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originally posted by: ChaoticOrder
a reply to: BlackArrow
If there is a time capsule buried under it, and apparently there is, then it would make sense for them to remove the capsule. But I'm not really convinced there's anything that special inside the capsule. However I will admit that demolishing the entire monument for "safety reasons" makes it seem like they wanted to remove the time capsule.
google.com "Georgia Guidestones +time +capsule" gets the job done every time.
originally posted by: ChaoticOrder
a reply to: Adamvegas
For safety reasons, they've now demolished the entire monument. I have surveillance footage pulled from social media showing the explosion at around 3:30am. I'll drop it here soon.
They blew up the rest of the monument or just knocked it down? I find it very hard to believe they would destroy the entire thing instead of trying to restore it. Or at least carefully remove whatever they could for display in a more secure environment, it is a historic monument after all, regardless of whether I agree with the message or not.
Perhaps a better suspect for our mystery man was discovered by filmmaker Christian J. Pinto. In his documentary Dark Clouds Over Elberton, Pinto interviewed Wyatt Martin, and was allowed to view one of Christian’s letters to Martin, as well as a glimpse of the papers in the box where Martin stored his paperwork and correspondences relating to the Guidestones.
Upon analysis of the footage, he spied a post mark upon one of the letters: Fort Dodge, Iowa. Another envelope had a return address from that same city in Iowa.
That address, Pinto discovered, was associated with a Doctor Herbert Hinzie Kersten. He lived there both when the Guidestones were commissioned in 1979, as well as in 1998, the date on the letter shown to Pinto.
The more conspiracy-minded among us might rightly ask, could this be a ruse of some sort? Certainly. But in that 1998 letter to Martin, Christian referred to himself as being 78 years old. Kersten, born in 1920, would have been 78 in 1998. Our other main contender, Ted Turner, would have been only 60 at the time.
Kersten was additionally a self-proclaimed conservationist (indeed, it’s literally engraved on his headstone), and was deeply concerned with human population growth. He was of the belief, among other things, that people with lower IQs should be paid to be sterilized to improve future generations of humans, very in keeping with the tenants of the Guidestones.
Their messages were so controversial that they were both sworn into secrecy. RC Christian is a false name the man who provided the designs and funding for the controversial Georgia Guide stones monument. Herbert Hinie Kersten was actually his real name, he was a doctor from Fort Dodge, Iowa. Herbert Hinie Kersten showed great support for David Duke who is a former Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, in a letter he wrote to the South Flordia Sun Sentinel. William Sayles Doan, a creator and Fort Dodge antiquarian, asserts on camera that Kersten was a candid supremacist who voiced plans to make an estimation to authoritatively demonstrate that whites – and specifically Northern Europeans – were the world's unrivaled race.
originally posted by: SirHardHarry
a reply to: Ahabstar
Probably says the earth is flat.
Or the moon landing was fake.
originally posted by: Brotherman
originally posted by: SirHardHarry
a reply to: Ahabstar
Probably says the earth is flat.
Or the moon landing was fake.
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