Mark Martinez

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Mark Martinez

Mark Martinez

@xprofe831

Into history, archaeology, philosophy, & religion. BS in philosophy, MA in History, and in school for PhD in history. Romans 8:31-39

USA Katılım Ekim 2024
470 Takip Edilen598 Takipçiler
Megalithomania
Megalithomania@MEGALITHOMANIA·
A Spiralling Magnetic Anomaly at Heart of Göbekli Tepe | @HughNewmanUK Podcast Clip youtube.com/shorts/Ef-5ciX… In Enclosure D at Göbekli Tepe, between the two central T-shaped pillars, researchers have identified a spiralling magnetic anomaly rising up from the ground. Hugh Newman of Megalithomania and author of Göbekli Tepe and Karahan Tepe: The World's First Megaliths, reveals that this was not incidental to the site's location - it was the reason for it. The ancient builders were constructing their most significant enclosure directly on top of a geomagnetic feature, and Hugh argues they understood exactly what that feature could do. Magnetic anomalies and telluric currents are known to affect human consciousness - and Hugh proposes these were the places where seeds and grains were deliberately placed before planting, charged by the magnetic and telluric energy rising from the ground. The agricultural implications Hugh draws from that practice are specific - higher yield, higher quality crops, and frost resistance attributed to the energetic charging of seeds before they went into the ground. The timing makes the argument harder to dismiss. Agriculture developed in the immediate area around Göbekli Tepe within approximately 200 years of the site being built. Hugh’s question is direct - did the builders of Göbekli Tepe possess a working understanding of how to enhance seeds and grains using the magnetic anomaly at the heart of their enclosure, and did that knowledge contribute to the agricultural revolution that followed almost immediately in the surrounding region? The spiralling magnetic anomaly at the centre of the main enclosure, he argues, is not background detail. It may be the most important feature on the entire site. Göbekli Tepe and Karahan Tepe: The World’s First Megaliths (Wooden Books): amazon.co.uk/gp/product/190… and woodenbooks.com/index.php?id_c…. Artwork by Dan Lish and the author. Published by Wooden Books. Subscribe to Danny's podcast: @dannyjones Video created by #CosmicSummit linktr.ee/megalithomania… Megalithomania MMXXVI. All Rights Reserved. #Megalithomania #HughNewman
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Anti Woke Memes
Anti Woke Memes@AntiWokeMemes·
Describe this man using ONE word
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@sola_chad Yup! That's the difference been a false teacher and a true teacher. A man of the world and a man of God.
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RosarySon
RosarySon@SkyVirginSon·
without the Catholic Church, there literally is no Bible.
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@ShayGamerD3 @DrDavidMiano I'm not a purist, but as someone who was born in Barcelona and grew up there, I prefer the original designs over the newer ones. Antoni Gaudí is one of my top heroes. He was a devout Christian who reflected God's creation in his own creation.
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@DrDavidMiano mentioned 7 modern-day objects being moved, but he failed to disclose the distances they were moved... 1. Fairmont Hotel (~1,600 tons) was moved ~800 meters 2. Shubert theater (~2,908 tons was moved ~90-120 meters 3. Cape Hatteras light house (~4,380 tons) was moved ~884 meters 4. Fugong building (~15,140 tons) was moved ~35 meters 5. House of Isa Bey Hajinski (~19,841 tons) was moved ~10 meters 6. Taisun crane shandong lifts ~20,000 tons ~80-100 meters in the air; it does not transport 7. Portion of the North Rankin B platform (~23,178 tons) was moved ~100-200 meters Attacking the claim that we cannot move ancient stones is a straw man argument. Yes, there are those who say that and they're wrong. In most cases, we could move any stone previously moved in ancient times. The issue is difficulty (weight/distance) and cost. However, Miano also failed to disclose the distances the ancient stones were moved... Baalbek megalithic stones (~800 tons each) were transported over 1km. The stone of the Pregnant woman weights ~1,100 tons) The Colossi of Memnon (~720 tons each) were transported over 675km and the Colossus of Ramesses II (~1,000 tons) were transported over 200km. Ancient civilizations quarried, lifted, transported, and placed stones weighing hundreds and thousands of tons without the wheel, cranes, pulleys, and in some cases, without animal power. By claiming we can move heavier objects at a fraction of the distance, with advanced technology is a false comparison and a waste of time. The true test is whether we could do it the same way the ancient people did it; or at least, how we thought they did it.
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Forgotten History
Forgotten History@4gottnHistory·
Why is the most advanced looking stonework always at the bottom? Why do the stones get smaller and simpler over time? it makes no sense.
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@Cristi_Neagu @BrightInsight6 haha... fair enough... you got me... The big one that needs further verification is the missing/lost pre-Sumer ancient civilization. I agree with Hancock and Jimmy. In spite of the available evidence, I think we need just a bit more to fully vindicate that theory.
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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
BREAKING: Trump is threatening to pull out of NATO.
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Luke Caverns
Luke Caverns@lukecaverns·
Also, the idea that the Great Wall of China was built to keep people IN — is a misunderstanding. Over the 2000 years of the Wall’s construction, China’s empire expanded & shrunk during conflicts with marauders, & there are places where the wall was built into “enemy territory” & trapped some marauding tribes inside China’s borders & conquered/controlled them. It’s in these sections where the wall has both outward & inward defenses. The idea that it was built solely to keep people inside China ignores the reality that ancient China was one of the most prosperous & wealthy places in the ancient world—with many enemies surrounding them, wanting their recourses. I think the citizens of Ancient China probably appreciated the wall protecting them… rather than wishing they could venture out into the Mongolian wilderness to scrounge for food & die of starvation🀄️
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Luke Caverns@lukecaverns

The Great Wall of China was built over the course of 2,000 years by many Ancient Chinese dynasties. The wall spans more than 13,000 miles across China’s frontier & was built to control immigration, trade, & serve as a barrier between China’s ~40 million population & the maundering steppe people who also attacked Rome. The Great Wall itself is probably the greatest surviving example of just how powerful & lasting China was in ancient times 🐉🀄️

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Elite Man
Elite Man@EliteMan091·
🚨Q: This is a tough one 😂
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@Cristi_Neagu @BrightInsight6 In many respects, they have already, yes. However, there are still some outstanding theories that need further verification before we can claim full vindication. I suppose what I meant by "vindication," was the acknowledgement by the scientists and academics...
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Mark Martinez
Mark Martinez@xprofe831·
@MOSSADil @visegrad24 The last time Germany won a war? The Franco-Prussian War of 1871. A unified Germany, led by Otton von Bismarck, defeated Imperial France, led by Napoleon III, Trochu, and Gambetta. I think Israel is fine... 🤣haha
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Mossad Commentary
Mossad Commentary@MOSSADil·
@visegrad24 When is the last time Germany won a war? And Europe as a whole? Should Israel be taking consult from them?
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Visegrád 24
Visegrád 24@visegrad24·
🇩🇪🇮🇱 German Chancellor Friedrich Merz: "We view the situation in southern Lebanon with particular concern. [...] The severity with which Israel is waging war there could cause the peace process as a whole to fail, and that must not be allowed to happen."
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Defiant L’s
Defiant L’s@DefiantLs·
"If we meet and you call me by the wrong pronouns, it’s gonna be a confrontation and I don’t think you want that."
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Yossi Goldstein
Yossi Goldstein@YossiGoldstein8·
Israel is not alone. Over 7 million Catalonians stand with Israel.
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