#1 Unsolved Mystery of Ancient Egypt: The Tools MISSING from History

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ความคิดเห็น • 94

  • @OzMate79
    @OzMate79 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    So in Tutankhamens tomb they found priceless artifacts made of beautifully crafted gold etc..they also found the tools they hunted with and used in day to day life. They were primitive and made of stone, so if they could make perfect coffins with lazuli imbedded in gold and build these fantastic creations such as the pyramids, why they still use primitive tools?
    Answer: because they were still basically hunter gatheres that happen to stumble upon the remnants of the previous advanced civilisation. The evidence is all there, mainstream academics need to wake up and realise most ppl don’t believe there outdated 1920’s ideas anymore. We have what’s called ‘ common sense ‘ and the BS they feed us just don’t make sense anymore.

  • @itranscendencei7964
    @itranscendencei7964 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +35

    Once you understand the amount of pure devastation that is caused by these globally cataclysmic events from our past, and how many times they have happened even in Earth's relatively recent past, it becomes a lot more easy to understand why we don't have any record/evidence of these ancient civilizations. At that point, the question becomes more so how have we even found what we have? The fact that these people had the forethought to preserve what little we have found should tell you a lot about what they knew.

    • @davidosborne5341
      @davidosborne5341 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Agree 100% and my thought on the pottery is they are prob. even Older then the Egyptians that last owned them and were prob handed down or ancient airlooms in there own right. Thinking even they were amazed at the workmanship and lacked the technology to produce something that precise. Like was was stated SOO many diff. typle of disaters and BILLIONS of years of changes on this planet has destroyed any real proof of advances ancient tech. If i leave my ipad in my basement and it never moves where would it be and what would be left in 100,000 years?

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@itranscendencei7964
      I refer to it as the cataclysmic cycle. Freemason Randall Carlson is particularly obsessed with the Upper Dryas Cataclysm, also known as the Younger Dryas event. This significant and abrupt climatic event occurred around 12,900 years ago, marking the end of the Pleistocene epoch and the onset of the current Holocene epoch.
      However, the Upper Dryas Cataclysm was merely the end of a long, exponentially slowing cataclysmic cycle. In other words, it was the least devastating of all the previous cataclysms.
      This period was characterized by a sudden and temporary return to glacial conditions after a period of gradual warming, just as Randall Carlson asserts. But that’s not the whole story-it’s not even the tip of the iceberg!
      It is simply the last pinpointed cataclysmic event, but it was the weakest. By this point, structures had been built, some of which even survived partially intact.
      Therefore, the real question for any intelligent mind should be:
      How long has this been going on?
      Incrementally pushing back the date of the start of civilization isn’t the work of those seeking progressive change in our understanding of human history. Instead, it’s the work of those who wish to retard and control that narrative.
      The information isn’t incorrect; it’s just not as significant or devastating as some would have you believe.

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@itranscendencei7964
      I refer to it as the cataclysmic cycle.
      Freemason Randall Carlson is particularly obsessed with the Upper Dryas Cataclysm, also known as the Younger Dryas event. This significant and abrupt climatic event occurred around 12,900 years ago, marking the end of the Pleistocene epoch and the onset of the current Holocene epoch.
      However, the Upper Dryas Cataclysm was merely the end of a long, exponentially slowing cataclysmic cycle. In other words, it was the least devastating of all the previous cataclysms.
      This period was characterized by a sudden and temporary return to glacial conditions after a period of gradual warming, just as Randall Carlson asserts. But that’s not the whole story-it’s not even the tip of the iceberg!
      It is simply the last pinpointed cataclysmic event, but it was the weakest. By this point, structures had been built, some of which even survived partially intact.
      Therefore, the real question for any intelligent mind should be:
      How long has this been going on?
      Incrementally pushing back the date of the start of civilization isn’t the work of those seeking progressive change in our understanding of human history. Instead, it’s the work of those who wish to retard and control that narrative.
      The information isn’t incorrect; it’s just not as significant or devastating as some would have you believe.

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      I refer to it as the cataclysmic cycle.
      Freemason Randall Carlson is particularly obsessed with the Upper Dryas Cataclysm, also known as the Younger Dryas event. This significant and abrupt climatic event occurred around 12,900 years ago, marking the end of the Pleistocene epoch and the onset of the current Holocene epoch.
      However, the Upper Dryas Cataclysm was merely the end of a long, exponentially slowing cataclysmic cycle. In other words, it was the least devastating of all the previous cataclysms.
      This period was characterized by a sudden and temporary return to glacial conditions after a period of gradual warming, just as Randall Carlson asserts. But that’s not the whole story-it’s not even the tip of the iceberg!
      It is simply the last pinpointed cataclysmic event, but it was the weakest. By this point, structures had been built, some of which even survived partially intact.
      Therefore, the real question for any intelligent mind should be:
      How long has this been going on?
      Incrementally pushing back the date of the start of civilization isn’t the work of those seeking progressive change in our understanding of human history. Instead, it’s the work of those who wish to retard and control that narrative.
      The information isn’t incorrect; it’s just not as significant or devastating as some would have you believe.

    • @itranscendencei7964
      @itranscendencei7964 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Younger Dryas. :p
      But yes, I have been fascinated with Randall's work since I started going down this rabbit hole. It has definitely been quite the journey.

  • @leehead537
    @leehead537 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

    @leehead537
    0 seconds ago
    This guy is the bees knees. Glad you had him on the Podcast Danny. You’ve filled the void that Joe Rogan created when he stopped interviewing guys like him. 🤘

  • @hanssharma612
    @hanssharma612 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Turn them over, introduce Sound, vibration, resonance? Think bells, they are not vases for flowers. Remember what chris dunn theorized .

  • @randomyank7777
    @randomyank7777 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

    Spot on ! You are not the first to question that fact , about the oldest stuff being better built , & longer lasting . I run 5 axis machines , CNC mills , & lathes . They can do that kind of precision work , but the tooling would cost about as much as the machines , diamond tipped to cut through the hardest materials , & finish polish them to that level of perfection . The difference is comparable to the way things are today . American made was so good , it has been in use for over 100 years , globally . Now ? It's all junk , at 100X the price , & made in China . We are not putting anything in inventory now either . Reason ? The states want their sales tax on the items , even if they are not sold yet . So , now everything is in unfinished goods form , to escape that . The old machine tools , are all being bought up & shipped out too . Consider time , for a moment . Even the best made machine , well maintained , & stored inside unused , will last a long time . Outside in the elements ? The only thing left on a model A Ford in the junk yard right now , is the stainless trim , & heavier built suspension parts of cast iron , & spring steel . Add 6000 years to that . Nothing will be left , but an iron oxide stain on the surrounding stones . All rubber , glass , plastics , & thin steel ? Dust in the wind . The only things left , are what was buried for centuries , protected from the elements of change , some even fossilized , like wood , plants , & animals . There is nothing new , under the sun . We have stood here before , many times . The climate changes in cycles . This why there are pyramids on every continent , & subterranean cities under ground . A new Age dawns soon , less competition = better odds of survival . Alas , history is written by the victors , to whom go all of the spoils , eh ? This explains today best , I think . Good luck folks .

    • @isaacshaver6218
      @isaacshaver6218 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Well said

    • @shanehall6081
      @shanehall6081 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ..... The meek shall inherit the earth. Once they emerge to see the remains.

    • @MA-qg5ju
      @MA-qg5ju 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I worked a year as a mason tenant when I was 18 the first time I cut with a 24 inch diamond blade saw I made my first score & I was already thinking of the pyramids & by the time I finished my first cut I was like no fuckin way. By hand. With Cooper tools. Unskilled forced labor. None of that can be true. We were building a damn fire place with a patio for a rich guy & the slightest error could cause major issues.😂

    • @randomyank7777
      @randomyank7777 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@MA-qg5ju Exactly ! One does not build to that level of precision , using unskilled labor , substandard materials , & copper tools . Whoever built them , took great pride in their workmanship . Slaves ? No Way !

  • @OiBigmin
    @OiBigmin 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    As a modern machinist myself in Scotland, I can say without hesitating that every machinist world wide will tell you that these have to fake or there is no way that the Egyptian made them.

    • @patrickday4206
      @patrickday4206 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      One of the ones tested was certified as authentic

    • @g-funk484
      @g-funk484 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      there was thousands found under a pyramid a long time ago, look up the diorite statues in Egypt and have your mind blown on the precision

    • @patrickday4206
      @patrickday4206 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@g-funk484 yeah those statues are insane they look unnatural because they are so perfect

    • @g-funk484
      @g-funk484 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@patrickday4206 i have a theory that all the granite vase and statues are made from a substance like scagliola

    • @patrickday4206
      @patrickday4206 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@g-funk484 I've seen evidence like insects and a human hair in the pyramid blocks showing geopolmer which stays soft longer than concrete so is easier to shape

  • @WhossBobbFPV
    @WhossBobbFPV 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Literally Danny talking to himself lmfao

    • @Nick-cz2qq
      @Nick-cz2qq 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Hahah the thumbnail made me go wait wtf

  • @thumperd74
    @thumperd74 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Have you done a cymatics or resonance study on them? Perhaps they are bells. And it is fascinating that some float. I would pursue frequency and resonance gauging on them and see what surfaces!

  • @angelstrawn5493
    @angelstrawn5493 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I had to get the idea of who the Egyptians were before I could understand the remains from that early culture. Present day Egyptians are the descendants of the different invasions. The original Egyptians were Africans. Yeah, they did it and the proof is these artifacts. There is an interesting video of a couple of Russians who used the techniques demonstrated in wall art to drill tube holes.

    • @jadedequeljoe3283
      @jadedequeljoe3283 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Some of them were Africans. Some were not. Egypt was a cosmopolitan civilisation,a multi racial society. Just look at the statues and busts. Looks to me like Caucasians.

  • @GemApps
    @GemApps 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Like, those vessels like are like incredible like; like how were they like made? And like where are the like tools that they were like made with? Like that's the thing that like bothers me about this whole like mystery.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      He obviously likes it!
      😮

  • @itsnot_stupid_ifitworks
    @itsnot_stupid_ifitworks 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    So incrediblly hard to find vases he says, means they cant be fake, as they pan out to a table full of them ....right into Round bottoms suddenly become more amazing than perfectly flat...unless if it was perfectly flat then that would be amazing

  • @jackshafto9123
    @jackshafto9123 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I want to own one of these one day. The original vases

  • @ahall1459
    @ahall1459 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Bull.
    It's the first thing apprentices are taught (and many years ago now), is how to make a straight & level face on metal. By Just using a file and a straight rule.
    If you couldn't do that then you need to do something else...
    Any machine had to start from a man-made object.
    Computers just make it easier, quicker and repeatable...this conversation here sounds like a next door neighbour talking about how HE thinks it was done...laughable

  • @ToonBlueEyes
    @ToonBlueEyes 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    With artifacts like these and others i think when people say why they arent more of these items it could be because they had such craftmanship they never needed extra or replacements because they created such items so well they dont tarnish or twkes way longer

  • @LooksLike-om4df
    @LooksLike-om4df 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    So this guy has nothing except incredulity. Just a mumbling dude.

    • @larryscott3982
      @larryscott3982 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yeah. Very click bait level denial.

    • @executivesteps
      @executivesteps 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Every other sentence he stopped halfway through and started another sentence. I was just barely able to watch the whole thing hoping he had something informative to say.
      What an annoying person.

  • @zachnielson858
    @zachnielson858 5 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Well having a rounded bottom I'd think it'd give more leanancy for wobbling if bumped or something. Also like the theory of sound resonators. It'd make sense along with some of the hieroglyphs of I believe the temple of Ra.. I could have the location wrong lol

  • @brianriggs6804
    @brianriggs6804 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Maybe the bottoms are rounded because they take them on boats and that way they maintain an upright position as the boat rocks

  • @andrewporrelli8268
    @andrewporrelli8268 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Copper chisels are a misnomer. They used high arsenic copper, i.e., arsenic bronze.
    It was Imhotep who was said to have invented the process of manufacturing stone vessels.
    You need to look for the most difficult examples of these vases.
    I turn wood as a hobby.
    I've noticed a few of the stone vases have long necks. Hollowing out a long neck vase would be WAY more difficult than an open neck vase.
    I recommend you look there!!

    • @erika8357
      @erika8357 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Good point with arsenic bronze. Presonally I'm convinced that they mixed abrasive (as granite sand) in the bronze melt to make saw blades and possibly aslo cutting discs to be driven by simple machinery built of wood. It would of course not be as effective as the high speed diamond cutting discs we use today but could still do the job if you have plenty of time, skill and patience..
      All worn out cutting tools were likely collected and melted down to make new tools, making it unlikely that we will find any artefacts.

  • @TONYPARAMOTOR
    @TONYPARAMOTOR 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    LOST TIME. LOST MEMORY.

  • @jeffreypaul2809
    @jeffreypaul2809 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Given the recent understanding of harmonic resonance technology, the machining by stone softening process might make it a more feasible. Much knowledge and technology was lost.

  • @indianjimmrmc
    @indianjimmrmc 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It's my understanding that the vases were made on planet 9 and were delivered here the last time it was close to Earth. Around 25,000 years ago.

  • @neuberknight575
    @neuberknight575 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Oh my, these are for mixing medicines! The stone maintains neutral PH for balms ad oils. What an incredible collection of our history! Restore the muse. All hail Medea.

  • @thisishowiedewitt76
    @thisishowiedewitt76 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Who is that guy? What podcast episode is it?

  • @davidgiles4681
    @davidgiles4681 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    moden man is arrogant to assume that the ancients (Egyptians, romans, greeks, etc...) did not have machines capable of amazing actions. they were not stupid by any means. they could create machines.

  • @user-uo9cy2ep2h
    @user-uo9cy2ep2h 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    SAY, YOU KNOW, ONE MORE TIME!!
    😖

  • @TheHypnotstCollector
    @TheHypnotstCollector 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The bowls are not symetrical to 1/100mm. A bowl like he holds look nice but when measured the asymmetrical by 2-4mm. and made by hand.

  • @NEEDCheese
    @NEEDCheese 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I don't see... all the ones on the table.

  • @MDaDonLegacy
    @MDaDonLegacy 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    They didn't use tools like we know today. They most likely made the blocks from scratch

  • @k.butler8740
    @k.butler8740 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Top Internet content. A little commercial, a little mystery, good example of 2024

  • @mrschuyler
    @mrschuyler 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    So where are the tools again? It makes no sense that the artifacts themselves, many in pristine condition, survived, but the tools did not.

    • @AncientEgyptArchitecture
      @AncientEgyptArchitecture 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It makes perfect sense when one pauses for just a moment to reflect on the fact that, over a span of 5000+ years, any unprotected iron or steel ( or other potential tool metals ) are going to (a) oxidize into powder, or (b) be seized, melted down and refashioned into weapons, axes, lances, arrow heads, spear tips, etc. Weapons of war and conquest. Even today that's what we spend most of our money on. No different in the past, sadly.

  • @henrygoboy8621
    @henrygoboy8621 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    remnants of antediluvian technology

  • @himher6968
    @himher6968 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Dude looks like Danny's dad. Lol

  • @righteous247
    @righteous247 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We need to think terms of pre and post deluvial. Wind the clock back to 40 thousand years ago. Still unexplainable

  • @libertyblueskyes2564
    @libertyblueskyes2564 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Why are we so obsessed by time?

  • @brucewayne2255
    @brucewayne2255 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    The “debunking videos”, for the stone jars are complete garbage. The precision from the ancient ones can not be replicated with primitive tools.

  • @iahsleumas8419
    @iahsleumas8419 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Is this Danny's brother

  • @scottfoster3445
    @scottfoster3445 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If its not in the record it never happend

    • @Abruzzo333
      @Abruzzo333 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      LOL yeah right.

  • @Andyrew33
    @Andyrew33 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

    You guys look related

  • @useall7665
    @useall7665 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Tools dont last 38000 years😂

  • @meggysaurusrex
    @meggysaurusrex 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I know exactly how this was done and I’m not boasting or lying, but I’m not gonna tell anyone because it’s a secret and that’s not a lie either it genuinely is!
    You wouldn’t like the answer anyway! -most don’t want to see the ingenuity and creativity, as soon as they know how easy it is to do something, they disregard all of the other qualities it possesses.
    I like the fact that people are puzzling over the mystery it is forcing them to look at the work to really look as opposed to just knowing how it was done when they see it.
    I can ruin the mystery for you, but I don’t want to not as long as people are really admiring past achievements!
    … you don’t want that either, not really …
    Why am I so ludicrously confident that I know how this was done because it’s an extremely ancient secret and there are lineages of people who still do this it’s not guesswork just a craft passed down from father to son older than masonry.
    Never underestimate the ingenuity of the ancient world!
    I made the mistake of telling someone once and all they did was go about, shouting their mouth off in public, about how all of history was ‘a lie’ because the implications for how things were done in the old world is so profound, despite seeing the implication they completely missed the point.
    Just because something isn’t done the way that people think it’s done and it isn’t as difficult to do as they had once perceived doesn’t make it any less admirable, doesn’t make it any less of an achievement, in fact, really, it makes it more of one!
    When one realises that ingenuity has existed from before time, when one realises our ancestors, no more wanted to slave themselves to the bone, doing a thankless pointless task than we do and when one realises that modern man possess the same brain and has always had that contemporary intellectual capacity very far back then truly one’s ancestors come to life in oneself in the present moment!
    So little of life is spent in reverence!

    • @jadedequeljoe3283
      @jadedequeljoe3283 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Aw come on man,tell us!

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jadedequeljoe3283 - you would hate the answer… genuinely, people are so easily disappointed, but they don’t think of the ingenuity only the ease of doing things when they know how!
      I like the fact that someone is admiring the work!

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jadedequeljoe3283
      You wouldn’t like the answer people don’t want to see the ingenuity and creativity, as soon as they know how easy it is to do something, they disregard all of the other qualities it possesses.
      I like the fact that people are puzzling over the mystery it is forcing them to look at the work to really look as opposed to just knowing how it was done when they see it.
      I can ruin the mystery for you, but I don’t want to not as long as people are really admiring past achievements!
      … you don’t want that either, not really …
      Why am I so ludicrously confident that I know how this was done because it’s an extremely ancient secret and there are lineages of people who still do this it’s not guesswork just a craft passed down from father to son older than masonry.
      Never underestimate the ingenuity of the ancient world!
      I made the mistake of telling someone once, and all they did is go around, shouting their mouth off in public about how all about how all of history was ‘a lie’ they completely missed the point.
      Just because something isn’t done the way that people think it’s done and it isn’t as difficult to do as they had once perceived doesn’t make it any less admirable, doesn’t make it any less of an achievement, in fact, really, it makes it more of one!
      When One realises that ingenuity has existed from before time, when One realises our ancestors, no more wanted to slave themselves to the bone, doing a thankless pointless task. Then we do when one realises that we possess the same brain and always have very far back one’s ancestors, come to life in oneself!
      So little of life is spent in reverence!

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jadedequeljoe3283​​⁠
      You wouldn’t like the answer people don’t want to see the ingenuity and creativity, as soon as they know how easy it is to do something, they disregard all of the other qualities it possesses.
      I like the fact that people are puzzling over the mystery it is forcing them to look at the work to really look as opposed to just knowing how it was done when they see it.
      I can ruin the mystery for you, but I don’t want to not as long as people are really admiring past achievements!
      … you don’t want that either, not really …
      Why am I so ludicrously confident that I know how this was done because it’s an extremely ancient secret and there are lineages of people who still do this it’s not guesswork just a craft passed down from father to son older than masonry.
      Never underestimate the ingenuity of the ancient world!
      I made the mistake of telling someone once, and all they did is go around, shouting their mouth off in public about how all about how all of history was ‘a lie’ they completely missed the point.
      Just because something isn’t done the way that people think it’s done and it isn’t as difficult to do as they had once perceived doesn’t make it any less admirable, doesn’t make it any less of an achievement, in fact, really, it makes it more of one!
      When One realises that ingenuity has existed from before time, when One realises our ancestors, no more wanted to slave themselves to the bone, doing a thankless pointless task. Then we do when one realises that we possess the same brain and always have very far back one’s ancestors, come to life in oneself!
      So little of life is spent in reverence!

    • @meggysaurusrex
      @meggysaurusrex 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jadedequeljoe3283​​⁠
      You wouldn’t like the answer people don’t want to see the ingenuity and creativity, as soon as they know how easy it is to do something, they disregard all of the other qualities it possesses.
      I like the fact that people are puzzling over the mystery it is forcing them to look at the work to really look as opposed to just knowing how it was done when they see it.
      I can ruin the mystery for you, but I don’t want to not as long as people are really admiring past achievements!
      … you don’t want that either, not really …
      Why am I so ludicrously confident that I know how this was done because it’s an extremely ancient secret and there are lineages of people who still do this it’s not guesswork just a craft passed down from father to son older than masonry.
      Never underestimate the ingenuity of the ancient world!
      I made the mistake of telling someone once, and all they did is go around, shouting their mouth off in public about how all about how all of history was ‘a lie’ they completely missed the point.
      Just because something isn’t done the way that people think it’s done and it isn’t as difficult to do as they had once perceived doesn’t make it any less admirable, doesn’t make it any less of an achievement, in fact, really, it makes it more of one!
      When One realises that ingenuity has existed from before time, when One realises our ancestors, no more wanted to slave themselves to the bone, doing a thankless pointless task. Then we do when one realises that we possess the same brain and always have very far back one’s ancestors, come to life in oneself!
      So little of life is spent in reverence!

  • @kimbronun6649
    @kimbronun6649 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Those were the tools God removed before the flood.

    • @randomyank7777
      @randomyank7777 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      More like "with the flood" , by destroying them .

    • @isrlear
      @isrlear 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      There's nothing that God hates more than.....
      .....granite vases? Huh?
      "And the lord saith, there shall be no more stone containers, for holding things is an abomination"
      Lmao

    • @kimbronun6649
      @kimbronun6649 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@randomyank7777 The reason why I dont think so is because then we would have uncovered the tools. Its gotta be termites for technology, like the langoliers.

    • @randomyank7777
      @randomyank7777 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@isrlear Technology is fine , until one uses it , to play "god". Then , all bets are off . Cloning , DNA , weather , & biological manipulation , just to name a few . The vases were fine , & proof of our abilities . Even cutting things off that offend us , fine . But using creation to twist things . Nope .

    • @randomyank7777
      @randomyank7777 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kimbronun6649 Hmm . Interesting , possibly even true of some . Do you think if academia found a functional holographic library , filled with the knowledge of the Ages , they would tell us ? I doubt it . The pieces we have found , ooparts , are even remarkably similar to today's tech . Time , the sun , & water , can destroy all things , even stone . He did remove them , that's the important thing . Here we go again , eh ? This time , He won't use water to do it .

  • @kimbronun6649
    @kimbronun6649 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    God removes technology, this is evidence for God.

    • @isrlear
      @isrlear 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Not really....all this is evidence for is that our ancestors were smarter than we give them credit for. I have no doubt in the existence of God, but the existence of these would not be sufficient evidence for any atheist.

    • @kimbronun6649
      @kimbronun6649 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Something has destroyed these tools, humans are incapable of safe guarding these tools. There has to be a creature thats designed, by God, to destroy technology thats too dangerous.

    • @kimbronun6649
      @kimbronun6649 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Think of all the under water pyramids. These people knew something that made the laws of the universe defend itself.