reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that mathematically the worldwide population in the last 1,400 years was basically zero, contrasting this with mainstream history which claims people were building palaces, castles, and cathedrals at the same time. He begins at Rimes Cathedral in France, dated to 1211 (eight hundred and thirteen years ago), and notes that in the USA similar cathedrals are dated to the 1800s, while in Europe dates are accepted without question. He questions the claim that this cathedral was part of a long, perfected tradition, pointing out that the cathedral supposedly followed an earlier church destroyed by fire a year before construction began, and he questions how eighty years of construction would be feasible without modern tools, power, or shipping.
He identifies the designer as Jean Day Orbeis and traces similar claims to other churches like Saint Pierre Saint Paul, built between the end of the twelfth century and early thirteenth century. He asserts that there were “basically no people” in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, yet mainstream history says these structures were built then. He emphasizes the “fire narrative” among more than 100 buildings and argues the math does not support such populations or timelines. He cites a 1835 population of 1,000 for the location and contrasts it with England’s population rising from about 9,000,000 in 1801 to over 56,000,000 in the last two centuries, claiming a worldwide decline rate of 83.92% in the same period, which he says should cast doubt on the claimed populations and dates.
He goes on to dissect Spain’s population from Worldometer data, suggesting the worldwide population would be 3,000,000 or less in certain earlier years under a model of a 66.1765% decline every sixty-nine years. He presents a string of calculated population figures—1748 with 106,000,000; 1679 with 35,000,000; 1610 with 11,800,000; 1541 with 3,900,000; and 1200 with 17,700 worldwide—arguing that such numbers imply that civilizations with no modern tools could have built cathedrals and other monumental structures. He claims this challenges the idea that thirteenth-century people built vast cathedrals with advanced capabilities.
The discussion moves to an ancient cathedral in Athens, Greece, photographed in 1860, noting that worldwide population then was just over 300,000,000—far from today’s 8,000,000,000. He zooms in on the Acropolis front, highlighting “incredible” details and a logo of Tartarian origin (a griffin) visible on buildings, including in prior episodes. He connects the Greek site to the idea of an advanced civilization (Mu/Tartaria) and references the Hill of Mu and the word Mu in Greek myth.
He critiques scaffolding and restoration practices as propaganda that keeps the perception of our civilization as more advanced than past ones, arguing that such modern interventions imply the opposite. He presents a side-by-side comparison to suggest that current buildings are dwarfed by ancient structures. He reiterates the core conclusion: with a math-based deduction, the worldwide population would have been extremely small in the past, implying a potential reset of population around 1776, with serious implications for accepted historical narratives.
Speaker 0 closes by noting that the population math—down to possibly three people in one of the years—supports the claim that there was little to no global population in early periods, and that this math has been waiting to be recognized, inviting viewers to delve deeper.