There is a very real possibility that a reset took place within the last 300 years and we are adding another proof in my opinion, that this is the case.
This is the exact point in time that our civilization sees a massive spike in population.
The Population Exposed? At no other point in time have humans repopulated at this rate of 66% increase every 69 years.
Billions of people at a rapid pace.
According to the mainstream narrative, we are told that we're at our peak right now.
We are the most advanced civilization ever.
We have the most technology.
We have the most amount of people.
When this is simply not true in my opinion.
I believe that we have been given all of this technology back.
I've said this before, but it is so true. I believe that our civilization is as advanced as we're allowed to be.
We see these inventions just flying at us in the 1800s.
Cars
phones
TVs
electricity
planes
You name it.
When you're in charge of controlling an entire civilization, 300 years is nothing.
To us, the 1800s were a long time ago.
But in reality, this is nothing.
We are being told that AI is a brand new thing.
When it has, in my opinion, been here a very long time.
And if we're being shown AI, could you imagine what else is not being shown to us?
Thinking logically and using the information that we're provided.
In my opinion, we are pinning this narrative down.
We are finding our civilization's beginning point.
And the more people that see this, the more people that understand this information, the more people that we have researching and looking for the truth, the probability of us finding the truth about our past becomes more and more eminent.
All of this explains why we have buildings sitting in all of our cities and most of our towns that don't fit into our timeline.
They don't look anything like the way we build today.
And the only way to explain it logically is that an advanced civilization was here before us, that fully understood how to create massive palaces.
And it was a civilization that was worldwide.
We see these cathedrals and basilicas in every single continent.
It's not like it was just limited to a single location.
This was a worldwide understanding and something massive happened to them.
And right around 1700, our civilization began occupying this land with their work looking us straight in the face.
Welcome to episode 65 of My Lunch Break.
I hope you're all having a great day and if you're new, welcome.
In episode 64 we were looking into Budapest, and we found this character that was building palaces at 23 years old, winning contests for massive parliament buildings where Budapest had so many master palace architects that they didn't even need to use the winner's design.
Mr. Hausman was pinned to a lot of buildings like we have shown, but we need to officially close the book on this guy.
We have covered the New York Palace in Budapest, which is now a 185-room palace hotel and cafe.
They tell us that this building opened up in 1894 as the headquarters for the New York Life Insurance Company, where life insurance is yet another thing that starts right up in 1706.
The first company to ever offer life insurance was founded in London, 1706, one year before the British pound became the official currency of the UK.
At this point it is becoming incredibly evident that something massive happened at this point in time.
It's just one thing after the next, and if all of this wasn't true, then the mainstream narrative would have given us something major that was created in the 1500s by now.
A single company from the 1400s.
You would think that there would be some sort of progression over time, that something would still be here from the 1500s.
It's not mathematically probable that every single invention, all the money, billions of people, all of it, comes in a matter of 300 years.
And before this, basically nobody rode around on donkeys and lived by candlelight, writing with duck feathers, yet knocked out massive castles and basilicas.
It doesn't add up at all.
Everything was given back to us, starting around this date of 1700, where in my opinion they were laying the groundwork, the foundation of our new civilization, and our new civilization was being formed.
And then after it was all situated and they had control over all the major things that a controller would want to be in control of:
governments and laws
financial institutions
insurance companies
taxes
and the rest.
After this was done, the okay was given to start repopulating this place again, and 300 years later, here we all are.
Now before we take this research to the next level, let's take a minute and thank all of our:
badge members
Patreons
every single subscriber
You are all awesome in helping grow this channel to reach new people every single week, and this is becoming clearer and clearer by the episode.
When we take a look at inflation, where it basically follows the exact same chart that the world population does when we have nothing going on before the 1700s, and then just takes off, I think we have located the beginning point of our current civilization, based on math and information that they have provided us.
Where there is nothing, and out of nowhere in 1700, everything is created and billions of people just come out of nowhere.
Inventions all over the place, with wars to confuse people, demoralize the ones involved, and destroy massive cities that give it all away.
Where, according to the data provided, people reproduce at basically 66% growth every 69 years, and this is documented.
So, what was going on in the 1200s?
Well, according to the mainstream narrative, everybody stayed away from each other.
Nobody wanted kids apparently, for hundreds and thousands of years.
The population was basically nobody.
And then the 1700s hit, and all of a sudden humans want to repopulate at a rate that's never been seen before.
And it's not even close.
Where it goes from nobody to billions of people in just a few hundred years.
Buda Castle in 2013 with Matthias Church in the background
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View full-sizeDownload Buda Castle (Hungarian: Budavári Palota, German: Burgpalast), formerly also called the Royal Palace (Hungarian: Királyi-palota) and the Royal Castle (Hungarian: Királyi Vár, German: Königliche Burg), is the historical castle and palace complex of the Hungarian kings in Budapest. First completed in 1265, the Baroque palace that occupies most of the site today was built between 1749 and 1769, severely damaged during the Siege of Budapest in World War II, and rebuilt in a simplified Baroque style during the state communist era. Presently, it houses the Hungarian National Gallery, the Budapest Historical Museum, and the National Széchényi Library. Stumbling around at night with no glasses and no lights.
Where you might say, yeah, that's because the USA was formed in 1776.
And then we go over to England, and the first state prison in England was the Millbank Prison.
Millbank Prison in the 1820s
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View full-sizeDownload Millbank Prison or Millbank Penitentiary was a prison in Millbank, Westminster, London, originally constructed as the National Penitentiary, and which for part of its history served as a holding facility for convicted prisoners before they were transported to Australia. It was opened in 1816 and closed in 1890.
Established in 1816, and eight years later, in 1824, 54 other prisons had formed and adopted this system.
And we will have an episode fully dedicated to this in the very near future.
I found some other things that I thought you all might enjoy.
So, let's start the bonus.
The Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis, which is a church located in Paris, France, with construction beginning in 1627.
The north façade in June 2019
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View full-sizeDownload The Église Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis (French pronunciation: [eɡliz sɛ̃ pɔl sɛ̃ lwi]) is a church on rue Saint-Antoine in the Marais quarter of Paris. The present building was constructed from 1627 to 1641 by the Jesuit architects Étienne and François Derand, on the orders of Louis XIII of France. It was the first church in Paris to break away entirely from the Gothic style and to use the new Baroque style of the Jesuits, and it had an important influence on Parisian religious architecture. It gives its name to Place Saint-Paul and its nearest Metro station, Saint-Paul. Next door to the church is the Lycée Charlemagne, also founded by the Jesuits.
Beginning in 1627, 397 years ago, in a time period that we have shown, according to the mainstream narrative, had just a little over no people, yet able to knock out the Buda Castle and massive palaces.
It was the booming 1600s, before all currencies.
They just decided they would just go trade a donkey or two for some limestone.
They would give the architect a pineapple for his skills.
And this was completed in 1641, perfectly.
They give us this story that we have seen so often, where the first church on the exact same site was built around 1125.
You know, 899 years ago.
And they give us a story of a chemist that gets guillotined, just to make us think that they know all about the backstory of these buildings.
Where we have shown in episode 33, when you just email them about a building that was built in the 1900s, they have no clue who built it.
They are as trustworthy as a child's bedtime story, where we are told that there was a cemetery connected to this first church, the one that was built 900 years ago.
And then the cemetery just disappeared, and the old church was demolished in 1799, because they just needed an upgrade in 1799.
And here's another one of those situations where we have these reoccurring names, with these stories, where we have seen all the Fredericks in episode 43.
Just accepting this narrative for years, when I think it's clearly a key to look deeper into these stories, these buildings and castles surrounding these characters.
So, the city supposedly grew too big, and the chapel was replaced, where they know that "Lewis the 8th" laid the cornerstone.
And when you know, you know.
The building's original name holds "Mason Jesuits".
The architect of the new church was the Jesuit priest.
So, now we are made to believe that the 1600s priests were also master architects.
This was the first church in Paris to stop using the Gothic style and now use the Baroque style, when the famous Jesuit preacher preached some of his memorable sermons in the church.
All documented, of course.
No.
So, my question is, who is this Jesuit priest architect that just knocks out palaces in the 1600s that last forever?
We are told that he was born in 1569 and had two brothers, who both became Jesuits as well.
Almost nothing is known about his early life.
Nothing.
It's a big mystery, just like the mainstream narrative likes it.
But don't worry, they know all about every other detail of the rest of his life.
Joining the Jesuit order in 1590, when he was 21, this group, the Jesuits, established themselves in France in the 1560, but were banned in 1595 after attempting to kill Henry IX.
But that's okay, because they let him back in eight years later.
So, this master architect, he wasn't even the best one.
Where he would supposedly draw up all these kinds of buildings, no problem at all, and send them back to a superior general.
They would have to approve them.
So, we're supposed to believe a time period where we're told that the population was like ten people.
They also had all kinds of people just waiting around to draw up palaces.
And some guy was sitting in his chair, throwing master designs in the no pile.
How ridiculous does this sound?
Now, of course, when they pin a guy to one building, there are always so many more.
Here's the first one, which is still in use today.
Built this one, and then he also supposedly built the Blois Cathedral, a cathedral that also had multiple buildings.
When we know that this sounds like there was something on the glass that told a story, possibly things that would give something away about our past, things that we're not supposed to see, thinking logically, why would the glass be broken?
And everything else is fine.
It sounds to me like these people just went in there and broke the glass and replaced it with the new narrative.
What better way to do this than to just chalk it up to a war?