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-9
1.
Dilly 1 year ago
#4 Looks like a pile of Sh#te
       
4
2.
Lorry 1 year ago
Dilly,

You don't think they were clever by building (sh*tty) homes in caves and rocks?
       
2
3.
One 1 year ago
Dilly,

well, this pile of whatever is about double tthe age of the USA.
And - if that's not enough for you, let's compare buildings.

Show me a building in your country that's only ¾ of age and I will stop laughing about you.
       
-2
4.
Calliedona 1 year ago
One,

Here are 8 buildings that are at least 400 years old in the US. You can stop laughing now...
www.oldest.org/structures/buildings-america/
       
3
5.
Kissy 1 year ago
#9 "I'm really tired of looking at this massive, historical, and highly significant piece of history and architecture. I know- let's accelerate the deterioration of the delicate structure by putting a f@#king soccer field in it, and then fill it with a bunch of drunk, degenerate hooligans."
"Yeah! F@#k history! We want sportsball!"
       
2
6.
Noah 1 year ago
#9 Kissy, well it was originally built to hold a bunch or drunk(on wine) degenerates screaming for the death of the people on the floor
       
1
7.
Fred 1 year ago
Noah,

True, but that was thousands of years ago when it was new and structurally sound. It's neither of those things anymore, and adding a soccer pitch is a desecration to the structure and a defilement of history.
       
-6
8.
Midge 1 year ago
Fred,
oh no, a defiled history... well the rainbow people have got you beat setting a record for tearing down statues.
       
-4
9.
Calliedona 1 year ago
Midge,

Great point! We're supposed to respect everyone's history except our own.
       
0
10.
Harold 1 year ago
Calliedona,

For centuries, the people in medieval Italy destroyed all statues of Roman origin they could find to use the material, mostly bronze, to cast guns or new statues. For the bronze decoration of St. Peter, tons of bronze from the to this time completly preserved pantheon where used.
The only statues spared are the ones from Christian emperors.
So, destroying statues and don't 'respecting' the own history is completely normal.
       
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11.
Calliedona 1 year ago
Harold,

I guess I didn't realize the US is out of metals from which to cast statues. So we have to tear down existing statues for the sole purpose of salvaging the metal. Who knew?
       
1
12.
Justina 1 year ago
#18 probably got tired of climbing up and down that darn thing

#28 this was where he kept his set of infinity stones

#39 sometimes a sheep is just a sheep
       
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13.
Noah 1 year ago
#11 if i found that i wouldn't tell anyone and drink my morning coffee out of it instead of some stuck up archeologists putting it in a museum
       
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14.
Prudy 1 year ago
Noah,

American, eh? It shows.
       
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15.
Noah 1 year ago
#12 before Iron-man there was the not as well known Jade-man
       
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16.
Trina 1 year ago
#9 Metallica wanted to play there, but was declined for obvious reasons.

#14 "Undisputedly?" That's a bold claim. I would wager 'arguably' as I doubt it's undisputed in the archeological field.
       
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17.
Frank 1 year ago
#8 How do you lose track of something that large and conspicuous?
       
3
18.
Frank 1 year ago
#39 An amazing place but its under 20 feet of water not 150 feet. Interesting that you list the distance in metric and the depth in imperial.
       
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"Magnificent Hand-Made Door Lock Crafted By Frank Koralewski In 1911, Using Gold, Silver And Bronze"

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