5 hours ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)2 children
Now look into orphan trains, old world architecture, and the testimonies that these buildings were around in the late 1800s.
And of course, World’s Fairs
3 hours ago2 points(+0/-0/+2Score on mirror)1 child
They never ask how entire cities of architecture existed on the west coast with a couple thousand people with wagons and chisels at best. And then they never questioned the massive deconstruction projects of the late 1800s and 1900s disguised as “fires”
The "Tartarian" nonsense stems from people losing their roots and connection to the world. It is also due to the collapse in manufacturing in the US and the population being disconnected from how things are made. There is no "testimony" needed to hint that Chicago had early skyscrapers in the late 1800's. It's a common historical fact. The first steel frame high-rises went up in the mid 1880's. Chicago was a major industrial hub. You see China building cities at a rapid pace today? We used to do that, before bureaucratization neutered our society and finacialization hollowed it out.
5 hours ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)1 child
Most architecture like this was deliberately destroyed under auspices of Worlds Fairs and renovations. Satanic jews couldn’t stand the site of divinely inspired architecture standing around.
4 hours ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
I've listened to some mainstream ivy league architects try to explain why modern architecture is the way it is and past architecture is the way it is. None of the reasons seem compelling enough. It seems incredibly orchestrated. They could have kept building that way if they wanted to. The reasons for why they didn't want to are lackluster. "After WWII people just had a fatigue for buildings from the past and wanted to modernize." That's literally a cited reason for why do many Old World Buildings were demolished and replaced by modern boxes. The demolition as far as I'm concerned was orchestrated and these excuses were given for why but the excuses don't hold up.
The truth as far as I'm concerned is jews hated seeing such amazing structures because it reminded them of White people's superiority so they decided to make everything ugly. There's a reason the cite "after WWII" because that's when jews fully took over Western Nations completely.
Something I haven't looked into yet but it seems odd that everything used to have stone/marble/granite but then we switched away from all of that (jews orchestrated the change) but I don't remember hearing any of the workers who worked with stone/marble/granite complaining about the shift? Given how fast some of these buildings were constructed, our society would have had tons of skilled laborers with these materials in the construction industry and it seems we killed all their work nearly immediately and all at once. They probably weren't too happy but it sounds like they were entirely silenced which just gives credence to the fact the shift wasn't organic and naturally but 100% orchestrated and pushed on us by jews.
I've watched a lot about Tartaria and the Ancient Civilization built these structures narrative. It's tough to dismiss the theory entirely because there's a lot of things they seem pretty unbelievable. Some of these amazing structures we'd have difficulty building today popped up on towns with really small populations in construction times that sound unbelievable. The quality of the World's Fair Buildings is questionably too good done in such short time spans. The logistics in these periods of time don't seem probable. The fact many people petitioned to keep the buildings and then it just so happened the one building they decide to keep from the fair was actually constructed with permanent materials but every other building was a temporary building, uh huh... Still, I definitely think we could have built all these structures because I think many people's only skill was literally constructing these kinds of buildings. No internet, no other hobbies, no distractions. All these people knew was building these kinds of buildings. No one today has that level of care or focus for their job. Also, too many unions and workers rights that lead to lazy workers and 10x the time to get anything done.
This was also before the corporations. Most builders were sole proprietorships or partnerships. That means if they did a bad job, they could be sued personally. When a corporation does a bad job only the corporation can be sued and modern builders often keep the building company holding very little value so they don't care if they get sued. It's quite common for builders to fuck up and there be basically no recourse for the stakeholders because the building company is a shell corp. This didn't happen in the 1800s because the builder was a master builder who was putting himself personally on the line. If we want quality building we need to go back to this model and away from the corporation model, imo.
1 hour ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)2 children
> it seems we killed all their work nearly immediately and all at once. They probably weren't too happy but it sounds like they were entirely silenced
Which might be related to the fact that mental health "reform" was happening around that time and a ton of "hospitals" were built all over to contain "crazy" people.
Finally, we're starting to get to the bottom of what went on without using the Tartaria theory.
I did some checking:
>When did asylums become extremely common in the USA? The Boom and Overcrowding (1890s–1940s)
>Stone buildings began to lose their popularity as a primary structural material in the late 19th century (specifically the 1880s and 1890s), with the decline accelerating rapidly into the early 20th century.
>The asylum system reached its absolute zenith in 1955. At that time, there were roughly 560,000 patients living in state psychiatric hospitals across the United States.
>How many people's skills for their labor were tied to stone building construction from the 1890s to 1950s? During the 1890s peak, it is estimated that hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. alone, and several million globally, had their labor directly tied to the structural stone industry. By 1950, traditional structural stone building had virtually vanished.
And of course, World’s Fairs
Retard