Stuff You Should Know - Nostradamus: Predictor of the future? Not so much.
Episode Date: January 22, 2015Nostradamus delighted us all in grade school, but it turns out the real guy wasn't quite as prescient as we were led to believe. In truth, he wrote a lot of purposefully confusing riddles that people ...have twisted into meaning exactly what they want them to mean. Learn all about Nostradamus in today's episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant. There's Jerry.
I predict this will be the best podcast of the new year.
Man, I don't know about that one. I don't think that prediction is coming true.
And the first month when Gray filled the sky, the recorders of Gobbledy Cook hit a high-water mark.
It's a little on the nose for Nostradamus. Actually, it should have been even more big.
Like way bigger. Yeah. That was like explicit for him. Yeah.
Yeah. Because Nostradamus used to like to just basically take concepts and words and put them
together and pretend like they were going to happen. Yeah. Nostradamus snored a little nutmeg.
When I was a younger person, I realized like from this and ESP that I was into some pretty cool
occult stuff. Yeah. Read lots of books about ghosts and things like that. Sure. Me too a little bit.
And then now I was like an older person. Like I wanted to go to Duke University to study
parapsychology. Oh, really? I was into like that kind of thing. Wow. And then now as an older person,
I'm like, man, some of the things I used to believe. Just do a face palm here. Like for example.
We got into real science and that's usually what happens. Yes. So the pseudoscience has kind of
fade away once you start educating yourself. Well, we shouldn't say parapsychology is necessarily
a pseudoscience. That's not French science. We're here to poo poo Nostradamus, not ESP or
parapsychology in general. But for instance, I remember not only believing, but frequently
saying, dude, Nostradamus, he had to be exhumed once like at the church he was buried at. They
were like expanding and they had to exhume his grave and they opened his casket and he was holding
a tablet that had the day they exhumed him. I thought that was real. I thought that really
happened when I was a slightly younger man. That's awesome. Yeah. When you were in your late 20s.
All right. Yeah, I remember I didn't read up on stuff like this, but I was a big fan of
like Leonard Nimoy's In Search Of and all these TV shows that kind of dabbled in the fringe
scientists. And what's wrong with that? Nothing. There's nothing wrong with enjoying that kind
of thing, liking it. Maybe even wondering if possibly some of it could be real. No, nothing
wrong with exploration. Right. But the key to keeping egg off of your face as much as possible
is to doing research, especially when a claim is very extraordinary. Yeah. Really look into it.
Yeah. Like had I looked around, had the internet been invented yet and I'd looked around and I
probably would have found somewhere some interest saying like that is absolutely not true.
Well, that's one of the the internet is one of the big reasons, I think, because before that was
around, you know, it's you'd have to go search out a book that was written right doing those
dramas. Yeah. And the card catalog. And it was just a lot harder back then, you know. Yeah. But
the internet is a double-edged fiber optic line. I mean, there's a lot of sites out there that
I mean, no drama has gotten probably even more popular and even more play
since the internet was invented. Oh, sure. You know, yeah. So let's talk about this guy.
Let's try to separate the man from the myth and really get into who No Stradamus was because he
was a lot more than a crackpot writer of vague predictions. That's true. He was one of the tough
parts is though, is that there are so many disagreements about his biography even. Yeah.
I didn't find that necessarily. Yeah. I saw one guy wrote a book at him that said he wasn't even a
doctor. Oh, okay. That is a disagreement. Yeah. Well, let's go ahead and go there then. Okay.
So he was supposedly born in 1503. No, not true. In France, he was born Michel de Nostradam.
He became Nostradamus because he Latinized his name after he graduated from medical school,
which apparently was custom at the time. That's right. But when he was born, he was Michel de
Nostradam. Yeah. And he was his family was educated and they believed in education. So he was from
an early age, an academic in a traditional sense. Right. Nothing wacky right out of the gate. Well,
his grandfather instructed him as when he was a younger man taught him languages and kind of
sparked his interest in all sorts of different topics and all things learning. Yeah. And do you
remember when we did the Inquisition episode? Yeah. Where there are a lot of Jewish people who
converted but just converted in name only. Yeah. Yeah. Apparently, Nostradamus's family was one
of those. Oh, so that wasn't a genuine conversion? Supposedly not. Gotcha. Again, it could be myth.
It could be whatever because he was on good terms with the local Inquisition and the local
church officials for most of his life. So I guess either they didn't suspect him or he had a pass.
I don't know. Oh, that's interesting. That makes sense. He studied astrology, which was
at the time respected, well respected as a science. Yeah. And supposedly his fellow astrologers
thought he was full of it. Oh, really? His contemporary astrologer pals. Well, one of the
things that he did was he studied and this would play out throughout his career as a predictor,
but he really just wrote the book, the centuries book, which we'll get to. But he studied astronomical
patterns that coincided with historical events. That's astrology. Well, yeah, but he would basically
use those to predict the future events. Like by some accounts, he didn't even say that he was
a prophet. He said, I study history and basically history repeats itself. And so I'm going to use
the stars. And when these things line up pattern wise and the certain year in the future,
this may happen again. Yeah. So that's like real astrology. Yeah. We should do an episode on that.
Yeah, I've been thinking about that one for a while. This one, well, the article we have,
like almost like spits in the middle. Yeah. It's so one sided and skeptical. There's just a picture
of a big lube. Right. But I looked into it and like there's the, it's fascinating what they
used to believe in all of the holes you can punch in it. But it's a pretty, we should do that for
some time. Yeah. I had my chart done one time, like for real by my friend's mom. And I remember
looking at it and thinking like, wow, that's a lot like me. Yeah. It's pretty accurate. But even
remove that last part, the amount of thought and effort and what it's based on in the ancient
tradition of it and everything, that in and of itself is fascinating. Yeah, totally agree. And
then you get into, we're totally doing astrology at some point. But so what he was doing with
astrology, apparently where he ran afoul of his fellow astrologers was to make predictions of
how something would come about rather than the next time Venus is in the seventh house of Mars
and a cat catches fire. There's going to be an earthquake or something like that. He went
further and like made predictions about, you know, what was going to set this off and like
where the people involved were going to come from and like, and then he was very, very vague.
Right. So all of that added to the astrologers disdain for him because he gave him a bad name
pretty much because they were all right. Exactly. So he left home supposedly in 1522
to study medicine, legit medicine and became a physician. Most people agree that he became
a professor and a physician in southern France. And apparently he was pretty good to doctor
at treating plague victims. Yeah, he's very ahead of his time. Yeah. Even though he lost his
wife and son, I'm sorry, his children to the plague and his wife. Yeah. And that had a big
effect on his life. Obviously he basically sent him on the road for a decade, which is where he
kind of came up with this plan to write this book. So he, he was a, he was a progressive doctor in
that like he prescribed sanitation practices. Yeah. He prescribed fresh air. He also apparently
came up with a rose hip lozenge to help cure plague, mild cases of plague. And that actually
makes sense because rose hips are packed with vitamin C. Yeah. So he was a pretty good doctor.
He had a good record. And from that, he lived in this village with his wife and children and
had a patron who basically supported the family. And then once his wife and children died, he
couldn't cure them. His star really fell in this village. And about the same time, he also had a
pretty good sense of humor. About the same time, they were raising a statue of the Virgin Mary
in the local church. And he thought it was the ugliest thing he'd ever seen. And he was making
a comment on the artist's abilities. Yeah. Not the Virgin Mary, but he said, these guys are casting
demons. Like basically saying, that's a really ugly Virgin Mary. Right. Well, the artist didn't
like this and turned him into the inquisition. That's about the time when he ended up on the road.
Yeah. And he went all over Europe. Just basically he was described as sort of wandering.
But he did meet another woman and get remarried on his wanderings. I think toward the tail end
of his wanderings about eight years later and moved to Salon in France. And then he started kind of
getting his, getting his act together in a, in a, in a real way to publish. Like he, he said,
you know what? I'm going to put together this book of prophecies. I've been messing around.
I've been kicking the idea around. I'm just going to do it. So we'll talk about what came out of that
right after this. Attention bachelor nation. He's back. The man who hosted some of America's most
dramatic TV moments returns with a brand new tell all podcast, the most dramatic podcast ever
with Chris Harrison. It's going to be difficult at times. It'll be funny. We'll push the envelope,
but I promise you this. We have a lot to talk about for two decades. Chris Harrison saw it all.
And now he's sharing the things he can't unsee. I'm looking forward to getting this off my shoulders
and repairing this, moving forward and letting everybody here for me. What does Chris Harrison
have to say now? You're going to want to find out. I have not spoken publicly for two years about
this. And I have a lot of thoughts. I think about this every day. Truly every day of my life. I
think about this and what I want to say. Listen to the most dramatic podcast ever with Chris
Harrison on the I heart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Do you ever
think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh God,
seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man.
And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one.
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I heart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. So Chuck Nostradamus is
settling down in Salon, Salon. Yeah, selectives. And he is deciding to put his awesome thoughts
down into quatrains. That's right. And to a book called the centuries. But at the time,
he just called it the prophecies. Yeah, the prophecies of Michel Nostradamus. I think what
when did they rename it? I think after his death. Yeah. And apparently the centuries had nothing
to do with time, but it was in the structure, the organized structure of the book itself,
right? Because there are 1000 quatrains or four line versus in hundreds. Yeah. For some reason.
So that's the centuries. And it wasn't it wasn't chronological or anything like that?
No, and it was it was a it became a huge sensation due to a few things. One simply enough was that
the printing press was a recent invention. And books were a big deal now, you know, like widespread
books like those. Now something could literally be a bestseller for the first time. So it aligned
in that way. And another is that he just sort of fit the dark times. It was a book for and of its
time with all his dire predictions. It was, you know, when the Catholics and Protestants were
warring and there were all kinds of people saying the end of the world was coming. And it was just
it was basically put out right at the right time and widespread because of the printing press.
And then Queen Catherine de Medici of France was a really superstitious queen. And he predicted
her husband Henry II's death. Yeah, I'm pretty specifically for once. Yeah. But we'll poke holes
on that too. And it happened a few years later. And so she invited him to the court,
which was like the most popular court in Europe at the time. And so he got a lot of attention
there. So he was sort of like a big writing superstar of his day because of all these
things aligning. Yeah, I mean, like he wasn't one of those posthumously honored authors,
like he was celebrated during his time. Supposedly he met some monks on the road once and correctly
said that one of them was going to be the next pope. Bam. No way. Case solved.
Nostradamus is the real deal because that supposedly happened. So he had like a whole
jam going where he would retire in the evenings. Yeah. And he would concentrate on maybe a fire,
the flames of a fire, meditate on it. Yeah. Or he would take a bowl with some herbs or something
in it and just zone out on those try to read the herbs. Yeah. Like you said, I don't know if he
was doing lines of nutmeg, but he was ingesting nutmeg most likely. Yeah, which could be hallucinogenic.
Right. And he had to have been rich to just be doing nutmeg, you know. Yeah. Because they had just
discovered that. Yeah. And he would just kind of zone out. He would apparently he got help from an
angelic figure. That's what he says. Said. And then he would just see the future. It would come
to him. The thing is, is Nostradamus, these prophecies didn't come to him all convoluted and
kooky and however he put them, he understood exactly what was going to happen. Well, yeah.
He supposedly convoluted them on purpose to avoid persecution during his lifetime.
Yeah. That is supposedly what he told his son from a second marriage. Is that Cesar? Yeah.
Anyway, doing all this on purpose. Yeah. And because they will, you know,
string me up as a heretic because I'm so eerily accurate. Yeah. They will find out.
Which I mean, at the time, it was a genuine concern. So it's not like this is just a
preposterous claim on Nostradamus's part. It's just that for skeptics of Nostradamus,
it's just one more convenient little thing. Because if you read the quatrains, they make
almost no sense in all sense simultaneously. Yeah. Depending on whether you're reading them
on their own or whether you're trying to look at them in context. Well, yeah. Well, we might as
well go and talk about that. That's one of the big reasons you can poke holes in it is because
there were even experts say it's hard to find two copies of this book that are the same. Oh,
yeah. Yeah. Because it was translated, you know, hundreds of times. It was the early printing
presses where, you know, they weren't super accurate. And they would, if the printer maybe
didn't know exactly what he meant, they would say, well, I think he meant to actually have an
apostrophe here. And in middle French, that apostrophe could completely change the meaning
of the word. Right. So beyond that confusion and the translation confusions, there are,
like you said, there are many different ways to interpret something. And if something didn't come
through, you could probably find a version out there of it that supports whatever you think he
predicted. Right. You know, yeah, there's a pretty good example that people give of a translation
problem. After 9 11, which we'll talk more about in a second. Yeah. They some some quatrains of
or I guess an assemblage of Nostradamus's quatrains were kind of bandied about as proof that he
predicted it. Right. Yeah. One of them was that there'll be smoke in the new city. Well,
in his actual text in the centuries, he wrote Villa Nouve via Nouve, which means in French,
the new city. Yeah. But it was also a city in France at the time that he was probably talking
about. Yeah. So there's a lot of translation and interpretation that can come together and really
lead to a misunderstanding. If there is even such a thing at all with Nostradamus, can you
misunderstand him? I don't think it's possible. Can you misunderstand what's not understandable?
Right. Yeah. Well, since we're talking about interpreting, we might as well go on to the
famous Hitler prediction. Bees ferocious with hunger will cross the rivers. The greater part
of the battlefield will be against Hister, into a cage of iron. The great one be drawn
when the child of Germany observes their thing. Man. I want, I hope we added some effect to that.
Jerry, yes. Vocal effects. Yeah. Something menacing, maybe. Or maybe we should do like clown music.
So Hister, this was, has long been looked at as the prediction of the rise of Hitler. Yeah,
he says Germany in there. Yeah. It's clearly Germany and Hister. Yeah. But Hister was actually
the lower Danube River. And so most people or skeptics would say, well, he didn't say Hitler,
he said Hister. Since that was a place, that's probably what he meant. Yeah. Or he would have
said Hitler. Yeah. It's kind of a miss right there. Some people say, well, Hitler was born
around the Danube. So he still met Hitler. That's exactly the point. Is it people will find a way
to interpret it if they choose to. But the Nazis still use this to their advantage. They actually
dropped pamphlets containing this prediction on to France from planes because they wanted to scare
them like, hey, even Nostradamus said we're coming. Yeah. And we're coming. And it worked. I guess it
did for a while. So there's basically the, if you're a skeptic of Nostradamus, you say, okay,
first of all, he's not really saying anything. Right. Or anything concrete. Right. And a believer
of Nostradamus would say, well, he even said that you're not supposed to get it unless you're one
of the enlightened few who get it in the future. Yeah. And I happen to be one of them. It's not
for this time. It's for people far from now to understand. Right. And so the skeptic that's
arguing will sigh and then say, okay, here's the thing, though, even if even if he is saying
something like even there, if there's something clear, he's making a prediction and it does seem
to come true. If you look at events in human history as numbers on a graph, yeah, eventually,
statistically speaking, one of Nostradamus is very vague predictions about the rise of a power,
yeah, a war, sure, an earthquake, something like that is going to happen. And maybe
maybe something will have even a couple of predictions that will fit one event. Yeah,
like the date might align somehow or something. Yeah. Because every once while he used dates,
but for the most part, he didn't. But if you look at it statistically, yes, even Nostradamus'
predictions are going to come true over a long enough period of time. Right. Again, if you read
the predictions, it's hard to say his predictions come true because he's not really predicting
anything. It's not like he sat back and said, sometime in the 20th century, a guy with a
terrible mustache is going to come to power and there's going to be a horrific war as a result,
nothing even approaching that. Yeah. I mean, you read what the Hitler prediction was like,
there could be anything. Yeah. But even if you have predicted something, if you take his predictions
as predictions, if you put them over the arc of time, sure, eventually, you're going to get hit.
So that's one argument, a skeptical argument against Nostradamus. Yeah, especially if you believe,
like most people do, that history repeats itself in some fashion over a long enough timeline.
When he himself said that that's the model he used was using the stars to look at past
historical events to predict future events. Right. So it kind of makes sense. And also,
some people say these aren't even predictions because a prediction is something that you
realize before the fact. And despite the fact that thousands of scholars have studied Nostradamus
and millions of people have read him, no one has ever pointed out something before it happened.
It's always afterward that they go back and see, look, see here, he said this was going to happen
and it happened. Right. Because we interpreted that way. But no one's ever said, stopped anything
in its tracks because Nostradamus predicted it. That's an excellent point. Yeah. It also
raises another argument against Nostradamus in that the people who follow Nostradamus,
like you said, it's always the interpretation is always after the fact. And allegations of shoe
horning occur where basically you make something fit, you shoehorn it in to the context. And in
doing so, you cherry pick stuff that makes sense and you ignore stuff that doesn't make sense.
Yeah. In fact, I think this article, this one line says it best imprecise language lends itself.
Well, to subjective interpretation. Yeah. I mean, if you throw something super vague out there,
you could come up with a hundred different interpretations of it. Yep. You know, that's
what poetry is. Exactly. And, you know, despite all of these very great arguments,
there's still plenty of people out there who believe in Nostradamus. It almost seems like
there should be a phase in life where you do go through believing that Nostradamus is real because
it does kind of lend some sort of something to life. It also coincides with being really into
Pink Floyd. Exactly. That's true. So we'll talk a little more about some of the people who argue
for and against Nostradamus specifically centered around 9-11 right after this.
Attention Bachelor Nation. He's back. The man who hosted some of America's most dramatic TV
moments returns with a brand new Tell All podcast. The most dramatic podcast ever with Chris Harrison.
It's going to be difficult at times. It'll be funny. We'll push the envelope. But I promise you
this, we have a lot to talk about. For two decades, Chris Harrison saw it all. And now
he's sharing the things he can't unsee. I'm looking forward to getting this off my shoulders
and repairing this, moving forward and letting everybody hear from me. What does Chris Harrison
have to say now? You're going to want to find out. I have not spoken publicly for two years about
this and I have a lot of thoughts. I think about this every day. Truly every day of my life. I
think about this and what I want to say. Listen to the most dramatic podcast ever with Chris Harrison
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Lance Bass,
host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing
who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah,
we know that, Michael. And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through
life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life. Oh, just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye,
bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts. Okay, Chuck, 9 11 happened and almost immediately people said,
Nostradamus predicted this. Yeah, his sales went through the roof, apparently. And supposedly,
his name was Googled more than Usama bin Laden or George Bush after 9 11. Really? It's what they say.
That sounds like something someone just writes on the internet. Exactly. But I believe it. Well,
here's why his star rose again was because this quad train emerged where it was like,
like, yeah, that's pretty close to what happened. Yeah, I remember hearing it and thinking, Oh,
my gosh. So you want to read this one? You're pretty good at reading it. Can we get the sound
effect again? Please cue the clown music. In the city of God will be a great thunder two brothers
torn apart by chaos. While the fortress endures, the great leader will come. The third big war
will begin when the big city is burning. That's super specific. Yeah. The only thing I
don't know if most people would agree on is calling New York the city of God or George Bush,
the great leader. Yeah. But the two brothers clearly those are the two towers. Yeah, the fortress
endures, the Pentagon, the great leader, Bush. Yeah, some people said. And then the third war
will begin when the big city is burning. Well, at least one more war. I don't know if it was World
War three, but a pretty huge couple of wars started up as a result. So yeah, people are saying,
here it is. Finally, evidence that shows almost incontrovertibly that Nostradamus was the real
deal. What's the argument against the Chuck? Well, it was made up. Yeah, Nostradamus didn't write
that. No, it was apparently written by several years ago by a guy named Neil Marshall was a
student in Canada and said he was actually using that as a demonstration of what Bunk
Nostradamus was like. I could write something like this and people would think he predicted 911.
And somehow it became something that Nostradamus wrote. He actually proved it by writing that
in 1997. Yeah. And then it getting picked up in 2001. Yeah. So what he set out to do worked
like it perfectly. He didn't have to wait more than four years. So he basically showed just how
man, I hate to use this word, but global people can be when they're reading Nostradamus' work.
Because no one checks anything, dude. They see it and they click on it and they post it to social
media. And then it's done. And here's another really good example of that. A little while ago,
this still cracks me up. Clickhole, you know, the onions like Buzzfeed like site. Oh,
is that onion? Yeah. I didn't know that. I believe so. Yeah, I'm almost positive.
I know clickhole. Yeah. Okay. So clickhole, satirical site of like Buzzfeedy sites.
They released something called Five Tragedies Weirdly Predicted by Adam Sandler. And dude,
they are, so can I read a couple? Yeah. Yeah. So read all five. In the wake of the 1993 tragedy,
apparently people went back and saw that Adam Sandler during his early standup career would
mutter something's coming to Waco, something dark like during his standup show. Is that true?
None of this is true. Okay. I thought they just picked apart real things and
no. Okay. So the 1997 car crash that, that killed Princess Diana. Yeah. Apparently if you go back
and watch Happy Gilmore, which was made in 1996, Sandler looks directly in the camera and says,
our Queens eldest, the beautiful flower will wilt under a Parisian bridge. Can I keep going? Oh,
yeah. So the BP oil spill that happened in 2010 in the Gulf. Yeah. Apparently Adam Sandler was on
Conan O'Brien in 2005 and he was just wearing a t-shirt that said BP oil spill in five years.
The 2010 Haitian earthquake. Yeah. The UN estimates that 222,570 people were killed.
Apparently in Adam Sandler's funny people, he estimated 220,000 on the nose. And then lastly,
the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. Adam Sandler, when he was opera man, there was a 1993 opera
man sketch where he says, I'm missing plane. It's from Malaysia. Makes me insane. This will all
make sense in due time. That's good, man. Here's the thing, man. People believe that. Oh, shut up,
really? Viral. I'm not kidding you. It went viral that like somehow Adam Sandler had made all these
crazy predictions and this is a real thing. Because apparently they didn't announce that
when clickbait came out that it was a satirical site. That BP oil spill on the t-shirt is pretty
good. Yeah. Well, let's get into some of these then. First of all, to further the 9-11 thing,
there were a couple of other quatrains which have been cobbled together to try and support
the 9-11 thing. But like I said, they weren't as he wrote them. They like would combine things,
which is just silly because that goes against everything that he was saying was each quatrain
is his own thing. One of them, Century 10, Quatrain 72, the year 1999, seven months from the sky will
come the great king of terror to resuscitate the great king of the Mongols before and after Mars
rains by good luck. That last part sounds like it's from a fortune cookie. That before 9-11,
back in 1999, some people thought he was foretelling the end of the world would be on July 24, 1999.
And I remember this happening and I remember it being a big deal. There was like genuine concern
from some people. Like some stores in France had like closeout sales. There was this one
French designer who cancelled his big. He was a big believer and he cancelled his big show.
And of course, it didn't happen. And then it was recalculated and everyone said,
no, no, no, no. It wasn't supposed to be July 24th. If you read it this way,
it means August 11th. And of course, the world didn't end then either.
How do you get August 11th from seven months into 1999?
Well, again, there were some different translations that maybe were different enough to
to recap it. But then that one was also used for 9-11 was repurposed for 9-11.
Right. They're like, he was just close. Yeah, exactly.
This is a couple of years off. Well, they combined that one with century six,
quatering 97, which says at 45 degrees, the sky will burn fire to approach the great new city.
In an instant, a great scattered flame will leap up when one will want to demand proof of the Normans.
What is that last thing? I'm not sure.
Sure. That's the thing. You can't just pick part of it and then discount the rest.
Right. And say that he was wrong on that.
But that's exactly what people did.
Well, they did because several quatrains refer to an Antichrist figure called Mabus.
And if you rearrange the letters, it could be Usam B.
Yeah.
And so people use that as proof, but they also didn't, they failed to mention that
previous to that, they used it as Saddam.
Like up to the day before 9-11.
Yeah. They were saying it was Saddam Hussein was Mabus.
Because Mabus fell backwards as Subam.
Kind of a reach.
If you ask me.
It is. Well, in that 45 degrees part of the quatering, some people said that New York City is
around 40 degrees, five minutes north latitude. So that's close.
Yeah.
But again, he was said the New City will burn at 45 degrees Villanueva or Villanueva
is at about 45 degrees latitude.
So it could just be interpretation.
I don't know who's really at fault here.
Is it Nostradamus?
Is it the people who just blindly accept Nostradamus' predictions?
Is it though?
Because Nostradamus purposefully obfuscated his stuff.
So I think he's a little bit responsible for this too.
I imagine since he has that great sense of humor and made fun of that one guy statue of the
Virgin Mary.
Yeah.
He is sitting in his coffin holding a plaque with some future date when he'll be exhumed
is laughing and laughing.
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah.
We mentioned Henry the second he predicted his death.
This quatering, the young lion will overcome the old one on the field of battle and single
combat, he will put his eyes in a cage of gold, two fleets, one, then to die in a cruel death.
So that means two injuries.
And this actually happened.
King Henry was in a jousting competition, but it wasn't on the field of battle.
It was a friendly, it was a party basically.
And Captain Montgomery, who was younger, the younger lion, did joust, hit him in the eye and
through the throat.
So the two injuries supposedly from one.
Man.
Yeah.
But that was all that his, his wife, uh, Dima DiCi, Queen Dima DiCi needed to know.
She was like, you know, holy crap, this has come true.
Yes.
And he knows what he's doing.
Uh, John F. Kennedy, the, the challenger, the great fire of London.
People have, uh, said that he's predicted, predicted all these things, but we could sit
here all day poking holes in the, you know, that not that we're poking holes, but other
people have poked legitimate holes.
I think we poked a few holes.
Well, yeah, but I mean, it's all been from other people's stuff.
Oh, that's true.
You know, I didn't do my own hole poking.
No.
And we should probably say we'd never begrudge anybody that believing in something like that
or enjoying like, I don't think it hurts anything behind it or anything like that.
Yes.
And if you go out and dump all your stocks and sell your worldly possessions.
Or you cancel your big fashion debut.
Yeah, that's all that just hurts you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Although that may have hurt the fashion world.
Yeah, he probably had it the week after.
You want to hear something crazy?
Yeah.
About the day before September 11th, this group called the coup.
They're a rap group out of Oakland.
They're pretty awesome.
Uh-huh.
They were releasing their album, I can't remember what it's called.
I want to say like party time or party fever, party something.
Yeah.
And like the day before the and it had the guy boots Riley, who is like the the emcee
for the group.
It had him like standing there pressing a button and the twin towers were coming down
like blowing up.
Oh, they were going to release it like the day before.
It was scheduled to release in September of 2001.
And then 9 11 happened.
They're like, well, let's change the cover.
And that's why you've never heard of the coup.
I wonder actually, yeah, well, they were getting kind of big right around that time.
The album had like good buzz around it and then yeah, they just went away.
They're still around them.
Well, all the all the entertainment that was released around that time notoriously suffered.
Yeah.
Um, can't remember what movies in particular, but yeah, exactly.
There are a lot of things that are on the people like, well, we've released it right
before 9 11.
So we were, you know, we were doomed.
Yeah.
But it was a movie who cares, you know.
So if you want to know more about Nostradamus, you can go look this up on house to works.com
by scanning the search bar, or you can just kind of look around the internet because there
is plenty of stuff about that dude on there and enjoy yourself.
And since I said enjoy yourself, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this trailer builder.
Um, hey guys, Chuck and Josh or Josh and Chuck, whichever you prefer.
We prefer Josh and Chuck.
I think it goes either way.
Yeah.
Well, that's what we kind of settled on.
Consistent branding.
No, it goes both ways.
We go both ways.
Yeah.
All right.
Chuck and Josh, Josh and Chuck.
Hey guys, I must admit that I tried very hard not to listen to you.
I was told by several of my friends that I absolutely must subscribe to your show.
However, as a stay at home dad, by day to a beautiful three year old and three month old boys,
very busy small business owner by night, I had trouble finding enough time to go poop,
let alone indulge in any form of entertainment.
Needless to say, I did listen in wonder and became instantly addicted.
I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed learning.
The two months since I first gave you guys a shot, I've been on a steady binge and I'm quickly
running out of back episodes to listen to, which is a frightening prospect to me,
considering your podcast is a fuel that powers my motivation engine while I work.
My brother and I own and operate Oregon trailer, this trail, Apostrophe R,
where the two of us build high end, tiny teardrop style camp trailers.
Nice.
Have you ever seen those?
Yeah.
Really cool.
Yeah.
Like, I want one of these.
So, hand to hand.
Duffy's gonna send me one.
I found that while my hands are on autopilot building trailers,
my brain has been totally neglected listening to my requisite Pandora stations.
But now that I'm listening to you fellas and receiving constant brain stimulation,
I'm getting more done than ever and enjoying every second.
And my wife and sons thank you as well as my general mood has improved,
despite the potentially unhealthy lack of sleep.
However, my lovely wife is still getting a little tired of the phrase.
So, I was listening to stuff you should know last night, dot, dot, dot.
So, I just want to say thanks for everything you guys do have done and will do in the future.
Large amounts of platonic love.
That is Sawyer Christensen.
And I'm gonna plug Oregon trailer.net just because these things are really cool.
Yeah, Oregon trail apostrophe er.
No, on the website, it's trailer.
Okay.
Oregon trailer.net.
Good point.
And if you're in the market for one of those, like, check them out.
Small business, handmade.
Yeah.
Send me one, send Josh one.
Yeah, that'd be sweet.
Yeah, they're pretty neat.
Thanks a lot, Sawyer Christensen.
Great name, by the way.
And we appreciate the kudos.
And if you out there, everybody else who isn't Sawyer Christensen,
wants to get in touch with us to say anything at all.
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