-So, were the dinosaurs the 'reptilians'?
-What about the rest of the races? Creation, locality, synchronous co-existence, etc...
-Impossible architecture is all over the world, but each place has its own unique style. Where there different 'nations' within the Aryans?
-Where do buildings like the Parthenon fit into this legend?
-Destroying is relatively easy, but even refurbishing of the lost world buildings and the landscape around them takes time. Less than 200 years was not enough for such a thing.
-The same about local languages and traditions. These need decades and centuries to develop. The mainstream narrative explains them much better.
Hoping for answers in the next video, this was a good job for a start.
It is not just the timing factor, but, more importantly, the financing factor. In our current economical structure, buildings of these sorts are just far too expensive to bring back to their original splendor. Restoration projects that are under way to restore some of these nearly forgotten gems represents a phenomenally small portion of overall buildings that have mostly gone neglected. Growing up in Troy, NY, I always marveled at the amount of dead buildings scattered throughout the city. It has only been in the last 20 years or so that some progress has been made in restoring some of these architectural milestones, with the end result being a handful of watering holes and high-end apartment/condo co-ops. However, in this "renaissance", the average mug of beer starts at $8 a pint, while the rest of the city lies in unpolished ruins, the inner city ghetto crowd mostly taking over.
The idea of new construction, utilizing some of the ancient architectural techniques, would be and could only ever be a billionaire's vision. Only in a truly overall wealthy and prosperous society, where the means of exchange does not lose trade value by the minute, would we see the kind of development we see evidence of in these architectural wonders.