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The speaker argues that historians are wrong about historic buildings, asserting that major structures around the world were not built in the 18th–19th centuries but by an advanced civilization that existed before us. They claim there is documented proof that construction records, receipts, and blueprints for several famous buildings do not exist or cannot be produced. Specific claims include: - The Cathedral of All Saints, Albany, NY; Big Ben (Elizabeth Clock Tower) in London; the Field Museum in Chicago; and the Philadelphia City Hall supposedly expose that they do not have construction records. - The New York Public Library (NYPL) is cited as lacking original blueprints or engineering drawings for its own structure, with a request for the original construction documents met by redirected searches and in-person visits rather than direct answers. - The main assertion is that the city funded these projects with taxpayer money, so construction documents should be public records, including blueprints, ledgers, and technical drawings, and the speaker questions how many horses and chisels were used, how marble was hauled, and how the buildings were actually constructed. - The NYPL’s archivist allegedly claimed that the original blueprints and engineering drawings or contractor specifications exist but are only available to NYPL staff, and that no building plans are shared with external researchers, including scholars. The speaker states the NYPL did not confirm possession of the originals or provide catalog numbers, conditions, or evidence that they exist, leading the speaker to conclude that the blueprints are being withheld. - The speaker notes personal emails from an individual in charge of substantial construction funds who maintains that, as a publicly funded project, there should be a large paper trail, and asserts that the proof of construction for the NYPL is hidden away and only accessible to staff. - A broader claim is made that five world-famous structures lack construction records, implying that the documented timelines for their construction are false and that the public is misled about the true history of these buildings. - There is an update from the Field Museum in Chicago: the museum’s library archives manager and the Art Institute of Chicago archivist indicated that the Field Museum did not receive full planning records, and that the collection holds very few original drawings with virtually no job filings or administrative records. The Field Museum allegedly has no known architectural or engineering drawings, no job files, no ledgers, no contracts, or project documentation, and there may have been a purge of materials. - The speaker states that a new FOIA effort is underway to obtain further evidence and insists that more documentation is necessary to verify or refute these claims. Throughout, the speaker credits ongoing FOIA requests and audits of institutions as they pursue “the truth” and claims that these revelations could rewrite the timeline and history of the buildings and the world as we know it. The episode is identified as episode 157 of “my lunch break,” with sponsor and affiliate mentions interwoven. The overall mission is to reveal that publicly funded buildings lack public construction records and that major historical narratives are false, with ongoing efforts to obtain original blueprints and records.

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The speaker questions the mainstream narrative surrounding old buildings, suggesting they are larger than perceived and not AI-generated. They visit the Streeter Public Library, claiming its construction timeline is impossible and its murals have a suspicious history, including the painter's convenient death. The Logan County Courthouse's renovation is viewed as destruction, highlighting the contrast between quick 1800s construction and slow modern restoration. The Illinois State Capitol Building reveals a possible tunnel entrance, suggesting an underground system. A nearby castle-turned-museum lacks historical information. A fire at Union Station is seen as a planned demolition of old-world structures, questioning the official explanation and the feasibility of construction with limited resources. The Carnahan Courthouse's construction timeline is deemed impossible, with archives lacking details. The building features griffins, possibly connected to free energy and defaced Egyptian sphinxes. The Saint Louis Basilica's construction during a financial crisis is questioned, along with the architects' simultaneous projects and lack of construction photos. The speaker analyzes the architects' biographies, finding statistically improbable coincidences. The Khohekea Mounds, near Saint Louis, are linked to a past civilization, with the Monk's Pyramid compared to Giza. The site's history is questioned, citing tunnels and a suppressed temple discovery. The Saint Louis Art Museum's layout mirrors the Field Museum, suggesting a giant-scale design. The speaker introduces Turkmenistan, linking its architecture to structures worldwide, including a Chicago house of worship. Road construction in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, is seen as a cover-up of old-world remnants. The Milwaukee City Hall's construction is scrutinized, finding the Cream City brick's origin and the project's timeline implausible. The architect, Henry Cobb, is linked to the demolition of the Chicago Federal Building, replaced by an inferior structure. Saint Andrew's Catholic Church's construction photo is deemed a completion photo, and its architect, William Ginther, is suspiciously credited with numerous similar buildings.

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We now possess the official 1929 Chicago Tunnel Network map, revealing exactly which buildings the Chicago Tunnel system connects to, and no longer needing to ask others about tunnel connections. The map, hidden in the Chicago History Museum and never digitized until today, is shown in full to identify buildings with current tunnel connections. The presenter asserts that the old-world buildings were connected by a vast underground web, not just independent structures, and that the tunnels predate roads and selective routing suggests a purposeful network rather than a mail-centric system. Key points and claims: - The 1929 map shows tunnels linking to various buildings in Chicago, and the presenter emphasizes that these tunnels were already present before the roads and were not built merely to transport mail. - The official narrative claims that the interconnected tunnels were constructed in the 1890s to transport mail and move freight, and were officially shut down in 1959; the presenter finds this story illogical and inconsistent with the evidence of widespread tunnel connections and reliance on underground transport. - The map’s black lines are tunnels, not roads, and the tunnels appear to skip entire blocks and connect specific buildings rather than following streets or uniform routes. - Examples highlighted on the map and in accompanying discussion: - The Palmer House shows two tunnel entrances. The presenter questions the repeated construction of multiple Palmer Houses on the same site, and notes the Palmer House entrances on the map. - The Temple (33rd Lodge) is discussed, with the building demolished in 1939 due to “poor internal services,” and replaced by a Walgreens. - The La Salle Hotel and the Stock Exchange are shown with a tunnel between them; the Stock Exchange building was demolished in 1972. - The Rookery Building is examined; 1891 photos show subterranean features and an alleyway that is identified as a tunnel connection between the Rookery and nearby structures. - The map indicates that these tunnels existed under streets that were surface-dirty and congested in the early 1900s, suggesting underground transport as a primary mode. - The presenter argues that access to publicly funded buildings (like City Hall) is possible for tunnel entrances and intends to press for access to sub-basement plans, arguing that publicly funded buildings are subject to public records and tours. - The plan includes visiting the actual buildings to verify tunnel entrances visible on the map, leveraging public records requests to uncover entrances that may be overlooked or unknown by building administrations. - The presenter claims that the underground network extends beyond Chicago and suggests a similar web exists in cities worldwide, implying that the 1929 map is a snapshot of an ongoing, larger network that has expanded since. - The upcoming work involves contacting publicly funded buildings to request tunnel-entry information and documenting the responses. Note: The transcript includes sponsor and channel-promotional material, which has been omitted from this summary per content guidelines.

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The speaker details ongoing outreach to hundreds of records departments and officials to obtain a single blueprint for an old world building, specifically focusing on the Field Museum in Chicago. They claim mainstream history states the Field Museum was constructed from 1919 to 1921 as a 480,000 square foot palace with 75-foot interior columns, designed, engineered, and completed in two years, and assert that blueprints and related documentation should be publicly archived as proof of this construction timeline. He argues that by the early 1900s Chicago had strict building codes and permit laws requiring stamped architectural and structural plans, with plans to be permanently kept in the city’s engineering archives, including blueprints, engineering load calculations, plumbing, electrical, and HVAC schematics, logs, and permits. He contends that, if the Field Museum’s narrative is true, these documents should exist and be accessible today. The team has contacted various places, archives, and museums with a set of questions aimed at verifying the true construction records: blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, engineering calculations; evidence of communications between architect and builder; costs, including marble shipments and origins. They begin with the Chicago History Museum, which preserves Chicago’s architectural, civic, and engineering history and claims to hold architectural drawings and maps since 1856, including records from major firms like Graham, Anderson, Probstin White—the firm tied to the Field Museum. They note the History Museum’s responses to their inquiries: staffing reductions, limited ability to answer questions about architecture, and that the collection is complicated. They claim the museum admits they only have renovation drawings from the 1980s and cannot confirm originals; they suggest they may have copies but lack originals, leaving the status of original blueprints unclear. The speaker asserts they have “unlocked another building that does not have blueprints” and emphasizes the Field Museum’s large, marble construction as a key case. They recount further email exchanges showing the Chicago History Museum responding with negative findings for original blueprints, engineering calculations, and contractor ledgers, while offering some photographs. They question why a 1915 photo labeled “construction of the Field Museum” exists when construction supposedly began in 1919, suggesting the building appeared roofed before the stated start date. They press for inspection, occupancy, or dedication certificates but the museum again states they do not hold these records. They connect this issue to Soldier Field, implying a broader pattern of shared architecture and funding knowledge. They acknowledge the Field Museum was said to be under construction 1919–1921, yet present contradictions about pre-1919 imagery. They thank supporters and donors, reiterating that they will continue investigating and exposing inconsistencies. They report contacting the Field Museum directly on 10/27/2025 to describe their research project and institutional affiliation as an independent researcher producing a long-form documentary on landmark buildings’ architectural and engineering history, requesting blueprints, ledgers, and public records from the last two hundred years, but receive no reply after follow-ups on 10/28/2025 and 11/11/2025. They declare the archivist’s knowledge that original blueprints are not held and assert the Field Museum is exposed. The speaker pledges to continue exposing buildings worldwide and promises more discoveries weekly, thanking supporters and subscribers as they continue.

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Speaker 0: The Cathedral Of All Saints, Big Ben, the Field Museum, Philadelphia City Hall, the New York Public Library, and the Emmanuel Church in LaGrange, Illinois all share a massive issue: they do not have the original blueprints. Proving that they actually constructed these structures, when they say they did, and we have exposed this right here on this channel. We know that their narratives are all the same, which I believe are all generated by the AI. There’s never an author to any of these mainstream stories. It doesn’t matter which country the building is in. They’re all the same. They’re all constructed in a year. And then there’s a mysterious fire that burned down the original one, replaced by a guy with zero training, and then he never builds anything ever again in his entire life. And they don’t have the blueprints even though these buildings were publicly funded, paid for by the taxpayer, yet they say only the staff can see them. To this point, we have not received a single blueprint, and we have changed archivist minds as to how they should look at their job moving forward. This is no longer a theory. Within the last 10 episodes, we have taken this research to a whole new level of exposure. A full audit is taking place live. For everybody in the world to see, they’re caught off guard. They wanna know which institution we work for. They don’t like this because the story that they have worked so hard for years to believe is being dismantled in seconds by the people that want the truth, all of us. We want the blueprints. We want the ledgers. We wanna know how much water the donkeys were drinking while hauling thousands of pounds of stone to the site. We wanna know which stores they were buying all their chisels from. We want the records. We want the verification to their story, and the FOIA requests are a brand new weapon for us. We are forcing governments to respond legally, and to this point, they are failing horribly. The timeline that we all live in is completely fake, and we are just getting started. When we contacted the National Archives and Records Administration, nara.gov, we want the blueprints to the Federal Hall in New York City, so I formally requested the original construction documentation for the Federal Hall or the US Custom House that was supposedly completed in 1842 under the US Treasury Department. I want to know if the National Archives holds or has ever held any of the following materials related to its design or construction: the original blueprints or engineering drawings, specifications, ledgers, inspection reports, and the rest. I also put in there because we all know the rules now, and we’re cornering them very quickly. NARA replied back: we searched the cartographic branch’s architecture master list and, unfortunately, did not find any records that appear to be responsive to your request. A master list from the National Archives? They found three drawings from the US Custom House in New York City. However, these are dated nineteen o five, which is sixty-three years after the thing was done. So we all know that those don’t count at all. We did not locate any other reference to the US Custom House in New York City during our search and then gave us a massive finding aid for all of our reference. Do they know who they just gave the master list to? I have to say, I don’t think that that was a good idea for the mainstream narrative. The master list is the internal index of all architectural records held by the National Archives. If a federally funded building ever had blueprints, they would be cataloged in this master list. This is huge. The master list includes every federated architectural record created by, submitted to, transferred to, or preserved by any federal agency. If the federal government commissioned a building, paid for a building, inspected a building, or even maintained a building, then under federal law, the architectural records need to be preserved, and they would be within this master list. And they have admitted to us that the Federal Hall has zero documentation inside this master list, meaning that the federal government is implicitly admitting they have zero verifiable proof that they ever constructed the structure in 1842 or at any point for that matter. I want to take a look through this master list. Welcome to episode 159 of my lunch break. I hope you’re all having a great day. And if you’re new, welcome. Get 10% off all Dubby products right now by using code MLB. I’ll put the link in the description below. This is clean energy, no sugar, no artificial flavors, no jitters, no crash. There’s over 15 flavors to choose from, and every purchase helps this channel. Speaker 1: I thank all of our sponsors over on Patreon. Thank you to flatearthdave.com. You can check out his app, the flat earth sun, moon, and zodiac app. I’ll put the link right in the description, and you can use my referral code MLB. If you click the Tartaria button, you’ll see the my lunch break playlist right here. Speaker 0: I want to see this master list. We can see that it shows the date of construction, the city, and the building’s name. So we type in the US Custom House, and we can see that there’s 170 of them inside this master file. We scroll down to the one in New York City to confirm what this individual is telling us. And as you can see, we’ll be able to pin these institutions down, telling them that there are zero documents regarding their building inside the master list right out of the gate. Here it is: Confirmation, the US Custom House, New York City, the only documents they have, three of them from nineteen o five, exactly like they said, a consolidated file with no location. So do they even have these three pages from nineteen o five? And then I had a crazy idea, an idea that I should maybe type in the US Capitol Building. What files do the federal government have on this palace that was supposedly constructed without a power tool in just seven years from 1793 to 1800, the beginning of our timeline in my opinion. So why is it, when I type in The US Capitol Building into the master list, that the only construction documents that the federal government has on their own structure is from 1935, a hundred and thirty-five years after it was supposedly constructed? A consolidated file with 10 pages of documents. There are sketches. There are no records. A moment that everybody in the world right now watching is gonna see that the mainstream history is exposed. This is a horrible mistake, I’m gonna be honest with you, to give me this master list. I cannot believe we have this. We no longer need them to confirm anything. We have their log. We have their records, and we know what they don’t have. The nation’s capital. It’s blueprints from the seventeen ninety three to eighteen hundreds construction project. Those blueprints, the ledgers, they’re gone. I told you we were just getting started. New York Public Library update: they claimed only staff could see the blueprints, then said originals are only available to staff because they’re fragile, then said they’re not processed or conserved yet. They’re not available to the public. I replied that since originals aren’t available to researchers, I won’t share my report. If the originals ever show up, we can revisit this. The New York Public Library is clearly lying and contradicting themselves. Stop emailing me.

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The transcript traces a broad, interwoven set of claims about hidden history, underground structures, and manipulated timelines, centering on Iran but weaving in examples from around the world. - Iran and Tehran: The host questions whether Iran is “not going along with the mainstream story” about control of the population and asks what in Tehran “they want destroyed and erased forever?” A Truth Social post from Donald J. Trump allegedly urged an evacuation of Tehran, prompting a mass evacuation that night. The host contends a “post-World” element is evacuated, focusing on the Golisthan Palace as a symbol of an old-world architecture that supposedly does not belong in the timeline and that its photos are extraordinary. - Golisthan Palace and underground expectations: The host describes the palace as featuring griffins at the entrance and asserts it is a “palace from the old world” connected to others underground, with a subterranean storage area beneath Salem Hall that is said to be larger than visible and labeled for storage. - National Museum of Iran: A half-mile away lies the National Museum of Iran, described as a massive box of land housing artifacts that supposedly reveal “something else happened here” than the mainstream narrative. The host notes that hands are removed from some items and points to a supposed basement level of the museum as evidence of hidden, off-limits artifacts that predate Islam or feature iconography tied to Zoroastrianism, female rulers, or alternative power structures. - Basements and “off-limits” artifacts: The program reiterates that basements of museums often hold millions of artifacts not on display, and claims this is a pattern consistent with a broader attempt to conceal the true past. The host suggests that the basement storage of the National Museum of Iran contains pivotal, undisclosed artifacts, perhaps including tablets and human remains. - Censorship and tech platforms: The host repeats that censorship is returning and platforms control narratives. A promotional pivot introduces Rumble and its Wallet as a tool to resist big-tech and big-bank influence, claiming it allows users to store digital assets (Bitcoin, Tether Gold, and USAT), tip creators without middlemen, and avoid bank censorship. The host urges viewers to open an account at wallet.rumble.com. - Repetition of “truth” and pattern: A recurring theme is that the true history is hidden in basements and underground spaces, and that many museums’ basements house millions of artifacts that are not accessible to the public. The host cites prior episodes (episode 113, 109, 108, 52, 41, 43) to support the claim of a deliberate cover-up and to illustrate “patterns and repetition” across locations. - Underground cities, tunnels, and old-world technology: The host asserts Tehran sits atop an old-world tunnel network and that Iran announced a tunnel project in November 2024; by January 2025, locals reportedly uncovered an underground city beneath five old-world homes. The host posits that many underground networks and tunnels exist worldwide and have been modernized while the public remains unaware, suggesting old-world technology persists under modern cities. - The old-world, older-than-addressed timelines: The speaker asks what under the feet of cities, what tunnels, vaults, chambers, and artifacts lie under the old world. They reference giant beings, tablets, and elongated-skull findings (as discussed in prior episodes) and argue that the artifacts in Iran’s basement could expose a story divergent from the widely told history. - Architecture and timeline inconsistencies: The host explores multiple examples to argue that the mainstream narrative about construction timelines is inconsistent. They discuss the National Museum of Iran’s basement, and then move to global cases, including: - Saint Peter and Paul Church in San Francisco and 666 Filbert Street, noting allegations that the second church on the site was completed in 1924 and bombed in 1926-27, implying a recurring “fire narrative.” - Saint Anne Shrine in Fall River, Massachusetts, where a postcard allegedly shows a founding date (1869) earlier than construction dates claimed (1891), used to claim the building was “founded,” not constructed, by a previous civilization. - The Greene County Courthouse (Ohio) and a comparable courthouse in Illinois, both claimed to have been constructed in under a year in the late 19th/early 20th centuries, with multiple earlier courthouses said to exist on the same sites, all accompanying a “fire narrative.” - The Manitowoc County Courthouse (Wisconsin) and a Benton County Courthouse (Iowa), each said to have been built rapidly in the early 1900s, cited as evidence that a single builder and sons complete grand palaces in short periods, then disappear from future projects. - AI-generated names and patterns: The host highlights recurring AI-generated names (e.g., Richard Blackhead, Peter Desroaches, John Warner, Mary, Alice) as evidence of scripted or constructed narratives, arguing that the same names and characters recur across locations and episodes. - Overall claim and call to action: The host asserts that the timeline is dramatically misrepresented, that many old-world buildings and underground systems are older and more advanced than the story told, and that artifacts and subterranean networks under cities reveal a truth that is being suppressed. They urge viewers to continue digging into locations being illuminated, to question evacuations and the reasons behind them, and to consider that “the truth about what was once here before us is all under attack right now.”

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The speaker tours multiple sites to challenge mainstream historical narratives, arguing that the presented histories are deliberately misleading and that evidence points to a technologically advanced, previously dominant civilization that left underground and above-ground monuments around the world. Gonzales County Courthouse, Gonzales, Texas: - The contract for the current Gonzales County Courthouse was awarded to Furman Moran on 06/26/1894. The speaker notes a sequence claim: the first courthouse on the site burned on 12/03/1893, followed by the completion of the second courthouse in April 1896. They question why the first building’s builders are never described and why the fire story is presented so abruptly. - The narration is criticized for implying that the second courthouse was finished quickly after the fire, with a timeline that seems to minimize the complexity of rebuilding. - The speaker finds it implausible that a quarry owner who “had limestone in it” could suddenly serve as construction superintendent and oversee a major Romanesque revival courthouse in roughly two years, given needs for vast materials, workers, equipment, planning, permits, housing, and logistics. - They reference a ChatGPT-derived breakdown: design and planning could take about a year; permitting “a couple months”; materials (red brick, white limestone trim, wood, steel, glass) in large quantities; hundreds of laborers; and a realistic overall timespan of four-and-a-half to seven-and-a-half years. They emphasize that a one-year construction claim ignores essential logistics (housing, water, feeding workers, transportation, cranes, skilled labor). - Specific logistical critiques include the need for 20–30 horses for transportation, milling, site work, water, and power, with water requirements (300 gallons per day for 30 horses) casting doubt on a one-year timeline. The speaker argues such a project would require extensive planning, workforce, and infrastructure that a single quarry owner could not supply in a year. - The speaker uses this to argue that the mainstream narrative for the courthouse is fabricated or at least severely misleading, suggesting a hidden history behind the structure. Vienna, Austria: Saint Charles Church and related palaces - The speaker shifts to Vienna, asserting that the Saint Charles Church and nearby palaces show a global pattern of narratives that don’t align with the on-site evidence, including complex underground connections and extensive architectural features. - They describe an architectural competition for a palace in 1713, a winner in 1716, and widespread, often-globally echoed claims about construction during plague conditions. They question how a 18th-century duke and his son could complete multiple palaces under such conditions, suggesting the narratives are unrealistic. - The claim is made that the underground and above-ground complexes around Vienna, with angels depicted in ceilings and statues, reflect an “old world” civilization that guided or influenced architectural motifs. They point to symbols—angels, skulls, and hidden chambers—as evidence of a deliberate, hidden past. - The speaker highlights that the Saint Stephen’s Basilica in Vienna is located 0.68 miles from Saint Charles Church and asserts underground tunnels connect these structures, implying a coordinated, ancient underground network. - They reference the Kluczynski/Chicago comparison and argue that the Vienna city hall and other structures show discrepancies between the claimed construction dates and known restoration timelines, suggesting hidden or revised history. Malta: Hypogeum - The Hypogeum in Malta is presented as further evidence of a suppressed past. Discovered by accident in 1902, excavation revealed a vast underground temple with thousands of remains. The speaker claims that excavation records show bones destroyed or not fully cataloged, and that only a small percentage of the 7,000 remains had elongated cranial shapes typical of certain ancient peoples. - They argue that bones were removed from public view and stored in basements, with public access restricted to about 80 people per day since 2020, and that skulls have been displayed only intermittently since 1995. - The narrative suggests the skulls show elongated cranial deformation, but the speaker contends the secrecy and destruction of many remains imply the true history is being hidden. They note that the Hypogeum and other underground sites around the world imply a widespread, advanced past civilization that built extensive subterranean architectures. - The Hypogeum of Volumnus in Central Italy is mentioned as another example of an underground complex dating back to antiquity, with similar claims about careful design and hidden or contested histories. Overall thesis - The speaker argues that a highly advanced previous civilization built monumental structures worldwide—underground and above-ground—equipped with sophisticated geometry, symbolism (including angels and elongated skulls), and global networks. - They assert that mainstream narratives about construction dates, workers, and timelines are deliberately eroded, misrepresented, or hidden, and that artifacts and bones have been suppressed or destroyed to maintain a controlled history. - The overarching claim is that the “old world” remains beneath our feet, and that questions about these sites reveal deliberate obfuscation by authorities and historians. The narrative ties together courthouse archaeology, European palatial construction, and Maltese hypogeum findings as parts of a broader pattern of suppressed truth about human history.

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The speaker argues that Big Ben (the Elizabeth Tower) and the Palace of Westminster reconstruction after the 1834 fire are not adequately documented, and that the standard narrative is false. He states that parliamentary archives claim Big Ben was commissioned, funded, and built as part of the Palace of Westminster reconstruction under state contract, designed by an architect of Parliament, with all work government funded. Because this was government funded, he maintains there should be official drawings, blueprints, ledgers, specifications, inspection certificates, and related records in the parliamentary record, and that these records should be accessible to the public. He describes his process of requesting from the parliamentary archives the original materials related to the Great Clock of Westminster—specifically, the original blueprints, architectural drawings, structural or engineering drawings, ledgers, engineering calculations, specifications, and any communications between architect, builder, or officials, as well as any photographs and inspection certificates. He notes the aim was to determine whether construction records exist and, if so, where they are kept or why they are not available. He emphasizes that if such records exist, they would reveal how the clock was designed and constructed, including any underground tunnels or echo chambers discussed earlier. The parliamentary reply is that there are surprisingly few architectural drawings of the great clock in their collections and that they do not have the construction records requested; they could not prove that Big Ben or the Elizabeth Clock Tower was constructed in the eighteenth hundreds as claimed. He presses back, asking for clarification on whether the archives ever held the complete set of original drawings and whether records were ever transferred, lost, or never possessed, and whether there are any catalog references or accession numbers for remaining materials. A subsequent reply shifts the argument: the architectural drawings and related materials were never part of the parliamentary collections and were not produced by Parliament, implying Parliament did not create or hold the original blueprints. He asserts that the Palace of Westminster and Big Ben were government-funded, public projects, and that under the Public Records Act of 1838, all documents created by government departments must be preserved as public records. He contends that if construction began two years after the act, such records should exist and be preserved. He argues that saying the records were never produced by Parliament violates this act and contradicts themselves, since Parliament would have approved the project and paid for it with public money. The senior archivist reportedly agrees that public records exist in principle, stating that records about the construction of Big Ben will be held by the National Archives at Kew, i.e., government records. The presenter then states they have contacted the National Archives to prove the blueprints exist, or to show they do not, which would violate the Public Records Act if the records are nonexistent. He describes this as a legal ultimatum with two options: produce the original blueprints and related documents, or admit that they do not exist. He asserts that the National Archives has told them that records are being transferred and will not be available to the public until 2026, and that the inquiry cannot access the same materials until then. He concludes that this constitutes an official paper trail, showing that parliamentary archives admitted they do not possess the original blueprints, even though Big Ben and the Palace of Westminster were government-funded projects. He predicts the National Archives cannot confirm the existence of records and suggests that the transfer and inaccessibility until 2026 is a deflection. He hints at broader investigations into other ancient structures and teases future content, including a potential move to Chicago’s Field Museum.

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The speaker believes mainstream narratives about the construction of old buildings are false, suggesting they are from a previous civilization and that history is fabricated. Fires destroying old buildings are a key giveaway. The speaker analyzes the Gonzales County Courthouse in Texas, highlighting that the original courthouse burned down in 1893 and a new one was supposedly completed by April 1896. The speaker questions how this was possible in such a short time, especially since the superintendent was a quarry owner. Using ChatGPT, the speaker determined that constructing a courthouse of that size in 1895 would take 4.5 to 7.5 years, requiring hundreds of laborers, thousands of bricks, and significant amounts of limestone, wood, steel, and glass. The speaker emphasizes the logistical challenges, particularly the water needed for the horses used for transportation. The speaker then discusses Yeshiva University High School, questioning the use of the word "founded" instead of "built." The speaker points out the speed at which the building was supposedly constructed and the lack of information about the construction process.

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The speaker explores Chicago Public Library archives, alleging a cover-up regarding tunnel systems beneath Chicago. They claim the city's narrative about the tunnels' origins and purpose is false, pointing to discrepancies in dates and explanations. The speaker suggests the tunnels predate telephone cables, implying a previous civilization constructed them. Photos of the tunnels reveal railways, leading to buildings like City Hall, hinting at a connection to an "old world." The speaker cites a former Field Museum employee's account of a tunnel connection and a freight car in the museum's sub-basement. The 1992 Chicago flood is questioned as a possible intentional act of destruction. The speaker then discusses Mount Nemrut in Turkey and Andhara in Syria, alleging deliberate destruction of ancient sites and suppression of true history. They highlight inconsistencies in the mainstream narrative, such as the timeline of architectural advancements. The speaker also questions the official stories behind fires that destroyed numerous buildings in Portland, Maine, and the rapid construction of elaborate structures by figures like Richard Bond and Alfred B. Mullet. They suggest cornerstones in buildings hold hidden information from a previous civilization, referencing the US Capitol Building cornerstone search.

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The transcript presents a sprawling conspiracy-tinged exploration of hidden underground histories, focusing on Chicago and expanding to other ancient-site claims around the world. The central thread is that vast networks of tunnels, bases, and underground structures exist beneath major cities, built or left by a “previous civilization” and largely hidden from public view. - Chicago tunnels and underground real estate - The Chicago Public Library archives allegedly document thousands of miles of underground structures beneath the city, including tunnels that connect to numerous buildings and even to City Hall (constructed in 1911). The narrator asserts these tunnels were designed for rail transport and for connecting underground spaces, not just for utilities. - Photos circulating on the internet supposedly show a railway on the tunnel floor, with tracks running throughout the tunnel system to serve transportation under the city. The narrator claims the tunnels extend under thousands of miles and link to major buildings such as City Hall, Merchandise Mart, the Federal Reserve Bank, the Chicago Tribune building, the Civic Opera House, and the Field Museum among others. - The Chicago Tunnel Company is cited as having built these tunnels, with a history that includes initial tunnels and later plans to fill tunnels with telephone cables. The narrator argues that the dates and narratives about cables and utilities collide with earlier claims of thousands of miles of tunnels existing long before telephone expansion. - An incident known as the Chicago flood (April 13, 1992) is described as a breach in the tunnel system near the Chicago River, involving hundreds of millions of gallons of water and affecting multiple buildings. The narrator questions whether this was an accident or a deliberate act, and links it to figures like “Bruce,” alleged to have been a publicized expert on the tunnels. - A firsthand account from the late 1970s at the Field Museum of Natural History describes a Field Museum freight tunnel connected to the Chicago Tunnel Company, including an elevator and a train car that remained in a sub-basement before being moved to a museum. This anecdote is used to claim the tunnels are larger and more integrated than publicly acknowledged. - Public maps from 1910 show a 60-mile section of tunnels, implying far more exists than is disclosed. The speaker notes that many private connections (switches, shafts, elevators) linked warehouses and stores to the tunnels, suggesting that the tunnel system was integrated into building construction and commercial activity. - The narrator asserts that, since 2001, public access to the old tunnel system has been restricted or closed off for security or other reasons, implying ongoing suppression of information about the underground network. - Mount Nemrut and other “hidden pasts” - The speaker shifts to Mount Nemrut in Turkey, arguing that the mound of crushed stone and the headless statues on a 7,000-foot-high summit were built by a previous, highly advanced civilization. They challenge mainstream explanations of earthquakes, earthquakes removing heads, and the dating of construction to periods like 62 BC or 2086 years ago, insisting the dates are misrepresented. - Ground-penetrating radar (September 2012) reportedly found a pyramidal chamber beneath the apex of the site, suggesting there are buried chambers or a sarcophagus beneath the mound. Turkish authorities are said to be restricting excavation, leaving questions about what lies beneath. - Similarities are drawn to other global sites (Syria, Egypt) where heads have been removed from statues and where modern renovations are described as destroying evidence of the past. The speaker uses these examples to argue that a hidden, advanced past has been suppressed worldwide. - Interwoven claims about reconstruction and misrepresentation - The narrative repeatedly asserts that mainstream histories are manipulated or inverted to hide the existence of a previous civilization and its architectural feats. The speaker alleges that cornerstones in major buildings contain containers with items from prior civilizations, and cites alleged investigations into cornerstone contents (e.g., the Capitol) to support the claim that previous civilizations actively preserved knowledge inside cornerstone artifacts. - Alfred B. Mullet is criticized as a possibly fictitious figure used to explain grand constructions; the speaker accuses the architectural histories of being AI-generated narratives with fabricated biographies, while asserting that many grand early U.S. buildings were constructed far earlier and more rapidly than publicly acknowledged. - The presenter teases that future exposés will cover more sites (including a Syria location with griffins and blasted heads) and invites viewers to discuss and verify these ideas, claiming a worldwide pattern of destruction of evidence by powerful groups. - Overall stance - The speaker contends that “there was a previous civilization here” and that “these tunnel systems, structures, and underground real estate” were long-hidden and are much larger than publicly admitted. The claims hinge on alleged archival evidence, decontextualized photos, disputed dates, and contested readings of historical events, all presented as part of ongoing investigations that challenge conventional history.

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The host opens Episode 157 of My Lunch Break with a provocative claim: historians have been wrong, and there is actual evidence that global structures were not built in the 18th or 19th centuries as commonly taught. He asserts that these structures were constructed by an advanced civilization that existed before us, and that there are documented proofs showing that construction records, receipts, and blueprints for major monuments do not exist or cannot be proven to have been created by the timelines attributed to them. He lists several well-known buildings as examples where construction records allegedly are missing or unrecoverable: the Cathedral of All Saints in Albany, New York; Big Ben (the Elizabeth Tower) in London; the Field Museum in Chicago, Illinois; and Philadelphia City Hall. He claims that these sites expose that construction records do not exist and that there is no proof they were actually constructed as claimed. The host focuses on the New York Public Library (NYPL) in New York City, describing how he and others sought the original blueprints, structural engineering drawings, contractor ledgers, calculations, and material records for the building, which has long been believed to have been constructed in the 19th century. He emphasizes that taxpayers funded the project and that, by law, construction documents should be public records. He questions how many horses would have hauled marble, how many chisels were purchased with taxpayer money, and how the alleged competitive construction process of the era could align with the idea that such palaces were built with primitive means. A correspondence with the NYPL’s reference archivist is detailed: initial emails redirected to general websites with suggested keyword searches and in-person visits, rather than direct answers. The host reports that the NYPL later claimed the original blueprints and related documents exist but are fragile and, because the building is in use, are not available to researchers. According to the archivist, no building plans are shared with external researchers, even though the building is publicly funded. The host notes that no catalog numbers, no condition reports, and no evidence of copies or public access were provided. He cites emails from a staff member who reportedly oversees hundreds of millions in construction projects, claiming that the documents are held by the library and are accessible only to staff, not to the public or external researchers. The host contends that this pattern—no accessible construction records for major landmarks and official claims that records exist but are off-limits—extends to the Field Museum in Chicago. He references a Field Museum library archives manager and a connection to Burnham Brothers, noting that the museum reportedly has very few original drawings, virtually no job filings, no ledgers, and no contracts or project documentation. An archivist at the Art Institute of Chicago is cited as saying there may have been a purge of materials, and that, as far as is known, there are no architectural or engineering drawings or other primary construction documents for the Field Museum. The host summarizes that, across five major cities, there is a pattern of missing original construction documents, no ledgers, no logs, and no public receipts to verify the standard timeline of construction. He argues that this could lead to a profound re-evaluation of the accepted historical timeline and identity, insisting that the pursuit of the truth continues with upcoming FOIA requests. He teases forthcoming discoveries and invites viewers to follow as he and his team continue to audit these institutions and seek concrete evidence.

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The video presents a sweeping series of claims that several world-famous buildings were not constructed as commonly believed and that the original construction records for these structures are missing or inaccessible. - The host asserts that structures around the world were built by an advanced civilization before ours, not in the 18th/19th centuries as widely told, and that there is documented proof that construction records, blueprints, receipts, and ledgers do not exist for many famous sites. Specifically named are the Cathedral of All Saints (Albany, NY), Big Ben/The Elizabeth Clock Tower (London), the Field Museum (Chicago), and the Philadelphia City Hall, with the claim that none of these have verifiable construction records. - The New York Public Library (NYPL) is a focal point of the investigation. The host describes mailing the NYPL for the original blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, and contractor records for the New York City palace (the NYPL building). The library allegedly replied with generic guidance rather than direct answers. After follow-up, the librarian purportedly refused to provide the requested documents, stating the blueprints exist but are fragile, not shared with researchers due to accessibility and preservation concerns, and that no building plans are shared with external researchers, even though the building is publicly funded. The host alleges the blueprints are “off limits to the public” and only available to NYPL staff, and that no catalog numbers, conditions, or evidence confirming their existence were supplied. The host references a specific contact who allegedly oversees hundreds of millions in construction and who allegedly indicated there should be a public paper trail, yet could not provide actual records. The host accuses the NYPL of withholding evidence and suggests the claim that these blueprints exist is unsubstantiated. - A major update concerns the Field Museum in Chicago. The prior episode indicated the Field Museum may not have the full planning records, with archivists noting few original drawings and a lack of job filings or administrative records. A subsequent email from an Art Institute of Chicago reference archivist suggested a purge of materials and that pre-1885 materials could have been lost to an office fire. The Field Museum’s archivist allegedly stated there are no known architectural or engineering drawings, no job files, no ledgers, no contracts, or project documentation for the Field Museum, casting doubt on the museum’s construction timeline. The host emphasizes that these findings would support the broader claim that many iconic buildings lack verifiable construction documentation. - Throughout, the host attributes the absence of records to a broader cover-up and expresses a determination to pursue FOIA requests to obtain actual responses, promising to reveal what those requests uncover. - The narrative interjects humorous references to Donkeys Incorporated Club as “true builders” of the past, with donkeys doing the work, and includes extensive sponsor mentions and channel promotions. - The host concludes that five world-famous structures allegedly lack original construction records and that FOIA requests will be used to pursue further confirmation, aiming to demonstrate that widely accepted historical timelines may be false. The overarching message is a call for the public to demand primary construction documents and to expose what is alleged to be hidden or inaccessible archival material.

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The video suite centers on challenging conventional historic narratives about late 19th‑century architecture in the U.S. and Europe, arguing that “old world” buildings were far more advanced and that many stories about their construction are misleading or invented. - Altgeld Hall, University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign: The narrator notes construction began 06/10/1896 and took “a little over a year,” praising the speed as unbelievable for the time. The trustees supposedly awarded the design contest to Edward, “a young man with no experience in building design,” which the narrator finds implausible. The building’s chimes sit atop a 132‑foot tower with 15 bells weighing seven and a half tons total; the bells are claimed to be a gift from a graduation class, but the narrator questions their current functionality and origin, suggesting a past civilization gifted them. The narration accuses the official account of being inconsistent (cornerstone laid September 11 vs June). The Altgeld narrative is treated as part of a broader pattern of questionable attribution and rapid construction claims. - Other campuses and buildings: The narrator mentions Alpha Delta Phi fraternity house (demolished in 2018) and Alpha Gamma Delta Fraternity House (still standing), criticizing repetitive “narratives” and alleging AI‑generated or inauthentic name patterns. Assertions are made that old world buildings on campuses are being repurposed and assigned to select groups (sororities) with old world origin stories. - Forensic and pattern claims: The host frequently alleges a “massive historical cover up,” using forensic photo analysis to claim anomalies in historical images (edited trees or removal of figures in the sky) and posits airships as removed icons from timelines. They reference a castle-like London courthouse (the Royal Courts of Justice) as an example of rushed design competition narratives and AI‑generated name patterns, arguing that a designer named George Street, supposedly born in 1824, could not have authored all the projects as claimed. - George Street and connected narratives: The video recycles a trope of a single designer (George Street) responsible for major London projects (the Royal Courts of Justice, etc.) but then introduces a second George Street and multiple “Mary” associates to explain why the same pattern appears repeatedly. The narrator argues these are AI‑generated names and inconsistent biographical details (e.g., a 22–24 year old clerk commissioned Saint Mary’s Church in Cornwall; a sister named Mary influencing commissions). He suggests a hidden past civilization rather than a sequence of ordinary events. - Windsor Castle and nonstop contradictions: The host links the imaginary builders’ timelines to Windsor Castle, arguing the later Pennsylvania “castle” near Madison is modeled after Windsor and that the supposed dates (1070s Windsor and 19th‑century American construction) reveal a broader deception. The video repeatedly emphasizes “logistical impossibilities” under the mainstream narrative, such as a 1,000‑room fortress built rapidly in the past with claims of power tools or no power tools, and disputes the assertion that ancient builders worked with limited resources. - Milwaukee City Hall case study: In Milwaukee, the narrator critiques Henry C. (and two Henrys overall) and the claim that Cream City brick, limestone, and granite were used to construct the tallest U.S. building at nearly 400 feet in three years (began 1892, occupied 1895). They argue Cream City brick production ceased in 1920 and question the supply and transport times for millions of bricks and thousands of cubic feet of stone. They estimate a more realistic timeline of five to seven years, given climate and seasonal work, rather than three. They also question the absence of credit to skilled craftsmen, engineers, and clerks in official histories and accuse the narrative of “photoshop” style misrepresentations (e.g., a Chicago Federal Building image with a “new” Kukzinski Building replacing an older, grander structure). - Saint Mary’s and Saint Andrew’s churches: The host scrutinizes church websites and claims of “renewal and rebuilding” implying that genuine construction did not occur as described, and highlights a pattern of using the same architect across multiple old world buildings (William number two) to reuse celebrated styles while disguising actual authorship. - Overall theme: Across Altgeld Hall, Milwaukee’s City Hall, Chicago Federal Building, and various churches, the narrator argues that the mainstream historical timeline is riddled with inconsistencies, that “old world” structures were far more advanced than credited, and that many dates, designers, and construction stories are fabrications or heavily distorted. The videos consistently stress the idea of a previous advanced civilization whose work remains visible worldwide, while present histories obscure or rewrite how these monuments came to be.

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Speaker 0 argues that several famous buildings—the Cathedral Of All Saints, Big Ben, the Field Museum, Philadelphia City Hall, the New York Public Library, and the Emmanuel Church in LaGrange, Illinois—do not have their original blueprints, making it impossible to prove they were actually constructed as claimed. He states that their narratives are all the same, generated by AI, with no author, and that these buildings were publicly funded yet the blueprints are claimed to be accessible only to staff. He asserts that in ten episodes they have pushed their research to a new level, conducting a live audit, and that FOIA requests are a new weapon that government responses have failed to provide the requested blueprints and ledgers. Speaker 0 describes contacting the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) to obtain the original construction documentation for the Federal Hall in New York City (the US Custom House), supposedly completed in 1842 under the US Treasury Department. He requests the original blueprints, engineering drawings, specifications, ledgers, and inspection reports, noting that Federal architecture records would be preserved under record-keeping laws. NARA replies that, after searching the cartographic branch’s architecture master list, there are no responsive records; only three drawings from 1905 for the US Custom House in New York City exist, dated 1905, which is 63 years after the building was completed, and thus allegedly not relevant. He emphasizes that the master list is the National Archives’ internal index of all architectural records created, submitted, transferred, or preserved by federal agencies, and asserts that the federal hall has zero documentation in this master list, implying no verifiable proof that the structure was constructed in 1842 or at any time. Speaker 0 then claims he wants to review the master list himself and demonstrates using it to search for other federal buildings, noting for the US Capitol Building that the only records available are from 1935—10 sketch pages, not architectural, engineering, or construction documents. He argues these sketches are nontechnical and not construction records, and that 1935 is far too late to be authentic construction documentation for a building begun in the 1790s. He contends that the master list proves the mainstream history is exposed as false, describing the Capitol as an “American, neoclassical style palace” whose original blueprints and ledgers allegedly do not exist in the master list. He asserts that this pattern appears across seven or eight buildings, suggesting a broader trend of falsified records. Speaker 0 revisits the New York Public Library, referencing prior coverage (episode 157) where the library claimed that blueprints exist but are restricted to staff due to fragility and processing status, contradicting earlier statements that external researchers cannot access them. He reports a back-and-forth with the library, noting that the library now claims originals are not available to the public because they are not processed or conserved yet, which he argues is a contradiction. He quotes the library asking for his documentation while not providing theirs, calling the library’s stance a lie and stating that researchers will be revisited if the originals ever appear. He closes by stating they are grateful to other institutions for cooperation but see the New York Public Library as hiding the construction records, urging the library to stop emailing him.

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Speaker 0 discusses the idea of proving a new civilization within old-world buildings in a single video, noting that capital buildings with different architects shouldn’t look exactly the same. He visits the Texas State Capitol, stating it was made in 1988, largely by convicts or migrant workers, and that it took six years and ten months to build, questioning whether power tools existed in 1885. He then moves to the Mississippi State Capitol, describing a contest in which 14 architects submitted plans and Theodore C. Link of Saint Louis, Missouri won; he suggests the design looks like other capitals. He visits the Arkansas State Capitol and calls the builders “a bunch of prisoners,” then questions whether cars existed for a walking figure in a scene. He shows the Florida State Capitol and notes that “they tore down the original.” At the Minnesota State Capitol, he says there was a competition with 41 submissions but the design looks the same as the others. He covers the Montana State Capitol, explaining there were two competitions in 1896; the winner’s design was deemed too expensive and another competition followed, with Charles Bell winning, though the resulting building allegedly still resembles the others. He notes that Arkansas’s design is allegedly identical to Montana’s, and that a competition for Montana’s design produced a rejected plan that Arkansas supposedly uses as its own. He documents another competition in Utah, describing a lengthy process and a nail-biter vote, after which the resulting Capitol supposedly looks like the others. He asserts the pattern of sameness across these capitols supports a narrative that the structures are manipulated for a consistent appearance. He closes this section urging viewers to subscribe and support the channel. Speaker 3 shifts to a focus on documented records, explaining that the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) should hold construction documents for federal buildings. He states that the National Archives’ master list for the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. contains only 10 pages filed in 1935, which is far later than the building’s supposed construction period of 1793–1800. He reports that he emailed NARA to confirm these records and was told that if blueprints are missing from the master list, they are not in NARA’s holdings. He claims this constitutes “the end of the mainstream narrative” and states there is no evidence in the National Archives to prove the original construction. He asserts that adults in classrooms grade children on a story that is “completely fabricated” and that receipts or verification are needed for all stories, calling for an ongoing demand for verification across history and beyond. Speaker 0 continues, signaling that this is the eighth time they have exposed a structure with no documentation for blueprints, ledgers, load-bearing calculations, or other proof of construction. They announce plans to examine Louisville and expand the investigation to more structures, stating that nine structures have no verified documents and that purported scholarly sources admit they do not possess the blueprints. He lists structures including the Cathedral of All Saints, Big Ben, the Field Museum, the Philadelphia City Hall, the New York Public Library, Emmanuel Church in LaGrange, The Federal Hall in New York City, the U.S. Capitol Building, Crescent Hill branch library, and Westminster Presbyterian Church, reiterating the demand for blueprints and construction records. He claims the mainstream history is collapsing and frames this as a worldwide audit, one building at a time, with expectations to reach many more structures. He signs off, inviting viewers to watch more episodes and to provide receipts for the stories presented, and previews future focus on a castle tower in Riverside, Illinois.

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The speaker questions the rapid obsolescence and demolition of elaborate 19th-century structures in Chicago, such as a castle built in three years and destroyed after 65, and a 55-room mansion demolished after 56 years. Construction timelines are scrutinized, particularly for the Levi Leiter mansion, alleging permits were obtained shortly before its supposed completion in 18 months. The speaker highlights architect Theo Chandler, associated with old-world buildings that were quickly destroyed, including a courthouse in New Castle County that stood for only 40 years. This pattern suggests intentional destruction projects of pre-existing, advanced structures. The speaker believes these demolitions were concealed due to limited communication in the 1800s. The Symphony Center in Chicago, supposedly built in seven months in 1904, is presented as another example. Architect Daniel Burnham, whose name evokes "burn," is linked to the Montauk Building, allegedly built in a year and demolished after 19. Burnham also built the Masonic Temple building, which was later demolished. The new Masonic Temple location was the site of a deadly theater fire that killed 600 people, a number that the speaker claims exceeds the death toll of the Great Chicago Fire, suggesting a cover-up.

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Speaker 0 discusses contacting hundreds of records departments and officials to obtain blueprints and documentation for the Field Museum in Chicago, which are supposedly from 1919 to 1921. He states the building is a 480,000 square foot palace with 75-foot interior columns, built in two years, and argues that blueprints, receipts, and other construction records should be on file in Chicago’s archives. He emphasizes that by the early 1900s Chicago had strict building codes requiring stamped architectural and structural plans, and that these plans, logs, permits, plumbing, electrical, HVAC schematics, and load calculations should be permanently archived. If the narrative is true, he says, these documents should still exist and be accessible today. The team’s outreach is described: they asked the Chicago History Museum for blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, and calculations, and/or evidence of construction and funding, including correspondence between architect and builder and construction costs, especially for marble procurement. The Chicago History Museum is described as preserving Chicago’s architectural history and holding archives from major firms like Graham, Anderson, Probstin White, the firm associated with the Field Museum. The museum reportedly replied that they have experienced staffing cuts and that their ability to answer architectural questions is limited, describing the collection as complicated, and stating they do not have original blueprints for the Field Museum. They reportedly only possess renovation drawings from the 1980s and can only assume they have copies of originals, with no additional information. Speaker 0 highlights a contradiction: a 1915 photograph labeled “construction of the Field Museum” published by the Chicago Daily News shows a structure with a roof, suggesting work predates the claimed 1919 start date. He notes that if the Field Museum began construction in 1919, there should be records; none are available. He questions whether there are occupancy or dedication certificates verifying completion, and repeats that the museum replied they do not believe such records exist, though there are pictures. He also references Soldier Field as having the same architectural design and links the two structures to the same builders, claiming that records are missing for both. The narrator thanks supporters and reiterates that they will continue to investigate and expose discrepancies, stating that they have now unlocked the ultimate key: the question to ask is, “Do you have the blueprints? Show them to us the receipt to the building. We wanna see it.” He claims multiple structures lack blueprints and asserts that this proves mainstream history false. He mentions continuing to pursue questions about contractor ledgers and correspondence, and notes that the Field Museum was contacted again but did not provide blueprints, acknowledging they do not have them. He concludes that the Field Museum is exposed and promises to push forward with further episodes.

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We are in contact with hundreds of records departments, officials and the rest, in search for a single blueprint to an old world building. The Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois is said to have been constructed from 1919 to 1921, a 480,000 square foot palace building with 75 foot interior columns, supposedly designed, engineered, and completed in two years. The presenter argues that after today, viewers will understand that this place is different from the mainstream narrative, and that blueprints, framing receipts, and construction details should be on display given Chicago’s early 1900s building codes requiring stamped architectural and structural plans and permanent archival storage. The team has reached out to the Chicago History Museum, which preserves Chicago’s architectural, civic, and engineering history and holds archives from major firms including Graham, Anderson, Probstin White—the firm tied to the Field Museum. The questions posed include blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, engineering calculations, documents proving the Field Museum narrative, logs of communication between architect and builder, construction costs, and marble sourcing. The request letters are dated with the aim to verify the building’s construction, procurement, and design records. The Chicago History Museum’s reply notes staffing reductions, limited ability to answer architectural questions, and that they hold renovation drawings from the 1980s; they can only assume they have copies of originals and cannot provide more information. They state they do not have originals for blueprints or engineering calculations, and that their collection is complicated. The team highlights that this implies the Field Museum and the broader mainstream history may lack the expected records for a building of this scale. The team continues by noting that the Chicago History Museum also claimed to have some pictures, but not the full set of originals. They point to a 1915 Chicago Daily News photo labeled “construction of the Field Museum,” which predates the stated 1919 start date by four years, suggesting a major contradiction. They ask for inspection, occupancy, or dedication certificates verifying completion; the museum again replies they do not believe they have these. The presenter emphasizes that the Field Museum is a massive, marble-built palace on the lakefront and notes related architecture like Soldier Field, implying a connected lineage and common building methods, yet lacking the anticipated archival records. They thank supporters and promote their channels and sponsors, while continuing to press for responses from both the Chicago History Museum and the Field Museum. They report that the Field Museum replied on 10/27/2025 asking for a description of the research project and institutional affiliation; the presenter identified as an independent researcher producing a long-form documentary on architectural and engineering history, requesting blueprints, ledgers, and public records. A follow-up on 11/11/2025 produced no reply. The archivist’s awareness of not having the original blueprints is declared evident, and the presenter proclaims that the Field Museum is now exposed. The episode ends with a pledge to continue exposing these buildings worldwide and to uncover more questions and truth.

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The video episode documents an investigative push to verify the construction records for the Field Museum in Chicago. The host asserts that mainstream history claims the Field Museum was constructed from 1919 to 1921, a 480,000-square-foot building with 75-foot interior columns completed in 24 months, and that blueprints, engineering drawings, load calculations, plumbing, electrical, and HVAC schematics, logs, permits, and other archival materials should be permanently stored by Chicago’s building and archival institutions. The host stresses that, if true, these documents should exist and be readily accessible today, given Chicago’s early 20th-century building codes and permit requirements. The team explains their approach: reach out to archives, museums, and record offices to obtain blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, and construction-related correspondence that prove the Field Museum’s narrative. They pose multiple questions to these institutions, including whether there are original architectural blueprints or engineering drawings, ledgers showing material procurement, construction or contractor ledgers, engineering calculations or specifications from before or during construction, and any correspondence between the architect, builder, or diocese regarding design or funding, plus the cost of construction and any communications about it. The Chicago History Museum is the initial focus. They note the museum preserves Chicago’s architectural and engineering history and claims to hold drawings from major architectural firms connected to the Field Museum. The host reports the museum’s responses: they do not have original blueprints or engineering drawings; they only possess drawings related to a 1980s renovation and can only assume copies of the originals exist, with no more information available. The cataloging librarian indicates the collection is limited and that answering architectural questions is challenging. The host highlights the museum’s admission that they do not believe they have original blueprints, engineering calculations, or ledgers, and that the museum’s response includes some photographs, though not the original documents. The host then mentions a contradicting element: a 1915 Chicago Daily News photograph labeled “construction of the Field Museum,” which predates the alleged 1919 start of construction, suggesting an open-air or roofed structure existing before the claimed timeline. They question why there would be a 1915 image if construction supposedly began in 1919. Further inquiries to the Chicago History Museum inquire about occupancy or dedication certificates and other records; the museum again responds that they do not believe these exist. The host connects these gaps to a broader claim that the Field Museum and related structures may have been built earlier than stated or by a different, possibly undocumented, process, linking this to a broader narrative about historic construction across the world. The Field Museum’s own reply is summarized as a request to describe the research project in detail and to identify institutional affiliation; the Field Museum confirms they do not have the blueprints. The host asserts the archivist’s knowledge of this and declares the Field Museum exposed, while promising ongoing investigations and episodes. The message closes with thanks to supporters and a pledge to continue uncovering more details in future episodes.

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The speaker announces that they now possess the official 1929 Chicago Tunnel Network map from the Chicago History Museum, revealing exactly which buildings the tunnel system connects to and asserting that these connections are still present today. They claim this map, previously tucked away and undigitized, shows a web of underground tunnels that links many old-world buildings in Chicago, and that narratives about these tunnels’ purpose do not match what the map shows. Key observations and claims: - The map demonstrates that the tunnels connect to multiple buildings, and the speaker argues that the old world was not just above ground but also actively used the underground to create a large network of interconnected buildings. They contend the tunnels existed before the streets and roads were modernized. - The official story—that the tunnels were constructed in the 1890s to transport mail and freight and were shut down in 1959— is criticized as illogical. The speaker asserts there was no justification for a massive underground network built solely for mail, noting that mail delivery by foot persisted well into later decades. - The map is described as a “foundation map” of Chicago that shows tunnels across the city, with many tunnels skipping entire blocks and not following streets, suggesting selective access and purpose beyond mail transport. The speaker emphasizes that tunnels appear to serve specific buildings, which they identify as the old-world structures built by a prior civilization. - Examples cited on the map include connections between the stock exchange and the La Salle Hotel, and a tunnel between the Palmer House and other nearby structures. The 33rd Lodge is referenced as a building that would have had connections if mail were the sole purpose, yet the map indicates selective connections. The 1900 postcard and a 1939 demolition of a related temple are discussed to illustrate changes to the built environment. - The tallest building in Chicago from 1895 to 1899 is questioned as having been built in one year (1891–1892) and demolished forty-seven years later, challenging the conventional timeline of construction. - A camera view of the Rookery Building and surrounding alleyways is used to visualize a tunnel between two buildings. The speaker points to photos from 1891 showing structural features that imply underground work, with columns extending below street level. - The speaker notes that tunnel entrances exist at publicly funded buildings (e.g., City Hall) and argues these entrances are part of public records and accessible under public information requests, inviting scrutiny and potential access to sub-basement plans. - The plan is to physically visit publicly funded buildings to verify tunnel entrances, asking for their sub-basement plans, and to document responses. The speaker emphasizes that the underground network is no longer a theory since the map proves its existence, and suggests similar networks may exist globally, not just in Chicago. - They conclude by expressing anticipation for forthcoming interactions with buildings about their tunnel entrances and promise to share the responses, asserting that the map represents only a snapshot from 1929 and that contemporary networks could be far more extensive.

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Speaker 0 argues that Big Ben, the Elizabeth Clock Tower, London, is older than the official narrative claims and was not built by “our civilization.” He states he and his team contacted the parliamentary archives, which allegedly said Big Ben was commissioned, funded, and built as part of the Palace of Westminster reconstruction after the 1834 fire, a government-funded project designed by a parliamentary architect under state contract. He emphasizes that because it was government funded, official drawings, blueprints, ledgers, specifications, inspection certificates, and related records should be in parliamentary records and accessible to the public. He sent an inquiry to the parliamentary archives asking for original materials related to the Great Clock of Westminster (Big Ben), specifically the original blueprints, engineering drawings, ledgers, calculations, specifications, communications between architect, builder, or officials, any dialogues, any construction photographs, and inspection certificates. He notes that this would reveal whether such records exist and, if not, would undermine the mainstream construction story. He claims that the parliamentary reply indicated surprisingly few architectural drawings exist in their collections and that they do not have construction records proving the eighteenth- or nineteenth-century construction as described. He presses further, asking whether the parliamentary archives ever held the complete set of original architectural, structural, or engineering drawings for the great Clock or the clock tower, whether those records were ever transferred, lost, or never held, and whether there are any catalog references or accession numbers for remaining materials. The response he received allegedly asserts that architectural drawings were never part of the parliamentary archives collections because they were not produced by Parliament, and that Big Ben was not built by Parliament. He argues this contradicts that the Palace of Westminster was a government project built after the 1834 fire, with Parliament approving or paying for the project, and that under the Public Records Act of 1838 all documents created by government departments must be preserved as public property. He maintains that if construction began two years after the act’s enactment, the records should exist, and their absence would imply a violation of law. He then poses two possible scenarios: either the original blueprints, ledgers, and engineering documents exist and prove the construction story, or they do not exist, which would contradict the Public Records Act of 1838 and the mainstream history. He states the National Archives at Kew should hold government records, including those about Big Ben, and that Parliament has admitted they do not possess the original blueprints. He reports that the senior archivist acknowledged alignment with the Public Records Act and said such records would be held by the National Archives at Kew. Subsequently, he says they contacted the National Archives to prove these blueprints exist under government custody. The plan is to force a formal admission that the records exist or do not exist, exposing the construction story as false and creating a legal paper trail. He notes that the National Archives indicated that they cannot confirm the existence of Big Ben construction records and that the collections are being transferred and not available to the public until 2026, creating a deflection. He concludes that this constitutes a potential historic revelation: the most famous clock may lack foundational construction evidence, and the inquiries open the door to reexamining other historically claimed pre-1800 structures. He ends by signaling future exploration, including plans to examine the Field Museum in Chicago, and thanks supporters and sponsors.

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The speaker outlines a quest to verify the original construction blueprints for major historic buildings and reports a cascade of archival rejections from several institutions. - Field Museum (Chicago, Illinois): The speaker states they have documented that the Field Museum hasn’t emailed back regarding the original blueprints to their structure. These documents would supposedly prove the mainstream story about the building. A library/archival contact at the Field Museum is cited as saying the museum holds limited orphan materials that are not fully inventoried; they do not have the original blueprints or full planning records for the 1921 construction. - Chicago History Museum (CHM) and Art Institute of Chicago: The CHM reportedly only had renovation drawings from the 1980s, not the original construction drawings, and told the researchers they didn’t have anything. The Art Institute of Chicago’s access and reference archivist indicated that their collections do not include drawings of the Field Museum and advised checking with the Field Museum. The speaker points out that both CHM and the Art Institute have told them to contact the Field Museum, which has not yet replied. - Summary across institutions: The speaker asserts three documented sources confirm that the original construction documents do not exist in the CHM, Art Institute, or Field Museum, and that these documents would typically be held by CHM or Art Institute as primary historical repositories. The speaker emphasizes that the city of Chicago should have the original blueprints for the 1921 Field Museum. - Philadelphia City Hall (in a separate thread): The speaker discusses contacting the Linda Hall Library, described as the world’s largest research library dedicated to engineering, to locate the Philadelphia City Hall’s original blueprints. The Linda Hall Library reply dated 10/24/2025 states that they do not have internal documents such as blueprints, ledgers, or correspondence for the construction of Philadelphia City Hall, nor do they have a partnership with any institution that may have them. They affirm they do not have the blueprints or internal correspondence sought. - Additional context and implications: The speaker notes that ASCE (American Society of Civil Engineers) publications and WorldCat searches show no blueprints or internal construction records for Philadelphia City Hall, only secondary reporting about the building. They argue that if no original blueprints exist in these major archives, the documented construction of these buildings remains unverified. The speaker promises further updates and mentions upcoming inquiries to the New York Public Library as part of an ongoing global audit of mainstream historical narratives. - Thematic stance: The narrative centers on obtaining stamped drawings, signatures, dates, revisions, construction logs, and load calculations to verify authorship, funding, design, and construction timelines. The speaker frames the absence of primary documents as evidence that mainstream histories are unverified and subject to revision. - Channel branding and calls to action: The segment includes episode labeling (episode 156 of “my lunch break”) and promotional plugs for sponsors and patrons, as well as acknowledgments to supporters. Overall, the speaker presents a pattern of missing original construction documents across Field Museum, Chicago History Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Linda Hall Library, and related institutions, framed as a broad verification effort challenging established architectural histories and pursuing the question: who has the original blueprints and who signed off on these structures?

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Speaker 0 argues that the Cathedral of All Saints, Big Ben, the Field Museum, Philadelphia City Hall, the New York Public Library, and Emmanuel Church in LaGrange, Illinois all lack their original blueprints, making it impossible to verify that these structures were constructed as claimed. He asserts that their narratives are uniform across countries and time, claiming they were built in a short period, followed by a mysterious fire, and replaced by untrained individuals who never build again. He says these buildings, though publicly funded, have blueprints that “staff can see,” and that no blueprints have ever been provided to him or his team despite repeated requests. He states that in the last 10 episodes they have escalated the research to a live audit, exposing the narratives and pressuring institutions to reveal blueprints and ledgers. Speaker 0 describes using FOIA requests as a new weapon, pressuring governments to respond legally, and notes that responses so far have been poor. He references a formal request to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) for the blueprints and supporting documents for Federal Hall in New York City (the US Custom House), built under the US Treasury Department and completed in 1842. He quotes NARA’s reply: a search of the cartographic branch’s architecture master list found no responsive records, with three drawings from 1905 for the US Custom House in New York City, dated 63 years after the building’s completion, and no other references to the US Custom House in NYC. He emphasizes that those 1905 drawings are not construction records and questions their relevance. Speaker 0 expands his critique to the US Capitol Building, noting that the master list shows only 1935 documents (10 pages of sketches) for a project begun in the 1790s, which he says are nontechnical and not construction records. He claims these sketches demonstrate that “the master list” is an internal receipt, effectively empty of authentic construction documentation for the Capitol. He concludes that the federal architectural records for the Capitol are absent for the original construction period and suggests that similar gaps likely exist for other capitol buildings in the U.S. He asserts seven verified instances where credible records are missing and that this undermines mainstream history, calling for eight if the Capitol is confirmed. Speaker 0 then recaps findings regarding the New York Public Library, stating that the library claimed only staff could view blueprints and that originals were fragile, later claiming they are not available to the public because they are not processed or conserved yet. He describes this as contradictory and accuses the library of lying about access and availability. He notes that the New York Public Library has not provided the researcher with any documentation and suggests other institutions are cooperating, while the New York Public Library is not. Throughout, Speaker 0 reiterates the intent to reveal the truth, asking for viewers’ reactions and inviting further discussion, while signaling plans to continue pursuing master list verification and FOIA responses. He also mentions that this is episode 159 of “my lunch break.”

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The speaker questions the official narratives surrounding the construction of old buildings, suggesting a historical cover-up. They highlight Altgeld Hall at the University of Illinois, built in a year by an inexperienced architect, and its chimes, theorizing they are a gift from a past civilization. The speaker points out inconsistencies in construction timelines and materials, using AI to challenge mainstream history. They discuss the demolition of old buildings and the filling-in of windows, suggesting buildings are larger than visible. The speaker analyzes old photos, claiming airships were edited out. They critique design competitions and recurring names, suggesting AI involvement in historical narratives. They cite the Royal Courts of Justice in London and question the official timeline. The speaker discusses the Windsor Castle and its connection to other castles, suggesting a lie about history. They mention a road construction project in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where archaeologists found an extensive village, suspecting a cover-up. The speaker analyzes Milwaukee City Hall, questioning its construction timeline and the architect's credibility. They compare the Chicago Federal Building to its replacement, highlighting the decline in architectural quality. They discuss architect William P. Ginther and his credited buildings, suggesting a pattern of attributing old-world structures to a single architect.
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