Cosmic Brilliance - Soldiers Jumping into ET Bodies - Enabling 22 Amazing Abilities with Capt. Randy Cramer

Episode Date: July 20, 2022

Captain Randy Cramer, hybrid Super Soldier for the US Marine Corps, Special Sections, has had over a dozen experiences running multiple-species Avatar/Drone bodies - (think Avatar movie).He describes ...the super-advanced suit tech elite soldiers wear that enables incredible feats.This back-engineered Extraterrestrial technology will be one of the last things to trickle down to the civilian sector to assist in the protection/safety of police and firemen.*What it’s like running an Avatar of your clone across thousands of miles on different planets in real-time* What it’s like jumping into an Avatar of another ET species - for real!* 22 amazing capacities that the Super Soldier's most advanced armored suits enable them to do!* Heads-Up Display (HUD) helmets enable you to see and hear beyond human capacity* Advanced hand-held weapons with bullets that turn corners*Randy shares what he has been told looks like an important event rollout; most probably within the next three months?? How to keep yourself prepared and calm.He shares afterwards; (if it happens?) we can all look forward to the rollout of positive beneficial tech solutions for our world as a future galactic civilization.https://www.CosmicBrilliance.comSupport this podcast: https://www.cosmicbrilliance.com/copy-of-donate

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:07 Marily, of course, and I'm back with part seven titled Running Avatar Bodies and Advanced Suit Tech that enables amazing abilities. My guest, once again, is Captain Randy Kramer, Super Soldier for the U.S. Marine Corps Special Sessions, who has had a dozen experiences running an avatar, many of which were biological drones of different extraterrestrial species. For example, picture having claws, a tail, infrared, an ultraviolet vision, et cetera. Kind of like what you saw in the Avatar movie. So I welcome you back, Randy. So let's start off with you defining what Avatar's drones or clones are and how you operate your biological drone. Okay?
Starting point is 00:01:00 So go ahead with that. Sure. We essentially refer to any such a pilotable drone as a pilotable drone. But, you know, because of the movie, sure, people like to call it avatar technology, that's fine, it's whatever. Civilians can use whatever terms they want, as far as I'm concerned. But we call them pilotable drones. And they can be mechanical or biological. And essentially the brain, if it's biological, would be replaced with.
Starting point is 00:01:31 a mechanical unit that sends and receives all of the information remotely to and from your brain in whatever, you know, sort of stasis unit that you're in, which could be line sitting or standing and operating the pilotable drone, which would, from a first person experience, you experience all of the sensory experiences of the pilotable drone as if it were used. So it's a pretty, I mean, for sort of being an experience where you're not really there, but you're there, it's just like you're there because you're receiving all of the information from the senses of either the mechanical or biological drone. And it's going into your brain as if it were actual sensory information that you were picking up from standing somewhere and hearing things and seeing things and smelling things. That is so cool. So in other words, if your drone got hurt or an arm caught, if you would actually feel it back where you are in your chair? I mean, yes, yeah, you would, but not as much as you would as if it was your real arm because they have the ability to turn down the pain sensors.
Starting point is 00:02:50 So you don't actually feel like your arms actually cut off. But you feel it. It's not like you don't feel anything, but it's more like getting, you know, slapped with a ruler and not having your arm really chopped off. That's good. I can see why you want to use avatars in a lot of situations. Well, there's some situations where they're just a lot safer because of the gaseous environment, gravity environments, or in some cases it's considered high risk enough
Starting point is 00:03:25 that it's worth using a drone because drones aren't cheap either. You know, so you're definitely taking chances going either way. But there are certain circumstances when there's certainly, you know, a feasible good idea. How much – do you have any idea how much drones are or to repair or anything like that? I don't know what the current going rate for like a mechanical drone body is, and I'm not sure based on what different biological basis, you know, if you're caring species or another species for a biological. drone, you know, what the actual cost of that are?
Starting point is 00:04:02 I honestly don't know. That's something I guess I would have to ask someone if I needed the information, but yeah, I have no idea what the actual, like, cost on a spreadsheet right now for that sure it is. Okay. No problem. So would you be willing to pick, like, one of the ET species drones that you had to be in, you know, in, so to speak, for a mission, and describe for us what that
Starting point is 00:04:26 species training involved before you were deployed to their planet or whatever? Like what's involved in the training? Yeah, so it was a species that was an amphiboid hybrid. So they weren't like a pure amphibian. They were kind of an insiboid mammalian hybrid. They were about nine feet tall. And so breathing like an ammonia chlorine environment with a grass. gravity that's like 2.7, so almost, you know, three gravities, which is significantly more than here.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And so they, you know, made biological bodies that were of the species that lived there. And then we have basically an obstacle course on the ship that you can change the gravity and the gravity plating, and you can change the gaseous environment. So basically we had to spend, I mean, it was probably at least a week and a half, two weeks doing obstacle course every day, every day, every day, using the drone, the pilotable drone body. Because you got to get used to a whole other biomechanical system. You know, your coordination takes a minute. And yeah, you're literally hearing with the same hearing apparatus that they are. you're seeing with the visual cortex that they are.
Starting point is 00:05:55 So, yeah, you can end up seeing and hearing things uniquely differently, and it can be kind of a, I mean, I'm not sure what I'm to call it, a kind of a tricky experience. Well, I mean, just kind of a trippy experience, you know. You're just seeing things in a very different way, and you're hearing things in a very different way, but that's just because you're hearing them the same way, the ocular or the auditory sensors, hear it.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Because you need to be able to hear and see things in a natural environment as in the natural environment you're in. So anyway, but it takes a while. A lot of obstacle course running in a new biological like pilotable drone body before you get kind of coordinated in it. And then you said, then you were sent off on your mission and, and I know you can't say details, but what was the purpose of that mission using an amphibian drone?
Starting point is 00:06:48 Was it like spa? No, no target rescue target. No, I was high value, high value target retreat. Oh, okay. Okay. So in and out quick, kind of. In and out quick to pick up someone that we wanted to keep alive. Yeah. And not have anyone notice that you weren't one of their kind, more or less? Not until the last minute when it matters, yep. Okay. So Randy shared with me earlier today some great, great news. And I wanted to share with all of you regarding something that occurred about 10 years ago for our human species.
Starting point is 00:07:31 And Randy, would you like to share that so people can give a little bit of a sigh of relief? I think you're referring to the process in which we essentially extricated all of the extraterrestrial, overlordy-type influence and became a sovereign species as far as the intergalactic community is concerned. absolutely that what you mean absolutely that's like a big deal that is a big deal yeah it is and i gotta say a lot of people in the community who i hear telling stories about what they think is going on are way behind the times on that one they're still talking you know like we're not in control of our own destiny here on this planet and that's just not the case they need to kind of like get with the time to stop fear mongering about things that don't exist anymore
Starting point is 00:08:24 That's for sure. Well, that's why we have you. So, yeah, thank you. You're welcome. You're welcome. And you guys, I don't know if you really get the impact of that, but how long do you think it's been, Randy, that Earth has been and humans have been a non-sovereign system? Oh, let's see, probably at least maybe the last, uh, 100,000 years, 150,000 years probably. I agree. So, you guys should be standing up doing a victory dance here because this is like awesome, awesome, awesome, awesome. And there's, for those of you that are, they know a little bit more about the different species here. Also, only 100, only 100 draconians are left here, which is also not many. And you guys are seeking them out as we speak, correct?
Starting point is 00:09:26 Oh, absolutely, hunting them down one at a time. There are a bunch of cry babies hiding in their little hidey holes. Spoken like a super soldier. Okay, you guys. All right, so sit back down from your victory dance. And so let's talk about these state-of-the-art super soldier suits and heads-up display helmets. Because from my understanding, the reverse engineered extraterrestrial technology, and they constantly recalibrate your health and safety needs.
Starting point is 00:09:56 can keep you strong and agile. And it was not something just thought up by humans. And pretty much, correct me if I'm wrong, Randy, but almost every advanced tech we humans have, even though we're excellent back engineers, came first from extraterrestrials. Isn't that right, more or less? Yeah, at some point, the basic engineering
Starting point is 00:10:18 and the basic technology of the tools that we have today came from some extraterrestrial origin. and also fair to say that, yeah, we've gotten very good at adapting that and coming up with our own ideas and improving on that and so forth. So we've come up with some pretty unique ideas, as it turns out, with those tools. But, yeah, the basic fundamental engineering concepts, yeah, pretty much all of it was at some point brought in from or crashed, retrieved from extraterrestrial technology. Right, Zetas and different groups. Yeah. Yeah. Even though we're kick-ass engineers and a lot of people want to trade with us because we improve things, right? Don't we? Kind of? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Well, and, you know, every once in a while, you know, we get someone smart enough that if we listen to them, you know, and we followed in their footsteps, we could sort of develop this kind of technology on our own, like Leonardo da Vinci or Nicola Tesla.
Starting point is 00:11:19 But, you know, for everyone to kind of come along, it takes a little bit of a hand, usually. That's not uncommon across the intergalactic system when you're trying to help species sort of get up to speed. Yeah, you've got to give them a little nudge, give a little hand up. Yeah, of course. So, Randy, let's do this. I compiled a list of, like, say, 22 characteristics that these nanofiber suits, can more or less, you know, they have characteristics and how they can enable certain abilities, amazing abilities for the super soldiers.
Starting point is 00:12:01 So would it work for you for me to kind of list one off and then you let me know, is that accurate and you can tell a story about it or whatever you'd like about it? Does that work for you? Yeah, sure. We can do that. Hit me. Okay. Yay.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Don't tempt me. Okay. Absorb. Okay, so these nanosuits, folks, absorb. Now, let me be clear. One of the reasons I'm having this show at this time is Randy was given permission to give the most advanced information for civilians up to this time involving the suits that these super soldiers wear as well as some weapon equipment. And the reason why we're doing this is for the possible invasion rollout, which we'll discuss at the very end of this, so that you can recognize you will be a little up to speed. You won't do anything silly or stupid.
Starting point is 00:13:00 Okay. So that's my intention for sharing this information, and I'm really happy to have Randy be able to do that. So the first quality that I was noticing is they absorb all the shock in your body. So say if you were to jump 40 feet off a cliff onto the ground, your weight is distributed throughout the whole suit, so your body feels no compression. Is that accurate? Yeah, like there's essentially a kind of compression break in the boots
Starting point is 00:13:31 so that if you are, like, jumping down a bit of a distance, the little compression break extends out of the bottom of your boot so that when you come down it, there's all this hydraulic sort of impact, you know, sharing. There's a gel that's inside the liner of the suit that it's, if you were to hold it in your hand, like a chunk of it, like a 12 inch by 12 inch chunk of it in your hand, it would feel and have the consistency, a lot of whale blubber. So it's soft-ish. It's also really, you know, dense and really solid and not at all easy, you know, to cut or, you know, do any kind of
Starting point is 00:14:14 damage to whatsoever, but the ability for the shock waves of anything that hits it to be absorbed into that gel, the just amount of force absorption that that consistency of that gel has is ridiculous. So that you can take direct hits from bullets and be next to explosions and things that you won't even feel because the distribution of the force through that gel is uncanny. It's pretty uncanny. I kind of wish I knew more about exactly how it was made. But it's some pretty incredible stuff. Do you know who we got it from at all?
Starting point is 00:14:54 You know, again, I can't say that that's something we got from someone or based on biochemical technology that we maybe got a really, really long time ago in our guys run with. So like I said, there's some basic fundamental technologies that came. from somewhere else, but some things, you know, were just science and enough, you know, we run with enough science long enough for a few decades and we start getting creative with that and coming up with ideas. Right, I agree. And using special alloys and stuff and who knows, right? So it's also... Yeah, what we're finding and what mixed metals and mixed compounds can do are just a real incredible array of properties. So you can kind of use a material that has to properties of just about whatever you need it for when you're constructing ships and vehicles
Starting point is 00:15:49 and battlesuits and all kinds of stuff so so cool so as you said then i i assume it's bulletproof and can also absorb every bullet that comes to you right so like what happened pretty much up to what point um so there's some math involved on what hardness of a tip that you would need going at what velocity based on what thickness of armor plating and gel thickness that you have in the suit for it to penetrate. Suffice it to say there are limits to those, you know, parameters of the quality of the materials and their tolerances, but you've gotten better and better and better at that. So whatever it is, it would have to be something pretty big, pretty sharp, pretty hard, and pretty fast, pretty heavy.
Starting point is 00:16:43 Okay. Okay. Good to know. I mean, you could take, you could, you could, you could take a near point blank shot from a 50 caliber anti-material rifle with a stable round, and it would, yeah, it would not penetrate the armor and gel. It would bounce in a little, you barely feel it. You barely feel it. Wow. And it's shock proof, more or less, too, right? Yeah. That's, that's kind of the miracle property of it is whatever force, you know, shockwave or force wave is moving towards you, whether it becomes a physical contact of, you know, a bullet or a piece of shrapnel or something, or whether it's just the force of the wave of a shock wave moving from an explosion, yeah, that gel has the ability
Starting point is 00:17:25 to distribute that force throughout the gel in the suit in such a way that it takes a lot of force for you to feel it. It absorbs so much of the force, again. up to a certain number of Newton's, but it's a lot. I've stood next to, like, I've stood within, you know, less than 10 feet from, you know, what I would call the equivalent of an artillery shell explosion and, you know, barely, barely noticed it. Oh, my God. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:59 That's amazing. Yeah, it's pretty incredible. It's pretty incredible. Yeah. Now, it's also electromagnetic proof to an extent. Is that correct? well some of them do have a design that sends an electromagnetic pulse field through the armor itself which then has the ability to deflect some plasma balls so basically a plasma rifle takes a little
Starting point is 00:18:29 ball of plasma that it surrounds an electromagnetic field that this little sphere injects this plasma superheats it and then shoots it out wicked fast on a on like an electromagnetic rail gun. And so that plasma ball has to stay in that magnetic field, which has a certain lifespan of a certain fraction of a second. And when it hits, when that field comes into contact with the field on their suit, there is a really good chance that it's going to bounce off that the fields, will essentially be active if they're polarized and it will bounce away. Not 100%, but they're pretty good.
Starting point is 00:19:16 How many of the quote, I don't like using this term, the enemies or the opposite ETs that are not pro us, also have the same ability as that on their equipment? You know, it depends on a lot of things, just because some species have a technology doesn't mean that they've applied it very well. That's not an interesting situation where not every species applies every technology because necessity is the mother of invention. And if someone hasn't come along in such a way that it's been a requirement for them to
Starting point is 00:19:53 implement that technology, then they don't necessarily do it. They may have it. They don't necessarily implement it. We're a little on the, I don't necessarily want to say paranoid, but a little bit of on the paranoid side so that we're always thinking of, you know, well, what if this happens and what if that happens? I don't know if this happens or what that happens, which is, you know, just smart, tactical thinking.
Starting point is 00:20:12 So we plan ahead for a lot of what-ifs. There are some species that don't plan for what-if. Something would actually have to come up and they'll go, oh, that's a thing now. We need to maybe prepare or adapt for that. So it really depends on what they, at what level they feel like they need to invest in soldiering technology, you know, into security forces versus, you know, actual soldiers and how they want to outfit them or what they minimally want to outfit, you know,
Starting point is 00:20:39 non-military personnel, if that's who you're running into. So there's a lot of variables there. But I would say that we're running into a lot of, a lot more species who really don't have the grasp on the tech that we do. And some species who've been around for a long time have a better grasp on it. But keep in mind, you know, we live in a galaxy where there are literally tens of thousands of civilized worlds who have come into the intergalactic community just this last century. Think about that for a minute. Like evolving species come into the intergalactic community all the time.
Starting point is 00:21:22 So there are lots of young we just got here. We're just in the intergalactic community. This is a new thing to us. Like there's a lot of species that come into that are at that level. So, you know, as far as, you know, the new kids coming in, we're doing really well. And we make most of them, you know, look like they're not getting their shit together at all. But there's some species who've been around longer who have some really good tools. But again, we're learning and adapting quickly against, again, enemies and opponents that have way, you know, longer times to figure some of the stuff.
Starting point is 00:21:58 stuff out. We're learning. We're learning very quickly. Every time we come up against something new, you know, we come up with a whole new redesign program to make something that can kick the crap out of it. Humans are incredibly adaptable and incredibly creative and engineering, so that's really good to know. Yeah, very, very, very. Yeah. In fact, more, again, as I've said before, more so than a lot of other species. So this is where it's kind of paying off for us. And whether everyone in the world likes it or not, our destiny is as one of the smartest. cleverest, most dangerous warrior species to ever roam the galaxy. So we better do it right so that we're not assholes about it.
Starting point is 00:22:38 And that you're not looked at. And I imagine that's why they send in super soldiers because they wanted less people, low visual, you know, not like overkill, destroy everything, and you get in and out you're very efficient. And therefore you have a much better reputation among the galactic community than barbaric, correct?
Starting point is 00:23:02 Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's an old saying, you know, sort of about the military, about the difference between a scalpel and a broadsword. And this is definitely, you know, when you're at a level where people are really precise about their math and their science and their engineering,
Starting point is 00:23:18 they're pretty precise about their tactics too. And so, yeah, if we didn't demonstrate that we were willing to be incredibly efficient with the numbers and the forces that we have, then we would be looked at as just being just barbarian hordes running across, you know, different planetary planes, which is not what we're doing at all. The individual soldier and how they're outfitted and trained and equipped, and a small group of them can do tremendous amount of damage, tremendous amount of damage.
Starting point is 00:23:49 I mean, when we were doing high-value target rescues and terminations, I mean, oh, my goodness, we would sometimes just mow through dozens or hundreds of enemy combatants, you know, on the way to, you know, or from, just hundreds. And I'm talking about, you know, a dozen or 16 guys, you know, men and women, really, sorry. I mean, I'm talking about, you know, about a dozen, you know, soldiers mowing down, you know, hundreds of enemy combatants. That's really, really efficient. Yeah. And it does, and it does help you. And it does.
Starting point is 00:24:24 It does help. And all that. Absolutely. It lesses collateral damage, and it does enhance our reputation as being a scalpel and not a broadsword. Absolutely. Yeah, well said. Okay, so let's give people an idea of what it's like to put one of those, you know, nano helmets on with a heads-up display where you have all this visual information,
Starting point is 00:24:49 which would be just, like, incredibly overwhelming to me. So can you describe that? Plus, you have an ear butt or whatever it's called, you know, an ear thing, right, where you're hearing your command at the same time, right? Right. Absolutely. Yeah, you've definitely got an earpiece in that you're hearing orders and instructions from command officers at all times. But the heads-up display is giving you a lot of information. So any soldier that is a friendly has a...
Starting point is 00:25:23 ID marker so that they come up as a color depending on the heads-up display so that you know that they're a friendly and You're looking at some things that are outside the visible light spectrum so some infrared some ultraviolet some suits have a Basically a sonar device so that's also sending out a sound a sound a soundar echo that's retrieving sonar information echolocation information that then also is overlaying that over the heads up display it has a object identifier so it can identify enemy combatants enemy vehicles some of them have high velocity projectile detectors so that you can actually see a bullet coming at you from a very long distance very fast because it shows up as sort of a lit up tracer so you can see incoming
Starting point is 00:26:25 projectiles before you could actually visually see them. Obviously, it doesn't matter what time it is day or night. You know, you can see just fine. Good suits have also a flash protector. So you're not actually looking with your eyes. You're looking, you know, at a screen and a heads-up display so that if there was a bright flash or a flash bang or anything that would otherwise be blinding, it doesn't actually affect your eyes.
Starting point is 00:26:52 Yeah. There's a ton of information. that's being provided all the time. External temperature and pressure, wind speed. Yeah. All kinds of stuff is being displayed there, for sure. And then you're listening at the same time. Yeah, and you're listening to a, right, to a platoon officer
Starting point is 00:27:17 that is basically giving you general instructions, you know, like move, you know, target, you know, enemy combatants, you know, at this many degrees to your left or right this far away from you, engage this way, move, you know, to this location, you know, move to this location via this, you know, waypoint. Yeah, they're giving you the instructions and you're essentially carrying them out, but they're general instructions. You know, they could go here, do this, shoot that, and then you're doing all the actual work. But the instructions are very general. Okay, so, wow, that's amazing.
Starting point is 00:27:57 So is it more or less impossible if you're wearing one of these super advanced suits for anyone to sneak up on you? Is that possible because there's so much information? Absolutely impossible. One of the things on the heads up display is a little dial. It's like a 360 round dial that you see, and it has a little flashy points around it that will flash and light up depending on something that's not a friendly approach as you will. you how far they are and how many of them there are. So, yeah, nothing can sneak up on you, even if it's invisible to sonar and so forth
Starting point is 00:28:29 to detect it. So it's impossible to sneak up on you. Wow. I can only imagine how much one of these suits costs. Now, I know they used to have to make them completely, completely to correspond to the individual soldier's bio, you know, signature and its particular needs, are And are they still doing that or are they trying to unisex it a little bit more? Well, the suit that we're kind of talking about is the highest sort of level of technology is called a nanosuit.
Starting point is 00:29:03 They still have to be custom fit. They still have to be custom-made custom fit to the soldier's exact specification. They take a mold actually off of the soldier that then, you know, they build around that. So there's literally a mold of you inside the suit. The older suits are components that can be sort of general sizes that then can adjust a little bit. So the older suits, which are probably the ones that they're going to introduce to the Army infantry, civilian infantry and so forth. Well, we'll just call it the regular branches of the military.
Starting point is 00:29:46 It will probably be these sort of older clunkier suits that are, you don't have to actually can fit every single one. We'll see, I get told some possibilities and likelihoods of how this is all going to sort out. If what happens is what I'm being told, most of the larger sort of infantry
Starting point is 00:30:10 divisions when they get these battlesuits will get the clunkier older ones and some of the special forces teams will get some of the newer ones. And so we'll see some tiny use of the newer ones. fancy ones and probably a more broad general use of the older style. That makes sense.
Starting point is 00:30:28 And then eventually down to the civilians probably first in the police force for protection and the fire department to avoid burns and things like that, most likely. Well, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But there's actually another grade of suit, which they call the light body armor suit. And it actually is much more flexible. much easier to just sort of like you kind of put it on it sits a lot and looks like a wet suit like a scuba diving suit but it's made of a harder, stiffer material that's actually still pretty flexible. I would say that for because we used those for what we consider it to be light duty,
Starting point is 00:31:11 meaning situations when we weren't expected to undergo, you know, heavy fire or require the return of heavy fire power. So sometimes stealthier missions or something's required to move a little lighter. You require less body armor. There's a light body armor suit. I would think that that technology is what civilians are going to see. Because that's super easy to provide protection that basically as far as civilian guns, knives, explosives, and so forth, yeah, you're going to be pretty invulnerable to anything that civilians are going to have. grade technology might hurt you or probably could hurt you or will hurt you. But, you know,
Starting point is 00:31:55 civilian level sort of sticks in the stones and stabby things and guns would be pretty ineffective against that style. So that's probably what law enforcement interventionists and so forth will get P&P's firemen. Oh, yeah. Firemen will probably get a special environment suit because they're going to need a breathing apparatus and everything, but they'll just get a super easy-peasy, fireproof environment suit that will enable them to walk into incredibly hot flames and not give a crap. Yeah. Okay. That's good to know, you know, all this projections of ideas and especially rolling down to the civilians eventually, right?
Starting point is 00:32:33 At some point, it's the goal. Yeah. Yeah. And also, listeners out there, this is like the MianoSuit does everything for you. I mean, it's amazing. And I'm going to shoot through this a little bit. where, and you correct me, Randy, if I'm off base. So folks, it regulates the individual's fluid excrement, sweat, oxygen intake, body temperature, blood pressure at all times.
Starting point is 00:32:58 It can tighten and absorb and make sure that you don't fall at all, you know, even on uneven ground. And it can also give you, it contains a bunch of pharmaceuticals. It can automatically know what you need. It has inbuilt tourniquet. If you lose an arm, it can give you the drugs to, you know, anti-quagulates or stop bleeding. And one of the most fascinating things in all of this is, Randy, you are sharing with me that when you have to really go for it,
Starting point is 00:33:39 you know, get your adrenaline and you're facing some really, really dangerous enemy. and it's like freaking you can give yourself an injection of this like kind of performance cocktail and well you don't give yourself the injection someone else is in control of that button never never the soldier themselves is in control of that button but someone else when they decide they need the boost and it pushes the button and everybody gets a boost good idea yeah it would be bad if yeah it would be bad if individual soldiers were in control of that that would not be good Yeah, exactly. So when you say that happens, does that happen electronically or does your teammate do it or how does that happen? Oh, no, that's the platoon officer makes the decision and pushes a button.
Starting point is 00:34:29 Okay. Yeah. But I want you to share with people because this is where it gets into one of our favorite subjects, which is the holographic med beds that we've already discussed. So the fallout from these really heavy-duty drugs, performance drugs, that makes you do your job, is what? Basically liver failure, like liver failure. So you get a daily blood test, and when your liver starts to show that it's going to fail, then you have to go in for a liver reconditioning and they clean out your liver and make it all nice and pink and fresh and new again. And how long does that take on the bed? Oh, really like an hour maybe at the most usually.
Starting point is 00:35:14 Yeah, maybe an hour. Okay, guys, hope you hear that. So you basically got a regenerated liver. Then you hang out to make sure you're good and then you're all fighting again. Yeah, and then it's right. Everything is about getting you repaired and back out there so that you're not costing money. Yeah. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:35:35 So, okay, share with people. in those suits how fast you can run on terrain? Well, it really depends on gravity, because gravity depends on how big of a stride you can take and how big of a stride you can take really is what, you know, depends on how fast you can go. But I'd say like 1G, you know, they can definitely go between 25, 35. Some of them might be able to go almost 40 miles an hour.
Starting point is 00:36:07 So folks, this means that if this event happens, one of the reasons you want to stay indoors is a lot of beings, both offworld and super soldiers, can be run in like, you know, and you don't want to get their way, right? Oh, yeah. Yeah, the suits weigh quite a amount. So, you know, you're adding, in some cases, more than a couple hundred pounds to your whatever weight. you are when you're running down the road. So that's a lot of mass moving very, very quickly. If someone got run over, they'd get run over by a motorcycle. It would suck.
Starting point is 00:36:51 What about your jumping ability? I've heard that you can kind of like jump 50 feet, do a backslip, and that the suit calibrates, kind of like we talked about, where it will land you on your feet like a cat, you know? Is that? Yeah. Is that absolutely? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:10 Yeah, the newer suits actually when you jump, the suit takes control of the lakes. So that you jump exactly right and you land exactly right. So there's for just that instant of time when you go into a jumping position, the suit knows exactly how to do it mechanically correct. And then basically does the jump for you and also does the landing for you. you so you stick the landing. Think of it like automatic parking software but for jumping. Oh my God. You guys, you know, once you get used to this, you must have a blast training in it, kind of. They're fun. I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to lie, they're fun.
Starting point is 00:37:55 Yeah, exactly. Okay. So, you know, there's so many things that our audience gets an idea of the amazing health and safety precautions and abilities that a suit can help, especially if it's a state-of-the-art one. Now, you did mention I also want people to be aware of the two main side-armed, so-to-speak weapons that super soldiers will be using, and they might see in the streets down the line if this event occurs. And those two major ones are what? Plasma rifles and rail guns. So a railgun is going to appear and behave the most like a regular, you know, combustion-powered rifle. The difference is it's not going to go bang and it's not going to kick. But it fires out a metal projectile down a barrel, magnetically propelled projectile,
Starting point is 00:38:49 down a metal barrel, much like a regular rifle does. Again, no kick, no explosion. So there's less heat, less combustion. can shoot them a lot more faster before they start to overheat. You have to let them cool down. Plasma rifles essentially take a superheated plasma, injected into a little ball electromagnetic field with a little sphere, and then it shoots that down in an electromagnetic rail like a rail gun
Starting point is 00:39:21 and fires out the end of the barrel. and so then you have this little ball of super, super hot plasma. It's several thousand degrees. I mean, I think the hot, the super, super hot ones now are almost 5,000 degrees. It's ridiculously hot. And shoots super, super fast. It's thousands of feet per second. And it essentially burns a hot, hot hole through anything.
Starting point is 00:39:47 So either one of those things is also not something you want to get on the other end of. Rail guns have an incredible range, way longer range than a chemically propelled projectile. So another reason why I don't think they're going to want to use rail guns because they're going to be a lot of civilian environments. And to be honest, railgun bullets would just fly incredible distances. Plasma rifles have a shorter range because the electromagnetic ball that's containing, the plasma has essentially a lifespan that's a very short amount of time, maybe a couple of seconds. And then it dissipates.
Starting point is 00:40:22 So as far as that ball of plasma can travel in that amount of time before the electromagnetic field dissipates is your range. So it's safer, to be honest with you, to shoot plasma rifles in a civilian environment than it is railguns. Way safer. And the plasma rifles will literally burn a hole in this species that we're talking about. Oh, yeah, right through that. It'll melt a hole right through the exoskeleton. Keep in mind. It's about 5,000 degrees, but it's also moving at force.
Starting point is 00:40:57 It's moving at speed. So you get all the physics involved there. Force equals math time velocity squared. That's a factor is how that hot ball of plasma hits the target. And then the 5,000 degree temperature, which it melts everything in front of it. So it melts whatever it touches, but it's being pushed by a tremendous amount of force. so it burrowed through, you know, flesh, bone, exoskeleton, whatever, and just it melts and incinerates, you know, on the way through.
Starting point is 00:41:28 It's a really devastating weapon. It just rips up burning hot holes through just about everything. Yikes. And the real guns go, how far? Just so people know. Thousands of yards. Thousands of yards. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:42 Okay, people. So listen to that. Yeah, thousands of yards. In case something goes down, don't think like, oh, I'm in the next block, so I'm going to peek around. the corner and be curious and check everything out, you know. You don't want to do that, right? Hunker down.
Starting point is 00:41:56 Hunker down. I just after remember, yeah, when people were on the pier during Hurricane Sandy and the then of the time New Jersey Governor Chris Christie had to go on TV and say, get off the damn pier. So at some point, yeah, don't go, like, go and watch and give them a hug. It's like, get out of there. That's not what you want to do. But invariably, there will be some.
Starting point is 00:42:20 dumb people who will do that and I just want to encourage people to not be one of those people. Yeah. Well, we're going to talk about that shortly like exactly kind of, you know, what to recommend to people so they can stay relaxed and that after we get through this next section, it's going to be uphill. I just know, I mean, there's a lot of good things to look forward to after this. So they tell me. Yeah, there's also something like many.
Starting point is 00:42:50 of the species that we're dealing with that aren't pro, some have more of their exoskeleton on their front side or their backside. Isn't there something like, I can't remember the name explosive bullets or something that you can explode it in front of them or behind them
Starting point is 00:43:08 or something? Yeah, yeah. I mean, there's programmable, I mean, so there's these little, basically it's an arm-mounted missile launcher that shoots out a little tiny missile that's, you know, maybe three and a half, four inches long and about a half an inch in diameter. So it's pretty small, but you can pack a lot of them, you know, sort of into a magazine.
Starting point is 00:43:36 And they're completely programmable. So there's a little touchscreen that you have on your wrist on the inside of your left wrist. Or if you're left hand, I get to be on the inside of your right wrist. but since I'm right-handed, it's on the left on my suit, that you can program those missiles where you want them to explode. So they will automatically, you can paint a target, meaning your targeting system will touch the target,
Starting point is 00:44:04 a laser will touch the target. The target will be painted. It will be marked. So it can run around, and it's now, it doesn't matter. The computers, targeting has its, you know, in its site that cannot disappear, cannot hide. And then you can tell that missile where you want it to blow up. If you want it to blow up in front of it, on the side of it, or behind it.
Starting point is 00:44:22 And it will literally do a little curve right around their head to the backside. And just as it comes around to the backside, it'll detonate and make sure it blows up the backside of their head instead of the front. So, yeah, you have the ability to choose with that program ability exactly where you want it. And when it blows up, it's shooting off like a bunch of teeny little pieces of shrapnel, too. So it's going off like a little tiny fragmentation grenade when it goes off. So it blows up and it shreds and sends out little sharp, jagged pieces of metal. And it's, oh, yeah, it's mean, mean, nasty little tool and does a lot of damage. And how far is that spread?
Starting point is 00:45:05 Yeah. You consider the blast radius? Yeah, you consider the effective blast radius for a kill shot to be within about four feet. Okay. If it's farther than that, you'll, you'll main, there's more of a chance you'll maim them and a chance that you won't kill them as you get farther away from four feet, but your, your kill zone is like about a four foot radius. Okay.
Starting point is 00:45:30 It sounds similar to what are they called Super Bullets also that you can program, correct? Yeah. I mean, way more advanced, but yeah. Okay. Are you, do you guys have, well, I guess it's just going to be spontaneous. clearance to use that during this next episode? You know, like super bullets and things like that, or it's just you got to use whatever you need them. Yeah, that's a good question. And that's going to be based on which deployable units they deploy. So regular, you know, Army,
Starting point is 00:46:07 regular Marine Corps, regular Navy, regular Air Force will probably not have those tools right away, probably, but we'll probably see some other units that will have them first, but then they'll want to get them spread out throughout the system pretty quickly. But that's how it has been indicated to me it's most likely to sort of rule. But we'll see. So decisions will always come at the last minute and we'll really see what happens, you know, at the last minute. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:35 So folks, one of the good news about this is, Randy, you can quickly mention that, is there's a cooperative effort with all the different military teams in this next event, correct? Is that correct, Randy? Yeah, yeah, at some point. Control why. Yeah, at some point we anticipate probably as with this new O-NIDNI reports that's coming out, that either write about the same time or probably the same report, but a classified version will be sent out.
Starting point is 00:47:11 to military commanders so that they can be briefed. So they'll have more information than what the civilian apparatus will have. But they'll probably most likely get a briefing packet when that happens. So they'll at least have a heads up on what's coming. Okay. All righty. Well, I like the cooperation that's coming together. I think that that is awesome.
Starting point is 00:47:34 So these super bullets, by the way, you can program them for targets DNA, can't you? There are some that are programmable that do that, that have a DNA targeting system in them. Yeah, there are some that do. So would that be applicable when you're working with a foreign species, say like a reptilian species or insectoid species, can you actually set the super bullet to go upstairs and around a corner and just hit those species rather than humans? So in theory, what you're describing is possible. What you're still dealing with then is the blast radius when the little missile explodes. And, you know, if you're talking about a building, what could go through walls, floors, ceiling, et cetera, or not.
Starting point is 00:48:34 And whether that would endanger anybody else in the building or not is based on a lot of variables. but theoretically what you're describing could happen. But there's a lot of variables there whether or not the non-repidians or the humanoids or the terrans in that situation would be not injured. You take a good shot at it. I'd give somebody maybe some good odds,
Starting point is 00:48:57 you know, of low collateral damage on that one, but, you know, shit happens when you're in close quarters. Yeah. Okay, so I want you to share with people what you feel is there need to know, and as much as you're comfortable sharing, about what most likely could be coming down in the next few months.
Starting point is 00:49:23 Yeah, so in December of 2019, our intelligence officers outline the, what we're looking at is sort of the five-stage scenario that approaches to the invasion scenario. which is stage four of that scenario, which stage one would be the pandemic stage, stage two, the civil disruption phase, stage three, the World War III phase, phase four, the alien invasion phase, phase, phase five is the reconstruction phase. So there's an end to all of that, to be clear. Well, we've done one and two, and we've been on the precipice of three for some time,
Starting point is 00:50:01 and I don't, it's not the kind of thing I want to call early, but I kind of think that we're probably looks like we started World War III yesterday with Israel and Palestine going to war. So that's going to draw everybody else in in a very short time. So I think we just crossed the threshold and we're entering the World War III phase now. Okay. And so at some point after that, we will enter the stage four, the invasion phase. Really, the best advice I can give people is, number one, don't panic. That's obviously going to be an inclination.
Starting point is 00:50:35 Don't panic. to stay calm and stay out of the way. That's really the smartest thing that anybody can do right now is just not get, you know, involved in any of the hot activities in any hot places and hunker down and be nice to your friends and your family and your neighbors, especially your neighbors, and, you know, work together because we're all going to be in this together and we shouldn't be fighting with each other right now. We're going to be in it together in a minute.
Starting point is 00:51:07 So we should all be cooperating, helping each other out. So don't panic and just know that it's not going to last forever. So it's a little bit of an endurance test, and we all get to kind of just endure something for a year or two, let's hope, and then it'll all be passed. So we've already gotten our good experience in enduring the pandemic phase. in the civil disruption phase, so now we can get ready to endure the invasion phase and we'll be okay. Just don't panic. Be nice to each other.
Starting point is 00:51:43 Right. And so the estimation of the shortest time would be that it would be an initial invasion, mostly ships showing up, super soldiers and other species popping out, and especially places over major cities. like beaches and beaches and things where they can land. But it's really important to know people that Randy, when we were discussing earlier, said they're not probably going to be breaking down your homes because you as humans are not their targets. Can you mention that, Randy? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:23 I would say that it's an incredibly low probability of any kind of home invasions because let's just be honest. for the people who are listening to my voice, if you're a regular Jane or Joe citizen and you're not involved in military intelligence activities, your house does not tactically matter. So you don't tactically matter, and therefore you're not a tactical target. So I seriously doubt there's going to be home invasions
Starting point is 00:52:51 because, quite honestly, none of the people who live in the homes that could be invaded matter tactically or strategically to their goals. Right. So in this case, you should feel super good that you don't matter about something because in this case it's saving your life because yeah so you can just say yeah I don't matter so I'm not going to eat by a bug because if you mattered then you'd be on their list and that's not so in this cases it's good to just not matter
Starting point is 00:53:17 about it so tactically you know civilians just are not on their list they don't matter they're not strategically tactically important in any way shape or form it's really going to be this exotic species and it's going to be a bunch of super soldiers and military who are dealing with each other. And our job is to stay out of the way. Yeah, basically, I mean, you know, like I said, don't be one of the stupid people that wants to stand on the pair in a hurricane. So don't do it.
Starting point is 00:53:48 Stay home. Don't answer the doorbell. Don't answer the doorbell. Yeah. Don't answer it. Just hunker down, pretend like you're on vacation. Yep. and people will be notified with updates on TV, is that correct?
Starting point is 00:54:05 Oh, of course. Yeah, everyone will get, I mean, radio, television, there will be plenty of updates, you know, as we move along. So, yeah. And when people first, these are all the things in people's heads, so I'm just addressing it. Oh, yeah, please. So when people first see something coming out of the sky and ships and creatures and all that kind of thing, close your curtains, you know, lock the doors, relax, and call all your friends and family and tell them to get inside too, you know, do that.
Starting point is 00:54:37 So go ahead and call everybody that you think needs to tell them to get indoors. If you see it first, you know, start sending up text messages. Right. And pass. Everybody, everybody, I've told everyone the minute that I know something for sure, I will send out the biggest group text to everybody, you know, on my list and let them know that they need to go, you know, get cases of bugs spray. Which also
Starting point is 00:54:59 bugs spray. That was a hint, folks. That's a code word. I don't actually encourage that. I don't encourage it because we're also very allergic to toxic bug sprays so they can damage us too. I don't recommend them. However, flamethrowers are legal in all 50 states and only
Starting point is 00:55:17 regulated in two. So if you don't live in California or Maryland, you can own a flamethrower and it's not even considered a firearm or a weapon. You can just know, a flamethrower that shoots napalm 45 feet for about $1,000 and if you want to shoot 114 feet, it's about $3,000. Wow. Okay, you bad boy.
Starting point is 00:55:36 Get online. Oh, I absolutely want to encourage flamethrowers right now. I'm encouraging flamethrowers. Oh, you do? Okay. Oh, I am. I'm encouraging, flame throwers. Everything's allergic to fire.
Starting point is 00:55:48 Everything's allergic to fire. You might want to have a backup flamethrower. Okay. Well, especially if you're in the middle of city, or something, yeah. I was just saying. And look, let me be perfectly clear. Anyone who uses a flamethrower irresponsibly deserves to be arrested and locked up behind bars,
Starting point is 00:56:06 but if there's an invasion and you got a flamethrower, you're going to be happy. You've got a flamethrower, so I'm saying. Okay. And to be on your email list, give them your contact. Oh, sure. My website is covert spacecowboy.com. and contact information, links to my email, sign-ups for my psionics class, all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:56:31 All the updates are on my website. Okay. And so, folks, just a brief summation. We're going to get through this. I think that if your kids are away from your home, you know, get them home within a couple of hours. Spread the words. Stay relaxed.
Starting point is 00:56:53 I'm not attached to this happening and I'm hoping it doesn't, but by you being notified ahead of time, you won't go into quite so much amygdala shock and you'll be able to have some extra water and food, which most of you can afford it should have anyway. And then just, you know, hunker down, kind of like we've been doing, stay positive because the results and the strategies and the multiple strategies that are going to come from this will end up. very likely start us on a new projection where we have wanted for a long, long, long time. And so even if the invasion, I know that when Randy first told me, I was thinking, oh, is it going to last like three days? And he goes, Natalie, he says, if you're going to liberate a planet, 1.5 to 2.5 years is not that long deal. Yes, not.
Starting point is 00:57:49 Come on. So it could look like, you know, an initial invasion, and then it could like different services of which you'll be warned about and you can still be able to go outside and do your shopping at appropriate times and things like that. So you're all struck, right, Randy? Is that kind of yellow? Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:58:10 Yeah, absolutely. I mean, attacks will come in waves and they won't be constant because most militaries can't afford, you know, to sort of wage constant wave attacks for very long. So they have to sort of be able to have fallback points and regroup and send another wave in and so forth. So, you know, there's absolutely a process to that in which, you know, people will have their opportunities to get to the store by toilet paper. The goal is not to have the supply line. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:45 Yeah, right. Exactly. The goal is not to shut down the supply lines. There will be some interruptions. There will be some places that may be out of things for a minute. But don't panic and think that, you know, no stores are ever going to get stuff on the shelves again because that won't happen. It may happen for a minute, but, you know, give it a minute and you'll get stuff back. Well, I tell you guys, most people don't have a clue of what you, your team, and others like you have done for freeing the earth.
Starting point is 00:59:19 and will continue to do in the future by, you know, keeping this sector of faith free from any, shall we say, anti-human beings. Because the majority out there, as was stated earlier and earlier shows, we are in streets with and to get along fine, correct? Exactly. We want to trade stuff with most people, so, you know. Yeah. All right. So, um, Thanks so much, Randy, and I will certainly have you back in the future because your information is invaluable to us here on Earth. And kudos again to you and your team. Thank you for your – I know you're very, very busy, and you will be called upon for some major consults with some heavy heaters. And I feel very fortunate that we've had the privilege to have you and learn from your expertise.
Starting point is 01:00:16 Oh, my pleasure. Thanks for having me. Thank you very much. My pleasure. Glad I can help. Yep. And folks, in two weeks we will have John Richards, who's the wife of one of the first generation soldiers, Captain Mark Richards, who will speak about the very first interstellar treaty conventions that took place way back in 1961 in England and 1971 in Persepolis and the multiple extraterrestrial species and sentient earth, water, and land species that attended. It should be lots of fun, insightful, and mind-opening. So relax. We're going to get through this together. We're going to do this. So thank you for listening. Until then, onward and upward.

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