『The Lost Civilizations』のカバーアート

The Lost Civilizations

The Lost Civilizations

著者: R.V. Nielsen
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概要

Welcome to the channel — created because I believe there’s a lack of engaging content about lost civilizations. Here, I explore the idea that Earth may once have hosted more advanced societies, whose remains we often interpret in the wrong light. In this podcast, my goal is to break down these key ideas in clear and accessible language, drawing on the work of thinkers like Paul Wallis, Graham Hancock, Matthew LaCroix, Randall Carlson, Billy Carson, Mauro Biglino, Erich von Däniken, and Zecharia Sitchin. What these researchers share is a willingness to ask bold and fascinating questions — not only about how ancient structures could be so precise, but also about whether we have truly understood the ancient texts we’ve inherited.R.V. Nielsen 世界 社会科学 科学
エピソード
  • S2E6 - Underground Civilizations
    2026/02/08

    Across the world, archaeologists have uncovered vast underground cities capable of sustaining thousands of people for long periods of time. These are not simple shelters or temporary hideouts, but complex systems with ventilation, water management, storage, and social infrastructure—built with long-term survival in mind.

    In this episode, we explore why ancient societies invested so heavily in building beneath the surface, and why these structures are often treated as anomalies rather than part of a global pattern. Was the threat war, climate instability, repeated environmental crises—or something even more unpredictable?

    We examine archaeology’s blind spots, the limits of siloed research, and why “refuge” is an incomplete explanation unless we ask what people were repeatedly seeking refuge from. From climate shocks to rare cosmic events, this episode reframes underground cities as a form of long-term risk management.

    This is not an episode with easy answers—but with better questions about resilience, planning, and how civilizations survive uncertainty.

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    12 分
  • S2E5 - Speaking Too Early: Pilots, Stigma, and the Cost of Challenging the Narrative
    2026/02/03

    For decades, military and civilian pilots reported encounters they could not explain — and learned quickly that speaking up came at a price. This episode examines what happened to those who challenged the established narrative long before 2017, when the conversation around UAPs suddenly changed.


    Focusing on documented cases involving U.S. Navy pilots, this episode explores how professional credibility, career advancement, and institutional culture shaped what pilots were willing to report — and what they chose to keep quiet. Rather than censorship, the system relied on stigma, humor, and silent consequences to discourage discussion.


    By tracing pilot testimonies, historical programs like Project Blue Book, and the sudden shift in official language after 2017, this episode reveals how silence can be manufactured without force.


    This is not an episode about proving what UAPs are.

    It’s about understanding what happens to truth when speaking is risky — and why the absence of reports is not evidence that nothing was there.

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    8 分
  • S2E4 - The Manhattan Project and the Myth That Big Secrets Can’t Be Kept
    2026/02/01

    We often hear the same argument whenever secret government projects are discussed:

    “Something that big couldn’t be kept secret. Too many people would have known.”


    History tells a very different story.


    In this episode, we examine the Manhattan Project — the largest scientific and military effort of World War II — a project involving more than 130,000 people, multiple secret cities, and technology that changed the world forever. And yet, it remained hidden from the public until the moment it was completed.


    From the atomic bomb to stealth aircraft, mind-control experiments, mass surveillance, and Area 51, this episode follows a clear pattern: massive projects, thousands of participants, strict information control — and years, sometimes decades, of silence.


    This is not speculation. It’s documented history.


    Episode 4 explores how secrecy actually works, why large organizations can stay quiet, and why the absence of leaks is not proof that nothing exists.


    If you believe “someone would have talked,” this episode challenges that assumption.

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    8 分
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