Friday, July 21, 2023

HardRider Motorcycle, eStore, HardTalk, Mag

HardRider Motorcycle, eStore, HardTalk, Mag @hardridermotorcycle #hardtalknews #hardridermotorcycle #motorcycle #motorcycles hardridermotorcycle.com

Riding Horses and Motorcycles

Real horse power vs mechanical horse power... #hardrider #hardridermotorcycle #horses #motorcycles #hardtalk #hardtalknews #mediahead hardridermotorcycle.com

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Why Letting Things Go Is True Wealth

Why Letting Things Go Is True Wealth - Alan Watts On The Art of Letting ... #hardtalknews #hardrider #mediahead

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

I was wrong about the Democratic Party

I was wrong about the Democratic Party. Incredible Discussion worth your time. #hardtalknews

Vivek Ramaswamy: Wokeness

Vivek Ramaswamy: Wokeness. Incredible Discussion worth your time. #hardtalknews

Monday, July 17, 2023

Jordan Peterson Vivek Ramaswamy

Jordan Peterson Interviews Vivek Ramaswamy . You want to know whats going on? Check this out... #hardtalk #hardtalknews

Denmark: provoking the limits of tolerance

Copenhagen...Danish Freedom! #hardtalk #hardtalknews

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Ancient Inca Stone Cutting Mystery

Video How did ancient Incas fit the hardest of rocks with such precision? It baffles all scientists today. They had insufficient pyrotechnology to do it. You need very hot temperatures to melt most stones, close to 3000F. Nobody could produce temperatures like that until well into the Middle Ages, when the Chinese developed suitably designed furnaces. Machu Picchu is almost the only Inca site in Peru that survived the Spanish invasion and the last 500 years unscathed. As such, it is one of the few places where you can experience the architectonical ingenuity of the Inca masons. Despite its picture-perfect vista, few facts are known about Machu Picchu. The Lost City of the Incas remains a mystery, though the buildings hint at a glorious story. Here is everything you need to know about the Machu Picchu architecture. Machu Picchu was built around 1450 AD on a mountain ridge roughly 2,420 meters above sea level using simple tools*. Roughly 200 structures survived throughout the ruins – all of them lost their wooden, straw-thatched roofs over the ages. But the decay stopped at the perfectly cut granite stones. These remain impeccable and showcase the unbelievable skill of the Inca masons. The technique of fitting stones without mortar is known as Ashlar. The Inca refrained from using mortar because the loose-fitting was more resistant to earthquakes and the whole Urubamba Valley was prone to experiencing them. How the Incas cut the stones so perfectly remains a puzzle: theories range from wild (gold disks in parabolic shape to concentrate the rays of the sun into laser-like beams) to plausible (wooden wedges inserted in the rock, expanding and cracking it along natural fissures). There still is no consensus in the archeological community of exactly how this was done, so any hypothesis can be the starting point of more research to prove or disprove it.