We're ready for the phallic installations. We'll just look down here for them (flickr.com). |
White faces, okay, but what is that Buddhist-style rock cut cave back there? (vrogue.co) |
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Did Skull 'n Bones meet in this rock cut chamber? |
This Anglo landmark took 14 years to complete and was meant to commemorate the nation "until the end of time."' Fox News remembers: This day in history, Oct. 4, 1927, Mount Rushmore defaces sacred Native American land in South Dakota.
What is Mt. Rushmore? In plain state South Dakota, there are only 1.5 attractions, one being the four faces of some white president of Conquerors who helped lead a slow genocide against the Indigenous populations. Tom Margie on Flickr has a butt shot.
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Was ancient man aware of his penis? |
It looks like Freemason-style "secret society rituals" for Washington DC elites (Yale Skull 'n Bones, Moose Meetinghouse, Elks Lodge, Illuminati chamber?), who would be the only ones to know it was back there.
- Phallic architecture is a myth or a case of pareidolia
- Why are Theravada Buddhist Thailand and Vajrayana Buddhist Bhutan so obsessed with penises, to say nothing of India and its obsession with Shiva's lingam and Shakti's yoni at the center of most every stone temple? Nepal has a new D City named Shivaling
- See Chao Mae Tuptim penis shrine in Bang C*ck
- Phallus paintings in the Last Buddhist Kingdom in the Himalayas, Bhutan
Mt. Rushmore's secret stone penises (linga)?
Mt. Rushmore’s enormous underground quadruple PENIS (D. Willys/Slackjaw/Medium) |
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A proper Hindu Shiva lingam |
Q: How far underground are the sculptured phalluses, and how does one get to them?
A: The four phalluses [penises, stone Shiv-ling, Thai-Buddhist lingam] are located 200 feet below ground. To get to them, take an elevator journey entitled “The Descent to Glory.” Going down into the rich silence of the “Chiefs’ Chamber” often casts a reverential hush over guests. In the hush, many claim to hear the throbbing heartbeat of our nation [or their own sexually excited ears pounding].
Q: Why did the artist choose to work with rock hard granite?
A. Granite, a type of igneous rock, is extremely slow to erode [slow to lose its erect status], making it an excellent medium for representing the endurance and vitality of, ugh, the, ummm, nation.
So says Daniel Williams at Medium.com. Our resident historian and old timer doubts it. "That can't be true!" he insists. Williams is confabulating. We believe him. (Did this woman Eve see it?) If only there were pictures instead of rumors. No one had a flash? No cameras allowed? No low lux secret phones could be snuck in?
- FAQs: About Mount Rushmore’s enormous underground quadruple penis (by Daniel Williams | Slackjaw | Medium)
- Mount Rushmore in popular culture (Wikipedia)
- PHOTOS: activly.com looks at the hidden room behind Mt. Rushmore (questionable source)
- Secret room found on Mount Rushmore behind giant sculpture of Braham [Brahma, Brahman, Brahmin?] (vrogue.com)
- 23 iconic national monuments to explore in the USA, have you considered the giant ball of yarn?
- PHOTOS: 27 rare pics show how much Disney Parks have changed through the years
The American Indian experience
The Natives and ancient city builders in what is now the USA had giant pyramid mounds |
Blackfoot, Glacier Nat'l Park, 1913 |
The national memorial draws millions of visitors a year – and Native Americans want their sacred site back.
Mt. Rushmore national memorial draws nearly 3 million visitors a year to Lakota land in remote South Dakota. They travel from all corners of the globe just to lay their eyes on what the National Park Service calls America’s “shrine of democracy.”
American Indian Phil Two Eagle is not opposed to the fact that the giant sculpture of American presidents is a major tourist attraction, but he thinks the park should have a different focus: oppression. More: The Guardian
- Annette McGivney (sej.org via The Guardian, UK, July 3, 2021); edited by Xochitl, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly
- Netflix’s Ancient Apocalypse scraps US filming plans after outcry from Native American groups | Indigenous peoples | The Guardian
- Peyote is the darling of the psychedelics renaissance. Indigenous users say it co-opts ‘a sacred way of life’ | Native Americans | The Guardian
- ‘A portion of paradise’: how the drought is bringing a lost US canyon back to life | Colorado river crisis | The Guardian
What must the (free-) masons been thinking? The secret history of secret societies in America -- not just the world-famous megaliths of Mexico, Guatemala, Peru, and tombs in the Americas -- but the ritual architecture of the proto-USA is amazing.
Should Trump's penis-haircut be added to MR? |
The pyramid mounds of Cahokia, Missouri, near the Mississippi (the second longest river in the country), where many Midwest giants are buried, kurgans (monolithic structures on energetic spots that should have been impossible to erect by Stone Age Native peoples), American Stonehenge in the Northeast, the Stonehenge underwater in a lake, the massive walls that experts try to explain away as the work of newcomers when they are long and pointless as any kind of demarcation of plots, homesteads, or property lines, the massive stone block walls that are aligned as only masons (and not Mother Nature) would bother to do...
There are many mysteries in the country we call our own, only 75% of which has ever been surveyed by foot. (A quarter of the country has never been visited by foot to be mapped or officially surveyed, only scanned from the air, such that anyone can be in there doing anything. Sasquatches raising families? Why not).
Remember to visit the Mt. Rushmore gift shop. |
- 23 iconic national monuments to explore in the U.S.A.
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- Hey, Fatty, how to actually burn off belly fat and why it matters
- October is supposed to be Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Ask Jack and his Legos over at komen.org
- Daniel Williams (medium.com); Annette McGivney (sej.org via The Guardian, 7/3/21); Pfc. Sandoval, Xochitl, Ashley Wells, Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
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