links comin this one starts 10:03 into the vid
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTYE0aU3xeI
hmmmm hypothermia? i fuckin doubt that
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElsLeeC6thE
this one has lalibela and balbec(sp) in this one.
after i watched those in my head i dont need any evidence besides what i see. what i see is two cases where amazin shit has been built...one in which we still cant recreate which is balbec...and no kinda way to explain them. you're tellin me our ancestors were makin shit that we would have trouble makin today if we even could....with sharpened rocks at that lol. im open for any explination to these and if im proven wrong ill be the first to say hey i was fuckin wrong you were right.
watch those videos aswell and then tell me its bullshit. never once have i wanted to believe that aliens were the reason why we thought we had gods and all that, not once.
I endured that first video. It's complete bullshit imo.
There was a long segment about the Japanese suicide forest, with highfalutin terms like Ancient Alien Theorists
(insert facepalm here) and a veritable phalanx of would, could, maybe, how about, what if. At one point one of these Theorists
mentioned electromagnetic energy. Oh good, I thought; at least this can be measured. No maps, no numbers, no further explanation. I would imagine that if anything WAS there to measure, they'd have shown data and done a victory dance.
The second segment stinks of hoax. There is no chain of evidence linking any of those corpse photos to the described incident. I think the whole story is a put-on, without any fact to support it. Can we as Westerners even verify the occurrence and membership of the alleged expedition?
So yes; I call bullshit. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and a clip from a series of fiction dressed up as serious inquiry into reality doesn't begin to satisfy me. I find it significant that the Urals incident occurred in post-Stalin Russia, where the evidence can and routinely was made to disappear.
After the simply awful investigative standards displayed by that first segment (complete with eerie evocative music and new-school machine-gun video editing!) I'll say I won't pay attention unless higher-quality info that has been through peer review (by scientists, not Theorists
) can be produced.
Humans have this amazingly strong and resilient capacity for superstition and spirit-power ideation. All it takes ime to believe in magic is to want to believe, and our hard-wiring handles the rest. Nature however is indifferent to our wishful stories of spirit and powerThere is some ancient tug deep in my mind-meat that wants to trust the bringers of tales of magic ... however My experience has taught me consistently that this trust is not the friend of reason. cn