Stonehenge vandalized by climate terrorists!



Climate activists love to demonstrate their fidelity by vandalizing the environments they claim to love.

Brilliant strategy, said no one ever.

Last Wednesday, “Just Stop Oil,” a climate activism group notorious for disruptive protests, decided the best way “to demand that the UK government commits to signing the Fossil Fuel Nonproliferation Treaty and ... stop burning fossil fuels by 2030” was to spray orange paint all over Stonehenge the day before the solstice.

But don’t worry, the paint was made of cornflower and therefore completely harmless.

Or was it?

Climate Terrorist VANDALIZE Stonehenge!youtu.be

The brain behind the operation, 21-year old Oxford student Niamh Lynch, justified the demonstration in a video, in which she said, “These stones have stood here for 5,000 years. What will the world look like in 5,000 year’s time? What will our legacy be? ... We end the fossil fuel era or the fossil fuel era ends us.”

“Well, I can tell you that your legacy will be ... that everyone will hate your movement because you're so insufferable,” Sara Gonzales fires back.

In response to the vandalism, @StonehengeU.K tweeted:

Looks like Just Stop Oil might’ve actually contributed to the damage they’re supposedly trying to prevent.

“Let’s cause destruction under the auspice of doing good. Let’s burn America down and say it’s peaceful,” mocks Jaco Booyens, BlazeTV contributor and host of “The Bottom Line.”

“[Lynch is] a completely indoctrinated human being that is not capable of making any logical sense whatsoever,” he adds.

Sara, however, speculates that this level of climate absurdity may be more complicated than we realize.

“I read this awesome conspiracy theory that I totally am bought into that ... the climate activists are actually a psyop that was put on by Big Oil to get people to hate the climate change activists,” she says.

To hear the rest of the theory, watch the clip above.

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Stonehenge vandalized by environmental extremists



One of the most iconic prehistoric monuments in the world is currently covered in orange paint, thanks to two members of a radical environmental group notorious for damaging valuable property and bringing traffic on busy thoroughfares to a frustrating halt.

At around noon on Wednesday, Rajan Naidu, 73, and Niamh Lynch, 21, of Just Stop Oil stormed the grounds of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England, and apparently began spraying orange powder paint on the stone edifices. Others standing nearby noticed the two vandals and attempted to stop them, to little avail. Video of the incident can be viewed here.

'Either we end the fossil fuel era, or the fossil fuel era will end us.'

According to an X post from Stonehenge curators, "a number of the stones" have been doused in the paint. An investigation into this "extremely upsetting" incident is underway, but the site remains open to the public.

Wiltshire Police arrested Naidu and Lynch "on suspicion of damaging the ancient monument," the agency said in a statement. The pair seemed to time the incident to occur on the eve of the Summer Solstice, when thousands of visitors from around the world gather at Stonehenge to mark the longest day of the year.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak slammed the activist group as a "disgrace." "Just Stop Oil should be ashamed of their activists, and they and anyone associated with them ... should issue a condemnation of this shameful act immediately," he added.

Despite the strong words from the prime minister, Naidu and Lynch do not appear to be "ashamed" at all. Naidu insisted the paint was made up of "cornflour" that "will soon wash away with the rain." However, the need for radical government intervention "to mitigate the catastrophic consequences of the climate and ecological crisis" remains, he claimed.

"Either we end the fossil fuel era, or the fossil fuel era will end us."

His alleged coconspirator, Lynch, claimed she and others associated with Just Stop Oil are trying to preserve their generation's "legacy." "It’s time for us to think about what our civilization will leave behind," she said.

"Standing inert for generations works well for stones – not climate policy."

Mike Pitts, archaeologist and author of "How to Build Stonehenge," believes that if Just Stop Oil intended to protect the environment, vandalizing Stonehenge was the wrong way to go about it. "A rich garden of life has grown on the megaliths, an exceptional lichen garden has grown," he said. "So [the attack is] potentially quite concerning."

Stonehenge is just the latest heritage site or artifact vandalized by Just Stop Oil. The group has also thrown tomato soup at Vincent Van Gogh's "Sunflowers" painting and broken the glass case protecting the Magna Carta at the British Museum.

Members have also incited the wrath of their fellow countrymen in recent years by shutting down major British highways and interrupting popular sporting events. They claim these are acts of "non-violent civil resistance."

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New children's history book claims Stonehenge was built by 'people with brown skin' back when England was a 'black country'



A new children's book published by Bloomsbury and promoted in the U.K. by a government-funded group claims that Stonehenge was built by "people with brown skin" back when England was supposedly "a black country."

Atinuke, the daughter of a Nigerian university professor and a white English author, claims in "Brilliant Black British History" that "Britain was a black country for more than 7,000 years before white people came, and during that time the most famous British monument was built, Stonehenge," reported the Telegraph.

Stonehenge is a monument that was erected on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, England, roughly 4,000 years ago during the late Neolithic period and early Bronze Age.

The Telegraph noted that recent genetic analysis indicates that the inhabitants of Britain around the time of the monument's construction were "pale-skinned early farmers whose ancestors had spread from Anatolia," which is modern Turkey.

A 2019 study published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution indicated that around 6,000 B.C., there had been a massive expansion of such people out of Anatolia who then introduced farming to Europe.

The BBC reported that "DNA reveals that Neolithic Britons were largely descended from groups who took the Mediterranean route, either hugging the coast or hopping from island-to-island on boats."

These settlers are also believed to have introduced the practice of building monuments using large stones.

Millennia later, it was the pale Bell Beaker people from mainland Europe — who settled in Britain around 4,500 years ago and ultimately replaced 90% of the gene pool — who "were associated with the elaboration and refurbishment of Stonehenge around 2000 BC as a stone circle rather than an earth and timber monument," according to "The Oxford Illustrated History of Prehistoric Europe."

English Heritage, a charity that manages hundreds of the nation's historic monuments, noted that the "stone settings at Stonehenge were built at a time of great change in prehistory, just as new styles of 'Beaker' pottery and the knowledge of metalworking, together with a transition to the burial of individuals with grave goods, were arriving from the Continent."

While the ancient engineers behind the megaliths may not have been dark-skinned as Atinuke claims in her book, scientists have speculated that "Cheddar Man," the 10,000-year-old skeleton unearthed in Gough's Cave in Somerset, England, may have had "dark to black" skin and blue eyes, based on DNA analysis.

However, whereas Atinuke claimed with certainty that Cheddar Man had "skin as dark as dark can be," the Daily Mail reported that an expert involved in the project, geneticist Susan Walsh at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis, suggested that the dark skin claim was a "probable profile" contra a scientific certainty.

Atinuke's focus in the book is not just prehistoric. She also catalogues black populations throughout Britain's history, from the time of its Roman conquest through the Middle Ages and onward.

For instance, according to the author, during the period of the Tudors and Stuarts — which partially overlapped with the Barbary slave trade — Britain was enlightened by black Muslims who brought "new knowledge about textiles, medicine, maths and navigation."

While stressing in her introduction that "Britain has been a mostly white country for a lot less time than it has been a mostly black country" and underscoring nonwhite contributions, Atinuke reportedly noted on a page devoted to the identitarian, Marxist group Black Lives Matter that "race does not scientifically exist."

Historian and author Zareer Masani suggested that Atinuke's book "seems typical of the kind of wokedom that's been colonising our schools and universities," reported the Telegraph.

Masani added that the book, which was promoted by the BookTrust, a Arts Council-funded literacy charity, is "evidence of brainwashing children with outright lies, confusion and misinformation."

"The Nazis claimed that the cultural achievements of the north were the work of blond, fair-skinned folk," said David Abulafia, a historian and professor emeritus at Cambridge. "Making skin color a criterion for judging great achievements like Stonehenge is therefore not a new idea. It is also rubbish. It only gets interesting if their skins were blue or green."

British conservative commentator and Anglican deacon Calvin Robinson told GB News, "It's massively hyperbolic. It's actually insane, the revisionist history that takes place in there. ... You can say that we had a diverse culture to some extent, but it was so minuscule. Up until the 1950s, Britain was predominantly white and that's not a judgment call. That's not saying it's a good thing or a bad thing. That's a fact."

Robinson noted on X that the "book provides no sources, funnily enough."

— (@)

"Brilliant Black British History" appears to be the latest in a burgeoning genre of revisionist agitprop aimed at either distorting facts to paint Caucasians uniquely as history's villains or erasing them from history altogether as part of a broader leftist-identitarian agenda.

The BBC program "Horrible Histories" released a song in 2021 that has since gone viral called "Been Here From the Start," which advanced a similar alternate history to that favored by Atinuke, suggesting Roman Emperor Septimius Severus, the Aurelian Moors, and the early Britons were black. It was widely criticized by historians and those tiring of liberal identitarianism.

'Been Here From the Start' song | Horrible Histories: Black British History | CBBCyoutu.be

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Archaeologists unearth 4,000-year-old 'Stonehenge of the Netherlands,' discover first-of-its-kind ornament at burial ground



Archaeologists have discovered a 4,000-year-old structure, which has been dubbed the "Stonehenge of the Netherlands." The site is said to be a first-of-its-kind discovery by experts because of a special ornament from thousands of miles away.

Dutch archaeologists announced this week that they had unearthed an ancient burial mound containing the remains of nearly 60 men, women, and children.

The Guardian reported, "Studying differences in clay composition and color, the scientists located three burial mounds on the excavations, a few miles from the banks of the Waal River."

The archaeologists believe that the historical site had been used as a solar calendar – much like Stonehenge, the prehistoric stone circle monument in Wiltshire, England.

The site was first discovered in November 2016 during construction at an industrial area in the town of Tiel, Netherlands. Since the initial discovery six years ago, archaeologists have reportedly excavated more than a million artifacts dating from the Stone Age, the Bronze Age, the Iron Age, the Roman Empire, and the Middle Ages.

"The shrine must have been an important place," the town of Tiel stated in a Facebook post. "People kept special days of the year, performed rituals, and buried their dead. The shrine had been in use for 800 years."

"This sanctuary must have been a highly significant place where people kept track of special days in the year, performed rituals, and buried their dead. Rows of poles stood along pathways used for processions," the town said in a statement, according to Reuters.

Fox News reported, "The sanctuary was four soccer fields long in total and contains three burial mounds with the largest one being about 65 feet in diameter, which served as a 'kind of solar calendar.'"

The 4,000-year-old site had several passages, which allowed the sun to shine through. The "Stonehenge of the Netherlands," which is roughly 40 miles east of Rotterdam, aligned with the sun on the summer and winter solstices to inform locals of the longest and shortest days of the year.

"A person, for example, a priest or priestess, stood on the hill, which was flat on top and on which probably stood a large pole. The priest then viewed the position of the sun from the fixed point of the pole. There were more posts around the hill as markers. They helped the priest determine the exact time of the year, a spokesperson for the archaeologists told De Telegraaf, the largest newspaper in the Netherlands.

"On certain days the sun shone straight through those passages on the hill," the spokesperson said. "Just like in Stonehenge, where the sun shines through the stones on important days."

The town of Tiel said on Facebook, "In the places where the sun shone straight through the openings, archaeologists also found sacrifices."

On the burial site, archaeologists discovered animal skeletons, human skulls, and valuable items. Archaeologists found a bronze spearhead and a single glass bead in the grave of a woman. The bead is significant, since it is likely from thousands of miles away, and experts believe the bead is the oldest one ever found in the Netherlands.

Chief researcher Cristian van der Linde said the glass bead is from Mesopotamia – present-day Iraq, approximately 3,000 miles away from the burial site in the Netherlands.

"Glass was not made here, so the bead must have been a spectacular item, as for people then it was an unknown material," said Stijn Arnoldussen, a professor at the University of Groningen.

"Things were already being exchanged in those times," Arnoldussen said. "The bead may have been above ground for hundreds of years before it reached Tiel, but of course, it didn’t have to be."

The statement from Tiel said, "This is the first time a site like this has been discovered in the Netherlands."

Some of the ancient artifacts will be showcased in a local museum in Tiel and at the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities.

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