Cosmic Brilliance - ETs Cleared from Solar System & Building HUGE Dyson Spheres with Capt. Randy Cramer
Episode Date: July 20, 2022Randy Cramer, Super Soldier for U.S. Marine Corps Special Sections, did a 30-year tour and is still active. Seventeen years were with the Mars Defense Force on 'Forward Station Zebra'. Thirteen years ...were with the Earth Defense Force and fleet; protecting Earth and the solar system.*Learn what percentage of our solar system is NOW FREE from problematic pirate scavenger ET species that have been coming to earth for a long time to grab minerals, water, supplies, and worse.*More descriptions and abilities of the 2 ET species Randy dealt with on Mars*Hear stories of his visits with Inner Earth beings & how they have recently assisted us*Find out how Randy found his way home piloting a non-operational fighter spacecraft when his electronics were fried by an EMP (electromagnetic pulse weapon)*What’s an average day look like for Earth Defense Force pilots like Randy when they go out and return to Nautilus (non-atmospheric universal transport spacecraft)?*What are space structures called Dyson Spheres, how they are built & by whom?https://www.covertspacecowboy.comhttps://www.CosmicBrilliance.comSupport this podcast: https://www.cosmicbrilliance.com/copy-of-donate
Transcript
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Hey everyone, welcome to Super Soul Solutions.
Hopefully you got a chance to listen to Part 1 and 2.
Today's part 3 continues with U.S. Marine Corps special sections, Captain Randy Kramer,
an augmented super soldier who did a 30-year tour and is still active.
17 years were with the Mars Defense Force on forward station zebra.
13 years were with the Earth Defense Force and fleet protecting Earth.
and the solar system. Today's show will mostly be focused on his experiences while being a pilot
in the Earth Defense Force, protecting all of us. And by the way, for any disbelievers,
Captain Kramer reminded me that impersonating a military officer and committing fraud or both felonies,
he was given a legal mandate from his Marine brigadier, General Julian Smythe, to bring truth forward to civilians.
these truths have remained undisclosed for hundreds of years.
And I believe one reason why so many people are confused right now
and can't make sense of what's going on in the world
is largely because most civilians do not have the fuller big picture
of what has been a prominent and hidden undercurrent
that has affected literally every element of our planetary cultures and society.
That prominent undercurrent is the fact that for thousands of years
This planet has always had space-faring extraterrestrials visiting it, living on it, and inside it.
So with that introduction, welcome back again, Randy, and thank you sincerely for offering your precious time to further educate all of us.
Oh, thank you for having me, Merrily.
It's a pleasure, as always.
I have so much fun with you.
Well, thank you.
I'm the cool kid.
I'm the fun one to talk to.
You are.
You are.
So how about if you start by telling the listeners the intergalactic name for our Earth and solar system and where those names originated?
And by the way, we can hear things in the background on your end, just so you know, rustling papers and all that stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry, no.
I was stepping out on the back patio thinking it would be quiet.
And then all of a sudden someone's beepy, beepy thing starts going off.
And I was like great things.
I thought I had a nice quiet outdoor spot here, and apparently not.
Do you want me to repeat that?
No, no, no, we're fine.
I got you.
So we're the Sol system spelled S-O-L and we're the planet Terra, T-E-R-R-A.
These are both Latin words.
Saul means sun, Tara means Earth.
The reason why that's what we're called and as far as the intergalactic community is concerned
is because our planet was entered into the intergalactic registry of worlds during Roman times
when Latin was our predominant language.
So that's why that is.
I found that so fascinating.
Thank you for sharing that.
Yeah, the first time, the first time someone explained that to me,
I was like, no way.
Yeah, it's a pretty interesting little factoid.
It is.
I loved it.
So when did the two protective fleets called Solar Warden
and Radiant Guardian, if my memory serves me right,
comprising the Earth's Defense Force,
When did they first get created and why?
Ooh.
I'm actually not sure I know the answer to that question.
No, I'm not sure that I'm privy to...
Yeah, no, no, I'm not sure I'm privy to a start date for the dates of the fleet.
See if I can even guess on that.
I would say, well, probably in its most tiniest form,
that would have had to have been late 60s or early 70s, probably.
Now, now that you ask me that question, I'm going to have to ask somebody to get that information
because I've never had a reason to ask that or no one's ever just offered that up.
So that's a, you've got me a question.
No one's ever asked.
Ooh-hoo.
Okay.
I can die happily now.
You got me.
Good job.
Okay.
So I'd agree with you that like where it started accelerating was around those years, too.
That makes total sense.
Well, I know we had the colonies by the mid-70s, and there would have to have been some fleet presence, even if in its tiniest form for that to occur.
So that would be my guess.
I could get probably a precise year on that for you, but I'm going to have to ask someone, I think.
Okay.
We'll do that for the next show.
It's not a biggie.
But I thought the Latin and back from Roman times also was also very fascinating.
So let's as long so briefly share for us what an average day.
looks like for you as a pilot flying your viper class fighter and what percentage of your 13 years on the Earth Defense Force were spent actually fighting?
And what percentage of the fights did you get seriously harmed that required regeneration on the holograph med beds that we discussed in previous shows?
All right.
So I know you think that's a question.
That's like three or four questions.
So, all right.
So let's back that up for a second.
Ask me the first, yeah, ask me the first question.
Let me get to that one.
We'll just do those one at a time.
Okay.
So what does an average day look like as a pilot flying?
You're a class fighter.
Okay?
Sure.
Get up.
Have breakfast.
Muster with your commanding officers and your flight group.
And then you get what your flight flight.
schedule for the day, which is when you're going to fly patrols at what times, and then you
show up for duty when you're going to fly a patrol, and patrols basically are the nautilus,
the larger vessel itself, going from location to location, and then spitting out squadrons
of fighters to go do this search pattern and basically just like check this chunk of the
lawn to make sure that nobody's, you know, stepping them along where they're not supposed to be.
And a typical patrol can last three or four hours and then come back.
And then there's, you know, usually a number of hours in between.
There's rest period.
You eat something.
Go back and do it again.
And you can have two or three of those a day depending on the schedule.
So usually don't end up flying more than eight hours a day, but sometimes as many as 12 hours a day.
And mostly it's really boring.
Do you cover the entire solar system?
Not at all.
In little sections, one stop at a time.
So it's, and all the other vessels in the fleet have another schedule.
So everyone's kind of moving around, stopping, sending some fighters out to do search patterns.
you know, check for anybody who's sneaking past the sensors.
And again, if we find anybody who's not supposed to be there,
chase them away, basically.
So, it's not young.
Definitely not.
I always referred to it as glorified guard dog duty, really,
because you're just kind of wandering around the yard.
And if someone comes in the yard, you go,
and you chase them out of the yard nine times out of ten,
and they go, oh, and they run away.
That's really, that was it.
It was really uneventful for the most part.
work? Does it, I mean, does it work? How many times are you actually, you know, hurt or, you know?
Oh, at that job, I don't know, at that job, I don't know that I ever got a serious injury, to be
honest with you. Okay. It was, I mean, at least for the three years that I was just flying,
it was just a pilot. It was a very, and especially solar system duty, it was very low risk.
We had very few actual engagements, dog fights with anybody.
Again, nine times out of ten, it's not a bunch of people.
It's one person trying to sneak in and we're like, hey, there's a bunch of us.
There's one of you.
And they go, ah, and they run away.
So most of the time it's not a fight.
Every once in a while you get into a little kerfuffle about it, but most of the time not.
And most of the time, the kerfuffles are over pretty quickly to be honest with.
In our favor.
Okay.
Okay, well that's good to know.
So this just blends right into the term you use called jackals.
What percentage of the solar system is now free from problematic groups like that
and describe to people what that term means and what I'm referring to?
I guess if we're going to talk about extraterrestrials that we consider to be unfriendly,
it's the 95-5 rule.
So, you know, 95% of the people we run into, we can,
have arrangements that everyone can agree upon and we can engage in trade.
There's a 5% that can be troublesome.
So I would say we have a secure solar system in the sense that it's patrolled well.
Those that are allowed to come through our travel through traffic lanes.
There's a very orderly process for that.
And there's very little incursions into that space.
I don't think I could give you any kind of a number on how many incursions
we have per year that are in any way successful versus those that are unsuccessful.
I wouldn't have date on that, but I would suggest that it's a very small number.
So saying that we have control of that space to 100%, I don't know that that's fair,
but it's 99% something.
I mean, we have a very secure presence on our own solar system right now,
and there's very little to threaten us that wouldn't have to be very, very large.
you know, little people, little bits and, you know, single ships coming in.
Now, even, you know, big ships, a single one, no.
A fleet would have to come in to be a threat.
Okay, well, that's good news.
And by jackals, I think if I remember right, Randy, you said they're just a general term for the pirate kind of scavenger species that went to take things off of the earth.
Is that true?
Yeah, that's a generic term, you know.
Mm-hmm.
kind of a short-hand term to describe anybody that's not really a predator, not really prey, but is, you know, a jackal.
They're waiting for an opportunity to come in and tear a leg off and get some of your food or whatever is going on.
So, yeah, we just have to be vigilant about that shit.
So that's, those are kind of the major ones you're patrolling for, because there's a lot of rules out there now.
and there's not supposed to be, you know,
there's not supposed to be any encourages in or insurgences in, right?
Yeah, I would say probably the number one thing
that we're keeping out of the system right now are spies.
You know, people coming in very small ships and very small groups
trying to gather information or see if they can get planet side
to do something good or bad or whatever their agenda might be.
So it's sort of individual agents operating from,
larger organizations and species that they're trying to sneak in to do whatever, you know,
shenanigans they're up to.
It's probably the majority of what we're trying to keep out at the moment because, like I said,
anything sizable is going to show up real fast and we're going to go, uh-uh.
The only way to really sneak in is to be small and to sneak in.
Okay.
Interesting.
You know, I'm thinking that the people might love to hear from you what it's like out in the
solar system, just when you're flying.
What it looks like, is it dark, is the light,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Sure.
So I would recommend anyone who ever gets an opportunity
to look at the night sky without a moon,
somewhere clear with a pair of night vision nautils.
And the first thing that you notice is that
there are all kinds of stars that you can't see
with your naked eye.
And you're like, oh, crap, there's a whole bunch more stars.
Well, when you're in space, there's even more stars.
When there's no atmosphere to block out that light, there's even more visible stars than you would see with Paranite Vision goggles.
So it's a very bright sky with a lot of sparkly stars in it.
It's very full.
It's gorgeous.
Let's just say that.
You can read by it, to be honest with you, it's bright enough.
If you had no power and you had to read a manual by, you know, starlight through the window, you could do it.
You could manage.
Is it blue, black?
The background of space is pretty black, but one of the things that you see a lot of are gas clouds.
So when we're looking at telescopes, when telescopes are looking in the space and they see very large gas clouds, they can get images of them and we can say, ooh, look at these gas clouds.
What those telescopes won't see are small gas clouds.
Well, when you're flying out there, you do see them.
You run into them.
And it just turns out that there's a lot of small gas clouds all over the place.
We had an external temperature and pressure sensor that was giving us a digital read out of the temperature and calvins and the pressure in millibars externally.
And what I noticed was it was not constant.
It's not constantly cold.
It is not constantly one, like, you know, 0.001.
one, you know, milibars or something, it varies.
So you have variable temperature, variable pressure, which means there's weather, there's
currents, there's all kinds of things that can happen.
It's a very interesting, it's not just this dead, quiet, nothing happening environment.
There's actually quite a bit happening out there when you start running around and you can
see things close up.
It's very interesting, right?
Very.
The other thing that I found absolutely interesting.
So if you've ever again been on a clear night sky where you can see the Milky Way
and you see this band that goes across the sky, it's super cool.
Well, if you're in space, it's not a band.
It's a circle goes all the way around.
You're not standing on the side of a sphere where you can't see it going all the way around you.
You're seeing it in a place where it goes because you're seeing the galaxy,
the flat part of the galaxy from the position that we're at.
Well, if you're in a position in space, 360 degrees,
you can see the whole circle of the Milky Way band as it goes all the way around.
And so it literally becomes the horizon point.
So people, I know some people say, oh, space, you can't tell up or down.
Now, horse pucky.
The horizon point is the Milky Way.
So you can, it's a circle that goes around you so you know where the horizon is.
You'd level out with the horizon.
There's northern stars, southern stars.
They're different.
You learn to identify them at all.
There's an up, there's a down, there's a north, there's a south.
There's all kinds of up-down direction because you have a horizon point and it happens to be that circle of the Milky Way that goes all the way around you.
And it's pretty impressive.
The first time you see that it goes all the way around, it's just really like, oh, wow, right.
Okay.
Yeah, it's an interesting perception moment the first time you see it.
Well, that's a beautiful, beautiful description.
That flows me into, now I remember you sharing this on a couple of other interviews.
Okay, so, and I just, I just love this.
Would you be willing to share the awe-inspiring, this is a hint, okay, experience you had of how you were able to locate the Earth after your fighter ship was hit by an electromagnetic pulse weapon and became non-operational drifting through space?
Would you be willing to share that?
Well, so, yeah, that's fine, but it didn't exactly happen that way.
So what happened.
The experience was after running into somebody who'd run into the yard,
who decided to turn around and run away,
but they set off an electromagnetic pulse before they took off,
so that essentially power was knocked out and all floating,
you know, sort of dead in space for a few minutes before we get picked up.
Well, floating dead in space, everything goes quiet.
Engine goes quiet.
All the electronics go quiet.
Everything goes super still and quiet.
And what I noticed was they started hearing this noise, which I realized wasn't noise.
It was music.
It was like not hearing it with my ears, but I could hear it in my head.
And it seemed to change depending on where I was staring into space.
And what I had another ET, who's a very experienced pilot, tell me, it's like, oh, he said, yeah, actually, you can navigate that way.
He said, if you just listen for the music of the place where you want to go, you can find it that way.
So he said, if you're ever lost, you have no idea which way to get home, like, point yourself in the direction where you hear Earth music and then go that way and you'll get there.
I was like, holy shit, that's crazy.
But, yeah, apparently.
That is so cool.
Yeah, apparently that musical vibration that we're making is literally pumping out into the universe in a way that when you're in space, you can hear sionically somehow.
somehow and yeah it's a thing the stars make music it's the thing well and planet
supposedly you too now now just to be clear are you hearing like a symphony and a music or are you
hearing the actual earth sounds people talking uh it's just what it's just music um and it's
a lot of different kinds of sounds that are coming in and it kind of you really have to focus
on one place to sort of not hear a lot of music.
So it's kind of like all the radio stations playing at once,
but they're not all from Earth at all.
Wow.
Now, you explained one of the things that I also found really interesting
of how you created that focus.
It seemed to appear, I mean, it seemed to be depending on,
like, where you focused your life.
Yeah, I mean, as I was,
listening, I found myself focusing on listening as closely as I could, which caused me to sort of
stare off into one direction. And I think without realizing it by staring off into one direction,
I was focusing on one place and then began to hear one music that was more prominent over
others. And then as I focused, and then as my head turned and it changed and I was like, oh, that
was interesting. What happens if I stare at that spot? It would happen to I stare at that spot? And it
shifted every time. So I was like, okay, that's interesting and noted in my personal brain
notebook for that. I didn't know what to do with that, but it was interesting. Especially when
you're spinning and dead in the solar system, you know. You're not dead dead in the water.
Yeah. Well, and there's some truth that space can play tricks on your mind, too. So, you know,
we're trained to not ever take anything that you may perceive too literally or too seriously
because it just may be background space messing with your brain for a second
and making you think weird thoughts or something or see weird things that may or may or may not
really be there.
So I was interested and skeptical of whatever was happening at the time but, you know, made
a note of it.
And then when I had a chance to talk to another pilot, there was another species explaining,
No, no, that's the thing.
I was like, oh, cool, that's the thing.
All right.
What species was this one?
Are you able to say?
Centauri.
Do they look humanoid?
How do they look?
Very much so, actually.
Mm-hmm.
Go ahead.
They're the same ones that gave us the holographic medbed?
I don't know that they did.
I don't know that they did.
But when Centauri are definitely a humanoid species,
I would say they tend to be a little shorter,
tend to be dark-haired, not too many blondes among them.
I mean, there's some obviously mixing, you know,
once people get intergalactic,
they're mixing with intergalactic other species all over the place.
But they tend to be kind of shorter, dark-haired.
Their ears are a little different.
So if one was walking down the street, you could see their ears.
You would go like, oh, they got funny ears.
or where are they a costume party are they going to.
But you wouldn't necessarily think right away
that it wasn't a human-teran person.
You might just think they were wearing a costume
to a party or dressed up or something.
They don't look that different.
What are their eyes like?
They're also concentric circles like we have,
so you wouldn't notice a difference in the eyes, really.
Okay.
So they are one species for sure.
that says they actually navigate the solar system by sound?
Well, not that they do.
When they're in trouble.
No, no, no.
It's not so much they do so much as he was explaining.
It's a thing and you can.
And there are some species who, you know, prefer to navigate that way.
But most everybody uses, you know, computer electronic navigating systems for the most part.
But it's something you can use in a pinch more like, you know, yeah, if you ever get lost and confused and you don't know what else to do, you know, you can find your way back doing that.
But it's not a preferred method for most species to travel that way.
You've got to be able to get really focused and really precise to be able to really hear and focus on a specific place.
Plus one of the things.
I was just going to say that's one of the things we'll get to that Randy is, I have.
haven't had a chance to listen to part one or two yet teaching an awesome Cyanic class that I
am signed up for which will be available soon online and um you want to you want to explain briefly
what Cionics is and also Ciamon Powers yeah yeah baby jammond Pires uh i mean that's the short version right
The more complicated version, it's the self-mastery of the brain and the mind and understanding how you're wiring your brain constantly and how you're wiring your brain rewrites your genetics and how practicing the daily discipline of phionic practice will develop those muscles into stronger and stronger outputs which manifest abilities.
So that's the more slightly more long explanation, but the short explanation is that your mind pairs.
Okay, but, you know, what I found was profound is you and I have so many similar passions,
like bringing forward the med beds, all of that, and advanced technology.
But the second, I was really excited because can you mention that when you have better psionic,
how important that is for the human species in their development and how that affects the DNA?
or could affect the DNA?
Oh, well, it just does.
So acts of self-propelled evolution,
which is what individual psionic self-mastery is,
on a social or cultural level,
it absolutely accelerates, you know, species evolution.
So species who begin to understand both genetics
and the ability to influence,
fit through self-action inevitably come to a conclusion, hey, we don't have to just like wing
this Darwinism thing.
We could actually plot and plan our evolutionary path and choose where we want to be in
a thousand years, 10,000 years, a million years, whatever.
And so most species, once they get to that place, they're like, yeah, of course we'd want
to do that.
Why would we want to let random things destroy our civilization or have it develop or evolve
in a bad way, why wouldn't we want to steer that through understanding our own self-development
and understanding our evolution and understanding our genetics?
Why wouldn't we want to do that?
So at the point that we engage with that as a species, absolutely, is a point where we get
to accelerate our evolutionary development and accelerate our process that can go way beyond
whatever the natural curves are.
which is a major reason to take the class, you know, right?
Well, I mean, if you want to think that big, sure.
I think that that's like pebbles in a jar.
You know, it's going to take a lot of pebbles.
And, you know, it's more important to sort of focus on the pebbles than the jar at this point.
But eventually you get enough pebbles in the jar and, you know, critical mass and all that stuff happens.
But mostly at this point, it's just.
trying to convince people individually why it's a good idea to for them personally,
even if their personal ambitions or goals are to make the world a better place,
you make the world a better place by being a more effective person,
by having a stronger mind,
by having better memory and all the other things that self-mastery and psionic development can create.
But you certainly start to understand that bending matter and energy in your life
and your body and the world around you is also part of,
what's happening. So why wouldn't you sculpt that to a way that's preferable to you? Why wouldn't
you sculpt that into the way that makes you happier and less anxious and more grounded as a person?
So I think that it doesn't, to me, I don't really care what your motivation is. I don't care if you
want to figure out how to use yourself mastery to be a billionaire. I don't care if you want to use
yourself mastery to move objects with your mind. I don't care if you want to, you want to,
achieve self-mastery, to make the world a better place. I really just care to try and figure out
what everybody's personal motivation and says, great, here's a way that you can do that better,
do that. Because ultimately, just having more people do that is what matters. Not that they're
all doing it a certain way or for the right reasons. It's just more important that people are doing it.
So I'm perfectly happy to let people be self-motivated for whatever motivates them to be better, to be better mentally, to have their brains work better, to have the ability to project more mental psionic power to bend the things in their realities that they want to for either their own good or for the good of others around them or the world at large.
I would just want to see people develop themselves.
Obviously, I don't want to people to keep going on doing evil stuff with it, but, you know, a little self-motivated is not necessarily.
necessarily a bad thing in this case for people.
If that's what's going to drive them, fine, because if they do it right, the process will
create a path of evolution personally anyway, where they're going to have to start
dealing with their internal baggage and garbage and actually, you know, come to question
and understand things about their motivation and their ethics and their morality and so forth.
So just engaging in a true path of development, even if it's for self-centered reasons,
can still put someone on a journey of self-awareness.
self-analysis that, you know, makes them a better person all and all.
So I don't think wherever anybody starts with that is fine.
Start wherever you want with it, whatever your motivation is.
And eventually, eventually we get enough people in the program that as a species,
we can start to move directly, purposely at a magnified rate because we're putting some
collective effort into it.
Exactly.
Exactly.
We have more powerful collective consciousness, more directed, you know, working together, more beneficent, I hope, et cetera.
And we have a much half of your life, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
And, of course, as you mentioned with the Alpsaturian who is psionic, the species you were dealing with and had skirmishes with, you know, the giant reptiles and insectoids that you shared on Mars, those guys are totally psionic, right?
Yeah, very well developed.
Very well developed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we might as well get up to speed a little bit here.
You know?
Absolutely.
No, the species I think that we've listened to the most,
who, when it came right down to it,
and back in the early days, like 50s and 60s,
conversations between military intelligence personnel and extraterrestrials
that they were.
working with the developed technologies obviously are directed by tactical conversations
and tactical awareness.
A lot of people are thinking about propulsion systems, death rays and time travel,
you know, anything that just sort of seems that you can put military force behind it.
I think that you can make ships out of, better tanks out of, better soldiers out of,
which makes sense.
They're not wrong to think that.
but one of the things that we were encouraged to think was long-term.
And thinking long-term,
psionic development is a more powerful tool.
So if you start a race with someone and they're developing, you know,
hard technology and you're focusing on psionic technology,
they'll be ahead of the game for the first 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, maybe 70 years.
But eventually you catch up.
And eventually you get ahead.
And eventually you demonstrate that the psionic technology is stronger.
It's ultimately stronger.
It's ultimately more powerful.
It's ultimately more tactical.
It's ultimately a better use of resources.
It's a better use of funds.
It has, you know, more higher success rates and combat engagements on paper.
So it just turns out that...
And manifestation in life, right?
I mean, for people who aren't very, it has all kinds of applications.
Right, right.
But just to be clear, the people who are making those decisions, that wasn't a factor.
The factor was, how does this make us militarily stronger so that we're not vulnerable to someone who can come along and kick our ass later?
And so the species, I think, who encouraged us to think long term are why we have good programs for developing science.
ability and why we have people who are psionic specialists who are really good at it because ultimately
it's a tremendous asset for us to have that ability and to be able to and it gives us an edge not
just here amongst our own species but against other species who to be honest have some
development ability as well but really don't have the potential that we have to be honest
So our ability to surpass some of those people very, very quickly is not only happening but on the table.
So there's some species that would like to think that they have the upper hand sionically on us,
but that may not be for long, if at all.
So it's absolutely critically important and just on a tactical level.
And I think there were people who steered us in the right direction.
So, yeah, that's a priority for the people that it matters.
to be a priority for, and I think it will be a deciding factor as we move forward in ways
that I'm not even going to try to predict.
But I think it will be a deciding factor many times over the next few decades.
Oh, I do, too.
You know what?
This brings me, too, is I was really touched by the profound way you decide, you define
service to self-people and service to other people.
I was profoundly just, I went, oh, my God, that's the best efficient, having to do with short-term and long-term.
Do you know what I mean?
You know what I'm talking about?
No, refresh my memory.
Okay, so short-term, if they want short-term rewards or long-term rewards.
Oh, sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Could you share that with people because I thought that was such a useful way to look at it?
the people that
Yeah, no, no, I think that that actually
It's fairly easy to define
People who are
Motoring towards making civilization a better place
For everyone forever
Versus those who want to make a short-term gain
And don't care what damage they may do
To society or civilization in the process
And it really has the difference to do
Between short-term profiteering
short-term going and long-term profiting, long-term goaling.
And kind of what we call when we're talking about these types of people who have a lot of money
or a certain significant portion of the world, but a tiny percentage, we often think of these
people as having a long-term greedy or short-term greedy mentality.
And a short-term greedy mentality is really ultimately self-serving.
long-term greedy mentality is actually okay because a long-term greedy mentality has to take into
account for how everyone else has to benefit so that you can keep doing that thing for a long
time.
So people who want to mine asteroids need to be long-term greedy.
They need to think about how to make an industry work for the next several centuries,
not just something that they can make a profit of for the next decade if it's going to work.
So it's okay for certain people to have a profit motive.
It's totally fine.
As long as that motive meshes with a society that is all benefiting from that and not just them-bedded finning from that.
But nine times out of ten, you can break that down from those who have short-term greedy ideals versus those who are talking long-term greedy ideals.
Which is why the corporate model, the quarterly model has to go, right?
Because all the corporations are basically doing all their math on what matters for profits for the,
the next 90 days. And that's a short-term reading model. That has to change.
So as many of the indigenous people, American Indians, they always talk whenever they, you know,
say, we need to think about this for our children's, our grandchildren and future generations,
you know, very different, rather, than where can I get my next fast car, you know, sexy girl,
whatever it is, you know, false power and the whole thing.
Yeah, and that's also going to shift when we have the technology to keep us a lot.
for longer because people who realize that, oh, wait, I can enjoy all this stuff for centuries.
Oh, wait.
All of a sudden, clean air and water matter.
All of a sudden, you know, environmental degradation matters.
All of a sudden, deforestation matters.
All of a sudden, whether you have a functioning society, a stable society matters.
Because, you know, if you want to live for the next thousand years and making billions and billions and billions of dollars from the system,
that you live in, well, geez, it's got to be healthier and more functional for you to be able to do that.
So we look at the psychological model there and think it's actually a good thing that people will have
longer lives because it will make them actually take a more serious interest in long-term benefits.
People will be just looking at their short term.
Yeah, people by the act of knowing that they're going to live for hundreds of years longer,
they're going to be like, hey, wait a minute.
I got to plan ahead.
And that means making sure that all of this social economic manipulation that I'm also thinking ahead.
So that, you know, it's more stable.
I think we've done a pretty good job of convincing most of those people that a more stable structure,
they will make more money from them than a destabilized structure.
So luckily.
That's wonderful.
Yeah.
And to be honest, there's just no way of having any kind of disclosure event unless the rich people decide that they're going to cooperate.
with you. And so I think the cooperation level is from like, don't you want to make like so much more
money? Well, okay, then do this this way so you can make more money. And everybody can make more
money that way. Not just you, but everybody, but you especially because you care about you,
we'll make more money. And I'm kind of okay with selling them that motivation if it gets us
over the line and everyone does better. Well, exactly. That's what's needed for transition.
It's not about fighting one another. It's about like, okay, listen, let's like work in cooperation. Yeah,
Exactly.
And that's going on as we speak a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Well, I just love that.
I love that how you define that by, you know,
someone who's more preoccupied with short-term gain,
and someone who's more preoccupied with longer term and things of others.
It's just a beautiful kind of non-judgmental way of thinking about it.
So thank you for sharing that.
I love that.
It's just smart.
I'm just smart.
That's all.
It's just smart. It's just a smarter way of doing things. So it's not rocket surgery.
Okay. So I want, I want you to share a really, really fun story, even though it probably was terrifying to you.
Now we met, you know, this is from memory. So tell me if I'm wrong here. Because the last show, we only had the last three minutes to get into the whole inside Earth's Civil.
civilizations that live in the honeycomb caverns and tunnels.
Sure.
And most people I know about it.
So would you be willing to describe the solo mission you were sent on to go deep into the earth
to get permission from a guardian species there to retrieve probably a classified item or whatever?
Would you be willing to share that?
I don't know.
To be honest, the one thing that I have gotten the most, like, shitty feedback from people are for me
telling that story and then going, no, uh, that's too much, dude.
And so I don't know.
Oh, that's ridiculous.
Maybe it's too much for people and maybe I just don't need to tell that story.
So I think I'll pass.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry it's a limited mind to people.
No, no, I, well, my job is to, is to sort of broaden my audience, not narrow my audience.
Yeah.
So if that's something that narrows my audience, then maybe I just don't need to bring it up.
Well, you could.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Thank you for caring.
How about if you talk about or share, either ones you personally know or have heard about from your, you know, superiors and other people, different examples of beings and species that live inside our earth.
That might you could do that, right?
Sure.
Oh, yeah.
So we definitely have an indigenous reptoid species.
We have an indigenous insectoid species.
We have some surface species that went underground at one point.
So you have a portion different times when you had like the Lumaria shift, the Atlantic shift, et cetera.
Sometimes you have people that go, all right, screw the surface world thing and they head underground.
And so at different times along those patterns, you've had certain people of the advanced civilizations,
Okay, all right, screw it, we're going underground.
And participate in the Garthin Network.
So we have some of those people down there too.
And then you have people who've moved here from other places who work there.
There's thriving industrial trading civilizations that, you know, portions of the
Garten Network that have been functioning and thriving and trading for thousands
and thousands of years and continue to do so.
So there's other people from other places who have come to visit.
Sometimes they stay and sometimes they live here.
Sometimes they meet someone and have kids and stay here, just like anywhere else.
So I'd say it's a pretty cosmopolitan mix in some places,
but there's, I'd say, probably mostly like the three indigenous Tarran species that are
like from here that live underground for the most part.
And could you describe, that's great, could you describe, should the people, just because people always go, well, what do they look like? How tall are they? They love to get pictures of it. Can you describe?
Sure. The reptiles, yeah, sure, the reptiles are, we call the raptors. They have kind of a, kind of a longer, narrow snout with a little curvy neck.
You know, lean a little bit forward.
If you're at the park, but more up, right?
Yeah, a little taller, a little taller.
I mean, you know, but you kind of...
Or humanoid.
The ones that I've met, I can, you know, look eye to eye to, so they stand, you know, about my height.
They're, you know, between, you know, five, six feet tall or whatever, five and a half, six and a half.
They, what else when I say about them?
They do have a tail.
Yeah, they have a tail.
They have a pretty good size tail.
They can swing it.
For sharp teeth.
Yeah.
Yeah, very sharp teeth.
Yeah, river carnivores.
Yeah, they're very quick.
Very, very quick.
The insectoid species.
Have psionic abilities, right?
Some.
That's an interesting question about them.
I would say that as a species, they have some people who are way more developed among
their people who have really, really specialized abilities there.
But I would say sort of, if you want to call them, an average Joe of their particular civilization might have minimal psionic ability, but nothing that would really even rival some, you know, a Tarran, a surface Taryn that's really developed, could, you know, outfight them sionically as far as like average Joe.
So their average Joe might be a little more developed than our average Joe, but our advanced people are pretty advanced, too.
all right and then there's
sexoid species you mentioned
they're kind of like ant people
ant people so there's
yeah
and they're on the moon
and Mars and inside our earth
right
yes from what I understand
yeah interestingly enough
anyone who ever wants to check out
like an old movie called
the first men in the moon which I believe
is from an HG Wells story
which is a whole other conversation
about how he got all that information
oh yeah you betcha
But that's pretty accurate.
They're like ant people.
So, yeah, they're like, you know, human-sized ant people.
And what are their abilities?
They certainly tell passive.
Things like that.
They're not, I don't think they're necessarily that fast.
I mean, they can scurry, but I wouldn't say that they're exceptionally quick.
Are they connected to a hive consciousness?
Always.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, all those guys are, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
I don't understand.
I don't know whether it's matriarchal,
patriarchal, because it can be either or.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, but they're all tuned in together.
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hives mind.
They've been here a long time.
Yeah.
Okay, and what about the humanoid?
Now, Admiral Beard visited some of the inner,
bird, sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Admiral Bird visited some of the inner earth too, correct?
Correct.
Yeah.
I mean, they're classically tall, blonde, you know, Nordic people, as people often want to refer to.
Nordic is a very generic term for, you know, tall, blonde humanoids.
But they're sort of, they're, you know, the, they're, you know, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great.
grandchildren of you know mostly the Lumerians and the Alamarians.
Lomarians yeah who went there with the destruction stuff.
Is there a general term?
Well some decided to stand the surface and help build the other civilizations and some went underground.
So it wasn't like everyone went under or everybody stayed up.
Some people like, screw this.
We're going back underground and some people are like, we're going to try again.
Are they generally referred to the AN shaw as the ANSHA or not necessarily?
No.
More like the Garth and Network.
Okay.
Yeah, pretty much.
Okay.
And they're all connected by maglev trains, magnetic, levitated trains, all that kind of stuff, right?
Oh, and tunnels that are like, I mean like a mile in diameter, so you can fly a pretty big ship through them as well as undersea tunnels that are absolutely huge that you can take really big ships through.
So cool.
Really, really cool.
Okay.
Okay, well, thank you, because it's just beautiful, descriptive stories.
We have a little time just quickly if you wanted to share what a Dyson sphere is.
Cool.
Yeah, Dyson sphere is an incredible act of engineering that is basically a, think about a giant metal hollow ball.
that is big enough to go around a star.
So say the diameter of this particular sphere,
let's just imagine one that goes around our sun,
that's the same diameter as the orbit of Venus.
Or I know it's elliptical, let's call it a mean, you know,
diameter orbit.
So the ship itself would be that big.
around edge to edge would be bigger than the star itself,
that the actual size of it diameter-wise would be bigger than the star itself
would be as big as a chunk of the solar system itself.
To go from one side to the other would be as far as going from, you know,
one part of the orbit of Venus around to the other.
But you have the, and the star is at the center.
So the star is a power source for the entire vehicle, obviously.
It's solar powered.
But it's also such that then you can have an
internal habitat on the inside of the sphere that faces the sun. So you can have an entire
organic habitat inside this ship, inside this Dyson sphere, that is powered by the sun. So you can,
you could actually have, you could populate this area with more people, like a hundred times
probably the number of people that are on planet Earth right now. You could probably fit, you know,
over 100 billion people living comfortably with green grass and trees and wind blowing and a star
and a sun at the middle, you know, of their existence, that's literally inside a ship that can move,
that can go from place to place.
So cool.
I put on my pre-announcement that I do in the shout-out, I put a kind of a, not a real picture,
but a descriptive picture of a Dyson sphere,
as well as your viper-class ship that you fly, right?
Sure.
You fly a viper class?
Yeah.
That's what they call them.
Yeah, I mean, there was a viper, cobra rattlesnake,
but that's, you know, getting into minutia,
but it was mostly vipers.
Okay.
And so it's literally like this entire planetary ship that moves,
and it's built around a star.
Yep.
Totally.
Yeah.
So our version of that
theorized by this guy
named Dyson,
you know,
so it's called the Dyson sphere,
just turns out
that intergalactically
other species figured that out
way long ago
and made it happen
and it's a thing.
So it wasn't just him
that like made it up.
He's the first,
you know,
Karen that thought about
that idea and called it something,
but some other species
came up with that
millions of years ago,
millions and millions of years ago.
Now,
is there truth that that's up
above,
now you know supposedly like some Dyson spheres have been seen but I don't know you know
what's your experience with that have you actually seen one or not no no there is one
there well not anywhere near us the one that I saw was very very very very very far
away from here so that I have heard of nothing that has come anywhere close to us as far
as that's concerned but there are some I have heard of some ships that are as
biggest planets that have, you know, come nearby.
That's rumor that I've heard.
But that in itself is incredibly fascinating.
And I imagine there's some similar design where there's some, you know,
fusion core of some kind that's smaller that's powering the planet-sized ship
and, again, maintaining some kind of internal habitat because that's just the most efficient
thing to do with something that big is to make it completely organically.
self-sustaining.
So if you had to, I don't know why this thought just popped in, if you had to like quickly
evacuate most people on a planet, right?
Would you use a Dyson sphere for that?
No.
You know, as a future temporary planet, you know, because you can put so many people in it.
Or would you use more like motherships that are miles long?
So, yeah, the expense.
of building or using a Dyson sphere would be tremendous.
So first of all, to build one takes a really, really, really long time.
The one species that I saw the one that they had built and asked them how long it takes them to build one,
they were like about 185,000 years your time.
Whoa.
Yeah, which is not that long to them, which is not that long to them.
They live millions of years.
And so 185,000 years is just like, yeah, it's a good work day.
So, but scale, right?
So to build something that big, it is a huge scale operation.
It's going to take a really long time.
Or you've got to get one from someone that's already got one,
and these are not like things that are just floating around,
like everybody's got an extra giant planetary sphere hanging out somewhere.
There's not a lot of them.
So I don't think that that would be the most efficient thing.
The most efficient thing would be just lots and lots of landers.
And just picking and just dropping, you know, lander down to pick people up.
And taking them up to a bigger transport, yeah.
How big was your Nautilus transport that you...
Nautilus is about a mile long.
Nautilus is about a mile long and probably about 100,000.
I don't know, maybe 150 yards wide.
And how many people could it, how?
I don't know the exact number of crew,
because that was classified to me,
and it was divided into sections.
So the engineering section and the command section,
which were forward of the flight deck section,
were basically forbidden territory for anybody who worked in the flight deck.
So I've never been to the engineering section.
I have no idea how many engineers, how many people,
their whole living quarters and everything is back there.
It's like we don't share living space with those people.
The command section is the front section.
Same thing.
We don't share anything with them other than doors that access to the different sections.
So I've been escorted into the command section to talk with officers in the command section,
but I otherwise would not be able to just wander into the command section or wander into the engineering section.
I'm to understand, though, you're talking about a potential of crew members,
It could be several thousand.
Yeah, that's what I was thinking.
Not to mention tons of ships.
Yeah.
And, of course, use the standard compartmentalization.
So you only know your area.
That's it.
Just do your job.
Okay.
So that is so lovely.
And I thank you so much, Randy,
for sharing your huge bandwidth of knowledge
and helping to enlighten and people
and bring forth to disclosure for the citizens
of Earth.
And would you take the time for a couple minutes and tell people where they can find you
and where they could have a private session, which is awesome with you,
or where if they're interested in signing up for the oncoming Cyanac class, which I did,
you know, where they can go for that.
Yeah, pretty much all of that is available on my website, which is covert spacecowboy.com.
and every
updates will all be posted there
when the Cyanics course is up
that will be posted and links will be there
anybody who wants to put on the
list so that when we are
ready to launch the Cyanics class
we'll make sure you're on the mailers
so that we get to send that out to you
we'll let you know
but pretty much everything I do
and everything that is going to be
any information about the class
and anything else that's going on
will be up on my website first
And have you decided how long, a couple of you asked me, does he have any idea how much it's going to charge and how long it goes for?
Or can people just sign up whenever and start whenever they want, you know?
They were just curious how it works.
Very good question.
The answer is a little incomplete.
I've broken down, like I would say, half the course into lesson plans.
that I think will translate well or well enough into a video course,
which is what we're trying to do here.
So about the second half of the entire curriculum,
I have yet to bust out and really break down the lesson plan.
So I haven't really figured out how many lessons total.
It could be somewhere between 15 and 20 lessons total,
is what my guess would be at this point.
We're going to compartmentalize them a little bit,
So people will be able to get chunks of lessons for whatever the rate that we're going to decide to do for those are.
I think the first four lessons, which is an introductory, very, very basic introductory first four steps.
We're going to do for 111 bucks.
Oh, really?
Really reasonable.
Well, like I said, it's going to be almost, you know, maybe almost 20 lessons.
So by the time, you know, it spans out, you know, it's going to be a little.
a little bit there, but I want to make it fair and reasonable based on what the chunks are and so forth.
And because the beginning part, to be honest, it's very basic, it's very rudimentary.
It's so fundamental and basic that I want everybody to have that information, but I would feel
guilty if I charge people a bunch of money for that information.
So we're still working on valuing for the other courses and how we're going to stack that together.
but that's getting sorted out as we speak.
And obviously once it's all sorted out, someone wants to get the whole package.
They'll get a discount, but otherwise we'll make it.
So people can also do steps and go, okay, I did that, I did that.
Or if they hit a spot, it's like, oh, I don't know if I can go any farther than that.
And then instead of having, you know, stacked up a bunch of classes that they don't feel like they're going to get.
I want people to feel like it's manageable and digestible if they go through the process.
That's my main thing here is very steady integration.
All right.
Well, that's great.
It gives us something to work with.
So our time's up, unfortunately.
So please join in two weeks for Part 4,
nevermind-binding show with Randy.
And we're going to go into detail
about the positive and uplifting new beneficial,
pragmatic technologies that will heal the planet and the people on it.
So join us then.
And until our next adventure together,
onward and upward, my friends.
And thanks again, Randy.
Thank you, Marily.
Take care.
Bye, bye.
