Cosmic Brilliance - 2 years Living with Lifestyles of Alpha Centurians, Casseopeians & Sasquatch with Captain Randy Cramer

Episode Date: July 20, 2022

2 years Living with Lifestyles of Alpha Centurians, Casseopeians & Sasquatch with Captain Randy CramerCaptain Randy Cramer, Super Soldier for the US Marine Corps, Special Sections, has visited &am...p; lived with a couple of Extraterrestrial civilizations BEYOND Mars and the Moon.Randy spent two years on a planet in the Casseopeia region and shared many meals at the family home of an ET scientist he was sent to rescue.He shares his experiences visiting our closest neighbor; the Centuri ET civilization on Alpha Centauri and enjoyed getting to know the playful Sasquatch who originally came from the stars and have lived on Earth for ages.Learn about their lifestyles:Relationships & domestic partnering on other planets; sex, marriage, children Architectural shapes of homes & cities; building materials*Clothes, fabric & styles worn by citizens; color relevancePreferred food & preparation Various modes of transportationSystems of governance Commerce *Communication devices*Types of entertainment; music, dance, art, sound/singing, sportsSpiritual beliefs - Psionic abilities Any religions?*Health systems & Solutions to mental health issueshttps://covertspacecowboy.comhttps://www.CosmicBrilliance.comSupport this podcast: https://www.cosmicbrilliance.com/copy-of-donate

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Starting point is 00:00:08 Welcome Explorers to Part 5 with Captain Randy Kramer of the U.S. Marine Corps Special Sections, who is going today to give us a rare treat. I am glad all of you showed up for the Cosmic Family Discount Tour, where you will be stepping into the life of three extraterrestrial cultures that Randy has met and visited with. These ET cultures are not just the ones on Mars and the Moon. They are from other planets way out in our galaxy. We are introducing you first to some humanoid species, which are those that look mostly like us, two arms, two legs and one head, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:00:49 So welcome back, Randy, for part five. I always have so much profound fun with you. I'm like a kid in a candy shop. Are you there? Sweet. I'm here. Thanks for having me. Oh, very funny.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Good fun. Okay. So, Randy, you may actually be the first person that most of our listeners get to listen to that has actually visited in person at least two extraterrestrial civilizations beyond our solar system. That is correct. Okay. So on one planet in particular, you had an accident, unfortunately, and so had to stay there a while to recoup. So I'm wondering if you can share with our listeners.
Starting point is 00:01:35 what you know things like what that planet is called what system it is located in and maybe why you were sent there in the first place so i'm sorry i'm sorry this this was some place that i had been injured and had to stay behind i don't recall a place that i was injured and had to stay behind i'm not recalling that version of the story I thought you had your ankle injured. No. That's not me. You're thinking of somebody else. Really?
Starting point is 00:02:10 Yeah, no. If I'd hurt myself, they would have prepared it up in a matter of, you know, an hour or something. Okay. If I'm thinking of, was it in Cateopia? I'm thinking of Cacepia and Alphicentari. So, okay. Well, I've been to the Alphicentari.
Starting point is 00:02:30 sorry for a short visit. I spent two years on Sonara because I was stationed there. It wasn't injured. I was stationed there for two years. They were having a war with a neighbor, and we showed up to help out, and I got stationed there for pretty much from the beginning to the end of the war,
Starting point is 00:02:48 which is about two years. Hmm. And who was the war with? Are you able to say? Just some neighbors. I mean, some neighbors who really are of no constant, at the moment, that's for sure, but just a neighbor that had, to be honest, not a very advanced neighbor at all, fairly primitive neighbor that someone came along and sold a bunch of military hardware to, and so they got kind of a little overly ambitious and bigger than their bridges. Oh, okay. And so do they actually have a military base? The planet's called Sonora. Is that the name of the planet?
Starting point is 00:03:23 Well, that's not how they pronounce it, obviously, but that's how we pronounce what we say. Wouldn't be the first time that a bunch of of Anglos made names so that we could pronounce them. Yes, exactly. Exactly. Okay, so you were there for, you said two years? Did I hear that right? About two years. Yeah, about two years.
Starting point is 00:03:43 Wow. Okay. And helping protect the people, more or less, in the land there? No, I mean, no, I was stationed at a military base there. Our goal as a military operation there was to basically fight this war for them. They were not militarily capable, and so we came along to essentially do it for them. The assessment was that it wouldn't be that big of a deal, wouldn't take that much time, two years, fairly short time for a war with an entire planet.
Starting point is 00:04:17 So it was really something that we showed up to do it because they couldn't really do it, and so we weren't really protecting the people of Sonara because they weren't being directly threatened by, you know, the sort of battlefront at that point. of just being stationed there is like, you know, the equivalent of, you know, kind of like, yeah, the equivalent of sort of being stationed, you know, in Tokyo during the Korean War or something. I mean, you're, you're not that far away, but you're also nowhere near where the action or the battles are happening. So at no point were we really trying to protect the Japanese people during the Korean War
Starting point is 00:04:54 because they weren't at risk. So in this sense, there were colonies and science stations. that were Sonara and territory that were, you know, sort of at threat. But that wasn't really my job either. My job wasn't necessarily protecting people. My job was high-value target retrieval or assassination. So essentially we get high-value targets, people that are important. We either go in and rescue them or go in and kill them,
Starting point is 00:05:20 depending on whether they were someone we wanted to keep or someone we wanted to kill. So my job was a little more specialized in that sense. Okay. And the people on there were humanoid, correct? I mean, they were, they were more like. Yeah, I would say that physiologically, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a Sonarn and a Terran
Starting point is 00:05:43 with the exception of the iris of the eyeball. That's what's different. We have a concentric circle iris. They have a swirly iris as kind of an odd-esque shape. Okay. That sounds beautiful. distinct it's actually kind of it is actually kind of pretty it's very it's very distinct other than that physiologically they're almost you know the same and so
Starting point is 00:06:13 we're we're definitely an interesting close relative that's for sure of some kind okay so did you get to know are they called the sonarons is that what they're called that's what we call them sure the sonorans okay so did you get to know any families and people while you were there? Oh yeah. Yeah, there was a gentleman who actually, one of the first people I rescued as a high value target who was a scenario scientist when I got to meet his family and became very well acquainted with him actually. Yeah, I got invited to dinner a lot at his place. Okay, so that's actually what I was thinking about, believe it or not, but I must have had the injury.
Starting point is 00:07:02 I apologize. I don't know where you got the ankle thing. I was where he got the ankle thing, but that's okay. I thought it was on Gaiob, but anyway, no big deal. I apologize. Now. Let me put it this way. At what point in my career would an injury not have been able to be healed up
Starting point is 00:07:18 within a matter of hours based on the technology that we're using? Now, I'm trying to pick on you for that. I'm just saying, yeah, I can't imagine that I ever would have said that anywhere at any time. Okay. So it's all good. It's all good. In my reality, I never said you're injured for a long time.
Starting point is 00:07:38 I just thought you had hurt your ankle going down steps and that it was taken care of very quickly. Gosh, that is so weird. Can't think of a story that I would relate, that would have related to that where I hurt myself going down steps. In fact, yeah, I'm kind of at a loss to trying to think of an ankle injury like that, you know. Okay. Well, I'm confusing it with something else. But what I really want to people to know is not so much about the injury, but more about what you can share since you were kind of brought into the family there, what you can share about, you know, the things that often were interested in,
Starting point is 00:08:20 like personalities. You know, let's start with, like, personalities. I'll list off a bunch of stuff that you can describe, like, kind of their general personalities, their sense of humor, how similar is that to ours or not? Yeah, very, very, very similar, actually. It wouldn't be that different than visiting with Europeans, you know. They're really similar, but you'd also be, you know, some sociological language, you know, kind of differences, but, you know, they would be really, really, really, really similar.
Starting point is 00:09:02 So I would say so socially they're quite a bit more functional than we are as a society. So imagine people who are very much like us, but probably more like Europeans who are way more socially functional and, you know, not very anger prone. so they're pretty calm you know pretty intellectual they can be very very verbose very wordy depending on what they're talking about both very I'm sorry go ahead both with their so they have a language they use with their voice and then also telepathy abilities are just laying yeah I would I would see I would call them a sionically emergent species which we are also a sionically emergent species. I would say as a sionically emergent species,
Starting point is 00:10:05 they're probably, oh, anywhere from 150 to 250 years ahead of us on that sort of development scale that we could sort of be where they are sionically in another couple hundred years, which is, again, only sort of slightly more, you know, the average bar is only sort of slightly higher than our average bar. but, you know, significantly but slightly, really on the scale.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Okay, so close enough to really be able to easily relate to everything. Very, very. Like, yeah, it said very. Like, you run into certain things about food and certain things about certain social patterns and certain behaviors, again, in the same way that if we were traveling here on planet Earth and you'd meet other Terrans, you'd find some differences in the way people talk and communicate and socially behave and so forth. But we're still pretty much.
Starting point is 00:10:56 you know, the same more than we're different. So it's all sort of just a social, social, sociological, more than anything, you know, sort of behaviors and, you know, functionality versus this art sort of caring dysfunctionality, which is our sort of neutral gear, our main gear instead of the abnormal gear, unfortunately. Okay. So, well, there's so many
Starting point is 00:11:20 subheadings. I want you to comment on like we're doing. So I know there sounds constant. But what about facial hair? Oh, yeah, no, yeah, no, totally. Yeah, yeah, they can grow facial hair. I'd say there's a mustache at the time that I was there. Fashion-wise, mustaches were fairly common for men. And white ones, you know, big ones, too, big, bushy ones, too.
Starting point is 00:11:49 Not so much beards, not so much beards. Not that you wouldn't see someone with a beard, but not so much beards. clean-shaven also acceptable but yeah probably big furry mustaches and some clean-shaven faces and not a lot of beards
Starting point is 00:12:07 was there's facial hair preferences when I was there but like I'm sure we do it's the thing that would change you know with them over decades you know sort of fashion kind of stuff so who knows what's the same now and general
Starting point is 00:12:23 height And about the same. You know, were the mesomorphs or endomorph? No, I would, no, I would say most of them were really about where we are between sort of five and six feet tall. Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah. So very, very similar. What about their?
Starting point is 00:12:42 So they were close. So, the fabrics, I would say they had, you know, a variety of fabrics that clothes could come in. I would say the fashion design was not non-existent, but certainly not to the level of what human fashion design is. So their clothes were, I would say, simple and attractive enough. You know, they looked good enough on the people who wore them. But I wouldn't say that they had the same fit quality than a lot of them. our clothing does. But the fabrics were certainly, you know, very finely manufactured, well-manufactured
Starting point is 00:13:31 fabric fabrics and fibers. But the design is a little, I would just say a little less. I mean, maybe if you gave a design class to a high school, you know, garment making class, you might, it's kind of the kind of thing you might end up with nothing that fancy or nothing that great, but, you know. So the picture I get is kind of. was interesting, I'm sorry, go ahead. The picture I get is kind of practical and bulky or something.
Starting point is 00:14:00 Yeah, to be honest, they were a little, yeah, they weren't exactly the kind of clothes that make your, you know, physical definitions look really amazing. They're a little frumpy, little frumpy, but kind of for everybody. So, you know, it's not like, you know, are they all the same color? Not all the same color, however, major things. cities have color themes that are associated with the city. And so you will see, depending on the city you're in, buildings that are different shades of that color across the entire landscape. You'll see lamp posts that are that color.
Starting point is 00:14:41 You'll see benches that are that color. You'll see lines on the street that are that color. And you'll see a predominant of people wearing clothes that are that color. So, yeah, they have a very interesting. thing about their sort of fascinating yeah they have this very interesting relationship between civic pride the color associated with that civic pride and then clothing that seems to sort of reflect you know that color or color scheme in some cases so I've studied color and the power of that do did they share
Starting point is 00:15:19 with you like okay so say the family that you said had invited you and the scientists. What district were they in and what was their colors? They were in a city that was predominantly emerald green. It was the primary color of that city. It's not again, pronouncing their language is really difficult to do it sound right. So I'm not even going to try to do it for people because I can hear myself and it sounds horrible when I do it. And so I couldn't pronounce the name of the city.
Starting point is 00:15:54 city for you and I don't know that we had a different name, an angler name for it, but it was not, it was not the capital city. I did visit the capital city, but it was not the capital city. But it was a, I don't know, it was a pretty big city, I think, for, I don't know, I guess, for some of the size of the cities that they have, which were not that large. They had a pretty decent-sized population, but their individual, let me put it this way. They had more cities on their planet that were smaller, whereas we have, you know, kind of more city, you know, fewer cities that are bigger, if that sort of makes sense. There was kind of more metropolitan centers that were smaller than sort of metropolitan centers
Starting point is 00:16:35 we have. They would consider the metropolitan centers. We have to be ridiculously overcrowded and overdensed. And, you know, why in the world would you do that and put people that close and make it that difficult to pump water and electricity and wastewater? And why would you do that? They would think that would be incredibly condensed and waste. and packing people and like animals.
Starting point is 00:16:56 Are they big on nature? Do they make a priority? Less people more nature? No, I wouldn't say that. I would say that they really have a very completely green society. I mean, they don't pollute. They don't have fossil fuel burning. They don't, you know, river, you know,
Starting point is 00:17:13 whether dumping toxins and waste into the rivers and the ocean and so forth. They have a completely clean industry so that they're not polluting their environment. because they understand long-term, you know, well-being of a planetary environment requires that you, you know, treat it like the inside of your home. You don't go dumping, you know, shit and oil and toxic waste on the inside of your home because you have to live there and if you treat your planet like the inside of your home,
Starting point is 00:17:38 then you want to keep it clean. Plant it's the same way. Keep it clean, you don't dump stuff all over the place. So they have a clean environment. They have some large natural areas for sure. I mean, it's the planet is not so densely, populated by any means that there is vast swaths of natural land, you know, all across the place they certainly do.
Starting point is 00:17:59 I think their population was probably less than, you know, five and a half billion total for the entire planetary size, which was just slightly bigger than Earth. I think it's sort of the physical size. Their gravity is like 1.1 or something like that, so it's maybe, you know, less than 10% bigger, you know, volume-wise. Mm-hmm. and water and all of that stuff. Oh, water's plentiful, definitely, you know, green, blue, vegetative planet.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Oh, yeah. But, you know, with a variety of ecosystems in the sense that they had rainforest, they had deserts, they had, you know, grassy plains and so forth. They had a pretty interesting, what I would say, a normal range of ecosystems on a planet that would experience varying weather conditions like we do. What about animals? Do they have pets?
Starting point is 00:18:51 They're animals outside? Yeah, they do keep them out. I mean, absolutely their wildlife. As far as like house pet companions, they, family that I stayed with sometimes and they had a marmoset, the sort of a marmoset.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Think of about a marmoset, but like twice the size of a marmoset, but super domesticated. So like the most chilled-out, relaxed marmoset, that you've ever, like, met in the world. And that was, you know, their little pet, Bobo. I called him Bobo. I couldn't, I didn't like the name that they called him, but I just called him Bobo.
Starting point is 00:19:33 So kind of a mix between a rag doll cat and beaver or something. So pretty good at that, so you got to look up what a, you've got to look up a picture of what a marmot that is. And then, and then sort of extrapolate from the ears are. The ears are a little fluffier, but yeah. Yeah, he was, he didn't know what to think of me the first time he met me because he clearly smelled something that I smelled completely foreign and like anything he'd ever smell, and he was not okay with that.
Starting point is 00:20:04 So he kind of cured clearly at first, but I started bringing, they just these little protein bars, these little vitamin protein bar. Well, they're like these little vitamin protein bars that you know when you need, you know, quick food, carbos or whatever, and they're usually chocolate or ala flavored or something like that. So I would bring a few of those and, you know, pull them out of my pocket and bust off, you know, pieces and he would sniff at it. And apparently he liked chocolate. So, you know, I started feeding him those things.
Starting point is 00:20:35 And then we became friends. Oh. So. How long are we? Yeah. Then I, then I could, then when I would come over, he would basically come up to me and crawl, like, up and down, you know, sniffing my pockets, looking for, like, where's the treat? Oh, yeah. So was that like the major animal or, you know, for pets?
Starting point is 00:20:55 They obviously don't have the, was that the major animal for a pet? I wouldn't say that I was super familiar with like their range of domesticated pets. I mean, you know, interestingly enough, not completely unlike Terrans. Yeah, it's not uncommon for someone to have a fish habitat or a bird, habitat, you know, sort of in their home. I mean, there was some interesting relationships that people had with sort of domesticated animals that buried. I don't remember any dogs, but I do remember, I don't want to say, like, our domesticated
Starting point is 00:21:34 cat or a feline that you would ever recognize, but something that seemed to be similar to some kind of felonists. They're pretty good size, actually, though. They're pretty sad. something sort of like a cat, but not exactly. Like if you saw you, because out of cat, and it'd be sort of.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Okay. And were the animals telepathic there? No, not that I experienced. I mean, they were smart. You know, they had smart domesticated, you know, animals, or at least a marmoset that I, you know, was around. He seemed pretty smart, but he's a primate, so, you know, smart. But, no, I don't think I, I personally can't.
Starting point is 00:22:15 they experienced all the animal life on that planet, but I never experienced one that seemed to be like, hey, what's up? The callopathic over here. Exactly. Okay, so what about food? Like, did you have a meal with his family at all? Lots. Lots and lots and lots.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Okay, so can you tell us what that was like how they prepare? Well, I would say that their food is, to be honest, not a lot different from ours. The main differences are way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way, way less sugar in everything. Like, way less. Oh, that makes sense. Like, way. Oh, yeah. But I think it's also like they never had a point in their history where someone was like,
Starting point is 00:23:03 hey, let's mass produce this concentrated sugar and feed it to everybody. So I think it just didn't happen for them historically where that occurred. And so they didn't have an entire population addicted to sugar like we do. but yeah they have in fact it was some of their food was I had to choke down a little bit because it was a little bit in some cases and I remember the first time I was trying to explain cake to his wife and so I was like all right I'll have the cook make me up a little cake and had the cook at the base make me up a little cake and took her over to them and they couldn't hardly choke it down it was so sweet and so but she like okay let me let me let me take this and like
Starting point is 00:23:44 see if I analyze it and see if I can't make something, make some cake. And I was like, all right. So she took what was left of the cake and made a cake, a Sonarin cake, which was, to be honest, sort of like. Sawdust? No, no, no, no, no, no. Kind of like chocolate sourdough bread, to be honest with you. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:24:10 Yeah, kind of like chocolate. But, yeah, and not fluffy, not like a fluffy cake. She and I had the conversation about like eggs and fluffiness, and she was like, okay. You know, so I think she did better after that. Her subsequent cakes were fluffier anyway, but not much sweeter because they couldn't handle like a sweet cake. So they would basically, it was like a barely sweet, you know, chocolate sourdough bread. Yeah. It sounds like they're lovely and it sounds like they really took you in as kind of like a family member or something.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Oh, yeah, absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. Are they that way with, quote, off-worlders, you know, general or people? No. No, I mean, they're not super isolationist when it comes to off-worlders, but, no, I mean, I saved his,
Starting point is 00:25:01 as far as his family was concerned, I saved his life, and so they were incredibly grateful, and I think they went a little above and beyond to be courteous to me. Not that they, I mean, they're very hospitable. I think that just to invite an off-worlder into their home in the way that they did wouldn't necessarily been the first thing that they'd done if it was just somebody
Starting point is 00:25:25 they just happened to meet through work. I'm not saying they wouldn't show that person hospitality, but not, you know, three times a week. Which is lovely if you're going to stay somewhere for two years. So by interpretation of what you're saying, my guess is that this person, you saved with the target, your job. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, yeah. The scientist.
Starting point is 00:25:50 Yeah, the scientist's father. And what was his specialty? Some kind of meteorologist, geologist, some kind of, you know, environmental, like, scientists or something, meaning you studied things about the relationships between, you know, meteorology geology he was stationed at another planet at the time that he was doing research on and this was a a it was a smaller planet that was a completely different gaseous sort of makeup so it wasn't an oxygen nitrogen carbon dioxide anywhere it was something completely different than that and he tried to explain it to me a couple of times and somehow the chemical relationship in the atmosphere
Starting point is 00:26:38 and sort of geomagnetic activity had this weather relationship. And so he was studying this relationship between, I think, geomagnetic electric activity. That was essentially lightning that came from the ground out of geomagnetic activity, which is pretty weird. And then this gaseous environment, again, that was not oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, so somehow it was more conductive and that it created weather patterns. Anyway, something like that. He tried to explain it to me.
Starting point is 00:27:08 not my cup of tea, so I, you know, think something like that. But, so he was there being stationed there, and the planet got invaded. And so, you know, they had a list of people to get out, and he was on my list. So I got a lot. Way to go. Woo-hoo. Okay. What about their lifespan?
Starting point is 00:27:30 They're a little old. They get a little older. I'd say that they tend to, so. They do have the ability to medically extend lifespan beyond their natural lifespan. But right now, their natural lifespan is probably right around two or 250 years. Yeah, that makes sense. They seem pretty content with that at the moment. They seem pretty content with that at the moment.
Starting point is 00:27:56 So they don't do a lot of, like, you know, having people live hundreds of years, even though they could. They kind of seem to be pretty content. Nah, I'm 235. I can go. You know, they tend to have a. that's plenty. I can say I've had a complete life after that many years
Starting point is 00:28:14 and be perfectly happy to move on, start over whatever, you know, what they're doing. But, yeah, about two, between two and two and fifty years. Huh, which, of course, brings up the whole concept of spirituality and religions. And, you know, I would imagine they're more spiritual than religious in terms of their belief system of souls and who they are. I would say actually the very opposite of that. I would say that there, so there were some what I would call religious relics of previous eras. So there was an official sort of priesthood and they had little temples and, you know, but they were very small.
Starting point is 00:28:59 The number of devotees is very small. And people in the civilian population see it as literally. nothing more than hanging on to a piece of history. No one takes no one, and I mean no one takes religion seriously. No one takes religious explanations for anything seriously. No one takes religious mythology seriously. No one takes religious explanations for anything other than what tiny-minded, unscientific people do to explain things that they can't understand are scientific.
Starting point is 00:29:34 They are a deeply academic, scientific and mathematical people. their approach to their psionic development is completely 100% scientific and has nothing to do with religion. Or spirituality. They would just, if you tried to use spirituality terms, they would say, no, no, no, no, no, you're not talking about it. Right. It's physics. It's math. Well, you know what?
Starting point is 00:29:55 So did, you would feel quite coherent with them because your psionic class that you teach is based all on physics? the higher physics, correct? Yeah, that's because all of the really good psionic species that we've ever met have been very clear about that, that this is all science, math, physics, nothing else, not anything else. It's math, science, and physics. If you think about it in a different way, you're going to get lost. You're going to end up in a psionic dead end or, worse yet, start a cult.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Okay. All right, fascinating. What about art, music, dancing, what does that? their favorite pastimes, you know, things like that? No, no, they're very artistic. They're very artistic. They're also very musical. Good, try.
Starting point is 00:30:56 Well, interestingly enough and fortunately enough, I suppose, for me, they use the same chromatic musical scale that we do, which is not normal. It's actually pretty unusual to have the same. chromatic musical scale. There are some species that use the same scale, but a lot who don't. A lot who use very different pentonic scales and sort of dodeca. I mean, there's, there's so many different mathematical variations of musical scales and what an A is or would be in somebody's scale that can be so different, can make music really foreign if it's played on a different scale and the notes are really different. They're not going to sound right to your ear at all. But
Starting point is 00:31:39 our music wouldn't sound right to somebody else's here. So interestingly enough, they used the same traumatic scale. So their music was actually enjoyable sometimes. I'm not sure how I would describe, how I would describe is to say, very fond of string instruments. They're very fond of string instruments. You just read my mind. I was going to ask if they had those.
Starting point is 00:32:06 Not having had a close look at one or two, though, I would have to say that maybe someone who makes violins or guitars could look at that and, like, tell you what's happening. I don't think I could tell you what was happening other than to say there's some similar physics happening here, but also something happening in a way that I have no idea how to explain what's different about this. Okay. And what about dancing? For instance, most of our musical instruments have like a single bridge for strings. I would say that most of their instruments did not have a linear position for all the strings.
Starting point is 00:32:53 And so you had strings that were on different bridges at different angles to the echo chamber body, which all created slightly different sounds. Think of like a guitar that was crossed with a bagpipe. Wow. Was any of that design carried over into the geometry of their buildings? Meaning like, okay. Not in any sort of normal way. No, their architecture had a whole different kind of theme to it.
Starting point is 00:33:37 It was gorgeous, but it definitely, had its own theme. So they... Like what? So they like some tall buildings, not like skyscrapers necessarily that we like to make, but they have some tall buildings that were, you know, easily, you know, 30, 40, 50, 50, 60, 70 stories.
Starting point is 00:34:05 But instead of having a skyscraper or a building that has a square base or a rectangle, base, the base would be round or oblong. Oh, that makes sense. So instead of flat surfaces, it would be curved surfaces. So very roundy, very roundy, you know, sort of architecture. To be honest, it's very kind of pretty on the eye when you're staring at a skyline that's all sort of curved, you know, tall buildings.
Starting point is 00:34:35 Kind of makes your eye go, ah, that's kind of nice. Yeah. Well, you know, some people think the square. buildings we have in stuff, the energy gets trapped in corners. And a Palladian person was talking about their buildings being more dome structure, kind of, you know, because of a whole energetic to it. Sure. Yeah, yeah. No, they had a few, they had a few, some of their civic buildings, you know, city halls, courthouse and so forth were like domed buildings, buildings, buildings with big domes. But a lot of their, you know, other residential and big,
Starting point is 00:35:13 business sort of building to begin with these sort of tall, roundy shapes. Great. I know people will be really interested in extraterrestrial relationships, partnering and having children, i.e. sex. So if you can briefly describe that, that would be awesome? Well, so this very wonderful scientist and his wife lived with their son. and their adult daughter and their pet Bobo. And his daughter took a bit of a liking to me.
Starting point is 00:35:59 And there was an occasion where he took me aside and said, it's very clear that my daughter likes you very much. I said, yes, that is very clear. And he was like, isn't she beautiful? Yes, of course it. Isn't she smart? Yes, of course she is. Why do you keep rejecting her?
Starting point is 00:36:21 And I was like, oh, well, because where I come from, you don't hit on a man's daughter that, you know, you know through work. I was like, you know, that's how I was raised, that you don't do that sort of thing. And he said, oh, okay, I understand that. And he says, well, you're here and you live here. And I want you to know that, you know, if you reject my daughter again, she's going to be hurt and I'm going to be insulted. I was like, oh, okay, all right, okay, all right, all right, all right. If you're cool, I'm cool. You think you're goody, right?
Starting point is 00:37:02 Yeah, all right. So, yeah, I would say that, you know, we had a relationship for the better part of that two-year period. and I mean because because we're so very similar I would say the sexual interaction is not very different I would say that it's fairly similar as far as like you know what's different about sonar and sex and human sex not much except that sonar and females make this cute little sound it's a little trill sound that they make And it's kind of cute and it's kind of an adorable and it's kind of hypnotic. And, yeah, I've been told by Sonar and men that, you know, female trilling is really sexy and really hot.
Starting point is 00:38:03 And so I don't know that I understand it the same way, but, yeah, I was aroused when she did it. So it apparently is a cross-species kind of thing. It's like an aphrodisiac. So, come on. Yeah, it kind of, yeah, if there's something there, I'm not sure. I mean, obviously we have similar pheromones and similar hormone. I mean, again, we're super, super similar. So I guess I shouldn't expect anything to be so super different,
Starting point is 00:38:38 but there to be some sort of variation there. But, yeah, that was, yeah, that was interesting, for sure. Oh, how beautiful. So you're not going to do implementation for the audience of the trilling? Oh, no, I can't. No, no, no, I can't.
Starting point is 00:38:52 Because you're a male. Yeah, I'm a male. I couldn't do it right. I couldn't make the sound right. I'd have to teach some girl how to make a scenario and trill and then like have, you know, her do it for you. And be happy ever after.
Starting point is 00:39:07 Okay. Well, thank you for sharing something so intimate. That is really lovely. Yeah. And what about partnering in couples? Yeah. I'm sorry to say again? What about partnering? Because I know that often in higher cultures, they're not so always monogamous. You know. So, yeah. So, I'm assuming. So they, marriage is a thing in their culture, but a little old fashioned. So it's not as common for mated pairs.
Starting point is 00:39:45 to be married, but being a mated pair is also a legal arrangement. So, you know, if you're a mated pair, there are sort of lawful, you know, rules about children and child raising and so forth that would come to play that would be legally binding, even though you're not married. Marriage is more this formalization. But anytime two people decide that they're going to have a child together, then you're automatically a legally made pair. Okay. Yeah. Well, that makes sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:23 And we had one child while I was there. We had a son. And I got to see him for maybe a month and a half before I had to go. So at least I got to hold him. But hopefully I get to see him again. That would be really nice. Don't make me think about it too hard. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:40 Yeah. Oh, I'm sorry. And they have the same gestation period pretty much and all that stuff? It's actually about eight months. So it's actually a little shorter. It's not nine months. It's like about eight months. Oh.
Starting point is 00:40:57 Well, you'll get back there someday, right? Oh, yeah. No, no. When the travel embargo goes down, you know, oh, yeah. Oh, absolutely take a trip for sure. Oh, thank you so much for being vulnerable in sharing that because I know that's you know, really private and close to your heart, I imagine. Now, we have a lot of mental disease on this planet,
Starting point is 00:41:23 and I imagine they have a way that they have learned to deal with that. Could you share that? I mean, if they even have mental disease, they may not. Well, sure. I mean, it can happen, but the way that they avoid it having to be in a social problem, is that most, you know, mental health, behavioral health conditions are treatable if you understand what's happening at the neurobiological, biochemical, you know, glandular levels. And you can mess with that to make it, you know, things that aren't functioning quite, function correctly. and if you intervene early.
Starting point is 00:42:14 So the medical exams, the thorough state-mandated medical exams, I want to point out, meaning that as a citizen, you would not have the freedom to not go to your state-mandated health exam. You would have to show up to your state-mandated health exam, and if it is determined that you have certain conditions, you're going to be treated for them whether you want to or not, because you will not be allowed as a citizen to harm or damage society by making irresponsible health decisions. So in some cases, health decisions are not given to the individual.
Starting point is 00:42:48 They are given to society at large because individuals don't make healthy decisions for society at large. They make decisions for themselves. And so in this situation, they consider collective responsibility to be more important than individual freedom. So you would not be allowed to not, you would not be allowed to not take your kid in and not have them examined and have them say, your kid's bipolar. We're going to fix them so that they don't grow messed up.
Starting point is 00:43:13 And you wouldn't be able to say, no, you can't take away my freedoms. You'd be like, yeah, please, fix my kids. So he's not messed up and doesn't screw shit up when he gets older. Thank you. We love you for fixing my kids. So they have a completely different relationship, you know, with their social structure and their state structure and their governmental structure. There's a lot more governmental trust.
Starting point is 00:43:33 They trust their system. They trust their government way more than we do. Well, that comes with us slightly higher consciousness, don't you think? To be honest, no. If you want to get into the discussion about civilization, it comes down to two different mental attitudes. One is barbarism and the other is civilization. And people either have a mental attitude that motivates them towards things that are considered barbarism or they have a social mental attitude that motivates them towards social responsibility and collective responsibility.
Starting point is 00:44:06 And that's the difference between people who care about civilization and people who want to be barbarians. Okay. That's very succinct. Now, wow, time's just flying by. So a little bit about the Centauri. Sure, there are closest neighbor. Well, our closest star system neighbor, yeah, sure. And there?
Starting point is 00:44:30 I'm sorry, go ahead. No, no, no. Go for it, hon. So I'd say that physical stature, they tend to be a little shorter. They tend to be sort of in the four and a half to five and a half foot range, not so much the five to six foot range, tend to have darker features, tend to have dark hair,
Starting point is 00:44:50 tend to have olive skin, in some cases, much darker than olive skin. Very smart. Their cities are definitely a little bit more dense, packed a little bit bigger. They get a little bit more like our cities can be being, you know, big and more crowded. Were you there for a similar reason?
Starting point is 00:45:19 No, no, not at all. I was there for a training mission, to be honest with you. There was a, we have a military base on Centauri and there's a specialist training division there, which I won't give you. any more details about, but I had to do two weeks on Centauri for this training mission at this very specialized training base that's on Centauri Prime. Okay. So I was only there two weeks, but I mean, we had to go to class, and then when we're done with class, you know, we basically, the barracks were, you know, you could wander on
Starting point is 00:45:59 and off base, and we got to go down the street and go to sort of the market area and go shopping and eat food and stuff and be tourists. So it was kind of nice. Okay. Well, cool. Okay. So just for brevity's sake, I want you to speak a little bit about what I feel is one of my favorite ET species that most people think are myths, but originally came from the stars that have been here, I think, since Ice Age, at least, the Sackwatch. And you've had a chance to play with them a little bit, right? Well, I've had this very interesting series of experiences through my life here on planet Earth, and one of them includes a number of run-ins with these big furry Sasquatch dudes, InkyDoo. We call him InkyDoo in the program. Because in the story of being the epic of Gilgamesh, he had this friend named InkyDoo,
Starting point is 00:46:59 and InkyDoo was this big, tall, furry, stinky, warrior who we're pretty sure is the same species that we're sort of referring to when we think of we talk about Sasquatch Bigfoot's sort of talking about the ink you do but that was a long time ago so we think there's also now more than one subspecies and so the subspecies are devolved primates meaning they're not as psionically gifted they're not as you know spionically conscious or communicative and in some cases may represent a hazard or a threat if you ran into one in the wilderness. But chances are you wouldn't run into one
Starting point is 00:47:40 because they're so far from civilization. You'd literally probably have to hike in. Some of the places where they live in the continental United States, you would have to hike in by foot for two weeks to get into where you might be in the territory where you might run into one. That's how far we're talking about. We're not talking about five hours from the state,
Starting point is 00:48:02 or a two-day hike. We're talking about like a two-day hike from the last road that you could possibly get to farther into wilderness territory, maybe even by horseback, before you'd even be in the territory that those would be in. So if they choose to be anywhere near where we are,
Starting point is 00:48:20 it's usually a choice. It's usually a choice. There are some experts who have studied migratory patterns and so forth better than I have. But there's a couple of devolved species, which some people talk, talk about is, you know, the American Skunk Cape or something like that. But they can you do themselves. They've been around for a very long time. We don't think that they're
Starting point is 00:48:39 originally from here. We think that they came here maybe something like a half a million years ago. That's what they say. Yeah. I mean, that's what they say themselves. Yeah. Yeah, about that. And that they've kind of been here ever since. And that they have kind of found their little niche in their relationship, which includes being guardians of, They're often referred to in some native cultures as the guardians of the underworld. So we kind of know that they tend to hang around caverns and open spaces that could lead to tunnels or caverns that go further into the earth or down into the Agartha network. But you're not likely to get through them without their permission. And from what I've heard from also personal accounts, people who have been to where they're,
Starting point is 00:49:32 really certain based on sightings and so forth where some of these caves are and have gotten to the entrances of the caves and heard a loud screeching noise that all they could say was it was so scary I didn't want to do anything but go away I didn't want to even go anywhere near whatever was making that noise I was just like I'm outy so they tend to keep people away they tend to keep people away and they stump ranches and they throw rocks whizzing your head and all. Oh, yeah, yeah, no, no, I, yeah, yeah, I was, one of the interactions that I had, I had hiked up this, this trail for a little while, and then the trail ended, and there was a,
Starting point is 00:50:18 which was along this creek, and there was stones in the middle of the creek, and if you hop from stone to stone to stone, you could go up the middle of the creek bridge, which is what I did, and went up for, you know, a couple of hours, way past where, and you know, normally people would have you know gone past that trail way too rough or this is in northern California so you know very along the coast really rainforesty difficult vegetation to trudge through so you could just wander off the trail you'd be literally need a machete so he went up the creek got to this spot with this was beautiful flat rock sitting by this pool that these two little waterfalls were dropping into it was
Starting point is 00:51:04 super picturesque. And as I'm sitting on this rock with the sun behind me coming through the trees, I see in front of me a shadow of something that goes behind me that was very large. It was not a bird. It was not something tiny or small. It was something very, very large that made a very big shadow as it went from my left side to my right side. Of course, naturally, I spun my head around and saw nothing. I turned both ways. I saw nothing. I heard something. And I turned back, was looking the way again, a few seconds. And it jumps from my right side to my left. It's playing with you.
Starting point is 00:51:43 Yeah, they went back and forth and did that for an hour. Every time I'd turn around, I couldn't see anything. And every time I'd turn back the other way, you know, it'd be some matter of seconds before this big shadow would, you know, go right behind me and block the sun. And I would, you know, went my around and were like, okay, you guys are hilarious. Well, they also knew you were psionic.
Starting point is 00:52:04 obviously because they're psionic. Yeah, probably. Right? Yeah. Probably. Yeah. Probably. They're big practical jokers.
Starting point is 00:52:12 Yeah. So share some of their abilities. Well, psionic mastery is a thing of individual prowess. So depending on which individual you might be talking about, would have what level of advanced ability. But I would say they're very telepathic. That's sort of a baseline ability. People have reported watching them vanish into thin air, like ranchers pulling out their rifle,
Starting point is 00:52:41 thinking, I'm going to shoot that thing, and then having it literally disappear from the middle of a dirt road path, not jump into the trees, not jump behind a bush, just vanish into thin air and disappear. I've seen them appear and disappear in the blink of an eye. I saw one appear out of the corner of my eye, and I mean I saw it as vivid as, day and it was only it was maybe 10 feet from me and it was so freaking clear but the minute I turned to my head to like get a full on view of it was there was nothing there was gone it was so lightly playing with you and as and I can say as a trained observer I wasn't just seeing something you know as a trained observer I didn't imagine what I saw as a trained observer something popped out of nowhere
Starting point is 00:53:28 I saw a very clear image of it out of the corner of my eye and then when I turned to actually get a full view with bold eyes it was already gone. Exactly. So they do dimensional jumping, telepathic, playful, mysterious, can cloak, you know. Yeah. Possibly even move through solid rock, probably even, you know, phase out of, you know, sort of third density, yeah. Or possibly be able to phase out of 3D and straight into, like I said,
Starting point is 00:54:00 through solid rock. there are a few people that I've talked to and worked with that have very well-developed relationships with the more advanced ones to the point where they actually begin to write English it was just so beautiful so yeah yeah we got more to share down the line Randy so so thank you so much this has been so fun and why don't you give people your contact information and where our listeners can go for private psionic readings from you or a Q&A. And also, folks, I can guarantee it is rare to find someone that is teaching to civilians,
Starting point is 00:54:40 someone who has Randy's width and depth of experience. So please take advantage of that. And I certainly have. And Randy, you were the kind of teacher I had wished for in school when I was so bored. So why don't you tell them where to contact you? Sure. my website is www. covert spacecowboy.com, all one word.
Starting point is 00:55:07 There's information for people who, anybody who wants to have personal confrontation appointments with me, there's links for that. The online psionics course is we're doing the beta class right now, but I think we're letting people sign up still, so if people want to jump in and sign up, they can. Or if you want to wait until we're done with the beta class and another week or two
Starting point is 00:55:27 and we do the official launch, you're welcome to wait for that. But I think the link can take you through and get you signed up if that's what you really want to do. The Facebook page is the Captain Randy Kramer Facebook page. If you want to do there,
Starting point is 00:55:40 it's all kind of the same information linked together on consultations, the class and other stuff that's coming. So we're definitely working on some stuff. Cool. That's so wonderful. Well, as you know, I'm signed up for that. Thank you so much, Randy, for your brilliant expertise and generosity of spirit.
Starting point is 00:56:02 And folks, please join us in two weeks for Part 6, where Randy will talk next time. We've gotten you warmed up with humanoid ETs, and now we're going to introduce you next to some non-humanoid ETs, which will be good preparation for you, and as well as some other little treats in there. And for those of you that haven't had a chance to listen to the end of the last radio show we had, there's some very important information about a possible scenario, likely scenario, that will roll out and some suggestions for you in the next three months that Randy announced and explained. So please review that. And until then, remember to stay calm, stand up.
Starting point is 00:56:50 Do not give away your power or consent away. to any authority that out of fear, keep non-polarizing as possible, raise your energy with positive visions of the world you wish to create and take small action steps in cooperation with that vision so that we all act as true custodians of the sacred planet that we were meant to be. So I love you, Randy, and thank you again. Thank you, people. And until then, upward and onward.

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