Jim Stone, Freelance Journalist
"Moloch temple" facts - to counter misperceptions and in a few spurious cases, the standard trollage
1. This place is built like a combination of a convention center and a resort. It was impossible to capture the scale of this building due to the way it was proportioned. The room behind the eyes would have at least a 25 foot ceiling and the eyes are about 20 feet wide per eye with both of them equaling about 50 feet including the space between them. They are clearly visible as an "evil face" for well over a mile but you have to be on the surrounding mountains to see this. Under the spider web there is enough space for at least 50 foot trees.
2. This is not a millionaire project, it is a billionaire/trillionaire project that also got, in part, paid for by tax revenues that were siphoned off of environmental programs.
3. Not pictured: There are 3 different dams on the property, there specifically for this place. The smallest one is in one of the pictures. The actual scale of this place is approximately the same as Epstein's island. There is lots of stuff not pictured in the report.
4. It is very remote, but buses can get there. The roads are not paved but also don't need 4 wheel drive. There is enough LP gas storage on this property to empty an LP truck and nothing would need that much, unless you wanted to run a nice ceremonial fire show. They also don't use the gas for heating water because the place has a very large solar water heating array. It is not a "solar heater", it is an array. I don't know what on earth they'd need that much hot water for.
Here is some of the solar water heating array. Note the size of this, it is only on one small not noticed portion of the roof, and that little piece of roof is as much as a house would have. Why do they need that much hot water, and you can at least get a feel for the scale of this place from this picture:
5. Claudia somehow got information that indicates this place was asked for by British royalty and that it was the European illuminati that put it in. Obviously, from some of the stuff on the ground there is at least an occult type of Jewish influence here also. These would not be people you'd leave your kids with.
6. It is kept in perfect functional condition and is occasionally used and between uses the groundskeepers don't bother with the details. There are plenty of little messes from "work in progress".
7. The place emits an evil presence that reaches out for about 5 miles and can be felt by people who don't even know anything is there.
8. It is somewhat probable that after a report such as this that they'll tear it down because they want their secrecy and don't have it anymore. Then again, I have not given out the coordinates so the verdict is still out on that.
9. Though the place is quite private there are ranchers in the area that can see it, at least if they have to go after a straggling cow. However, they would probably not know what it is and would not be able to see into it well enough to observe what is going on.
10. The place definitely could detain people on the lower floor and probably also has a bunker complex. There is simply too much support there for just the surface appearances.
11. This place, with the way it is set up, would be the #1 choice for those who wanted to get through a zombie apocalypse. It would handle that type of scenario with style and comfort and absolutely anyone who mattered could be there. It would be tough to overcrowd. I'd love to have that place after a few exorcisms and a little re-construction to get rid of the creepiness, it is a five star bug out. Exactly the type of place any survivalist would want. I am sure the location it is in was chosen with that in mind.
To those speculating why I am keeping the actual location of the molech temple under wraps - I am keeping it under wraps for the "dead man switch" plus to provide a reason to stop messing with this site's funding. I'll wait a while to see what happens with that. Some people are speculating I am afraid of retribution if I give the coordinates. That's not it.