yellow/yeller and window/winder which have firmly remained as only pronunciation differences, with the same definitions? the pronunciation changes would have formed around the same time due to being parts of the same accent no? like hollow and holler definitionally have no connection I can see if they were simply dialectical differences the meaning would be at least similar right?
@@notahumanbeing6892 Words can have multiple definitions. One definition of hollow is "a small valley". In the Appalachian dialect, holler is also "a small valley". If you are talking about holler defined as "to yell or shout", it comes from a different root and simply arrived at the same spelling and pronunciation as the Appalachian version of holler.
I will say the largest of mountain lion toms are often just under 300 pounds, 260-270ish. Thats a boone and crocket mountain lion, a rare dominant male with a lot of food but still, way way bigger than the 140lbs quoted.
Weird aberrations are spiritual in nature. My son saw a bigfoot barely in the country just southeast of Austin Texas. He was white faced and shaking. The large hunting dog squatted and peed itself. He said there was a foul odor. I went and checked. Tjat brush is so thick in that ravine a dog couldn't go in there. There were no footprints uphill where it ran. Tjere was some mud.
12:23 as a surgical tech myself, I fully support the arrogant surgeon theory. 50% of our job is soothing adult temper tantrums and slapping their hands when they want to touch something they shouldn't.
I am Ojibwe. Wendigo is the boogie man that our mothers used to threaten us with to get us to be good 😂
BUT, there is also a very good life lesson taught to our ancestors when food was scarce. Our culture honors the sacrifice every living thing makes for our consumption. Basically, if you get so hungry that you kill and eat another person, the human blood on your hands and lips will forever change you. It turns you transparent, inhuman and terrifying. To stoop so low as to turn on your fellow man for your own satisfaction will turn you into something evil. There's so much metaphor in this lore.
There is always an element of truth to this type of story. There is a lot of wisdom to be learned.
The things you eat don’t make a sacrifice, you just eat them. Calling it a sacrifice on their part is insulting.
@@adurpandya2742 You can be sacrificed against your will. But I see your point, if it is not your will it is nor YOUR sacrifice, but the sacrifice others were willing to make.
If you are dead on impact in a plane crash in the middle of nowhere, the people who end up needing to eat you will appreciate YOUR sacrifice even though it was not your will. People will see you as making a sacrifice in the news story, that you died so others could live... not that it was by free will but fate. Fate can make a sacrifice out of any life. You can be fated to make a sacrifice you don't want intend.
Like the baby kangaroo the mother lobs at a predator as a diversion tactic (as losing one beats losing them all), the baby didn't make a sacrifice but they were one. And colloquially people would say that they died for their siblings, a selfless sacrifice on their part, dying so others may live. Circle of life is hardcore.
It is a semantic argument, I get how saying a gutted deer made a sacrifice is disrespectful. (It can be true though, a mother fighting so that its babies could escape did make a sacrifice in catching all those arrows. I mean it is instinct though, they might not think like that. But those like chimps and dolphins are pretty socially evolved, pretty sure they can make a sacrifice knowingly.)
I'm not a hunter despite loving shooting targets. I'd only ever do such in a survival scenario (for the meat as the store... they throw away metric tons of it a day, it is dead anyway... you might as well give the death some meaning in eating or they died for nothing... except ya know money. Safer to over kill at your slaughterhouse than under, if you are under you lose money... if over you lose very little comparatively.
Hey... If I was Prezo I'd crack down on the average slaughterhouse... we really do over produce beef especially. The sacrifice of deadly cow farts. They gonna melt the icecaps.
I loved hearing about the Ojibwe stories. My family told me tales that sounded super similar and I always thought it was unfair as a kid that the tribe my family is from never got the recognition in the story retellings. We *are* Ojibwe. Mom and family just always said Chippewa and I never realized until I was in my late teens.
Starts at 2:10
Thank you
Actually, 3:30?
Not all heroes wear capes, but I hope you do
Thank you, it's not your fault I only saw your post at 2:01
No Lore Lodge episode is complete without an Archie cameo. And to what you said about your credibility, I agree 100%. I find you more credible than others and the reason I have stuck with your channel since episode 5 is because you are willing to except new evidence and let it evolve your theories as well as admit when you get things wrong and actually post redactions about what specifically it was and why that makes your theory incorrect.
You know, sunken eyes, pale skin etc. are all signs of a person with an illness. Perhaps we get primal fear to avoid sick people and becoming infected ourselves. It definitely would have been beneficial trait before advent of modern medicine.
That's a popular theory for the Uncanney Valley effect.
It's still a beneficial trait. Being near sick people isn't a smart idea. Modern medicine doesn't save you from everything.
Cringe ideology
That is a human trait. It’s tied to mate selection, and subconsciously being able to pick up on obvious and not so obvious tells of a sick/diseased individual helps us to avoid the “error” of mating with someone who’s condition would not allow for them to achieve or maintain a pregnancy or produce healthy, hardy offspring.
And at the very least we know not to mate with their ugly ass.
My father grew up in backwoods Kentucky/Tennessee region. The whole family was from there before they moved further south into Alabama after he left the military. One of his grandparents was a Hatfield. He would tell stories about his father and older relatives taking trips up into the mountains in the fall, before the snows, to drop off supplies to other relatives who refused to ever come down to the towns. What he personally remembered would have been in the 60s through the 80s when he moved away. It was the type of thing that no one but family was allowed to talk about.
I grew up in the foothills of Appalachia in KY. I’ve always heard stories about “those” people & the end of the stories was always “leave those people alone” & “DO NOT GO” to this area or that place because it belongs to “those people” & leave them alone.”
I was born in 1967 & my father took off before I could walk. My mother couldn’t get a job without her husband’s permission but she couldn’t get him to sign the forms granting permission because he was gone. It wasn’t until the divorce was final that she was able to get a job. She also couldn’t open a bank account without a man co-signing so my grandfather had to open bank accounts in his name with her as a second person allowed to access the accounts. My great-grandfather had to buy her a house & a car because no one would give her a loan. There was no law against women having any of those things but it was policy for most financial institutions to require a man to co-sign or have his name on the account too. It wasn’t until the mid 1970’s that a federal law was passed that made it illegal for banks, credit unions & loan companies to deny women their own accounts.
I was in college in 1988 & one of my classes required 2 person teams to work with the disadvantaged in the area. My partner & I were assigned a young married woman with two young children who lived on one of the Thoroughbred horse farms. The husband worked on the farm & the wife was supposed to work in the owners big house. The problem was the wife was from deep in the hollers of West Virginia & she grew up without reliable electricity & no running water so she didn’t know how to operate basic appliances. It was our job to teach her how to do housework with modern technology & appliances. She had never used a vacuum cleaner or dishwasher. She had been washing clothes in the bathtub. She didn’t know how to use an electric stove or even a gas stove since she grew up with a wood burning stove.
She attended a small school in the home of a neighbor & could only read & write on a third grade level because her father believed girls didn’t need to be educated beyond the basics. She literally grew up the way the people of the mid 1800’s lived. It astounded me that we were only 12 years away from the 21st century yet this young woman spend her entire childhood & teenage years living like it was still the 19th century. I’ve often wondered what happened to her.
I grew up in 60's in Middle of Ohio and when my Mother left my father after years of beatings they put it in the local newspaper. She was now a Divorcee and not able to have Tea with the neighbor lady anymore or receive communion in Church. Woman have fought very hard for our rights and there are many trying to claw them back from us. It is a FACT, and just beyond me, that none of our representatives have seen it fit to ratify the ERA. On Kentucky, we had neighbors from there and they were honestly pretty Neanderthal.
Thats a lot more common here in WV than I ever imagined
Nothing cuter than a pet who is very loved being desperate for more. "PET ME DAMMIT" energy 😊
I'm the one that asked about book recommendations, first off you said my last name correct the first time! Thank you so much for letting me know about your list on your Amazon store! Didn't know about it til now! Gonna be getting tons of books to get as much information as I can. I'm excited to learn
“The CIA just… sucks. *ominous coughing*”
And then he was never seen again…
I too did not understand how pneumonia worked. Had a fever for 7 days. The shadow people almost got me
Deorr Kunz is a toddler that went missing while camping 9 yrs ago in Idaho. If you're interested in a recent case. It could use some new eyeballs on it.
Yes!! Such a confusing case.
@@pineywoodslawandcrime it is! I'm hoping they will take a look at it, like they did with the Sebastian Rogers case.
@@RayneLainey that case is so tragic. Really breaks my heart. My oldest nephew, who is actually a rocket scientist, is on the spectrum and is the most precious human. I really feel for Sebastian and I think he was not a priority to anyone. Breaks my heart.
I think most people in the area the family lives in believes the parents are hiding something, or that the grandfather and his "friend" he brought along (who is a registered sex offender) had something to do with it. A lot of folks think the child was never with them that day at all, that something happened to him earlier, likely an accidental death due to negligence, and they covered it up.
@@davidgreen7835 I fell into a deep rabbit hole researching that case. While I suppose it could be anything, that he was never at the camp site explains so much. Or, that he was hurt and transported, and dumped, by his parents on the way to the store for supplies.
Have never seen stairs in the woods, but I have seen a lot of chimneys from old pioneer homes. The brick chimneys are usually still standing even after 100-200 years, long after the rest of the house has fallen down and rotted away.
14:43 glad we're finally talking about the signature of the tracks. All through the Teddy vid, I was left scratching my head every time there was doubt about the shape of the tracks. Two expert hunters and woodsman would at least mention if the tracks didn't seem right for a bear, but they said they were bear tracks, no ambiguity. Yes there's a big question about why they appeared to be on two legs, but there's no "is it a cougar, is it a man" question about it, they were bear tracks
I followed David P and watched all of his movies long before finding your channel. So it was tough to hear you occasionally poo-poo on him, but I stuck with your channel and see the flaws in his case studies that you point out. My biggest issue with him is that his factors for being a special case - near water, separated from the group, near granite.... he may as well said "people being outdoors away from civilization".
Not All Couger's wear heels!¡! Some of us dress very light on the beach.. Jus thought ya should know..
Cougars are awesome.
@@paulajones114 Which beach would that be? Asking for a friend. And for science of course.
I do believe 90% of missing person cases have a mundane explanation.
But that 10%...
That 10% is SOMETHING. Or several different somethings.
Because I'm Irish, I'm like, yeah, that 10% is fairies. Big foot? Fairies. Time warps? Fairies. 'Feral people?' Fairies. Mysterious disappearing caves? Fairies. Aliens? Fairies. Whistling in the woods? Fairies. Tree people. Fairies. It's fairies, people.
@@misseh9420😂
I was behind on your content as spent over a week watching Sara Boone's trial. Just watched past two weeks of your content whilst cleaning the house. Thanks for getting me through it!
You two living across the hall from each other can only end well
Just had an idea: lately the algorithm has (to my knowledge) been favoring very long (multi-hour) videos because of an inability to differentiate sleeping "views" from active watchers (very simplified explanation) - you could make 'supercuts' of your videos (maybe entire clusters edited into one video, for example) to try and gain its favor once again.
Regarding the fishing rod (and the lack of any scream/yelp) - it's possible that the boy's panic reflex caused his body to tense and clench so hard that he was unable to let out any sound or to let go of the fishing rod. This sort of muscular tension at the moment of death can carry over into after death... sometimes it's hard to pry objects out of deceased people's hands. And as for the throat clenching so hard that a person can't make any sound let alone a louder one, it's not unusual.
I guess the question is what scared him that badly, i mean maybe that was just his reaction but some other kids go missing, almost literally die, face down bears or cougars, and they dont freeze so hard they die that way. Its just a weird question.
The uncanny valley is one of my favorite topics to talk about and discuss just because we will never know the exact reason we react the way we do to it. Some explanations in the evolutionary psychology side of it include having an aversion to the dead and sick, and pale faces with sunken eyes and exposed teeth do very much resemble a corpse. Other possible explanations include how our ancestors evolved alongside other human races such as homo erectus and homo neanderthalensis, and my personal favorite, baboons. Primates of all species are highly prone to attacking other primates and interspecies conflict is common. Baboons fit the pale face, sharp teeth, and sunken eyes stereotype among uncanny monsters
Think of clowns and why they are scary to some people. Huge red eyes, big teeth and red lips, weird hair, pale face. I could see a deranged baboon in there lol.
Repeat after me...David Pallides has books to sell...
That doesn't take away from the fact that these people ARE missing...
@@chab1rd155people go missing all the time. It’s not a conspiracy.
@@chab1rd155 It's a nation of 400 million, with over a century of data, for Paulides to draw from. Literally millions of people use national parks each year, parks which include some of the most remote, dangerous areas in the nation.
You really expect there to be ZERO unsolved missing person case's, in over a centuryz in a nation that big?!?
Paulides has just cherry-picked the MOST "mysterious", difficukt to solve cases; Cases which ARE genuinely puzzling, and may even be impossible to solve....
...but in a data pool THAT big, it would be far stranger to NOT have any weird, "mysterious", "unsolvable" cases.
It's just the law of averages. Pick ANY dataset of that massive size, and you"ll end up with a few hundred/few cases (representing a tiny %age of the whole), that are extremely"mysterious", and hard/impossible to solve
It would be more weird/suspect to NOT have a certain number of cases like these; Any organization dealing with THAT many cases, which has a 0% fail ratez at solving cases, is lying/faking data.
David politus is the pioneer in all this.
@@oneamong5571 Sure. A pioneer, of collating the inevitable, statistically-normal percentage of missing persons cases that are unsolvable, developing an exciting, spooky narrative that implies a connection between these almost-certainly unconnected cases, and using that narrative to sell books/get famous.
He's a pioneer, of being an "investigator" who makes his reputation off NOT solving as many cases as possible.
As a Fan of this Channel and Battletech player, I’m plan on making a Hunchback named Blue Snow Shovel. In Honor of the Lore Lads.
Mountain lion paws are huge. I've seen tracks on my land. They are the size of a mans palm from the wrist to the first knuckle.
Thank you.
They were way off!
I have no clue if I’m the only one who would be interested in this, but I would absolutely love a crossover between Lore Lodge and Jimmy Akin’s Mysterious World. If that is a thing that can happen, that would be amazing!
We're from the Poconos and staying in Gatlinburg and went to GSMNP today. The timing for this video is perfect 😊
My daughter and granddaughter just moved to Gatlinburg. They both love the outdoors, but I worry about their safety.
@@pineywoodslawandcrimeWe got home to PA tonight :)
Gatlinburg was nice, but waaaay too crowded for me. After seeing how huge and wooded/remote the national park is, I understand how people can disappear there. We didn't even have cell service when we were in there.
That sucks about your grandmother Aidan T., I didn't even know she was sick
On the Garrett Bardsley case, maybe maybe fishing hook got caught up on his clothes, and the poles just got carried along too.
Roosevelt could have made up the old frontiersman complete with a different age and backstory to further divert suspicion that it happened to him. Saying that it was probably a bear and a cougar could be even more misdirection. "No, that wasn't me, the guy is much older and always lived out here, personally, I think it was 2 animals."
Not saying that that is what happened, but that's the lowest level of fabrication I'd employ if I wanted the story to get out without getting back to me.
Ok, sure, he could, but there isn't really all that much evidence that it happened to Roosevelt and he changed the story.
So for me, it feels more like changing the evidence to fit a theory than the other way around.
Great show as always. I'm awaiting shoulder surgery as I speak.
This 2+ hours was a great, informative, and entertaining distraction.
I appreciate all of the hard work you do. ✌️🙂
Hope everything goes well (:
Movie idea… Teddy Rosevelt: Bigfoot Hunter!
Dave Paulides will probably sue Lore Lodge. Dave thinks he invented "missing persons" and he gets deeply offended if anyond besides him speaks about missing people.
Its not about missing people Dave owns,but "missing 411" and his creations from it. This guy channel is band camp, then acoustic guitar in his dorm, then all of sudden National Parks Missing 411 content in 2021.
You think this guy goes to profit off Pauliedes' work when he was a muppet in band camp in 2013?
@christophershannon8734 Dave gets his panties in a bunch anytime someone does a video on a "missing person". I've seen Dave whine and complain about it so many times it's cringe worthy.
A lot of people find him comical, reading letters for his videos about how this person or that person thinks he's "such a good guy".
I'll admit, I was a fan of Dave for the 1st year or two, then I read some comments about who he is really is. I didn't want to believe what people were saying about him, so I ignored it for awhile. Then Dave made some comments that led me to believe what the critics were saying might be true. I started researching him, and finally found a forum thread where they had posted a bunch of proof. Don't believe me, just ask him to tell you why he HAD to resign for law enforcement.
@@QuigleySharps45 No. People use "missing 411" to advertise for greater viewership. Just like Mr Ballen was doing.
@christophershannon8734 I understand what you're saying but there plenty of times he co plains even without someone using "missing 411". He's complained about channels who have never used that.
Every other channel that talks about Stacy arias brings up the lens cap and thanks to y’all, I know to tell them, yeah, that’s not a thing.
Missing Enigma just did a video about Stacey Arias case - he went there. There's a lot of ground that look like "trails" but are just the way the terrain is. If she wasn't paying attention to where she was going because she was focused on taking pictures of the lake (which is gorgeous) she could easily have thought she was on the trail when she wasn't. When you see the terrain it's really easy to see how she may have gotten lost.
@pineywoodslawandcrime Because you haven't deleted it? If you don't want it here, then remove it.
@@Off-HandedBarrel I made the comment in response to another on string theory. I don’t know why it’s here. I can delete a TH-cam comment? I truly am the unfrozen caveman lawyer. 🤦🏻♀️
@@Off-HandedBarrel I figured out how to delete. Didn’t know it was a thing. Thank you. 🩵
@@Off-HandedBarrel Sometimes you post a reply under one comment only for YT to put it under a different comment entirely. Probably not piney's fault.
That dog is utterly adorable.
Ashton is obnoxious. Not only will he disregard anything that doesn’t fit his narrative, he constantly insults people right out of the gate, and acts like they’re the ones who are being abrasive and disrespectful. He did it to me as well back when this whole thing started (before you guys even made your video on it). Then he banned me instantly just for pointing out the falsehoods regarding the various topics he keeps bringing up.
He sounds familiar, who is that
That’s Ashton Forbes. The guy who started talking about the Malaysian Airlines Flight 370. He blew up on Twitter especially, bringing up a variety of so called “fringe” topics all of which are focused around that flight ultimately. He acts like he’s the first one to ever talk about any of the topics he brings up, and now even acts like he’s an insider on secret science projects (signing NDAs and what not). He delivers zero actual substance on anything he touches. And pretty much makes a farce of any real investigation, whether that’s on “regular” or “alternativ” topics.
@activekernel oh, yeah. Him. I purposely put anything he's associated with out of my mind.
8:46 That’s just called growth. 😃
From a former Mulder turned Scully.
Being on site at the Little Big Horn battlefield shows you that Custer was NOT stupid, but Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse were brilliant! The plains tribes knew that land like they knew their eyelids.
Custer was arrogant, but not stupid.
There’s a Gary Larson cartoon called “Custer’s last view” which darkly amused me.
Your willingness to be open correction sets your credibility very high, in my book. I remember commenting some time ago here that I thought bigfoot accounts might be feral humans, or wildmen of some kind. It's nice that your thinking seems to be in that same direction. I doubt your thinking was influenced by my comment, but I prefer to think that great minds simply think alike. You have a very principled and professional approach to historical research that I appreciate as a physics undergrad and a Seminary grad with an emphasis on church history. The science of history is something few seem to appreciate. Thanks for the interesting research you do with a high level of integrity.
Hello guys! I want to clarify what holler means. It means holler.
Their neighbor is close enough that they could holler to each other. It doesn't mean hollow. Love your videos.
I always listen to the new vids and love to watch and rewatch the older vids and I keep you tube on auto play just in case I fall asleep so that way it will keep going and you still get the views
around the 52:00 mark you bring up the concept of a 16 year old girl emptying her account, most could not even Open an account without either a husband or a father cosigning it so for a withdrawl of that size she'd likely need the same to be with her.
I was a Cub Scout for 3 years and a Boy Scout for 2 and I feel like not only did I learn about the founding history of scouting but we were also assigned extra reading on the topic in the form of the “American boys handy book “ as well as some sort of internal scouting guide to the history of the organization now I was from the inner city and it was the very late 80s to the early 90s (I even remember asking questions for my report on this subject on a list-serve scouting group on my moms 30 lbs Epson “laptop” that had a display that maybe capable of showing 5 lines of text that we accessed via placing the receiver of our rotary phone on a stand and having to dial up via compuserve)
The more you wash the hair the more oily it will be. Try using some dry shampoo to help absorb the oils between washes.
My family is from East Tennessee and it's wild hearing it talked about like a separate country. Seeing the culture shock from the outside is a little comical. Just a touch 😂
I LOVE ARCHIE WITH ALL MY LIFE, he reminds me of my sweet baby Brody, who was also an American Eskimo dog and passed a year ago now 🩷 he was also a very need squeaky cuddly little guy
“Never give us what you need.” Phrase only works with physical needs. Emotional needs not so much.
Peter Bergmann, Jennifer Fairgate/Furgate, and the Isdal Woman would be awesome
1:49:46 Just? The miniminuteman video Aidan is thinking of is like 2+ years old...
I think that he was talking about in relation to when he posted his TikTok.
Love Archie and his awoooo's ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
If you don't get over this pneumonia soon it's gonna start to be oldmonia 😶😶
😂
Idk if it is an actual cluster but can you look at the shear number of people who go missing or found dead in the cascade mountains in Washington state?
You guys need to talk to the "Nephilim were clowns," guy. He's surprisingly compelling.
I love his channel, great backup evidence tbh.
Happy to see you two. Missed You 😲☺️both
I love you guys. Makes me sad when there's no lore lodge
Here where I live now, we can renew our registrations with a kiosk in the supermarket (some offices also have drive-thrus). Driver's license and car registration handled by different offices, but lines not too bad. Unlike when I was living in NJ and had to deal with the DMV. Enjoyed the podcast.
Take a drink every time Thornberry says, "Uhhh.... "
now you’ve pointed it out 😅😅 you’d be d3d through alcohol poisoning
So here’s the thing, I don’t know how to do patron at all. I would do it gladly, seriously. But if someone could just type down what I am supposed to do. I’m too old for this crap. I asked my teenaged kids and my 20 year old. They are all too busy to help. If you want to help, I will join patron or whatever it is called. I will pay you money. All you have to do is:
1) just tell me step by step how to sign up.
2) if I am supposed to do something different from there meaning go to a different site or watch these great shows- I will do it.
Also, I will bring others with me! My dad and my boyfriend both will probably come once they can figure it out the tech end of it. Don’t hate btw… I was just born before the internet or even computers. So. I’m not as proficient at things such as these.
Archie reconciled me to the incessant mispronunciation of Seton. GOOD boy.
Bart Schleyer will be the missing case that interests me and also confuses me the most and I hope you guys revisit it at some point in the future
The word Jungle is Hindi for “woods.” So jungles north India are not so tropical.
What you were saying about YT not notifying people of live streams is true, it is something I have been noticing of late. I was on here watching a short videos maybe 5 or 6 minutes and when it ended I had a notification that someone I follow was having a live stream posted 48 minutes ago but the notice had only arrive during the video. When I opened the link the video was one hour a twenty-one or an hour and fifty-one minutes not exactly sure.
Love a guy who loves his pupper!
Aidan looks like he is in a 70s southern rock band. The facial hair and long hair are giving off heavy Allman Brothers vibes.
I’m pretty inclined to say that someone going missing in the mountains doesn’t count as a mysterious disappearance. You never know what kind of chasms, crevasses, pits or ravines are hiding under all the underbrush. So easy for someone to fall down a gap, have some dirt, stones or plant material fall on them and render them unseeable. Just too easy….
As a local around Yellowstone I would love it if you could do a “local” event if you had the time
I hope I see you boys at the Steel Fighters events and axe throwing. Much love from Louisville.
It was grippos BBQ chips I was eating but Hi Thornberry from another member of the special interest club!
Uranium Fever is the song at 1:15:40
Angela Collier did a great video talking about string theory a few years ago that you might want to look up.
Sabine Hossenfelder also made a good video about String Wars recently, check it out.
Penn State might have one of the biggest collections of books in the world but mars University has the biggest collection in the western university
🤗 beautiful before: stunning after
Good for you putting yourself out there and meeting new people! 🎉
Marshall Iwassa,Classic case of RCMP incompetence please do one on this.
Love the archeology talk
The Theory I personally prescribe to when it comes to the uncanny valley is that it's a survival mechanism to avoid gravely infectious diseases.
If a person got so sick they emaciated, got very pale or had an otherwise unnatural colouration or movement, coming close to them could lead to further infection. I.e. Rabies victims
For cultures that share stories about a similar type of near-human monster with those kinds of attributes, it's not far-fetched to imagine that some illness might have come forth in the past that presented a certain way and was burned into the collective consciousness of the people, until all that remained were horror stories of people that looked inhuman.
Uncanny Valley to me likely originates from competing with other Hominid species
Thumbs up for Archie
The only issue is the channel seemingly became "debunk paulides" instead of "exploring mysteries." I dont really like david paulides because he includes stories that are almost all explanatory. However theres the handful that i wanted channels to focus on that are truly odd and come up with theories outside bigfoot, aliens, or human interference. The whole idea of rock fields and people falling into caves never to be found is still quite interesting despite nobody actually exploring these in any videos. (Like for example looking at local cave systems and just comparing to a topographical map, idk.)
It's because he has no content of his own. Look at his videos, click oldest, and see how he just straight steals David Pauliedes' work for his own benefit because he has no creations of his own.
Regarding the ghosty show on the other network, check with Eli about whether or not Savannah's show "Ghosted" is also going to be on that network. There's just a few episodes up on YT, but it's probably a good faith kinda thing to check with them.
Already pitched it to him!
Gallius Rax is a Star Wars EU character. I think it’s the Thrawn trilogy but I could be wrong
How about when they confiscate someones fishing gear and vehicle for having an expired/no fishing license?
It's called "robbery".
@@adambaum5824 No doubt about it. It's just like some of this eminent domain thievery they pull.
The missing girl from the 70s that you were talking about, if she had a bank account with money it, depending on the specific year, it was not legal for women to have their own bank account, so it could have been an account that her parents opened with her to keep emergency money or a college fund in. It may not be very pertinent in that case as she probably didn’t actually have access to it without having whoever else was on the bank account with her to make a withdrawal.
It was legal to have bank accounts pre1970. my grandma had hers in 1950s.
@@nightvolt9572 she may have had a male signer on the account with her. They just weren’t allowed to have one by themselves.
@@tarafinley2651 she did not she sign up by herself
@@tarafinley2651 she signed up by herself.
They knew there was a field trip and what was on the program but not the location.
As one who has encountered a live Mountain Lion I can tell you they are MUCH bigger than a dog and their paws are too especially a full grown Mt. LION
Up here in NY specifically upstate the roads where I'm at are terrible & their making stupid discussion with the structure of the roads again by getting rid of some sections that they really shouldn't be it's so stupid
Hey Lads, sorry I missed this stream, my current hyperfixation of painting 40k figures has had me distracted lol. But don’t worry, I still love my favorite niche internet micro celebrities 🤙🤙🤙
He has 600k subs rounded up, he ain't niche and he's not your friend lol
Game Wardens absolutely do. Police here will have a GW with them in certain areas for roadblocks. Driver smarts off or the cops suspects something but they can’t search the car, they’ll just get the GW to do it.
Listening to this while working on a cosplay. I cackled with the discussion of levels of nerditude
I never understood claiming groups as the lost tribes of Israel. I’ve heard people claim black people, Tibetans, Indians, native Americans, Europeans, and last week I heard someone claim Hispanics as the descendants of the lost tribes. It’s just such a weird claim to me, especially when there’s an established history of those people that has them already existing when the lost tribes got lost. I don’t get how people make a full force claim totally serious without knowing anything about it
The thing that really makes me smack my forehead is the mental gymnastics that people go through to ignore what the Bible *clearly says*. The Assyrians, like the Babylonians a few generations later, only took the urban elites for resettlement. The majority of the population was left behind, with some of them intermarrying with the settlers brought in by the Assyrians. This is literally, directly talked about in the book of Ezra. These people became the Samaritans and, through intermarriage with returning exiles, the Galileeans. When the Romans destroyed Judea as an ethnostate inside the Roman Empire in the late 1st century/early 2nd century, they left the rural population alone, as long as they didn’t resist the Roman Army.
The “lost tribes of Israel” today live in the Holy Land; some of them are Samaritans, and most of them are Palestinians.
i know a guy in arkansas who doesn't have running water. YET
hes working on it.
35:37 wow it’s so sad that Mattis disappeared shortly after this video. Rumor has it he got lost in the woods and taken by something. Truly so sad.
Technically holler is just a different pronunciation of hollow. Those with thicker accents also say yeller (yellow), winder (window), etc...
It's wrong.
@@wmdkitty how?
Don't forget purdy, and vaginer
then why does holler have a whole separate definition to hollow, as opposed to yellow/yeller and window/winder which have firmly remained as only pronunciation differences, with the same definitions? the pronunciation changes would have formed around the same time due to being parts of the same accent no? like hollow and holler definitionally have no connection I can see if they were simply dialectical differences the meaning would be at least similar right?
@@notahumanbeing6892 Words can have multiple definitions. One definition of hollow is "a small valley". In the Appalachian dialect, holler is also "a small valley".
If you are talking about holler defined as "to yell or shout", it comes from a different root and simply arrived at the same spelling and pronunciation as the Appalachian version of holler.
1:13:27 its a song from Fallout. Uranium fever.
Just watched the replay. 👍👋🙏
I will say the largest of mountain lion toms are often just under 300 pounds, 260-270ish. Thats a boone and crocket mountain lion, a rare dominant male with a lot of food but still, way way bigger than the 140lbs quoted.
They are Trickster Demons. King Solomon found them with his knowledge. It's explained in the old writings of Solomon.
Archie is best boy
Look into Randall Carlson if you're interested in comet impact theories. He's a brother too.
Love milk fever. It slides just above uranium fever but only by a bit
Weird aberrations are spiritual in nature. My son saw a bigfoot barely in the country just southeast of Austin Texas. He was white faced and shaking. The large hunting dog squatted and peed itself. He said there was a foul odor. I went and checked. Tjat brush is so thick in that ravine a dog couldn't go in there. There were no footprints uphill where it ran. Tjere was some mud.