Cosmic Brilliance - How Med Beds Regenerated His Body with Super Soldier Capt. Randy
Episode Date: July 20, 2022Discover how Super Soldier Captain Randy Cramer, U.S. Marine Corps, special sections, regenerated on Holographic Medical Bed & Interstellar Trading with 100’s of ETs* Randy spent a 30-year tour ...with the Secret Space Program (SSP), Earth Defense Force (EDF); including one 17-year tour on Mars Defense Force (MDF)Description of ET species Randy met. ET infiltrations & skirmishes; the truth about MarsRandy’s experiences on the Holographic Regenerating Medical Beds getting his arm and body completely healed within hours! Med Beds regrow limbs; cure all diseases including cancer; age-regress an older body to a younger body; and allow for a much longer age with high quality so you can have fun and contribute more!* Randy shares his journey to the Ambassadorial Trading Station near Jupiter ~ where hundreds of ET species meet up to negotiate trade agreements* He Offers a course to increase your Psionic (brain wave) abilitieshttps://www.covertspacecowboy.comhttps://www.CosmicBrilliance.comSupport this podcast: https://www.cosmicbrilliance.com/copy-of-donate
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It's time for Super Soul Solutions with Marley Milmo.
Marley is an avid researcher with over four decades of intuitive healing and related experience.
Here she explores many intriguing unknown and lesser known topics on her Super Soul Solutions show.
Get ready for the next adventure.
Here's Marley now.
Hello, welcome everyone to Super Soul Solutions.
Thanks for your patience getting started a couple minutes late.
Today's show is titled 2021.
The year to remove the blinders and learn what has and is really going on.
Carl Sagan, a well-known cosmologist and astronomer said, quote,
it is far better to grasp the universe for what it really is rather than persist in delusion,
however satisfying and reassuring, end quote.
So, as you all know, we can only apply wisdom and discernment as mature Earth citizens
when we know the truth of what is going on in our world
and why certain events have occurred and are happening now
by those in the know with boots on the ground.
So I'm so excited to share with you my special guest today
who has both his boots on the ground and wings out in space.
And Randy Kramer is the only Marine Special Section Officer
that has been given permission to disclose the facts to Earth's civilians
about currently used greener and cleaner advanced technology and 70 years of trade with off-world extraterrestrial civilizations.
Captain Kramer spent a 30-year tour with the Secret Space Program, Earth Defense Force, including a 17-year tour on Mars Defense Force.
I have followed all his work and find him honest, ethical, and skilled at eloquently clearing confusion by bringing
has specially qualified credentials to this show.
And it is a true honor, Randy, to have you as a guest, and thank you for joining us.
Oh, thank you very much for having me.
My pleasure to be here.
Thanks, Randy.
So let's start right off by sharing with our audience why your soul chose to come to Earth
Now and how you became a super soldier in the secret space programs defending both Earth and on Mars.
Wow.
Okay, that's a fairly loaded question, I guess.
All right, so throw that first part at me one more time to make sure I heard that correctly.
Okay, share with our audience why your soul chose to come to Earth now.
Okay?
You want to do this?
Well, I don't know.
I mean, I know the answer to that question.
I'm not sure I can tell you the answer to that question.
Other than in a very simplified and general way, which is, you know, to make the world a better
place in the sense of to ensure that civilization on planet Earth continues because without civilization
on planet Earth, there's no really focused goal or evolution or growth pattern for humanity
without a civilized structure.
So I think I really came here to make sure that civilization endures.
That makes total sense.
And I know we could talk for hours on how you became a super soldier in the secret space.
programs defending Earth and on Mars.
But if you could just explain to the audience a little bit about that history, that would
be lovely.
Sure.
Well, I guess the short version of that is the United States Marine Corps Special
Section as a covert military space program division was working on genetically augmented
soldier programs kind of from it started really in sort of the mid-late 1960s.
So I was actually genetically engineered pretty much from the ground up as part of an augmented soldier program that began in the late 1960s and would have had me and other members of the project born in about 1970.
So really started from the very, very get-go.
It's not like I enlisted.
It's not like I volunteered.
It's not like somebody asked me real nice.
you know genetic sample was taken from my mother genetic sample was taken from my father
I was sort of made at a fertilized cell stage the genome is for people who understand
genetics in the nuclei of the cell the genome is curled up in a really tight ball and they
unrolled that out of the nuclei of the fertilized cell group to tinker with the genetics to give
whatever, you know, smarter, faster, stronger genetic augmentations that they wanted to give,
so that essentially we start out sort of from the get-go with a better engineered platform
instead of trying to do techniques in which you're trying to change genetics after the fact
which problems with them. So there's a lot of history and a lot of complexity to that.
But the short answer is I got made to do my job by some smart genetic engineers.
that wanted to make me better at killing things than everybody else.
Right.
Okay.
And then just to be clear, there's no AI here.
The soul came in fully volunteer.
Oh, yeah.
I'm just making that clear.
I'm very clear conscious awareness of why I came here, where I came from,
and what that aspect of my soul or my spirit or whatever we want to call it.
I'm very clear about that.
It just kind of turns out to be one of those things.
I don't think is anybody's business for me to share that with them, the details of them.
So I keep it close to my chest.
But I'm very clear about that.
No, there's no AI in my brain anywhere that I'm aware of.
Okay.
All organic as far as I know.
Right.
And so AI means artificial intelligence.
Okay.
So thank you.
That's fascinating.
Now, when you were stationed on Mars, can you share with people what is Mars being used for?
And what was your job?
Well, so the colonies were established sometime in the early 1970s when the sort of construction began.
My understanding is the first, like, real groups of personnel that were sent to live there were really established somewhere, sort of 1974, 1975.
So the colony system has to have a independent military contractor defense system, which turns out to be the MDF.
for the Mars Defense Force.
So my job basically was I got assigned to the MDF
as a military, as a soldier,
parceled out to different Earth Defense Force agencies
that need soldiers.
So basically contracted out to the MDF
to essentially hold a perimeter that goes around the colonies.
We were never allowed to be in the colonies,
at the colonies, never seen them.
All I know is that we occupied a space
that was around the perimeter to make sure that anything that was outside the perimeter did not go past us and towards the inner part of the territory, which healthy colonies.
So because there's no less than four or five indigenous species on Mars, two of which we really encountered in the northern region where we were, which was an insectoid species and an indigenous reptoid species.
So there was some military conflict most of the time that I was there for that,
and essentially it was just to act as a buffer zone for the colonies.
So the four to five species were basically humans, an upright insectoid, so to speak, large species,
rectory to reptilian species, right?
And they all had their own little.
basis and sections divided on the Mars, and then everyone kind of protected that, right?
Is that correct?
Well, I mean, it's as simple as territorial claims and disputes are anywhere, including
here on planet Earth, when you, you know, settle down somewhere and decide, we're going
to build a colony here, you kind of set up a perimeter and anything that's outside of that
perimeter territorially may not like that you're there or you may want to extend your territory
a little bit. So it's the same
as it is anywhere else. You
bump up against people and you get territorial
and you end up poking each other
in the eye and punching each other in the face every once
a while because of territorial
to dispute.
Okay.
All right. And you were of course
briefed to be prepared for all these
species that you would run into, correct?
Obviously, right? Well, I wouldn't
say briefed and prepared
for all the species I ever ran
into, I would say that part of the training program we used to call training for exotic locations
and exotic targets, which is a nice way of saying alien worlds and killing alien beings.
So we're trained for that, but I wouldn't say trained for everything that we ever experienced.
I would say just trained in condition from a very, very early age so that you don't have amygdala shock,
which is essentially what happens to most people the first time they,
something that's non-human, they go into amygdala shock, which basically your amygdala,
it's a part of your brain that reacts much faster than your frontal lobe does,
and we pretty much send you into a panic state.
So if you don't freeze and go catatonic, then you panic and start running or, you know,
screaming or whatever people do when they panic.
But the amygdala response tends to override the frontal lobe response
when people encounter something that's otherworldly.
but we were conditioned for it.
So first time, you know, it was still a little shocking to me,
but I was prepared mentally and emotionally as I could be, I suppose.
So really, you know, after having done that for a few years,
I would say I was completely conditioned to any environment that I might be in
where I would have to engage militarily with something that was not a human being
or was of an alien origin.
because at that point it was just normal.
It was just my Tuesday afternoon.
Oh, um.
Yeah.
Well, it sets a different standard for normal.
You know, my Tuesday afternoon was different than your Tuesday afternoon,
but that was just a Tuesday afternoon.
Exactly.
So I know people at this point learning about a lot of the species
and that they're real will want to know this answer to put their mind at rest.
What percentage of the millions of species that are out there, as well as inside the earth, are what we call friendly to us, and what percentage do not have our best interest in mind?
Yeah, so luckily, that breaks down in something we call the 95-5 rule.
So so far, that is held standard as we continue to encounter more and more species out in the wider university that we have.
And that 95-5 rule means that 95% of whoever we run into would rather at least talk about maybe trading stuff or be nice or share things and really kind of a 5% or less that are uncooperative, scavengers, you know, dominators, assholes and other, you know, sort of.
Pirates.
Pirates and so forth.
Yeah.
So it's really less than really about 5% or less.
Now, when you get into numbers of like 200,000 civilized worlds in our own galaxy,
5% becomes a good size number to be concerned about.
But the emphasis really is, yeah, that 95% of that number are good neighbors.
And so we really should be a lot more comfortable entering into the intergalactic community
by just seeing it as entering into a much bigger neighborhood with a lot more neighbors
who more often than not are good neighbors and not bad neighbors.
So it really is a, it's not even a 50-50.
It's 95-5.
So it's a pretty good odds out there that you're dealing with mostly people that are,
you know, going to have at least somewhat good neighborly-friendly interest at heart
and only that 5% that you got to worry about.
But that's why we'll always have the need for a fierce and well-trained military
because there's always going to be someone that we have to defend ourselves from.
Exactly.
I was just going to say, and we have you and your team.
And kudos to the team that supports you as well.
I want to say that publicly.
So I don't know if you're allowed to say this.
You're welcome on radio.
But can you share some of the special abilities
as a super soldier, you know, I know that everyone has their own unique,
but then there's kind of like, isn't there kind of a standard of what we think is special
abilities, but are probably abilities a lot of us have that are suppressed?
Would you say that's fair?
Sure. Yeah, a lot of that comes down to small edges in speed, mobility, calculating thinking,
and reaction time.
So when you're talking about a standard hand-to-hand combat interaction between one physical body
and another physical body, the margins of muscle response, central nervous system response,
and how quick the brain can calculate, and if your muscles can move a little bit faster,
those edges become huge in an actual fight between one physical person and another.
So you don't necessarily need gigantic edges in those things to see an advantage.
But as soon as you start developing even moderate psionic abilities,
then you add a tiny bit of precognition into that so that as you're fighting,
you're actually anticipating things that are happening because you're,
precognitating that they're going to happen, which is a whole other level of fighting when
you can know where the punch or the kick or the throw or the bullet is going to come from.
It makes it completely elementary to not be where the punch, the kick, or the bullet is going to be.
So the equivalent of sort of being able to dodge an attack because you know where it's going to be when
it's coming because you're using precognition instead of just, you know, hand-eye coordination.
what also become a greater and greater ability to be present in the mind of an opponent,
which can not just give you an edge because you can sense what they're thinking,
but it can give you an edge in how you can contaminate their own thinking process.
So fighters know that you say things or you do things to psych out an opponent.
it, well, there are things sionically that you can do to psych out an opponent that can terrify them,
make them feel completely, you know, unable or inadequate to feel like that they can stand or
defend against whatever you are or whatever, you know, they're in front of.
You can psychologically, sionically, mess with their emotions and mess with their brain and things
that can give you a tremendous edge.
If you can, anybody knows if they've studied war throughout history,
history, if you can enter into a situation in which your opponent is terrified of you, you have
an edge of a real edge because they're scared.
And if you can use a psionic ability to instill fear into someone, you add all those other
edges that I mentioned, tiny bits of physical, mechanical, intelligence, and central nervous
system reaction time with a little precognition and with a little ability to send
psionic fear into your opponent's brain.
And now you're talking about a battle edge that's huge.
That's not a little bit at all.
It's a gigantic edge when entering into combat with another species that doesn't have
that ability.
That is, yeah, that makes total sense.
Also in martial arts, those that are really good at that.
And also a lot, well, not a lot, but if you have methammed have telekinesis and different
abilities like that.
Now, would you explain?
Right?
Yeah, there are even more advanced abilities that weaponize psionics, telekinesis,
pyrokinesis, a few other things.
Yeah, there's even a level beyond that, which is actual weaponized cyanic ability, correct.
Okay.
And then would you explain just for...
That takes a level of specialization that is a little more rare.
Okay, understood.
Would you just define psionics to the public just in case they've been?
don't know what that is, please?
Sure.
Cyanics is an output of waves from your brain, which we identify as a physical effect,
meaning it is governed by laws of physics and something that we call a psionic wave,
which is measured in Cyanons per second.
So it's an actual mental output of brain wave and scalar wave energy from your brain
that has the ability to impact matter and energy around you.
Well, well said, and if I remember right, aren't you providing for the first time for civilians and other people a, for those that wanted?
Yes, we're very excited.
Yes, we're very excited that the online course is being put together and we think we'll have the first four lessons up for people to sign up for sometime early middle of March, so super soon.
and then the subsequent lessons will be packing in right back on top of that.
So we expect to have the whole thing up and online in the next couple months.
Okay, and just briefly, we'll go over this at the end.
Do you want to give them your website or where they go to check that out?
Sure.
The website is covert space cowboy.com or via my Facebook page,
which is the Captain Randy Kramer Facebook page.
So there are the two places right now that everyone can get those updates for sure.
Okay, and Kramer spelled C-R-A-M-E-R folks, okay?
Correct, C-R-A-M-E-R.
Okay, so now my last Super Soul Solutions show spoke a little about the holographic
regenerative med-beds, and you are very knowledgeable about them and actually are working really
hard to bring that technology out to U.S. civilians, which is my passion, too, and I'm so appreciative
of. So as a soldier, for people to understand really get the importance and how this could change
the world, as a soldier, you have experienced the medbeds yourself many times after having parts
of your body blown off. So could you walk the listeners through how that tech works and how you
experience it repairing your missing arm or body part? Sure. So essentially it is a
A combination of two pieces of technology.
There's a software element and a hardware element.
The software element is able to take a blood or tissue sample and get a perfect read of the DNA code from that sample.
Then that software is able to take that code, translate it through a software code so that it read,
builds that person to a level of cellular resolution via that genetic code.
That's as then as an electronic essentially image.
Now, the hardware element is the holographic projecting lens, which has some special properties to it.
So even though I explain this, I'm not giving away all the secrets by telling how this works this way.
So the holographic projecting lens then projects that image, that cellular level, genetic,
image of the person that you're treating over the damaged tissue.
And one of two things sort of happen at the same time there, which is that the damaged cells
through a physical phenomenon, again, a phenomenon of the laws of physics, something
called dominant harmonic frequency resonance will then naturally begin to conform and change
their shapes back into ideal cells.
The other thing that happens is that the nuclei of damaged cells become fooled by the presence
of holographic cells and holographic nuclei that then the cells will continue to grow into,
so not only can you restore any damaged tissue, interior or exterior,
but you can also restore lost tissue.
So a finger that's blown off, a hand that's blown off, an arm or a leg that's blown off,
you can grow all the way down to fingertips or toes and regrow severed and destroyed limbs.
So cool.
And that's a map.
I know it does tons of things, you know, we'll get into that later,
but it's so cool because that, if I'm,
right, it only takes a couple hours, doesn't it?
Well, it depends on how much tissue you have to repair.
The more tissue you have to repair, the longer it can take.
If I had my hand burnt and had third-degree crispy burns all over it,
I could probably get that hand repaired in an hour and a half to two hours.
If I lost an arm or had an arm that was fully damaged, that could take, you know,
the better part of a day.
If I had, you know, a couple arms and a couple legs that had gone missing and a good portion of my torso, I could be, you know, in that thing, regenerating cellular tissue for several days.
And then that one trippy thing about it to one of the many things is that even if you're, if I have this right, even if you're politically dead, quote, unquote, and the soul is kind of hovering over the body, you can also.
regenerate it within a certain amount of hours if the soul is willing to come back in.
Is that correct?
Yeah, basically.
So the way we used to talk about it is that if someone is dead, they could be just partially dead.
They might not be all the way dead.
Or if someone's all the way dead, then you know they're dead dead.
And that is sort of based on the condition of how much of the body is really like gone.
And in some cases, there's enough body parts that are gone that if you couldn't hold the tissue into a stasis field and stop it from dying, then the body would just die.
And there would be nothing to cling on to.
But as long as there's a certain amount of electrical activity in the brain to cling on to, and you have a stasis field that can keep that cellular tissue from dying and decay, so it can still.
hold that electrical charge, then that silver cord stays connected. And as long as that silver
cord's connected, they can literally yank you back from the afterlife, back into your body against
your free will, as long as that cord is still connected. If that cord's connected, it's like
snipping a helium balloon, and it just, you fly away and go wherever, and there's no retrieving
you back into your body. So we essentially would just, you know, label people is either retrievable,
are unretrievable.
And so if you were able to treat someone and bring them back, you know, from a state of,
you know, not quite total death, they were retrievable.
If someone didn't make it, you would just say they were unretrievable, which is, again,
very polite words for saying that people are dead or not dead, but retrievable or unretrievable,
sort of dead, not really dead, completely dead.
These are all, you know, scales of experience based on the ability to just yank you back
into your body as long as you're still connected.
Yeah, because these soldiers are really expensive assets, as they're considered.
Yeah, what I understand, like start to finish.
Clones that we won't get necessarily into in the show.
It'll be too much.
But yeah, yeah.
So I'm sure they start to finish.
It costs like over $100 million to make me.
So repairing me as many times as it takes to throw me back into the field is worth $100 million.
So, yeah.
Wow.
Wow, that is amazing.
So I don't know if you'll be able to share this point,
but what extraterrestrial species did we get the holographic medbed technology from?
Do you know?
I think it was from the Centauri, who, you know, are living around Alpha Centauri.
So I think it was from the Centauri.
I think that's where we got it from first.
We're manufacturing our, we've been manufacturing our own for a
while, but they were making such cheap and efficient ones. I know that we were buying most of all
of our hollabeds from them initially because they were just making them really cheap and efficiently.
But we're making our own now. Okay, which, and that's a great point because that brings us
into the whole trade thing. And I have heard two other super soldiers speak about visiting the
huge ambassadorial ship that orbits Jupiter. And will you be willing to share your delightful
experience going there and give our audience kind of like a tour of the environment and what that
was like, including the many species you saw. Would you be willing to do that? Well, I mean,
that's a lot of story right there. So there's a little bit I can tell you about that.
Okay. Yeah, I mean, it's an amazing place. So it's a multi-level, I was call it a satellite station,
which the main level is probably about a mile in diameter.
It's pretty big, so kind of a roundish room, mostly round room,
with a Florida ceiling 360-degree window view,
and Florida ceiling is about, I'd say, probably close to 80 feet
so that it can house or you can have meeting space for the tallest life form that I have seen in that room,
which is about 55 or 60 feet tall.
Whoa, and what's the smallest?
About 18 inches.
You probably have a beautiful view of Jupiter out those windows, don't you?
It is an astonishing view.
And I can say that that view up close, there is no camera shot, no satellite picture, no Hubble picture, no Voyager picture that equals standing there and looking at the colors in those gas clouds.
It's just absolutely stunning.
Oh, my God.
It's just so exciting.
So does everyone go through, you know, the plasma shower or whatever it's called, it neutralizes all the germs, right?
And you were there for security reasons initially.
Is that why you were invited there?
Yeah, I mean, I was what we call, and I'm going to make air quotes that nobody can see when I say the just-in-case guy, because we're humans.
And we're paranoid little monkeys.
And we like to have someone, you know, who's good in a fight in a meeting between diplomats because we never know what's going to happen just in case.
But to be perfectly clear, this was a very stable diplomatic environment, no bad ass.
actors, nobody going crazy. This isn't a crazy canteen
scene where people are, you know, shooting each other over deals.
It was a very polite diplomatic environment.
And so really, I just got to go along
what really ended up being just for the sake of being able to tag along.
So I was sent because I was one of the only bridge officers,
pilots that had hand-to-hand, like full infantry hand-to-hand experience.
So sometimes these diplomats would come to do
these diplomatic missions and they were like, who've you got to be the just in case guy?
It was like, uh, Kramer.
So I would end up getting to go on these missions and really just got to sit there and sometimes
talk, sometimes interact, sometimes depends on the meeting.
But, um, yeah, the whole reason that I ever got to go there was never a reason that I had
to be there.
So in that sense, I really consider it like one of the luckiest most fortunate things that I ever
got to do because there really was no need for me to be there.
But I was just fortunate.
Which is so cool.
Yeah, they wanted a Justin Case guy.
When I got the pull out of the hat, I got to be the Justin Case guy, but I never had to do anything of the kind.
It was really just the cushiest, easiest, coolest thing ever to just show up and go on those missions.
It was fun.
It was really interesting.
So, Randy, are you in, describe a little bit more for people.
Are you in like some big, huge living rooms, you know, different chair, sizes?
cafeteria kind of thing, and how many extraterraceous and ambassadors are all there?
And what's the purpose?
Oh, so the main room, if it could be, the base sort of state of that room is an empty room
with not a single stitch of furniture in it.
But as people make appointments to come in and have conversations with other groups,
other species, conversational environments are created out of hard holographic life.
So think Holodex, like Star Trek Holodeck when I say that.
So the ability to create tables, chairs, or even a liquid environment and a gaseous environment,
I mean, whatever you would need to create as a conversational environment between two species,
including a big table for someone to sit at who's 25 feet tall with a little teeny table on top of that big table
for someone much smaller to sit at while they have a conversation.
And so those holographic environments can change at any time based on the appointment schedule
of people who are coming to have those conversations.
So conversational environments are changing constantly based on who's coming in and who's
having a conversation.
And at any given time, there are literally hundreds of meetings taking place in that room.
Again, it's like a mile in diameter.
It's huge.
So in some cases, you're no farther than, you know, 10 or 15 feet from the table next to you,
which could be in multiple directions.
So you could literally be, you know, shouting distance or, you know, loud voice distance,
not even shouting distance, but loud voice distance to, you know,
half a dozen different species or a dozen different species having other conversations about trade contracts.
or, you know, treaties or whatever it is that they're talking about.
So you basically, that is so fun.
So you basically could have like an amphibian hybrid or fibbian being over on your right
who has like some kind of water suit or water holographic thing to survive.
You can have a reptilian on your left.
It might be in a giant tank.
Might be in a giant tank that's been created for them to be able to be in a water base in that environment.
Yeah, correct.
So cool. And then in the meantime, you've got smart tables. I think the first time that stuff was shown was Minority Report.
Wasn't it with Tom Cruise where they showed, you know, kind of how the smart glass pads and the smart tables go up into 3D and all of that kind of stuff, right?
Do you have all that stuff there?
Maybe I'm not a big Tom Cruise movie watcher. I think I saw Minority Report, but that was a long time ago.
So I'm going to go with maybe on that reference.
I know, I understand.
Okay, but I'm sure the audience is wondering, like, how did everyone communicate?
Now, I know that all super soldiers are trained in psionics and telepathy,
and most of the species are telepathic.
But don't you have to have translator devices or telecom devices or things like that?
Oh, sure.
You have all of the options.
So there's a computer translator, which isn't much more than a black box that sits on the table.
and when one person talks, it translates, and then, you know, the other person talks and it translates.
You can also have a physical language translator, which is a person or a being of some kind, but we really say person or people.
Everyone's a person or a people.
It doesn't matter what species are.
You don't have to say being.
You can just say person or people.
They're all persons and they're all people.
So you have another person who is acting as a physical translator who's using the language that you're speaking,
to translate and speaks both or multiple languages to do that in.
You can have a psionic translator, someone who is translating using telepathy.
There's also a little halo that you can wear so that you can have an assisted psionic
conversation.
I won't want to go.
They have advantages and disadvantages.
Let me just say that each form of communication has its advantages and disadvantages.
And depending on who you're talking to, will have a preference for the use of one type of communication or another for contractor treaty negotiations.
There are even some species who are fairly telepathic who would still rather sit down and talk a contract out because that's more specific than a telepathic conversation about a contract.
Got it.
Okay.
Now, do you want to share with the audience?
So this is basically a huge trade.
You know, everyone's trading, doing species and big.
Can you give the audience examples of the most traded items, et cetera?
Beer, clothing, chocolate, coffee, military hardware.
Yeah.
What about DNA?
What about DNA?
What about DNA?
It's not as big of a commodity as some people think that it is.
It's really, to be honest with you,
genetics are a dime a dozen.
Because everyone's into it, and they're all doing genetics and hybridization, so they're pretty
advanced.
Yeah, right.
Everyone is, but it's kind of like everyone's doing it because everyone's got access to it.
It's not that, it means that you're looking for certain traits.
You might be looking for certain qualities for preferences, but to be honest, you know,
genetics are just everywhere.
And so it's not that if you have a box of different samples of genetics and you go into a bar and say,
dude, I got some prime genetics that you're going to be able to get anything for that.
You know what I'm saying?
Like now maybe for like my genetics because I'm an augmented soldier, like, dude, I got an augmented soldier, like proven.
Like that's worth something, that's worth something, you know, as a tool.
That has a little more value to it.
But even then, doesn't necessarily translate into a really tradable good or a tremendous value for someone just having a sample.
Just because someone cut my finger off doesn't mean they're getting a bunch of money to make copies of me.
Right.
Okay.
And, of course, there's no – I mean, like, how do you deal with the food issue or water issue?
or, I mean, because all their unique species have cultures and different protocols,
and you could offend them, right?
Like, you have to learn all that.
Yeah, talking about the intergalactic space station.
Yeah, no food.
There's no serving a food in the main meeting room of the intergalactic space station
that can get weird.
Mostly as far as beverages, it's basically water and drinks.
that I would say that are based on fruit juices.
Yeah.
Some of them are really, really good, too.
Some of them are really, really good.
Do we trade for those?
Very simple stuff, simple stuff to drink.
And no food, because, yeah, people can get weirded out
by what someone else is eating and be like,
that's my little brother Tony and, like, freak out.
That's my cousin.
Yeah, exactly.
Sorry.
I'm sorry.
That's the humor here.
Okay.
Fascinating.
So can you give them, so didn't you do one, I mean, you had a fascinating story, if I remember,
right.
And I think the audience might be in slight cognitive dissonance, some of them, because for
some of the listeners, perhaps this is the first time they're getting such an in-depth sense
of what's really been going on with the ET.
and our travel in our space.
And you were sharing a wonderful example of that in a meeting, I believe, with a different
species where you went into cognitive dissonance.
Explain that?
Oh.
Do you remember what I'm talking about?
So, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so one of the things that happens that's really biologically neurobiologically strange
to me is when you enter into this room, your brain literally, you're, you're, you're,
your pattern recognition part of your brain becomes overwhelmed.
And so it takes a minute for you to be able to see clearly the different sizes and shapes that you're looking at.
It does, so you can walk into a crowd of people here on planet Earth,
and your brain doesn't go crazy because basically everyone's about the same size,
about the same height, has about the same proportion of eye to ear to nose to mouth ratios.
So your pattern recognition doesn't have to go crazy to accommodate what you're seeing.
You go into a room where you're looking at potentially dozens and dozens of other species,
and all of a sudden the pattern recognition part of your brain has to work overtime.
And so it's not uncommon to have headaches, blurry vision,
to not be able to see things or people clearly for a few minutes.
There's sometimes an adaptation period that can take 15 or 20 minutes when you get into the room to sort of let your eyes adjust.
But there's also something that can happen if you see something that your brain, for some reason or another, just decides it doesn't want to translate that image to you.
And when you do, when that happens, your brain will go into some form of automated cognitive dissonance.
and it will find an image in your brain to replace for what it's actually seen to prevent you from some sort of like shock, trauma, or whatever it's trying to prevent you from having, or in some cases possibly because it simply cannot calculate the pattern change sufficiently to project an image to you.
And so your brain basically goes,
I give up.
I'm not sure what to do with this.
And then it projects another image over that,
and so you see something differently.
And so I remember we're sitting at the table,
and this person goes by,
and I just remember, you know, staring and going,
what in the world is happening there?
And then the guy next to me who is the senior diplomat,
I said, what did you see?
And I was like, what do you mean?
And he was like, you saw something weird.
And he's like, what did you see?
And I said, it looked like the scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz, man.
I don't know what.
And he was like, okay.
And then he started explaining.
He was explaining to me.
He's like, okay, he said, well, you know, that basically each person at the table
saw something different because whatever that being species is,
it causes like this just crazy cognitive dissonance that you can't calculate.
Now, I asked him once, I was like, well, is there any way to know, like, what I didn't see?
Yeah, exactly.
And he said, and he said, to be honest, you don't want to.
So don't ask any more questions.
Because he says it's really self-protective.
He says, it's not that, he says, it's not necessarily that what you would see would be horrible or terrifying.
It might just be something that's so shocking that you don't know what to do with it.
He says, and I was like, like, I really was trying to figure out, like, what do you mean?
Give me an example.
And he said, okay, what if instead, what you saw, what was really there,
that you couldn't see was like a pile of seaweed that had thousands and thousands of little tendrils
that came out with little suction cups on the end that had little teeth on them.
And I was like, uh, he's like, yeah, exactly.
He says, your brain just might not be able to see that and cope.
It might just be so weird and so shocking and so different that your brain is,
protecting you from having a panic attack.
And anyway, it's complex and I don't stand it.
I don't claim to fully understand it.
I haven't only experienced it two different times in my life.
But it's a strange experience and the way it was explained to me was your brain does
have a pattern recognition limit and it does have a basically an object sort of recombination
limit.
And when you're in a room like that where you're looking at so many different.
different species and so many different things, you can hit overload limits for your brain and literally not be able to see things as clearly or in some cases at all for what they are.
There are times when I can remember literally not being able to focus on someone that I could see.
But the pattern recognition in my brain was overloaded at that point and it just didn't want to create.
a defined image that I could focus on,
and it was like trying to watch someone,
trying to look at someone through blurry water
that was just where they were,
not where anything else was.
So not like you're looking through a lens of blurry water.
It's just that where that person is standing is blurry water.
And so weird things can happen
when your pattern recognition is overloaded like that.
But it was a very strange experience
and happened enough times that,
I mean, in one thing or another.
It was weird.
It was very weird.
Again, I don't plan to fully understand it.
No, no, no.
I totally get it.
It's like such a great explanation, Randy.
Thank you.
And don't you think, okay, so for, you know, the civilians here running around Earth and walking
around Earth and people who don't know that there's so many ETs walking around Earth,
Don't you think that there's a possibility that even walking by you, they actually can't see it because they don't know it exists?
They don't have any pattern recognition for?
Well, that and in some cases the ability for them to project some form of illusory image over themselves can also occur.
I have a friend who sent me a photograph that was taken by a guy who was.
worked in the security room at a Las Vegas casino.
So he's sitting in front of security cameras all day long.
And he sees something on the camera one day that he quickly pulls out his phone, takes a
snapshot of before the screen that he's looking at, the security screen he's looking at goes blank.
So what he sees is he's looking at the blackjack tables and two guys come walking up to
the table who have the palest, palest white skin, large,
craniums, no hair, big eyes, not super big, but big.
So clearly two dudes who are not from here.
Like AMID.
Yeah, well, no, no.
I think these are contractors who work at Nellus probably.
And so they got drinks and cigarettes in their hands.
They sit down at the table with, you know, cocktails and a cigarette.
And then the one guy looks up at the camera, looks directly into the camera.
and then that's when the image of the camera goes out.
But just before that happened, he pulls out his phone and takes a snapshot.
And then he calls down to the pit boss and says,
hey, can you tell me about those two guys that just sat down at the blackjack table?
And he says, do you mean the two guys in suits?
And he was describing two guys in blue suits with ties drinking and smoking.
So everyone on the floor did not see them as aliens.
but apparently the camera caught them as aliens
that they apparently were also able to recognize
that they were being watched by the camera
and had the ability to shut off the camera at a glance
but this guy managed to take a snapshot
and give it to a friend of mine
and she wouldn't give me a copy of the picture
but she did show it to me
so I did see the actual snapshot
I saw what they looked like
and it was an incredible shot
and they are literally sitting there with a you know
a drink it's like got a double whiskey sour
in one hand and a cigarette in the other,
and they're there to play blackjack
after work. You know
what? I have said forever,
like 20 years, I've told my friends,
the place that, quote,
off-worlders, on-worlders, in-worlders,
can go and really
have a fun time, and it's such
a weird place that nobody
particularly even notices is
Las Vegas.
Yeah.
I mean, if you're going to,
if you're going to try your cloaking ability,
or your projection abilities, that's the place to go, right?
Yeah.
And there are some species that use a technological hologram that's like wearing, you know,
like a device or a belt or something that does it.
But, yeah, there's different options for camouflage.
Now, that being said, isn't it true, at least in my research,
that most species are, you know, the five-star thing, like humanoid, like two arms, two legs,
and ahead.
It seems like, as you so eloquently put it in one of your speeches, one of your talks,
is the universe replicate success.
And that kind of body form seems to be what the progenitors preferred is most viable most of the time.
Would you, is that true?
No, I would disagree with that a little bit.
I would say that it's incredibly common to see that form, but that the variation on still what forms
are out there are quite, quite varied, quite varied and extreme. So I would say that the universe
does repeat successful patterns. So that's one of the reasons why we see a lot of that, but it's
also something that we see more of because those are the species we're going to trade with
because we have the stuff that fits the closest. But there are other species who are very,
very different that we may not really have as many common interests for trade as we might
if we were more biologically similar.
But the universe does have a wide palette as far as what life is and what it can be
and what individual life, collective life, civilized life.
It's a really wide palette and paintbrush that the universe paints with.
But it does definitely replicate success.
But let's just say, I mean, we're really talking about more than 200,000 civilized worlds in our own galaxy just in the galaxy we're living in.
Yeah.
That's a lot of very, even if you have 30% who are, you know, sort of star-shaped humanoid or bipedal, you know, bioptical oids or whatever you want to say, that still can leave a huge percentage of things that are really different.
So, I mean, you could end up at a convention with thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of just other humanoids.
But that doesn't mean that the universe is, you know, all humanoids.
It just means that you just happen to be at a conference where they're all hanging out because they all eat most of the same food and wear the same t-shirt size.
Yeah, it is so much fun talking with you, Randy.
I just love this.
It's just so expansive.
And I really believe that Earth was set up for maximum diversity and kind of this, you know, garden.
planet and stuff. So, you know, it's just delightful. And I help the listener, I know the listeners
enjoy you as much as I do. So do you want to tell them again how to contact you, what services
you provide and, you know, the, etc.
Sure. Sure. The easiest way to do that is via my website, which is covert spacecowboy.com
or via my Facebook page, which is the Captain Randy Kramer Facebook page, which I think you can
also find searching via covert space cowboy because that's what we're using right now.
So that's the easiest way for people can get to me and can get to my calendar to sign up
for consulting appointments if they want to talk about things or have issues that they're
trying to sort out.
I do a lot of work with people who are recovering memories from military programs and stuff
like that.
Perfect.
And I, by the way, folks, have had several private readings and, you know, readings and
consulting with Randy and highly, highly recommend him.
So thank you so much, Randy, for sharing your super valuable time with us.
And I'm so happy to announce that in two weeks, Randy will return again and share some
amazing stories with us, such as his experience with other space-faring civilizations,
species that live inside our earth, and more about his personal experience with age regression
technology. And also maybe what we may look forward to expect for this year as truth
disclosure continues to roll out. So thank you to all our listeners. And until then,
onward and upward. Bye-bye.
