The Tartarian Empire

The lost empire of Tartaria was a technologically advanced civilization that spanned Eurasia and parts of North America until as recently as a century ago, when it was erased from history. We once had fabulous Art Deco skyscrapers, Beaux-Arts train stations and Second Empire post offices. Now everything is a glass-and-concrete box. Americans and Europeans didn’t build those monuments. They are the legacy of a Tartarian Empire that emanated out of Northeast Asia. Are we supposed to believe that eighteenth-century mapmakers drew a vast “Tartaria” in that region out of ignorance? Surely not! Tartaria was real, and it was the most powerful empire of its time. The Great Wall of China was built not by the Chinese to keep the barbarians out, but by the Tartarians to keep out the Chinese. Some believe a biblical-sized mud flood decimated Tartaria, which also explains why so many old buildings have what we now call semi-basements. Adherent of this theory suspect monuments like Saint Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow’s Red Square continue tens or even hundreds of meters underground. Others suspect World War II was really a war of all against Tartaria, and the destruction of old Berlin, Dresden, Warsaw and other cities in Central and Eastern Europe was a deliberate effort to wipe away the traces of a rival civilization. Whatever the catalyst, after this “great reset” history was rewritten by the victors and the surviving Tartarian buildings were recast as the creations of contemporary architects. What had been Tartaria’s moving capital was implausibly reimagined as “world’s fairs”. How else to explain that, every few years during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, palatial complexes emerged all over the Northern Hemisphere? For entertainment? And then they would be demolished after the event was over? That makes no sense! The fairgrounds were not the only beautiful buildings razed to the ground. The original Penn Station, bulldozed in 1963-68 to make way for the ghastly Madison Square Garden, is the most infamous American example. But it is hardly the only one. But why cover it up? For several reasons, the most obvious of which are: 1. The knowledge that we have been part of a culturally-diverse, technologically- and spiritually-advanced worldwide civilization that upheld international peace and was responsible for global prosperity, is uncomfortable to those that benefit from keeping the global system of debt slavery as it is today. 2. Altering the history of a people is one of the most effective means of controlling a population, especially if the abridged version showcases their ancestors as depraved, decadent, backwards, violent, and altogether primitive (as is the case with our official world history) 3. The official historical narrative justifies the current established authorities (political and otherwise) that govern our society today because it paints a picture of progress and enlightenment to the current modern era of alleged human advancement that misleads us into a false sense of security and trust in our leaders. Reference Material:
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