Why did 19th Century Asylum Architecture in America far exceed necessity? Examples from every state

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 587

  • @jamesg6323
    @jamesg6323 หลายเดือนก่อน +300

    Asylums are still up and running everywhere, they are now called schools, college and universities.

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And they were all required to take the experimental "clot shots", no?

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Yes, agree, but there's an historical marker in Lapeer County Michigan on the old courthouse describing a trial that it claims was the case that ended forced sterilization in Asylums.
      Lapeer had one torn down in 1980s.

    • @jeffreybrown2902
      @jeffreybrown2902 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      Don't forget prisons and jails for non-violent crimes.

    • @FrankCunhaIII
      @FrankCunhaIII หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      CV-19 proves this 100%

    • @nyquil762
      @nyquil762 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      💯

  • @Pablo_Anunnaki
    @Pablo_Anunnaki หลายเดือนก่อน +141

    Everyone who talked about the last human reset was sent to the asylum.

    • @ChroniclesofAlicha_Balaam
      @ChroniclesofAlicha_Balaam หลายเดือนก่อน

      There was a huge backlash against the Mask Mandates back in 1918, they called themselves The Anti-Mask League of San Francisco. I started one up here in the far Northcoast of CA via FB at the beginning of the Pandemic in April 2020, and stood in front of my Courthouse in Eureka with a huge sign with an artistic rendition that it was an enormous red flag event made up using the Chinese WuTang Laboratory showing the Petri Dish and all. Wish you would do a rehash of the 1918 Reset Hoax that laid the foundation for the ensuing and contrived 1929 Crash, and shortly after the ten year long Great Depression leading right up to WWII! Many people lost their homes and businesses to the banks, just like happened during this Pandemic and Shut Down of the World. Calling those who voice their opposition to these mask mandates/ innoculations crazy or "Conspiracy Theorists" as Bi-Polar sidsophrenics. I even saw a program today on PBS stating a man who voiced his opposition to the govt mandates stemmed from him getting Covid and that it had affected his brain with lesions making him ultra paranoid. Wow...Really???

    • @acetate909
      @acetate909 หลายเดือนก่อน +50

      And their children were shipped off on orphan trains. Dark stuff.

    • @LilSeason_In_Tartaria
      @LilSeason_In_Tartaria หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      It could happen again.

    • @KozmicKarmaKoala
      @KozmicKarmaKoala หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      @@LilSeason_In_Tartaria Could ? Now it all makes sense...FEMA ! 👽👽👽😱

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@Pablo_Anunnaki after internment camps were accepted by American citizens during WW2,
      such elaborate disguise was no longer needed?

  • @kristinebb
    @kristinebb หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    Always appreciate the work and effort you put into your videos. Thanks!

  • @lauralauren6432
    @lauralauren6432 หลายเดือนก่อน +61

    The previous civilisation got locked up in the buildings they built. Work/ concentration castles.
    Their children were probably taken and shipped abroad. No wonder many became insane. Same thing here in Sweden. Big light yellow castles. Thank you.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      They called the local one in Minnesota the Poor Farm.
      The production of agricultural products was offered as a supplement to agricultural production.
      The eventual understanding that the products they produced was competing with commercial products,
      seemed to diminish the enthusiasm?

    • @ryanricker6556
      @ryanricker6556 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Their kids were the orphan train riders. . .
      Posted before I knew he was going to hit the trains too.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ryanricker6556 Trains of Conscienceless are important.
      We need to consider many forms of thought before we get sidetracked......

    • @aZoPandaWand
      @aZoPandaWand หลายเดือนก่อน

      and they was raped....day in day out...and blood was drinked..

    • @priceyindividual2995
      @priceyindividual2995 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The greatest sleight of hand in history. It really is no wonder that many people dismiss this topic out of hand, until you really start looking at it it just seems like the most absurd claim ever made

  • @roxyrockster
    @roxyrockster หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    my aunt was put into an asylum by her husband. i am thinking it was in mid 1940s. at that time it was law who ever had you committed had to be the one who had you released. my grandparents tried for years to get her out. the governor of that state worked hard to get the law changed and eventually got the place shut down. my aunt was there for 7 years. went in a vibrant attractive young woman. came out looking like an old woman, no teeth, stark white hair (her natural color was brunette) she did not speak, she ate with her fingers, she was petrified of people. such a travesty, so beyond sad. she clearly had been horribly abused all those 7 years. she had had a young daughter whom she never saw again. the daughter was told her mother ran away and then died. very very hard on my grandparents fighting to get their daughter out, as well as never seeing their grandchild again. i find it hard to believe these places ever did anything beneficial for anyone who went into them. torture, abuse, experimentation... the perfect way to get rid of your wife, or any family member, anyone you wanted gone.

    • @charlissmurph2129
      @charlissmurph2129 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That is so sad, they messed her up in there, such a travesty for many familys, Seinfeld's dad was an incubator baby.

    • @glendaanderson4969
      @glendaanderson4969 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I think this may have been more common than we think. My grandmother had electroshock therapy and was in one of these. She wasn't in my grandpa's obituary. She died 5 days after I was born and I was never told stories about her. I was told she passed from lung cancer but she didn't smoke. I was named after my uncle Glenn who I was told died of cancer at 14 and I found him on a grave website...he was 31, in the navy, and had a kid!!! Pff! Why was I lied to about it?! Also I found through the grave website my grandmother's parents were 9 & 11yrs old when they had her....
      Shit was a lot different back in the day.

    • @brianbates7490
      @brianbates7490 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I've been taking in every one of these documentaries on the "Asylums". A few different types were being put into practice. Seems like a massive "Social Experiment" had taken place at this time. It's also very close to the Civil War and the Reconstruction Period where everything in America changed massively!
      We weren't accurately taught about this time frame. From the election of a Man that shouldn't ever been elected to US government, because he held a title of Nobility as a BAR Member, as Esquire. Abraham Lincoln dissolved the De Jure Government of We the People and replaced it with the De Facto, Federal Corporation known as THE UNITED STATES INC.
      There is also a thing called the Public/Private Charitable Trust, aka. Cesta Que Vie Trust, established by the Crown in 1666 and later incorporated into our American Government by our Founders.
      Research that...
      Cause when we see how massive these complexes are and the grandeur of the design, whether or not built for these purposes, they are very expensive to build compared to everything else around at that time. Except for the Government buildings themselves. So that makes me wonder?...
      Were the "Controllers" gaining access to the Trusts of each person submitted to these Asylums? Because that would explain how these places were eventually funded. Just as they are funded now! They are robbing our Trusts! Everyone who has a Birth Cert, a SS#, a diploma, advanced degrees, drivers license, we've all been Bonded and Trusts were created in your all CAPS name....
      Did you know?

    • @ErocNelson88
      @ErocNelson88 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Interesting they like to use the asylum for the Batman movies. The penguin on hbo big segment on the asylum. The dad had the daughter committed so she couldn’t tell the world he killed her mom.

    • @TheJCompound
      @TheJCompound 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@brianbates7490yes , we all need to fix this together. i sign my name lower case initials and always claim to be the free livin man. no cap haha

  • @sabrinasusen7463
    @sabrinasusen7463 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I was in one, in Independence Iowa. Loom up the building on google. It was 2001 and they still treated us poorly, they would definitely strap people down, inject them and leave them unable to move. I was scared to act out bc of the terror of code red that I frequently saw. We traveled to the main original building through the underground tunnels. The main building had this gorgeous and grand spiraling staircase, there was marble and more. Absolutely beautiful. There was a museum on the 2nd floor and they showed the way people were treated. Small metal cots, terribly primitive and uncomfortable furniture... Inside the palace? That museum told the horrors of what the previous patients went through, making us feel grateful lol. In the tunnnels there were cells with chains for the really bad patients years ago.

  • @jamesn.economou9922
    @jamesn.economou9922 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    Once again! A collection, like no other. These photos are fantastic! I wonder how many people in the United States were in Asylums, in 1910?

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      My grandparents adopted and raised me, they spoke often of the Home, and threatened me as displianary punishment they thought was acceptable to do in their days born around 1920 and WW1.
      I think many kinds of people were incarcerated for mostly economic and political reasons, to take away anything of power or wealth, if disagree with those supported to rule.
      Not much different continues under other guises, in my opinion.

    • @Michel-7.7.7
      @Michel-7.7.7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Let's compare that to the current political climate. According to MSNBC/ CNN more than 50% of voters would end up in those asylums, if based conservatives can't stop the lunatics. Trump for president, (i'm not even american but german)✌️

  • @nancybass9096
    @nancybass9096 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    I think the people who are dressed nicely in the photos are the controllers, NOT the inmates.

    • @goose33
      @goose33 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nah
      Tbey are the CLONES brought up from underground
      Look at the pics of them at the beach they have no idea what they are doing
      All dressed in suits and hats and dresses at the water
      Makes no sense
      Even natives would go into the water naked or very minimal clothing
      But then all these people in suits are just standind there like "wtf do we do we didnt have this stuff underground "
      Just my 2 cents

  • @BADD1ONE
    @BADD1ONE หลายเดือนก่อน +62

    Michelle Gibson has an amazing channel. She does a video on "the grid". The video everyone should watch is "Asylums on the grid". These sights were not chosen by convince or by random. The video is amazing. It raises so many more questions. We have been made to forget the old diaganol lines that existed on old maps. These places worldwide line up with each other.

    • @MichaelEHastings
      @MichaelEHastings หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      tell me, what is the point of the grid, i watched the whole M gibson video and ti had 0 point or even told me us what the grid is for? Also,topse leylines only work on a aflat earth..

    • @BADD1ONE
      @BADD1ONE หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@MichaelEHastings maps were once flat. So as far as the people who made the maps were concerned the buildings of significance lined up. If you watch her star fort videos it may make sense. The locations are of importance to the natural energy of the earth

    • @RonCobb-co6dr
      @RonCobb-co6dr หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@BADD1ONE it's amazing how much more complex it seems to have been in the old world days yet designed for health and well being. Go to your local bell tower on Sunday and get a dose of healing light and sound. Amazing places. And people.
      I'm beginning to think that it was the Arians that built all that super structure, why else would Hitler and the vril society be so interested in them, and they had cities like Dresden, until 44.

    • @kaydi123
      @kaydi123 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@RonCobb-co6dr
      Same as why swastika was chosen to be used as yes. Existed and was utilized way before Hitler was born. He learned of the importance. Now we just sadly, associate him and the symbol as..well usual..bad. yet it's not bad nor good. It's how and by whom it was used by!! As all ways things tech etc. in life. For better? Or the worst? For all?!!!❤❤❤❤ NY has many and wow he says in NYC alone. Yet Catskills Hudson valley was of importance by many thru the times for their reasons. And borscht belt is becoming more known again to locals. Again. We shall see. As hospitals are new on HW easy access. And old one's utilized.
      Why are prison's now seeming to do the same? Not safe good healthy. But can restore to make a home community? I'm not confused yet makes sensibly..no sense.
      Ambercrombie and Fitch? Lol has his alledged wife's castle. Still standing!!! Wish we can build as once did! ❤ As reconnect w Earth's power house's!

    • @2Sugarbears
      @2Sugarbears หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      thanks for that I have found Michelles channel.

  • @Freedomau24
    @Freedomau24 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    In Australia we had more asylums than the claimed population. Completely unbelievable

  • @lakukarikscha1417
    @lakukarikscha1417 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Asylum : protection or safety, or a protected and safe place.
    That is probably what these structures where before the addition of `Insane´- communal facilities built in resonance with human needs of aesthetics, not for an elite but all members of the community.
    Changing their meaning from protection and safety to the taboo theme of mental illness was a (regrettable) masterstroke of reframing.

  • @samuelgates5935
    @samuelgates5935 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

    "American Horror Story, Asylum."

    • @johnje4285
      @johnje4285 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The same in England

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Most never made it out alive

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Notice the crematorium smoke stacks?

    • @tommcmurray3113
      @tommcmurray3113 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      New Phase coming

    • @BlackBoyKingTV
      @BlackBoyKingTV หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      What happened ? I'm lost

  • @hfvhf987
    @hfvhf987 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Suspicious how they started to close down all around the world at the same time, even behind the iron curtain and in places like Japan. Now look at society, crazies everywhere.

  • @nikkibridgewater4223
    @nikkibridgewater4223 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    They were founded by these people not built found.The bottom half of these buildings are still buried.

  • @illumencouk
    @illumencouk หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    The majority of the asylums shown in this video appear to be half buried with window lintels in places you wouldn't expect. These sites were first founded, (literally) then refurbished and repurposed. Young trees and landscaping are evident 'alles uber the platz!'

    • @PassionForGrammar
      @PassionForGrammar หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No they don't

    • @azfreeaz2665
      @azfreeaz2665 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@PassionForGrammar Yes they do. Most of them have been mud-flooded.

    • @PassionForGrammar
      @PassionForGrammar หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@azfreeaz2665 Lol

  • @c-hawkins4358
    @c-hawkins4358 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    The more I know the less I know. These buildings, before they were used as insane asylums would take years to build and would house hundreds of people. Is this how communities lived? If the truth doesn't come out before I pass on I sure hope in the afterlife all will be known.

    • @chriswhite2151
      @chriswhite2151 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Im with you. At age 63 I feel like a child, as everything I thought I knew turns out to be propaganda and gaslighting. My own government is now my worst enemy.

    • @labbeaj
      @labbeaj หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I just happened to look up some information on who built the library in my town.....
      Yea, nobody built it!
      It was a gift from some French dude...
      A gift is what the history says!!
      Now, I did manage to find one sentence in all of the internet that mentions a construction company name however Googleing their name is pointless...

    • @angelamonk716
      @angelamonk716 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thsts what I think , they were communities of old

  • @paladinkhan
    @paladinkhan หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Thank you for taking the time to make this, always interesting to learn more or hear from different perspectives. And surely it took a while getting everything together too

  • @TheKidd-iy7mz
    @TheKidd-iy7mz หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    So that's where they put all the smart ppl

  • @derricknikkel5160
    @derricknikkel5160 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Where are the Brick factories used to construct said assylums? Where are the abandoned quarries? They should be nearby and massive?

    • @MisterWebb
      @MisterWebb หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lost to the sands of time

    • @VikingMale
      @VikingMale หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@MisterWebbthey shouldn’t be, they’d be harder to hide than the buildings.

    • @jonmorrison4567
      @jonmorrison4567 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yess..where are they?

  • @marciaoh7056
    @marciaoh7056 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    You should add in what were known as "Soldiers Homes" that were places at that time era for "shell shocked" soldiers to live after war.
    The one in my area has magnificent archtecture built on 1867 at the top on a hill out in the middle of nowhere (at the time) with an auditorium, church, meeting hall, library, and apartment style living on a huge campus.
    Google photos of Old Soldiers Home in Milwaukee Wisconsin. Some of it has been destroyed already. Some original photos can still be found.
    There were many built across the nation. Apparently only three survive as the rest have been razed.

    • @flyboy1c
      @flyboy1c หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      it's because 100 years ago things were gentlemanly... even tho they were disabled they still deserved integrity. Banks are a great example they knew you by name and would come out to greet you and shake your hand, treat you to coffee and pastry while you waited. Things were treated with decorum all across the board. Plus we had Europe as an example of how to construct. We don't see that now because most of the European inspiration has been bombed out by communists in the 1940's.

    • @marciaoh7056
      @marciaoh7056 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      ​@@flyboy1c
      You must be new here.... The population of Milwaukee County in 1865 was a mere 55,000 with probably half being women and children.
      So it's improbable that this Soldiers Home was built on the outskirts meanwhile building massive, ornate, marble and granite edifices in what is now known as "downtown" Milwaukee.
      There's no way it was constructed in such a short time frame while building nunerous cathedrals, and courthouses at the same time by DONKEYS INCORPORATED.
      What on earth do these buuldings have to do with complimentary donuts and handshakes at banks anyway? Huh?

    • @flyboy1c
      @flyboy1c หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@marciaoh7056 1-2 years isn't a short time to construct something like that; and, the didn't just take people from within the neighborhood, they were transported from all around the state.

    • @xraceboyex
      @xraceboyex หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@marciaoh7056 Love how people all seem to think you can't build stone structures with thousands of people working 12+ hour daily shifts towards a common goal. For all of human history, people weren't sitting around all day watching cheap entertainment and youtube videos, wasting their time. I think you'd find we could still build these today if people were all building things for most waking hours every day of their life, from childhood, out of necessity

    • @xraceboyex
      @xraceboyex หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@marciaoh7056 The people of the past would look at us and think "It's totally impossible that all these people live in structures and are fed and clothed, while doing almost no work whatsoever. There's no way they can just sit around idle for 8+ hours a day and have their needs met. It's completely impossible the future will be like that. You need to work endlessly just to survive."

  • @trumpbidensameclub6668
    @trumpbidensameclub6668 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

    Look into where they got all of their replacement glass for these buildings. They needed alot. Who owned the glass companies and how much were they producing?

    • @raeshellweese8198
      @raeshellweese8198 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The grass got me too

    • @BradRadford-e8s
      @BradRadford-e8s หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Anchor Hocking, Nelsonville OH

    • @PassionForGrammar
      @PassionForGrammar หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Well you're the one who's wondering, so why don't you look it up?

    • @martawalkowiak773
      @martawalkowiak773 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      And who made the bricks?

    • @yvonneollivier7088
      @yvonneollivier7088 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@martawalkowiak773 Yup.

  • @mikc3305
    @mikc3305 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    They call them FEMA Camps today.

  • @stephanieteague1748
    @stephanieteague1748 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Oh how I would love to know the real past!

  • @werds511
    @werds511 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Check out the one in Dunedin in New Zealand, Seacliff. Absolute castle for a nation supposedly so young.

    • @15cuhonda6
      @15cuhonda6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Burnt down surprisingly
      Hi from north Canterbury
      Sunnyside in Christchurch also

  • @michaeldesilvio221
    @michaeldesilvio221 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I worked at a old asylum in Sparks Nevada.

    • @joemontano71
      @joemontano71 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It would be very rewarding to help people like that !!!

    • @beagler4234
      @beagler4234 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Tell us your craziest story from Sparks

  • @pharmerdavid1432
    @pharmerdavid1432 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    This was a fascinating look into an important part of America in past, other countries had these institutions to a lesser extent. Ezra Pound, the great poet and great man, was imprisoned in St. Elizabeth Insane Asylum as a political prisoner, a place which is now appropriately where the "Homeland Security" monstrosity is being built, said to become larger than the Pentagon eventually (it's already huge). I was forced into a psychiatric rehab facility after being setup for an arrest, and forced to take drugs or be said to a very unpleasant prison, which I told them they could send me to after taking them one time each. Remember how the Kennedy family famously put one of the pretty and promiscuous daughters in an insane asylum so she wouldn't "embarrass" the family? Rich people often put family members into a psychiatric asylum to "manage" them. I noticed the grape vines in one of the pictures, I imagine the inmates helped pick and process the grapes? I find these asylums deeply troubling, and know how the Soviet Union (USSR) used psychiatric prisons to imprison "counter-revolutionary" people, in other words - people who dared defy them. Older people with money are often targeted, people who have no family or lawyers to protect themselves, then their money is confiscated as "payment" for their incarceration. I can imagine much worse. The famous guitar player "Peter Greene" (RIP) in the UK made the horrible mistake of taking electric shock "therapy" after he was given bad drugs (LSD?) and was referred to an insane asylum - he never recovered. Psychiatric "medicine" is diabolically evil and cunning, a very dangerous part of the matrix control mechanism. I've got to keep my wits about me, and get out of the city now, things are getting too crazy, and the hellstorm soon to come.....?
    (this may be too long for a comment, copied it from a "Psyciatric News")
    *SNIP*
    The 20th century contains dramatic changes in the roles played by psychiatric hospitals. From 1900 to 1955, the peak year-end census in state and county hospitals, public psychiatric hospitals were provided minimal resources to meet the needs of huge patient populations. Subsequently, as these hospitals were progressively eviscerated, the hospitals and those who worked there were vilified, perhaps as a way to assuage the guilt of what happened to their former residents. The asylums of earlier days became popularly known as the snake pits of the 1940s and 1950s and abandoned shells in our lifetimes. How did this happen?
    In numerous public institutions, especially in the 1950s, the sleeping arrangements for patients with mental illness or mental retardation lacked any semblance of privacy or dignity. The above photo is from the June 1961 issue of APA’s journal Mental Hospitals, now Psychiatric Services.
    In 1955, 50 percent of all hospital beds in the United States were psychiatric beds, a fact made infamous by Mike Gorman in his book, Every Other Bed. The rise in census did not occur because “nobody ever got discharged from a state hospital” between 1900 and 1955, but rather because public hospitals admitted more patients than they discharged for many years. For example, in Fiscal Year 1925 Worcester State Hospital (WSH) started with a census of 2,523 patients (almost exactly 50 percent of each sex), admitted 643 patients, discharged 427 patients, and ended the year with 2,739 patients. Over a decade, following this pattern, a hospital’s census could increase by 2,000 patients.
    The ever-increasing population of public psychiatric hospitals from 1900 to 1955 was largely due to these facilities’ becoming the destination for those with syphilis and for the elderly. The change from an agrarian to an industrial society meant the large multigenerational family was dissolving. This change left no one to take care of elderly family members, who, unfortunately, then became the responsibility of the state. For example, there were 183 deaths at WSH in Fiscal Year 1925; thus, 43 percent of the discharges were through death. One might say this was indicative of fairly poor medical care, but 47 percent of those who had died were aged 65 years and older (males 66 percent, females 34 percent). The principal diagnoses among those who had died were, in descending order, senility (33 percent), dementia praecox (14 percent), and syphilis (14 percent). Of the 18 patients who died from alcoholism, 75 percent were aged 65 years and older. Individuals were sent to the state hospital in the last stages of life: 16 percent were at WSH less than one month, and 13 percent one to three months; thus, 29 percent died within three months of admission.
    Public hospitals became overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of patients. In the 1950s, there were only 26 U.S. cities whose population exceeded the aggregate population of public psychiatric institutions. The two largest hospitals each had a census that exceeded 16,000 patients. Never able to keep up with the needs of their patients, the hospitals went from awful to appalling when their workforce-from the farmer to the doctor-was pulled away to meet the manpower demands of World War II. The population at large learned of the horrors of their public psychiatric hospitals, tragedies long hidden away, through exposés such as The Snake Pit, Mary Jane Ward’s fictionalized account of her hospitalization at Rockland State Hospital (book, 1946; movie 1948); author Albert Q. Maisel’s article in Life magazine (1946) accompanied by some of the most painful pictures the American public had ever seen from Pennsylvania’s Byberry and Ohio’s Cleveland state hospitals; and The Shame of the States (1948), New York Post reporter Albert Deutsch’s opus based on research from 1944 to 1947.
    Perhaps the most dramatic shift in the use of psychiatric hospitals, and the most misunderstood, is “deinstitutionalization.” First, deinstitutionalization was not a thought-out policy shift, not a movement, and not even labeled until considerably after the relocation of psychiatric patients from hospitals to settings outside of hospitals had begun. The depopulation of America’s public hospitals occurred due to a confluence of factors including exposés and reports by conscientious objectors working in these hospitals in lieu of combat in World War II, the introduction of chlorpromazine (1954), a new breed of activist attorneys, and the renaissance of the disability rights movement.
    On October 31, 1963, President John F. Kennedy signed what would turn out to be his last major bill, the Community Mental Health Centers Act. While Kennedy was extolled for this legislation, the bill turned out to be not much more than a hiccup, and Kennedy actually had little interest in it.
    None of these factors, however, was as important as the passage of Medicaid. States realized that through Medicaid they could shift significant percentages of their expenditures for people with serious mental illness to the federal government by moving them out of large institutions and into facilities of 16 or fewer beds due to payment limitations imposed by the Institution for Mental Disease (IMD) exclusion. The states had been impatiently waiting for federal participation in funding the care of people with serious mental illness since 1854, when President Franklin Pierce vetoed a bill that would have made the federal government responsible for those who were poor and had a mental illness. The slope charting the rate of depopulation of the public hospitals became steeper after the passage of Medicaid. The cost-shifting race was on.
    Whether deinstitutionalization has ever occurred remains a matter of debate. While the number of current public hospital psychiatric beds represents about 3 percent of the 1955 peak, people with serious mental illness are found in many locations providing 24-hour care, including nursing homes, jails, prisons, general hospital psychiatric units, private psychiatric hospitals, contracted intermediate and long-term care psychiatric facilities, community residences (including some with locked doors and some where a person who leaves is shadowed by staff), crisis beds (often locked), and respite beds. Some who live “free” in the community are under the supervision of mental health courts or experience Assertive Community Treatment teams as unduly interfering in their lives or feel intensive case managers run their lives. Counted among those who may be totally unfettered by the mental health system are shelter residents and the homeless. This has led the critics of deinstitutionalization to instead label it “transinstitutionalization.”
    Over the past 60 years, many with serious mental illness have led and are leading self-directed, highly productive, meaningful, and satisfying lives. Many are not. The sad part of the history of public psychiatric hospitals over the past 118 years is that very few in government really cared how they could best be used. Of greater importance has been how much will any service for a person with serious mental illness cost and how can we get someone else to pay for it.

    • @yvonneollivier7088
      @yvonneollivier7088 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thank you, for that. It was enlightening. I hope, when you may have something like that, you won't consider it too long to post. Anyone not interested can scroll past in a couple seconds.

    • @herbalannie7707
      @herbalannie7707 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I found your comment and article interesting and enlightening.

    • @ethyn1762
      @ethyn1762 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Much thanks! Well worth the read.

    • @corkygoss7403
      @corkygoss7403 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I too like long comments. Thank you.

    • @MisterWebb
      @MisterWebb หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Forza Casa Pound!

  • @MegaTriumph1
    @MegaTriumph1 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Human hatcheries. You never see people visiting people in these places. Where are all these people. There was zero population around them when built and there are no construction pictures. To say these are anywhere a normal occurrence no they are not. Asylums what a label to keep people away. When there were no people.

    • @matthewmcmahon6727
      @matthewmcmahon6727 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      There probably wasn't even people in a lot of them. Their are probably so many asylums because there were so many buildings and they had to designate the building as something to justify its assistance. Calling it a mental asylum justifies its existance and gives someone claim to it at the same.time calling it a mental asylum also keeps people from poking around because there was no reason for the average person to go to one. It would of taken to many people working to house, feed and clothes all these people. Their would of needed to be established farms to feed these people and the workers if they had actually been filled with people and there weren't trucks to transport food or cars for staff to go back and.forth to work. Eventually there were people in them but I don't think there were in the beginning. More likely used the name.to justify there existance and lay a claim to them.

    • @wrends
      @wrends หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      💯

    • @S4v3_w3st
      @S4v3_w3st หลายเดือนก่อน

      What’s human hatcheries

  • @mikc3305
    @mikc3305 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    A fantastic ensemble of old world photographs Jarid, excellent expose!

  • @markserpa4511
    @markserpa4511 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    Cloning facilities
    Different age groups to choose from
    Different sections different prisons
    Train orders fulfilled cross country

    • @vehicularalchemy
      @vehicularalchemy หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Yep…and those “incubators” from the worlds fair were DIY grow at home clone starter kits! So each one of these institutions was probably filled with thousands of them lined up in the basement like some sort of weird, gigantic hatchery

    • @esotericveritas
      @esotericveritas หลายเดือนก่อน

      ridiculous ... absolutely ZERO proof for any "cloning". Yes, the baby incubators at the worlds fair was strange - but i think there was a recent reset and these children were probably left over from the previous civilization, maybe.

  • @starshine9016
    @starshine9016 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Samuel F.B Morse tried to warn the new world of what was coming. He has a couple of books out in the free archives I highly suggest/recommend reading.

  • @herbalannie7707
    @herbalannie7707 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    There is one in my home town of Athens Ohio which is now part of Ohio University. It is an art gallery and offices. But the bulk of it is closed off and deserted. It is awe inspiring architecture but slso has a creepy feeling to it. One wonders what stories the walls could tell. I look forward to further videos on these Assylums.

    • @MegaTriumph1
      @MegaTriumph1 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Wow that one has a Lunatic label. The Ridges. Spooky for sure.

  • @Leighannsayswhat
    @Leighannsayswhat หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    My parents remember people being in cages outside of the one in Buffalo…. The detail is mind blowing and absolutely stunning.. the stories from friends and family that stayed and or did construction, security…… no thank you. These poor people.

  • @Ashphinchtersayswhat
    @Ashphinchtersayswhat หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    We still have those here except they are now prisons. All have smoke stacks for their “boilers”.

  • @marciaoh7056
    @marciaoh7056 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    These photos are old. The buildings look ancient. Yet there is no vegetation around them. And if there are trees they are saplings or very young trees and young shrubs.
    Almost like a fireball swept through and only left the stone buildings. Followed by a flood washing debris away.
    Or something....

    • @kateemma-
      @kateemma- หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      And the lower levels all have windows popping out of the ground, showing that there are more storeys now below ground, which were above ground originally.

    • @SOMEOLDFRUIT
      @SOMEOLDFRUIT หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I distinctly remember the story of the three little pigs. Build your house of brick if you don't want it burnt or blown down!

    • @tinathene
      @tinathene หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      And sometimes it seems the roof is new, doesn’t match

    • @orpheuskhrystos580
      @orpheuskhrystos580 หลายเดือนก่อน

      #squatterman plasma apocalypse

    • @martawalkowiak773
      @martawalkowiak773 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      And no people.

  • @celticsoul2850
    @celticsoul2850 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    My mom had an uncle in one of these places. Her mother was born around 1904 and her brother would’ve been one of the 12 of them. I don’t know exactly what year he was born but this would’ve been the probably early 1900s that he was institutionalized. He was chasing someone in the family with an ax and they committed him. I know they went to visit him. This was in West Virginia. He used to bite people so they pulled out all of his teeth. He used to cry and beg to come home. I’m just curious as you about these places and our real history. There’s an actual Dorothea Dix Hospital in Raleigh North Carolina. That’s closed now. There were lots of hearings about what to do with that property. Somehow these places live on. Thank you for posting these things and using such beautiful music. I hope one day we will get our answers. And I hope they don’t haunt us into needing one of these places.

  • @MrInfinitefinality
    @MrInfinitefinality หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Hey Jarid @ 11:29 is a pic of the asylum @Orofino ID . My Greatgrandfather Herbert Coffee was domiciled , died and was buried at the asylum. My father visited the grave. No markers on the graves. Just a plot template with an assigned alphanumeric location. very impersonal. Not certain if it yet stands ? Thank you kindly indeed

  • @KozmicKarmaKoala
    @KozmicKarmaKoala หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Thank you for finding all these missing pieces of a huge Archonic puzzle.

  • @RonCobb-co6dr
    @RonCobb-co6dr หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Just getting started on the video, but I think everyone knows by now that aside from the real patient thing, most who were committed to these structures were the people who were asking too many questions about the structures themselves. Knowing that the gigantic cities they saw were impossible for the day. Shut up or you'll end up in the poor farm, that was an actual phrase used by friends to a friend. Portland Oregon had one right by the Multnomah county jail. Ha, Mc'minnimans bought it and turned it into a winery / pub / hotel, Cindy and I spent a night there once in the late 90s. The rooms still have the huge steel doors with a little peekaboo window. Creepy chit man. Supposedly haunted too. Ha ! No ghost bothered us that night, 😂.

    • @xraceboyex
      @xraceboyex หลายเดือนก่อน

      Stacking bricks on top of each other to form a shape is not impossible. Cranes have existed for thousands of years. A crane is a "simple machine". The ancient chinese built walls. Just because you get to watch youtube videos all day doesn't mean people of the past were just sitting around doing basically nothing all the time. Turns out 10's of thousands of people working towards a common goal for their own wellbeing can actually accomplish a lot in a short time

    • @mlmiller6
      @mlmiller6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​@@xraceboyexwow...aren't you the intellectual. Not one to be "sitting around watching YT videos all day" but just here making a "know it all" comment to chastise others when the fact of the matter is that you know ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about the "Ancient Chinese" or even have the slightest clue about any "common goal 10s of thousands of people" were "working toward" back in the day, other than the lies you have been taught here in fucking Clown World 2.0. Give me a break.

    • @KB8Killa
      @KB8Killa หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@xraceboyexthese asylums exceed ‘stacking one brick on another’ the carving of the masonry, and sheer scale of the asylums is questionable at the very least

  • @jeromesnykers9412
    @jeromesnykers9412 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Awesome work mate! Thanks for your amazing efforts!

  • @Lelabear
    @Lelabear หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I did a deep dive on the Kirkbride institutions. I found it interesting that his book about how to "build" these asylums mainly dealt with installing steam powered engines into these buildings, nothing at all about the actual construction techniques.
    I have a theory these buildings formerly were little plantation type facilities that provided fresh goods to nearby cities...they were typically 20 miles away from the old city centers.

    • @madamcreolethehighpriestes7401
      @madamcreolethehighpriestes7401 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      They didn't build any one of those buildings. They were all founded. It is disheartening these buildings were colleges for black people.

    • @Lelabear
      @Lelabear หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@madamcreolethehighpriestes7401 How did you come to the conclusion that these were colleges for black people?

    • @xraceboyex
      @xraceboyex หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@madamcreolethehighpriestes7401 Well someone ****ing built them lol. They didn't just grow up out of the ground on their own

    • @JohnFadtu
      @JohnFadtu หลายเดือนก่อน

      Those ancient asylum buildings where standing before em folks in the May flower step foot in america. True story look it up

    • @S4v3_w3st
      @S4v3_w3st หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think this is just normal European architecture. This is how Europeans use to build.

  • @kelleclark
    @kelleclark หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Old World 're-education' facilities...sound familiar? Don't get on the trains....

  • @HB-of6hq
    @HB-of6hq หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Should do a episode on the Odd Fellow Orphanages and Senior Homes.

    • @BeatdownBabylon
      @BeatdownBabylon หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oddfellows (masons of another color, really) were tasked w/brainwashing the orphans & cabbage patch kids

  • @watkinsinc.7147
    @watkinsinc.7147 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    People were just dropped off at the Asylums if a spouse wanted a divorce, post partem, orphaned.... Places of Torture in my opinion

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Charles Dickens did that to his wife. After she'd borne and raised all his children, he decided he was in love with a young girl, and had his old wife locked away.

    • @watkinsinc.7147
      @watkinsinc.7147 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@itzakpoelzig330 That stupid bastard was from London wasn't he?

  • @LuckySongs29
    @LuckySongs29 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    [I like the idea that they were places for people to protect their sanity, or asylum from mental distress of lower class life. Not that they were originally for crazy people.]

  • @snoo333
    @snoo333 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    thank you for taking the time to do this. very interesting. If these were built for the insane I can only imagine what the ultra rich built for themselves. A lot of these photos remind me of castles built by dukes and royalty in England. Wouldn't carbon dating tell us the age of these buildings? i am sure some of these structures still exist? this rabbit runs deep, been on it for long time now. this beats watching the crap coming out hollywood and streaming services. lol. you have taken me to a lot places. thank you.

  • @KristenaLayne
    @KristenaLayne หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I stayed at new Hope NJ in ‘05 shortly before it was demolished & its campus was huge. Our building was the only in operation at the time, but it was a whole town with houses & shops- supposedly for the workers who lived there. They even mentioned the tunnels connecting all the buildings for “inclement weather.” I don’t get these “tunnels “ I’ve never seen a tunnel constructed in my life- no photos or evidence of our tunnel building skills have I witnessed. Less than 100yrs later- like we just don’t do it anymore either? But it was common practice in the 1800s??

    • @divinationsbyelle
      @divinationsbyelle หลายเดือนก่อน

      Maybe the tunnels are the lower levels that were covered in a mud flood type event. These appear to be just the tops of the original buildings.

  • @mayerzyify
    @mayerzyify หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    There' was a mental hospital in Weyburn Saskatchewan Canada that I've looked in. I live not far away. They used to do some LSD testing there back in the 50's. Some dude wrote a book about it several years back. I've got a few old government videos discussing some of the testing that occurred there.

    • @murphyjulian7393
      @murphyjulian7393 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Reminds me of the Electric KoolAid Acid Test book. Excellent read💚💚💚

  • @Joekonda22
    @Joekonda22 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    It reminds me what was happening in Britain at the same time. People enrolled themselves in work houses because they were not able to function in society due to the changes between pre industrialization and after.

  • @judioliver8082
    @judioliver8082 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Very intimidating buildings that say - we are in charge just shut up and comply - here in New Zealand we have huge asylums operating from just 20 years after the first European settlers came to this country and they were in buildings like these ! It's clear the buildings were already here and also that there were many people who did not agree with what the dark controllers were doing. Thanks for this it is a very important topic.

    • @PassionForGrammar
      @PassionForGrammar หลายเดือนก่อน

      I beg to differ. They're nice buildings. And at that, they gave the rejects a warm safe place to stay... what's wrong with that?

    • @judioliver8082
      @judioliver8082 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@PassionForGrammar the rejects ? ? On the outside looking at them they are amazing buildings I agree. The stories I've read of life inside tell of a terrible fate and hard labour. Once again . . . the rejects ? And, more to the point . . . what are you doing on here ????

    • @PassionForGrammar
      @PassionForGrammar หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@judioliver8082 It's a harsh word, and I was just about to change it.. you beat me to it. But in a sense, they were rejected from something or somebody, no?... to have ended up there? But you're right of course, I should be nicer about who they were and their situations. It's very difficult, and "rejects" is an inappropriate word.
      What I'm doing on here is writing my thoughts and ideas in the comment sections of youtube videos. If you're referring to this channel in particular, I'm trying to dissuade my fellow viewers away from this ridiculous mud flood/alternate history theory mostly.

    • @judioliver8082
      @judioliver8082 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@PassionForGrammar I don't see anyone forcing anyone to watch this excellent in my opinion presentation.

    • @JohnFadtu
      @JohnFadtu หลายเดือนก่อน

      Those buildings are from ancient Tartarrian empire of north america. The anglo saxons seem to have wiped tartaria of the face of the earth total scortched earth policy. Any survivors got tortued to death in their ancient former royal buidlings. That where turned into asylums. Your welcome

  • @fwungy4285
    @fwungy4285 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Let's build amazing castles for the insane with our donkeys and hand tools, while we live in wooden shacks!

    • @TimTestifies
      @TimTestifies หลายเดือนก่อน

      Its openly recorded and admitted that we've had machines and catapolts of all kinds for thousands of years. Youre an insane person. You dont listen, you speak. Your imagination is so fun but its not real

    • @S4v3_w3st
      @S4v3_w3st หลายเดือนก่อน

      They always built great buildings. It wasn’t their money it was government sponsored. Look at any European city or Englands architecture. Even America had mostly classical architecture until we replaced it.

  • @charlissmurph2129
    @charlissmurph2129 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I enjoy all your stuff Jarid, thanks for including the headings so these can be looked up and verified, I have zoomed in to the headings on others, not a lot of info are given on the ones I looked up long ago, I did not expect to get as much info as I got though, when I show people these, along with Tartaria, and the Orphan trains, their eyes start to open, and they can see the real picture, thank you for your wealth of photos, and the beautiful music.

  • @ELXABER
    @ELXABER หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I found the reason most people were institutionalized at the time interesting. 'Religious fervor.'

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Where did you find that information?

    • @ELXABER
      @ELXABER หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@itzakpoelzig330 Just search for old letters from the institutions and patients like "A History of the Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital"

  • @mikepeterson4248
    @mikepeterson4248 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    If you spoke about true history, you needed psychological retraining.

  • @stephanieteague1748
    @stephanieteague1748 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Some beautiful buildings, many look like college campuses

    • @lauralauren6432
      @lauralauren6432 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Castles. Campus is a Roman word as arena, stadium, gymnasium, Senate, bath .....

  • @BeeWilliamsBuzz
    @BeeWilliamsBuzz หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Been researching all of this for years and cannot stop doing it. If you look at maps pre-Columbus they have tiny red castles all over North America and the world. They represented an area inhabited by indigenous people that were a from a tribe, clan and or family claiming that area as their own.
    Think about this everyone... If they burried everyone in cemeteries back then there would be way too many now. Cemeteries were for people of importance or had family who cared, buried on their own land etc...
    There was also Sanitariums back then for communicable diseases like Tuberculosis and Venerial Disease like Syphilis that untreated causes insanity.
    These structures served a repurpose of housing people who were left after the Christopher Columbus New World narrative was created. There are tunnels everywhere and especially under Cathedrals and Catacombs for miles, keep researching and you will begin to see the big picture of what really happened so long ago. Great vid and thank you for sharing Jared.
    L&L 2U

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yes, I've noticed that too on the old maps - little castles everywhere. On land that should have been "wilderness."

    • @HalifaxPeacock
      @HalifaxPeacock หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@itzakpoelzig330
      Knights Templar

    • @Jdeezy12
      @Jdeezy12 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HalifaxPeacock🎯

    • @S4v3_w3st
      @S4v3_w3st หลายเดือนก่อน

      This architecture is distinctly European. I don’t see how anyone else would have built it. And you can clearly see in historical documents that the land was natives only. Look at the Uncontacted tribes of Amazon. Their is no tartarian or European architecture out their.

  • @LinikdeTessalonik
    @LinikdeTessalonik หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You are amazing Mr. Jarid !

  • @CGW11
    @CGW11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    One of the ideas was that beautiful surroundings helps healing.

  • @panglossianaeolist3704
    @panglossianaeolist3704 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Were any of these connected by railways or tunnels ?

    • @mikedoyle2023
      @mikedoyle2023 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      You've been paying attention. 😉

    • @panglossianaeolist3704
      @panglossianaeolist3704 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mikedoyle2023 !? _ been mooching

  • @BeatdownBabylon
    @BeatdownBabylon หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Soooo many of these in my home state of CT. I may or may not have explored many of them.

  • @stillwaterrn
    @stillwaterrn หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Look at the "diagnosis" given during that time. And then go deeper re: the origins of psychiatry, how diagnostic criteria developed, etc I have....messed up

  • @Agent.99
    @Agent.99 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    WHOA! I looked up the etymology of the word “Kirk” and it means CHURCH! So Kirkbride means “Church Bride”. What are the implications of that??? 🤯
    Furthermore, another meaning of asylum is “refuge, sanctuary, shelter,” often in a political sense. Perhaps the asylums were originally a refuge or sanctuary for church brides (ie saints & Christians) and not for the insane. That’s why they all look so normal in the pictures.

  • @corkygoss7403
    @corkygoss7403 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    The lost history of "blueprints" becomes the seminal question. Thanks for framing it. Bothered me for decades. One bucket list item is to arrange an appointment at my local historical society with specific searches in mind. My kid sister did time at Pontiac State Hospital. We smoked a joint with her in the visiting room. Just punks back then. Very inspiring, Jared. Never stop.

  • @wesmann65
    @wesmann65 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The evil empire wanted to erase the history through brutal avenues.

  • @Sigmatized
    @Sigmatized หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    In 1980 I had to go in the day room alone at the Danvers asylum in Massachusetts. It was the most terrifying moment of my life. 50 lunatics one crazier than the next.

    • @ROGUE-GOVT86IT
      @ROGUE-GOVT86IT หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Damn bruh, do you care to expand on that a bit ?
      I mean was it one flew over the cuckoo's nest?
      And thank you in advance.
      ✌️😎

    • @Sigmatized
      @Sigmatized หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ROGUE-GOVT86IT none of the staff came in the room with me.

    • @ROGUE-GOVT86IT
      @ROGUE-GOVT86IT หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Sigmatized I hope it didn't create any I'll effects, that you had to go through. 🙏🏼✝️🙏🏼

  • @johnwilson6790
    @johnwilson6790 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Jarid.....water domino's and big water fountains had a big part to play....the water fountains had a release valve as a whistle to a train considering past energy....volcano's and drilling through mountains....quite possibley more to that story.....minerals all ready refined / crain into train carts and off to a smelter for adding other minerals / forming ect.....just seems we are missing some basics in past tech....the whole iron mold processing for train track / the levy's made ....water pressure / firetrucks / tug boats....they have much in common with train air pressure ....move a bunch dirt through water pressure as well.....Elevators in past structures.....honestly cant see how buildings of old was made without them...if you had them the builders understood the slide scale as well....meaning / when you dont have a problem moving weight up or down side to side
    its just a touch /point move process......easy....the processes had to be easy/ Material free....gave time for perfection / artistry ect....thx jarid

  • @MisterWebb
    @MisterWebb หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Because they were built by the civilization that existed before the Mud Flood

  • @VTnumber1
    @VTnumber1 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    pre 1700, all of them

    • @S4v3_w3st
      @S4v3_w3st หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nope, all created by Europeans.

    • @beamclash
      @beamclash 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@S4v3_w3st Here's a direct quote on wikipedias Indian Removal Act page from the 7th PRESIDENT ANDREW JACKSON-
      "as it does to the extinction of one generation to make room for another... In the monuments and fortresses of an unknown people, spread over the extensive regions of the West, we behold the memorials of a once powerful race, which was exterminated or has disappeared to make room for the existing savage tribes…"
      Not trying to dunk on white people with this, I have basque heritage which makes it easy to research alternate history

  • @stanleylamb4682
    @stanleylamb4682 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    People lost there minds because the 1000 years of Christ on earth had passed and they got Left behind, hello just look at all the huge buildings all over the world, we have been lied to bout history

    • @FisherKot
      @FisherKot หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Amen brother praise Jesus Christ ❤

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Left behind and witnessed Satan and his demons return to earth, with whatever this meant was happening. Horrific experience it must have been. Jesus saves.

    • @Jdeezy12
      @Jdeezy12 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I do believe this to be true to some extent. I am just confused about the time we are living in now after deeply researching this topic. Do you have any ideas?

    • @urmadhoe
      @urmadhoe หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'm so lost right now , and scared ​@Jdeezy12

    • @stanleylamb4682
      @stanleylamb4682 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Jdeezy12 I only know what the Holy ghost says to my heart, we are living in the short time that the devil was given to go out and deceive the nations, and we are at the end of that time,

  • @nyquil762
    @nyquil762 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Amazing. Thank you

  • @go_off_Sis
    @go_off_Sis หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    there’s a large abandoned one in Hot Springs Arkansas on top of a hill

  • @aprilaxsom8906
    @aprilaxsom8906 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I spent a lot of time studying Tartaria. When Tartaria was under siege, they moved the tartary citizens by trains. One theory I’ve studied is that the Tartary citizens could not mentally cope with the despair of losing their lifestyle. They were far more advanced spiritually and technologically, so much so that they did not cope well once Tartaria was destroyed. Tartaria was in Russia, indigenous people are most likely from Tartaria. They would house “crazy” people, they forced them to have babies and abuses. It’s always been about mixing races. Looking further, I found most Americans have Indian & or negro in their blood. These insane asylums housed perfectly healthy, sane individuals whom the government purposefully worked to destroy.

    • @nyquil762
      @nyquil762 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sad

    • @patriciasmart1682
      @patriciasmart1682 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Tardtarians.

    • @maxxsee
      @maxxsee หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      no one is advanced spiritually without being born again. you can only be born again through following Jesus, New Testament. was born again 3 years ago now, made a new person in Christ. find Jesus before it's too late, we are all guilty of sin

    • @jessedaughtry4433
      @jessedaughtry4433 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Most whites do not have negro or native americian. The Native American was a popular myth they told people 120 years ago to make you think you are mixed. Yeah some are but white people until more recently have done a good job at not mixing outside the white adamic race.

    • @goose33
      @goose33 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Noone ever answers this question so ill ask here
      If tartaria was so advanced
      Where was there defensive /military? Did they not have it?
      And who or WHAT fought tartaria? What caused all these cataclysms to hit them?

  • @Kev6764
    @Kev6764 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    He does an excellent job on these old photos videos.

  • @yvonneollivier7088
    @yvonneollivier7088 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    They had to explain all those American palaces, somehow. Lock up a labor force, and hit two birds w one stone? I love the photos and the way you've revived those birds.

  • @brettwells66
    @brettwells66 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I can't stop watching.

  • @charlescrossman2225
    @charlescrossman2225 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    SO LARGE AND LAVISH - BUT THEY DONT EVOKE FEELINGS OF KINDNESS OR IMPROVEMENT - MORE LIKE PRISONS

  • @Overstand100
    @Overstand100 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Some of them had their own power plants! It's ridiculous to think about the building costs at the time as well, especially according to the population.

  • @Davidbirdman101
    @Davidbirdman101 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    Hey man! Been watching you for years and enjoy the pictures very much. I'm feeling somewhat anxious though, more perturbed than I have ever been before, I'm 68 years old. I don't want to sound like a defeatist but I am worried that the world is headed for the apocalypse. Sounds crazy, right? Tin foil hat stuff. Well I wish it was just imagination,.....But

    • @thomaxtube
      @thomaxtube หลายเดือนก่อน

      It’s meant to be apocalypse time, literary meaning : removing of the veiling.
      Most tinfoil stuff is based on reality, and is there, for us- who are willing - to see, to help remove the veils
      of perception/ exposing fake& true history
      🙏 ❤

    • @lindsylindsy
      @lindsylindsy หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      You’re not alone.

    • @kelleclark
      @kelleclark หลายเดือนก่อน

      The apocalypse is far in the past...we are living in satan's 'little season'.

    • @tony690
      @tony690 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm with you. I haven't been around as long as you but I've been around. It is plainly obvious to me that we are now in the End Times.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@Loveisthegreater do you think those who ended up in asylum did not prepare? Oh, the hubris

  • @DouglasMosley759
    @DouglasMosley759 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    That narrative is mental! I think those massive buildings are much much older than our allegedly known history. I bet they were originally intended to be institutions of learning. Universities of all kinds.

  • @maryalison5173
    @maryalison5173 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I agree with your analysis completely. Thank you for presenting this important information. 😊

  • @tracingtheoldworld365
    @tracingtheoldworld365 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Looks like it was public housing where people were able to work and money they made were used to support the community. Modern days monastery for disadvantaged people

    • @kelleclark
      @kelleclark หลายเดือนก่อน

      nope....

  • @itt615
    @itt615 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    "Re-Education" Centers.

    • @joemontano71
      @joemontano71 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Now the 're-education' centers are block after block of homeless encampments in cities like la, san-fran, shirack, etc...

  • @outdoorsvideos8750
    @outdoorsvideos8750 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    So many mud flooded buildings.

  • @EmilyW.isawakenotwoke
    @EmilyW.isawakenotwoke หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Trust me, the horrific torture definitely occurred. I did plenty of urban exploring at Aradale, the insane asylum in Ararat Victoria.. all the paperwork was left behind, as well as all the straight jackets, the beds with straps, the size of a lot of the rooms were literally enough for a single bed and walking room around it with heavy metal doors. Records of single mothers being sent the to give birth, who never left and their children eventually going insane because of the conditions.. women who had post natal depression, locked up, their babies taken off them and adopted out, the medical records of medications was horrific.. the photos you show of the happy residents was probably staff 😵‍💫

  • @jerryweber1768
    @jerryweber1768 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    When they were tearing down Woodville Asylum in Scott Twp., PA I tried to look inside the buildings two separate times. Before I could get anywhere near the buildings a speeding truck would appear out of nowhere and told me to get off the property.

  • @Aliciaunique1
    @Aliciaunique1 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Asylums is where they housed The Original indigenious People non conforming Black Americans An relocated south american indian replacements Myans

  • @stephenmartinez6359
    @stephenmartinez6359 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I’ve had dream about being at some of these

  • @stephanieteague1748
    @stephanieteague1748 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    It looks like a tremendous number of them from Massachusetts and Michigan!

  • @omahaflynn5937
    @omahaflynn5937 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Bless all the African and irish children that endured the hardships then...."AND NOW". BLESS ALL CHILDREN.

  • @andrewmunchkin7212
    @andrewmunchkin7212 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    They replaced that system into hospital systems. Hospitals make it easy to get rid of ...😮

  • @anthropologybear2941
    @anthropologybear2941 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    OUTRAGEOUS. This is sickening. What a massive spell has been cast upon us unawares.

  • @CJ-gs1jk
    @CJ-gs1jk หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    These look like the 15 minute cities of the old world. The only difference is they build out instead of up.

  • @realityisjustadream1715
    @realityisjustadream1715 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I have been looking into words and have figured out. Luntic Asylum means The Citizen Solution. Luntic reversed Citnul is the Romania word meaning The Citizen. Asylum reversed is an old Greek word meaning Soultion. The Citizen Soultion was for anyone who remembered the old world and wouldn't go along with the reset.

    • @Tylox1
      @Tylox1 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Exactly ! I see the same thing.. Hold outs from the previous reset .. and wouldn’t sit still for all the new lies put on the younger generation at that time.. so made to look crazy , because they didn’t believe the globe lie and stuff like that ..

    • @ErocNelson88
      @ErocNelson88 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You may be on to something.

  • @savytigress
    @savytigress หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    what if these places were safe houses for the compliant ?? while dissidents were being rounded up and murrrrdered

    • @JohnFadtu
      @JohnFadtu หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Other way around

  • @88billythekid8
    @88billythekid8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Apparently there are a lot of similarities with these asylums and mansions. The interior furnishings were mainly a big difference.

  • @AdannaG
    @AdannaG หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It should be noted that the people living during the time of this magnificent architecture were not in awe of them as we are today; these buildings had existed for centuries! Furthermore, there is sufficient historical evidence to conclude that the majority of these so-called ‘insane asylums’ were, in fact, re-education institutions. They housed HISTORIANS - adults (and teenagers) whose personal experience and knowledge of past events and circumstances would counteract any alternate narrative! By containing these ‘HUMAN RESOURCES’ (interesting term!) and destroying their diaries, letters, etc, a widespread acceptance of HISTORICAL FICTION (combining fictional events and characters with real historical facts and events) would be possible … and successful.

  • @beagler4234
    @beagler4234 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Funny Harvard’s campus looks exactly like these buildings.

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Many look similar in many countries.

  • @charleshartzell8322
    @charleshartzell8322 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    We have a crazy farm 10 miles away, in Haskell Arkansas... Some of the buildings are said to be from Civil War era, barracks.. maybe ?? There was another in Waterloo IA. And the prison in Anamosa Iowa was built of Stone blocks looks like a castle and is still in operation..

    • @tony690
      @tony690 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Some say that the Civil War was not as much about slavery than it was about going along with the new narrative of this country's "founding".

    • @Jdeezy12
      @Jdeezy12 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tony690yep nothing about slavery. Most likely to destroy all the old world architecture

  • @stevehall9256
    @stevehall9256 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The asylum in Raleigh nc is named Dorthia Dix

  • @Battlestar31164
    @Battlestar31164 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you ❤ I appreciate you!

  • @prettyplayfull
    @prettyplayfull หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    If you dont know by now that they are Tartarian communities that built these in 600-1300 than RE:PURPOSED of the inheritors....,.Mental institutions they put the women min for not conforming to a new way of life, children they stole, killed the dad. Other castles and gothic style when to state houses , churches ....,. Lord. AND THEY HAD POWER TOO!!!

    • @bigzach1000
      @bigzach1000 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I have worked for the North Dakota State Hospital as an historian and archivist. I can assure you that that particular hospital was built by Americans in 1885.

    • @15cuhonda6
      @15cuhonda6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@bigzach1000population 36,000 around 1885.Two years to build.

    • @patriciasmart1682
      @patriciasmart1682 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ok fema is called and they will visit you