Hi everyone. I'm a professional art historian and teach at a college. I love topics like ancient aliens, conspiracies, and all of that jazz. That's why I'm here. But I wanted to talk about the Georgia Guidestones. There's a huge amount of misinformation surrounding them.
There's nothing actually nefarious about them. They were funded because a small group of people (some of who may have been Rosicrucians) who were scared that the cold war between the US and Russia would lead to nuclear Armageddon. They wanted to put together a set of "guides" for the survivors of that apocalypse. That's what the Guidestones are.
Now, do the elites of this world want to reduce the population? Absolutely. Will they do horrifying things to accomplish this? Likely yes. Are the Georgia Guidestones part of those nefarious plots? No, I do not believe so. I believe the guidestones, to the very best of my research, were funded by a small group of people who feared nuclear war, and wanted to leave behind some semblance of a marker for the humans who might survive it.
Do I personally subscribe to each ideal left in the Guidestones? Not particularly. I think they were well meaning though. Let's say you and your friends were multi millionaires. And you got together one night over drinks, and you were all in agreement that nuclear apocalypse was on the horizon. And you decided to do what you could, no matter how small the effort, to try to ensure the continuation of the human race. You put together your own set of guidelines which you felt might work after such an event, paid to put them into stone, and set up a monolith which you hoped would withstand the event. That's what the Guidestones are.
It's boring, I know. But every bit of research I have done into them shows that this is the real truth about them.
I'm not saying that shadowy cabals aren't conspiring to control the world, kill people, start wars, reduce the population, and I'm not saying that very powerful ruling families do not dictate the fate of billions of us.
I'm just saying that in my research, the Guidestones were not built by those people. They were built by fairly ordinary people with a bunch of money who were afraid of a global nuclear event.
Just wanted to share that with everyone. Take it or leave it, it's all good.
Why don't we ask them?
Can you cite your research please?
You put it out there. Source(s).
Uh, I guess my source would be myself. It's my own research. I've not written a paper on it yet. There's accounts available online with the commissioner R C Christian which I've not found to be overtly fraudulent. There's also a podcast from the Parcast network about the Guidestones, and while their research and opinions are not always what I consider to be perfect, I couldn't find any indication of fraudulent or incorrect information in their research. The best I can reason is that the stones were a Rosicrucian project. While the Rosicrucians are a little bit... wacky, and maybe a bit culty, I wouldn't immediately count them as part of an evil cabal in the case of the Guidestones, and I believe their intentions with them were likely good. And to me, it makes sense. If you and your group were truly afraid of nuclear Armageddon, you might pool some money together for a monument to help rebuild the world.
That monument didn't withstand a bucket hoe.
Can't down play that.
Nuclear Armageddon?
No. That dog don't hunt.
Here is the skinny.
UNLESS you were directly involved. UNLESS you WITNESSED the event. You have nothing. Myself included for 40 years.
All we have is the mystique of speculation and conjecture.
That is the allure, the hook, right?
As Phish once said :
Maybe so, maybe not...
Fair
If it makes you feel any better, it's not a douchey uber-left college. I don't know a single instructor here that injects left-leaning ideology into their class.
Two questions:
Why does the timeline and the inscription regarding the 500m* people line up to other beliefs.
Why did they not just provide such insight in the time frame it would have been accepted fine (nuclear fear). The anonymity is odd, do you have any explanation?
First, possibly coincidence. I don't have a clear answer for that. Second, regarding anonymity, the commissioner was R C Christian, a likely pseudonym, and as for why they wanted to remain anonymous, there's a few potential reasons. They may have been part of an egotistical club of wealthy people. They may have had delusions of grandeur. They may have been worried the stones would be misinterpreted with their intention. They may have simply enjoyed the idea of being mysterious. Or they may have been spending money that they didn't properly pay taxes on. There's a lot of different potential possibilities.
Well, I think you are selling the whole nwo plan a bit short, because in that timeframe, it was alive and well and most of what we see documented with outfits like wef were alive and well.
So the number match as well as other facets the entire claim reeks of a control mechanism to me.
An anonymous source (obviously rich) wants to reduce the population by 95%
Oh yeah --- that's normal.
I saw it 3 times this morning before breakfast...
That's not it though. The monument was intended to be seen after a nuclear armageddon to help guide the remains of the human race.
There are absolutely people who want to reduce the population, and many of whom are evil, but the evidence I've found regarding the Guidestones doesn't point to that.
Sounds about right. My issue with them is those that commissioned the work have the nerve to instruct survivors how they should live and the population they should level out at. Ask someone that believes the world is over populated if the like Ghandi. When they affirm, say "well, like Ghandi says 'be the change you want to see' ". Pisses them off to no end and they cannot recognize the fallacy of their beliefs.
the anonymity aspect? the collusion with state government? neither of those things strike you as cabal like?
foh
No, they are satanists openly telling us their plans.
Satanists exist for certain, but these stones were not built by satanists.
Thanks for displaying your ignorance.
Why don't we just ask them?