The Joe Rogan Experience - #2430 - Jay Anderson
Episode Date: December 24, 2025Jay Anderson is the host and creator of the YouTube program and podcast Project Unity, which focuses on UFO and UAP phenomenon, human origins, ancient mysteries, and other topics. www.youtube.com/@P...rojectUnityhttp://www.patreon.com/ProjectUnity Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. 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
What's happening man
What's up, bro?
It's great to meet you as well Joe
I really really appreciate you taking me out here
Oh my pleasure
I've enjoyed your content for quite a while now
So it's really fun
I'd be interested to know when was it
That you first started getting interested in what I was doing
What kind of subject?
What topic?
I wish I remembered
Because I know you followed me for a couple of years
It was before the Kaffra Pyramid scans and stuff
You know I'm into the UFO subject
And things like that
But I wasn't sure
Well, it's all the silly shit that I love
Silly and serious at the same time
Ancient civilizations, mysteries
And obviously aliens
Oh yeah
And it's all co-tangent
It all connects together
I think so too
We actually played a clip
We did a podcast yesterday with Dr. Michael Masters
Love him, yeah
He was very fun, very smart
Right, very interesting guy, but we played, we were talking about the, he has a theory that aliens are human beings in the future.
Yeah.
It's a very strange theory.
Based on like kind of the anthropological view and the physiology and how that might have happened over time.
And there's also, what was the model, there's the many worlds theory, and then what was his model?
There's a different one.
The concept is you could, if you lived in the future, you could go back in time and it would not affect the future.
that's supposed to happen is already happening.
And you were supposed to go back anyway.
Interesting.
Okay.
I tried to get my head.
But anyway, during that time, I asked him about the tridactal mummies and then we played
your clip.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, we played the clip that showed all the scans.
We talked about Jesse Michaels and how he went down to Peru and actually touched those
things and was there with them and how surreal it was.
Yeah, I was in Peru recently not to go and see the NASCAR mummies.
I wish I could have seen them.
I was out there to look at all the megalithic studies and the,
the excavations going on at Saxo Oman, which is an incredible megalithic site in Kusko.
But the Nazca mummies, I mean, what's interesting about it is that obviously you're going
to have a big knee-jerk reaction to something that's so incredibly profound as the idea of
these being non-human intelligences that are mummified.
But when you actually look at the CT scans and the x-rays, you start to realize that this
can't be faked.
You can't fake bone cartilage.
You can't fake capillaries and heart valves and a fetus inside the body.
It's so nuts.
Dude, it's crazy.
Some of them have eggs inside them.
Some of them have fetuses.
It looks like the eggs are big.
Big eggs, like inside them.
Yeah, and these are small beings.
These ones are meant to be like the little kind of like 60 centimeter beings with like three eggs inside them.
Then you got the big one, Montserrat, which has an actual fetus, like a baby not in an egg.
So it's like if these are all real, it does feel like there was some sort of genetic experimentation going on where they're just churning out prototypes or some form.
Do you think that's it?
or do you think that there used to be another type of, for lack of a better word, primate?
Well, the thing is...
Is that a primate?
I mean, what is that?
I mean, some of them, they're leaning more towards, like, reptilian anthropod kind of lineage.
So, like, the bigger ones seem to be more mammalian, whereas the smaller ones with the eggs are sharing reptilian traits.
So it's like there are all these different variations with these different bodies, different kind of, like, physiological characteristics, which is why it's like, okay, well, is this one.
lineage? Or is this just someone kind of like tweaking? Well, that one failed. That one's not
working on. This one grew wings or I fucked that one off. It's just weird. So your thought
is that these are the products of experiments. I mean, if you look at Jesse, when Jesse Michaels
did his documentary, one thing he mentioned, I can't remember where he got this from, but he was
saying that the original translation of the area of NASCAR from the original language was like
the area of experiments and genetic cloning. It was like a really
strange definition for the actual area that kind of says experimentation and genetic modification.
I can't remember the exact quote, but this was something that he brought up in the documentary.
I was like, huh? Okay. Then you have all of these various different examples.
Can I ask you? Yeah. Who said that? Who called it that?
So when Jesse Michaels put out his documentary, there was just a scene in it. Now, my memory is
failing me a little bit, but there's a scene anywhere. He was talking about the NASCAR region.
And he said that in the original language, this translates roughly to the area of experimentation and genetics of some form.
But how do they know what those terms were?
I agree. I agree. I agree. But it's just a weird little caveat that he brought up in the documentary. I'm not quite, he'd probably be rolling his eyes on me now. Like, dude, I actually fucking know exactly what is it.
You make me look like an idiot. You're butchering it. Yeah, I'm butchering it. But I do that all the time. No, for sure. But just the fact that these things exist. And they exist in an area of the world.
which is full of mystery.
I mean, the megalithic sites around there.
Like I said, that's what I was out there for
to see these different megalithic sites
and the Nazca Lines and, you know, Saxooman
and in the Sacred Valley,
you just have like incredibly complex architecture.
You know, rose court, granite, diorite,
and a site, these incredibly hard stones,
like in Egypt.
But honestly, I find Peru even more baffling
than Egypt with the architecture
because of just the level of interlocking precision
that you see and the fact that it looks like
They've softened the stone in sacks a woman.
It looks like marshmallows all squished together.
And it just invokes a lot of different theories from people
about how they were actually manipulating the stone.
Yeah, because it doesn't seem like it was just carved.
No.
Right?
Like it does seem like there's some areas where chunks have been removed from, you know, the quarries.
But when they're all pieced together, when you see those weird like curvatures to it,
it's like, what will you guys do?
And perfect precision.
Perfect precision.
And like sometimes you'll see like these corners where just a tiny bit of stone is jutting up and then the other two are connecting into it.
So this is such a ridiculous level of complexity for an apparent 600 year ago, bronze age, bronze chisels and stone hammer tool wielding civilization.
And also in Peru is what I find very interesting is you've got a brilliant visual contrast to use when you look at what is the inker work, which is the rough cut stone, the mortar brick using walls.
like this is all present in Peru
next to the megalithic sites
and the mainstream will attribute
all of this to the Inca of 600
years ago but you'll see that
the stone walls that are rough cut
and use cement and mortar, they're still
standing, they're pretty pristine, they're looking good
next to megalithic
multi-ton slabs of granite that are broken
to pieces and strewn across the hillside
so it just looks like there
was a lot of desolation, potentially
geological trauma in this area
and then these people, the Inca,
discovered these sites built around them.
You can see in like the cracks and corners of all these megalifts
that there's like stone walls that they've tried to kind of, you know, reinforce.
It's very visually obvious, actually, when you go out to these places.
Isn't it fascinating that people aren't willing to consider the possibility
that this is from an older time?
Like that it's heresy.
It's just such a knee-jerk reaction, man.
Like I think at the end of the day, we're still using models from like 1800s explorers, right?
And it's like, what the fuck?
Like, we've moved forward.
There's a lot of contradicting evidence and data in a lot of these countries,
whether it be, you know, Gobeckli-Tepa in Turkey, or the potential infrastructure below the Giza plateau,
and then the incredible megalists in Peru, like Saxe-Woman.
It just feels like what we're doing is rehashing the same status quo orthodoxy,
and it's coming up against an ever piling higher mountain of evidence.
And one of the cool things that I got to do out in Peru was go to,
Saxa woman where they've got current
archaeological digs going on through the
Chincana project which is a
archaeological team out there and they're doing digs
and they have actually discovered
below like 10
meters down into the ground precision
carved blocks of stone that are coming out
of the earth and this is where in this
region in Kusko
the Andean legends are that there is
a vast labyrinth below ground
connecting Kusko to Saxa Woman
connecting Saxa Woman to the sacred valley
all spreading out across the Andean Mountain
range. And this is like an old legend. This is what the shamans and the, you know, sacred
keepers of knowledge would say in Peru. We're finding evidence for it. We're literally going
underground now and seeing that there are actually really precise elements of infrastructure
below Saxo-Woman. And they're just beginning to uncover this. I was one of the first
to go down there and actually see these blocks myself. And it's just like, this is happening
now. We're actually getting to a place where we can start to validate some of these forgotten
myths and folklores or if you want to call them conspiracies or pseudoscience from the
archaeological side of things it's being evidence now that that's mad so these tunnels and
like what is exactly the structure that's supposed to be down there and what have they
discovered so it's it's supposed to be called the chinkana like the labyrinth and there's a few
different chinkana entrances around the region how big is it supposed to be vast multiple
kilometers. It's stretching from down
Saks of a woman, down into Kusko, and then off
into the Andean mountain range to the Sacred Valley.
So it's very similar to some of the stuff
they found in Egypt. That's
banana. Yes. Yes. And then what's
interesting is you have the same hallmarks and
signatures that you see in Egypt. So you see the stone
nubs, you know, these little protrusions that you
get. I'm addicted to those, man,
because they are all over the world. Do you have any
theories? I mean, I've listened
to a lot of theories. I certainly think
that the... We should show
an image of it for people that aren't.
Don't know what we're talking about.
Stone nubs.
There's all of these incredible, massive stones that have been somehow or another move from a quarry,
sometimes that were hundreds of miles away.
They all have these weird nubs on them.
And no one knows what they are.
And there's a bunch of theories, like maybe they help them move.
Yeah, there we go.
You see them all over the place.
And no one quite knows what those are.
You see them in India.
You see them in Egypt.
You see them in Peru.
This is in Orleans and Tambo in the Sacred Valley.
This is one of the things that's so infuriating about people that are arrogant about gatekeeping information and being the only ones that are allowed to distribute the truth, air quotes.
We're missing so much.
There's no way you really know.
Huge gaps of knowledge.
We're missing so much.
And more time goes on as Graham Hancock always says, shit just keeps getting older.
And now they just push back the use of fire by 300,000 plus years.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, it just keeps going, it's not going forward.
No.
It's going backwards.
And anatomically modern humans, I think, have gone much further back now in time.
They're looking at 800,000 years.
Plus, you know, plus, possibly even a million.
This is what weirds me about these creatures.
Like, human beings have gotten to the point multiple times where we were almost extinct.
The Toba volcano, I think we got down to, God, was it 7,000 people?
Is that like the low estimate?
Damn, really.
Yeah. It's a crazy story.
Like, super volcanoes are unbelievably devastating to just all life, you know, because it just
changes the temperature of the earth, the entire surface, whatever doesn't get blasted
out of the ground by the actual volcano itself.
All the other stuff on the other side of the world gets fucked.
Like, it just ruins everything.
We got down to, like, a few thousand people.
And then there was another time where one of these guys who can't, God, I forget who
where that was as well, we were talking about the reality
of glaciation and about what happens during ice ages
and how devastating it can be.
And they were saying that we had gotten at least
multiple times in the history of the earth
to the point where it was incapable of sustaining life.
Wow.
Within a few, you know, like whatever parts per million
of carbon dioxide are necessary to support plant life,
we literally got to the part where there was almost
impossible to support life.
And then it rebounded and everything's fine.
So there's so much we don't know.
Absolutely, man.
So crazy to try to pretend you know that people 600 years ago make this.
Because we know people 600 years ago live there.
We have a lot of archaeological evidence and we have,
but you have weird structures on top of obviously much more intricate and complex structures.
Yeah.
And again, they share the same signatures as places like in Egypt and India.
If you bring this up, they think you're a kook.
Yeah, they do.
And it's just a knee jerk reaction.
It's, again, it's adherence to a status quo, and, you know, you get channeled through a very kind of fine wall in academia, and I think that it can be a real detriment, actually, to opening up your ideas and being a little bit more expansive with what could be possible, because you do get put into a very restrictive format in the traditional academic sense, and then obviously you have, you know, the pressures of funding and things like this, and it's not going to get the funding if you're talking about this crazy shit, and it's just like a self-fulfilling censoring, you know,
But with the rise of alternative media, we're changing the game a bit because you can actually put a voice out there.
You can put an idea out there.
It's not completely stonewalled by the academic circle.
They can't actually prevent people from discussing these ideas in an open media format like this.
Right.
And if you put a video like you did on X or on YouTube, people can like the video that you did on the aliens, whatever they are.
Whatever they are.
People can see the CT scans.
Exactly.
You see the CT scans and you automatically go, wait a minute, this is 1,200 years old.
You're telling me someone fake this 1,200 years ago?
Like, I don't think they could fake that now.
I don't think they could.
Hollywood special effects guys, but then the composition of the actual, the bones and everything.
Like I said, like cartilage and muscle tissue and...
How would you fake that?
Circling back, I texted Jesse to ask him for some insight on what you asked for.
Oh, nice. Yeah, yeah.
So what he sent me was a screenshot of a book where he got it from.
Thanks for this, Jamie.
I had to translate.
Translation here shows...
Science of insemination.
Yeah, Jumana, I guess.
It's the local word.
So it's a local word for what that area is called.
Right, right, right.
And this is a book you found from that area, I think, and that says, yeah, Laboratory of Insemination and Cloning.
What?
That's what I'm saying, dude.
And look at all these terms.
They use Yuma is Suciman.
You may, it will verb to inseminate, eumage, the science of insemination, Yuma, Paj, wise inseminator, Yuma, cyan, or clone.
This is what I'm saying, bro.
Jumei to clone, Jumaj, the science of cloning, and Jumpaj, wise cloner.
So basically, you know, it's there.
It's interesting.
And then obviously...
Go back to that, please again?
You get alongside this kind of description, you have these bodies, you have this...
Oh, this is mad.
Yeah.
Dude, this was like one little 10-second clip in his documentary, and it just made me perk up, like, wait a minute, what?
The name of the place is like...
Like a laboratory of insemination and cloning.
And you're getting a smorgasbord of different beings coming out of this area, right?
What?
Jesse does add, I think he's speculating somewhat on the etymology.
Not definitive.
Oh, of course.
Right, right, right.
But yeah, I mean, it's there.
This is why Jesse's better at this than me.
I'm like, it's clear.
Oh, it's done.
The proof is there.
Wow.
But it is interesting.
Yeah, it is interesting.
And I think it does, you know, leads into what was happening on this planet a long time ago.
It doesn't, at least, like, my point was when I was getting to the whole super volcano thing.
Yeah, yeah.
What if something happened that wiped that species out?
Right, right.
Like, clearly, there's no more Neanderthals, right?
Whatever happened, whether it was us or disease or whatever killed them off, they don't exist anymore.
We only have evidence of people that are bred with them.
What is that thing?
Is that thing maybe one of us, like another kind of human?
Look, another kind of primate.
You know, look how different we are than rhesus monkeys, right?
like we're all primates we're so fucking different why would we assume that the ones that we found so far
including like what they find denisovans like 15 years ago something like that right right right
and then homo julienes what was that one that was just a few years ago like they keep finding
these new versions of people not new obviously no but long extinct versions of people i think
it's possible and i also think that there's a you know potential what if what if a particular
The sub-root species of hominid decided to opt in for subterranean living.
And they escaped a lot of the surface world traumas
and were actually able to kind of maintain their society.
I mean, look at all of the weird evidence we have for these vast underground.
Daring Kuii would love to go there, my God.
Jimmy Korsetti just released a video on it.
It's bananas.
Could you imagine renovating your house and fucking finding that?
Renovating your house and finding there's room for 20,000 people under your house.
Would you say anything?
I don't know.
I have to think about where I live.
It depends on where I live.
You live in a place where the government
can just come and take your house.
Yeah, I'd be worried about that.
I would say it if I was in America.
But if you know it was in America,
what if I really like my house?
And now my house is connected to this under the fucking archaeologists want to come.
Like, get out of my yard.
Exactly, exactly.
But like, yeah, I think about this and I think about all of these different.
Oh, it moved.
Good, good.
No, I'm happy to hear that.
I'm happy to hear that.
I'm happy to hear that.
But it's interesting.
And then you have, you know, the strange stories, like from the Hopi tribe,
about the ant people.
that came during a time of cataclysm and they brought them underground and then they brought
them back up and there's a few like that there was a really interesting podcast it was years ago
I remember seeing this where they'd brought these two Amazonian shamans on the podcast like full
headdress they spoke their own tribal language they needed an interpreter in the room and the guy
asked them what they thought about aliens and they didn't understand the question didn't know what
he meant by alien he was like thumbing through this book and he put up a picture of a gray and the
tribes and went oh that's mac and wabu that's mac and wabu and they had a whole story about how this was a human that
became an ant that lives underground and it can appear in the divine light but you should be very careful with
this being because it will take your soul underground and you need a very good shaman to bring your soul back
and they were taking it real seriously like yeah yeah yeah dude so it's like these tribal cultures
they know man they they fucking know well i think they have i think there's an ancient
memory in people. I think it's one of the reasons why these post-apocalypse movies are so popular.
There's a lot of post-apocalypse movies where, you know, like, people, they figure out
how to make houses out of wood again, and they're surviving, and they make little encampments
and they fight off the intruders from the outside. You know, real like Walking Dead type shit
with no zombies. I think there's a memory in us of the surviving humans. I think there's a memory.
I think there's a memory.
And I think we probably have been through some terrible moments in the Earth's history
where there was a enormous disaster and we are the ancestors of survivors.
And I don't think there was a lot of survivors.
No.
In fact, I heard you talking about that the other day where you were saying about like the,
and it's something I agree with, the necessity for post-cataclysm, post-apocalypse,
the strong men would inherit the earth.
You know, monsters would inherit the Earth, right?
And so if we really were a hyper-advanced Atlantean-type civilization prior to this, maybe even more matriarchal than patriarchal, it would make sense that when things fall apart, obviously, and now you need to survive in the wild, the strong men and the, you know, savage guys would inherit the earth because they would be the ones who would be able to, you know, push through that type.
of environment. And then if that is the case and you fast forward to where we are now, look at our incredibly competitive, hyper, kind of aggressive culture that we have, it would make sense that this was formed through the seeds of trauma and through the seeds of having to fight for survival and, you know, recovering what was lost.
Yes. Which also makes sense why the past, the further you go back, the more barbaric these people are. You're dealing and you're like, well, it took a while for people to learn. Maybe. But maybe.
You know, you're dealing with people that had to, they probably had to capitalize.
I mean, they probably had to eat everything they could.
There was only a few thousand of them left.
If we really got hit by asteroids, like if the younger dryness is correct, it makes sense
that it would take like 5,000 years for civilization to emerge again.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because that seems to be what happened.
It seems to be like you have literally the scragliest survivors and then eventually the Earth gets
back to normal. But even then, it takes thousands of years for people to just have a semblance of
what we're experiencing today in terms of civilization. And that's why prehistory is so fascinating
and the Neolithic in the Stone Age, because, okay, so this is a time when we were just basic
hunter-gatherers. We had no intelligence, no language, no real understanding of the world,
according to the mainstream, but this is where you have multi-ton, geodetically aligned, solar equinox and lunar alignment.
I'm completely just blanked just because I'm a little bit nervous of being on here.
Like, you know, like equinox alignment and like alignments to the sun and the moon, mathematically, geodetically aligned to what look like telluric currents, like electromagnetic flows beneath the ground.
a lot of these stonehenges and dolmens are placed on places where you have strong electromagnetic concentrations.
And just the package of mathematics and engineering and stone crafting and the knowledge of the sun and the stars and your placement on the planet to create things like stonehenge and these other areas in the world,
how can you do that if you're just hunter-gatherers coming out of, you know, animalistic behavior?
It doesn't make any sense.
And then we kind of regress as we go further into history and, you know, the stonework becomes less impressive, that things become less accurate.
And I find that very interesting.
How is it at the beginnings of our history?
Some of the most impressive structures exist.
Exactly.
It doesn't make any sense.
Just Egypt alone with the conventional timeline of 2,500 BC for the Great Pyraman doesn't make any sense.
No, it doesn't.
I think that they most likely settled around those pyramids.
Most likely.
Most likely settle around them.
And, you know, the scans.
If these can be validated fully and empirically with digs and confirmation physically, then that changes everything.
It changes everything.
And you're seeing a lot of people spas out online.
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
It's been wonderful to watch.
It's been wonderful to watch because when people are under pressure, the real character gets revealed.
Right, right, right.
And they're under a lot of pressure right now because those scans that radio tomography or whatever the fuck it is.
Synthetic aperture radar, yeah.
It's super accurate with stuff that we know exists.
Yes.
That's what's a real problem for these people.
You want to believe it exists when it can map out all these chambers in the pyramid.
You want to believe it exists when it can map out things that we know that exists 50 feet underground.
You're cool with that.
But one kilometer of subterranean, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, multiple scans from multiple.
Like over 200.
Yes.
It's all the same message.
They're getting the same message.
There's pillars, enormous pillars.
They have coils around them.
What?
Pillars with coils.
All of them have coils.
Yeah, dude.
And the whole structure is like almost two kilometers deep into the earth.
It's obscene.
It's obscene.
Like, laterally as well, like two kilometers of infrastructure.
It's like the whole underground.
Explain.
Help me out.
People with copper tools.
Help me out.
And that was my frustration when it first came out.
Because when it came out, obviously, I did some like research into the people involved in the
Kaffra Pyramid team.
I found Felipe Obionde.
I found his harmonic SAR webinar.
website where it has listed the things like the Mosul Dam in Iraq and the Grand Saso Laboratory
in Italy, places that they'd actually done scans prior to even the Great Pyramid, which
was peer reviewed. Their 2020 scan of the Great Pyramid was a peer reviewed paper. And then
you fast forward to now where they've got these ones and you have people like, you know,
Flint Dibble on Pierce Morgan going, it's bullshit, it's pseudoscience, it's never been done
before, it's never been tested. It's like, it has been done. It has been tested. It's actually
got a patent. It's been peer reviewed in a paper. It's got military applications.
military applications, and Filippo Bionde, he works for the Italian government.
Like, he's not some idiot.
He's a very, very intelligent man, and he can speak on the science of this, like, you know, articulately.
So it works on top secret projects with the Italian military.
I don't know if you caught, like, that little scene in Jesse's where he was just like, he didn't even say a fucking word, man.
He didn't.
He said, could you not talk about that?
He just looks at him.
Not a word.
Not a word.
Figure that out.
Like, that's when you know, man.
That's when you know.
But I mean, whatever this is, everyone should be fast.
You shouldn't be dismissing this if that's not even your field of expertise.
It just shows what kind of a fucking weirdo you are.
Like what you should be doing is going, okay, how many scans do you have?
Yeah.
You have 200 scans of this?
Show me more.
Show me more.
Tell me what's going on.
We should probably figure out what that is.
Imagine if the pyramids didn't exist.
Or imagine if it's like, you know, the Sphinx at one point in time was mostly covered with sand.
Let's just imagine some crazy scenario where the entire pyramid structure is covered in sand.
sand and nobody knows it exists and then someone comes along and does a scan of the surface
the ground and says you're not going to fucking believe this but there's some shit under there
now whatever else that's ridiculous that's preposterous and they don't look exactly and they
don't look we never find the thing that we all agree exists because you can go there you can
visit right it's there right if that didn't exist you'd never fucking believe in a million years
there's a structure with two million 300 thousand stones that's perfectly aligned the true north
South, East, and West, and you're dating it to somewhere around 4,000...
I mean, that sounds like some pseudo-science conspiracy talk to me, Joe.
Sounds like kukiness.
Right.
Why is it more kooky to say these people, not only were this advanced, they were even
more advanced, way more, they were down into the ground, two kilometers, it might have been
a power station.
Well, you know, Filippo thinks that.
He seems to think that the spirals might have actually been tied to hydrology and using
mechanical stress and the piezoelectric materials used in the Great Pyramid and the Plateau itself
because what you have is a very interesting coupling between limestone and Rose Granite.
So limestone is a very good amplifier of acoustics and Rose Granite becomes electrical,
pisoelectric under mechanical stress and acoustics are a form of mechanical stress.
So there's like certainly something to be said about the fact that the pyramids are acoustically tuned.
They're incredible inside the acoustics and they've done lots of measurements and
experiments on validating that, that it almost seems to go up in a perfect scale up to the King's Chamber.
And then the King's Chamber itself, I believe, is focused around 110 to 115 Hertz, which is
interesting for neurological reasons in terms of influencing the brain. But on top of that,
you have, again, this incredible coupling between limestone and rose quartz granite where
under the right conditions, you absolutely could get energetic responses from that. But as well
as this, you have the hydrological knowledge, which is really quite impressive. And when you look
at places like the Osirian in Abidos, which is a kind of sunken down temple.
We call everything a temple or a sacred site, but we really don't know, do we?
It could be functional sites, could be a power plant of some form, like you said.
And the Assyrian in Abidos, next to it, you have the Setti, the first temple, which is incredible.
It's beautiful and full of calligraphy and hieroglyphics.
And then you have this bare, faceless, megalithic place called the Osirian, which is sunken down
into the ground, perpetually filled with water.
So they've tried to pump it out and it just fills back up again because it's connected down into the water table.
And there's all these different shafts and hydrological kind of components in this site that they don't understand the full function of.
And then you look at places like the Great Pyramid where you go down to the bottom of the Great Pyramid, you have like the kind of core.
And this whole area looks like it's been water eroded as if it was flooded out repeatedly and use as some sort of like a pump or some sort of like sequencing area where you push water in and then let it out.
push water in and let it out.
And so Felipe thinks that maybe these spirals bringing water up.
And if you're 1,000 meters down, you're tapping into like ancient aquifers.
So you could be drawing up a really impressive amount of like ancient, ancient water.
And I just wonder if same with Peru, there's something incredibly important about accessing
this kind of water at the real depths of the earth.
And they seem to have a real interest in doing that.
So perhaps the pyramids are in some way like, I mean, if these spirals are real,
like a plug, isn't it? It's like plugged into the earth, connected down into these aquifers.
Perhaps it was utilizing water as an energetic medium through the materials.
I would recommend to anybody to check out Christopher Dunn's work. Oh, fantastic. I had him on
the podcast, and he explained to us his theory. He's an engineer. Yeah. And he started studying
the structure of the pyramid, and his conclusion was the entire thing was probably used to generate
energy. And it's like, what? But when he breaks it down in terms of, I'll butcher the math
if I even try, but in terms of the dimensions, the way it's made, and the fact that you could
have something that was down in the basement that was somehow another creating a resonance
that would have this effect, the shafts that go out straight out into space, and the fact that
there's evidence that they would possibly use these shafts to pour chemicals in, and it would
create gases. Well, this is pretty nuts. It is nuts, but, you know, I was, when I was,
not the last time I was out in Egypt, but the time before then,
I was out there with a guy called Jeffrey Drum.
He's got a YouTube channel called The Land of Chem.
And he's all about this in terms of the chemical mass manufacturing
that he believes was going on in the pyramids and these other areas.
And we filmed all of the coverage of that.
If anyone wants to go and see it on my YouTube channel,
taking us through areas in the Giza Plateau,
where you have an incredible concentration on the Giza Plateau of iron veins,
and they all seem to be emanating from the pyramids.
So if you go around the pyramids, you'll see these iron vein networks that are flowing out from the central point.
And these iron veins are heading down into what are called these boat pits.
When you say iron veins, so like iron ore.
Iron ore.
Yeah, iron ore.
It's it's on the surface.
It's deep in the ground.
I mean, there's some on the surface.
So you can actually see the snaking kind of veins of iron that's kind of rusted out and oxidized.
And you can make it out, but surely it must be deeper as well.
But it seems to be stretching out from the pyramids down into.
Like it's emanating from the pyramids?
So his theory is that they built the pyramids on top of these iron veins,
particularly because this place was getting lightning strikes frequently.
Oh, boy.
Yeah, I know, I know, I know.
It's a giant lightning rod.
Dude, I mean, these things are built in a way and they were gold capped at one point.
Right, and gold is a really good conductor.
Conductor of electricity.
That's what they're elected for electronics.
And the geese of plateau is covered in these conductive iron.
in vain networks, which the pyramids do seem to be built upon.
Now, this is, you know, his personal theory, but, you know, he's an American who's
been living out in Cairo now for about six or seven years, I believe.
He's been, he just decided to up and move out there and dedicate his life to exploring
these places.
And so he took us across, you know, all of these amazing areas and showed us things I'd
never seen before in Egypt.
But his theory on the pyramids is similar to Christopher Dunn in terms of some form of chemical
manufacturing taking place.
And if you know the original name for Egypt was Chemet, that's why this guy's got his YouTube channel, The Land of Chem.
Chemet is the beginning of chemistry and alchemy.
So this is one of the root words where we then got chemistry and alchemy from.
So it is the land of chemistry and alchemy.
That's bananas.
There you go.
Is this one of his videos?
This is the iron ore?
So these are the, yeah, I believe he's probably highlighting the iron veins and these iron veins head out into what are called a,
boat pits, which they believed in the mainstream interpretation.
You're freaking me out with the land of K-M-E-M-E-T. That is crazy. But when did they name that?
I don't know when it was named that, but it was originally referenced as K-M-E-M-E-T.
You know, there's reference to it being called K-H-E-M-E-T.
And it really means the same thing?
It's what people believe is a continuation of alchemy and chemistry, because you get so much alchemy
from Egypt and obviously this is the place where you get Hermes, Trismogistus and Hermeticism
and the philosopher's stone kind of leaks out from these types of areas.
So I think that there is a lot to suggest this.
Plus we actually know in the mainstream that they were incredible chemists, like regardless
of exotic forms of chemistry that we know they were using acids and natron baths and things
like this.
Like the Egyptians knew what they were doing even from the perspective that we understand,
regardless of getting a little bit deeper into it.
Right.
And you're talking about Egyptians like Cleopatra times.
Right.
So, like, we know that they who are doing it.
Historically.
Exactly.
Yeah.
That's why it's so strange.
Like, if this structure is proved to be real, if they start an excavation and they have irrefutable proof, like, without a doubt, there's some man-made structures that are beyond description underneath the ground.
What happens now?
Like, what does everybody do?
Like, what do all these dorks that think that that's a tomb?
what do you do what do you do to all those dorks that think like it makes sense that they built that
it was a national pastime it's a national project come on bro settle the fuck down i think at that
point you have you have to well i think the pyramids uniquely stand as uh like an intelligence
test because they are so crazy when you have stones that are so large that are taken from
Quarries hundreds of miles away.
500 miles away.
A lot of these people supposedly didn't even have the wheel.
So what is this?
You don't think this is crazy?
Like this isn't like, oh, we know they use the wood from these trees to build these homes.
Like this is bananas.
Yeah, whole over level.
This is something that would take us hundreds of years today to build.
And one of the things that is said so much, but I guess it's kind of shrugged off just because
it's said so much, but it's actually a really important point to highlight.
Like, there are no fucking hieroglyphs in the pyramids.
Not one.
There's not a single symbol, not a single element of what we would understand to be dynastic Egypt.
And so, like, you have this incredible contradiction when you go to places like the Valley of the Kings and the Valley of the Queens, gold.
And, you know, it's adorned in patterns.
You can't see a square inch of stone where there isn't something filled to venerate these people.
And yet the pyramids are bare.
Bear.
And, you know, when you go inside them, you're going to go to Egypt, Joe.
You're going to go.
Eventually.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. When you go inside them, it just feels mechanical. It feels functional. It's, you know, big port collises of rose granite and these shafts going off perfectly vertical off into the you can't even see. And there's nothing about it that feels spiritual or funerary at all, at all.
Well, just looking at it, it looks to me like an advancement of what we are that's almost like indescriable, like a thousand year advance.
of where we are currently to build something like that.
Right.
It seems so nuts.
And there's obviously stuff that doesn't seem as nuts.
It's just beautiful and impressive.
Right.
You know, just like the Coliseum in Rome is.
Exactly.
Or like, you know, the Cropolis.
You know, all those things are fascinating and incredible craftsmanship and engineering and
architecture.
Amazing.
Yeah.
But then there's Egypt and you go, shut the fuck up.
Like, what is that?
That's nuts.
Yeah.
And I resent the idea that we're like taking it away from them.
It's like, let's just be logical about this and actually assess the toolkit and assess the capabilities and then look at the evidence of what we're seeing.
Also, we're not because it's people that lived in the same place.
So it's literally just the older versions of them.
Right.
It's not like you're saying, you know, Chinese people came and they did it all and then they flew back.
Exactly.
No, that's not anybody's saying.
We're just saying it's your more ancient ancestors.
Yeah, it's your ancestors.
It's just the timeline's off.
The timeline seems funky.
Clearly, there were some amazing things that the Egyptians did during.
the accepted timeline.
I mean, they were a fascinating culture
all through till the end, right?
But when you go really far back,
whatever that is, is nuts.
And when you're saying that you know exactly
when it was dated, when there's so much evidence
of just today, modern,
doing these reconstructions and fixing
and all the feet of the sphinx
and they're covering it with new fucking rocks,
like they've always been doing renovations.
They always do.
So all this stuff that you're saying like you got a piece of wood from inside one of the cracks like bitch that doesn't mean anything exactly you can't date those rocks no
Unless you get under those motherfuckers to the bottom and take a chunk of organic material from deep underneath that thing
So you can know when the first stones are placed you don't know you're guessing and I think that that's why we're coming to a point now where there's such resistance from the mainstream when you see scans like this because they've they've built them
themselves into a wall. You basically have to admit, yeah, we're just fucking wrong.
You're also seeing them confronted by real evidence. Yeah. Like real evidence. And like just
when someone takes you for a walk inside the King's Chamber and you look up at those stones that somehow
they got like, how high are they in the sky? How high are they in the ceiling? How high are they? Do you
remember? Oh God, no, I don't. Sorry. But 80 ton stones? Yeah, 80 tons in the King's Chamber, 80 tons.
How tall let's look. And that's near the apex. That is.
near the apex.
Jammy, please put this into perplexity.
How tall is the ceiling
inside the King's Chamber and the Great Pyramid?
Because these things are perfectly
placed in there. Like, even if you
drag those somehow or another
across the mountains for 500
miles and got it to the pyramid,
how the fuck did you get it up there?
Exactly. How did you get them all to line up?
How many people got squished?
Chamber itself spans 10.5
meters long by 5.2
meters wide. How tall is the
ceiling? 19 feet.
But it's also near
the top of the pyramid. It's incredibly high up in the pyramid
as well. They have to lift it to that point. You have to
get these 80 ton blocks
19 feet and then
place them perfectly. And
there's absolutely again, there's nothing
kingly about the King's Chamber
at all. It's just completely
a bare room of Rose Granite
with this sarcophagus coming
up out of the floor with a huge
huge chunk missing and actually if you look at where that huge chunk is missing and you turn around and you look at the wall there's actually a massive impact on the wall there's like a big part of the wall that's been broken off so it makes you wonder if maybe that was jettisoned off at some point from power or you know what do you think is in that the what they call the sarcophagus do you have a theory i mean i've been inside it there's nothing inside of it's you got in it yeah i've laid i laid down inside of it's kind of creepy with a grandmaster of the temple order chanting over me oh fun yeah that was my
first trip to Egypt.
They're going to take a video of that and put it up on X and no one's ever going to take you
seriously.
Yeah, I know right, right.
Well, this guy's a fucking kook.
I am.
I am a kook.
Well, you have to be a kook.
You know, yeah.
You have to be a kook to really enjoy this.
And you have to be on the French.
And also, I think some of the, you know, most impressive scientists and creators have been
people on the fringe who are laughed at by all their peers.
Well, especially now because the way, the way universities work is essentially there's a
person that is the most important person in that field, right, at that university.
And there's a bunch of people that want grants, and there's a bunch of people that want to
play nice, and they want their career, they want tenure. And you've got to be careful
whose toes you step on. And if this one guy is the gatekeeper of him or a group of guys
like him at various universities or the gatekeepers to this information, you're going to come
up with the current bottleneck problem that we see, where people are not just unwilling, but
aggressively attacking people. The question is, which is why they called Graham Hancock's show the
most dangerous show on television like that is so crazy you have so many shows where people get
murdered that's the best way to make a show go viral though isn't it best way to make a show go viral
don't fucking watch this show like you know what I mean great job on the PR they did a great job
but it does bring up a disturbing and worrying element of it just how quickly the mainstream
media in various outlets all aligned at once to call him everything from a racist to a
pseudoscientist yeah conspiracy theorist and you know it is an alarming kickback
that he's taken in his stride
profoundly.
He's a wonderful guy.
He's great.
I can't wait to speed to him.
I literally missed him
by like three days
when I went out to Peru.
I was gutted.
He was my first real guest.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, he was,
wasn't there?
Me and him and Duncan.
Oh my God, that must have been such a...
I need to rewatch that.
He flew in, right from England.
We got him to drive to my house.
Yeah.
And then once he got to my house,
we ordered pizza.
We all ate pizza.
I couldn't believe I'm hanging out
with Graham Hancock.
I was so giddy.
I bet.
It was like one of the first
actual guests.
Giddy moments.
Like, you know, you're just like, I can't believe I'm actually sitting with this dude.
Yeah, because the guest before that had mostly been comics.
Right.
Or some person that I thought was interesting.
You know, some guy that I met at the comedy store, I'm like, what do you do?
You're a therapist and what do you give people?
Come on over.
Come on.
I did a lot of those.
But he was, I think, the first real guest.
Was there like a choice, like a conscious decision for you to kind of like evolve it from
just, you know, comedians talking shop to actually getting different guests on from a variety
of subjects?
know you're a curious person. You've probably been researching these things even at the point
before you were doing that kind of podcast because clearly you were. But yeah, like what was the
natural evolution of that for you? Well, I was always into books about ancient history and whether
it's, you know, like modernly, you know, commonly accepted narrative or Graham Hancock stuff. But I got
into Graham Hancock stuff, I think in the 90s fingerprints of the gods came out. And I fucking loved it.
I was so fascinated by it. I couldn't shut the fuck up.
about it. Oh, tell people, they're like, you've got to see this. Like, I think this guy's right. I think
we're, we are a history with amnesia or a race with amnesia. And then, um, of course,
I watched chariots of the gods that film, which I thought was very kooky and fun. It's very
campy and fun. And here's the thing about that. I dismissed it for a long time and I said it's
nonsense. And I was, I actually had lunch once. Eric Weinstein took me to, uh, lunch at Peter
Thiel's house where we talked to von Daniken and right right fun fun conversation
like interesting I'm talking to he's a full on true believer of von
Duncan yeah yeah fully of the alien theory the ancient aliens theory and back
see I've gone in like multiple stages in my cognitive dissonance and for a while I was
all in with the aliens I hear you I'm the same though and then for a while I was like
no no no there was an advanced civilization and we're just
just a rebuilding of that civilization and that's probably why we're so barbaric and now I'm
like why am I why they mutually exclusive right it could be a mix yeah I don't think they are mutually
exclusive at one point the gods walked amongst us you know right and that's when I see the things
like the tridactal mummies and I'm like okay okay okay what is that what are we talking why is why is
Peru so weird why do they have artwork that you can only see from the sky like there's a lot of weird
shit going on here like don't don't be so quick to jump exactly so but my point is like
Like, I have always been fascinated by stories, first of all, any subject that makes you ridiculous for considering it.
I'm always like, what's that about?
Yeah.
Why is that ridiculous?
Scratch that itch a little bit.
Yeah, even the cookie ones, like ghosts.
Yeah.
Bigfoot.
All the cookie ones.
Like, why?
What's the resistance?
I had a Russian astronaut tell me a Bigfoot story.
What is that?
He, I mean, a pinch of salt, but he claimed that he had been.
told this by a military guy out in Russia that they were in the rec room of this like air force base
and apparently this is according to this Russian astronaut trainer at the Yuri Gagarin Space Center
in Moscow and he said that this this yeti Sasquatch type being apparently just waltzed in like
just walked into their rec room helped itself to some water from the water thing waved and then
vanished.
I don't know.
So this guy, what was his job?
He was a trainer of astronauts at the Yori Gagarin Space Center in Star City, Moscow.
They probably dosed him up with so many fucking...
I bet they did.
M.K. Ultra Drugs.
Yeah.
I mean, you're holding on to that kind of information.
There's an interesting story.
They probably experiment on you.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
They probably gave that guy some acid.
I've never given the Sasquatch thing.
It's due course in researching it, to be honest.
I've been very dismissive of that.
But maybe it's real.
I mean, maybe, you know, I mean, like the demographic behind it.
I used to have a Sasquatch Bigfoot footprint, like a cast, like a plaster cast on the desk.
That rest in peace, Dr. Jeffrey Meldrum, he just recently died.
I had him as a guest on the show once, too.
He's so crazy.
I told him, I asked him if he was so crazy.
But in a wonderful way.
I said, if you could cut a finger off to know that Sasquatch was real, would you do it?
He was like, yes.
Yeah, instantly.
I was like, what the fuck, dude?
It's your finger.
Don't say yes to that.
Fucking joke.
The information just comes out, you don't have to lose a finger.
Damn it.
Just sitting there with half a finger.
I think Bigfoot was a real thing.
Yeah?
I think that's why there's something, like...
Do you think it was just like some sort of like branch of creature?
Because there's so many people think it's like an interdimensional being or...
It could be that too, but I think it's gigantopithecus initially.
Gigantopithecus was an absolute real thing that we didn't even know existed until the...
I believe it was the 20s.
down then.
I find its teeth in an apothecary shop in China and then they started researching it
and finding where the dig sites were.
And, you know, they found jaw bones and indicate that it was bipedal.
So this is a bipedal hominid that's eight to ten feet tall.
Yeah.
But what is that?
That's Bigfoot.
That is Bigfoot.
And that's probably, and also this thing 100% lived around modern human beings.
Like what we are today, it lived around us.
So imagine you see one of those things.
Well, first of all, you're going to fucking run like hell.
You're going to have stories
This thing lives in the woods or in the jungle
Stay out of this spot
That's where this thing lives
And that's going to be passed on
From generation to generation to generation
Until even after they're gone
Now it's just a whisper
Now it's just a thing
It's now it's a mystery man that lives in the woods
Are they like antiquated
Bigfoot stories like outside of just modern
Yes
Oh without a doubt
Especially Native American cultures
That's what's interesting
Is like Native American tribes
There's multiple obviously
Many different tribes
many different languages, right?
They all have a word for this thing.
Let's put this into perplexity.
How many different Native American names are there for Bigfoot?
Because I believe Sasquatch is a Native American.
I don't know which tribe had that,
but there's multiple different names for this hairy creature that lives in the woods.
But they don't have names for like a giraffe that lives in the woods.
They don't have like other mystical animals.
mythical creatures
just have this one
and this one
is a fucking weird one
well that's what I mean
with the interdimensional aspect
it's treated differently
than just an animal
even from like
that might be real too
this is part of the problem
it's like
we might be dealing
with multiple different things
it might not even be
gigantipithous
Sasquettes
skukum
that's right
I've heard that
Omar that's right
there was a movie called
Omar
the guy who did
the American World
for London
that's just the last words
you say when you see
Bigfoot
oh my
yeah
Chaitanka, big elder brother.
70 to 80 names.
Wicked cannibal.
Oh, boy.
Windago.
Wicked cannibal.
Yeah, Windigo.
I've heard that one.
Windigo.
Yeah, I've heard that one.
And yetisho.
How to say that?
Yeti so?
Yeti so?
Big God, and that's the Navajo name.
So there's a bunch of underneath that too.
Yeah, like it says about 70 to 80 names when accounting for variants across 50 tribes.
Okay.
Okay. So what is that?
And it's the same with the alien grates, like the ant people.
Yes.
Well, and then it brings to the same thing.
It brings us to the same subject of what if there is a way to traverse dimensions?
What if this is not as simple as something gets in a spaceship and it comes here from another planet?
What if it's coming from another place?
And what if that doorway is open to other things?
And what if some of those things are a Sasquatch?
Like, under the right conditions, this pathway is open.
And maybe it's not even something that it actually exists, but you can see.
Exist in our tangible timeline, but you can see under heavy stress, under, like, anxiety.
And imagine what gets you more stressed out than being in the woods at night, right?
The woods at night creates a lot of anxiety for people because there's all these sounds and you're looking around.
It's dark, you're vulnerable, especially if you live in real woods, like woods that have predators in them.
It's sketchy.
And I bet there's different states.
mind that you would if there are if there's some sort of a possibility some sort of a way
that an intelligent creature can get to a point where it has the technology to access other
dimensions it can go into other spaces would you even be able to see it all the time would you
only be able to see it if you were like under a highly anxious state in the woods you're kind of a
little freaked out. You're more open to weird things. And then it senses that and communicates with
you. Well, we are... Sounds kooky. We're dominated by our perception. And we have such a narrow
bandwidth of visual perception. You know, you get up the whole light spectrum and look at visible
light, just this tiny corridor of visible light that we're able to see. Obviously, we've
developed IR and, you know, different. And if you film the night sky with infrared, you get weird
shit. You get these orbs and things that seem to fly by. And I think that it is a perceptual thing
because the reason I even started my YouTube channel is because I've had my own experiences
with UFO-type phenomena that were entirely initiated by me. Like I asked for them to come
and they did. See, that sounds kooky. I'll take that clip and I dismiss you immediately.
This guy's a quack. I'll wait for it. But this is one of the things that people have been saying for a long,
time is that there's there's actual groups of people and there was even some guy
was like somehow another connected to the government that was saying that they
lead these people out they go out into the desert and they have a like some sort
of a secret frequency he didn't want to discuss it that they can push out they
can send out the secret frequency and it'll call them in and that other people
have done it simply by willing them in yes what I so sitting there and putting
this message that you're trying to communicate with them and then eventually they
show up yeah I I can't speak to technologically assisted psionics and all that
kind of stuff but do you want to hear my UFO story okay first of all where did
you come up with this idea on your own or did you hear about people doing this
no I heard of it from someone who's a quite polarizing figure in the UFO
community I know you've spoken to him dr. Stephen Greer but polarizing people are
right sometimes he's right on this yeah they could be right on a lot
lot of those. He's right on this. And, you know, I, I know that a lot of people have issues with Greer, but I, he was actually my intro into the UFO subject. So I'll tell you the story. Sorry about my throat. Let me just take a sip of water, actually. So, um, this was, uh, how did he find out about it?
it's a good question um he had a near-death experience believe and from that was actually
apparently communicated to and shown things that when he came out of that experience he became
a samadhi type you know teacher of course you know we got profoundly interested in great origin
story brilliant origin story um my origin story was i was really bored during covid no so like honestly
though um it was actually in 2019 that i had these experiences and i i do think that it's
very important to lay a bit of foundational groundwork because I think a lot of people will recognize
this as well. And it's something that you mentioned with Bigfoot being in a high stress
environment in the forest. Maybe that changes your perception. And I think that there's a degree
of trauma and a degree of intense emotional moments that can bring about paranormal experiences.
I don't know why, but it does seem to be something that a lot of people relate to. Yes,
I was in a very dark time. Yes, I was having a very traumatic time. Or yes, I was going
through something and then this happened. And so for me, I was in my third year of university
and struggling. I just had a whole mix of personal issues going on. So I ended up kind
of dropping out before I finished and was just in a really bad rut. And my dad was worried
about me. And he said, look, I'm out in, there's a bit of a long story, but it's important
to lay this foundation, I think, before I talk about what I actually experienced because it plays
in. My dad was worried. He was out in France.
the time and he said look do you want to come out and stay at this place with me and just you know
kind of relax and bring yourself back to normal i was like yeah okay so i came out and uh he was like
i've got these books that i've been reading i think they'll be really beneficial for you um
you should read them and i was like okay like you know i don't see how a book's going to change
does he often recommend books not massively no in fact no no this was the only time you
recommended books which is interesting um and they were a series of books called
conversations with god by neil donald walsh have you ever heard of them no okay
Okay, so it's interesting.
It kind of ties into, I suppose, the channeled works, things that people believe they received.
Oh, wait a minute.
I have heard of this.
He's quite well known.
He's quite well known.
He was a radio DJ, broke his neck in a car accident, became homeless, finally managed to get back on his feet, but was still struggling, wrote an angry letter to God.
And then apparently woke up at 3 o'clock in the morning and was having, like, voices literally telling him to write things down.
So he wrote all of this down.
And this became conversations with God.
It's literally a dialogue of him asking questions and him.
receiving answers, which he interpreted as from God. Now, that is intense, and I'm definitely not here
to say this is a Bible and everyone should read it. However, it was incredibly impactful for me at
that time. The things that I was reading about, it was a very different idea of God, universal
consciousness leaning towards more than some weird patriarchal cloud living figure that just never
made sense to me. So it got me in, and I was reading it, and it helped tremendously,
weirdly, weirdly enough, which I didn't expect.
And that put me on a path towards researching metaphysics and philosophy and science and
consciousness.
And that's where it really started for me.
But then a couple years down the line, I found myself in another depression in a sense
because I felt like I'd accumulated a lot of information about various different topics that
I thought were like these big questions and big answers and big esoteric things.
And I just got to a point I was like, none of this is actually helping me in my life.
In fact, I'm actually feeling like fucking worse for looking into.
of this thing. I don't know how this is going to benefit me. So I was sitting on my bed
one night and I just, I guess you could call it a prayer. I just sat on my bed and said out loud
to the universe. Like I need something that validates all of this. Like if I'm meant to be looking
into these big picture questions about the universe and consciousness, if there's something tangible
here, like I need to know and I want evidence and I'm ready for it. So give me it. I want that.
And then a week later, my best friend at the time, he was like, hey, I was watching this documentary.
You've got to check it out.
It's called Unacknowledged by this guy called Dr. Stephen Greer.
And this is my first introduction to the UFO subject.
I was like, okay, cool.
Sit down and watch that.
Very good documentary.
All of these different, you know, high-level officers and missile launch guys talking about UFOs.
It got me in.
And then near the end of that is when he brings up this concept of CE5, you know, initiating contact with these.
can actually have your own experiences by getting into a particular meditative state.
If I hadn't been making that request on my bed the week prior, I probably just would have
watched that documentary and gone about my life, but it felt like a very strong message to me
personally because I've been asking for something to validate these ideas around consciousness.
Now there's a guy saying, yeah, you can actually have an experience by going out and
attempting to, you know, ask for one.
So taught me through the process of actually doing that.
so he has did you get it on the first try no he has how many times to try it's it was a weird
gradual thing where things were happening in the sky that were enough to keep me going out but
not enough for me to be like okay this is legit so like how many times did you go out before it
worked uh before i saw what i really really saw um probably about a month of going out damn that's
commitment but i was seeing things but they weren't it was kind of
just enough to make me like, okay.
What were you seeing?
Lots of what the contact community
call flash bulbs, flashes
of light in the night sky in a void
of space repeatedly without any
discernible object attached to it.
Just one flash and then
send a thought, another flash.
Send a thought, another flash.
And this happened multiple times.
I've been someone who watches the night sky all my life.
I'm used to seeing satellites. I know what a
medium flares are.
Maybe an hour or two hours, you know.
And so you sit down, are you seated?
No, I usually be standing with my neck crane to the sky, but I would be...
Why don't I don't get a lounge chair?
I know, I know. I don't think about things properly sometimes when I do them.
How about just lay down on the ground?
Just lay on the grass, right?
You get a better view of the sky?
Yeah, but it's cold in England, and it was like a mildewy on the floor.
Oh, yeah, yeah. Get a tarp.
Yeah, yeah, but I was essentially because of, again,
being asking, asking the universe for something.
The universe seemed to be giving me
some sort of response. It kind of lit a fire up under me
and I started going outside. And honestly
a lot of people, like even Greer has
this incredibly, you know,
complicated method using samadhi
and, you know, doing various things.
I didn't do any of that. I just
breathed in through the nose and out through the mouth
until I felt very calm and then began to
very clearly model my
thoughts around the concept of I want
something to respond to me. And then
I would essentially visualize that
that was emanating from me, that these thoughts were emanating from me.
And it didn't take very long before I'd have flashes of light in the sky that just seemed weird
because I've never seen anything like that.
Or an incredible influx of what look and behave like satellites,
but just at an incredibly high level, which is like, what's going on here?
And it just felt like a kind of step-by-step progression until in August of 2019,
I had four incredibly vivid and real experiences with orange orbs of light.
um really profound what was that what happened so i was outside at this point it
become my routine it was in the summer of august and it was relatively warm so i was out
doing this quite a lot seeing little flashes seeing things in the sky trying to figure out what
exactly it was that i was seeing and um i was standing at the back of my garden looking towards
my house night sky crystal clear and uh i saw at the beginning a flash of light in in the corner of the
sky. So I looked over and I saw this flash, another flash, another flash, and it was just blinking,
but it was static in space. And then it started moving down. Every time it blinked, it would move further
down. And I was observing this. And then it settled above two stars and kind of created the apex of a
triangle. And it was just flashing above these two stars. And I was watching this for a while,
and it happened for long enough where I just decided, all right, I'm just, thank you, whatever you are,
I'm just going to keep panning around the sky here and looking around.
And as I pan my head, I saw that there was a cloud, but I didn't really look at it.
And I turn around here, come back, and I see this cloud again.
And this time I really look at it.
And this cloud, Joe, had so strange.
It's like a dark cloud.
But when you stared at it, it had a static-y appearance.
It's very hard to describe other than imagine a light overlay of TV static.
There was particles.
It was agitated.
It was shimmering.
Not a cloud.
Certainly not anything I've ever seen in my life.
And if we pretend this microphone is my house and this cloud is here, it's drifting this way.
So eventually it's going to drift past my house and go this way, at least according to its natural trajectory.
It gets to my house and it does a right angle turn and it starts coming towards me.
So eventually it's going to be above my head, this cloud-like formation.
A cloud does a right angle turn in the sky.
abrupt as in 90 degrees it's going like this and now it's going like this towards you high up in the sky but it's now in my path complete 90 degree shift from its trajectory and I saw it like a jarring now it's going this way okay so at this point I'm rooted in place not really scared but I'm shocked at the fact that this thing did what it just did and I'm watching as it's coming closer and closer you know towards where I'm going to be eventually it's directly
above my head. It sounds so crazy. And, you know, Terrence McKenna said something like this. He was
like, you know, if you tell the unvarnished truth about a UFO experience, you'll be taken for a
fool. It's like, it's true. You know, if you just tell people what really happened. But this is
what really happened. So this cloud comes above my head. As it's directly above my head, this cloud
like sucked into itself as if there was a central vacuum, a central point where it just got
sucked into itself. And it revealed a triangle formation of about 25, maybe 30 orange
orbs of light in a triangle. And this triangle, basically the cloud went, shh, triangle was revealed.
It kept moving. I had to turn around and watch as it went off in this direction.
And as I was watching it, I could see that some of these orbs were actually swapping formation,
swapping position in this formation.
And that was the first time I saw them.
I saw them with three other occasions, all within the space of a month after this.
Weirdly enough, I woke up the next day, and this is the only element of the story,
as crazy as the whole thing sounds, is the only element that makes me personally uncomfortable.
I was getting out of the shower, and as I was drying myself off, immediately, immediately
noticed where this tattoo is now.
there was a triangle mark of three red
red marks one here one here one here
very vivid like like
and you covered it up with a tattoo
well it faded it faded
did you take any pictures of it? I have taken pictures of it
yeah yeah yeah there are clear
yes can I can try and find them yeah
I haven't got my internet on right now
Jamie if you go onto my ex account
and just type in
uh
j Anderson
marks on arm maybe that will come up I'm sorry I should have really sent that
ahead of time but I do have images online people have seen them and I've discussed it
many times did it look like a wound this is the thing so two so three red marks
no bump no scab no itching no feeling of discomfort there was a slight shine to
them as if it was almost like a healed over burn and this was very vivid it didn't dissipate
for over a year. It was on my arm for about a year before it faded away, eventually faded away.
And then I got home. He's Trismagistas tattooed on my arm.
Weirdly enough, I got this tattoo and then got invited to Egypt.
But, yeah, I had these experiences. I had another experience where they came down and hovered above my house.
Yeah, I asked you this. So these orbs, there's...
There you go. There you go. Thanks, Jamie. Thanks for that.
That is weird.
It looks like you burned three cigarettes on your arm.
That's what some asshole online definitely claimed, but I didn't.
That's what I would say, too, if I was an asshole online.
Yeah, yeah.
But that's crazy.
Yeah, this, this, I noticed it immediately.
I'm not particularly comfortable with it.
I don't know what it really means.
I really, I'm a bit of an idiot, Joe, because like, I, you know, I should have gone to a dermatologist.
I should have, like, actually had things, someone to look at it.
You got branded, but like cattle, son.
Well, that's kind of what I think.
And at the same time, can I, let's keep an eye.
on this one? Can I even be mad at them? I was like, show me, show me, give me evidence. I want to sign.
Well, fuck it, fine then. Right. There you go, dude. I would say whatever that is on your arm,
who knows. Maybe a dermatologist could explain it. It's just a coincidence. But the actual thing
itself is far more interesting to me. And like, because one of the things that people always say is
if they were out there, what wouldn't we see them? Like, God, if they could come here from another
dimension or if they can come here from another planet or another solar system, don't you
think they could probably hide? Like, we're pretty good at hiding.
Like, do you think, like, we have technology right now, like the stealth bomber stuff, that diminishes the radar signal?
Exactly.
You can't pick them up on radar.
So, why would it be impossible to somehow another manipulate your visual field, project what looks like clouds on the outside?
We know that we can do stuff like that with plasma.
Like, they can, they have these plasma things that could spin in the sky.
Absolutely.
It's weird.
They can make objects out of them.
I wonder if that was plasma.
I actually do wonder if this was a form of self-organizing plasma.
Because that's definitely something that people have looked into quite extensively.
Maybe plasma has intelligence.
Yes.
There's some, yeah.
Yes.
And perhaps these are a form of individuated plasmic intelligences that can interact.
And one thing that's very interesting about that, there was a brilliant paper, actually.
I did a video on it.
It's like 11 different scientific institutes looking at the idea of self-organizing.
plasma and intelligent plasma, and they were using some references, like, do you know the
STS-75 NASA missions where the tether broke and you had all of these strange things going
around the tether?
Yes.
So that's dismissed as ice particles and things like that.
Have you ever seen the motion tracking version of that where someone actually attached the flight
paths of each object so you can see the flight path?
No.
That's crazy.
Can we see it?
Yeah, I'm sure if Jamie looks up...
That is a weird one because it seems like lights are going towards that thing and checking
it out.
Yeah, so this is, you know, this is a gigantic tether.
I think it's like two kilometers long or something.
It's absolutely insane.
It broke away from the ship.
And as it broke away, you had these, well, what some people believe to be UFOs or
plasmic intelligences, or if you're on the mainstream side, you'd say these are ice particles.
There you go.
If you go slightly further back, slightly further back, there you go, just as that green one's
starting up, this is the flight path.
So if you just take it back to the beginning of that, and this is where they've attached
to flight paths, and you will see complete 90-degree turns, you'll see absolute stops and
reversals of change, and it's incredible.
I wonder if it's just a kind of life that we don't assume that exists, and it just lives
in space.
I think so.
I really do.
Like the things they find at these volcanic vents at the bottom of the ocean, they're like,
oh, we didn't even know that something could survive down here.
There could be a type of life that survives in the void of space.
and it just wouldn't be a biological thing
it would be some form of energy or life
well this is apparently what all the spooks were telling tom dolong
when he went to the pentagon that there's amoebas in space
the size of whales and like you know that these things
were essentially yeah
i remember when he was on he was on fade to black
and he was talking about you know there are these amoebas in space
that are like you know
but why would they tell him and then he goes on those shows and tells
like i i feel like that's a kind of guy
that you tell some things that you want to get out
yeah and it doesn't necessarily have to be true no no a matter of fact it's more fun if it's not
true and and make them say as much kooky shit as possible so that the stuff that he's going to say
that's true looks ridiculous and now all of those guys that gave him that information are on
the age of disclosure documentary we should trust them right yeah we should trust all of these
government spooks it's fun if you're playing it's like the world is a gigantic escape room
Yeah, dude.
You're playing a bunch of weird puzzles and you're trying to figure it out.
But nothing is what it seems.
I think nothing is as it seems.
I think with Tom DeLong and the UFO subject and Tudor Stars Academy and all the things that have happened since like 2017, New York Times,
I have opinions on it because I think I might be the first guest that you've had on that wasn't already quite established.
So I've had to work my way up through social media, through the interactions in the community.
to personal relations with people that aren't big names or anything like that.
You know, I've had to work my way up it.
So I've seen and been exposed to things that perhaps people like Jeremy Corbell
and others who are already quite big names haven't seen
because they're too big.
They don't need to be on social media looking at fucking comments
or like, you know, what's going on in the X space.
But if you are like that, you start to notice things.
And so what's interesting to me,
despite what anyone wants to say about Stephen Greer,
and I've got my own issues of Stephen Greer,
What's interesting to me is that the only person really who was making noise prior to TTSA was Stephen Greer.
He was the one that was putting out Netflix documentaries that were getting seen by millions of people all over the world.
And he was saying, you know, these are black budget illegal programs.
This is a anti-congessional crime against humanity.
We need to be busting down the doors.
This is, you know, not exactly what they would want to hear if they were inside the national security state.
There's this guy out there saying this.
What do you do about that?
well, do you know how Tom DeLong got linked up at the very beginning to all of this?
No.
So he's always been a UFO guy and because of his background and, you know, the money,
he was able to secure connections and he was very friendly with Greer.
He was best buds with Greer at one point.
In fact, there's a video of him when he's quite young and he's pointing out all of the
UFO witness tapes that he's got in his library.
And he's like, you know, these are all, I'm holding on to these for a guy.
He's got like 50 whistleblowers.
He's bringing this all out.
And this is before Greer, you know, kind of made the announcement.
So it's obviously Greer.
And Tom DeLong's on Fade to Black.
And I want to say 2015 talking about this where he tells a story of how a friend of his at Lockheed Martin calls him up and says, hey, we're having a family and friends meet and greet over at Lockheed Martin.
Would you want to introduce the bosses to the stage?
And he said, yeah, but I want 10 minutes with your bosses afterwards.
And they were like, okay.
And so he went and he introduced them on stage and then he tells a story of being taken through, you know, these white noise corridors and down into this place where eventually he was chilling with the guys at Skunk Works and, you know, these big directors are all sitting in this room.
They're like, okay, what is it you want to talk about?
This is where he pitches to the Stars Academy of Arts and Science and this framework.
And what's interesting is on the radio when he's talking about this, he's saying, you have to approach these guys like you want to be of service.
You know, I was saying I'm being of service.
I want to help.
I want to help.
So you've got a disruptive rogue person out there, Stephen Greer, saying all this stuff, causing commotion.
What do we do about that?
I have no idea.
Suddenly, in walks a rock star.
Use me.
Because that's basically what he said.
Use me.
I'm happy to do whatever it were.
I am your conduit into the public.
Now, no disrespect to Tom.
I've met him.
He's a lovely guy.
And he's very passionate about the subject.
But I do think he was used.
And what you get from there is.
is the Tudor Stiles Academy platform.
Suddenly you have this official kind of green-lit disclosure,
very soft disclosure.
There's nothing like Stephen Greer's disclosure.
And we're all being encouraged to partake
and support in this very, what should we say,
curated method of soft disclosure for the people.
I think that they were very worried about
what type of disruptive truths might come out
before it was time to talk about them.
And then suddenly Tom DeLong was a very useful medium
for communicating this.
And when you see the things,
like the WikiLeaks emails between him and John Podesta where he's literally saying this
is about bolstering PR for the military industrial complex from a disenfranchised youth and the
generations of youth today don't trust the government. We want to change that. We want to change the
perception of the military and the government. He's literally emailing John Podester about this.
So it's very clear that at the very least he was willing to be the messenger of whatever message
they wanted to give him. And it just so happens that that message completely counteracts what Greer has
talking about in terms of classified black budget programs that have already cracked reverse engineering.
We cracked anti-gravity in October, 1954, you know, this kind of stuff.
It's like complete reversal of that narrative.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Well, it makes sense.
That's the, what's the term?
Useful idiots.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, like I said it before, I'll say it again.
I know I've had people on this podcast.
They were doing that with me.
And I know they were coming on saying a bunch of nonsense.
But you have to let them talk because.
For sure.
The truth comes out in the wash.
For sure.
And I think what's interesting about the age of disclosure is this narrative of the reality of what happened.
If it did happen, there's lying to Congress, there's misappropriation of funds, you're going to need amnesty.
And so this is the narrative.
This narrative is we need amnesty.
It's like it's kind of a smart way to do it, right?
Do it in a documentary.
Have all these people that are probably implicated in some.
way, say we need amnesty, all these people that say that they know about these programs
with amnesty is important because, you know, these people have been, but what they've been
doing really, if they have been doing, what we assume they've been doing. We assume they've
retrieved, crashed UFOs, and they've back engineered them. We assume they've used that
technology. We assume they're aware that there's non-human intelligences that are far beyond
our technological capabilities and that we interact with them. You've committed a crime against
humanity by not telling people that because we we all operate under the assumption that we have
an understanding of what our role is in this ecosystem of life and if our role is not even
remotely at the apex if we are being visited and manipulated and if we're actually a product
of experiments you should fucking tell us you can't you guys can't
be hanging out at Raytheon in the fucking conference room.
Can you believe this shit?
Like, yeah, right?
Which your gold Rolex is on, you motherfuckers.
Right, right.
Tell everybody.
But we can't handle the truth, right?
They're right.
They are right with the amnesty thing.
I think that's the pathway.
I mean, look, these guys are not going to, no.
What they stole, they stole, okay?
What they did, they did.
What the line of Congress, the lies have been told.
Let's fucking find out what the truth is.
These guys, they're, whatever they did, they did.
Okay, you didn't stop it then, let it go.
The more important thing is, let's find out if this is real.
That's more important than everything.
For the race, for the human race, the entire human race.
And the science and technology, to have all this stuff locked down like that
and not allow the great young minds that are coming up right now to have access to this.
It's crazy.
You're wasting one of the most valuable resources that we have with secrecy.
I think there's so many different reasons why.
they might want to keep this a secret in terms of breakthrough energy and propulsion systems.
Like there's so many different implications to that, right?
Massively disruptive.
Massively disruptive.
And, you know, could you imagine some, like, whacked out fucking dude with a zero point energy device?
Or you imagine some guy who's running an oil company who finds out that they're about to do something
like that, like the fuck you are.
Right, right, right.
Like, how about this guy at MIT that just got assassinated in his home?
Oh, dude.
This is...
The wet works in the corporate world is very real.
This is very real.
This guy was, one of the more disturbing theories he had was that not only is the shift of the magnetic poles that, here, I'll send it to you, Jamie.
But his take on it was that the shift of the magnetic poles is necessary in order to maintain, well, I don't want to fuck it up.
Well, like a natural earth cycle that has to happen.
I'm sorry, I'm trying to think and look it up at the same time.
You were good.
Here it is.
I'll send it to you, Jamie.
Sorry for the dead air, folks.
Okay.
So it says the assassinated MIT plasma scientists warned that Earth requires periodic
magnetic reversals to sustain its field.
Interesting.
No reversal equals no dynamo equals the magnetic field dissipates.
the last time this happened
and in the tweet it says
Noah's flood
oh sun weather man oh I know
both these guys
this guy who has
Google whistleblower yeah
is that not loading
the clip
plasma physics 101 fluid
description
it seems like the clip's not
okay let's hear what he has to say
it's really interesting shit man
you mentioned that
the earth
the earth's magnetic
was constant in the last years.
So yeah, is it right that the Earth has lost 10% of its magnetic field in the last 150 years?
And how come?
So excellent question, Alec. Thank you.
So when I say the Earth's magnetic field has remained roughly constant, what I mean is,
if you look over longish time scales, its magnitude is roughly constant.
Of course, it varies, right?
And it reverses sometimes, right?
And those reversals of the Earth's magnetic field.
So, you know, reversal meaning the North Pole becomes the South Pole and vice versa.
So those happen.
And there's even interesting stories you can tell about how those reversals of the Earth's magnetic field
correlate with many ice ages and things like this.
Okay, but the sort of the idea is that if you average over these periodic reversals, right, or fluctuations, the amplitude of the field has remained roughly constant.
And the idea is that if there was no induction, if there was no dynamo working, you would, you and I wouldn't be talking, right?
The magnetic field would have diffused very quickly, right, in within 10 to the five years.
The earth would be left without a magnetic field.
and the Earth's magnetic field
protected from cosmic radiation
and if you were open to that radiation
we well you wouldn't be here like I said
nor would I
yeah thank you very much
wild
and they just put bullets into that dude
well and
like you know it could listen it could have been a robbery
we don't know I mean Massachusetts
says a lot of robberies
for sure they've got a lot of
sure it's one of them East Coast liberal run cities
that's got a crime problem
Completely fucked.
And I'm sure, you know, as a MIT professor, has probably lived nice.
Yeah.
I mean, it's possible.
It's possible.
But it also is possible that somebody killed him.
And imagine if they killed him because he's telling us, hey, Earth's about to reverse its magnetic poles and we might be fucked.
A cataclysm might be coming.
Well, this is what I think there was a knowledge of in deep antiquity.
There was a knowledge of cycles, of earth cycles.
And they were preparing for it.
You know, why are these structures?
built in a way as anti-seismic that's resistant to incredible force.
Right.
You know, the amount of...
Saxo-Human...
Saxo woman's such a good example of that.
Yeah.
It's really an incredible example.
I mean, the level of ingenuity and also the fact that they're finding that these walls go way deeper, right?
Because not just the excavation where they're going deep down and finding new blocks of stone, but just the walls, there's key excavations going on around the walls, they just keep going now.
So it's like this place was buried, maybe.
A lot of earth push up and, you know, submerged into the walls.
the ground, clearly this place experienced some form of global upheaval.
And what's really weird about a place like Peru, for example, is that prior to the,
well, at the end of the last glacial maximum, around 19,000 years ago, when the Earth started
to warm up again, there were certain climatologically stable corridors.
And Peru was one of those areas, which was actually quite climatologically stable.
So at the end of the LGM, the last glacial maximum, to the Younger Dryas, it's about 6,000 plus, just 6,000 in change.
We've taken ourselves from horse and cart to supercomputers in less than 150 years.
So the idea, the areas of the world that had stability for about 6,000 years couldn't create something incredible, and then the Younger Dryas comes, and it takes it all away for the most part.
it's very provocative in Peru because of again the existence of the Inca structures that are very
quite pristine actually and still standing very simple and yet they are surrounded by broken
megalis and you know multi-toned structures that have gone through incredible damage and what I was
getting at when I was saying about that area is the way the stones are interlocked would protect
it against earthquakes yeah dissipate the force for all of these different areas it allows for the
force for the kinetic force to dissipate through the structure instead of it being
focused and blowing a part one area of it. So it's clearly done for the purposes of trying
to prevent massive amounts of force. Where would they get that type of a concept from?
Right. It makes me wonder. It makes me wonder if they did have a knowledge of great cycles,
you know, like the Adam and Eve story. You know the whole thing that was like classified by
a CIA for a minute? The Adam and Eve story. It was classified by the CIA?
It was listed on their freedom of information at library. Oh, right. What was that again?
It was a, it was a deep research into cycles, great cycles of cataclysmic destruction on earth by a guy
called, well, his name was Chan Thomas, but I think that was a pseudonym for a fake, not real
name. And he actually had at the beginning of it, like, a series of people he had listed
who, without whom this book would not be possible. And it was like, you know, top five star generals.
And like, it's like, okay. So, you know, this guy had the, you know, Chan Thomas, the Adam
Eve story. It's all about this great cyclical cataclysm that does take place every, what was it,
like, 12,000 years or something like that. And that the ancients had a knowledge of this.
And I think that this is something that we will probably begin to realize is that somewhere in deep antiquity, there was a level of knowledge that is very contradictory to what we understand now.
And I think places like Peru, places like Egypt and others, Malta, Gobeckli-Tepe, of course.
It's becoming very palpable that there was something before this.
Also, when you see the spikes of the earth's temperature, when you see those ups and downs, those glaciers and those warming periods, like, is there a uniform time in between those spikes?
in terms of...
Is it like predictable?
I don't know.
Is it like every 12,000 years it gets a little funky?
I imagine it's probably not like...
12,000 years comes back.
Right, probably not.
But this is, again, this is one of the things that people in like, you know, the conspiracy
world would say they're keeping from us.
They're keeping this knowledge.
Yes, there are 12,000 years cycles and we are just not being allowed to know that knowledge,
but that seems weird.
I don't know.
Well, they have models of the past.
Exactly.
You know, from core samples and things along those lines.
But we do know that it's never static and we do know that there have been.
these periods and they do look like like you know a strange graph it's not a flat line like it's all
look it's all getting warmer no it's it's always crazy so like what is causing these dips and these
rises and these these weird periods that seem to be rhythmic you know what I'm saying it's not like
there's an immense time of heating and then a small time of cooling and then uh no it's it's up and down
and up and down well it's it's almost like the heartbeat of the planet isn't you know you look at
the planet as some form of conscious entity,
is certainly capable of producing conscious beings on top of it.
So I wonder about that and the mycelial network,
these kind of elements to the planet that almost seem like neurological architecture.
Well, even if you could look from afar,
if you could have the concept of the earth,
like the water is moving, the clouds are moving.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
It's like a live thing almost.
Obviously, it's not moving because it's tissue.
But that doesn't mean there's not a force that's...
all connected and working in harmony.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I mean,
that's why I think plasmic intelligence
is very interesting
because it's this idea
that a self-organizing plasmic structure
could in some way create consciousness
inside of it.
And we don't understand
where consciousness comes from.
We still don't.
So it's very open to the idea of possibility.
And I've spoken to some pretty interesting
scientists like Dr. Salvatore Paise.
He's the guy that was responsible
for the UFO, US Navy UFO patents
that got put out a few years back.
like underwater, undersea, plasmic generators and things like this.
He was a U.S. Space Force engineer, and he is very much of the opinion that plasma itself is capable of becoming conscious, not conscious on its own.
But 99% of the observable universe is made out of plasma.
99%.
Isn't it weird how we get taught about solids, gases and liquids, but not plasma, the fourth state of matter?
that's 99% of the universe.
Why aren't we taught about that in school?
That's weird.
Weird, right?
Do you ever remember being taught plasma in school?
When did they start learning that?
Well, I mean, I don't know, but it's certainly before my time in school.
I didn't get taught it.
You know what I mean?
So why would they, are you saying that they perhaps are hiding this?
I think that there's things within plasma physics that are so novel and exotic,
like these self-organizing EVOs, exotic vacuum objects,
and the science that they're studying in...
Have you ever heard of the Sapphire Project?
No.
It's kind of gone quiet now.
Hal Putoff got involved with it for a minute,
where they're claiming to bottle the stars
and they're creating these plasmic,
you know, self-organizing plasmas inside these chambers
that they were claiming could transform metals
from one metal into gold or, you know,
like transmutation of elements
and complete revolution of propulsion and energy.
and then it just fizzles that.
I always wondered about that with Alcoming.
Why were people really trying to make gold?
That seems so crazy that you think you could make something like that.
And I always wonder, did maybe somebody used to make it
and they have like this story of how people used to make gold?
Like if there was, like imagine the caps of the Great Pyramids are in gold, right?
What if they're made that gold?
Right.
Right.
Right, right.
What if they had gotten to, it's not impossible to assume, like, if the earth creates gold, it's not impossible to think that we could take the elements of the earth and create gold as well.
There's got to be a way to do it.
It's got to be a way to do it.
Is there a way to create gold currently?
I don't know.
That's a good question.
Let's put that into our sponsor.
How do you make gold?
Well, let me show you what I asked first.
The alchemy history of gold and it automatically brought up ancient Egypt metallurgy.
blending four classical elements.
Whoa.
So there is some sort of process.
Earth, air, fire, and water, and you make gold?
It spread to Greco and Roman texts
via the Islamic world in the 8th century
where they made experimental methods.
I mean, gold plating is maybe what they're getting at.
I don't know if that's...
Unless they were trying to create gold.
A lot of alchemy is also kind of personal alchemy,
alchemy of the soul.
And so it's not always necessarily meant as a physical thing,
turning base metals into gold it's more about turning you base human into a golden person
like a lot of the times in alchemy it's more about the personal um development of your spirit and your
soul mixed together with science they're clearly talking about metallurgy oh yeah i mean like right here
so but i mean if you if gold was a valuable if it was about valuable part of technology which it is
and it had conducting aspects to it it's very conducive or
It's very good at conducting.
High and conductive, yeah.
And you can make it.
Modern methods.
Particle accelerators like CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
Achieve this by slamming lead nuclei together in near miss collisions,
generating intense electromagnetic fields that eject three protons from the lead,
82 protons to form gold, 79 protons.
Wow.
The Alice experiment detected up to 89,000 gold nuclei per second during lead lead lead
runs, totaling or lead lead lead runs.
lead runs. I'm not sure which point. Toteling 29 picograms over years, trillions of
times less than needed for visible amounts. Whoa, that's crazy. Trillions of times
less than need for visual amounts. Early 1980, Glenn Seaburg transmuted Bismith
into gold isotope using carbon and neon beams at Lawrence Berkeley Lab.
Maybe they use the pyramids for lightning strikes to create gold with iron ore streams
and next thing, you know, you get gold. That's why they had so much gold. I mean, who knows?
Who knows what they figured out?
But we should be able to ask these questions and not be...
Well, it's certainly fascinating.
It's certainly fascinating that people have been obsessed with the possibility of making gold.
Obviously, it's because gold is rare and very valuable, but here's the question.
Why is gold very valuable?
You can't make a weapon out of it.
Like, how did it rise to prominence?
Isn't there like some, like, translations that are, you know, from like the whole Sumerian
Babylonian text where it's kind of like we were made to mine gold for these beings.
It's like Zacharii Sitch and stuff.
Yeah, Zachariah Sitchin, though, is very controversial.
Very.
I'm too stupid to know who's right, but I do know that I always, when I talk about Zacharii,
I always talk about the website, Sitchin is wrong.com.
So there's a website where it seems like he was the only one that was buying into that.
And, you know, when I talked to Wes Huff, he doesn't even think that Zachariah Sitchin could actually read Sumerian.
Just fucking guessing.
Well, it might be, you know, I don't want to disparage the great man because he's not with us in.
anymore, but he might not have been totally honest, or he might have been convinced.
You know, some people just become true believers.
Yeah.
No, for sure.
What he's saying essentially is that he tried to learn Sumerian and West knows many
different ancient languages.
Like, he's a brilliant, brilliant guy.
He's like, I couldn't figure it out.
I couldn't figure it out.
I couldn't do it.
Now, obviously, there have been translations of Sumerian.
There are people that can do it.
It's incredibly difficult.
And it's also apparently not related to any other languages because it's so ancient, it's
weird and then the cuneiform and all that stuff it's like good luck right good luck
figuring out what they were saying i know i always wondered how you'd like actually kind of
come to those positions on it it's it is incredibly complex and the only people that really know
are the people that are that deep into it that they can read it as well and they don't seem to
agree with him but at the end of the day like whatever whatever was going on over in that part
of the world. They had a lot of discussions of things that came from the sky. Yeah. They had a detailed
map of the solar system, which is very weird. A 5,000 plus year old detailed map of the solar
system with all the planets, Jupiter, Mars, Earth. It's like, what's that? Yeah. How are you achieving
this? What are these giant people with monkeys on their laps? And like, you know, Gilgamesh
holding a lion like it's a little cat in loads of statues. Why all these dudes have wings? Very, very typically
dismissed as kind of like, you know, oh, it was just a, you know, an intellectual giant or a, you know, giant of
a power and regality. It's like, okay, but there's a lot of them. There's a lot of references all across
the world to these giants. So, you know, I find that very interesting. And, you know, like the watch
and the reality of fossils. This is the reality of fossils. There is a tiny, tiny amount of all the
things that die that leave a fossil. Right. Most things don't leave a fossil when they die. They get
absorbed by the earth, eaten by scavengers, bacteria, you rot away, the sun bleaches your bones,
and it's over.
It's over.
Within a few hundred years, there's nothing left.
Occasionally, you get lucky, and someone or a dinosaur falls into a bog and you get evidence.
But if you don't get that evidence, it doesn't mean it didn't exist.
You know, and the giant one is a weird one.
It is a weird one.
It's a weird one.
because there's so many
depictions in ancient literature
of giants, of giant beings
and you've got to wonder, okay, are we talking about like men
from Iceland? Are we talking about
giants that are just enormous human beings
like those... Big chads?
But those dudes that do those strong man
competitions, like the mountain.
Yeah, man. Those guys all live in Iceland. They're all from
Iceland. What the fuck is that about?
Exactly. Yeah, what is that about?
Vikings. Right. They were the Vikings.
And that's what's left. But
is it that? Are we talking about
that or we talk about another race of human that's even larger and if they found it do they tell us like
they tell us about certain they tell us about denisovans similar to us they tell us about homo julienne similar
to us just a little bit bigger they found a fucking four foot skull do they tell us well it's like there's like
snippets isn't there from the black and white days 1920s where the smithsonian kind of very quickly
covered things up and like this is very much the smiths they're giant bones but like bones from a giant
human. Yeah, there seems to be. And there's all these Native American stories about giant
right-headed humans. And, you know, in the burial mounds, supposedly. But here's, the thing
is like, this is the real question. Would, if archaeologists stumbled upon a four-foot head
and they were under the, you know, the guidance of the university, would they shut it down?
That's such a good question. Would they release it? I am fascinated by the fact that I have to
ask that question. Yeah. Yeah. Because I would assume that if archaeologists found, of course, they
would release it. We have found evidence of a giant, like a giant human being, and this might
be one, the first one we find. It might have been a whole race of them that existed 20,000 years
ago. Yeah. Would they tell us? I don't know, Joe. I don't, I don't know. That's what's weird
is we don't know if they would tell us. I don't know if they would tell us. They might not.
The government might step in and say, you are not allowed. Well, that's the thing is it might
supersede just academic circles and archaeology. It might get a little bit more serious. Why? The
implications of our ancient history and, you know, what exactly was taking place. I'm fascinated by
some areas that seem to have a level of kind of like theological reference to them. So, you know,
the Book of Enoch and the Watchers. And they descend down on Mount Hermann in Balbeck, right? So that's
Balbeck, which is Balbeck, the Lord of the Becker Valley and Bal, the storm god, like the one that
everyone, you know, talks about the sacrifices to Baal. It's also the place that has these insane
trillion stones. I was just about to mention him. Yeah.
That's it, the Trilithons.
The Trilithon.
800 to 1,000 tons.
800 to 1,000 tons apiece.
And they're not even laying on the ground.
No, they've been lifted up.
They've been lifted up quite significantly.
And this is the thing, man.
It's like, you know, somewhere like this.
So you've got this weird story about this is basically 30 miles away from there is Mount Hermann, where the watches apparently came down from the sky.
What the fuck?
And then he got these impossible blocks in this.
And the quarry there as well.
The quarry there, you have like the stone of the.
pregnant woman, which is like 1,250 tons.
And there's another one there that's like 1,500 tons.
Like these were never fully excavated, but they're there getting ready and they're just
been documented in situ.
But then, yeah, 300 meters up the road or less is the Temple of Jupiter, which again,
mainstream academics will attribute to first century Romans.
But the first century Romans had like wooden pulleys and like little wooden cranes.
Like this is insane.
This is an 800 to a thousand ton block, three of them, that were lifted up.
think it's like at least like 20 meters or something you know it's like yeah
but jame can please show us the photo of it i always love looking at these especially if you can find
one with a human being standing in it like uh corsetti if he's like yeah this is a good one of corsetti
like it's phenomenal how big these are it's so crazy it freaks me out it's so crazy to think that
they what we believe they use some sort of stone tools or copper tools like and pulleys
You get this in place, and you got it out of the quarry, how?
Well, I then...
Yeah.
Oh, so that's a brilliant place.
That's Oliantanthambo in Peru, fantastic area, which I'll be showing in my next episode of ancient technology.
It's the trillium stones.
Trilithon.
Trilthon.
Trilthon.
I keep saying it wrong.
The trilithin stones.
Yeah, Balbeck.
And one of the interesting things that Corsetti was saying is like, that's not even a place where they take a lot of tourists to.
No.
So there it is.
So you see the person and then look above how big those stones are.
This is not sensible to attribute to first century romance.
No, go back to just the Lebanon ones.
That's it.
They are so big, man.
That one.
And then there's a good black and white one.
We see with the yellow, yeah, there you go.
There's two little dudes sitting on top of them.
Crazy.
Absolutely phenomenal.
And then, you know, the smaller blocks on top, that is first century Romans.
Absolutely, without a doubt.
There is obvious evidence.
But they built it on top of something else.
Yeah, they built it on top of an ancient, ancient foundation,
which they were not capable of doing.
Probably a landing pad.
That's what's so many people say that.
Whenever I post like any, it's like,
you're just a landing pad for the spaceships.
Let's make a dope landing pad for our ships.
But what's crazy about that as well?
Just a real quick aside.
Well, not even an aside, it's an addition to that.
Okay, so the mainstream attributes is the first century Romans,
but then the Romans liked to brag about all the things they did.
And third century Romans bragged about the Lateran obelisk that's now sitting in Rome.
And the Lateran Obelisk is about 350 to 400 tons.
That's the heaviest recorded lift in Roman history.
These are 800 to 1,000 tons.
They never even mentioned them.
So it's weird that we attribute it to Romans,
but it's because within our model for history,
we can't not if we're going to listen to academics, right?
So you have to then invoke fringe theories.
I had Rep Luna on the podcast,
and she was the one who really got me to read the Book of Enoch.
She's digging in.
Oh, yeah.
She's digging in.
She's all in on the UFOs.
I know she is.
I don't know what they tell her.
Yeah.
I mean, is she useful to them?
You know, the whole thing is weird.
Maybe, maybe.
It's hard to know.
But when I started reading it, now, if that was included in the Bible, if they had, because
it really was rabbis, they decided that it didn't jive with the Torah, right?
Right, right, right.
And so they said, no, no, no, this one's too crazy.
Yeah.
If that was in the Bible, and that's what we were taught.
Things would be different.
Can you ask you Sunday church?
The Watchers came down.
But meanwhile, that is in the same area of Qumran.
written down as the book of Isaiah.
So all these things that are included in the Bible, that's there.
It's all the same word.
Why are we ignoring some of it?
Like, that's really crazy.
Why ignoring the stuff that seems the most kooky?
Again, I think that those probably may be disagreements.
Because, I mean, you know, there's so much change for the biblical canon from all of these different, you know, councils like the Council of Nicaea, all these different censoring and changing of the, of the, of the, of the.
of the Bible. It's probably personal issue. It could be something as simple as just someone who
personally did not believe that. It was like, that's bullshit. Remove that. That's not real. There's
no way they were giants. But I love how at the beginning of the Bible, it's like, there were
giants in those times and the times before. Yeah. Anyway, moving on, never mentioned it again,
like in any sort of real context of it. Like, you know, David and Goliath in a few situations.
But no, I really am starting to wonder if there was a giant race that was on this planet, dude. I really do.
The Native American depictions alone, there's too much story, too many stories of enormous men that they had to kill.
Yeah, yeah.
And their history, their oral tradition goes so far back.
Yeah, I mean, imagine we're talking 10,000 people, now that we know that human beings lived in North America 22,000 plus years ago, right?
So the fossilized footprints that they found in New Mexico.
So that's 22,000 years.
So imagine 22,000 years ago, these things were.
a real thing. How many of them have you found?
You haven't found any bones of humans from
22,000 years ago in North America, have you?
No. Right? So,
why...
Exactly. Does the Smithsonian have
them, these motherfuckers? If they really
do have a giant down there,
do you imagine... I think they probably do, J.
Can you imagine if there's like a... There's a
tomb that you have to go into. It's like a
vault. That cranks open the vault.
It's like the history version of Area 51.
You see a fucking head the size of this table.
And you're like, what? That's what we're
dealing with.
That's what we're dealing with.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We had to kill them off.
Maybe.
Which totally makes sense.
Why would you let that motherfucker live?
Right.
You got a 10 foot tall, 12 foot tall.
That's a problem.
Yeah.
2,000 pound human that eats people.
That is a problem.
I wonder, you know, always get this, because like the watches themselves are never described
as giant beings.
Right.
I wonder where the giant came into the equation genetically.
Well, isn't it us compared to them?
Maybe.
Let's look at this.
Maybe there were slight aliens, like alien grays or something.
Sure.
You know.
Well, look at the description of the Nephilim, how they destroyed everything.
Yeah.
Like, they created this thing, that consumed everything, destroyed everything, including mankind.
Like, what does that sound like?
It sounds like us.
That's not like us.
That's not like us.
It sounds like us.
Right. And also, like, you're saying mankind.
Like, mankind, what are you saying?
Are you saying aliens?
Are you saying, who wrote this?
Yeah.
Like, what is mankind?
For sure.
What does that term mean?
I bet you're not saying man.
I bet you're probably using an ancient language to describe whatever the dominant force was at the time.
that's writing all this down.
What are we talking about?
Yeah.
What is these watchers?
They made it with humans?
So what are they?
And they created something that destroyed everything?
What?
So, okay, what is that?
What are you talking about?
And doesn't that sound exactly like humans?
Like, what do we do?
We fucking destroy everything.
Yeah.
We destroy everything.
We light things on fire.
We suck all the fish out of the ocean.
We throw a garbage in it.
We are so destructive.
Yeah.
And we're so consuming.
We consume.
You know?
We're one of the only.
animals that dies because we eat too much.
Yeah. Right. Right.
Whether you're one of the only animals.
Exactly. Yeah. Well, and we're one of the
own, we are the only example
on this planet of the level
of intelligence that we have. I mean, it's just phenomenal.
I mean, really quite phenomenal when you
consider all of the various avenues
of evolution that have been given
the opportunity. We have a massive leap.
Yeah. Phenomenal leap, but
a leap that has to in some way have been
intervened with, in my opinion.
I mean, it's such a quantum leap
in our ability of cognition and the brain
size. I mean, I do find the stoned ape theory very interesting and, you know, the concept of
using psychedelics, and I think there's a role to play in that for sure. But I just think that
when you have such a novel trajectory change from every other creature, every other animal on
his planet, that tells me that there is something fundamentally accelerated in humans.
And whether that can just be put down to shamanic use of psychedelics, I don't know. I think that
when you invoke again, all of these various theological stories, it becomes clear that something
was interfacing with us. And perhaps.
At one point, we were interfacing with them.
And there was a communication and a relation that has since long degraded after, you know, cataclysmic outreaches and, you know.
I think the evolution that came out of psychedelics and primitive man was the escape from the barbaric nature of our roots.
Right, right, right.
I don't think it's necessarily the development of the human brain.
I think it's probably a way to, but also a way to use the human brain.
with its primate background, but soften the ego.
Right.
Right?
Yeah, yeah.
And endorse a feeling of community.
Like, promote a feeling of community and love and the connectiveness that you get from psychedelics.
It will allow you to traverse the timelines between incredibly barbaric hunter-gatherers with stone-tipped tools to agrarian societies where people are all living together and cooperating.
And it makes sense.
But what doesn't make sense is the giant leap to being a human in the first place.
No.
It's kooky.
It is kooky.
And it's in the Bible.
At least it's in the book of Enoch.
It's there.
That's the crazy part about it is that they literally describe what we're, and not just us, like many people have theorized.
Like, have we been a product, are we a product of genetic manipulation?
Are we a product of accelerated evolution?
Well, again, my own experiences, I just feel like.
There is quite obviously a vast intelligence spectrum out there, in my opinion,
and I think it goes beyond our own perception of space and time.
And I think that there are likely things that can come in from, you know,
realms that we just don't really believe are real, like the astral.
And, you know, even the realm of the imagination is an interesting thing.
What is this place inside of our heads that we can instantaneously create anything we want?
And all things, including everything on this table, once came from inside someone's mind.
Like we are excretors of ideas into reality.
We kind of render reality into something that nothing else does.
And I think that there is a spark within us that speaks to what people would call a divine spark, for sure.
And maybe that is a divine spark.
Maybe it's a highly intelligent race that intervened and gave us that spark.
But we are entirely different.
And I do think that as we begin to get deeper and deeper into kind of the physics of our reality
and our fundamental connection to it, we start realizing.
that our physiology, our body is like an antenna, it's like a technology.
It's an instrument for picking up on signals and perhaps even consciousness itself.
I don't know if you're familiar with microtubials and the orchestrated objective reduction theory by Stuart Hammroff and Sir Roger Penrose.
How many times do you bring that up to people and they go, oh yeah, I know what you're talking about.
Well, I hang out with some weird fucking people, but I just thought it might have come up.
I definitely have heard Duncan Trussell say to you, microtubials, man.
Yes.
Microtubules.
No, so I did an interview with an anesthesiologist called Stuart Hammeroff,
and him and Sir Roger Penrose developed a model called the orchestrated objective reduction theory,
or orc-O-R, looking at microtubules, which are these tiny helical structures inside our neurons.
And I forget the exact metric, but it's something ridiculous, like 10,000 microtubials per neuron.
So it's just, you know, this incredible architecture of these tiny little helical structures
that apparently are so small that they interact with quantum vibrations in fields.
That's how fine and tiny they are.
And the reason I bring this up is because I think that we're getting deeper now
with things like the OrkoR theory into looking at the structures within humanity
that actually seem to be receiving nodes or receptive nodes for energy
that could then be translated into consciousness.
The old idea of are we generating consciousness from our brain
or are we receiving consciousness and we're just a conduit for it.
And I think the evidence,
is getting a little bit more clearer that we're a conduit.
And I just wonder if that's evolution naturally
or if that's interaction from these others
that have come and meddled with our genealogy.
It's a good question that we'll have to ponder
when I come back from peeing.
You do that.
We'll pause.
No worries.
All right.
Where were we?
Well, Jamie brought something up,
which is a really interesting video
that I took when I was out in Sakara in Egypt,
again with Jeffrey Drum.
He was taking me through.
And yeah, this is an awesome place.
So just for context,
before we play it.
Yeah, take it back to the beginning.
This is inside the Pyramid of Yunas in Sakara,
and this is deep down inside of it
inside what they call the burial chamber.
Now, you see all of these amazing Arabic artwork
that's been quite relatively crudely scratched in.
Now, you see that glow?
That's actually calcite crystal, and that's limestone.
Now, the entire back of this chamber,
like this wall, the back wall, the other wall,
and the ceiling and the floor,
is made out of a slab of calcite crystal.
But what's really interesting about this is that when you take a flashlight and you put it in a certain angle on this wall, something very interesting appears.
Boom.
Huh.
An otherwise invisible etching of an individual. You can see the navel, the belly button and the arms.
And this is completely invisible until you get that flashlight.
Now, these have been actually smoothed...
Let's a promo for my episode,
but these have actually been smoothed
into the calcite crystal itself,
and then obviously these Aramaic writings
and pictographs have been scratched on afterwards.
So clearly, this is the original artwork of this chamber,
but it's not perceptible
without a very specific angle of light
that creates the shadows.
And these are on the other side of the wall as well.
I think in this clip,
maybe he doesn't show it. But very, very strange. Now, this entire pyramid is acoustically
profound. I mean, the acoustics inside of this are unbelievable, the amount of echo that you
get. And the entire Sakara site, we went around it. And I mean, my God, it's a weird site,
man. You've got, again, just incredibly huge slabs of rose quartz granite. And there's one area
that's like on the other side of the pyramid, not even near the entrance.
which is just this huge portcullis made of granite
with interlocking pieces where it clearly another piece of stone
was slid between them.
But this is nowhere even connected to the pyramid infrastructure
and they don't say anything about it.
Strewing across this entire place,
you've got huge blocks of granite with drill holes in them.
You can see the striation marks going all the way through them.
And his opinion, Jeffries,
and I think there's merit to it
because in Cairo Museum,
there's a little cabinet of,
laboratory equipment
like jugs and
apothecary bottles that were recovered
from Sakara including a little
plate there's like a little
plaque this wasn't included this is put into
the actual exhibition but it's tucked into the corner
of Cairo Museum you have to find it and you have to really look
for it and there's a little plaque saying
that the area of
Sakara was a laboratory and
again like this completely contradicts
all of the things that they say about ancient Egypt
but it's in the Cairo Museum it's literally
written as the ancient lab
of Sakara. And so, you know, what's going on there? Why is there a contradiction like
that that's being acknowledged? And it's truly just an incredible place with these shadow figures
and the acoustic resonance of the site, the rose granite. So why do you think that it was
originally these carvings were in the wall and then they wrote on it afterwards? Well, I think it's just
another case of a later civilization coming across an incredibly amazing place and carving on it.
Maybe they didn't even see these figures because you have to have a very specific type of light to actually be able to see them.
You have to get it at that angle.
You can't detect by looking at it that there's some variation.
I mean, you can see when you actually know what you're looking for, but barely anything.
It's like really hard to perceive.
So maybe they didn't even know that these things were down there when they went.
There's another part of this when you're going through the chambers where it's rose granite, rose granite,
and then plaster where you've got hieroglyphics pod on the top and you can actually see the plaster is kind of bleeding off into the rose granite.
So it feels like they found it.
They slapped some hieroglyphs on it.
They, you know, put their own veneration around it,
but it was not an original structure of the Egyptians,
once again, a place that they found and settled around.
But it's just weird that in the Cairo Museum you have like this tiny little shelf
full of beakers and measuring jug type things.
And it says that the lab complex of Sakara.
It just doesn't make any sense in comparison to what they're trying to tell us is the reality of this place.
So that's, you know, that's weird.
It's all weird.
It's all weird.
Yeah, that's why the bottleneck of talking about this stuff is so infuriating.
This is the same place, by the way, we have the Serapium, you know, the 80-ton boxes that are precision marble top.
The ones that Christopher Dunn went down into and was like, these have been machined.
Yeah, let's pull up photo of those, please.
They're strange.
It's like, what do you think they were doing with those things?
Like, what was the purpose?
Well, you know what's interesting is...
What was the drill?
They were, um, so these things are absolutely incredible.
And there's a few questions with this.
One, if you go onto that image, zoom out, just go to that image on the right where you've got the entrance, just the entrance into the, yeah, this one here.
So this is, you know, this is the entrance into the Serapium, or the Serapium, however you want to pronounce it.
It's a subterranean labyrinth.
And these corridors are extremely small.
There's actually a half finished, a half finished one sitting in the middle of a corridor and you can kind of really get a scope for the size.
a 70 ton
70 to 80 ton
granite
sarcophagi
they attribute it
to the apis
bulls they say
that there was a
cult around
this region
that venerated
the apis
bulls and that
these were
burial chambers
for the apis
bulls
but you know
the you're funny
about that
is the only
the only thing
that they have
to evidence
this is no
bones of
bulls
or anything
like that
what they have
is a single
hieroglyph
on one of these
one of these
boxes of a
bull
that's it
they have a hieroglyph
with a ball on it
and that's why
they attribute it to the
apis bulls
regardless of the fact
that these are
precision carved
80 to
you know
70 to 80 ton
granite
marble top smooth
boxes
with even more
precision inside
they're even
more precise
on the inside
which is strange
you wouldn't necessarily
need them
to be that
precise if they're
just
funerry boxes
but the
precision is
actually more
impressive
internally than it is
externally
and
how long it
take to make
one of those
here's the
question. Make it, move it, put it in place.
Make it move it. That bull's long dead. Let it go.
Let it go, dude. It's not that important.
By the time you finish that thing.
That's crazy. These things are nuts, man. Absolutely nuts.
And this is one of the big things that Christopher Dunn saw and was just like, no, no, no.
There's just no way.
Look at the people standing next to those stones.
I've been inside one of these.
That someone moved it there and then put that other one on top of it.
Unbelievable.
When? Who? How?
Yeah. And again, like, you know.
To say that's not a mystery.
It is nuts. And also, if you go on that image where they're shining a light and someone's leaning on it on like the right hand side, yeah, that one there. So many of these, the boxes themselves are so precise, but the actual writing is extremely crude. It's been scratched on. It's basically just been scratched on. And a lot of them, it kind of feels like as a lot of these pharaohs did, they just went and slapped a cartoon on it. I own this. This is mine. And so, you know, the exterior work contradicts the advanced.
of the actual box itself.
It doesn't make sense.
There's only one in here
that's actually got 3D
actual carved in artwork
and that one actually does make sense
but these ones are all chicken scratch.
It's just been scratched on.
Of course.
Which is what people do.
Which is what people do.
I mean, a lot of history
of human beings doing that to ancient things.
Yeah, if you've got that third image
actually, that's an interesting image
because you've got these
such low quality.
That's a shame.
But you can actually see these dimples
where they've smoothed out the stone
and what's weird about this
is that, so if these were funerary boxes,
you would expect the external to be the most impressive
because that's what people are going to see, right?
But instead, you actually have a lot of malformation on the boxes.
And one of the theories about this,
and this is something that, there we go, is a good example of this.
One of the theories about this is one that Jeffrey Drum brought up for me
is that whatever was going on inside of these cases,
the exterior had to have absolutely zero critical imperfections.
So any cracks, anything that was problematic would have been,
dissolved out, smoothed away. And you have this weird kind of dimpling on a lot of these
and somewhere you can actually see a crack where the crack's been removed and it's been kind of
smoothed out. And then inside it's like 90 degree just perfect. And so it just kind of contradicts
the idea of it being for the, you know, a funerary purpose. You'd expect the outside to be
absolutely perfect and beautiful. But it's not. It's all kind of malshaped and as if they were
trying to remove any sort of cracks, anything that could cause a structural problem.
and then inside they're perfect.
So it does make me wonder about the real purpose behind these.
Why are you assuming that it would be cracks?
Why wouldn't it just be that they didn't have a need to finish the top of it?
Because some of them are finished quite profoundly.
And then you have others that have got these big dimples in them
where it just looks like they were trying to remove anything
that might have been a critical damage to the structure.
Obviously, this is guesswork.
Right. The purpose of that would be to keep it from cracking all the way through.
To keep it from cracking all the way through.
I just find it very interesting that the inside is more impressive than the outside for something that's meant to be, you know, viewed as a funerary box.
Right.
An enormous funerary box.
An enormous funerary box.
Does anybody have a wacky far-out theory of what they were actually for?
I mean, there's always some.
I mean, one of them that I find interesting is the idea that it could be like some form of like a sound bath, like an ice literary chamber where they would go into and have like some form of experiences.
You've got to count on someone to move that fucking thing?
You know, there's such a strong, there's such a strong evidential trail of acoustic sciences in the ancient past, especially archaeoacoustics in terms of the actual architecture itself, like the pyramids, they're designed to resonate, like one of the most, sorry, one of the most interesting places that I've been to in terms of looking at the acoustics of places as well as Malta, the island of Malta.
And the island of Malta is very interesting because when the Bronze Age settlers from Sicily and other areas of Italy came over to Malta for the first time, they discovered an island that was absolutely littered with megalithic sites.
And Malta has got the highest concentration of megalithic sites in the world, but there were no people.
They all gone.
No one knows who they were.
It was just a land full of these incredible megalithic temples.
And one in particular called the Hypergeum of Halsefleini.
Now, the Hypergium is fascinating, dude.
It's a subterranean huge, huge temple, temple that was discovered by road workers and they were literally just chipping away at the road and then it collapsed in and they find this huge what they call a necropolis because they found hundreds of skeletons down here.
This thing is incredible.
This is all carved out of the limestone and it is a overlapping geometric series of chambers that is so obviously acoustically tuned.
that if you actually, if you wanted to search hypergeum acoustics,
it will come up with studies where they've noticed that this is absolutely a
deliberately acoustically tuned complex.
Go on the actual website, not images.
That's an interesting one.
Whether or not it's entirely accurate,
someone's comparing the hypergium to the human ear.
Specifically because of the fact that this place
absolutely is acoustically tuned to resonate between 110 and 115 hertz,
which is the bandwidth to activate certain brain states,
like alpha and theta brain where you can get into more meditative states of consciousness.
And only 20% of this site is accessible to the public, 70% of it's locked off, and they treat
it like a skiff.
They take your phone, they take your camera, you can't bring any audio recording devices
into it, nothing.
Very curated tour for like, you know, 30 minutes and then out.
Why is 70% of it locked off?
That's a great question.
They say it's for preservation of the site because it's such a delicate neolithic.
It's prehistoric.
I believe it's prehistoric.
And again, this speaks to what was going on in prehistory
because this is an acoustically profound series of chambers
that have been carved out of the limestone bedrock
by people that we attribute bone antler tools to.
They were chipping away at it with bone antler tools
and they made something as profound.
So when you say prehistoric, what do you talk?
Well, they dated to, I think, about 5,000 years ago.
About 5,000, yeah.
Mainstream, mainstream.
What?
Mainstream.
Yeah, yeah.
Carved.
Carved. Carved out of the bedrock. Out of the bedrock. It's huge, huge thing. And what's even
weirder about it is that they found all these elongated skulls at the bottom of it. And I've seen one
personally. I went to the Museum of Valletta in Malta and saw one of these elongated skulls.
What's very interesting about these skulls is that they actually lack the sagittal suture that we have
going down the back of the head. So, you know, we have this sagittal suture which pushes
the growth plates together as you come through the birth canal.
Not that one.
The third one,
sorry, the fourth one,
that one, and then there's other images which are,
actually the one below it where you've got skulls recovered from the hypergium.
Yeah, so this is the elongated skull.
This only got the horizontal suture,
no vertical suture,
which is what all humans have,
a vertical, satchel suture.
Now, apparently,
hundreds of elongated skulls were discovered
in the Hypergium, but only a couple of them
are on display in Valletta, and I've got a couple of
friends who are in, have you heard of the Knights
of Malta? No. It's a kind of
a secret order, a bit like Freemasonry.
It's spawned from the Vatican. The Vatican
basically threw these people into Malta and said,
fuck off and go do your weird stuff over there.
But now it's a very connected, you know,
kind of like with the Vatican order,
the Knights of Malta.
Very powerful. A very powerful
group.
Very much in the geopolitical world
stage. And
a friend of mine who's within that
was like, yeah, they bring out this book
once a year in the Valletta Museum
and it's
detailing the skulls of the
hypergeum and apparently tells a
story of how the locals
would throw bodies down there
because there are beings down there
that they wanted to prevent from coming up to the
surface. And this is the strange thing
is the hypergium is full of
normal human bodies, hundreds, not
buried with respect, but just piled
down there and then also
elongated skulls. And the story is, according to this very ancient book that they bring out
and put out once a year, you have to be lucky to catch it. It apparently describes that they were
using this as a place to discard bodies to prevent these creatures from coming up to the surface.
So they were feeding them? Feeding them? Feeding them. So when people would die, they would just
throw them down that hole? Or would people are bad people? Maybe, yeah, yeah, throw them down
that hole to. So these elongated skull things were eating people? Well, that's, you know, the
connections we might make from that kind of connotation from these books.
But that's certainly something that's rolled out in the Valletta Museum once a year if you get to go there and see it.
So that, you know, is that like an ancient version of Scientology?
Somebody make all this up?
Dude, I don't know.
But, well, I mean, in terms of that.
Very strange that there's the hybrid human skeletons down there.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, they did find a profound amount of them, which is why the mainstream labels it as a necropolis.
But there's no burial respect being done.
It was just piles of bodies, like piles of bodies, dude.
and again it's just so profound
this is called the oracle room
yes the oracle room yeah
this is where the sound concentrates
the acoustics concentrate
read this description I've found here
these two paragraphs I guess
it's going to be a little long but it's not that long
during testing a deep male voice
tuned to these frequencies
stimulated a resonance phenomenon
throughout the hypogeem creating bone
chilling effects it was reported that the sounds
echoed for up to eight seconds
archaeologist Fernando
combria or combra
coimbra
said that he felt the strong
the sound crossing his body at high speed, leaving a sensation of relaxation.
When it was repeated, the sensation returned, and he also had the illusion that the sound
was reflected from his body to the ancient red ochre paintings on the walls.
One can only imagine the experience in antiquity, standing in what must have been
somewhat odorous dark and listening to ritual chant while low light flickered over the
bones of one's departed loved ones.
Holy shit.
Yeah, dude.
Might have felt like what drugs do to us.
Yeah.
Oh, so they made a drug house.
He goes on the state, yeah.
Under right circumstances,
ancient populations were able to obtain
different states of consciousness
without the use of drugs
or chemical substance.
Or maybe in coordination with.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is the Monroe Institute
of Applied Sciences and Binaural Beats
way, way before we were around.
This is the original,
it's called psychoacucucate.
acoustic architecture, the idea that ancient architecture is designed in a way to propagate
acoustics that affect the human brain.
Now, imagine, this is 5,000 years ago, and where did you learn that from?
Right.
How did you do that?
Did you fail?
Did you learn?
What's the science?
And another interesting element is, there are a lot of temple sites in Malta that look
weirdly similar to New Grange in Ireland, and Newgrange is another cycle.
acoustic temple, if you want to call it a temple.
It's a huge mound, if you look it up.
But within it, they've done, again, acoustic studies, and it propagates infrasound, sound
below the threshold of human hearing.
And that's the stuff that reverberates through your chest cavity, through your bone structure.
That's what that guy is describing.
It's infrasonic sound.
You know when you're like...
This is it?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there's a...
How old's that?
Oh, is it again, Neolithic.
I don't know the exact date, but it's Neolithic.
And these spiral patterns are in the hypergium.
Those spiral patterns are in the Hypergeum, in Red Ochre.
This is Ireland.
The same structure.
That very famous Irish...
This, by the way, is incredible because it's completely singular.
There's no break in the line.
That's a very hard piece of geometry to actually create at the time as well.
It's extremely complex because all of this feeds into itself.
There's no break in that line.
It's a very complex geometry.
But that same type of geometry is also found in the Hypergium, and it's found in Red
ochre on the painting, these swirling, these swirling.
swirling kind of motifs.
So it's very interesting you have these weird correlations between places that were separated
by entire oceans in Neolithic time.
Do you think they represent sound waves?
Yes.
Yeah, I think it's about the flow of acoustics, the flow of movement and sound.
And that was perhaps their interpretation or perhaps they had a visual hallucination that
gave them the idea of it being this kind of like swirling pattern.
But yeah, I find this.
Yeah, this is Ireland.
And there's just some striking similarities between places like this.
in places in Malta.
So again, it just leads into the idea that there was perhaps a globally maritime-connected
civilization that was using these psychoacoustic attributions in sites to produce novel
effects of consciousness, you know, inducing brain hemisphere synchronization, just like they're
trying to do in my ass with the CIA.
And here's the real question.
How did they learn how to do that?
And how long did it take before you figured out how to carve that out of a mountain?
Yeah, exactly.
You know, these are the questions that are absolutely not being answered by our
understanding of history. These are the, you know, the red ochre, the more rough ones are the ones in
the Hypergium. Incredibly old. Also, also a very good. Yeah. Like, it's, it's nuts. Is that,
other cultures have that as well, right? Those spirals? Yeah, yeah. That's what I mean. So that
right there is also in New Grange, in Ireland, like pretty much the same. It's right. But not just
those two places. There's some other places in the world. Yes, the swirling motif is one of the
oldest. I mean, it is one of the oldest. There's, you know, it's everywhere. But the implication of
it being about sound is very interesting when you find it represented in places that are
absolutely acoustically tuned from prehistory. Yeah, dude. Like, you know, it's weird. There's
another one in Peru called Chavin de Huanta, which is a, there's a temple built above it. This
is another thing that you find. I mean, this one in Malta, they haven't done this, but you do
definitely seem to find layering, like Gunnam Padang in Indonesia, where you have like the original
structure below and people are just piling up on top of it over time. So in Chavender
Hunter in Peru you have this amazing temple site, but below ground is a labyrinth of corridors
that also propagate acoustics to the point where it brings up infrasound. So below this is
an infrasonic laboratory essentially of labyrinthian passages that were used for ritual
acoustics. And they actually found inside of this conch shells that had been purposefully
re-engineered to produce a new harmonic when blown into them. Like they had actually changed them
into a different type.
Oh, so they'd go in the acoustic chambers and blow the conch shells and someone would obviously
be walking through this perhaps as a form of rite of passage.
Could you imagine going back in time and seeing what these fucking people were up to?
I really want to.
Just being a fly on the wall.
I wish we could.
Yeah, so, you know, it's not incredibly profound stone masonry, but it does produce
infrasonic reverberation.
They have proven that and looked it up.
And yeah, the conch shells were found there that have got all of these designs on them
have been purposefully changed to produce a different sound.
So there is a clear lineage of acoustic science way before acoustic science was acoustic science,
you know, at least to our terms.
So it brings up big questions.
And the fact that it was influencing consciousness, I think that we just had an incredibly
intelligent but shamanically orientated society at one point.
You know, we were using our human ingenuity, but we were using it to create effects more spiritually aligned
than anything else.
And, you know, these are all chambers for inducing.
expanded states of consciousness.
The real question, though, is what technology were they utilizing for the construction?
That's the real question, especially when you get to the megalithic stuff.
Yeah.
What were they doing?
Like, what is this?
Because this is not what we're saying it is.
There's no way this is stone tools.
There's no way this is copper.
This is something nutty.
Well, that's why the nubs are interesting because it almost seems like the stone was being
softened and perhaps like, you know, if you were pulling a spoon out of hot toffee,
you'd get that pullback, right?
You'd get like a little kind of protrusion that came out of it.
down, though?
But they do, and then they don't.
That's what's really weird about it, especially in Peru.
Peru has so many stone nubs.
There's a place in Peru called the Kori Kancho, which is like the kind of main temple in Kusko, the Sun Temple.
And, you know, these precision, there's various layers of architecture in Peru, albeit it's all being attributed to the Inca, which is weird, rough cut stonework, then the weird, megalithic kind of smushed together stones.
Then you have what's called Ashlaar stonework, which is where.
it's like a bunker.
If you look at the, it's, it's spelled with a Q,
Q-O-R-I-K-K-A-N-C-H-A, Kori-K-H-A-K-R-E-H-A-K-R-E-H-A-K-R-E-K-H-E-R-E-R-E-S-E-E-R-E-S-E-E-R-E-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1.
one. Yeah, so that's Ashla stonework, that bottom bit. That is original. This was built by the Conquistadors, right? The rest of it's been built up by the Conquistadors from Spain. But this original stonework is also represented inside with these incredible bunkers. So if you type in like bunker, it's got, yeah, like this image here, like, I, the level of precision on these is absolutely phenomenal. I mean, we're talking just complete, precise fitting stones, not globular, like,
Saxooman, like marshmallows, but just precise blocks.
Like these bunkers here, yeah, like down here.
This is all original work, and then they built a, you know,
a Spanish-inspired temple over the top of it.
So what you're asserting is that this was here first.
Yes, yeah, yeah.
This stuff, it was here first.
Like, this stuff was absolutely here first.
And if you look up, there's a little nub, a little stone nub right at the top there.
And they, but some of these walls have like ten nubs on them,
like one here, one here, one here.
And then there's none.
So it's like they were smoothing out some of them,
leaving others.
Some have speculated that it's a form of language
because in Peru, the Inca,
do you know what the Inca language was?
No.
Written language, it was called Kippu,
and it wasn't written.
It was pieces of string with knots on them
in different colors.
That was the historical language.
So it was literally like a line
of different strings,
different lengths,
different colors with little knots in them,
which corresponded to data.
And most of this was lost
by the Spanish conquisadors
because they went over there
and it was like, burn this shit,
burn this pagan nonsense.
This was their language.
Oh, my.
This was their language.
And it just made me wonder,
obviously, this is a complete guess.
But it just made me wonder if, like, the stone nubs are stone Kipu.
Is it a stone version with all these different nubs on different places and different areas?
Because it just feels like, especially in the Kodikansha, which is a temple, it's a regal temple.
Why would you leave the nubs on?
Like you said, why wouldn't they smooth these down?
So it's almost like it's meant to tell us something.
And they're left in very specific areas.
Then in Peru, you get.
stone nubs protruding straight out of bedrock.
That's what weirds me out, is that it's not just on the crafted stones,
but like a sheer rock face that's been obviously kind of quarried down
by some unknown technique without any chisel marks, just straight.
And then you have like a group of nubs coming out of the stone.
So Peru is just full of contradictory architecture.
And I think that, you know, the Spanish went over there
and they saw places like Saxo Oman, and they attributed to the Inca.
You know, they attribute it the Inca. The Inca, the Andean shamans say it's not the Inca.
You know, the Inca themselves to the Spanish conquisodos said, we found these places.
But we take the words of the Spanish conquisodos and we apply it to our knowledge set and we teach that.
And it's just like I was saying to you before, we're basing so much of our history off of like the word of people from like the 1800s.
When clearly we're seeing contradictions of that, even in, as Graham Hancock would certainly say, the oral traditions of the local region.
The people are saying differently.
But we're listening to the foreigners who went over there and destroyed things and burnt things and burnt the keeper and went back and taught us what their civilisations is all about.
It doesn't make any sense.
Wow.
But yeah, Peru's fascinating, dude.
Peru's one of the most interesting places I've ever been.
And has it had the same level of discovery of...
Not like Egypt.
No?
No.
I mean, like, there are areas in Peru.
In fact, shout out to my friend Raul Belecki from Pillars of the Past.
He's a guy who's out there in Peru, literally just go.
out into the middle of nowhere, he's found pyramid sites in the middle of nowhere that have
absolutely zero recording, no excavation, no study, no name. They don't exist in the record,
but they're out there in the middle of nowhere in Peru. And so like Peru has...
How many? He found a pretty impressive complex, actually. He found a pretty impressive complex.
He's got videos of it, like drone footage.
So it's one of the places where you could actually still be a real explorer and find
Yeah. Yeah. If you want to go off into the Andean mountains, like he's finding stuff in the Andes high up in the mountains that nobody's documented. Like nobody's seeing it. He's a real, you know, real adventure. But it just proves that, yeah, like you said, there are still places like this where you can do discovery.
That's nuts. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Peruse. That is really nice. And then obviously you have the Amazon rainforest and like, you know, all of the things that could be in there through LIDAR. We're already seeing so much geometry, so much evidence that there was a massive amount of civilization going on in that jungle. So, you know, this is. This is.
is, you know, getting very interesting to me.
And again, this weird climatological stability through the last glacial maximum to the
younger dryest, this period of about 6,000 years where they had access to development without
being disturbed.
So, you know, you have these incredible anti-sismic, anti-earthquic, megalithic structures in Peru
using materials that they shouldn't have been able to use, using multi-ton stones.
That's an interesting area, although I will say that it's made out of tough, which is volcanic rock,
very easy to cut because it's actually compressed ash.
So that's a really cool place, but it's not as mind-blowing in terms of how they cut the rock, because it's extremely soft rock.
So this is doable?
This is doable.
This is doable.
But there are other things.
In fact, if we could, could you go on my YouTube channel real quick?
This is, there's an area in Saxo-Woman, which has got, there's a diorite outcrop, which is an incredibly hard stone.
There's a measurement of hardness scale that goes up to 10.
and being the hardest and diorite sits at about 6.5 to 7 out of 10 whereas bronze sits at 3 to 3.5 out of 10 so you know there's a discrepancy with the hardness of the material to start with but yeah yes there's um if you go back to the beginning of it sorry man I wish I could see the screen um it's it's gonna be difficult I think keep it playing though I'll I'll talk about this and they'll come up in a moment I'm sure but all across Peru you have these incredibly precise cuts
into bedrock with very little evidence of any sort of chisel marks and no real understanding of how they were able to excavate it, you know, these incredible just voids into the rock.
But there's one area in particular, this is just the beginning of my video, but there's one area in particular in Saxa Woman, which is this gigantic, in fact, you could probably just type it in if you typed in Saxa Woman diorite steps or something like that.
Sex-Women, it's not the easiest word.
I know.
S-A-Q, S-A-Q, S-A-Y, S-A-Y, S-A-M-A-M-A-N, W-A-M-A-N, W-A-M-A-N, W-A-M-A-R-A-R-E-A-N-A-W-A-R-E-A-D-A-A-W-A-R-E-A-D-A-A-R-I-T-E.
It's all right, but I mean, I mean, like, I think we're actually getting.
I just, I'm like, trying to listen while I'm typing, and it's...
No, I know, sorry, dude.
But yeah, so yes, yes, that's the one.
So this is diorite.
This is incredibly hard stone.
To give some context, you know, the stones at Saksa Woman are extremely impressive, but they are made of limestone, a little bit softer, a bit more workable.
This is impossible.
If you can find a HD, I've got a 4K video of this.
That's why I wanted to see it in that video, but if you can find a HD image, it's shined like a marble top.
like these are just precision cut into this huge outcrop of diorite
which they actually believe was a magma burst so a huge blob of magma came bursting out of the
out of the ground and formed into this huge stone mound that's adjacent to saxa woman
and you've got cuts like this where it's just insanely perfect and this is not possible with a bronze age toolkit
this to me is actually more interesting in some ways than saxa woman itself because it's just a complete
contradiction of the Bronze Age tools.
You shouldn't be able to do that on diarite.
Yeah, it's wild.
I mean, how long did that take?
And it's smoothed down to a point where it's like shiny.
Like, what did they do?
And what's the purpose of it?
Why?
And there's all these weird little cuts.
Yeah, there's all these weird little cuts into the stone like that.
And across Peru, you just find like, you know, these voids where it's just like a 90 degree cut into stone with perfect finish and no sign of chisling.
And the weird thing is the back is smooth too.
And the back is also smooth.
So how did you get it out of there?
Dude, this is the thing, man.
I just find that so, like, fascinating.
This is what really fascinating.
It clearly seems like there's a lost technology.
Yeah, yeah.
These ancient people had figured something out.
They probably existed for thousands of years.
They were probably really advanced just in a different pipeline.
Yeah.
They went in a different highway.
I will say this, and I'm sure you'll be happy that I'm bringing him up.
There is one guy out there who's trying his best to prove how they were liquefying stone and then bringing it back.
and I only know his ex-handle, which is F-O-M-A-H-U-N, I can't remember his actual name,
but I've been talking to him.
I'm thinking of actually going out to visit him and film him doing this,
but he's been demonstrating making teddy bear casts of rose granite and things like this.
And for a long time, he wasn't revealing how he was doing it.
So I kind of just was like, whatever, dude.
Like, I don't think that you're actually doing this.
But he's now actually revealed his secret ingredient, which is slaked lime.
Like this slaked lime, which was very easy to make for them, and water glass, which, again, is something that they could have made.
I don't know the science behind this, to be fair.
So I'm just going to briefly say that I think he's got some provocative ideas here because he's actually adding, like, this water glass and slaked lime to, like, you know, mixed up compounds of granite or limestone, like crushed up granite, crushed up limestone, adding the slate lime, adding the water glass.
And then it's solidifying into solid granite, like, within six hours.
What?
Yeah, and he's got like literal like teddy bear casts and like, you know, different like cookie cutter casts of solid granite.
And so there's a potential that it's really simple, but totally been overlooked, you know.
It's just using the right compounds, the right components and the right stone mixture.
Again, how do they learn this?
But, you know, it's not definitive.
But he's one of the only people I've seen that's actually presented actual evidence that could explain how they were doing this.
And it's relatively simple ingredients.
That would account for some things, correct?
Yes, but not in film.
The enormous, okay, so this guy?
Yeah, so he's, I think so, if you go up and make sure he's actually the right person.
Yes, yes, there we go, Marcel Foti.
Brilliant idea to create artificial granite with nothing as an additive to water glass,
the latter being the glue between original granite grains.
Why?
Because I realize we need full transparency in order to clearly see the original granite grains like quartz.
We need a fake quartz as a binder.
Well, nothing did not work because the outside layer prevented the thing to get hard inside.
Oh, well, nothing did not work, I guess.
I don't know how you're saying that.
Now, what we're seeing is made with a secret additive.
Let's call it almost nothing that did not change the transparency of the water glass, but forced it to set from the inside.
So remember, this is the wannabe binder only of artificial granite, not granite itself.
It's very interesting
And he's revealed that it's slaked lime
This secret ingredient
For a while he wasn't saying what it is
And now he said it's slate lime
So I'm actually going to go out to
He lives in Budapest
I'm going to go out to Budapest
And actually film him doing this
To see if he's right about this
He's actually I think one of the originators
Of the whole Natron theory
Which I haven't dived too deep into
But it's one of the explanations
Behind it melting the stone
So I started paying more attention to him
Once I was in Peru
And he was messaging me saying
You know this is what I think is going on here
as they were using these ingredients to melt the stone,
well, to solidify crushed up stone and create molds.
My issue...
What?
Yeah, one issue I do...
How they crush up the stones?
That seems like it'd be harder than moving.
Maybe using harder rocks, like, you know, just like smash, smash.
But yeah, exactly.
You need to, I mean, how much stone smashing would you need to do
to create sacks a woman and all these areas?
Eighty tons of smashed.
Plus, plus every single block is different.
You'd be talking about millions of molds.
Like if we're talking about molds here,
then every single block is completely different.
So you need an individual mold for each one.
So, yeah, compelling idea.
Does it answer it?
No.
Nothing ever seems to fully answer it.
But it's compelling that he's trying to actually find a way to solidify the stone
and it seems to be working.
Whether it explains all of it, I don't know.
But there's certainly a lot of people that will say that, you know,
this is the definitive explanation behind it.
I don't think that.
But the thing that these amazing sites have in common is that they are so spectacular,
no one really has a logical explanation.
It's one of the coolest things about the most ancient of sites
is that it forces you to go, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, even the best people don't...
Defies probability.
Yeah.
It defies probability.
It's truly, truly fascinating, man.
It was a national project.
So simple.
I get it now.
Yeah, I know, man.
That's the thing is, like, you know, this outdated kind of dismissal of everyone on the
outside of the academic.
Yeah.
gatekeeping, you know, he wants to say he's not a gatekeeper, he clearly is.
It's not yours, buddy.
Did you know he came through the Edgar Casey Foundation?
Wonderful.
He did.
Zahiawas originated in the Edgar Casey Foundation, so he got funded.
And weirdly enough, he was actually quite pro these ideas until about the mid-90s.
So there's like a 1993 quote from him at a university in Cairo where he was saying something
along the lines of, there are tunnels underneath the sphinx that lead down into greater structures.
and when we truly understand this,
we will understand the real builders of the pyramids.
That was the last time he said anything close to that.
Post-193, about 993 and being 96,
but after that, complete polar opposite 90-degree change.
I wonder what happened to Zahi.
Who knows?
I don't understand why if you really want that place
to get more money, more tourism, more people interested in it,
and funding and research.
I mean, just be open to...
to all of these people that are like yourself and like Graham Hancock, why wouldn't you not
be open to these people and their ideas?
Like they're clearly very well versed.
I think Ben Van Kirkwick.
Oh, yeah, he's brilliant.
He's incredible.
Fantastic guy.
He's an encyclopedia of information about Egypt.
And why would you not want that guy exploring publicly and also reaching millions of people,
by the way?
Yes.
Why wouldn't you want that?
It doesn't make any sense.
I think there's like a, maybe like a bit of a cultural arrogance.
like who do you think you are westerner coming over here and teaching us about our history i think
there's a level of that like you know at least on a surface layer before you get into the deeper
implications of you know freemason secret societies keeping things from us my true fear is that it's
people just have this desire to be the one in charge of stuff right and the desire to be right
they want to be the boss they want to be proven wrong and who's this guy who's this podcaster
who's coming on and telling me what my country's heritage is and i you know but that's but the problem
with that is like even mainstream archaeologists are angry about it right right well everyone
gangs together you know they all gang together it's group think well it's also a lot of bitches
in archaeology yeah i've noticed that bitchy people i've noticed that they just there's it's such a
bad look for the profession it really is because immature yeah like snarky shitty comments yeah i know
like aspersions of racism shut up it's it's it's a really gross
field in terms of which some of the humans are...
I came through the toxicity of the UFO community, which is, like, so bad.
And, you know, I thought it would be...
A lot of cooks, but also just a lot of bad actors and hackers and people that want to, you know,
one thing on the UFO subject, actually, which I do think is worth noting, because like I said
to you, I think I'm one of the first people that you've had on that had to actually make
their way through the social media interactions.
And one of the things that a lot of us noticed and have to give credit to a couple of people,
like Red Panda Quala and Tupacabra on Twitter
to very good researchers that have been highlighting this
is that when the whole kind of 2017 narrative
and Lou Elizondo and Chris Mel and all these guys started coming out
obviously we were all extremely excited about it
over time you know there were some issues like some contradictions
Lou Elizondo especially has contradicted himself quite a lot
and some of us started to get a little
bit suspicious of these people and just started asking questions. It didn't take long for us to
be targeted by a pretty significant network online of people that were trying to hack and docks us
and people like, he hasn't put his actual name out there, but people that read Panda Koala
was doxed online, had his family house put out online, photos of his underage sister put out
online by a group of individuals who are all very closely connected to Lou Alessondo.
And this is something that you would not notice outside of being in the minutia of X,
because you would see these troll accounts, these really nasty troll accounts that were all
being followed by Lou.
And when they were having their accounts shut down and reinstated, Lou was one of the first
people following them.
Some people have actually come out about this group now and revealed screenshots of DM.
where they're in private conversations with people like Lou and Gary
and, you know, some of these other guys who I got connected to early on,
very early on, I got some of the first interviews with these people
and was very pro-it until I started realizing
that they were very much trying to control the narrative
and there were, you know, things you couldn't speak about,
can't talk about, you know, reverse engineering
or consciousness-initiated contact,
anything to do with Greer is completely poisonous.
Lou Elizondo was actually, he called Greer
and a couple of other people terrorists.
He said, I wouldn't negotiate with terrorists
when asked about Stephen Greer.
But what people have dubbed this as is the UFO hate group.
This is very well known online, the UFO hate group.
And it's a group of people that are so savagely in favor
of people like Lou and this kind of modernized narrative
that if you even go half an inch,
like I really gained my accolades in the UFO community.
People really praising me for the interviews I was getting.
Until I started asking a few questions about people like Liu
and suddenly I get an absolute maelstrom of hatred
from people that were once really, you know, enjoying my content.
And I'm quite lucky.
I haven't been targeted so heavily.
Some people have had their lives ruined by these people
who were all connected to individuals like Lou.
And Lou actually said that he came to burn euophology to the ground.
Like he actually said that in an article.
He was like, I want to burn UFO, I want to destroy it.
When did he say that?
Oh, it was like in like a few years back now.
But why did you say it?
What was the context?
I think it was just about the way in which the UFO community has, you know, been misrepresenting the phenomena and, like, the confusing spaghetti junction of narratives and he just kind of, I want to put a hard reset.
Doesn't that kind of actually make sense to say?
Does he, does he know things?
You don't think he knows things?
What does he know?
I don't know.
Exactly, right?
They all know something, but none of them can tell us, and they all knew it from someone else, and someone else told them, and they knew it, and they know this.
And, like, dude, I was so in love of all of this.
You have to understand that I was truly, I was a believer.
I was like, this is amazing.
I had my orb experiences, so I had a bias already.
I was like, I'm ready to believe in whatever you're saying.
It took me a while to start actually realizing that this is not going in a direction.
I think it should be going in that there's a heavily curated narrative.
And if you try and question the narrative, you will be punished by group think.
It felt like, honestly, I started to feel like I was in a COVID cult for UFOology,
where you just can't talk about Louis Luzondo in a bad light,
regardless of the fact that this man has gone on stage
and presented literal fake UFO photos to the public
which have been debunked in less than 24 hours
and he had to admit that they were fake
because of the debunks
but people are just happy to forget these things happened
like he went up in a congressional setting
and held up a UFO photo
that was proven to just be fields
like agricultural fields
yes this is a fake
that's not a shadow
that's a darker field next to
the lighter field. These are two circles. And this was proven. He had to admit it. He had to
this is in a congressional setting. This man apparently ran the advanced aerospace threat
identification program. I call bullshit. I don't believe he did because he seems like more of a
government stooge. And he feels like someone that would be sent out to do what he admits he was doing,
counterintelligence. He's a counterintelligence, counterterrorism, counter-espionage guy. I'm not a
UFO guy. I'm a counter-terrorism, counter-espionage guy. He's also one of the guys calling for amnesty, right?
Oh, how surprising.
Yeah, exactly.
Is he?
Is he?
Yeah, no, he is.
Like, you know, color me shocked.
Does he say that in the, because a lot of them do say it.
I want to make sure that he actually said that.
I don't know.
In the age of disclosed your document.
I'll be perfectly honest with you, Joe.
I haven't even fucking watched it because I'm just not interested in that element of the UFO
subjects anymore.
I've been burned by these guys.
I've had Gary Nullet emailing me like, why aren't you on the team anymore?
Why don't you like be a team player?
It's like, because you're literally telling me that I can't tell my own fucking truth.
You're censoring me and saying that I'm not being a team player just because I have questions.
What's censoring you about, what in particular?
Well, I was...
Or attempting to get you to stop talking about specifically.
Well, primarily, there seems to have been a bit of an issue with the way that I've been talking about Lou and his association with ATIP.
Because I think that ATIP was actually a cutout.
It wasn't a real program, and it was a cutout that was actually created for Two the Stars Academy.
And Orsap, which was more of a kind of, you know, precursor program, wasn't being run by Liu Elizondo.
That's the advanced weapon application space program.
I forgot the actual acronym now, Orsap.
ATIP is meant to be Luz, and I just think that, well, I have to be careful,
but a very prominent journalist in the UFO community literally told me that Lou told him that
this was all created for To the Stars Academy as like a way to, you know, generate an understandable structure.
Here's this guy.
He's, you know, running ATIP.
I have an issue with the idea that someone like Lua Lazzondo can,
go to the New York Times and say that the Secretary of Defense wasn't being briefed on UFOs,
and I'm the one that was running a program when people like Julian Assange and Edward Snowden
are being thrown to the wolves for just revealing standard national security issues.
This is meant to be even deeper, right?
It's a black, black budget.
This guy can just roll out to New York Times.
Seems a little bit planned.
Seems a little bit curated and forced.
So I started asking those questions, and especially when things like this were happening where
there were discrepancies, where he's bringing up images that are being debunked.
It was like, who is this guy?
You know, who is this guy, really?
And then his book comes out, and he's talking about being the torture czar in Guantanamo Bay.
And, you know, the people there called him the Darth Vader of the United States.
He's in his book.
You know, he admitted they called him the Torture Tsar of Guantanamo Bay.
Because, you know, he ran Camp Platinum at Guantanamo Bay, Black Sight, CIA Black Sight.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So, you know, he actually had in his book that he was known as the Darth Vader of the United States by certain people and the tortures are.
of Guantanamo Bay. I don't really trust people like this who, you know, waterboarded people for a living and are now trying to tell me what's going on in the UFO subject.
Let's ask this question. What purpose would there be to muddy the narrative? If you wanted to have a government agent come out and have what you're claiming is like a fake disclosure, like a government narrated disclosure, what would be the purpose of that?
What are they all asking for, Joe?
Money?
Amnesty.
Amnesty.
Amnesty.
And what was happening before that is you had someone like Stephen Greer just saying,
these people need to go to jail.
And that was the only big voice in the UFO community prior to Tom Donovan.
Maybe they're offering a window to possible disclosure, though.
Maybe.
If we give them this fucking amnesty.
If we don't, what happens?
Nothing.
It keeps going the same way.
It's been going.
There's no actual disclosure.
We keep talking about it.
It gets nuts.
It gets to the point where it's driving you crazy.
Like, I don't even want to have.
hear about any fucking UFOs until you show me one. But if it's a real subject and the only
thing that's keeping us from learning this real subject is that. And so they're trying to push out
this narrative of amnesty. I'll bite. What are we talking about? I think for me, again, coming
up through it and just seeing how these people actually act when you challenge them and the fact
that there were absolutely organized groups of quite frankly, quite mentally unstable people
that were very easily misled
into believing they're important
who were getting brought
into these signal chats
these private group chats
and you know I'm in touch
with Lou Elizando
I'm one of those guys
I'm being brought in
and you know they tried
to do that useful
yeah useful idiot
and like there's a lot of them
and you know
there's a few people out there
that were extremely dark individuals
like we're talking like you know
connected to all sorts
of weird Satanism groups
and Lou's just there of selfies
like hanging out of these guys
like he's a dodgy dude
I don't care
he's like you know
I'm freaked out even saying this
on the Joe Rogan
he's like
He's going to remote view my brain or something.
But at the same time, he is a dodgy guy.
Like, he's shady.
But you do believe in the existence of these things.
Dude, I've had orbs hover over my house.
Right.
Yeah, like reverse engineering.
So what you think is that there is a clear decision somewhere in our government to muddy the water and to put out this narrative that these whistleblowers are trying to tell everybody.
So to slowly trickle this stuff out there.
And then float out amnesty, which is a big part of.
the Age Disclosure documentary, really the first time.
Exactly.
I've ever heard anybody, like, where everyone uniformly talks about that one particular subject?
Yeah.
Like, I think that that's the goal is to create a curated soft disclosure that does the very
best to paint the government in the best possible light and allows them to actually kind
of not face too much punishment for what's been going on in the legacy programs.
Again, if you only had someone like Stephen Greer out there, he was offering a completely
different thing.
We need to punish these people.
Like, they are criminals.
They've ruined humanity for 100 years of stagnating technological progress.
You got a little testy with that.
Should have taken a little softer tone.
Sorry.
No, I'm saying with him.
Maybe if he did that, maybe they would have not been so defensive.
Like, fuck, they want to lock us up.
Yeah, but that's it.
That's why you...
As soon as you say, you're going to lock someone up for what they did, they're going to say,
I didn't do anything.
And they're going to keep saying that.
But that's why they got rid of him.
That's why they got rid of him.
That's why Gary Nolan, who was originally with Greer, then changed over to
Two Stars Academy, and they poached quite a few people from his team and brought him over to TTSA,
and he became a pariah.
You know, again, he says a lot of things that, quite frankly, I don't agree with, but
I just think that basically they tried to overtake the narrative and they needed government
representatives to run this.
And just, again, how they do everything.
Why would we be shocked that they do it about something this important?
Well, exactly.
Especially if there is lying to Congress, the misappropriation of funds, and for sure, some
frog for sure you're talking about a shit ton of money one thing um one thing that does interest me
though is the arv the alien reproduction vehicle the flux liner have you heard of this
you know about mark mcandelish and the alien reproduction vehicle oh well that's something you
should know if you type in arv flux liner you'll get this image right away um this is one of the
avenues that i would actually pay attention to and think okay i think something's going on here
Mark McCandlish was an aerospace illustrator for the U.S. Air Force.
That's the, yeah, so the actual...
Oh, I have seen this.
Yeah, of course you have.
It's very classic.
And that one that's blue with the writing all over it, that's what was held up at the 2001
national press conference organized by Dr. Stephen Greer.
Again, like, you know, this isn't you.
Like, to be fair to Dr. Greer, he brought like over 50 witnesses on live television
during the national press conference, and one of them was Mark McCandlish.
military illustrator who drew this sketch.
A friend of mine has a version of this framed in his house.
So do I.
I need to get one.
We need to get one for the studio, right?
You can literally get one on Etsy for like 100 bucks.
Let's fucking go.
A big one on Etsy.
But so this is important.
Mark McCandlish, he actually ended up taking his own life.
Go that.
Back to that again?
Yeah, what about it?
I want to read the heading.
It says, according to this documentary, we had this, the technology.
for faster and light travel and zero point energy for a very long time.
Let's pretend this is true.
How do we know the UAPs we sent aren't ours and more modern build?
The person who made this documentary died of an aggressive form of cancer, not long after making it.
It was quite a young man as well, documentary filmmaker who made this.
But Mark McCandlish, military illustrator, he had a friend called Brad Sorensen.
Now, Brad Sorensen was a government guy, aerospace engineer.
Lockheed Martin had quite an extensive portfolio.
And Brad Sorensen goes to his buddy one day, Mark McCandlish, and he says, I was shown something, and I want you to draw it.
I'm going to describe it to you in great detail, and I want you to create the illustration.
Brad Sorensen says that I think it was in like the 70s or like early late 60s or early 70s that he was invited to a private air show at Lockheed Martin by an individual who was a good friend of his in the military who was higher up than him and apparently this you know he didn't have the what they call the tickets the right classifications to actually get access to this private air show but his friend brought him because he had the tickets and essentially they bring him into a hangar in Lockheed
where three large sources of varying size were hovering a few feet off of the ground.
They were described as instantaneous nuclear payload delivery systems.
That's the way that they were actually classifying them,
had a nickname for a moment, instantaneous nuclear payload delivery systems.
Like the idea that you could just instantaneously deliver a nuclear payload to anywhere in the world.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Which is, again, one of the reasons why they might keep this stuff secret.
The ships were nicknamed Mama Bear, Baby Bear and Papa Bear.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
What's really interesting about this is that Brad Sorensen has never gone public.
But I was in the room when he was phoned.
And I've heard him say things that have never been on the record before.
No one's ever contacted Brad Sorenson.
Mark McCandlish took his own life a number of years ago.
His closest friends would say that that was not anything untoward.
It's hard to know. I didn't know the man. All I know is this is the man that produced an incredibly
profound illustration and then eventually took his own life. But his friend, Brad Sorensen,
has never gone public, ever, never. I've got quite a few contacts now because of my research
and, you know, affiliations that I've managed to gain with people in like the US Navy and, you know,
Intel. And a good friend of mine who was able to actually find his number and get in touch
with Brad Sorenson. I was present when he was phoned. And, you know, my friend
introduces himself to him and he'd never spoken to him before and they were just
talking shop first of all he said that he wanted to reach out to him because he'd heard about him
through various stories online but you know anyway to cut the long story short he asked him
my friend asked him about mark mccandlish in this alien reproduction vehicle and brad
sorenson went off on quite a diatribe actually very angry about mark and how he said that
I gave this man the keys to the kingdom, and he went out and told the whole fucking world.
And I will never do that because my employers will fry me.
He said, they will fucking fry me if I speak out about this.
But I am capable of building and designing an aircraft that can go 210 times a speed of light.
Yeah, he reiterated that multiple times.
What?
Yeah, I...
What year was this?
I've sat on this for a couple of years.
It's about two years ago that my friend found him.
Yeah, I would...
Instantaneous nuclear payload delivery.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, you can imagine that's how the national security system would actually look at this.
Not as an exploratory vessel, but let's be honest, what is this?
It's a payload delivery system that's instantaneous.
Let's be honest.
That's what they would look at it as, right?
Another reason to keep it secret probably.
Oh, shit.
But that was, you know, I would love to get him on record.
I don't know if he ever will.
Brad, if you're listening to this, I would like to get you on record.
But he, yeah, he said that.
He said that he can design a craft that goes 210 times a speed of light.
And this is the guy that gave Mark McCandlish the illustrations to create that ARV.
So it's weird.
I mean, it's weird, dude.
This is the real question.
What would civilization be like had this stuff not been kept secret?
Right.
What, what, what, if we had access that that kind of energy, whatever that thing is operating on.
Could you imagine if you had access to that energy and you're watching all these idiots burn coal?
I know.
What are you doing?
What are you doing?
But you can't say anything.
Yeah.
Because you have a instantaneous.
I would, I would hate.
I would hate to be these people.
I'd hate to be these people.
It's crazy.
Imagine sitting there knowing that we have access to these kind of technologies.
Also like this desire to tell people.
Yeah.
It's really important to humanity.
They can't all be complete sociopaths.
Maybe they do.
Like they screen them for that reason.
you know what I mean like they have to be a certain personality type and give a fuck about humanity
I think honestly I think at highest levels of these especially these military corporations I think
you just have to become that anyway yeah yeah by force of nature yeah we're gonna kill a hundred
thousand people today yeah exactly I mean how emotionally attached can you possibly be in that kind
of be task oriented position so you know the yeah the ARV is a provocative one for me and
to be honest I think a lot of this I mean it's called the ARV the alien reproductive
vehicle. And maybe we have had alien crashed vehicles, but I'm more tempted to believe that
Nikola Tesla's work was taken by the US government. John G. Trump, Trump's uncle from MIT
was the one that actually oversaw all of that. You know that? Yeah. Yeah, he actually looked
at all that. You know, he found a correspondence between Nikola Tesla and British and Russian
royalty, like the high top levels of Britain-Russian royalty, about them acquiring a super weapon
of incredible power. There's a video I actually posted it on X of John
Trump, a vintage video of him talking about coming across these correspondent letters that he never found the true method of the secret weapon or what it was, but there was correspondence between the king and Russian czars about acquiring it from Nikola Tesla.
So I think that they took things from Tesla. His electromagnetism studies, I think people like T-Towns and Brown, you know, these original ideas of being able to use field induction to create positive lift.
This is something that was being looked at by humans.
You don't need to invoke flying sources crashing from Alpha Centauri for that.
Maybe it happened, but I would be more on the line that we've done it ourselves.
We've done it ourselves.
Yeah, some of it.
The Cold War happened, Cold War paranoia, and we've never got rid of it.
All the iron walls came up around that.
And it's a case of how do we kind of get rid of all this legacy program, you know, stoving and stovepiping
because of Cold War paranoia.
It's too late now because we're in 2025, and you've got to try and tell us that you've got
zero point energy.
You know, we've been flying around in fucking Wright Brothers planes for 100 years and shit.
Like, are you kidding me?
Like, it's not going to go down well.
So amnesty, right?
Yeah.
Amnesty.
Fuck, it might be the only way.
It might be the only way.
And if it is the only way, that's fine.
But like I said, I do have...
It sucks that they're not going to get punished for crimes, but so what.
So what.
At least we are not being punished by being withheld.
Exactly.
Information being withheld that I think would change the course of humanity in probably a fantastic
way.
But I do feel, I feel like the world.
have to become a more heavily controlled place for these types of technologies to come
out. Do you know what I mean?
I was trying to wrap this up on a high note. Digital ID coming up.
Well, this is all I'm saying, like, you know, the control structures around something
like free energy would have to be quite profound because of the things we were saying about
some psycho with a ZPE device.
Exactly.
So like what just happened in Bondi Beach in Australia. Imagine if you have access
to that, if everybody has access to that, especially off the internet, you figure out how design
one, it's not that hard.
The world will have to become a more restrictive place for these things to come up.
for public benefit. Now people are going to think you're a fed for saying that.
Listen, man, I really enjoyed this conversation. It was a lot of fun.
It's been real good. And your content is excellent.
Thank you so much.
So please tell everybody how they can watch more your stuff.
Yeah, I've got a terrible business acumen. So I just have two channels.
Project Unity on YouTube and the Project Unity on X. And if you want to follow me and subscribe, much appreciated.
I think that's a good model. Because it's quality stuff and it's building a following, just literally based on being good.
For real.
So thank you, brother.
Thank you so much, dude.
All right.
We'll do it again.
Yes.
Goodbye, everybody.
Bye, bye.
