cover of episode #2231 - Jimmy Corsetti & Dan Richards

#2231 - Jimmy Corsetti & Dan Richards

2024/11/20
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The Joe Rogan Experience

Chapters

The discussion explores the complexities of plant domestication and natural selection, especially focusing on the domestication of rice and the contention around ancient agricultural practices.
  • The domestication of rice may have involved multiple phases of going wild and being domesticated again.
  • Seeds adapt to agricultural environments and might revert to wild characteristics when not cultivated.
  • Some arguments about ancient agriculture methods may have been debated incorrectly in academic circles.

Shownotes Transcript

The joe rogan experience.

Gentle, I very nice to meet you. By the way, nice to meet you. Thank you very much for that video. We talked about IT before, but I want to say publicly the deep bumping of the deep bumping by flint deal. And you really nailed him on so many those things that he was dishonest about and he just, I wish we knew in real time but unfortunately, you know, it's IT takes a lot of research to be able to figure out what he was told the truth about and when he wasn't you. You know.

thank you. I will .

tell about youh the dunk.

the dunk the past as my email, the dunk on youtube or on twitter. That's with two days like my ex, not deep bunky.

So keep this D, D, dunking.

Not debunking. yes.

thanks. Thank you. Yeah, the thing was that was actually funny.

The the moment that I knew that he was lying about the science was when you asked him about the feriz ation of plants. That's what they roll back into. No longer domestic. He was just take thousands years like, no, no, no, no, i've research this and I know Better and he was just need your king straight out of the thousands years and when you press him, he's like, well.

I don't know for sure well, that's a bomber because that is fuel to study, which is really kind of crazy. It's a really fascinating thing that seeds do adapt to, uh, agriculture. They adapt to the fact that it's Better for the survival of the plant. If when you develop agriculture of their more robust than they stand on, the plant is Better for the wild. If they break off easy and they can scatter Better and they can know proliferate ET.

It's really basic. If you think about IT, if IT stays on the plant after after it's right, but you just sit, they're waiting for the first thing to come along and needed.

That whole natural selection thing when IT comes to plants is so fascinating. But the question was so simple, if you stopped having agriculture and these plants just grew wild, would they go back the same characteristics of wild plants? And he was like, no, just no evidence to that. But then I saw your video, and then I looked at some other stuff and there's quite a bit of evidence of is particularly with wild rice.

right? Yeah, particularly with wild rice. Yes, there's that one IT looks like alleva. But there is a possibility that one was domesticated and then went back to the wild and then was domesticated again. That would be rice that shows multiple types.

There's different ways the seeds can break off and they can break in different point to the plant where they can just fall straight out. And rice shows numerous passer, uh, we only has one genetic pathway to that seed shatter with the seed falls off. So it's um they get pretty complicated. But rice does rice does have a lot of genetic possibilities for that. I'm not a geneticist, so i'm sure that's something going to come and say this is a student crap. But ultimately, at the end of the day, flint was treating IT as a debate where as you and grand, we're both trying to shift to the truth and that's why he was not going to give one little corner, one little thread of possibility of being right anywhere when in reality, a lot of, just like everything else, life is a lot of great.

What's also this whole subject of the past is is so obviously confusing because when you look at I watched your your video today, the ball back video, just looking at the enormous size of those stones, there's no reasonable explanation how people like, what is that dated to? like? What year do they believe that was made?

This is where IT gets fun, is because they credit to the romans and the finish. However, there's IT goes beyond the sophistication, the capabilities, what the romans were known to have, whether it's the existence of the screw jack for lifting the stones.

But bullbean, which is located in lebanon, and I had the great privilege of going there in september of last year, exactly one month before things kicked off in israel with the whole lamos thing. And if I hadn't got there, then I won't have no chance, like right now, israel's bombs lebanon. And so it's a dangerous place.

But bull bec, if there was one example, one ancient side on earth, that is evidence of a lost ancient advanced civilization. And by advanced, i'm not talking about spaces, lasers here. I'm talking about more sophisticated than what we were taught school for the known capabilities.

And bull bec has the largest stones that were ever coded in human history, the largest stones that were lifted, stacked and transported in human history, in the largest stone columns in all of classical history. And we're talking, so the true thon stones, three stones, nine hundred tons of piece, or eight hundred metric tones, and they were moved a half a mile from the quality. They were lifting stack approximate feet off the ground.

And when I say stack, they were perfectly lined up in Jamie. It's in my folder of ball beg. You want to show some of these in their absolutely massive.

So let me tell you right here. And I of course have the gentleman there who i'll tell you about later highlighted just to can show you for perspective like that, someone right there. It's five, four, eleven.

Those stones that are highlighted in red are the trial phone stones. But these pictures do not do IT justice because it's taken through an ultrawise camera. S, from the top to bottom of the red highlight stones is fourteen feet and there's sixty two feet long or sixty two feet, excuse me, like IT that there's me. And so it's hard to .

tell because of the perspective. And people need kind of understand how White angle lens sort of distorts things. Yes, by showing you this enormous field of view. But when you're looking at something that's fourteen feet long and sixty, excuse me, sixty, sixty two feet long and fourteen feet high, like what is the weight of that? What's the overall way?

Nine hundred imperial tunes or eight hundred metric tonnes? And anyone listening, a metric ton is twenty two hundred pounds, one thousand kilograms, and in imperial time is two thousand pounds. So that's one point seven million pounds each of them.

And there's three of them. And if you were go to the correct, there's ones that are twelve hundred times and even five hundred times that are twenty feet tall um this is mind boggling. Like jane, if you want to just growth, you some of the other photos to kind of give joe the perspective and the audience the perspective.

these are clearly cut stones that were moved into place and moved twenty three feet above the ground, right in technically .

thirty feet because there's stones that are actually below the ground there that you can see because it's emerged into the earth. So technically we're thirty feet, but twenty three off, twenty three feet off the ground today. And right there, this highlight.

So not only is that fourteen feet from top to the, you would never realize when you're looking at this. And these are confirm measurements, by the way, this is read out of encyclopaedias, but notice how they are completely flush nice and even with each other. And the this exceeds the known capabilities of what the romans had.

And it's worth mentioning that this site is some twenty four hundred miles from rome, the capital. And if you're going to say that this was created by the romans, one people need understand that the romans were were renowned for documenting everything. Yet this site is not credit to anybody.

They don't know exactly who did IT or when. But the academics concluded that I had to have been the romance of the finances because, of course, there was no one before them. And with this photo right here, let me say something else.

There is evidence of at least two, but arguably three different architectures there were done at this site. And I would conclude that this is evidence that this site existed in prehistoric times. There's also, I could show you in cycle pedia that talk about bulb c being prehistoric and nature, dining back eleven thousand years of human history.

And what I argue is that he was built up. IT was found by the romans, the finish and built upon later. And right here is evidence for all the device to see. Look how they obviously used broken stones and constructed on top of IT.

Why would you go for making the most advanced stones in history that far exceed anything you see in rome? For example, if you were to go to the as magnificent as that is, IT is a architecture of mathematics and just brilliance, this rate here, why would they use the? Why would they, for all the feats of roman history, why would they have the most of impressive feats over two thousand miles away from the capital? In fact? And let me just say this, when i'm talking about nine hundred hundred stones, the largest stone in all of room is fifty three tons is the traditions capital work can make up the tradition's column fifty three times this is fifteen times header.

There is a number of things to um i'm not a huge believer in ancient technology. I'm not a big deliver in nation technology is Jimmy is well aware but .

which is why it's important that you're here because people can hear multiple .

perspectives yeah that's where I can tell you some things about about back that are still interesting to me. One of them is you don't see the roman foot in those stones, which is weird. You would expect to see some sort of breakdown of the roman foot in these measurements.

but they're not there about they on the ones a different what they considered a foot is not twelve inches.

correct? There's A A roman unitive measured that they would use in construction. And I see we don't see IT in those stones in the trillions on in. But there's three stones that were Carried and left in the ground. All of those stones show signs of a using the roman .

foot jme you grow over to.

so that right off the bats shows to me that the ones that were installed, we're not built by the romans, but the ones that were worried were made by the romans. They were trying to Carry out a stones to to match IT. Another thing is that roman architecture always uses the most impressive things right in the front walk, in the front of the thing, and that we are going to see the biggest stones, the most impressive previous reasons.

These are in the back, completely on the opposite of the entrance so you have to like from what you told me, you are kind of to look for him if you don't know where they are at, right? Like you can't just shop on the site. They say here, the true thon.

Well, let me tell you a quick story, very quick. So I had the pleasure of going there with some people, and i'll tell you about IT later. I won't do to the name drop just yet.

Um but dorry, who lives in lebanon, he told us around and he had been to the site three times before. When we went to us this fourth time, he did not know of the existence of the trial. Athon stones there are around back.

You ve got to walk probably a third of a mile to get there. They don't ever bring the tours around to the trial, thunder ones. He had no idea what I was talking about the night before a dinner. I'm trying to explain to me like the truth on stones, the nine, hundred hundred stones, and I had to show my picture. He had never seen him before.

How do they not show the tourist this?

That's an excEllent question. You do have to walk to be on. It's like a twelve, fifteen minute walk a to go around to get there.

I mean, it's part of the platform, but you have to go all the way around. And some people just don't feel like making the walk. And when we were there, we were totally alone for a half hour with these stones, not a single person.

There were hundreds of people at the site. Not a single one of them came around back. Now, just to clarify with the audience of seeing right now, this is at the quality, which is a half mile away.

This is where all the stones originate from. And this one rate here is what's called the stone of the pregnant woman. IT is twelve hundred tons. As you can see, it's fourteen feet tall, which is the same height. So when this trial funston es, I was shown you a moment ago, this, the only difference is that this once sixty eight feet long, it's virtually the same size, except for just a few feet shorter, but it's the same height. So that gentlemen right there, peer, who's a wonderful man, is six foot tall, and look at him, just dwarfed by the stone.

twelve hundred tons. And right, and it's not from there won't .

know that IT is this was court. So this is the quality.

So this ones out the quality and but the ones that were placed where they from this quality.

which is a half mile away.

So this is they moved one million, eight hundred pounds a half a mile.

three of them. And that doesn't include the two dozen that are three hundred and fifty times of piece. That doesn't include the nine that are six hundred tons of piece. Nine stones that are six hundred tons of piece are somehow a side note to the trial, fine stones. And then we just tell you this, this is something, jane, if you score over a few to articles involving, cause this is what the audience needs to understand.

A lot of people hear these numbers, and they don't wrap the head around exactly how important this is, which is that the go to the article involving the los Angeles county museum of art, okay, it's in the same folder of bullbean. And the largest stone moved in modern times is three hundred and forty times. We're going to come back to all these photos too because it's extremely important. Uh, there are some details in .

here that's the one of that gpi museum in L. A.

Yes, which is.

by the way, of very goofy museum.

Yeah, I haven't been .

there is so dumb. It's so dumb. It's there's an acquisition box that's on the ground. Yeah you're supposed to interpret as are is just a box. It's just sitting there. It's one of those places where you go there and you go, what is my tax doors going to? You go mother fuck .

ers other folder, its moving stones. So let me just what he's looking for that let me explain to you.

I saw the video on that. And what this is is was a suspended stone. Yeah, it's enormous stone that they place.

There is part of their art peace. yeah. And this thing was not that James play .

video a little bit pretty funny.

They had to move this stone IT was four miles and hours, the fast as they can move IT. They had to build a structure around the stone to move IT. yes. So this fucking insane, huge truck, that me tell you.

So the details IT is a two hundred. So they had to custom build a trail truck around the stone itself. James, look under the moving stones.

There's not a folder, just the video. Go to, let's see here. Scroll down a little bit. Go to ramsey m. statue. And the sill you're using a mac IT doesn't show you the preview of the of the pictures.

Sill keep looking until you find the of a big red truck but i'll tell the audience why you're looking for IT um exactly what we're talking about here so yeah, keep go and start back back. You're on IT. Go back a little bit.

Go back to the article. three. Go left like three times right there. Go back or right there. So this one stone, three hundred and forty tons, they call IT the largest Operation of its kind since the egyptians built the pyramids.

They had a custom build, a two hundred and sixty foot long trailer truck that consists of one hundred and ninety six semi truck wheels as forty four axels. It's thirty two feet long. IT took a european ning at cost, ten million dollars. IT took nine days to move the three hundred and forty times stone.

What a great use of taxpayers money. Million dollars, that there's no way they needed that money for. L, A.

yeah. Who cares about bottles and .

homeless people? No way. You don't mean .

this is more important. And so this is what so important is that this, the largest stone moved in human history is is at the ramsey, is the ramsey statue in egypt. It's one thousand metric time, which is two point two million pounds that was inflicted, moved one hundred and seventy miles from the korean.

Ask one. And here's the significance of this brother. The, this stone is the last Angeles county museum of art.

Is one third the weight? One the stone at the rain? Macon is three times heavier.

And how far did they move that stone? This one, the one one hundred and seventy miles.

and the other one was no one hundred and six miles.

one seventy miles and is two million pounds.

And so this is where things get really fun, is that they say, the academics, they say that the stones would have been moved on tree logs because that's the best guess, and it's not an unreasonable gas. But when you look into the new one's details, so I really nurtured out hard on this. There's a lot of people. Are you familiar with the most scale of harness? no.

So it's the measurement of stone and is often used by alternative ancient history buff s to say that, hey, a copper based tooling could not have been utilized to cut granite stones like the that's been claimed and there's no evidence that the egyptians, egyptians and never told us to use bronze tooling to cut the stones that make up the grand stones within the pym's. And so I started asking him, like a way to second, if they are going to say that they moved a two point two million pounds stone on tree logs, well, they say that he was the seder, the lebanon on seeder trees. Well, I nerd out on this. And there's something called the jana scale of harness which measures the harness of of wood and it's often used for if you're going to pick a uh, with flowing in house .

very softwood.

It's one of the softish on earth, the softish, but it's so soft that I would never even be considered for flooring in your house because your furniture and your heels would dented immediately. And if you're to put significant weight on IT, whatever that weight is, IT would either crush IT, crumble IT, or at least dented out of a circle, or being a circular in nature to roll on.

And so when you look into the nuances, details involving the mysterious accomplishments of the ancient IT becomes abundantly clear, like if I had one theses, is that the true history of mankind was more advanced than what we were taught in school. Now, how advanced? That's the fun topic. We will dive into that here the next couple hours. But the reality is that there's evidence for all who advised to see that they're mean again, brother, a thousand metric ton statue and this is this is right out of .

encyclopedia show the statute. So this is the statue IT somehow another fell yes.

who was a seated statue? Um that's in the in front of IT and it's broken into multiple pieces.

There's some images, Jimmy, of what IT originally looked like.

Look, so that foot, it's up to my belly bun, like the top of foot. That's just the foot. There's another picture that would an illustration that would show you IT would have looked like when I was full there IT go back one.

So that's where IT looks like from an erie shot. Now it's completely topped over. God knows what would have taken to knock this thing over.

They they say probably an earthquake. IT was a seated statue. I, if IT was a standing statue, I.

that is what I look like originally. That.

yes um and again, a thousand metric ton is two point two million pounds. How IT god knocked over in itself to me might be indicators of some sort of caicus m but at the side point but the point is this IT was moved one hundred and seventy miles. They do not the egyptians, and did not articulate, illustrate or describe how they would have done so.

Isn't that part of the problem with, like the burning of the library of Alexander, as all the information was lost forever?

Yes, here's the thing. Let me say this rock quicke brother, the library of axis Andrea was, like, thousands of years before the great pym ID, like the library of ex Andrew was just after, was forty seven, eighty or bc. That I got destroyed, is believed something around there.

So two thousand years ago, this start is three thousand years old, according to the academics, this is a thousand years before the library. Vx, SAndra so yeah, it's not unreasonable to suggest that they would have had information about how to constructed these things. In fact, I want to believe that they did um but it's gone on yeah, they might not .

have you going to say you are talking about we look at the way that they move the stones like you're talking about the seeder. They moved one stone in human history that was really big. The biggest one ever moved was the thunderstorms moved by Katherine, the great people, late seventeen hundred and eight seventeen hundreds. They um used a big team of people and they move. This thing I got very far .

like eight years of ths when .

they were poling. This thing on the ground had to consistently try metal energy, different types of all bearings through IT to roll on, because the ones they were moving to keep being crushed. And they had to use screw jacks that are just like you jack up the house floor with like a, they would use the score jack to lift the statue back up and put IT on, buries.

Well, the romans didn't have a screw jack. The digit wit metal logy were trying different kinds of ball bearings. And should that something way outside, I mean, to seventeen hundreds, seventeen hundreds, we're talking right at the cusp of them actually making structural steel. You know, this is the beginning of iron bridges and shit. They were actually making good metal logy then, and IT still took trial narrow to move the stones.

And it's that stones basically the same sizes, the ones of all back, a tiny bit bigger, but the same kind of issues where they would have had to have jack that thing up, they would have had which would have took steel or hard, hard medal. They basically, they to have some highly advanced medical erg for the time. Not as good as we have now, but seventeen hundred ds level medal, eric, that's what IT would have taken.

And the romans did not have that level of spice. So that's the thing. So there's something that you inform me of, dan, and this is me.

Give you a shout out. Everybody goes subscribe to d dunking on youtube. Youth channel is a gold mine that is bringing you are bridging together the facts that the alternative theory are presenting as well as the academics.

And you're differently. The truth and truth in your channel is so valuable. And what you taught me is that the invention of the screw jack was utilized in order to lift that thunder stone, the bronze horseman, on top of that, those metal rails.

So with the egypt cheese me, the romans didn't have that. That wasn't invented until thousands of years later. So without that screw jack, they would have never been able to lifted in the first .

place that don't want to just SAT there because yeah.

you says something that you don't believe .

in ancient technology. I don't believe in ancient high technology in the regards that generally speaking. Y, when you start get that, I don't i'm not a believer in ancient high technology regards that.

I don't believe like even even ancient steam engines would be like pushing IT. When you start talking like really advanced stuff, I tend to be tend to look for other h explanations. I tend to look for stone was the premier building material for homework.

Ds, for like millions of years, literally millions of years. So father passed to his son how to do this sort of thing. And eventually you get to a point where we start working with metal and that that kind of just dies off.

We could doing that for a while, and then a thousand years goes by and we look at what our ancestors used to do. We're like, holy shit. But I I honestly think a lot of the stuff that we just saw, how they did IT, we would just be like, well.

fuck, why did I think of that? But when you talking about moving things that are thousand tons and you're moving on through the mountains.

I mean, why why would you believe in the action? Put IT this way? I'm not opposed to the idea, but we need to get there first. Like if we're going like we're talking about the the understand or back stones um going from like I feel like we need to exhaust every other possibility before we can start hanging in our head on something.

Okay, what other possibilities .

could you even conceive .

of that up to the conversation? But this technology, which is IT.

would be definitely something bigger, Better than we know, uh, or different than we know. But like like I I give example that I ve used that with jim before was, you know, when this world war two ended, amErica ended all the snipper schools overseas, 这个 to tighten the budget, and vietnam started, we didn't have any sniper schools. And the n ceos on the ground say, hey, we deed trained snipers.

They had to actually recruit snipers of star shooters in the american olympic team because we didn't have trained snipers anymore in years. We had Better tools, look worse the uh, results because of the lack of skills. So I am of the opinion that there is you're right.

but this snipe is something that we're all very well aware of. It's conceivable it's obvious how you would do IT. You could explain IT to the lay person yeah .

you can um but IT was something that still there was a skillset that was lost in just twenty years. That's all. I think that um I think like a lot of things, you see a lot of the ideas for moving the big rocks. Some guys we use like like they think that like like water pressure, vacuum were used to pull rocks up tubes.

And you see all kinds of of interesting hypothesis that use lower tech means that I tend to think most of my think that don't work, but I tend to to think that those would be the direction we should be looking before we go to ancient hide technology. And again, the reason the reason that I think that is a because if we do get to ancient high technology, we really need to have eliminated everything else. But but we get there in order to be taken seriously. I guess that's kind of how I look at. I'm a more skeptical .

person with so that's back up to this to see if we grow on this. Would you agree that what we were taught in school that the ancient were more sophisticated than the describing? Yeah, I seen them.

There you go. So are on the same page because it's like what's technology like do they have spaces, lasers and hydro ics? I'm not suggested that a horse sample technology, right? So they had something else.

No, yeah, definitely. I guess I get to I think when most people think technology like you say space lasers and stuff, uh, powered powered things like something where they were no longer using human power, water power, some something they were harnessing energy, you're doing sophisticated chemistry, things like that's where I start to be like, well, I need more evidence to go that far with IT.

However, um the movie of the big rocks is something that I am quick to say. In order to do that, we would need if we were to do that, we would not need technology well outside of what they had available to him at the time. And and in my opinion, if you look at those like this, IT valuable to go back to that.

You've got the three big stones that we're put in a wall that don't have the roman d unit of measurement used, and we got three big rocks in the ground that do have the room and humanity and measured, I think, that they gave up, they realized they weren't able to do IT. They had one group, carbon. And the guy's task, a movement. Look what the fuck of you guys on body. No way we're moving.

You think you're crack. And the fact that it's undocumented, like the foundation of all bec, is completely undocumented.

And do you were saying something about dating into a thousand?

There is. So jane, if you go to the ball back folder, uh, you will find in a psychopath a article that describes the evidence of human habitation at bullbean ating back nine thousand bc, which is eleven years ago. And i'm not suggesting these stones were created back then. I'm open to IT.

What is the evidence? Like what kind of evidence? pottery?

No, sure i'd have to go read through the scientific article, but hubs were there eleven thousand years ago, and and the fact that they don't document when when the romans were, yes, he right there. And there's another art history.

the dates back at least eleven thousand years of compound significant periods such as prehistoric canonic helonias and roman errors after Alexander great conquer the city, and three, three, four B, C, he really named IT hilaire's hello hillier as um greek for sun city. The city flourished under roman rule.

Now let me say this rock. Uc, Jimmy, will you go to the picture of the the mountains in this folder? So this is something that's unbelieved, right? So just grow through all these photos of the mountains, because here's something that people need to understand that is unbelievably significant, which is that all at all, bec, there are approximately two hundred rose granite columns that were transported from the us.

One, korea in egypt, which is seven hundred miles as the bird flies. And what wild is that? The only way to get them to bull back? Because the bull bec is located in the middle of the lebanon mounds.

And IT has an average alleviation of a eight thousand feet, with peaks reaching over ten thousand feet. As you can see, there's a fricking ski resort there, which I couldn't believe when I was driving there. There was really the ski lifts. I went there in september, so they had to bring all of those multiple us. Colum stones columns from egypt in the only way to get there was over these mounts, which is mind blowing.

And what you're saying by how how the cro flies as the crow flies, what people need understands that take new account elevation changes. So if you if you have a flat line like a bird in your flying from one point to another at seven hundred miles, but if you have to go up and down and up and down and up and down, IT is significantly larger when the measurement is not seven hundred miles.

it's probably double that, right? And that's an excEllent point. And it's like then the questions like why would they do this? Like why they go out of how and why?

how? Why is like at school? Is the real question like how I mean, obviously, we built things because it's cool, right?

You if you go to the acropolis and the parthenon, you know why they fucking cool. You know, like people like to leave calls ship, right? But you look at .

about back a lot of interesting things about IT, like IT has the largest temple of jupiter out of anywhere on the roman empire, generally speaking, and is got some of the biggest temples in the roman empire period but a AR corner of the empire and its not an important city really mean is set my important in the region but it's certainly no tyro anything right um the whole but but IT has all these huge tempers.

My opinion is my thinking is that they showed up and there was this massive stonework there. And these are the romans. They can have these have the local thinking, their ancestors.

We're Better than the romance. So theyve fuck an eye jacket. We just build a big shit on top of IT.

This is now, or if we plan our stamp on IT. This is a roman building. This is all roman.

Now, this was never your ancestors. This was always our, and then the locals known ever. You can look to their four fathers, or whatever legends they had in a couple of generations .

just the power room well, even the parthenon built on the crops is the crops less is older than the and it's you know who made that everybody just structure .

your shoulder other folks.

what are we put up here um you know it's interesting .

about bulba c as well is that it's in the bible. Um the lebanon on mountains are mentioned one hundred and three times in the bible. I am not a bible temper. I am a believer in a divine creation. I'm proud to say that because i've seen the proof my own life.

However, what's interesting is about bulleted c is that they said that IT was created by ball, which is like this demand entity and the bible, and they declared red as the world's first civilization after the flood. And that was created by giants as punishment for what there are, neque of the flood. And I have an article about IT jami.

If few schools find now, or in the anonyme.

it's finally. So I go back to cranes. Let me tell you this. So what you're looking at here is the romans most sophisticated crane in their history, and adding max lifting capacity of six point six tons.

In other words, to lift just one of those trial thon stones, you would need one hundred and thirty three of these, which is obviously completely not feasible whatsoever. You you went have the space to do IT and it's just ridiculous to suggest you would corn ate through one hundred and thirty three cranes around IT. So what is around trying to say is that it's further suggestive evidence that the romans didn't build IT because they didn't have the capability to lift .

stones of that matter. Yeah, so pretty fast needs the roles were able to build crane that can lift six, that's amazing. But but not enough to even lift the stones that inside the kings chAmber.

right? So me let me put this in the perspective. So the largest stones inside the the king's chAmber of the great pyramid are proximately eighty tons imperial. So that would actually seventy eight tons imperial, or seventy tons metric, were removed some five hundred miles from the us. One corry, and lived in stacked hundreds of feet above the ground. But here's what's wild is that those stones, the largest stones, the great pyramid, compared to the troll phone stones, the troll on stones are fifteen times heavy, not twice as heavy. Not three times is heavy, not ten times as heavy.

I has a guy who skeptical of that of engine high technology. There's a couple of things that make IT words like I drive straight up and explained about back is one you can, when you can, you can use these cranes and lay them on their side and drag that stone across the ground. That's exactly what they did with the thundering cater ing the great time.

But then you have test with lifting that sound of a bitch. And all the time you're right back to where you started. You can drag IT across ever you want, but when you get to picking IT up fourteen .

feet off and they dragged IT on those those rails though yes, rails twenty .

three feet off a thirty feet right yeah IT .

is thirty feet um is documented um I have twenty three feet illustrate because it's where the ground is now but the the foundation of IT goes subsurface um so it's like, you know what these details like?

There's a reason why there is a growing interest in the mysteries of lost incent civilizations because smart people of all kinds of walks of life are looking into the new one's details and realizing like oh the second like graham hock gram hancock says that there's a missing chapter of human history. Like this is reality. We don't know how they built the great pyramid. IT isn't a IT is a fact that the egyptian's left us with no explanation of any kind out of the tens of thousands of higher glimpse all over egypt, not a single one of them describes how they constructed the pyramid ID or how they cut grand its stones. Not one.

Yeah, there's not there's the big lacks of big gaps in knowledges is where we end up having these kinds of discussions.

And I think to go back to where we first started, we mentioned a plant at the beginning is that we have a problem, in my opinion, that most people that see things kind of like I do is opposed to, like Jimmy yourself does, where they're looking, where I kind of need to take my steps to get that should high technology they end up going. Just straight, deep bunker out. And then they get skeptical sceptically get cynical.

They turn into asso. They turn into they're looking for ways to deal to authority. Shoot this down.

I just fuck your idea. Just think your idea is wrong. So I know what the implications are instead of saying, well, you know, maybe there's other implications.

Let's have a discussion about IT. They just go straight to, no, this is impossible. This is stupid. Make fun of the person compared to flat earth orison compared to aliens. In even .

worse, a fluence cases even worse, he somehow another to White lucky john hop man.

He's the one that started that is his dead guy wikipedia. And we can talk about that work quick like a john hooks is uh professor for the university for kansas university and he one of the earliest editors of wikipedia consistently gram hancox page Younger drives impact page, all kinds of suitor chao logy and and all praise and land is all that shit. He's got locked.

He is not just, he added IT him and his bodies edited and you can't go in and edit. There's a scientist from the comic research group that tried to edit the a Younger drives impact hypothesis page and was told he can't because it's a conflict of interest, a fucking scientist that works on this shit, a conflict of interest. But as scientists from outside the field isn't.

by the way, john hobbs studied at harvard and yell, he got his underground, I believe, from harvard, in his PHD, from ye, or vice versa. This is, this is significant because he is controlling .

the information, and he hides this stuff too. He'll tell you that he'll, I wash him, tell forms, hey, you guys need to site with kip dia instead of just because he said the Younger drive impact I pothead and they just made a real quick article about IT with no skepticism. He says you need to site wikipedia as well. He added the wikipedia page and doesn't mention that. He added IT when he tells people .

to go look at the problem with his motivation for, he bunking the stuff he doesn't like.

gram hand, cocky, he doesn't he, same kind of thing. He think suitor cha ologies all the isms, if you believe an ancient high technology, believe in the land, is you must be a White of premises to racist.

And I let's forget about the land is for a minute. But I definitely to talk about what you're seeing is impossible. It's essentially impossible with today's technology when you're talking about those stones that we remove seven hundred miles through the mountains. If you try to bring some engineering together in the united states in twenty and twenty four, the best in the brightest and said, here's your project, they would say.

fuck you on most levels of money to that you would .

need super billions money. And even then, I don't know how you would do IT. I I just don't I can't conceivably think of a way. And that's what's so interesting about this stuff, is that whatever they did was not just complicated for the time IT was so beyond our imagination of what was possible, the time that is beyond our imagination of what's possible today.

So I just IT throws this, these facts, the physical facts about the site and the location they were brought from, that fly in the face of logic, incredible book, and our understanding with possible, not just then, but today. So for anybody to say, oh, we figure this out, hey, man, fuck you. And definitely happen.

And the problem is that you have these buckin names attached to harvard in yale, and you've decided, because there's a group of people that have been studying this stuff and they ve you can wrote some shit down and you studied what they roll down. You did your own studying, you got a degree, you're the guy, you're the only one and it's the same fucking and weird whistles have put their pronounce and their twitter bio, and they're just crackpots. They're crackpots.

Maserati intellectuals, yes, because the things they're saying are completely bizarre. They're all one hundred percent of them are captured by this woke ideology. We are weird people, man, because they exist in this structure that's been completely promised. And that's our education, and higher education systems have been completely compromised. And this is not to say that they don't teach you amazing stuff about medicine, science, of course they do, but they are also in a cult IT.

IT is IT is a total cult behavior. And honestly, it's the religion we motives.

Sly ab, they are.

Let me just share this. So with the biggest critics in the naya's of alternative theories, there's a common denominator. Like when you mention the pronouns in their profile, you almost all of them have IT and they're not trans.

And if you look at their political ideologies, IT is extremely left. And these people are visceral, their toxic. And that means just make a site point that I almost forgot is when we're talking about kip dia, lot of people say, well, that's why you don't look at wikipedia. You don't trust and who cares about wikipedia like excuse me, IT shows up at the top of google on anything that you search so we cannot be ignored.

Um and when you're talking a moment to go about the impossibility, the movement of these stones, I wouldn't just emphasize this point one more time, which is that movement of that three hundred and forty one stone at the last less Angeles county museum of art is one third the weight of largest stones in ancient history. And when you look at what I took to do IT, so it's like when people when you're using the word and possible, it's like, listen, what IT took for us to do that. And IT was a third of the weight, and he had a custom build, this two hundred and sixty foot long truck with one hundred and ninety six.

I have roads that are flat and far Better.

little, far Better. Rose experience the roads.

One reason why they had to go one hundred and six miles is because they had to go around different roads, because most roads can support the weight like this, right? People that look into this like, don't listen to Jimmy the youtube or like look into the details on yourself and you realized like this is completely inexplicable.

And it's so important now because we're living at a time where people are starting to realize that not everything we were taught was true. In fact, a lot of things you see in the mainstream media nowadays have been uterine debunked. It's all propaganda.

And IT looked about history, about recent history that's easily proven. And the mainstream m media will tell false narratives. solution. And so we know that people are. So we know that people lie. We know that people love to be in a position of authority to be the only people that are allowed to distribute the truth.

We know that do you want to get provocative for a quick? sure. So there nowadays, there is a lot of conjecture about the historical accuracy of different things involved in world war two.

And Jamie, if you were to go to the ball back folder, or fact, go to the folder called swansea. So this is something that I got tremendous heat for. Where's that? When I went to ball back, I knows that they were swash is all over the place like, well, that's interesting um that's an ancient simbo.

What a lot of people are not aware of is that the sassa a is prehistoric. It's found on five continent around the world and dates back approximate ten thousand years. IT is found in europe, africa, asia, north and south america, all before trans ocean travel was thought to be possible. If you scroll for the images, jie, you're going to give the audience and understanding. Now let me, let me press this whole conversation with this fuck killer.

He like he.

of course, he right, he stole .

the symbol, which was a symbol of peace, and he bastardized IT. So this way here, I took this photo. You almost think it's photoshopped in this is, this is a photo. This is real. And unlike what this is, fascinating.

I put this up on twitter and I said, did a hitler knows something about ancient history that we don't? And the reason why? And this was a sincere question, everyone sort called me a nazi.

I was springing dangerous nazism for IT. No, this is a grown up conversation. Hitler was a very, he was evil, but he was intelligent. And the not were arguably the most technologically advanced country at that time. And war two, the jet engine rockets, and for some reason, for reasons that I cannot find a definitive answer on, is why was hitler so into an archie logy? They call IT not to archaeology and the the mainstream people will say old he westernized he was trying to get this arian thing going to unite .

people and just create enemy one that was really into that ship.

So that's by that's pero like eight hundred years ago um you'll find the native of .

americans, the pema indians, the navaho apache, a old house and we went to visit. You could actually have weddings there and they had to have a sign up explaining whether somebody .

swalec kers went I in japan and .

the same thing I I was a kid. Oki, in karadi. One of their patches was a swatter. Ka, and this was when I was a kid. So this isn't the eighties when I was studying much. When I first start studying martial arts, you could get these okanagan kari patches that how a swash on IT had nothing to do IT hit ler d had to do IT japan, right?

Well, so, so it's a very .

quick well jami's on this slide. This is from the opal amount people, which is a modern day ohio, and that dates back twenty two hundred years ago.

is cries. This is from modern day ohio two thousand years ago.

twenty two hundred years ago. And so here's the point that i'm making about the swash a is that, like people debate on whether is the look away galaxy, the big, deep, whatever you want to see, its origins, where I do not think that it's a coincident, that a symbol is so specific as IT is is found in five continents around the world before trans ocean ex ca.

Travel was said to be possible because just to remind the audience, IT wasn't til file ninety two and Christopher ceann. And it's like, no, this, I believe this is strong, suggestive evidence that humans were traversing the continents and the oceans thousands of years before we are taught in school, which is evidence of being more advanced. We are taught in school, right?

What did they think this thing was?

Well, I have an idea about that. I mean it's it's not really just dance idea but um the the four directions across is the root of the slosson that's pretty commonly used and even in date of american culture as like your cargo points, right this is more southeast to so this could be a symbol for the passage of time um here's this guy .

is turning with the cardinal points turn rotation of the area along with the .

points of the the company is just an idea is. IT doesn't really add a whole on a context to IT as far as I.

Why not just have a cross then up .

down that risk isn't a crazy that a geometric pattern is evil. Yeah, not just a gm erec atter, but a master ash.

expensive.

I like your beer is fine. Noone has any problems of that. But imagine like like you you have a wizard beer. You believe in child first you know like lazy.

It's very strange what we've done.

and obviously that's how horrific there was. So here's something .

people need to understand. I would emphasize this point. Um hiller, people need to look in the details.

He was looking for giants in africa. They did. They said .

a mission yeah. Ah yeah dinner.

I love IT.

The thing is though.

it's like I have not found an answer on why he was looking for the art of the went. He was looking for theres hammer in the holy grill. And the thing is to me, I like, I don't what did I feel like there's something that they knew about ancient history that we don't? I don't know if this is true or not, but I want I feel like I can't find a straight answer. And let me tell you this, if you go googling for answers on hitlers .

interest in what do you have to, Jerry.

you're going to find the same article. So this is actually kind of explosive. About two years ago, I made a video about google, uh, sabotaging the search results.

Because remember, how will show you if you google some topics, say there's like in results? yeah. So I made a video on this and they would max out IT didn't used to be this way.

Because remember watching a video years ago, if people going thousands of pages to find some blog spotted on some topic, if then became limited. I did experiment myself many times on on benie topics such as pancakes was one of them. I typed in pancakes like a billion, real, like seven hundred and million results.

And then I only go back to page forty one. And then he would recycle all those pages before the dozens of pages would recycle some of the same exact mainstream articles. And so I did this on all kinds of topics.

And now google has since removed the page numbers. And so you can only just go see more, see more, see more. And so if you google any type of topic and if you're looking for answers on this, they're going to keep sending you the same registed mainstream article. So I can't find a reliable answer on why hitler was so invested in ancient history. And again, I don't give a shit about his arian stuff.

Like, why was he into the cold? Why was like, yeah.

I want to know why he was looking for the ark of the covenant.

Well, obvious ously. Their engineering was insane. I mean, to this, like, look, so many of our best vehicles that we buy today, the most coveted vehicles came out of nazi germany and an original, right, this wagon, and was this porsha, you know, bmw, bavarian motor, ks, mean, all that.

Should the not this? I mean, have you ever seen hitler's race car? No, hitler had an auto race car.

Yeah, man, it's worth like a shit, tons of money, civic to find hitler's race car. But this was, I mean, their engineering was superior. This is the reason why we had Operation paper clip.

So Operation paper clip tly brought over all of the best nai rocket scientists. Yeah, that's how we got NASA. We got NASA essentially from notice .

that's to put on the moon, man.

I had, yeah, that's original race cars.

not fucking in crazy. But I was basically A V out.

right. Is what was the ozma's y's bends? Did you have more than one? I believe you had a later one that that that's the one well, so that one had the oud symbol in the front of IT.

Can you just clarify your pronounce? So I know if not to be offended that you're interested .

in this up i'm an american man.

We come .

up to .

your town.

So look at that photograph s click on that auto union. I guess that was what out his original name was. Isn't that crazy?

He look at that hard, pretty short, pretty flocking dope. I mean, where in one thousand nine, nine? Oh my god, it's prior. This is to worth five point five million pounds .

and illegal to sell on so many markets that pounds.

So yeah, the little sign.

so many things that would be like all that bought .

bert R A cup that the was one of a hitlist cups like one he hand up really allegedly but you know how the food they .

get in the study yeah .

but if you have that, you're monster but if you had gangs can't sord .

you're fucked and cool yeah that's .

actually interesting. That's get parent percent .

of the population.

And about he wrapped so many people that his DNA in a giant percent of people .

today and twenty person. And it's something .

we've done that before. I forget with the numbers up with the really nutty. But the point is, is something particularly disgusting to us about that one genocide.

And it's it's really interesting. And you know you you wonder like how long is going to take. We made dan carlin talk about this in depth because he talks about the mongols.

And that is so far in the past and we're talking about like twelve hundred A D. It's so far in the past that we look at IT with almost like an objective perspective instead of a moral perspective. So we say you one thing the gang is counted.

That was great to open up trade to the east. And he was a believer of all religions. You could practice anything. You didn't impose anything on people body fucked and kill you alive back, way worse than eat, where he killed ten person of the population of birth. But the notes were so recent, you, we have grandfathers and alive today they're fought more war two. And they can tell you, you man, I fuck and remember this shit and and then we have jews like orage fears dad, who was in the concentration camps. Our fears dad has a atto and is our that's well, yeah as dad and his eighties.

I believe that's that recent memory is a big part. I can see the other as thomson stuff on your world you read is a book of health Angels. You remember him talking about that aspect of IT that, uh the the bikers, the hills Angels rocked.

Not the memory, billie, the guy, he asked the guy, why? Why don't you? He's like, because my dad thought not. He thought and hate this. So I wear this, I wear this is .

to piss.

But that my point is that, you know, he would, again is consider what we do in any good, right? Has this has an emotional attachment? Again, cons mustache would be fine on me a little bit yeah .

see I see picture looks like yeah no um yes but .

that is the not see thing the fact that it's so horrific, it's just like puts any anyone who has anything to say that color outside the lions you get labeled the holocaust ie and anti cei know though the worst labels that they can put on you and a good example that is the podcast of god forget his name um but he was the tucker crossed in controversy where he had this guy in his podcast was talking about um what Williams churches role in the holocaust because they had put these embargoes on germany and basically starving everybody death and they just started calling him a how cost in our that's like nobody was talking about at all not what he was saying at all.

He was just saying, no, there's there's a multifaceted plantation for why they decided to to exterminate all these jews and part of IT was because of an embargo where they were starving people out. What is his dark Cooper and what is his podcast call is excEllent. I listen to IT all the time, but in my brains not working right now. I just got out the gym, meet something I know you're .

talking and I can't. I don a blank on IT as well.

Marter mate, that's right. Modern made and he's marter made on twitter and instagram. And you know, to call that guy in anti seen or a hole costs is so stupid.

He's a brilliant guy and his podcast is excEllent and he's really sensitive and well baLance. And he gives a very comprehensive view. He thinks that it's not in any way like prejudice is a great protest but you allowed .

to color outside the lines yeah that's all he was .

just saying that churchill was one of the villains yeah and that's very that's .

that's real alisal like the multiple different reasons for that. You tight up their belt, they're gonna. That's not going to be pass to the top.

That's going to go straight to the people on in the camp. And that's no brainer. Ship, I see the .

part of the murder of all those juice that's not working. And that's what so crazy about stifling discourse yeah because because I was a fascine conversation, we should be considering that well, well, that's crazy. There were so many factors, so many horrible things going on all together. Well.

they say you're supposed to learn from history, but how you're going to learn from history if you're actually take the lessons out of IT, right? This is important thing here. You think about this right now with the stuff in the middle east in the last twenty years, every time we put an embargo on there, we are not, we're not starving to on who saying we're starving the people in his prison to remember .

that gave Smith was talking about the on the pockets rationally during the clinton administration, the embargoes starve to death, five hundred thousand children.

Well, SHE, that's what yeah, and that's worth remembering that IT doesn't if if having that conversation makes somebody call you a holocaust, I that person should be out of the conversation in my .

and what you were an academic forme shamed by people who want to know the the whole picture.

the opposite of knowledge.

It's certainly not condoning it's fucking and it's so stupid that to not be looking at everything. The good news is that .

people are waking up to this. A lot of people think just like us where they're objective enough to understand that like, well, that's silly yeah and so they are putting themselves in a corner in the echo chAmber where people listening too many more like when IT comes, like mainstream archaeology. We called big archaeology, establishing archaeology. They're putting themselves into a corner where people like, if you're going to, if i'm going to ask questions about the sash, say i'm springing dangerous nazism. Some people buy into IT, but i've noticed that most people are like now he's asking a question.

we have the internet now. We have shows like yours and yours and mine where you can have conversations about things and and people get oh, these people that are in control, they're all loons and they're all telling us that you have to think this one way or you're the the worst person on earth. And I don't buy IT. It's a dumb way to look at the world.

It's on american. Sorry, it's just for a second. But yeah, really proud to be. I live in a country where I can have somebody with their pronouns and their fucking and bio and somebody not with their print. We can both yellow each other and .

not have a set up in jail over IT. It's also this position that people have when their heaters, when their educators and they have this position. You know, and I can speak to IT a little bit for martial arts, because in martial arts, and when when I first started doing martial arts was in the nineteen eighties.

And the nineteen and eighties, every. Discipline, believe they had the very best discipline. All the judo people thought judea's was the only martial.

You need to know all the kari. People thought kari was a tak. When do people where I came from? They all believed in tag one do.

And I took U. S, the U. S. To slam everything together. Go, oh, jesus, have the stuff is fucking useless.

Know some of its not useless, right? There are some things from like john Jones won the u fc. Heavy way title this past weekend with a tight window cake was amazing.

Yeah, that was unbelievable.

I sob so happy because I was my thing. So me watching him do that was like, yes, why are more people doing this? Like you guys should have been doing this from the beginning.

It's the most powerful kick in the sport, but this the you were in trouble if you trained in other disciplines like Brucey was a heroic and he's probably the one of the most important figures in march. Or it's not just because he induce introduce people to like myself who became martial artist because there was a Bruce leaf, and he also combined all kinds of different martial arts. And that was g condo.

He developed a style that was essentially, he took western boxing. He took some judeo that he learned in karadi and all these different techniques, and just tried to find what is the absolute best thing for just fighting. And that was, he was a heroic like he was.

His life was threatened for that. And it's because the educators want to be the only people that can distribute information, and they don't want to be chAllenged. When I was in high school, I had a teacher who his name is, mister holman.

He was a very nice guy, but he was a smart guy that wanted to be the only smart guy. And he was great. Talk to me because I was a stupid kid.

But unfortunately, one day I had watched a documentary, and I have, i've always had a very good ability to recall things. And we are a, we are in class. He was talking about the pollution in lake area.

And I had just watch a documentary about the extensive work that they had done to clean up lake early, and that they'd made these huge strides in removing pollution and crap and always different things like here. And he was talking about stuff that he had learned in school twenty years prior. And so when I was, I said, well, you know, there's A P.

B. S. Documentary and brought us up in class where there has been extensive work, and they talked about the amazing accomplishments of cleaning up gear.

And he gets so mad at me, and like, you're not mad at me, and you mad is P. B, S. Like, I don't fuck and do any research.

I watch a documentary but back then you could say you don't know what you're talking about and I couldn't pull my phone now and go, oh, but what look you that you can watch IT do like these people have done an amazing work cleaning up like year, but he didn't want anyone else to have any information what he should have said as that's fascinating. I haven't seen that documentary. Can you recall the name of IT? And let's see if we can get IT, maybe show IT to the class.

I'm going to try to do that because that's great, that that's a good sign. What i'm talking about is what lake ury had become because of industrial engineering and because of pollution and waste that was coming from all these plants. So he was true, he was correct.

But time has changed, and he did not like that. I knew that, and he didn't know that. And remember me in that classical, this is so crazy. My folk and science teacher, my science teacher doesn't want details. He doesn't want .

this happened to me. So I was in the military years ago, and IT wasn't long after I got home from rock, and I was going to warrior leadership course, which is to become any five of argent. And back then they were teaching abc, which is airway bleeding, was the other one circulation, whoever a for emergency medical uh response if someone's dying.

And they had since updated where bleeding is the most important thing to focus on because soldiers were bleeding out. And during this warrior leadership course, they're teaching the core, the class thirty people. Wrong information is since outdated.

I tried to interject to say, oh, this is what they're teaching now IT was the same exact thing that happened. He didn't stop you. This is what's writing down here.

here. I'm like, no, but that's not even what they're teaching in theory right now. Like i'm trying to this is, this is medical emergency stuff that could save someone's life and he didn't wants to hear at one bit. I couldn't believe that.

I was astonished. I have said that's interesting. I did know that we need update what we're showing you. These three factors are the same, but now we know thank you, Jimmy. Now we know that bleeding is more primary.

That should be the that's the response of a real leader, right? And a real leader you would like there's years is onna have blow hards in your class. They going to want to hear their own voice.

They want to talk about stuff. And in china and incorrect people. And but you gotta a certain amount of that, and that's the international net. And people don't like that. That's why they wanted to ban people from twitter. They don't like these people coming along that have ideas that like the great barret and declaration where, you know, the government actually inspired to get these people removed from twitter. And we know that because islam, thank god, bought twitter and change this course, but the this this was a concerted effort to take these people who were brilliant people, who had degrees, where experts in fear that they were discussing, and they decided they were going to remove them because they didn't go along with the narrative, and they were confused, using people in a time where they are trying to force vaccinations on everyone.

right? The emotion side of IT from the individual levels, like what you guys describe, you have a teacher that emotional reaction um that's a huge part of IT, but when the uh that's a huge part of that when experience with our chaos. Gy, because a lot of its not really hard science, a lot of its like i've got this area head here and i've conder up the story and so that was my story and you're not attacking the science to attacking me. But he gets even worse when you look at what they get like this hate for gram hancock in particular and gram hancock um that makes IT where it's like you can't trust a damn word that comes out of their mouth when they are discussing like if we were talking back to the martial arts um you know one of the things that came out was a kito was just as it's no good at all like man to man combat it's what was that for like samurai ed had been .

knocked a horse or some shit was designed to redistribute the energy of your attacker. O so if someone's coming at you with a sd, if you don't have a sore and a guy swings a sd in your fast enough to get away from the path, the sort, and grab the guy's ARM or body and manipulate him to the ground to remove a sod, it's essentially a disarming OK.

So not the best work against .

our restless OK.

So so now this is way Better. And restless is.

if you want to find out the best way to take a person to the ground control. We one hundred percent. no.

It's resting the most ancient sport in the world that .

dates back to the marian. And by the way, restless and restless, I include juda, I include different forms of judge to that were ancient, because these allowed people to manipulate limbs into control joints, which allowed them also to take, keep down and submit them. But the point is, you, you, you know how a bunch of people believing that this one goofs martial art was the end all, bill, because of a good .

even saw exactly. No, no. My point one there is it's like considered pretty much an expert in large and not not like you. You're a professional announcer for your see so you know you're shit so if I watched you say Stevens.

the goal, the martial arts for the city was really good.

really good at aqua but if you were if you um if you hated Stephen a goal, you were one of his many haters you could just attack a ae to without ever saying his name and just be digging a ditch you could just be buried him without ever mentioning Steven seagal name you could just attack a kedo a kito this ship martial art it's it's not effective. It's not very good. And then by extension, you're making Stevens the god look bad.

And this is what they are favorite taxes to do to hancock that they will attack this ideas. racist. It's inherently bulshed. You don't have to mention hancox and just they just grew the tube. They're so insidious .

this way yeah the connecting hancock to Whites supremacy in aliens, the dumas one. Because, first of all, he never said nothing about alien. And not only that, not only does he not think of White people built this stuff, he thinks is the people that live there, but they live there a long as time ago.

It's the same fucking people. It's africans. Whoever built the pyramids, they were africans like i'm in american.

Let me just remind the other they lived. Egypt is an african .

yeah that is the northern africa. And it's the most sophisticated construction we have ever on the face of the earth there. Anybody that disagrees, you need to really study what they accomplished in just in the great pym's. It's mind boggling precision. It's not just the incredible feat of moving massive stones hundreds of miles through the mountains.

It's the mind boggling precision of the construction of these these buildings that it's so crazy, it's almost like they made IT so nutty that even if everything dissolved, things right, IT would give us at least some clue that maybe something happened, maybe people had achieved a level of sophistication. And my thought is, and this is just a gas, is that as we move towards metal and we move towards using different kinds of combustion engines and electronics, we moved in a very specific area of technology. And we were allowed to do this because things have been relatively peaceful for a couple hundred years, okay, relatively peaceful.

And also there's war in other places. So IT allowed us to spend our time here devising ways to fuck up people over there. That's the manhattan project, right? But if you have a completely different avenue, that thinking goes in and innovation goes in.

And instead of combustion engines and electronics, you have something that we have IT even considered. And that to me, seems like what egypt is IT seems to me that they have this. Feral area.

So if the people look at egypt, you're looking at all the sand and all the shit. That is not what IT looked like in the the thousands of years before the construction. The pyramid IT was a rainforest and IT was feral.

And so my thought is these people probably had planning of food and so they didn't have to go anywhere. And so they weren't attacked that off in the nubians concrete um and that's when the statue you started changing, looking more southern african. But you you have these people that live this incredibly resource rich place, and they were able to spend thousands of years there.

And I think in those thousands of years, they devised methods that we still haven't even considered because we went in a different path, and we we can consider any other path. We consider our path and we say, well, we're the furthest we live. We live today, okay. So those fuckers in the past, they're basically cave people, right?

That's how we look at IT like dumb people playing the stones, silly. They use stones because they weren't smart ough to use metal. It's like we look at the details of stone. It's like you could say it's more impressive.

Well, we wanted to talk about go backlit ppi. Go back to tappy is not just fascinating in its construction, but also in the time mine because the time line fluked everything. Remember when gram hancock and zai haas, we're having that big debate without other guy who's an archologist american guys, very smug.

Because what evidence do you have of the civilization thousand years ago? Well, you have one now. yeah.

So you have to shut the fuck up because you are wrong. So in the one thousand nine hundred and ninety, a shepherd finds his stone. He starts kicking IT and move in around the realizes.

Well, this is a big as stone. I probable bring some smart dudes to figure this out. And they start digging, and they go, old jesus, this is these huge circles of giant stone columns with 3d carved animals on them。

At a time that we thought people were living in T. P, S, right? We thought people had stone tool. We didn't think there was any metal.

We thought I had to be done the opposite way around. We thought you needed to be a hunter, gather a former, and then you could build. Now they had to flip the entire shit on its year, actually, maybe I think they .

only flip that shit on his ear to try to make IT look like they were right about the time mine of hundred thousand to the possibility of an ancient civilization before my postini completely agree because it's the only thing that make sense. There's no way when you're just struggling to find food, okay. And if you ever gone on a fishing trip er or hunting trip, it's fun hard to get food.

When we have modern stuff, it's hard to get food. They are rifle, right? So these people were getting food and they somehow or another in between them while like running around trying to shoot rabbits with a bone error, they figured out and make these massive stone columns and put them position and and move them in circles .

and and hundred, them pretty great artists. Doing some relief car means, I mean, that's some that's .

not the same as improve were to the area. How do you even, I know this is a thing.

What is this? So go back the tap, rather, if there is such a thing, is an ancient conspiracy. Y theory, it's this.

So I remember hearing gram hancock come on your show back in like twenty fifteen or twenty seventeen. And he was talking about quebec ki tapping. And at that time he had shared that the site IT was only approximately five percent excavated.

Is the first video on my channel. It's like August twenty seventeen. And I share the details of IT. These these pillars, these back one thousand six hundred years, appears to be purposely buried at the same time of the Younger dry climate atap ropy. This is fascinating.

And you know, exhibitions were continuing some like, okay, i'm onna backburner, this topic of quebec y tepi for a little while that them further their excavations. And i'll revisit this later when there's something new to share. So earlier this summer, i'm like, alright, let me let me revisit quebec type I and see what's new there. And I was astonished to learn that that five percent figure was still the same.

Have you heard this? Yeah, i've watch your videos .

on youtube channel bright insight tribe.

undeniably ly strange. Your videos are undeniably strange. So here's some images where you could see what IT kind of looks like, along with this global heritage fund dot org story on IT. So so shows five percent, five percent. And that figure is still the .

same as of twenty twenty three. I had part of one. There's a lady who does tours there and corporate the five percent figure. And then there's a gentleman name, newman, who's an author and also leads tours.

And he communicates with me that what they were gonna and I couldn't believe this, they're going to a differ a full scale execute ation for, quote, future generations with a one hundred and fifty year estimated time frame for a full executive ation of quebec c tap. And i'm like, way to second. Are you seriously this makes no sense. We're talking about arguably not just the world's oldest ancient site, but arguably the most mysterious because it's like you're just not supposed to exist based on everything we're tight in school is to with the semi ans and then you have decided to go back to tap day, made up of sophisticated pillars and concentric surface.

at least five thousand years .

older that older, almost seven thousand years older than stone hinge. And stone hinge is a mystery of itself. So I start looking, I started google and looking into the details. And like this doesn't make any sense.

How could there possibly be? How could they differ excavations for future generations, when this may be the most important ancient site on earth involving our lost, our mysterious lost ancient past? And so I started digg into this, and I couldn't believe what I found.

So they were doing large skill excavations, but that has since, just to clarify, they are still excavating quebec, the tea, but they have rolled and dialed back the large school executions of the year's prior. And they are focusing on conservation and tourism management of the site. And like I said, with one hundred and fifty year time frame, and i'm like way to second, I and I have all the three shots and outfit .

because of funding.

absolutely none. So not only have they never claimed that is related to funding, but this is where things get bizarre, is that there's a turkish conglomerate, LED, the doge's group, which consists of two hundred and fifty companies within turkey. It's a billion dollar industry and they're the ones that took over management in funding of the site back in twenty seventeen.

And they announce this at all places. The world economic four meeting in davos in twenty sixteen, when the announced partnership initial funding of fifteen million dollars at that time, this up the infrastructure for tourism, for roads, sidewalks, walkways, roofing platforms. And since then is when they dial back the excavations and like this makes absolutely no sense.

So IT has let me just be Christal clear here. IT has nothing to do with funding, and they've never claimed there is anything to do with funding. But their excuses, they have said, one of which is that, well, we want to wait for, uh, future technologies to develop so we can more safely execute.

Ate the site. And like way to second, hold on a second. We're talking about hiller's buried in dirt is twenty twenty four. Do not tell me that we do not have the technological capability .

would be an alternative explanation.

So okay, this is where things get fun, boy. So rabbit.

here you let me say a couple .

of things before I get into IT. One of which is that them saying that they're waiting for a future technology to develop to safely exhibit the site of like what type of magical shovel or pressure waterholes are we talking about here?

right?

And and since they're saying that they're continuing to explore the site today, since are saying to continue to activate the site today, i'm like what which is IT? Are you saying that you're doing so in unsafe methods and already know that's not the answer because there has been no issue with destructing the site um from digging up, it's not likely broke a pillar. And like our dang way to second, we need to walk this back.

We're not doing things safely, not the case here. Um so there are a few explanations, so I want to hear so one of which is that I the most logical explanation, this is the less conspiratorial one, which is that he has to do with money. You have this turkish conglomerate of people that are saturated with members of the world economic form.

For example, the CEO of the doge's group is a long time member of the world economic form that may backin the world economic form. For a half a second. Their business people, they took over the site and its all about money.

Now back in twenty nineteen gobaze y top, I had approximately ninety thousand visitors early. Now is at half a million. They're focus, if nothing else, they're just trying to bring revenue in. Its all about money, but they don't care .

about exhibit less is not in fifty million .

money right and and they just want their money back, okay unlike that make sense IT doesn't make sense the way .

in on that road quick. And also the mystery place is that side is probably the second most popular place in the planet with people like ourselves. And um the more mystery is there, the more money is, the more likes we deal in mystery. So if there if they escalate everything that we know, everything there is about that side and it's all super munday and there's nothing cool about IT anymore that that .

tit drives up and how .

ever stop being agree agree. I know with that that one doesn't make any sense that as he who was kind of thing he of the same opinion where um I I think a lot of the same thing, excuse me, happen in egypt the same reasons are he who wasis quarter was saying that those new age people who doesn't matter what happens in egypt, the new age people, they come it's about tourism. And ever since the area, spring tourism and you just been lower.

So I think a lot of the same like that we're going to talking a minute about hidden chAmber in the pyramid that they have located and still have an for whatever pluck in the reason, I think that might be part of IT if you want to get super mundane and not conspirator is this. And the tourists keep coming. While there is a mystery, there is soon we opened that up, just an empty, empty chAmber.

I mean, so I don't think I don't buy that the mystery of the structures themselves that we have completely excavated is just so fast.

Let me be clear on, go back in tap. I IT summer between five and ten percent executions ated.

which means archaeology sites that were only ten percent or less have been uncovered.

none of which date back anywhere near remotely as old as quebec ly tai. And so just to put this into perspective, quebec ly tep, according to ground pedicure and radar, consists of approximately two hundred t shape pillars. Only seventy two of them have been on earth.

And as of just a few years ago, they are, they're dying that back to fully execute, ate them, which, again, one hundred fifty years time frame, and like this, is entirely unacceptable. IT is there could be hidden answers about our lost ancient past waiting to be discovered on these pills, because all the pillars are trying to tell us some sort of story. The all the depictions, animals.

all kinds of things on there.

There's the shaman with the bag, right? Which is seen interesting, right? We've seen that from the semi ans we've seen in south america.

The black thing is very fascinate .

IT is it's hotly debated was.

yeah, i'm sure I don't mean you could say may be it's a tool bag. You could say maybe it's sycom x he's gotten that bag.

Academic is water. It's a water.

It's a water bucket. N A M H. He is the one that he was on apocalypse as on one for a minute he is the guy who the made basically a star map of go that pillar forty three.

And in his opinion, those three handbags, the top were three sun rises. And if that's the case, that would almost make sense because then like a picture of an a syrian holding, that would be like holding a vastly amic knowledge like this. This symbol could have been a symbol of knowledge of me, which is one thing, honestly, about go back, I mean.

economic sense, that probably to travel around with their books.

So here's the thing, that pillar that's just one pillar of two hundred. And here we are debating.

We don't even know what that is.

It's all conjecture. So this cob tappy situation is far more far then we've described so far. I think the .

logical explanation knows that you have massive tourist revenue coming to see that as is why spend more money and execute these things?

I think that's the most the pillar. I think that's the most logical explanation. But IT could be more insidious than .

that because that's one pillar.

That's piller forty three, the most debated one of them all. And there's approximately one hundred and twenty eight more pillars that are still buried in the earth.

What a bird doing holding the earth that that doctor mart, doctor Martin sweatman h his first paper on go beck ly tippy pillar forty three, he's got scorpio in the bottom.

He'd believes that sagar that's the sun and if uh that that's one basically to star map denoting the time that the comments map the earth is, is what people each one of those fees and his latest paper on each one of those v symbols is a day, each one, in his opinion, each one of those boxes is a month and there is basically a full year to noting the whole thing, the way he's broke us. Very interesting stuff, and what interest that's wild to me. And when we talk about like the lack of further rescue, ation is almost every pillar we bring up as new, new symbol, new symbol's, new iconography.

If we're trying to find some sort of ancient proto language or something, we're we need more symbols. We need more things on earth. yeah. And that's completely opposed by the mainstream archaeology, the idea that these guys had any sort of written language .

is fuck and ridiculous. What are the theories involved in you? I know it's therefore zed that I was purposely covered in. T IT really looks like IT.

If you look at pictures of the excavation, IT looks like IT was all piled in with stones and dirt, because if IT was some sort of natal event to what to destroy the call, the pillars, the pillars are preserved. So IT wasn't just blown in with dust. If you look at its gravel, and like his gram, hancock has to explained that claus' mdt, the original executor of the site before, is untimely passing in twenty thirteen IT. The people have worked the cycle that was intentionally buried that is debated in the in academia today.

But isn't there are also a carbon isotope dating of the ground soil that shows at the same age throughout the entire whatever feet IT is of the the?

yes. And so it's very apparent that IT was purposely buried. And what's interesting about that is that a coincides exactly with the Younger drives climate.

So if you want an alternative idea, the on. So, okay, we lies. No, because I would destroy those.

Those pillars knock come over. IT. Yeah, that's that. I've seen that in iraq with the status.

So what's here? Let's talk about this in a second. This is, so this is where things get wild. So that is .

before the excavation. This is an erie photo. From what years .

is that should be two thousand four or nineteen ninety four. They started activation in nineteen ninety .

four and one thousand and ninety five. So that is when there was just thought was just a regular hills de, which is makes you wonder more there.

There are finding dozens of other sites around turkey.

There are even older and older.

yes.

So let me tell you a few different things about quebec ley tap. When you bring up pictures of the pillars, notice how the all antitch animals on them. yeah.

Now this is a fun topic, and I have a few other things to share, uh, one of which is that if you want to talk about reasons not to execute ate IT, i'll give you two possibilities and this is just conjecture. I don't know what the answer is. Let me say this up front, but part of you could have a religious implication as well as a climate change implication.

Then we start with that. So we know IT is an established fact that the Younger drives climate catastrophe happened between twelve thousand and eight hundred and one thousand six hundred years ago. We know that there was vast changes in weather patterns throughout the northern hemisphere, the only part of IT that's debated and as well as near extinction events or extinction events of many different males in north america.

Um but um what we know is that something happened. Whatever IT is, is what's debate whether it's a cosmic impact, well, it's a pull shift, whether suncor cle all kinds of a conjecture all the way around. But when I mention the W E F, they are the biggest proponents of the men made climate change energy of they're ones that want to get rid of gas powered stoves, they want us to get rid of vehicles.

They are pushing their initiatives around the world, and they believe that we're destroying the planet on that saying they're entirely wrong, but I don't agree with their ways of going about IT, but that's a side point. But here's the thing. When you look at the legend of noise flood and the and nose ese me know is arc and the flood.

So i'm not suggesting that there was a flood that covered every mount on earth in, nor my suggesting that there was a boat that housed every species of animal on earth. However, if no is arc existed, many believe that I was, uh, crashed onto mount era, which is also in turkey. And something fascinating is that in the bible and genesis eight twenty, some of the first verses after nowhere emerged from the flood, is that he was said to have constructed and alter to the lord, where he sacrifice some of every clean animal and some of every clean bird.

Quebec tappy is in turkey in every single one of those pillars, annotates animals. And some have suggested that IT could be no as alter. Now that could be one reason why they won't want to execute ate IT is because turkey is in an islamic country.

And if if there were some Christian religious belief that was co aborted, they might not want that to happen. Another possibility is that the site itself might CoOperate. The Younger drives climate catastrophe, he and when we're in a time from where they don't, they don't like talking academics.

They don't like talking about catalysis. They want to pretend they don't. They didn't happen if they want everything to be man made climate change. They don't ever talk about the sahara being Green five thousand years ago, like when you're talking about egypt being a reinforced.

They find whale bones in this.

And oh, those are thirty million years old to stop talking about IT. Yes, it's amazing .

you think about .

yeah and so as far as the climate change narrative there, there could be a possibility that they don't want the evidence of a of a pre historic civilization that was more advanced than what we ever thought to believe that might corporate some Christian natives. And if nothing else, they don't wanted to be back into the discussion of modern day climate change. Because notice on the top of climate change, they never mention natural stuff.

They don't discuss the blank of cycles, which consists of three variables, one of which is the earth procession, the other is the earth tilt and the other is the distance from, uh, the earth, from the sun. All three of those variables are constantly changing every single day, although in memorable day by day, they happened over tens of thousands of years. But each individual of those variables impact climate on earth.

For example, when I talk about the Green sahara, they believe the most likely reason has to do with earth processional cycle. And like a way to second, where's this in the conversation of monday climate change? If we're talking about us destroying the planet, I would just like an answer as far as where these three variables .

are in the conversation, did you see the washroom posts very a inconvenient data that they published about the temperature of earth?

No.

please help find the washed. And post climate study, they found that we were in a massive cooling period. If you go back, you know, x amount of hundred thousand years and you look at like what's happening to, yeah IT goes in cycles, but that's what IT looks like now.

User's climate over the last four and eighty five million years, look at the the dip were then. Look how it's never static. It's down and up and down and up and down and up all throughout the history of the earth, which is measurable. And it's not to say that we don't have .

an impact on IT. We definitely prety increased .

thing even if we didn't. But the sharp increases .

in the couple look .

at those look you look at three hundred and ninety million years. That's fuck and craze that that's straight up and down. Yes, it's always happened. It's not like it's static.

And then industrial engineering comes along and then you see this big increase, old boy, what are we doing to the earth? No, it's like even if we didn't do anything, we have no control over the temperature of the earth. And what's really terrifying granda crossing talks about the same time is global cooling. That's, it's really terrifying. When global warming happens, oh no, you've gotta move out a malo, you're gonna be OK kind of move to the blazes were used to be called and now it's warm because humans have always been no matic.

That's the whole reason where were not afraid more in us, all right?

So global killing will kill. Global cooling will kill everything. And we came, randal talks about this, that we came very close at one important human history, that we came very close to losing the little change this required to literally keep life.

Jimmy, when we bring up my ice age or ice folder so I have an update for you from the last time I was on your podcast. Um go over to the graph should be one of the first slides in that one. Go hang out right there for a second.

So when I was on your show last time, joe, I discussed, I said something very specific. I said, I think that this is about my exact words. I think the data might indicate the cold is more often than its hot.

And you know what happened after that? I was going to send to you but I held off because you've seen enough headpieces. So um there was a hit piece on on me by media matters which was funded by George soros and their networking of vox and other.

They did the hit piece of me to say that Jimmy course said he was on georgine spreading climate change denial and inaccurate. The only thing if you could bring that backup, jammy, please. The only thing that I said wrong is that I said the data might indicate that the earth is called more often than a hot excuse me, know the the data absolutely definitely shows that earth is called more often than it's hot.

And what you're looking at here is straight out of the utah ological survey procedures. It's fn of the top of google. And what you're looking at here is data from the last four hundred and fifty thousand years corporation from data taken from ice core samples from antartica as well as Greenland.

And what this shows is that not only are we in the middle of a three million year old ice, there is something called glacial and inner glaciers, glaciers, or where it's cold in the glaces grow interglacial, or where things warm and glaciers recede. What you're seeing here is for argument five interglacial periods over just the last four hundred and fifty thousand years, and never one hundreds of millions of years ago. What IT shows is that the periods of cooling last seven to nine times longer than negligible, which are periods of warming.

And here's with the fun part, integers ious last anywhere from ten to thirty thousand years and are warming started eleven thousand, six hundred years ago, which means that we're already in the window for potential catastrophe, for things to start cooling again. So when I was on your show last time and I was matching elon must talking about, I say A D talking, well, I know what he's talking about, is this IT means that we're already in the window where things could start cooling again. And when he does, where in a lot of trouble, I think, and I can't speak on his behalf, I would, I gotta tell you next, could you just text them and ask them if he thinks it's related?

Poll shifts, I need to tighten up by study on this because i'm like I think because let me tell you something, let me share something right now that you've never heard on the show before. You hear everyone talking about cosmic impact yp thesis, hear people talking about sn cycles. Not a lot of people have been on.

You're talking about pull shifts. Let me give a quick shout out to bend Davidson of suspicious observers. I recommend maybe you look up with him.

Nobody has research the topic of pull shift and sun cycles as much as him. And he brought something to my attention I had never heard before. Jimmy, the very first flight that you showed was of the gothenburg excursion.

So there was a partial poll flip right in the middle. See how the dates between thirteen thousand seven and two thousand thousand three. So the Younger dry started twelve and eight hundred years ago, and it's right in the middle of that bowl park range. We already know IT is established signs that when geomantic police versions happen, IT changes weather patterns on earth, on earth, as well as the ocean current. Jammy, if you want to google um there's a bed stock com article title that in twenty twenty five sine some scientists are suggesting that the earth's ocean currents may stop.

Have you heard this? No.

okay. And nowhere in the articles that you mention anything about police version. So people need to understand that we're already in the middle of a of a police version, which is a partial poll foot, which means that things are shifting inside the earth. It's also known that that can cause changes in ocean current. Now most mainstream m articles that we just be fair until you they'll say we'll say that oh no it's related to me and my climate change weird we are changing the current of the ocean. I don't believe that um but don't allowed to let them take your data look at this nowhere in this article to explain why um but here's the thing people need to understand that the number one thing that affects weather on earth is of course the sun the second thing is ocean current is the reason, is the reason why england is relatively temperatures back, is the reason why england is relatively temperate is because the gold stream flows up there and IT keeps IT relatively warming.

The person the way he says here, key atlantic current could collapse soon, impacting the entire world for centuries to come, leading climate scientists warn. So just by saying climate scientist, you're already implying at least this is the result of climate change, which further fuels this agenda that man made, climate change is the cause of all of our wales. This is a narrative that you are consistently hearing.

And again, to be real clear to someone going to say something about this, this is not to dismiss pollution. This is not to dismiss our impact on the atmosphere of the earth and what we're dealing with coal plants and all the bullshit they were doing. For sure, we're doing bad things, right? Also, if we weren't IT, we have no control of this thing.

This thing is constantly moving, and both of those things need to be looked at. At the same time, the problem is this whole narrative of climate science has been adopted by the same fucking people that want twitter plum prononce s it's the same people. It's the same sort of thing.

And if you have anything to say about IT, if you want to talk about a swash of an ancient symbol, now you are not see if you know your climate denier, you're vaccines. Day after that, you are whole costs. Now it's like the same kind of stupid shit. And unfortunately with this one, this one is uniquely tied to money, this one is uniquely tied to Green agendas, and the enormous amount of funding that is going towards these Green agendas and people that are profiting off of spreading this narrative for a throw capitalist that are making hundreds of millions of dollars promoting this idea of climate change being our primary problem. And and if you deny your science denier in the reason why you shouldn't .

sten to these people is because you're leaving out the key data involving in both historical earth's historical climate data, they're not including all these other details, right? Um and so I think people need to look at pulseless because it's very interesting in this alternative round that you have people that are proponents of the of the uh cosmic impact hypothesis.

You have doctor robbs shock with the sun cycles you have other people talking about or shifts. I think people should consider that all the above are correct. And the me explain why when poll shifts happen, earth shields are diminished.

We're in the middle of a pull shift right now. The earth shield ds are diminishing, and it's been happening since the eight hundreds. It's been accelerating over last few decades. The specific data, uh, the north pole is shifting IT like almost forty miles a year when I was half that just a decade ago. And when the uriel ds diminish, when we are more suspect ble to cosmic impact because less miles a year, google, this is real.

Wow, it's no A I thought was free. Now the mainstream will say.

don't worry, it's still another thousand years away. And like they actually can prove that because we have never, we've never been we haven't been alive to document a pole shift. But what i'm trying to say is that we should consider .

the polls think brother, ask thoughts actually twist he twisted something about the magnetic poles oh my god yeah he tweet something about, um I think .

he actually retreated the court of the S I get me that's the case because .

here's the thing .

much IT is he doesn't too much. It's less .

effective because i'm like I missed stuff and and I follow him costly.

The molten rock.

which generates most of our magnetic field, is eighty five percent iron and moves independently from the surface plates, which is why the magnetic pull changes position.

I love brian romela saying, this time we follow each other. He's a great guy. I think you a mosque is giving a hint here, because you member how the northern light are visible as far south as mexico s in the just last few months.

that was from solar activity.

right? But the reason why it's more visible now is because the our shields are diminishing. This I not make. This isn't like from bob's website. This is mainstream science again.

Then Davis has taught me a lot on this, and he was actually on with alex Jones not long ago, and he really blow out jone's mind. He voted him. And so what i'm trying to say here is that, like this is not being brought into the .

equation of many climate change, is talking about the to the with the information. And they don't want to look at the full picture. They only want to look at this one thing for the greater good of all of us. It's Better if you just get people to only focus on getting an electric car. Well.

like i've i've always ever since I started doing this stuff, i've had people and like a man, you fact check scientists, we want you in the climate change debate and i've always had the opinion of, like, look, i'm talking about big gold rock and move at egg zero zero zero skin in the game and if if i'm wrong about that, nothing changes but if i'm wrong about climate change and I get a bunch of people, I feel a little like it's it's not your not by your events for tests there's too much skin in the game, right? But when I did the bumpkin of flat devils, the bumpy of gram, the part about the meddle erg, I. Spoke with the ice core specialist, another, but a handful of these dudes on the planet.

literally just a handful.

That was very important part of the things.

Appreciate that the guy blew the roof on that. I contacted first and.

well, explain what you did. Well, I spent an hour room chat what to do because what flint said was that there was no proof of metal logy in the ice age. And well, of course, there's no proof IT. But there he said that we can prove, definitely there was no medal logy. And that's where it's like, well, no, because they look for levels of LED and levels of LED.

That graph you just showed with the integration periods LED that because when there's more dust on the ground that the reason they believe is and more dust on the ground, more gets kicked up, more ends up in the glorious. But that's the same dirt that would be kicked up if they were digged for iron or right? So either way, you're going to end up with more LED and the glacier.

I talk to this ice core specialist for an our own zoo, and I like band. So I flesh this out for he explained to me, so he explains me how to determine whether or not lead from an anthropogenic ic origin or for its natural. And that's based on if there's an archaeology site that they can match the other isotopes to.

He went through all the troubles with that. He even lamented having he's got other people in his field that are hard core anti udo science because their new climate change deniers are dealing with them. So he's all and he's like some of these guys are just too zales over zealous with I get where you're coming from but then I put the video out and flint contacts I dude and next thing you know well, you know I didn't exactly say that to he.

He doesn't change what he says. He just kind of implies that I wasn't quite be an act. He doesn't, he doesn't give a four IT makes IT vag all the sudden and IT quite clear he was pressured from a fucking y archaeologist he's climate, the climate science.

Why you care? Because they are all part of the same little twitter keyboard warrior yeah twitter number yeah and that that right there changed my attitude on, I changed my attitude on the whole global warming thing. I was like, it's probably accurate and was like, uh, you know, i'll fucked in noma a to dig into this sunk because I don't trust your switches anymore. I know that if somebody pressured him from upstair, he would have crumbled like a bag because he showed .

him when flint pushed him. So the issue is that it's not like there's one explanation that could conceivably have caused this massive chemical ism. There's probably a lot of variables, just like there's always been.

I mean, we always like to conventional ignore super volcanoes. One of those blows the whole, the whole world's fuck the countries dead, everyone's fucked. You should .

consider the possibility that that's related to pull ships as well. And I can give you a point, there is one that happened, you know, i've heard you talk about before, the toba super rupture. Did you know that happened the same time of a, of a geometry polar sion? Boy.

it's make sense. You have this movement.

this movement inside the earth. A full pole shift is when they believe that the inter, the inter most portion of the multon within the earth core shifts. A geomantic pool excursion is a partial pull flip, which these theorize is related to the outer portion of the mental.

The earth crust sits on top of multon everything, and when that shifts, the shifts our compasses. And it's not unreasonable to suggest that when something shifts inside the earth, IT would affect things on the surface. I I touched on this in the last time I was on. But when IT comes to earthquakes, as an example, some originate in the crust, which is like twenty eight miles at.

Is that because they believe are on average, and others originate in the multon other portion of the mental well, if something shifts inside the earth, why won't IT cause issues on the surface, whether at the earthquakes or volcanic ic activity? In some volcanic activity involving supervolcano, OS coincides with geometry tic polis versions. And so when I was on your show last time talking about pull shifts, along with the ice sages, I was the part of the same topic.

Why is IT that media matters funded by George soros, decided to do a hit piece on jimmie core setting the youtube r brother. They came after me hard on this, which I, to be honest, I relished over. I was like this hilarious. I like.

they don't understand. It's actually good publicity. IT is and that makes me feel like diable anymore, right?

And IT makes me feel like i'm over the target because what's that saying about you get the most flat when you're over IT? So like unlike IT makes me think that am on to something because nowhere in any of these climate change topics, the met, you know, as far as, like the narratives on IT, do they mention anything natural involving whether to be pull shifts. They sure held on bring up the Green sahara.

They don't bring anywhere into the equation. They don't bring up the scientific fact that the earth was warm or four thousand years ago. There's nobel prize relates that have been speaking out about.

This is two of them, doctor cloutier. And there's another gentman i'm going to draw blank in the top my head. But like theyve shared this data. This is a scientific fact and they're getting shunned and .

ridiculed LED for IT. Yeah the problem is, is there's a consensus that's been politically accepted and and it's been talked about so much as a political talking point. If they lose that political talking point, they lose a large percentage of their platform.

Oh yeah, right? There's so many parts of the liberal, the left, this platform, but they they need to to have these narratives. And one of them is climate change. And that Donald trump p as a climate change denial, the right ring people are climate change denial .

urgo science deniers urgo racist.

It's it's very, very, very, very stupid. And it's bad for all of us, because I think we all need to have an understanding of how delicate our environment is and how delicate life on earth is. And that IT is this constantly changing thing that has never been static. We know that we know about the dinosaurs, know about all these different things, we know about the ice, but we don't truly have A A comprehensive narrative that everyone accepts. It's become politicized ah and it's become is by the worst people because they're the cultists.

Yes, they are the ones that made not the only ones but a lot less political than a lot of people in this community. And I said IT, when covent first started getting bad and you could see IT on the internet, I was real quick to say, but we're going to be fucking locked down for years, guys and everybody y's laughing at me. But it's like it's a political football.

Neither side, neither side is going to to drop a square. We don't live in a society of political compromise anymore. We given a society of given, actually take a mile in other side, is going to concede one fucking inch on this. And we are going to be dealing with the same argument three years or now. And blow and behold, you were dealing.

And that's what crazy about this, is that data has become political science and data and knowledge completists ze.

Over eighty thousand papers were retracted last year. Eighty thousand scientific papers and all the vat, like sixty percent of them were medical. The top ten most still cited papers that have been retracted or all medical.

The medical community is is the right now from from covey IT turned in on itself and just started. If you look at their papers and stuff, it's insane. They are all at each other throats in all kinds of different ways, still citing retracted papers and all kinds of goofy little shit.

Because if we came a foot, a political football, we can see on tiktok, you watching, you watch a nurse come out there and she's going to be, do a little tiktok. You can just look as at a donkey, extra name or an elephant is an elephant. You going to tell you if there's nobody in this hospital and it's fuck and empty, it's a donkey. He can tell you about the body outside a machine outside making corp starts out of the fucking and dead people that are they can vary much faster or donates IT was so openly easily from the average joe could look right through IT could just see if this is a fucking this is is an argument between the two parties isn't IT as they're just transfer this to the medical problem.

You remember in the beginning days of the pandemic when they were really fear mongering, when they gave a preposterous number of people that we're going to die from covet.

And what was the percentage at the high point was IT like three and a half percent or something like that? Or was that thirty percent IT was something that there's a compilation video jme see if you find IT where they're dunking on Donald trump because dog prom heard less than one percent. He was was told the person he was .

about the U. V. Stuff too.

But I I think they was trying to say that he was thirty four percent. I think that's what they're saying. It's three point four or thirty four. Can't remember which.

But they were repeating IT at nosie on television that this was going to death rate of people that get covered is one of things that justify the lockdowns. If IT really was less than one percent, people go, what? So it's like, what's the flu? And then you get in the flu.

You, well, what's the percent tage difference? Like fifty percent difference OK. What do we do in? Yeah, is a bad flu.

This, this is like a bad flu, but you can't say that or you're some kind of anti science. Hr, you're terrible person. Your killing grandmas .

if you want to mix IT up. Jamie, there's a video. The last time I was on, I mentioned a clip of Donald trump talking about it's going to get cold again and I we didn't find the clip at the time, but I have IT in my folder. Je, it's just Donald trump. It's in the front .

all the other step at a time. I try to find that video of them all repeating the same thing over and over again. It's brian stelter that little Whiter and see and and constantly repeating the fact that Donald trump doesn't nobody talk about he was right. He was absolutely correct.

Donald trump t doesn't just say things out of his, but like people make him out to be I saying he doesn't talk in that way. O OK OK o OK .

when you .

renter if you're renter, you on your podcast.

he wasn't talking about this.

But with the uv killing off. Bacteria and viruses?

No, no, he just said IT in a way that wasn't logical. He said, like you get the light in the body he talking about. But no, they figured out how to get L, D, lights into lungs to kill viruses.

Specific thing, look, type Donald truc video.

death rate. Death rate is what's important. Death rate a completion versus the media. And the media was the one that we're dunking on him for. And they were coming over this ridiculously high rate that turned out to not be accurate at all.

But I think we have these those people, those people, the left or whatever you want to go different debs of the fucker world, these guys are they like we talking about with climate change and everything else. They don't want to leave anything in there could let the other side have anything. They assume that the average ranking joe ranking file joe public, is dumas health right?

Mean, one of the things i'll always say about ancient apology complained about that be like, well, he goes on there. He talk shit about archaeologist and everybody d's going to believe everything he says because it's so well made it's like men I didn't do that at all in the first season. You did talk a little about archaeology but the bottom to me, if i'm watching us anything I don't care what IT is if the person says, you know, the mainstream scientists disagree with me here.

But here's what I have to say. All my alarm bells go off and that tells me I cannot hang my head on what this mother fucker saying. I got to go google.

That's what gram does over and over again. Mainstream marchio logic disagree with me. So for them to say, everybody in the country's .

just everybody the world's is. So give me some volume here.

and a lot of conversations with a lot of people to do this. I think the numbers igh under one percent. So the fact check the world health organza says the corona virus death rate is three point four percent. President from lies that the world health organization is wrong.

the number is three point four percent, four .

percent is deaf.

right? The percentage is three point four percent. And no hunt from the president can change that. The most recent health organization estimate that the the three point four percent death rate was wrong in W H O. Data later .

updated IT to faction .

one per back in the history.

trump has a hunch that .

the .

death rate is lower than one percent of .

the city, and viewers .

the mortality .

information, spreading information .

is a dangerous information.

The world's greatest ciencias. England could be considerably less than one percent.

way under one percent.

See, this is we've seen enough. These people fuck and puppets and the puppets, and they willfully, gleefully repeat these narratives. yes.

And instead of saying, well, where did you get that information? Who are you talking to? Let's find out if that's correct.

Why is the world health organization think is three point four percent? Is there any nefarious intent behind this whole idea of the killing everybody that's forcing some enormously profitable venture, like forcing everybody to take these fucking in new vaccines you guys developed, right? Is that IT? Could that be factored in? Maybe we will know only only here that it's factor in once everybody is is profit and got out, including bill gates yeah bill gates, who was on television telling everybody to get the vaccine you won't get code and then afterwards didn't work, unloaded all of a stock because he wasn't effective and IT turns out cover IT wasn't as bad.

We thought I was well, you guys are really responsible for a bunch people taking a medication that was unproven. You're responsible for all the side effects. You're responsible for all. And you're responsible for fear mongering line, closing down businesses, ruining economies, changing the political structure of the country they need .

to be held to account. I am not going to forget this. And a lot of other people want people's lives were destroyed and IT is, I mean, there needs to, there needs to be recording.

Elon recently said that he still has pronouncer still prosecute, fought.

I love IT. I love IT. A A real .

possibility of making an impact? No, yes, he does. I mean, they listen to him yeah .

when IT comes to the IT comes to the the economic site. But I honestly think if out of everything, if would the job not withstanding, just strictly from the top downer speak, is those guys I mean the .

most immense transfer of wealth in the modern hip.

amazon war, ebay, all these clean house. And you know what ut spoke, can we lost wild elephant? This guy had started in the forties. After world war two, he would buy surplus and put IT in the store. He had fishing wars for thirty cents, what I can transformers from the eighties, you I was buying in two thousands old money, ebay get all kinds of shit there and he went out of business because as he had to closed doors, oh everything you can even go ah you can even go to fucking walmart two in the morning like we did like everything close now at a certain time compared to where I was.

Everything really important because the ground virus doesn't stay .

up up up and IT doesn't exist when you walk to your table well and sit down.

all the homeless people need a place to hang out. And so walmart .

parking lot to show up. I meant actually the opposite is, but IT doesn't, is like the whole thing was so done because then they allow black lives matter protests, like, what about six fit, distancing everything, breathing IT. They're screaming, yelling down the street. And you guys think that's not good read IT, right?

And the brain dead stuff behind the symbol is my talk about this a long time ago, my channel, the person that thought of what we're going to have this band to play, let's get the masks. S that have a big hole in IT to show solidarity with everybody. Audience, fuck. And it's like everybody y's .

going to look at that like .

people swimming .

so don't go the mass on inhered .

me to see those clips. Now, coit was one of the biggest psychist .

in modern times. IT was really a compliance test that to see how many cowards there are out there that even, even though they know something to be true, are terrified of the blow back. So they don't speak about IT.

And when you do speak about IT, you do get attacked. No, I obviously experiences that, and I was fascinated by that. I mean, he was kind of horrifying to watch, but also fascinating.

Like, oh, so this is real. Like you guys are just completely all lock and step and awful shit. And if you don't even care that I got Better.

quick brought two by fizz. yes.

And you can watch how the world, you can see this from a world perspective. Two different communities all around the world react differently. I remember lots of people, or why can't we do like korean? And well, almost everybody, he's wearing a mask over there and they do all this reporting all this time is like, yeah, you ever bend their men you were talking any koreans or job people, they're fucking culture is lockstep compared doors.

They are very much there's there's no counter culture in those community. There's counter culture. People are in jail, so you have one community. So yeah, they are told to do this. I can do that.

Well, obviously we don't do that means so compromise, so obviously compromise, you know, Kelly means has a really good point about this. He was saying that the reason why they spend so much money advertising on cable news is not because it's effective.

It's because once they do that, now cable news cannot criticize them, right? It's it's so much smarter because it's like, listen, we're spending all this money just to make sure that you guys told the line that's what they're doing. And so the news is not the news, is only the news. If an advertiser agrees that it's the news and that's not good.

no, that's good for anybody.

Left wing, right wing, if you think to somehow another money gives a fuck about your political persuasion, it's it's so stupid that I got attached to a political ideology. And from the most complaint of people, those are the ones who are the most willing to go along with the narrative, because the consequences is on the left of of coLoring outside the lines.

They attacked you so hard, they crush you so hard that this moderates situation, or any anything, anything where you're stepping outside the one to talk about IT though, like what you experience just discussing something that turns out to be absolutely correct. They fund a big hit piece about you, which essentially access an advertisement for you, right? Just build your and effect, then people, what's good to your channel? This guys great.

Just like this is interesting information and just underived facts. The underlying able facts like that, no one can discuss, no one can debate in any way. They perform the actual size.

These stones where they came from. This is not under debate. So just the undeniable stuff is unbelievably fascinating.

And then when they go to your channel, they go, where's all the nazi shit? I like this ni and nose. I was in fact.

you we should go back to go back to top the go on putting in the great pyramid because there's some more stuff involving archaeology and lack of excavations. They're actually pretty significant. So going back to go back the tappy, one of the photos at jammy that you showed earlier was before activations began, and you knows that there was no trees there. So one of the controversies is that there's some eight hundred trees that were planted on the site a full decade after excavations began, and the the trees are buried on, replanted on top of ancient ruins, which stands to not only destroy the ruins, but also also highlights the that they can execute, ate with underneath them what the trees are there. And so here's the .

boring after. So what what's the conventional explanation for why they planted all these trees over a site that they know .

is filled with rules? And so when this property, this was a property owned by farmers, and the turkish government want to purchase the land for them, and the owners felt that they were being low bowled. So what they did was they planted all of trees on top of the site in order to increase the value of the land, which, for me, when I first heard this, unlike I don't understand this doesn't make sense to me.

Gobelet peppy is already Price. This is the world's oldest, the most murderous sancian side on earth. It's Priceless. Now to be fair, and dan, you you've held on this and I really agree with you.

it's stuff. If the food are going to buy your land for a highway, they don't care what's. You are an indian barrel ground or what? It's, what's this land worth in this city? Is this this kind of problem? So he made in an order instead of a desert.

Now here's the thing though, of all things, they planted all of trees. And there's something that was enacted is called the olive of law in turkey in the nineteen thirty, where it's illegal to cut down all of trees in turkey. So i'm like, well, that's interesting.

And let me this real work. Imagine just imagine being the owner of that property and you've got this you've found these rules here. You've got these people coming out there paying your money to check IT out.

You're so in all kinds stuff. And now you're the governments going to take IT from you. You've had to for ten fucking years and now the government saying it's there. So you got, you start planting trees. So when you dig a hole to plant that tree, you find an artifacts.

Do you put that in the pile of artifacts to hand to cloud smeet? Where do you put that in the piles to cell to the t collector? It's not going to tell anybody.

Obviously you put in, he's pissed off. I my opinion is that guy sold a tonto fuck and artifacts. Well, that was going down and he just why wouldn't you now?

Now are there artifacts connected to go back .

to no potter, you anything but they have found? Like one of the biggest things is a bunch of china stone like to archaeology, even if they call a microchip, which would be like a tiny little piece you get from that still technically an artifact. So there's a lot of that kind of stuff.

There are a lot of bones that have been charred and things like that. But there's nothing too terribly amazing tools that, well, nothing too crazy. But again, that's the kind of stuff that would possibly do.

I'm a lot this world, my skepticism can get a little cynical. You know i'm of the opinion of the anti kids or mechanism would have been identified as what IT is and they pulled out the ocean. They would never made IT to a museum. That there was somebody I was like telling jim last night we were having dinner um if the reports of giant bones that you see in the one thousand nine and thirties from guys that were over a new mexico and are bringing them back to dismissing and they just never made IT there if they really did find giant bones, which i'm skeets ticals of, but if they did, this is probably an advertisement to sell them where they are traveling, these things across the country. This happened to lose them along the way because this do came over in bot to this has been a problem since they one.

especially when you think about those kind of crazy old school rocker fellow type beyond s yeah, I really love to control information in everything. You know, if you have access to something that just under ably throws the whole timeline into a question, or throws a narrative of human beings to question.

Now you ve got some power without yeah i'm of the opinion that that's been a problem like I don't believe in the dendera light. I assume you .

know what the dendera light you glossed .

over the and .

that one is fast crazy because that is how old is IT two thousand years old, two thousand years old. It's a hand carve brass machine that you use to IT. IT attracts the cycles of the moon, the earth and different planets in our solar system.

brilliant.

And they didn't know what I was. They found IT was just like some crowded up gears and then they start doing some sort of A I mean, I don't even know how they did IT, how they understand all the different pieces of because it's all corroded together. But they use some sort of scanning mechanism correct to and see if you find what .

IT actually looks like. You can buy replicas of note day.

They boxes the IT, but now show what IT looks like. When done.

the sand of stumble across up. Interesting too. And the guy found IT heap of dead, naked people.

wow. Emerge them to see .

shaking and fear and mumbling about a heap of dead naked people is among the group of grip divers from the easter meditating ireland of semi who are searching for natural sponges that had shelter from a violent storm near the tiny island of how do he said again and and the and kiss a between great and mainland greece, when the storms, besides they dive, response chance upon a ship full of greek treasures, the most significant wreck of the ancient world to have been found up to that point.

The dead naked people were marble sculptures scattered on the sea floor, along with many other artifacts. Soon after, the discovery prompted the first major underwater archeology dig in history. So, saving and find what this mechanism looks like, what IT actually looks like. Is there a replica? yeah. So this is a replica of this thing, this incredible piece of engineering from two thousand years ago, where all these gears and all these planets, and you, you could figure out where everything was, how, how, how they do this, how they do this. And this is beyond what we ever thought was available.

But now there is a youtube channel that a guy goes through. I forget his name, but he does go through. And he makes one of these with old school tools, but making each gear by hand, he's making the wire by hand. guys. ork. He's a ork.

great. Bring among the show what is possible version .

of the dog watch but incredible but .

but at the .

end of the that's that's interest people to recreate the planning of the thing that's really .

and mathematics. And then you have to take any consideration what is this based on what knowledge was available back then that we did not think was? So we're talking about two thousand years ago.

This is the time of Christ. We did not think that they had any kind of machines that were in any way similar to that thing. What else don't we know? What else is lost? How much of that stuff is gone? Like if this is two thousand years ago, is that corroded? What is ten thousand years due to the right?

Be dust, the right. And the fact they even found IT the bomb in the ocean is america.

This is, it's important to understand. And this is another lie that A C divil told about the number of sheep ricks that have been found. You not only that, but what would be left over after just a few thousand years, and that when they find these one thousand year old ship break, they don't find anyone anymore. You just find the pottery. So you just know where the ship break is because it's a about a gold on the ground and some pots.

But if you go back ten thousand years before that, how much is the surface of the floor of the ocean shifted? How much of that stuff has been covered up? How much is ten thousand years is so long now? What if it's twenty thousand? What if it's thirty thousand? To say we don't know is the correct thing, correct thing to do? And that's what nobody wants to do there?

Is there a hypothesis is more of a um it's more of a like a mental forget the name is what you call like a mind teaser, like a way to make your brain think it's called the solarian hypothesis.

The solarians are a doctor who monster that was supposedly lived on earth like millions years before humans wake up one day and they find all these monkeys are running around they said they don't like this um but the hypothesis is how would you determine if there was a species or IT advanced civilization lived on the earth a million years ago, five million years? As soon as we have fossil fuels, long as we have the first bit of oil had been created on the planet, you could have a civilization like arts. So what would you look for? The only conclusion is maybe nuclear stuff if they tested, like maybe nuclear power plant, we might still will define some radioactive material.

But beyond that, not a god damned thing. After ten million years, you going to find a fuck in bit of IT. That's what their conclusion is. And and this is a scientific thing.

This is something I thought to all that's what it's called something that they in science and archeology and history and stuff s presumably to to look at that problem. But these guys like obviously didn't do that. Like I said, he thinks people are stupid. He said right here on in, sit in this room that, oh well, you know, he doesn't matter how long sometimes underwater, you might think that IT matter how long something underwater, but IT really does is like, you fucking kidding me. Course, anybody knows that, of course.

decent terms. Are you going to find the right? They haven't done like a comprehensive light.

Our scans of the bottom, the ocean floor just have not done. That is not possible right now. But if they did, do IT who fucking knows what they find down there? Well.

here's where things get nutts is that here we are talking about things that far tens of thousands of years. So we do have a site, the gram m hancock, highly ted, in season one of ancient apocalypse called gunn panna e in indonesia. Jane may have a folder on this.

So this pure middle structure could potentially, the twenty seven thousand years old, hotly debated. But as gram hancock highlighted, there is a subtract anian tunnel in chAmber, which may have those those dates, and it's not being executed. And a geologist, danny, now you never pronounce IT correctly.

Forgive me, danny, but he is a geologist that analyzed the ground penetrating radar, and he said there are strong likelihood that it's man made. Now the the skeptics, the academics will say what? It's probably just a love, a tube, because the structure is volcanic and nature.

But something interesting has happened that back in twenty fourteen, the indonesian government said that they were willing to allocate unlimited resources in funding to excavate the site. Something shifted a handful of years ago where they're not excavating IT now. And as of today, there is no plan in place to find out what that sub janean chAmber is. So if IT was indeed man made, we don't know IT could be natural IT could be man made, but we're never gonna what IT is until we go digging and right to know for .

sure that people occupy the land above IT after that one hundred percent .

hundred percent. That is a man made structure IT IT was volcanic and nature. But the terrace ted is a pyramidal like structures, is not a pym's .

um and we do have examples over and over again of truly ancient things, unexplainable things, where people built more crude versions .

above all over the tubes. There all kinds of places in south amErica where they. A big pyramid built on top of a spring, the lava tube could have been in a cave that was sacred that they just kept in bellisle and kept in belsher.

And captain bellige saying, it's just a lavatory. Be not a man made tunnel down, there is a non sec, or anybody who knows anything. Ancient history, we could understand how a .

sacred sites could have a permit built on top of OK.

Where were we about lack of excavations are going unpinning. And this should segway into something that very, very interesting, which is the great pyramid giza. I already said that quebec I tap I is arguably not just the oldest, but the most mysterious santin side on earth, because it's not supposed to exist. However, the great pyramid giza, I would say probably trump s IT.

From the same point that it's just so mysterious it's sophistication as well as the fact we have no idea how IT was constructed and it's argued the most debated structure and all of human history for two standpoints, one of which is that so many people debate on whether IT was built to be a tune for the feros, or whether or some sort of lost technology and had some other purpose, whether its energy or whatever. I have done stuff, which is a fascinating topic, and i'll have a story involving me visiting IT there with a certain person. That really is.

It's a story in itself, but let me say this so they are back in uh eight years ago, back in twenty sixteen through moon technology, they discovered that there is a hidden chAmber in the great pym ID, which is massive Jimmy, I have a folder on this great pym's hidden void. And IT was established in two thousand seventeen through a scientific stuff. So we're talking seven discovered eight years ago, CoOperated, uh or eight years ago, CoOperated seven years ago .

to study ology debates that at all. Is that a rough .

interpretation of this?

They don't know the exact shape of IT. They have an approximate size and appropriate shape.

So now many theorize that IT is a second so called grand gallery. IT was originally thought to be thirty metres long. Now they have at that over forty meters long, so almost one hundred and fifty feet.

And IT is above the so called grand gallery. And so when they first discovered IT, zhuo came out of the wood work and like denounce IT and said, this is nothing. And they said they're going to spend a few years debating with the international community on how to go about IT. Brother, that was seven, eight years ago, almost rounding up to a decade. And as of today, there is no plan of any kind to go and find out what's in there.

So they would have to go through the walls to get to.

No, actually, brother, they could just drill a one half hole instead, a little tube camera through IT, and they could figure out .

whats in there by the end of the week there.

Go to the doctor. And here's what so important about this. Like we're talking about the most debated and argue the most important structure, all of human history was IT.

A tome was at a loss technology. We have no idea how they even built IT. That's the only thing that's more debate than that is how did the egyptians construct the pyramid? So many theories have already been in a bunk on that. We just don't know .

how they did IT two million, three hundred thousand stones that were supposedly all put in place within twenty years, right?

The twenty years partner I referred red to that is like the gateway drug to becoming a peria media that the twenty years things, the stupid is fucking thing. You, any guy who who's ever like stack bridge for five minutes. Now, that is absurd, but they just wrong with that because, you know, you can't this one. The weird things, the written record is more robust to them than the actually like science, like the carbon dating for the parameter in the written record of a couple hundred years of all of the entire force nest, the carbon dangers a couple hundred years of, they just come up with some explanation for .

and stick to that written. Well, my favorite is when they look at the higher gliff that depict farrow from thirty thousand years ago, that's apples.

But the one a little further down, this is, this is important ship there. But after, well.

why do you think that the thirty thousand new markets, bull ship, but the five thousand new market is legit? Like that is really weird guys, is like why you conveniently ignoring all the other stuff while validating the more reasons because .

of contradictions. Ts, the textbook of .

the early road.

educate that dynamics. Sorry, really quick. That dynamic you mentioned Christopher done. Um when he saw one of my recent videos about two months ago mean he mr.

Gonna start he's going to come on my channel and each art of fact that he's covered, we're going to discuss one of the time he knows I don't believe in our technology and he told me basically, to summarize, what he said is he is tired of having either yes men or cynics. He wants somebody that doesn't agree with him to sit, doesn't have a conversation about these things and it'll be honest and we can actually get somewhere. And I was like, IT was like the guy had been wait in forty years, had a fucked in gd.

And I worked as an elective. I don't fuck. I should not be the one sitting in the chair, the man, but the other people qualified to do IT to treating like an right.

And his theory is very faster. IT was some sort of a power plant generated hydrogen. And it's feasible.

It's wild. And I ve got to tell you, when you walk through the great pyramid, there's nothing about IT that resembles anything like a tomb. IT seems like IT was some sort of industrial function that had a function of some kind.

So here's a story, and I have his permission to share IT. So I had the the only thing more wild than than the topic of the mysteries of lost ancient civilizations is the diverse nature of people that are into this topic. So I had the pleasure of connecting with George sepia, the goat, the great legendary u of sea fighter.

And because of him is how I I went with him to ball back. He had unique connections, and I was able to go with him. And we had connected, and I went with him from there to egypt, and we went inside the great pyramids this first time in there, and we basically tipped thc.

We tip the guard, i'll to say, IT. And we had the kings chAmber alone to ourselves for a few minutes. And we were with usaf ion who's the sun of lead a king adela avion, who is the mentor of john y.

Anthony west and he was in the pyramid code um and so George, late in the the so called circle gus and you so did the, oh, I can't do IT but you do IT with your throat and he doesn't inside the box and IT makes the whole granit box vibrate i've experiments wild IT feels the reverberation of the of the stone so he did that to George orge late in IT and he did IT for about a minute. This is so George comes out of the box. His eyes were wide open.

And he said, there is, he said, i'm coming out of retirement. I'm going to win the title. And he just started pacing around the room. So fast forward, three, four hours later, i've been the hotel pool of them.

What year was this?

Just last year, the september of twenty.

twenty three.

And just to clarify, at that time he was considering doing a grappling match. That's not what he was talking about. He was talking about winning the u fc.

Role title again so fast for three hours later, i'm at the hotel, the mini house marriott hotel pool with the pym's overlooking us and i'm like, hey George, you said you're thing about coming out of retirement and is like, I love his accidents nor Jimmy. I love coming out through retirement and I said, well, what made you say that he's like thought of I like that, just how I felt. So just to clarify, arguably the goat allow him and john Jones, they're comparable, just different.

But the goat and his first inclination out of coming out of the box with his why his eyes wide open was like i'm coming out of retirement, i'm going to win the title and I asked you like, no, i'm going to do IT. It's just how I felt in the moment. And i'm like when people talk about IT in the context of IT being some sort of energy device, some people have speculated that with all these legends of humans living to hundreds and even thousands of years, some people have proposed that maybe was a DNA restoration.

I have no idea what I was. I just don't think IT was a team. I think IT was something else. I think I was a functional structure of some kind. But the fact that someone like him, with his history in his accomplishments, the fact that that was the first thing that he felt coming out of the box after doing the reverberation thing, is a story like.

I don't know what to make a bit. I think that's Normal. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

I think a guy like that is always got in the back of his head. That's a good point. yeah.

I mean, that's the highlights of his life. When he was conquering everyone in the world way division. He was the greatest fighter on the planet earth. It's the highlight of his life. So anytime he gets an elevated feeling, i'm sure that's one of the reasons why, like a lot of old fighters, they drink, a lot of they do drugs and think they're trying to, they experiences hides that most people could never imagine, right? And I think whenever they experience a new high, some new thing, they get in their head and i'm making up fucked and come back and they want, they want to chase that dragon.

get the ring with jake paul.

With money yeah but it's just this thing that just is in every one of those people yeah that makes .

sense um although the fact that he's laying inside the great pym ID and almost think that would be the furthest thing from his mind at the time.

elevated experience, right? So it's an elevated experience that makes them very excited. And when a guy like that is very excited, he thinks about the most exciting thing he's ever done is like i'm a fucking and go do IT again.

We ve got to get you in that box.

We ve got to get in there. I go on the box. I'd like to go there. I really would um is just a matter of carving out the time I really have to do IT, but especially let's see what happens with the world. But the world just keeps you getting sketcher and sketcher .

in certain parts of the world.

right? Yes, sadly yeah sadly would .

be nice to be the via going back to the point of the this hidden chAmber yeah like .

what is so why would you not explore .

IT makes no feasible sense like this should say that. Well, first of all, whether IT was a tub or something else, we could find out a going in there. Maybe there's another may be there's a fair row in there. Maybe we instantly know that. Okay, all this conjecture and debate is is now been put aside.

We know .

be to you and here something else.

a lot of conjecture as far as a loss technology. Could there be some sort of evidence of a tooling and how they constructed IT? Could there be evidence and how is constructed itself, even if it's a completely empty rome and nothing else, we still would have learned something new. In fact, i've joked to other people like, hey, they can turn this into a paper view event. I bet you one hundred million .

people around the world.

But even if there's nothing in IT, even if there's nothing in IT still win because we will learn something new yeah and IT is, of course, the academics will say we don't want to damage the payment anymore like OK. I respect that. But the thing is already erect the use tons of dynamite to blast their way in IT.

The casing stones are all blown. The regularly.

I don't. And so between gobelet tapping, upping, fully executed ted on putting, as well as the great pym ID, arguably the three oldest and most mysterious ancient sites on earth, for some reasons, are not being appropriate.

Execute ated.

Doesn't there a chAmber this fix as well there there's something there, but they're not it's it's smaller, is smaller and and uh that he who was stuck is knows down the tiny little chAmber that's down that they say that they're supposed to be something more there but like that a dc is far what they know for sure.

They have never released any photos or video or have any kind of don't think so. It's like, okay, just stick a camera in there with a flashlight and show us that there's .

nothing in there.

IT shows the wall so there's nothing in there and like, okay, show me, show me what nothing looks like so just look, i'm an outsider in this and I have an great set. You're not you're .

human being on planet earth and you're a part of and you know what?

Every single person alive has an inherent right to know the true history of our origins. And I don't care what country you're born in because people have come after me like you. IT is none of your business what's happening at quebec?

Ly tepi, you're not a turkish city. And then I say, excuse me, IT is a they elected for IT to become a world heritage site, so they have thrown that out the window. IT is everyone's .

one's IT does a sense do not to germany because you don't .

live in germany of part of the people of earth.

It's like we we have a very fractured understanding of the history of the people on earth. Get back the types and excEllent piece of evidence that points to that. We don't really understand why they did IT or who did IT. And there's probably more of those things out there that we missed saher desert, the create example. I if they did some sort of very comprehensive examination of the sahara desert, let's say, if technology advanced, the point where they can do like some really comprehensive, like underground scanning of that entire part of the continent, who I can know .

only five percent of the sahara has been um studied as far as like like say with the use of lighter technology. They're using IT from space and they keep finding new structures that are prehistoric. They don't know who made them when and the throughout from space.

Yeah, this cause liar from space .

called archaeology from space. And they use satellite. So this is is interesting, is that they can use satellites with lights the like.

I might be buttering this. I want to see ten meters. I could be off on that. But it's it's a substantial amount of depth from a satellite penetrating through dirt. And like who I thought that could .

even exist prety. amazing. We have good evidence they didn't have that. Yes, there's orbit would decay.

Yeah.

I had fly back in time .

because I do .

some couple things about going on for dying. The worth mentioning um the point when they were rescue ating like mad the president was of the opinion, the same opinion that doctor danni jaa is that the that like he najaf a wrote a book even like play to was right and like a land is is in indonesia so the president of the of a java back and believes that that was the case and he so he was thrown money, he added when he lost his bid to be reelected in somebody else took over he was the one that shut everything down he's in more lockstep with the yark eulogists and stuff the mainstream guys. Um so that's one of the reasons that was the changing of the guard, is why all of IT just stopped.

So one guy was into IT. The next guy ain't well, let me OK here. Just look up the window here. So the W F conspiracy IT is nothing more than conspiracy theory.

I am not at all convinced that there's something here with them trying to suppress int in history that may be clear, but there is a correlation between what's going on and go back to that and good unpinning that the minis. So this is a government position, the minister of technology, education, research and technology, something along those those lines in indonesia. This generally came into power, I believe in twenty eighteen, his named the kim, or at something nara.

I have a slide of him in my going on playing thing. He's a global shapes within the world economic forum and he is the head decision maker of excavations that would or would not happen. This gentlemen, at good on paying. No, be clear, i'm not saying he's suppressing IT all and i'm not saying that the W F. Is trying to suppress our anan history.

All i'm sharing here is that is just so happens that the gentleman that's in charge of decision making then me be clear, I said IT earlier, they went from saying that they're be unlimited resources and funding to execute ate gun unpinning IT stopped. And as of right now, there's no plan in place to do IT. And i'm just sharing that the person who would make that decision or has the power to do so happens to be a global shapes and close swap, the former preheat of the of the world economic forum. I have a video, him gloating about how they have invented ted, government cabinets, the media all over the world, and if are enacting their initial Young global leaders.

See the photo of him in the bathroom.

No, I now please .

photo of him in our bathroom here with the foot and crazy, dark veto outfit.

Yeah, yeah. That that was bizarre.

Black is fucking outfit ever. If you you so on the nose. Now you're evil supervillain.

He looks like a bond, a bon James bond villain.

More crazy than that, like more crazy than a bond pacific to find that photo. More crazy at a bond villain like a star wars .

villain yeah like some A D me.

a crazy person to put that fucking and thing on to go on public. Unless it's a halloween costume, it's a bizarre outfit for you to wear. And if everyone's worried about these secret societies and people that are in control and pulling the strings in the world, what are they worried about? They worried about fucking crackpots that dressed like this. That's they worried about ice wide shut parties like that kind of ship photo fuck in crazy p photo right there that's the one we have yeah .

in front .

of the podium the world economic wow, what is that fucking photo? What is that out of your .

warning that looks like something from something like nineteen nineteen .

seventies this topic and yes yeah ah yes one .

hundred percent like yeah yeah two thousand .

that's so that output so crazy. Imagine someone .

I think was the event of the university somewhere in rope locking.

Crazy that that's where there anyway, what are you doing? You're dressed .

like a drew ID even got a mac that so web.

so again, got another out. 我 给 okay。 So when I look at go back c tap a involving my little W F conspiracy idea IT is a bit bizarre that that partnership with the doge's group was literally announced at the annual world economic forever meeting in davos.

And I also should share this, that I may have been banned from turkey. So this is, this is later. So after my video came out, um what's in cruel? What's this in darker cruel? So the head of a archaeology in turkey took great issue with my conspiracy theories on IT.

And has he was quoted in an article saying that I should be sanctioned and then he followed up with, like, I will be sanctioned and i'm like, well, how are you going to keep me to go back with tempi? Have i'd been banned from turkey? Because american citizens don't need a VISA to go into turkey and this is going to be there more than ninety days.

So there's if I could, I could apply a head of time. Like in egypt, you can apply for, uh, your tourism VISA head of time. And I know if I was rejected, he that what he said is that i'll be sanctioned. He was referring to me and unlike, okay.

well, I mean.

travel bands.

airport get rejected. The customs.

possibly what would happen?

He said IT will happen. I don't know that it's happened well .

to turn you're .

actually a little bit Prices and like that it's like going to land there, get turned around.

That was you might be video about IT that's .

true yeah ah yeah that would actually yeah you .

that that's a .

video sure I think kind of like help you over .

the target would go back where at .

least you are making them uncomfortable yeah you're forcing them to consider why they've chosen this. So if it's just for economic reasons, which does make sense. If so many people are already going there, why we spend more money?

I get well and that makes sentence is the most likely explanation is probably true. But that means that then this is an issue of either mismanagement or recommendation because they there's IT is inexcusable that cause as of right now, their plan is that IT will not be full, IT will not be fully executed ted in any of our lifetimes and there could potentially be answers involving our ancient past at gobelet type and IT is entirely inexcusable that we wouldn't dig IT up. And I don't actually think it'll take away from tourism by removing the mystery. People are half a million people a year are visiting IT just because and if you've digged up more of IT, in my opinion.

that's more reason to go there, right?

Well, what do you show? jam? I went to the article about the funding. Yes, um IT does say that thing about funding but things I might have been also misinterpreted by translation but it's coming from the jara post talks about how the soldiers were using host to uh, excavate. They didn't like that.

IT mentioned the first dispersed one of two and fifty grand was put out. Is this from twenty fourteen? This is the same article because that shows the thing that says unlimited amount of research funding. But IT says that was taken from other other funding. And then IT says that there's a lack of funding right below IT archaic .

logic and other sites. Be more funny.

Let me just say this, my ask. All they got to do is drilling hole and stick a camera through IT into the tube to figure out if it's a love, a tube or something men made. This is not expensive.

That could get done for thousands of dollars, not millions of dollars. And if IT is a twenty seven thousand year old pier middle structure, as gram hancock's s proposed, the data, look, the data is not proven. It's hotly debated, but let me just make this crustal clear.

We don't know what IT is. IT could potentially be the oldest ancient ruin in on earth. And when we're never going to know the answer until we go looking and IT is entirely unacceptable that we're not doing IT well.

What is happening there? There's a thing to get like less conspiratorial, but supported from a very real position. There's a thing of science with our paradigm.

You've look at IT from a very long time with the origins of earth sciences and history was they were expected to bear out the bible, prove the bible right, then evolution and then Darwin, and then IT was gradualism proved the bible wrong. There is no major global flood and gradualism. They assume that everything happens slowly as all there's nothing catastrophic in the record.

And that lasted from the late seventeen hundreds, all of or eighteen hundred, excuse me, all the fuck. And way up until one thousand nine hundred eighty, when the kt dinosaur killing media was accepted, before that there wasn't no such thing as punctuated equal liberum, which is what they call IT. Now where which any kid could figure out as the way the fucking and world works, that the slow erosion happens on the side of the bank.

But sometimes there's a big flood that carbs, a big chunk. I mean, this is no brain or shit, and the life moves on a steady pace Normally. And then every now again, something catastrophic happens.

So my point is, is that if they think that digin something up is going to change a paradise they're expected to maintain, they're not going to fun to take get up this um the kind of of opposite that they face to overturning paradise like the clothes. First thing like when flint was on here and he tried to play that went down. Not only work careers ruined from that, but one thing you almost never here mentioned was close.

This first was version two of this before that IT was the full some point and full some first. And many careers were ruined by people that posited to the americans were people before the full sum culture. Then they found the clubb.

This, this isn't some, that is not some novel time of of, well, with the scientific debate in a few. No, no, no, this is standard Operating procedure. It's always fucking been done. So it's not a surprising thing that you're going to try to hide stuff.

It's not a surprising human ego and control. Humans always want to be the experts, and they always want to be the one and control the information of the information that's new, that's coming out, counters their control and their expertise they rejected. It's just eager. That's ego.

It's just because, I mean, I know scientists are people, but sure.

i'll be what we know now. This is what we know now. And when new information comes along, okay, now we're thinking about in a different way. But the problem is they publish books and these books, they're definitively given dates.

We now know we we are sure that this what are your thoughts on the dating of the pyramids and how do they take the pym's? They date the pyramids based on whatever carbon that they could find in between the stones. You obviously can't carbon date stones themselves, so you have to use some sort of organic material that's around that.

The best dating is that the great payment of summer around forty five hundred years ago, that was from organic material taken between casing stones.

You could argue that the casing stones were restored because they, even the romans, restored parts of the thinks um I don't know how old the great pyramid is, but if IT was constructed forty, five hundred years ago, then our understanding what was happening on the gaza platow at that time is vastly different. Then the people that were, if you look at any academic textbook, they show people wearing lowing, clifts and barefoot, constructing the pyramid. And now that's now, well.

even hybrid lofts that depict moving statues, a bunch of guys sandalled pulling a sled.

So that depiction, which would be in my ramsey folder, Jamie, that one statue was only fifty eight metric tones.

only heard to .

the other is that they say.

well.

they pull IT on a sledge, which is like A A wooden sledge. And i'm like, the ramsey statue is fifteen times heavier than that other one. Yeah, this is what they always show. They always show these naked dudes. You look at the bear.

S he. So just to be clear, because they .

wanted to show them that they're dumb and promotive .

and with the whip, he gets some clothes on that guys got closed on. But that's kind of been debunked, right? Because one of things that they found is that when they studied ed, the remains that were in the is where the people that works in the pym's lived.

They're not slaves. They are fed well, yeah, they are fed well. And IT seems like they .

were highly skilled. I mean, i've tried to to to me what's the most impressive thing about IT the accuracy of the permit to itself? It's like a perfect square with like two inches of deviation at seven hundred and fifty sixty per side. That's like tiny fraction of a percent job, if you like, machine age standards on a fucking gigantic fucking scale, right?

Um the only thing I can come up with was um I have to test IT, but like if you had a concave meer IT creates a little circle of light like a magnifying glasses does, that will start a fire at a certain distance is going to be the same size and no matter what. So you could calibrate that. And if you had to have everything exactly is set up.

But if you shot at the and filled up a perfect circle, you could know this exact range. That kind of thing would work because you can't measure this with ropes. You can't measure this be rope sag and they are affected by humidity and stuff. And again, it's two inches at seven hundred and fifty six feet. That's not that's .

not you not is taking into account the casings that were removed.

Oh, that's not. This is the just the base parameter of the um the there's an outline around the period where IT was kind of scratched into the ground um for where they would they think that they use water and stuff to to do leveling um and they generally measure around that .

to to my understanding in any deviation, even in millimeters with each rock, as you get up to two million, three hundred thousand stones to build a peek of the pyramid, any deviation either side would .

fuck the .

whole thing oh no, IT is this is virtually perfect.

not quite perfect. But it's IT is virtually made by humans allegedly. Do you know the rocky one is the most fun? Because I love those stories. I love hitching stuff. It's just because it's the the finest possibility is that human beings were genetically engineered by a superior race that came here to mind gold.

It's I was telling jim actually last night the uh, archaeologist frequently referred to the club's hypothesis is and I often tell him the this is actually Chris histon stuff is even more alleged IT explains why we want golden and silver. I can go on as all around the entire world.

the gold plans, the weird one, because you can't make any tools out of IT, you can make weapons out of IT. And yet he was the most prize metal.

And IT works pretty good for when you get to a higher level of tech, all the sudden useful.

even IT is very useful. And then the dissected a of suspending particles, the atmosphere like cx, right, which is what bill gates want to do today, that fucking and cook, he fuck face. There's a lot of people live in here.

You don't get to choose when the shades get put on the earth, because you have this goofy climate change narrative. I don't believe you, right? I don't like that you're even talking about doing this. How about a global vote as whether not just one asso created windows ninety five kids to do this. He didn't .

create anything. He bought the pat enough that IBM guy I love putting that on blast because it's like I think he has I think he suffers from an infinitely ity complex. I think that he's jealous of elon musin others.

I think he his time short yeah and .

he makes me look like a massive dush um I think that he is look, he was once the king, the rich st. Man on earth, and now he's not and I think that that's all he wants.

I think again, power, human power and ego, and especially people that have enormous resources and control over things they don't want .

to relinquish grip. Yes, he should be living in all inclusive.

And jets keys, you made a brother like jess.

yeah.

And that he let go at least happy. That's what I want. My ilus.

I want jef basso. People critize them. Like, what are you talking about?

He's living in a dream also. He's jacked the super hot girlfriend. He's got .

a giant.

Dick rocket, I can't figure out .

why he runs the washington post because he was the washington post.

Change the shit out of IT. Yeah, there is a big, big to do about IT because he released this article that you have to a release, a story. Rather, he wrote a peace essentially saying that you have to take divergent viewpoints.

You have to take a bunch of different perspectives, who we can't just be this left wing echo chAmber. And it's a reason why the business is faltering. I mean, all of these I was just reading something about CNN ratings and msm bcs ratings post election.

They've crashed all these learning cooks on youtube or hamerton ing subscribers where people go, you guys are out of touch, you're not accurate, your delusional. And people are speaking with their subscriptions and they're speaking with their purchasing of the washed impose their purchasing. The new york times, the new york times, just debunked in the most insane way, debunked R, F, K juniors assertion that the ingredients in fruit loops are different in canada than they are in united states.

The fact checked, while saying he was accurate, so their fact is so dumb. When you see the first I tweed IT, the fact check is so dumb because the fact check says it's not correct. They have the same ingredients except for these harmful chemicals.

mr. Kennedy has singled out fruit loops as an example product with too many artificial ingredients. Question why the canadian version has fewer than the U.

S. version. But he was wrong. The ingredient list is roughly the same, although canada has natural coLorings made from blueberry and carrots, while the U. S.

Product contains red by four, yellow five and one, as well as mutilated high roxy to lean or bh T A lab mid chemical that is used for fresh ness according to the ingredient label. That is the fuck and dangerous chemicals that are banded canada that we're trying to get rid of in amErica and that at are kicked. They are literally saying he was wrong.

body was right that that made my brain hurt just reading was just like .

fucking time.

pretty pie had and stress like a native for a while I didn't have anything to talk about, right?

I don't know that's about all is what the new york times is doing. So of course, you're gonna have bridge subscribers. Of course, you're crazy. You're saying something that's nuts.

And also, what is your motivation? Look, what's your motivation for removing potentially harmful and toxic chemicals if someone is trying to do that for the greater health of the population? If we're saying that these things have been eliminated in other countries because they've been proven to be dangerous, what is your motivation for saying he was wrong? Well, what else could you be? ideology.

Ideology left ling rejection of the junior because now is connected to trump, which is connected to notes. It's like you go down this fucking and weird rabid hole with these people. And like, what are you trying to do? Are you trying to remove all leftover credibility? Are you trying to eliminate because you lost so much credibility? Are you trying to kill IT all? Are you secretly working for the chinese?

They're you doing? It's probably back by month santa or something.

Because if you look at like this serious crazy state, it's to think that the media was once called the fourth estate in this country. Is mind bogin honestly to think that we used to consider them the fourth estate of government, that he was like this, our father's generation, that's what they considered. Take couple and fucking what?

What i'm hoping is that what jeff pays us is said about the washington post, and I know what CNN is considering doing and theyve made some sort of a trend towards a more objective form of journalism. But they're still compromised by the the sponsors. They're still compromised by the advertise.

There are so compromised then I don't know they can ever get to where they really need to be to compete with actual, objective, real journalists. They're independent because I I don't think they can. So it's it's kind of crazy. So like they're digin their own grave here every day and then they're lashing out all the other people that aren't digging their own grave. It's like you .

guys are and so crazy .

the donate to themselves and now it's like, what is citizen journalist? How do elon musk put IT that you are now .

the journalist or how I misquoting him?

People news now the view speak for itself you know.

like not just the views, the community notes, the fact that you can actually fact check these things. And then you have all these brilliant people that are participating in this live debate in real time online about what's real and what's not. And you're finding out specifically with the like they when they found the twitter files like jesus cry, the FBI involved in this, like what what the fuck is going on?

Yeah.

this is so crazy. The p eyes involved in deciding what's real, what's not on twitter.

unreal.

And you you're banning journalists, your banning scientists like this is really crazy yeah and .

it's bad for society. It's cause irreparable harm with this information is not so .

it's bad initially but then ultimately he is good because ultimately we learn who you can can't trust. So who's just honest and accurate because there's a lot of money and being honest, accurate yeah you know this is was crazy like all these independent journals are doing really well well because they don't have a fucking and giant building in atlantic that's filled with a thousand workers, right? So they don't have the overhead for terrible ratings, terrible ratings and a massive overhead like you're kind of fuck ah so it's great for us that IT leads to the rise of these guys like math, thai, bi, the usually part of the system and now are independent glen Green wall, all these types of people, Michael selling burger, people that you can actually trust, they're onna, tell you the truth because there's actually and telling the truth.

Yes.

it's a great business model. It's corrected .

in the proof IT. And all these other people know what? There's tucker carls and many, many others like the private yp.

No, there is a course correction. And that the problem is that they've ve duggin their heels in so much. They'll write articles like that new times article that is so crazy. They updated IT. Oh, congratulations.

They change the world a little bit. Here's what that looks like.

They changed that I did because I got like ten million views .

on s and they got blasted everywhere. That's why I have double things.

And so this is what they said, why do we have fruit? Listen, this country, that eighteen or nine, nine hundred and ingredients, you go to canada to our three years to come to ask he was wrong. In the ingredient count, they are roughly .

the same changed up.

but there's still there, still missing the whole fucking point. So the ingredient account is roughly the same. So there is still ingredients in the canadian version. But it's all just like sugar and wheat and .

like carrot die and blueberry die.

Saying, you said all these things, these guys are all illegal in canada and also illegal in other countries.

And sera is one of the worst things .

you can consume. This is, but I wonder, is just as delicious in canada, which is crazy, like I don't need IT to be flavored or covered by fuck and die. And when you can get IT from beats or whatever.

yeah the the die things crazy, the red diffused. Actually kind of a big problem is a lot of kids that have like A D D kind of a symptoms from red diff left alone .

the your own devices near a child like I was, you just get power ball and all that slow I would keep fucking captain crunch until I had a fuck and heart arms lucky charms .

eating just the marshmallow .

oh yeah whereas the marshmallow attend morning meeting yeah oh my god yeah you get cracked out the ball winkle .

o yeah and you .

eat balls at sugar I mean, we didn't even know that sugar was bad for you because, again, another working conspiracy that turned out to be true, the scientists got by by the sugar industry to the lame SAT and that that's why where to start using margin, all stupid shit. It's some plastic. I like, you know, believe margin ATS don't even eat.

I was about to say that you see answer.

we'll be eating natural butter, but they .

want to change glue. It's chemical.

it's industrial .

oil like really .

weird you species for engine lubricating great on. This is we're so stupid. We're so bug as stupid.

It's wide when you think about the things that we will do, like the military m experience I mentioned before, the ah the experiment they did back after the everybody was wondering here in the states why the nations were able to convince rank can find Normal people to do fucked up stuff so they got guys in a lab coat, they hide an actor pretend he was getting shocked as a test object.

But the real test object was the guy they had quote and quote, shocking that guy, and the guy in the lab code to keep telling, to do IT more. And and they felt about thirty percent of the people, if they were told what, shocked on all the way up to kill the guy. yeah. And that that kind of appeal to authority, that kind of that kind of worship of authority has really they're gotten IT right now and their paying the Price.

And that since dangerous, because authority has a massive responsibility to be accurate. And with that comes humility and the understanding that we don't know everything is not possible, which is why we're constantly studying things. And this this need to be accurate and need to be correct and need to be the only one who has access to this information to educate people is stress. It's really crazy, especially when IT comes to something like ancient history, which is why your channel so popular in your channel and gram hancock shows are so popular and why these people that want to hold onto that throne are so adamant about labelling them with every possible horrible majority.

Yeah ah yeah it's A A really easy way to to get them out. Like I said, they're losing authority right now. Like we're talking about we're talking about the mainstream media or legacy media you call a fAllen apart and stuff.

Um what I mentioned about putty pie earlier, if you member about ten years ago, the uh ad pocalypse that was I think that was actually the wall street journal article, but IT was a legacy media that wrote about putin e and they fucking like three one of the bus. They like misconstruction um and everything else. And the effects were very real. IT slapped youtube content creators across the board. If you look up, add pocket PS.

You can read all about IT. They've been actually dropped some of the bans on x now, which is great yeah which is I think, a sign of the culture shifting also after the election, realizing that there is a lot of money in advertising there. What do you fuck? retard.

Or there is the number one platform on earth for people discussing things new. Advertise there because you're trying to you trying to bleed that eye out, but you fuck with the wrong too. Crazy is got more money than anybody I don't care.

And buying you got IT for twice what it's worth. Not like twitter has lost twenty billion dollars in value. He's a terrible businessman now. He overpaid. He overpaid substantially to try safe.

free freeze was not. This was what you would call an activist investment. Well.

this is just a rare cat who's willing to do something like that is not a lot of people that are willing to like lose billions on but when you got two hundred billion and like let's fuck and shift this apple card.

i'm so glad that he's on the right side of history that guys ho is living hero and x is the future that is going to the biggest platform.

Th goal third, and probably will grow and know they keeps saying people going to blue sky, you know, you go to the blue sky and you type, there's only two genders, your band instantly yes, I saw the three year yeah, but the sky is just the newest echo chAmber of the old twitter and the people in kink dorks, you're going to go over there and let their brains right out.

Echo change I ve been picking on at all of my friends in the real world that we're laughing at um I forget the name of the the site that rumble when everybody was like all the right winters going to rumble ha, ha, ha. How now it's like all you guys are run in the blue sky.

A, A, A fucking funny that show out.

rumble. Rumble been so good to me that may give Chris oski a shot out. The C.

E, O. Rumble had the pressure, a pleasure of meeting him. And we've .

been treating me role. good. Room was great.

The other fantastic fool on free speech with the left and I want, yes.

So I recommend me everything that's legal, which is what it's supposed to be and that's what the first amendment is supposed to apply to. And this is one of the great things about this administration it's coming in is that dont mmp wants to apply the first amendment to all these sites. He wants to stop all this big tech banning, which is, by the way, was terrible for him in twenty and twenty.

I mean, IT really its election interference IT truly is because you're you're eliminating one complete side of the argument is supposed to be one side thinks this, the other side thinks that they get together and discuss IT and you as the persons outside of IT gets to see who makes the more compelling argument and the wonder wonderful thing about community notice is you get to see with them some of the bullshit. So let's find out what's right and what's wrong, what's true, what's not what's that's what it's supposed to be. But the problem that is then you don't really have control the election and that's what they found out twenty twenty four.

They don't have control of IT anymore. And you can get beyond, say, and pay or ten million dollars. IT doesn't fuck and work.

IT doesn't work anymore. No one cares. No one believes them. They don't trust them.

They make terrible life choices and you like, well, clearly you're not a listen to when he comes to who's going to run the fuck and world tail this wife, right? He shot the fuck up. This is crazy.

M and m, what are you talking about? How much if you you locked I mean, I want to sit m and m down with like a political scholar and like, tell me what you know about the invasion of ukraine? What do you know about the coup in two thousand and fourteen? What you really know about nato moving is closer and closer.

What do you know about the violation of the treaty that we are? What the fucking are you doing? Man, you shouldn't be doing this. This is not the thing for you to be doing here.

These people have no idea what they're talking about. They are all puppets. They're there are people that don't do any research on their own and they're just told what to think or .

they are compromised. Well, I think they were getting paid. And I think that's what's even weirder is that you're allowed to pay people to for you for president, which is crazy. Yeah.

over at two and half million, not a million. Thought now two and a million.

I game me. But that seems to be like production cost would seem at least slightly elevated event. But the weird bbm m was like the bion's a one if if it's true and know there's a lot of sites reporting IT as IT is true.

But we try to look and me looked this, it's hard to find what's true, what's not true because there's a lot of money that was paid to staff, but it's like unclear what that means. And then there's it's it's unclear where they burned all the money. And then there's also the money that went to these activist groups.

And we're talking about hundreds of billions dollars they paid to people to support the this administration, which is kind of supposed to be the other way around. Are these groups supposed to be paying money to prop up the campaign because the campaign believes in them? No, you're paying these activist groups to support you, which is just crazy. Also, I didn't went through billion plus dollars in three months. This is so crazy in your in debt.

I think, and I think a lot of people made some money in the process, that money went somewhere.

Where is part of the problem with climate change? As part of the problem with everything is that it's profitable to to spit out a narrative and that there's a lot of money being moved around and this is money in politics. And there's much as we can get that out, we need to.

And I think one of the most important things about getting that out is this whole thing about pharmacists, drug companies be unable to advertise which changes in the ninety nineties. We have to recognize that before the ninety nineties, pharmacology drugs could not advertise on T. V.

And guess what?

We were taken way less, and we were way healthier. So this is not good, folks. This is not good, you know. And other than olympic, which is like at least curbing obesity to some extent, what what are these drugs are doing? good.

Like what if you look at the overall health of people is declining, obesity is rising, heart attacks are rising strokes or all? He is bad. We're not moving in the right direction, and yet there's a tremendous resistance for change.

But funny to me that they would spend so much money on this election when mean, it's kind of it's kind of clear that when one person's platform is do this, this, this, this and this, the other person's platform is not him. If again, I mean, that's like, you know, that's like riding someone else's cotai delivery SHE came in with the platform. I'm just getting you.

I'm not trump. So okay. Well, that's great. But I mean, once people appearing through the vale of firms going to make everything illegal and put everybody that's not wide into camps and shit, once i've got passed, that what you have.

well, it's also, if you're gona develop like a real platform, like a real you gonna run for president, I would think you would want to do that over a long period to be very careful about treat IT like a defense attorney.

Like if you are prosecuting this as a case, you would want to have all your facts that show that you're correct and have all of your arguments, and you would want to have mock arguments if someone comes to and says, what about this? Is this that's not the case, and this is why that's not the case. And you would want have all your ducks in a row.

To me, it's like a fighter that takes a last minute fight, and they've been sitting around drinking beer and they haven't gone through a ten week camp like don't do IT don't do IT you're not ready for this. And if your only strategy is just like a wild punch, which is basically he's a liar like me while you're lying about him every fucking day, the russia collusion shit, the very fine people shit the fuck on all the thing about you know um the thing about um taking list, chaining and executing that's all lies. you.

You guys just lying and you're saying he's a liar, but yet you're lying all the time and you're doing IT like it's nineteen and ninety five and there is no social media, but you can't do that anymore, especially when the people that are paying attention, the podcast is what podcast a hundred times bigger than anything. You guys and people listening to that they know you're fully shit and then your numbers decline even further. yes.

So I think they are saying that CNN and what what's how much is cn down because i've seen this on twitter and it's hard to know where there not there. It's hyperbola or where they not, it's fact. But they're saying the scene s ratings are down like eighty percent of their peak and m sbc is some other proposers number that both on the chopping block CNN is talking about mass layoffs talent because nobody believes them anymore. So it's counterproductive you to use the same voices which is why the the garden of brian stelter, they brought him back.

which was so odd like i'm looking talent .

is missing mean, they don't have any talent.

They're all going out of business. They are going to have to rebrand. They are going to have to get entire new management. Like i'll never washed those programs ever again. Those networks literally .

never like they are dead to me. Now it's propaganda. At least a percentage of IT is propaganda. That's unacceptable. That's unacceptable. If you're the voice of the news in the world, it's unacceptable for you to have a large percentage of what you're saying to be completely full shit.

It's funny. You can see the the same pattern of attacks that they throw at thump and being used against tosa gathered the last time around when SHE fucked in dale kala and in the debate and SHE was just like you, you can stay here and say all cops are bad, but you ve got hundreds of thousands .

of people in jail and perceptives viewers deal, nbc, cn, N, A, trump, slump, raining, crash. Here's why. So what's the numbers? Was IT said, does that say the Rachel manner show, for example, easily msm. C's toper's programme the only ears once a week draw drew just one point three million viewers on november ten, five days after the election, a drop of one million viewers from the month before. In the key twenty five to fifty four demographic, the advertiser is most covert meals numbers mark. The smallest audiences are show has seen her show has since since April of twenty twenty two, and she's the number one show which is like, you know, got a million people watch and shall be so pissed a handy nearly quadrupled her with four hundred and twenty thousand views to her meager one hundred and nine thousand SHE got one hundred and nine thousand people in the twenty five to fifty four yeah so it's a .

bunch old cat ladies in airports.

Airports right? Um outside of metal M S MBC seen an unprecedented plunge. This is a really bad news. And what is that? For example, on tuesday, in november eleven, the week after the elections, msm c attracted its lowest twenty five to fifty four demo ratings in twenty three years.

Over on CNN, the demo number was the lowest that has been since june twenty seventh two thousand, when bill clinton was president, for the overall week of the ever six to thirteen fox news average two point two three billion views, while msm c attracted a poultry five hundred and fifty thousand and CNN just three hundred and ninety nine thousand. Thank you about how much money is being pumped in the CNN. So go to scroll back up a little bit. In fact, fox news, uh, says viewership jump by thirty eight percent overall since november fifth after dominating an election night by topping all networks draw more than ten million viewers. It's so bad that m sbc is joe scarboro and meko or name crawled to marlowe on friday kiss trumps ring, drawing scorn for their other shamelessness after years of on air attacks.

Very quick. Let me just, you know, what they are not including is that on rumble, dambulla and Stephen crowder had the number one and number two ratings on all of election night so that they're just mentioning mainstream networks. They are leaving out the fact .

that hit over half .

million real time viewers live um and same same democratic. They are very comparable. They were the number one and number two platforms in .

the world really so .

I can't i'm not entirely sure that was you that look up. I would agree that online they had the highest. But to compare the world watching CNN and fox news and m mb. That night was less than five hundred thousand years.

Streaming referring must be because we didn't just say fox news of the highest ratings there. Five .

point five they don ated .

online. O okay, so either way, this is what happened after twenty sixteen, well, you know, like or after twenty twenty right there, once he's out of office, you can complain about time company more. Your ratings crash like your entire, your entire businesses .

Operate on fear.

So the orange and hair, I tune to get angry. I get blazed most that lady, like what the flux used again, like she's talking about, like SHE spent an entire part of her program comparing trump to stolen hitler in musli. In M, S, N, B, C compared the rally in mass and square garden to the native rally for the nineteen thirties. Or, oh, well, they're to say, no, I performed a mass square den. X, and you just had a guy on .

your show talking about .

the sash around the, let me, that's more nothing.

I encourage everyone to go watch everyone go watch in china pocalypse gray macoutes and inflict think for yourself. Um but one last thing they mentioned about that is that even john hoops had compared ancient apocalypse he associated with Sandy hook. I am not ck. This was A A week ago, two weeks ago, disgust.

He's talking the archaeology of can in the coal mine and you can tell that because you see this horrible thing happened before nine eleven and therefore they're connected in and Sandy hook happened before read around the same time as the twenty twelve thing. Or go is just like, dude, alex Jones can give you some advice, your body, you're gonna get fucked and suit, shut your mouth about society. Hook man.

the same thing that they do, the same thing the flint devil did know, connecting IT to wait supremacy atlantic .

to the land. We are three .

hours plus and I would feel like we cheated the world. Talk about the resod structure. IT I love your video um and I saw I understand randle reluctance to uh to accept this as a possibility.

It's very fascinating. Y because there's so many details and your video that details the research structure, which is an incredibly strange structure. If it's not man made and if IT wasn't at one point time, it's some sort of structure that was made by human beings. IT doesn't need to be.

So this is one of things that randle says, what is a natural feature? So a campillo is unlike who built atlantis. He said he was the god presiding, well, was presiding an actual individual.

Because if you look at the ancient greek translation, preside in its lord of the earth, which I think is a modern day translation for mother nature, and humans have built on natural geological features throughout history. If you're to bring up the resort structure from space is like no other place on earth. IT is a mysterious site.

The best, the consensus is that its volcanic and nature is a collapsed volcano, ic dome, but IT does not match anything else, anywhere else on earth. As far as volcanic domes go, IT matches more than a dozen similarities of the most. You say this, the most consequential similarities, what played to have had described as a lost ancient city of atlantis.

And it's made up of concentric circles. If I had water IT specifically matches three of water in two of land. It's made up of red, black, White color stones. There's an abundance of gold and more tania elephants, which were described as being on atlantis. You won't find gold or elephants in the ezra's like rental promotes um IT also has an opening at the south which matches the description of atlanta s there's mountains to the north which just so happened to be called the atlas mounts which are in modern day moraca well, atlas, which is very unique, name was said to be the very first king of atlantis, which also happens to be the very first, the name of the very first king in Martinia, which is where the rick hot .

structure is located in salt.

Yes, the water was there and they heard another similarity is that a lentil was said on those mountains that were set to be to the north, which are, again, happened to me in the outlet mountains. Well, there is a river that was said to be alling from those mountains. And there is a scientific study to say that tamon resent river flowed at the exact time of the lens one thousand six hundred years ago, either right through the worst hot structure or directly north of IT and um and that was just a handful of similarities. IT is by far the most likely location of the lost ancient city of atlantic tis nothing can be concluded either way um but IT is something that should not be ignored.

Certainly really fascinating and just the fact that there's this concentrate rain that match the description of atlantis and it's in the same spot and the mountains are in the same spot, the orbiting in the same. But I mean, look at that, whatever that is, is really weird. And if you imagined a city like atlantis and what the way was described, that seems a very likely spot for IT.

And let me tell you something else. A lot of people say, well, it's not an island's who could possibly be atlantis, but what they leave out is the fact that the ancient greek word for island was news and nexon, which had five meetings, one of which was island, the other was promentory peninsula, as well as land within a continent surrounded by lakes, rivers or springs, which matches the respect structure.

So it's like, you know, a lot of people in the meal to say this because a lot of people, and I think all areas should be studied and not dub bunking the assar. However, the fact that it's in the sahara desert and that the egyptians are the ones that came up with the tale of atlantis, that's where IT originates from, which surprises a lot of people. Well, egypt in the sahara.

And so is the wish t structure. And at the time of atlantis the sahara is is Green I had one of the largest networks of rivers ever known to exist as well as the largest walter lake um and so if they were if the egyptians were callers of a destroyed civilization, it's not unreasonable to say that I was in the sahara. And let me say something else, if atlantis was described as being busy all day and all night.

And was a trading post. Does that make sense to be in the middle the litigation an or is far more feasible that would be in the sahara desert, which wasn't a desert at the time. Um because if IT was sent to be busy all day and all night with languages spoken from all over, when where are all these people coming from in the middle of of the atlantic ocean to go visit IT? IT makes far more sense than IT would be in that portion in .

that region of the world. How much work has been done .

excavating in the .

none zero IT? Is they their there's gold in the Martini and desert and they don't want anyone touching IT. It's it's very unhospitable um it's to underfed fifty miles inland and IT is I know people who have gone out there and IT is a dangerous, inhospitable place. Water IT is it's hard to get to you get of all the money in the world, you can still die out .

there yeah it's it's not just hard to get to but um not just inhospitable. It's kind of more torn, kind of fucked up. And yeah, the kind of place where you're not gonna worry about somebody playing a tourist on can take your shit.

So IT is a lot a lot of it's a lot of reasons that people aren't go in there. But it's really interesting even to me, where a lot more skeptical. So I do believe in a law civilization.

I and I think that I think it's really interesting to find so many of those same things in the same way is just uncanny. I like like jim says, was just a stones throw away from egpc. Really, it's IT would make sense that they would have that package a big chunk of those things.

So accurate, recorded, defined, IT, right there definitely is one of things I have about my channel of the time. There's we need more honest skeptics. This is definite, the kind of thing.

We need real scientists to go out there and do we don't guys just need jure can say, well, you attached to atlantis, fuck that noise. I can't be. We don't need guys to say it's definitely atlantic, but there's no sea here. We need boots on the ground.

I'll have the fuck at atlantic. If IT really is in africa, be connected to what?

But let me touch you on this one. Really quit. So if if I can hit this really fast, the africans .

are black. I'm saying the atlantic and black supremacy. This is what john eth and he vested on your show. He said he's like, not only did atlantes exist, but they were black .

africans primacy. They did IT there the way that these guys attached the White supremacy thing as they go back to guys from the eighteen hundreds that wrote about the land that had some old school reviews on race. Now they believed in the biblical races, and the way that the biblical races came to be something you'll never find, john hop or die, will tell you, because IT gets their entire argument before the flood.

There was one race of humans after the flood, noa gets drunk. One, three of his sons are around. One of them picks on him, laugh at him.

Two other ones don't. The one that picked on him was ham. Here, the african people were considered to be the hammer the same, the symmetry people were the in in the middle, and then the other one.

The chaotic fight, which eventually became the areas, were considered to be the White people. That was the european view of race for up until about one hundred fifty eight years ago. So two hundred years ago, a guy riding about atlantis would not have thought that was an area in atlantis, because arians didn't didn't exist until after noa, there was one of knowest sun.

So before the flood, there was no arians. So anytime somebody says that the all these old school ship believes do a scratch of service, you'll find that not the case at all. This guy didn't believe in a wide atlantic. The natives donny did not believe in a wide atlantic despite flint deal making sure the name drop that bucer any time you get a chance. But they're going to make sure you think that they're going to eliminate because of biblically, races are something most people don't know much about.

Listen, let me just say this one point. I don't care what the color the skin was, but the legend comes from egypt, and they are fucking in Brown. So get, go, get fucked with your racist argument. I don't care .

like I I don't fuck. Gentleman, thank you very much. Just been a lot of fun.

Really, really been fun. Jimmy, I was great to see you. Thank for channel, both of us. fantastic. D dunking bright inside some .

follow me an x rumble and instagram.

love you all the cosmic s sum speaking the summer if you guys want to catch me.