Oh, for the love of sanity, can anyone else out there just admit they’re utterly exhausted by Alex Jones and his relentless parade of batty, over-the-top nonsense?! Here we go again, folks, with the self-proclaimed oracle of Infowars screeching on X about “The Greatest Archeological Find in HISTORY”—a supposed skyscraper-sized structure buried under the Khafre Pyramid, discovered via “powerful ground-penetrating radar,” no less—leaving us all to wonder if he’s lost the last shred of his already-fragile grip on reality or if he’s just trolling the entire human race for clicks! Spare us, Alex, and let’s dive into this latest circus act of conspiracy-fueled lunacy with the skepticism it so desperately deserves!
Alex Jones, a prominent conspiracy theorist and media personality, posted on X claiming, “The Greatest Archeological Find in HISTORY was Just Discovered! Using Powerful Ground-Penetrating Radar, Scientists Have Mapped a Structure More Than Twice the Height of the Tallest Building on Earth Under the Khafre Pyramid in the Giza Complex.” This post has generated significant online buzz, but its veracity requires scrutiny. Below is an investigative update based on the X post, related web results, and available scientific and archeological data.
The Greatest Archeological Find in HISTORY was Just Discovered!
Using Powerful Ground-Penetrating Radar, Scientists Have Mapped a Structure More Than Twice the Height of the Tallest Building on Earth Under the Khafre Pyramid in the Giza Complex pic.twitter.com/QBxJFHZNto
— Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) March 19, 2025
Origin and Context of the Claim
The post originates from Alex Jones, known for promoting controversial and often unverified claims on his platform, X, and through his website, Infowars. Jones frequently amplifies sensational stories, particularly those involving ancient mysteries, extraterrestrials, or hidden structures, which appeal to his audience. However, his claims often lack credible sourcing or scientific backing.
The post does not provide specific details, such as the date of the discovery, the names of the scientists involved, or a link to peer-reviewed research or official announcements. It mentions “powerful ground-penetrating radar” and a structure “more than twice the height of the tallest building on Earth” (i.e., taller than the Burj Khalifa, which stands at 829.8 meters or 2,722 feet), located under the Khafre Pyramid in the Giza complex.
Analysis of the Claim’s Credibility
Scale and Feasibility: A structure “more than twice the height of the tallest building on Earth” (over 1,659.6 meters or 5,444 feet) buried under the Khafre Pyramid is physically implausible. The Giza Plateau, where the Khafre Pyramid (also known as the Pyramid of Chephren) is located, spans approximately 2.5 square kilometers and sits on a relatively flat limestone plateau. A structure of that height would be visible above ground, extend far beyond the plateau’s boundaries, and defy geological and engineering constraints of ancient Egypt.
Khafre Pyramid Context: The Khafre Pyramid, built during the Fourth Dynasty (c. 2570–2540 BCE) for Pharaoh Khafre, is the second-largest pyramid in Giza, standing at about 136.4 meters (448 feet) tall (originally 143.5 meters before erosion and the loss of its capstone). It is surrounded by the Sphinx, other pyramids, and the Giza Necropolis. Web results, including Wikipedia and egyptmythology.com, describe ongoing archeological work at Giza, but none mention a structure of the claimed height or scale.
Scientific and Archeological Evidence
Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) Use at Giza: Web results confirm that scientists have used non-invasive technologies like ground-penetrating radar (GPR) and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) to study the Giza Plateau. A Smithsonian Magazine article from May 14, 2024, reports that researchers from Higashi Nippon International University, Tohoku University, and the National Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics in Egypt discovered an “anomaly” beneath a royal graveyard near the Great Pyramid of Khufu (not Khafre) using these methods. The anomaly is described as an underground structure, possibly a tomb or chamber, but no dimensions are provided, and it is certainly not “more than twice the height of the tallest building on Earth.”
Ground-penetrating radar (GPR), while a powerful non-invasive tool for archeological and geological surveys, has significant limitations that render Alex Jones’ claim of mapping an underground structure “more than twice the height of the tallest building on Earth” (over 1,659.6 meters or 5,444 feet) under the Khafre Pyramid scientifically impossible. GPR operates by emitting electromagnetic pulses into the ground and measuring their reflections, but its depth penetration is constrained by factors such as soil composition, moisture, and frequency—typically ranging from 20–30 centimeters in dense materials to a maximum of 30–50 meters in ideal conditions, as noted in Wikipedia and US Radar’s website. The limestone bedrock and shallow sediment layers of the Giza Plateau, combined with the high-frequency antennas required for detailed imaging, limit GPR’s effective range to mere meters, far short of detecting a structure exceeding 1,600 meters in height. Additionally, such a massive cavity would cause geological instability, seismic anomalies, or surface deformations detectable by other methods like satellite imagery or traditional excavation, none of which have been reported, making Jones’ assertion not only technologically unfeasible but geologically absurd.
And yet, doubling down on stupid is an Alex Jones feature
Below see an artist rendering of the radar scans recently made public of the largest artificially made structures on Earth under the Giza pyramid complex. The incredible illustration is to scale.. https://t.co/9v1asvHg50 pic.twitter.com/GPhQFXtZkp
— Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) March 20, 2025
Previous Discoveries: The Pyramid of Khafre has been extensively studied since the 19th century, with explorers like Giovanni Belzoni (1818) and Auguste Mariette (1853) documenting its chambers, passages, and valley temple. Modern excavations, led by figures like Mark Lehner and Zahi Hawass, have uncovered artifacts and small chambers but nothing resembling a massive, skyscraper-sized structure. The Wikipedia entry on the Pyramid of Khafre notes its construction details, including its limestone blocks and steeper slope (53° 08′), but no hidden mega-structure is mentioned.
Giza Plateau Geology: The Giza Plateau’s limestone bedrock and shallow depth (typically 10–30 meters of sediment over bedrock) make it geologically impossible to conceal a structure taller than the Burj Khalifa underground. Such a structure would require an enormous cavity, which would collapse or be detectable through seismic activity, satellite imagery, or prior excavations.
Response from the Archeological Community
As of March 19, 2025, no major archeological institutions, such as the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, the Giza Project at Harvard University, or the Supreme Council of Antiquities, have announced or acknowledged a discovery matching Jones’ description. Official press releases or peer-reviewed journals (e.g., Archaeological Prospection, cited in the Smithsonian article) would typically report such findings, but none exist for this claim. Egyptologist Peter Der Manuelian, mentioned in the Smithsonian article, has not commented on this specific claim, but his work focuses on smaller, realistic discoveries, such as L-shaped offering chapels or tombs, not mega-structures.
Public Reaction and Skepticism
While the X post lacks replies in the provided thread, Alex Jones’ claims often elicit polarized responses: some followers amplify the story as groundbreaking, while skeptics dismiss it as typical hyperbole. The absence of follow-up evidence or credible sources in the post fuels skepticism, especially given Jones’ history of promoting unverified narratives.
And those other tinfoil hat-wearing sites need their clicks…
And then there’s this load of hogwash published in The Express Tribune…
A stunning new radar study has sent shockwaves across the internet, revealing a vast subterranean complex beneath the Pyramids of Giza—challenging long-held beliefs that the structures were built solely as royal tombs.
Using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) tomography, scientists Corrado Malanga of the University of Pisa and Filippo Biondi of the University of Strathclyde scanned the Khafre Pyramid and uncovered what appears to be an underground system stretching two kilometers beneath all three major pyramids.
The findings, made public through a scientific paper and a press release issued on March 15, detail five identical multi-level structures connected by geometric passageways near the base of the Khafre Pyramid.
Even more striking were the eight vertical cylindrical wells, encircled by spiral pathways descending 648 meters below the surface. These wells ultimately merge into two massive cube-shaped chambers—each measuring 80 meters on each side
Oh, for heaven’s sake, can we please put this absurd, tinfoil-hat conspiracy about “massive underground structures found beneath the Giza pyramids” out of its misery and kick it to the curb where it belongs?! The Tribune’s breathless claim of “chambers larger than the pyramids themselves” sounds like it was scribbled on a napkin during a late-night alien abduction podcast—utter nonsense peddled to wide-eyed rubes who think ground-penetrating radar can magically unearth a subterranean city bigger than Manhattan under Egypt’s sands! Spare us the drama, folks: real archeologists, like those using actual science at Giza, have found modest tombs and anomalies, not some fantastical mega-complex—get a grip, check the facts, and stop embarrassing yourselves with this laughable, pyramid-sized pile of hogwash!
The “scientist,” Malanga, is described as a chemist and researcher at the University of Pisa. There, he has focused on controversial topics, particularly UFOs, alien abductions, and related phenomena. His academic credentials include a chemistry teacher and researcher position, but his work on UFOs and extraterrestrial life is considered fringe and outside mainstream scientific inquiry.
While Malanga holds a legitimate academic position at the University of Pisa, his research into UFOs and alien abductions is not recognized or peer-reviewed within mainstream scientific communities like chemistry, physics, or astronomy. The Steemit post labels him a “heretic scientist,” suggesting his work disrupts conventional science and is often mocked or discredited by peers.
Filippo Biondi is a legitimate scientist, actively researching in a recognized field at a reputable university. His work is grounded in established scientific methods, with no evidence of controversy or pseudoscience, making him a credible academic in contrast to Malanga’s more controversial profile.
Filippo Biondi likely linked with Corrado Malanga through a shared project on SAR imaging of the Giza pyramids, driven by Biondi’s technical expertise and Malanga’s interest in ancient mysteries. The collaboration appears to have been limited to the 2022 Remote Sensing paper, where Biondi’s legitimate science overshadowed Malanga’s pseudoscience. The association may have been opportunistic or institutional, but it risks reputational damage for Biondi due to Malanga’s fringe reputation. No direct evidence (e.g., interviews, project proposals) explains the partnership in the web results, suggesting it was project-specific and focused on technical merits.
Yes, the study of structures beneath the Great Pyramid of Khufu took place and was published in the 2022 Remote Sensing paper, documenting internal structures using SAR tomography. However, it did not uncover a two-kilometer underground system or structures beneath Khafre, as claimed in later reports. The findings were modest and scientifically valid, but not sensational enough for widespread news coverage.
Shorter version: The Khafre study of underground structures NEVER HAPPENED.
The 2022 study was not widely published in news outlets, likely due to its technical nature and lack of sensational findings. Later, unverified claims (e.g., The Express Tribune, Marca) may have drawn on or misinterpreted the 2022 work, but no news coverage of the original paper is evident in the web results. Sensationalized reports in 2025 suggest media amplification of Malanga’s fringe ideas, not the peer-reviewed science.
Yet the headlines spill out on the Internet like an overflowing septic tank:
✅ Truth Mafia: SAR Scan of Khafre Pyramid Shows Huge Underground Structures.
✅ Trends Newsline: The Greatest Archaeological Find: Massive Structure Under Giza!
✅ News & Jave: The Greatest Archeological Find in HISTORY was Just Discovered!
✅ News 18: Pyramids Or Ancient Power Grids? Radar Scans Reveal Massive Underground Structures In Egypt’s Giza.
✅ Deep Newz: Radar Scans Reveal 648-Meter-Deep Complex Beneath Khafre Pyramid.
✅ The Intel Drop: HUGE Structures Discovered 2km BELOW Pyramid of Khafre?! (at least they had the presence of mind to include a question mark)
Conclusion and Assessment
Alex Jones’ claim of a structure “more than twice the height of the tallest building on Earth” under the Khafre Pyramid is not supported by scientific or archeological evidence. It appears to be a sensationalized or fabricated story, likely intended to generate attention or align with Jones’ broader narrative of hidden ancient technologies or extraterrestrial involvement (a common theme in his content).
The use of “powerful ground-penetrating radar” aligns with real research at Giza, but the scale of the alleged discovery is implausible and contradicts known geological and historical data. The Smithsonian article and other web results confirm ongoing discoveries at Giza, but they are modest and realistic—e.g., underground anomalies or tombs—not skyscraper-sized structures. This claim fits a pattern of misinformation often associated with Jones, exploiting public fascination with Egypt’s pyramids to promote unverified stories. The lack of official corroboration, combined with the physical impossibility of the described structure, suggests it is false.
Final Note
Alex Jones’ X post is not credible and appears to be a fabricated or exaggerated story lacking any scientific basis. The public should rely on verified archeological research and official statements rather than sensational claims on social media. This investigation will continue to monitor any developments, but as of March 19, 2025, the claim is unfounded.
Do you guys even check ? Alex is nuts but even a stopped clock is right twice a day. This is easily searchable reputable information posted by scientific experts using SaR not the radar you suggest in the waste of text article. Is huge historic changing information with a 4 hr press conference upcoming. Non of this has to do with Alex jones.
Oh, bless your heart, dear commenter—your sanctimonious little rant on my Khafre Pyramid post is an absolute gift, practically begging for a merciless skewering! “Do you guys even check?”—oh, the irony, dripping like a leaky faucet from someone clutching Alex Jones’ coattails while sneering at my “waste of text” article. Yes, Alex, the tinfoil titan who peddles lizard people and fluoride conspiracies, is your beacon of “reputable information”—sure, and I’m the Pharaoh of Giza! You claim this is “easily searchable reputable information” from “scientific experts” wielding SAR (not the radar I “wrongly” suggested—my deepest apologies for not groveling at your Google-fu). But let’s be real: your “huge historic changing information” reeks of clickbait vaporware, propped up by a mysterious “4-hour press conference” that sounds like a fever dream straight out of Jones’ Infowars studio. And the pièce de résistance—“None of this has to do with Alex Jones”? Spare me—your obsession with defending this nonsense proves you’re his unpaid intern, clutching a stopped clock like it’s the Rosetta Stone. Sit down, champ—your conspiracy couture is showing, and it’s not a good look!