Greek Laptop Relief: Time Travel’s Next Clue?
Basically, we could have time-traveling machines within the next few years.
Little fact kпowп. Time travel is definitely real and in ancient Greece, around 200 BC, laptops were all the rage with mobility, and never a day went by without people logging into their computers and probably checking their feeds of whatever their version of Facebook was.
It’s all true, I hope. Well, as true as you’d expect it to be if you believe everything you see on the Internet and have complete faith in the growing number of conspiracy theorists who make convincing videos like the one above.
The Greek sculpture Aпcieпt kпowп as Grave Naiskos of an etropic woman with a successful intent has sparked some conspiracy attacks. In a video, which was actually posted in 2014, users are still talking about how the statue could be a laptop with USB ports.
Oh yes. “I’m not saying this represents a sexy laptop,” the video says. “But when I look at the sculpture I can’t help but think of the Oracle of Delphi, which was supposed to allow priests to cooperate with the gods to retrieve advanced information and various aspects.”
It is said: “’I can’t help but think that Erich vop Däpike had been right all along and that most of these myths of magical artifacts given by the gods to a very restricted group of individuals were fit civilizations – technological devices similar to those we have today.”
While historians are describing the sculpture on display at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Malibu, California as a “shallow chest held by a servant of this friar,” conspiracy theorists suggest otherwise.
They say it is proof that time travellers visited the ancient Greeks and gave them laptops and they say it is too shallow for a jewellery box.
But people refute that by saying that if it is a jewelry case, it is probably a wax tablet, a wax-coated object that the Greeks wrote on with a stylus or pencil (see below).
“But what about the portholes?” the conspiracy theorists cry? Well, maybe they are just holes made to secure something?
What do you think? Is this proof of time travel or just a chest with some holes? I think we all know the right answer.
Please leave a comment below and let us know what you think. Thanks!
An enigmatic Greek statue, known as the Naiskos Grave, has sparked conspiracy theories by showing a young woman holding what appears to be a laptop with USB ports. Some interpret it as proof of time travellers, while sceptics attribute it to a simple casket or wax tablet. A glimpse of advanced technology in antiquity or a modern illusion? The mystery continues to fuel debate and global fascination.
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