Advertisement
Dinosaurs Never Existed - Dinosaur Hoax
The class “Dinosauria” was originally defined by “Sir” Richard Owen of the Royal Society, and Superintendent of the British Museum Natural History Department in 1842. In other words, the existence of dinosaurs was first speculatively hypothesized by a knighted museum-head “coincidentally” in the mid-19th century, during the heyday of evolutionism, before a single dinosaur fossil had ever been found. The Masonic media and mainstream press worldwide got to work hyping stories of these supposed long-lost animals, and then lo and behold, 12 years later in 1854, Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden during his exploration of the upper Missouri River, found “proof” of Owen’s theory! A few unidentified teeth he mailed to leading paleontologist Joseph Leidy, who several years later declared them to be from an ancient extinct “Trachodon,” dinosaur (which beyond ironically means “rough tooth”). Firstly, it should be needless to say that it is impossible to reconstruct an entire hypothetical ancient animal based on a few teeth! But even more importantly, it is dubious that a myriad of ancient reptile/bird and reptile/mammal transitional forms necessary for the blossoming theory of evolution, would be hypothesized and then conveniently “discovered” by teams of evolutionist archeologists purposely out looking to find such fossils! And it is even more dubious that such fossils have supposedly existed for millions of years but were never found by or known to any civilization in the history of humanity until evolutionism’s Masonic renaissance in the mid-19th century!
Dinosaurs are as real as Santa Claus.
David Wozney Dinosaurs Hoax Science Fiction
https://archive.org/stream/DavidWozneyDinosaursHoax_201903/David%20Wozney%20Dinosaurs%20Hoax_djvu.txt
- Category: Hoax Season,Busted / Exposed,Debunked,Hollywood Production
- Duration: 03:31
- Date: 2023-01-14 16:24:13
- Tags: dinosaurs, hoax, never existed, science fiction, fake dino
20 Comments
Video Transcript:
Hello, so I wanted to talk tonight a little bit about fossils that are around the ground. And I guess I'll start a little bit about what the fossils actually are and then go into a little bit about the composition and what they end up being when everything is said and done. So a fossil is not actually a piece of bone. A fossil is actually a bone that was once in the ground that has been then filled with limestone, calcium, and other kind of stone-linked deposits over the course of many, many years and at the end of the day it ends up looking like a bone but it's not really a bone. It's really rock inside of rock. So you have a rock this big and you say, okay, inside this rock is big. There's a bunch of fossils. Here you go. And you hand the rock off some paleontologists. And the paleontologists takes a little mallet and they chip away at it and at some point they come out with something looking like a bone and that's a fossil. So here's the question that I pose. Now the first fossil that was ever found was actually after they came up with the idea of a dinosaur. That seems a little bit farfetched. Why would the bone that was found or the fossil that was found actually be the exact same thing as what was originally hypothesized without any other evidence. It doesn't make any sense. So now I give to you. Here, you're my paleontologists. Turn that into what it was before I ripped it apart. You can have some spackle too. So much spackles you want here. Turn this into what it's supposed to be. Alright, who knows what you're going to come up with. Now here, take this same substance, this same spackle. By the way, it's supposed to be this little guy, Brachiosaurus, who's 40 meters tall. This is what he looks like. This is what the head was supposed to look like. This is a Brachiosaurus skull. Make me a Brachiosaurus skull. The back and as much spackles. Chances are, what are you going to come up with? If you want to keep your job, you come up with a Brachiosaurus skull. If you want to be truthful, you come up with whatever it was that I smashed the parts to get this job. When millions of jolars are on the line, which one are you going to do? My guess is you're going to go with a Brachiosaurus. That's where the money is. So I hope this was insightful for what happens on a daily basis in the world of paleontology. Thank you very much for listening and I will see you next time.