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I thought the Denver airport murals were just weird art until I went there myself

For years, I heard the theories about the creepy murals being some kind of New World Order message. I wrote it off as nonsense. Then, I had a long layover in Denver last fall and went to see them. The scale is huge, and the imagery is genuinely unsettling in person, with scenes of dead animals and soldiers. I spent about two hours looking at all the panels. While I still don't buy the wildest claims, seeing it firsthand made me understand why people ask questions. Has anyone else visited a famous 'conspiracy' site and had their view shift, even a little?
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wyatt_green31
Exactly, the scale is what gets you. Photos don't show how the whole concourse feels wrapped in it. I had the same thing at the Georgia Guidestones before they were damaged. Reading about the messages was one thing, but standing next to those massive slabs with instructions for a future society, carved in multiple languages, gave me a real chill. It made the whole thing feel less like a silly story and more like someone had a very serious, strange plan. It doesn't mean I believe the plan, but you start to feel the weight of the intent.
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victorb17
victorb173d ago
Man, that reminds me of my buddy who saw the Guidestones too. He said the exact same thing, @wyatt_green31, about feeling the weird weight of it all. Just a totally different vibe when you're actually standing there.
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miamitchell
The Guidestones were actually in Elbert County.
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