Tesla & The Cabbage Patch Kids: Exploring the lost Empire of Tartaria and the Reset of 1776 - Tapa dura

Anderson, Mr Guy Peter

 
9798337585093: Tesla & The Cabbage Patch Kids: Exploring the lost Empire of Tartaria and the Reset of 1776

Sinopsis

Tesla & The Cabbage Patch Kids explores the lost Empire of Tartaria and the Reset of 1776. It’s is a deeply researched and richly illustrated investigation into a forgotten global civilisation, systematically erased from mainstream history. This book is not simply about Nikola Tesla, nor just a critique of conventional narratives; it’s a sweeping analysis of architecture, geopolitics, lost technologies and the mechanisms of historical cover-up.

Tartaria was a vast, advanced civilisation that once spanned much of the known world, including North America, Europe and Asia. Its influence is still visible in the grand, intricate architecture found in cities across the globe-structures that could not have been built by the societies that supposedly erected them. It focuses on “impossible” architecture - domed government buildings, Greco-Roman facades and massive cathedrals, built with techniques and precision far beyond what 19th-century settlers or colonists could have realistically achieved. Particularly striking are star forts; geometrically perfect fortresses, often built into the landscape with symmetrical, star-shaped designs that show an understanding of sacred geometry and energy flow.

It also dives deep into the World Fairs of the 19th and early 20th centuries, arguing that they were not mere celebrations of industrial progress, but rather showcases, or cover-ups, of existing Tartarian structures that were rebranded as temporary exhibits. I examine how entire cities of elaborate “temporary” buildings were supposedly constructed in just months using horse-drawn carts and primitive tools, only to be destroyed shortly after the events. This book challenges the plausibility of those timelines and suggests that these fairs were part of a larger effort to erase Tartaria’s legacy and rewrite the narrative of human development.

One of the most haunting parts of the book is the Orphan Trains and the so-called Cabbage Patch Babies. I propose that after a cataclysmic reset, involving mud-floods, war and coordinated event in the 18th century, millions of children were displaced from the former Tartarian territories. These children were shipped across continents, stripped of their cultural memory and used to repopulate areas now under new regimes. I tied this to the eerie popularity of “found” children in 19th-century art and media and to the practice of photographing orphans as spectacles, something disturbingly common at the time.

I also argue that a sophisticated understanding of energy, electromagnetism and atmospheric currents was known to the Tartarians., linking architectural features such as spires, domes and antenna-like structures to a global energy system; one that may have been tapped into by later inventors like Tesla, but which has since been suppressed in favour of fossil-fuel-driven industrial power.

What I hope makes this book stand out is its breadth. It’s not just a historical analysis, it’s also a forensic reconstruction of a hidden civilisation. I use photographs, maps, architectural plans, old encyclopaedias and public records to build my case. I do not claim to have all the answers, but I present so many questions, so many inconsistencies and patterns, that the reader is left with a deep sense that something important has been hidden in plain sight.

Tesla & The Cabbage Patch Kids is more than a book about a forgotten empire, it’s a challenge to the reader to reexamine everything we think we know about history, progress and who we really are. It’s a dense and highly visual journey through an alternate lens on our world; one that resonates especially strongly with those who feel that the official version of history doesn’t quite add up.

Guy Anderson

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