I bet that would have been amazing to see. I’d love to see all those Ancient Greek/Roman cities.
bowlfullofjellosays
Wow, I have never heard of this. It’s so amazing
bowlfullofjellosays
Wow, I have never heard of this. It’s so amazing
nickgt1969says
Is that vaulted roof typical of the time, I’ve not seen that before ?
BraganzaPaulistasays
Sorry for my poor English. What I wanted to imply was that all the visitors to the statues would feel no complete sadness after they visited the statue
IHeartRedditGESTAPOsays
I am told we are advanced and that things are way better today than in the past … but then I look at history and realize that the far far smaller population back then created way more impressive things with far less "technology" and made way greater strides in significant and consequential knowledge of the world than we have been making ever singe about the 1960s. Literally everything we have today is just an incremental iteration on the invention that came mostly before the 1960s and our houses and buildings are getting smaller and less human in their stark and barren design and total lack of flourish or stylistic embellishment and at the same time our global populations are utterly out of control and billionaires and bleeding hearts who fuel the out of control reproduction of the most unproductive and unsustainable populations of the world cheer on that they have accomplished the negation of natural population control through "technology".
Again, what is supposed to be the outcome of all of this, when, e.g., Africa has a population it simply cannot sustain any more than it could today or even decades ago without literal life supporting white people keeping the forces of natural selection at bay?
If you study natural imbalances in any other ecosystem, you will quickly start seeing very similar patterns that are readily and plentifully available to observe among the human population today. I hate to say it, but all the objective indicators keep screaming that the ecology of humanity and the civilized world in particular is rapidly approaching an inversion event, where the whole system essentially collapses, likely akin to the collapse of the bronze age eastern Mediterranean civilization that humans were not even aware of having existed up until just a relative few years ago. It totally collapsed, more or less without a single trace remaining until a single person started piecing things together over the last 60 years of fighting an up hill battle having to prove all the "experts" wrong.
liveandletdieax says
I bet that would have been amazing to see. I’d love to see all those Ancient Greek/Roman cities.
bowlfullofjello says
Wow, I have never heard of this. It’s so amazing
bowlfullofjello says
Wow, I have never heard of this. It’s so amazing
nickgt1969 says
Is that vaulted roof typical of the time, I’ve not seen that before ?
BraganzaPaulista says
Sorry for my poor English. What I wanted to imply was that all the visitors to the statues would feel no complete sadness after they visited the statue
IHeartRedditGESTAPO says
I am told we are advanced and that things are way better today than in the past … but then I look at history and realize that the far far smaller population back then created way more impressive things with far less "technology" and made way greater strides in significant and consequential knowledge of the world than we have been making ever singe about the 1960s. Literally everything we have today is just an incremental iteration on the invention that came mostly before the 1960s and our houses and buildings are getting smaller and less human in their stark and barren design and total lack of flourish or stylistic embellishment and at the same time our global populations are utterly out of control and billionaires and bleeding hearts who fuel the out of control reproduction of the most unproductive and unsustainable populations of the world cheer on that they have accomplished the negation of natural population control through "technology".
Again, what is supposed to be the outcome of all of this, when, e.g., Africa has a population it simply cannot sustain any more than it could today or even decades ago without literal life supporting white people keeping the forces of natural selection at bay?
If you study natural imbalances in any other ecosystem, you will quickly start seeing very similar patterns that are readily and plentifully available to observe among the human population today. I hate to say it, but all the objective indicators keep screaming that the ecology of humanity and the civilized world in particular is rapidly approaching an inversion event, where the whole system essentially collapses, likely akin to the collapse of the bronze age eastern Mediterranean civilization that humans were not even aware of having existed up until just a relative few years ago. It totally collapsed, more or less without a single trace remaining until a single person started piecing things together over the last 60 years of fighting an up hill battle having to prove all the "experts" wrong.