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re: Derinkuyu underground city

Posted on 5/14/18 at 1:49 pm to
Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 1:49 pm to
quote:

That doesn't look like it was done by hand.


You don't need power tools, it just takes much longer. They knew how to build a rotary drill powered by horses for example.
This post was edited on 5/14/18 at 2:23 pm
Posted by mofungoo
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2012
4583 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 1:56 pm to
quote:

I've seen better tunnels under the Quad

There are actually several tunnels under the LSU campus, carrying utilities like electrical power, water, steam, phone lines and cables to the buildings. I knew some people who lived in them
Posted by AUsteriskPride
Albuquerque, NM
Member since Feb 2011
18385 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 2:03 pm to
quote:

I knew some people who lived in them


I did facilities management at AU during undergrad as a student job. I found multiple "camps" under bleachers and mechanical rooms. They definitely scoped out places not frequented often.
Posted by StealthCalais11
Lurker since 2007
Member since Aug 2011
12530 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 2:39 pm to
quote:

There are actually several tunnels under the LSU campus, carrying utilities like electrical power, water, steam, phone lines and cables to the buildings. I knew some people who lived in them

That's the joke
Posted by bigberg2000
houston, from chalmette
Member since Sep 2005
70556 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 2:41 pm to
I definitely had a few warm tequizzas down in the LSU tunnels in 1999.
Posted by JOJO Hammer
Member since Nov 2010
12322 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 2:58 pm to
looks like the work of


Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
91256 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 3:00 pm to
quote:

There are actually several tunnels under the LSU campus, carrying utilities like electrical power, water, steam, phone lines and cables to the buildings. I knew some people who lived in them


joke

----------------


your head
Posted by JohnnyRebel
Colorado
Member since Sep 2014
8174 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 4:54 pm to
quote:

After knocking down a wall in his basement, he stumbled upon a secret room, which led to an underground tunnel, which opened up into a completely hidden ancient city: Derinkuyu


This was one of my childhood dreams.
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
91256 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 5:28 pm to
quote:

This was one of my childhood dreams.
Posted by Eightballjacket
Member since Jan 2016
7892 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 5:30 pm to
Cell reception has to be terrible down there.
Posted by Thib-a-doe Tiger
Member since Nov 2012
36544 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 5:39 pm to
quote:

something like that happened in the US, the IRS would show up wanting back taxes bc our home would suddenly be bigger than previously thought.





Man, frick your accountant
Posted by ThinePreparedAni
In a sea of cognitive dissonance
Member since Mar 2013
11315 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 6:20 pm to
For those interested...

Related to above (going to ground for cataclysm???)
There is a direct link to CIA document in the thread (I did not link directly, but it is a pretty wild read (9 pages) and is described in the Slate article below (which has been 404ed since I posted this in the past))

reddit

quote:

Remote Viewing Ancient Civilizations - a compilation of data. Groundbreaking, answers to Everything. (self.conspiracy)
submitted 3 days ago * by Danster56[??]



quote:


quote:

I'm an employee in an educational facility of sorts. Together with my co-workers we're engaged in what ypu'd call remote viewing with a specific goal of targetting and describing ancient civilizations.
The goal itself is to provide our benefactors with crucial information, technological and historical artifacts and whatever data might be useful commercially or otherwise.



quote:

For starters ;)
We're the third human civilization to have high technology on a global level.
The number of civilizations that reached some level of technology below ours is much larger, none of them were global however.
The entire span of human civilized history as counted by the broad human genus is approximately 150.000 years.
The total number and the time span is too large to elaborate.
There have been two major civilizations, first centered in a region of Antarctica, once warm - today covered in ice. This civlization was both global and advanced.
It was destroyed by an impact of a small comet that caused a global firestorm and destabilized our planets geology some 50.000 years ago. The remnants of this impact are evident in a layer of ash in India, the comet exploded directly above this continent.
The second civilization, much closer to ours both in technology and lifestyle though still above our level destroyed itself in a global war some 32.000 years ago.
The final destruction was caused by a rapid submerging of the final remnant of Atlantis some 12.300 years ago. Human civilization by then was less advanced than we are though still possesing a sophisticated and significant level of achievement, also enjoying some leftover technologies with capacity to maintain them but without the ability to reproduce them.
Less than 3% after the first destruction, less than 10% after the second survived


quote:

Do you know for what reason the global war erupted during the second civilization?
One side believed in an enslavement of all minor human species to use them as tools. The other did not. Both sides consisted of major nations and minor allies with imperial ambitions.
The desitre to dominate led to conflict. The inability to break the stalemate led to the use of weapons of mass destruction and a mutually assured destruction scenario.
The participants on one side were people from the land mass in centre of Atlantic along its ridge now submerged, their allies who lived on the plains of western Europe around british isles - today flooded, people who lived on and around Cuba and in the Americas.
On the other side were the nations and states that inhabited areas of today's Indo-China including the portions of land now submerged, large part of Africa and mediterrenean as well as parts of today's Black Sea coast.
All belligerents were wiped out, on both sides.


quote:

1, The hall of records is a massive subterrenean complex accessed via natural caves and multiple entranced around Giza Plateou.
What's beneath the Sphinx is a small cache of artifacts, also it's already been emptied by egyptian authorities at an unknown but recent date.
whilst not a city i hope this answers
2, Gobekli Tepe was an administrative center of a local civilization. It was built some 10.000 years ago.
They buried it because they were losing a war with a neighbouring kingdom and it was not in their culture to destroy their heritage - instead they preserved it with sand and fled the area becoming nomadic and gradually losing what civilized state of mind they possesed.


quote:

Specifics, please but here is something: Tomb location
Alexander the Great - Soma, the communal mausoleum of Alexandria, now submerged.
Where the Greek gods, just remenants of surviving old civs, with advanced tech?
Yes. The mountain facility in which they dwelled still exists in Greece.


quote:

There was a continuity of human history for the past 150.000 years. The total loss of knowledge happened only recently during the end of the last ice age.


quote:

Did either of these two advanced civilizations tinker with genetics to create slaves?
The second one did. Gene splicing and other methods were used to strip people of their consciousness and reduce them to biological automatons.


---



slate

quote:

MARCH 20 2017 7:02 AM
FROM SLATE, NEW AMERICA, AND ASU

A Martian State of Mind
Did the CIA really astrally project to Mars in 1984? We asked a psychic spy.

By Jacob Brogan


quote:

By any ordinary standard, successfully sending humans to Mars would be an astonishing triumph—a world-historical feat for the nation (or corporation) that manages to pull it off first. Talk to the right people, though, and you might be surprised to learn that more than 30 years ago the U.S. military accomplished just that.


quote:

You’ll find the evidence of it in a document freely available on the public “Reading Room” section of Central Intelligence Agency’s website. (Credit where it’s due: The friend who brought this treasure to my attention said he learned about it through the Mysterious Universe podcast.) Contextual details are scarce in the document, which goes under the unassuming title “Mars Exploration: May 22, 1984.” A brief explanatory note indicates that “the subject” was given a sealed envelope “immediately prior to the interview” but was instructed not to open it yet. During the interview itself, the subject only had verbal access to “[s]elected geographic coordinates, provided by the parties requesting the information.”




quote:

In what follows, the conversation jumps around rapidly as the monitor directs the subject to investigate different coordinates, providing no other information. As the subject does, he describes some of the sites of interest that he notices, including a large “obelisk” that reminds him of the Washington Monument, “rounded bottom carved channels, like road beds,” and, most strikingly, “pyramids … like shelters from storms.” In those structures, he finds the shadowy people he had seen before, hibernating. “They’re an ancient people,” he tells the monitor. “They’re ah … they’re dying, it’s past their time or age.”


quote:

According to an explanatory document about the Star Gate, available on the CIA’s site, the program sought to cultivate “psychoenergetics,” which it defines as “A Mental Process by which an Individual Perceives, Communicates with, and/or Perturbs Characteristics of a Designated Target, Person or Event Remote in Space and/or Time from that Individual.” (The unusual capitalization scheme is original to the document.) In particular, Star Gate focused on “remote viewing”—which involves using the mind alone to see thing that aren’t immediately present. The document proposes that “remote viewing” is “inherent to every human to some degree” and “Probably a vestigial form of self-preservation.”
Posted by M. A. Ryland
silver spring, MD
Member since Dec 2005
2135 posts
Posted on 5/14/18 at 6:55 pm to
quote:

“Pressure and time. That’s all it takes really. That, and a big damn poster.”


good movie.
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