Cosmic Brilliance - 10 Non-Humanoid Species & their Talents on Mars & in Galaxy with Captain Randy Cramer

Episode Date: July 20, 2022

Captain Randy Cramer, Super Soldier for the US Marine Corps, Special Sections, has been on the Intergalactic Space Station conversing peacefully with Non-Humanoid Extraterrestrials, as well as on Mars... and even farther reaches of space. Join us as he shares his experiences and knowledge of Raptors, Insectoids, Mantids, Antids, Aquatics, Cephlapods/Octopus, Avians, Giant Centipedes, Large Spiders, and ‘Creepers’Learn about their:*Strength, speed and agility of the Insectoid ETs*Dare from his 1st wife to walk up to a group of 5-foot tall Antids on MarsTrade agreement with a Cephlapod/ Octopus & their amazing abilities (Hint: Arrival movie) Aquatics; like the upright Shark species and others*Dyson Builder Tree Frog ETs; their brilliance and longevity*Most unusual ET species Randy met*Most intimidating ET species Randy methttps://covertspacecowboy.comhttps://www.covertspacecowboy.comhttps://www.CosmicBrilliance.comSupport this podcast: https://www.cosmicbrilliance.com/copy-of-donate

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Starting point is 00:00:05 Hey, hello everybody. Welcome back to Part 5 with guest, Captain Randy Kramer, learning about your non-humanoid galactic neighbors. Captain Randy Kramer, Super Soldier for the U.S. Marine Corps, special sections is back, and he, as most of you know by now, has been on the intergalactic space station, conversing peacefully with non-humanoid extraterrestrial, as well as on Mars. Today, Randy is here to share his experiences, expertise, and knowledge of insectoids, antids, tree frogs, cephalopods, avians, aquatics,
Starting point is 00:00:49 raptors, reptilians, centipedes, et cetera. So welcome back, Randy. Oh, thanks for having, excuse me, thanks for having me, Marley. No problem. It's fun to have you always. So how about we do this for a general plane? if this works for you, that I will name, for instance, a different humanoid species. But for each one, I'll remind you and have you give six specifics briefly about each one.
Starting point is 00:01:19 For instance, the classic things most people like to know, like how they look, their speech, their greatest ability or expertise, their longevity, et cetera, et cetera. Does that work for you? Probably. Okay. We'll just flow with it and see, okay? Yeah, probably. Okay. So let's start with the, well, I think first, I understand, if I remember correctly, that there are two species that have worked with the marine.
Starting point is 00:01:54 So could you describe the ones I think are referred to as the Braun ones or the Children of Light? Would you tell people about that? I mean, they're very old. They're very smart. They tend to be pretty short, like under four feet tall. The heads are kind of boxy, pretty big eyes. The reason they're called bronze is because their skin color is sort of bronzy color. They're kind of like a real deep metallic bronze, not like a bronze, you know, canned person,
Starting point is 00:02:29 but like a fairly deep metallic kind of blonde sheen to their skin color. Super smart. They live millions of years. Like an individual person of their species will live for millions of years. So they're a pretty long-term view of things. Tinkerers in the sense of those that like to tinker with genetics to improve species. Yeah, they're pretty cool. I like them.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Ooh, they sound neat. Now, did they first contact you, the Marines, and what was the purpose for that? What was their agenda? I'm not exactly sure who talked to who first, but, yeah, their people started talking to our people at some point, and their prime suggestion to us was to spend some time focusing on psionic development and hive mind psionics so we took that advice and decided to do that which I think has been to our benefit and everyone's benefit in the long term so could you describe what you mean by hive mind uh how do I do you describe a hive mind hive mind um
Starting point is 00:03:51 I think the best way that I can describe it is if one were to perceive themselves mentally in their own mental space. But we're also able to perceive on the very perimeter of that mental space other members of the hive mind and be able to connect with those minds and those experiences, memories, thoughts, etc., and access that information as collective mind, not as singular mind. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:04:28 Now, did that start the Marine? And, of course, you were teaching a psionic class, which you can, we'll introduce again. Did that start you and the Marines to move forward on psionic training, brainwavesability? I would have been before my time as far as before I was born. But my understanding is, yeah, they took the advice and began a very serious psionic training development program. Neat. Okay. So now I assume this means you still keep your individuality because, you know, people have watched them. Oh, yeah. No, no. They're not, they're not thinking like absorbed in the hive mind, you know.
Starting point is 00:05:10 Yeah, people, yeah, fictional, like, science fiction hive minds aren't how hive minds work. So even when I remember communicating with insectoids as part of an insectoid hive mind, they still have individuality, they just, I mean, and I guess in the sense that something, really, really basic. Like two different insects in the same hive might have a different flavor that's their favorite or a color that's their favorite. But the main sort of distinction is twofold, the ability to access collective information and to act in collective interests, which also means the inability to act against collective interest.
Starting point is 00:05:55 So a member of a hive mind would never do anything against the hive. would never act against the hive, would never threaten the hive, would never threaten anyone else within the hive, and would never betray the hive. Those things would simply not even be possible or ever happen because of hive mind consciousness. Fascinating and great description. So you're saying as a species, they came in and encouraged us to focus perhaps a little bit more on collective well-being. Would you say that? I'm pretty sure they made it pretty clear.
Starting point is 00:06:29 that if anyone had the designs of wanting to be a type 1 civilization, that was going to be a requirement. Okay, and folks, type 1 is one of several types that is, I believe, the first stage will we move into more advanced. And we're not even quite there yet, are we? Oh, we're not even close, no. Yeah. Okay. That was encouraging us to move forward. Thank you, Randy.
Starting point is 00:06:53 And was there a second species also that the Marines worked with? Or was the bronze one? I mean, certainly we have relationships with a number of species, but I would say as far as main technological development, psionic development, you know, sort of the lead ET species on that has always been the bronze ones. Okay. But, I mean, yeah, we deal with a lot of different species, but I'm not, I can't think of one other in particular species that,
Starting point is 00:07:30 that would be that that would be okay fair enough okay so why don't we start with the insectoids antids that you met and dealt with and so and you know kind of just as a reminder how they look their speech their greatest ability or skill set lifespan and then I'll remind you just a few more things like indigenous insectoids from Mars, which are probably going to have the most experience with. Yeah, they basically, to me, look like a tall ant, maybe about five, five and a half feet tall. They have ability to make a speech, but they don't really use speech. They're telepathic, so they don't really talk to each other, but they can make sounds, you know, sort of out of their breathing apparatus,
Starting point is 00:08:28 but it's not really speech and it's definitely not really how they talk. They're probably their main strength is genetic engineering. More often than not, they will genetically engineer another insect of some type to do the job of whatever tool or machine that they might otherwise be thinking of doing sort of their main deal. I don't know. I would say that their exoskeletons were kind of a dark, dark, dark, dark brown, not really black, but like a dark, dark, dark brown,
Starting point is 00:09:02 a deep brown. Okay. Oh, and you had a funny story about how they view us around the exoskeleton thing. Oh, yeah. They think it's pretty gross that we wear our insides on our outsides. So for an insect, their exoskeleton is on the outside, and all their squishy bits are on the inside. We have our skeleton on the inside, and we're all squishy bits on the outside.
Starting point is 00:09:27 They think that's very bizarre and they think it's kind of gross. So they're probably more comfortable with you when you're in your armor, right? Oh, yeah, absolutely. Way more comfortable when you're wearing a suit of armor. That seems way more natural to them. They're like, you wore your exoskeleton today. So, yeah. Which they are.
Starting point is 00:09:49 Body armor is quite literally an exoskeleton. So it's not wrong for them to think of it that way, that we wear an exoskeleton. then when we go out into battle and so what because we do? That's absolutely correct. And so we're more relatable that way to them in terms of our physiognomagogy. It doesn't gross them out as much to see our squishy bits on the outside. And their longevity is what about? I mean, that's hard to say.
Starting point is 00:10:17 I don't know how long a drone lives, but they recycle. So death isn't really death for them. They're hive mines. So a drone dies. it's just going to get hatched out again later. I'm not exactly sure what their process for memory, rememory for some cases is. If it's for everybody or just certain drones
Starting point is 00:10:37 or how that works, I'm honestly not sure. But they basically recycle. So I'm not sure what their lifespan art is. And I have no idea what the lifespan of a king or a queen would be, but I imagine it's a very, very long time. I would say probably it's got to be thousands of years, but I don't know. Yeah. And didn't I hear you mention a long time ago, the queen is huge?
Starting point is 00:11:02 I don't know. I've never got to meet one. And the indigenous insectoid on Mars are not matriarchal, they're patriarchal. So they actually have a king. Oh. They are pretty big, from what I understand. But I didn't get to see it. I didn't get to meet the king.
Starting point is 00:11:22 I had an anxiety attack and had to go stand outside. Well, that's honest. Well, I know some... Well, there was a big old giant centipede in the corner, curled up like a kitten, but they're about 20 feet long, and I tended to not really like them. So it wasn't threatening or anything.
Starting point is 00:11:41 It was just like with less than six feet away from me, curled up sleeping, and I was just like, oh, shit, I got to go outside and get some pressure. So I didn't get to go meet the king, but that's okay. It was all right. You know, okay. I can do it.
Starting point is 00:11:55 Was the centipede like a guard, and it was the centipede something that they engineer? Or is it, it's a species? Yeah, no, the centipede, they engineer, and they're mainly used for combat, and so, you know, they're big. And, you know, mandibles are meter wide, and, yeah, they suck. Yikes. Well, I can understand why you needed a little break from that then. Yeah, for sure. I did hear, I think it was from another augmented or super soldier where they were dealing with something.
Starting point is 00:12:27 I can't remember if it was mantids or long the insectoid. And there was a queen and she was purple in color, I believe. And they said she's like 20 feet long and 10 feet high. So that's pretty big. But I don't know. Yeah, that sounds about probably physically proportionately correct. I mean, it really depends on the species. I'm just not sure.
Starting point is 00:12:51 Exactly. Now, would you be comfortable? This story cracked me up, but more than that, it shows your ethics and the greater purpose that you were trying to also accomplish rather than just protecting. It was the dare, I think, your first wife gave you. Your first wife wasn't raining. She gave you a dare towards the antids, didn't she? What I'm talking about?
Starting point is 00:13:20 You were walking? Yeah, we were on patrol. Yeah, we were on patrol, and they were outside, you know, it was kind of standing around, kind of like bringing boxes out and laying them out in the sun or something. And they didn't seem to have much interest in what we were doing, and we weren't that far away, and I kind of risk getting a little closer, and they still didn't care.
Starting point is 00:13:39 And somehow I just thought, well, I don't know, maybe because there's so few of us, it's not, we wouldn't be considered threatening. And I suggested to the squad, I was like, maybe I should just walk up and say hi. My first wife was like, oh, yeah, do that. I want to see you coming back here carrying your arm and your other arm, you know, screaming. She was like, oh, yeah, I want to see that because she was precious. And so, yeah, anyway, so I did and basically introduced myself and the insectoid that was standing there was introduced himself back.
Starting point is 00:14:13 We had a little chat and anyway, arranged a meeting. Did you chat telepathically? or what? Oh, yeah, of course. Yeah, yeah, no. I walked up and waved and verbally, you know, said hello, but I wasn't sure what was going to happen. And, yeah, he responded telepathically.
Starting point is 00:14:30 So they're pretty mentally strong. That's very brave of you. And it also shows that it seems like they're not so attacking as they're more defensive. Is that their strategy in general? For them in particular, that's difficult to say. They have a complex understanding of what's good for them and what's not good for them.
Starting point is 00:14:56 So their ethics and their morality aren't based on the same things that ours are. I wouldn't say that makes them bad at all. I would just say that it means that if we presume in some way that they're thinking or judging or determining things and the same reason that we would, based on what we think is good or bad, is probably not going to be the same decision-making process. they would go through. So in my experience, they tended to be situation responsive. So the more aggressive you want to be with them, the more aggressive they'll respond,
Starting point is 00:15:29 the more sort of non-aggressive you want to be, the more willing there might be to have a conversation. But I don't understand them well enough to know all the things that they like, don't like, want, don't want, considered good or bad. But I would just strongly suggest that people who think that other species, and some do, but to think that presumably that all of these other species think like we do, have the same value system we do, have the same morals or ethics that we do, is just not correct. That's a good point. Now, what came out of your bravery of going up and starting a telepathic connection?
Starting point is 00:16:05 What came out of that? Some meetings between diplomats and the insectoids, so, you know, ended up being a good thing. Wow. So weren't your higher-ups or your command structure pretty surprised or are appreciative? I mean a little bit, but, you know, it's whatever. I was just doing my job. So I winged it one day and it happened to go right and, you know, gay teen. Yay. And you won the bet. Pretty much. Okay. So, and the objects were.
Starting point is 00:16:48 they were putting out in the sun or something, you said? They were setting stuff out. Yeah, apparently, I mean, I found out later that they were using the UV and the sun to sterilize instruments or something. So anyway. Yeah, that's very clever. Okay. And have you also telepathized or met a mantid at any time, which to me are different than
Starting point is 00:17:10 the antigids? I'm not sure who exactly you mean by that. I mean, there really aren't too many other insectoid species that I've had conversations with in a casual environment or in a field environment like that. Okay. Yeah, I mean, people kind of use different terminology interchangeably, too, as far as insectoids, mantis, or whatever. And those are terms people are going to have to get a little more clear on when exobiologists come along and straighten people out on that stuff. But, yeah, I haven't had too many other diplomatic conversations with insectoid species. Cool. Okay. Well, thank you for educating this. And are we an active trade with the insectoids?
Starting point is 00:17:55 Do we trading any items? My understanding, yeah, my understanding there is, I honestly am not sure what we're trading them for what. Probably, we're probably trading them something in large quantities of minerals that would take them longer to gather than we can provide them to them in exchange for. Some technology or, excuse me, scientific development program, because that would be the most valuable thing from them as their genetic engineering mastering. Yes. Okay, great.
Starting point is 00:18:30 Fascinating. Okay, what about the tree frog? I can't pronounce that species. You're going to have to tell me it. But can you tell people a little bit about that? The trog the Bogdian. Yeah, it's a fun name. The Trog de Bogdian.
Starting point is 00:18:46 And, yeah, Bogdia is a star. Trogda is the name of the planet. So, yeah, they're the trogda Bogdian. It's a fun name. And they evolved from a tree frog species on a pretty big planet. Like I want to say it's got to be over three and a half, four Gs or something like that. In a red star system. So they evolved tree frogs, which, I don't know if you think about what a tree frog.
Starting point is 00:19:14 which, I don't know, if you think about what a tree frog does, sits in one spot and it stares at things for long, long periods of time. So in some ways, they're kind of predisposed as a species to be really good meditators. So they advanced mentally and psionically pretty quickly because their tree frog genetics made it very easy for them to sit in one spot and stare off into space and go into, you know, altered consciousness states pretty easily. it was pretty easy for them. So they develop pretty quickly.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Again, they're very old. Of the only two species that I've ever spoken to that have this age and longevity are the bronze ones and they're talking to Bogdians and they live millions of years. The Bogdians, the one that I talked to was very chatty, offered up a lot of more information than I ever was really asking for. Yeah, I mean, just seemed real, I mean, just, I don't know how to say. when I say chatty Kathy, I mean, just someone who was just really eager to answer my questions, provide information, say, oh, I mean, let me answer that for you and let me explain this to you and was just very eager to explain, which I felt quite, you know, privileged and graced to be able to hear such information, for sure. But yeah, anyway, he was very, very, very, like, really deeply
Starting point is 00:20:35 informative. To the point, I mean, this was a completely telepathic conversation. He was providing massive quantities of information. It's talking about swaths of history that lasted millions of years. And so I had a headache for no less than like, you know, three, four days afterwards. It was definitely a strain on my cranium to have that much information pushed into my head
Starting point is 00:21:00 in such a very short period of time. So, yeah, I had a headache for about three days after that. But they're fascinating. Absolutely fascinating. They have mastered the ability to build a Dyson sphere Dyson sphere ship so for anyone who doesn't know a Dyson sphere
Starting point is 00:21:16 is a ship that has a star at the middle of it so the shell of the ship would be the diameter of the orbit of the planet Earth so if you started building an exterior
Starting point is 00:21:30 of a ship where we are now and built it all the way around the sun contained the entire sun inside of it so that the interior of it was essentially all in the Goldilocks zone and the sun is at the middle so the entire inside of the Dyson sphere at that point
Starting point is 00:21:47 becomes habitable, a habitat. So if, for instance, we were to build a spaceship with our sun at the center of it that was at the position of orbit where the earth is now, but more roundish instead of oblongish, we would have a surface, livable surface, green grass,
Starting point is 00:22:08 trees, livestock, fresh, crops, et cetera, with a sun at the center of it, that would probably easily, easily, easily, easily, easily habitat, I mean, probably more than 200, 300, maybe even, you know, half a, more than half a trillion people. Woo! Wow. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:34 I mean, I'm comfortably. Comfortably spread out with lots of space and elbow. room between your neighbors, not packed in like sardines in any way, shape, or form. You know, that's a very, everyone having a lot of personal, comfortable space, and you could still have a half a trillion people habitating the inside of that thing. So then imagine that the ship itself, the fusilage of the shelf, is fairly thick. It has layers, which has compartments and places that are massive amounts of physical space. It's not just your surface area, sort of libidable, habitable, you know, growable space.
Starting point is 00:23:09 including the ability to store, build, machinery, tools, use magnifiers to magnify the power of the sun as a weapon so that you can essentially have a cannon that fires from this Dyson-Sphere ship that's using the power of the sun and could pretty much vaporize an entire planet at about a couple seconds. So how long does it take them to build this ship? You said they live millions of years old.
Starting point is 00:23:39 Yeah, millions of years. And I remember asking that question, and the answer was, oh, not long at all. Only about 185,000 years. Oh, my God. Wow. Wow. So they're obviously known for their brilliance and longevity then. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Are they as agile as the insectoids are? Because I know the antids can use, like, very ambidextrous, can use, like, three or four hands at once or something. Are they like that? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:13 Wow. I'm sorry, who you were talking, the dog dog dams? The dog dog dams? Yeah. Well, so they're, so as an evolved tree frog species, they're bipedal. They stand on two legs. They have two arms. Their fingers are kind of squishy.
Starting point is 00:24:29 They do a little suction cups on them. They don't think they can grab stuff with them. But yeah, they're definitely very idle. But their head is probably almost, two-thirds of the size of their physical body. Their head is huge. So they're really, they look a little weird in that sense that you see this really big head
Starting point is 00:24:49 and a really tiny body attached to it and you're like, what is happening there? But they're, apparently that's sufficient for them. It works for them. The body motors them around and does what it needs to do and the brain and the head part is more important, but that's where they've evolved. Really big eyes, really, really big eyes.
Starting point is 00:25:08 Like, I mean, I'd say, I mean, at least six inches in diameter, like six, seven inches in diameter per eye. They're really big. Whoa. Yeah, they're really big. I love how gregarious they sound in a certain way. Yeah, they're really cool. I mean, they're really nice. I mean, well, when you kind of think about it, you know, tree frauds aren't predators.
Starting point is 00:25:30 And so, you know, they don't really have predator genes. They're not really have predator instincts. they evolved in a way in which their ability to evolve from predators in their own environment was something that they could sort of relatively easily do and they developed very quickly. So yeah, they've never really had to address sort of naturally aggressive or naturally violent
Starting point is 00:26:00 or sort of predatory instincts. That doesn't mean that they can't fight if they feel like there's a good reason to but you know that yeah they have very very calm and very personable demeanor for sure well they don't need to fight if you own a moving planet you know bigger than planet ship that can destroy you immediately it's like it's probably everyone kind of gives them some space yeah I mean to put that in perspective that's that's a ship that's as big as like a third of our entire solar system is the shift.
Starting point is 00:26:37 It's really big. It's really, really, really big. If there was a train that went around the edge of it, I don't know how many weeks or months it would take you to take that train. I mean, it would have to be some ridiculously fast train to get you from point A to point B. We're talking about that distances that are, you know, if you wanted to go halfway around the inside of the sphere, that's the distance of, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:07 traveling the width of the planet Earth, you know, 50 times or 100 times to get from that corner to the next corner. It's that big. You wouldn't be able to see from one into the other. You wouldn't be able to see, you know, the distances would be so far. You wouldn't be able to see the whole thing
Starting point is 00:27:25 from the inside of it. Yeah, it would have its own weather. It would have clouds. It would have rain. It would have lightning. Yeah, it would have its own weather, sunshine, and breathable air, crops, animals, farms, cities, homes, everything, anything and everything that you could possibly have in an organic, livable environment.
Starting point is 00:27:48 Wow. Well, so one of the most brilliant and advanced, obviously. What about... Definitely. They're only, only that I'm aware of a very, very, very, very tiny number of species who have mastered this skill to build these ships this big. Very, very few that I'm aware of. So, yeah, if you can build one of those, you're kind of top dogs.
Starting point is 00:28:11 Now, we know from zoology and stuff that cephalopods or octopus, I don't know if that's octopuses or octopoe. Octopi. Octopi and cuttlefish. Okay. Anyone who doesn't know anything about cuttlefish. Yeah, anyone who doesn't know anything about cuttlefish and, like, you know, know, pull up a video on Cuddlefish. They're incredibly intelligent.
Starting point is 00:28:36 They communicate through color. So they literally change the color on, and I mean like not like slowly, I mean, they flash colors like rainbow light shows on their skin as they communicate with one another. It's a pretty interesting thing. So they communicate, yeah, with literally the physical light
Starting point is 00:28:59 that changes on their skin is a form of, communication. They're incredibly intelligent, super smart brains. They're super, super, super kind of old, like sort of prehistoric kind of species almost, but they're really, what we know about cephalopods is they're wicked, wicked smart. They're octopi that, you know, live in aquariums that find their way out of their habitat, crawl across the floor and, you know, almost escape out the door. You know, you can take a you can put a fish in a jar, tighten up the jar super tight, hand it to an octopus, and the octopus will figure out how to open up that jar and get that fish out of it.
Starting point is 00:29:43 They're really, really smart. I watched a fisherman, a fishing boat that caught an octopus, and the guys on the fishing boat were trying to figure out how to pick it up or what to do with it, and the octopus found a hole where a drain hole at the edge of the, of, the side of the boat. Well, that's not the hole. This part of the boat is on the deck. So where there's essentially, I'm forgetting my Navy terms, but there's, when you have a,
Starting point is 00:30:18 it's like a little wall, but it's not a little wall anyway. And so there's a little tiny hole and it's maybe four inches wide and it's maybe two inches high. And this octopus is, you know, probably could stretch out six feet wide. Its head is probably, you know, nine or ten inches in diameter. It squeezes an arm through that hole and then squeezes its whole body through that little tiny hole and escapes back out into the ocean. The whole squeezes its whole body through a hole that's like two inches by four inches. Yeah. So they have no bones.
Starting point is 00:30:55 So, yeah, they can squeeze through, you know, a tiny little small. space, they can open up things, they can crawl out of stuff, and they live, you know, outside the water for really extended periods of time. So even though they're an aquatic, you know, species, they can, they have been known to crawl out, you know, and survive for hours and hours and hours and hours and hours outside of the water. So they're incredibly advanced just as a biological animal that we understand them. So species that are based on like cephalopod evolution, brilliantly smart, wicked, wicked smart. Like, did you have a trade agreement with one?
Starting point is 00:31:32 Did you ever do a trade? I mean, we were sitting down having a conversation with some diplomats about a trade agreement. And, yeah, I mean, it was definitely psionic telepathic communication, but they also have a communication scheme that happens with the changing of the color of their skin and so forth. So while we were communicating with them and while we were communicating cyanically, you could still see, you know, them changing colors and so forth in a way in which was obviously related to what they were saying. So it had to do with the communication, but it's not like anyone was looking at the color changes going, oh, I totally understand what they're saying in color.
Starting point is 00:32:15 But you could see that it was communication and see how it was relevant to what was being said. Now, is it kind of like the arrival movie where they showed a, octopus ET that was able to do kind of mathematical and symbols and communicate? So the heptopods in the arrival were not cephalopods. They're heptopods. And heptopods, as they define them in the movie, are quite different and are not cephalopods.
Starting point is 00:32:46 Hepatopods have six legs or six or seven. I forget six or seven legs, octopi cephalopods do have eight. and the heptopods from the arrival had fur. They were furry, so they had a mammalian trait to them as far as having external fur on them. But yeah, they had like big long legs that they were walking on. One of my favorite movies, by the way. Me too. I thought it was so underdone and so beautiful.
Starting point is 00:33:15 Don't they have like some ridiculous, like, able to reason it warp speeds in their head or something? Aren't they really, really bright? They have, yeah, I mean, their brains are, I would say some of the most biologically developed brains, you know, that I'm aware of or that we know of. So they, yeah, they have really, really quick thinking, fast thinking brains, for sure. They're very, very brilliant, very brilliant. Okay. And what were you, what was the trade agreement discussing? What was the exchange?
Starting point is 00:33:51 I mean, it's something to do with minerals, something that they had an excess of, something that we had an excess of that we were trying to negotiate a trade agreement on, something mineral related. I'm not sure exactly what it was again. Okay. Avian, you know, bird, avian non-humanoid.
Starting point is 00:34:18 You've come across them? almost none at all. I mean, I've seen some in passing that seem to be kind of feathery, but not in any way that I would say was obviously bird-like or avian. So I've never seen a bird person or an avian person that seemed like it was like really a bird. I've seen bipedal species who appear to have some feathering on their body, which makes me think that they're some sort of evolved avian species, but I've had very little contact with them, so it's definitely not my area.
Starting point is 00:35:05 Okay, what did their heads look like? I was just curious. So they're bipedals, but they have feathers also? Yeah, no, I wouldn't say all over. That's the other thing. You know, they're not completely feathery. They have feathers, but that doesn't mean that they're completely feathery. Kind of depends on how much clothing they have on or what they're showing and how much you can see.
Starting point is 00:35:27 It's not like they're completely covered with feathers. So, yeah. I mean, how would I say? In fact, it was, they looked pretty hybridized, to be honest with you, as far as what was happening with their facial features and what was happening with the feathers, I was releasing some kind of mammalian avian mix there, but I'm honestly not sure. They did not look like any kind of a pure avian or pure bird species. But that's my guesstimation from what I was looking at as a trained observer, not because I have any more familiarity with them than that.
Starting point is 00:36:04 And what about you obviously dealt with reptilians on Mars? What would you say about their top abilities, their longevity, you know, their skill set, their longevity, their speech, how they look kind of thing. Oh, they probably would have to stand out as the most formidable psionic species, psionic warrior species of their stature, meaning of their height and size. Yeah, unquestionably, the most powerful, accomplished psionic warrior species of their stature that I've ever met. Okay. Okay. And on Mars...
Starting point is 00:36:44 I'm not sure about lifespan. I'm not sure about lifespan other than... I think we're talking at least a couple of few centuries, you know, per individual there, but I'm not entirely sure. We never talked about birthdays. Okay. And super warriors and... The best. The best. Yeah. Were they pretty much the most intimidating EP species you've ever meant? Nope. Not the most intimidating, but not the most intimidating. but not the most intimidating, maybe the most fierce.
Starting point is 00:37:16 The most intimidating were quite a bit taller than that. I mean, they were like 18, 19 feet tall. That's a little more intimidating, you know, when they're big. Whoa. Were those drachos or some other? What was the thing of that? No, no. Just, you know, hillbilly losers that needed their teeth knocked out.
Starting point is 00:37:37 okay but were they humanoid or what yeah I mean roughly I mean humanoid is a tricky thing I'd say that you know they're like a bipedal mammalian species I think probably fair to call them you know similar to sort of
Starting point is 00:38:00 some kind of pre-adamites or something like that but they were oh okay let's just let's just say they'd gotten off the track you know for some time and they had been living like, you know, hill folk for quite a while, and they just needed their teeth knocked out. But they were intimidating because they were big.
Starting point is 00:38:18 So they had big swords and big clubs. So something 18 feet tall swings a big club or a big sword at you. It's intimidating. So kind of more like giants, obviously. In a way, you know. Well, okay, so the intergalactic average height is 16 seats. So an 18-footer would not be considered a giant. An 18-footer would consider to be slightly above-average intergalactic height.
Starting point is 00:38:48 We're kind of wee. We're a bit on the wee site. And so we're kind of hobbit size? We're kind of hobbit-sized, really. Like in the intergalactic average, we're kind of hobbit-sized. So we say giants, but really, you know, that might just be average or slightly above average to us. You know, because 16, 18 feet is in the average zone, for sure. But we're, yeah, we're on the wee hobbit-y side.
Starting point is 00:39:14 That is so cute. Okay. That makes sense because I had dreams of me at 18 feet, so that's pretty interesting, whatever that was about. Somewhere else, yeah, probably. Yeah. What about, have you heard the term diamond spiders where armor was made from, they either have armor on them, these huge spiders or made from diamond or something? Does that make any sense to you?
Starting point is 00:39:40 So we're talking about an arachnid species, not an arachid animal. Okay. An arachnid species that uses some kind of diamond armor or wear some kind of diamondy armor or something like that. Is that what you're trying to describe? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's interesting that like when you say that I seem to vaguely have a photograph of something that looks like that in my brain.
Starting point is 00:40:12 I'm not really sure what the context of it is, though. So whatever my interaction was, that it must have been very casual. So I don't seem to have any depth of knowledge about that, but I do seem to have a picture of that in my head somewhere. So I'd say I've seen that, but I'm not sure if that was actually, I saw it in person or was just in an exobiology class.
Starting point is 00:40:30 Could have been just an exobiology class because it seems like it's a static image in my brain. So it doesn't seem to have any movement or dynamic motion to it. So I think it might have been an exobiology class. Sorry, terminal exobiology class. which is how to kill stuff that's not human. Yeah. Well, there were some Vietnamers,
Starting point is 00:40:48 and there were some stories about Anger Watt being attacked by giant spiders at some point, too. So I will say this. I had a chance to work with a Vietnam veteran personally who was having some issues, retrieving some combat sort of PTA. SD memories. So I assisted in the process of helping him walk through that. And he had a very, very, very, very clear vivid memory of being a part of an army unit who, um, a sense, what seems
Starting point is 00:41:31 to have happened is that someone disturbed their home, these spiders. They were not happy about it. and came out in kind of fierce numbers. And I can't say this for a fact. But it seems from what I've been told that the entire Vietnam conflict may have been a cover for this war with these fighters. Actually, the entire war may have been a cover for that. Yeah, I've been told the same thing.
Starting point is 00:42:00 That in some relationship to gold, too. Like, retrieving gold or something. Yeah, it's always about gold. It's always about gold. Gold is valuable. But I don't know about that in particular. And I can't say much more just because I haven't had an official conversation with anybody or asked for a briefing on it.
Starting point is 00:42:19 But from what he told me and then when I, you know, went to talk to Julian about it, my brigadier. And his response was, yeah, it was, it would, it ended up being a bigger deal than they wanted it to be. And the military action and the cover up for it. seem to extend far and wide. So anyway. Okay. Now, what about aquatics? There's so many different kinds of the mere people.
Starting point is 00:42:49 There's our cestations, whales and dolphins, some serious, I think, B that were ETs. But didn't you come across at least one unusual, something aquatic beyond that or anything like that? Did you have to communicate with? Well, I mean, certainly a few. mostly again in like diplomatic negotiations like the cephalopods yeah most of the time I've spent out of the water so I can't think of off the top of my head if I had a conversation about that before
Starting point is 00:43:27 of whatever like aquatic species I mean it certainly had some experience well so it was kind of had a shark body and it kind of had tentacle arms and you're kind of a shark head and kind of floated upright like the tail down at the like almost like a cartoon shark would like with the tail down at the bottom
Starting point is 00:43:50 or at the feet and like upright with the head sort of facing towards you was kind of like that yeah I'm not really I'm not really sure no I mean it was more like to be honest it probably
Starting point is 00:44:04 yeah again no more than probably between five and six feet in length a little tricky to tell it because it's floating there, but it was about my, ish, you know, a little shorter than me or maybe about my same height. And definitely had the teeth, definitely had the teeth. That must have been a little weird.
Starting point is 00:44:27 It was. It was. And again, the tentacles, to be honest, seemed like that could have been a genetic engineering addition that could have happened way early. in their evolution when someone said, you know, these guys need something to manipulate stuff with. Let's give them some tentacles and, you know, replace a couple of flippers, you know, with tentacles or something. So the tentacles seemed a little out of place, but at the same time
Starting point is 00:44:54 didn't look like they were stitched on or something. I mean, it looked part of how they, you know, developed and grew and evolved. It just, I'd never seen anything like that on any kind of other fish like that. So my guess. This is just really out of nowhere that there's some, you know, genetic engineering, again, some merging or hybridization of species in there, some mixing of genetics. Oh, of course. I don't know if people realize how common and how many species play with genetics and hybridization and everything out there.
Starting point is 00:45:31 Let me put it this way. Once a species understands genetics, they'd be stupid not to use them to advance. themselves. So most species, once they figure it out, use them to advance themselves. Because, again, they'd be stupid not to. Now, they don't always do it right. They're not always smart about the way they do it, but it would be absolutely the dumbest thing ever to not use that technology to develop and advance your own species faster. They don't like that. Don't always do it right, but it would be dumb not to. Yeah, I agree, because there's just so many that I've studied. They're just like always tinkering, always playing with that.
Starting point is 00:46:08 And so what, do you remember what the shark species was trading or interested in it all when you telephithe with it? It wasn't a trade agreement discussion by my understanding. It was what we call it initial contact. An initial contact is more of a casual conversation about who their species are, what they do, what they like to do for fun, what they eat, what's important to them, and, you know, we sort of have the same. It's just, it's a big get-to-know-you conversation. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:46:43 Okay. Yeah. Well, that's so neat. What about raptors, which, of course, live in the earth and also are spacebearing? Do you want to tell people a little bit about that? Yeah, they're a saurian species, S-A-U-R-I-A-N, like dinosaurian without the dino. and they my understanding
Starting point is 00:47:04 they're very intelligent pretty organized species also better than average warrior species my understanding is that if in the past non-rafters wandering into raptor territory could end up finding themselves on the menu
Starting point is 00:47:25 I am to understand perhaps that is no longer the case maybe someone high up in the chain of command has said no more eating people and that's a pretty significant thing if that's true. I don't have a confirmation on that, but that seems pretty interesting and would also go in line with progressive diplomatic conversations and relationships that we have with them. I got to meet one rap, really one raptor personally who was a judge and I had to sign a bunch of stuff and he asked me some questions and I had to, you know, raise my right hand and swear some stuff in front of him and then he signed off and stamped something for me.
Starting point is 00:48:04 So that's really my only personal reaction, which was this raptor judge. Now, with this raptor... I will say I want to sort of add this one point about that because one of the things that I couldn't stop thinking about the whole time that we were talking is that he had these reading glasses on the end of his nose. And so he would, you know, look down at the papers through his reading glasses and then do that thing, you know, where you look over your reading glasses up at someone in front of you and gives you that sort of look. And I guess the learning experience
Starting point is 00:48:39 from that was we're not the only species that can get ice drain and need reading glasses. Wow. Wow. Now, I know about two species. I know about the ones that show up in Jurassic Park movie. And then the ones you're talking about, though, are they bipedalibalded? To my understanding they are, yeah. But the one you, the judge you saw, for instance. Can you describe what? Yeah, yeah, yeah, two legs, two arms. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:11 Okay. And then the face looks like what? Well, I mean, kind of a longer neck, longer snout, rounded head. So, I mean, when people say raptors, I get that. I'm not sure that I would say like a velociraptor. I would almost say maybe more like a diploducus, but that's, you know, me. Okay.
Starting point is 00:49:37 Well, I know you're exact. Yeah, like a diploducus with a bigger head. Okay. With a bigger cranium. I know your exact. Yeah. So obviously, very brilliant. Oh, very smart.
Starting point is 00:49:49 Yeah. Very, very sionically developed. The conversation was entirely telepathic. I mean, there was paperwork involved, but the conversation was not a verbal conversation. Yeah, he was obviously very smart, and I was advised before I went in to be very nice and very professional and very respectful and say or do nothing untoward and so forth. So I was told to be on my best behavior, which of course I would be, but it was clear to me that I was to go in on my best behavior, not in any other way. So I behaved myself.
Starting point is 00:50:25 And even though they're telepathic, did you happen to hear them make it? any natural sounds, you know, like, did he? Not really. He kind of kept doing this thing. Like if you've ever heard someone kind of, you know, roll their tongue in the back of their mouth and they kind of, you know, kind of like that. He kept doing something like that and making a noise like that,
Starting point is 00:50:48 but I don't know if it had anything to do with speech or if it was just, you know, him flicking his tongue in his mouth for, you know, whatever reason he was doing that. It didn't seem to be directed towards me. whatever was happening or whatever the noise he was making. So I didn't feel like I should take it personally or even think too much about it. But he seemed to make this sound like he was, you know, rolling or his tongue or, you know, kind of clicking or sucking on his tongue in the back of his mouth like someone.
Starting point is 00:51:15 I mean, I don't know. I've heard human beings do something similar. So it was something like that. I didn't stop and ask him or look into his mouth. So, you know, I'm guessing because that's my ability. Well, no, because you were on good behavior, of course. Exactly. That would have broke the beyond your best behavior rule.
Starting point is 00:51:33 Exactly. So let's finish with this. What's the most unusual ET species you've ever met that you can share? Unusual is a pretty interesting, I don't know, when you say unusual. Of course, you know, that's true. I mean, that's a tricky word. So I'm not exactly sure what's the answer to that as far as unusual. usual because, you know, what's usual?
Starting point is 00:52:01 Well, how about one that got you by surprise? Like, really, it could be their abilities. It could be a surprised ability or a skill set or anything. It's a tricky one. Unusual. Okay. So I did meet a mineral-based species, meaning they're not carbon-based. and I'm not even sure there was silicone base.
Starting point is 00:52:35 There were some mineral base of properties that allowed the construction of what are the equivalent of organs, cells, fluids that move through a body structure, but the body is a mineral structure. So the females tend to, at a... have this ability to grow their physical form in a way that they want to. They can kind of grow their bodies to be a shape that they want. And so I remember meeting this female of the species when I was hanging with the Ambassador Corps, and she was very attractive.
Starting point is 00:53:24 So this is a mineral species that doesn't like breastfeed it's young, but she had breast. and she had this really ornate kind of thing going on the top of her head that sort of looked like coral coming out of the back of their head. Wow. Well, and I remember the senior diplomat later just saying to me, it's like that's not natural that they look like that. She's choosing to look like that because it makes other species look at her more favorably. So she basically is choosing a more physically attractive appealing form, mostly to other humanoids. in order to sort of be a better diplomat. So she kind of changed her physical form to alter itself from what her normal sort of figure would be
Starting point is 00:54:12 in order to give herself some kind of mammalian female figure and with the kind of trippy coral hair thing going on because she knew that it was more visually appealing to certain species and therefore they would find her more tolerable to talk to. Yeah, that makes total sense. mechanical way. That was her whole point of doing it. It was like choosing to appear in a certain way because it was better for her as a diplomat and, you know, got her more conversations with more people that got more productive results because she had boobs and hair. Well, Randy. But she was gorgeous, but she was absolutely gorgeous. But I think it was, I thought it was super interesting that none of that, none of those were like organic features that she was born with. She chose to alter the mineral structure of her body to look that. figure. Which is fascinating.
Starting point is 00:55:05 And she was absolutely gorgeous. She was absolutely gorgeous, no question. Like absolutely, absolutely beautifully gorgeous. Again, no lot of minerals, but like a sculpted marble statue, to be honest with you. I mean, she was just gorgeous. Wow. Well, thank you so much, Randy. And I know we could go on forever with so many species out there.
Starting point is 00:55:29 but I would like you to share with people where they can contact you for sessions and also talk a little bit about your soon-to-go public psionic class your offering. Yeah, my website is www.com. Govertspacowboy.com. Facebook page is Captain Randy Kramer Facebook page. Either of those places, you can find links to my... consulting calendar links to the psionics class which is all about psionic self-development self-mastery it's a multiple parts multiple section course that we're still finishing the curriculum but we've got the first
Starting point is 00:56:14 eight uh two levels and eight lessons up at the moment and i think from what my team member tim told me yesterday we're ready to do the excuse me the full uh launch to everybody and we've done sort of the beta class this last month and feel like we've worked enough out that we can throw it forward but I haven't checked if we've actually hit the super duper launch button as of yet but any minute now or within the next 24 48 hours that should be official so anyone who wants to get information about that sign up email me or whatever that's the place to get all the links and information to me www.covert spacecowboy.com right great well I'm as you know I'm taking it because
Starting point is 00:56:59 I think it's very important to develop our psionic grain wave ability so that we can advance forward since so many of the other species all use that. Don't you think? I mean, well, let me be clear. Not all of them do, but those who do have a distinct advantage. And again, if we ignore distinct advantages, we're being a stupid species. So just like learning to alter our own genetics, which obviously we're doing, my genetics are altered as a species because we've altered our own genetics.
Starting point is 00:57:34 But if we don't take advantage of something like psionic development as a species, we're limiting our ability, limiting our scope, and handicapping ourselves in a way that is really, on a species level, stupid. So if we're smart, we'll want to develop those skills. If we're dumb, then we'll do the things that will sort of prevent us from wanting to develop those skills. And I would even go that to an individual level. Smart people will want to develop themselves. Dumb people will somehow want to convince themselves and anybody else that they don't need to develop themselves or that it's not important or that they can't.
Starting point is 00:58:10 But smart people want to change and develop their psionic abilities. That's the thing. Great. Well, thank you so much again for your precious time, Randy. I always have a blast with you. And Randy will return in two weeks for the last part where we're going to have a surprise involving. what it's like to run an avatar body. So you guys all might want to watch the movie Avatar to prepare for that,
Starting point is 00:58:37 and we'll be adding a few other things to it. So thanks so much, Randy. I'll add one better movie than that. Anyone who wants to really watch a movie about teleoperation needs to watch Surrogates with Bruce Willis. Oh, cool. Okay. I'll do that.
Starting point is 00:58:54 It's a much more technological conversation. Anyway, have a great one, Mary. Thank you. Thank you, love, and everyone else, upward and onward.

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