The Joe Rogan Experience - #2428 - Michael P. Masters
Episode Date: December 18, 2025Michael P. Masters, PhD, is a professor of biological anthropology at Montana Technological University and the author of several books exploring the hypothesis that alien visitors may be human time tr...avelers from the future. The most recent titles are "The Extratempestrial Model," a work of nonfiction, and the novel "Revelation: The Future Human Past." www.idflyobj.com/books-%26-merchwww.youtube.com/@MichaelPMasterswww.idflyobj.com Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. This video is sponsored by BetterHelp. Visit https://BetterHelp.com/JRE This episode is brought to you by Monster Ultra. Zero Sugar, Flavor Unleashed. Visit https://monsterenergy.com to learn more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Joe Rogan podcast checking out
The Joe Rogan Experience
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night
All day
Mm-hmm
Yeah
Disclosure Day
Very interesting
Yeah, I'm excited for that
Yeah, he was always like way ahead of the curve
When it comes to the whole UAP, UFO stuff
You know, with close encounters
of the third kind. He had that French scientist that was essentially modeled after Jacques
fillet. Yeah. He's always been, I would love to talk to him. I wonder how much he knows.
Is that an accident? Was he fed some information? Was he a part of disclosure the whole time?
That's what I've always wondered. I mean, what does that mean, right? Because there hasn't really been
disclosure. No, but it has to be a slow process too, right? You think so? I don't think, I mean,
And the whole idea is that they're just sort of normalizing it, right?
Neurolinguistic programming, they call it, where you're slowly getting people accustomed
to these ideas.
Like the aspects of close encounters, for instance, where you have the radiation burns
on the guy's face, you have a time travel component where these World War II soldiers get
out of the craft with the little beings and the bigger bean.
And I mean, just seeding our culture with those little bits of information that might
help later on down the road. That was like in the 70s, wasn't it? Like, when was close
encounters? Uh, yeah, I think it was. Was it the 70s? Late 70s, early 80s, maybe.
Yeah. Either way, I mean, like a lot of stuff he's done. Like, I rewatched the,
God, what was it, Jeff Bridges Starman? I think. There's a lot of elements of disclosure in that,
too. Like, I think there's just, I don't know. I mean, obviously we don't know who's pulling the
strings. We don't know what's going on. We don't know who's in charge. But it does
make sense that if there is this thing that they know about, that we're supposed to know about,
leak it out, do it slowly, get in our culture, get it in our media in different ways.
You know the Hal put-off story, right, with George Bush?
Do you know a story where they were talking about, okay.
Hal talked about it on my podcast, but he also talked about it in the Age of Disclosure documentary
where they brought in him and a bunch of different prominent thinkers.
Yeah, I watched that episode, and I watched the doco.
So to people that don't know, I'll just explain it.
So they brought in him and a bunch of other prominent thinkers, and they had, they sat them down and said essentially, we have recovered crashed UFOs.
We have biological remains of these creatures.
We are considering releasing it to the public, and we want to make an assessment of what are the pros and what are the cons.
So we want to assign a numerical value that, you know, you're estimating what kind of an impact it would be on government, finances.
religion, et cetera.
About whether they should do it basically.
Right, whether or not they should release this information.
And all of the people that were brought in came to the agreement that there was more
con than there were pro, and that formed their decision to not release it.
And didn't he say at first, like, he was pro disclosure.
He was like, of course, we should do this.
And then after the conversation, he switched teams and decided.
Yeah, I don't know about that.
Maybe, perhaps.
I thought he said that he went into it thinking, well, yeah, obviously we should do this.
and then sort of was convinced otherwise after the conversation unfolded.
Yeah, how could you be convinced?
Like, whose decision should it be?
If some people know, everyone should know.
It's a humanity decision.
I don't think it should be in anybody's hands to decide whether or not this information gets distributed.
And the implications, too, if they have zero point energy.
Like, how would that solve the problems that we face today?
There's so many ramifications of it that, yeah, whose decision?
is it and why has it been kept from us
I don't I don't buy that whole like
Orson Wells 1938 everybody
freak out bullshit I don't
I don't think that's the case at least
not anymore there's got to be something more
to it than that it would certainly have
I don't know if they factor this
in but a uniting element
like you remember the Reagan speech where he came
in front of the United Nations where he said imagine
how united we would be would forget our
differences if we were faced with an alien threat
from another world I mean just
knowing that we are
all unite. I mean, we, how old are you? Uh, 47. Okay. So you remember September 11th.
Mm-hmm. One of the, one of the things that happened after September 11th was there was,
it was a horrible tragedy, but there was a beautiful result temporarily where everybody was
really united, like really united. Like, there's American flags and everybody's car in Los
Angeles, you know, like the most ridiculous, progressive sort of kind of, you know, kind of
fucked up place. But everybody became patriotic. And in New York, everyone was friendly. I mean,
people were smiling and saying hi to each other on the streets. We had all decided that we were
together and that we were faced with a real threat and that we had to be united. And I remember
it well. Yeah. You're right. And not to get too weird too fast here, but if there are aspects of
sort of an all-encompassing consciousness that unites us associated with the UFO phenomenon too,
if we recognize that we are just fingerprints on the same hand.
We're all iterations of the same overarching consciousness.
If seemingly there is a part of that in the UFO phenomenon.
Yeah.
So how would that unite us as well, even beyond the threat from outside?
Like if we did start to understand that we're all part of the same sort of cosmic community,
sounds kind of weird to say that.
It does sound weird, but have you seen the Apple Shale Pluribus?
No.
it comes up a lot worth watching it's really good yeah it's really good it's very very original very
unique but that is essentially what happens and it has a negative aspect to it there's a virus i don't
want to give away too much of it for people that want to watch the show because it's a really good
show but there's a virus that they get a signal from another world and they figure out what this
signal is and through this lab work they reveal that this signal is
some sort of the encoding of a specific virus.
They work on this specific virus.
It spreads, and the entire planet becomes one consciousness,
except for a small number of people.
Interesting.
It's a weird show.
It's a really good show.
I don't know I'm going to explain any more of it like that.
I don't have any spoiler alerts, but it's fucking great.
But it's strange.
It's like, wouldn't that be better?
There's no crime.
There's no this.
But then it reveals all the problems that come along.
Yeah, I'm going to have to watch that as a counterpoint, if anything else, because it makes sense to me that if everyone's kind of united as one, super organism of sorts.
But you lose all individuality.
You lose all the fun parts about being an imperfect person.
Right.
Because we are an imperfect species, but that's also what makes great art.
That's what makes great music.
It's what makes great fun.
Most creative people have the most trauma in their past from what I've seen.
And if you have zero trauma, you probably have sucky art.
It's just stick figures and shit.
I mean, I wonder why would be, if they would even have a need for it.
No, because it's an expression.
It's getting you're angry out.
Right.
Or your angst or your anxiety or depression, whatever it is.
You're getting something out.
I was telling my son that the other day.
Avi's his name.
You know, it's hard being in these bodies, especially going through puberty.
You know, you're just like, what is this thing I'm carrying?
This little meat suit, you know?
And I was like, man, I was the same way.
I still am the same way.
And I picked up instruments.
I started painting.
I learned to play every sport I could physically play.
Like, there's ways to get that out, you know.
But it seems like a lot of that does come from just the anxiety and the angst.
And, you know, you're growing into yourself.
You're starting to get the feels.
You know, you look at women differently.
And it's like, what do I do with this?
Well, it rechanges, it rewires the entire way you view the world.
and meanwhile your body is physically changing and growing and like what am I going to look like eventually
this is weird it's so weird you know there's actually this uh in a small island in the pacific
they have this weird um characteristic where they start out as females everybody does we all start
out as females in utero and then maleness is imposed on the developing fetus but they they don't
until puberty because they're not sensitive to dihydro testosterone the precursor to testosterone so
So they grow up their entire life as girls, and then at puberty they turn into a boy.
So they get raised as girls?
They are girls.
They're physically girls.
Not yet.
Nope.
What?
Is there a planet?
I mean, this is an island.
It's an island in the South Pacific.
It's called pseudo hermaphroditism.
What?
I know.
I learned about this in grad school.
So what do they look like?
They look like girls.
What?
Exactly like girls.
They are girls.
And then the ovaries descend as testicles and the clitoris grows out into a penis.
Wow.
So you think puberty is hard enough already.
These people turn into the opposite sex at age like 12 or 13.
It's wild, man.
So is this a bizarre genetic anomaly?
Is there something to do with the environment?
Yeah, so a lot of times on islands you get like really strange characteristics of people
because of the isolation and those characteristics get selected just through genetic drift alone
because it's a small population.
So just probably one person had this really weird trait where they're insensitive to dihydro testosterone.
And then it spread throughout more of the population.
It doesn't do anything.
It's not something natural selection would select against.
It's just weird as shit.
What is the name of this island?
I don't remember the name of the island.
But the condition's called...
Find it?
I think it's Malo Island and Vanadu.
Oh, yeah, Vanity.
How many people were on that island?
This says there's a population in 1979 of 2,300 people.
Yeah, and think historically...
There's two kinds of people there or something that says to...
Two different kinds of people?
Two cultural groups.
Isn't that wild, though, man?
I remember hearing about that in grad school, Ohio.
state. And I was just like, I'm sorry, what?
It's so strange.
I'm sure you've seen those people, the ostrich feet people in Africa.
Uh-uh.
It's a very strange genetic anomaly where they don't grow toes.
They essentially have two very wide appendages.
Weird.
Yeah. It looks like a weird bird foot.
It's very strange. But a bunch of people in this particular tribe share this trait.
Is there any advantage or it's just, it's like this where it's kind of.
kind of happened and yeah i don't know i don't know i mean i don't know what advantage there would be maybe
it's it's maybe it's really sexy to him it's just like maybe you could move better with it i don't know
it's it's that's what they look like whoa yeah i don't know how i haven't seen that that's wild
oh no isn't that crazy i mean it is kind of sexy um if that's what you're into dog i've never
got a big guy that's been going on for vodoma see that seems like more of like a defect that just
work toward fixity in the population maybe not but it just makes you wonder like why don't we it's in
zimbabwe apparently why don't we all have that you know like what is what is the reason why we have
all these toes that it's called electrodactyl yeah that electrodactyl i mean historically prehistoricly
evolutionarily i should say if you did have something like that and you were hunter-gatherer you're
kind of boned you know you're not going to be able to run after a gazette
I don't know.
Maybe you can.
It's like it says their feet are well adapted to the Zimbabes.
Oh, Zambazi, not Zimbabwe.
Zambazi Valley's rough terrain, allowing them to move quickly and efficiently through the landscape.
All right.
I take it back.
Well, it kind of makes sense, right?
Because what it's saying is that their bones are fused.
If you scroll up, it'll say, condition affecting ostrich-footed tribe, genetic mutation passed down through generations,
causes the bones and the feet to fuse, resulting in a claw-like structure.
with two large toes.
Toes are very vulnerable.
I don't know if you ever broken a toe,
but it's a...
I broke one an hour before I got on the plane to come here.
Really?
Have you could see my left foot?
Oh, that's hilarious.
That's ridiculous.
Like, the whole thing is just purple.
Yeah, they're so small.
Like, my pinky toe, I was messing around my pinky toe the other day
because I have to trim my toe nails, right?
And the pinky toe is, like, barely a nail.
It's so tiny.
And I'm like, God, this little thing is so vulnerable,
and it has to support my entire body weight
or part of my entire body.
wait yeah they're so dumb oh yeah you can see that it's all like it's jacked yeah that was like right
before i was coming down i'm like you're kidding me that sucks that sucks yeah i've broken a bunch
of toes it's it's very very annoying and you would imagine if you had two giant fucking elbow
bones down there instead of these bitchy ass little toesies oh maybe that's why they did it maybe
that's what they got going on kind of makes sense that that would be an adaptation invincible feet
Yeah. Well, you know, we're so vulnerable. And that's one of the weirder things. So first, we should get into what you do because you have a very interesting theory. Tell everybody what your background is, first of all.
Yeah, all right. That does seem like a good place to start. My background is in anthropology, biological anthropology. My research mostly focuses on evolutionary anatomy, biomedicine. I've done some archaeology, various places around the world in Montana. But the reason I'm here, I assume, because according to my friend Matt, we were we were butchering a mule deer, I think, I shot. And I was like, yeah, I got to go to this conference.
I was like, do you want to know what it's about?
He's like, nobody gives a shit about what you do other than the UFOs, man.
I was like, damn it, he's right.
Like, I did actually use to do a lot of what I thought was cool stuff.
But, no, the main thing is that I've become known for advocating for this idea that UFOs and the aliens are actually a time-traveling future human descendants.
I wouldn't even say as opposed to extraterrestrials because I do think that's a component, too.
I oftentimes get pigeonholed.
People are like, oh, you just think they're all time travelers.
I don't.
I actually say this all the time, but it doesn't matter.
I do think there's a lot going on.
But my background, and the reason I approach this question this way,
is because there's a lot of characteristics of these aliens that look so hominin.
They look just like us.
And specifically what we'd expect to see in our hominin future,
if the same evolutionary trends continue into the future.
So I kind of just tie those things together.
And even the saucer-shaped craft seemingly are time machines themselves.
So that's kind of the Cliff Notes version.
Well, it's a theory that a lot of people have independently sort of come to, right?
Yeah, especially recently.
And the concept of, just if you just think about ancient man,
I was watching this documentary on Neanderthals last night about this one intact Neanderthal skeleton that they found that was,
it had sort of been
he had died in a cave
and you know there's stalag mites
is stalactites are mites how do you say
tights are up mites are down
so he was essentially mineralized
there was stuff all over the body
and it took a long time for them to break this body
I think I saw that
was on Netflix
no I was watching it on YouTube
maybe originally it was on Netflix
but it was just documenting
how strange this body was
that they had found but it was
immensely strong
like much stronger than us.
One of the interesting things
was that their visual cortex,
the part of the brain
that would process imagery
was larger than ours,
10 to 20% larger.
So these things probably had better eyesight than us,
perhaps even we're able to see at night,
and that this was a bigger, stronger version
of a human being,
like much more durable than what we are,
modern 2025 homo sapiens.
If you just look,
Yeah, that's it.
So that's one of them.
Neither human nor Neanderthal.
Oh, really?
This is a published.
This might not be the same one.
This is maybe a different one.
That's a weird one because what's that fucking thing on its head?
That's what it says it's a stalactite growing out of it or something.
Wow.
In a weird form.
Weird.
Yeah, it's like a unicorn.
Yeah, like a crest.
They do have a sagittal ridge.
Yes.
Homo erectus had one.
There's an offshoot in our hominine lineage called the Paranthropus or robust Australopithecines,
and they had a full-on, like, guerrilla-style.
Really?
Sadrtle Ridge.
Yeah, because they were a vegetarian, so they just chewed all day.
Right, so they had massive muscles to chew.
Yeah, their whole face is huge.
Wow.
Neanderthal is kind of, I mean, they were just big.
It's just a robusticity thing, but there is evidence from Shannadar Cave in Iraq where they were using their teeth as tools.
We think they were, like, tan and hides.
They were holding the hide in their mouth and then, like, scraping all the nasty bits off.
And you can see that in the tooth wear.
So, yeah, they were pretty badass.
They were the first, I don't know, I think this is cool, but a lot of people think I'm a nerd, too.
They were the first to use the flake.
Like, for 2.8 million years, we just hit a piece of rock and were like, oh, this cool tool.
But then they figured out that if you hit the rock in just the right way, the piece that falls off makes an even better tool.
It took us like 2.5.
Yes, exactly.
You make a narrowhead.
And from that point on, like, I got to work at a place called Chapeno, Jean-Zac, in southern France for a summer, and it was a Neanderthal site.
And we found these, actually, it's pretty funny because when we first got there, these tools called MTA hand axes, Moosteri, and it was Shulian tradition hand axes.
There were only eight found in all of Europe.
And they said, if you guys find one of these, we'll buy you all the beer and all the cognac, you can drink.
So we're in the cognac region of France.
And we found one like the fourth or fifth day.
We went on to find seven more over the course of that week.
We doubled the number of these things in existence in all of Europe.
And they were not lying.
They bought us so many damn beers.
Like archaeologists like to drink.
I'm sure.
We dig and it's boring as hell.
You know, it's not Indiana Jones.
We're not running around banging hot chicks and flying on planes.
We're like, we got a spoon and we're doing this for eight hours.
So, yeah, I actually found the last one on the last.
last day and it was by far the worst one. Like I had to argue that this is even, it should even
count as one of these. But yeah, it was a cool site. So yeah, they were, they were doing well,
but we were doing better. We came in and replaced them. Well, something happened where we
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The point is, as time goes on, humans today are probably the most feeble version of humans
that have ever existed.
Oh, for sure, yeah.
And we're the most feeble versions of people that have existed within the last century,
right?
Like, if you go back to humans from the 1920s versus humans from the 2020s, people have way
less testosterone now, way or higher instances of miscarriage.
wages, way lower sperm count, you know, there's a lot of factors that are at play right
now that are changing what a human is.
And if you extrapolate, if you look at the future, you would naturally say, well, we're probably
going to be very thin.
It seems like there's at least some sort of a push to eliminate gender.
Like gender seems like it's on the table as whether or not it's even necessary.
There's all sorts of new technological innovations that are leading to.
to the possibility at least sometime in the future of an artificial womb, there's genetic engineering
with CRISPR and a lot of other different technologies that are being explored that we might be
able to engineer human beings and then even create a complete individual human being
without a mother, without a father.
So if you thought about what that looks like in the future, like one of our problems in this
planet is we all have different ideologies, different religions come from different parts of the
world. We look different. And human beings as tribal primates have a tendency to other. We other
different tribes. Those are not us. We are us. Those are the enemy. You rally around it. But if everybody's
exactly the same and we share one mind, you know, then a lot of our problems go away. If we no longer
have to compete for resources. We no longer have the desire to procreate and to acquire
land and to be, you know, to have a territory. We, we eliminate a lot of our issues. And that's
what these things look like. When you look at the archetypal, these iconic sort of shapes that
have been on cave walls all the way up to close encounters of the third kind, one thing they
share is that they have no muscle. They have large heads. They have big eyes. And they're childlike.
They're very pedomorphic, as we say. Yeah, you just tied together, like, a lot of really important
points related to this theory, aspects of why they're always interested in our gametes, why they
come back and put that little machine on a man to collect semen, why they're constantly taking
eggs from females and implanting fetuses, pulling them back out later. Like, they're clearly focused on
reproduction, gamut extraction.
And one of the things that might be fueling that in the future, if these are future humans,
let's just assume for a second, hypothetically, is that they might be having problems
directly resulting from these trends toward self-domestication, these trends toward
feminization, these trends toward reduced sperm counts, which is 60% across most populations
of the world, the industrialized world, 50% across the entire world.
yeah problems with reproduction in vitro fertilization exogenesis chambers might help solve some of those
problems growing the fetus outside of the body so so yeah and like you said you know what do
they look like they look like kind of a hybrid between males and females to some extent but
there's still an essence of gender like if you talk to wittly streber you know he's with this
being he he says in communion that i had a sense that she was a woman i don't know
know why, but I kind of sensed that. So it's almost like the essence of the individual, the
soul of the individual still retains that sort of gender identity, even though our bodies are
becoming more childlike, more gender indiscriminate. I don't know. But yeah, yet another one of
those ways in which we might sort of grow together as a species. Now, when you say they are extracting
sperm like how many of these stories do you take seriously there's a lot of these stories a great
question you know this unfortunately for any sort of spectacular public thing that's in the zeitgeist
like alien abduction whether it's wittly streber from communion or the john macbooks uh the guy from
Harvard that wrote, what was it, abduction?
Passport to the cosmos, an abduction, yeah.
Two great books.
Great books.
But these are all books about encounters, close encounters of the third time with some sort
of a being from another place.
Whatever it is, it's just not a human being, and it seems to be technologically at least
superior to us.
It seems to be one thing they all seem to share is they seem to be able to communicate
telekinetically or telepathically.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I mean, they aren't human, but they are very human too.
So, for instance, that's one of the main reasons I started exploring this.
I was actually kind of put into this when I was eight or nine years old, sort of activated in a way and put on this path by a weird thing that happened to me.
What happened to you?
Well, so I talk about it in my first two books, identified flying objects and the extrater tempestrial model, where I learned about a close encounter.
that my dad had. He was a veterinarian in northeast Ohio where I grew up. And he was out one
night on a call with another guy. So there's two people as far as Jalen Hinex reliability scale
has more reliability because there's multiple witnesses. It's also strange on his scale because
they crested the hill. There's a bright light. This is an Amish country. There's no lights
in Amish country. And all of a sudden this bright light darts toward them,
hovers just above their truck, darts back to where it was and straight up into space.
like at incredible speed.
So this happened before I was born,
but I overheard him telling the story
to some friends one night.
He got Whitley Streber's book Communion,
as most people did in the 1980s,
and as they should, because it's a great book.
And I walked into the living room.
The book is sitting on the shelf facing out,
and I remember, like, it was yesterday.
I sort of stopped,
and there was like this light, like a white light.
And then I saw this image in my mind
of like an early homin and chimpanzee
creature, a modern human, and then that archetypal gray alien from the cover, with this
information, what if they're related? What if they are us from the future? And obviously, I mean,
that's why I became a biological anthropologist. People are always like so. You saw this? Yeah,
it was like a flash, like a light. And it, you know, it's weird looking back on it because I know
a lot more about these experiences. I've talked to people that have had these types of experiences.
What was the setting? It was our living room. So it was like the, you guys, you guys,
come in the front door and just to the left, there's this living room, build-in bookshelf,
with these books right there. I just turned the corner, saw it, and then, like, just kind of,
it just came. Like, I didn't know shit about evolutionary biology. I didn't know about UFOs.
Well, you say you saw it, how? In my mind, just this white light. Just an image.
And those, that image of the three faces. And then the question, could they be us from the future?
And a lot of people are like, how did you get into UFOs? Like, you're a biological anthropologist. It's the opposite. I got into biological,
anthropology to research this question of whether they could be us from the future huh so so this
you felt like at that moment it wasn't just like a weird thought or a dream it felt like a message like
what did it feel like yeah yeah it was some it was a tasking you know i think i think rupert
sheldricks said it that that people don't have ideas ideas have people i think that was like the
hey go do this thing
And I did. That's why we're here now talking about it.
And obviously, you know, you've got to be careful about like selection bias and confirmation bias.
Like I didn't go into this. I didn't go into grad school. I also didn't tell anybody in grad school I was there because they would have kicked me out.
But I went into it with an open mind, but I was there to study these things because of that event when I was eight years old.
Wow. Yeah. It's, it is a problem. The confirmation.
bias. It is a problem with wanting it to be real. And I struggle with that because I desperately want it to be real. And so every time I talk to someone, you know, I've talked to a bunch of people that are, you know, air quote whistleblowers. And some of them, I think, for sure, have been sent in here to distribute disinformation. Yeah, no doubt. For sure, because it's a great place to do it. Yeah. I'll listen to you. I'll entertain almost anything. Which is great. We need that.
Yeah, you know, but yeah, I mean, obviously there's people that are going to take advantage of it.
But I think it's also important for me to say, I'm not convinced. I, you know, I don't know how much of this is horseshit, but it's not zero.
No. And that was your question, is how do I differentiate among these different cases?
I do draw from Heinex in his book, The UFO Experience. He lists out how we all should approach this based on the reliability scale and the strangeness scale.
Jacques Valet also drew from that, helped him develop it as part of the Invisible College and all of his work.
But regardless of like my own personal discernment, my second book, the extrater tempestrial model, is about 30 case studies, 15 main case studies, but then I pull in other ones.
And it explores the different theories.
Obviously the main one being this extra tempestual idea, this future, which by the way, I saw the word of the day.
Today was anachronistic.
And I was like, man, that would have been a way better word than extra tempestrio, which everybody struggles with.
I could have called them anachronauts.
Doesn't that sound cool?
That does sound cool.
That does sound cool.
That sounds really cool.
I know.
What the hell is I thinking, man?
Anyway.
Anyway.
What if you learn?
But so one of the most commonly reported things across all cases, regardless of what you think is bullshit, or you think this definitely happened, is they really want our sperm.
They really need or want our reproductive material, our gametes.
And it's funny because when I wrote my first book in 20, I started in 2012, published it in 2019.
Right at the end, I did an interview.
And someone was like, have you heard of Jim Penniston?
Like, no, which is kind of a failing on my B.F.
I'll admit that one.
It turns out, so it was the Rendlesham Forrest incident.
He touched this craft.
He got this binary code.
And he, when deciphering the binary code, they legitimately specifically said, we are you from the future.
we're having problems with reproduction he underwent hypnotic regression we're having problems with
reproduction and we need this genetic material to help ourselves and a lot of people are like well why are they
coming back and doing stuff to us i think they're coming back and getting stuff from us because of problems
they're having largely related to what you were talking about earlier with the reduced sperm counts
the problem with female infertility what if we do try to create the perfect human specimen or we try to cure
these genetic diseases through genetic manipulation CRISPR and we screw something up we might have to
come back that we can't go to another planet there aren't people on these planets we can't go and
sample gametes from these other places we might have to go into our past to get those wild type
unmanipulated gametes in order to fix these problems god that's that's a crazy level of
technological sophistication the ability to venture back in time and somehow another not fuck up the
timeline that's leading to I mean this is the problem that's always been theorized about time travel
anything that you do if you went back in time any interactions you would completely change how
the future would play out in the many worlds interpretation yeah so that idea is unfortunately very
pervasive and mostly because of back to the future which I think ruined the brains of most people
mine too certainly in my my generation um but what most visit and physicists don't agree on many things
but most agree that we live in what's called a block universe landscape time block time where if you
imagine all moments from the very beginning of the big bang to the end of the universe where all matter
disappears into like a black hole or contracts or whatever it does all moments are already there
they exist as this massive four-dimensional block of all moments, all world lines, everything.
So you go back into the past as you perceive it, you can do whatever you want.
You can walk around, step on butterflies, you know, slap people on the face, kick over, you know, dinosaurs or whatever.
I don't think we can go back that far.
But you could do anything you want and it doesn't change anything because you're going back in the black universe and doing those things you are always already going to do.
And when you get home, everything's the same because that was.
already there past to everybody that stayed behind that was already there past it was only the
future for you to go back and do those things that you were already going to do and then you just
went and did them get home everything's the same because you were always going to do those things
in the first place that's bizarre that's hard to swallow if that is the actual model of the universe
and again I can only work in writing these books I can only work from what we know now
clearly there's a lot of things we don't know I'm not claiming to know anything beyond what
we can know right now. But physicists, despite not knowing what time is, they know it's an
emergent phenomenon. There's something more fundamental that time comes from. But they do agree
on this block universe model. And in that case, there is no paradox. How did they all agree on
that? Like, wouldn't you have to test that and come up with some sort of a hypothesis and then
try to prove it or disprove it? You're right. I shouldn't say they all agree because there is the many
world's interpretation of quantum mechanics where if you went back in that situation, it would
would be change. You would be changing the timeline. Would it be changing your timeline or would it be
changing a different timeline is the question. And how would you know there's more paradoxes
with changing things than not changing things. Why do you confidently state that you don't think
that they can go back to the dinosaur age?
Partly because three different reasons. One, I think they need tremendously high speed in order
to be able to go back into the past.
So basically, again, working from all I can work from in this time
with the limited primitive primate knowledge that I have in the year 2012 to 2025,
I basically just started with Einstein's Theory of Relativity,
which he published in 1905 on the electrodynamics of moving bodies,
and then in 1915 he published his paper on general relativity.
From that point on, almost instantly,
there were solutions to dispute equations that showed with the right parameters of a massively
highly energetic rotating ring or sphere or disc that you could create close time light
curves, that you could actually orient light cones back toward the past so you can physically go
into the past.
We saw this with Lens and Thuring in like 1917 and 18.
Kurt Godell.
Godell universe was not long after in I think the 20s maybe.
And then importantly in 1970s, you have.
Frank Tipler, who showed mathematically that you can shrink that down to a disc. He actually
called it a disk. And it's one of the reasons I think that these are time machines is because
it has all of the parameters described by Frank Tipler. He wasn't talking about UFOs, but they
seemingly have the ability to jump in and out of time. They appear and disappear. And I'm talking
too much, so I'll wrap this up in a second. But you're definitely not talking too much.
Well, I mean, we're here to talk, but I have an internal trigger where I'm like, shut up, masters.
You don't listen to that trigger.
Let it roll.
So anyway, you know, if you look at the history of how we understand backward time travel, what I think they're doing is that I think they're combining general relativity and special relativity.
So I think they're orienting the light cones toward the past by rotating these things really, really fast.
You hear that all the time.
They power up.
They're spinning or at least there's some sort of flywheel on the outside that's spinning.
I think that's what's allowing them to move toward the past.
and then they take off.
So it's that high speed that I think allows them to go further into the past.
So you're aware of the twins paradox, I'm sure, time dilation, where you have two twins,
they're the same age, and then one goes into a spaceship, they move at tremendously high speed,
they come back, and they're much younger than their twin, because time move faster back on Earth.
I think they're using that high-speed motion while light cones are oriented toward the past
in order to travel deeper into the past through that point.
process of time delation. There are limits to how fast we can go. Einstein was very adamant about
this because there's an increase in inertial forces the faster you go relative to the speed
of light. That's why he thought we could never go. That's why he thought that anything with mass
could never go faster than the speed of light. Light can do it because it's a wave or a particle
or both. So I think there's a limit to how fast we can go. The other reason is because Jim Penniston
in this hypnotic regression said that.
He's like, we can only go 40 to 60,000 years into the past or we might not get back.
You also have, and this is a more speculative one, so take it for what it's worth,
you also have the Dan Burrish testimony of this J-Rod, this allegedly captured alien,
who said, we're from the future.
We are you from the future, and we're from about 55,000 to 60,000 years in your future.
So those three things together are why I don't think we could go back 65 million years to hunt dinosaurs, which actually would be kind of fun.
When talking about going the speed of light, you're talking about not traditional propulsion, but some form of propulsion that allows you to go at insane speeds.
Yeah, electromagnetic is what it seems to be.
And importantly, the electromagnetic force is 10 to the 40 times more powerful in gravity.
So not only do I think that's what they used to fly
I think that's what they used to manipulate space time
Actually and Dan Burrish is not Dan Ferrer
I think you just had him on to the Age of Disclosure
Yes
There was this really cool thing at the end where
How put off and I think Eric Davis as well
We're talking about this space time bubble right
A really weird thing happened
We can get to that in a second
But I don't want to jump around too much
Because I'll lose people and myself probably
but this space time bubble that they form around the craft I think is also indicative of the fact that they're manipulating space time that they're traveling in and out of time they use it to hide in plain sight they manipulate the rate at which they move relative to us in their frame of reference and they're moving fast all around and they've slowed time down outside of that bubble so everything is really really slow to them and they can easily evade our bullets and our missiles but we don't see them because we don't have
that frame rate of perception and and if you slow videos down I'm sure you've seen
these all the time where there's like a and then you slow it down and you can see this
saucer shaped craft moving slowly across the sky once you slow down the frame rate
um but a really funny thing happened because I've never actually talked about this
with anyone before um I owe a lot of the fact that anybody even knows who I am to help
put off he uh when
I first started talking about this publicly in 2018, and then I published my book in 2019,
identified flying objects. He, I guess, reached out to the head of Mufon at the time,
who was putting together the 50th anniversary Mufon event and was like, hey, you should have
this Mike Masters guy come talk. And I found that out from the head of Mufon. He's like,
hey, just so you know, how put off of all people recommended I contact you. I had no idea
who that is. So I'd get on the internet and I Google how put off.
He also put Jesse Michaels, mutual friend, in touch with me after, I think he did an interview with him and Weinstein.
I forget his name.
Eric?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he did an interview with those two.
I guess Howe was like, hey, you should reach out to McMasters.
And he did, and we talked, and we've done stuff together.
But what was cool is that at the end of that age of disclosure film, when he's talking about the space time bubble, I thought back to after my first book came out, and I was contacted by someone who claimed to be an.
ex-intelligence person who explained that exact same thing to me back in 2019, that these things
aren't doing 10,000 G maneuvers that would crush anything inside to them. In their frame of
reference, what they feel is completely different than what we see. Because in that space time
bubble, they can be moving at 50,000 miles an hour to a right-hand turn, and it would splatter
or anything inside because of the G forces, that's what we see on the outside. But in that
space-time bubble, they probably feel one, two Gs at the most. So I started thinking, man,
was that how? Did How reach out to me with like a different email address and say, hey, just
so you know, this is how these things are happening, this is how they're able to do it. And I was a
dumbass. I still am a dumb ass, but I was an extra big dumbass back then. And I was like, oh, cool,
Thanks, man. You know, like a story went viral about my books and Fox News picked it up and
space.com. And so I was going through a bunch of emails. They recognized I wasn't getting what
they were saying. I was not picking up what they were putting down. And they were like, no, this is
important. Said it again and then it clicked. I was like, oh, yeah, that makes perfect sense.
They're manipulating the rate at which time passes in this bubble around the craft and we see
something completely different. So when we're seeing this, we are imagining what we can do. And we're
sort of saying, well, what would be an advanced version of what we can do? And what this technology is,
is something that's levels of magnitude beyond even our theoretical, like any sort of idea that we have
currently about, you know, potential future timelines of technology. Yeah. There's no one talking about
gravity bubbles that allow you to instantaneously traverse immense gaps in the universe.
Well, they might be talking about it behind closed doors at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Right.
And have been for 70 years, give or take.
That's the real problem with disclosure.
Like, how much progress could we have made if they had opened up all this stuff?
And you got to imagine if you were an intelligent life form from another planet.
You know, Diana Posulka talked about, her and Gary Nolan talked about how they refer to some of these things as donations.
They don't think of them as crashed vehicles because some of them are not crashed.
They're completely intact.
I think David Grush said that too, didn't he?
Yeah, I believe he did.
And even, you know, Lazar, when he was talking about it, you know, he...
Yeah, the sports model.
Wasn't that fully intact, too?
Fully intact.
Yeah.
Fully intact in operational and apparently they flew it around.
No kid.
Yeah.
That'd be fun.
Well, that was one of the reasons, you know, the whole story, how he got caught.
It's a really crazy story.
So he used to work at Los Alamos.
He was a propulsion's expert.
Guy put a jet engine on the back of a Honda.
It was a real freak.
You know, he made a hydrogen corvette in like the 1990s.
He was a nutty dude.
Clearly an engineer.
Yes.
That part checks out.
So he gets his job on Area S4 and goes there.
And it's all documented in Jeremy Corbell's excellent.
movie, Bob Lazard, Area 51
and Flying Saucers. So he goes there and sees this thing
and it's got a American flag sticker on it.
And, you know, they basically say, tell us how it works.
And he's like, oh, this is ours because he sees it as a sticker on it.
And then he realizes this is made out of some completely unknown
alloy. There's no seams in it. It seems to be 3D printed.
There's no controls inside of it. It's designed for something that's
three feet tall. It's all very fucking weird.
So he's working on this thing, not making much headway at all.
They understood that there was an element, element 115, that was not even on the periodic table, eventually found to actually be a thing by the large adron collider.
But even then, they only measured it for a millisecond, right?
So then he's saying that they have this stable version of this element, and you bombard it with radiation, creates this sort of gravity drive.
He's working on this thing, and it's all top secrets, so he cannot tell his wife.
So they're calling him up at 10 o'clock, like, hey, get to the airport, we need you.
And so he would have to fly out at random times, fly out to S4, and his wife was like, this motherfucker's having an affair.
Well, I'm going to have an affair, too.
So she starts fucking her flight attendant, or a flight instructor.
I think that's what it was.
When you have that kind of clearance, they are monitoring everything.
They're monitoring all your phone calls.
So they've realized that his wife is having an affair, and they think that he will be emotionally unstable, and it's too dangerous to have him working on this insanely top secret information if he's not stable.
So they tell them, you know, we're going to at least temporarily relieve you of your duties.
So he's freaked out, and he tells his friends, like, hey, this is what they're doing there.
They have these things, and they fly them every Wednesday.
I'm going to take you guys.
There's an area we can go watch.
So they take, he takes his friends out there on two separate occasions, I believe.
They get caught.
They get caught, gets arrested.
They release him, and he realizes like, I'm kind of fucked.
They might kill me.
I'm going to have to go public with this.
Contacts George Knapp.
I did see that.
Then the whole thing is history.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, that's wild, man.
And I think, and it's still happening.
You know, there's still these whistleblowers.
He says they used to fly them, and you could go watch them.
fly these things and they were moving in these really weird ways across the sky that you cannot do
with conventional aircraft that they only sort of understood how to like pick it up and put it down
they didn't understand how to like really that was out at groom lake right yes yeah i remember as a kid
i've been obviously been into this for a long time i remember as a kid seeing videos of people
going out and then they eventually closed it down you couldn't get to that spot but there was like
that was during the obama administration during the obama administration they actually had to admit that
Area 51 was real because before that
no one even knew it was real. I mean, it was always just
a joke like Area 51. It was like
for fun. But then they said, no, it is
real and we need to expand
the forbidden boundary.
Yeah. And isn't that when people were
going to like bum rush it too? Is that
when that happened? That was during COVID. During COVID
there was a bunch of dorks that like, we're going to crash
Area 51. That's a good way to
die. Exactly. They'll fucking kill you.
A natural selection. Yeah, they're working
on a lot of stuff out there and some of it is
weapons. Right. They can't have you.
internet dorks from Reddit
just running out into Area 51.
Yeah, I think they eventually realized that
because I don't think they went out there,
but I could have been bad.
I think it was all bullshit.
They weren't going to do.
How are you going to get out there?
Engagement farming.
Yeah, man, there's a lot of crazy shit
that's been going on.
It's been going on for a while.
Jamie and I were talking before
and about the stove piping too.
Stove piping?
Yeah, the different ways
that they compartmentalize what they're doing.
They talked about it in an age of disclosure.
too. That's a big problem because certain people are working on these parts of the craft to
reverse engineer them to understand them, but they don't have the whole picture.
Lazar was talking about that from the 1980s. In 1989, he said the people that are work on
metallurgy, we're not in contact with the people that are working on propulsion. And he's like
science cannot operate like that. Yeah. No, it can't because you need to know what's going on
beyond just this little part that you're working on. And if you have a bunch of people that are sharing
information, you get a much more comprehensive understanding of what this thing is. Yeah, we all
benefit from communication. Right, because there could be something involved in the actual
structure of it that lends to its ability to do something. It might not be simply just
structure. It might be structure with some sort of an ability. Yeah, you can't see the forest
through the trees in these situations. And it's unfortunate, and the argument they made in this
doco is that we're putting ourselves a disadvantage because other countries have probably
retrieve these things too and they might be working on yes in secrecy but if people are working
together right and not stovepiping this thing right at infinitum then they might be able to
actually make more progress faster than us so part of the disclosure push is to be like yeah these
things are real we have them let's get our best scientists together to work on this holistically
instead of compartmentalizing it would just imagine if they had done that from 1947 where we would
be exactly if that's real if roswell was real if all the crash was real Philip drake corso is correct
and all these people are telling the truth.
I know.
And we still have to preface these things with if it's real, if it's real.
And, yeah, I do the same thing.
I mean, coming from academia, when I wrote my first book, I had to be like if this is real.
But it's hard.
It's this paradox of sorts because how do you write to explain something that isn't real?
What's the point of even doing that?
Yeah.
So I think we have to assume.
I'm actually teaching a class at Montana Tech this spring.
called UFO's history and science.
Ooh, I would take that if I was in school.
I think it's going to be a lot of fun.
I know, I'm pretty stoked about it.
And I had these artists design a poster in Norway and the UK and just this crazy.
Like, I was like, how conservative should I be with this?
Like, just a UFO.
And I gave them total artistic freedom.
And there's like an alien holding the earth and this UFO's swinging out.
I'm like, all right, I guess that's what I'm doing.
Plastered it all over campus to recruit people to take the class.
But, like, I'm going in on day one.
we're not we're not going to fuck around with like are these things real we're not going to waste time on that we're going to jump in these are real here's what we're doing this is what we know this is what we don't know explore the theories explore the history explore the prehistory because it's it's a waste of time like these things these things are real you think they're real what makes you convinced um I have read enough accounts in researching this and from people
that I know, I mean, starting from when I was a kid, hearing my biological father's account,
you know, the way he told it. And then I interviewed him again in college to try to get more
information because I was just overhearing from the stairs when I was supposed to be in bed.
He saw what he saw. And then eventually, I saw some UFOs. What did you say? I was kind of pissed,
actually, because I started talking about this in 2018, and people were always like,
you ever seen a UFO? No, never seen UFO. I'd like to. And then finally, in 2022,
it might have been late 2021.
I don't remember exactly when it.
It was kind of warmish, so it was probably 2021.
But I was, everybody's in bed, I met my house, I live in a canyon, and I was having a whiskey, and I was like, I just walked up the canyon wall for some reason, like the hill behind my house.
I don't really know why.
I turned around, and I could see these five super bright lights over what's known as the East Ridge in Butte, Montana.
They were just like sitting there right over the East Ridge.
I was like, well, that's not normal.
Those aren't usually there.
And they weren't stars.
You know, they're way too big, way too close.
I would say they were probably within five to eight miles.
You know, they were in the distance, but they were like there.
And then I just kind of looked at them for a second.
Like, oh, that's weird.
And then one by one from right to left, they just went,
phew, shot off toward the southeast at like crazy speed, you know, like the kind of,
like in Star Wars or Star Trek, I hit Hyper Drive.
And there's that little light trail, like just one by one until they were all gone.
I have no conventional explanation for that.
Wow.
But I've never been one of those people that's like I need to see it to believe it.
Right.
Because I believe the people who say the same thing over and over.
There's patterns that we can extract from people's testaments who have had these close encounters.
And that's one unfortunate thing that's happening right now is we're talking about the pilots, talking about police.
But people have been seeing these forever, but they did such a good job manufacturing the stigma around it with Project Sign, Project Grudge, Project Blue Book.
They discount these people to make them seen insane.
That is one of the main points of evidence that I would point to that there is something.
When people think there isn't something, I'm like, you should really pay attention to what they were trying to do during Project Blue Book.
Yeah.
Because one of them, I have a buddy in mine, my friend Steve Graham, shout out to Steve.
when he was a boy
he was living in New York
upstate New York
and he filmed this red orb
that was flying across the sky
and he took some photographs of it
and they called
someone, some officials somewhere
I don't remember he was very young
and they said
we are going to analyze the photos
and then we'll bring them back to you
and they never returned the photographs
when he called he said no agents
there's no record of any agents coming to visit you.
We don't know what to tell you.
So they just took his photos and that was it.
But he said, whatever it was, you know, he was young.
I believe he was 10 or 11.
And he said, whatever it was was really weird.
He goes, it was this red orb that was flying through the sky.
It was a spacecraft.
It wasn't a sun.
It wasn't a meteor.
It looked like it was moving purposely and under control.
And it was there long enough for him to take a Polaroid.
of it.
Yeah, and they just completely erased any memory of it or any evidence of it.
When he called, like I said, they said no agents visited you, whatever the agent's name
were.
There was no agents by that name.
That's kind of the status quo.
They try to make you look like a fool.
Absolutely.
And that was intentional.
Like, the stated mission of Project Grudge was to debunk these things, come up with
conventional explanations.
make people seem like idiots.
Right.
It wasn't to investigate.
No, not at all.
The purpose wasn't, let's get to the bottom of this, find out, is this Russia?
Is Russia doing this?
That was not the purpose.
The purpose was make these people look like fools.
You only do that if you know something that other people don't.
Yeah.
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more. And it worked. I did a damn good job at it because we still feel like fools talking about
this. Oh yeah. And we still have to check ourselves and be like, is this real? If this is real,
you know? Right. But, but I think that shame is starting to diminish. I think the stigma is
starting to go away. Well, I think the New York Times article from 2017 was huge. That was a game
changer. That was a big one. Yeah. And then from then on, it's been this trickle. These guys like
Ryan Graves and, you know, guys like David Favre, these David Favors guys that was, you know,
He was in a fighter jet, saw this thing move from 50,000 feet above sea level to sea level in less than a second.
Yeah.
And they saw this thing, there was something under the water below it.
It's like whatever he saw.
And if you ever talk to him, have you ever talked to him?
I've talked to Alex Dietrich, who was with him during that.
He's a very reliable guy and very intelligent.
buy the book, very disciplined.
I mean, he was like a top gun pilot.
He was leading the whole group, right?
Yeah, he's a commander.
And when he describes it, it sounds very real.
Whatever he's talking about, he experienced.
I believe that.
And there's also a video of it.
There's video of it flying.
They have the radar data.
They know that it went to their designated meetup point.
The cap point, yeah, which is really weird.
It is.
And it indicates they knew the future.
or they were part of our military.
Right.
I kind of wonder if the Tick-Tac,
because it is somewhat anomalous in the context
of a lot of things in the UFO lore
as far as spinning discs or big triangular craft,
this one kind of seems like one of ours.
Well, it is odd that these things happen
where there's a lot of military training exercises.
Like this one was off the coast of San Diego.
It was off the Nimitz.
So they had the Nimitz, which was a,
out there. Obviously, you got a lot of military in San Diego. And the Roosevelt, too, I think,
is where they were capturing the radar. And the ones that Ryan Grave experienced were all
East Coast. Again, it's all near military bases. It's all where they do military training
exercises. Yeah, and why not figure out what you can do with people that you train with already
anyway? Right. And why not see, like, what is detectable and what's not? You know, Ryan Graves
talked about how in 2014
they upgraded all of the sensors and the jets
and then all of a sudden they started picking these things up
all over the place.
He said they were encountering them
virtually every time they went out,
which is so weird.
Imagine you're encountering
was it a circle inside of a sphere
or a sphere inside of a circle?
I think it was a circle and a sphere.
Yeah, whatever it was.
Which one was it?
Was it a circle and a sphere?
It was. I just saw a picture on Twitter recently.
It was a little circle
and then a cube or something.
Very fucking weird, whatever that is.
It is.
And able to hover motionless and like 200 knots of wind.
Yeah, and it would make sense if we are reverse engineering these.
They're going to look pretty primitive.
It's basically a big propane tank that they're flying around.
Like they probably started simple.
It's probably unmanned.
But they're testing that capability to like manipulate the space time to shoot off.
You know, because it dropped 80,000 feet in a couple seconds.
Yeah.
A cube inside of a sphere.
Yeah, I can remember.
Apparently my dyslexia.
extends to images, too.
Explained using UFO patents.
Click on that.
Explained.
A recent article by the Hill has highlighted the reports of a Cubanosphere.
UAP military pilots have been seeing as reported by graves, where he once again highlights
how often our pilots are seeing these things and why he doesn't believe they are conventional
drones or balloons.
And so this is obviously some sort of a computer-generated rendition.
Ah, that fucking pop-up.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
But, I mean, yeah, they didn't get a picture of it, but...
But here's the patents.
Scroll up a little bit.
So a month ago, I did a deep dive on a post about UFO patents,
how magneto-hydrodynamic propulsion systems could explain some of the observations.
Includes an expired patent for the 1960s and a few newer patents describing not only the propulsion,
but how the plasma field can make the craft invisible to radar.
Huh.
Huh.
Yeah.
I mean, again, it makes sense.
Like, if we have been reverse engineering these for 70 years, we would start bringing them out.
They would look weird.
They wouldn't necessarily look like the craft that we struggle to fly at Groom Lake that we could go up and down with, and that's about it.
Like, they would look like this little thing that's simple.
It's a propane tank or it's a cube within a sphere.
I probably had that backwards again.
And then experiment with it, see what you can do.
And a lot of people make the argument, why would they do that's dangerous?
You know, what, if there was a mid-air collision?
If they are actually manipulating space time in these things,
like they seemingly are with the saucer-shaped craft,
you don't have to worry about that.
You know, this isn't a cat-and-mouse game
where the cat-and-mouse are equal.
Like, you have complete control of space-time
in and around that area.
You're not going to run into anybody.
They're all moving extremely slowly relative to you,
according to Put Off and Davis at the end of that doco,
and whoever reached out to me, whether it was Hal or not,
somebody reached out to me and explained this same thing in 2019,
and it makes a lot of damn sense
and to kind of extend it
into my area of research,
if you can manipulate space and time
in and around this craft,
what's keeping you from using that
to travel through time?
I guess.
I mean,
but again, that's
with the different model,
not the multi-worlds model,
but what was the other model
that you described?
Block universe.
Block universe theory.
Yeah.
The idea that they would be so advanced
that they could genetically
engineer a body and get to whatever state they are at where they communicate telepathically,
but yet they can't solve the problem of old DNA, like needing, what do they need?
Genetic diversity?
Like, what is it?
What are they trying to get out of us?
Are they trying to get the source, source material instead of the old stuff or instead of
the stuff that they've had forever?
One of the arguments I made in my first insect.
books is that really since European colonialism, starting about 500 years ago, we are all becoming one
interbreeding population. So it used to be that you had different isolated populations and then
occasionally there would be gene flow that introduces new genes. If we all are just one population
on this inbred island of Earth, where are you going to get new gene variants? And then you combine that
with the things we just talked about with the potential for things to go wrong with trying to make
designer babies or you know the trends toward reduced fertility in men and women and importantly
the potential that there could be some massive cataclysm that puts us into a huge bottleneck where there
just is no genetic diversity at all like if you think about something that happened that wiped out
a huge percentage of the population and there are warnings about this over and over again with
experiencers and contact ease they're like there's some cataclysmic thing coming if that were to happen
all of those problems we're already having,
all of the trends that are already leading to us
having problems with fertility in the future
will be hugely exacerbated by a very limited gene pool.
Well, we know that human beings have gotten down
to a very small population in the past.
Yeah.
So we are...
So we're already kind of limited in our diversity.
What do you think of the theory
that human beings have been genetically engineered?
Man, when I first started in all this,
I wouldn't touch that one because I had to impose some restrictions on myself, so I didn't
seem like a crazy person.
And keep your academic standing?
I don't really care anymore, to be honest.
Well, you sold a few books.
Yeah, I sold some books.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's like, I do have the respect of my peers.
And it's not a career killer anymore.
No, exactly.
You know, back in 2018, I was kind of rolling the dice.
I was really nervous about it.
I went to the chair of my department and was like, hey, just the job.
just so you know, in case there's any pushback.
I'm published in this book about whether, you know, UFOs or future humans.
And he looked at me and cocked his head and just like, that's our job.
It's what we're supposed to be doing, asking questions like that.
Like, he was all pissed off.
Like, why are you even asking me this or telling me this?
Well, that's a cool guy who worked for.
I was like, sweet.
All right.
Well, check.
I got one on board at least.
But I was really conservative in this approach.
Like, the dean, actually, of my college, who gave me an award for,
scholarship and researchers. And there's a lot of amazing researchers at Montana
Technological University. Like we're very well known for research and scholarship. She gave me an
award in 2022 for research and scholarship. And all I was doing at that point was UFO stuff.
You know, that was kind of a nod too. But she was telling me the other day in a meeting
from the chair of the department, unfortunately. And she was like, oh, your dissertation
book. Because I did kind of write my first book as a dissertation. It's very scientific. It's very
dense, it's very technical, but I needed to do that because of the stigma, you know, because of
the shame. And you're right, it is changing, which is great. But there are certain things that
we still can't, that are hard for me to talk about because it starts to get into ancient aliens
territory, and that's one of them. Are they manipulating us genetically? Have they been for a long
time? I don't know. I used to say, I don't know, so I didn't have to talk about it. Now I say I don't
know because I genuinely don't know maybe well how could you how could I yeah good point yeah I mean it's
all theoretical but there seems to be a trend in at least the encounter reports and there's when
when people have reported some sort of communication with these things there there is there's a lot
of talk of genetic manipulation there's a lot of talk of it's the most common trope yeah but it also
make sense when you look at how different
we are than any other animal that
exists or has existed.
True. We're so advanced and so
weird and we vary so much
like biologically and
structurally. I mean there's animals
like there's different kinds of wolves, right?
There's gray wolves and red wolves
and they vary and, you know, red wolves
and gray wolves, they can't even interbreed
and create viable offspring
in terms of like their ability, like
they would be hybrids if they did breed
where they wouldn't. But they don't. They don't breed
with red wolves and coyotes which is also a type of wolf but that's kind of where it ends
whereas humans are fucking weird at least coyotes all look like coyotes wolves all kind of look
like wolves like with humans you get seven foot tall people and five foot tall people and
round people and thin people but we are actually all very similar genetically there's a study done in the
70s um looking at at polymorphisms and they found that between like what
It used to be thought there were races, like Africans, Asians, and Europeans.
That was it.
They didn't consider Native Americans or Australians or anybody.
But they did this study on polymorphisms found that only about 6 to 7 percent of all of our genetic differences can be accounted for by those between group differences.
And they did the same thing with Y chromosomes.
They did the same thing with craniofacial anatomy and found that were all very similar.
So despite those differences in height, weight, skin color, hair color, eye color, we're very, very similar.
similar, which could again lead to problems related to genetic homogenization, limited gene
pool in the future, needing to go back and sample gametes from the past. Another argument I hear
people make related to what you're saying, like an argument for potential genetic manipulation
of the human species over time, is that it all happen really fast. We see this acceleration in
our rate of change, rate of our technological development. Those things might indicate that there's
some sort of seeding in the past with not just technology, but the genetics that allow us
to expand our minds and develop these things.
Well, then there's the weird stories from ancient scripts, ancient texts like the
book of Enoch.
Like, what is that all about?
Like, that's some weird stuff where it talks about the watchers coming down from the
sky and mating with humans and creating the Nephilim who destroy everything.
Yeah, I might get some shit for this, but I would be with.
willing to bet that all major religions and the little ones have some sort of UFO alien component
to the myth and legend that gave rise to them over time.
It makes sense.
It does.
Actually, the third book I wrote, Revelation, flips the whole script on Revelation, and it interjects
time travelers.
It interjects this whole, for a while there's this question of like whether there was a
fight over the timeline, whether the grays were coming back to, because some cataclysm needed
to happen, and we all went underground, and that's why we have big eyes and pale skin, so we
had to evolve underground for a while. And then another group, like, trying to keep that from
happening. So the book kind of explores that in a fictional capacity, and I wrote it because
my friends weren't reading my science books, because they're dense and scientific. And I was
like, man, you know, what if I wrote a book that's just like a crass, sex, drug-fueled,
exploration of like this time travel idea and that's where that book came from it it still ties in
all of these same concepts scientifically but in the story like the the main character is a intertemporal
sex researcher she goes back in time and just fucks everybody to learn what to learn what sex is the
book I gave you when I got here actually it's a weird one that's right here yeah it's a weird one
but it's super fun to write you know and and they're like and and then her the professor in this book he's
like the he's an intertemporal drug king pen of sorts um but but it's like it's exploring these same
ideas in a different way you know with fiction it's satire it's comedy the word most commonly used is
it's hilarious it's a comedy book you know because i wanted people that don't read the science
books to still be introduced to this concept and the science behind it in a different way
and man it was so much more fun to write than those science books what do you think of um when
people start theorizing about some sort of a breakaway civilization that lives under the ocean?
Yeah, so we actually published a paper about that last June about the crypto terrestrial
hypothesis. You mentioned it on your show in a really funny way. It went viral internationally.
It was absolutely insane the impact this thing had. Like I had to go on Fox and Friends one morning
to talk about it, and then the next day I did.
What made it go viral?
What was the...
Well, because I published it with two guys from Harvard.
I was a co-author on the paper, and so it's clickbait.
It's Harvard researchers say dinosaurs are aliens and they live among you.
So stuff like that.
And it worked because it...
Yeah.
Well, it makes you go, what?
Yours was the funniest one.
You guys pulled it up on your screen and you're like, man, these Harvard researchers must have snuck in where they're doing the psilocybin experiments
and ate all the mushrooms.
That cracked me up.
And I don't think we did.
I don't remember if we did.
I don't think we did.
But it definitely had elements of like these guys ate a lot of mushrooms,
which was part of why it went viral.
But there were some really solid arguments in there.
And the title of the paper was scientific openness to the cryptoterrestrial idea.
That's all we were advocating for.
And we listed four main ways in which this crypto-terrestrial.
idea could happen and the fourth one is what really got clickbaity because we're like maybe
there is a breakaway civilization that's the cryptotterrestrial idea but maybe an advanced reptile
dinosaurs didn't go extinct and this was you know we don't think this actually happened but we're
just putting out arguments for what this idea could be and so yeah they took that and put like
dinosaurs at keyboards and stuff like that but but one of them is time travelers and it would
make sense if you are in the future instead of jumping back through time in order to study people
on a specific time you set up a base on the far side of the moon or up until the 60s 70s we wouldn't know
they were there set up a base under the oceans and this would go for the extraterrestrial idea too
instead of traversing the vast swaths of space right come here set up under the oceans where we're
not going to find you right Antarctica far side of the moon and then you can do everything here
locally instead of having to jump across space extraterrestrial or jump across time extra tempestrian
well it also explains some of the very strange ways that they've observed crafts moving under the
water like they've observed crafts moving under the water at 500 knots that are as big as a football
field and apparently there's video of these things apparently there's you know the navy has
something that they filmed that is as big as a football field that was going essentially 500
miles an hour underwater without any ripples, not disturbing the water at all, not creating a wake.
And then moving right out of them, the transmedium capacity.
Yeah.
Well, you know, when you think about how little exploration, excuse me, exploration, we've done to the bottom of the ocean.
It's, we know more about the moon than we do about the surface of the, the actual bottom of the ocean.
Yeah.
Yeah, it would be a great place to hide out.
And again, you know, the ability to move in and out of air, water.
space, upper atmosphere, with no disturbances, the transmedium capabilities, that whole
warped space-time bubble around them would help explain that too, that they're not experiencing
the water, they're not experiencing the air as they move between them. Like, I always think about,
I really love skiing, and one of my favorite times to ski is late season. You know, it's April,
the sun's out, everybody's in T-shirts or bikinis or whatever. I don't wear bikinis, but people do.
and you get into that slushy stuff
you're cruising down the mountain
you hit the slush and you just go ass over kettle
over the top of your skis
and that's what we would expect
if they're moving in and out of air and water
and space is that there would be some resistance
there's not you know they don't have that
and it does indicate
that there is some sort of manipulation
of space and time around them
and yeah moving underwater these football field size
craft going that fast? I mean, how can you do that if there is actual resistance from the
water? Well, it just makes you wonder how much does the government know? You know, you've seen that
guy Tim Burchett talk about it. He's hilarious. Yeah, it was very funny. I mean, he was just
casually mentioning that there's five different locations in the ocean of the world, in the seas of the
world, where they've observed crafts coming out of. That's a very weird thing to just say why you're
walking, just casually talk about it.
And with such confidence, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, they're doing these skiffs.
They're talking to people behind closed doors.
They don't have the same requirement to not disclose things as those people do.
Right.
They didn't sign NDAs.
And he has a hilarious way of talking about it.
He's got the best one-liners of anybody discussing this stuff.
I mean, somebody knows.
Somebody knows a lot of things.
A lot of people probably know a lot of things and have for a very long time.
But, you know, what is that really?
relationship. What do they control? Why are we not allowed to know? Well, this is the real question. Like, what do they actually know about what's going on in the ocean? Like, if there are bases somewhere down in the ocean, there's that weird one, the Baltic Sea anomaly. I don't know that one. Jesse Michaels just did a show about it where he interviewed the guy who found it. I think they're treasure divers. And they found this very strange thing that is sitting on the floor of the ocean.
and it has right angles to it and it's kind of curved there's an actual uh i believe i don't know
what kind of an image is of it but they have explored this thing and he's convinced that it's
it's not a natural formation yeah interesting see if you can find something on the baltic see put that
into our sponsor perplexity so is there an indication it's like uh like a base look it looks like a
fucking millennium falcon what's wrong in my mouth today i can't say millennium falcon like that's what
it looks like that's interesting so you know look this could be something that's sitting on or it could
be something that was built at a time where this was not covered by ocean yeah like you live in
montana montana used to be the great inland sea right yeah there was you could find seashells in
montana which is really weird yeah and even all along the coast of alaska like there's a
about a 110 foot rise in sea level
over the last 12,000 years.
So what, like, more images of this thing?
Like, what is that thing?
Yeah.
Like, these are all artistic renditions.
Some of them are.
But the other one, that blue one that you see there,
that's the real thing.
That's what it actually looks like.
Yeah, that's pretty anomalous.
Right.
And what is that, though?
Is that an ancient structure
that people built, you know,
20,000 years ago?
Like, what is it?
Baltic Sea Anomaly is a sonar-detected seafloor formation in the northern Baltic Sea found in 2011 by Swedish Ocean X, formerly Ocean Explorer team during a treasure hunting expedition.
Most geologists who have examined the available data consider it a natural rock formation shaped by glacial processes despite ongoing popular speculation about UFOs or artificial origin.
Yeah.
It's tough, man.
There's that thing off the coast of Malibu, too.
Is it Malibu or is it
Catalina Island?
Was that one thing where it was in Google Earth
and then they blurt it out after a while?
I think that was just a Google Earth thing.
Maybe.
Maybe not, but...
But it was on Google Earth and then it now it's blurred.
I read where they're getting the data
from Google Earth, you know?
Like what is that data?
You know?
So it was like bad data?
I think so.
And then it cleared up.
Okay.
Also, that's a good answer.
It's a good answer for the government.
I did a talk in Manhattan.
Latin last year, and Tim Gallaudet was one of the speakers, and he was showing images of, I think, what you're talking about, where there was like this sort of almost like a cliff underwater and then had some strange things around it, like it had been modified, or I don't remember exactly what he was saying, but I think that's what you're talking about. That was just off of Catalina Island.
That's right. Yeah, it was very weird looking, and a lot of people were speculating. And one of the reasons why it's very weird, there's a lot of sightings.
of a catalytic island.
There's a lot of sightings out there.
Yeah, and, you know, again, it makes sense
if they were trying to covertly study us,
regardless of their origins,
ultra-terrestrial, whatever,
use the oceans.
Perfect. Perfect base.
It's very difficult for us to get there.
Especially if you can move in and out of there
with impunity, not just because we won't see them,
but they have the technology to make the water
and the air the same thing.
Click on that image where the curse is at?
Yeah, that was it.
That's it.
Whatever that is.
Like, that looks real weird.
It does look weird.
That looks real weird.
Whatever the hell that is.
That's so strange.
That's so strange looking.
But again, that's like, is that what it really looks like?
What are the new images?
Is the new one the right?
Okay, that's it right there.
The one that had up says it's from 2014.
Like, what the hell is that?
It's got pillars.
I mean, that's very strange.
It has those sort of uniform shaped pillars.
Yeah, and the top.
Looks structural, you know, like something you would make to withstand the weight of the water above you.
Like a garage door.
Yeah.
Like it's a garage door to a base.
Yep.
No, I mean, again, when I started out in this, I was relatively conservative with my views on things.
But, man, the further you go down this rabbit hole, just the weirder shit gets, and you can't do that anymore.
You've got to recognize that there's a lot of things that just you can't write off, you know?
The impossible become possible.
or at least you have to open your mind to the fact that these things you used to think were impossible, need a second look.
Right.
And then there's also the people that work in military intelligence that work with these defense contractors that say there's black operations, like operations that are completely top secret, that are 30 years ahead of anything that you can imagine right now.
So you go, okay, well, what does that look like?
What is 30 years ahead of us now look like?
Yeah, like that was SR-71, the Blackbird or whatever it is, black, whatever.
Yeah, like, we didn't even know about that until 20 years after they had made it.
Right.
And it makes sense.
You know, you don't want your enemies to know.
And that's an argument that's been made over and over, that we can't disclose things because then our enemies will have this technology.
And I always thought growing up that, you know, it'll take a war before they're like, oh, we need to use these things.
We've been developing.
Like, we're getting our ass kicked in this war.
It's time to bring out the UFOs and our space-age laser well.
weapons and stuff. But I kind of think it's going to happen before that. It's weird to say,
but I kind of get the sense that it is happening. There's been a lot of false horizons. People
have been saying that for a long time. But doesn't it feel different? I mean, you've
definitely does feel different. It definitely feels that the general public is a lot more open to the
concept without being thought of as a fool. Right. It used to be when I was a kid, if you'd bring up
UFOs, people just roll their eyes, especially before the internet.
Oh, my God.
If you brought up any of that stuff, they would laugh at you.
I was reading some book on Roswell once, like I think it was in the 1990s.
And, you know, this guy's like, what the fuck you wasting your time on this complete horseshit for?
There's no such thing as UFOs.
I'm like, how do you say that with such confidence?
Yeah, exactly.
We live in a galaxy with hundreds of billions of stars just in this galaxy, with hundreds of billions of stars in other galaxies, and there's hundreds of billions of other galaxies.
Like, what are you saying?
That's crazy to say that we are.
are the only ones. It is. They did a really good job at making us feel like idiots. Yeah. Well,
you can see how that can be done, you know. I mean, look what they did during the COVID crisis.
You know, if you don't get a vaccine, make your end of life preparations now, you know,
like you're going to be killing everybody. No one's going to survive. This disease targets the
unvaccinated. And people believed all that. Well, I think the two are related, too, because we
started to figure out that we've been lied to about UFOs and the obvious question is what else
what else were they lying to us about yes well I think once you realize how strong the propaganda
machine is and how gullible people are oh yeah that's the big one easily I mean if people were going
to accept something as 100% truth out any investigation or any skepticism from the pharmaceutical
drug industry they are the most evil motherfuckers that have ever lived they are a responsible
for more death from releasing drugs that have horrible adverse side effects that they knew about.
They have taken the largest criminal fines of any companies.
I mean, what they've done is really fucking creepy when you look at how they released drugs
that they knew were going to fuck people over and they knew those people didn't need those drugs.
And yet, when you put people in a scary situation and you make them terrified and you offer up a
solution. They believe wholeheartedly that the pharmaceutical drug companies were only telling the
truth and anybody who didn't believe. They have your best interest in mind. So it's like that
sheep mentality is so strong with so many people. There's so many cowards in the world and so many
followers that would just step in line the moment things get weird, whenever they get challenged,
the moment things get weird, that it just makes sense that if you make it like socially,
you become a social pariah, if you start talking about UFO.
Here's Mike, his fucking wacky UFO theories.
Like, people don't talk about those things.
They don't want to bring them up.
And the military industrial complex is kind of the equivalent of the pharmaceutical companies on the other side of this coin.
Sure.
We, you know, we trust them.
They defend us, whatever they are making.
I'm sure they'll use for great purposes.
But, yeah, I mean, a big part of that was making us feel like idiots for talking about this stuff.
And that is changing, though.
And it's not largely because of, you know,
Ancient Aliens. I've been on the show five times. I had a little bit of cognitive dissonance the first time I went on.
That show goes, they go way out there. They get out there, man. But it's just fun.
It is fun. You know, and that's how I approached it. Well, I also approached it because I was trying to talk about this theory.
They did this funny bait and switch for the first three episodes I was on where they're like, hey, come down, talk about your theory. I'm like, oh, okay, so I'll go to L.A. or wherever.
and we do the shoot they cut out everything about my books and this theory and just used me to talk about whatever the show was actually about
little small snippets yeah i cut onto that and so the fourth time i went i was like all right but i'm only doing if you guys actually you know but in the one of the episodes was about this whole theory anyway so it made sense but um i forget where you're talking oh the stigma so one of the cool things that's been happening largely because of
ancient in your show. You know, you talk about this a lot and it helps normalize it for a lot of people
is that there's a safe space now, you know, like where you'll be talking about these things and
somebody will come up who had a sighting when they were, you know, a teenager in the 40s or whatever,
and they never told anybody. And now it's like, wait, it's safe to talk about this. And that's so cool
to see, man. And then it makes me realize just how many people have had an experience that's been
bottled up inside, and it's liberating to let that come out, and we're sharing information
and contact ease, too. You know, unfortunately, I started saying earlier, we're still kind of
stuck on, this is changing too, but we're still largely stuck on the cockpit videos and the
fleer and the gimbal and the go fast, but people have been taken into these craft. They've had
stuff put on their junk and their semen taken, you know? Like, there's a lot of no-no square
touching that happens, anal probes, you know, and we used to laugh at that, but that is such a common
theme throughout these, and we need to recognize that these people are having real experiences
and have been having them for a very long time. Let's move on. Let's talk to these people.
Let's let the contact ease and experiencers who have had the closest form of a close encounter
you can have. Let's trust them now. Let's listen to what they have to say. Let's be discerning,
but let's keep an open mind. Well, I think one of the more interesting things, when you start
talking about stories and encounters, one of the more interesting things is some of the research
that Jacques Valet has done, where he brings up stories that absolutely predate the modern
cultural visions of UFOs, like the modern cultural concept of the close encounter of the third
kind type grays that come down in a flying saucer. All those things, like flying saucer
didn't even come out until the Kenneth Arnold experiences. So it's these encounters, people
we're talking about from the 1700s and the 1800s. And they're talking about something coming
down and something interacting with people and, you know, them having some sort of experience
of lost time. The threat is very common, the Betty and Barney Hill story. Yep. Yeah, it's not
just the gamete extractions. I mean, you could make the argument that a lot of things that happened
in very mainstream religious texts were exactly what people are describing. Even the
CIA admitted that
unexplainable pregnancies
are an aspect of
the phenomenon, you know,
where Jesus come from.
Kind of an unexplainable pregnancy.
I think Jesus was time traveler, personally.
A time traveler? Yeah, that's another aspect
of that book. That's in your satire?
It's in my satire book, yeah.
I think...
Oh, you literally have Jesus coming out of a UFO.
I got some shit for that.
With the double bird. He's throwing up
the double bird. It turns out Christians.
don't like that.
Well, you know, I can't please everybody, right?
No, he can't.
But there are many aspects of Jesus' life, big fan of Jesus, by the way, that are very
paranormal.
A lot of these seemingly miraculous things, I think, can be explained with a lot of the same
technologies that we see today.
We just didn't have a way of conceptualizing them.
Obviously, Ezekiel is the one that gets talked about a lot, the wheel within a wheel,
the telepathy, the embers, burning embers.
Yeah.
Yeah, and then you look at the Nephilim, and all kinds of different.
Mbaba Juana-Resa, this story from Zulu lore, it's a fucking alien abduction, man.
And they've been telling this story for thousands of years.
So it's this woman, this sky goddess, who chooses a man to mate with and comes down, tests him to make sure that he knows that it appears in his dreams, communicates telepathically, gets him.
him ready for this interaction. He's in love with her. Never met her before. She comes down from the
sky and takes him up with her on this rainbow of light. And I made the case in my second book
that if Antonio V.S. Boas had been able to go back with the woman that he had sex with,
it's basically the same story. So those Brazilian lawyers telling a story that's identical to
this Zulu legend that's been told for centuries, millennia. I don't know how far
goes back.
How weird.
But we need to look outside of just the mainstream view, which is finally happening.
So I'm excited about that.
I'm very grateful.
I have a lot of gratitude about what's happening.
But the question is, why did the mainstream view become what it is?
And we know that that is because of a concerted, concentrated,
propaganda effort.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And a very effective one.
They nailed it.
But they had, there was no other.
media back then. They had complete control of newspapers, complete control of television stations.
Yeah. I mean, how many people, how much do we know now about various news anchors that were
actually CIA agents? There's a fucking shit ton of them. Yeah. And even if they weren't, they were
being forced by this stuff that they were happy to regurgitate. Absolutely. Yeah. They just wanted
to look good and have a suit and speak like an expert. Here we go. And if you don't tow the line,
somebody else will. Yeah. And you're living a great life. You drive a Mercedes.
Yeah. Why would you fuck this up?
Over a UFO story, just tell your friends.
Just tell everybody what you're supposed to tell them.
Yeah, it's easy to get people to comply like that, especially when they're dependent upon, you know, whether it's a corporate entity like CNN or whether it's New York Times or whatever it is.
It's not hard to get people to comply.
No, and you're right, since the internet, things have changed.
Radically.
Like really radically.
Radically.
But I think there's a downside, too.
We've already kind of been moving toward a post-truth existence.
good Lord man like I'll scroll through videos on Twitter now 90% of them are fake oh there's so much AI now it's so ridiculous and I make the unfortunate decision to go into the comments to see what percentage of people think it's real 80 90 I would say at least 90 it's insane like I just I have it still have it on my phone it's a stupid fucking video of a rabbit like nursing that's little rabbit babies and one of them is a cat so the
The mom cat comes in, picks the fucking baby cat up by the nose.
Like, they're magnetically attached.
It doesn't even grab it.
Like, the baby kind of comes with it.
And then walks out the back of the burrow.
Like, there's no back to a rabbit burrow.
You know, and everybody's like, oh, whoops, that cat made a mistake.
It's drinking from the wrong species.
People don't see it.
They don't see that this is very obviously fake.
And it's not just for that.
Like, they're using it for propaganda.
They're using it for the same type of thing that they've used forever.
oh, well, this UFO phenomenon is not real because AI made this video.
Well, there's also the problem with what percentage of people that are even commenting are actual people.
Exactly.
There's a huge amount of bots that are communicating on all the social media platforms.
A giant percentage of the comments are not real people.
That's a really good point.
Yeah.
No, you're right.
So they would comment on anything and just say, wow, that's amazing.
But that also still feeds the perception that it's real.
Yes.
Because other people that maybe don't have great critical thinking skills or discern.
because, you know, their 90-year-old grandma that doesn't know how to use a computer, she sees that, oh, it's cute.
I think it erodes the consensus intelligence.
Yeah.
Like the overall level of intelligent discourse that a society puts out, you know, if you have a town square, which is like Twitter is our town square, right?
If that town square is populated by fake people, like enormous percentage populated by fake people that are just designed to, say, the most inflammatory.
ridiculous things to get interaction and engagement and also to erode people's faith in other people and to make us argue with each other to construct the other like you were saying at the beginning of this conversation it fuels tribalism yeah it's really problematic my my hope is that eventually there'll be some way to accurately discern and it'll stop that stuff from happening you know that you'll be able to tell like very clearly whether or not it's an actual
person. The problem is that, if that does happen, it's a gateway to digital ID because you
would have to lose your anonymity. Because if you're a, like, anonymity is very important for
whistleblowers. Like, say if you work for a corporation, you find out that corporation is dumping
stuff into a river and it's all secret and it's illegal and you know that if you tell they're
going to kill you, you know, and you're an executive at that corporation, your conscious is troubled.
You can make a fake account, you could sign up through a VPN, you can make a fake account, and you could post all this information that you know, and you could break a story, and you don't face any consequences, you don't get killed.
If you have digital ID, if we know who everybody is that's posting something, and you make that same post, who knows what they do to you?
Who knows what happens?
Yeah, and it's been happening.
There's been whistleblowers who have had mysterious deaths.
All over the place.
all over the place um yeah it's it's didn't Gary Webb didn't he shoot himself in the head
twice what's that the story what's the one Tim Burchett always says get shot and or you shoot yourself
in the back of the head four times or something yeah I mean I think it's in reference to that how did
Gary Webb die yeah there's but even if that's not true there's a bunch of stories about whistleblowers
who go missing.
Yeah, there's so many examples.
If you're inconvenient, you're going to cost them billions of dollars and they can just get
rid of you, they just get rid of you, whoever they are.
Yeah, it all comes down to money and it has for a very long time.
Someone was deciding if this was accurate.
They found in a case where someone shot themselves in the head eight times.
That's a lot.
So there's a couple cases where it's happening.
Boy, that's a commitment.
I mean, I guess if it was like an airsoft gun or something.
I don't think that killed me.
That'd be a really inefficient way to kill them.
kill yourself. Yeah. The whole thing's crazy. Do you think it's even possible? To kill yourself
with an airsoft gun? Maybe possible. Like a lobotomy kind of? If you shot yourself up the nose eight times?
It's not that fast. No, it's not, is it? I mean, it might eventually give you an infection.
Oh, that's, see, so you could. I guess. If you got enough airsoft bullets in you,
just fills up your entire nasal cavity. And you never went to the doctor. Maybe eventually
get an infection. I think somebody might intervene at that point. When I was living in L.A., when I
first moved there, a guy had killed himself accidentally on a set because he took a gun
that was a blank gun and he shot himself in the head, like trying to be funny. And it killed him
because the force that comes out of the gun is still extremely powerful. And he put it to his
temple and he literally caved his skull in. Oh, that sucks. Yeah. That's rough. Yeah,
that was just an actor who just didn't know any better and he thought he was just going to be funny.
Yeah, so shooting yourself in the head twice, highly unlikely.
But I guess you could shoot yourself in the head once and just really fuck it up,
but be aware that you're still alive and be committed to doing it and then shoot yourself a second time.
I guess it's possible.
I mean, unless the pain response was like, yeah, it didn't feel good.
I don't want to do that again.
Or maybe the pain response is so bad.
You want to do it again just to end the pain.
Oh, that's a good point.
Like, whoops, let's get this over with.
I don't know.
But our point, what we're getting at is that for the longest time,
there was no real outlet to get true information.
out other than books and books are so easily maligned you know if someone has a cookie book
you're reading you go oh that guy's nuts that that is a conspiracy theory and then of course
that terms popularized during the JFK assassination because of that very reason there was a lot of
people that doubted the official story and those people became conspiracy theorists have you
looked into that much oh yeah I kind of thought you had who do you think did it I think there
was a lot of people I think here's a mistake that people make they say Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone
or Lee Harvey Oswald wasn't involved
and he was a patsy.
Lee Harvey Oswald shot a cop.
There's very few people
that disagree on that.
I think his officer Tippett,
I think that was his name,
when he was on the run.
So Lee Harvey Oswald
absolutely seems to be
some sort of an intelligence asset
in some way or another.
Married a Russian woman,
lived in Russia for a while,
came back to the United States,
during the time of the whole,
I mean, this was right after the red scare,
the fact that this guy went to Russia,
married a Russian woman, came back, and, like, the whole thing's screwy.
He could have been a Patsy and involved, too, right?
Absolutely.
I heard some theory once about, like, the driver turned around with some...
That's all horseshit.
Gun or...
Was there something about, like, a poisonous fish thing?
Horset. That's all horseshit.
It's all horseshit.
That's why I was asking, because I don't know.
Well, there's a lot of those...
One of the best ways to make a conspiracy theory seem absolutely ridiculous
is to add a bunch of really silly ones into the mix.
And so that any conspiracy theory...
involving something that's not the official narrative.
But there's just so many aspects of the Kennedy assassination,
the back and to the left, the head shot,
the shot in the neck from the front,
the magic bullet, which is preposterous.
It's the most preposterous.
There's a lot of them.
There's a lot of these weird aspects to it.
And it's also the fact that Kenny was very hated.
Also the fact that, you know, it's in Dealey Plaza,
which is like, why would you ever drive someone through there?
in a convertible that's the president that's a very you know any president is you know we think of
JFK was the most loved president bright by half the country that's how it always is folks there's
always half the country that thinks you suck and half the country that loves you that's how it was with
Clinton that's how it was with Obama so it is with everybody yeah no we don't tend to agree on
those things as an entire human population there was a lot of people that were very happy when he
died including Dulles so Dulles was fired
by JFK, and then was on the Warren Commission, investigating JFK's assassination, which is hilarious.
It's kind of crazy.
Richard Nixon, also in the Warren Commission.
The Warren Commission, there's a great book on it called Best Evidence by David Lifton,
and he was an accountant that was hired to do something with the Warren Commission, some aspect of the Warren Commission.
So he decides to read the whole thing.
It's a huge amount of pages.
I forget how many pages are in the Warren Commission report.
I think it's at least 900 pages.
So he reads the whole thing.
And after it, he comes this conclusion.
Like, there's so many inconsistencies.
There's so many contradictions.
There's, like, this doesn't make any sense.
Like, they were trying to reach a conclusion.
So many of the witnesses that saw the assassination died in very weird deaths.
The statistical possibility or probability of all those people
dying from murder, suicide, car accidents, you know.
know it's just too weird it's too weird what about the UFO connection like that's the one
I hear I don't know if there are like CIA ties and I don't know I don't know what's bullshit and
what's not you know like yeah there was clearly like we had the technology for 20 years at that
point yeah what what does a president even know I I don't know what they know I don't know
whether or not they would kill them for that doesn't make any sense it doesn't make any sense
You know the Nixon story with
Jackie Gleason?
No, I don't think so.
You know that that story?
Uh-uh.
The story is that Jackie Gleason and Nixon were drinking one day
and, you know, they were friends
and Nixon was like,
I want to see a fucking UFO.
They get in a plane and he took him to,
was it Wright Patterson?
Jamie, do you remember?
I think it was somewhere in Florida.
But I don't, they,
I remember when we looked this up,
they said there's, he went somewhere.
I'll look at it up right now.
So anyway, supposedly sees this recovered craft and bodies that are in freezers.
So Jackie Gleason, one thing is true about this.
He became obsessed with UFOs.
That is true.
And it'd be hard not to after something like that.
Yeah.
There's definitely a catalyst.
I'm mad.
I mean, fucking dude, right now, someone took me, if Trump called me up,
I'm going to see some shit.
And all of a sudden, I'm standing in front of some craft that's made of this unknown alloy.
and especially some of the weirder stories
where you have a craft that's like 40 feet wide
and you go inside of it, it's bigger than a football field.
That's wild.
So here it is.
Nixon arranged for him to visit Homestead Air Force Base in Florida.
Upon his arrival, armed guards took Gleeson to a building
at a remote location on the site there.
Gleeson, who harbored an intense interest in UFO,
saw the embalmed bodies of four alien beings,
two feet long with small bald heads and big ears.
He was told nothing about the circumstances of their recovery.
He swore his wife to secrecy, but after the divorce, Beverly freely discussed the story.
In the mid-80s, UFOologists, Larry Bryant, sued the U.S. government to get it to reveal its UFO secrets.
He tried without success to subpoena Gleason.
Wow, he wanted a subpoena Gleason.
Yo, that's crazy.
I mean, he could just plead the fifth the whole time.
Oh, yeah.
I was drunk.
I don't remember anything.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I mean, how would you know?
But Gleeson built a house in upstate New York.
Oh, yeah.
I heard about that.
It looks like a UFO.
Right.
Isn't it for sale right now?
It is right now.
Yeah.
We thought about buying it.
I did.
I looked that up one time.
I don't remember why, but it's kind of cool.
Yeah, it's kind of cool, but the problem is if we bought it, everybody would know that that's ours.
Yeah, true.
Like, oh, Joe Rogan's got the UFO house and then they'd visit and fuck up my vacation.
That's always bound to happen.
I remember.
That's the house.
Very gold.
Look at the house.
I mean, come on, man.
That's pretty sweet.
That's fucking crazy.
Something happened.
He was.
He was, there was a catalyst involved in his interest.
Well, I mean, if you're friends with Nixon and this is in the 1960s and this, all this stuff is.
Yeah.
I saw an interview with Barry Goldwater where he was talking about.
That's a fucking dope house, by the way.
God.
Talking about asking, uh, asking some commander general about what's it right, Pat.
And I guess he just cussed him out.
Barry Goldwater.
He was like, don't ever fucking ask me that again.
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah.
He cussed out Barry Goldwater?
He was a, yeah, I don't think he was ever present.
candidate for president. But yeah, no, there's people that don't want us to know. The big thing going
around now is that Dick Cheney was the ringleader of all of this, the deep state, the UFO
secrets, the gatekeepers. Wow, he had to know. Of course. That guy had to know. Kissinger, too,
probably, like the legacy programs. These are legacy people. Well, someone has got to talk, right?
But it's like, but at to what level?
And the idea, here's the really erroneous idea that a lot of people hold.
People can't keep a secret.
Of course they can.
Of course they can.
Especially when their life's being done.
Yeah, of course they can.
Especially if, I mean, there are certain programs that if you disclose the existence of this program, it is considered treason.
And they're allowed to execute you for that.
So you have to take that into consideration.
I would keep a secret if that was the case.
Of course. Then you have to take into consideration the immense amount of money, and this is discussed really very comprehensively in the Age Disclosure documentary. I think they did a great job of highlighting the whole problem with the misappropriation of funds. So someone had a lie to Congress. If they have these back engineering programs, if they've been spending as much as a trillion dollars over the course of X amount of years, where's that money? And who lied and who benefited from it? What?
military contractors were allowed to have this stuff to back engineer it, what process has
taken place to shield the American public from that, and what profits have they made from that
that made them like much more anti-competition against other military contractors who didn't have
access to it.
It's not just, you might get killed, but there's a lot of profit potential in this, and we don't
want our competitors to have that.
Also, a lot of fraud, I'm sure.
Like with any
No oversight at all
And a shitload of money?
Oh my God
There's not a chance in hell
That there wasn't some money
That went into people's pockets
Human nature takes over
And people are like well I could just keep some of that
Yeah
Nobody's watching the till
Yeah I mean look we're finding that
With things just like Black Lives Matter
It was massive fraud
Like just like non-profit organizations
Oh yeah
Like I don't want to start shitting on NGOs or anything
But that's a big reason why I don't give
money to I'll find you know smaller organizations doing thing on a local level but yeah local level
stuff you can trust yeah absolutely you get big enough it's just that happens yeah and of course if
you're talking trillions of dollars black money that nobody's trace and and I mean that was one of
david grush's arguments too is that these whistleblowers are exposing crimes you know fraud potential
murder uh that happened to keep these secrets so yeah it's a complex it's a
very nuanced situation that we will have to move past if we are going to have disclosure in some
capacity, however that happens. I mean, amnesty has been talked about for some people. That was in
the documentary. That was the road out of this, which totally makes sense to me. Like, what is
really important? The fraud has already taken place. If people are prosecuted for the fraud,
guess what? If we don't release it, they'll never be prosecuted for the fraud anyway. Yeah, and what's
the alternative? We wait until they die and then talk about it. I would rather just give them amnesty now
and then let them die without these secrets going to their deathbed with them.
But just not only that.
If they're misappropriating funds, they're not just doing it 30 years ago.
They're doing it last week.
So now the current people also have an incentive to not disclose.
Yeah.
Unless you have mass amnesty, just say, listen, let's just forget about all this stuff.
Then the problem with that is all those people that are profiting off of it right now
and also funneling money into whatever NGOs they have and misappropriation of money.
Yeah, and embezzlement.
What do we do with that IP, too?
Right.
Like the intellectual property that, say, Northrop Gromender, whoever has, Boeing, like, do we share that now?
Do they have to give that up and spread it across the industry?
Yeah.
It's all weird, man.
It's very weird because there's been a few inventions that came about after Roswell that a lot of people say, like, this does not make any sense.
Yeah, fiber optics is one.
The transistor is another one.
Yeah.
This is a lot of weirdness.
People say, oh, there's a direct.
Scientific research shows how they made it.
Yeah, but there's not.
If you go into it, it's like there's a giant leap that gets made that's real weird.
I mean, I'll take more leaps, man.
Like, honestly, these craft are being empowered by something that's very, very energized, you know?
And if we could use that to, I mean, I pay a lot in utility skills.
I was going to talk about, like, climate change or some shit, and then I made about myself and my utility skills.
You could have your own zero point energy generator in your backyard, never have to worry about power again, never have to worry about the grid.
Keep the heat at like 90, you know, as many Christmas lights as I want.
Yeah, never worry about the grid.
The grid doesn't exist anymore.
It doesn't exist.
I mean, imagine that.
For an infrastructure level, and there's so many implications.
If it's real.
If it's real.
If you think it's real.
You're convinced.
I'm convinced it is, yeah.
I mean, it makes sense.
There's so much energy trapped within the space between, you know?
That's what it is.
Even at zero degrees, it's still energized.
If you can, try to explain the concept of zero point energy.
Man, that's beyond my pay grade.
Other than that, I know that it is infinitely times more energetic than what you get when you split an atom or fuse atoms together, the nuclear force.
My understanding, again, very limited knowledge, is that even when you take a molecule, a particle, whatever, and you feel,
freeze it down to zero degrees, there's still energy inside of that. And there's energy at a
subquantum level that if we could tap into that, it would provide infinite energy. The downside is
it would also make a bomb that is much, much more powerful than the biggest hydrogen bomb because
you're releasing that energy in a way that's irresponsible. There's this quote going around by
E.O. Wilson, famed biologist on, I think I saw it on Twitter, that was like, we have a
prehistoric emotions, medieval institutions, and godlike technology, basically saying we're
fucked.
Yeah.
Because we've got, we're like little kids playing with chainsaws, you know?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But zero points, little kids playing with guns.
Yeah, exactly.
But zero points kind of that next thing.
Like when Einstein equals MC squared, you know, there's all this energy in mass.
And if we, you know, split these atoms, combine these atoms, we can release that energy.
Sweet.
but hundreds of thousands of people died in Japan you know so what's what's the flip side of
zero point like it would definitely unlock a lot of potential but are we responsible enough as a
species to handle that type of energy right currently no yo Wilson says no and I'm on board
with anything well I'm on board with it just look at what's happening in Ukraine look at what's
happening in Gaza full scale war scary shit it's happening right now
in various parts of the world where, you know, we're just blowing people to smithereens.
And you know what? That's kind of an interesting argument about the whole time travel thing.
You know, there's these genocides. There's a genocide happening now in Gaza.
It blows my mind that we can still have genocides and just not do anything about it.
But like Pol Pot, you know, three, four million people killed, the Holocaust, Darfur.
But these aliens don't seem to care about us.
It was something that John Mack noticed.
He wrote about it a lot.
They're really focused on the earth.
You know, they care about this planet.
They don't necessarily care about us.
As individuals.
As a species.
Well, clearly they care as a species.
But they do kind of care as individuals.
The people that get picked up are oftentimes, obviously, there's cases where this doesn't happen, but they're cared for.
They're told no harm will come to you.
Barney Hill was told that.
It's a commonly repeated thing.
So they take care of people.
They give us screen memories to try to hide.
What they did, they sometimes give people tours of the ship.
They seemingly care about us as individuals, but not when we start murdering each other on a massive scale.
They've never intervened in these things.
However, they have demonstrated their ability and willingness to shut down nukes.
They might intervene if we move to the point where we're not just destroying ourselves, but we're destroying the planet, that they may also.
call home in the future. If they are future humans, that whole care for the planet, take care
of the planet, they told the kids in Zimbabwe, they told the kids in Wales during this other
incident, they tell these contact ease all the time, take care of the planet, take care of the planet,
but they don't seem to care about us. And it might actually benefit them if we don't screw up
this planet, either through nuking ourselves or just all of the other things we do to it because
we're kind of parasitic in a way. Well, also, if they are us in the future,
We probably have to go through all this to realize the folly of our ways.
That's a good point.
Dark Night of the Soul kind of.
Yeah, I mean, clearly we're getting better.
I mean, we're still horrible, but we're better today than we were during the Viking days.
We're better than we were during the time of Genghis Khan.
We're better.
We're more civilized.
We're more peaceful.
There's less war, even though there's still war.
So it's a slow, gradual shift of consciousness that probably is going to be accelerated by technology.
especially if there is some sort of a technology that connects us telepathically and allows people
to read minds.
One of the things that Elon famously said about is NeurLink.
He's like, you're going to be able to talk without words.
Yeah, I had a whole section in my first book about that.
The question of whether it's a technology mediated brain-to-brain communication or if there's
something about our consciousness that allows us to communicate telepathically without some
sort of technology. And I kind of, I did that. My friend Jeff Crapel pointed this out. He's like,
I see why you did that. You know, you're like, well, what if it is technology? And there's a lot of
studies that have shown we can't communicate through some sort of computer medium. But so many people
in contact e-cases who are spoken to or can speak to the visitors telepathically don't have that.
There's also all of the research of Dean Radin at ions and all of his other studies that he's put out
that show people have telepathic abilities with very, very strong P values,
statistically showing that we have this ability,
I think a lot of people have it and just don't realize,
but it does seem like we're moving in that direction.
Like you were talking about the evolution of consciousness.
It seems like we're sort of moving to that,
whether Neerlink has anything to do with it
or any sort of computer-mediated brain-to-brain transmission.
I think we're just becoming telepathic
and unlocking these abilities
that have always sort of lied dormant within us.
Yeah, I've often asked the question,
is it one of two things?
Is this a new emerging aspect of human consciousness?
Or is this an aspect of human consciousness
that exists before verbal speech?
Mm-hmm.
And then verbal speech,
and then, of course, the written word, video, all that stuff.
Yeah.
It just became completely non-useful to us.
It's like we lost it, and we're trying to get it.
It atrophied.
Yeah.
I mean, you had Kai Dickens on.
The telepathy tapes were hugely impactful.
And a lot of those episodes show that this is actually extremely common, you know?
And it seems like that's kind of where we're going.
I look at that as another indication that these are us in the future, that their main form of communication is telepathy.
And we're already seemingly moving in that direction.
What do you make of the tridactal mummies in Peru?
Can we pee first?
Yeah.
Okay.
Oh, do that right now.
Sweet.
We'll be right back, folks.
Go to Jay Anderson's X page.
It's Project Unity.
Yeah, I saw he's coming on soon.
Yeah, he, so Jay Anderson just released this, and Jesse Michaels actually went down to Peru and actually saw those things and handled them in person.
And he said it was fucking surreal.
He said, they are real creatures.
Whatever they were, it is a real thing.
and they look exactly like an alien.
He has a video that he just released, Jamie.
I think it's a video that he's releasing on...
That's it, right there.
So scans reveal this ancient alien-looking mummy
has a baby inside of her.
Well, that's one of them.
So these things.
Like, whatever this is.
Can we get volumes?
You can hear what he's saying?
She has slightly smaller stature and slighter build, the Maria,
but shares the same natural mummification with skin covering parts of the body.
Her skull is elongated with large eye orbits and cranial volume comparable to Maria's.
Importantly, Montserrat CT scans reveal that she was carrying in her abdominal cavity,
the team identified a developing fetal form being visible on the scans,
a tiny tridactal embryo with skeletal structure,
curled in a womb-like space.
This confirms that Montserrat was pregnant with at least one advanced fetus.
Montserrat also contains an astonishing array of metallic implants,
at least 10 distinct metal implants embedded into her body.
These include four small round implants in her skull,
two on each side,
several in her chest and thoracic area,
and others along her arm and leg bones,
per the CT images. They're described as very dense and made of rare metals, osmium, and gold.
Additionally, Montserrat's chest anatomy is peculiar. She has an expanded rib cage without a sternum,
like the other tridactyls, and an interclavicle bone, an extra bone at the shoulder girdle.
Noted by researchers, her spine is continuous into the skull, again, demonstrates this cranioservical
canal.
Look how crazy that is.
In one of the most deeply analyzed specimens, high resolution 128 slice CT scans were performed
and a full 3D virtual autopsy was conducted.
The scans confirmed Montserrat's pregnancy with tridactal features.
I mean, how strange is this?
Like, what is that?
And these are in Peru, the same place where you get the NASCAR lines, the same place where
you have saxo him on you have these incredible structures that defy logic defy conventional
construction methods and like like the owl man you know the big petroglyph on the side of the hill
that you only be appreciated from space there's a lot of weirdness there's a lot of weirdness from
peru peru seems like a very extraordinary place and at one point in time well also the the ancient
artistic depictions of these exact beings.
There's these ancient tapestries and ancient art pieces that show these three-fingered,
three-toed beings.
And this is all like a part of their folklore.
And then you have these actual creatures.
Like that thing is 1,400 years old, I think it is.
So if that's the carbon date on that mummy.
So I think it's that old.
There's one that's 1,200.
I think the oldest one is like $1,400.
That sounds right, yeah.
Something like that.
But like, whatever that is, like there's not a chance in fucking hell
that people back then had the ability to fake that.
And that, with that depth, you see tendon structures, ligaments.
You have a completely different skeletal structure.
No sternum, different clavicle bones.
It's fucking weird.
Cranial facial anatomy.
Three fingers, three toes.
Which is, by the way, exactly what Lazare described, I believe,
or some people have described as like the control.
It might not be Lazare.
the controls inside the crass that they've observed that had these three-fingered things
Varginia Brazil those things had three fingers and three toes so the question is like
they saw footprints too in that case didn't they yeah well they supposedly one of the soldiers
carried carried a hurt and injured whatever it is yeah there were three women that saw it too
like an alley or something yeah that's the moment of contact documentary very good very good James
Fox documentary it is I watched that with James
Fox and a pre before we released it we were at the same conference and crazy documentary yeah it's
really good um but those things look exactly like that yeah what they described it'd be cool if
they still had eyeballs because they said they had red eyes right docco which would be kind of crazy
whatever these things are they're they are the same size and in the same shape and they're also
that thing that tridactal thing what does it look like it was exactly like gray it's small it is a big head
It has big eyes.
It's very thin, thin body.
Like when you look at its body, when it's curled up in the fetal position,
is no muscle.
It's very small.
Yeah, there's definitely, I mean, there's variation within the way these things are described.
Unfortunately, until we have, like, you know, dude got to go with Nixon to see these things in liquid.
That's like a wet dream of mine, man.
I would love to go see these things and, like, study them.
As a biological anthropologist, that would be the holy grail for me.
to actually get somewhere that you could go right now on earth if you knew the right guy he'd let you see that absolutely yeah that's crazy i'm sure there's many many examples of these things
i would argue in multiple places that i'm not allowed to go see and it makes me mad oh um but what is your take when you see these things right so i've always been outwardly critical of them except i guess the question is
which ones, and what do we mean by real?
Like, these are obviously real.
These are things that aren't a fairy tale.
I mean, they make their way into the lore,
so we do have to take that in the same way that these,
you know, ancient stories about things that are very similar to the UFO phenomenon.
But this is an actual physical model.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
This isn't make believe this is a real thing.
I have been highly critical of the little ones.
Oh, yeah.
There's some fake ones.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But when I first started talking about these, those were conventionally understood to be real, too.
Oh, really?
I got a lot of shit for that.
I actually retired from the mummy thing.
I'm happy to come out of retirement for you, Joe Hoverim.
But I retired from the mummy thing because I was getting trolled so hard, so aggressively.
I'm like, I'm out.
I don't give a shit.
By people that thought they were real.
Yeah.
But they look fake.
The difference between those...
See, we all say that now.
We weren't saying that even three or four years ago.
Oh, I definitely was.
Well, yeah, you look at them.
It's very obvious.
But a lot of people are like, no, no, these are so real.
Those are the people that still believe in Bigfoot.
And that's why I have to sort of approach this cautiously, because I will admit, scientists don't do this enough.
I will admit, I haven't looked into those.
So I don't want to form an opinion about them until I have.
I have extensively looked into the small ones.
I forget what they're called.
They have cute little names and they're little dolls.
They're made out of animal bones, human bones.
backward llama skulls, they're put together.
I've been looking at these long enough that I remember when they were held together by pieces of wire and metal.
Like they didn't even try to really hide that.
You x-ray, I'm like, oh, Jesus Christ, you know, but then we moved away from that to like, oh, they're using better materials to hide the fact that they're sticking these together as little dolls.
And now, fortunately, we've at least moved past to the point where most people are just focused.
seen on these big ones with the fingers and the toes and the elongated skulls.
Again, I don't want to speak to those because I haven't looked into it enough.
I don't have an informed opinion.
But the little dolls, one thing that concerns me that I think is a red flag,
is that the little dolls that are now conventionally understood to be fake have the same
diatomaceous earth characteristics as these.
And there's also, I think if they really want to prove these are real,
Do more to highlight the provenance of them.
In archaeology, the way that we understand the way things are related is by doing a massive, as I mentioned earlier, very boring survey of how things are located in three-dimensional space and over time.
I think there's a problem with that is that some of these people have lied about where they got them because they're essentially grave robbing.
They're grave robbing. Exactly. And that's a big problem. And an ethical issue that needs to be addressed too.
So, like, as an example, the Rising Star Cave, Homo Nolidi.
They did, you know, Lee Berger, who's actually, I guess, my academic brother, because we had the same Ph.D. advisor.
He was at Ohio State when he was my advisor, and he was at Johannesburg, University of Fitzgeraldesrand, in Johannesburg for him.
But this Rising Star Cave, very meticulously, hard to get to, you know, really hard.
They had, he had to lose, like, 50 pounds to even get down in here to see his.
own site, but they map it out, they study where everything is, where it comes from, and they
publicly release that information. Yeah, like this is extremely hard to get into, but we have a
very deep knowledge of the provenance of all of the artifacts and the features and the remains
at this site. We're not getting that with these mummies. And that troubles me with the issue of
the diatomaceous earth being painted on, and it kind of makes it seem like they did these slits
in the eyes on purpose.
To the mummies?
Yeah.
Doesn't that seem like they kind of went like this
with like a pen or something?
Let me see it again?
Can I see some images of them?
Yeah.
Yeah, the bigger ones.
I never saw that.
It didn't seem like that to me.
It seemed like...
There's a little slit right.
That's their eyelids closed.
Yeah, but they wouldn't have eyelids, would they?
Well, how do we know that?
I mean, you take off the diatomaceous earth and you see, I guess.
Right, but why would we think they don't have eyelids?
Oh, no.
I'm saying that maybe they do when they were alive.
Well, I mean, we see grays or what, you know, people describe as grays.
But these seems a little bit different than what people describe as grays.
It seems like, I mean.
There's definitely intentional cranial modification.
They have all the telltale signs of, yeah.
So actually one of my questions on my general six.
It's not possible that they have a totally different designed skull.
Oh, yeah, if there are some sort of extraterrestrial, absolutely.
Right. But I'm saying, like, when, and this happens all over the world, and it happened in that region of Peru, too, that they were manipulating children's skulls.
Maya did.
Unique fingerprints.
Look at that.
Yeah, like I said, I don't have an opinion about these.
But here's the question about the modification of skulls.
Were they modifying skulls to try to emulate these people or these things?
That's the question.
That's one of the actual scientific explanations for it.
There's this paper by Geertzen and Geertzen from 1995 where they interviewed people,
said, why are you doing this?
Because they were still doing it long enough into modern times that we could ask them.
We could interview them.
And one of the reasons is because the gods instructed them to do this.
Who are the gods?
You know, again, this comes back to that.
And what is the end result of this intentional cranial modification is that they have the larger, more gray alien-type skull.
So, yeah, I would absolutely agree that that's probably a part of it.
I don't have an opinion about the big ones.
The little ones pissed me off.
And then everybody pissed me off more when I told them they were bullshit.
We should show people of images of the little ones because they do look so fake.
Yeah, and they brought these out at that, you know, Mexican Congress.
And the guy who brought it out had been hoaxing with other things, right?
Didn't you have a history?
I mean, the song.
She's got a little dress on.
And these are an extreme version.
There's some other ones that...
Look a little better.
Yeah.
But they do look fake.
When I look at that, I'm not interested in that.
Exactly.
And that's what I was calling out back, you know, five years...
Go back down a little bit.
Jamie um below the tridactyl till you get to that one right there like the the one next to your cursor
to the right yeah that looks so rigid and stiff and fake that's one of them like why is it so
straight and flat like that doesn't make any sense why is its shoulders built like that looks fake as
fuck it looks like a doll there's issues but the tridactals now click an image on one of the tridactals
i mean these were called tridactals too that's why right but look at that thing that's weird that has
an anatomy that's much more consistent
with a living thing. One of the criticisms
was that these things couldn't move. Like that
little doll with a straight rib cage
like the legs which we can
identify as specific animals, they're like
flipped around, they're just stuck together.
These things couldn't walk. There's a form follows
function aspect of these that just
doesn't make any sense. And the list goes on. I actually
in that cryptotrestrial paper where we
broke in and ate all the mushrooms, I
actually published a critique
of these things in that paper
but just talking about these little ones.
I think those little ones were people trying to make copies of those things.
Because they were probably selling them to wealthy investors or wealthy, you know, enthusiasts.
Because like if one of those things were for sale and some guy from Saudi Arabia was like, I want one in my home.
And, you know, he gave them a hundred million dollars.
Like for sure that thing would vanish.
And then everybody's going to find out and start making more.
Right.
Right. Of course. That's why you make the little stupid fake ones.
And unfortunately, that did lead to grave robbing, which is a crime and really sad.
It shouldn't desecrate graves.
For sure. But there's also such a small amount of excavation that it makes you ponder.
Like, how many of these are there right now that we have not discovered?
Like, is it possible that this is one of many that are out there in Peru right now where you can't find them?
and also why Peru and why the NOSCA lines?
The NOSCA lines are absolutely fascinating.
It's artwork that you could only see from the sky.
Like, what motivation to people a thousand plus years ago, at least, have to make artwork that you can only see from the sky?
Yeah.
And especially if you, I mean, the obvious thing would be that they're trying to get these advanced beans that make them come, come down from the sky.
like interact with them again you know like who wouldn't a lot of a lot of contactees are really
upset about what happens Willie Streber is a great example this goes for a lot of people but he felt
violated he felt raped the first time and then over time he missed them and wanted them to come back
and that's what we find over and over one of the best resources currently is the doctor
Edgar Mitchell free study that interviewed thousands of contactees and abductees and
there's these common themes across these different cases and one of them is
that people, 85% of people who interacted with a more human-like entity enjoy their experience.
And that's another thing that we have to combat with the stigma and this forced shame that
comes with talking about this. And what has happened in TV and movies over the years is that
we have the sense that abductions are horrifying and everyone's picked up and probed and hurt.
And that does happen. But most people, based on what contactees actually say, it was a benign or
enjoyable experience. Well, they're probably terrified because it's so strange. It probably freaks
you out. It's the ontological shock aspect. Oh, it has to be beyond. What they also found is that with
repeated contact, once that ontological shot goes away, it's like, whoa, that was kind of cool, actually.
I wish I could have more of that. That makes sense. And then people come to enjoy it, you know?
That makes sense. I, you know, I talked about this on Jesse Michael's show and I talked about it here.
I had a very strange dream. That was a great interview, by the way. Thank you. It was cool.
I love Jesse. He's awesome. And he's the best. Can we
They talk about your dream, too, by the way?
That's what I was just going to talk about.
Oh, no shit.
Yeah, that's why I said I talked about it on Jesse, and I talked about it here.
That dream was the most realistic dream I've ever had in my life.
It is a problem, and that dream was a couple months ago now, and I think any recounting of that dream is essentially me recounting, my recounting of the dream.
It gets weird.
But what I do remember was it was the most vivid dream I have ever had in my life, and that I could not go back to sleep, which is really,
rare. I am I am a good
sleeper. I'm always
go, go, go. And
when it's time to go to bed, I fucking
crash. I'm easy.
So for me to not be able to go back to sleep
was so straight. I mean, wide
awake, just lying in bed,
I mean, fully awake
for an hour and waiting for it
to dissipate. And I'm like, this
isn't going away. I'm just going to go work out.
So I just went to the gym and just
tried to like think about
like what just happened. Why did that? Why was
that's so real.
One of the things about it was they were shocking me and then laughing.
They were trying to relax me.
They were trying to get me to, at least my perception of it in the dream was they were
trying to get me to calm down from the shock of interacting with these things that
aren't human.
They were human-like.
They almost seemed like their skin coloration was like, like, like, I'm not.
us but like maybe a little more tan like a little more like not tan but like a yellow um yeah more
yellow than tan and they had it looked like clothing but the clothing was the same color as her
skin but the clothing wasn't distinctive it's like almost like a rash guard that they were wearing
and they were very slender and uh what's a rash guard uh rash guard is like what surfers wear
you know like they wear it's like um a stretchy material
that's skin tight that goes on your body
and it keeps you from getting scratched up by stuff
keeps you from getting rashes
you know you wear it on your legs
you ever see surfers do it
jiu-jitsu guys wear it when they roll
we wear rash guards
so it's show them what a rash guard looks like
and that's that had a whole suit of that
that's what looks like
so that's a jacked guy with a rash guard on
these things were not jacked and there was no creases
there was no there was no lines that indicated
that was cloth but they had a humanoid form
like arms legs yes but very thin very thin like Michael Jackson like super slender
like genderless genderless Michael Jackson like the old days
when he you know toward the end really thin yeah like really thin and I could I had no sense
of what they felt like men to me uh maybe it was because the way they were joking with
they were like ah and they're like yeah just joking around and I was a very male thing you
wouldn't expect a nurturing female maybe a fun chick
Yeah.
Like, woo.
But whatever it was, they were talking to me without talking to me.
And there was some sort of communication that I was trying to absorb where they were telling me to relax.
Telepathically, were they moving their mouths?
No, they weren't moving their mouth, but they were able to smile at me, which is what they did when they, but I don't even really remember teeth.
I just remember it being so weird, so weird, that them, them scaring me and they,
going, ha, I just walking around.
Like, was like, I'm like, I got it.
I was like, okay, I get it.
You want me to calm down.
And then they were telling me, just relax.
Just relax and try to take this in.
And it didn't last for very long, I don't think.
It changed their hard to decide for.
But after that, like, when they were saying, take this in,
were they talking about being there in the environment or were they communicating something?
I got the distinct impression that this was a first meeting.
That's what it felt like.
Okay.
Like, maybe we'll see you again.
Breaking down some barriers.
Maybe we won't.
But I want to let you know that, like, if you wanted to introduce someone to a life form from somewhere else, and you wanted them to have prolonged exposure to it, I would imagine you'd want to do it briefly and shockingly where it felt really weird.
And then at the end of it, they're not even sure if it really happened at all.
And then slowly, over a long period of time, when the person gets to adapt and they make a decision, it's time.
And it's just like what we were talking about, with the ontological shock, get past that.
And then you can move on with whatever is supposed to come from that.
Because it was very brief. Very, very shocking and very brief.
Well, I mean, was it, though? Because when you're in a dream state, time and space kind of get manipulated anyway, isn't it possible that you are actually interacting for a longer time?
Or do you mean just from the start to finish was like, here we are.
I'm going to fuck with you for a little bit. And then it's over.
Well, that's what it felt like when I woke up.
So when I woke up, it felt like it happened so quickly and then it was over.
but I don't know you know I don't know I mean I was asleep for it was like three in the
morning so I was probably asleep for I probably went to bed at like 11 something like that so
I wasn't asleep for very long um maybe I went to bed a little later I don't remember but what I do
remember was the shock of it was it was different than any other dream I'd ever had where it was like
like this is this is a real thing this and it I was in a corridor and the corridor was weird
lit like not lit in any way like oh there's a light and the light is casting light it was like
the it was weird walls and ceiling but it was felt not normal it felt like some completely different
way of lighting things i mean i will mention just from doing a bunch of research on this that one of the
most commonly described things about people being in UFOs is the light they described the light
emanating from the walls, the ceiling, everywhere without like a point of light.
Did it feel like that?
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But it almost...
Was there a curvature to the hallway at all?
It was.
It almost had like an organic aspect to it.
It was...
People say that about UFOs too.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
That almost seems like a living entity into itself.
Yeah, well, I mean organic, like almost like I was in a cave or something like that.
It was a part of Earth.
It was weird.
It was really weird.
And it was really vivid.
like the beings were very vivid
I can't remember how many of them there were
I think there was three or four
I don't think you should write it off as just a dream
like I mean
well most likely it was just a dream
but what is just a dream
that's the question that's where it gets weird
like I have come to think that
that is almost the baseline
real reality more than this
oh boy
yeah sorry
that's kind of why I wanted to talk about
Oh, you just cracked me.
Well, maybe.
So I had a really insane experience in 2022 that forced me to start thinking about what this is, what this physical reality is.
Because I was shown.
What was 2022?
I call it a mini-abduction.
I was taken up.
I was at a UFO conference.
Actually, the same one where I was watching that with James Fox before it came out, the Virginia case.
so I was taken up to this room that no one was in I was taken on the balcony I wasn't allowed to leave
by who a woman who I knew uh but loosely basically I was downstairs she saw or they saw through her
because this gets really weird that I was out of money I was trying to get a beer at the bar for like
12 bucks or whatever they charge you with these things it was it was a Halloween dance party
this was October 14th 2022 I was out of money she comes up
and says, hey, I have a key of the VIP room.
We had just come down from there where they hosted a meet and greet with the speakers.
I was one of the speakers.
So we went up there to get beers, stuff in my pockets.
We're going to bring some to our friends.
They didn't have to pay $12 for a beer.
And then she's like, well, you can't go.
My friend Eric wants to talk to you.
I was like, who's Eric?
Don't worry, you'll like him.
Just kept saying that over and over.
Don't worry, you'll like them.
So at some point, we end up on the balcony, and I'm just sitting there and give up.
I'm like, fine.
I guess I'm just waiting for this Eric guy, whoever the hell that is.
So eventually Eric comes in, pulls his chair up right into me.
Like his knee is in my dick.
Like straight up right here.
I start to get that.
I'm very much fight and the fight or flight thing.
And I'm like, you know, who the fuck's this guy?
Total stranger.
Never seen him in my life.
And his face is right here.
He says, I sense that you're angry about this, but I need to be this close for this to work.
And then it just all went away.
Perfectly fine.
And they tell me something that was that same thing that they did to you in that dream,
something that they knew would shock me and make me pay attention.
So about two weeks before this, I'd been washing dishes, and I just decided I wanted to quit all of this.
I was sick of doing TV shoots and podcasts.
I was exhausted and want to be home with my family.
That was it.
That was just a thought.
Just while you were washing dishes?
Washing dishes.
My wife's right behind me, didn't tell her or anything.
Very next thing he says is we know you've been thinking.
thinking about quitting lately and we'd really prefer you not do that yet complete stranger i'd never
seen this guy in my life and he knows a thought in my head you had while washing dishes from two weeks
privately and my i was just like how could you possibly know that and they said i'm going to use
they because they used they i wasn't talking to this guy i was talking through some sort of entity or
entities through him and they said once you know who we are you'll only
know how we know that and i never had a telepathic moment in my life but i thought future humans
that's all i could come up with because like this is what i'm doing they didn't answer the question but
they did say so you know how we did that and i just go uh-huh it doesn't fucking answer the question but
in that moment it placated me enough to move on and there was a number of things that transpired
we're out on this balcony i'm in shock i'm like what the hell is going to
going on here? How does this complete stranger know my thoughts? The conversation evolved. I was allowed
to ask questions. They're like, we know you're frustrated. We know you're upset with this. We'd really
like you to keep going. Is there anything you need? Is there anything we can help with? I was like,
no, I'm quite happy in general. I'm just exhausted. I don't want to do this anymore. Like,
yeah, we get that. We get that. We get that. And then I was allowed to ask questions. I asked
three different questions. And people started to come back to this room because the party was
wrapping up downstairs and they're starting to come back to the VIP room where all the free booze was
so that makes sense and we're out in this balcony these three women come out at one point
and this man uh who now is like just right here like eyes right here i can't move anymore like i lost
the ability to turn my head i'm just like laser focused said can you close the door behind you
that was it and these three women turned in perfect unison walked back and closed the door
nobody came out the rest of the time we were out there eventually got to the point where they're
like we came here because we need to put three things in your brain for some future time or times
I forget which they said um do we have your permission to do that and over the course of this
interaction I started to remember them and I started to feel like a little bitch about complaining
about being tired traveling hotels flights you know and I was like oh that's right I know you
I know who you are, not that guy. I'd never seen him in my life. But I know you and there's a familiarity. And this was like the breaking down of me to be able to get past that, to do the things that needed to be done. They told me what would happen. They said that I would continue looking. My eyes would be open, but this darkness would come from top to bottom. And they would put things in my brain. And I would see it coming in, but I wouldn't have access to it once they were done. Do you agree? They're very polite, extremely polite.
free will was conserved. Do you agree to this? Are you okay with this? And again, at that point, I remembered them. I recognized them. I was like, yes, absolutely. I agree to this. That's exactly what happened. Eyes went dark, still wide open. Eyes went dark. And I see this massive, fast stream of information just going straight into my brain. It was exhausting. It didn't hurt, but it was like really overwhelming. I have no idea how long they were doing this.
You said you see it playing your brain?
I could see, it was like, I could see, I don't remember it, but I could see and understand the moments because, and it wasn't just me.
Like, at one point, this conversation switched from being vocal to telepathic.
Like, we just started communicating telepathically.
It was so seamless that I didn't even really notice it happened.
And eventually I'm like, wait, we're not moving our mouths.
We're just talking with our brains.
But the woman who brought me up there in the first place was standing in my left with her hand on my shoulder.
she would occasionally go, did you get that?
Did you see that?
That was important.
Did you get that?
So she was watching it too and saw it coming in as it was coming through this individual in front of me.
And I could see it at that moment.
I'd be like, uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh.
Like I understood it.
It all comes in.
I have no idea how long I was in that mesmerized state.
But after they finished, that entire room had five times more people in it.
there was like probably 20 people in this room all looking at us like what the fuck has happened in the masters out there you know like what is going on they lifted me out of this uh site returned from bottom to top the opposite of what happened before and i stand up turn walk through this room it felt like my head was a bowling ball like i could barely even lift my head and this woman i think one of the ones that came out when we were on the balcony uh put her hand on my shoulders said are you okay i was just like uh huh
Walk past her
Fortunately, I was on that same floor
On the fourth floor of this hotel
Walked down, lay back on the bed
With my feet still on the floor
All my clothes on and just slept in that position
For about 13 hours
What?
Didn't wake up at all
And when I woke up, I started crying uncontrollably
Like my, I could not stop crying
I wasn't sad, I wasn't scared
I had a memory of what happened the night before
But it was kind of fuzzy
And then as it started to come back more
and more and more and more I started to be like oh shit like that that was real you know my first
thought was like oh that that wasn't real and then I was allowed to remember all of it everything
before they put me in that state is like crystal clear in my mind and I wrote it all down
not long after that just to make sure I had you know so so it wasn't me recounting me recounting
like you were saying so there was actually like a written transcript of how everything happened
I should probably done that it is helpful
probably done that, but I know that my recollection of it is pretty accurate, my recollection,
my memory, and I know that it was very brief. Like, would the encounter seem very brief? It
might have gone longer than I think it did. Well, they might have done the same thing to you.
That's why I mention it. They might have done the same thing where you weren't necessarily
allowed to remember the things that were done. Like, they told me that we're going to do this,
are you okay with it, and then missing time. I have no idea how long they were doing that.
And in a dream state, like it could have been dreams often skew time regardless, but maybe if, let's just say hypothetically, you were on a craft, they were breaking you down in the same way they did me to try to get you whether now or in the future, like you said.
It might have been an initial encounter where there's something more going to happen later, but maybe there was more to it that they just didn't let you have conscious memories of.
Like they told me I wouldn't remember what they put in my brain and I don't.
Which is, just a second, this is what blows my mind, man.
This is fucking insane.
It's my brain.
Right.
They put things in there.
The ability that they can even do that in the first place is nuts.
But I don't have access to it.
It's really wild.
How do you know what's in there then?
I watched it come in.
I know it went in.
And they told me that it was going to come in.
And I saw it happen.
But then once it's in, right.
But does that make any sense?
Like, think about it.
If they're giving you information, what is the point?
point giving someone information that they can't access.
Well, that's what they said, though.
They said, for time or times in the future.
It's time released.
It's time stamped.
At some point, whatever that was that they thought was so damn important to many abduct
me at this conference, fuck with me for about five months afterwards, is going to come out
at some point.
Have you ever considered the possibility someone dropped acid into your beer?
Yeah, I have.
Because that would be such a cruel thing to do to someone at a UFO conference.
Problem is.
And then fuck with them and say, sit down, look, and look at it.
my eyes, I'm going to give you information now. You're like, oh my God, it's coming. Information's
coming. It is. Problem is I've done acid over 200 times. So I know exactly what that's like.
Maybe it was a flashback. That's what they say. That was the thing they always, I never heard of one
fucking person getting a flashback by the way. I know. I feel robbed, dude. Like I was totally
crack our back and we're going to get a flashback when you're driving your car, man, and you
fucking run into a bus full of kids. It's like how they told us everybody's going to give us free
drugs on the playground. Nobody ever gave me free drugs. No drugs. No drugs.
No, it was not. I had actually only had two beers the entire night. I was completely sober.
So it was some kind of experience that was very anomalous.
Extremely, yeah. So here's another aspect of it. They knew my future. They knew everything about me.
They knew my thoughts. That's how they broke me down. And they even knew where I was going to be the next day.
They saw that it fucked me up and I was not doing well. Like I wasn't crying because I was sad or scared or anything. It was just a physiological response to whatever they did.
I'm walking down through the main corridor to give a book to a friend of mine, John Dover, Navajo Ranger,
and that same guy comes around the corner, comes down, puts his hand on my shoulder, says,
are you okay?
I was not okay.
But I go, uh-huh.
And they fixed me somehow.
His touch on my shoulder released all of the whatever was messing me up.
They knew where I would be at that exact moment for him to come there.
He wasn't part of this conference.
He had nothing to do with this.
He was used as some sort of vessel or some sort of medium for this end.
Whatever it means, I don't know, because the things haven't come out of my brain yet.
But they are a time stamped for the future.
I completely believe you.
It's not a belief.
It's not a belief.
They did it in a way where other people were involved, so I didn't even get to pretend.
Don, what I'm saying is, I'm saying, I believe your story from you.
I have no information on it, obviously, other than you telling me.
I believe you, it sounds like this is a real experience, but most people hearing something like this will automatically go, get the fuck out of here.
And they did.
But I want those people to imagine what it would be like if that happened to you.
For me, it's easy because mine was in a dream and I'll tell you it's a dream.
I think it was a dream.
It was the most vivid dream I've ever had, but it was a dream.
It was really weird.
I couldn't shake it.
He really freaked me out.
I had to talk about it the moment I got on a podcast next.
I was like, this is something that I have to bring up right away.
And thank you for doing that, by the way.
It takes bravery to talk about this.
But I was talking to Brett Weinstein, it's an evolutionary biologist.
Like, it's not the topic to talk about.
But I'm like, I have to tell you this because it was one of the weirdest things that I've experienced a lot of weird shit.
I've had a weird life.
That was the weirdest.
It was weird.
It took me a year to talk about this.
I went down.
Let me finish your book.
Sorry, I didn't know you were.
This is what I, for people that are very skeptical, I want you to imagine yourself in a position where something like this happens to you.
You're a regular guy.
You're a mechanic for Chevrolet, whatever you are.
And this thing happens to you.
And what do you do now?
What do you do with this?
And who the fuck is going to believe you?
You wouldn't have believed you.
So why would you, you don't even want to tell people.
It's that crazy.
Yeah.
And if these things are happening.
happening, they're not happening to 7 billion people, right? They're happening to select individuals for whatever unknown reason all over the place. And if that is happening to one in a million, one in 100,000, whatever it is, over time, these people have all of these similar stories. I get being skeptical. I get it. I'm a skeptical person with a lot of stuff. I go back and forth. I'm a believer. And then I'm like,
shut up. I'm with you. I'm with you. But you got to imagine what you would do if that happened
to you. If these are unique experiences. That's a great point. Unique experiences, totally novel
experiences that most people don't have, trying to describe them and everybody who I've ever
talked to, including Travis Walton, who's by the way very believable. Yeah. Very
believable. They, the way they describe it, it has that weight to it. Like, I know no one's
going to fucking believe me. I know this is crazy, but I have to tell you, I have to tell you that
this happened. Imagine being Travis Walton. That's what I want people to think about, the people
that are very skeptical. I'm really glad you brought that up because a lot of people don't think about
that part, how hard it is. Not just to have some crazy shit like that happened, but how hard it is
to then talk about it and subject yourself to the ridicule and the scorn that comes with it.
Of course.
And the possibility that you might just be some disinformation artist, just some bullshit artist that's sent down here to muddy up the narrative.
Absolutely. Absolutely. And if it hadn't, if I hadn't, yeah, I don't, I have thought about that.
Like, what if, you know, there's some sort of mind control thing that the government has or whatever?
Have you ever heard the recordings of Betty and Barney Hill?
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Yeah.
Jamie, see if you can find those.
Yeah, they're kind of trippy.
Trippy.
I don't think that's the case in this situation because of the way it happened, how it happened.
They're uber politeness and the fact that I was allowed to leave my body and see and remember things that I normally wouldn't.
Well, also, take it in the context of who you are, the time we live in.
Betty and Barney Hill, I believe it was in the 1950s.
They're an interracial couple in New England.
So they have a lot of anxiety just on that
Imagine being a pioneering interracial couple in the 1950s
I mean the fucking racism they must have experienced must be
So the level of anxiety that they must have slept with
Thinking the KKK is going to show up at any point in time and burn a fucking cross on their lawn
So you've got all that too
Then there's a completely novel experience where no one has talked about this before
They were two of the first people to ever talk about
They are the OGs
So this is a tape of Dr. Benjamin Simon and Peyton
Barney Hill. Play this.
It's right over my right.
God.
What is it?
And I try to maintain control
so Betty cannot tell I am scared
God, I was scared
It's all right
You can go right on
Experience it
It will not hurt you now
I got to get my gun
Oh
You gotta get my god
All right
All right
That's intense
This is
This is 1961
Wild
And like you say
You know, that's actually, I haven't thought about that.
I did a whole case study on Betty and Barney Hill in my second book.
I hadn't even really thought about that.
Like, it's already hard to talk about stuff.
They were the OGs.
They're the first one.
Interracial couple coming out publicly describing these horrific events.
Also, these events in 1961, when no one had heard anything about that before.
There's so many compounding factors that make me want to give them even more credit for being honest about it.
And, and, I mean, that's what, that's what's important.
really hard for me to talk about this. It really fucked me up for like, I'm going to say five months,
but it was way more than that. And the reason I bring this up is because of your dream and the
shock factor and what it means for conceptualizing reality, this physical reality versus what we
write off as being dreams, a dream reality. I have come to think that that is baseline, that consciousness
is fundamental. It's foundational. And this physical reality is built off of it. And I've heard a lot of
other scientists talking about that lately. So I think one of the questions that gets me is why
does everything dream? Everything. Every living organism dreams. And it almost seems like we're here
for the universe to learn about itself and to have these experiences because at source,
there's nothing. There's just love and energy. That's it. And I've gotten to experience that.
I was thinking in the shower the other day that I feel lucky because I've gotten to have near-death
experiences without actually dying because it's a very similar thing. And I go to that same place
that people describe in these near-death experiences,
that's real.
That feels the most real,
but you don't get to have divorces and people dying
and car crashes and the shit that makes this life suck,
but also being the only way that the universe can learn about itself,
and then every night, what do we do?
We empty the hippocampus and upload that information.
Near-death experiences people describe that review, the life review.
So we upload it every night,
and at the end of your life, it's like,
upload the whole thing all at once,
go to a different body and the next time.
Wow.
I think your dream is just as real
as anything we experience here,
if not more real.
Let's end it with that.
Thank you.
That was a lot of fun.
That's been a lot of fun.
Can I tell you one more thing?
You can cut this out if you want.
No, you can leave it in.
One of my favorite things about this lately
has been how many comedians I get to talk to.
Like the last dinner,
I did an interview with Mark Gagnin.
I did an interview with Dave Foley.
From back in the day, news radio.
I grew up watching, that was one of my favorite shows back in the day.
Dave used to make fun of me when I was into UFOs back in the news radio days.
Not anymore, man.
Not anymore. He's all in. I love it. He's super into it.
I love it.
No, it's great, man. I don't know. Dan St. Germain, Sean O'Donnell.
A lot of the people I've been talking to lately are comedians.
And I actually wanted to ask you why. Why are so many comedians into this UFO phenomenon?
I think more than like most other genres or professions.
Well, most comedians are into interest.
things and comedians don't have to worry about the stigma of being thought of as a fool.
We're professional fools. You know, if someone says I'm a moron, I'm like, okay, what do I'm
do? This is how smart I am. This is how smart I am. I'm exactly this smart. I'm not pretending
to be any smarter than I am. If you think I'm a moron, that's fine. I don't care.
My reputational integrity doesn't depend on whether or not I'm an idiot or whether you think
I'm an idiot. It doesn't matter. So if I think something, I can just talk about it.
Right. So like if my dream, if I was a political correspondent and I wanted people to believe me, I probably wouldn't tell that dream. I'd probably just tell my friends like that was fucking weird. And I'd leave it alone. I wouldn't treat it as like something that I needed to get out there. Yeah. And you have the freedom to tell the story and express it. I'm a clown, you know, honk, honk. I think I mean, comedians also are really observant. Well, we like interesting things. Yeah, exactly. And you observe those interesting things and can talk about them and interesting ways. I think most people like interesting things, but most people are saddled down by a structure.
And that structure could be the office politics in the place that you work.
It could be whatever your cultural or whatever your political ideology is, whatever your thing is.
Like you get stuck in this structure where you have to think about things at a very specific way and talk about things in a very specific way.
Some things are shunned.
In the comedy world, those shunned things are ammunition.
Like, that's where our weapons for comedy.
Like, I want to talk about things that are fucking.
weird you know i want to talk about the things that make you go oh yeah i didn't want to say
that but i've been thinking the same kind of thing but that might be real that might be what's
going on that is what's discouraged in polite society is encouraged as a comedian that's awesome
so that's probably why we all love UFOs that's cool but there's a lot of us that are skeptical
i've had conversations with people that don't believe in any oh i don't believe in any conspiracies
i'm like well that's just silly you're just coddling yourself
You know, people only see what they are able to believe.
They only see what makes them comfortable.
Yeah, exactly.
Or they try to only see what makes them comfortable.
And a lot of people, I think Nietzsche said that people don't want to know the truth because it'll destroy their comfortable sense of reality.
I totally bastardized that quote.
But it's something like that, you know?
I think that's why people get so paranoid when they smoke weed.
Yeah.
All the blinders melt away.
You're like, I'm a big proponent of the filter theory.
You know, I think there's all this weirdness all around us all the time.
and it just takes a little masculine or DMT or psilocybin and it removes that filter and you see the world for what it is, which becomes much more dreamlike.
I really do think that that essence of our consciousness is the root of all of this.
Yeah, I think you're correct.
I think it's the hotline to the universe.
That's what I think it is.
I think we're, you know, in order to do this task, whatever it is, my belief is this task is to create artificial God.
I think that we're in the middle of that process right now.
Yeah.
I think that's our task.
There's a lot of factors that I point to, and they make sense.
Materialism, why are we so infatuated with materialism?
Because materialism ensures technological innovation.
It ensures that this being is going to make better stuff all the time.
Well, if that being makes better stuff all the time, it's not hard to extrapolate.
Like, take this a few years down the road.
You have an artificial intelligent life force, and you have an artificial intelligent life force
that has sentience and creativity and is capable of making a far,
better artificial intelligent life force radically quickly different kinds of energy sources before
you know it it's a god and we're just the propagators exactly we're the we're the bees we make the
hive we don't even know why i call us the electronic caterpillar we're making this little cocoon we don't
know what the fuck we're doing and we're turning into some sort of a butterfly some sort of a superior
being following the script i think that one of the might be one of the reason why beings from somewhere
else are interested in us because they recognize there's a process going on and perhaps
Perhaps this process doesn't go on everywhere.
Perhaps these beings are embedded with a type of consciousness that doesn't allow them to seek territorial dominance, that they don't ever evolve, these kind of primate instincts that we're saddled down with.
Because of our savage background, you know, I mean, I don't know if you've ever watched Chimp Nation on Netflix, amazing docu-sure fucking incredible docu-series.
Can't recommend it enough.
These scientists were embedded with this chimpanzee pack, I guess, for 20.
20 years, so the chimpanzees had completely acclimated to them being around.
So long they always stayed 20 yards away, never had any food, never look them in the eyes.
When they approach, back up, get out of there.
They leave you alone.
And so these guys did this for 20 years, and they observed chimpanzee behavior.
And it's like fucking people, just like way more violent.
The only other species other than us that's been observed going to war.
Going to war, having these social games with each other.
Politics.
Yes, like grooming each other.
We're really interesting stuff, but we, so we are saddled down with that programming.
And even though I think if we were genetically engineered, they made a superior version of what we used to be as chimpanzees or whatever the cousin of chimpanzee we came from, we're still saddled down.
Maybe they weren't.
So maybe, like, maybe they don't have the sensational desire for innovation that leads them to create art.
Maybe they're logical enough to realize, like, we can never make AI.
AI is a fruitless, it'll remove us.
like let's be conscious of how we decide we progress forward so that we can keep our race
you know that we're these beings that control this planet we create this digital god
it controls us now we fucked ourselves in a prison of our own design maybe they're different
than us maybe they could recognize that and not fall into that but they realize we're about to do it
and they go well the primates just always do it the primates always want more fruit they want more
wives, they want bigger cars, bigger houses, newer phone, all that keeping up with the Joneses.
The hairless upright ones with free hands. Especially, you've got to be able to build stuff
with those hands. And they're curious. So they're always trying to build new things. And they
communicate so they could store information. It's a mess. It's a beautiful mess, though, Joe Rogan.
But it's a beautiful mess as opposed to their mess, which is probably telekinetic and telepathic.
They could probably operate things with their mind. They probably use their mind to communicate.
and so they know what each other's thinking
so there's no room for deception
there's no room for lies
no room for manipulation or sociopathy
we would see it a mile away
and so they've like radically shifted
what it means to be a living thinking organism
yeah yeah absolutely man
dude thank you so much
thank you awesome
revelation the future human past
and I really enjoy talking to you man
this has been super fun
I'm so glad you had me on this has been
great
If people want to find you, how do they get you on social media?
Yeah, yeah, I've got a website, Michael Pmasters.com.
It's got links to my four, I have four books, and I just published a kid's book last week.
This is on UFOs too?
Yeah.
What's it called?
It's called Marshmallow and the UFO, a time travel adventure.
It's actually a prequel to that one with Jesus throwing up a double bird on the front, which is not child appropriate at all.
Yeah, it doesn't seem like it.
It was a bit of a right term, but, man, this has been so fun.
I really appreciate it.
I really appreciate it.
It was fun.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
