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Checklist: - Identify the core thesis: great fire narratives are a cover-up, implying demolition of pre-1776 buildings and near-zero historical populations. - Enumerate the fires cited, with the exact figures given (buildings destroyed, deaths, years) to show the claimed inconsistencies. - Note the comparisons and rhetorical points (e.g., 9/11, Maui 2023) used to argue improbability of the official record. - Capture the two alternative explanations presented for Chicago 1871 and the author’s preferred interpretation. - Record the broader claims about a prior civilization, advanced technology, and bombs/explosives as alleged causes. - Highlight the author’s stated plan to address population history in a future episode. - Preserve the tone and sequence of the presented claims without endorsing them. Summary: The video episode opens by asserting that great fire narratives worldwide are a “massive cover up,” arguing that they were actually demolition projects that removed buildings built prior to 1776 and left populations in massive cities effectively zero. The host promises the audience they will never view the great fires or mainstream history the same way again. Chicago, Illinois, is presented as a centerpiece. The eighteen seventy-one Great Fire supposedly destroyed over 17,500 buildings and left six buildings, with “zero point zero zero zero eight percent of people died.” The host emphasizes that “humans cannot inhale smoke” and notes that a fire destroys oxygen, implying danger in ongoing flames. If the event had killed a proportionate share of the 334,000 residents, more than three hundred people would have died, the host contends. Two possibilities are offered: either many more people died than stated, or the population was not 300,000 and the city was effectively empty. The host prefers the second explanation, arguing the population had been erased and that 17,500 buildings were shredded by bombs to hide an older civilization’s past. The narrative then touches on post-fire reconstruction, pointing to the Palmer House’s completion four years after the fire and the Masonic Temple Building, which is tied to claims about the temple’s builders and their deaths during construction. The host recounts a theater fire on the newer site (the earlier venue on the same site opened in November ’3 and burned one month later in December ’3, with 602 deaths), asserting it was “fireproof” and suggesting locked exits or curtains on fire started the disaster — a detail connected to a broader pattern of suspicious theater fires. The host contrasts the Chicago figure with a single-building death toll: one hundred and eight? No; they ask how one building killing 600 could reconcile with 17,500 buildings killing 300. They widen the comparison to other cities: the Great Fire of London (1666) allegedly destroyed 13,200 houses with six deaths; the Great Fire of New York (1776) destroyed 700 buildings with only two deaths. A tally is accumulated across fires in London, New York, Chicago, Paris (Phoenix, Paris, Texas and Montreal episodes are cited), all presented as destroying tens of thousands of buildings with a fraction of the deaths one would expect under the mainstream narrative, culminating in claimed totals like 32,930 buildings destroyed and 311 casualties. The video then includes Canada (Toronto 1904; Montreal 1852) and Maui (2023) as contemporary points of comparison, noting about 2,200 structures damaged or destroyed in Maui with around 100 deaths, and arguing that by the claimed ratios, modern fires would yield far higher fatalities than reported for the scale of destruction. The host concludes that the numbers expose a lie in the historical record, asserting the early-1800s global population was basically zero and hinting at a future episode focused on a deliberate Population Lie. A prior civilization’s population is hypothesized to have been around a hundred years before 1776, with much more advanced technology then lost or concealed. The fires are claimed to be bombs and explosives aimed at erasing the old world, a pattern the host says will be further detailed. The episode closes with a few more fire examples (Detroit 1805; Phoenix 1916; Miami 1901; Houston 1912) to reinforce the claim that many large fires show zero or improbably low deaths, further supporting the asserted narrative of manipulation and concealment.

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In this video, the speaker discusses the repetitive nature of fire narratives and how they are connected to a group that fabricates timelines and explanations for old world buildings. The speaker focuses on Edinburgh, Scotland, and highlights various buildings that have been rebuilt due to fires throughout history. They question the logic behind these narratives and suggest that they may be hiding a larger population and advanced civilization. The speaker concludes by asking viewers to suggest other cities for future episodes.

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The mainstream historical narrative is a lie, evidenced by repeating stories of courthouses worldwide. These buildings, masterpieces built in a year or less with impossible speed using the same architects and sons, often share a fire narrative. Take the Benton and Manitowoc County Courthouses; supposedly built around the same time by the same builders who only ever built those two buildings. Both courthouses had the fire narrative. Then there's Bell and Detwiler, the architects who also only built two buildings in their career, and they were in the same year, too. How is this possible? Then there's Saints Peter and Paul Church. Located at 666 Filbert Street, San Francisco, supposedly the second church on that site. The first church succumbed to an earthquake and subsequent fire. But the giveaway is the second church was bombed four times two years after completion. They don't want you to know the truth about these buildings.

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In 1959, the Chicago Tunnel Company went out of business and sold everything for $64,000. The Chicago Tribune reports that the city assumed control of the tunnel system, revealing that many buildings were connected by underground tunnels in the early 1940s, including the Boston Store, Carson, Perry Scott, The Fair, the Davis Store, Mandel Brothers, and FW Woolworth & Co., all linked back then. The speaker recalls the accidental flood of 1992, noting a court case that showed the city knew the tunnel was leaking before the flood and allowed it to happen by not properly maintaining the tunnel, which led to its breach and destruction. A man named George W. Jackson is identified as leading the Illinois Tunnel Company, and the narrative surrounding this individual is described as revealing upon deeper investigation. An article in the Chicago Examiner from January 1909 is cited, connecting this company to a sequence of events: the public map in 1910, and the bankruptcy of the Illinois Tunnel Company in the exact year 1909, which is described as coincidental with other disasters. The speaker mentions “67” that did not make it by fire in an unprecedented lake disaster, with flames following explosions. These events allegedly occurred two miles from the shore inside the tunnels, where 48 were recovered and many others are said to lie beneath the lake’s surface. The speaker questions whether these fire narratives are accurate or merely nods to what was found, noting that many of the pieces end with answers that cannot be precisely identified because many bones are headless, burned, or dismantled, all tied to the George W. Jackson company. There is speculation about bones found within the tunnels that could be bones of the past explained away by the narrative, trapped 160 feet underground, with a fire described as an explosion according to chicagology.com—the source claiming the fire was caused by an explosion three minutes before the flames. The discussion shifts from the Illinois Tunnel Company to the Chicago Tunnel Company, with a second hypothesis suggesting that these tunnel systems could be remnants from a past civilization and might have contained items inside them. The speaker references episodes 72 and 78, suggesting prior findings of tunnel systems under Chicago, Odessa, Paris, and wonders what remains inside today. The tunnels in Chicago are described as thousands of miles long, and questions are raised about why such extensive tunnels would be created if dirt roads existed, and why they were used from 1904 to 1959 for only fifty-five years before being blocked off to the public.

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The speaker questions the mainstream narrative of great fires worldwide, suggesting they were demolition projects to remove pre-1776 buildings in cities with sparse populations. They highlight the 1871 Chicago fire, where 17,500 buildings were destroyed, but only a tiny percentage of the population died, contrasting it with the 9/11 attacks. The speaker proposes two possibilities: either the death tolls were underreported, or the cities were sparsely populated, and the fires were planned demolitions. They cite the rapid rebuilding after the Chicago fire as evidence of a flawed narrative. The speaker points to other fires, including the Iroquois Theater fire and the Great Fire of London (1666), where thousands of buildings were destroyed with few reported deaths. They discuss fires in New York (1776), Paris, Texas (1916), Toronto (1904), and Montreal (1852), noting the pattern of widespread destruction with minimal casualties. They compare this to the 2023 Maui fire, where the death toll was proportionally much higher. The speaker believes the world population was low in the early 1800s and that a previous advanced civilization built the destroyed structures. They cite the Great Fire of Detroit (1805), the Phoenix Great Fire (1916), the Miami fire (1901), and the Houston fire (1912) as further examples of suspicious narratives.

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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 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 Old Globe Theater, built in 1935 for an expo, became a San Diego landmark but was damaged by arson in 1978. The speaker suggests a pattern of destruction and rebuilding connected to expositions and wars. Balboa Park had two expositions, in 1915 and 1935, surrounding World War I and II. The speaker questions the mainstream narratives surrounding these buildings, citing the San Diego Aerospace Museum which moved into a building briefly before a fire in 1978 destroyed the building. The speaker then discusses the Dennis Building in Buffalo, New York, which also has multiple names and a fire story from 1905. They claim AI generates mainstream narratives, evidenced by recurring names and fire stories. The speaker highlights Our Lady Of Victory Basilica in Lackawanna, New York, where a fire damaged Saint Patrick's Parish Church in 1916. They suggest the basilica was built on a site with no documented evidence of a prior structure. The speaker claims the replacement of marble towers with copper is an operation to diminish the work of the old world.

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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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There's something fishy about the great fires of the 1800s. The official story claims that in Chicago, 17,500 buildings burned, yet almost everyone survived. How is that possible when one theater fire killed 600? It seems more likely that either the death tolls were higher than reported, or the cities were nearly empty, part of a planned demolition of the old world civilization. Looking at other great fires, like London in 1666, New York in 1776, and even more in Canada, the number of deaths is ridiculously low compared to the buildings destroyed. In Toronto, not a single person died while over 100 buildings were lost. The population numbers don't add up either. How could a small population need so many buildings? It's clear we're being lied to.

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The discussion argues that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not unique atomic bomb catastrophes but outcomes of extensive conventional incendiary bombing, with various witnesses and sources cited to dispute the established narrative. - Speaker 0 opens by asking what destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki if HG Wells-style atomic bombs did not exist, distinguishing between “firebombed” or “carpet bombed” cities and the atomic narrative. He explains that firebombing uses large numbers of M-47s, M-60s, M-69s, and similar incendiaries, with bomber formations delivering tens to hundreds of bombs per city, and notes that some B-29s carried high explosives to deter firefighters. He asserts that Kyoto was not bombed and questions why a massive investment in “HG Wells atomic bombs” was made if carpet bombing worked, suggesting the aim was fear and control. He claims Hiroshima and Nagasaki were selected because they were among the last cities standing and largely wooden, and that a fire could incinerate them to resemble atomic destruction. - Speaker 1 then offers Major Ziversky’s eyewitness perspective from air reconnaissance over Honshu and Kyushu, describing aerial observations of Tokyo, Yokohama, Osaka, Kobe, and other attacked cities. He notes that smaller towns were totally burned out and that the overall air view showed a pinkish carpet of ash and rubble with unscathed concrete buildings, bridges, and some intact structures among gutted areas. Hiroshima, viewed from above, reportedly appeared like other burned-out cities, with a two-mile pink blot and a largely intact downtown cluster, including undamaged flagpoles and lightning rods. He says the blast did not appear as powerful as claimed and that concrete buildings near the center showed little structural damage, suggesting an extensive rather than an intensive blast. He argues there was no obvious vaporization or unusual phenomena at the T Bridge, the purported atomic bomb aiming point. He presents the possibility that 69 Japanese cities were carpet bombed, or that the official narrative about Little Boy and Fat Man could be accepted, but notes General Crawford Sams believed the atomic bomb existed but was not very effective and claimed he was ordered to exaggerate its power. - The conversation shifts to a Manhattan Project-era letter carried to Japan, discussed by Speaker 0, which purportedly instructed people to portray the atomic bomb as devastating to deter future war, with a claim that authorities credited the bomb deaths within six months to the atomic bombing for propaganda. Sams allegedly stated that no 100,000 people died as claimed, and a Jesuit priest was described as a “harley guy” for the nuclear hoax. - Further testimony (Speaker 2 and Speaker 3) recounts eyewitness accounts of the Nagasaki bombing, including a valley light and widespread injuries and deaths, with estimates of at least 100,000 deaths in some accounts, and observers noting post-blast conditions and direct impact on people. Another speaker recalls that many who survived post-blast felt no ill effects and questions the presence of radiation. - The discussion proceeds to a detailed, numerically driven examination of bomb missions on August 5 and August 9, including Imabari, Saga, Mebashi, Nishinomiya, Ube, and other targets, comparing incendiary missions and the scale of damage. The analyst calculates that the number of B-29s and the acreage burned would imply different cities’ damages if Hiroshima’s fire area were compared to Tokyo’s incendiary results, arguing discrepancies between expected and actual damage. They scrutinize Ube oil refinery destruction as a possible alternate explanation for the mission that night, suggesting that some bombs targeted the refinery rather than urban centers, and proposing that the B-29s designated for Nagasaki missions may have been diverted, with Nagasaki already bombed earlier in the month. The account mentions the “Great Artiste” mission over Nagasaki and alleges confusion about crew assignments and target designation, implying deliberate obfuscation in official records. - Nagasaki is discussed as potentially having been bombed earlier, with a controversial assertion that the city’s August 9 target switch from Kokura to Nagasaki involved last-minute cloud breaks and a press conference-like briefing before the Enola Gay departed. The narrative asserts multiple layers of deception and misreporting, urging the reader to scrutinize the official chain of events rather than accept the standard atomic-bomb account.

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The speaker claims that the fires in Paradise, California, Quebec, Ontario, Canada, and Maui, Hawaii were all man-made using directed energy weapons. They explain that trees and houses can catch fire from the inside out when targeted with high-frequency microwaves. The speaker suggests conducting an experiment with a grape in a microwave to demonstrate this. They also mention that the World Trade Center collapse was a controlled demolition and that directed energy weapons are responsible for the fires. The speaker concludes by urging people to educate themselves and take action against the government.

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Speaker 0 argues that the eighteenth-century narrative of history is false or manipulated. He questions the idea that most incredible buildings were built in the eighteen hundreds and suggests that society’s claim of progress is an ego boost used to distract from truth. He notes that many ancient buildings appear in modern times to have been taken over by Banks or the USA, which he claims were created and followed by a burst of new inventions. He asserts that if these buildings existed in the eighteen hundreds, then there was hidden technology beyond just building, and that the timeline being true would imply that previous history is false or severely altered. He questions where earlier inventions like the car and the light bulb were first invented and ponders the odds of The USA being formed in 1776 and the stock market opening in 1792, with great buildings accompanying both developments. Speaker 0 highlights that photos of a certain building show it as remarkable architecture that was “found, claimed, and repurposed.” He points out that twelve years after the stock market formed, the first train appeared; in eighteen o four the first train emerged, in 1817 the first bicycle was created by a servant to the duke of Germany. He contrasts this with the claim that in the eighteenth century nothing happened for thousands of years, then rapid advancement followed after The USA’s formation. He lists milestones: first phone in 1876, Major League Baseball in 1876, first light bulb in 1878, and eight years later, the first car; he states it is “unbelievable” to believe the mainstream narrative that everything happened simultaneously after a long stagnation. He mentions 1895 as the year of the first power tool, 1903 the first plane, 1920 the NFL, 1927 the first TV, 1936 the first computer, 1946 the NBA, and 1983 the Internet, arguing these timelines imply a deliberate concealment of earlier technology and knowledge. He claims that the past civilization left technology and structures that modern society does not recreate, and that this supports the idea of an old world whose tech has been retroactively integrated into our history. Speaker 1 begins five months later noting a recurring giveaway in the mainstream narrative: nearly every major invention—planes, trains, cars, phones, computers, light bulbs, radios, major sports organizations—appears in the last three hundred years, while the world allegedly evolved from cavemen via evolution. He rejects this as insane and offers a different explanation, asserting a construction of the last three hundred years that does not fit with the timeline. He points to Australia’s appearance in 1901 and references construction from past civilizations visible today, including Budapest’s buildings that resemble old-world designs. He mentions “nearly a hundred fire stories” about buildings said to be from the eighteen hundreds that were destroyed by fire, yet are stone and not easily burned, suggesting a deliberate erasure of the past civilization. He claims past civilizations possessed more technology that has not been returned yet, including AI, and posits that AI or ChatGPT-like tools could be used to fabricate false narratives. He notes inconsistencies in biographies of architects and builders moving across the United States with little documentation, implying that false narratives are easy to create with AI. He cautions that books might disappear in a future where information is wiped from computers, making history easy to rewrite. He questions Columbus’s historicity, suggesting “1492, nobody named Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue” and that the narrative of Columbus could be a mind control tactic. He argues that the dissemination of false history serves those who control banking, technology, government, and media, and posits that the old world’s technology has been released in pieces to profit and control. He emphasizes the need to reclaim common sense, battle the manipulation, and revisit the old-world narrative as foundational to understanding truth beyond buildings and history. He then returns to the Gonzales, Texas courthouse example, scrutinizing the sequence: the first courthouse burned down in 1893, the second completed in 1896 after a contract awarded in 1894, and the lack of transparency about the first building, labor, and construction logistics, arguing that a one-year build timeline is implausible given materials, labor, water, and transportation needs. He demonstrates how ChatGPT could be used to test such a scenario, concluding that the realistic construction timeline would require years and substantial resources, thereby challenging the narrative of a rapid one-year rebuild.

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The speaker questions the mainstream narrative of great fires worldwide, suggesting they were demolition projects of pre-1776 buildings in sparsely populated cities. The 1871 Chicago fire, which supposedly destroyed 17,500 buildings with few casualties, is compared to 9/11, where far fewer buildings resulted in thousands of deaths. This discrepancy suggests either a massive underreporting of deaths or a low initial population. The speaker highlights other fires, including the Great Fire of London (1666) and the Great Fire of New York (1776), noting the low death tolls despite widespread destruction. Fires in Paris, Texas (1916), Toronto (1904), and Montreal (1852) are cited as further examples of this pattern. The speaker contrasts these historical fires with the 2023 Maui fire, where the death toll was significantly higher relative to the number of buildings destroyed. The speaker believes the world population in the early 1800s was near zero, and these fires were deliberate attacks to hide the past. The Great Fire of Detroit (1805), Phoenix (1916), Miami (1901), and Houston (1912) are mentioned as further examples of fires with few or no deaths.

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Speaker 0 discusses the Alexandra Palace (Alipali) as home to the World Darts Championship since 2008 and connects it to the Crystal Palace fire narrative. The speaker traces a path of fires, claiming the Crystal Palace burned down with 89 fire engines and 400 firemen, and questions how long the building burned before realization, noting Crystal and her dog were the only ones to realize it. They state 100,000 people watched the blaze within a few hours, and describe the cause as a “true cause of the fire will forever be a mystery,” calling part of the narrative a clear lie. They reference 1866, the North Transept, and GEICO insurance as an aside about rebuilding, asserting old-world structures like York Cathedral existed with such elements but that modern times cannot reproduce them. They claim construction details are missing: “In the year 07/1941, they know all about this building,” followed by a claim that the church was destroyed by a fire, yet no prior fires are noticed until now. The narrator attributes reconstruction to Egbert’s librarian and Ian Bald, insisting the “truth” is that these stories are narratives, not actual events. The speaker asserts that the original building of Alexandra Palace begins with a company name that is “definitely AI generated” (the Great Northern Palace Company), and contrasts it with the Crystal Palace’s Owen Jones. They allege the Great Northern Palace Company built the Alexandra Palace in 1859, that the Palace Construction Company could not fund it, and that materials were recycled from the large 62 International Exhibition Building. They argue the two buildings have the same material and that the explanation is that pieces were taken from the other building. Key timeline claims include: - In 1863, a project to explain why the palace sits on a hill, later built on a ridge over 300 feet high. - The project started in 1865 and finished in 1873, sixteen days later the whole thing burns down; 4,700 items claimed as “historic value” are destroyed. - The entire building is said to be destroyed from the inside while outer walls survive, yet rebuilt and reopened in 1875, with a brand-new Alexandra Palace featuring a concert hall, art galleries, a museum, electro hall, a library, a banqueting room, and a large theater. - A horse racing course and a Japanese village are mentioned as part of the complex. - They note a pattern of many fires and reconstruction projects, while asserting some fires (pre-19th century) are nods to a hidden group and not real events. The speaker highlights a specific 1980 incident: Haringey Council took over trusteeship and insured it for 31,000,000, and “six months after they insured it, for 31,000,000, a fire started under the organ that completely spread,” destroying half the building, with outer walls surviving. They question the odds of the organ being destroyed while it was dismantled, and point out the eight-year reopening vs the two-year reopening claimed for 1873 to 1875. Overall, the speaker argues that fires across these buildings are part of a deliberate, largely untrustworthy narrative, with repeated mentions of “old world” construction, AI-generated names, and insurance-driven destruction. They promise to continue exposing what they see as lies and invite the audience to wait for more.

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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 1 presents a radical challenge to the mainstream “great fire” narrative, proposing that in many cases entire cities were not annihilated by fires as claimed, but instead that massive destruction was orchestrated or misrepresented. The episode centers on Chicago’s 1871 great fire, arguing that 17,500 buildings were supposedly destroyed, yet only 0.0008% of the population died, raising questions about how so many structures could burn without higher casualties. The host emphasizes that fires destroy oxygen and that smoke inhalation is a major cause of death within minutes, urging readers to consider why a fire that destroyed tens of thousands of buildings would leave so many people alive. Speaker 1 lays out two possible alternatives to explain the Chicago narrative: (1) there were far more deaths than officially stated, or (2) the population was not actually 300,000 as claimed and the cities were largely empty, suggesting a deliberate erasure of prior civilization. They propose that 17,500 buildings could not have burned in such a way without greater loss of life, implying inconsistencies in the mainstream account. The discussion ties the Chicago fire to other events, noting that the Palmer House was rebuilt just four years later and comparing the fire narrative to the Temple Building, Chicago’s tallest building at the time, which allegedly had two designers who died during construction—facts used to cast doubt on conventional timelines. The narrative then broadens to include London’s Great Fire (01/06), New York’s great fire (1776), Paris’s 1916 fire in which 80 buildings were destroyed, and Detroit’s 1805 fire, each used to illustrate a pattern: massive destruction with surprisingly low casualty counts. The host argues that such patterns repeat across cities and over centuries, concluding that these events were not merely fires but possibly pretexts for erasing the old world’s architectural legacy. Canada’s fires in Montreal (1852) and Toronto (1904) are cited similarly, with the claim that hundreds or thousands of buildings burned yet casualties were minimal or zero, challenging the plausibility of the official histories. The host asserts that these widespread fires correlate with a hidden narrative of a highly advanced prior civilization, suggesting that the world-wide population in the 15th–16th centuries was substantial, but that by the early 1800s the population globally was effectively zero. They argue that the fires and subsequent rebuilding served to destroy monuments of the old world while presenting a rebuilt landscape that appeared new but was fabricated. The episode repeatedly states that a vast amount of old-world architecture was destroyed and replaced in short spans, often with “one year” rebuild timelines that the hosts deem impossible given logistics, materials, labor, and technology of the 18th–19th centuries. A key focus is Galveston, Texas, where multiple courthouses are claimed to have burned or been replaced in rapid succession. The host scrutinizes the sequence of Galveston’s courthouses from 1838 through 1898, arguing that the first courthouse’s existence is undocumented and that the later structures were allegedly built in ways that would have required far more time, labor, and materials than the official accounts admit. They question the involvement of the architect Nicholas Clayton, whom they associate with numerous Galveston buildings—including temples, schools, and a hospital building—arguing that Clayton’s output and the timeline contradict the notion of quick, flawless construction in the late 19th century. The Ashbel Smith Building and Ball High School are highlighted as examples wherein alleged pre-modern construction quality and rapidity seem inconsistent with the documented logistics of the era. Throughout, the speakers challenge the reliability of traditional historical narratives, asserting that old-world construction was far more advanced than commonly claimed and that modern histories intentionally obscure or delete information about these projects. They utilize hypothetical exercises (including a ChatGPT analysis) to illustrate the logistical improbabilities of building large structures in a single year, especially under horse-powered, labor-intensive conditions, and they emphasize patterns across multiple cities to argue that the standard fire-centered historiography is a deliberate cover for a deeper history. Note: The summary preserves the speakers’ exact claims and proposed interpretations without endorsing them.

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The speaker claims that mainstream history is a lie, particularly regarding the "Great Fires" of the 1800s. They argue that the reported death tolls are impossibly low considering the number of buildings destroyed. Specifically, the speaker cites the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, where 17,500 buildings burned but only a tiny percentage of the population supposedly died. They suggest the city was either empty or the death toll was suppressed, and that the fires were actually planned demolitions of old-world buildings using bombs and explosives. The speaker highlights other fires, including the Iroquois Theater fire (600 deaths), the Great Fire of London (6 deaths, 13,200 houses destroyed), the Great Fire of New York (2 deaths, 700 buildings), and fires in Paris, Texas; Toronto, Canada; and Montreal, Canada, all with suspiciously low death counts despite widespread destruction. They suggest the population worldwide was near zero in the early 1800s and that a previous advanced civilization existed before 1776. The speaker believes these fires were deliberate attacks to hide our true history. They cite the Great Fire of Detroit, Phoenix, Miami, and Houston as further examples of this pattern.

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The speaker claims to expose a pattern of fires destroying old world buildings, often during restoration projects, which they believe are planned demolitions. Examples include the Copenhagen Stock Exchange, Toronto Church, and a French cathedral. These fires, they argue, target old world technology, specifically spires holding free energy. They question the official narratives surrounding these fires, highlighting the lack of witnesses and the implausibility of fires igniting metal spires. The speaker also points to the removal of statue heads worldwide, suggesting a deliberate attempt to erase the true appearance and history of a previous civilization. The speaker contrasts the advanced architecture of old world structures with the primitive living conditions of the 17th and 18th centuries, questioning the mainstream historical narrative. They analyze the construction timelines of buildings like the Gonzales County Courthouse, using AI to demonstrate the logistical impossibility of their rapid construction. They highlight the underreported need for resources like water for horses during construction. The speaker discusses fires at the Alexandra Palace and Crystal Palace, suggesting these are nods to a hidden group indicating buildings from a previous civilization. They also mention the Altgeld Hall, translating its name to "Old Money," suggesting hidden gold and a deliberate destruction project. They highlight the reoccurring names and AI-generated narratives surrounding these events.

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The speaker questions the mainstream narrative of "great fires" worldwide, suggesting they were planned demolitions of old-world buildings by a previous civilization. They highlight inconsistencies in official accounts, such as the low death tolls despite widespread destruction in cities like Chicago (1871), London, and New York (1776). The speaker points out the unlikelihood of so few deaths occurring when thousands of buildings burned, questioning how entire cities could be destroyed with virtually no casualties. They cite examples like the Iroquois Theater fire (1903) with 602 deaths in one building versus the Chicago fire's 300 deaths across 17,500 buildings. The speaker analyzes fires in Paris, Texas (1916), Toronto (1904), and Montreal (1852), noting the recurring theme of minimal or zero deaths despite extensive damage. They use the Gonzales County Courthouse as a case study, questioning the feasibility of its rapid construction after a fire, citing AI analysis that estimates a much longer build time and significant resources. The speaker discusses architect Nicholas J. Clayton, linked to numerous buildings in Texas, many of which were demolished or destroyed by fire. They highlight the implausibility of Clayton's rapid construction of elaborate buildings with limited technology, suggesting a hidden history of a more advanced civilization.

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The speaker questions the mainstream narrative of great fires throughout history, suggesting that they were actually deliberate demolitions of old buildings. They point out inconsistencies in the death tolls and the rapid rebuilding of cities after these fires. The speaker argues that either the death tolls were higher than reported or the cities were empty. They also highlight the Great Fire of London in 1666, where only six people died despite the destruction of thousands of buildings. The speaker concludes that the mainstream history is a lie and suggests that a previous advanced civilization was erased. They promise to explore this topic further in future episodes.

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Speaker 0: The Hypogeum in Paola, Malta, is described as an enormous subterranean structure excavated 4,524 years ago, with huge limestone blocks removed. It was discovered in 1902 during house construction, which blocked the public for nearly a decade. It reportedly contained about 7,000 elongated skulls, many destroyed and the rest hidden from the public. The speaker notes that some underground chambers appear to imitate above-ground megalithic temple architecture, with false bays and underground windows. A ceiling features one ring of carved stone overhanging the one below, allegedly to imitate a roof. The speaker questions whether the structure was originally underground or came from above ground and was buried during an event, possibly killing thousands inside. He asserts the mainstream view is that it was a burial site, while the speaker posits that people were killed on the spot or trapped underground, with bodies piled rather than buried separately, suggesting a catastrophic event that melted structures globally and reshaped civilizations. Speaker 0 then states they revisited the Hypogeum of the Valle dei Famili (Valumnus) in Italy, noting about 200 tombs and a 1840 discovery. The excavation uncovered a site used into the first century BC, with 10 rooms and two winged demons guarding the entrance. He points out urns with painted scenes, including griffins, and argues that the griffin imagery links to Tartaria and Greek mythology, asserting that much of this history has been removed or hidden. A photo shows items behind a wall prior to modern changes; he claims that items were removed from the site between 1839 and today, suggesting ongoing suppression of evidence. Speaker 0 highlights an underground complex near Palmyra, Syria, the Temple of Baal, and a castle on a cliff—arguing that the area contains massive stone structures, hundreds of columns, and a temple the size of the Great Pyramid, with a perimeter roughly half a mile. He notes a mosque or palace-like complex nearby, and references the destruction and removal of the arch and other structures by modern groups, claiming that these actions suppress true history. He mentions the Baal Temple was allegedly found in 32 AD, though war zones have prevented access and exploration. He cites the Temple of Baal as being built on a tell, layering past civilizations, with the nth-century destruction of the post-classical elements—they allege the site had advanced construction and technology. Speaker 0 asserts that Palmyra’s temple complex was judged by mainstream narratives as centuries old, while the speaker believes it is much younger and part of an extensive old-world city evidence. He points to the Temple of Baal, the Temple of Baal Shemin, and the Taimer (Tadmur) Castle on UNESCO’s danger list in 2013 due to the Syrian civil war; ISIS captured it in 2015, recaptured in 2016, and the stairway was blown up in 2015, with plans to rebuild the arch denied by the speaker. He repeats the view that the old world had advanced technology and that the public has been misled, with the pottery focus being a deliberate decoy. He also references the Baal Cycle tablets—the ball cycle—found in 1929, claiming thousands of tablets reveal more than pottery, including royal palaces, high priests’ libraries, and texts about Baal’s rituals and offerings. Speaker 0 closes by suggesting that the true history lies beneath our feet, with a hidden past shaped by an advanced civilization violently erased or relocated, and that the current timeline is a fabrication designed to obscure what truly happened in the last few hundred years. Speaker 1 comments on the beauty of the cities and the impossibility of rebuilding them as they were, reinforcing the notion of lost grandeur.

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I've been researching old maps, flags, and architecture, which led me to the Cincinnati Music Hall, supposedly built in two years by Samuel Hannaford and Sons. But their company had no records until after the building was completed, which is suspicious. The Music Hall also had a fire just two years after completion! Fire narratives are key to identifying old-world buildings, and these buildings were not built by our current civilization, but rather a much more advanced one. From the Notre Dame fire in Paris, to the Royal Exhibition Building of Australia being built in one year, or even the St. Anne Shrine having its construction date wrong, so many signs point to a previous civilization.

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The speaker argues that many historic “old world” palaces and structures exist beneath modern American cities, including the Wisconsin State Capitol Building in Madison, which they claim is not the fifth capital on the site but part of a much older, hidden global architectural network. They assert that mainstream histories are deliberately repetitive and fabricated, using the Wisconsin Capitol as a focal point to expose what they consider a universal pattern: palaces built by a previous civilization that were later repurposed or erased from public memory. Key claims about the Wisconsin State Capitol site and its history: - The Wisconsin Capitol is presented as part of a recurring narrative in which ancient palaces precede the current government buildings, and the stated sequence (five capital buildings at this site) is said to be false. - The first capital building was supposedly built in 1836 as a wood “woodshed,” followed by another stone structure in 1837–1838, which they say was constructed by “nobody,” and a third capital building that supposedly collapsed while under construction, though it appears finished to the viewer. - They allege that the population data contradicts the official timeline: Wisconsin’s population was extremely small in the 1840s and 1850s (30,000 in 1840, 305,000 in 1850, 775,000 in 1860), implying that a large-scale capital-building enterprise and skilled labor force should not have existed at that time. - The narrative suggests a deliberate destruction or concealment of older structures and records, with fires cited as a tactic to erase history and clear the way for new constructions on the same sites. They link the fire narratives to “catacombs” and to the idea that many old-world buildings were destroyed or repurposed rather than replaced, with important artifacts removed. - The speaker questions the official fire explanations (e.g., a gas jet igniting varnished ceilings) and notes the rapid rebuilding of new capitals on the same site, sometimes claimed to be completed in under two years, despite alleged significant losses of records and architectural details. Underground and tunnel networks: - The presenter asserts that the Capitol connects to tunnels and utilities under the city, including a tunnel to the Risser/Justice Center across the street, and another continuing down Milwaukee Street that transports utilities and steam; a separate tunnel runs down East Washington Street. They claim multiple interconnected tunnels extend far beneath Madison and link to nearby institutions like the University of Wisconsin–Madison, the Wisconsin Mesa Center, and other government buildings. - They argue these underground passages form a massive, global web of tunnels linking old-world palaces and modern civic centers, accessible only to a select few, with the public largely unaware of their existence. Underground life and popular culture connections: - The narrative mentions a Madison resident, known as Tunnel Bob, who explored tunnels since the 1970s and reportedly lived under the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Patrick Rothfuss, author of the Kingkiller Chronicle, is cited as having a family connection to Tunnel Bob, suggesting a link between fiction and underground reality as presented by the speaker. - They extend the underground concept to other cities (Chicago, New York, Minneapolis) as part of a broader pattern in which old-world structures are hidden below modern urban environments. Other locations and examples: - The Minneapolis Basilica of Saint Mary is discussed as another example where multiple prior churches existed on the same site, with claims about restoration, gold leafings found, and a narrative of successive buildings—each described as an old-world palace rather than the officially claimed church history. - The speaker repeatedly asserts that the old-world constructions exist and have been overwritten by a controlled, modern narrative, urging viewers to see the “truth” behind the lies and to examine the underlying tunnels, architectural transitions, and the supposed deliberate erasures. Overall, the presentation reiterates a global pattern: ancient, elaborate structures beneath modern cities; repeated fires and reconstruction to erase previous palaces; hidden tunnel networks linking capitols, universities, and government sites; and a call for viewers to question established histories and to seek the underground infrastructure that supposedly proves the old-world presence beneath contemporary cities.

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The video argues that Dallas, Texas, hosts ancient “old world” structures and a hidden past connected to a prior civilization. It begins by presenting the Dallas County Courthouse, described as a red sandstone palace with rusticated marble accents at 100 South Houston Street, claimed to have been constructed before the invention of power tools in 1891. A 1930s photo allegedly shows the palace in the background with a small wooden hut in the front yard, used to “shred the narrative” about a simple 19th-century development. The presenter lists a sequence of courthouses on the site: log structures in the 1840s and 1850s, with another rebuilt after a fire in 1860, a fourth two-story granite structure erected in 1871 that burned in 1880 and again ten years later in 1890. He then asserts that, all to reach the current palace, a fifth courthouse on the site began in 1890 and was completed in twenty-four months. He claims evidence shows this impossible construction timeline, especially with tools and methods available at the time. The discourse introduces an Orlopp Jr. as a key figure, described as a 59-year-old Masonic member, connected to the palace’s history. The Dallas Municipal Building at 106 South Harwood Street is labeled as the fourth city hall, with land purchase between 1911 and 1912, plans drawn in 1913, bankruptcy of the building company the same year, and opening in 1914. A “cornerstone” ceremony is cited, with grandmaster A. W. Houston of San Antonio presiding in Dallas. The speaker claims to have located Orlopp’s archives and backstory, linking his father to American arrival and to a narrative of “free” buildings and “free may may sons.” The palace is alleged to contain a sub-basement “floor below the basement floor,” supposedly constructed in a single year over a century ago, with tunnels connecting to other structures worldwide. It is claimed the sub-basement was repurposed as a shooting range and that a section of the building was left unfinished because it wasn’t needed at the time. Modern renovation is said to have destroyed original features, including ten bronze doors and original windows, during a 2015–2017 restoration. Woodrow Wilson High School in Dallas is mentioned with a 1947 yearbook stating this is the nineteenth volume, yet the building appears far older; a 2016 fire damaged three floors, with disaster details not officially explained. The video asserts the school opened in 1928 after supposedly being built rapidly in one year. The Pretorian Building in Dallas, at 190 feet tall, is noted as having been demolished by 2013 and replaced by a sculpture of an eye. The speaker references the city’s Great Fire in 1860 and compares it to the Houston Great Fire of 1912, noting a lack of confirmed causes or fatalities in these fires. Across the narrative, the host promotes the idea that Dallas’s supposed rapid palaces, the destruction and renovation of ancient-looking structures, and the fires are part of a broader cover-up of a superior ancient civilization’s presence in Dallas and around the world.
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