Mud/Flood Kansas City, Missouri. Chiefs in France. Tumuli of Ancient America. Irrefutable Photos.

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  • Опубліковано 13 лют 2023
  • Howdy ya’ll. Today we’re going to look at some astounding photographs of Kansas City, Missouri taken between the years 1860 and 1899. This collection of 150 images, all highly detailed, and most never before seen, appear to identify Kansas City as a location which bore the brunt of weather events in the 1800’s. We see a “renovation” process occurring in the mid 1800’s during the time of the first photographs (which we will look at today).
    This renovation clearly shows that in some (most) locations of Kansas City, the initial ground level had jumped by anywhere from 10 to 20 feet. We then see buildings with infrastructures appearing to go deep inside the landscape. We also see “bluffs”, and I’d be bluffing if the entirety of these bluffs didn’t appear to me to be indigenous in nature; as if one larger earthwork or superstructure.
    In the narrative we’re told these locations photographed are simply layers of construction, yet the historical timeline of Kansas City indicates this whole flood of mud would have occurred almost overnight, as the city developed mainly from the 1840’s onward, with our photographs beginning shortly after that. So what can you see in these images?
    To me they are some of the most detailed and clear evidence of a much larger operation that was being used in major cities all around the country; that is, to highlight the previous attributes of the landscape, and build on top of them, rewriting the history in the process. So let’s get right into; 150 of the oldest photographs of Kansas City ever taken. I really want to hear your thoughts and ideas on this one down below, & enjoy!
    Topics for further reading;
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missouri
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89t...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Or...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisia...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_a...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mound_B...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississ...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumulus
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 584

  • @aaronsatterlee365
    @aaronsatterlee365 Рік тому +313

    Hey Jarid, love your work. I wanted to share a story of covered up history. I went to the Richardson public library in Richardson TX back in 2010 and meet a wonderful old woman who worked there. She showed me a whole bunch of old photos of Richardson and Dallas from around 1870 of small Texas towns that indicated amazing public transit existed back then. There were trolleys and suspended trams that I had no idea ever existed and according to the current narrative, didn't. She basically stole these pictures before they were archived to the Smithsonian institute. Her version of history was way different than what we are told now. She even told of a massive slave revolt in 1880s Dallas that has been scrubbed from the history books, and had photographic evidence of it all. History is a lie.

    • @adambomb8324
      @adambomb8324 Рік тому

      Footwork and boots on the ground and speaking to our elders is where the truth is found. His-story is a lie agreed upon by those who seek to control the masses.

    • @timothydillow3160
      @timothydillow3160 Рік тому +31

      Galveston Texas is really a mind-blower, some of the most incredible architecture and advanced infrastructure was wiped out in 1900, from the so-called hurricane. Stone blocks and Bricks became splinterwood during the storm I guess.

    • @astralenlightenment1743
      @astralenlightenment1743 Рік тому +9

      Do you happen to remember her name?? I’d love to see if I can find these old photographs

    • @allenbeers2837
      @allenbeers2837 Рік тому +7

      Wow interesting for sure we gotta get her information

    • @aaronsatterlee365
      @aaronsatterlee365 Рік тому +42

      @@astralenlightenment1743 it started with a V is all I remember. Velma, Verna or something along those lines. She lived in the Park Cities area of Dallas near SMU. She has most certainly already passed on since then due to her age at the time. That woman tuned me in to the false history narritives we are given. She insisted that the Smithsonian Institute was the entity that acts as a gatekeeper for history. She insisted that Dallas specifically had a completely fabricated history. There is a lot of hidden infrastructure in the City place Station on the DART line that can be accessed if you don't mind risking a trespassing ticket.

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Рік тому +23

    The word "Bluff" means to trick or to convince others something is true, when it is not. There are numerous photos of train tracks being excavated throughout our plane. There are trolley cars in the Amazon rainforest, that have been there since at least 1870. The US National Archives have photos of 1870 India, showing a horse pulling a trolley car.

  • @kcjeremiah7262
    @kcjeremiah7262 Рік тому +49

    Grew up in the Kansas City area & still live here. It's awesome you did a video on it. Missouri has the reputation of being the "Cave State" even though I believe Tennessee has more. The largest surplus of cheese in the world(?) is near Springfield deep underground. Plus, you have the sports teams Chiefs, Royals, Kings, Monarchs, an interesting theme. I like to spend my weekends checking out the cities around it. Excelsior Springs is my favorite, but Liberty, Parkville, Weston, Leavenworth (KS), St. Joe, Independence, Blue Springs, etc. So much Moorish style architecture & castles everywhere, still. Just got back from the state capital yesterday in Jefferson City & walked around in the cold rain mesmerizing myself with the architecture there, too. Good work, sir. Love it!

    • @frankstewart8346
      @frankstewart8346 Рік тому +1

      Hello just had a friend of mine move to the north west corner of Missouri was wondering if there’s anything possible to check out around that area. Thank you

    • @kcjeremiah7262
      @kcjeremiah7262 Рік тому +5

      @Frank Stewart St. Joseph probably isn't too far away. Lots of old buildings there. The Missouri theater is a good example of "Moorish" architecture.

    • @raimeyewens7518
      @raimeyewens7518 Рік тому +2

      I live in Blue Springs. What buildings are you talking about? Maybe I’ve never noticed them.

    • @lauracsimon4125
      @lauracsimon4125 Рік тому +1

      Absolutely, how about Lawrence?

    • @mollyg4980
      @mollyg4980 Рік тому

      ​@Frank Stewart maybe Maryville?

  • @billywhyte6693
    @billywhyte6693 Рік тому +28

    Hi Jarid. 6.40 AM here & your research is better for the soul than all the multiple confusions being spread on us by current affairs. Our reality has far more complex event horizons than people can grasp. Even around here = chunks of history are staring us in the face. So so interesting & impossible to detach from your findings. Keep up your findings. Lifting a stone, lifting the veil, opening the mind

  • @stephiis8882
    @stephiis8882 Рік тому +27

    I randomly stumbled upon 1800s Kansas City photos a while ago - and wow! That place seriously went through an insane natural diaaster that clearly shows a buried city. It's quite amazing.

    • @PNC713
      @PNC713 Рік тому +4

      One of the many “great fires” of the late 1800’s.

    • @mollyg4980
      @mollyg4980 Рік тому +1

      Where did you find those photos?

    • @jeffandersen7397
      @jeffandersen7397 8 місяців тому

      randomly stumbled upon...? that's odd, as the narrator of the channel claims these images have been mischievously removed from the public forum.

    • @PSP92262
      @PSP92262 6 місяців тому

      Different ones ...

  • @bluevireo425
    @bluevireo425 Рік тому +19

    The building at 21:30 is astonishing! It just keeps going and going so many bricks and it is ruined at the top! The population must have been huge at one time. Thanks for this post, amazing.

  • @kerylorbsmultidimensional4214
    @kerylorbsmultidimensional4214 Рік тому +31

    Wow, astonishing collection of photos! I live in Montana & it's starting to become evident to me that there are cities under cities all over this state, country & probably realm. The 'mounds' are the homes of the (mostly larger) people that died before us

    • @DAUDYBENYAHUAH
      @DAUDYBENYAHUAH Рік тому

      I was just reading a document from the historical society of Montana that talks about 6 noble cities near Salt Lake city from 1720

    • @brianwebber6996_ROADHUNTER
      @brianwebber6996_ROADHUNTER 11 днів тому

      Just moved to Vaughn, right outside of Great Falls, Montana so my wife could be closer to family... I hate it!! Montana fuckin blows!! Would donate my testicles to be able to move back to the UP of Michigan or Wisconsin!!

  • @tawnierayne3604
    @tawnierayne3604 Рік тому +20

    I just wanted to share a story from my great grandparents. I don't remember exactly when it happened, but Missouri had a bad earthquake and the ground did liquefy on them. People moved away. The damage was so complete they couldn't farm the land and infrastructure was destroyed. They were farmers not masons so they moved to Idaho to farm potatoes.

    • @eliyahsromans9547
      @eliyahsromans9547 11 місяців тому

      1811 is the most well known MO earthquake

    • @ShowMeMo
      @ShowMeMo 10 місяців тому +4

      New Madrid

    • @carsyncruz
      @carsyncruz 7 місяців тому +1

      1812 it’s hidden from history and even hard to search here on UA-cam. There have been earthquakes just about everyday this year so far on the new Madrid.

  • @johnnysmoke652
    @johnnysmoke652 Рік тому +18

    Knocking ‘em out of the ballpark with this one Jarrid. I have searched for these other photos for a minute and you are right they have been scrubbed or paywalled gatekept etc. Thanks for all your thorough research.

  • @charlesgraham9954
    @charlesgraham9954 Рік тому +16

    starfort in the middle of the Mississippi river just south of Saint Louis, 15 square miles big and 10 feet high, a lot of dirt to move with no heavy equipment.

  • @AlphaFlight
    @AlphaFlight Рік тому +28

    Kansas also had at least several natural spring pools, one even in a cave. Lots of bath houses, And 3 of the largest caves that are still used today for storage.

    • @BeckyGard
      @BeckyGard 11 місяців тому +1

      We also hVe storage built into hills

  • @bookofrevelation4924
    @bookofrevelation4924 Рік тому +15

    At first wondered how Kansas City could be significant so far inland.
    Then watching video and looking at map of Kansas city being on a river connected to Mississippi River and set back off that main trade route where there's a good large range to rule over with good growing climate likely made this area quite valuable and wealthy from earliest of days.

  • @tabbiesRred
    @tabbiesRred Рік тому +30

    Thank you Jarid, I feel that you have, bar none, the best most comprehensive photo presentations out there! Thanks for all your hard work, please keep them coming!

  • @cairoglyphs
    @cairoglyphs Рік тому +12

    KC native here! Thanks for the history!

  • @liamsmith6102
    @liamsmith6102 Рік тому +15

    Hey there Jarid. In digging in the Cincinnati Public Library Archives, you can find literature littered with mention of Tumuli and the Monarchy that built them. Even an account of when digging a well outside Cincinnati, 60 feet below was found a tree stump cut at its base, with the axe just nearby. Amazing reading the journals found online!

  • @jonathanbarnes3061
    @jonathanbarnes3061 Рік тому +12

    Love, Kansas City. Thanks for this video

  • @billywhyte6693
    @billywhyte6693 Рік тому +11

    At 10.25 the building and windows looks exactly as what one sees in Glasgow, Liverpool, Edinburgh from 150+, 200+ years ago (or so we believe) with all the complex intricate rail, bridges and tunnels networks. The commerce and commitment to such commerce must have been MASSIVE. Much bigger than we understand from our current way of thinking..... whenever it really happened.....

  • @RikkiBruntmeyer
    @RikkiBruntmeyer Рік тому +7

    I'm from KC. There is actually a big exhibit on this in the basement of the Union Station. A lot of these pictures and more are featured there It details how there was a huge flood on the MO river in 1853 and in the 1870s the did a massive undertaking project, one of the first of its kind, to change the course of the river to give Kansas City that was more usable instead of a flood plain. Big flood happened in 93 and in the early 2000s they moved 5 blocks of historic jazz district down the road in attempt to save it from going into the river. Also, the bridge, there's another one the exact same about 30 mins up the hwy that is finished.

  • @confusingplane663
    @confusingplane663 Рік тому +16

    New Madrid earthquake 1811-1812 tons of 7+ quakes

    • @jonathanbarnes3061
      @jonathanbarnes3061 Рік тому +4

      Remember reading it was so strong the Mississippi River flowed backwards for three days and fried telegraph cables.

  • @APBinVTA
    @APBinVTA Рік тому +8

    I sure hope you have copies of all this, as material like this that [they] may have missed will disappear from said archives and repositories overnight. Love brother, and thanks for all you do....

  • @haroldmcdaniel735
    @haroldmcdaniel735 Рік тому +18

    I live in Kansas City MO. And you have confirmed what I have suspected for some time now. Great video.The trolley system was massive in KCMO and known to be the first electric trolley system in the country. This is a Matrix reset. Tartarians are responsible for the buried architecture...my opinion.

  • @EveRoissy
    @EveRoissy Рік тому +12

    I am LOVING this plethora of new videos we are getting from you! I could watch one EVERY DAY. And, unless Matt of Q/C is right and we live inside a GIANT Mandela Effect in which ANYthing can be manipulated, you have THOROUGHLY proven the 'mudflood', or whatever unrecorded cataclysm destroyed our intentionally hidden past!

  • @Patrick-xd8jv
    @Patrick-xd8jv Рік тому +7

    The Missouri River used to flood all the time. The channel moved back and forth miles at a time

  • @JamieCrain5349
    @JamieCrain5349 Рік тому +10

    Another great vid ❤ thank you 😊

  • @driftwood9807
    @driftwood9807 Рік тому +9

    I have pictures from a book about the 1903 flood of KC, which is also forgotten. Not in any of the museums.

  • @I_am_ka
    @I_am_ka Рік тому +12

    My father came to NYC in the 60's as a teen. He said the underground parts were easily accessible everywhere from subways to church basements. Mostly all locked up now. But he said that there was literally citys on top of older citys, atleast 4 layers beneath today's NYC.

    • @cornelbucur3577
      @cornelbucur3577 Рік тому

      Futurama

    • @astralenlightenment1743
      @astralenlightenment1743 Рік тому

      Is your dad still around?? Can you please find out more?

    • @I_am_ka
      @I_am_ka Рік тому +4

      @@astralenlightenment1743 He told me how the subway layout we use today is the 1st layer. Which is built on top of the older tunnels that are above even older subway tunnels. It just kept going and going deeper. The deeper you go, there's doors that open into buildings like gothic cathedral stone but huge like megalithic stuff. Citys on top if older citys, Literally. But the tunnels are the only way into the older structures. The city blocked many of the deeper access points but alot of ppl know & have seen what I'm talking about. City didn't block every point, like the ones in the old churches if NY. My pops is still alive. Living in Puerto Rico now

    • @I_am_ka
      @I_am_ka Рік тому +6

      @@astralenlightenment1743 He said how one time, exploring under Brooklyn, they found a door that open to a huge paved highway tunnel. Like an expressway! Under Manhattan one door opened to a huge Dome
      that had movie studio equipment, old SOS radios & machines he never seen. Football stadium size dome. Huge! In my research, I found in a book "ForgottenNY" there's a tunnel in long Island that goes through every burrough, then upstate to Buffalo then Chicago down to San Fran. There's literally underground-highways. My pops laughed when I found that info. He actually seen it, under Brooklyn. The old churches still have the best access points. Those link to other churches like webs and are still accessible

    • @bobbyatman273
      @bobbyatman273 Рік тому +2

      This is incredible! I’ve got my own 2 cents, one Russian researcher has a vid of Moscow train system, well he produced very old pictures of tons of stations and guess what? ALL of them used to be “churches” that were demolished in 1920s… they only became churches they used to be before flood electric installations! ALL had metal floors, all had very thick walls with very serious “rebar”, all had metal chains hanging from sealings and get this, all “electricians” wore golden thin chains that were hanging from their belt to the floor - they were GROUNDING themselves!!! And were metal “crowns”! It was all based on collecting static electricity in the atmosphere and transforming it in usable energy! All “star forts” are also built for same purpose but much earlier, they are much more complex! There are no 2 alike and they are all designed using specific frequency of that precise spot! Also, I’ve been to Washington DC few times… wow it’s all covered by hills and old world buildings! Also I have pictures of a tram rails like I’ve never seen before, they did not stick out above the stone layer road, had a third rail in the middle and equally spaced “check board” metal “inserts every 20 or so feet! They are in perfect shape, that tells me that DC also suffered same fate but they just build the hills and forgot about it, but there was a transition period where they still had some of those technologies left and utilised them until the imperialism took over the globe

  • @MariannaKatz17
    @MariannaKatz17 Рік тому +47

    Thank you so much, Jared. My grandparents lived in Kansas City and I spend a lot of time there growing up over the summers. I went to the University of Kansas right out side of Kansas City. My paternal grandparents often talked about the "flood". My grandfather talked about finding stuff in the mud after the flood. He would tell stories about going to the "bottoms" and helping them dig out of the mud. They would come across stuff and if no one claimed it they took it home to their wives. He said that had to demolish a lot of very old buildings and it was "pitiful." I wish I would have paid more attention as a kid. I'm assuming that the flood they spoke about was in 1951. My dad and aunts would not have been born or old enough to remember anything about this flood. Yet, my grandfather talked about it like it was yesterday and it made a huge impact on him. My maternal grandparents owned a dry cleaning business down town and they finally sold their business in the late 1960s because of all of the demolition going on down town. My grandfather said it was hard to do business in such a mess. I always had the impression that KSMO and KCKS was rebuilding or changing. Both of my parents went to Wyandotte High School. That is another rabbit hole to go down. Both parents proudly say that the building was built by the WPA. I've been hard pressed to ever find construction photos of it, my grandparents have no memory of it because neither side of my family lived here at that time. There are a ton of questionable buildings in KCMO. One of them is the Nelson Atkins Art Museum. Now the Country Club Plaza is something I'm unsure about. I've not been there for a very long time since all have passed away. It is a bewildering city.

    • @randygreen6652
      @randygreen6652 Рік тому +17

      I grew up here, never gave it a thought. I've been hooked to Jon Levi for the last 3 years, and just recently moved back here from Colorado.
      We went to union station around Christmas and driving down there for the first time in 12 years was quite an eye opener. There are tons of old world wonders downtown. Definitely worth looking into. Some of the fountains, schools etc.. it's full of mysteries!!. This is the first I've seen it mentioned

    • @SnakeJones09
      @SnakeJones09 Рік тому +5

      You have an obelisk.

    • @bassqueen7134
      @bassqueen7134 Рік тому +13

      I have seen so much here in Missouri that doesn't make sense. I know they either are confused or my strongest theory is that in a starvation survival situation its hard to keep track of history. Who has time to keep track in an apocalypse. I have lost everything I have twice in my life in economy collapse. How can you pass down your history when anything you have gets thrown away and you have no where to go.

    • @OGDooshbagg
      @OGDooshbagg Рік тому +9

      We have an obelisk in Topeka, KS also. No historical records of how it got there or where it came from. Kansas Historical Society said they have no knowledge of it.

    • @Mutual_Paige
      @Mutual_Paige Рік тому +1

      @@OGDooshbagg Where in Topeka?

  • @nickanderton3296
    @nickanderton3296 Рік тому +12

    Thanks Jarid. so much data to take from your research. Lots of sloppy edits by the neutral field similucrum.

  • @svenolsen9420
    @svenolsen9420 Рік тому +8

    Mate, brilliant!keep it coming ....truth shall set us free,thankyou!

  • @amybobamie7366
    @amybobamie7366 Рік тому +3

    27:41 I stood at this location in October of 2022, as I did, I had the distinct feeling that I was standing on TOP of a buried civilization, no joke, been waiting on you to do this city for just this reason. Thank you Jarid,

  • @kalrandom7387
    @kalrandom7387 Рік тому +19

    There used to be a trolly system that went from coast to coast and could be rode for free. Then cars and gas stations were built, all the trolleys were bought up, and decommissioning.
    Thanks to JP Morgan, and Henry Ford.

    • @iBullyDemons
      @iBullyDemons Рік тому +6

      I was shocked to find out there was a trolly system near my house (I live in the middle of nowhere basically)

    • @TimTestifies
      @TimTestifies Рік тому

      No there wasnt.

    • @caleblawrence2743
      @caleblawrence2743 10 місяців тому +1

      Source?

  • @matildamarmaduke1096
    @matildamarmaduke1096 Рік тому +9

    U do such a good job thank you

  • @bluewaterdiva1
    @bluewaterdiva1 Рік тому +7

    Great perspective. Yes, our history is not what we have been told. I'm curious if anyone has been in the below basement level of some of these old buildings to verify windows underground & other floors below. I'm sure there were architects & engineers involved in remodels that could tell some great stories. Perhaps they just filled some of the lower older floors with cement.

  • @pattybecerra5733
    @pattybecerra5733 Рік тому +7

    I took some pictures of construction around Washington DC and found foundation that go 30 feet below the ground lever with no basements ,I wish I could put the pictures up

  • @quapawqwerty1619
    @quapawqwerty1619 Рік тому +9

    Now do Des Moines, IA - the only state capital with gold on five domes. Tartaria everywhere, once one thoroughly follows the building edge of a sidewalk.

    • @eggsalts4243
      @eggsalts4243 Рік тому +4

      Look up the Cherokee state hospital, I’m from Des Moines and know exactly what you’re talking about. We did not build the capital building, there’s Greek/Roman architecture everywhere downtown, look at the governors mansion, same style buildings in Florida and budapest. The extensive underground tunnels I’ve been told run all the way to Woodward, my dad told me that one time he was driving semi’s for a farmer in Woodward and the police knew about ammonia smugglers using the tunnels underneath us but couldn’t do anything about it. I don’t know if it’s true but it’s convincing. Woodward used to have a giant Indian painted on the wall of the building that was next to the old Casey’s there. We have ALOT of old world buildings here still.

  • @timalexander6252
    @timalexander6252 Рік тому +8

    Cheers! Great video! I live in Blue Springs, MO just a little east of KC and Independence. I moved here in 2007 and have seen some strange things while driving around. Now that I have a different worldview, I want to go back and get a second look. The Kansas side of the city is different that the Missouri side. Two cities actually, vastly different.

    • @kcjeremiah7262
      @kcjeremiah7262 Рік тому +2

      I grew up Blue Springs off Argo Road by Pink Hill & 7 and live up north now near Kearney. However, all around there are sooo many caves & bizarre spots & I always had a suspicious intuition about it's history.

  • @awillis2676
    @awillis2676 Рік тому +6

    Thanks so much for all the work you do to bring us these great videos. So many just mind-blowing things, like all the boarded up windows and the crazy amount of wires.

  • @skullasylum33
    @skullasylum33 Рік тому +5

    howdy jarid 😃
    great selection of images!!

  • @michelej9496
    @michelej9496 10 місяців тому +3

    I've heard of people doing renovations on their homes and finding unground cities. I'd be enthralled to see what's buried beneath the structures. Simply fascinating.

  • @Rajamak
    @Rajamak Рік тому +5

    The building that is visible from 15:03 is the double of a building in Glasgow, Scotland. It has been converted into flats and is just on the southside of the river where the Kingston bridge motorway passes by at roof height.

    • @TimTestifies
      @TimTestifies Рік тому +2

      Yea I dont trust any of the photos.

  • @havokthadon4173
    @havokthadon4173 Рік тому +32

    I used to live there! I went to the library and it holds many of the old photos that were taken after the clearance of the mud. Many of the structures were destroyed over time.

    • @driftwood9807
      @driftwood9807 Рік тому +5

      I am in Saint Joseph. Same here. Over time they took down so many beautiful buildings.

    • @jonathanbarnes3061
      @jonathanbarnes3061 Рік тому

      @Driftwood - Much of what was lost was legitimately crushed by necessity,
      asbestos was a fashionable insulator until it's carcinogenic property's were discovered and once the impending public hazard discovered the buildings were by healthy caution. ⚠️

  • @gloriaterry333
    @gloriaterry333 Рік тому +14

    I just want to share a paranormal event that happened while I was watching one of these videos. I like to turn candles on at night and last night I was watching a mud flood video when I heard the candle wick kind of make a weird snapping sound, or. Tackling sound, I looked at the flame 🔥 and it was going crazy whipping back and forth and I don’t know what it means but there was no wind 🌬️ or any type of draft in my bedroom. I wasn’t scared. I ponder many times when I watch these videos what kind of people must they have been? What God did they pray to? What was the moment like when they realized that it was their last day on Earth? What were the first signs which manifested that lead to their demise? What was the first thing they did? Did they hug their kids? Where they all hunkered down? Were they together? Was there a warning? Did they have a regular day? Was it instantly that they were doomed? Were the Gods happy? Or sad? Was there an Arc which served as salvation? How many survivors were left? Was that planned? Were there elite families and or people that were spared? What happened afterwards? What did they eat? Who cared for the sick? Who cared for the animals? I have so many more questions. I can’t help but think that my candle and it’s fame going crazy is a sign of any soul which once left it’s flesh to the mud flood.

    • @TrumpsTheAntichrist666
      @TrumpsTheAntichrist666 Рік тому +6

      🕊️ These are pre flood melted cities of the giants. Concerning the candle I will say this...when God wants to get your attention you will know it but most of the paranormal activity that we see is of the devil. Read your Bible. Follow Jesus. He loves you and it is almost time for redemption. If you want a sign from God pray. Study the Word. Over and over. Study the sun moon and stars. God's message board. "Be wise as a serpent and gentle as a dove."-Jesus. Take care. 🕊️

    • @antiprismatic
      @antiprismatic Рік тому +1

      Great questions I don't think they had a religion recognizable to us these days. I feel like they were a world apart nearly unrecognizable in their beliefs and very efficient and full of human soulfulness.

  • @AlphaFlight
    @AlphaFlight Рік тому +5

    KCMO strange enough has several parks, called lookouts, observation hill, and all these look like a look out built on large walls.

  • @aking032962
    @aking032962 Рік тому +3

    I grew up in Kansas City, MO the Clovis Indians also built mounds and cities in the area. You have to remember that the New Madrid fault line in southern Missouri had a forceful earthquake in around 1803 which made the Mississippi River run backwards for four days. The Missouri River could have also ran backwards with a great amount of sediment and caused devastating flooding . Especially at the turn at the Kaw River in Kansas very near downtown Kansas City, MO. We have a lot of granite under Kansas City, MO which has been tunneled out underneath now there are many caves with industries within them. With all the different types of soil in that area I do believe that flooding could have changed the area. I lived there during several floods and they made a lot of damage and they were not as severe as what could have occurred in the past.

  • @bassqueen7134
    @bassqueen7134 Рік тому +9

    Thank you! One thing I can back up is the burial of our family history. I am a Gibson I have fought hard to find my family line not into the DNA tracking. My grandpa I can track one side all the way back as being on full Norse his name specifically but his maternal side is blank completely. When I ask no one not my grandma who married him or her family want to talk about it. The only answer I get is they all hade dark red skin and hint, hint stop asking. My dad says his father told him he was a native American but not to talk about when my dad asked. No pictures of her can be found anywhere. I am mistaken as Mexican or Native and my children have been cursed out for denying their heritage and one son is even gets invited to the reservation in Dakota all the time to learn his heritage. As someone who lives outside and fishes every bit of Missouri I can get to I find things, structures, artifacts, large megalithic out of place stones. The home my other grandparents family built theirs on in Sni Mills was built on top of a home that was already there because it had a preexisting well. The farm I walked every inch of the 80acres and the idea that it was only settled in the 1800's never made sense to me. The things I found and the things my grandpa told me he found seemed so much older. The one that I found that tripped everyone out was a Spanish military metal in the middle of a freshly plowed field. All my grandpa told me was that it shouldn't be here and its was old.

    • @hildea.e3319
      @hildea.e3319 Рік тому +6

      I living Norway but have parts being totally denied in the family. My grandmother was so scared because she had lived trough how children was taken from their loving but nomade parents. The kids were slave worked, shoe less year around and sleeping in the barn, while the farmers kids were well dressen, fed and closed and going to school. They were called "Tater", and I wonder if that side of my heritage could be migrantes from Tartaria. They were Hunted down, and the native Sami-people were sent to "residentiel"schools for the same reason as for the Canadian and American, but the catholicks never got a hold on Norway, like the Romans never came futher North than Scotland. Even though the culture and language destruction were the same reason and the kids had a aweful time, we still don't have the masse graves and the things following that kind of evilness.

    • @bassqueen7134
      @bassqueen7134 Рік тому +2

      @@hildea.e3319 some of my children have the fold over the eye so extreme it calls attention and gets questions I can't answer. Some are darker skinned with dark blonde hair and my girls are as porcelain with the folds and amber eyes. The questions I have I know that will never be answered. I understand completely.

  • @randomxaos
    @randomxaos Рік тому +7

    Love your channel. You're a true researcher

  • @tartariabritannica
    @tartariabritannica Рік тому +2

    Great work and amazing collection of images! Fantastic research !!

  • @tarajackson349
    @tarajackson349 Рік тому +4

    Oh also im from kcmo. North of downtown. The entire area is a giant honeycomb underneath our feet. No one knows how vast. No normies at least. Downtown there are still parts of roads that are brink and you do see remenents. Plus along the river there have been giant bones found in mounds and we have an oddfellows home....these pictures are amazing! I love k c and that side these pictures show are great examples. Kcmo cuts through that" hill" showed there all the way through. It must of been huge

  • @OFF-GRIDPhenohunt
    @OFF-GRIDPhenohunt Рік тому +6

    Bro. your video's are getting better and better! stay lit

  • @lauracsimon4125
    @lauracsimon4125 Рік тому +2

    Excellent work Jarid, thank you!!

  • @queenelcene638
    @queenelcene638 Рік тому +9

    ThankYou ☺️ ❤️

  • @ernielamadeleine-bs1je
    @ernielamadeleine-bs1je Рік тому +6

    Hey, just found you! Great job! Hey, how about the new Madrid earthquake in 1811-1812 causing all this mud? They say there were between 6000 to 10000 quakes. Will be watching more videos of yours! Thanks again!

  • @FullofWonderChannel
    @FullofWonderChannel Рік тому +6

    Subtropolis is the largest underground storage facility on the planet and its located under Kansas City mo. There are old entrances to under caves In Roland park. All out lining towns and cities have an underground in their history. Weston MO has an underground bar in the tunnel system you can still go to today.

  • @cathyedwards3861
    @cathyedwards3861 Рік тому +1

    I live in Kansas City just over a year and I have been noticing this!!! OMG thank you for doing this work!!

  • @johnstopyracus5674
    @johnstopyracus5674 Рік тому +10

    makes me wonder about the origin of the saying " finders keepers"

  • @charlesgraham9954
    @charlesgraham9954 Рік тому +8

    there is a pyramid in Wyoming with megalithic blocks. i mean how did "we" build that with zero heavy equipment? i do believe people were building in America pre-1492. Indians say they didn't build them, and they have always been here.

    • @freemindg4886
      @freemindg4886 Рік тому +1

      Nile valley civilization had been traveling and building here since the beginning before Indians even existed. That’s how that kind of architecture got here. The Mayans and all other “ancient” peoples of America worshipped those Africans like Gods because they literally taught them everything they knew. That’s why a certain kind of people later on went on quests to destroy all evidence of this ever happening. The greatest trick they ever played was deceiving us and dividing us. The world was better when everyone worked together. But of course someone had to get jealous because they were the new kid on the block that felt inferior.

  • @johnje4285
    @johnje4285 Рік тому +10

    I believe that in the USA and in England there was a huge cataclysm between the 1700s and 1800s . This changed the world first backwards and then advanced quickly.

    • @peterparker9286
      @peterparker9286 Рік тому +5

      It is said that we are on the sixth go around for mankind. Some say around 1870 was the last re Set.

    • @johnje4285
      @johnje4285 Рік тому +2

      @@peterparker9286 That makes a lot of sense. I know from my own family history that huge and advantageous things occurred around that time.

    • @peterparker9286
      @peterparker9286 Рік тому +3

      @@johnje4285 Yes You see it. The Rapid Advancement in technology amongst other things.. Thousands of years in the past to the last few hundred years.. Kaboom...

    • @cornelbucur3577
      @cornelbucur3577 Рік тому

      ​@Peter Parker yup facts. The eyes are useless if the mind is blind

    • @TimTestifies
      @TimTestifies Рік тому +1

      nope. What changed things was the protestant reformation and knowledge not being censored anymore. Freedom. Patents. All of a sudden knowledge and invention could be drawn from the entire population because people were motivated to invent. They were free. You guys need to study all of history. Stop wishing what seems cool.

  • @beetroot48
    @beetroot48 Рік тому +2

    Awesome video. You show what we need to question, and you ask the right questions. I moved to a small town in Oregon and really question my surroundings.

  • @SnoodleTortleTribe
    @SnoodleTortleTribe Рік тому +4

    Do you should come to Joplin Missouri, it's pretty much the heart of the country, used to be the Metropolis of the Ozarks....
    Brothers from building downtown at a fallout shelter sign on the back but when you get inside and you go down in the basement but you literally got to break through a wall to get into where these alleged fallout shelters are but bro they look like ovens! And we follow the damn hallway between the ovens that goes all the way down to a room with one of those metal tables on it that you basically put the body on and cut it up and it across from that it's a weird-ass radiator off of the walls like a long coil.
    So I got an 1833 Webb City which is basically allegedly like a subdivision or whatnot of Joplin, but in all honesty is where the James Webb telescope came from. But the second time I read through the newspaper graphic review book I noticed an article about the slang that the teenage kids were using those days, and a lemon squeezer was a subway car, and a dupli-ducat was a Subway ticket.
    It took the second read through for me to recognize it and realize I want the world would they have slang terms for something that wasn't allegedly here? but as soon as I found that stuff and busted that wide-open now I find people all over the place that admit that there was subways running here, in Joplin Missouri, bro I need help!
    During nowhere else to go besides like the bricked-up windows underground, but in that place where does avanzar or fallout shelters or whatever the hell they are... Madrina waiting into them from what's available at the moment, and in addition to that there's a spot where the concrete floor basically gives and you can feel like giving him like especially when somebody else's walking and you're on it like you can definitely feel that it's hollow underneath there. And it's right next door to a church that allegedly goes down five stories, and has the river that had been diverted underground running through the subway tunnels that pass beneath the church...

  • @aljawisa
    @aljawisa Рік тому +8

    So Louise & Clark were just like the 12 spies who spied out the promised land only to tell the founding fathers of the previous civilization that had existed before them. I'm starting to get the impression that the natives were inheritors and themselves could not reproduce these ancient structures. It seems like this stuff was produced by a mixture of ethnicities. Maybe more than mud floods wiped these people out. Maybe some outside force would hunt down those who tried to resettle theses cities, while those who didn't were forced to revert to a primative existance. Maybe the founding fathers cut deals with this outside force, to make sure the next society would not advance so far. Maybe now that mankind is at the next big leap, these forces have decided to knock man down again, killing most of us, and forcing the remainder to now live a primative existance.

  • @lahart2003
    @lahart2003 Рік тому +1

    It's so compelling!! Keep them coming!!! ❤❤❤🎉

  • @coppercoloredlibra
    @coppercoloredlibra Рік тому +5

    A lot of the old buildings are still standing and homes been looking many abandon, made out of solid bricks, and they all have basements. A lot of doors was underground leading to no where or was walled up. They are rebuilding most of those old homes back up it’s like they wait for a certain time and rebuild. The plaza looks Spanish we also have very old fountains that’s one thing we are known for. It was a time when POC couldn’t go past a certain street even with us owning most the wealth at one point before 1920. We had our own hospital and business a very rich history. You can clearly tell what was built in the last 200 year compared to before. I’ve also questioned it but was told the material cost to much to build solid structure like they had and I also wonder about air becomes most homes don’t have central air and with the homes because being so big with so many room and levels how did they stay cool.

  • @timsayer1492
    @timsayer1492 Рік тому +3

    I keep thinking.? The " French and Indian Wars" were a bigger deal than we were told. And the Louisiana " purchase" never made sense

    • @Adam-qz3wh
      @Adam-qz3wh 4 місяці тому

      You do not want to go down that hole, lol. The name "French and Indian wars" is misleading enough.

  • @ernestogramsci1656
    @ernestogramsci1656 7 місяців тому +1

    Love your work,keep it up.

  • @ReallyRenee852
    @ReallyRenee852 Рік тому +6

    Watching this and other videos is actually depressing because the history they give us in the United States of America, and across the world is a lie. Even the term mounds is misleading. I don't know about you, but I don't like being lied to. Sites like the Mississippi river, and state of Utah are particularly interesting. But could there be more old (not ancient) world history actually under each of our feet?

  • @ZalMoxis
    @ZalMoxis Рік тому +6

    Oh no it's all made of plasterboard by steam shovel, steam crane and horse and buggy......

  • @michaelrollins4916
    @michaelrollins4916 Рік тому +1

    Good work as always.keep on keeping on

  • @theecherokeerose
    @theecherokeerose Рік тому +4

    I'm from Kansas City, and this excavation is obviously pre civil war! There have been major floods concerning the Missouri and Kaw River, but 1844 was absolutely the biggest to be found in the records. The pictures clearly look like massive mud slides which would mean that an unfathomable torrent of water must have come through. Just rain? I don't think so. Was there an earthquake on the scale of the 1811 Madrid Fault quake that's been erased from history - a quake of which people reported huge columns of water shooting up out of the ground? I don't think the official story concerning why this degree of excavation occurred is believable either. They are alleging that it occurred in the 1860s in order to facilitate easier paths to the river district. My god that's a lot of dirt to move by shovel, horse, and cart! The electrical infrastructure for that time is also interesting. Their story is that some Catholic priest with tremendous knowledge in engineering, excavation, and stone cutting launched the plan to cut through the hills with Irish Immigrants?

    • @stephaniebyard3958
      @stephaniebyard3958 8 місяців тому +1

      That would be Father Donnelly. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Donnelly

  • @Bandwithbrass
    @Bandwithbrass Рік тому +3

    Was just finishing up the video and thought about St. Louis!! They got a bunch more too

  • @user-mg6ml6uf9w
    @user-mg6ml6uf9w 7 місяців тому +1

    Amazing work and amazing content. Very interested in this topic and your channel along with a few other channels are educating myself and others to a diffrent story thats not taught to us. I am open minded and motivated to dig and scratch my way to truths not told to us

  • @p0c0q25
    @p0c0q25 Рік тому +2

    This video sparked a thought about sinkholes.

  • @LegendofJeffJCS
    @LegendofJeffJCS Рік тому +2

    Being from KC this is facinating( as well as infuriating) Ive never seen anything like this in our history. Thank you. We do have a recent history of devastating floods, so I can only imagine how many occurred in the further past.

  • @NorAnon
    @NorAnon Рік тому +4

    Hello from Maine! 🤓
    I’m not a builder, but these photos of what looks like the actual ‘build’, doesn’t make sense. (15:45).
    Generally, the frame is built, THEN the roof, then the exterior, then the interior.
    In that picture, they are putting on the roof last? There are architectural details that would go on last, with the rendering over the brick, before the paint, but AFTER the roof…lol
    This picture looks like a demolition.
    Look at the size of those beams!😍
    You can see the building looks to be already painted, but the roof isn’t complete?
    Another false narrative ‘they’ give us, expecting we won’t figure it out….
    Great pictures! Thanks!

  • @saralopez4338
    @saralopez4338 Рік тому +5

    i am born raised in kansas city and its about kcmo and kck and surrounding areas. its really spread out massive and i have always questioned ho it all got here and i will give you a couple of things to look up on kck side look up mt marty and arch it is so out of place and odd but also i grew up in a area called armourdale and they say its called that because armour meats stared there but i think it was called that because it was more also because most of the old brick houses there was and tore down in the sixties they said to make it a industrial town but nothing ever came of it and some of the streets had become taken over by the elements and also i remember being a young kid seeing a few big sink holes by the river that never got talked about that looked to me like another town with some buildings that looked like old kcmo and is by the river and there is so much about this city that the story does not match up

  • @oneflyinggirl
    @oneflyinggirl Рік тому

    Awesome info!

  • @PYTHAGORAS101
    @PYTHAGORAS101 Рік тому +2

    This is the exact same story as in every city in world. In all cities there was a mud flood that wiped out everyone in every city. It was only the fine architecture that remained but was partly buried.

  • @carterlane3039
    @carterlane3039 11 місяців тому

    Good work dude!

  • @dearsuester
    @dearsuester Рік тому +5

    I completely agree with your theory plus, I think the reason the native Indians did not go and live in these remnants and buried advanced building structures is because, the native Indians have great respect for the dead and realised that these buildings would be tombs. But the Europens had no morals ir ethics and came and re purposed/built on top of the tragic ruins. Although the people who perished in these sunami mud floods would be unrecognisable, the native Indians spiritualists and wise knew this instinctively. Love your chanel

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 Рік тому +2

      the tomb raiders were after the star forts on the map of the 'New world' no mystery there.

  • @phucknorris311
    @phucknorris311 Рік тому +5

    Have you looked into underground KC at all? The Subtropolis… would love to see if you could make any connections.

  • @randygreen6652
    @randygreen6652 Рік тому +3

    My hometown. This should be interesting

  • @jeancaissie9281
    @jeancaissie9281 Рік тому +3

    The phoenix episode in 1902 caused he great mud-floods.. the phoenix phenomenon comes every 138 years..

  • @4tounces
    @4tounces Рік тому +3

    Hey Jarid, where are these photos sourced from? AI photos are going to become a real problem in this community. Some of these are undoubtedly real, but others are so blurry and sketchy that they could pass as “AI generated.”

  • @angelsoulnme
    @angelsoulnme Рік тому

    Freaking amazing JB!!

  • @tarajackson349
    @tarajackson349 Рік тому

    So interesting how your research syncs up with kcmo Gematria currently...great content. New fan👍

  • @shaun7125
    @shaun7125 Рік тому +10

    How do I know that these aren't A.I. generated photos? I can't tell the difference anymore and it's screwing with my reality.

    • @jonathanbarnes3061
      @jonathanbarnes3061 Рік тому

      Verify, Verify Verify!
      Incredibly rich history and much is unknown.

    • @scw2cool
      @scw2cool Рік тому +1

      Pretty much everything in books and taught us a lie of some form. We have no idea, when we are, where we are, or how we got here. We just know if it was taught, it was probably a lie.

  • @Bandwithbrass
    @Bandwithbrass Рік тому +2

    OK!!! I'm giving this to some of my natives around here... MY MAN!

  • @KevinFreist
    @KevinFreist Рік тому +3

    Thank you Jarid. amazing pics. i have never seen these before. Cape Gerardo is a strange place in Mo. too. no real explanation from mainstream historical stewards. ( i call their take " the hysterical record" )one must have eyes to see and a balanced mind to to get this . most folks are ketchup and hot dog peoplejust led by their genitals and taste buds and could care less who made their ketchup much less their capitol building. good work Jarid ! seriously! good work!your videos are more valuable than an entire 4 years in a history class in a public school. doing a land patent search for my property in fla and found some anomolies here too. holes in the record and no names or time frame for road infrastructure here around my place.

  • @HowardBeale08
    @HowardBeale08 Рік тому +8

    hey mate I like much of your content. This one is very confusing to me as you're talking about 'stuff' but the images don't match what youre talking about. It's very confusing for the viewer. To be more convincing as a story teller and with topics like 'mudfloods' or what ever, it's important to correlate the images with your words. Your subscriber rate will rocket up if you can do this. Also as I'm on the fence about whether there was a mudflood cataclysm whatever none of the images here convince me either way. These shots are distinctive to this location only. You mention mudflood like it's widely understood as truth... is there any content or channel you can point me to which is convincing that there was a flood or 'mudflood'?nThanks.

  • @wendym5137
    @wendym5137 Рік тому

    This Is truly amazing fantastic pics so happy found this channel keep spreading the truth thank you

  • @yuckent.2268
    @yuckent.2268 Рік тому +1

    🐢🏝️ great work

  • @muneyjodye
    @muneyjodye Рік тому +1

    This video is so dope. I live 3 hours outside of KC, MO. Please post more videos

  • @rebelbear428
    @rebelbear428 Рік тому +7

    Under KC is completely hollow. It’s called Downtown Underground. Just go down 31st past SW traffickway

  • @allthesun7114
    @allthesun7114 Рік тому +9

    😎👍

  • @mikc3305
    @mikc3305 8 місяців тому

    Well done!

  • @Infotokev
    @Infotokev 4 місяці тому +1

    At some point, George Washington's great grandfather, along with a relative of Harry S Truman, lead a charge, in cooperation with the Iroquois Confederacy, on the Susquehannock "giants". That would be a really great topic also. Love you work and thank you.

  • @markhedquist9597
    @markhedquist9597 Рік тому +1

    Hey, cool. I'm glad you did this one on my home town. I've noticed plenty of buildings with partially buried first floors. This video makes me want to go exploring more.
    About the mound builders: I guess the mounds are forbidden from being excavated because they are "sacred burial mounds"? Or are they ancient, buried structures that were buried to hide the history of the original people?. A la Gobekli Tepi.

  • @moosefarmusab5924
    @moosefarmusab5924 Рік тому

    Thank you! Wow! Just wow!

  • @sharyno
    @sharyno Рік тому +2

    Love your work! Just up the Missouri River in Sioux City Iowa I've often wondered the same thing...hmmm...also in that area are the "Loess Hills" supposedly native ONLY to this area anywhere. I've always questioned this. Might be worth looking into. Thanks 😎

  • @marilynnjacobsen1077
    @marilynnjacobsen1077 Рік тому +1

    Visiting KC years age I was amazed at all the water fountains that are very ornate and seemed to look more like old world European.

  • @thundercatnation
    @thundercatnation Рік тому +4

    There’s a huge mound of dirt close to 40 or 50 foot tall you can still see and I’ve always wondered about it until I came across this video. At 210 Highway and 435 go west on 210 and the huge mound of dirt is on the north side you literally can’t miss it.

    • @hunterwhitner6998
      @hunterwhitner6998 Рік тому +5

      Considered the same thing passing and going to work. Prob the same pyramid mound builders in ancient Cahokia, who were possibly Phoenician ancestors, same as with Jekyll Island. Strange plot holes in "Mississippian" culture.

    • @chrisgerardy2877
      @chrisgerardy2877 Рік тому +2

      I know exactly where you are talking about. I used to live in Northtown and would pass it on my way to work on Front Street. Always thought it was odd too. Out of place.

    • @1Autostrada
      @1Autostrada Рік тому +1

      Yes! I-70 where I-35 meet on the northwest side of the downtown loop, if you are approaching downtown KCMO coming from the Kansas side, you see these same or similar cliffs. You literally see the city sitting on top of raised sections of earth, or mounds as this video put it.