I live right outside of the city of St. Paul. I’ve been to all of these locations. A walking tour of St. Paul in the summer is incredible. I recommend doing an exploration of the caves down by the river.
@@shakejunt3hunna I have spent a lot of time in those caves too growing up... the milk truck cave, stairway to heaven and others. The underground storm drains off the river lead to some strange underground old-world looking tunnels as well.
I grew up in St. Paul. I remember taking the bus with my grandmother in the 1950's and how amazed I was at the buildings downtown. Even the apartment buildings had ornate decorations on the windows and the top. Unfortunately,many of the beautiful old buildings were torn down. The old museum was gorgeous. Now modernized and much of it's beauty removed. There is such a treasure trove of old world buildings here in the frigid north. Thank you for showing these wonders of my childhood.
The underground storm drains off the river lead to some strange underground old-world looking tunnels as well. Spent lots of time in them and the brickyard caves as a kid.
I think they're might be something too this but a couple clides dales for 2000lb brick if marble and 7 years isn't that crazy for St. Paul Cathedral. It's like 18 bricks 20 something high all uniform size. Yup right behind the Wabash street cave is the Fema emergency service building 100 feet away.
I went to school in the inner city if St Paul. I was always amazed by the old architecture, even some of the bridges. They now destroyed what was known as 7 corners on West 7th Street. Then, many of the houses in Summit Avenue seem so much older and a different build than houses in St Paul suburbs. Ya, I noticed all of this even as a kid.
i went there when i went to school in roseville. i looked at my camera after i took a picture from outside and there was a BEAM of light coming out the window going directly into a cloud. on a cold winter day too. wasnt expecting that cuz i didnt see it when i took the pic
Considering that every major and minor city in the land in the 1800's was building bridges canals dams and incredible cathedrals capitols and courthouses it's amazing that such small populations could keep up with the demand for the highest quality building materials required to perform that much work. Everywhere at the same time. With horses and wagons and maybe a train. Gentleman we're being lied to!
Massive. That whole section, St. Paul hotel is amazing. Landmark center. Now that I think about it everything is connected from the ordway to the Excel center. That’s a whole block.
I lived for several years right downtown there. Owned a condo on the 29th floor of a building right on the corner of 10th and Minnesota. I could see the capitol building from the balcony. Good times.
Is that tall figure in the County Courthouse a depiction of a Giant 😱 Well, I guess that IS why they're called Giants after all.......... Thank you for yet another absolutely AMAZING presentation. 🎉❤🎉❤🎉
That courthouse is called Ramsey? Isn't that the name of an Ancient Egyptian God? I'm new to all this Old World, Mud Flood, Tartaria, and while it's a little overwhelming for such a newbie like myself, it's also absolutely amazing and mind-blowing. I am so very grateful to have found this channel that is helping me to open my eyes and mind to truly SEE. Thank you ✨️🙏✨️
I remember going on a field trip to the capitol in 2nd grade. My young mind was in complete awe. They used to have an event there called The Taste of MN. They would let off the 4th of July fireworks right behind the building. Beautiful memories.
I went to school at St. Matthews and the lay out is "off" to say the least, the gym is in the basement below ground level and under the basement(gym) is an old bowling alley and under the bowling alley is a bomb shelter, so it goes really deep. Also the school looks dug out the way the parking lot sits and also they had a fire in the church that sits adjacent to the school in the early 1900s that burnt down the original building of the church. if you went and looked at the building all the way around You'd totally see it was dug out and the bottom window placement is off. This is on the city's West Side which has numerous buildings like this there's also a building between George street and Robie that's a church and if you go in the Robie side you will see how the back brick work looks dug out and even had dirt-stained brick up until last year when they painted it. lots of old world buildings in my neighborhood and also lots of caves and tunnel networks. just look at the bluffs in Saint Paul the sand stone is intact and on the top of that is like a 9 to 13 feet of cracked up jagged rocks and debris that would make sense if there was a mud flood.
Keep em coming! 😊 I spent a lot of time in St Paul! Then up to Bayfield Wisconsin! You are making it all so much more exhilarating than when I lived there! 🙏 💜🌺💜🌺💜🌺💜🌺💜
I grew up and still live in the Twin Cities. You should do a video on Minneapolis. Lots of interesting old buildings there too. I enjoy your content 👍🙂
the last image of the library isn't inside the James J. Hill house. It's the James J. Hill Reference Library that was located on a wing of the St. Paul Public Library building, corner of 4th St. W. and Market St., downtown St. Paul. It closed in 2019.
If they could build this artfully , the they wouldn't be destroying the competition 😊 I've seen with my eyes the paper mache boxes slapped together now in the land of space exploring 😂
(At 2min 20 seconds) being from the area, the image of the river has an island, I fish there in the summer.. there are several highly peculiar areas of interest on both sides of the river. And the cathedral seems to just loom over the entire downtown, gives me chills at night.
Thanks so much! We always take out of town visitors to the James J. Hill House. Everyone always likes the tour. My son had his prom last year at the Landmark Center. I don't think kids appreciate it now. I know I didn't until I was older.
I can’t believe I’ve not been to the James J Hill house since grade school! I’m definitely making a point to get there in next few weeks- thanks for commenting, because I’m following through, now…
Speechless after viewing Minnesota State Capital. Got to dig into the star jon levi and you fly. Art deco guardian giants are all around cleveland, too. Maybe being in center of the North America it was the capital of the old land. Love your work. Thanks.
You’d be the best trip /globe trekking buddy on the planet! Thanks for stirring a sense of wonder /imagination up again. I’m stunned I live in this state, and yet I’m basically unfamiliar with grand landmarks and history.
It only gets stranger the more we examine it. Did you know they built a giant monument to Arminius in New Ulm, MN? It reflects the "German" ancestry of many Minnesotans...... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Heights_Monument
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Iv’e not seen it, but will! I’m still slightly stunned the generic and brief Google paragraph omits all data /stats on the current stone courthouse in Mora. It gives construction dates on the original (wooden) edifice, says when it was built and then eventually burned down, but to completely skip over pertinent details on the one standing now? That tickled the hairs on the back of neck the other night, especially thanks to your content pointing out oddities + inconsistencies (that should be obvious, but aren’t!)
I love the way they say that our forbearers were so small and short.. but when I see door ways that are ten feet tall with a generic window vent jammed in there..and ceiling that are 18 feet to 40 in some of the larger structures like central stations.. I have to smile to myself.. knowing better and more than most people.
You know design choices aren’t always for function right? For all the “large doorways” you see here, you can easily find examples of doorways of normal height in like 99% of other buildings lol
Thats awesome, I'm doing research on the Locks of the Ohio river, they say they were started on in the 1830's but I have maps prior to that already showing the cut canal through the land, 8 locks ports & up to 20 boat/barge slips. I also found a picture of the Canal being built with a crew of 6, a horse & cart & timber levers, but in the background you can see that the cut blocks have been pushed forward into the canal (like a mudslide would do). Just funny coincidence about the Locks.
Wow 😮 I’m absolutely loving your videos and I’m thoroughly enjoying the ‘history’ that I’m learning about as well I know you’ve mentioned you’ll be covering Australia and I can’t wait for your take on it all-so much of it just leaves me scratching my head lol ❤ from Australia The girls from Tartarian Truthers YT are my main go to for Australian focused research and videos, there’s not too many alternative researchers that I’m away of covering Australia so if you know of more feel free to let me know Thanks mate!
Another great one Lucius 😘 you mentioned the long winter months and it reminds me just how much the weather can slow down modern construction light and love always 😘
St Paul City Hall @15:24 has had a lot of point-up done to the morter work. Far more than a building that new should have. The Vision of Peace is the statue. Did anyone else notice the similarities with the Mayan/Aztec carvings and drawings? Look close at the face. In the Minneapolis Municipal Center theres a statue called The Father of Waters, and has an alligator. Ill bet everything that Its Sobek. Egyptian god of the Nile(Great River), now on the Missi Ippi (Great River in Iroquois). Such a coincidence. Im beginning to believe in those.😅
@@djfundraiser9710 I'm positive it is. Upper Khemet which the Greeks called Egypt was along the Mississippi. There's too much proof. I've got some old maps that put Babylon on what we call the Nile today. Fra Melro map is the main one to look at.
12:00 the dome has interesting acustic properties. I remember learning about it in a feild trip, i was in maybe 2nd grade and i can't properly describe it with out a google search.
Craftsmen running all over the nation and yet most of the homes shown to us (that average people lived in)weren't nearly as grand? Hmmm...something isn't adding up. To go back in time for a moment and see firsthand the structures before demolition, to uncover the truth buried under (hint, hint) the lies would be grand. Great exploration per usual. Thank you.
Great video here, as are all of your posted videos. Albany New York has some breathtaking architecture worthy of a visit;) Thanks for your time and effort💪
I have been building high rises since 1998 in NYC and i assure you those pictures are bogus. You can ask me any questions if you need perspective from a structural Ironworker. I would love to help ya out if you want.
Great video , I live in the area and feeling inspired ! I think I’m going to head down today to St. Paul and take some photos. You are tight there are so many more buildings that are genuine old world. Ie. Union Depot and the downtown St. Paul Library to name a few.
yesssss.. absolutely.... proly indianapolis... cuz in the narrative now they say it is a central hub for the country. and when i was in indiana, i did sense there was something more tartarian about it than other states ive been too. the churches were on every street corner almost. the brick was still glittering cuz it was so darn smooth and so darn flawless that it was like a smooth glass sparkly surface . something very eerie about the midwest for sure.
The only thing I knew about St Paul was that for the longest time it was the "Friendliest Gangster Town" before, during, and a little after the prohibition days lol... So long as you paid the officials (plus police of course), and did not mess with any "prestigious citizens", you could literally get away with anything. This is where the story of the Barker & Karpis gang started, if anyone is familiar with the names of "Ma" Barker or "Creepy" Alvin Karpis..
All these magnificent buildings and no photographs, wasn’t the camera invented in 1816. I just find it very strange they can take a photo of billy the kid but can’t find ten minutes to photograph these incredible structures being built, maybe it’s just me , 😊
At 13:46 The Progress of the State. Interesting name for a gilded statue. Id paraphrase this next bit, if the quote wasn't so fun: "The underlying armature is steel covered in copper. The exterior copper surface is gilded in 23 karat gold leaf and requires re-gilding approximately every 20 years." That's ok, it's not much gold. "Five pounds of tissue-thin, twenty-three-and-one-half-karat gold leaf applied over the copper gives the artwork its golden patina." Remember I quoted, so it's true. Side note: the women are Industry and Agriculture, the guy is Minnesota himself, and there are pine-cones in the wheels.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Easiest way to cover up the pagan god it actually is. BTW, early on in the video that Star on the floor is a Star of Ishtar. I forgot to add that earlier. But I'm guessing you know that.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 She got around for centuries. Although I've been digging a bit and 1) Minnesota man is most likely Helios. He rides across the sky on a chariot pulled by 4 horses, usually carries a simple staff, and as the giver of life would have the cornucopia of food. 2) That symbol could also be related to Helios/Ra/Sol Invictus. As the later 2 similar star-like symbols have been used. It is said that whole cities were built just for the sun god.
When I saw the photo of the “confederate flags” my first thought was, “Why did they have shredded meat on a pole?” I had to make the picture larger. 😂 We are not capable of creating the large statue (the man with no shirt) today. Anyways, thanks for the video.
It is really strange because normally captured unit colors are treated with respect. Unless they really broke down that much after a few short decades and you are welcome!
Never been in the US but for all the European Cathedrals I have seen, none of them can possibly be build with spending millions. If we even are able to build such wonders a Billion Euro will not nearly be enough. nowadays. ... I did visit one in Lyon, France, and wondered how they have been able to transport all materials needed to the top of a mountain on a road that is nearly wide enough for a small truck and stairs cut out of the rock. The interior is so amazingly detailed that it will take weeks to have a good look. And that is only the public space
The mighty Euro, the superpower counterpart currency of the Dollar.:) It would be interesting to see such an estimate with many of the main currencies.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 My brain is so giddy! 😊 Brilliant presentation! Previously unknown information... don't know how you do it. 🤷🏼♀️ But you make it look so easy.
Monolithic buildings like this were so much easier to build back then. No TV or internet distractions. People worked harder (not smarter), and they used donkeys and wagons back then, and sometimes had to use hand held tools which made is easier too… I attended the St. Paul cathedral as a child growing up. I was there this year walking around the church during a youth choir concert. I found a room with an incredible doorway entrance with a table blocking it. At that point, one of the church’s security guys kicked me out!!!!
While viewing this tonight, I used Google to inquire on a majestic, stunning building I happened across driving through Mora, Minnesota one day. An immensely mind blowing stone structure in a small, rural town caught me off guard, I pulled over to snap pictures in disbelief. Google provides a small paragraph on this Kanabec County Courthouse, built in 1883 and “burned down in March of 1894. The current courthouse was added to National Register of Historical Places in 1977.” I’m scratching my head. Why are details on the current (grand, sprawling stone) building omitted?
Usually because it is not so well-documented as we are supposed to believe. Even this more recent lovely art-deco building in the middle of Rochester, MN that is surrounded by lovely glass buildings now and hidden. Look up interior photos of this beauty and try thinking it makes any sense.... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plummer_Building
I’ve been pondering your content/material for 2 months now, (when quiet opportunities arise) because your questions/presentations/examples have been nagging at the back of my head for what feels like decades. Only I can’t pinpoint words to explain the gravity (of it all, as a whole) as you eloquently can on YT. I do know for certain a fundamentally weighty and major shift occurred. Whether current architecture and general practice originates from a collective conscious (valuing immediate gratification: cheap, easy and disposable) or is something else entirely, IDK. But if we’re in the midst of a definitive, radical shift, lacking imagination and a connection with nature , it’s scary that it’s so subtle and slippery; and goes unnoticed by the majority.
Some family members say the logistics and material for customizing beautiful structures today are too tedious and expensive, and that’s why neighborhood churches going up today resemble plain ‘ol airplane hangars, but yet in the 1800’s official places / buildings weren’t written off as: too laborious, forget it! That’s mystifying on so many levels….
Im a flooring guy the flatness if the floors is impressive . Even with leveling clips its necer always that flat . Stone and tile, marble work . In particularly .
I would point out that when the US joined World War I there was no Federal Reserve and the Government had very limited ability to raise money via taxes. In order to equip the US Army the US Government needed a big loan from a group of banks. The Government was not considered a good credit risk due to its limited income. James J. Hill was one of three wealthy Americans who pledged their personal wealth as collateral for the Government.
Was it an 8 pt star similar to the GOT star maybe? I'm not as up to speed with all of his videos, as I am others. I'm gonna have to commit to a binge watch I suppose.
****MUST READ**** I can't helpy self , its your questions ..the same i asked my self at first.. i must share clues with you as you are sooo very close to realizing a massive section of our true history.. your right some of these almost look like sky scrapers.. yet if you had your own personsal kingdom? You would put passion into it as it represents you.. you would decorate it with memorials..also ,do you remember what makes a successful kingdom? Well,besides the spiraled staircases .did you know the elevator shaft was invented before the idea of a elevator ?(BIG CLUE)when they say founded. It's not in the sense of finding(although that true) it's in the sense of foundries. ....your welcome brother...
😂 the masters that built these structures are going to have to come back and tell us about how they manifested these structures into reality. Building them really wasn't an option. 😊
It doesn't matter when they were built, we can't build this today. From the Parthenon in 447 BC to 1929 today, they don't explain how. BC means Before Construction.😂😂😂
i cant help but wonder why the stains would leave these buildings standing and dust the others. in monument valley they worked over time on melting almost impossible to melt structures. like they took multiple passes at it. so.. i dont know. i look at these structures and i dont hear that sweet song in my mind from the pre melt world calling out to me. i get this emprical dread feeling. life has a way of tossing in plot twists. my hunch is telling me that perhaps these bulding survived because they were in part responsible for the melt or used as an infrastructure component to facilitate the war on man. im referring to the intact architecture that we still have today.
I did inflation maths on Alaska Yukon expo, now University Washington. 2016 cost, $1.00 a sq ft. Los Angeles Sofi stadium was my comparison, $3,500 a sq ft. So we'd get to a trillion real quick, if we're talking todays reality😊
Roofers on balloons! Metalworkers on trapezes… gift wrappers not necessary. Creator made Tartaria. No one has built like that Lucious not before(?) nor after. The buildings were GIFTED, I rest my perpetual case.
Your videos keep getting better, not gonna lie.(love seeing other countries)🗿🍷 I have been picking up on some ideas that might crack the mystery behind “tartaria”: 1. The all seeing eye. It’s all over old world buildings(mainly churches, including St. Paul’s cathedral) 2. The symbolism displayed in the layout of Washington D.C. (pentagram, owl) 3. ANIME. Specifically, the show called One Piece, in which I have observed to have many solid roots of old world understanding. For example, the Void Century: a time 800 years ago were nothing was officially recorded in history. In the show, trying to learn about the Void Century was a crime punishable by death. The main way to learn this secret history were the ponyglyphs: giant, indestructible, megalithic cubes with glyphs engraved on them. It is noteworthy that these poneglyphs are scattered across major landmarks, cities, and ruins. They are said to be comparable to the Egyptian obelisks. I think that the use of the symbols today may indicate the intentions of the past civilization, especially if they worshipped lowercase gods(Im Christian by the way). The worshipping of these evil gods may have been cause to have God himself use the sun as judgement to scorch the earth(that’s why deserts are mainly in the tropics). However much is still to be said, especially to the fact of how primitive and corrupt we may seem after such a reset, begging the question if it actually would be Judgement.
The Old World, Our Buried Past The Millennial Kingdom, it has Passed Satan's Realm, it too, soon shall Pass A New Heaven, a New Earth, shall come at Last Lived in the area for 70 years. Did 5 years 'mud flood' field research all over the twin cities. Recorded findings on my channel. Since then, have moved on to more creative filming. Lot's of footage from the Saint Croix River Valley the past few years.
Schizo ramblings aside, this is a neat tour of cool old buildings in St. Paul. I thought it was funny when he thought it suspicious that the building could survive the winters and then also found it suspicious these buildings had occasional maintenance. You expect a professional dot connector would be able to connect dots.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 maybe... or the race of living souls could manifest amazing things with the collective union of minds and will? You rock man.. thanks thanks thanks for all you do. You should interject some...of your intuition..... and lead the thinking you are connected to source and are a leader... of info so spread some of your soul thinking Thanks again
Trust me.i have everything for you. Cuz you deserve it and i love what your doing..i need one of these..just one ..3hrs long.lol.its a long great story never told. I promise results.i guess I should warn any and all of you picking up what I'm putting down (especially you luscious )that road of wisdom you are searching will be found but it comes at a price.. logic is the winner in all this .that being said ,you too will be transformed into a philosopher.. once you know have confirmed truth .there is no return to the old reality.. the true reality is (its not like te matrix or anything.lol)alot different then what we have been excepting and some content can be emotionally ,psychologically and spiritually (maybe even physically ¿??) Hurtful to the self..you to ask yourself.. would you rather know then not at what ever cost? Cuz ignorance is blissful but wisdom and truth is reality no matter what...can you adapt yourself to a reality you could never predict from the one you already have? Some can go mad...( just saying).it has happened..good luck to you brother.. those clues are solid and you can depend on them
11:54 - missing artworks everywhere. The bust statues in the small arched areas are nonsense to me. I've seen what they did with Haggia Sophia enough to know they shove random things in all the inexplicable spaces. Throw christian or indian religious icons in front of inexplicable spaces like gates or panels or odd devices. The central space could have been a "grand fireplace" if that's what you want to call it. Alternatively, a seat for a king rather than a house for politicians.
I don't think some of these structures were actually dug out.. I think they've been in the same place the whole time.. it's just that humans don't live long enough and also humans don't have an omnipresence to actually say if these buildings were going up at the time they say they were!!
I notice the way the so called rivers split, seems man made. Edit sorry In the deep south it's obvious, even with the forest's. One can see the results of the catastrophic events
I live right outside of the city of St. Paul. I’ve been to all of these locations. A walking tour of St. Paul in the summer is incredible. I recommend doing an exploration of the caves down by the river.
It is on my list, just hinting at it in this one!
I have 8 years of caving under my belt in MN some locations will blow your mind
I wonder if all those organ pipes are tuned to 432 frequencies or 440 hrz.? Love your videos and satire❤
@@shakejunt3hunna
I have spent a lot of time in those caves too growing up... the milk truck cave, stairway to heaven and others. The underground storm drains off the river lead to some strange underground old-world looking tunnels as well.
I grew up in St. Paul. I remember taking the bus with my grandmother in the 1950's and how amazed I was at the buildings downtown. Even the apartment buildings had ornate decorations on the windows and the top. Unfortunately,many of the beautiful old buildings were torn down. The old museum was gorgeous. Now modernized and much of it's beauty removed. There is such a treasure trove of old world buildings here in the frigid north. Thank you for showing these wonders of my childhood.
You are on a roll! I’ve learned more in last few weeks with your videos than I learned in college.
Thank you very much Paul!
Spread the word bro.
Me too! And I see these unique places in a new light..
I lived in Minneapolis for almost 8 years having moved from Southern California. That state capital absolutely blew my mind. The Cathedral too.
Hundreds of miles of utility tunnels,abandoned trolley tunnels,caves,nuke shelters,right under downtown!Basement of cathedral insane! Take tour!
The underground storm drains off the river lead to some strange underground old-world looking tunnels as well. Spent lots of time in them and the brickyard caves as a kid.
Cause nothing says dig a tunnel like frozen ground that floods in summer😊
Don't forget the titanic mines and quarries. One of the largest underground systems in the country, in the world!
I think they're might be something too this but a couple clides dales for 2000lb brick if marble and 7 years isn't that crazy for St. Paul Cathedral. It's like 18 bricks 20 something high all uniform size. Yup right behind the Wabash street cave is the Fema emergency service building 100 feet away.
I went to school in the inner city if St Paul. I was always amazed by the old architecture, even some of the bridges. They now destroyed what was known as 7 corners on West 7th Street. Then, many of the houses in Summit Avenue seem so much older and a different build than houses in St Paul suburbs. Ya, I noticed all of this even as a kid.
i went there when i went to school in roseville. i looked at my camera after i took a picture from outside and there was a BEAM of light coming out the window going directly into a cloud. on a cold winter day too. wasnt expecting that cuz i didnt see it when i took the pic
Considering that every major and minor city in the land in the 1800's was building bridges canals dams and incredible cathedrals capitols and courthouses it's amazing that such small populations could keep up with the demand for the highest quality building materials required to perform that much work. Everywhere at the same time. With horses and wagons and maybe a train. Gentleman we're being lied to!
The St Paul Library in downtown is another architecture that is reallly interesting.
Massive.
That whole section,
St. Paul hotel is amazing.
Landmark center.
Now that I think about it everything is connected from the ordway to the Excel center.
That’s a whole block.
I lived for several years right downtown there. Owned a condo on the 29th floor of a building right on the corner of 10th and Minnesota. I could see the capitol building from the balcony.
Good times.
Fabulous
Is that tall figure in the County Courthouse a depiction of a Giant 😱
Well, I guess that IS why they're called Giants after all..........
Thank you for yet another absolutely AMAZING presentation.
🎉❤🎉❤🎉
That courthouse is called Ramsey?
Isn't that the name of an Ancient Egyptian God?
I'm new to all this Old World, Mud Flood, Tartaria, and while it's a little overwhelming for such a newbie like myself, it's also absolutely amazing and mind-blowing.
I am so very grateful to have found this channel that is helping me to open my eyes and mind to truly SEE.
Thank you
✨️🙏✨️
You are most welcome.
It is close, although they will see it is named after the mayor/governor that looks like Brian Dennehy.
I am once again rendered speakers! The detail and the beauty is other worldly!!!
Thank you.
I remember going on a field trip to the capitol in 2nd grade. My young mind was in complete awe. They used to have an event there called The Taste of MN. They would let off the 4th of July fireworks right behind the building. Beautiful memories.
I went to school at St. Matthews and the lay out is "off" to say the least, the gym is in the basement below ground level and under the basement(gym) is an old bowling alley and under the bowling alley is a bomb shelter, so it goes really deep. Also the school looks dug out the way the parking lot sits and also they had a fire in the church that sits adjacent to the school in the early 1900s that burnt down the original building of the church. if you went and looked at the building all the way around You'd totally see it was dug out and the bottom window placement is off. This is on the city's West Side which has numerous buildings like this there's also a building between George street and Robie that's a church and if you go in the Robie side you will see how the back brick work looks dug out and even had dirt-stained brick up until last year when they painted it. lots of old world buildings in my neighborhood and also lots of caves and tunnel networks. just look at the bluffs in Saint Paul the sand stone is intact and on the top of that is like a 9 to 13 feet of cracked up jagged rocks and debris that would make sense if there was a mud flood.
Keep em coming! 😊
I spent a lot of time in St Paul! Then up to Bayfield Wisconsin!
You are making it all so much more exhilarating than when I lived there! 🙏
💜🌺💜🌺💜🌺💜🌺💜
Thank you very much!!
I grew up and still live in the Twin Cities. You should do a video on Minneapolis. Lots of interesting old buildings there too. I enjoy your content 👍🙂
I will, I was going to do the twin cities together but that would not do either justice. Thank you much!
❤️🙏 Love from Scotland 🙏❤️
the last image of the library isn't inside the James J. Hill house. It's the James J. Hill Reference Library that was located on a wing of the St. Paul Public Library building, corner of 4th St. W. and Market St., downtown St. Paul. It closed in 2019.
Thank you 🙏
Any time!
It seems to be the common design purpose for sure.
If they could build this artfully , the they wouldn't be destroying the competition 😊
I've seen with my eyes the paper mache boxes slapped together now in the land of space exploring 😂
(At 2min 20 seconds) being from the area, the image of the river has an island, I fish there in the summer.. there are several highly peculiar areas of interest on both sides of the river. And the cathedral seems to just loom over the entire downtown, gives me chills at night.
Thanks so much! We always take out of town visitors to the James J. Hill House. Everyone always likes the tour. My son had his prom last year at the Landmark Center. I don't think kids appreciate it now. I know I didn't until I was older.
You are most welcome, and I think that goes for all of us on appreciating these beauties.
Spread the word brothers and sisters
I can’t believe I’ve not been to the James J Hill house since grade school! I’m definitely making a point to get there in next few weeks- thanks for commenting, because I’m following through, now…
Wow, old world is all l can say! Bravo!
Thank you!
Love it. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it!
My mom is from Tillway
Yer and then Lakeland. We 4 brats loved swimmimg in the Saint Croix River.
I hate.my Spellcheck demon! What I meant was that my mom was from Stillwater. Lake lake too.
Speechless after viewing Minnesota State Capital. Got to dig into the star jon levi and you fly. Art deco guardian giants are all around cleveland, too. Maybe being in center of the North America it was the capital of the old land. Love your work. Thanks.
You are most welcome!
You’d be the best trip /globe trekking buddy on the planet! Thanks for stirring a sense of wonder /imagination up again. I’m stunned I live in this state, and yet I’m basically unfamiliar with grand landmarks and history.
It only gets stranger the more we examine it. Did you know they built a giant monument to Arminius in New Ulm, MN? It reflects the "German" ancestry of many Minnesotans......
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Heights_Monument
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Iv’e not seen it, but will! I’m still slightly stunned the generic and brief Google paragraph omits all data /stats on the current stone courthouse in Mora. It gives construction dates on the original (wooden) edifice, says when it was built and then eventually burned down, but to completely skip over pertinent details on the one standing now? That tickled the hairs on the back of neck the other night, especially thanks to your content pointing out oddities + inconsistencies (that should be obvious, but aren’t!)
4:40 Yikes! That's a mean looking man there
I love the way they say that our forbearers were so small and short.. but when I see door ways that are ten feet tall with a generic window vent jammed in there..and ceiling that are 18 feet to 40 in some of the larger structures like central stations.. I have to smile to myself.. knowing better and more than most people.
You know design choices aren’t always for function right? For all the “large doorways” you see here, you can easily find examples of doorways of normal height in like 99% of other buildings lol
Thats awesome, I'm doing research on the Locks of the Ohio river, they say they were started on in the 1830's but I have maps prior to that already showing the cut canal through the land, 8 locks ports & up to 20 boat/barge slips. I also found a picture of the Canal being built with a crew of 6, a horse & cart & timber levers, but in the background you can see that the cut blocks have been pushed forward into the canal (like a mudslide would do). Just funny coincidence about the Locks.
The major rivers are much more than we are led to believe it seems.
Wow 😮 I’m absolutely loving your videos and I’m thoroughly enjoying the ‘history’ that I’m learning about as well
I know you’ve mentioned you’ll be covering Australia and I can’t wait for your take on it all-so much of it just leaves me scratching my head lol
❤ from Australia
The girls from Tartarian Truthers YT are my main go to for Australian focused research and videos, there’s not too many alternative researchers that I’m away of covering Australia so if you know of more feel free to let me know
Thanks mate!
Do you watch Auto Didactic as well? He has tons of great content on Australia and has collabed with TTruther as well.
Another great one Lucius 😘 you mentioned the long winter months and it reminds me just how much the weather can slow down modern construction light and love always 😘
So true and thank you!
You should cover The Ledge Building in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada!!!
Actually, theres many old buildings in WPG
Getting to Canada!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 can't wait!!!
St Paul City Hall @15:24 has had a lot of point-up done to the morter work. Far more than a building that new should have.
The Vision of Peace is the statue. Did anyone else notice the similarities with the Mayan/Aztec carvings and drawings? Look close at the face.
In the Minneapolis Municipal Center theres a statue called The Father of Waters, and has an alligator. Ill bet everything that Its Sobek. Egyptian god of the Nile(Great River), now on the Missi Ippi (Great River in Iroquois). Such a coincidence. Im beginning to believe in those.😅
Careful. ;))
One day out of the blue I thought,
What if that’s the Nile…
Ever since I keep stumbling on information that’s really leading me to believe that.
@@djfundraiser9710 I'm positive it is. Upper Khemet which the Greeks called Egypt was along the Mississippi. There's too much proof. I've got some old maps that put Babylon on what we call the Nile today. Fra Melro map is the main one to look at.
Would you consider doing a video on Sedona Arizona? Lots of allure
SW USA is coming. :)
Glensheen Mansion in Duluth, MN and orher structures in Duluth get interesting too, even the roads!!
The huge statue in that one building reminds me more of South American natives than North American natives. (Ie. Aztec, Maya, Olmec, etc.)
Out of place, sort of like finding a statue of Alexander the Great and his horse in the heart of Scotland.....oh wait a minute??!
12:00 the dome has interesting acustic properties. I remember learning about it in a feild trip, i was in maybe 2nd grade and i can't properly describe it with out a google search.
Craftsmen running all over the nation and yet most of the homes shown to us (that average people lived in)weren't nearly as grand? Hmmm...something isn't adding up. To go back in time for a moment and see firsthand the structures before demolition, to uncover the truth buried under (hint, hint) the lies would be grand.
Great exploration per usual. Thank you.
You are welcome!
Great video here, as are all of your posted videos.
Albany New York has some breathtaking architecture worthy of a visit;)
Thanks for your time and effort💪
Albany, such an interesting area there!
It really is.
Entire city built on a hill/slope. An underground expedition would be time worthy! Love to see how deep these structures go
My mother worked in the capital building as a kid I would explore the place…esoteric symbolism in the strangest places
I have been building high rises since 1998 in NYC and i assure you those pictures are bogus. You can ask me any questions if you need perspective from a structural Ironworker. I would love to help ya out if you want.
Sounds good!!
Great video , I live in the area and feeling inspired !
I think I’m going to head down today to St. Paul and take some photos. You are tight there are so many more buildings that are genuine old world. Ie. Union Depot and the downtown St. Paul Library to name a few.
Look at the Old Bars around the city
I just watched the movie on UA-cam called The Fall of Minneapolis. Its quite revealing and very sad.
Things were set in motion a long time ago. 1990s had a lot of tumultuous decisions.
Spread the word brothers and sisters
Spread the word brothers and sisters
Another mysterious city. I do believe the midwest part of the United States was a main hub of something
yesssss.. absolutely.... proly indianapolis... cuz in the narrative now they say it is a central hub for the country. and when i was in indiana, i did sense there was something more tartarian about it than other states ive been too. the churches were on every street corner almost. the brick was still glittering cuz it was so darn smooth and so darn flawless that it was like a smooth glass sparkly surface . something very eerie about the midwest for sure.
@@lechatleblanc 3 courthouses here in KCMO have that same sparkly marble stairs and pillars really amazing
Spokane Court House; looks the same , turret layouts, spires, etc.
I never considered the organs until your videos now I have to recalibrate all my thoughts😂
The only thing I knew about St Paul was that for the longest time it was the "Friendliest Gangster Town" before, during, and a little after the prohibition days lol...
So long as you paid the officials (plus police of course), and did not mess with any "prestigious citizens", you could literally get away with anything. This is where the story of the Barker & Karpis gang started, if anyone is familiar with the names of "Ma" Barker or "Creepy" Alvin Karpis..
True enough!
Paul had some nice style! Bet it was great living under his rule.
It seems better than under "Pig's Eye". ;)
THE ENNEMY 😨F MAN AT WORK AGAIN
Fort Snelling is interesting too.
Star gate!
All these magnificent buildings and no photographs, wasn’t the camera invented in 1816. I just find it very strange they can take a photo of billy the kid but can’t find ten minutes to photograph these incredible structures being built, maybe it’s just me , 😊
Ah you know just busy and photographing buildings wasn't very notable at the time. ;)
Construction crews were humble and camera shy
9:05 That has the look of a collage to me. Seems to lack the minor focus changes it should have at varying distances.
🙏🏼❤️👍🏼👊🏼
At 13:46 The Progress of the State. Interesting name for a gilded statue. Id paraphrase this next bit, if the quote wasn't so fun: "The underlying armature is steel covered in copper. The exterior copper surface is gilded in 23 karat gold leaf and requires re-gilding approximately every 20 years." That's ok, it's not much gold. "Five pounds of tissue-thin, twenty-three-and-one-half-karat gold leaf applied over the copper gives the artwork its golden patina." Remember I quoted, so it's true.
Side note: the women are Industry and Agriculture, the guy is Minnesota himself, and there are pine-cones in the wheels.
Interesting how they often use those statues as states.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Easiest way to cover up the pagan god it actually is.
BTW, early on in the video that Star on the floor is a Star of Ishtar. I forgot to add that earlier. But I'm guessing you know that.
@@bretthenke9613 Yes, as we are informed from the Sumerian period.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 She got around for centuries. Although I've been digging a bit and 1) Minnesota man is most likely Helios. He rides across the sky on a chariot pulled by 4 horses, usually carries a simple staff, and as the giver of life would have the cornucopia of food. 2) That symbol could also be related to Helios/Ra/Sol Invictus. As the later 2 similar star-like symbols have been used. It is said that whole cities were built just for the sun god.
Very good research. :)) I agree with you.
When I saw the photo of the “confederate flags” my first thought was, “Why did they have shredded meat on a pole?” I had to make the picture larger. 😂 We are not capable of creating the large statue (the man with no shirt) today. Anyways, thanks for the video.
It is really strange because normally captured unit colors are treated with respect. Unless they really broke down that much after a few short decades and you are welcome!
Never been in the US but for all the European Cathedrals I have seen, none of them can possibly be build with spending millions.
If we even are able to build such wonders a Billion Euro will not nearly be enough. nowadays.
...
I did visit one in Lyon, France, and wondered how they have been able to transport all materials needed to the top of a mountain on a road that is nearly wide enough for a small truck and stairs cut out of the rock.
The interior is so amazingly detailed that it will take weeks to have a good look.
And that is only the public space
The mighty Euro, the superpower counterpart currency of the Dollar.:) It would be interesting to see such an estimate with many of the main currencies.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 For a billion we can at least act like if we can build one. 😉
hehehe Sure take out a loan, nice high interest rate.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 lol
Built by Earthbending.
🤯 = 😃🧠 🙏💯
I would say that makes it another worthwhile exploration? :))
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 My brain is so giddy! 😊 Brilliant presentation! Previously unknown information... don't know how you do it. 🤷🏼♀️ But you make it look so easy.
@@bekaebrown A balanced mix of art and science. :)) Trying to bring in more art though. Thank you so much RB.
Monolithic buildings like this were so much easier to build back then. No TV or internet distractions. People worked harder (not smarter), and they used donkeys and wagons back then, and sometimes had to use hand held tools which made is easier too… I attended the St. Paul cathedral as a child growing up. I was there this year walking around the church during a youth choir concert. I found a room with an incredible doorway entrance with a table blocking it. At that point, one of the church’s security guys kicked me out!!!!
No TV and no internet make Homer something, something.
While viewing this tonight, I used Google to inquire on a majestic, stunning building I happened across driving through Mora, Minnesota one day. An immensely mind blowing stone structure in a small, rural town caught me off guard, I pulled over to snap pictures in disbelief. Google provides a small paragraph on this Kanabec County Courthouse, built in 1883 and “burned down in March of 1894. The current courthouse was added to National Register of Historical Places in 1977.” I’m scratching my head. Why are details on the current (grand, sprawling stone) building omitted?
Usually because it is not so well-documented as we are supposed to believe. Even this more recent lovely art-deco building in the middle of Rochester, MN that is surrounded by lovely glass buildings now and hidden. Look up interior photos of this beauty and try thinking it makes any sense....
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plummer_Building
I’ve been pondering your content/material for 2 months now, (when quiet opportunities arise) because your questions/presentations/examples have been nagging at the back of my head for what feels like decades. Only I can’t pinpoint words to explain the gravity (of it all, as a whole) as you eloquently can on YT. I do know for certain a fundamentally weighty and major shift occurred. Whether current architecture and general practice originates from a collective conscious (valuing immediate gratification: cheap, easy and disposable) or is something else entirely, IDK. But if we’re in the midst of a definitive, radical shift, lacking imagination and a connection with nature , it’s scary that it’s so subtle and slippery; and goes unnoticed by the majority.
Some family members say the logistics and material for customizing beautiful structures today are too tedious and expensive, and that’s why neighborhood churches going up today resemble plain ‘ol airplane hangars, but yet in the 1800’s official places / buildings weren’t written off as: too laborious, forget it! That’s mystifying on so many levels….
Those Art Deco buildings seem to have extremely high ceilings on every floor. Rather large doorways too.
11:02 The architect was Higgins from Magnum P.I. Ha!
I live on site as a caretaker of the youngest Governor elected in Mn. , The Honorable Harold Stassen of St. Paul Mn.
from Boise
Another good one, Boise! Hello to you.
There were giants in the Earth in those days. Especially around the Twin cities area.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️❤️
Im a flooring guy the flatness if the floors is impressive . Even with leveling clips its necer always that flat . Stone and tile, marble work . In particularly .
I would point out that when the US joined World War I there was no Federal Reserve and the Government had very limited ability to raise money via taxes. In order to equip the US Army the US Government needed a big loan from a group of banks. The Government was not considered a good credit risk due to its limited income. James J. Hill was one of three wealthy Americans who pledged their personal wealth as collateral for the Government.
I bet you didnt expect that successful kindoms comment to be as useful as it is ? But i beleived you whent you said so.. cuz it is ❤
@1141 What gets me thinking is the goat head on the end of the tongue of the cart.
It is in the position of a war trophy in some older triumphs, quite interesting.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214ah that is interesting. I am learning a lot from these "explorations"😊
14:06 the star, is it a compass? if not, can i call a friend lol need more clues
Was it an 8 pt star similar to the GOT star maybe?
I'm not as up to speed with all of his videos, as I am others.
I'm gonna have to commit to a binge watch I suppose.
@@flatplaneoregon4605 oh! What a fun guess! I can't believe I missed that, good memory!
It's the tulsa flag as of about 5 uts ago
****MUST READ****
I can't helpy self , its your questions ..the same i asked my self at first.. i must share clues with you as you are sooo very close to realizing a massive section of our true history.. your right some of these almost look like sky scrapers.. yet if you had your own personsal kingdom? You would put passion into it as it represents you.. you would decorate it with memorials..also ,do you remember what makes a successful kingdom? Well,besides the spiraled staircases .did you know the elevator shaft was invented before the idea of a elevator ?(BIG CLUE)when they say founded. It's not in the sense of finding(although that true) it's in the sense of foundries. ....your welcome brother...
Is this why some say America is egypt?
Possibly. :)
Yes the land of the Basques/Goth Phoenicians/real Cherokees/real Vikings =)
😂 the masters that built these structures are going to have to come back and tell us about how they manifested these structures into reality. Building them really wasn't an option. 😊
It doesn't matter when they were built, we can't build this today. From the Parthenon in 447 BC to 1929 today, they don't explain how. BC means Before Construction.😂😂😂
HA! I like that one.
i cant help but wonder why the stains would leave these buildings standing and dust the others. in monument valley they worked over time on melting almost impossible to melt structures. like they took multiple passes at it. so.. i dont know. i look at these structures and i dont hear that sweet song in my mind from the pre melt world calling out to me. i get this emprical dread feeling. life has a way of tossing in plot twists. my hunch is telling me that perhaps these bulding survived because they were in part responsible for the melt or used as an infrastructure component to facilitate the war on man. im referring to the intact architecture that we still have today.
An unfortunate possibility, especially if subverted cymatics had something to do with it.
❤️🙏🏼😂 Imsurance and liability law would cut that short ! 😂
I did inflation maths on Alaska Yukon expo, now University Washington. 2016 cost, $1.00 a sq ft. Los Angeles Sofi stadium was my comparison, $3,500 a sq ft. So we'd get to a trillion real quick, if we're talking todays reality😊
No wonder we need more inflation!
We are very proficient at making parking lots, today. Erasing history is another proficiency.
Roofers on balloons! Metalworkers on trapezes… gift wrappers not necessary. Creator made Tartaria. No one has built like that Lucious not before(?) nor after. The buildings were GIFTED, I rest my perpetual case.
Like I don't see any light switches or receptacles. Btw I have a old light switch from a 1920 home..it uses mercury. Still have it
Very cool!
The Van Dusen "castle".???
Never can have enough castles.
Your videos keep getting better, not gonna lie.(love seeing other countries)🗿🍷
I have been picking up on some ideas that might crack the mystery behind “tartaria”:
1. The all seeing eye. It’s all over old world buildings(mainly churches, including St. Paul’s cathedral)
2. The symbolism displayed in the layout of Washington D.C. (pentagram, owl)
3. ANIME. Specifically, the show called One Piece, in which I have observed to have many solid roots of old world understanding. For example, the Void Century: a time 800 years ago were nothing was officially recorded in history. In the show, trying to learn about the Void Century was a crime punishable by death. The main way to learn this secret history were the ponyglyphs: giant, indestructible, megalithic cubes with glyphs engraved on them. It is noteworthy that these poneglyphs are scattered across major landmarks, cities, and ruins. They are said to be comparable to the Egyptian obelisks.
I think that the use of the symbols today may indicate the intentions of the past civilization, especially if they worshipped lowercase gods(Im Christian by the way).
The worshipping of these evil gods may have been cause to have God himself use the sun as judgement to scorch the earth(that’s why deserts are mainly in the tropics).
However much is still to be said, especially to the fact of how primitive and corrupt we may seem after such a reset, begging the question if it actually would be Judgement.
There is no "God himself" as you think. Get over your myths. Your religion is not special.
I got pics of old architecture I can send you from the old courthouse in Toronto I have a lot of good pics
Please do, it is in the near term for an exploration. Thank you!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I have the portrait of the supposed architect and everything where do I send
LtRaiden at msn dot com please. :)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 got it Thankyou
Looks like the horoscope star at a certain university. 14:52
Indeed!
🙂
The Old World, Our Buried Past
The Millennial Kingdom, it has Passed
Satan's Realm, it too, soon shall Pass
A New Heaven, a New Earth, shall come at Last
Lived in the area for 70 years. Did 5 years 'mud flood' field research all over the twin cities. Recorded findings on my channel. Since then, have moved on to more creative filming. Lot's of footage from the Saint Croix River Valley the past few years.
word
Schizo ramblings aside, this is a neat tour of cool old buildings in St. Paul.
I thought it was funny when he thought it suspicious that the building could survive the winters and then also found it suspicious these buildings had occasional maintenance. You expect a professional dot connector would be able to connect dots.
Thanks for watching and please be sure to maintain your health at the Mayo Clinic.
Star trek beamed the buildings here from krypton
Makes more sense than anything else!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 maybe... or the race of living souls could manifest amazing things with the collective union of minds and will?
You rock man.. thanks thanks thanks for all you do. You should interject some...of your intuition..... and lead the thinking you are connected to source and are a leader... of info so spread some of your soul thinking
Thanks again
It is a journey for all of us, myself included. I learn as much from interacting with all of you.
Clause Schwab (World Economic Forum) has that 8 pointed star on his robe that he wears with his cult buddies
Reminds me of Ator. ;)
How do you reconcile the natives not destroying the structures before westerners found them?
Why would they destroy them? Check out the Reset War video for that theory.
What about all the native Americans that were throughout the land in minnesaota. Especially along the river
Trust me.i have everything for you. Cuz you deserve it and i love what your doing..i need one of these..just one ..3hrs long.lol.its a long great story never told. I promise results.i guess I should warn any and all of you picking up what I'm putting down (especially you luscious )that road of wisdom you are searching will be found but it comes at a price.. logic is the winner in all this .that being said ,you too will be transformed into a philosopher.. once you know have confirmed truth .there is no return to the old reality.. the true reality is (its not like te matrix or anything.lol)alot different then what we have been excepting and some content can be emotionally ,psychologically and spiritually (maybe even physically ¿??) Hurtful to the self..you to ask yourself.. would you rather know then not at what ever cost? Cuz ignorance is blissful but wisdom and truth is reality no matter what...can you adapt yourself to a reality you could never predict from the one you already have? Some can go mad...( just saying).it has happened..good luck to you brother.. those clues are solid and you can depend on them
11:54 - missing artworks everywhere. The bust statues in the small arched areas are nonsense to me. I've seen what they did with Haggia Sophia enough to know they shove random things in all the inexplicable spaces. Throw christian or indian religious icons in front of inexplicable spaces like gates or panels or odd devices.
The central space could have been a "grand fireplace" if that's what you want to call it. Alternatively, a seat for a king rather than a house for politicians.
Palaces on the exact azimuth south, several of them...
I don't think some of these structures were actually dug out.. I think they've been in the same place the whole time.. it's just that humans don't live long enough and also humans don't have an omnipresence to actually say if these buildings were going up at the time they say they were!!
Founded! 😂😂😂
I notice the way the so called rivers split, seems man made. Edit sorry
In the deep south it's obvious, even with the forest's. One can see the results of the catastrophic events
Would be strange if that symbol did not look familiar to you.😂
Wondering what it means and stands for though.
Star of Ishtar, also may have stood as the primary symbol of Sol Invictus, Sun Unconquered.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 already thought it was not the Kundalini version.
8 pointed star...hhmmm