Of course Stonehenge was not built by aliens! What a silly notion! Everyone knows the stones were levitated from their original quarries by the wizard Myrddin Wyllt!
Some of the science the narrator uses is now dated. For example, new, more accurate DNA studies show that Cheddar Man was not dark-skinned as politically correct academia would have it. Instead, he was lighter skinned, in keeping with a more northerly European origin, rather than the dark skinned sub-saharan African origin promoted by the politically correct.
The Neolithic "original inhabitants" of Britain didn't "mysteriously disappear" as she claims. They were outnumbered and outbred by a massive invasion of Bell Beaker Europeans from the mainland of Europe, and replaced within just a few generations. Their genetic signature is still detectable in British DNA, at a level of about 10%... so the remaining folk were assimilated by the newcomers. I myself carry a DNA signature still traceable to the people of Cheddar Man.
The gentleman's invention to "walk" stones over vast distances was interesting, but I think it would have been even more interesting had it been shown in operation rather than as stills of a wonky contraption. Interestingly, there are still legends that the stones "walked" there under their own power among all the other legends trying to explain their transport. So, he might be on to something, but visual evidence that his contraption would actually work would have been nice.
The plague angle was also interesting - the Irish Annals mention that a plague among the people of Partholon wiped them out to the last man in the history of the invasions of Ireland. There might be some connection there as well. The same Irish invasion histories also mention an invasion from Scythia which, although of later naming, covered the same eastern European steppe area as mentioned in the video... the area the "white skinned horse riders" came from during the European migrations. "Scythia" didn't exist as a place name until about 600 BC, but still, it covered the same area as the one where the earlier "Scythian" invasions were said to have originated from.
.
Some of the science the narrator uses is now dated. For example, new, more accurate DNA studies show that Cheddar Man was not dark-skinned as politically correct academia would have it. Instead, he was lighter skinned, in keeping with a more northerly European origin, rather than the dark skinned sub-saharan African origin promoted by the politically correct.
The Neolithic "original inhabitants" of Britain didn't "mysteriously disappear" as she claims. They were outnumbered and outbred by a massive invasion of Bell Beaker Europeans from the mainland of Europe, and replaced within just a few generations. Their genetic signature is still detectable in British DNA, at a level of about 10%... so the remaining folk were assimilated by the newcomers. I myself carry a DNA signature still traceable to the people of Cheddar Man.
The gentleman's invention to "walk" stones over vast distances was interesting, but I think it would have been even more interesting had it been shown in operation rather than as stills of a wonky contraption. Interestingly, there are still legends that the stones "walked" there under their own power among all the other legends trying to explain their transport. So, he might be on to something, but visual evidence that his contraption would actually work would have been nice.
The plague angle was also interesting - the Irish Annals mention that a plague among the people of Partholon wiped them out to the last man in the history of the invasions of Ireland. There might be some connection there as well. The same Irish invasion histories also mention an invasion from Scythia which, although of later naming, covered the same eastern European steppe area as mentioned in the video... the area the "white skinned horse riders" came from during the European migrations. "Scythia" didn't exist as a place name until about 600 BC, but still, it covered the same area as the one where the earlier "Scythian" invasions were said to have originated from.
.
“Trouble rather the tiger in his lair than the sage among his books. For to you kingdoms and their armies are things mighty and enduring, but to him they are but toys of the moment, to be overturned with the flick of a finger.”
― Gordon R. Dickson, Tactics of Mistake
― Gordon R. Dickson, Tactics of Mistake