

The idea is that humans are bad, need to be controlled, are destroying the earth, etc is often wheeled out. I do note that TPTB do NOT miss an opportunity to blame/guilt us for events that I personally assume no guilt for. If this is true, then submit the extinction of the passenger pigeon as supplemental evidence (similar to the 200 year old forest conundrum) of an American reset.Ĭlick to expand.Passenger - passing by - pigeon. Perhaps this species suffered a short, catastrophic end that had nothing to do with overhunting. This animal populated what was an absolute hotbed of natural and artificial disasters that reshaped the entire eastern half of the united states in a few generations. I'll remind you again to review that territory map. Though perhaps rather than rack your brain trying to imagine every man, woman and child relentlessly smacking pigeons out of the sky, perhaps the method of destruction needs to be reconsidered. Like discussions on the logistics of the War of 1812, what are the logistics involved with the hunting and distributing of passenger pigeons to this extent? After all, we're talking about the same species that killed all the wooly mammoths and basically hunted the bison to extinction. For most, it is easy to accept that it is fully within human's ability and greed to wipe out the passenger pigeon. Moreover, you understand that academia, journalism, and scientists are constantly lying to you, or at the very least, lazy and incompetent. The Biological Evidence for the Reset HypothesisIf you've made it this far into stolenhistory, you likely have at least a sneaking suspicion that American between 1800-1900 was going through a lot of big changes (see source, source, source, source). So here we are 100 years later - wallowing in Climate Hysteria and finding history to rewrite to convince us evil humans that we've always been inventing new and evil ways to exterminate nature and its abundance. Yet, this seems to be somewhat absent in the cultural record. Surely general supply stores should have an entire aisle dedicated to canned, smoked, and dried pigeon meat.
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If anything, their numbers suggest that it should be almost impossible to kill all these birds. Perhaps I haven't done enough digging here, but it doesn't seem to be quite as ubiquitous as to suggest that we over-hunted these creatures. Surely if the passenger pigeon was this numerous, we should see tons of examples of pigeons eaten in literature, art, and grandma's recipe books. I'd go so far as to say 90% of all restaurants in the US serve chicken on their menu somewhere. We love our chicken in the US - so much so we genetically engineer clones in captivity to supply the demand. By comparison, the United States currently consumes around 8 billion chickens per year, with a total population of 330 million. I suppose if we are going to appreciate the building techniques of these folks, we should admire their propensity to eat all these pigeons. Pigeon for dinner again, mom?Apparently, we accidentally ate every single last one of them in less than 50 years.
