The End Of The Georgia Guidestones...
Вставка
- Опубліковано 16 жов 2024
- Hello guys and gals, it's me Mutahar again! This time we take a look at the loss of one of the most mysterious landmarks in the United States. The Georgia Guidestones were destroyed one early morning marking the end of an era. Thanks for watching!
Like, Comment and Subscribe for more videos!
Use code "SOG" at www.gfuel.com and save some money.
Check out the newest podcast episode: • Speedrunning Drama is ...
Use code "SOG" at www.gfuel.com and save some money.
Check out the newest podcast episode: ua-cam.com/video/g4G5LDB-z6o/v-deo.html
Cool
real
Love you muta
a
Get da fuel
I like to imagine those guys built the stones, started the engraving, wrote down the "open on" part and then proceeded to ask each other if they put the time capsule. Neither of them did and they sat there in awkward silence for a while...
That would be funny, if its like siting in someone's house or something and everytime they look at it they're like "Man, can't believe we forgot to put that in."
Or it was the excavatuon team "took it" or just said "There was nothing there" like how epson murdered himself.
@@jackalenterprisesofohio what?
Lol 😂
@@MrTriple3D I think he meant to say Epstein*
@@Dgero the entire comment is gibberish
Surviving nuclear war and surviving a targeted explosion is a bit different. A piece of stone wouldn't care much about radiation unless nukes were dropped close by.
Shockwaves,
and i think if something is claiming to be able to survive nuke, it should be safe in about 300-400Km of the fall zone.
It's supposed to survive because of it's distance from projected targets. Fair enough.
That's completely null and void if the stones themselves *ARE* the target.
Tbf, if a structure claimed it can survive nuclear nuclear war, it must imply that it can at least survive nearby nuclear blast. If it can survive a nuclear war because it's going to be far from any strike, then anything can "survive" a nuclear war as long as they're far enough from any blast
@@casualduck7398 This is how marketing usually works. Its like when they said the titanic is unsinkable. It was in theory, if they avoided all icebergs lmao
@@casualduck7398 youre arguing semantics at this point. Nowhere on the stones do they imply that they could endure a nuclear blast in close vacinity.
As a fellow Georgian, I can confirm that we tend to blow things out of proportions at times.
badum tsss
ჩვენ არ ვართ ტერორისტები.
@@comradesusiwolf1599 who?
@@theorangeheadedfella i think it's the georgian alphabet, the actual country. Brilliant
@@comradesusiwolf1599 The US state, not rhe European Country...
It's a shame to be from GA and only hearing about the Guidestones for the first time when it was blown up.
Also on a lighter note, there's a tree in Georgia that legally owns land that was inherited by its predecessor tree. It's name is unsurprisingly, "Son of The Tree That Owns Itself"
I’m gonna move there and take over the land, after all, the constitution doesn’t give rights to trees.
Chad tree
@@NathanTowles Chad tree
Now that's interesting. Gotta look for a vid of that one.
I am the Lorax and I speak for the trees, this tree is speaking Vietnamese
If the dude really wanted to help future generations after the end of the world, he would have included actually useful info. i.e. the Pythagoren Therom, Germ Theory, thermodynamics.
Hopefully some of that would have been included inside the time capsule that never got placed.
I think what they had was a good start, but definitely could have used some critical scientific discoveries. Perhaps something along those lines could be built, in an underground bunker out of metal or something that's a tad more secure than just a few giant granite blocks. Maybe just have some giant granite blocks to lead the way, ya know.
And box and whisker plots
Just join the Rosicrucian order and they will teach you all about it.
In small fairness, that kind of knowledge would require more than those stone tablets could contain. Germ theory would be HUGE though. One of the biggest issues in living in ancient times by FAR was absolute shit medical. It was so bad. XP
that one guy who goes to the guide stones regularly is in agonizing pain right now
U.N Globohomos crying rn.
I would go there fairly often, and yeah it sucks..
@@StationaryGamingReal buzzword soup
MY STONES!
@@StationaryGamingReal what does this even mean
I don't think that they (Georgians or whoever is responsible for erecting the Guidestones) thought the slabs would survive being fully intact if a war or nuclear event occurred. And they likely felt that they were large enough to be recovered (in pieces) at least one of the 4 slabs all with different languages perhaps by someone that could read at least one of the languages to translate it ; in the event of a nuclear fallout event if people discovered the stones afterwards. And to reiterate they didn't expect the stones to be fully intact . Think of the Dead Sea Scrolls they weren't full intact but someone saved scripture on papyrus scrolls in hopes that they would be preserved (being the text and messages) in hopes of future generations.
TLDR: Guidestones were likely made in sheer size to be found in pieces in a nuclear event. Time Capsule area designed for anyone who wanted to put a capsule there which might’ve been purposed for after a disaster event.
@@captainblood9616 I read the Athens Banner-Herald article released today (being a local Northeast Georgia resident). Guidestones "might" be rebuilt. Seems like people want to see them up again. But theyre gonna need more security systems in place for sure this go around.
Probably meant more like the epic of giglamesh?
Imagine assuming that if the world were nuked that bad, generations later, the survivors would have literacy, astronomy, etc as priorities before they'd already develop a culture without using the stones
It was an anonymous organization that put it up
@@__jonbud______________________ and eugenics (commandment 2) would have been the last thing on their to do list
On the Ford Pinto. That car and the Gen 1 of the Ford Crown Victoria had the unfortunate design flaw that if hit on the rear bumper, would cause the vehicle to explode. Ford Motors when they learned of the issue chose to actively ignore it due to recall cost behind more expensive then simply covering the legal fees. It would take a decade before Ford eventually would recall the affected models which had already been removed from production.
wow interesting
@@foxxrider250r we had a whole discussion and case study on this during a business ethics course at university. Truly astonishing the lengths people will go for greed.
@@Instabruh.User.. then let your content do the talking and stop spamming.....
luckily for the italians it sold very badly because "pinto" sounds like the italian slang for small penis
@@Instabruh.User.. you ain't shit and you ain't never gonna *BE* shit
For the record, please understand that while the Georgia Guidestones are /similar/ to Stonehenge, American Stonehenge is most definitively Carhenge in Alliance, NE.
What does that make the Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, TX? Baby Carhenge?
Calling the Guidestones "America's Stonehenge" is the dumbest shit. It wasn't ancient it was made in the 80s by a group of globalists. One of the guidelines was to "guide reproduction" aka eugenics.
Bro really tried to sneak Nebraska in there 💀
There is a stonehenge like structure in New Hampshire.
The Stonehenge monument is cooler cause despite it is huge it allows you to have a 360 degree view while you are inside of it but the Georgia Guidestones took that view away from the viewer, causing unease and complaints.
I grew up in Georgia and I don't think I remember hearing about this at all. It seems to me like a big tourist trap/troll combo. That's pretty brilliant if you ask me. It's literally made of one of that town's main exports, which is probably great for their granite industry.
tbh it made more sense
There really is no tourist trap. There is nothing there but a field and the stones. Maybe you'll stop by a store to grab a snack and a drink, but there is no t-shirt stand by the stones.
There was literally a senator in Georgia pushing the conspiracy so no people did really believe it.
Like she wanted them destroyed and ran on it
@@xxTAARGUS Yeah, have you heard of city of Roswell and how it's economy started to boom after Concpiracies about Aliens ?
Dramma brings attention, and while there was no shops by the stones, people would be stopping around anyway for casual shopping... and if people stop by a store to grab a snack and drink and it happens that drinks and snacks are a bit more pricey...
As someone who lives in GA it’s always been weird but at the same time subtly genuine about the stones. Odd things tho
500 million ONLY
The other 7 billion, GET OUT
Wdym subtly genuine
@@Lucas_Jeffrey I think its about not making more humans, not wiping out the rest. Which is good advice but unfortunately will fall on deaf ears due to a deeply rooted evolutionary drive to reproduce.
@@Instabruh.User.. you ain't shit and you ain't never gonna *BE* shit
@@Lucas_Jeffrey thanos moment
11th principle on the new Georgia Guidestones: “NO EXPLOSIVES WITHIN 100 FEET OF THIS LANDMARK”
as if that would stop a copycat
@@crayonchomper1180 it’s a joke.
@@blakeog2034 thank you captain obvious
I hadn't even heard of it till Kandiss Taylor was calling for her crusade against it. Granted, the conspiracy about the guidestones had been around forever, but Taylor's... campaign was obsessed with them and she really wanted them gone. She even dedicated an entire page of her campaign advertising her "executive order number 10" which would destroy the guidestones.
Seethe
@@jackson633
Cope
@@natethegreat7967 mald
Just looked up who this woman is. Of course, a Christian would want to get rid of these stones. It spits in the face of what they believe in, constant war and suffering. I don't want to sound like a Redditor off R/Atheism but for fuck sake when will these Religious idiots realize that destroying stuff like this is only going to lead to them being villainized more.
Modern day Order 66
How are they supposed to be investigating the destruction of the guidestones when a day later they completely demolished the site without even doing a full investigation of the site after the attack, which is done in almost every other circumstance? Weird.
They tore down the place instantly the next day? What? Sounds fishy.
@@Sypaka Same day actually.
@@Windrake101 Dafuq. My opinion is, someone paid them to damage it, so they can tear it down later. "Because it was damaged and unable to be repaired, we decided to take it down, must to our dismay." blabla.
many decades down the line the existence of these monuments will be treated as a mandela effect
Lmao fuck them stones
The part about maintaining humanity below 500,000,000 is because a lower number of people are easier to control.
The part about "useless officials" is for less checks and balances on those in charge. You get the idea.
Because with the shit ton of bureaucracy we got today there clearly doesn't happen anything sus when it comes to the ones in charge
The real conspiracy here is the way Muta pronounces “gran-nite” and not “gran-ite”….. he is in on it…. GET HIM BOYS
And Illuminati.
@@40g33k that seemed like he was being ironic
Illuminaytee
For me it wasn't the. 500 mil population cap; as folks already mentioned this was for a post apocalyptic scenario. It was the rule after advocating for eugenics that was a problem.
Eugenics? one of the aims was "diversity" . I mean, i think they literally meant:" please, for the love of god, stop fucking your sister and search for someone different than you" . These were meant for the survivors of some sort of apocalypse, so not interbreeding may seem like an appropriate rule.
It's litterally telling them to go in the way of how nature does things ... i'm pretty sure an handicaped man would not have reproduced if in a wild civilisation. It is a guide to SURVIVAL of the human race, not a guide to let everyone get a chance to get laid ... Nature and the univers itself are eugenic, wether you like it or not.
@@artmadaofficialyoutube I mean, there's the "guide" in the beginning that is pretty sus tbf, but we're not talking about modern people, we're talking about fallout 1-2 tribesmen with scraps of metal in their noses and old tyres as armor. Or it's actual eugenics, i don't care anymore. They're gone now either way. Probably some rich club trolling an entire town
Doesn't rule out intentionally steering us into something like... a food shortage to decrease population to an ideal number
I mean eugenics could just mean something like genetic modification, the possibility of genocide being justified is sketchy though
Looks like Mutahar’s school project is finally paying off
Leaving the fact of vandalism and conspiracy theories aside, this new decalogue is the most useless piece of shit advices for postapo humanity. It truly reads like 1st worlders fanfiction about democracy and population, whereas potential audience would mostly be interested in something useful like farming or medicine. The clock function was neat tho
Yeah, why not leave a manual on farming and animal husbandry.
In an all out, global nuclear war, perhaps 50% of the population fies in western countries + then USSR. Countries reliant on the west could have been hit even worse when they can’t import cheap food, machines, malaria medicine etc. This loss of knowledge wouldn’t happen.
We call them "globalists"
You can say that the guidestones' longevity were pretty misguided themselves.
love that most of those guidelines were completely nonspecific besides multiple “be good” and/or “don’t do big government” messages, and another one of them is literally eugenics
also love that they wrote everything down in modern languages or modern interpretations of languages instead of, like, trying to use pictographs or something that anyone would understand. Which is what, for example, long term nuclear waste warnings use under the understandable assumption that modern language won’t fully survive any sort of apocalyptic scenario like these are supposedly made to.
Edit: some of y’all really don’t know what eugenics is, huh. Eugenics is *any* process where the human gene pool is artificially changed, as some have pointed out below, and often to pursue some goal for the entire population. While that’s not something _inherently_ bad at core, you can take one look at its history (and the history of groups in power deciding how to rank the freedoms of other groups) to see why leaving a vaguely worded instruction on a big block of stone telling future people(who in this case are assumed to be less advanced) to “guide reproduction wisely - _improving fitness_ and diversity” could be a bad idea.
I was gonna spend some of my free time diving into why the form of population control this block is promoting is eugenics, but then I took a look at the Wikipedia page for eugenics - and the key points are already spelt out right on the page.
"don't do big governments"
"also, while you're at it, you should keep governments in line with WORLD GOVERNMENT"
wack, yo
no big govt, just one world govt.
mucho better...
Its not "literally eugenics" lmao. Eugenics is racially based selection. Meanwhile the Georgia Guidestones specifically point out that genetic diversity is important.
Selective breeding is something we do all the time and if you're mad about it then you better not ever buy a dog or a cat, because you're funding "literal eugenics". And you also better date only people you find hideous or unappealing, otherwise you're selective breeding and you're doing literal eugenics.
@@lj2265 quote "do not exceed over 50 million people".
how do you expect them to do that...?
Eugenics? Where tf do you get that from? It literally said genetic diversity is important, the opposite of eugenics!
I've lived in the town before. Never got to see the guidestones up close but I remember hearing about some suspicious stuff going on there a few years back. Fun little note, the town has a little venue you can rent for parties and stuff called the Time Capsule but that's just a little town trivia. Thanks for covering it, it's a real shame.
Ok
Ok
real shame for who? hapless NWO enthusiasts?
O
K
Ok
1:15 - The pinto was famous for its lighter. The gas tank sat right behind the rear bumper, and if rear ended, the car became a lighter, meaning it burst into flames.
Locally we have The Palace Of Gold, it's a massive Hare Krishna Temple and multiple shrines in the middle of the back hills of West Virginia. It's a massive tourism site, despite locals not having the best history with the followers and pilgrims. Despite that it brings in a lot of tourists and tourism dollars
I grew up about 20min away. It's really a wonder to behold in such a peculiar location. What are the details of the troubled history between the locals and the followers/pilgrims? Is there anything comprehensive on the topic to be found online?
Aw yes a fellow man of culture. I too took a conspiracy theory class in school and did a project on mu (lemuria). Best class I ever took honestly. The class was basically just a crash course on critical thinking and why people fall for bullshit.
@@jellyfishi_ lol exactly
Like the government spying on its people. Those who dismiss conspiracy theories easily just don't learn.
@@jellyfishi_ These people are the reason why i believe Schopenhauer when he said that to study you need to "age" first, these kids run with all this info and literally can't make connections. We are doomed to fail...
@@jeanb523 I think you are making many assumptions and projecting much belief upon me. There is bullshit like Atlantis story and Bigfoot and pyramids built by aliens, and jfk Jr raised from the dead. Then there is very real and very boring conspiracy like sugar and corn subsidies. Go look at agricultural subsidies if you want to see real conspiracy
Such a class should be mandatory, especially nowadays!
"These stones will survive anything and can serve as the guiding light if the world ends, outliving us all"
Guidestones: don't even hold up against a minor explosion
I mean, there are lot of things that survived thousands of years that could be brought down by explosives.
They, the builders, probably didn't foresee someone actually bringing explosives to tear the thing down. Looking at it from the perspective of a nuclear apocalypse, the state of Georgia wouldn't be hit with a nuke. Probably. So the stones had a relatively good chance of surviving since they wouldn't be a target. I dunno, just a guess.
If we end up in a nuclear war the whole world will be launching them (who has them anyways) and id bet my shitty little existance that every state would get hit to make sure no rat survives.
I think they figured it was Atlanta that was going to have a bomb dropped on it, not the monument itself lmao
@digifalc0087 A tractor and a good chain could have pulled it down lmao
Went out there 5 years ago (I live an hour and a half away near Gainesville, GA), and didn't really think much of it. However, the more I read on it, the more I was intrigued. Shame that people can't witness that type of mystery in person anymore.
Commerce here!
Same kinda. It was back in 2019 my buddy and I were bored one late night in high school. It was during spring break out senior year. We drove 3 hours out just to be there for 30 minutes. Worth every minute.
@@kor3176 I'm in Oakwood, which is right below Gainesville lol
@Phuv Shu You joined a week ago. Shut up, nephew
To heck with them stones, they look better as rubble.
The idea: if humanity ended, our ancestors can look at these guide stones and have ten commandments to build a society from
The reality: probably one of the first things to be reduced to dust in case of an appocalypse
Looks like the dust has a head start :/
If humanity ends then there wont be any ancestors around to waste time looking for the crappy garden sculpture..
And lets be honest, if we as a species get to see a end of the world scenario, America will be nothing but sand and dust and nobody in the rest of the world will want to go there of all places... pretty sure, food/water/weapons and a safe place will be top priority... not going to learn laws from a already failed variation of ourselves..
Them granite blocks are just a waste of resources and money.
Also, those morons command that people should create new world order ruled by "reason" after this one ends, but at same time nobody reasonable would create world order based on rules left by a civilisation that wiped themselves in nuclear holocaust. In fact they should do the opposite in this case.
What makes you think they'd be reduced to dust by an apocalypse?
You are wrong
Saying the Georgia Guidestones are as mysterious as Stonehenge is like saying sand is as wet as water. They literally had an unveiling.
Imagine being one of the few survivors of a catastrophic event and thinking vague and morally ambiguous messages from the old world that just destroyed itself can help you fix the planet.
If anything they could serve as relics to learn about the old world's various languages similar to how the Rosetta Stone was used to help decipher ancient Egyptian texts.
And yet we know that there would be certainly idiots who would. And the cycle of madness would continue. If I were to write a message for the future, it would be "Suffer not the 'Human Cowbirds', for they will not suffer you; you who only wanted to be happy..."
it's purpose to be inspirational in an aesthetical way. it wouldn't be the same if it was some soulless wordy document
@@axaxt7000 I'll take a soulless wordy document relating to future survival over something inspirational. One might include instructions on clean drinking water, the other might lead to a hierarchical cult. Never forget that society learned brewing before it learned how to clean water in cities.
If you view it from the context of the 21st century it's absolutly filled with hypocrites because of that reason. It's more of a way of communicating "don't do what we did, let's get it right this time".
As a Georgian, yeah barely any of us even know what they were for. We all just kinda went "oh shit they got blown up? Ok then."
fuckin stones done got blown
I think it would be concerning to people since if someone decided to blow this monument up, what are the chances for imitators at other monuments?
@@chadschmaltz9790 in Georgia, i hate to aay it, but we really just don't care-
@@chadschmaltz9790 Well, the thing is. We didn't care.
Nah brother I'm pissed literally my favorite thing ever
As a Georgian I happen to know these stones were made by giants
"Stone Henge in America"....not even close.
"Maintain humanity under 500,000,000...."
Yea, I don't think you need to be right wing to find issue with that little section.
It is strange and rather unsettling, but given the context of the rest of it combined with the functionality of the stones themselves... it makes sense. It's essentially to maintain nature and the natural Earth in the event of a collapse. Not to murder people senselessly until we reach that point. At least that's how I understood it.
The guy who allegedly built these guidestones was a klan supporter eugenicist. So yeah, those tablets are closer to conservatism then one may think. John Oliver's video Rocks was very informative
This is not true though. A global nuclear war wouldn’t be able to reduce population to under 500 million and a reduction in state and government would lead to kids being the free farm labour and retirement plan again.
You're correct, however, only the right wing was upset with this monument. It may have problematic things written on it, but many things are problematic, and not everything will draw the attention of everyone with a political opinion - it became basically a right-wing meme to hate on this statue, because the words written fit in well with the NWO conspiracy theory, and that drew their attention.
I have been watching your channel for a while now and you have caught me off guard completely. This is all new to me. I have been obsessed over stone henge my whole life. Kudos to you.
yeah i remember an old friend of mine talking about these things and me just thinking this sounds like tripe and genocide lmao, like those dystopian scifi movies where things SEEM perfect but are actually horrific and cold (like Logan's Run as an example)
As someone who seen Logans Run you wouldn't want to live in a nightmare of a society.
After what happened these two last years, placing the NWO next to dumb conspiracies like reptilians and illuminati really hurts, Muta.
You will own nothing and you WILL be happy
@@User-be4fx Why are you surprised that an organisation (the World Economic Forum) with funding from the largest corporations in the world and multi billionaires and a founder who's father was a literal Nazi would say something like that? The whole point of defending capitalism is to ensure the workers can't own the means of production. The less workers own, the more capitalists gain. If you really want workers to have more control over society you should be anti-capitalist.
I read that as NWA at first lol
@@User-be4fx You vil eat ze bugs
@@menthols4625 und you *VILL* live in ze pod
There was a companion book to go along with the guide stones. It is called, Common Sense Renewed by Robert Christian. There were 2000 books printed and 100 were signed by R. Christian
"The guidestones would serve to guide humanity back to civilization after a great calamity."
- contains no instructions to build cornerstone technologies
should build new ones with that information. this time without lots of cringe typos and errors in the non-english slabs. also leave out the creepy ideology.
@@Lucas_Jeffrey the guy who commissioned it was named Herbert Hinzie Kersten. He was a proponent for eugenics and apparently a huge racist. This information is from the documentary called ‘Dark Clouds Over Elberton’ in which the directors of the doc trace him down.
I've lived in GA since 2006 and I don't think I've ever heard of it. I've heard of the concept of preserving language and plant seeds etc in case of apocalyptic scenarios but yeah. It sounds a bit odd to put such guidestones in the middle of nowhere, unless they were strategically placed near where water would rise. But it would have to be freshwater to attract remaining humans. But why would we expect remnant humans to know what a damn capstone is? Or describe "feet" (not even using the more common metric system) with NO ruler included? And why would they expect anyone to follow the rules. Idk where I'm going with this. Was it really "one of the largest/most prominent conspiracy theories in the United States"? Not by a long shot. But it's kinda nice that this one doesn't involve horrific crimes for once.
And all of my life I never thought for a minute My tiny Town would become international news again if you want or possible I'd be glad to sit down and chat with you one day about it. I lived about 6 miles from the miles from there for most of my childhood you'd be amazed on some of the crazies that it brings too.
Sucks someone destroyed it , I hope they rebuild new better one
@@VarenvelDarakus nah why rebuilding another one anyway
@@nosik68 it's just been a staple for so long it's just kind of part of our culture that we have there it's kind of like driving past the same thing every day like an old store or a old gas station etc etc and then not being there anymore Small Town Georgia life little things that seem trivial and like they don't mean much could be quite significant for people like us call us resisted to change but we always say we just like consistency
@@Pluh88 yeah i can understand that but do you agree with what was written on them?
@@nosik68 can you give 1-2 reason why not? , it was good for people who lived there , good for economy , not done any harm? , did bring tourists.
Dont the stones technically stand for mass game ending so that only 500mil people remain?
Yeah. Among other things.
No it's a guide saying if 99% percent of humanity dies they should keep the numbers low to maintain a balance with natute
@@sekiahead Yes because you are totally in the know and this isn't the information just being fed to you, that is if you're even real and not a bot.
@@sekiahead Hello fellow fed, how much do you get paid?
@@Fataltyler08 you taken your schizo meds today?
I could be wrong but that looked like a “Tannerite” explosion. Obviously much easier to pull off and access several pounds of that stuff.
I literally made a barn disappear once because I used a bit too much. We were there to demo the bar but I didn’t mean to make it fucking disappear. Just because it’s somewhat cheap and readily available doesn’t mean that it’s not extremely dangerous
Bro are u a demo expert that's an awesome job
@@darthchungus9964 guess?
The town is surrounded by granite quarries. Easy access to explosives.
There’s multiple quarries, engravers, and there’s also Freemason cornerstones on all the buildings and two lodges.
The entire town is run by the Elberton Granite Association.
I have zero idea how my phone is even working right now, but currently using a portable charger and somehow it held just enough charge so i can use it... im with a few buddies rn camping in the middle of the woods, by my house there is like 20 acres of straight woods we went into, now we got turned around lmfao, lowkey we just watched one of your videos while in the tent, about to pack up camp soon and continue moving, love your videos keep up the great work... even in the middle of the woods your videos are still a straight banger!
it was very laggy but the video came through, thank you Verizon lmfao
I’ve lived in Georgia all my life, and I have never heard of these. Still cool that Mutahar is talking about my state
The mystery has been answered but for some reason its managed to remain relatively unknown, A documentary team uncovered the identity, rich racist eugenicist who supported the Klan, its Georgia what did we expect. John Oliver covered this in a youtube video called Rocks like a month or so ago.
yeah i don’t get how people keep supporting these stones
@@soggos732 I don’t support a lot of the commandments on it. Some I do(protecting nature and a few others like the one language thing. Since I think anyone can have their own language, but I think when you’re rebuilding have a global language that everyone knows so it’s easier to communicate with complete strangers is good)But I truly enjoy the idea of building monuments just in case the worst of the worst happens in rural areas.
Yep. And I wouldn't be surprised if it was a crazed supporter of Kandiss Taylor that destroyed them. Since, you know, she wanted to destroy them.
Muh Nazis
@@yea3603 it's cool having many languages. it's human and natural and not holding us back.
Not gonna lie. The Georgia Guidestones were creepy
Im glad theyre gone
it’s advice and i’d prefer if it were still still here also L checkmark
The rich pissed off way too many of the poor. I don't condone what happened but it's not surprising either.
"Stones made to sustain nuclear war"
Home made explosives: "Hold my beer"
you know that a full slab of granite would have probably just fell to the ground in case of a nuclear war ... right ? Like, there 0 chances they would target the stones themselves with the bombs ... are people really that stupid these days ?
Stones can survive radiation. Not a direct blast.
@@angelgjr1999 yea but again, erosion and acid rains are a thing after the *funnyboom* so I doubt you would be able to read them a few thousand years from now, considering how they are placed.
@@puddingsimon2626 yeah because all those thousand yearold stone structures are just a myth then. The ruins of countless civilizations were all built in the 20s to fool us!
@@joehill4094 yea but back then there where no intense radioactive ash storms and acid rains from all of that fucky wucky after nuclear destruction.
What theory goes with the pinto? Ford put the gas tank in the back so it you got rear ended hard enough the gas tank explodes. That’s just a major design flaw.
As cool as the concept was, theres virtually null chance out of 10 it would've actually done anything for apocalypse surviving humans. For one, they're still stuck in Georgia...
I'm from GA and I knew them as dumbstones
the non-english slabs were filled with grammar errors and typos
I bet when they blew up, Klaus arose from his bed and said "zer iz a deesturbance in ze force"
“Keep the population below 500 million”
Like Jesus, not even Thanos advocated for killing 90% of the population.
5:46 The 10th commandment there was gonna be: "Thou shalt not simp!!", but they tried to milk more out of it by making it a more generalized statement 😑
It would be hilarious if a completely new set of guide stones mysteriously popped up elsewhere in the world in the near future. lol
That would really cause the conspiracy theorists to freak out, so it’d be really funny for someone to do it
I hope they are made of titanium and like ten times as big
you know something, right? just admit it 😑
.
All of the granite sheds are just going to donate new slabs and the Guidestones will be rebuilt, the blueprints are still in a safe in the Elbert County courthouse.
Nuclear war would kill potentially billions, but the target sites were at the time limited to urban europe, USSR, north America and NATO/anti-soviet neighbours. Every western city would get destroyed as would every military base and ICBM site, and afterwards nuclear winter would starve the 3rd world. But humanity would survive and the worst projections were a few billion dead.
So if 1.5 billion humans remain in the worst of worst cases, according to the guidestones 2 of 3 people will have to pick the short straw. I'm sure that would be a great message for post-apocalyptic people looking for guidance and lead to peace and civility!
to imply a nuclear winter is unlikely, we got volcano that explosed with equivalent to 10 megatons and its not nearly enough to change the weather,
when the 1815 volcano in mount tambora erupted, it was equivalent 800 megatons, there was a summer colder than average after, but not nearly to kill us all.
using nuclear weapon to cause a food shortage via a nuclear winter its inefitiant, it more efficient to just send a nuke to some farmland, and make the ground contamined to it not good to make food out of that place, also they used modern nuclear weapon by explosing them above the surface because its more efficient to destroy infrastructure and people.
Or just, everyone could have 1 child for a couple generations...
People seem to conveniently forget the simplest and most painless method of reducing population
@@StuffandThings_ China moment
@@Trashboat4444 Once again, there are many ways of achieving this without being cruel (I do *not* support the PRC in any capacity). Simple things like a tax, or a cultural understanding that its for the greater good will work. But it seems that evolutionary tendencies tend to gain the upper hand when no action is taken.
@@StuffandThings_ ya for that have worked so well for China
As someone who lives near there it is shocking to see them destroyed.
shockingly good.
On the Pinto: Ford execs decided it was cheaper to pay for lawsuits from death and injuries than to add an $8 part (pressure relief valve) to each car's gas tank.
This saddens me. As a native Georgian we have MANY historic registries, but it's imperative as a human to preserve our history. Especially when we don't fully understand it.
It was a tourist trap idea.. not registered
not even close to state history.. just an art tour project
@@snakeman5250Native americans are not history just a minor inconvenience to genocide by settlers :D
FYI the Ford Pinto might be one of the most disasterous car designs ever. Basically the way the rear of the car was designed is that would cause major sparking when any other car rear ends it. It’s fuel tank was also really close to the rear bumper and had a habit of leaking gas fumes. Sparks + fumes = flaming Pintos whenever it gets rear ended
I've always found some elements of the guidestones to be illogical. Mainly the extremely low population cap--and the horrors that enforcement would bring, especially regarding the idea of breeding and weeding out "weaker" DNA.
I don't think you have to be politically conservative to believe that.
Gotta watch my daily muta video. I get to learn some small amount of knowledge everyday
" be not a cancer "
How can a new humanity even know what the word cancer will mean
"Surviving an apocalypse" does not mean it is designed to withstand a direct hit (nothing does agains a nuclear hit center on).
It was meant being left alone in the aftermath, to survive weather and other circumstances after the big fall.
What destroyed it in the end was the public knowledge about it being in a place it was not condoned.
Fun fact we aren’t over populated we’re actually hemorrhaging population
Judging by the comment section, most people barely have any idea about the planet and world they live in.
Clearly the reason they destroyed it was because of questions raised about ethics in games Journalism.
(In all seriousness though politicians shouldn't be encouraging literal acts of terror like this and the fact that she felt confidant in encouraging them at all is insane.)
Average GOP politician reasoning
Been waiting for you to cover this! :D
Thanks Muta for showing names and twitter feeds, now I know who to follow...
The biggest mystery here is Mutas pronunciation of “Illuminati”
Stone Henge is 5000+ years old. The Georgia Guide Stones were put there by some dude in the 80's. They are not alike.
With some time they would have.
@@Flegadoit's like china that remade the Eiffel tower.
When you destroyed your past, you're left only copying from others lmao.
As a Georgian, I'll admit that we were all conspiring to troll the world with rocks.
Also a Georgian here, can confirm
@@soviet_mayo same
Guidestones were legit. Look at the great rest, world economic forum, KLAUS Schwab, world banking system/federal reserve. No theory here. Just pure facts
muta didn't do his research sadly.
Take your meds shizo
Take your meds
You made me interested in cyber security and now I’m just finishing my degree and IT security and using wire shark and Kali Linux just wanted to say thank you I appreciate everything you do and I know it’s probably not going to happen but Ik how much you like emulation and old games my favorite childhood game is Predator concrete jungle on the og xbox or ps2 you should try it out sometime it’s like Spider-Man acrobatics meets metal gear solid stealth and with the gore of some thing like Mortal Kombat fatalities. Ps I played this as a 6 year idk how my parents thought it was ok you can literally rip someone’s head off with the spine attached or pick someone up by the head and smash it into the wall the limp body falls to the ground spraying blood everywhere from where his Head used to be.
@@nancypelosi480 I’m sorry to hear about your experience it makes me feel really sad I wish people were treated with respect in the work place or at least like a human being
I live 25 minutes from the Georgia guide stones and always wanted to go check it out but never did. Guess I never will get to now.
The CIA is getting feisty these days.
I dont think these stones talked about how to rebuild after an apocalypse..The stones talked about HOW to bring about the apocalypse, and how we needed to get rid of 80% of the world population. That was my take on them
i live in elberton ga, and everyone in this town knows that the people who built the guide stones practically own this town. it’s ran by high ranking freemasons who are the same people that run the Granite shed (where the stones were built)
@SOG the reasoning for the lack of time capsule, it seems to be for when disaster strikes someone can burry stuff specifically there, hence why the date is blank... it was a decided location for a time capsule not yet used
My thinking is that, in regards to the guidestones not having any dates for the time capsule, there was no need to a time capsule to be buried until the world was nigh due for a very hard reset.
The guidestones were also likely commissioned in the event the world did end, and the person(s) behind it had hopes that, should humanity survive beyond the end, they could unite, thrive, and leave the past to die as it was meant to.
Keep the past close enough to look back and learn from it, but far enough away to not allow it to corrupt anyone with zealous fanaticism. No real conspiracy to be had here, just a set of very basic laws to lay the foundation of a post-apocalypse human society.
Lucifer presents himself as being of light. This stone existed for no other purpose but as an insurance policy for language parasites to be able to rule again after messing everything up. If I were to make a slab that was to survive the apocalypse, it would simply say this: "Beware those who would promise you anything just so they may take everything. Suffer not those who would follow them...or you will end up like us."
Ehhh they can make some new stones with more modern day ideals.... Like keep wokeness out of society before it fails
@@Dragonk116 "those who beg for personal security in exchange for universal freedom shall be instead granted exile, where they will have neither and suffer alone" this sound about right for starters?
Not sure if it's been mentioned in the comments or not, John Oliver covered the Georgia Guidestones a few weeks back on the Last Week Tonight channel under the episode "Rocks." They uncovered that the person who commissioned the Guidestones was a David Duke supporter - yes, that David Duke.
bs
@@camraid9 Thanks for the contribution.
In the documentary ‘Dark Clouds Over Elberton’ the directors apparently found a way to figure out the identity of the person who commissioned the project. They contacted the publisher of Common Sense Renewed (a book by the pseudonym Robert Christian, the same pseudonym used for the commissioning of the Georgia Guidestones.) the publisher (Mr. Merryman as was found by the tracing of a letter sent during construction) was friends with Robert Christian, whose real name was Herbert Hinzie Kersten. Kersten was apparently known in his community for his racism and his views on population control. He also apparently bragged about his friendship with William Shockley, a controversial inventor who was a proponent for racial eugenics.
@@couriertx More detailed and eloquent than I could have put it. Thank you.
I'm pretty sure I saw something about these stones before but confused it with the Four Corners Monument. Anyway, it could survive a nuclear war because it's not in a target area and wouldn't be in a blast radius.
"Avoid petty laws"
Politicians abs bureaucrats: how about no
"I'm not saying it was aliens... but it was aliens." -That Guy From _Ancient Aliens_
Conspiracy theory class sounds actually really interesting.
Yes, everything is a conspiracy theory. Trust the government, media and coporations. They have everything in your best interests.
Turned out most of them aren't theories, they became true
Gotta love it when you get shadowbanned for making a mockery out of sheep.
@@666chapelofblood You're not shadowbanned, I can see your comment.
@@lookingfortruth1930 I get that there are crazy ideas about lizard ppl, but the idea of the "new world order" is not a "conspiracy" when the US president (Bush Sr.) said it on record to congress lol. Not to mention they're using it nowadays in mainstream media haha.
"LISTEN TO THESE STONES AFTER HUMANITY IS EXPLODED!!!!"
--Dude with left over 4th of july fire crackers takes it down.--
**surprised pikachu face**
Fucking love ur channel my guy, been on here since u started the deep web sunday series, ur literally a part of my daily routine lol
How many cookies do you want?
I had no idea these existed. thank you for educating me, this was really interesting
At the time those stones were erected, it would’ve been good advice. Nowadays it wouldn’t surprise me if it turns out humanity’s gonna double down on it’s self-destruction instead.
Damn I live in Georgia and I’m just learning about this from a Canadian 😂 Muda the best lol
"Here's a closer look at it"
*remains zoomed in on own face instead*
I fully buy into the idea that the local government of the town they were in paid to have them built.
It's like if out of nowhere all local politicians got together and constructed an old looking mansion, making it look abandoned for 200 of years. Filled it with strange foreign and other worldy looking object and later said "hey look at this cool weird place we found", fully knowing this would be the perfect tourist trap.
I haven't thought about these in a long time. I remember watching some documentary (don't know the veracity), but the thought they had tracked down the guy who did it. It was something about R. Christian standing for the Rosicrucian's (a christian order linked with the Templars). I need to look it up again. I think the guy had died before the making of the doc, but one of his relatives(?) still had paperwork of some kind. Anyway thank you for a blast from my past anyway.
I live in georgia and visited them when a couple years ago. really interesting stuff.
The World is Not Overpopulated. There is enough for everyone's needs, not everyone's greeds.
tell that to b i ll g. at es
"Overpopulation" is not The Problem. The Problem is The Elite ruining The World & Society.
@@futurewario9591 are you replying to me? it seems like i’m shadow banned again. i agree btw
Ford pinto conspiracy? I mean ford knew about the fact if the pinto received a rear Impact that there was a possibility for the fuel tank being penetrated, not sure what the conspiracy about that would be, Ford decided to save around $10 per car and not fix the issue which resulted in many deaths, Ford would rather pay out to victims than pay to fix the problem. Regular car reviews has a good video on the topic. Maybe Muta got confused and was thinking about the NBC Chevy conspiracy, where in the 80s NBC stated the 80s sqaurebody trucks would do a similar thing as a pinto when hit from the side and even had video proof of the truck in question being hit and spraying gas out of the tank and starting a fire. But what they failed to mention was that they overfilled the gas tank so much that it was leaking out of the gas door and they also had rags stuff in the gas hole, with an ignition source attached to the rags that was detonated after the impact. So basically NBC lied (the news lying, shocking and unheard of I know) and said the c10 Chevy trucks were dangerous which was proven to be false, NBC had to pay General Motors in some sort of defamation lawsuit I believe and publish a retraction, which you can find both nbc videos here on UA-cam.
Bingo. 🎯
What a waste of a good truck. Those old trucks were loyal as fuck. Certainly better than post-2007 GM, once they put AFM on the 5.3, it was downhill from there. I mean, they basically guaranteed that what was once a 300,000+ mile engine would fail prematurely because the lifters would give up. At least you can get rebuilt and crate 5.3s that have that shit removed and are just ordinary engines.
Mythbusters i believe covered it way long ago, or maybe the historychan
@@lsswappedcessna yeah, I love mine. I got a 85 c10 and a 95 c1500 both short bed single cab. Not a fan of modern gm, or the ls engines either. They are cool but not interesting to me as I prefer the old fashioned 350 or a big block. Plus the vortex 5.7 is actually faster than a 5.3 stock but 5.3 can be tuned for boost better in stock form. The ls heads actually bolt up to a ford block I think it’s a 351 🤔 not too sure but kinda funny. Imo nothing sounds better than a open header sbc or big block Chevy 😫. I heard a lot of 2010ish and up ls blocks just eat lifters though.
My roommate was bugging about this and I couldn't understand the whole jumanji about it, but excited to learn from this vid. 😅
@DONT READ MY PROFILE PICTURE What happens If I do?
I keep saying that Humanity is lost but now , humanity is really Over
The episode about "Rocks" from John Oliver gives great insight into the whole Guide Stones issue.