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Entrance portal to the Pallavicini Palace in Vienna, Austria.

Note the height of the door handles.

Official history tells us that it was built at the end of the 18th century. If so, those people who were clearly much bigger than us existed only 300 years ago.

It is so obvious—and even ridiculous—to see so many doors of ancient buildings all over the world with only a small hole for modern humans to pass through, and the handles are at an absurd height for us. Anyone who does not see that they were much bigger and taller than us in the past has a blindfold on.

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A very important message for mankind if you ask me. No question about it, we must change and get into action!

"The Final Goal Is To Eradicate Humanity As We Know It." — Laura Aboli

Transhumanism — The End Game
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Crimean Pyramids: Traces of a Forgotten Civilization

The discovery of underground pyramids in Crimea is not a theory but a fact that could change our understanding of the past. In 1999, geophysicist Vitaly Gokh announced the discovery of mysterious structures hidden underground.

According to him, these are traces of a highly developed civilization that existed long before the historical epochs known to us. These pyramids could be the key to unlocking forgotten pages of human history.

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The Root: The Plant's Brain

The root system, comprising all the roots of a plant, is one of its most important and vital parts. It functions like a “motor pump,” absorbing and pushing water, mineral nutrients, activators, and promoters of chemical reactions (such as enzymes, coenzymes, and hormones) from the roots to the leaves through the stem and branches. Most importantly, it maintains physiological balance throughout the plant.

So, the next time you look at your plants, remember that the green leaves, showy flowers, and abundant fruits are all due to the root system, which is the true “brain” of the plant.

The rhizosphere is where the relationships between microecological life and the root system (including roots and absorbent hairs) are established, along with the tissues that wrap around the tips of the roots or growth zones. This area is crucial for the absorption and pumping of nutrients and water into the leaves.

An example of this is that almost all plant root systems are associated with mycorrhizae, which mobilize nutrients to the rhizosphere. In turn, the plant excretes (essentially, it “urinates”) simple substances resulting from its physiological processes through its roots. These substances are used as a food source by soil microorganisms, helping to avoid competition with other microorganisms.

These microbes emit antibiotics into the rhizosphere, providing indirect protection by "repelling," so to speak, pathogenic agents. This is very useful for maintaining the health of the roots and, consequently, the health of the soil and plants.

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Kaokoland - Africa Wilderness

Kaokoland, one of the last vestiges of unspoilt wilderness in Africa where the word ‘remote’ still has meaning. Here, in the extreme north-western corner of Namibia, where the semi-nomadic Himba live traditionally in the barren expanses as they have done since time immemorial; where gemsbok, springbok, ostrich and giraffe wander freely and desert-adapted elephant meander through the dry riverbeds; time seems to stand still.

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The Origins of Mobile Telephony

There was a brief, almost anecdotal moment when telephony from the car became a possibility: it happened in 1949, in post-war Italy. Although it did not prosper, it marked a curious milestone in the history of connectivity on wheels. It was in Naples that the first Public Auto Telephone was installed, invented by researchers Mario Iovine and Angelo Maiello.

This innovation, which seemed almost like science fiction for its time, consisted of a system of telephone stations on the sidewalk that allowed motorists to make calls without getting out of the vehicle (depending on the car model, that is).

In the midst of a modernization effort for the country, Italy implemented a telephone system intended for drivers at the end of the 1940s.

It was 1949, and this curious car phone was neither wireless nor universal. In fact, it required a specific facility and was restricted to certain urban areas. However, it represented one of the first public attempts to facilitate communication on the move, anticipating, decades in advance, the first hands-free connectivity solutions, such as Bluetooth kits and voice assistants.

But the idea of communicating from the car did not originate in Italy. Back in 1920, a visionary named W.W. Macfarlane in Pennsylvania (USA) made a wireless call from his car to his wife. To achieve this, he used a rudimentary radio system that some media of the time referred to as a “cordless phone.”

In 1921, the first radiotelephone was installed in a vehicle in Detroit, and in 1946, AT&T launched the first official telephone service for cars in the USA, which came with a high cost and overloaded lines. In Italy, the car phone would officially arrive in 1973, introduced by SIP, although with much more advanced technology.

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The copyright of the music belongs to Renato Carosone.
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The Shepherds on Stilts of Gascony

In the late 1800s, a discreet man with a camera was traveling the windswept plains of southwestern France. His name was Felix Arnaudin, and what he captured was a way of life that was already disappearing.

Among his most striking images were the shepherds of the Moors, perched on high wooden stilts. Dressed in thick wool coats and wide hats, these men were not artists but survivors of the swamps. Their stilts lifted them above the damp, uneven ground, allowing them to keep an eye on their herds and travel long distances across the soggy heather.

Through Arnaudin's lens, these shepherds appear as slender, spectral silhouettes on the flat horizon—figures shaped by wind, mud, and patience. His solitude is almost sacred; their poise, a silent defiance of the elements.

But progress was coming. The swamps dried up. Pine forests were planted. The roads were paved. The stilts were lowered and then forgotten.

Arnaudin knew what was disappearing. He dedicated his life to preserving the faces, stories, and songs of his homeland. His photographs, now preserved in museums, are not just archives; they are elegies.

Thanks to him, the shepherds on stilts of Gascony are not forgotten. They remain tall and motionless, engraved in silver and light, watching over a past too proud to disappear completely.

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How Rockefeller eliminated natural cures from the popular imagination to create the modern pharmaceutical industry

People these days may see you as a weirdo if you talk about the healing properties of plants or any other holistic practices. Like everything else, there is a lot of politics and money behind our modern medical system.

It all starts with John D. Rockefeller (1839–1937), who was an oil tycoon, a robber baron, and the first billionaire and monopolist in the United States. At the beginning of the twentieth century, he controlled 90% of all oil refineries in the USA through his oil company, Standard Oil, which was later split into companies like Chevron, Exxon, and Mobil.

Around 1900, scientists discovered "petrochemicals" and the ability to create all kinds of chemicals from petroleum. The first plastic was made in 1907, and scientists also identified several vitamins, leading to the assumption that many pharmaceutical drugs could be derived from petroleum.

This presented a wonderful opportunity for Rockefeller, who recognized the potential to monopolize the petroleum, medical and chemical industries simultaneously.
The best thing about petrochemicals was that everything could be patented and sold at a high profit.

However, there was a problem with Rockefeller's plan for the medical industry: natural and herbal medicines were very popular in America at that time. Almost half of the doctors and medical universities in the United States practiced holistic medicine, utilizing the knowledge of the indigenous peoples of Europe and America.

Consequently, Rockefeller had to find a way to eliminate his biggest competition. So, he employed the classic “solution-problem-reaction” strategy. This involved creating a problem to scare people and then offering a pre-planned solution.

He went to his friend Andrew Carnegie, another plutocrat who made his fortune by monopolizing the steel industry, and together they devised a scheme. Through the prestigious Carnegie Foundation, they sent a man named Abraham Flexner to travel across the country and report to the heads of medical colleges and hospitals.

This resulted in the Flexner Report, which gave rise to modern medicine as we know it. The report emphasized the need to modernize and centralize medical institutions. Based on its findings, more than half of all medical universities were soon closed. Homeopathy and natural medicines were mocked and demonized, and many doctors were even imprisoned.

To facilitate this transition and influence the opinions of other doctors and scientists, Rockefeller awarded over $100 million to universities and hospitals and founded a philanthropic front group called the "General Education Board" (GEB). In a very short time, all medical schools were modernized and homogenized. Students were taught the same content, and medicine became focused on using patented drugs.

Scientists received substantial grants to study how plants cured diseases, but their goal was to first identify which chemicals in the plants were effective and then recreate a similar, though not identical, chemical in the laboratory that could be patented.

Now, 100 years later, we are producing doctors who know little about the benefits of nutrition, herbs, or any holistic practices. We have a society that is largely dependent on corporations for their well-being.

They do not focus on cures but rather on symptoms, thus creating recurring clients. In the pharmaceutical industry, there are no cures for cancer, diabetes, autism, asthma, or even the flu; it would be poor business practice, as they would run out of customers.

As for cancer, oh yes, the American Cancer Society was founded by Rockefeller in 1913.

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The Peruvian Whistling Vessels

These vessels produce sounds by shaking or when a liquid is poured through them. This is achieved through a complex system of chambers and channels inside the vessel that act as resonators.

They may have served ritual and ceremonial purposes, possibly in connection with religious or spiritual practices.

Comparable whistling vessels also exist in other cultures and countries:

~ In present-day Iraq, vessels were made that produced sounds when liquids were poured out.

~ The pre-Columbian cultures of Mexico, such as the Aztecs and Maya, also created whistles and flutes from clay.

~ The “Askoi” are known in Greece and produced whistling sounds when liquid was poured through them.

~ In Chinese ceramic art, there are also examples of whistling vessels.

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Black Panther mythology draws on real-world African and Native American legends, primarily featuring the panther (or jaguar) as a powerful, mystical symbol of spiritual connection, wisdom, and guardianship. The panther's symbolism includes connecting the physical and spiritual realms, embodying the spirit of a hidden realm, representing ancestral wisdom and the eternal struggle between light and shadow.
The panther awakens the unconscious urges and abilities that have been closed down. It signals a time of imminent awakening.

In North and South America, the black panther was seen as a powerful, magical creature symbolizing mastery over all dimensions, and was even associated with thunder and eclipses. 

The panther is associated with both darkness and rebirth, a powerful presence that bridges the gap between light and shadow, embodying the cycle of life, death, and renewal. 

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Uncover The Secrets Of Ohio’s Ancient Pilgrimage Route
The Great Hopewell Road

The ancient Hopewell culture of North America built a massive network of perfectly straight, parallel earthen walls, forming "sacred roads" that stretched for up to 60 miles, connecting their major ceremonial centers. These were not simple footpaths; they were monumental engineering projects that maintained their trajectory over hills and valleys. Why build such elaborate, arrow-straight highways? This was a transportation and communication grid for a civilization far larger and more organized than we are taught, whose understanding of geometry and large-scale engineering rivaled that of the Romans.

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2025/10/03 03:36:57
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