Fall Of Civilizations

I can’t begin to describe how good this channel is. The latest installment dropped a few hours ago.

In this episode, find out about one of the most remarkable ancient civilizations: the society known today as the neo-Assyrian Empire. Discover how the Assyrians built their empire out of the ashes of the Bronze Age, and built an empire of iron that lasted for centuries. Explore the extraordinary flourishing of art and technology that they fostered. And finally, discover what happened to cause their final, devastating collapse.

10 Replies to “Fall Of Civilizations”

      1. Which is why it has to be “revised” to properly show the true racism and oppression caused by whites, the only race that ever did such things. (Blacks never had slavery. Noooooooo–it was just part of their culture, wasn’t it?)

      2. Knowing history means seeing it coming, nothing more, nothing less.
        This time, its much, much worse. We are staring into the end of history, and the beginning of a 1000 year reich.

  1. I especially enjoyed the one about the events that precipitated the collapse of the bronze age.
    Kipling wrote ‘Gods of the Copybook Headings’ in 1919 and the poem still applies today.
    “Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew,
    And the hearts of the meanest were humbled and began to believe it was true
    That All is not Gold that Glitters, and Two and Two make Four—
    And the Gods of the Copybook Headings limped up to explain it once more.”

  2. Thanks. Will check out the channel. Looks great. Also that is a delightful poem, nold. If I remember correctly, Epoch Times had a feature on it some months ago. Fun to read and think about.

  3. “Epoch Times had a feature on it some months ago”
    Glad to hear that others enjoy the poem.
    There does seem a curious trait that humans exhibit, evident throughout our existence, that when ever we come to the proverbial fork in the road, invariably we will take the path that causes us the greatest harm moving forward.

    1. Could have something to do with evolution.
      Mass extinctions are good for evolution, maybe when we become as tough as an asteroid or meteorite impact, we do it ourselves, not because we want to, but because we are merely players in a game that is 3+ billion years old?

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