🪦 Georgia Guidestones 🪦
(media.scored.co)
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Not a bomb ------ this was a projectile ----- too directional for a bomb ---- shaped charges would just cut a directional hole without moving large masses.
That bomb would have had to be there waiting for years. There were cameras when it happened.
The one-direction debris field was not from a bomb.
There was an incoming projectile.
Take the center of gravity of the wall ----- before and after ---- see how much it moved ---- then times the mass of the wall.
This will give you a clue of how heavy and how fast the projectile was.
When you go bowling you push the pins with the ball. My eyes didn't see that on the video. Did yours?
Back of my hand calculations:
You have a 40,000 lb slab
The center of gravity falls about 10' (about .75 seconds, 25 feet per second final velocity, average velocity 12.5 feet per second)
The center of gravity ALSO moves about 10' sideways.
SOMETHING imparted this 40,000 lb slab to a average velocity of 12.5 feet per second sideways (during the 10' vertical fall).
energy = 40,000 lb x 12.5 feet per second == 500,000
A 1000 fps projectile would need to weigh about 500 lbs
A 2700 fps projectile would need to weigh about 185 lbs
these slabs weigh 40,000 lbs ---- explosions are too fast and lightweight ---- they would just blow a small hole.
You need something that is heavy and already up to speed.
You would need at least a 500 lb weight directionally blasted away at mach 1.
You would need some kind of directional containment barrel to keep from blowing up the whole site.
IMO this was a military grade projectile.
When you go bowling you push the pins with the ball. My eyes didn't see that on the video. Did yours?