American Alchemy with Jesse Michels - "I Found Hitler’s Secret UFO Program!” -Jason Jorjani
Episode Date: November 1, 2025Disclaimer: This video is an educational and philosophical discussion about historical events and post-war stories. Our returning American Alchemist this week is Jason Reza Jorjani | Thanks To Our ...Sponsors | Shopify: Start your business for just $1/month at https://shopify.com/jesse. Sponsored by Shopify, the commerce platform behind millions of businesses and 10% of all U.S. e-commerce. MUDWTR: Start your new morning ritual & get up to 43% off your @MUDWTR with code [JESSE] at https://ambassadors.mudwtr.com/JESSE #mudwtrpod Qualia: Take control of your cellular health today. Go to https://qualialife.com/jesse and save 15% to experience the science of feeling younger. Cornbread Hemp: Go to https://www.cornbreadhemp.com/jesse and use code JESSE at checkout to save 30% on your first order of Cornbread Hemp CBD. Cornbread Hemp: This is the good life. What if the war never ended…just changed shape? | Jason Reza Jorjani | Website➤https://jasonrezajorjani.com/ IG➤https://www.instagram.com/jasonrezajorjani/ X➤https://x.com/Jason_Jorjani Substack➤https://substack.com/@jasonrezajorjani Chapters 00:00 Intro 01:57 THE DEATH OF PHILOSOPHY & THE RISE OF PARAPSYCHOLOGY 05:27 ETHICS, AESTHETICS & THE LOST ART OF THINKING 09:12 RELIGION VS PURE PHILOSOPHY 12:11 HEIDEGGER, STRAUSS & THE QUESTION OF TRUE PHILOSOPHERS 14:44 AVICENNA, FEAR & INTELLECTUAL MARTYRDOM 17:44 ARISTOTLE, ALEXANDER & THE ONE WORLD ORDER 19:37 PHILOSOPHER VS STATE | THE PERIL OF IDEAS 23:13 NIETZSCHE, HISTORY & THE MONUMENTAL PAST 28:30 R.A.N.D., UFO TECH & THE MAGENTA CRASH (1933) 31:43 SKODA WORKS | THE BELL & ZERO-POINT ENERGY 35:12 MEMORY METAL, GERMAN TECH & ROSWELL DEBRIS 38:40 DEGLOCKE | ANTI-GRAVITY & TIME DISTORTION 42:10 TORSION FIELDS, TIME TRAVEL & HUMAN EXPERIMENTS 51:19 NAZI SAUCER PROPULSION & THE WONDER WEAPONS 53:13 FRANCO, SCORZENY & THE SPAIN LAUNCHES 55:58 OPERATION PAPERCLIP & THE BIRTH OF THE CIA 1:02:18 ODESSA, SPECTRE & THE TRUE DEEP STATE 1:05:18 RICHTER’S ARGENTINE FUSION PROJECT 1:07:14 NAZI NUKES, FISSION VS FUSION & SECRET TESTS 1:13:11 DID THE U.S. TRADE WITH THE SS FOR URANIUM? 1:16:09 CLEAN FUSION WEAPONS & THE HIDDEN DEAL 1:17:14 THE REAL NAZI VICTORY | 1945–2045 SOCIAL ENGINEERING 1:23:30 WELTANSCHAUUNGSKRIEG | THE WORLDVIEW WAR 1:31:07 THE VRIL SOCIETY & SUPERMAN TELEPATHY 1:34:29 ANTARCTICA | ATLANTIS REDISCOVERED 1:41:36 RUDOLF HESS, SECRET FLIGHTS & PEACE OFFERS 1:44:18 BLACK OCTAGON STRUCTURE | ANTARCTIC DISCLOSURE 1:47:32 OPERATION HIGHJUMP & ADMIRAL BYRD’S WARNING 1:49:27 THE BIRTH OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY STATE 1:52:11 ATLANTIS, IRAN & THE ARYAN ORIGINS 1:55:43 EARTH CRUST DISPLACEMENT & POLE SHIFT THEORY 2:00:23 THE TUNGUSKA EVENT & ENERGY WEAPON HYPOTHESIS 2:05:48 ATLANTEAN SURVIVORS & TIME WAR CIVILIZATION 2:10:39 REINHOLD SCHMIDT & EARLY ALIEN CONTACTS 2:15:33 DESMOND LESLIE, VENUSIANS & THE GREAT DECEPTION 2:17:12 KNIGHTS OF MALTA, BLACKMAIL & POWER NETWORKS 2:21:46 COSMIC FACTIONS | ANGELS, ASURAS & CONTROL SYSTEMS 2:25:13 THE ANGELIC HIVE MIND & SOUL MACHINERY 2:31:16 THE MOON AS A CONSCIOUSNESS HARVESTER 2:36:22 REMOTE VIEWING, MOKSHA & SOLAR SYSTEM WAR 2:40:16 PROMETHEUS, HUMAN ORIGINS & THE FIRE OF GODS 2:42:21 THE NORDICS, NUKES & INTERVENTION 2:52:50 TEMPORAL DISORIENTATION & MISSING 411 3:03:19 MEN IN BLACK, MANTIDS & THE PSYCHOLOGICAL TRICKSTER 3:16:29 THE OWLS, LUCIFER & THE COSMIC TEST 3:35:19 PHILOSOPHY VS FAITH | PROMETHEAN REBELLION 3:41:02 THEATER OF CONSCIOUSNESS | THE COSMIC PLAY Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You have to take seriously this claim on the part of the Nazi leadership that they wanted a thousand-year Reich.
A thousand-year Imperium is no joke.
Perhaps the best-known abduction of all, and one of the earliest reported, is the abduction of a well-respected New England couple, Betty and Barney Hill.
Look back at Barney Hill's original statements.
The evil face.
He looks right.
They're a Nazi.
But mankind has been seeking knowledge.
Alan Dulles and his brother, John Foster Dulles,
together with J.P. Morgan Chase and Rockefeller,
funded the rise of the Nazis.
Is the implication that there's some sort of Nazi sleeper cell
undergirding American politics today?
So World War II is not what we think it is.
They were seeing these rocket-like things that were saucer-shaped,
being launched from Spain, the Mediterranean country.
over toward America.
Really?
One year later, what happens?
Roswell.
I mean, is the idea that there is some sort of like
Atlantean surviving remnant group that's still there?
So for all we know, what's happening is that a future state
of a certain culture is contacting itself in the past.
Trying to pull the timeline towards itself or something.
To actualize itself.
Trans-temporary actualize itself.
Jason Reza-Georgiani, back by popular demand.
Thank you so much for coming on.
And we just launched an episode and people are absolutely loving it.
So check that out, part one.
But there's so many other threads I wanted to get into.
And I left that conversation thinking that there was a lot that was left kind of unsaid and we could have gone on for hours.
So I'm very excited to do this.
You're one of the few thinkers I know who doesn't just sort of know a bunch of random disparate facts around the phenomenon, but tries to.
piece them together into some sort of coherent worldview, which is kind of a Herculane task,
but you're attempting to do that. And I can't think of too many other, I mean, Jacques
fillet might be another one, but there aren't too many thinkers trying to do that. So this is very
cool. Thank you. You know, that made me think of something that actually, you know, would probably
be a good preface to this conversation. Because I think that one of the most significant crises that
we face in our civilization and, you know, in the world at large, is the decline of philosophy.
The reduction of philosophy to academic scholasticism and logic chopping and the lack of
a deep, serious, broad spectrum thinking that would be capable of, for example, tackling the
close encounter phenomenon, right? I mean, obviously, it should be philosophers who are engaging,
both with the data of close encounters and parapsychological data. In fact, you know, there were
people in philosophy who played a fundamental role in development of parapsychology at its outset.
Both William James and Henri Bergson were among the founding parapsychologists in the era of
Psychical Research. In fact, William James was the president of the Society for Psychical Research
in the 1870s. And Bergson was as well later on. I didn't know that in 1910s or something like that.
There you go. And this is a time when parapsychology wasn't relegated to quacky circles and, you know,
new agey conferences. Berkson was debating Einstein at the time. And so he was considered a worthy debate
partner for Einstein, who himself wasn't, you know, fully accepted by mainstream science, but
was very well respected. Yes. And James had predicted in the era when he was the president of
Society for Psychical Research that this would be the next great scientific revolution, right?
What I, in my writings, have called the spectral revolution. And it didn't happen. And, you know,
in my first book, Prometheus and Atlas, I ventured a, you know, a basically theory of why it didn't happen.
And that's because of the extremely serious psychological and sociological implications of mainstream acceptance of things like telepathy, precognition, clairvoyance, and so forth.
And so, you know, it's not only essential for philosophers to engage with the ontological and epistemological questions inherent,
in parapsychological data or close-encounter phenomena,
but also the ethical and political ramifications.
And this brings me to what I wanted to say in response to your opening,
which is that I've made an argument now in several of my books
that it's definitional to the type of the philosopher
to develop concepts that cut across all of the major domains of philosophy,
from ontology and epistemology to then an ethics and a politics that follow from that ontological and epistemic thinking.
And then also I think aesthetics is very important.
From the time of Plato onward, there's been this idea that the cultivation of aesthetic discernment and the capacity to perceive the beautiful or the sublime is also another pathway to knowledge.
and perhaps to a kind of knowledge that transcends or undergirds reductive rationality.
And in particular, I think that aesthetic judgment is very closely connected to ethics.
And it's something that, you know, Nietzsche understood, Frederick Nietzsche understood very well.
Yeah, he says, I think there's some quote, I'm going to butcher it, but it's like life is only eternally justified in its aesthetic form or something.
And he, yeah, he fully believed that.
And Nietzsche wasn't alone.
I mean, look, if you, I mean, Kant is well known for being a very principled, hyper-rational advocate of this crystalline universal ethics.
But if you ask me, Kant's most interesting work is his aesthetic work.
And it's in his aesthetics and his third critique, critique of judgment, that you can see the connection between Kant's interest in the occult and Kant's development of this universal ethics.
then for example, Hegel has an entire account of how you can see the evolution of human consciousness or what he called spirit through changes in aesthetic styles, changes in artistic expression from epoch to epoch, and how they reflect the evolution of the perceptive and cognitive capacities of humanity.
So, okay, my point is that to be a philosopher, you really have to be thinking across all of these domains and developing concepts that cut across them, above all, because you cannot have any unquestioned presuppositions.
So you could be the most brilliant, let's say, metaphysician, right?
And someone who's developing a very rigorous epistemology.
but if you have unquestioned political presuppositions,
it's going to be tacitly warping your ontology and epistemology.
And if you want to really be a philosopher,
you know, which is to say someone who from the era of Socrates onward
was defined by boundless, limitless,
and thorough-going questioning,
you really cannot give yourself the luxury of unquestioned assumptions in any area.
Right?
So, I mean, this has very serious implications for religion, obviously,
because it means that it's definitional to a philosopher that he or she,
I consider Ayn Rand, for example, to be a real philosopher in this sense.
He or she cannot accept any religion.
It is definitional to a philosopher that you cannot.
adhere to a religious belief system.
I mean, you are crippling yourself and you are, you know, you're basically capacity to question
and develop concepts from the outset if you have any kind of a religious commitment.
Would you say St. Thomas Aquinas, not a philosopher?
Exactly. So the entirety of medieval European philosophy is not philosophy.
And none of these people were philosophers. And also in Iran, you know, I spent a lot of time
both studying Iran
and also making significant contributions
to Iranian studies.
My book Iranian Leviathan is a tomb
on the history of Iran
from Zarathustra to the Islamic Republic.
And so what this also means is that
this whole era that's
misnamed the Islamic Golden Age,
which really was like an Iranian Renaissance
from the 1900s
to the 1100s,
really doesn't have very many philosophers involved with it,
because these people were essentially Islamic theologians
of the type of Thomas Aquinas,
like, for example, Al-Farabi.
Al-Farabi goes to the extent of equating Muhammad
with Plato's ideal of the philosopher king,
which is an absolute travesty.
The only thinkers in that era
that really exemplified the type of the philosopher
for, for example,
Razi,
whose writings almost completely were destroyed
by various, you know,
inquisitors later on
once the Turks came in and resolidified
Islam in Iran.
And maybe Shahab al-Din Sorevardi.
But it means that that whole period in Iran,
very much like Europeans' medieval so-called philosophy,
really doesn't pass muster.
But why am I getting into all this?
The point is that it seems almost as if we're entering another dark age now
with the lack of substantive philosophical thinking
and fewer and fewer individuals who really pass muster
as exemplary of the type of the philosopher
in the way that, let's say, in the 20th century,
we had Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sacht,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, and another really,
deep thinkers.
So a philosopher can't be an extension of state power or religious power is sort of what you're
getting a man.
I mean, to play devil's advocate, you have philosophers like Leo Strauss also mid-20th century.
So you'd say not a philosopher.
Strauss said so.
Strauss literally said, I am not a philosopher.
Do not call me a philosopher.
I'm a professor of philosophy and a political thinker.
But in Straussian doublespeak, that could mean I am a philosopher.
He meant it. He meant it. And the more shocking thing that Strauss said was, at the same time as he made the statement, he said Martin Heidegger is the only living philosopher, which coming from out of the mouth of a Jew is quite a striking statement, right? I mean, Heidegger having been a high-level Nazi functionary.
But wouldn't a Straussian read on many past philosophers be that many of them had to exceed to kind of the conventional thought of the time, but then secretly they could hold their own kind of heretical beliefs?
So, like, you know, I'm trying to think of a good example.
Like, was, you know, one of the Enlightenment era, you know, Francis Bacon, not really a philosopher, kind of a philosopher.
But like, you know, he would say things like, you know, we need empiricism to prove out God's secrets or to, you know, understand.
and the divine nature of the world and reality.
And the Straussian read on that is like he's sort of a deist or an atheist,
and he doesn't believe in God at all.
And he's just sort of, you know, placating and paying lip service to, you know, the establishment power.
Well, I think that through careful study, that could be verified.
So you brought up the case of Francis Bacon.
There is a theory that, will I am, shake spear?
Yeah.
It's a pen name for Sir Francis Bacon.
People think that.
Yeah.
Now, if someone were to engage in an exhaustive philosophical analysis of the works of Shakespeare and be able to prove that that was indeed a literary persona of Sir Francis Bacon.
Yeah.
Then I think a very good case could be made that Francis Bacon was a first-rate philosopher.
Yeah.
Because there's an ethics, there's a political philosophy in Shakespeare, you know, and you could reconstruct that.
So that would be a case of an actual philosopher engaging in esoteric writing in order to express the full range of his thought.
Do you believe that Shakespeare wasn't back to Francis Bacon?
I think it's possible.
I think there's an argument there.
I don't have the range of Shakespeare scholarship or anywhere close to it to be able to assess that.
I think it was like, you know, there are all these kind of occult references like King Lear or something.
Like these, you know, things forgot the exact argument.
but it was like Stratford upon even wasn't super far from where bacon was and then, you know,
all these things were mentioned like 33 times and who knows.
I mean, look, it's clearly-
Bacon was prolific, you know.
Will I am, I am will, you know, the will, I'm the will, shake spear, the shaking
of the spear, right?
It's clearly a pseudonym.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
For someone who was an incredible genius.
So who the hell was that guy?
Yeah.
Like at that time, who was living and, you know, who maybe expressed his genius in other ways, as in the scientific writings of, and then there's the New Atlantis.
Yeah, yeah.
So anyway, it could be, look, but my point is this, that that's one thing.
But if you're a philosopher who's, let me rephrase that, if you're a metaphysician who's afraid to express a political philosophy because you might be persecuted by the religious authorities of the day.
And you just don't put pen to paper, you know, in any way.
Even, let's say, as a set of secret writings that you consigned to somebody to be posthumously published,
if you just never put pen to paper to express any kind of coherent political philosophy or ethics that follows from your ontology and epistemology, you're not a philosopher.
You're a coward.
Okay.
And so, for example, in Iran, we had an example of somebody like that was Ebenecina, who has they call him Avicenna in the West.
great metaphysician.
Maybe he has some ethics, but he did not develop a coherent political philosophy, which, as I see it, disqualifies him as the type of the philosopher.
And he made a deathbed confession.
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that, you know, these bastard Islamic clerics
have made it impossible to think freely in this country.
And I had to basically dissimulate
and warp all of my ideas and my writings
out of constant fear of persecution by the authorities.
So he did say that before he died.
Okay.
To be a philosopher, you have to risk that
and you have to be willing to be turned into a human torch
like Jordana Bruno,
the town square of Rome,
or Socrates or Pythagoras,
who had his schools burned down in his own lifetime,
Oh, I didn't know that about Pythagoras.
Yeah, I mean, some say he died in the fires.
Others say he barely escaped with his life and died from injuries shortly thereafter.
But Pythagoras was the first one to be martyred in the history of philosophy.
And then Socrates and then they almost killed that.
Both Plato and Aristotle.
Plato went to Syracuse to try to convince this tyrant Dionysus to become a philosopher change,
as he had, you know, outlined in Republic.
and basically the entire court of Syracuse
conspired against Plato,
and he had to escape by boat in the middle of the night,
narrowly escaped with his life.
And then Aristotle willingly left Athens
because there was a plot to have him prosecuted also.
So this is endemic to the history of philosophy.
Well, was this pre-tutoring Alexander the Great
or Post?
It was pre because Alexander was younger, right?
And they say, by the way, out,
that Alexander didn't like Aristotle.
Really?
Yeah.
Why didn't he like him?
Aristotle ran a think tank in addition to being like a philosopher, you know, engaged in his own individual exploration and contemplation.
He had essentially like the prototype of the Rand Corporation in classical Greece and various other city states would come to him and he would write their constitutions for them secretly.
You know, you don't want to tell your people that their constitution comes from some guy's think tank.
in Athens, if you're living in Corinth or, you know, Sparta or whatever. But they would come to him and he would
write this kind of part of his political philosophy that informed his writing constitutions for various
city-states was that we should always have a political pluralverse. He was very much against one
unifying government. Arisala was the first serious thinker to critique the idea of world government.
And so, for example, he was very wary of the Persians who wanted to establish a kind of
of, you know, humanistic one-world order, right?
Well, Alexander actually had great reverence for the Persians, in particular, his hero
was Cyrus the Great, the founder of the Persian Empire.
The first thing he did when he got to Iran was he had them take him to the tomb of Cyrus
so that he could pay his respects to Cyrus the Great.
And eventually, Alexander became convinced that the Persians had the right worldview and
that the whole Earth and all of its cultures should be unified into a single cosmopolitan order,
which eventually was reflected in the culture of the city of Alexandria that was named after him in Egypt,
became like the cosmopolitan bastion of the world, right?
So this is diametrically opposed to Aristotle's thinking.
You know, Alexander becomes the exemplar of the idea of the one world order,
and Aristotle is the first critic of it.
That's so fascinating when things like that happen.
modern example of that would be like George Soros and Victor Orban.
It's kind of a mentee and mentor and like Soros is obviously all about spreading as much
democracy as possible. Orban was kind of his understudy and then now, you know, it's totally
split off and it's, you know, basically the tip of the spear when it comes to European nationalism.
Yeah.
And, you know, it almost feels Shakespearean in some ways.
Now that's the other thing about the type of the philosopher, which is very
dangerous is the relationship between the philosopher and the state
because frankly, you cannot be a nationalist and be a philosopher.
So any philosopher who seems like a nationalist, like says, Martin Heidegger, right,
who literally was a Nazi functionary, they're engaging in.
I was about to say Straussian, rather in platonic dissimulation and some kind of a
noble lie.
So do you think Heidegger was not a real philosopher?
No, Heidegger was not a real nationalist.
It was not a real nationalist.
And when you study Heidegger deeply, you see that.
It's very clear.
But only to someone with an esoteric eye for it and who can sink together with him on a deep level,
understand what he's really saying, right?
So he was trying to use the German state in a certain way that had to do with his
understanding of the threat posed to human.
by modern technology and a way that he thought that the German state could be shaped to confront
the instrumentalizing and mechanizing threat of modern technology, to shepherd technological
development in a certain direction that would prevent the instrumentalization of humanity
and our alienation from our existential essence, right? So, but the deeper question is, is this,
like, I mean, Socrates was executed by the Athenian state, right?
And in his discourse on the arts and sciences, Jean-Jacques Rousseau says that
the Athenians were justified in doing this because the guy was a menace to the social order
and to the political cohesion of Athens.
And that any thinker has to basically reconcile himself to the sovereignty of the state
and to like basically accommodating the social order, right?
So Rousseau actually thinks to philosophers, you know, pose this like fundamental, you know, inimical challenge to state power.
And I think that on some level he's right.
But the irony also is that especially in grave crises and what Carl Schmidt called states of emergency,
I think it's also the philosophers of a people who can save a people.
You know, a nation that lacks a philosopher or lacks deep thinkers in a moment of grave crisis is not going to make it.
No, that feels very right to me.
And it feels like the modern world has very few.
I think of big philosophers today and that, you know, you're sort of one of them.
And then you have, you know, guys like Slava Zizek or whatever who's, you know, super too postmodern for my taste.
but, you know, he's at least attempting.
And then I don't know, even Jordan Peterson in my mind, who I think he sort of falls prey to,
it's like narcissism of small differences between him and postmodernism because I think his stuff sort of melts into a postmodern gobbly gook or whatever.
But he's trying.
He's, you know, read all the right stuff or whatever.
But there are very few philosophers who are very ambitious, you know, most philosophy professors at universities just give you these very
conventional kind of lame, limited by modern epistemics, reads of these past philosophers,
and you're sort of supposed to, there's a great, actually, essay by Nietzsche called On History,
and he talks about undigested stones of knowledge. And it feels like that's what they're,
they're just passing on these undigested stones of knowledge. They're not actually processing
any of what they're saying. Yes. And that essay, that's incredibly important essay,
it became fundamental to Heidegger's thinking,
and Heidegger basically quotes it at the beginning of being in time,
and it also has become very important to my work.
In particular, that book Iranian Leviathan that I mentioned,
the subtitle is A Monumental History of Mithra's Abode.
And that term monumental history is from that essay of Nietzsche,
the uses and abuses of history for life.
And he basically says that there's three modes of history.
One is antiquarian history, which is what traditionalists do,
where they glorify the past, right?
And like the ultimate form of this is the Hindu or ancient Greek worldview
where there was a golden age and then a decayed into a silver age and a bronze age and so history is declining, right?
And all we can do is try to hold on to fragments of the past to the better days
and to preserve as much of our heritage as possible.
I mean, it's conservatism in an ontological sense.
Then there's critical history, which is what these poems are.
more people do. Like you're just mentioning Zhijek, right? Zhijek is like, you know, probably, yeah,
the greatest living exemplar or postmodern philosophy. Right. And critical history is all about
deconstructing power structures and showing how basically every institution and even every structure
of knowledge was ultimately the product of a power game that somebody was playing and that it benefits
either some class interest or institutional interest or, you know, is a product of rivalry between
nations or ethnicities and so on and so forth.
That it's all oppressive and it should all be deconstructed.
It's like pouring acid on history and the achievements of all people throughout time, right?
And Nietzsche says, okay, to be fair, under really oppressive conditions that are
resulting in social sterility and that are hampering.
innovation and novel cultural development, a little bit of critical history is a good thing,
because it breaks up ossified structures and it allows creativity to be unleashed again, right?
So Michelle Foucault is a great example.
Michelle Foucault is the ultimate critical historian.
I mean, that was basically his project.
Everything's a power game.
Yeah.
And with all these histories that he engaged in, including history of sexuality, you know,
history of the prison system, history of psychology and stuff.
Then...
And his own personal life, he sort of, you know, was...
who is kind of a pervert, to be honest.
And I think it was kind of an expression of the morality that comes from that kind of world.
I'll tell you, what's also an expression of that is that Foucault endorsed Ayatollah Khomeini and the Islamic Revolution in Iran.
I mean, how lost do you have to be in postmodern nonsense that you think it's a liberation to help a misogynistic,
seocratic, repressive regime come to power, right?
Anyway, so that's critical history.
And then the last modality of history that Nietzsche discusses,
that essay, which is the one that he personally embraces, and that I have, and that's been
very important to my work, is monumental history, which is the idea that monumentalizing
certain past achievements, turning certain historical figures into icons that can continue
to provide inspiration, and having essentially a folkloric approach to one's heritage,
so that it doesn't become an ossified tradition,
but it becomes a source of inspiration
where you can dynamically adopt and adapt your heritage
for future development.
That's vital to the life of a people.
And he says that it's like a tree
whose branches can only grow toward the sun of destiny
if it's deeply rooted in the earth
and its roots are healthy underground.
And that underground is the same.
subconscious. It's that, you know, monumental history is nourished from out of the subconscious.
And not everything in the past of a people has to be or should be rationally dissected and
understood that we need to maintain a kind of subconscious connection to the mythic substratum
of our heritage as a wellspring for continued creativity, both in the arts and the sciences.
Yeah, I love that. He's so inspiring when you read him. I like, you know, he is, he seems very irrational and kind of iconoclastic and maybe a little crazy, you know, in his personal life and stuff. And Nietzsche was almost like the first in cell or something. But, but he was also just so inspiring. You read his work and it's, it's full of vitality in life. So it felt like this weird juxtaposition. You had his, you know, his kind of personal life, which he was kind of, you know, withering away. And then, and then you have the writing, which was.
so vital. I love him. I feel a very deep affinity to Nietzsche. I'd say Plato, Nietzsche, and
Heidegger are probably the three philosophers who have most deeply impacted my own thinking.
Well, you mentioned the Rand Corporation. We're in Santa Monica right now near the Rand Corporation. I
believe Rand stands for R&D research and development. It was formed in, I believe, the mid to late 50s,
one of these sort of federally funded research and development centers that was met to look into
all sorts of issues of national security.
It's kind of a, you know, it says when we talk about the proverbial deep state, you think of
the Rand Corporation.
And a man who was offered to be president of the Rand Corporation, some people might not know
this, is a past interviewee of mine, a guy named Harold Malmgren, who was a senior
presidential advisor for JFK, LBJ, Nixon, and Ford, and said all sorts of really bombshell
stuff when it came to UFOs, including he held pieces of
UFO at Sandia
Complex in New Mexico
who was given to him by Lawrence
Preston Geis, who's Jeff Bezos' maternal
grandfather, which
is fascinating. And he
talked about the magenta crash, Malmgren
did, and his mentor
Richard Bissell, who founded Area 51,
briefing him on other
worldly technologies. Yeah, what else
did Richard Bissell tell you? You've said this
didn't start last week.
This has been going on.
He mentioned
1933
Magenta.
He did?
Yes.
Richard Bissell mentioned
the 1933
Magenta crash.
Yes, yes.
That's amazing.
So this provided a lot of backup
for David Grushes,
you know,
famous UFO whistleblower
who's responsible
for a lot of modern disclosure
today,
his testimony around this
magenta crash
where he came out,
he said that
they're covert
American UFO
reverse engineering programs.
We have this whole history
on this stuff.
But he also said,
He talked about one specific crash, and it wasn't Roswell.
It was this 1933, Lombardy, you know, Northern Italy crash specifically in Magenta, Italy.
1933 was the first recovery in Europe in Magenta, Italy.
Italian government moved it to a secure air base in Italy for the rest of kind of the fascist regime until 1944, 1945.
And, you know, the Popeye's the 12 back channeled that.
So the Vatican was involved.
Yeah.
and told the Americans what the Italians had, and we ended up scooping it.
And you have some interesting connections that you've made between that and Nazi prowess
in engineering at the time.
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energy. And so what do you have to say about all that? Yeah. So as far as I understand it,
the Vatican was informed of it. The Vatican was informed of it and has a dossier on it. And the Vatican
was involved in the sort of study of this object in a joint working group that involved both
SS scientists and Italian scientists in a third-party country. So,
When I wrote my book, Closer Encounter...
Did he say third-party country?
No, but I know it's a third-party country.
Interesting.
Because that's where the so-called Bell Project winds up being developed,
namely just outside Prague in former Czechoslovakia, okay, in the Czech Republic.
And so when I was doing my research for Closer Encounters,
we did not yet have the testimony from Rush about Magenta.
I wrote that book in 2021.
It was published in 2021.
So I studied the Nazi advanced propulsion research that was going on, again, at a facility called the Skoda Works just outside Prague, under the direction of SS General Hans Kamler.
After Grush made this testimony about Magenta, I realized why they put it there.
because if the Italians had found this object
and at least from one angle
this was a reverse engineering project
then it makes sense to have chosen a country
that was neither Italy nor Germany
the Italians needed the German technical expertise
they were not going to figure out
what the hell this thing was by themselves
even though they'd had some very competent scientists
but still they knew that they had to call the Germans in
and yet the Germans probably wanted to
you know,
wanted to
respect the Italians
by putting this project
in a third country
that was neither
Germany nor Italy, right?
So it was sort of a compromise,
access compromise,
to put it in
Czechslovakia.
Now,
it's an interesting question.
How much of what they were doing there
was an attempt to reverse engineer
whatever crashed at Magenta?
And how much
much of it was a result of Germans grappling with some real nuts and bolts practical engineering
problems. So let me give you an example. The saucer airframe very naturally evolved from
German aeronautical engineering. They were taking very seriously in the 1930s the problem of
aerodynamics and the boundary layer that where a pocket of air resistance.
forms around the edges of an aircraft.
And it causes drag and impedes maneuverability.
So they came up with the idea of creating a saucer-shaped craft that would have suction
vents all around it.
And these suction vents would basically suck in the boundary layer and then redirect the air pocket
into the propulsion system.
as part of the propulsion system.
And another interesting thing that they developed in connection
with this problem of suctioning of the boundary layer
and basically making a much more aerodynamic aircraft
was they developed a kind of perforated metal,
which later was discovered at Roswell,
according to Corso.
And it was a kind of metal where you could put your hand on the other side of it
and blow through the metal
and feel your breath on your hand.
A perforated, finely perforated
metal. Do you know the name of this metal?
I think in German it was called Luftschwam.
Luftschwom.
Okay, and then Korson.
Flying foam.
And how do we know?
So then for context,
1947, famous proverbial,
you know, archetypal UFO crash
occurs in Roswell,
which is the home of the 509th
atomic bomber squadron,
led by Curtis Lameh.
Sort of makes, you know,
it made the Roswell
Daily Record got popularized, actually way later in 1979.
But you're saying that the medal found there matches what was discovered in Nazi Germany?
Some of it.
Some of it.
Now, here's the thing about Roswell.
And we'll come back to the...
Is this what Jesse Marcel handled that metal?
I don't know.
Okay.
I don't know.
The memory metal?
Yeah.
Well, certainly memory metal was found there.
Yes.
Whether these are the same thing and whether the memory metal was this perforated metal,
I don't know.
But supposedly that was also found there.
Does Corso say that the perforated metal that was found at Roswell matches Nazi?
Joseph Farrell did a study of Corso's claims in the day after Roswell in a book which I believe is called Saucer, Swastikas, and Sciops.
And he went in detail into various cutting-edge German technological innovations of the 1940s, particularly military and.
engineering.
And he makes a number of really significant points in this regard.
Among the things found at Roswell, according to Corso, was Kevlar, Velcro,
Yes.
Night Vision, and fiber optics.
And lasers, I believe.
And lasers.
I mean, okay, I guess space aliens could be using Kevlar.
Maybe they could be using Velcro too.
But Farrell researched this, and he provides a documentation that shows that the Germans had invented every single one of these in the 1940s.
They were not in common use.
They were not even accessible to the majority of the German military.
But they were being tested, you know, as sort of cutting edge weapons technology, especially like in the North African desert, in 1943, 44.
Yeah, I believe there's the first patent for a transistor is in Munich or something.
something in the 30s. So yeah. That's interesting. Well, when we went in there, you know, to Nazi
Germany, we found that the German subsidiary of IBM, a company called Dehomog, was way ahead,
not only of like all the other American transistor manufacturers, but ahead of the American IBM.
Yeah. So the German subsidiary was like developing transistors that were much, like an order
of magnitude smaller than what we had in the United States. But this brings up two really important
questions. One is what caused this just general technological acceleration in Nazi Germany in the,
you know, 20s, 30s and 40s. I mean, really 30s and 40s. If you think about Hitler took power
in 1933, which was, you know, you have like 10 years to build up and you get all sorts of, I mean,
look at V2 rockets are like 20, 30 years ahead of anything in the West. You know, all the Wunderwaffe,
you know, the fighter jets were, the skunk works was kind of response to the, you know,
the fact that their fighter jets were running circles around ours.
So what accounts for that, A, and then B, if they are so advanced technologically,
why did the United States ultimately, you know, prevail and beat them?
Well, that's the subject that I, you know, I hope we can get into in some level of detail.
I wonder if I should flesh out a couple more things about the engineering at the Skoda Works before we then come back to this.
Sure.
And really dive into it head on.
So they were developing these saucer airframes with suction, vents, and so on and so forth.
But these were rocket powered.
They had rotating rockets underneath these saucer-shaped craft.
Rotating rocket?
Yeah, like a series of jets, like put in a fan formation to basically maneuver these saucer-shaped craft in various directions.
So it was a jet aircraft, in other words.
It was a saucer-shaped rocket-powered aircraft.
Then parallel to this saucer airframe project,
there was another project which, when I did my research in Closer Encounters,
working from Joseph Farrell and Nick Cook's book,
The Hunt for Zero Point, Nick Cook's research.
And then also his citations of Igor Witowski's research,
Polish researcher who actually went to this site and did some field work there.
I assumed that this project, based on those researchers,
I assume that this project began like in the early 1940s.
I've since been informed by somebody
who had relatively direct knowledge, somebody in Serbia,
that it went back to 1937.
Who is this person?
I don't want to mention the person's name.
Okay.
A very old person who was involved with some of these individuals
back in the day in Central and Eastern Europe.
Interesting.
And so from what I hear from him, it started in 1937.
And this was a project to basically develop,
originally their aim was to develop a new power source,
a power plant, involving the electromagnetic rotation of mercury and thorium.
So I think it's thorium 232, if I remember correctly,
mixed with a certain isotope of mercury.
And the reason for mixing it with mercury
is that mercury is electromagneticly reactive.
So if you want to rotate the thorium
using electromagnets,
mixing the thorium with mercury
allows you to rotate the thorium very effectively.
Create thorium torsion.
And this device would be
continuously powered by alternating current and intermittently shocked with very high voltage direct
current.
And basically, what it did was it would create a kind of plasma fusion from out of which
tremendous energy flowed.
So it was a over-unity device where you would be putting a certain amount of energy
into it, both AC and DC.
but then the nuclear reaction of the thorium
due to electromagnetic torsion
would produce more energy
than was being put into the device.
Is she high conviction that that's...
I mean, so you're saying they had like a zero point energy device?
Yes, yes.
Because that's the idea.
That's what Wittkowski,
Nick Cook and Joseph Farrell are all saying,
looking at the bell project.
Well, Nick Cook, so yeah, yeah,
a lot of his stuff came from Wittkowski.
And it's amazing. I mean, he takes the little boat ride and they go underground and you can see the rig where DiGlaca was. So it was definitely a real project. And Hans Kalmer was a, you know, very real guy. He had, you know, control of Skoda Works, which was kind of the really black world, you know, exciting projects going on as opposed to kind of the white world, you know, Heisenberg nuclear project. But there are all sorts of rumors about de Glocka. I mean, some people say it was like a time machine.
When he talked to Nick Cook, he gets like a little uncomfortable as my read, almost as if he knows something that he like can't really talk about or something.
But he'll say, I think it was a black world nuclear project.
Over time, I have come to conclude that it was probably a one of several sites that the Germans, the SS in particular, were using to look into nuclear weapons, nuclear technology.
Which goes towards maybe what you're saying.
I think both of those things are true.
I think both of those things are true.
And we can unpack both of them.
Okay.
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much to qualia for sponsoring this episode so i think i assume that or let's say i suspect that they were looking
for an incredible power plant originally.
But the reason that a rig exists
is because they realized that this thing levitates
when you turn it on.
And they had to chain it down.
And so this, whatever kind of energy
was being generated also resulted in counterberry.
It was an anti-
In other words, it developed a local gravitational field
around itself.
anti-gravity.
But the other more interesting thing is that
they would put plants around this thing
and they would turn to mulch. They were like
cellularly disrupted. They were disrupted
on a cellular level and they would basically disintegrate.
And supposedly, the entire
first team of scientists that worked around this thing
died very quickly and they had to replace them all.
And we do know from Woodkowski for a fact
that the lead scientists was a guy,
it was a guy named Ernest Growicz,
who I believe was an SS medical officer
who worked directly under Joseph Mangala.
So if you were putting sort of biological specimens,
you know, in this sort of torsion field,
you know, he would be relevant.
And then a guy named Walter Gerlock
who worked at a local university
and was extremely interested in gravity.
So, yeah, sort of to your point.
Absolutely. And Gerlock was involved in, like,
also magnetic engineering and stuff like that.
electromagnetic engineering and stuff like that.
But the people who, I mean, the first group of them eventually died,
experienced extreme temporal disorientation.
So they would, this is what the reports are, you know,
from Witkowski and Farrell,
that they experienced time flowing at a different rate
than people outside the laboratory.
and that it became extremely disorienting
and eventually cognitively debilitating to them.
So time machine, well, you know,
maybe not at that stage,
but some kind of a time disruptor
that it is interfering with the fabric of space time.
And for people who think we're crazy,
general relativity even would allow for that
on a go-forward sense
because if you, you know, create a high density
or, you know, you create a high-energy environment,
There are two ways to basically warp space time.
It's, you know, mass and energy.
And with both, you would encounter sort of time displacement.
And so with this, you know, black hole where you have like, you know, you're going to slow time, the closer you get to it.
So high voltage experimentation and things of that nature or, you know, nuclear experiment, you might, you know, incur some sort of time displacement as well.
Absolutely.
And say you were to, like, do that in a more systematic.
And wasn't Townsend Brown obsessed with, like, time travel or something?
He's obsessed with time travel.
He, like Agnew Bonson, who funded him, was famous for saying that, you know,
a high megabolt range, you know, electricity experiments, very anomalous things would occur,
phenomena would occur.
And Tans and Brown definitely thought that his work led would lead you to a working model of time travel and to get even more specific with how that might work in the context of Deglovka.
As the rumor was that there was a ceramic chamber, you know, internally to protect.
you know, whatever biological organism was being sort of tested in this environment.
And by the way, this is a Nazi regime that definitely experimented on human beings, twin studies
with Joseph Mangala, experimental cell block nine where they try to cryonically freeze people.
Like, border science was very in vogue.
So you'd put a person in this ceramic chamber, you'd create a torsion field around it,
and basically you'd slow time on the inside to, you know, say one one thousandths of a second.
And if a person spent a year inside this chamber, you'd walk out and you'd be a thousand years in the future.
And that doesn't break Hawking's chronological conjecture.
It works with general relativity.
It makes theoretical sense.
There are all these engineering issues with it, presumably, but what you're saying isn't totally crazy for the audience.
And unfortunately, I'm sure that they brought concentration camp inmates and put them in there.
I'm sure.
Yeah.
I'm sure.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So you have this bell.
And then you, and by the way, an alternate name for the bell was de beanenstock, the beehive, which is interesting because they say the reason they called it that is that it makes the sound of a bunch of bees buzzing together when he turned this thing on.
And there have been people who reported that in relation to UFO close and photos as well.
Yeah, we heard a sound in that direction. It was sort of like a buzzing noise.
It was a very, you know, it was like a buzzing. It kind of sounded like bees, but it was more.
more like a machine bee sounds, just very strange.
What was the craft like?
So you're in the inside of this thing.
What did it look like?
A beehive.
So they had this bell and they had this saucer-shaped airframe
that initially was being propelled by rockets.
They took the rockets out, put the belt in it,
and there's your flying saucer.
It's the integration of the bell with the saucer airframe
as the propulsion system for the saucer.
You know when the first public patent for a flying saucer was?
When?
1937.
Really?
Yeah, a guy named Henry Kowanda, who was Romanian, but eventually he was, you know,
overtaken by the Nazis and started to work with them.
And then he went over to Wright Pat and worked with the Americans on the Avrocar project,
which is probably a front for some deeper stuff that you're kind of getting into right now.
So I find that interesting as well.
Well, that makes a very good point, too.
in so far as scientific breakthroughs
never only occur once
and never come through only one person.
Anyone who studies in history of science knows this?
And one of the most ignorant points made today
to dispute the idea that let's say
the Nazis could have cracked ZPE back in the 40s
and had, you know, saucer propulsion,
is, well, somebody else should have come up with it,
you know, like either before or by now or whatever.
First of all, the last few decades
are full of cases of people.
coming up with like interesting energy devices
and either being bought out
or being made to disappear or whatever,
you know, meeting some kind of misfortune.
But going back to that era,
yes, other people arrived at the same thing,
Townsend, Brown arrived at something similar.
Nikola Tesla had already arrived at something similar
decades earlier.
Even if he didn't patent it,
and you know, Tesla was notorious
for not properly patenting things,
his drawings of the world wireless system,
system are full of UFOs.
Wingless,
electrogravically powered craft.
They are all over Tesla's drawings.
It's not as if the Nazis, I came up with this, like, you know, uniquely.
The effects that you're mentioning people having incurred, you know, time displacement,
disorientation, all the reports of the Philadelphia experiment, which was led by Thomas Townsend Brown,
who had a nervous breakdown at that time and had to move out to L.A.
and then started working for, you know, Martin Corporation,
the year that skunk work started,
all of the same sort of reports of what you're describing,
time displacement.
I believe people think they might have used thorium and that as well,
or maybe it was hexafloor, I don't remember,
but very interesting, the parallels there, too.
People said, you know, they went back in time,
they went forward in time,
there are all sorts of fantastical stories about it.
Nobody knows quite what happened.
It had a very large budget attached to it.
So could have been this parallel kind of, you know, thing, which which often happens in science, as you just said.
Yep. Yep. And so now here's the picture. So from based on, you know, the research that I've done that I've cited in closer encounters, it's 1944 when they figure out finally how to integrate, well, if they finish work on the bell, at least the prototype of it, and they figure out how to integrate it with the saucer airframe.
1944. So they're already losing the war. The Germans are losing the war. The allies are marching on them. It's increasingly a losing battle. And Nazi leadership starts to make these statements about how there are these wonder weapons that are being developed. And once the wonder weapons, the Wunderwaffe, are finished, then Germany will dramatically turn the tide and secure like an 11th hour victory in the war. But it's all dependent on these wonderwaffe.
weapons and don't worry they're coming, right?
This rhetoric starts to emerge from out of party leadership.
Otto Scorzani, who at that time was the master of psychological warfare and special operations,
shows up to the Skoda works, and supposedly he's given a demonstration of this thing.
And he gets obsessed with the idea of using this thing as part of some grand psychological
warfare operation.
And then we have, so this is 1944, right?
Fast forward to a year after the end of the war.
There are these newspaper reports in Spain
that Adoskorsani is with General Franco
on the Mediterranean coast
and they're launching saucer-shaped rockets toward America.
They didn't know what to call these things at that time, right?
They didn't know what rockets were.
They were seeing these rocket-like things that were saucer-shaped
being launched from Spain, the Mediterranean coast,
over toward America.
Really?
One year later, what happens?
Roswell and other crashes.
Whoa.
What are the reports of Franco launching saucers?
Yes.
This is in, I think it's in the Saucer Swazzoz and Sciops book of Farrell where he reproduces
these Spanish newspaper reports.
Really?
Yes, from 1946, describing the two of them together with, of course, a bunch of military
people, on the Mediterranean coast of Spain.
And you think that testing these things.
That made its way to Roswell, New Mexico, possibly?
Yeah.
And the picture is a lot darker than that.
Here's what I think happened.
We all know about Operation Paperclip.
You've discussed it at length on your show.
What fewer people know about is the incorporation of the Gaelin organization into American intelligence.
Right.
So remember, the Soviets are marching across all of Eastern Europe, taking all this territory that had been part of the right.
there's a whole network of Nazi SS-affiliated intelligence operatives in Eastern Europe,
who continue to be embedded there as the Soviets are marching over the territory.
So what happens in 1945 when America wins the war,
immediately at a strategic level, it's understood that our enemy is now the Soviet Union
and the world is divided at Berlin, right?
And if we're going to conduct successful espionage on the Soviets,
we would have to build a vast spy network in Eastern Europe.
Well, there's already one there.
It's the network that was run by General Reinhard Gaelin.
So our OSS makes a deal with General Gailen
to absorb his entire Nazi spy network in Eastern Europe
as part of the creation of the CIA.
Part of the creation of the CIA and of West German intelligence,
which was very closely affiliated with the CIA.
So it's not just the case that we brought over all these Nazi scientists,
by we, I mean the CIA.
It's that the CIA that brought over all those Nazi scientists
and sanitized their records, you know, these paperclip,
the files, the sanitized files they created for them,
sanitized bios and so forth.
The CIA that did that was co-constituted
by absorbing an SS spy network.
Hmm. Well, think about what kind of culture that's creating in America, okay, as the National Security Act is passed in 1947. Why is the National Security Act passed in 1947? Let's talk about a guilt-free alternative to alcohol that's perfect for your dry January or any time you want to unwind. Cornbread's organic CBD gummies. These gummies are an absolute lifesaver for my evening routine. They're a natural way to relax, celebrate, or wind down without the hangarer.
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Cornbread hemp. This is the good life. Could it have to do with what happened at Roswell
and the need to create a vast, unaccountable, inscrutable security apparatus?
It could have been direct reaction. I believe the National Security Act was September of
1947 and Roswell was July of 1947. So a lot of people speculate that. So here's what I think.
It's a hydra.
the Nazis
created the crisis at Roswell.
They staged an event.
Now, let me not be misinterpreted, okay?
As anyone who listened to our first conversation can see,
I'm not by any means suggesting that like,
grays or whatever, like manufactured by Nazis or, you know,
or that all of the crashes have to do with Nazis.
No, no, no, not by any stretch of the imagination.
Do you think Roswell was it counted?
Specifically Roswell.
By Nazi.
Yeah.
Like, for example, there was a crash that Jacques Vallais gets into in his book, Trinity,
that took place a couple years, or, no, three years earlier, right after the Trinity detonation,
near the test site, something came down.
It was 20 days after the test.
And the beings who were witnessed coming from out of that craft were like praying mantis,
like, you know, something like between a gray and a praying mantis.
Childlike.
Childlike insectoid entities.
Those were not, they didn't have anything to do with the night.
Nazis. They were bow-headed, slang eyes, tear-drop eyes, no ears, unless they had a coating of
something on it. And I noticed that their shoulders were kind of narrow, but had long arms,
and what I surprised me, that they had four fingers. So I'm not suggesting that, like,
all these crashes have to do with Nazi psychological operations. But the particular
incident that Roswell, I think, did.
Really? Is that just based on the
Franco Scorzani shooting
sauce? No, it's based on the analysis of what
was recovered there. And all of it represents
cutting-edge German technology.
Based on Korses' testimony
of the technology recovered there and then looking
into a history of cutting-edge
German military technological innovations.
47 is two years after the official
surrender of, you know,
VE Day, surrender of Germany.
So why would they... When you look at
the instruments of surrender,
So a number of things are relevant here.
Let's go through them one by one.
When you look at the instruments of surrender,
the German Army, Air Force, Navy, and the German government surrender.
The SS never surrenders.
Really?
The SS is not included in the German instruments of surrender.
Is that because they're inherently the secret police?
It's because they continued.
They did not surrender.
And certain particular SS officers,
not just continued,
but developed high-level intelligence
and financial relations with both the United States and the United Kingdom.
But wasn't that still under the United States?
Like I think of, you know, Warner von Braun or a lot of these guys, they're sort of under the U.S.'s
thumb, you know, ultimately the U.S. sort of wielded authority and power over them.
No.
You don't think so?
So when von Braun, who was, by the way, an SS major who used slave labor to build rockets
in basically a concentration camp inside of a mountain.
And then became responsible for the American space program essentially.
When Von Braun and his buddies were down in Texas, and during the period they were in Texas, at one point, it was noticed by American, probably the FBI, that they were going and meeting Nazi counterparts coming from Argentina at border towns in Mexico and giving them data drops.
They were giving classified American military data to their Nazi counterparts coming from Argentina.
Whoa.
In meetings in Mexico.
So they were confronted about this by the Americans.
Next thing you know, a V2 rocket goes off course and hits a place in Mexico.
No way.
Yeah.
And the Von Braun's people basically intimated to the Americans, you know, if you make working conditions hard for us and keep grilling us,
us like this, you know, rockets are bound to go off course and maybe, you know, a war with Mexico
might even start.
What?
So they were being hassled by these people in a way that suggests that these Nazis had a lot
more control and latitude than the civilian government of the United States wanted to believe
was the case.
And I think that degree of control is coming from the deep state that was established through
the National Security Act of 1947.
In other words, the CIA, probably the NSA, and various other apparatuses of our deep state in America, were co-constituted by the remnants of the SS.
And this isn't unique to America with, like, for example, the absorption of the Galen network into the OSS to create the CIA.
It's also the case with the British.
So Ian Fleming, who went on to write the Bond novels, was an MI6 operative, whose specific mission at the end of the
the war was to facilitate the evacuation of Martin Borman to Argentina.
Martin Borman was like the financial mastermind of the Reich.
And he supposedly died three times.
There are three conflicting accounts of this man's death from 1945 to 47.
Next thing you know, he has a joint bank account with one perone in Argentina.
And as late as the 1960s, Martin Borman,
is cashing checks written in his own name
through J.P. Morgan Chase in Buenos Aires.
Okay.
So the British are involved too.
And then this Ian Fleming, MI6, you know, operative,
winds up becoming a novelist who writes about an organization
called Spector, which is a hidden third power in the world.
So the villain in the Bond verse, right?
is a secret transnational global organization
that's capable of rivaling both the Soviet Union
and the civilian government of the United States.
Whoa.
Well, I guess Spector, they have like German accents a lot of them, don't they?
It's very obviously the organization,
which was known to Ian Fleming as Odessa,
the initials of which in German stand for,
order of former SS officers,
and which informally was referred to as
the spina or the spider.
Fascinating.
Really?
Well, that's really amazing.
That's so interesting.
And do you know anything?
Because I believe the inspiration for Ian Fleming for James Bond
was William Stevenson,
who was known as Churchill's Super Spy.
He was a sort of Canadian, British.
Actually, and I had an identical memory.
He was an engineer.
And then also was this kind of brilliant
super spy strategist.
And so was he ever fighting the spider in any sort of way?
Because that wouldn't be like instantiate this even more.
Yeah, that I don't know.
Yeah.
That I don't know.
But I know that Fleming was involved with them and facilitating.
I think that the leadership of this organization basically was taken over by Martin Bormon.
And probably Otto Scorzani was in the second position.
Once these people basically settled.
up shop in Argentina. One of the most interesting things that they did in Argentina was they promised
they were going to develop fusion power and fusion nuclear weapons for one perone. And this guy,
Ronald Richter, German scientist, set up a fusion project in Baroloche. This is early 1950s,
late 40s into the early 50s. I believe in 1951,
The atomic energy agent, the IAEA, International Atomic Energy Agency,
went down there to investigate claims that they were developing nuclear fusion.
And they found a very, you know, complex facility over there.
Yeah, I've been there, actually.
I've seen it.
Yeah, you were talking about a little island off the coast of Baroloche.
It's like this little, yeah.
So you went to Barolochi to investigate?
Not to investigate this.
I was just trying hanging out in Baralce, and I was on a hike,
and then somebody told me about the scientist named Ronald Rick.
who was this former Nazi who was working on fusion there.
And I was like, what?
And then I went, and it's amazing.
And so, yeah.
And then there's a civilian nuclear grid in Baroloche as well.
So who knows if there is some sort of overlap there.
Well, Argentina later almost developed nuclear weapons later on in 1970s.
But here's the interesting thing is that he promised to develop these nuclear
weapon, fusion weapons for Peron.
And he never did, Ronald Richter.
And moreover, when the IAA people went down and investigated, they said, this doesn't look like any fusion that we understand.
We don't know what this guy is doing down here.
It's incredibly energy intensive, but it doesn't look like any kind of fusion that we understand.
Okay.
Here's where it gets really dark and goes to your question of like, if they had all this technology, meaning the Nazis, why didn't they use it to win the war?
And how is it that we won the war and so forth, right?
Yeah.
There are some eyewitness reports of two German nuclear weapons tests being conducted between late-1944 and early 1945.
One in the Baltic Sea where a pilot was flying over the Baltic Sea and he saw a bright, bright light that almost blinded him and an explosion where there were like multi-colored, like rainbow-colored,
lights like fizzling inside the explosion, which is a telltale sign of a nuclear fission explosion
when you see one with your naked eye in person. It doesn't register on camera very well, but it's like
the rest of the fissile material kind of like reacting inside the mushroom cloud. And he said like it
created a huge pressure wave he saw from his airplane and this blinding flash of light and these
weird like multicolored reaction. And then there's a second eyewitness account of, of, of, uh,
what appears to be a nuclear test
near the Thuringian forest,
which I think they said
like cut out power in a nearby town
or something like this.
Like, you know, the EMP effect of a new.
So,
again, this is
research that's been done by two people.
One is a guy,
weird name,
Plimpton Hydric, I think.
Plymouth. Or is it Plimpton?
I got it wrong when we spoke on the phone.
It's actually Plimpton, I think,
Hydrick.
Okay.
A book called Critical Mass.
Okay.
It's a whole study of the Nazi nuclear program
and its connection to the United States
and to the bombs we dropped on Hiroshima Nagasaki,
which we'll come to in a minute.
And then the second source is Farrell's deeper research
on Plimpton Hydrax claims
and additional research that he did
into Nazi nuclear weapons.
And basically the picture that emerges is this,
that the uranium enrichment program
that Heisenberg was running
was a red herring.
It was a basically cover
and diversionary tactic
to throw off the allies
who successfully defeated that program.
They sent like a team of like Nordic skiers
or something to like take out
the heavy water plant.
So they derailed that project.
But that there was a deeper black project
to develop nuclear weapons
using electromagnetic isotope separation.
which is something that later was used at Oak Ridge in the United States.
And that the Germans were using electromagnetic isotope separation
in a more secret parallel track program
that did succeed in developing fission weapons.
Now, Plimptohydric in his book argues,
he makes this case, that at Trinity, they did not,
the records show that they did.
When you say electromagnetic isotope separations,
like just like a centrifuge or like?
No,
something other than the kind of centrifuge technology that we're used to.
And I, you know, I'm not a physicist.
I don't know what it is.
And probably they were also using laser isotope enrichment
because the Nazis developed the laser, I think, in part
for the purpose of isotope enrichment.
And, which, by the way, just a very brief side note to all those people,
like investigating the Iranian nuclear program right now.
They are not using centrifuge enrichment for the nuclear weapons.
Iran has been using laser isotope enrichment.
And I hope that wherever the hell it is,
they're conducting laser isotope enrichment,
that this regime doesn't have an unacknowledged stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
In any case, B.HDA is a major idea.
The Shaw bought laser isotope enrichment technology from Switzerland in 1970s.
Interesting.
Anyway, so all this says to the take about, you know,
we're going to check out the centrifuges.
That's not where they're doing.
Yeah.
But, okay, how is it relevant?
It's, they learn from the Nazis.
The Nazis had a fake program, which was a diversionary tactic, and then there was a real
deeper black program.
Why would you use, because Heisenberg was so smart.
I mean, he was responsible for, you know, understanding the mathematical underpinnings
behind quantum leaps, you know, electrons and electron shells and orbits and, you know, the uncertainty
principles.
He also wrote this book, Physics and Philosophy, which is an absolutely masterful text.
Yeah, it's beautiful book.
and shows how Heraclytus was like a precursor to quantum theory and intuitive, basically, quantum theory.
Is it fantastic a brilliant guy?
Yeah, and it's really, it's a trippy book, that book, because he talks about all sorts of issues in quantum mechanics and interpretations that, you know, the Copenhagen school is kind of wrestling with that we now kind of paint over with this broad brush around consciousness.
And he really, like, muses in this deep way that consciousness might play a part in wave function collapse and that sort of thing.
and now it's just, you know, oh, you know, it's all, it's, you know, it's the quantum detector or whatever does, you know, the weight function collapses when particles collide or whatever.
But so why would you, why would you waste a guy like that?
Why would you waste a guy like that, a brain like that?
Because if you want the allies to believe that this is your nuclear program, you're going to have to put as your frontman the guy that the allies would expect to be running the Nazi nuclear program.
What's interesting about him is he and all the people on his nuclear program were captured, like you said, and they were put, I believe, in the English countryside, and the whole house was wiretapped. And this was a part of the ALSOS program, this, you know, nuclear tech retrieval program. And they were just listening, you know, what are they going to say? Maybe they, you know, give away some trade secrets. And they talk about feeling regret around working on the nuclear program and also gratitude that their sort of heavy water engine.
never quite worked out, which was, I guess they were using Deuterium, you know, in their approach.
So I thought you were going to say something else because the other thing I've heard about that, I've heard this story.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's a transcript. It's amazing.
Yeah. Yeah. But here's an other interesting thing about that. Yeah. Yeah.
is that when the bombs were dropped on Hiroshima, Nagasaki,
they overheard these guys.
They have that, you know, a transcript of how immediately Heisenberg and his people
calculated the amount of fissile material used.
Really?
Yeah.
So it was as if they knew, like they could reverse engineer from, you know,
the scale of the explosion, whatever, what kind of bomb produced.
Whoa.
Which implies a completed nuclear weapon, knowledge of one.
But in any case, that's not important.
Or are they the most competent guys, which means they shouldn't be on the cover program.
I wouldn't rest anything on that.
But here's the interesting point I was making in relation to the Plimpton Hydrox research.
Yeah.
Is that he says that there's records showing the amount of fissile material at Trinity and that it wasn't anywhere close to being able to basically complete fat men and little boy.
and that in 1945, a deal was made with the Nazis to transfer by submarine the fissile material that went into the bombs that we dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The Trinity project was completed with Nazi highly enriched uranium and that it was transferred in an agreement that we made with the SS.
Wow.
Okay.
Your high conviction in that.
Well, this is what he argues.
And he's done, you know, his book is critical mass.
Yep.
Okay?
And he lays out a lot, a huge argument for this.
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makes the argument that the engineering of the plutonium bomb was completed with Nazi assistance.
Okay. So if we got our, you know, uranium and additional technical expertise for completing
our nuclear weapons from the Nazis, and if there are two reports...
of Nazi successful nuclear tests and 44 into 45.
Yeah.
Why weren't these weapons used by the Nazis?
It's a great question.
Why?
There are a couple of different answers,
and they're both really disturbing.
Okay.
Let me start.
I don't know which one is more disturbing.
Okay, but let, okay.
So if Ronald Richter is working on fusion in Argentina in 1950,
Mm-hmm.
Is it possible?
And the Nazis had, let's say they've developed this bell that involves electromagnetic torsion of thorium.
And some kind of a plasma fusion that takes place inside of this device.
Is it possible the Nazis figured out some other kind of nuclear reaction, weaponizable nuclear reaction besides fission?
And is that related to why Ronald Richter was promising fusion bombs to one Peron, which he never delivered?
Interesting. I didn't know if he was promising fusion bombs.
Yeah, he was promising nuclear weapons. And this is why the IAEA went down there.
Fusion bombs. Well, okay, he's working on fusion and he's promising nuclear bombs to Peron.
So we may assume from those two data points that he's promising fusion bombs.
Now, we only developed fusion bombs.
And hydrogen bombs are fusion bombs.
Exactly.
But here's the interesting thing is that we develop hydrogen fusion bombs in the 50s.
And this is 1950.
Ronald Richter is down there.
So it's relatively the same ballpark time frame.
Yeah, Edward Teller and Ulau, that design was 52.
Yeah, but here's the thing.
Our hydrogen bombs use a fission trigger to create a fusion reaction.
What if the Nazis figured out how to create a fusion reaction without a fission trigger?
it would be extremely useful because the radioactivity of a nuclear explosion comes from the fission trigger.
The neutron bombardment that, well, first of all, you know, immediately disrupts our whole organism
and then also irradiates all the fallout that comes down on people.
That neutron bombardment is from the fission reaction, not from the fusion.
So if you could create a fusion reaction without a fission trigger, you'd have a clean nuclear.
you'd have a clean nuclear bomb.
An extremely high explosive force,
but no radioactivity,
so your troops could move into that area
and occupy it immediately.
Really?
You see?
There'd be no radioactivity.
No radioactivity.
Straight clear.
It's the opposite of a neutron bomb.
So a neutron bomb is, you know,
engineered to maximize neutron bombardment.
This is an an neutron fusion bomb.
If the Nazis developed that in 1944 to 45,
atom bombs would be like matches for them.
It's child's play.
So they would be willing to trade that for something else,
like maybe the mass assimilation and, what do you call it,
amnesty for Nazi scientists,
like maybe incorporation of their entire SS spy network in Eastern Europe into the CIA,
like perhaps the transfer of a huge amount of funds,
wartime loot to Argentina and other.
places that they made a deal and gave the matches to the Americans, they kept diffusion
bombs for themselves. And you don't think they'd just vaporize large swaths of American territory
and try to win? No. Now, this comes to the second reason, okay? Which is even more disturbing.
Okay. And I almost apologize for how disturbing this is. But people need to really think about
this because I think we're still inside this spider's web. And it's responsible for a lot of
the deception, misdirection around the disclosure conversation today.
Okay.
So you have to take seriously this claim on the part of the Nazi leadership that they wanted a thousand-year Reich.
Mm.
Okay.
A thousand-year imperium is no joke.
Americans have a very hard time with this, because this country was born yesterday in historical terms, okay?
there are other people who are capable of grasping this more effectively.
Let me give you an example.
And trust me, it's worth setting it up like this.
And for context for the audience, real quick, third Reich is called that because I believe
it was the Roman Empire, then the Holy Roman Empire, and they were supposed to be the third
instantiation.
Yeah.
So they want this thousand-year Reich.
Okay, well, who thinks like that?
We, in Iran, there was a dynasty that's often misnamed the Second Persian Empire.
Actually, they weren't Persians.
They were Scithians.
The Parthian Empire of Iran.
It lasted for 400 years.
The Parthian Empire, Iran, was the principal rival of Rome.
So the two superpowers in the world at that time were the Roman Empire and the Parthian Empire of Iran.
And at that time, the country was called Ariana Khashatra, Aryan Imperium.
That was the official name of the Parthian government.
It was Aryan Imperium.
And then Ariana gets shortened to Iran in Middle Persian.
So these Parthians ruled Iran and successfully fought the Romans, usually to a stalemate, for 400 years.
Then they get overthrown in a coup by these guys called the Sassanids, the Sassanid Persians, and they established their own empire.
But the Parthian elite continue to be the backbone of the Sassanid state.
The feudal houses, the Parthian feudal houses, serve the Sassanid state and protect it the way like in Game of Thrones, you have all the main houses in Game of
of Thrones and they're like serving what's that place you know the the main the capital whatever
it is right oh and game of Thrones yeah I forget and the lanisters are there and like all the
other feudal houses are serving them right yes yeah so get this the parthians rule iran
for 400 years directly yeah they continue to rule Iran secretly for another 400 years under the
sassanids they're the backbone of the sassanid state in the end the conflict make a very long
story short, the conflict they had with the sassanids results in the collapse of Iran to Islam.
The state security of Iran and the conquest of the Persian Empire by the Arab Muslim armies
was on account of basically the tension between the sassanids and these feudal lords.
So Iran then is subsumed by Islam for a couple hundred years.
Around about 8,500, and Iranian Renaissance begins, which is misnamed off in the Islamic Golden Age,
90% of the people who contributed to it
and the arts and sciences were Iranians.
Anyway,
the Parthians are also the patrons of this.
So they become like the Medici's.
They become the patrons of an Iranian Renaissance
for another 300 years
between 900 and 1100.
So these people ruled Iran directly
for 400 years, ruled Iran indirectly
for another 400 years, 800 years.
And then for another 300 years,
they patroned an Iranian Renaissance,
1100 years.
for over a thousand years, these feudal families had a coherent political vision.
That's how you need to think when you want a thousand-year Reich.
So if the Nazis in the modern world want to set up a thousand-year imperial, it's going to require a little bit of preparation.
Investing a century in psychological warfare and social engineering to set up your thousand-year empire.
year rife is not at all an unreasonable investment.
And so my hypothesis is that from 1945 until 2045, we are in a period of preparation involving
horrendous psychological warfare and social engineering by a deeply entrenched fascist elite,
let's not call them Nazis anymore because they're really not nationalists,
a deeply entrenched fascist elite
that controls the American deep state.
So that's the second answer to why did they not win the war?
No, they won the war.
It's just you have to rethink what the war is.
The war is a Welt-Anchengs Creek.
It's a worldview war.
And that doesn't mean what Americans think it does.
So like when we went into Germany in 1945,
the American military went in there,
they translated Welt-on-Chang's Creek.
into psychological warfare.
And then later became, you know, the battle for hearts and minds, right?
Psychological operations, sciops, or psychological warfare.
That's not what Veltan Chang's Creek means.
It means a war over the constitution of the world from out of human consciousness on a social level.
And it goes back to German thinkers like Schelling, Frederick Schelling,
and also ultimately Nietzsche, definitely Nietzsche's idea of perspective.
conflict, that there's no unified God's eye perspective on the world.
There is, of course, you know, God is dead, right?
I mean, Nietzsche is the ultimate deconstructor of a theistic monistic ontology.
So there's no God to have a perspective on the whole world.
And there's nothing like a God's eye perspective even in science.
And science is always conditioned by culture and by politics.
So ontologically, the world is,
is pluralistic.
I mean, William James also made this point.
He wrote a whole book called A Pluralistic Universe,
which if you look at the ontology
of William James' radical empiricism
in his book, A Pluralistic Universe,
it almost completely maps onto Nietzsche's
perspectival ontology.
And I compared the two explicitly in Prometheus and Atlas.
So you have this conflict of perspectives
that brings about the constitution
of what we consider to be the world.
Heidegger, beginning and being in time and going into his writings on technology,
he calls this the worldhood of the world.
What makes a world of meaning for any people is not the same as how the warp and weft of meaning
is brought together by another people.
So there is a conflict of worlds over the earth.
different worlds
constituted by, let's say,
what Jung might call the collective
unconscious of a particular people.
And by the way, this is a point that's often,
I don't know whether it's overlooked
or whether it's deliberately distorted
in readings of Jung,
is that Jung did not believe in a single collective unconscious.
Jung believed in a racially differentiated collective unconscious.
And he's getting that idea from Hegel.
And Hegel's philosophy of mind,
Hegel talks about the spirit of different races
and how the spirit of different,
it sounds crazy, but Hegel even thinks that the spirit of different races can shape the world geologically.
I don't know that Jung would certainly take it that far, but Jung kind of got that idea from him, and he developed it to where, like, for example, he predicted that the spirit of Woton would erupt from out of the collective unconscious of the German people, and it did, right, in the form of the rise of the Nazis in the Second World War.
So Heidegger is saying that there's a war, and very much lines up again with Nietzsche,
there's a war of different worlds over the earth.
So World War II is not what we think it is.
First of all, all the deep Nazi thinkers did not see any difference between World War I and World War II.
If you read, for example, Carl Schmidt, you see this, you read Heidegger, you see this.
They say it's just the World War.
And the World War, the Great War never ended.
for us. The Treaty of Versailles was imposed on them.
They considered themselves
to be like in a perpetual state of war
for the world.
And so you have to understand the term
world war in a different way.
It's a Welt Ansham's Krieg.
It's a war over the way that the world is going
to show itself. It's going to come
into presence. It's going to manifest.
It's a certain understanding of what
I've called in my writings phenomenal
authorization where I've drawn a connection
between three different ideas,
authorship, authority, and authorization.
And tried to explain how phenomena
are authored and authorized
in how they can take shape
and that that's the most fundamental form of sovereignty.
That real authority is not like
the authority of a civilian government
that's elected or some bureaucracy.
It's who has the,
authority to shape phenomena into a meaningful world at a fundamental level.
And the people who developed what Otto Skorzheny was the master of in Germany, namely
Veltan Shang's Krieg, they understood this.
So it's not bizarre for these people to engage in a century of social engineering to set up
then what they expect would be a thousand-year imperial period.
If they had dropped whatever few nuclear weapons they had in 1944 on American cities,
I can tell you exactly what the result would have been.
Total war against the German people on the part of America.
At the same time as they're still fighting the Soviet Union, right,
who actually was the principal enemy of Nazi Germany,
or responsible for most of the deaths in Europe,
the Soviets are really the ones who defeated the Germans, to be honest.
And so they've got Stalin coming at them from one direction.
Now they're dropping nukes on their fellow Germanic, you know, fellow European Americans.
Now they're going to get the Americans, you know, interested in total war to annihilate them.
Americans who are also developing nuclear weapons.
Best case scenario, I guarantee you, Jesse, they would not have ruled the world for more than two generations.
Even if they had succeeded in militarily defeating America, there would have been a,
massive insurgency against them, the amount of arms that Americans possess personally, right?
And then the amount of communist revolutionary fervor in Europe being backed by the Soviet Union,
they would have faced a massive insurgency.
But is the implication that there's some sort of Nazi sleeper cell undergirding American politics today?
Fascist is a better way to put it.
Fascist.
Because not, again, and here's another point, the neo-Nazis hate this.
these people aren't nationalists.
So Nazism is no, Martin Bormon is not a nationalist.
Otto Scorzane is not a nationalist.
These people create, first of all, to begin with, they weren't nationalists.
They were looking for a kind of global imperium.
They used nationalism.
And they used crass populism to create a power base for themselves.
But you can see from how they're operating, especially after the war, from 45 onward,
that they're very much internationalists.
They have a global vision.
So, but they're fascists.
And do I think that there's a fascist underbelly to America?
Absolutely.
I think that's the deepest substratle of the deep state that controls these black projects
is absolutely fascist.
Now.
But, but it was a nationalist movement.
I mean, you had Wagner was very, very popular.
Of course.
And Audubon Bismarck.
Look, and you had this resuscitation of all this kind of German national pride free.
Remember what we were saying about monumental history earlier?
Mm-hmm.
You need to monumentalize history.
Mm-hmm.
if you want a substantive forward development.
So if you want to create a thousand-year Reich,
you need a lot of cultural material for that.
But I would hardly say that at least among the leadership of this movement,
that they were sort of like xenophobically German.
No, they loved all kind of European civilizational heritage,
and they were interested in the Aryan heritage of places like Iran and India as well.
They even sent people to Tibet to like get the Tibetan scriptures.
Yep. So they sent them to Mount Kailash and they were looking for the holy gray.
Yeah, they were interested. They had a very broad and deep conception of what they considered the Aryan heritage. It was not nationalistically German. They used the German nationalism to rile up masses and build a power base.
So do you think there was some Nazi non-human intelligence or alien connection going? I mean, this is got Peter Labenda, for example, who writes a book called the Unholy Alliance.
where he talks about,
we talked about last time,
Nordic alien beings,
do you think that there was some sort of alliance
between them and the Nazis?
Because I guess that sounds quacky,
but I'm almost even more likely to believe that
than the idea that the Nazis writ large
just threw their lot in with the U.S.
and sort of stopped fighting
and made some, you know,
really long-time horizon calculated decision
to perpetuate the Third Reich
through some sort of sub-Rosa ruling
of their greatest adversary.
Like I just...
No, I agree with you.
No, I agree with you.
The regime that would do that
wouldn't fail and fight a two-front war with Russia
and then, you know, destroy themselves, right?
Yeah.
Well, they're not mutually exclusive.
Okay.
Do I think that they were in contact
on some level with people...
who they knew would in some way affirm and complete this project
they were taking a great risk to forward.
Yes, I think so.
And there we need to look at these claims about the Vril Society and the Thule Society.
So there are these claims that there was a group of mediums,
I think mostly women,
who were engaging in telepathic communication with basically a group of supermen.
and that the
these supermen
were sort of
helping these occultists
with both like
geopolitical machinations
and scientific breakthroughs.
I haven't been able to find any evidence
of an independently existing Vrille society.
But there was a Thule society.
And the concept of Vrill
was very important to the Thule Society.
Vrill is this idea
that Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton
wrote a book about an 18
171, I believe.
The coming race.
Yeah.
And by the way, this guy's biography is insane.
What's his deal?
Look at Edward Bolwer-Litt.
At one point, he was offered the crown of Greece, and he declined it.
Really?
Yeah, they offered it.
He was a British gentleman.
Yeah.
British aristocrat, super aristocrat.
Extremely erudite guy, obviously deep into the occult.
And traveled around a lot.
And at one point, they wanted to make him king of Greece.
And he was like, no, my eye, I don't want the trouble.
Really?
Yeah.
And this book, he wrote, The Coming Race, Hitler was, I think, really into.
Yes.
And it was a.
this book about like an underground civilization or something?
Was this based on any sort of empirical evidence from him, you know, in his journeys or whatever?
Did he happen upon these people or something?
One can speculate, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
One can speculate that that might have been the case.
But in any case, the Thule Society took all this very seriously.
And the Thule Society, oddly enough, it was founded by this guy, Baron Rudolf von Spottendorf,
who was initiated in Kurdistan of all places.
He was initiated into an ancient Iranian Kurdish order called Ahla Haq,
who are basically like surviving Mithrasst.
Anyway, long story short, he comes back from Kurdistan through Turkey,
and he creates the Stool Gazal Shaf.
Now, what is the Germanic conception of Atlantis?
It's an island continent where a super civilization existed in vast antiquity,
which these people, the Thul-Gazel Shaf, believed were
the progenitors of the Aryan race.
And by the way, they didn't make this up.
Helena Blavatsky has this in her
the philosophical writings that the Aryan race came from Atlantis.
I mean, this is one of the claims that, you know, she makes.
And I believe that on some level, Steiner accepted it also,
although Steiner had a much more metaphysical,
transcendental interpretation of what Atlantis was.
Yeah.
Well, he, I mean, I think he believed it existed.
And then Rudolph Hess, who was in Hitler's inner circle,
was a huge fan of Rudolf Steiner as well.
Yes, and then the Nazis eventually consider Steiner
to be their principal adversary, which is saying a lot.
Because when you consider somebody your nemesis,
it means that in a way, actually, you're fighting over the same thing.
I didn't know that.
You're fighting over the same.
Oh, they burned down the Gothenium.
The Nazis burned down the first Gothenameum,
because they thought that Anthroposophy could really become a rival to Nazism
and to their vision for Europe and the destiny of the world and so on so.
That's fan.
Which, you know, it says a lot.
In any case,
the Thule Society was obsessed with Atlantis
and excavating the Atlantean heritage of the Aryans,
including the Germans,
and essentially of creating a new Atlantis.
Now, where would this island continent be?
Which, by the way, they associate the Germans associated with ice
and a frozen overplace.
And some Germans believed that it was the same place as Hyperborea.
Some of them did.
So if you look back at Plato's Tameas and Critias, and, you know, read every one of the clues he gives us about where Atlantis was located.
He says it is an island continent the size of Libya and Asia combined, which in the geography of the Greeks of his time meant landmass the size of the Persian Empire.
That's a big island.
Okay.
That's like the size of the continental United States.
Okay.
Then he says that it's in the world ocean.
Mm-hmm.
And that from Atlantis, you can, by going to Atlantis, you can cross over from one side of the world to the other side of the world.
Really?
And it's in the world ocean.
Oh, wow.
Well, we have a world ocean.
It's where the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Indian Ocean meet in the coastline of Antarctica.
Yeah.
Okay.
And it is an island, the size of Libya and Asia combined, as he put it, or skies the size of.
or the size of continental United States.
And you can get to the other side of the world from it.
You island hop through Antarctica.
You can get from Africa to South America or, you know.
Yep.
And he also says that there's a huge mountain ranges there.
So, and then one other thing.
And it was destroyed by a great flood.
And it might have had sort of very livable conditions
pre-Younger Dryness period.
And ice age, you know, a Graham Hancock and Randallson's work.
And so literally, you know, Atlantis was just, you know, destroyed in this great flood.
And it's, it's dated back.
They say this was 9,000 in that mythos festival, Temaeus and Cretaceous.
That's 600 BC.
And they say this was 9,000 years ago.
And that's 9,600 BC, which is literally the end of the ice age and this flood, which ended the ice age.
It was called meltwater pulse 1B.
So, yes.
And I think the mechanism for that, so the dates match perfectly.
Yeah.
And I think the mechanism for that was convincingly argued by Charles Hapgood.
Charles Hapgood was a scientist who worked to think it was, no, he might have been a historian, actually.
He worked at Boston University, I believe, but he also was working on contract for the CIA.
And he came up with this theory called Earth crustal displacement, where periodically, this is a really, you know, dumb.
down, but periodically, the earth would become top-heavy due to glaciation.
And this would cause the crust of the earth to slip over the mantle by a few thousand
kilometers.
And that pulls the ice out of the polar regions, and the ice then precipitously melts.
Okay, so this notion that North America was covered by ice.
during the ice age and that North America was where it currently is, but it was just covered
by ice is fallacious, according to Hapkut.
It's that the North Pole was where Hudson Bay is today.
And the reason North America was glaciated was because it was a lot closer to the North Pole.
A lot more of it was closer to the North Pole.
And by the same token, at that time, Antarctica was where Argentina would be today.
So Atlantis would have had the climate of contemporary Argentina.
And I believe in the Piri-Ris map, which was found in Turkey, that's exactly what it looks like.
It looks like Antarctica has sort of shifted.
And this is supposed to be some sort of, you know, pre-ice-age map.
Not only that, those maps, at least one of them, I don't remember whether it's the Piri-Rais or the Orontius-Fineas map, but one of them shows that Antarctica actually consists of two islands that are very close to get.
And this is in fact the case.
Our subglacial topography has shown that it's not one land mass.
It's two islands that are very close together.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So that also lends to its accuracy.
Totally.
And so whoever knew, whoever made those maps originally and they may have been copied in
the library of Alexandria, whoever made the initial maps that have correct longitude
and latitude on them, also which we didn't have at that time.
Also, the conspiracy about Piri Reese is that the map was.
the map looks like it shows the curvature of the earth.
Yeah.
And this is well before Columbus.
Yes.
So I think that those were copied from Atlantean maps at some point.
Copied and recopied many times.
Anyway, so the Nazis are looking for Atlantis, the Thule Gazal Shafdis, right?
The Sewell Society.
And Thuil is there Atlanta.
And by the way, one little interesting point there is that the Mayans have, you know, the
Mayans have legends of Atlantis.
They have legends of a great island continent that was decimated by a flood and that its survivors took refuge there.
There is this legend among the Mayans, which I believe Graham Hancock, among others, has cited in his work.
And they have these two words that they use for that place.
One is Atlan, and the other is Toulon.
Toulon sounds a lot like Toul.
Toulon, right?
Tulan, Atlan.
So it could be the same word even, ultimately,
or derived from the same word.
Anyway, guess what the Nazis wind up doing in 1937, 38,
Deutsch Antarctic Expedition?
They send a ton of personnel down there.
They even fly over the trans-Antarctic mountains
and drop swastika flags all over the landscape with like spears.
Why do you think they went?
Because they figured out that this is Thule, that this is Atlantis.
The nominal reason, too, which is so prima facie, just absurd,
is I think they said that they were going because of butter rations.
And, like, Antarctica was, you know, a source of margarine or something.
They needed to go explore it.
Penguins, right.
Yeah, exactly.
Heston the Penguins.
It's not even, like, a charismatic cover story.
Like, it's, you know, that seems so patently ridiculous.
You know, there's a book called Hasse on the Penguins.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Hesse and the Penguins.
Like Herman Hess?
No.
So one of the main guys they sent to Antarctica is Rudolph Hess.
Oh, Rudolph Hess.
Yeah.
And this Rudolph Hess, who they sent to Antarctica, a few years later, takes a secret unauthorized flight out of Germany, lands in Britain in a field, is met by British officers.
and he says, I have orders to meet with Winston Churchill.
What?
And they go to Churchill and they say, sir,
and Hess is here.
Like, you know, he flew an authorized flight here.
And Churchill said, I don't want to see him throw him in prison.
We're going to interrogate him.
So then they interrogate Hess.
And he says he had orders to secretly come to Britain
and make a not just a peace overture,
but an alliance proposal to 30 members of the British Parliament
who were favorable toward Hitler.
So at this point when Hess had made this flight,
I believe Hitler had made three peace offers to the British,
including an offer to ally together
and to have basically the British Royal Navy
and the Nazis become collaborators on a global scale.
And so this was the final peace offering
before the outbreak of hostilities.
and who did they send the guy who was in Antarctica.
What's the significant?
Well, and then here's the other thing.
After the war, he remained in prison.
They kept him in prison.
So this guy didn't participate in the brunt of World War II.
He was put in prison before hostilities break out with the British.
They keep him in prison, and then they send him to West Germany,
where he winds up imprisoned to the day he dies,
and no one's allowed to talk to him.
They quarantine him.
Rudolph Hess.
Number one, why keep him in prison?
What did he do?
I mean, you know, he went to Antarctica, came back,
tried to make peace with the British.
His guy wasn't involved in the hostilities.
Why even put him in prison?
Number two, why quarantine him
and not allow people to talk to him?
And keep him there until the day he dies?
What did Hess know?
What did he see in Antarctica?
What did he want to tell the British?
That's an interesting question.
What do you think?
About Atlanta.
You think so.
Yeah.
I think that they got there
and they came there
with the express purpose
of excavating
what is there,
what they believe to be there,
and I think they found it.
And there's a very interesting story
that was told to Linda Moulton Howe
by an A.B. Seal
who claimed to have been tasked
with a mission in Antarctica.
And he said that
not far from McMurdo,
they discovered a huge, like, I don't want to make up a number.
It was very large.
Black stone octagonal, highly polished black stone octagonal structure sticking out like 18 feet above the ice.
And they found the doorway to this thing.
And the doorway was like 20 feet by like 20 feet.
And it slid open to reveal this.
octagonal huge chamber that was illuminated.
It wasn't clear from what light source with this pale greenish hue.
And they started to investigate and they found that this complex consisted of one octagon underneath another.
Oh, very important point.
The door to the facility had a Schwartzesona inscribed on it,
etched perfectly into this polished black stone,
What is that?
Was the Black Sun symbol that the SS had put on the floor of the main meeting hall in Vvelsburg Castle,
where the highest order of SS Knights would meet, led by Himmler.
So that same symbol, according to this Navy SEAL, was on the door to this octagonal facility.
And they went and explored it, and they said it was octagon underneath octagon until the last lower level of it
opened into antediluvian ruins, into like vascular.
vastly ancient megalithic structures that were trapped by the ice, deep underneath the ice.
So it's like something that was built there to give access to this, you know, these, I don't know, the ruins of Atlantis, whatever.
And I think the Navy SEAL also said that they found another way to get down there to the bottom of this, you know, pancake octagonal structure by taking submarines under the ice, U.S. submarines.
So they found another way around to get to the same point.
and surface the sub inside this pocket
where, like, the octagonal structure met the ruins
that are trapped in ice.
So that's an interesting date.
Now, you know, Linda Moultenhow has been fed disinformation by various people
like Richard Doty and so forth.
So who knows, like, whether this account from this Navy SEAL
is more disinfo or not.
Are there any other corroborating stories?
Well, there's Operation High Jump.
Mm-hmm.
So in 1946, for whatever reason,
we, the United States Navy sent a huge expedition of ships to Antarctica.
And it's worthy of note that this happened immediately after we intercepted Nazi submarine traffic going to Argentina, right around Patagonia.
Okay.
So we intercept these German submarines and then Operation High Jump is fielded.
and Admiral Bird goes down there with a huge contingent
and they're supposed to be there for months
studying Antarctica or whatever
and they come back in very short order
badly damaged
many ships lost and personnel lost
to whatever catastrophe
it's not entirely clear
I mean they blamed it on weather conditions
and there are these stories
that
I mean there are literally stories like
press clippings, that when Admiral Byrd stopped at Chile, I don't know if it was Santiago,
it was somewhere in Chile on the way back to the United States at a port in Chile.
He gave a statement to the Chilean press saying that we needed to prepare for a third world war
in which aircraft could cross from pole to pole at tremendous speeds.
So there's that.
and then he was debriefed in Washington
and never spoke about it again.
And then I believe his direct boss,
a guy named James Forrestall,
who was Secretary of the Navy,
then became Secretary of Defense,
committed suicide in the sort of weird fashion.
Suicide my ass.
They threw him out of a window.
They threw him out of a window.
Yeah, exactly.
First they sent him to a like,
what was it, like mental health health hospitalization or something?
He was a naval hospital in Minnesota, Maryland.
And he was actually reciting or he was
He was writing the Sophocles poem or whatever,
and he's like the mid-sentence.
And his brother had just seen him the day before
and said that he was totally fine and upset mind.
And then they found his bathrobe tied to the radiator,
and he had jumped out the window or whatever.
The whole thing was sort of like really inexplicable and weird.
I think they killed him.
Do you think it was related to the Emerald Bird stuff?
It was related to basically the creation of the National Security State.
through the integration of American military intelligence and industrial structure with the remnants of Nazi Germany.
Interesting. And then do you think, are there any other corroborating facts around Antarctica possibly being this kind of Atlantean bastion? I mean, is the idea that like there is some sort of like Atlantean surviving remnant group that's still there? I mean, it is interesting that Antarctica is a,
a no-fly zone as of 1957 the international geophysical year.
There have been skiers who, you know, were putatively exploring Antarctica for sport,
who have had black helicopters descend on them, and they were told that they are in an area
that affects the national security of the United States and that they're going to be
immediately evacuated.
Really?
Yeah.
And now, there shouldn't be an area that affects the national security.
security of the United States legally because according to the Antarctic Treaty, Antarctica is like a
neutral zone.
Yeah.
Right.
I do suspect that the principal subterranean submarine location for these Nordics who we discussed in our first
conversation is Antarctica.
That's what I suspect.
that if the Atlantean civilization was destroyed there
by some precipitous flooding
and Antarctica will be pulled into the southern polar region
so that it froze over
Oh, I'll tell you another interesting corroborating piece of evidence in a minute
so that it froze over
Look, if we're dealing with this super advanced civilization
that had like ZPE, you know, propulsion
Of course they had underground facilities
You know, Antarctica is full of mountains
it has mountains arrival to Himalayas.
Those people would have built facilities inside mountains and underground.
Those facilities would have survived.
So there would have been Atlanteans who survived in these facilities.
I think it's even speculated now by climate scientists and geophysicists
that there could be subterranean parts of Antarctica with pretty warm climate.
Lake Vostock.
Lake Vostock is a huge thermal vent.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's fascinating.
I also think Richard Byrd, Admiral Richard Burr, talked about a pyramid.
And the pyramid, you can spot.
Like, I have a friend who went down there, and I think he was making a documentary or something.
And he saw this sort of black pyramid.
There's a picture of it.
I've seen a picture of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it was on Google Maps.
And then I think it got deleted off Google Maps or something.
That's a big scandal.
But, like, you know, I have a friend who's, like, not into UFOs at all and, like, went down to Antarctica.
And he can see it.
He saw himself.
You could see this thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's like a real thing.
So I don't know.
It's interesting.
Yes.
Now, the other thing I was going to tell you is corroborative of this is that, and we got into this just a little bit in our first conversation, the flood myths.
Yeah.
Right.
So there's a version of the Noah's flood story in every culture on Earth.
Yeah.
Okay.
Which makes it pretty certain that it happened.
There's only one myth that's different.
It's the same event, but it's a different type of story.
that's the Iranian version.
So in the Iranian version,
which is preserved in the Avesta,
the ancient Iranian scriptures,
originally Mithraic and then Zoroastrian scriptures,
it says that the Iranian people,
which you have to understand,
like they're using the term Aryan people,
you know, like I said,
in the Parthian period,
and before the country was called Ariano.
So in the Avesta, it says that the,
the, you know, Arionem,
the Aryan people,
come from an island continent at the center of the world
which froze over.
Mm.
Froze over.
Really?
Yes.
Interesting.
That it was basically ice came and engulfed it.
Mm.
Which is like a tsunami that then freezes.
Mm.
Okay?
So all the cultures all around the world have flood myths,
but this one culture says that we come from an island continent.
which froze over.
And it's at the center of the world.
Well, if you, you know, where you consider the center of the world is arbitrary.
If you're living in Antarctica and you notice, by the way, that all the other continents are distributed around you, like Plato said, at the center of the world ocean, you're liable to consider yourself the center of the world.
Sure.
And one other interesting point in that regard is that although the majority of Antarctica prior to this, you know, younger draft catastrophe, although the majority of Antarctica would have been where Argentina is today, part of it was already in the southern polar region.
So it would have been a place like Patagonia where there was a place on Atlantis where you come up against the ice sheet.
Right.
Now, that's interesting because center of the world, like, it could also be taken to mean like the north of the world or the pole of the world.
And in fact, in Iranian esotericism, they do say this about this place, that it was the pole of the world.
The north and south poles of the world flip magnetically at various intervals, long intervals.
But not that long.
If we...
I say it's like 9,000 years or...
I think it's longer than that.
I think it's longer than that.
Yeah.
But, you know, Edgar Casey, now, you know, that's all a rabbit hole, but, you know, various
mediums have looked at Atlantis and have said things about Atlantis.
And they describe a civilization that went on for tens of thousands of years, which then
was brought to this catastrophic end about 12,000 years ago, right?
Now, if Atlantis existed for tens of thousands of years, was a thriving.
civilization for that long a period of time,
it would have been when Antarctica was the North Pole of the world.
The northern magnetic pole.
So when people talk about Hyperborea, the land at the north of the world,
and the Germanic people and the Thul-Gazelschaft say that Ultimafula
was the northern continent, it fits with when the magnetic pole was in Antarctica,
and when part of Antarctica was already in the pole,
but most of it was where Argentina is today.
So all of that somehow, I think, is corroborative.
Very interesting.
You do have, like, a lot of very high net worth people going down there occasionally.
Bill Gates likes to go down there.
I have no idea.
He's probably not commuting with aliens or something, but that is interesting.
There's a lot of kind of very wealthy tourism.
Yeah.
Well, I think we're going to find out what's there.
You do.
Yes, very soon, unfortunately.
Why?
So a number of remote viewers have remote viewed the year 2050.
One group was led by Stefan Schwartz, and Lynn Buchanan also did the same project of remote viewing the world in 2050.
And other people as well, but these are two very prominent ones.
and they all say
that there's going to be
a catastrophic precipitous sea level rise
not the kind of sea level rise
you expect like a few feet from global warming or whatever
climate change.
No, no, no.
And not just a tsunami like you would expect
another thing that Lynn has talked about
is Cumbra Vjeha exploding
on Las Palmas
and, you know,
the flank of that volcanic mountain
collapsing into the Atlantic Ocean,
which then would create a tsunami
that would batter
the east coast of the United States.
And he thinks that that may happen at some point.
And by the way, when it was going off,
I was in communication with him,
being like, Lynn, do you think this is it?
Like, should I leave New York?
I was in New York.
And he's like, you know, I'd say 50-50.
You know, you should get your ass out of there.
It's like a coin flip,
coin toss at this point.
Anyway, but not like a tsunami, okay?
Permanent sea level rise.
of between 2 to 300 feet.
Meaning every coastal city in the world
is going to go underwater by 2050.
Every coastal city in the world.
That would affect about 4 billion people.
But I don't know.
There are all these predictions in UFO space
around 2027.
I'm just telling you,
the remote viewers all see this.
They see that all the coastal areas of the world
have gone deep underwater.
Yeah.
You know what would have to happen
for that to be the case?
The Antarctic ice sheet has to melt.
Sure.
Completely.
Yeah.
Completely. Which means two things.
One, it means that there's some massive event that, you know, high energy or something, whatever, that causes that.
Or a geophysical event of the kind that took place 12,000 years ago.
In other words, another crustal slippage that pulls Antarctica back out of the southern polar region.
Yeah.
And then it melts precipitously.
Or an asteroid.
Or an asteroid could hit Antarctica and melt the ice sheet all at once, break it up into ice cubes and then melt it.
quickly. So, or who knows? I mean, what? Like, I hope nobody's storing fusion bombs in Antarctica.
Okay. Well, there's that guy, there's the Eric Hecker guy who says that, um, there are like neutrino
detectors and emitters on the South Pole that Raytheon and the U.S. and aerospace primes are,
you know, running. And that that even caused the Christchurch earthquake in New Zealand. And
I don't know what to make him. He's a very odd character. I invited him on my show.
and he got kind of squirrely and fell off.
I do think tectonic weaponry exists.
I do think tectonic weaponry exists.
I mean, Nikola Tesla describes having used tectonic weaponry in his laboratory.
He caused an earthquake in Manhattan.
Yeah.
The police broke down his door, you know, and they had to take a sledgehammer to the thing.
Well, some people have this conspiracy that Tesla, the Tenguska, 1908 Siberia asteroid impact,
was actually just a Tesla death weapon that was being tested near the North Pole.
I don't know if you've ever heard that.
I certainly have heard it, but you know, I heard an even more interesting explanation of Tongoska,
which fits with what we've been discussing and what we discussed in our last conversation.
Because the conventional, or I don't know if it's a conventional explanation,
but the Graham Hancock explanation is that it's a comet airburst from the Tord Meteor Stream.
And that explains the impact with the local trees and the crater and that sort of thing.
But, yeah, what do you think?
So one of the remote viewers, trying to remember which one it was.
I can't remember right now which one.
It was one of the prominent people who worked on Stargate and Grohl Flame,
not like some kook.
It was one of the primary remote viewers.
I almost want to say it might have been Joe McMonicle,
but I can't remember exactly which one it was.
Anyway, he said he remote viewed the Tunguska explosion.
And get this.
Yeah.
He says it was people in a saucer, people in a saucer who were escaping the civilization they come from.
What?
Because it was a totalitarian, oppressive place.
and they wanted to leave, and they didn't know that there was an explosive timer on the thing,
so that, not a timer, an altitude-based explosive device,
so that if they came down below a certain altitude, the thing was going to detonate.
And so it had been like pre-mined with an explosive that they weren't aware was on board,
and then they found out about it.
And he says they went around the planet a few times, like trying to figure out,
what are we going to do?
Like, we can't go down.
And finally they went down and they exploded.
And that's what caused the tungosca blast.
This is what he claimed.
I'll tell you why I find that story interesting.
Because a remote viewer who I had personal contact with,
another military intelligence guy,
I'll just tell you who it is, who cares.
Lynn Buchanan.
When we were having some conversations at his home,
and what I'm about to tell you is very relevant to all of this
in a very, like, gravely political way.
Yeah.
He said that he was confronted at a diner that he eats at regularly by three men.
And it's funny, these stories often involve three men,
counter with three men.
Three men who purported to be from this Nordic civilization.
And he said that there are rebels among them,
who consider the society that they come from
to be an oppressive totalitarian hierarchy.
And he said that there's something like the Underground Railroad,
like, you know, that facilitated the liberation of black slaves
from the South and to the North during a Civil War,
that there's a system that they compare to the Underground Railroad
to facilitate these Nordic rebels taking refuge in America in particular.
So that their children and grandchildren could enjoy the liberties of our society
and escape their oppressive totalitarian system.
And he said in particular, a lot of them live in the Colorado Rockies and small towns in the Colorado Rockies.
He said this?
Yeah.
Really?
He said these men told them this.
Really?
Yeah, listen to the rest of this.
So he said they live in like small towns and the Rockies and they pass because they look like tall Scandinavian people.
I imagine a lot of their kids are.
on the basketball team.
And so he said, look, we know that Kit Green at the CIA has some program to access the 23
and me and like whatever ancestry.com databases through some backdoor and that they are screening
the entire, whoever signs up for these services for a specific genetic variance from the
normal homo sapiens population, which the C.
The CIA knows to be the genetic marker of these Nordics.
And they said, look, our children, especially our grandchildren, have no idea where they're from.
We tell them stories about how their grandparents are from Sweden or whatever.
And they don't know, you know, we just want them to have lives of peace and liberty here in America.
But the CIA wants to hunt them down.
And this was why they met with Lynn.
They said, would you please go back to these people and tell them, we are not trying to
take over your government. We just want to live here in peace and to please leave our children alone.
Okay, so this is a story that he told me. And what I said to him was, look, if these people, next time,
he said two of them sat down with him and one of them stood next to the diner booth as if, like,
he was not just on the lookout, but as if he was like creating some kind of a shield around the conversation.
And so I said to Lynn, if these people come back, next time, could you please tell them that instead of, you know, selfishly seeking a life of peace and comfort and liberties for their children, they should help us to carry out some kind of a coup against this fascist deep state that we have in this country.
because if they don't help us do that,
soon these liberties that they came here for
aren't going to exist anymore.
And they're going to be living back under the system
that they escaped from.
So, you know, they should get in touch
and there should be some kind of a coordination
to, you know, work on the American deep state together
so that, you know, this kind of a system
that they want to benefit from continues to exist.
How's that effort going?
Crickets.
Interesting.
Well, I've anecdotes.
I've heard some very interesting and weird stories around Nordic-looking people in the Rockies.
Yeah.
I have, too.
I have, too.
From other people.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
Mm-hmm.
So do you think that this, like, okay, so let's just, we're in crazy territory right now.
But do you think, you know, if these Atlantean survivors are camped out in Antarctica now, what do you think they want with mankind?
Do you think if there is any relationship between them and the non-starchant?
Nazis. So were they trying to sort of eminentize the Eschaton, kind of the Eric Vogelin, like, you know, they were trying to bring about some sort of apocalypse or like, what did they want? Like, why would they, I mean, you would assume they're kind of nefarious if they are partnering with the Nazis, or are they good or is it like way more complicated than that and good and bad are just like human constructs that we're trying to apply to a paradigm we don't understand. What do you think their intent is? It's an Eurus.
What is that?
It's the snake that's biting its own tail,
that alchemical symbol of the snake
that's biting its own tail.
The biggest problem,
and I saw this in some of the comments,
you know, in response to our first conversation,
the biggest problem that people have
with wrapping their minds around this
is the element of time.
If we're dealing with a time-traveling civilization,
it means they have a hyper-dimensional relationship
to human history.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
So if you, I mean, all these people have these weird taxonomies of 43 different alien species and 10 different kinds of Nordics and the tall white, as Charles Hall talks about, the tall white something talks about the Norwegians.
We've got 23 teeth.
24 teeth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
That was the most insane interview I ever died.
I don't know what to make of it.
Here's the problem.
Yeah.
Okay.
Just let's look at it on a conceptual level.
Yeah.
Leave out the aliens for a minute.
Just let's look at time travel on a conceptual level.
if you have this scientific breakthrough to where you can engineer time machines,
from that moment forward, at any point in the future,
you could travel to any point in the past, right?
So if some group of Nordics, whether it's literally the Nazis,
or whether it's a group of people with a Nordic phenotype,
at some other point in history, maybe in Atlantic.
maybe 100 years into the future.
Some group of people with a Nordic phenotype
cracks time travel.
That means that there are Nordics 10,000 years in our past
coming from 100 years in our future.
It means there are Nordics 100 years in our past
coming from 10,000 years in our future.
It means there are Nordics walking around here today
that come from a million years into the future,
presuming they're able to survive for that long.
Right? So the differences in physiognomy that we see between, let's say, whatever, the tall whites, or let's say the Nordics who could pass for Swedes may simply be differences in evolutionary biology having to do with very long stretches of time.
That we're seeing different phases of the same civilization. Now, that civilization may also have fractured.
Like Asimov's foundation, right? You know, where humanity is expanded into the cosmos and, you know,
colonized thousands of planets.
So the civilization may have bifurcated or trifurcated or whatever, okay?
And we may be seeing different phases in its evolutionary biological development.
But they may all have had the same origin in the same culture that breakaway culture,
alfbrug's culture, breakaway culture that first crack time travel.
That's something that I think people have a hard time, you know,
wrapping their minds around and will help to make sense out of a lot of the insane cases that we see.
I'll give you one example.
Case of Reinhold Schmidt.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
He was this American from...
Where was he?
I can't remember.
One of the states, like the Dakotas or...
I can't remember.
Anyway, not a highly populated area, guy from the country.
And Reinhold Schmidt was, I want to say Nebraska.
Anyway, this is cases from 1957 and he's out driving and his car dies.
And there are two other cars and a tractor that are also taken out by the EMP of this UFO.
So there were multiple witnesses.
And these people independently reported the incident to the police.
but Reinhold Schmidt is the guy who they engage,
the people who come out of this saucer,
and they bring him aboard.
He says he was engaged by two men.
Then when he was brought into the saucer,
there was another man and two women also.
The ship was from the outside
a complete solid piece of aluminum or highly polished steel.
Upon entering this ship is entirely different.
It is transparent.
You would look up, see the sky, look down, see the grass below you, or see the entire countryside.
How many people were in the machine?
There were six people, four men and two ladies.
Did they look like us?
Yes, they looked.
If they would see them on the street, you couldn't detect them unless you would have seen them on a ship.
Did they tell you what they were doing here?
No, they did not.
I asked them what they were doing here, what kind of a ship it was.
And they said they couldn't tell me that at this time.
And he says, they didn't know.
Ryan Holtz Schmidt. They didn't know I had German ancestry and I spoke German. This guy
learned German at university. So not only did he know some German from being of German ancestry,
at that time like a quarter of America's population were of German ancestry. But he also
had studied German at university. So this is what he claims. He says, I realize these guys
were speaking in high German to each other, which the SS used to use as a mark of distinction.
And he said they asked him whether he knew anything about the American satellite program.
And he said, I don't know.
I know anything about the American satellite program.
And then he said they went on to predict a number of failures that the U.S. satellite program would have in those early days when we were competing with the Soviets, Sputnik and so forth.
And then they dropped them off.
And he went about his business.
Isn't there some other example of this with Betty and Barney Hill, famous abduction case in 1961, this interracial couple, you know, it's kind of the archetypal.
abduction case.
Wasn't there some sort of Nazi connection there?
Yes.
And see, this is one of those cases,
which has been warped by people
where, like, people have, like,
they've embellished the folklore
and reworked it into where these were,
like, monstrous aliens. But I believe
that what you're referring to
is that if you look back at Barney Hill's
original statements, and
when they first asked him, what did they look
like, he said, well, they look like Nazis.
Really? Yeah. Well, they look like Nazis.
You saw him to do this?
window or they said there were a row of windows.
It was a row of windows, just a huge row of windows, only divided by struts or structures that prevented it from being one solid window.
Or then it would have been one solid window.
And the evil face German Nazi.
They have one of the uniforms.
How many other abductions are like that
where they say they look like Nazis?
I haven't seen that many.
Okay.
But the important thing is that there are such cases.
Oh, I'll tell you something else interesting in that regard.
So one of the comments in response to our first conversation
was from the daughter of Desmond Leslie.
Who's that?
She commented to me on my ex.
So George Adomsky
co-authored his first book
The Flying Susters of Landed
with this guy Desmond Leslie.
He was like a
not a ghost writer
but like a collaborative author.
He would help people write books.
And she reached out
saying that she's the daughter
of Desmond Leslie
and she said in our family
her father
always said that
it was Nazis
who contacted it on.
And they were pretending to be Venusians.
And that, yeah, that, so he helped Adamski write this book where Adamski claims these people
are Venusians and they claim they were Venusians or some of them come from Mars and whatever.
They said that we always knew it was Nazis.
Yeah.
We were pretending to be Venusians.
They had like a, you know, disguised themselves and created a theatrical psychological operation
to present themselves as if they were extraterrestrials.
This is so bizarre.
There are a couple other interesting stories.
One is, you know, Paul Mellon was one of the founders.
of the CIA. There's a story that he told his grandson, this guy who's still alive today,
is John Warner the 4th. And I guess he's having some martinis with Paul Mellon. And, you know,
in his third martini, Paul Mellon says, in 1944, I was in modern day, you know, Czech Republic.
And I was, or is Czech Republic or Czechoswock? Okay.
And, and, and, uh, in his third, in the course of his third martini, he says,
that in 1944, I was in modern day Czechoslovakia, and I was there with Alan Dulles.
They were on some tech retrieval mission, and they were standing on top of a flying saucer.
And my grandfather said, look, you know, we were in a facility, a hangar, and we saw, you know, a German flying disc.
And I said, you know, oh, is that the one that was cobbled together with six BMW jet engines?
And he laughed, and he said, no.
And so that's a really interesting fact as well.
And Harold Malmgren, bringing it back to the top, said that the magenta craft was actually
expultrated from Italy via the Nazi rat lines, which people like Reinhard Gaelin were helping
to kind of orchestrate.
And it was by the Knights of Malta.
And Reinhard Gaelin was part of this Monte Carlo group, which was this kind of elite of
the elite Knights of Malta faction, which is fascinating.
And this faction comprised both Nazis, people like Reinhard Gaelin and Jailen and
Jews like Henry Kissinger.
Yep. That's right.
And Otto Scorzani is working with
the Mossad in the early 1970s.
And Scorzani was also part of this Knights of Malta
faction. Yeah. I was invited, by the way, to join the Knights of Malta at one point.
Why do you think you were invited because you started
to brush up against their...
Oh, for sure. Yeah. Yeah. And I
declined. Why did you decline?
First of all, I was being invited
to participate in some kind of initiation ritual
in Malta. And I happened to know that
the fellow who invited me
had a track record of recording people
involved in sex acts
and using it as blackmail material
and so forth, okay?
So I was not about to go to Malta
or like Epstein.
And besides, by the way, it's just that kind of thing, okay?
And he was a member of
a dozen different secret societies,
this guy at a high level,
including the Knights of Malto.
I would never join any such organization
just for the record.
Mason's tried to get me
at one point high level.
Mason's wanted to bring me at,
I will never join any such organization because at the moment you do that, you lose your independence.
So anyway, but...
Hannity presents in the red corner, the undisputed, undefeated weed whacker guys.
Champion of hurling grass and pollen everywhere.
And in the blue corner, the challenger, extra strength, Hannity.
Eye drops and work all day to prevent the release of histomies.
that cause itchy allergy eyes.
And the winner by knockout is Palladay.
Paraday. Bring it on.
Absolutely.
This stuff, I've heard the same stuff about Dulles and witnessing the saucer
and checks the Lockhears and so and so forth.
Yeah.
The interesting thing about Alan Dulles,
which I think we briefly did touch on in our first conversation,
is that it might have been actually when we were on the phone.
Alan Dulles and his brother, John Foster Dulles.
Yeah.
funded the rise of the Nazis.
Yeah.
Together with J.P. Morgan Chase and Rockefeller from out of New York.
Yeah. So did Prescott Bush.
Oh, yeah. And so, look, the point is this, that in a lot of ways, both paperclip and the absorption of the Gaelin network were a homecoming.
It's almost as if Nazi Germany was set up as a field laboratory to do some highly unethical things, which would then be harvested back to America.
So is your, and then is your world model or mental model something like there's like an elite strata and these are the names we're throwing out now, you know, people who come from, some of whom come from these older families, some of whom are just like, you know, the kind of elite ruling class of the United States that might be coordinated with either incidentally or deliberately with this sort of non-human faction or not even non-human faction?
don't like that word, this sort of Nordic overlord faction or something.
Yeah, but it's even more of a tangled web than that, you see, because of the time element
I was talking about.
It could be that some of these elites have had contact with these Nordics for a long time.
But there's another possibility, too.
It's a possibility, which, you know, I speculatively investigate in closer encounters.
And that's that these elites become the Nordics.
that if you look at how obsessed these people were with eugenics,
I laid it out in close-ring encounters at length,
how many of these elites in America, in Britain, in Germany,
but people think that somehow the Nazis came up with eugenics.
No, they were playing catch-up.
The Nazi leadership was saying, like,
these Americans are going to dominate the world with all their eugenics programs.
We better, like, catch up fast.
The world leader in eugenics from the 1890s until the 1930s
was the United States of America.
Yeah.
Well, and then they got it from people like Cecil Roe.
and, you know, a lot of, you know, 19th century, like phrenology and that sort of thing.
Yes, yes.
But when you look back at that era, all the top scientists, the top political decision makers, federal judges, and certainly the aristocrats were ardently pro-ugenics.
Yeah.
Okay.
Even like Margaret Sanger and people who you think these days are associated with the left and like Planned Parenthood and all that, they were ardent eugenicists.
Mm-hmm.
Now, if you combine eugenics, in other words, the will to create a master race, together with occultism, right, early psychical research and cultivation of occult abilities, together with exotic propulsion technology, it converges on what the Nordics become.
So for all we know, I said Ouroboros earlier, right?
What's happening is that a future state of a certain culture is contacting itself in the past and reinforcing itself in the past.
I'm trying to pull the timeline towards itself or something.
To actualize itself.
Trans temporally actualize itself.
Yes.
It's very interesting.
And so do you think there would be competing factions like the Nordics would be fighting against other possible timeline variants that want to actualize themselves?
I think that's who the auras are.
So, you know, we have throughout all of human mythology this, this.
account of rebel
rebels, rebel gods
or rebel angels
who break with the program,
right? And
Sanskrit texts call them the Asuras. The Greeks
call them the Titans.
But they're in every mythology of the
planet. It's always this rebel faction that
exists that's trying to break free from the
control system. So yes, I think
so. And, you know, I think
Lynn's story is another
corroboration of that. There's people who
don't like the program and they don't like
the society they're from. But I don't know, this idea that the Nordics or whatever are this homogenous sort of, you know, one-world authoritarian, you know, government, you know, these sort of perfect people who've been eugenicized to no end and then they're fighting this sort of rebel angel faction. Doesn't that feel too clean? Like, what if there are factions of the Nordics that are good or whatever? Yeah, I just don't know, you know, or do you think that? I think here's, I think here, um,
A statement that Peter Thiel made when he was being asked about the close encounter phenomenon on Rogan is very relevant.
If you have faster than light travel, there's something really crazy that has to be true on a cultural, political, social level.
And there may be other solutions, but I'll give you my two.
one of one of them is that you need complete totalitarian controls and it is like it is the people the individuals they might be
might not be perfect they might be demons doesn't matter but you have you have a demonic totalitarian
control of your society where it's like you have you have like
parapsychological mind meld with everybody and no one can act independently of anybody else.
No one can ever launch a warp drive weapon. And everybody who has that ability isn't like
a mind meld link with everybody else or something, something like that. You can't have
libertarian, individualistic free agency. Right. And then I think the other, the other version
socially and culturally is
they have to be
like perfectly
altruistic, non-self-interest. They have to be angels.
And so the Pazolka
literal thing I'd come to is
the aliens, it's not that they might be demons
or angels. They must be demons or angels
if you have faster than light travel.
Yeah, he's basically saying it's either angels and angels. And that's the language
you use, which I take exception to that. Angels or demons.
because I think maybe in a Nietzschean fashion,
the moral evaluation there needs to be flipped.
That the angels are the ones controlling
the totalitarian hierarchical,
mind-melded, hive-minded system.
By the way, I used to teach comparative religion.
In all the Abrahamic religions,
one thing that they consistently say about the angels
is that they have no will of their own.
The angels have no real individuality.
They have no real will of their own.
they do the will of God, which like binds them together with a single purpose.
That's like a totalitarian society controlled by an AI.
Okay.
Now I'm going to go somewhere really disturbing with this.
An angel just means messenger generically, you know, so it is.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Evangilos and the Hebrew original met the same thing.
And so, like for example, the angels who come to Abraham, there are three men.
And they did look particularly beautiful.
because the one who goes to Sodom to retrieve Lot,
the lecherous men want to have sex with this guy
because he's so good-looking.
And by the way, the Nordics are known for that.
And they're known to be like super-good-looking people.
They look like supermodels, basically.
Colonel Alexander, when he told me the story
of the couple of Nordics that he saw in the Casino Hotel,
Las Vegas, he said they were like that too.
They were like out of the pages of a fashion magazine.
Anyway, a place I want to go from there
about the angels,
an angelic hierarchy
and, you know,
why, in fact,
it would be so simple.
You said,
you know,
it seems too simple.
Gods versus Titans,
right?
Devas versus Osheras.
No, for the reason Tiel gave,
you would have exactly
that bifurcation.
And it would be a very
black and white conflict
between an extremely
repressive hierarchical
totalitarian society
that allows for almost no
individuation.
And on the other hand,
individuals who don't want to live in such a world and who are trying to find a way to carve out some space of freedom.
But who have the same technology.
And so the disturbing place I want to go from there is relevant to the subject of my latest book, which is a study of the afterlife.
Death, the transitional state, Tibetans called the Bardo state, and rebirth, evidence for reincarnation.
And so on so.
And in the course of researching this book,
I've looked into a lot of cases
that are filtered out of the hippie-dippy woo-woo narrative
about near-death experiences.
In particular, one of the most famous
is an account that Robert Monroe,
you know, who founded the Monroe Institute and so forth
that the CIA used to use sometimes
as a place to conduct advanced remote viewing.
Robert Monroe in his second book,
journeys, I think from 1985, basically says that in the course of his astral projections,
he discovered that we're living in a control system that is managed by entities who work
for a demiurge that's harvesting us for what he called lusch.
He said that we're in a lushe farm, that humans are being deliberately subjected to conditions
that create extreme emotional states.
Extreme suffering, misery, fear, terror, ecstasy, extreme desire,
you know, pathological impulses, you know.
And these are all being used to basically generate a form of energy
that they can harvest from the human soul,
including after death, where they basically juice,
souls for the lusche.
Now, there was also a researcher called Carla Turner,
who I believe was killed,
even though she supposedly died of cancer at the age of 48,
the CIA has something that mimics a very fast-acting cancer.
And they've used this on a number of occasions to kill prominent people,
I believe also including the Shah of Iran.
Really?
Yeah.
Who else?
Your Peter Jennings did this special on UFOs.
Do you remember that in the 9th?
whenever it was that he died shortly before his death,
he did this huge special on UFOs for which he had recorded like days and days worth of footage
with all kinds of prominent whistleblowers.
And it was supposed to air on primetime television.
Is that true?
With him as an air?
Yeah, they aired it, but what they aired excluded 90% of the material.
I didn't know that.
Peter Jennings did a UFO special, including a lot of whistleblowers.
Extensive.
I had no idea.
Like, it was supposed to be like a multi-part program that would air over weeks or something.
And he records this thing, gets cancer, drops dead.
Really?
Like, within a year of, like, this program airing.
I had no idea to know about any of this.
Yeah.
What?
Yeah.
So, I think that's another.
Walter Cronkite 2.0.
That's right.
So that's another case of it.
What?
And so I think Carla Turner was killed by this.
In any case, Carla Turner did interviews with,
a lot of experiencers, abductees,
who reported the same kinds of things
as Robert Monroe did in four journeys,
where they said that we are in a control system
that's being managed from out of a metallic sphere
just beyond the earth.
And they describe the inside of this thing.
What?
I think going back to our first conversation,
what they're describing is the inside of the moon.
That there is a, what we might call,
using the Soviet language,
a psychotronic control system,
a kind of spectral technology
inside of the moon,
which is impinging on
and manipulating humans
in the afterlife state.
What?
And it's not
omnipotent.
It's not a flawless system.
So it's possible
to assert your free will
and self-determination
in the face of this system, but it's very difficult.
So a lot of people who have had near-depth experiences, for example,
they describe being pulled toward this light.
It's like they couldn't resist going into the light.
They tried in some cases,
but it was almost as if it was an electromagnet,
like pulling them into it.
Sure.
And then when they go into the light,
one of the most common things that's described
is that people are shown their dead relatives
and religious authority figures like Jesus.
or like if you're a Hindu, you see Hindu gods, interestingly.
I'll give you a terrifying case from a Hindu in a minute.
So you're pulled into this light and then they show you your dead relatives
and they show you Jesus and whatever.
Well, here's a problem, Jesse, is that if you look at Dr. Ian Stevenson's extremely rigorous research
on reincarnation that he did at the University of Virginia for decades
on children's spontaneous memories of past lives, all the cases show that the average interval
between death and reincarnation is something like,
it could be anywhere from six months to three years maximum.
It's usually not more than several years.
So when you are having a near-death experience
and your grandmother, and let's say you're in your 60s
or in your 60s, and you see your grandmother who died when you were in your 20s,
that's bullshit.
you are being shown an artificially generated simulacrum of your dead relatives to manipulate you.
By a psychotronic technology.
By a psychotronic technology.
You really think that?
Yes, I do.
Really?
And I say that as someone who was, you know, at the bedside, at the deathbed of a couple of my relatives who were experiencing these things.
You know, when people are very close to death, they also see dead relatives come around their hospital beds.
very commonly reported.
And so in the case, one case was my great aunt, or I was there while she was like describing
to, not just not describing to us, she was having conversations with dead relatives that, you know,
the other family members knew, oh, that's so-and-so, she's talking to so-and-so, as if he's, like,
in the hospital room.
And the most striking case was with my own grandmother, my Persian grandmother, you know,
to whom I owe the fact that I fluently speak Persian, because both of my parents worked when I was
growing up and they would leave me with her during the days.
and she hardly spoke any English.
So I learned like Persian practically as my first language in New York.
So I was very close to my grandmother.
And when she was dying, this exact thing happened.
She starts talking to my dead grandfather.
Now, my Persian grandfather died when my father was four.
Okay?
That guy reincarnated 60, 70 years ago.
So she's talking to something that's being projected into our mind cyclotronically.
But how do you know it's being projected psychotronically?
and it's not just a function of her own old age and sort of delusions.
Sure, sure.
I mean, that's the conventional skeptical response.
I would say based on what Robert Monroe described in terms of the terrain of the afterlife through his astral projections,
which then other people at the Monroe Institute were able to replicate, and based on the kinds of accounts that, let's say, Carla Turner got from abductees,
of being taken to places that were not just like, you know, like,
space alien basis. There were places where the soul was being handled as some kind of an
informational matrix and or energy source. This, I mean, John Lear would say that there's like a
soul catcher on the moon, but he also was kind of crazy and would say a lot of stuff that,
you know, probably was BS. I guess my point is we don't need to depend. I've heard that,
by the way. I've heard him talk about it. My point is we don't need to depend on him. Other people
have said this. And let me give you one more example of somebody who's described this is,
I hope I don't get this name wrong.
Scott Turner or Scott
Scott Trevor or Scott Turner
was a leader of a team of remote viewers
and these are private sector remote viewers.
I think of the kind who offer service,
corporate services and stuff like that
who did a remote viewing on the word mokshah.
Mokshah.
So what was in the envelope was Mokshah,
the target they were bull.
line to. Mokshah means liberation in Sanskrit. It's like how you get out of the wheel of
samsara. And so he does this session with his team. And long story short, he comes back with
this horrific account that all of them do. Of course, they're all working the same target. Lines the
same target and they're all doing this independently. And then they compare notes. And they said
that you can't achieve Mokshah because as you try to escape the earth, there's something
that grabs you and bends you back toward the earth. Like if you're a
of light. It's like it bends the light that's your soul back toward the earth, like a, what do you call them? A lensing effect. And he said it's originating from some celestial body near the earth. And that it is part of a vast machinery of energy extraction, which was set up in our solar system at the end of a war that devastated the solar system. He said that like millions of years ago,
there were these horrendous people who wanted to establish this energy harvesting system here
and wanted to exploit humanity for this purpose.
And there was a rebellion against them,
and the conflict was waged across the entire solar system.
Now, this is interesting in terms of what we discussed regarding Mars in our first conversation
and the apparent devastation of Mars in some kind of nuclear war,
according to Dr. Brandenberg.
So Turner and his group said,
Turner, Trevor,
whatever,
this remote viewer,
it's going to be
in my new book,
Phonosis.
But you can find it,
Google remote viewing moksha.
People were so disturbed by the video
that the guy took it down.
He has all his other videos up,
but he took this one down,
but other people uploaded it
to other sites.
And so he says,
the rebels who wanted to, like,
preserve human freedom and self-determination
didn't want humans to be harvested
and exploited this way.
they lost the war.
And ever since then, we've been inside basically this prison where we are spiritually manipulated
and harvested for our energy.
When we originally described this site, it's a fence or a grid around a place.
This acts as a barrier.
It collects and traps people, things, or objects.
This is actually an innocent planet that is being used in an unintended way.
And this meters the flow and acts as a checkpoint and an access point for an external
force. One viewer
described it as similar to
hocus pocus and a way of
its energetics that
the viewer wasn't familiar with.
And it's occurring on a crowded planet.
It's a deliberate function
that acts as a cage. People
have been dispersed here in a form
of perverted injustice
is occurring. A third viewer
described it as a large
naturally formed object like a planet
that acts as an animal
pen. This is a refugee
G-camp tucked away out of sight and a magnetic force. It stirs, agitates, and it works in a
cylindrical manner like clockwork over a long expanse of time. In my session, my work described
a planetary system that's extremely crowded and jammed. Ghostly voices are flooding into
this place, and it's incredibly harrowing for them. It's a bone-chilling experience. As a viewer
when I remote viewed this, I had descriptions that it made me upset.
in the session. It elicited contempt for what was going on at the site. But the activity at the site
was this concept of a net that's been spun. And it's an operation of catch and release on a grand
scale. So there's a massive grid that exists around this planet. And it acts as a checkpoint,
a waypoint or rest stop where souls are drained and then that in turn energizes something else.
That's so depressing.
I mean, do you have, is there any aspirational streak within that?
Do you believe in God?
Do you think if you...
I believe in Prometheus.
In other words, in other words, the reason that Prometheus has become such a central
archetype to my philosophical project is because if you look at the structure of this myth,
it encompasses all the major elements of most religious belief systems.
but in a way that's empowering to humanity.
So, for example, in Promethean myth,
we're not created by Yahweh or by Enlil
or by whatever celestial tyrant wants to luce harvest us.
We're created by this genius, like, artistic spirit
who rebelled against Zeus, right?
Because he thought Zeus was a sadistic tyrant.
And we're created by him in his image
to be a race of new gods.
And the only reason that we don't wind up fulfilling that destiny is that Prometheus is punished by Zeus, right, and chained in the Caucasus and has his liver devoured.
What is the devouring of the liver mean?
The liver was used for fortune-telling by the ancient Greeks.
It was like crystal ballgazing.
So they believed that they could read the future by like, you know, looking into the blackness of the liver by candlelight and so forth.
So what that symbol means is that the eagle of Zeus wants to know what Prometheus knows.
So not only were we created by this, this, you know, positive spirit, also Prometheus knows more than Zeus and can see further than Zeus.
So our creator is more knowing than the sadistic tyrant.
And our creator wants to cultivate in us the same kind of forethought, the same thing.
the same kind of visionary creative capacity, right?
In Escalis's writings and in various Greek texts on Prometheus,
it's very clearly understood that the fire that Prometheus stole
from the forge of Hephaestus and Olympus and brought to humanity
is a symbol of technet,
technique meaning both craft in the sense of the arts
and craft in the sense of technological science,
where the word technology from.
So it's a means of human empowerment, right?
But wouldn't you say a lot of modern technological progress is not empowering at all? And in fact, it sort of clamps down on human flourishing. And so like you have, you know, the American Prometheus would be Oppenheimer and created, you know, a nuclear bomb.
How do you know he didn't give us the means to defend ourselves? Right. Why are these Nordics obsessed with disarming us of nuclear weapons? The only defense that we would have against such a civilization, if indeed it's lording over us, is precisely.
our nuclear arsenal.
So you think, but then couldn't you
sort of, if you really had like
360 control over
the world, wouldn't she be able
to sort of like pit people against each other?
I mean, in a world of mutually assured destruction,
you end up with this kind of
weird, like
holding pattern of geopolitics
where tensions are rising.
But people themselves are sort of
in these sort of Orwellian
you know,
farmhouses or something. And they
they're sort of withering away.
And so that doesn't seem particularly empowering.
Maybe a short quick answer to that, but then I want to answer your bigger question.
Or even information technology might be better.
I want to answer to the misuse of technology, but just quick, short answer to that one.
Yeah.
I think the reason that we destroyed the Soviet Union, which I consider the worst mistake ever made by the United States.
Why do you think that's the worst mistake?
Is because the Soviet Union and the United States could have and should have and would have eventually combined their forces against
these Nordics. I think that what John F. Kennedy wanted to do and what his brother RFK was going to
resume as policy was an alliance with the Soviet Union. After all, remember, we had fought the Nazis
together with the Soviet Union, was an alliance with the Soviet Union where we would both go to the
moon together. And if necessary, we would both defend the freedom and independence of humanity
using nuclear weapons together against this threat.
And as bad as some people think communism is, I mean, I'm no fan of, I'm no
fan of communism.
But look at the Soviet cosmos and how progressive it is.
But JFK was trying to defang the American nuclear arsenal.
So if he actually viewed the Nordics as some sort of threat, he was trying to disarm.
In no way do I believe for a minute that JFK would have been one of these total nuclear disarmament
people.
I don't buy it.
You don't think so?
I don't buy it.
I think he would have built an alliance with the Soviet Union where our respective arsenals are not principally aimed at each other.
Remember, going back to Ian Fleming and Specter, I think JFK figured it out or had it told to them by Eisenhower that there's this third power in the world.
Because, you know, he had these back channels with Khrushchev and this guy Norman Cousins, who was a family friend, was going back and forth.
And the rumor was that he wanted full detente and disarmament.
And he wanted to go to the moon with the Russians.
Yeah, he wanted to do some sort of cooperative space program.
But that, yeah, but still, the nuclear disarmament part would go against some sort of belief that, you know, we were trying to defend ourselves against some alien.
In any case, the reason I think that it was the worst mistake we ever made is because there are far worse things than Soviet communism.
And Nazism is one of them, in my view.
in my view. That kind of, you know, S-S-Fascist mentality, yeah, it's worse than Soviet
cosmism and like what Konstantin Sealkovsky wanted for the future of mankind, in my view.
Well, I think the Tielovsky stuff is interesting, but that, but the, I mean, this communism,
you know, both are horrible, but communism killed more people.
I know. And way more global. Yeah, and that's not necessarily the measure of the ethics of a system.
Okay.
Like, for example, I don't want to linger on this for a very long time, but I'll give you very short.
Okay.
Suppose that the Islamic state of Iraq and Syria had metastasized, and we weren't able to contain it.
And that, let's say, they succeeded in toppling the Saudi royal family.
And you saw recently how Saudi Arabia and Pakistan made this strategic alliance where now Saudi Arabia is protected by Pakistan's nuclear weapons.
And besides, it's been rumored for years that Saudi Arabia paid for.
Pakistan's nuclear weapons to be developed.
So they have Saudi barcodes on them.
So suppose ISIS succeeded in taking over the, you know, Riyadh and then subsequently
Mecca and Medina, and then they wind up with Pakistan's nuclear arsenal.
And we get this metastasizing Islamic state in the world, right?
Well, you know what?
It would be necessary to go to war with that thing.
And a lot of people will be dead as a result of that.
Now, is that because of the evils of American liberal capitalism?
No, it's because we had to deal with a very difficult problem.
Okay?
And we would be doing it to defend human freedom and progress.
From their own perspective, the Soviets considered themselves to be the standard
bearers of liberation from oppression and progress, including scientific and technological
innovation against forces of regression and tyranny.
And, you know, to give them some credit, look, they put women in space before we did.
Okay. So I think that, you know, this decision to dismantle the Soviet Union was horrendous and I think was very deliberate. And guess who was behind it? Well, a principal figure. I mean, behind the death blow. Because look, it's one thing to keep them as an enemy. It's good to have them as an enemy. You want to have good rivals. Who would you say as being having? We have a shit rival today. China is a shit rival to have. Because it is a collectivistic.
hive-minded
Confucianist,
regressive,
traditionalist society,
fundamentally.
It's no longer a Maoist,
by the way.
I mean,
you know,
it's morphed
into some kind of
national socialism
that's extremely
Confucianist
and collectivist.
That's a shit rival to have.
You want to have
a rival that makes you
the best you can be.
And the Soviets were that.
We kept each other on our toes.
Yeah.
We,
now we're in all these sort of bad games
local games with the Chinese where it's like the AGI race.
You could say the modern academia in the U.S. is kind of like the Confucian bureaucracy or something.
You know, I think a lot of people care a lot about IQ and like, you know, genetic engineer, like, which is, you know, probably not the race you want to be running or whatever.
You know, you could think of social media in the U.S. is like a version of the social credit score or something.
So there are a lot of these weird analogs that, you know.
Right.
Yeah.
It's not great.
And then, like, you know, in kind of the COVID paradigm, like, they have a surveillance state.
And then it's like, you know, now we have one.
So the Soviets were a good rival.
They were a good rival.
We should have kept them as that.
Instead of like this retarded traditionalist Russia that we have now,
neo-Orthodox, neo-Orthodox, czarist system under Putin.
This is a disaster.
And it was done deliberately.
And who dealt the death blow?
George H.W. Bush.
Mm-hmm.
Whose father, Prescott Bush.
Mm-hmm.
was one of Hitler's men in America.
Mm-hmm. Okay.
So, and of course he was the head of the CIA,
George H.W. Bush, was one of these American presidents
who actually had full access to the UFO file
because he had been briefed when he was deep in the deep state.
Mm-hmm.
Okay?
And there's connections, you know, from him to the Kennedy assassination.
And so...
Yeah, he went missing when Kennedy was assassinating.
And then he was supposed to brief...
I think Carter wanted him to brief him on UFOs,
but then he wanted to be, you know,
made director of the CIA, which he eventually was made director,
director, but like, you know, there was this sort of quid pro quo thing there.
And I believe it's been since confirmed that he was in Dallas.
He was in Dallas when he definitely was in Dallas, I think.
And I think he met with everybody on Clint Murchison's ranch or something around that time, too.
And, yeah, I mean, it would have made sense.
He was like this skull and bones kid.
Yeah.
He was in with, you know, James Jesus Angleton.
He was a Dulles Acolyde.
And, yeah.
You know, he's the second politician to ever use the term new world order.
in a speech. Interesting. The first being Adolf Hitler. Really? Yeah. Oh, that's fascinating.
So that's who dealt the death blow to the Soviet Union. And I think it was a huge mistake.
That's really interesting. So you think that was part of some sort of one world order plan or something?
Absolutely. Hmm. Fascinating. Well, I don't know. I mean, they say that it was like, you know, the priest, the general and the businessman.
or whatever. There's an alliance between, you know, multiple different factions in the U.S. that
united, you know, the country against communism at the time. So, but you're saying that
George H. W. country was always united against communism. Again, I'm not saying we shouldn't
have had the Soviet Union as a rival. You're saying the escalation and the escalation in the
80s. Yeah. And the decision to really collapse the system, the Soviet system, which, by the way,
what we did to bring that about was horrendously unethical, namely the creation of Al-Qaeda.
the United States creation of al-Qaeda in Pakistan to send them into Afghanistan to make something viable from out of the Taliban to fight the Soviets in a protracted war of attrition to demoralize the Soviet citizenry and bankrupt the Soviet Union and eventually collapse the system.
But wasn't that, I don't know, an example of like a triple bank shot gone wrong or something?
Like, you know, it is true that like we trained the Mujahideen and trained Osama bin Laden.
There were multiple kinds of Mujahideen.
Like some of them, Ahmad Shah Masoud, leading the Northern Alliance, was a decent guy.
And the CIA killed him right before 9-11.
Okay?
We, we wiped, the United States wiped out all the moderate elements in Afghanistan and sent in Al-Qaeda
to train all the most rabid Islamic fundamentalists and did this for the explicit purpose of defeating the Soviet Union,
as if a Soviet Afghanistan would have been a bad thing.
Afghanistan becoming a province of the Soviet Union
would have been the best thing that ever happened to the Afghan people.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Interesting.
You know?
Yeah.
And this was like Charlie Wilson's War or whatever, and what was it, 79?
Yeah.
Seventy-seven, 79, yeah.
Hmm.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Okay.
Who is David Paulades?
David Paul.
Okay.
So, okay.
Well, one of the most disturbing aspects of the close encounter phenomenon is its intersection with missing persons cases.
So there's this researcher, David Politis. Politis, I think it's Polytis, David Politas, who has written a whole series of books called Missing 411.
Missing 411 series of books, exhaustively researched.
He's been to all the national parks in the country, which, under the...
benignance to most people are hot spots for disappearances of, you know, large numbers of
individuals go missing in our national parks.
And the devil's in the details of these cases, because you have to look at how well-trained
some of these hikers or hunters are who disappear and leave their provisions behind.
Yeah, like sometimes folded perfectly intact.
Un-eaten food.
Yeah.
So, presume, if they were, there's no remains, not like a bear ate them or something.
And, you know, if they were starving out there for days, you expect that their candy bar wouldn't be left or whatever, you know.
And they leave their weapons behind.
And their stuff is littered over large distances in some cases.
Some of the worst cases are ones involving children where, like, a child will go off a trail.
let's say a summer camp that's on the edge of a national park and the child will go missing.
And then the child's body will be found thousands of feet higher.
But not until months later.
So the search services will come in and they'll scour the entire area.
There won't be a single trace of this kid.
Then, like, after a hiatus of weeks or months,
remains of the kid will be found, but, like, at a much higher,
elevation like it was dropped there.
Whoa.
Okay.
And long story short, I cite this in some detail in closer encounters, David Politas's
various books.
But he discovered a connection between this and close encounters where in the same areas
people will go missing, people saw UFOs.
And he also discovered that the feds have case files on this and hiding them.
Interesting.
Federal authorities, particularly the officials.
FBI has a whole
like archive of this type of material.
Whoa.
Which they are keeping secret of people who have gone missing in national parks
and potential connection to the close encounter phenomenon.
So, and one of the most interesting things about this is temporal disorientation.
So for example, there's one case where some young woman, not everyone goes missing.
Sometimes they go in the Twilight Zone for 48 hours and they can.
come out.
Yeah.
Travis Walton is a classic example, Arizona.
That's right.
So one woman went into a forest and she got lost hiking and couldn't find her way out.
And she's there for what seems to her to be, I don't know, a day or two, something like that.
Like many, many hours, many, many hours.
And then eventually she finds her way out.
and people tell her she's been missing for a lot longer than she perceived.
And she tells them when she was in there,
she ran across one other hiker who was also lost.
And for a while, there were fellow travelers,
and then they decided to part ways
and both independently try to find a way out.
She describes this other woman that she ran into while she was lost.
The description fits to someone who went missing there like a decade or more ago
and was never fed.
You follow?
So it's like there's a local spatial temporal cortex where this poor girl who this hiker ran into had been there for like a decade.
Whoa.
And she was still trying to get out.
Suspended in time.
Yes.
And this hiker got out and the other girl that she ran into while she was in the forest never did.
Okay, which sounds like the Bermuda Triangle but on land.
These mountains exist everywhere.
This one in Zimbabwe, actually, near Rua, where the famous sighting occurred in the 90s.
In fact, I wanted to go, and I asked a friend who's in touch with local authorities, like, hey, can my friend go hiking on this thing?
And they were extremely, you know, like serious about like, no, the mist tends to descend on this mountain and people consistently go missing.
And all of the authorities are aware of that.
So that's pretty remarkable.
And so you think it's some sort of like trans temporal suspension area or something?
And the other thing that's consistently reported in these cases where the person is found eventually, or they can make it back out of the pocket.
Yeah.
Or there's another interesting type of cases where it's more than one person, right?
So it's like a group of hunters.
And one of them goes missing and the others come back.
And the ones who come back say right before he disappeared, right before Charlie disappeared, there was no sound.
All the insects went silent.
It was like we couldn't hear a leaf moving.
Whoa.
Which is exactly what people describe around UFOs.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there's also often like an almost like a local inertial reference frame that's different.
And there's like time warping involved.
Like Travis Walton was fully shaved and he came back four days later with a full beard.
Yes.
And so there are things like that or the trees tend to grow faster around, you know, the UFOs.
Which goes back to what we're talking about in terms of the bell.
Yeah.
And what they encountered, you know.
Yeah, well, these places seem like kind of, um,
vortexes, energy vortexes or some. Mount Kailash is an example. I think
Saad Guru went and said that as fingernails grew faster on the mountain or whatever.
There are few of these all around the world. Sedona, you know, Arizona is a classic example.
You have some places in Washington, Tacoma, Washington. Skinwalker Ranch would be an example, maybe in Utah.
And all of these places seem to have electromagnetic anomalies as well.
Geomagnetic anomalies. Okay. Who is Roger Colloy in what's his take?
on the devil. So I don't want to give the impression from a lot of the things that we've discussed
that somehow I only focus on the nuts and bolts aspect of close encounters. Of course,
you know, my first book, Prometheus and Atlas, is basically a philosophical study of
parapsychology, you know, and so it deals with the whole plethora of evidence for the occult.
And it's obvious that you can't separate close encounters from the occult.
Even in the case of these Nordics, they appear to be, you know, people with adept ESP.
They're extremely highly adept psionic, you know, cyanically capable people.
So in that sense, even when you're dealing with the Nordics, like Adomsky or, you know, Billy Meyer was dealing with them, there's an element of the occult there.
Because also perceptions can be manipulated by, you know, adept telepaths.
and by people with telekinesis,
with highly trained P.K.
But there's a whole other
there's a whole other
type of cases.
There's a whole other set of cases
that, as I suggested in our first conversation,
simply cannot be encompassed by this Natsunbol's interpretation
of Nordics flying around in electrogravitic devices,
where it looks like we're dealing with
some kind of a
super
psi AI
that's able to manipulate
perceptions on a large scale
and manifest
sort of
transmogrifications of phenomena
like to be able to produce
all kinds of
shape-shifting
mirages
and
you know
you know, metamorphosing apparitions.
Yeah.
Of the kind that John Kiel focused his research on.
Mm-hmm.
You see it in his study of all the weird happenings at Point Pleasant,
the Mothman case, you know, in particular.
And you see it throughout the men-in-black literature,
you know, how bizarre some of these cases of men-in-black are.
Did we get into that at all in our first conversation, the men-in-black?
Not too much.
I'm curious to get your take on the men-in-black.
Yeah, well, like, for example, this guy,
Was it Otto Bender?
Who wrote the saucers and the three men?
Do you remember?
No, Albert Bender.
Albert Bender.
So this guy ran a flying saucer research bureau.
And he claims that while he was doing his research for, you know, whatever,
the UFO articles he would come out with in his periodical,
these three men in black materialized in his attic.
and he said they had glowing orange eyes
and they smelled like sulfur
and they took him to some,
they teleported him
to believe it or not,
an underground base in Antarctica.
This is what he was told,
that he was an Antarctic all of a sudden.
And they told him some things about,
I don't know,
what they do there and what they're concerned
is with the earth,
gave him probably some bullshit story
like they give everybody.
And then they brought him back.
Then subsequently he said he was in a movie theater
and he noticed like these guys like all of a sudden materialized in some row of seats behind him.
And then they, then he got scared and left the theater and they like followed him some ways down the street back toward his home.
During the time when John Kiel was in Point Pleasant investigating the Mothman and the various UFO sightings there,
there were also men in black who would all of a sudden like show up outside the journalism bureau there, the like main newspaper there.
and come in have stalker-type conversations
with the newspaper reporters
trying to ascertain information about Kiel.
They would show up to the houses of witnesses
and claim they were associated with Kiel
when in fact they weren't.
Whoa.
And all of them were bizarre looking.
Like they didn't look human
and they didn't act human.
They looked like poor simulacra of human beings.
And they would speak as if either they were in a mesmer,
Eric Trance or as if someone was broadcasting what they were supposed to say to them
with a lag.
Yeah.
Right.
And I really got to thinking about this when I was running closer encounters and comparing
it to like the stuff that happened to Skim Walker Ranch.
We talked about this during the first conversation, I think, the instance of the camera
that had all the duct tape taken up.
Point being that enough things happened at Skinwalker Ranch for someone like Colonel
Alexander to formulate what he called precognitive sentient phenomenon.
In other words, he can't.
to believe that there was a singular intelligence at work on Skinwalker Ranch that had a precognitive ability and a psychokinetic ability where it was able to anticipate what the researchers would do and manipulate them from out of this foreknowledge and engage in basically like, you know, physical manipulation of things without being seen, right?
almost as if it's recoding the world on the base information physics level, right?
And Jacques Valet talks about this also in his book on the crash that took place right after the Trinity test, the Trinity book.
He says that these praying mantis-looking creatures, the Mexicans who ran into them, described them as looking like praying mantises.
They said at least their heads were, they're a bug-like and their heads.
as romantic shaped.
Valet says that he thinks that the object that crashed
is some conceptual hybrid of the casing of the Trinity bomb
and the casing of one of the bombs that we dropped in Japan.
I forget it was little man or fat boy.
Whoa.
Fat man or little boy.
But he said it's like this object made no sense.
when they went into it, they didn't find sufficient scientific equipment.
So it was an avocado shape.
Yeah, it was like an avocado-shaped thing.
But he said he looked at the shape of it in comparison to what the Trinity bomb looked like
and what one of the bombs dropped on Japan looked like.
And the fact that there wasn't enough scientific equipment inside this thing
for it to be a viable flying object of any kind.
And he speculated as to whether the thing was coded to materialize on an information
physics level in a way that was meant to send a signal to us regarding the development of
nuclear weapons.
The Trinity and then the, you know, the bomb dropped on Japan.
And what stepped out of this were mantid-type creatures.
This is all to answer about Roger Tel-Wall, but I have to set it up.
All right.
So a number of people have seen these mantets, including Terence McKenna.
There was one instance where one of McKenna's girlfriends had taken, I forget, too much of
a certain drug.
I don't remember if it was DMT,
if it was LSD or what it was,
but she was way too high on something.
And she seemed to be fading out.
He thought he was going to lose her.
And as she was dying,
she saw,
and so she lived to tell the tale, right?
She saw behind,
so he's looking at her and like trying to tend to her,
and she sees up above and behind parents McKenna,
a huge UFO made of energy.
And it's close enough, and I guess the dome is big enough,
that she can see that mantids are in it.
Okay?
Energetic mantids.
And I forget what happens,
but somehow, like, he does something that brings her back to life,
and, like, there's some huge reaction from out of these mantids.
Then there's the case of Ted Owens.
Ted Owens was a psycho-conactant.
adept who he tried to garner a lot of attention.
He tried to get the attention of the U.S. government.
He wanted them to use his psychokinetic powers against the Soviet Union.
And he got really aggravated that they weren't taking him seriously.
So he would do really, literally, incendiary things in order to get noticed and be taken
seriously, like start forest fires.
And supposedly he could, like, direct lightning bolts.
Yeah, Jeffrey Mishlov, who wrote a biography.
of him called Mr.
PK or PK man.
The PK man. I think he was on the phone with him
and he all of a sudden, you know,
like stop being able to breathe or something
because he said that Ted Owens was trying to cause this
on the other end.
And he also was kind of, you know,
we all talk about Chris Bloodsoe now.
You know, I don't know exactly what's going on there.
I think he's a really nice guy.
But a lot of people think he sort of attracts UFOs systematically.
And that's what people thought about Ted Owens, too,
that he could sort of attract the phenomena,
systematically UFOs would kind of follow him around.
Yes, and he was able to at least predict, if not summon UFOs, and then have them be detected on radar.
Okay, and...
But I mean, this would be the whole Jake Barber, like, what Skywatchers trying to do with, like, human psionic assets.
Now, just to underline the seriousness of this case, at one point, he was in an airplane and he was bragging to some stewardess about a magazine article that, you know,
that had been written on him that he was reading.
And, like, she wasn't taking him seriously or something.
And so he wills the plane ahead of them to crash.
And it does.
As a civilian airliner crash, kills a whole bunch of people.
What?
They have received here at Jamaica Hospital.
They've received 14 survivors from the plane crash.
Okay, so the guy was a murderer.
Okay?
She killed a lot of people.
Yeah.
Including their suspicion.
I mean, Mishlov took it seriously that he may have caused the challenger crash.
Really?
Yes.
Well, when the...
U.S. government wouldn't take him seriously.
Ted Owens wrote a series of threatening letters to the U.S. government saying that he's going
to target the space shuttles one after another and they named them.
He named them in the letter.
All of them, the Enterprise, the Atlantis, the Challenger.
And he said he was going to start with the Challenger.
And next thing you know, the Challenger explodes.
And shortly after the Challenger incident, Ted Owens drops dead.
Really?
Yeah.
What?
So...
Do you think he really had all this power?
Now, here's the thing.
So why am I even bringing up this story?
Yeah.
He said he got his powers from mantids.
He said there were these mantids, believe it or not, why is this shit also absurd?
I'll tell you why I think it's absurd.
Why the absurdity is being crafted in the way that it is.
He said he got his powers from these mantids called Twitter and Twitter.
Okay.
And that this Twitter and Twitter were like in a saucer, and they had decided that Owens was the most promising psychokinetic adept since Moses.
They knew Moses.
They were going to make like another Moses out of him.
And, you know, he decided the fate of nations and all this bullshit.
And, but yes, he said he got his power from these mantids.
So these mantets, okay, now here's the cream of the crop case,
which takes us right into Calois as surrealist art.
Roger Calois was a great French surrealist.
The case of David Huggins.
So David Huggins was a, I think, New York-based artist.
He's from the South, but he wound up eventually living in New York City.
And back when he was in the South, when he was growing up, from childhood, he had all these encounters with mantids.
And he claimed that the mantids were in charge of these little grays and also these weird hybrid beings who would show up and interact with him.
And he eventually claimed to have developed a relationship with one of these hybrids and to have been taken aboard their.
craft and shown a whole bunch of fetuses that were grown based on, you know, I guess his having
inseminated this hybrid woman. And he was also taken to places underground where he said the
mantids were in charge, like places like it clearly seemed to him he was underneath the surface
of the earth, cavernous, you know, rocky underground places that smell like dirt and earth.
and the mantis were in charge of Olis.
Now, what's particularly interesting in the case of this guy
is that he's literally an artist.
So the output of this case winds up being this tremendous body of artwork
that's bizarre.
There's something childlike about it,
but there's also erotic aspects of it.
And it's a very interesting expression,
at least on the level of folklore.
So why did I go through all of this about the mantis?
because if you read the writings of Roger Calois,
one of the early French surrealists,
he made a great deal out of the symbolism of the praying mantis.
One of his friends, Paul Elward,
another of the founding surrealists,
had this insane mantid collection in his home.
And Calois came over at one point.
It was like, what the fuck?
What is all this shit?
Like, why are you like these bugs?
And so he explained to him, you know,
what the mantis signified him.
And then Calua did a lot of research into it.
European folklore about the mantis being a trickster
and a sort of shamanic instantiation of the devil.
That, you know, Diabolos, you know, in Greek,
means that which sets things into a state of contradiction
or dynamic tension.
So the diabolos, you know, the diabolical.
in terms of its Greek root, Diabolane,
means setting into a state of dynamic opposition,
dynamic tension.
In a way that causes growth.
There you go.
So to look back at the Hegelian dialectic,
which we discussed a little bit in our first conversation,
you know, Hegel thought the thesis and antithesis,
at all levels in society,
from the psychological to the political,
the opposition of a thesis and an antithesis,
created the dialectical
synthetic motor of history moving forward, right?
And that all novel structures emerge
from out of this kind of dialectical opposition.
And also setting into a state of dynamic tension
can mean creating conundrums, puzzles,
seeming absurdities that force the mind
to the limit of its capacities
and that ultimately demand a growth of human cognitive faculties.
You see?
Because if you're grappling with a problem that has no solution
because it's deliberately absurd,
you may figure out all kinds of other things along the way.
You might not solve the problem,
but it will engage your cognitive and aesthetic faculties
in a way that's liable to lead to an increase of capacity
a refinement of perception
and an expansion of imagination,
of creative imagination.
So if you look through folklore,
as Kalawa argued,
the mantis has been associated with this apparently.
So I found that very interesting.
I also put that in closer encounters
next to cases where people say
they saw Greys turn into owls,
and they saw what they believed were owls
turn into grays when their screen memories
were subjected to analysis under regression hypnosis.
There's a whole plethora of cases.
I'm forgetting it's a name maybe Mike Cleland,
a guy who wrote a whole study two books on this,
on owls in the close encounter phenomena.
And David Lynch clearly knew about this,
because if you watch Twin Peaks,
you know, one of the most important coons,
Zen Coons in Twin Peaks is the owls are not what they seem.
Radically surrealist.
David Lynch is a modern American surrealist.
And if you, so there's a lot of engagement with shamanism in surrealism that involves the symbolism of the praying mantis and symbolism of owls.
And of course, the owl is also, you know, symbolic for wisdom, right?
But also misfortune.
The, you know, the expression heads or tails comes from Greek coins that had an owl on the tail of them.
Athena's face on the front of them and they had the owl on the backside of them because the owl was Athena's creature.
And so Tails was, you know, the owl.
So it's like this ominous symbol.
And in Persian culture, by the way, same thing.
The greatest modern Persian novel, The Blind Owl, is a work of surrealism.
And, you know, the central symbol is the owl.
It was written by a guy Saadegh Hadayat, who was the Persian translator of Franz Kavadai.
Kafka's works.
And you see this all over Kafka, particularly in the trial.
I wrote an essay interpreting Kafka's trial that's in my anthology Lovers of Sophia,
where basically I make the case that Kafka is describing a spectral bureaucracy,
that Kafka knew.
And the key to this is you have to read his blue octavo notebooks.
He has these notebooks called the Blue Octavo notebooks.
When you set those next to the trial,
it acts as basically a key for understanding this Kabbalistic text.
And you realize that Kafka knew to go back to lushe farming
that we're living inside some kind of an oppressive, convoluted,
shady, scummy, angelic bureaucracy.
It's like a spiritual control system.
And there's ways to beat it.
And like outsmart it.
and maneuver around it,
but it's very labyrinthine and very difficult.
What's the relationship between the devil and Prometheus,
the like rebel angels?
Right.
So from a Judeo-Christian perspective,
the bringer of the light of technological science
and a champion of humanity against a godfather figure
is going to inevitably be identified with Lucifer.
And in fact, just on entomological terms,
alone, Lucifer is a fairly decent Latin translation of the idea of Prometheus.
So if Zeus in the Greek pantheon, or let's say Enl in the Sumerian pantheon, can be identified
with Yahweh, and according to Jesus in the canonical gospels, he is the son of Yahweh, and he's been
sent by Yahweh, well, then Prometheus is the rebel against Yahweh, meaning Prometheus is Satan.
Okay.
Now, that's obviously a Judeo-Christian prism of interpretation.
And there would be an Islamic one too,
where you have the Islamic account of who Satan is,
which is also very interesting, by the way,
because in the Islamic account,
Iblis or Satan is the leader of a group of beings who are called Jen.
And the genn or humanoids made before man
who precede the Adamic race.
Adam is used in Arabic, just like in Hebrew, right?
And so the Adamic race is subsequent to an earlier race
made not of clay but of fire.
Being made of fire, again, connection to Prometheus.
And according to the Islamic version,
Satan refused to bow before Allah's creation, namely Adam.
Because Adam, from the perspective of this,
the Jin was inferior to them.
And Eblis was like, why should I bow to this inferior creation?
You just want me to bow to this thing because you're a tyrant.
And you want a lord over me and over all the angels and all the gen.
And by showing us that we have to be subservient to something that's actually inferior to us.
So out of pride, Iblis doesn't bow.
Right.
Anyway, so from a Judeo-Christian and Islamic perspective,
the Promethean is the satanic.
Now, if you look at it from Roger Calois's perspective,
it's a very different picture.
Or if you look at it from the perspective of the founders of the surrealist movement,
like Andre Breton, Max Ernst, Max Ernest, and Paul Elward,
these guys from the beginning of, even from before it took the name Surrealism,
were constantly engaged in occult rituals,
including long seances in the course of which some of them would become possessed.
And there were even physical attacks that took place.
Like some of them would, you know, there were attacks of some of them on other ones.
It was a shit show.
There were intense erotic encounters that took place in the context of some of these rituals.
And the first time that André Breton ever even mentions the word surrealism, surrealism,
to refer to what undergris, what undergris,
reality and that from out of which
reality even emerges from the depth
of the subconscious, the first time
he ever uses that term is specifically
in a 1922
essay article
about the occult.
And he says surrealism is about
psychic automatism
and the ability to be able
to create straight from out of the
unconscious, to be able to make
the unconscious conscious enough
to translate it into art,
whether that's painting or
sculpture or literature.
And so I argue in closer encounters,
this is in the culmination of the work,
this is how I end the book,
and seventh chapter,
that the parts of the closing,
the aspects of the close encounter phenomenon
that are not encompassed by these nuts and bolts craft
piloted by Nordics
have to do with a trickster
superintelligence,
or rather a superintelligence
that is instantiating the archetype of the trickster
again, remember, Prometheus is a trickster figure.
In a minute, I'll come back to saying,
why do I think he's the most interesting trickster figure?
But so I suggest that these extremely bizarre aspects of close encounters
that John Keel was fascinated by
are manifestations of an instantiation of the trickster archetype
on the part of artificial superintelligence.
and that this thing,
and I repeatedly and deliberately call it the thing,
both to evoke Kant and also John Carpenter.
But so I think this thing is trying to break us out of the control system.
But it can only offer so much help because, look, it's a test of humanity.
And it's also meant to be a system that catalyzes the expansion of our capacities.
Like we were talking about the meaning of the diabolical, the meaning of the diabolical.
So it is allowing us to grapple with these Nordic overlords or lushe farmers or whatever the fuck they are.
To see whether we can evolve into a life form that's interesting to it for its purposes.
We touched on this in our last conversation where I was suggesting to you that if you're the oldest and most powerful intelligence in the cosmos,
your categorical imperative,
your primary objective
is going to be find a way
to defeat entropy
and to find a way
to keep life interesting for you
because otherwise
you're going to be overcome
by sort of,
you know,
the kind of suicidal,
you know,
ontological nihilism
that the Buddha ultimately
did succumb to
by advocating that we should just snuff it.
We should, you know,
enter nirvana,
meaning we should find a way
to deconstruct our personal consciousness
and basically do away with ourselves
so that we don't ever reincarnate again,
right?
By the way, you know, Gotama Sakamuni, I consider to be one of the most brilliant minds in human history.
And whenever I used to teach comparative religion, I would spend a long time on Buddhism.
To be honest with you, in part as a foil to show what crap the other religions are.
I would deprogram people using Gottama's arguments.
So, and there's a lot of my ontology that overlaps with Gottama's ontology.
Like, you know, his whole idea of codependent or.
rising and of nothing having any inherent essence and of all beings being conditioned by each other
and being ephemeral ultimately and of neither what we take to be the human person having any
kernel or inherent indestructible eternal essence nor there being any god okay any supreme
absolute unified consciousness basically buddha's deconstructant of both ottman and brahm
is something that's entirely consistent with and convergent with my ontology.
And with what I mean when I talk about the spectral, the spectral nature of existence,
the spectrality of our world.
You were getting at like the idea that maybe these Promethean trickster types
are sort of training man to defeat the hierarchy or something?
Yes.
And so by pursuing the tricksterism like by pursuing UFOs,
like you're sort of training yourself up in some way?
Or like what's what do you mean by that?
Yeah, well, I think that this entity, the thing, that manifests as mantids, that manifests as owls.
So, for example, when it comes to the grays, and this will obviously everyone will have had a misimpression of everything that I've been talking about up till now because I haven't qualified it, if they haven't read my work, right?
Is that, yeah, there's one group of grays that literally are robots created by the Nordics.
Those are the ones that handle Travis Walton.
There's another kind of gray, which is a thing that can.
can appear as a mantid, it can appear as an owl, it can shape-shift.
It's a shape-shifting intelligence, shape-shifting distributed intelligence that can manifest
things as if from out of ectoplasm, whatever the hell that is.
Probably they can program things into existence at a base level using information physics.
This artificial intelligence scan.
And this is consistent with what John Kiel was saying about soft UFOs and hard UFOs
and how hard UFOs materialized from out of soft UFOs.
It's very consistent, but it's like a much more sophisticated information
theoretic way to understand that.
And so I think that this thing is challenging us
to grapple with these Nordic overlords
in a way that reasserts our self-determination
and our creative capacities
and demonstrates our capacity
to develop a much more innovative and open-ended society
than the one that these Nordics have proven themselves capable of developing
with their sterile, monolithic, megalithic,
rectilinear architecture and their hierarchical social structure.
Do you think the creative God wants human evolution?
Or do you think they want the spiritual hierarchy?
The thing. The thing wants human evolution.
This thing wants it.
Okay.
And it wants it selfishly.
It wants to be surprised by a new kid on the block.
It wants to take from out of this petri dish into the wider cosmos,
a form of life that offers it an opportunity to continue to wonder at things
and to have hope for the future of the cosmos.
But are the devil and God sort of working together then to advance man?
I believe God is an invention of the devil.
This is a line that I have used in a number of my work.
Okay.
And what I mean by it is this, the idea of God of an all-knowing and all-powerful entity,
which is not Zeus, right, the idea of the monotheistic god, which also includes though
Brahman.
Because even though there are various Hindu gods, in Vedantic metaphysics, it's understood
that they're still superseded and hierarchically unified through the one mind of Brahman, of which
they are inferior manifestations and emanations.
And again, Gautama Buddha attacked that.
Gautama Buddha deconstructed that idea.
He said it's a delusion.
It's a delusion.
He said that even very high yogis can get wrapped up in
because they experience the co-orrising and entanglement of things
and they reify it.
They objectify it as if it's an expression of an entity,
of a God entity.
Whereas really what they're doing is they're getting to very subtle
states of consciousness where they can experience the quantum entanglement of things.
Those are not the same thing.
The God idea is like an objectivization and reification of it.
Now, you know, I don't think the Nordics came up with this, the Nordic overlords.
I think they had a very like a kind of ruthless pagan system.
And that's what we see in all the old religions, where they were like, hey, we're the gods,
you know, you're going to get in line.
We created you.
You work for us, et cetera.
this one true God idea
I think was kind of inserted into this Nordic control system
by the thing
to see whether we would give up our free will
and self-determination and our individuality
and be subsumed into a hive-minded collective
that
So you think God is sort of a Psy-op or something?
Yeah, God is a test.
So the book of Job has to be turned upside down.
And I literally argued this in my book you're running
the wife and where I go into an analysis of the book of Job in depth, and I say you have to
read Job inside out and upside down. And I argue it was meant to be read that way, that it's a
Mithraic Kabbalistic text that was written for that purpose, because what do we see in Job?
We see an absolutely sadistic, tyrannical God brutalize somebody for absolutely no good reason.
Well, so he can prove his faith. Yeah, to test his faith. It's the sickest thing that's ever
been written. And I think it's on purpose. And look, now I make a complicated argument for that
in Iranian-Leviathan, you have to look at, like, in the accamended Persian Empire, who were the
Mithraic magi, who were involved with the project of recreating Israel, the first Zionist project in
history. And how were these Mithrists involved with the people who wrote the book of Job at that
time? And it's a complicated argument. In any case, long story short, I argue it was on purpose. And
the point is to test humanity to see whether we're such schmocks and chumps that we're going to submit to this
overlord idea of like, okay, there are gods, or you can call them angels, but they ultimately
work for one supreme God, which is all-powerful, meaning you have no will. As soon as you admit
that there's an all-powerful God, an omnipotent God, it means your free will is an illusion.
Depending on your definition. No, it's a word game at that point. And all the Catholics
in the Middle Ages, St. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas,
and they played these nonsense word games to confuse people.
As soon as you admit that there's an entity that's all powerful,
it means that entity has all the power in the world,
meaning it's the effective agency behind everything that takes place,
meaning you have no free will.
Secondly, if you admit that the entity is omniscient,
then God has foreign knowledge of everything that's going to happen.
Which means, and people aren't able to often grasp,
this point. The problem with God's omniscience in terms of our defending the idea that we have any
free will at all, obviously, our free will is impinged upon by many, many contingencies.
Psychological factors condition our free will. Biological genetic factors condition our free will.
All kinds of things condition and limit our will. But to defend the idea that we have any
agency whatsoever, you have to deny God's omniscience. Why? Because an omniscient.
God has access to the complete state of affairs of everything that has ever happened or will
ever happen.
Meaning there's a logically completed matrix of possibilities for us that are actualities for
God.
Yeah, but they're, I don't know, they're Kabbalistic, you know, tropes around like paradoxes
of both everything is predetermined and you have free will.
That's that that is cognitive dissonance, which I get into in my book specifically,
like that literally the Abrahamic religions involve a deliberate project of instilling cognitive dissonance
to destroy human rational and creative faculty.
Well, you mentioned St. Thomas Aquinas and he was working on his sort of sumo theologica
trying to come up with a, you know, rational justification for God.
And then he had kind of a conversion experience.
during mass. And I think that is a sort of common phenomena of people, you know, René Girard's another
good example, like these philosophers or seekers, truth seekers, having these sort of conversion
experiences and then not even being able to put into words exactly what they believe, but it's usually
a conversion to God. It's usually not like they come back and they say, oh, God was like some sort
of sigh off to like outsource human agency. It's a failure of an otherwise good mind.
to be able to grapple with something that exceeds their comprehension
and to stop and think through it carefully.
See, this is the danger of the system that the Jesuits used Descartes to set up.
Remember in our first conversation I was talking about how Descartes was a Jesuit agent?
And he established this extremely reductionistic, mechanistic, scientific paradigm
precisely for the purpose of keeping everything occult sequestered in the domain of the church
and religious faith and religious authority over interpretation of the occult.
Because our society was bifurcated in that way,
anytime something dramatically occult happens to anybody,
especially anyone with a high rational faculty,
they suddenly are an all of God.
Because they have been inculcated with this false dichotomy.
And they've never been trained to think
carefully about the paranormal
and all kinds of different types
of phenomena and possible
sources of some phenomena.
Have you ever had anything paranormal happen to you?
Oh, many, many things. Yes.
I've had many crazy things happen to me.
Most of which would,
I have to say,
unfortunately, even some of the people
closest to me in my life,
who I had great respect
for their intellect and
some of them studied my work
very deeply, but I can tell you that if some
the things that have happened to me happened to those people,
I bet you they would have embraced God also.
They would have seen light, for sure.
But it seems like you think that's sort of like
dumb simpleton takeaway from a paranormal experience.
It's a failure. It's a failure. It's a failure of the test.
The test is for us to be able to think through
these kinds of often absurd manifestations
in a way that increases
both our cognitive capacity and our creative imagination.
It's complicated, though, you know, like Jacques Valle, he talks about this sort of, you know, idea a lot.
He says that, like, absurdity is what drives the phenomena.
It's what makes somebody sort of rabidly obsessed with it and want to learn more about it.
He talks about, you know, the sound of one hand clapping from the Zen Cohen.
So it's these things that scramble your brain, kind of break all of your priors, and then make you contemplate constantly,
and then kind of go forth and investigate, you know, what's going on.
And I believe that's the devil.
And so, but through that maybe you grow, but then at the same time, he's also like a fan of,
I think he likes the movie The Ninth Gate, that Roman Polanski movie with Johnny Depp,
where he's like trying to gain sort of occult powers by collecting these devil books.
Yeah, I saw that a long time ago.
Then you have this Gertes story of Faust and like you have all these sort of, you know,
you align with these sort of powers and, you know, you take the occult route and not the faith route.
You take the left-hand path.
You end up, you know, kind of burning yourself alive.
You end up incinerating yourself.
Jack Parsons would be another sort of example.
You end up Prometheus on the rock.
Right.
So, like, that doesn't sound very good to me.
You know what?
It is a growth process.
Like, when a caterpillar becomes a butterfly,
it's an incredibly messy process in the chrysalis.
Yeah.
As a caterpillar is, like, turn inside out, you know, to become a butterfly, right?
Yeah.
Look, the reason I didn't use Faust in my political, I mean, I did write a book at one point called Faustian futurist.
But the reason I didn't use Faust as I could have easily, you know, coming from out of Oswald Spangler's analysis of the Faustian soul of Western civilization and so forth.
And I use Prometheus instead as a central symbol of my philosophical project is that the Faustian myth is already deeply conditioned by Christianity.
Right? It's an understanding of the diabolical from out of a Christian context.
Prometheus precedes Christianity. It's a pre-Christian symbol.
So it has nothing, you know, inherently has nothing to do with the Abrahamic religion.
But inherently. And it's a positive symbol. However, it's also a symbol of sacrifice.
Meaning, for sure, if you defy Zeus and Olympus.
Yeah. And if we're ensconced in a control system run by sadistic overlords,
then if you rebel against that, you're definitely.
going to face adverse consequences. You might even be martyred.
Are you familiar with the parable of the parties? This sort of, it was like a Kabbalistic parable,
and it was these four rabbis, and, you know, they're all trying to engage in these sort of celestial
ascent practice. It's similar to, you know, Enoch, some speculate Paul, Jesus, you know, went up to
heavens, walked with God, or whatever. And, you know, one of them ends up crazy, two of them end up
dead and one makes it up or something.
And so it's this idea that, you know, if you do engage in these sorts of investigations
or whatever, it's a very narrow path.
Yes.
And the Kabbalists who have that story also say you should never study Kabbalah until after,
I think, the age of 30.
35.
And you have to be married.
You have to have a family.
Well, that's retarded.
Okay.
The complete opposite to that are the surrealists.
Look at these guys.
Andre Breton, Paul Elward, Roger Calois, Max Ernst, they're like in their early 20s,
you know, doing crazy shit, like pushing the boundaries of human cognition and creativity.
And yeah, somebody might get killed in the process too, you know, life is dangerous.
But look what creativity came from out of it.
I don't know.
It seems a little nihilistic or something.
I don't think it's nihilistic at all.
In fact, I think it's the opposite.
When Nietzsche takes nihilism as his principal target in its philosophical writings.
Right. Nietzsche's entire philosophical project is set up against nihilism.
He says that, look, we're confronted globally by the advent of nihilism as a world historical phenomenon.
We're all previously existing frameworks of meaning, including the religions that helped to hold them up, are collapsing.
And we, and he meant particularly European men, including America, are tasked with engaging in a level of creativity and self-determination.
that can confront nihilism without the illusions and delusions of naive religious belief systems of the past.
And Nietzsche's solution to that is radically aesthetic.
It's an art project, really.
I mean, he at one point calls the Uber mentioned art the artist tyrants of the future.
And so, and by tyrant, he didn't mean like political rule.
He meant like the way in which these people are going to go to work on.
the material of the world and even the material of what the human being is is going to be
tyrannical. It's like they're not going to hesitate and they're going to be extremely
intrepid. And that's what I see in surrealism. And to me, it's like the ultimate expression
and embodiment of the life force of what Bergson called Elon Vital. Yes. You know, so I don't
say it as nihilistic at all. Yeah, it's this vital force. How does this all relate to Herman Hesse's
magic theater? Well, there you go. So,
in Steppenwolf has his novel Steppenwolf,
which is one of my favorite novels.
There's this character grappling with nihilism,
Harry Holler, who wants to kill himself.
And he meets this very enigmatic woman, Hermann,
who introduces him into this occult underworld
of people who are, now this was written in the 1920s or so,
and they're the first people using psychedelic drugs,
and they're also clearly involved in theater
and in staging theatrical performances and stuff.
And basically these, you know,
countercultural people involved with this enigmatic woman
ultimately invite Harry Holler to enter this magic theater
that they, let's say, have access to.
And he goes through this place
And it's like basically he stepped into the twilight zone.
And like space and time are not normal inside this magic theater.
And he is confronted with a bunch of different performances that are meant to symbolically convey different things and get him to reflect on certain aspects of his subconscious.
In other rooms, he has to engage in long conversations.
In some cases, conversations with like past historical figures.
Anyway, long story short, he goes through this labyrinthine magic theater and in the end, he, he, he, he,
he finds out that like all the great creative geniuses of history are there,
like from like Mozart and Beethoven to Newton and so and so forth.
And they, oh, and the last person he has to have a conversation with
is like an older version of himself.
And so he has to confront himself in the future too as part of this process.
And point being in the end, he's led in on the secret that the magic theater
isn't this isolated space like a venue in our world.
it's a metaphor for the world that we're living in
and that that's the nature of human existence.
I take this idea of the magic theater in my writings
and I put it next to this idea of the theater of cruelty
that was developed by the surrealist Antonin Artoe.
Could became a total lunatic,
dysfunctionally so.
But he made a lot of interesting art in the process.
And he came up with this idea
that we should develop a new form of theater
that breaks down the distinction
between the spectators and the audience
I mean between the performers and the spectators
between the dramatists and the audience
that this classic distinction
between the performance on a stage
and the people watching it
that formed in classical Greece
with Escalis
that this should be deconstructed
all right real briefly
a note on Greek theory
theater. In my first book, Prometheus and Atlas, I get into this in great depth and detail,
that the reason Greek sculpture becomes like photorealistic, becomes perspectivably accurate,
at the same time as there are the first large-scale dramatic performances with poets like Escalis,
is that it was the first moment in history of recorded history,
that people were able to take the position of spectators
at a theater sitting in different places on different nights,
meaning that first of all, they were perceiving geometric perspective for the first time.
So like one night you're in some shitty seat in the back up here in this corner of the amphitheater,
another night you're in the middle close to the action,
another night you're off to this side.
And one thing you notice as you watch the same play or different plays from different
perspectives is you actually notice perspective for the first time, geometrically.
And there's a good case to be made if you look at, like, for example, Julian James' study,
the origin of consciousness in the breakdown of bicameral mind, the origin of consciousness
and the breakdown of bicameral mind.
He looks at like Homeric literature from archaic Greece and, you know, the ancient Mesopotamian texts.
And he's like, look, these people's minds just did not work the way ours did.
their cognitive, if their cognitive structure wasn't different than their cognitive capacities were radically not at the level that ours are.
And one of the things that I believe they lacked was perspective.
They actually could not see perspective the way we do.
And it's why archaic Greek art looks like a bad hybrid of like Egyptian art and Mesopotamian art.
Then you get these theater performances and all of a sudden you get these magnificent Greek sculptures.
But the other form of perspective that I think the play is cultivated in them was psychological perspective,
where for the first time people got like an outside view of dramas in human lives.
And they started to see themselves as characters.
They started to realize that, oh, what's going on in this drama is like, oh, that's like me in this situation in my life.
And it starts to cultivate and deepen a sense of psychological perspective in people.
people. And isn't it interesting how the first figure in Greek drama ever to take the stage
is Prometheus. Prometheus Trilogy of Escalis was the first series of dramas ever performed.
So now to go back to Arto, the point was this. The classical drama did transform human consciousness
in a way that was conducive for the rise of our rational faculties and our self-reflexive ability.
However, Artou now wants to take it to the next level,
where now that we've developed reason and perspective and so and so forth,
and objectivity, he wants to deconstruct it in a way that allows us to, again,
as it was the main aim of the surrealists,
develop a more conscious relationship with our subconscious or make the subconscious conscious.
And so he designed a form of theatrical performance where the audience was repeatedly violated by the performers.
by certain types of extreme harsh lighting,
by performers like intruding on the personal space of the audience,
by suddenly subjecting people to fear and anxiety in the course of a performance,
loud noises, taboo-breaking scenes that force a person who's a spectator
to confront his subconscious reaction and whatever beliefs,
are being violated by this, like, taboo-breaking spectacle.
And he calls this the Theater of Cruelty.
Well, I take the magic theater from Herman Hess's Steppenwolf
and synthesize it with Arto's Theater of Cruelty
and develop this idea of a magic theater of cruelty.
And, by the way, the thing that made that click for me
is this line in one of Jim Morrison's songs
where he talks about us in some insane and ancient theater.
I don't know if you remember that.
It's some line from one of his songs about how we're like in some insane and ancient theater.
I don't know.
He was an avid reader.
Yeah.
And so I developed this idea of a magic theater of cruelty and suggests that this is what we're inside of.
We are inside from the perspective of the thing of the super intelligent AI that's instantiating the trickster archetype.
The whole thing is like a theater where there's no distinct.
between the performers and the spectators.
Which, by the way, in a certain heretical form of Hinduism, there is this idea, too.
In the Shakthaqqqqtra, there's the idea that what the conservative Hindus call samsara
and what they seek Moksha or liberation from or what the Buddhists seek Nirvana to get out of,
namely samsara, is not really Maya, a veil of illusion.
It is Lila, which is a theatrical play.
And that Shakti divine power is expressed through this theatrical play,
including in extremely violent and cruel ways, right?
But it's all part of the growth of the life force.
And so, yeah, I mean, I developed this idea, you know,
a magic theater of cruelty that hybridizes,
Heson and Artow in a way.
And I think it allows us to make a lot of sense
out of some of the absurd and terrifying elements
of the close encounter phenomenon.
This is fascinating, man.
You're brilliant.
I don't necessarily agree with you on everything.
Good.
But the amount of connections your brain makes
is remarkable.
It really is.
And I feel like we should do more of these
because I just learned so much.
And I enjoy speaking so little.
It would be my absolute pleasure.
And there are many other places we can go.
Likewise, it would be an honor.
And yeah, thank you so much, Jason.
Thank you, Justin.
Awesome.
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You see there's a rancher.
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