I
iseidon
Guest
Near the Kremlin, in addition to the Palace of Farmers, there is a circus, the Central Stadium and the Pyramid Culture and Entertainment Complex.
The only evidence of the presence of chernozem is that there is chernozem, of which there is plenty in Russia.
Yes, you are right. We mere mortals cannot provide any evidence. They won't let us in. If we were allowed in, this site (and many others) would be unnecessary.
But what do I see, from my subjective point of view? I see the Kremlin area in Kazan. Around this Kremlin there are a number of buildings that always attract my attention (circus, pyramid theater, stadium). Next to such an object a building in the "ancient" style is built. Already there are suspicions. But then I go to the website of the architect and what do I see? And I see that the same architect was engaged in a suspicious (one of the most suspicious, in my opinion) building in my city, which interests me for a long time. And on the facade of this building (as if in banter) hangs a phrase that can be made the motto of this and any other similar site.
And as the cherry on the cake. Building in Ekaterinburg, is located 400 meters from the place of "murder" (the proof, though was not after the death) of Nicholas 2. Combine this with numerous legends of dungeons in those areas. I got these legends directly from my relatives (mother, grandfather, great-grandmother). All as one said that there were underground passages. But over time, most of the area where my relatives lived was buried underground. So was the Melkówka River. Now there's a movie theater and a park there.
Given all this, the Palace of Farmers in Kazan seems suspicious, to say the least. The presence of photos at the stage of the bare excavation with the appropriate depth would remove my doubts, but there are no such photos.
User @HELLBOY gave the example of two buildings. Hypothetically linked them to the Manchurian supposed "ancient" old-new cities. Given that the building in Kazan interested me before, I decided to give the @HELLBOY user as much information about that area as possible. And given that this building led me to a building with similar connotations in Yekaterinburg, I think there is definitely reason for doubt.
Still found (with the help of Yandex) photos of construction (albeit not from the stage of the pit). That's something.
But there are still no photos of the zero stage of construction.
And I can tell you exactly. The fact that you have to search with such difficulty for pictures of construction in a city with a million people, in one of the most visited places in Russia (the Kazan Kremlin; except for Moscow and St. Petersburg), is already suspicious.
The presence of fresh chernozem does not mean anything. In Russia, they put it everywhere. Next to my apartment building there are constant excavations every year (replacing pipes mostly). And there are thousands of such houses all over the country. Under the black earth and layer of soil, literally at a depth of 2-3 meters there is a sewer. By your logic, I have to assume that there is nothing under the fresh chernozem (which, among other things, every time they fill up the sewer system).The black soil in the foreground of both pictures is evidence the site has been cleared of all previous construction.
The only evidence of the presence of chernozem is that there is chernozem, of which there is plenty in Russia.
Yes, you are right. We mere mortals cannot provide any evidence. They won't let us in. If we were allowed in, this site (and many others) would be unnecessary.
But what do I see, from my subjective point of view? I see the Kremlin area in Kazan. Around this Kremlin there are a number of buildings that always attract my attention (circus, pyramid theater, stadium). Next to such an object a building in the "ancient" style is built. Already there are suspicions. But then I go to the website of the architect and what do I see? And I see that the same architect was engaged in a suspicious (one of the most suspicious, in my opinion) building in my city, which interests me for a long time. And on the facade of this building (as if in banter) hangs a phrase that can be made the motto of this and any other similar site.
And as the cherry on the cake. Building in Ekaterinburg, is located 400 meters from the place of "murder" (the proof, though was not after the death) of Nicholas 2. Combine this with numerous legends of dungeons in those areas. I got these legends directly from my relatives (mother, grandfather, great-grandmother). All as one said that there were underground passages. But over time, most of the area where my relatives lived was buried underground. So was the Melkówka River. Now there's a movie theater and a park there.
Given all this, the Palace of Farmers in Kazan seems suspicious, to say the least. The presence of photos at the stage of the bare excavation with the appropriate depth would remove my doubts, but there are no such photos.
User @HELLBOY gave the example of two buildings. Hypothetically linked them to the Manchurian supposed "ancient" old-new cities. Given that the building in Kazan interested me before, I decided to give the @HELLBOY user as much information about that area as possible. And given that this building led me to a building with similar connotations in Yekaterinburg, I think there is definitely reason for doubt.
Still found (with the help of Yandex) photos of construction (albeit not from the stage of the pit). That's something.
But there are still no photos of the zero stage of construction.
And I can tell you exactly. The fact that you have to search with such difficulty for pictures of construction in a city with a million people, in one of the most visited places in Russia (the Kazan Kremlin; except for Moscow and St. Petersburg), is already suspicious.
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