Knowledge Fight - #332: Anunnaki Stasis and Emerald Treaties
Episode Date: August 14, 2019Today, Dan and Jordan take a little adventure into Project Camelot land to discuss an interview Sweary Kerry did with a woman who claims to be both Anunnaki and Martian royalty. She also has some inte...resting ideas about history and religion that are completely foreign, but also strangely familiar.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody! Dan here with a little apology slash clarification for y'all. I know in the
intro to Monday's episode I promised that we were going to cover Alex's response to the news
about Jeffrey Epstein's death on the Wednesday show, but you know what they say about plans,
the best laid ones, mice men, all that good stuff. We ran into a little bit of a barrier
in terms of following through on that plan. I mentioned that on Saturday Alex released a
two minute video with his immediate response, which was actually just a one minute of him
rambling in an airport with a ton of nervous looking people behind him, and then one minute of
commercials. It turns out that Alex was in that airport because he was going on vacation,
and it turns out he's not going to be back until Friday, August 16th. He had Tom Pappert,
that boring guy who owns a station that still broadcasts Alex's show. He had him hosting
on the Sunday show this week, and Alex called in to ride shotgun, as he likes to put it.
The stuff about Epstein was very boring and predictable, and you know, it's just that the
deep state killed him because they knew they couldn't use him to attack Trump, that sort of thing.
But honestly, that wasn't most of what the episode covered. It seemed to me that Alex was far more
interested in complaining about his vacation. According to Alex, he ran into some people in
a pool who he decided were lawyers because they had what he describes as bike rider bodies.
There's no real explanation about why having a bike rider body means that you're a lawyer,
but somehow Alex is confident about his leap in logic. Anyway, these alleged lawyers harass
Alex in this pool because the left is so evil that they can't even allow him to enjoy his vacation.
And then I'm here at the hotel in five white yuppies, ruling class type.
You know, they all had their bicyclist bodies. I'm not saying that's a bad body type to have,
but they all had that trimmed professional look. Well, it's time for war, man. So they're gonna
come up to somebody with their 11-year-old girl and say, I hope you kill yourself.
The other woman says, I want you to die with their faces twisted in hate and the men's
fistballed and breathing heavy. And you know, I'm a man, but I know they're full of it. I've
learned about the left. So I started laughing at him saying, Hey, leave us alone. I don't want to
hear it. You're standing in front of a child. Oh, I noticed you left love to abort babies. So no
wonder you want me to kill you. You love death. And then, oh, one of the women goes, you're the one
that killed those children in the shootings. I mean, it was incredible. This is the stuff that went on.
Now, leaving aside how this absolutely didn't happen, and leaving aside how badly Alex wants
to be the victim in all these stories that he tells, and leaving aside how it's super suspicious
that Alex goes on a week-long vacation right after doing a huge save info wars money bomb,
what I want to focus on is how the pool is the most dangerous place for Alex to be.
We all know he was accosted by globalists in that hot tub a while back. He had some globalists
mess with him while he was lounging in the hot springs at Barton Barton Springs, I believe.
Alex can't manage to get into the water without some minion of the New World Order ruining his
good time. He should have learned his lesson. Stay out of the water, Alex. That's where the
globalists come for you. Anyway, what I listened to, there wasn't an episode there to go over.
And so today, what I'm going to do and I hope you'll enjoy is I'm going to present to you a
wacky Wednesday episode that Jordan and I recorded before he took off for his vacation. Now I ask
you this, is it a conspiracy that Alex and Jordan went on vacation at the same time? It's definitely
probably possibly a conspiracy. And please have a field day speculating about it. Since Alex has
announced that he won't be back until Friday, I want to just let you all know that we're not
going to have an episode on Friday this week due to just the difficulties of trying to pull it off
and farm content to go over from, like, I don't know, he's probably going to have Robert Barnes
hosting, have his lawyer host for the week. And I'm not in to listen to hours of Barnes talk.
So we're just going to go ahead and take that day off. But we'll be back next week with coverage
of everything that merits discussion. But I appreciate you all sticking around and having
a good time. But for now, please enjoy this wacky Wednesday adventure. And we will see you soon.
I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys knowledge
love you
Hey everybody, welcome back to Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan. I'm Jordan. We're a couple dudes like to
sit around, drink novelty beverages and talk a little bit about Alex Jones. Indeed we are Dan.
What up? Dan? What up? Was there a band when you were in high school that was like the local cool
band? Yeah. Like did you ever go to those like open mics for bands and there would be a bunch of
two terrible bands and then there'd be the one band that the local people all thought was great?
It's hard for me to say that about high school time because I might have been a little disconnected.
There might have been some like high school bands that I knew of that were cool, but I'm not entirely
sure. But in like a little bit later, there was a band called Warhammer 48K. They were really
awesome. They were like a really, I don't know if they were really, they were, they were, everyone
loved them. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Cause they're that local band. I liked them as well.
Right. But it was not my style of music. It was a little too loud generally and a little bit too
aggressive. It's kind of like, I'm not so into this, but all my buddies loved them. One of my
buddies, his little brother Cooper was in the band and so like our friend group had a bit of an
association. A lot of fans in my circle of friends, but some of the members of it became cave.
Okay. And they, they were the ones that ended up touring Europe and making some pretty great.
I mean, it's, it's good music. It's not my style. You don't need to get defensive about it.
I don't know. I think, yeah, I think that Warhammer slash cave is probably the, the biggest
example of those local bands. So anyway, this is a podcast where I know quite a bit about the
Columbia local music scene. Not really. Don't, don't know a tongue. Don't know a tongue. Was not
involved. Gotcha. But I do know a lot about Alex Jones. And I only know what you tell me about
both today. It does not matter, Jordan. Okay. Cause today we're doing good news. We're doing
something a little bit different. I decided to go into project Camelot land. I'm loving it.
And I decided that we got a lot of, we got a lot of weirdos that we pay attention to. And some of
them have become great characters for us. Guy with telescope. Of course. He's got a telescope. He
has a telescope. Yeah. We have Mark Richards. Anytime a Mark Richards episodes come comes up,
we got to hop of the list. Guy who wants to storm the Getty Museum. He's fun. Stephen Kelly.
Is he ever going to these are like characters that we've become friends with
over our time in a way. And it becomes like, it becomes a sort of thing where it's difficult to
listen to any episodes that don't involve them. Right. Because of, you know, there's a letdown.
Yeah. I want to hear about these other guys. How's his telescope doing? Did he get a better
telescope? He needs a better Bruce. Bruce sees all that's his name. Bruce. That's right. Yeah.
He's got a telescope. He does. And he sees all and there's one other guy, of course, Eddie Page,
the racist pleadian. And so what I decided to do initially when I set out to make this episode was
I wanted to check in on Eddie Page because last we heard of him, he had fallen out of
carry Cassidy, the host of Project Camelot's Good Graces. Right. He was a little too racist
for her. That certainly started it. And then accusation started to come out that he was passing
off screenshots from video games as his mother ship, which is a problem. Yep. That's a bit of an
issue. So when he started to get called out, he took a turn for the dark. And I checked in on him.
And he is now going by the name Archangel Abaddon. That works. He is now the bringer of death.
Good for him. That's a big step up for him. He has shaved his beard and he looks very sinister now.
I listened to a bunch of his videos because I thought like, well, if he is now the angel of
death, this has got to be amazing. They're a big letdown. He is very boring. He threatened to open
the seventh seal on New Year's 2019. So we are now living in the aftermath of him opening the
seventh seal. Okay. Well, I'm glad he told us. You know, you think that's something that you
wouldn't even know about? He gave like seven hours warning.
That's actually kind of proper of him. That's polite. So now he's leading a small cult based on
the videos that I could tell, where he's telling them that when the time comes, the aliens will
come and take them away. So are people actually in his cult? Okay. Never mind. Never mind. You're
right. You're right. Why am I asking this? I don't know why. Sometimes I ask you questions as though
you have some sort of omniscience. Let me tell you, there's no way for me to find out if anybody
is watching this, or anybody cares about what Eddie Page is doing now. Your researching skills are
called into question, Dan. Well, I think that even the greatest researchers would have difficulty
getting to the bottom of that mystery. So I went down that road. I realized that maybe it's not
worth it. I can't make an episode out of Eddie Page's turn to Archangel Abaddon. Right. There's
bad presentation. It's bad content. He's not even saying like, I will destroy the world. It's not
even that kind of fun. So I'm like, well, maybe it's time to let go. Maybe it's time to let go
and let God. Sure. I mean, anytime Mark Richards comes up, certainly we've got to cover that.
Of course. That's pressing news. Of course. But maybe it's time to let go of some of these
connections that we have with these other people, the guy with the telescope, Eddie Page,
Stephen Kelly, certainly not going to cover him again. He is way too scary and creepy.
They're toxic presences that sometimes you just need to get out of your life. Absolutely. Yeah.
No matter how much you love him, you got to let him go. I decided maybe it's time for us to try
and find new friends. Okay. Project Camelot World. All right. And so I found one episode that was
titled Deceit and Human Society. I thought, hello, this is something I'm interested in. I love
Deceit and Human Society. I like both of those things. I only like one of those.
Well, I like to, I like to study Deceit. Okay. And I like Human Society. I don't,
I just like Deceit. I'm not a huge fan of Human Society. You're on the other way with it.
So I decided that was going to be what we're going to look into and we'll see what happens.
But before we get to that, we got to give a shout out to some people who have signed up
and are supporting this here show and make it possible. So first, Thomas, thank you so much.
You are now a Policy Wonk. I'm a Policy Wonk. Thank you, Tommy. Next, Luke. Thank you so much.
You are now a Policy Wonk. I'm a Policy Wonk. Thank you, Luke. Thanks for joining the Luke's.
We got a lot of Luke's these days. Yeah, we got a strong Luke faction. Next, Robin.
Not Robin, R-H-A-B-A-N. Thank you so much. You are now a Policy Wonk. I'm a Policy Wonk. Thank you,
Robin. Next, Lionel, Lionel, Lionel. Thank you so much. You are now a Policy Wonk. I'm a Policy Wonk.
Thank you. Thank you. Lionel, Lionel, Lionel, Lionel. There's only three Lionels. There's only three.
Yeah, so you can't do the last one. You have to stop. Yep. And finally, like to give a shout out
to some people who have signed up on an elevated level. We appreciate it very much. So first,
we got Kelsey. Thank you so much for joining up and supporting the show. Thank you, Kelsey.
Next, someone who I believe I pronounced Taconius when I gave them an initial shout out, but I
looked closer. There's no spaces, but it's clearly Taco in Anus. Oh, yeah. Taconius. I think I prefer.
I prefer Taconius. I suspect it's Taco in the butthole. Next, Eric W. Thank you so much.
And then finally, Leanne McAdoo is an anagram of Amneo Condil. I didn't know that. Yes,
apparently. Thank you. So thank you all. You are now technocrats. I'm a Policy Wonk.
Crikey, mate. That's fantastic. Have yourself a brew. How's your 401k doing, bro? All right,
we got to go full tilt bugging on this Watson. All right, let's just get down to business.
We ain't making that money off that heroin. Why are you pimp so good? My neck is freakishly large.
I declare info war on you. Thank you so much. Thank you, Kelsey, Eric, Taco in Anus,
Taconius. Well, Leanne McAdoo is an anagram of Amneo Condil. Thank you for all anagrams everywhere.
We appreciate it. Thank you to all of you. If you'd like to support the show and what we do,
you can do that by going to our website, knowledgefight.com, clicking the button to
support the show. We would appreciate it. It really would be great. So today's episode involves a
lady by the name of Emily Windsor Craig, C-R-A-G-G. Anytime you got the full three names,
we're talking assassination or somebody who is to be looked out for. This is going to be fairly
interesting. And I think that I don't know for sure if I want to say that we found a new friend,
but I've certainly learned a lot as we go along. I've learned that Kerry Cassidy is capable of
what she expresses in this out of context drop. So where are you getting this information and
why do you think it kind of means anything? Ouch. That's a damning question. That is not the question
of somebody that you trust and believe in. So we're going to get there. Oh boy. So all this
bullshit, where do you think it comes from and why are you telling me? I should also point out that
this interview was, I believe, the last interview that Kerry posted before the 2016 election. It's
on November 3rd, 2016. Oh no. And also, this is the second time that she's interviewed Emily Windsor
Craig. Okay. So she is saying that to someone she invited back on her show, which is great. So here
is Kerry giving an introduction in the way that only she can. Hi everyone. This is Kerry Cassidy
from Project Camelot. Hi Kerry. And tonight we have a very interesting guest. I've actually
interviewed her in the past. Her name is Emily Windsor Craig and she is, well, a fascinating
woman and she has a great deal to share with us today about some investigations she's been doing
into our ancient history. So this is about deceit and human society.
Hmm. I do agree. She's pretty fascinating. So in terms of more of a bio, here's Kerry laying
out some of the important facts of her guess. Okay. History. She had her own start software
startup in the early 90s called Play Technologies Inc., which failed to gain funding. I know what
that's like. Let's see. She was radicalized during the Clinton administration by the
university's focus on globalism and the effects of human life of HR practices, gas sliding by
corporations. Right. Fair. And she wrote a small political theory newsletter when she lived on Capitol
Hill called Just Now. She was redlisted in 1998 and spent spent the next seven years running from
gang stalkers. Also not a good sign. Gang stalkers. Yeah. She was redlisted in 88. She wasn't
radicalized until the Clinton years. Oh, that's a good point. We got a full four years where she's
just gang. She was getting gang stalks, but not radicalized. Just on the run from gang stalkers.
Okay. Okay. She was too busy running to get radicalized. I suppose except for maybe a couple
years into the Clinton years, which overlap with the running from gang stalkers years.
Yeah. Oh boy. So she's been doing some research and she gets here into, this is where Emily jumps
in and she expresses what her goal is of this research that she's doing. I don't know if I
like the title of this video being Deceit in Human Society because I don't believe that that's at all
what ends up being discussed. Okay. There's some deceit for sure. It's just her lying about human
society. Yeah, I guess on that, on that and maybe you can, it's a stretch still, I think. Oh boy.
I have been kind of disturbed by the chaos between spiritual paths and ideologies and my
master's is in conflict analysis. So I decided to try to make, to synthesize a single timeline
out of all the books that I showed you in my bibliography. And so that's my life goal is to
explain life to myself and to make sense of where we are politically and spiritually and
physically and you know, I want to just understand it all, put it all together.
When you hear something like that, that sounds fine. She wants a grand unified field theory.
Great. Now the only thing is that this is a project Camelot interview. Yeah, that's so you
have to really ask the question when she's saying all these books that I've read, I want to bring
them all together. What the fuck books are you talking about? Because that is a very important
question. Of course, you could be talking about real books or you could be talking about the goddamn
Necronomicon. I would actually argue that you are almost certainly talking about the goddamn
Necronomicon if you're on project Camelot. I think there's a much higher likelihood that you're
talking about books that aren't real. They might be imaginary books. It is usually tough to create
a grand unified field theory out of imaginary books in this world because they all contradict
each other almost on a constant basis. It is tough. So as soon as she said that, I was like,
okay, I need to know your books. I need to know what you're trying to bring together if I am going
to sign off on your mission. Because I might just ignore this. Yeah, fair enough. Thankfully,
a couple minutes later, she does explain what books she's talking about. The books that I have
studied in depth, believe it or not, Ashiana Dean has done the only work that I have been
able to find. I know you interviewed her at least once and she's fascinating to listen to
if you can keep hold because she talks so fast. But her Voyager series are the beginning of the
story of this planet because the Bible doesn't go back that far, the Orantia book doesn't go back
that far. None of the other books go back as far as she does. And so that's where the story begins
where according to her Voyager's account, and which makes sense to me, the first two seedings
of life here on this life platform failed because of wars, because of the indigenous populations
being peaceable and law abiding and intelligent and having 12 strands of DNA and yadda yadda.
They were no match for the predatory races that came here to get what they wanted.
Now, the predatory race is coming to get what they wanted. There's a bunch of stuff where I'm
already like, my red flags for you're about to be super races have just raised all the way to the
top. It certainly has the feel of this being very... We're about to get wild. Maybe. What do you mean
maybe? You definitely get the sense that some of this stuff could be very easily seen as codes.
Yeah. Whether it's conscious or not. Yeah. So the books that she's using here are the Orantia
book, which we covered in a past episode, a lot of bullshit. The Bible, which is open to all sorts
of interpretation. And I'm not positive about her interpretation of it based on something we
learned later. Doesn't even go back far enough. Why even add it? But it's still in the mix.
Well, of course. And then Ashiana Dean. Who is Ashiana Dean? We've heard Kari bring her up all
the fucking time. And it's just, it's the same thing. She talks about like, Sean David Morton
wrote some sci-fi book that she believes is actual truth. Right. It's the same thing. Ashiana Dean
wrote these series of books called Voyager. And she believed, I don't know if they're actually
science fiction. I think they are supposed to be like, alternative history of the universe. Right.
But Kari believes that they are unveilings of truth. They're supposed to be,
she thinks it's creative nonfiction, if you will. I don't know if she even would go that far. I
think you just say straight nonfiction. Straight nonfiction. This is the facts. This is a straight
up history book. Yeah. Ashiana Dean is a new age teacher, or as some have called her, a cult leader
whose real name is Anna Hayes. These books that she's written Voyager series, Kari believes are
completely true and the best source of information about the secret history of mankind. Of course.
I honestly wish it was more interesting than that, but it's not. From everything I can tell,
Ashiana Dean seems like kind of a run-of-the-mill UFO cult leader. Like there's promises of a
return of these people that she calls the Guardian Alliance, just never seems to come to pass,
predictions that they're coming. Money gets handed over, nothing verifiable as ever said,
and then nothing happens. The reason that these things are really dangerous though and need to
be taken seriously is that even though the vast majority of cases where someone has beliefs like
this that they disseminate, vast majority of them, nothing happens, but sometimes something does.
You need to look no further than Heaven's Gate to see how the framework of a UFO cult can be deadly
in the hands of the wrong person. Anyone drawn to starting their own group like this is someone I
consider to be very suspect, and that's not even because of anything that they're saying about
aliens or the varying degree of quality between different races, which is a whole other conversation.
I just think the impulse towards it is something that puts you in a category of,
I'm going to keep my eye on you. I don't know if I like what you're up to.
Yeah, if anybody was like, man, I really want to start my own UFO cult, even if I agreed with
everything they were saying, I'd be like, no, no, no, no, you need to get out of here.
Since Ashiana Dean is clearly one of Carrie's main spiritual gurus, I really wanted to get
my hands on a copy of her book so I could better understand what she preached. These books are
out of print and they are fucking expensive, and I can't find any PDFs. Ultimately, I think
I've read enough books in that genre though, because I used to read a lot of that like Sitchin
shit. It's fun. I've read enough in the genre to know more or less what it's going to be like,
which is to say that it'll be nearly incomprehensible bullshit. From what I've been able to tell of
Dean's writings online, because I have read some breakdowns and some excerpts, there seems like
there's a big emphasis on genetics in her philosophy. Humans, as created by the good aliens,
presumably the Guardian Alliance, have 12 strands of DNA, whereas the Anunnaki are missing some of
those strains, so they came to the earth to steal our gold, which somehow helped them manifest in
the third dimension. Now in present day, the Anunnaki are trying to get involved in our gene pool
in order to get this 12th strand of DNA and breed it out of our genes, which honestly kind of sounds
a lot like space replacement anxiety, or kind of a poetic science fiction version of white genocide
propaganda. We know that Carrie believes that the Jews are Anunnaki, so like if she gets a lot of
her info from Ashiana Dean, I wouldn't be too surprised if she kind of believes that too.
I don't know that to be the case since I haven't read enough of her material, but like,
if Carrie is a huge disciple of Ashiana Dean, and that's one of her beliefs.
If it doesn't have Mako Shark Rampant, I don't want to read it. That's my new philosophy on all books.
I think that's a fair philosophy. Anyway, Ashiana Dean's Voyager books are not a good source of
history. I will leave it at that. And if that's some of the books that this Emily Windsor Craig is
trying to bring together, I gotta say no thanks. Yeah, it's a little bit like a birth of a nation.
It seems like a fruitless endeavor, but also, I don't know, I don't think it's fair to make that
assumption like at this point. Later in the episode, maybe. But I don't think that there's
anything necessarily wrong with spending your time trying to unite like space philosophies.
I think if you're not hurting anybody, whatever, it's only when it becomes damaging or is clearly
reinforcing something negative that it becomes like, that I even care to, or when it rises to
the level of being really interesting. And so far, I'm not sure we've reached that qualification.
Gotcha. But we might in this next clip. The reason that I can look into this is not only because
of the books, but personally, I'm a sole incarnate of one of the Anunnaki bloodlines. And so I have
telepathic contact with that bloodline, not that everybody in that bloodline agrees together
or with me, but I'm part of the bloodline of King Nanar, N-A-A-N-A-A-R, who was the Anunnaki
King who died in late 2012. Okay, so I have access to their stuff.
She got access to their stuff. First off, R-I-P King Nanar. King of the Anunnaki.
King Nanar died in 2012. That's pretty recent. Yeah, I know. That's exactly what I was like,
really, we're doing that, huh? Like, it's a couple weeks ago and now we're... That's insane.
That's almost like one of her sources. That's like one of the people who's like,
oh yeah, my source was this guy in the CIA. Too bad he died a few years ago. Otherwise,
you could confirm with him, but he's dead. It's like that scene in Mumford, where all of Mumford's,
like everyone he went to grad school with, they're all conveniently dead. It's so strange
that they're all dead. Yeah, it was a few years ago too. You almost had them. Yeah,
could have talked to this Anunnaki King. What was he like? So anyway, of course,
she's royalty. She's Anunnaki royalty, which now is like, all right, I'm starting to get interested
now. All right, but let me ask you this question. Who's the new king? Well, I don't know, she says.
It seems like that has to be, that has to be mentioned because she has a telepathic connection
with the bloodlines. Of course she's going to stay in contact with the game. I'm positive that she
knows. Okay. Okay. All right. And it might be her. I mean, she's in the royal bloodline. It's true.
You know, she's an incarnate of the Anunnaki bloodline that is the king's lineage. She could
legitimately be the king of the queen of the Anunnaki. Or at least she's in the royal family.
Yeah. Cool. I am really uncomfortable now when anybody says bloodline about anything. You should
be. I'm like, no, evil. So the Anunnaki King died in 2012, but that's not the only recent Anunnaki
news. You might be surprised to hear that. Did John Oliver do a segment on the Anunnaki
recent? I think he missed this headline. Bummer. But there was some big news back in 2007. 2007.
And Emily cracked the fucking case on this one. All right. Now in 2007, in Iran,
a Anunnaki royal was dug up who was in stasis. And I don't know if you've seen his pictures
online. A very extremely handsome guy who has apparently been revived. There were two other
Saracasa guys that were collected when they found him. One had an elder gentleman who didn't make it.
And the third one was not revealed who it was. And I believe, now I can't validate this or verify it,
but I believe that that Anunnaki was Durgal. Oh, of course it's Durgal. I was thinking Paul Newman,
but I was way off. We all should have seen that coming. Obviously. So in 2007,
they dug up some Anunnaki that were in stasis. Right. One of them was alive. The elder gentleman,
however, did not make it. Poor guy. Surprisingly, Kerry is not sold on this story. Okay.
Okay. Now let me, let me slow you down one minute here. So you think that an Anunnaki
Sarcophaga guy, as you're calling him, I think, you think they were revived? That's,
I don't think that's common knowledge. Why was that a YouTube video you saw and you believed it?
Yep. I've seen several references to that YouTube video. A lot of references to that YouTube video.
Not a lot of references to her telepathic connection. Wouldn't she already know about it?
She does talk a little bit about that. She's like connected to the, the wife of Durgal. Okay.
Okay. Cool. Cool. Cool. Cool. So this is actually a really interesting story. So to get this out
of the way up top, the Anunnaki Sarcophagi that Emily is talking about here are not real. Okay.
That was a hoax video, but circumstances surrounding that hoax are actually kind of fascinating.
In 2008, excavators working on prepping for road construction in Kurdistan accidentally
uncovered an Iron Age graveyard with more than 20 intact graves. This is a really cool discovery,
and there were indications that there were all sorts of burial goods and plenty for researchers
to learn from the graves. According to a report co-produced by Ghent University, quote,
within a week, however, a hoax was created around this discovery that gained worldwide
momentum through blogs and websites. Reports and press releases began mentioning the discovery of
six corpses instead of five, and they became a mummified king and five of his bodyguards.
The media frenzy was supported by a 36 second video fragment that was placed on YouTube and
various other sites. It is the orchestrated discovery of a bearded mummified king with a crown,
a gem encrusted gold box, and two gems encrusted gold plates with cuneiform inscriptions.
The forgery was so crude that no professional archaeologist could ever be fooled by it,
but many others were, and unfortunately such Indiana Jones style stories are still persistent
and keep circulating on the web. We hope this preliminary report may for once and all put an
end to the speculations and conspiracy stories related to this hoax. That paper came out in 2012,
and best as I can tell, it did not end the speculation. They did kill King Nenar, though.
Oh, Nenar. That was what killed him. Here's that paper. This sort of thing happens a lot.
A large section of the space weirdo community, particularly those at the top of the pyramid,
are scammers who know that nothing is ever going to prove what their arguments say are true. So
the best they can do is piggyback any real archaeological discovery and try and co-opt it
into their world. This behavior manifests in a dozen different ways. You see it here with this
hoax mummy video attempting to co-opt this graveyard that was found in Iran. You see it with
the insistence that there's a cover-up. Like when mainline archaeologists won't admit there was
an Anunnaki in that tomb, they use that as proof that there was. The same sort of thinking as
what's behind Kerry arguing that things like ISIS was created so that the New World Order can go
around and destroy monuments in the Middle East, these monuments that prove that humanity has
deep relationships with aliens. It's all about co-opting reality in such a way as to deceptively
elevate your ideas and give masking to why you can't prove any of the things you say.
It's a good grift because you don't even have to work that hard.
It is. The archaeologists are doing the work, or the people who are trying to build a road in
Kurdistan. They're the ones who accidentally uncover this, and then the real archaeologists
do the hard work, and then you fake a little video and pretend that it's related to this.
It's almost like your job is just sitting and waiting around for somebody else to do stuff,
and then you lie about it. And you make a living off of that? That's a good grift.
You morph bullshit. So anyway, here's Emily talking more about this video.
Okay, now, hi. The Anunnaki gentleman on YouTube in several videos, and they do not
show him conscious. They show him just lying in the Saracophagus, but somebody pinches him like
somebody pinches him, and his flesh is very fresh, and he has hair on his chest.
And he's like, hey, what?
Beautiful red beard. Okay, so we're in Iran, and the guy has a beautiful red beard.
Well, he's Anunnaki.
Okay. Okay.
He's Anunnaki. Cool. Love it.
This is just a really good encapsulation of how little proof people in this world
require to believe something. I've seen screenshots of this video. I didn't watch
the video because I don't really care, but I saw screenshots of it, and it is next level
clunky. Hackery. Yeah, it's the sort of thing that it's like Kerry's video or picture that she
showed of Anunnaki leading human prisoners. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like, you look at that,
you're like, really? Get out of here. No, yeah. So Emily starts talking about the Emerald Tablet
of Thoth, which is something that's really big. I don't even want to pronounce that.
It's, it's complicated. Okay. I like that. I like the added like, whoa, whoa,
this isn't the golden tablets like in my, this isn't the other tablets. This one's Emerald.
Right. You know, we're doing something original because the tablet's a different color.
It's, it's a very big piece in this, this space community that gives a big piece of a lot of
the stories that go around. Okay. It's a foundational document of some sort. I don't
sure. I'm not sure it exists.
It's, it's way better for everybody if it doesn't.
So anyway, she starts talking about Thoth and she's saying some stuff that's a little bit weird.
Okay. And Kerry just now to the point that Kerry is even like, hold on now.
There are, you're, you are saying some things that are different than let's say
the Zachariah Sitchin material and some other people. I've actually,
can't forget the investigator's name off hand that I interviewed, but there's another guy who does,
and he's got a whole nother group of people that he sort of identifies. So it does get
quite confusing, but continue just to clarify that for the people.
I'm open to other resources. And if you want to turn me on to other resources,
the question, what I'm doing, I love it. Well, you're going to love this podcast.
Let's turn you on to some other resources like reality.
It's a good resource. So this Emerald tablet also, it somehow weaves into a treaty, an Emerald
treaty. Oh boy. Oh boy. Jordan. It's a dearth of imagination these people have.
This next clip, Jordan, is two minutes long. Oh boy. It's one of the more confusing things I've
heard. All right. Let's find out. This is where I really think it becomes like we go from, I am in
the royal bloodline of the Anunnaki and they dug up a living Anunnaki in Iran based on a
hoax video. Yeah, that's just fun. Sure. This is where it kind of gets real for me. Okay.
Where there's actually like, I think she's talking about something. Oh, no.
So around 500,000 BC, the Emerald Covenant Treaty that Archana Dean talks about was crafted after
the Lyran Wars because the Lyrans were very peaceable law abiding, trusting people. And when
they were slammed by the Alpha Dracona who are basically predatory, they were unprepared to deal
with it. They just simply suffered annihilation. So the Emerald Covenant Treaty was written by the
Founders Elohim in order to protect the white races from predation. Oh, God. And that happened
around 500,000 BC. And after that, the now. Now wait, wait a second here because you're making
a distinction when you say white races. Why is that? Why is that? Because the Alpha Dracona are
reptilian races. And the treaty actually specifies four white races that are supposed
to be protected from predators. This has turned out to be a very bad idea. Because what it's set up
in the minds of the cultures in the galaxy is that white races are somehow more special than others.
And the truth of the matter was, according to, where did I read this? Okay, yeah, because I am
not familiar with this distinction you're making. So I'm wondering where this is coming from.
I've talked to Archana Dean. She's the one who wrote it then. Well, no, because there is the rainbow
races and there are so many races that are mixed in here. And the Emerald Covenant actually covers
all the races, not just the white ones. And that's the problem. Wait. The reason this is really
confusing is the best reading I can take of this is that she's trying to explain white supremacy
based on a tens of thousands of year old Emerald Treaty. Yeah. I believe that that's what she's
doing. So here's what I'm getting from her admittedly brilliant explanation of what she's talking about.
Sure. So white people were getting fucked up by reptiles. Right. Reptiles and white people were
like, let's make this treaty and let's put it on Emerald because Emerald lasts forever. Everybody
knows this. Absolutely. Every kiss begins with Emerald. And Emerald. Nice. When they got overrun.
They got slammed also. I enjoyed that as the word. Like they got slammed. Like it's a lug shower. Oh,
white people suck. Oh, I was going with you're really busy at a rush. Oh, I got these reptiles just
keep ordering steak. People steak. And so then because they made the treaty specifically with
four races of white races for white races for separate white races, apparently, then the
galaxy was like, well, clearly if the reptiles are making a treaty with white people specifically,
that means white people are more special than the other non white races. Your guess is as good as
that's what I think she's saying. I don't think you're far off probably in terms of like laying
out what she's saying, but I'm more interested in what's behind it. Right. Because she condemning
the fact that the galaxy thinks white people are better or it. Yes, it seems that way. Yes. It seems
that she's saying that the unfortunate result of this is white supremacy. Yes, that's what I think
she's saying. I would say that this is a way of reinforcing white supremacy almost in 100 because
when you make it the result of space treaties, you kind of make it so you can't really deal with
the issues. It's not white supremacist. It's not white people's fault. It's not white supremacist
fault. It's the galaxy's fault. Dan, you got to let them off the hook. Right. It's kind of the same
thing as just like when you take away real world cause and effect real world systems as being the
roots of a lot of these things. What you're doing is enabling them to continue and perpetuate
because you'll never deal with it seriously. Or so even if she is saying that white supremacy is
a negative consequence of these space treaties, it's still like it's as damaging as just saying
like it is what it is. Well, I mean, if you're going to say that it's the consequence of space
treaties, then you're saying that the way to solve white supremacy is renegotiate the emerald space
treaty. I bet it is. So I think we're going to get, I mean, why aren't we doing that right now,
Dan? We really should. That could solve so many things. She's on an hockey royalty. She's got to
tell you about it. She should be actually renegotiating. She could solve this problem now.
Instead, she's just complaining to Kerry. So anyway, I thought that was very confusing. I'm not
entirely sure what the deal is. But in this next clip, I think we get more troubling. I don't like
this clip. Uh-oh. In 208,000 BC, the Anunnaki did some genetic engineering on the white races to
produce a race of white gold miners in South Africa. And this is my tip. Oh, no. Okay. Okay. But yeah,
I just don't know why you're emphasizing white because this is not really emphasized it. And it
becomes the predicament that we're in now. So there's current day real world consequences
from this tree. I just feel like whenever you're talking about white people in South Africa, I
always stop unless unless it's, uh, they should redistribute 90% of the land. I always feel like
you're on sort of touchy ground. Yeah. And when you're saying that the Anunnaki created white
people to be gold miners in South Africa. And if she's saying that this is part of the predicament
that we're in now, does she mean the post-apartheid South Africa? Like what, what exact, she doesn't
really get into specifics about what the predicament we're in now. You presume it would be something
to do with the issues surrounding whiteness, but she's not offering any kind of real critique on
that level. No, I don't know. And it seems like Carrie is less offended by the whole white thing and
more like, if you're going to be racist on my show, you better back it up. Um, sort of. And I think
that she resents, uh, the implication that, um, it's possible that Emily understands Ashiana Dean
better than her. Yeah, that's true. They're, you know, it's the same thing with anybody who, uh, impunes
Mark Richards. Right. You know, you get in trouble whenever you push back on or, um, claim sort of
authority over her sources. Right. So I thought that was weird. Um, certainly the, the Emerald
Treaty to protect white people, gotta be created white people in South Africa. Miners. I feel like
she's speaking in code. Um, this next clip, this ain't code. There was a problem in scripture. If
you follow Jesus teachings, you get in a lot of hot water. You know, he said, turn the other cheek
and he said, be peaceable and so on. Well, he said you would be persecuted. Well, if everybody's
law abiding, there's no persecution. So this is why the Roman Catholic Jesuit branch wrote or had
written the Quran to provide a system of martyrdom so they could have martyrs and saints and they
could validate and verify the teachings of Jesus that Christians will be persecuted. So that's why
we have. Okay. Okay. That's an interesting theory. Um, but you know, where are you getting that the
Jesuits had the Quran written? This is an interesting interpretation of Muhammad's life.
That's, uh, I understand that's known history. That's known history. Um, well, I, I certainly,
that's not known history and come up with that. That's okay. I can't, I mean, known history,
like that's a very vague term. We can't actually bander around because nothing right now is known
as, as you know, because everything, our history, our lies within lies. Fair enough.
Especially your history. I would, I want more people to shout from the rooftops that Islam is
a false flag operation. This is insane. Like, um, the two things that I think are particularly
notable about that clip is the first is that it's, it's embarrassing to see Kerry capable of this.
Because that means that she could always do this. Where are you getting this from? It is
unacceptable to hear from Kerry. Right. Right. When everything's going her way and someone agrees
with her, there's never any sort of like, let's discuss how we know these things. No. In fact,
it's always like, this is just known history. Right. That's the other part of it. Yeah. That
behavior, that sort of this, like she makes an extravagant claim. The Jesuits wrote the Quran
in order to create victimhood for Christians. False flag narrative. Right. Well, first,
there's that. And then second, so she makes that claim and then when asked about it, it's known
history. Yeah. That is the same behavior that Alex Jones does when he says something really
fucked up and it's like, it's in the mainstream news. Yep. It's in the white papers. Yep. The
appeal to some sort of vague authority of like, everyone knows what it was. You're, you're dumb
for even questioning it. Right. It's a strategy that people who are bluffing use. Yeah. That's
like saying they just know that they believe like things that aren't, aren't defensible. Yeah. If
you're going to, if you're going to question me on the fact that Islam is a false flag, you might
as well question me on that Abraham Lincoln was an alien and that's why I wore that tall hat to
hide his fucking cone head. We all know that. Exactly. It's known history. So when, when I
listened to this episode, like I had this feeling of like, all right, she's saying some stuff that's
pretty, you know, like weird, like I am from Anunnaki royalty. And I was like, I don't know.
Is this beating up on someone who just believes weird stuff? And then you get into this and it's
like, I believe that Islam was created as a false flag against Christians. It's like, okay,
all right, I don't care about your feelings anymore. You graduated. Yeah. That's, that puts
you in an upper echelon. You are quite literally expressing things that are invalidating of
tons of people. So Carrie wants to know where she's getting these ideas from because she's
making a claim that's like, this should end the interview, quite frankly. I'm surprised it goes
on quite a bit longer, but it does. She wants to know where she's getting it from. And we find
out it's YouTube, but also, of course it is, but also she gives a specific citation.
So on YouTube, and you can Google it. Okay, but you know, you can appreciate there's going to be
plenty of Muslims who are going to take issue with the notion that the, the, the Jesuits wrote
or basically created Mohammed in some way or mind controlled him or something to do what he did.
Is that, that your idea? That is the history of Islam, as I understand it from Dr. Bill Warner.
Okay. All right. And this is somebody that you, you obviously believe. Okay. Is that right?
Yes. Yeah. This is where the interview definitely should have ended.
Yeah. But I don't think that she knows who that is. Yeah. Let's find out.
Bill Warner is the pen name for a guy named Bill French. I have no idea if this is true,
but I like to have fun. So I assume that after 9 11, he heard that we were going with freedom
fries and he was like, shit, I better get on the board with this program. I was going to say,
Bill French is actually a totally great name for, for publishing. It's your bill. Your first
name is shorter French. They fits all that's great. So Bill French is the founder of the Center
for the Study of Political Islam. And he's been one of the main voices putting forth a narrative
that Islam is largely a political system and not a religion. Gotcha. So many of the propaganda
talking points about the spread of Sharia law trace back to him and his 2010 book, Sharia law for
non Muslims. The SPLC includes him in their category of anti Muslim hardliners, which is a rare group
to be in along with the likes of Pamela Geller, David Horowitz and Jihad watch founder and Alex
Jones guest Robert Spencer. And I assume all of Fox news. Bill has absolutely no education on the
subject of history or religious studies. He's a former physics professor who just had some
half cooked notions about Islam and decided to start spreading them. Because of his vague
PhD designation, people take his shit a bit more seriously than they would if it were coming out of
the mouth of some dumb, dumb on YouTube. And thus here we are. Yeah, he's a naturopath as well.
Yeah. Why not? Bill Warner is a seriously dangerous source of information. And to hear Emily say
that this is where she crafted her the Jesuits created Islam narrative from is super fucked up.
I found Emily's bit shoot channel, just you know, like the off brand YouTube,
where people go when they're kicked off YouTube did not know that bit shoots that sort of fucked
up YouTube. Gotcha. She has a channel on there and it's full of videos stoking fear of Muslims
and immigrants. It's really important to recognize that however zany it is to hear someone insist
that they're living on a knocky. And the you know, there's a mummy, there's dug up in Iran,
all too often these sorts of beliefs and preoccupations accompany that. And the reason for
that I suspect is that the world the project Camelot exists in trains people to accept claims with
completely non existent thresholds for evidence. Does something resonate with you? Then it must be
true. That's a fine system for picking a couch. But it's not good in terms of philosophies, history,
concrete facts, especially not good, not good to use. Does it resonate? Does it feel true?
Yeah, we we do seem to be in a bit of a war over whether or not objective reality exists
at all with so many of these people. Yeah, the problem is that like, you know, even within an
objective reality, there's still room for subjective experience and things that are
subjectively true to you and not to me. Exactly. There's that's what makes the conversation so
much more difficult. It's whenever you become an absolutist about either you run into real trouble.
And I do think that's a problem. And that's one of the things that I really want to
distinguish here is like this, this woman is, you know, she's presenting these
kind of fun things. And then also, this is not fun. Yeah, believing deeply Islamophobic
belief, believing that the entire religion of Islam was created in order to antagonize
Christians, as opposed to being its own thing is a deeply Islamophobic thing. And just because
you have a fun way of getting there, right, doesn't change the treaty. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Space Treaties and Emerald Tablets and an Islamophobic former physics professor.
Yeah, and it's never like the Emerald Space Treaty was designed to make everybody feel
good. Like there's always a bullshit enemy at the end of it, that you get to demonize.
It's crazy shit. So in this next clip, we find out that Islam isn't the only religion that she
has some issues with. Oh, it turns out Christianity, there's some problems there too. Oh, getting back
to the life of Jesus and so on and so forth. Jesus was not actually hung on the cross. There's
plenty of evidence that he was not. Okay, it's no mystery. The Gospel of Barnabas tells that story,
and that's one of the books that the Council of Nicaea removed. Right, okay, so fear not. But
there are so many sources to say that no Jesus is not the one hung on the cross. It was Judas who was
hung on the cross and Jesus got away and he lived to found the Marovinian bloodline
from which King Arthur arose. Okay, we know that that's part of the Marovinian bloodline
from Jesus who couldn't die on the cross. We know that this is true. Important point,
King Arthur is not real. Pretty sure he was real, Dan. Pretty sure he is related to Jesus.
Not a figure of man. Nope, everybody knows that Jesus' bloodline
in Arthur was not a real person. Isn't that also British-Israelism? Wouldn't that have to be
considered a certain type of British-Israelism? You make a very interesting point. Oh, no,
we're not doing this again. I don't know if we are. Oh, God. So they're speaking really non-specifically
here in that last clip. Yeah, and agreeing with each other. So it's tough to know exactly what
book they're talking about. She said the Gospel of Barnabas, but it's important that I walk you
through some of the reasons why this might be confusing. So there are a number of books ascribed
to Barnabas that are all not in the Bible. Yeah. There is the Epistle of Barnabas, which is dated
back to around 70 to 132 CE. And then there's the Acts of Barnabas, which contains language that
solidly places it as a fifth century text. Neither of these were considered canonical, and it's
possible that the Epistle could have been considered by the Council of Nicaea, but the
Acts of Barnabas postdates the Council. So it can't have been kicked out by the Council of Nicaea.
The problem is that neither of these books contradict the crucifixion of Jesus. In fact,
the Epistle of Barnabas, the one that would have been around when the Council of Nicaea
was around, it validates and discusses Jesus' passion and martyrdom as a ritual of him being
a scapegoat. However, there is another book of Barnabas, the Gospel of Barnabas. And I suspect
that this is specifically the book that Kerry and Emily are discussing. The Gospel of Barnabas
includes the belief that Jesus escaped crucifixion and that Judas was crucified in his place.
The Gospel of Barnabas is definitely a book that is not in the Bible. But here's the thing,
there's no way the Council of Nicaea could have kicked it out of the Bible. It was written 50
years ago. The Council of Nicaea took place in 325 CE. The earliest versions of the Gospel of
Barnabas traced to the late 1500s. This is a very recent text when you're talking about biblical
literature. The Gospel of Barnabas includes a lot of elements that contradict Christian doctrine,
like that Jesus wasn't the Son of God, but he was just a prophet. Many of the areas where the text
departs from Christian belief, it's in line with the Islamic understanding of Christianity. So many
have suggested that the text was written as an attempt to combine the belief systems of the two
religions. But that's really just a hypothesis. The world of extra biblical literature is a seriously
wide canon. And when you allow a time span of considered books to extend the late 1500s,
you could possibly and probably find just about any argument you want to make with any of those books.
Like there's so many books you could choose from. Yeah. With a book like the Gospel of Barnabas,
it's really easy to get things mixed up. You want to make the argument that this book proves that
Jesus wasn't crucified and that the Council of Nicea covered that up, but it just doesn't make
sense. You can make it make sense if you intentionally confuse people by combining the Gospel of Barnabas
that makes the argument you want, but was written in the 1500s with the Epistle of Barnabas, which
existed in the correct time period, but doesn't make the argument you want. It's either evidence of
insane levels of sloppiness and research or an intentional attempt to mislead people. And I don't
know what it is. I don't know if it's just foolishness or deceit.
Well, we are talking about deceit in human society, so I'm going to go with the former.
I'm going to go with the former. I don't know. I could easily see it just being like confirmation
bias and just believing what you want to believe and willingly combining the two or getting it
from a bad source that is intentionally misleading you. Any of those things are possible, but whatever
you're doing, you are disseminating deceit because it isn't true. The Gospel of Barnabas was not
kicked out by the Council of Nicea. It was written in the 1500s. Well, I mean, if you're already playing
fast and loose with reality, I'm sure that you could be like, no, it wasn't written in the 1500s.
It was rediscovered in the 1500s. If we've got an Epistle of Barnabas, there's probably a Gospel
of Barnabas. Paul wrote Epistles all over the place, and he's got his own. There are some
indications that some people believe that some pieces of the Gospel of Barnabas do trace back
to older texts, but there's no consensus opinion about that or surviving examples of what it would
be. Things that do survive are the Epistle and the Acts of Barnabas that are from closer to that
time period, and neither of them fulfill the other requirements that they need, which is Jesus
escaped crucifixion and Judas was crucified in his place. So they're just trying to make things
more interesting. I guess I don't know. Anyway, we get to present-day politics now in this next
clip. I don't want to do that. And guess what? She sounds a lot like Alex. God damn it. The people
no longer had any voice in what is going on, and that's one of the things I keep pointing out is
that the globalists were seated into both US parties so that we have now had five
presidents who were following the globalist line, and we the people couldn't do anything about it,
because our voting system has been manipulated. Right. So globalists are in all parties. The
taking over the right and the left. Yep. This view of politics is very similar to Alex's. Don't
even bother voting. It's annoying. It's unfair when they take a very real problem that everybody
agrees is a very real problem, and then create a unsolvable problem out of it. It's almost like
taking away supremacy and blaming on an emerald treaty. Sure seems like it, Dan. It sure seems
like what you're really doing is justifying the status quo in whatever possible way you can in
making it damn near impossible to change. And dressing it up with just sort of extravagant
escapism. And I'm envious on some level. There's a part of me that's like, if there were a way for
me to engage in this without descending into outright Islamophobia, denial of people's religious
beliefs and identity and all that, I wish I could do it, but it doesn't seem possible.
So anyway, she believes that the globalists are all around us, and they're dictating all this
political brouhaha that's going on. She also believes that the Rothschilds are up to no good.
Well, why not? Which is also similar to Alex. Everybody tosses the Rothschilds in there. Although
she may have a conspiracy about the Rothschilds that is slightly different than what Alex believes.
Napoleon actually made the Rothschilds make Napoleon lose. This is more current Rothschild
behavior than the Waterloo. But this one's a little buck wild. Now, I just found this week
online, the new constitution for the United States of North America, which is an Islamic state.
Surprise, surprise. Where did that come from? Good question. And reading down to the signature
line, it comes from a Rothschild who put, patched this constitution together, according to his
best understanding. Now, it has not been ratified by the 50 states. So it is not in effect. But again,
this is a globalist trick behind the people's back to control. So it's a globalist. The Rothschilds
are globalists who have, I mean, the whole conception of this, just without some of the details,
is very similar to Alex's beliefs. The North American Union shit, the new constitution. She
just believes that the Rothschilds have written an actual new constitution and that it's an Islamic
state. Which isn't actually that far from Alex. Because I mean, you know, you're saying that Obama
was going to get a third term and where Nichols was yelling about it becoming a caliphate and
becoming the king of the Muslims. So it actually is a lot closer than it initially appears.
The way she phrases it is different, but it's very similar. And yet it's somehow
dumber. It's the same level of stupid beyond all reasoning, but somehow coming from her and the
way she's putting it in the context of emerald treaties. It's fucking stupid. Yeah. But I also
think it's because Alex is more careful not to be as overt of what he's talking about. And because
of that, he allows himself to have the air of knowing something as opposed to her being like,
I saw it on YouTube. Yeah. And you're like, Oh, yeah. Oh, honey. So Carrie is not super. You
see, you might hear that typing. That's Carrie type. That's what I was that's what I was thinking.
Yeah. As I heard that typing, I was like, Carrie is bored or Carrie is looking up that bullshit.
Yeah, she's googling it. I just wanted to make that clear because people might hear that and
think you were typing. Yeah. Yeah. And so here, Carrie has googled. And I don't think she believes
this Constitution thing, but it's interesting to see how she asks her about this, this disbelief
that she's feeling. Okay. Can I can I just stop you there? Because what you've you've just brought
up this so-called Constitution written by a Rothschild. So where are you getting this information?
And and why do you think it kind of means anything? And do you think it'll get two thirds?
I have given you my outline for today's interview. And that link to that Constitution is on that
outline. I see. But for the purposes of the people listening, it can you just paraphrase
where you're getting this information? In other words, finding a link on the Internet is all
very finding good. Can you say why this, this so-called Constitution sort of means anything
to you? Why did it resonate? It comes from the intention to set up the North American Union.
So damn it. So but the thing is like she's asking is like, you know, finding something online is
all good and well. Yeah. But then the standard of evidence that she's asking for is why does it
resonate with you? Why does that's not good? That's not going to help us get anywhere. You're never
going to find any actual information about this fucking fake Constitution. I ask why does this
feel real to you? That's great in therapy. That's not good in a presumably journalistic show about
the secret space program. Every time I've read a history book, I've always been like, well, this
fact doesn't resonate with me. So I'm just going to assume that's not true. I'm worried that a lot
more people do that than we think. I really think a lot of people do that. Yeah, perhaps. Oh God.
So we get off this topic because she's not really able to defend her resonance very well. Oh,
she's not. It's not very interesting. Surprise. So apparently Emily is writing a new book and it
has to do with some desired education reforms. And it's in this clip that we learned something else
about her that has been sort of lingering in the background for this episode. This isn't good.
It's not great. Is she going to say slavery is okay? In education, I'm so glad you're asking
me this. In education, we have to correct the BS, the wrong history that our children are being
taught every day. We have to teach them to solve problems according to causes and effects,
not according to what's the most popular notion. Okay. So that I'm going to propose that in secondary
school that a year be devoted to the differences in law between maritime
admiralty, common law, and administrative law, much along the same lines as Annabelle Reitz
spoke to you the other day, except I want to do it at about 10th grade level.
There needs to be a year talking about financing and thrift. There needs to be a year talking about
the political process and how the precincts work.
I like Simmons. Just go through the steps with young people so that
you see people taking a survey on a video and asking, well, do you know where Thailand is?
Or what's the name of your state senator? The people answering the questions are not so clueless.
I don't think that any of the three things that she said should take a year have to do with where
Thailand is or who your local representative is. That's current affairs and geography,
not spending and thrift. And also, by the way, almost every high school district in America
requires some civics. That's a prerequisite in almost every school district. So that might even
be a junior high. And you know what? In all honesty, the more she's talking about the things that she
would add to education, if they were out of her hands, they might not be a bad idea. Like if
people spent a year talking about crazy fucking sovereign citizens and why we should
ignore them. A year is too long. Probably. A year is too long for any of those things. Any of those
topics, a whole year is too much. Maybe a week. What about the other things you need to learn?
Now, here's what I want to say. Throw out the sovereign citizen year because that's stupid.
That also it is a nice tip of the hat like, oh, I'm a sovereign citizen also. I like that you
popped that in there. Love it. I did like that. I think that if you interpret spending and thrift
to be economics, sure, kids should learn more about economics. Absolutely. Balancing checkbooks.
100%. It should be more required as opposed to an elective thing that people understand because
it is kind of wild that when you're 18, you're not you have no information on how to survive.
Understanding some of that stuff is and I don't know if maybe there are school districts that do
a better job of having those classes in place. Mine certainly wasn't my experience. Nope. And then
civics. Yeah, sure. I mean, we already do that in most schools, but you know, expanding that and
making it more complete or more comprehensive and I would say even like engaging. Those two things
are great ideas. They're not going to help you know where Thailand is. No, those two things are great
for things that kids could be taught. Sovereign citizen. Nope. Now teaching them about how to
avoid sovereign citizens. That is helpful. Maybe don't be a cop. That's a good way to don't be a
cop lawyer. You'll probably never run into some definitely don't be a judge. I would say too
that like there's a real diminishing in what she's talking about about a lot of the classic
educational topics. And I know that a lot of people kind of poo poo on some of them. But like,
writing and reading is really important to be able to express your ideas. Yeah. And people also
shit on math a lot. And like math isn't really all that helpful. But the process of math is helpful.
The reason that it's such an important piece of like universal education is because it trains
you to go through thinking processes in the same way a lot of science education does. Like the
actual thing like I'm never going to need to balance a chemical equation in the future. Right.
But learning how to do it opens up the process of thinking in systems. No. That is really important
in terms of navigating the world. It is to my great disappointment that I have to say this. But
learning proofs in geometry. Like when I was in geometry and I could do all of the math in my head
and then I could come to the right answer. But being forced to actually write down step by step.
Helped me a great deal in that just ability to organize your thoughts and how the logic moves.
Right. And I was such a dick in geometry. If it's only worth it for that it's still
yeah absolutely worth it. Yeah. And I think that there's there's a lot of applications for it in
the real world. And so when she's talking about this stuff like this amending education in order
to add sovereign citizen belief. It's like you're only going to be able to do that by diminishing
other high school curricula. Right. And like well. But that's also a good goal of theirs
is because the more you learn the more or the less likely you are to be one of them. To be a sovereign
citizen. Yeah exactly. So Carrie at this point wants to know like how do you talk to the Anunnaki.
Like you talk to. Good question. Right. So she gets into some of the details here.
And I would say that this is a kind of part of we kind of there's no way around this. The interview
gets a little bit sad at this point. And it's at this point where I kind of thought like maybe
we shouldn't cover this episode. And I think that there's an argument to be made that she will say
a few things that show deep humanity in her. And I don't want to make fun of any of this. Right.
But at the same time the other stuff that she's saying is too fucked up to not cover.
She just invalidated a billion people because she thinks that the
Yeah. Exactly. Along those lines now you believe that you're in contact
to this day with a certain group of the Anunnaki. Is that right.
Occasionally. Occasionally when something comes up.
OK. What when you say that do you mean that you're getting downloads. How are you communicating.
They're mostly checking because I'm part of their bloodline. They're checking to see
that I'm not doing anything to either dishonor them or teach or say what their hierarchy is.
Doesn't want to get it put out. And basically what I've said here today was OK.
OK. That was OK with them. And yes. You've probably not heard it before.
They check on me to see what I'm doing. And I can ask them a question now and then.
But they're not very forthcoming. Yahweh is a lot more forthcoming than they are.
Yahweh. She talks to Yahweh. She talks to Yahweh. Yahweh is a lot more forthcoming.
He wasn't very forthcoming if I recall. Well that's a misunderstanding of Yahweh apparently.
According to her he's just kind of interested in the nuts and bolts of like keeping volcanoes at
bay and stuff like that. All right. Yeah. I kind of like that perception of God is just like he's
just describes him as a techie. Yeah. Yeah. And just sort of he's not into the social stuff.
That's OK. God Yahweh doesn't have a Facebook page. I get it. I get it man.
So they already get a little bit of a sense of like yeah they come and check on me and like I
don't. It's a weird conception of how you communicate with aliens. They just come around
and I ask them stuff and they don't say anything. This is weird. That is interesting.
But she doesn't. In this next clip we learned that she doesn't see them. She can just hear them.
OK. And I believe I believe this next clip is where things get kind of sad.
You believe you're in contact with them and are you seeing them in person or are you just
getting sort of mental pictures or what? I'm not clairvoyant at all. I'm only clairaudience.
All right. So what I can hear. I can hear their alarm system when a meteor is about to hit somewhere.
I get tones of my ear when that happens. Different kinds of tones. I hear music
particularly songs that are specific to certain meanings to certain messages.
You have a memory. When, for instance, last night I was awake at 3.30 in the morning
and I don't know exactly who it was that I was communicating with
in terms of my thoughts about what I was going to do here. But the intention was very direct
that what I said today to you was going to be guided. OK. And so it has been guided.
So all this stuff has been guided by the Anunnaki but that means that the Anunnaki
don't believe Islam is a real religion. The Anunnaki believe that they had an Anunnaki dug
up in a hoax in 2007 in Iran. Yep. The Anunnaki are pretty easy to trick, Dan. I would say that
if she's getting external like really wise information you wouldn't perpetuate a hoax.
A grave hoax. I respect to some extent somebody who can take tinnitus, a bad dream and sentimentality
and turn them into an entire alien religion. Right. There's a little bit of reaching for
the stars there, so to speak. Literally. There's an indication of how these things that are very
normal human experiences can be twisted by exposure to ideas like this. Yeah. And they
also amplify and probably allow you to take in information and integrate it into your worldview
that you might not otherwise like Islam is a fake religion created by the Jesuits. Yeah.
That's why exposure to these worlds I believe can be dangerous even if wacky. Absolutely.
So in this next clip we learn about her being incarnated on Anunnaki. I was wondering about
that. And also we learned something at the end of this that I think could honestly be an episode
to itself, but I'll just have to explain it to you. Okay. So are you aware of like the Neanderthal
bloodline that you may be part of? Same bloodline. No. On Anunnaki. Okay. But you know they made
human hybrids, right? Yeah, I'm not a human hybrid. You don't think you are? I'm incarnate,
one of them. All right. I'm really, I don't fit in in human society at all. And that's just how it is.
And their way of thinking makes sense to me. And I just fit it with them better.
Yahweh and I have a very open relationship in terms of trading meaning and thoughts back and
forth. We can, we can just, we can- And Yahweh still on Tinder. I have a terrible time trying to
talk to my children. Okay. And then, you know, I was, as a reshka gal, I was part of the royal line,
the royal bloodline. And on Mars, I was part of the royal bloodline. And so now I'm one of
three illegitimate daughters of the Duke of Windsor. I'm part of the royal bloodlining.
Okay. All right. All right. All right. All right. That's a roller coaster. All right. I feel really
sad for her on one level because what she's expressing is so deeply human. You know, like
she feels alienated from people around her. She has a hard time connecting with her children.
I mean, literally alienated. Well, yeah, that's what it's become. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The way to deal
with those feelings and to cope with them is to create an entire worldview that's surrounding,
like I'm communicating with aliens. They understand me. Their line of thinking is much more in line
with mine because it is mine. Right. I have, I have stamped onto these aliens. Yeah. Some sort of,
they get external identity as opposed to just being, I have thoughts. Yeah. And you can totally
see how the, the sequence of events could unfold. She starts to believe things that, you know,
she's on YouTube all the time. She's believing stuff that is wild out there. She's talking to
her kids about it. And they're like, that's absolutely not true. Please stop doing that.
And then as they stop talking to her, because she starts to believe more and more crap,
they, she's more isolated. So she starts to believe more and more crap. Yeah. This is the story that
you hear pretty regularly now or at least from time to time about people who get into QAnon.
Yeah, absolutely. Like you see this, this spiral of isolation that happens around these, these worlds.
And I think some of that is fairly intentional. Yeah. Like the people who are promoting these ideas
don't want people to have a robust, healthy ecosystem of friends and relations because they
will check you. Oh, no. They will help you not fall into these traps. Absolutely. And it's called
find vulnerable people and then they make sure that you're isolated from your support group.
And it's a bummer. It is a real bummer because on one level, I recognize that a lot of the stuff
that she believes is probably in some way a result of her feeling these feelings and becoming more
and more entrenched in this world that leads you down bad paths. Absolutely. I understand that and
I empathize with that. And I don't want to mock her for it. But I do think that there's a line.
Yeah. I think there's a line. And I also think that it's weird that she now is the heir to the
throne. That does happen. That does happen. You know, sometimes you're not paying attention
and then all of a sudden you're the illegitimate daughter of the Duke of Windsor. That happens.
She has not my fault. According to her, she has prophyria, which proves that she's from
the royal bloodline. That makes sense. It's not a one to one, certainly. Right.
So Arish Kigal is the line of that's the wife of the Nenar. No, not Nenar, the one,
the alien that was found in Iran. Yes. Yeah. The wait, that wasn't Nurgle might have been Nurgle.
I don't remember all their names. Arish Kigal, I believe, is the wife of the Anunnaki who was found
in Iran. It was part of the royal bloodline. She is connected to her in some way and is therefore
part of the royalty of the Anunnaki. She's somehow royalty on Mars. And now she is one of the
illegitimate children of Edward VIII here, which makes her the heir to the British throne.
Well, one of them. Well, there are three. Exactly. We don't know if she's the oldest.
No, she's not. Oh, see, then there we go. She's not. She's not even, she's not eligible yet.
I think this whole thing about her, there's a lot of controversy surrounding her claim to the throne.
From what circles, Dan? From what circles? This is known history. I should tell you.
This is known history, Dan. I should tell you it's a little scandalous.
So, she... Number 10 is trying to keep her out of the government entirely.
She has three, or there are three. She's one of three of these illegitimate children of Edward VIII.
And she brings up one of them in this next clip. Okay.
Okay. The next half-sister lives in Virginia. Her name is
Peggy and Childers. She has a YouTube account. She has a lot to say on YouTube.
She doesn't like me very much, and I like her. We are half-sisters.
All right. Yeah, well, that's what royals do is they spread the seed around.
So, that's what my dad did. That's what he thought was the important thing.
I don't know that they do.
They throw it, and they're tossing it around.
I am not positive that that is the case anymore. I believe that that would be a real threat.
It would be a lot of trouble.
It would be a real threat, first of all, to monarchical systems.
Secondly, it would be a huge threat to the reason why royal families intermarry is the
protection of property. I really think that there would be a very serious
issue with it. I mean, this would rock the foundations of...
I mean, just period to discover the royal family, the monarchy, the symbol of the United Kingdom
is just throwing it around.
And the rightful queen is somewhere here in the United States.
Or in Virginia.
Possibly Emily. Now we know why she's Windsor Craig.
Right.
I was actually... That's interesting, because whenever she was introduced as Emily Windsor
Craig, I was like, hmm, isn't it odd that she has a name of a royal in her?
I was hoping that that would slide under the radar until the end.
So, or it could be Peggy Childers out in Virginia.
So Peggy does have a YouTube account, and it's mostly full of videos about how she's
the rightful heir to the throne. She's the queen Victoria, the second, I believe.
Okay.
Apparently, according to her, FDR is a Jew and part of the Illuminati.
Well, so he set out to destroy Peggy's father.
Off to a good start.
Because he would play ball with the Illuminati.
Obviously.
Edward apparently was replaced by a bunch of clones, doubles.
A bunch of clones.
I mean, not clones. Definitely doubles, body doubles.
Okay.
And one of them married Wallace Sampson and abdicated the throne.
And apparently, another one was Emily's father.
So Emily Windsor Craig thinks that she's the daughter of Edward VIII, but actually,
it was one of the clone doubles.
Okay. So Peggy, though, is a legitimate daughter.
The real Edward VIII.
The real daughter.
Married her mother, so she is the rightful heir to the throne of England.
Right.
Yes.
But her mother is not, like, he didn't abdicate.
Her last name is O'Keeffe.
Okay.
I'm not sure what...
All right.
Her mother was Georgia.
No.
Different O'Keeffe.
This is all convoluted.
Yes, this is convoluted.
A ton of her videos have to do with how Emily is a fraud.
And about how Emily had tried to contact her so the two of them could work together.
I'd really hope this would be a more fun way to approach the situation.
Like, we could listen to a bunch of her videos about this feud about these...
It was a rat beef.
Supposed heirs to the throne.
I'm all about it.
We're talking the Black Prince versus...
Yeah, I'm waiting.
Yeah, but the more I looked into Peggy's channel, the more another picture came together.
It wasn't a coincidence that she makes such a point out of the fact that she believes FDR is Jewish.
Oh, well, that doesn't surprise me at all.
There's a ton of subtly racist shit in her YouTube channel and tons of videos about how,
like, white supremacist terrorism is the result of mind control.
Sure.
So it's really weird they have another pretender to the throne in this Peggy...
Peggy Childers who was just vaguely mentioned on this episode.
You go to her YouTube channel and you find very similar shit.
You see anti-semitism.
You see defense of white supremacist terrorism.
You see stuff like videos about Michelle Obama that include the words,
pickin' cotton in the title.
I'm like, I'm not even gonna talk about that.
Nope, no, no, no, no, no, thanks.
No, thanks.
I can just leave that out of my life.
Nope, pass.
So it's insane.
You got these...
Man.
And after she brings up her claim to the throne here, Emily,
Carrie wraps up the interview pretty quick after that.
I don't think she's very interested in hearing this.
And so they wrap it up.
And that's what our new friend Emily Windsor Craig, man.
So all the anti-semites, let it go, man.
Let it go.
To paraphrase, let those people go.
Oh, so I want to say this.
Ultimately, it may seem kind of weird for us to have done this episode.
And there might be some people who think it's an exercise
in making fun of someone who's in pain or struggling,
you know, especially with her comments about the alienation that she felt.
You know, I definitely empathize.
And I don't want it to feel like I'm beaten up on her or anything.
I sat with these thoughts and I considered them.
And I decided that if I allow that excuse for Emily,
I kind of have to allow it for everybody on Project Camelot.
She's lucid.
She defends her positions, although very poorly.
She has all of her mental faculties,
and she's clearly not in some sort of a real struggle.
Like I've seen in a number of cases with the episodes
of Project Camelot that I just won't do.
While we can maybe read from context clues
that she's felt a serious alienation from people in her life,
and that's led her to adopt some elements of a fantasy life
that she feels more in line with,
that doesn't make her off limits to me.
I spent three years isolating myself.
I didn't have, you know, I was out of my mind.
I didn't suddenly start believing that a billion people
were fucked over by the Jesuits.
And I didn't start disseminating that information
and trying to hurt people with it.
If we made fun of the human aspects of what she's...
Yeah, if we were like,
Nan, you don't get to see your kids anymore,
then yeah, fuck us.
No, I'm awful.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it would never behave that way.
But the fact that she believes and perpetuates this stuff,
if you can't just allow it
because she's having a human experience.
How many people in Turning Point USA adopted that worldview
because they felt they didn't fit in
on college campuses around the country?
How many times have you heard the story
of people falling in with dangerous groups
because they offered them a sense of community
which they felt they lacked?
This is the story of so many cults.
For sure.
I believe that it's important to treat people
who fall in with these ideologies
with a great deal of empathy.
And I still do have feelings of compassion towards Emily.
However, I also believe that the world we see in front of us,
we can't allow compassion to entirely blind us
to the reality that a lot of the time,
people who enter ideologies
because of motivations we can empathize with
often end up becoming disseminators
of the very same ideologies
which is a behavior that cannot be empathized with.
What tipped the scales for me
was when I was looking to see if I could find Emily's books
to maybe come to understand her positions
a little bit better.
I couldn't find any PDFs or any real reviews of her books,
but I did find her blog.
What particularly caught my eye
was a March 27, 2015 post entitled, quote,
What is a Jew?
No!
In the post, she argues that the Israelites
went to Ireland after the invasion of the Southern Kingdom.
There it is.
And that's where the lineage traces down from.
Conversely, she argues almost all people
who believe themselves to be Jews are not Jews,
and quote,
Do not have the gifts that God Yahweh gave
to the seed of Abraham.
She closes the post by saying, quote,
I'm sorry, but you don't know your history very well.
And that's why the Anunnaki had red hair.
Sure.
That's why there was a red beard there.
Perhaps.
So she's espousing British's real life beliefs.
She's espousing Christian identity beliefs.
She's perpetuating these things.
And even if she got sucked into this stuff,
I would never do an episode about her
if she wasn't on Project Camelot.
Like, I don't believe that she has a huge reach.
Right.
Necessarily on her own.
And I think it would probably be an exercise
in punching down if we did an episode like,
if I found her bitchu channel.
Yeah, yeah, that wouldn't be fun.
But Project Camelot still has a much larger audience than us.
She's being featured as somebody who has something interesting
to say about deceit in human society on that channel.
She's being deceitful and hurting human society.
This is not the first time she's been on.
She's someone who Harry had on was like, let's have her back on.
Jesus.
So when a lot of these ideas that she's disseminating
to a wider audience than we have are traceable back to the,
like Islamophobic zealots, Christian identity beliefs,
bullshit that's intentionally misleading
about the Gospel of Barnabas, hoax videos about Iranian graves.
It is still important that we talk about it.
Absolutely.
I think, I think it's still very relevant to our worldview.
And I don't know, maybe I'm being a little bit defensive
because I do prioritize empathy towards people
and not wanting to beat up on people who are, you know, struggling.
Absolutely.
And if I believe that there was a larger mental illness
that was driving her, then I probably would feel
like we shouldn't do this episode.
But from what I've been able to tell,
I think that she's just somebody who believes fucked up things.
And whether or not pain in her life led her to believe those things.
She is now trying to disseminate these beliefs.
And she's being successful in it.
She's on a platform larger than ours.
So it's fair game to me.
Yeah, she's absolutely fit to stand trial, so to speak.
And I get it, like the impulse to be empathetic over all is very good.
But it has to be tempered by a, we can't let this shit go, you know?
Like that kind of thing.
So I understand your defensive position.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I think what I'm trying to...
But also, fuck her.
What I'm trying to express is I think that the overarching empathy
is a guiding principle.
And when I try and operate through that,
it requires a lot of questioning if it's appropriate to, you know,
laugh at some of this stuff.
Right, right, right, right.
And I've gone through that process.
And I've decided that, yes, in this case, it is okay.
She posted on her fucking blog before she was a guest on Carrie's show.
What is a Jew?
So I don't feel too much qualm about that.
But it is important to go through that process all the same.
Because if you don't, it's too easy to fall on the wrong side of it.
And I think that there are some people who may think that we still fell on the wrong side of it.
And I respect their opinion, but I disagree.
I can't imagine that the end goal of empathy is inaction.
True.
That doesn't make any sense to me.
The idea that being empathetic means allowing this shit to go unchecked.
Sure.
You know what I'm saying?
Sure.
We can't be ignored just because we understand where you're coming from.
I understand where tons of people are coming from.
You know, it's...
You go back to a serial, you know, he was abused when he was a child.
A lot of people were abused when they were children,
but they didn't grow up to murder a shit ton of people.
Yeah, yeah.
It can't be...
And to put another layer on that, like the thing that's human,
and I'm not making fun of about her, is her feelings of alienation from other people
that led her to decide that she is talking to aliens.
Right.
Who agree with her and think more like her.
Strange how they always agree.
But I would not make fun of that.
If this was just an episode where she was talking about feeling great disconnect and,
you know, that she now has a bunch of aliens that she's in communication with,
I wouldn't think that that was appropriate to talk about.
It's where it extends into really dangerous ideas that have real world consequences.
Absolutely.
Because I did find her bit shoe channel and it's full of agitation towards Muslims and immigrants
and reinforcement of that worldview.
Yeah.
So the way it manifests is a very...
I mean, there's no other way to put it in line with the world we talk about.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
It's...
What it is, is like there is a version of what she's talking about that I would never make fun of.
But unfortunately, this is a version that puts itself into what I consider fair game.
Yeah.
No.
Fuck her.
Wash my hands.
I wash my hands of it.
So anyway, we'll be back.
But for now, we have a website.
We do have a website.
It is knowledgefight.com.
You know how you spell knowledge?
How?
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That's right.
We're also on a N-N-N-A-K-E book.
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We're on Twitter at knowledge underscore fighting at go to bed Jordan.
That is correct.
Indeed.
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There are many cats who carry a, you've heard of toxic plasmosis, I believe?
I have.
Toxoplasmosis.
Toxoplasmosis.
Well, that also comes with an episode of our show.
So if you're feeling a little...
So if you have a baby, put it on the litter box and you'll get our podcast.
Don't do that.
So as we wrap this up, I would say that DERGAL.
DERGAL?
How dare you?
Arescagal.
Arescagal has never killed anybody.
But one guy who technically probably has is Alex Jones.
Andy and Kansas, you're on the air.
Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex.
I'm a first-time caller.
I'm a huge fan.
I love your work.
I love you.