Did amerimutts really allow this to happen in one of their major cities?What the hell is going on here?
My guess is they painted it as some short of historical event so people didn't think much about it
>>530172776this is only a portion of the whole productionthe child sacrifice is condemned in the narrative.seriously, if jews were sacrificing kids, why would they tell everyone at the world's fair, the same year hitler came to power? not exactly a cagey move.do you think this is some sort of proof that jews secretly worship moloch?https://www.nytimes.com/1933/06/11/archives/pageant-to-depict-rise-of-religion-cast-of-3500-on-jewish-day-at.html>The first episode of the pageant has been built around the sacrifice of a child to the god Moloch. A figure of the god, twenty-seven feet high, flanked by lesser idols, will be the centre of this scene. More than 500 slaves and idolators will enact the ritual of the "passing of a child through the flames," against which the Hebrew prophets protested.
The whole video is mind bending. It is worth doing a dive on the World's fairs. Notice how the buildings all look like modern Rome? We are told that these buildings were basically paper mache; completely temporary and only held together for the fair. They soon fell apart when the fair was completed.The 1897 version of the Chicago World Fair had a building - Arts and Crafts if I recall - it was 32 acres with spans that were 450'. Nothing is temporary that is that big with a roof on it. We couldn't build that today. That span is bridge length which is done with towers and guy wires. A building with a span like that would have a beam that was 15' deep and not moveable by anything made for the next 150 years. Then you realize 10,000 Jews depicting a child sacrifice was the least odd thing that happened. At the worlds fairs you could adopt kids and take them home like they were a rotisserie chicken. It is a strange world that we know nothing about only 100-125 years ago.
>>530173361>e 1897 version of the Chicago World Fair had a building - Arts and Crafts if I recall - it was 32 acres with spans that were 450'. Nothing is temporary that is that big with a roof on it. We couldn't build that today. That span is bridge length which is done with towers and guy wires. A building with a span like that would have a beam that was 15' deep and not moveable by anything made for the next 150 years.this tells you the official story is trueit was a lightweight, temporary building. apparently the facades were made with jute fibre and plaster, so basically papier machethis whole thing that "nothing that big is temporary" is silly. says who? you?is this the same event? it wasn't a world's fair, but something closehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World's_Columbian_Exposition#Architecture
>>530174606>The largest building at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair (World’s Columbian Exposition) was the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building. Yes, says me. That is a building that could put 24 football fields under its roof. The largest clear span was 354', (not 450' mistype). That is not possible today. That is a feat of Engineering and nothing temporary about it. You can make paper surfaces that hold paint, but the weight of the roof and the forces involved in the sheer weight and size needs real support. An absolute crazy time. One 'temporary' building that was not torn down survives to this day. Palace of Fine Arts, now the Museum of Science and Industry still stands. Must have been some good temp work to last 130 years.
>>530175520ok i didn't realize that the world's fair and the world's columbian exposition was the same thing lelhave you even looked at the interior? it had an arched roof with partly fabric panels. https://chicagology.com/columbiaexpo/fair010/>It is more than a third of a mile long, and nearly a sixth of a mile wide, and covers over thirty acres of ground. In the center of this space is a court 1,237 x 387 feet in size, the roof of which is supported on gigantic steel trusses, which span the entire width, and are 210 feet high, or fifty feet higher than those of the Machinery Hall at Paris, forming the largest unincumbered court ever constructedit was basically a big quonset hut/tent
>>530176050ok another article said the roof material was glass and iron, looks like those are just curtainshttps://www.outsidelands.org/manufactures_building.php
>>530176050That center where the US flag is hung could house a 20 storey building. The size is deceptive. Those trusses to construct would be like building 50 'temporary bridges' or '20 baseball stadiums'. When they say paper mache they make it sound like it was a movie set that would fall down if the wind blew. This was beyond anything we have in North America and it was build 130 years ago. None of that steel or glass was temporary and if it wasn't torn down it would be standing today. I guess is it like a Quonset hut if you call putting fabric over 5 golden gate bridges a 'hut'. I find the whole thing fascinating. There are odd buildings all over the US like Buffalo of all places from this same era that are incredible.
>>530172776>Did amerimutts really allow this to happen in one of their major cities?It's a reenactment of idolatrous worship straight out of the Torah/Bible, Judeo-Christian Ameri-Golems love that YHWH Jew Fairy Tale shit.
>>530176712yes, it was very impressive. but you can do a lot in a day with enough manpower and skilli used to work on commercial sites and it was wild to see how fast skydeck goes up and concrete goes down.they are bolting pieces of steel together, or probably riveting? have you ever seen an amish barn raising? whole building goes up in a day. a permanent building too. i don't understand the conspiracy aspect of this. impressive building, but not impossible like you claimed earlier. and it has no central span requiring a beam.
>>530177470>Michael de Young, Director-General and mastermind of the Midwinter Fair, really wanted the Park Commission to agree to keep the Manufactures and Liberal Arts building after the exposition ended. He argued that its capacious dimensions lent itself to possibilities such as “annual exhibits of our State horse shows; also this building might be used for general public convenience for the Park Band to play in inclement weather and as a place where great assemblages, like national conventions and others, could meet.” The idea was declined and the giant hall was sold for salvage in the fall of 1894.