- Joined
- Apr 1, 2019
>They couldn't have had slaves because of their culture and sheitNone of the evidence indicates that aliens didn't help them either, but most people besides the History Channel would disagree. Actually, "aliens built the Pyramids" isn't too different than "slaves/(((slaves))) built the Pyramids", it's just a lack of being able to think outside your own culture and answering the way you think is best rather than try and understand how the Egyptians thought. Egyptians weren't part of your culture, I mean they're the people who believed their ruler had to jerk off into the Nile every year or else they'd have a bad harvest.
I mean the villages the workers lived in exist and we have all sorts of remains. They weren't slaves because one, that would be blasphemous, and two, slaves might do shit work. It's the same reason the Greeks and Romans didn't use galley slaves but because some medieval/early modern European powers did then that meant the ancients must have used galley slaves too.

Also, you keep bringing up the kikes in relation to the pyramids, but the biblical claim is not that they ever worked on the pyramids, since those were built by Pharaoh Khufu who came well before Pharaoh Ramses the 2nd. If I had to guess, the slaves that worked on the pyramids likely would have been rando Nubians and Semite tribes (some Jews mixed in) on the borderlands of Egypt at that time. The reason the kikes came into the conversation was because of the post I originally responded to.
>Also this meme is stupid. It's based off pseudohistory that enslaved Jews built the pyramids. Shouldn't rely on Christian pseudohistory with absolutely no evidence other than Bible fanfic for a gotcha. You can't prove hypocrisy by using a fictional example and a real example.
The argument I'm making is from other claims and sources about other projects within that region and era, we can extrapolate that more than likely slaves worked on the Pyramids. (The Biblical source being one of the claims)
The other part of the argument I'm making is that what is currently pressed as "fact" by modern historians is based on the idea that slaves and paid labor are an either-or thing, which is just on its face outlandish. I literally can't even think of any ancient building project anywhere in the world that didn't incorporate both slaves and paid professional labor.