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Hello, Michael Tellinger here and today in this episode, however long it may be or end up being, we're going to talk about Torah stones.

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The incredibly mysterious Torah stones, their origins when they were first spoken about or depicted in rock art and so forth and when they last were used

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and seen being used by Western explorers and being used by African tribes and Bushmen and Koisan and so forth

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and how the establishment of archaeological societies, our historical departments see and explain the Torah stones

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because if you've been following my work and my research, now you should be aware that or you will be aware

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that the Torah stones are most likely some of the most important eye-opening examples of ancient advanced technology

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and we would think about ancient technology in our perspective of what we see technology look like today

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and unfortunately that's our biggest mistake because we see technology as often shiny metal, intricate circuit boards, intricate machinery

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because we haven't been taught the fundamental principles of energy, toroidal fields, how energy is created through sound, resonance, vibration, frequency, how electricity is created, not necessarily energy

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but how energy manifests and physical form manifests and everything starts with toroidal fields, toroidal fields, Torah stones.

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So what are Torah stones? I'm talking to you from the Stone Circle Museum. I have not spoken or done anything in the Stone Circle Museum for quite a while

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because I've been busy with one small town, we under a lot of exciting pressure because of our latest discoveries

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so I've been doing very little in the field of ancient civilizations and museum, I come in here every now and then

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I take a small group on a tour of the museum and that's pretty much it. So I haven't done any exposé or discussions about the incredible tools and artifacts on display

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and the unique tools and artifacts on display. There is no other museum like this. So I'm very happy to do the introduction about Torah stones from here

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and then I'll move it back to my office and we'll continue there. But first of all, I have about 33 or so Torah stones here on display.

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I've got another two at home and another one at a lab in Nelspray that we did some research on.

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And so what is that about 36? 36 Torah stones. Torah stones, Torah stones, Torahs. That's the word that is used, toroidal fields, Torahs.

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That's not Torahs as in the bull, Torahs, T-O-R-U-S, Torahs, which is like a donut shape.

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So if you're new to this, when I say Torahs, I mean a donut-shaped stone. Now let me turn the camera around and talk you through it.

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So here's my display of Torah stones on the table for people that come in. And this is just a general number of Torah stones that are on display here

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for no particular reason, but as an introduction for people to see what a Torah stone is.

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And your first reaction and first, I guess, realization is that they're not all the same size and they're not necessarily all the same shape.

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You can see some are bigger, some are larger. And when you see something like this, this is not because the Torah stone was used as a grinding stone.

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You can see somebody, somebody grounded down. That was not its original purpose, but over the thousands and hundreds of thousands of years that these Torah stones have been around.

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So many of them have been used and abused and utilized for all kinds of things as weights.

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Well, the number one example of that is the weights for digging sticks, because archaeological and historical societies all refer to these as weights for digging sticks.

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And yet they still say they are the most mysterious objects in South African history, in African history.

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So we can see that they all different shapes and sizes, some of them being abused and you can see some of them are really badly scarred.

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They've half broken, like this one you can see it's got stuff chipped away.

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Half of it is chipped away. They're small ones. This is a much smaller one, much smaller Torah stone.

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And again, you can see that they've been used and abused, because the one side is a lot thinner than the other side.

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The good quality original Torah stones are reasonably well balanced.

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And you can see that originally they were created as symmetrical as they could be, I guess.

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So these are just the Torah stones on display on the main table as you come into my museum.

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But I have a bunch of more here. Here we have more Torah stones.

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In fact, you see the one here sticking out or the paper sticking out.

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That was recently discovered by a tourist group that came here and they went out.

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They found the Torah stone and the note here tells me where it was found, by whom it was found, and they brought it to the museum, which is really fantastic.

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I really, really appreciate that.

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What is a terrible thing that happens is if people go on tours of the go to these ancient sites and they find some artifact that is highly significant.

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And then they take that artifact home. They pick it up and they take it home.

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I don't mind people picking up artifacts and taking them home, because if you're in the middle of nowhere, that's fine.

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But if it's something significant, I would also always suggest is contact me or contact any other museum, especially museums who will appreciate that artifact.

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If you're not in South Africa, if you're in some other country, and let that artifact be displayed so that the whole world can see it, if it's significant.

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If it's something that you think is special to you, that's a different story.

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But it's a great shame and tragedy that so many incredible tours and artifacts are lying in people's private collections and they literally are wasted.

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And it could be a missing link, a very important piece that could explain an important missing bit of information that archaeologists, historians and researchers have been looking for.

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So just keep that in mind.

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If you find something that could be significant, let's get it into a museum.

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And especially a museum that you know is going to respect and honor that particular artifact and not put it on the side and reduce it to some nonsensical, irrelevant and unimportant relic.

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So, fortunately, the Stanzuco Museum, every one of these stones, every one of those stones, which many of them are teeth and spikes and so forth, from dinosaurs, humanoids, et cetera, et cetera.

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So we, I remember exactly where each one of those is coming from.

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Where each one of those came from, where it was picked up, why it was picked up.

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And let me show you one that we just picked up this weekend is this one here.

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This is a beauty.

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I was taking out my friend Wendy Oldfield.

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She came to visit us, South African musicians, superb musicians that we used to play gigs in the 80s here in South Africa.

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And Wendy has remained a musician and she still plays and is incredible.

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If you don't know Wendy Oldfield, please find her on YouTube or ever, you might find her and listen to her music.

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It is unbelievable.

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Truly a South African musical pioneer.

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But anyway, Wendy picked up this, this stone, she just was automatically drawn to it.

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And you can see this is clearly a very, very obvious fossil.

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It's a tooth or a spike of some sort.

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So very excited to be able to display Wendy Oldfield's tooth in the display at Stone Circle Museum.

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And there it is, right next to the big one, the real tooth, that tooth.

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You'll see in some other videos, that's a tooth of about 80 meter giant and in size of tooth.

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Anyway, let's come back to the tourist stones.

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You'll see down at the bottom there, I have more tourist stones that are lying there.

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And to come back, to come back to these stones behind me, before I finish in the museum and continue this in my office.

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The one on the pedestal there, that is the stone that crashed the TSA security system in Doha in 2013.

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This one here.

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Now, this one here is actually not the original stone.

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This is a replica, replica of the original tourist stone, which I have at my house, which I will share with you when I continue this from my office.

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But the replicas are so incredible.

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They were done so well by our friend Sally here in South Africa, who is an incredible artist.

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She made replicas of the tourist stones and we have sold a few of those replicas.

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And that's how we help to continue to raise some funding for the museum.

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And so the replicas on display, I will share with you from my home office, the real tourist stone that crashed the TSA security system.

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So let's just recap what I was talking about here.

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Tourist, the word tourist, doughnut, doughnut shaped stone and toroidal fields are the primordial shapes of everything in creation,

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whether it's seen or unseen, starting with sound, frequency, resonance, all manifests in toroidal fields.

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And toroidal fields are inextricably connected to vortex fields, the energy that flows into the tourists from the one side and into the tourists from the other side.

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And they spin clockwise from the one side and clockwise on the other side.

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So when you look at a tourist energy tourist field or a toroidal energetic field, magnetic field, and that's by the way, that's how magnetic fields are formed.

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They are perfectly balanced toroidal fields is a perfectly balanced magnetic field.

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They spin clockwise and anticlockwise and clockwise from the other side opposite side.

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So if you see it from one direction, it would seem that the one side spins clockwise and the other side spins anticlockwise.

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And that's where many mistakes have been made by physicists and those that observe what they refer to as subatomic particles and subatomic quantum mechanics and quantum particles.

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When they misinterpret them as having a positive and a negative spin, but we'll go into more detail about that a little bit later.

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So I wanted to start this talk and this discussion about tourist stones in the museum so you get a feel for it.

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You know that they're on display, they're real. It's not just a figment of my imagination.

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And I'm now going to take it home to my home office and continue talking about tourist stones when they were first discovered by the Europeans when they started to explore Africa.

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What the impressions were, what they thought about the tourist stones and how they were then documented incorrectly by European historians as being waits for digging sticks because that was their first interaction and their first visual contact with African tribes and Bushman using tourist stones as waits for digging sticks.

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And I think I'll leave it on that note and to pick up at my office and continue this conversation and expose about the incredibly important and powerful tourist stones, the most underrated and underestimated ancient advanced technology that you'll probably ever find.

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All right, we'll pick up at my office. Ciao for now.

