The Bridge of the Gods is preserved in Native American oral tradition as a natural land bridge that once spanned the Columbia River at the location now known as the Cascade Rapids. Dan Richards draws attention to a detail in those traditions that most accounts overlook - the bridge did not just span the river, it contained a tunnel running through it, so long and so dark that most tribes would only permit their bravest warriors to pass through it.
The artistic representations of the bridge tend to show something resembling rubble over the river, but the tunnel detail suggests something more structurally sophisticated - something Dan compares to the kind of maintenance passage you would expect running alongside a large engineered structure. The bridge eventually came down in a landslide, and by the time Lewis and Clark passed through the area, the evidence of tree growth in the region suggested to them that the submersion had occurred no more than a couple of hundred years before their arrival - placing the collapse somewhere in the sixteenth or seventeenth century, well within the historical period and consistent with documented accounts of a major seismic event in the Pacific Northwest.
I do declare, this is the first time a bar served me beer in an iced tea glass. @monterey_cafe wouldn’t do such a thing, and @mootsysspokane laughed at the very notion.
I now have a twelve year old twelve hour layover in the Denver airport. Stupid delays. Anyway I could investigate the rumors of alphabet bois hiding out u def the place… or I could just hit a dive bar… locals you will be able to find me at Just Bill’s. I imagine I’ll be closing the bars tonight.
All these psyops the feds are perpetrating are meant to distract you from the things that will heal humanity, the things we truly need to have in order to progress past this state of constant strife.
Case in point: The Fortnite Item Shop has your key to peace and happiness.But ‘they’ want you to talk about UFOs and beef jerky.