The Terraforming of Terra - Architecture of the Hills, Part 1, Cunning Valleys, April 16, 2020
Jock Doubleday
Writer-videographer Jock Doubleday takes you on a journey between two artificial hills in Texas, discovering diagonal-section construction, providing additional evidence for continental terraforming.
"We have this diagonal construction. . . . This is pure diagonal building." (start minute 1:38) "Architecture of the Hills, Part 1 - Cunning Valleys, Gillespie County, Texas, April 16, 2020"
"This whole bottom of the riverbed is one molded piece. And above it is the stacked, sectioned layers -- diagonally created, diagonally structured, sections. . . . It's so obvious. And yet the geologists would just say, 'That's just the way it happened.' But it keeps happening in exactly that way." (start minute 2:42) "Architecture of the Hills, Part 1 - Cunning Valleys, Gillespie County, Texas, April 16, 2020"
"The creek on our right is given its direction by the meeting of the hills. They brought their hills together here. And therefore we have a valley that has been laid bare by erosion, by rainstorms, right? Then we have the diagonal building, 45-degree, 45-degree, 45-degree. So the hills give us the valley, and the hills are created with diagonal construction right next to [directly on top of] the bottom layer, which is this one molded layer without any fractures or breaks. It's completely integral. It isn't anything that has been created over time. This is not a feature of natural tectonic movement . . . This [bottom layer] is simply a perfectly strong, integral joining [of the hills]." (start minute 4:19) "Architecture of the Hills, Part 1 - Cunning Valleys, Gillespie County, Texas, April 16, 2020"
"In my previous 'Terraforming of Terra' videos, where I've been exploring, in particular, creek beds and riverbeds in Texas, I've always talked about the structural strength of the riverbed or the creek bed, and that the diagonal seams of the layers directly above the creek bed look like they were created specifically for structural strength, because why else would the ancients consistently use diagonal seams in those layers that are directly above the molded concrete creek bed or riverbed?
"But now I'm thinking that I should change the focus of that analysis and talk about the structure of the hills. . . . The hills, which have valleys between them, whether they're creek beds or riverbeds or not -- for the ancients, they were just valleys between hills, before the rains came, right? So, the cunning nature of the ancients was such that they built valleys between hills with diagonal seams, that they were trying to keep their hills strong with valleys built with diagonal-seamed layered construction.
"In other words, they were building topography across continents, they were engaged in continental terraforming all over the planet on an earth that was, and i ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssc74UbDep0
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