Planted01

I don't think that it is an NWO monument, nor a call to depopulate.

I think that they are something that is suppose to cataclysmic event of some kind, like the makers forsake some event where masses of people died either by ear or disease or something, so it says to MAINTAIN a population of 500,000.

Besides that the other guidelines are not NWO ideals. Things like living in natural ways are not NWO ideals or goals. The guidelines also say not to have excessive public officials all over the place which I don't see as an NWO ideal.

Do you want to see useless public officials all over the place? Probably not but the NWO would so the guidelines are not likely their statement.

Nishnabe

Is the concern over them releasing increasingly more deadly bio-weapons?

knightwarrior41

yeah

WolfgangBlack

Why haven't these been blown up yet?

knightwarrior41

good question

Online_Archivist

Reading the rules in reverse order reveals something.

happyfacemcgee

Good. Wake up the masses of covidiots.

Panic-Now1

I live within driving distance, but have no interest in going. I can find creepy, stupid bullshit all over my own county. Not going to it, as such nonsense keeps coming to us here. But this article seems pretty spot on.

NakedWarrior

If I lived near these they wouldn't be standing anymore.

knightwarrior41

As the History Channel explains, the stones are aligned to precisely track astrological and solar cycles.

“The east and west corners of the monument track sunrise and sunset. A slot that’s cut into one of the slabs marks the winter and summer solstices. A shaft that’s drilled through the center of the stone marks Polaris, the north star. And a slit that’s cut through the capstone marks the perfect noon time. So that means it’s this sort of granite Swiss Army knife: The Guidestones have a calendar, a compass, a translator and a guide…which is bananas.”