Tin Foil Hat With Sam Tripoli - #1006: A Mega Flood And Catastrophes Cycles with the Grimerica Boys
Episode Date: July 10, 2026On the latest episode of Tin Foil Hat, The boys sit down with Darren Grimes and Graham Dunlop for a fascinating deep dive into the evidence for Earth's recurring catastrophe cycles. From mega floods, ...comet impacts, and forgotten civilizations to the mysteries of pole flips and crustal displacement, they explore whether humanity's past has been repeatedly erased by global cataclysms and what those ancient events could mean for our future. Please subscribe to the new Tin Foil Hat youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@TinFoilHatYoutube Sam Tripoli's 5th Crowd Work Special "Hero Live From Batavia" Drops May 2nd On Youtube.com/SamTripoliComedy Grab your copy of the 2nd issue of the Chaos Twins now and join the Army Of Chaos: https://bit.ly/415fDfY Check out Sam "DoomScrollin with Sam Tripoli and Midnight Mike" Every Tuesday At 4pm pst on Youtube, X Twitter, Rumble and Rokfin! Join the WolfPack at Wise Wolf Gold and Silver and start hedging your financial position by investing in precious metals now! Go to https://www.samtripoli.gold/ and use the promo code "TinFoil" and we thank Tony for supporting our show. Grab Tickets To Sam Tripoli's Live Shows At SamTripoli.com: Miami, Fl: 7/31-8/1 Lawerence, KS: 9/17-9/19 Tulsa, OK: 10/9-10/10 Dallsa, Tx: Nov 7th (TrutherCon) Austin, TX: Dec 11th-13th Please check out Word War Debate and the WordWarDebate Contenders Series: https://wordwardebate.com Please check out The Grimerica Show's internet: Website: https://grimerica.ca/ Premium: https://grimericaoutlawed.ca/ Audiobooks: https://adultbrain.ca/Audiobooks Events: https://www.instagram.com/grimericashow/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/grimericaoutlaw Please check out Sam Tripoli's internet: Linktree: https://linktr.ee/samtripoli Sam Tripoli's Stand Up Youtube Page: https://www.youtube.com/@SamTripoliComedy Sam Tripoli's Comedy Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samtripolicomedy/%20P Sam Tripoli's Podcast Clip Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samtripolispodcastclips/ Please support our sponsors: Helix Sleep: Helix is offering 20% off Sitewide, 25% off Luxe Mattresses, 30% off Elite Mattresses AND two free pillows for our listeners! Go to Helix Sleep dot com slash Tinfoil. That's helixsleep.com/tinfoil. This is their best offer yet and it won't last long! With Helix, better sleep starts now. Mint Mobile: Stop overpaying for wireless just because "that's how it's always been." Mint exists purely to fix that. Mint Mobile is here to rescue you with premium wireless plans starting at 15 bucks a month. All plans come with high-speed data and unlimited talk and text delivered on the nation's largest 5G network. If you like your money, Mint Mobile is for you. Shop plans at MINT MOBILE dot com slash tinfoil. That's MINT MOBILE dot com slash tinfoil. Home Chef: Home Chef delivers fresh ingredients and chef-designed recipes, conveniently to your doorstep to simplify your cooking experience. Users of leading meal kits have rated Home Chef #1 in quality, convenience, value, taste, AND recipe ease. For a limited time, Home Chef is offering my listeners FIFTY PERCENT OFF and free shipping for your first box PLUS free dessert for life! Go to Home Chef dot com slash TINFOIL.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Some of the mammoths came out of the permafrost with food still in their stomachs,
multiple specimens, Alaska Siberia, in Alaska and Siberia, had undigested vegetation.
So this thing, this means something hit, hit quick.
Yeah, it means it froze within hours, maybe days at the most.
So it went from being somewhere where it could eat temperate foods to freezing to death
within at most a couple of days, long enough for the food not to digest,
and fast enough for the soft tissue to preserve.
the flash when it was excavated in 1900 was so well preserved that they fed it to the dogs
tinfoil hat oh what the fuck are you guys people talking about global controls will
have to be imposed and a world governing body will be created to enforce them
welcome to tinfoil hat we go deep home boy
Eric, open your mind
Drink from the fountain of knowledge
There's lizard people everywhere
That's some interdimensional
Make up, Aaron
This is only the beginning
Dude, you just blew my mind
Are you ready to get your mind down?
All right, guys,
Welcome to Tim Fall Hat live from the Wolfpack Gold Studios.
That's right. Wolfpack Gold, Wise Wolf, Golden Silver, go to Samtriplea.
Dot Gold.
Use the promo code Timfoy and you two can get in on the press medals game for as little as $50 a month.
Very excited to have the OGs back.
It's been a while.
They've been on a show a bunch of times and it's been too long.
They're back.
They're on one of the best podcasts out there on one of the OGs of the conspiracy podcast,
the Grimeerica podcast.
Please welcome Darren Grimes and Grand Dunlop.
How are you guys?
Good Sam.
Thanks for having us back.
I know.
Weird called OGs.
Yeah,
isn't that?
Isn't that?
It's like women hate being called legends
because they're like,
that means I'm old,
but you are a legend and unfortunately old.
OGs is the same thing
because there's just so many conspiracy podcasts now,
which I'm cool with.
The more the mayor,
they can't shut us all down.
So it's always fun to meet new conspiracy theorists.
But yeah, man, you guys have been doing it for how long?
I mean, if we're almost at 10 years, you guys have to be what?
13.
13 years.
That's a long time.
Yeah, we're 14.
We just started our 14th year.
The Cougars are podcasts.
Yeah, you guys really are.
That's what they talk about.
Who are the Cougars of Conspiracies?
That will be a podcast at some point.
Someone would be like, hi, we're the Cougars of Conspiracies.
But how weird is it that so much is coming true
What we talked about? I mean we can't believe like what's happening these days all this stuff coming out
I mean so many people are
Learning about all these things all these newbies in the conspiracy world and you know so much of the stuff we've been talked about over decade like over 10 years is like just now normal and the mainstream
Yeah, yeah, I'm worried I'm getting laughed at some point I'm like okay. I got nothing good new to talk about
The weirdest thing is right now that's Tyler Robinson
before we get into that
if you guys can promote where you guys
where they can find you real quick
I want to get that out so they can definitely
follow you guys after hearing you guys on the show
pretty much everything we do is at
grammerica.ca.ca.ca.coma
podcast of 770 episodes
and gramerica outlawed.ca.ca.ca.ca.a.ca.a.a.
is our other podcast we started to stop
getting canceled from COVID and that's at
gramerica outlawed.ca.
And then we got audio books at adultbrain.ca, over 250 of them now on audible and Spotify and directly for sale by us and a lot of ones that fit into the genre.
A lot of great, you know, a lot of the all-time great old school conspiracy books and theosophy and all that sort of stuff.
And then we started developing some interactive software maps recently to help sort of visualize some of the catastrophe stuff we talk about.
and that's all available at simulation maps.com.
All right.
I'm going to make sure all the links are below and glad you guys are on again.
So this Tyler Robinson trial,
this is the hearing,
I guess it is.
I don't know what exact pre-trial.
I don't know because people are arguing over that on the internet.
But it's just very interesting to me who's on what side,
who's saying what.
You know,
I am now in a place that everything's face.
making gay. So, but if we just take a look at it, it's very weird to see people who are like
anti-COVID, anti-BLM, anti-this, and suddenly just deep-throating this whole thing as straight up,
you know, the FBI's being honest, nobody's lying. There's no, there's no subversion going on
here. And it's just like, I put out a tweet where I listed 60 cases at the FBI just
literally just shut down and killed the investigation.
Are you guys following this Tyler thing at all?
Is that the guy that,
who's not the guy who shot Charlie Kerr?
Yeah, that's the guy they say shot Charlie Kerr.
I should say, by the way, it's a preliminary, like they have to convince a judge
that there's probable cause for it to go to trial.
So that's what's going on now.
They're presenting the evidence to the judge.
Yeah.
I don't know.
This is, again, I mean, this goes back to the OG conspiracy thing.
this is part of the problem, I think,
where some of the newer people in the space
are constantly sort of blackpilled,
and it's like nothing's happening fast enough.
We talk about in the show all the time,
about how even people in our space are, you know,
bitching at Trump and bitching at RFK,
and not that we're supporting those guys.
We don't really trust anybody.
But for us to be doing this for almost 15 years
and see the stuff that's on Fox News and CNN
and the mainstream media,
and that's getting discussed
at White House press conferences and in the Oval Office,
like five years ago, that stuff was all third rail.
There was no chance.
I mean, we've been pushing back on childhood vaccines,
been canceled for pushing back on childhood vaccines a decade ago
before anyone else really knew what the fuck vaccines were.
We were already getting canceled for fighting against vaccines.
So now to see, like, you know,
I would have said when I first started pushing back against childhood vaccines,
that the chance that anything could ever even remotely start to change in that sector was zero percent.
The best you could do is not vaccinate your kids and hope that you could eke through the system
and the school system, whatever other systems you had to get through without having those vaccinations.
Some places are easier than others.
And now we're at a place where it seems like everything is on the table.
And I think it's really too soon to tell how much is on the table.
Yeah, I do find that intro.
I do find that people don't want to admit maybe we've been, we've made some progress.
I think people will always be like, well, that's part of their plan.
Yeah, totally.
You know, that's the plan, dude.
They make us think of winning.
It's not happening fast enough.
Yeah, it's interesting to me because I say this all the time, like, try to throw a birthday party, dude, and see how it goes.
You know, it's like if it stays on track the way you want.
wanted it to. And now you have people on a global level trying to control Earth. Like, good fucking luck.
And the craziest story is this thing about Klaus Schwab found out he's getting like fucking
bugged and spied on and now he's freaking the fuck out. And I'm like, oh my God, you're the guy
that wants us to own nothing. And now you're upset when your own rules get used against you.
It's such an interesting time. What is real? What is not real? That is the true battle.
And I try to keep, I tried to mention was our trips, sorry to interrupt you.
I forgot to mention we did these trips all over the place at contact at thecabin.com.
And that's kind of the perfect example.
I mean, we've got to the point where we've got a whole managing team that's meeting for weeks and weeks and sometimes months and months before we throw these events.
And we've done a bunch of them.
It's not like it's our first rodeo.
We've done, you know, almost 20 trips with Randall Carlson and other people.
and it's still like you can make all the plans you want.
And we're talking about trying to manage 35 or 40 people.
Adults too, not kids, adults, 35 to 40 adults.
And it's always just like a nightmare.
And I'm not going to get into specifics,
but we just like did this other,
just finished another event where it's like just like a weird little logistical
thing that we didn't think of that you assume would never be a problem.
And all of a sudden it's just a problem at the event
when we've been doing it forever.
And it's just like whatever,
I couldn't imagine trying to manage
thousands. I couldn't imagine it. I mean,
there's, you can see how it's a shit show.
But I'm sure there's done, not to say
there's not tons of people trying and pulling off different
aspects of it at all times, but it is a
shit show that is just filled to the brim with human
incompetence and emotion and everything at sort of every
step of the way. And it's, but getting,
getting back to the Tyler Robinson,
example. Like I, what I try to do with these things now is just like detach a little bit from
thinking I know what happened. Because you can say I think these things didn't happen or I don't
think this is true. That's a lot easier than saying this is what happened. So I try and just absorb
most of the stuff coming in. But something like that, I don't even really want to. It takes so much
effort just to keep up to date with one of these events. I mean, there's multitude of them happening
all the time. It's like, how much time do you spend keeping up to date on that one thing? It's, it's a
It's weird choices that have to be made now.
I'm okay to say, and I don't know what happened.
I don't believe what they're saying.
I just don't know.
And it's good to just listen to a bunch of people about it
because everyone's got sort of something to add to it
or a little bit of expertise to add to it.
I mean, it is crazy to think that 30-odd six round did that.
It's almost impossible.
I won't say it's impossible because you could dial down.
I mean, if you're packing your own rounds,
if you're making your own ammo,
which I know a ton of dudes that do.
It's not,
you know,
out of the realm of possibility.
How many of them are furries?
Holy shit.
That makes...
But out of 20 guys I hunt with,
you know,
five of them do their own rounds.
Because like if you're starting to shoot,
if you're like shooting a thousand yards plus,
you can't just go buy ammo off the shelf
because it's this factory ammo.
Some of them is better than others.
That's why they charge so much for some of it.
But to a man,
if you get to a guy that's shooting regularly over a,
thousand yards and hitting stuff, they're almost all of them are going to be packing their own
bullets. So they're going to know exactly how much gunpowders in it. So all that to say,
there is a way that you can dial down the gunpowder in a 30 out six if you're packing your
own round to have it have a little less punch and pull that off. Someone packed it for him,
though. Someone packed it for him. There's no way that kid is packing his own bullets.
Well, that's that's the other thing. I mean, he's pretty young to have the level of expertise.
so be involved to be back in that sort of ammunition.
The guys that I know that are doing at a high level
or, you know, have been doing it forever
because it's not something you watch a YouTube video.
It's like by gun.
It's by, you know, it's your gun.
It takes it, you know, they seem like they're all the same.
They're not different guns.
They're going to take a little more gunpowder, a little.
It sort of varies a little bit.
So, I mean, the chances, so I won't say it's impossible
that a 30-od six went into his neck
and didn't come out the other side.
It's possible.
but it is extremely unlikely.
Well, it's also when you say he's got bones of steel,
and then the next day a Tyler Robinson picture comes out
and he's standing in front of Superman display.
I mean, it's just everything is just witchcraft, dog.
It's just witchcraft.
We're dealing with sorcerers.
But here's the thing.
Do you think, I like thinking of like the higher level stuff.
Like, do you think that whoever planned this and whoever,
pulled it off, whatever the answer to that is, did they, did they, um, foresaw the,
how bad the left was at celebrating this? I mean, it really did expose. Like, I like the fact
that it just exposed a whole portion of the culture war. It's like, all right, we know who
sort of advocates for the violence and who wants the violence. Yeah, it's very crazy that the side
that's always like, just love, just love. And then they're like, the quickest,
is the violence. And the only reason they get away with violence is because the right
doesn't want, they want peace and calm, right? You know, we could have this Patriot front,
which is the most organized, choreographed, best outfits, possible, organic movement
I've ever seen in my life. Like, you guys are throwing these events, imagine if everyone
showed up in khakis. Like, how would that fucking happen?
without a coordination, without somebody behind, you know, even when we get the Southern Poverty
Law Center being busted, not only funding Nazis, but banging Nazis, this chick is literally
banging Nazis, right? It's like so crazy to me. It's like, you couldn't write this movie. People
be like, this makes no sense. So we have this story coming out. And then people just want to believe
in all this stuff. But if you really watch like the right, the right, the
Christians, they don't want violence.
They're actually like, dude, can we all just chill?
Can we just be cool?
Like, do what?
Most of them are like, whatever you want to do in your house,
we're going to just succeed that.
We're just going to give you that.
Do whatever you want in your house.
Just, you know, in the food core of the mall, okay?
Just everybody chill.
Just everybody chill.
We don't need to know if you're a furry.
When I'm at Jamba Juice, I don't need to know that you're a furry.
Nobody cares. Just do your own fucking thing.
But it is, it is, it has shown that these people that, you know, that are constantly talking about love are quick to violence.
And it's going to get to the point at some, because their whole thing is they just want martial law.
That's all they want.
They want martial law.
They want us to completely just devolve into chaos so they can come in with a head.
heavy hand. And all these people are useful idiots. They're just useful idiots. And going back to this
Tyler Robinson thing, if you study conspiracy, and it's very important that you study conspiracy,
because if you study the history of conspiracy, you see the playbook being played over and over and
over again. To the point you go, this seems fishy to me. It's just,
weird it's you know the camera oh the camera the one can the camera that would show you what
this cop saw when he went on the roof suddenly dies i mean like the odds of that happening are
absolutely fucking ridiculous oh you know he only recorded 34 or 40 or 30 minutes out of his
11 hour shift yeah i mean it's like absolutely ridiculous dude
that didn't like a turning point take down some cameras right away too and had them out of
there for a bit, then gave them back.
So they take a hard drive, right?
They take the hard drive and they had the core a disc,
which means they transferred it.
Like, how is that chain of custody?
And everyone's like,
and not only that, why would that be like,
well, how is that on your priority list when this is going down?
Like, if you're out with your buddies and one of them gets shot,
are you going to be thinking about any cameras?
Yeah. Yeah, you're grabbing a point.
Well, to be fair, that the security team should have protocols in those types of instances.
I mean, they should have protocols to follow.
Yeah, to destroy all the evidence.
Yeah, dude. Protocol one. Call a fucking cement company to come and lay the shit down.
Yeah, what they call it, a paver emergency. That's what the guy, the guy that got called said that he was called and told for the first time in his career that there was a paver emergency.
and I needed to call all his paver buddies to go out there and cover up the scene of the crime.
I just imagine that call was boys, today's the day.
We got us a pavor emergency.
Finally.
So who was it then?
Who was it?
I mean, listen, if you're asking me, based on just studying everything,
it's really hard for me not to believe the microphone isn't involved.
when all these people that are going,
it's a furry.
It's so stupid.
We're the same people celebrating the Lebanon,
uh,
pager attacks as this most brilliant intelligence,
you know,
operation they've ever seen in their life.
They're like, it's just,
I mean, dude,
they just got those terrorists.
I mean,
I'm like, oh,
the terrorists who are in their own houses,
on their own land,
in their own country,
got those terrorists,
you know,
not to get too much into that.
But it's like,
yourself and I will go on all these podcasts and be like dude you got watch yourself because
if they can do it to them they can do it to you oh yeah it was just we were talking about the
roadcasters like the roadcasters have the roadcasters oh yeah oh yeah they get all the podcasters
at once you know all the roadcasters we're all using the same right there's like you could pick
like a half a dozen mics in the podcast community and the roadcasters or the like the yeties
there's just a few little peak devices the little dGI things i mean everyone's always got a
clipped right there too right 100% dude did they paint it up because of the uh explosive residue right
supposedly if it exploded something should have landed on the on the concrete or on the lot and then
that's what they're trying to get rid of no well that's i mean uh i think it's called i think it's evidence
no yeah but that's what i'm saying if if if the road if the mic was a bomb wouldn't the bomb
leave some residue left over on the floor get that maybe yeah and that's how they found out
Forensic stuff totally
I mean even like the 9-11 playbook
Right those towers come down and they're just like
Loading out dump loads of stuff
100% dude
It needs to go right now
Or when like McCaffey's
Kill Switch gets taken down in Florida when they blow up
That whole condo building in Florida remember that one that just collapsed out of the blue
Yeah
That was the rumor is that's where John McAfee had his kill switch
Yes dude that's the only time
In American history
That the IDF was brought
brought in to deal with the cleanup.
Unbelievable, dude.
Unbelievable.
And it's just watching these people that don't study this stuff
just put their entire credibility and brand into this thing that we've seen
happen for decades, dude.
And you try to warn them going, I would hold off on this.
And they're just juggernaut.
They put their head down and run as fast as they can into this wall, dude.
and it's crazy to me.
So I know we didn't want to get into that,
but it's just crazy time
because you are talking about how like,
I don't, like,
I don't know what winning looks like to people.
You know, and again,
this gets into things with Trump.
And, you know, we obviously,
whatever this war is,
and I don't even know if it's a real war.
I mean, I'm just being honest.
I don't even know if it's a real war.
It's just like we will,
I mean, like Trump seems to be 27 and no,
against Iran. It's like this crazy
fucking record he has of winning
and then stopping them winning again.
Again, he did say we would be sick of winning.
So we finally, the 35th time,
I think we're sick.
Well, I mean, I'd like to mention something
about that because this is something I get in shit
on all the time and I have a bit of a
contrarian view. But no, no, no, no, but
the West is getting destroyed from within and without. I mean,
you guys are in America. It's a bit different for you guys.
but in Canada, the UK, you guys have heard all the news, the EU, like we're being destroyed.
Like it's not like five, ten, fifteen years we're gone if things don't change.
And things don't look like they have an opportunity to change.
In Canada, there is no path out of where we're going.
So I'm trying not to be blackpilled about it, but it does seem like the USA and Trump
and his team is the only bulwark against the destruction of the West.
Now, the West sometimes I think, well, it kind of needs to be destroyed, but not in that way
that we're not in the way that it's happening, right?
we want to reset in some ways
but to me
that he's the only one that's doing anything
about the destruction of the West
and nobody else is even coming
close in the UK or Canada
or like we're toast
so you guys have your own issues down there
but I still I still think
that our number one
enemy right now is being
attacked and you're going to hold
the guy who's attacking him his arms
behind his back I mean that's what I feel like
it's happening right now everybody has turned on
on Trump. And I don't support him for everything. I hate a lot of the stuff he's done. No, 100%. I love a lot of
stuff he's done. I'm kind of just have a, you know, an un-emped, just a very sort of neutral view.
I try to have a neutral view on it. But what I see happening, there's no solutions in these countries
right now. He's the only one that's making moves towards ending this. I would tell you that, you know,
if you think a president is all good and a president is done nothing,
wrong, then you've been brainwashed, right? Like this, this deep throating of Obama is absolutely
hilarious to me when you, like, you know, you can have this guy commenting on slavery, why he caused
slavery, you know, he did something, in my humble opinion, worse than Watergate. And the way they're
like, oh, someone said, you know, because they had a UFC fight at the White House. Someone's like,
you know, Obama should go back in and have a barbecue. I'm like, well, he did spend $65,000
on pizza and hot dogs.
I mean, that's kind of close to that.
But you're right.
There are, I mean, like, again,
I've expressed before there's things I don't like Trump,
that Trump does, but there's things that whether you want to give them credit for
or not are talked about right now.
And one is Epstein, two is the control of Zionism on our country.
How fucking desperate the, the,
Democrat, socialist, communist people are, how corrupt California is.
Like all this stuff's coming out, whether he's, I think he's a chaos magician.
And some of that's good, some of that's bad.
I do find his humor absolutely amazing.
Sometimes he says retarded shit, but I'm okay with that.
I mean, I get it.
Is it perfect?
No.
I mean, do we have boots on the ground in Iran?
No, not yet.
I believe, I mean, if they do do that, that would violate this kind of this occult rule that
they have where they have to get our permission to do anything big.
That seems like a big violation of it.
But again, like there are things I like.
Now, everyone flipping out about all this crypto and corruption and this polymarket corruption,
and they're like, look at Trump's 10 times worse.
I'm like, the only reason those guys didn't do it, but Biden, because it wasn't around.
Like, and, you know, you don't think Obama would have a crypto coin just fucking stacking.
Okay.
And if you're upset about the crypto shit, just know Biden did do that.
It was called FTX.
And he would send money to the Ukraine, the Ukraine turnaround buy FTX coins.
And then that fucking weirdo would just give money to the Democrats and one Republican.
So he was doing that.
It was 100% doing that.
And maybe it's going to cause some attention, more attention than, than,
than in the past to get to fix some of this stuff.
I mean, maybe finally this kind of stuff will get fixed.
I mean, Carney's,
carney in Canada has got Brookfield.
He's fucking funneling shit to Brookfield constantly, too,
contracts and all kinds of stuff,
ends up back in Brookfield.
I mean, it's happening all over the place.
But maybe this is what we need to get some attention on it.
I don't like that either.
I mean,
I think that's, you know,
frustrating to hear that the family,
because a lot of it's not in his name,
but the family's companies and stuff
are benefiting from these,
these cryptos.
But I mean, there's still all kinds of just the corruption, the doge, the declassification of records, UFOs, fucking plasma fusion, weaponry, like, you know, all kinds of stuff that, man, we can't believe we're being talked about now at the highest levels.
Yeah, I would agree with that.
So I know you guys wanted to come on and talk about some things.
So I wanted to get into that.
You wanted to talk about some catastrophic cycles.
I think that's important shit right now.
Like people just have no clue of cycles,
especially when comes to Earth and what's going on here.
And everyone's like, it's the hottest time ever.
I'm like, well, if you actually study history,
humans flourish when it gets warmer.
We flourish.
You guys, nobody's moving to North Dakota.
Everyone's moving to Florida and California.
You like it when it's warmer.
Like, what are we fucking doing here?
But where do you guys want to start with that?
Yeah, Darren's got a presentation there.
Yeah, I mean, the cathedrals will build.
We're built in the medieval warm period.
You know, that's one of the things kind of Randall talks about a lot is these old cycles of climate.
And you can see how we flourish or we don't during them.
But yeah, Darren will pull something up there.
He's done an amazing kind of presentation on, it's kind of a new spin on the Adam and Eve,
the thing that the CIA censored, the cataclysm book that the CIA censored.
And then also some of the stuff from other researchers that we've been talking to.
I don't know how the
The share works
How the share works in Zoom
Guys, you know
You spend most of your life sleeping
Your mattress is really important
And that's why we love Helix sleep
Okay
Helix mattresses
I slept on him forever
They're absolutely blessing
Clouds
Love it's like incredible how great it is
And they can make it just personalized
for you. You go on the website.
You want to take a quick quiz
and they'll hook you up. Dude, I've told
you before and I'll tell you it again.
I love the Midnight Lux.
Fire, dude.
Exactly what my test
told me. Johnny, you look more like a
Twilight Lux. No, no, I went
with the Midnight Lux also. No, you did, dude?
That's amazing. They're
high quality. They're durable.
Okay. They make
I'm telling you, you're going to see
your sleep improve.
move, okay? It's really easy.
I will say, okay, you want to hear something?
My family is visiting this week, and I,
because the bed we have from Helix
is the king size bed,
I gave it to my sister
and my nephew so they could have more room.
And I've been sleeping on not
our older mattress, not a Helix mattress,
and it sucks so much. It was like going back to the stone age.
It's like sleeping on, it's like sleeping
in a cave sleeping on this other mattress. Johnny, listen, dude, that is so nice to you. Listen,
it doesn't stop there with being comfortable, okay? Free shipping, seamless delivery. Helix delivers
your mattress right to your door with free shipping in US. They got 120, they have 120 night sleep
trial and limited lifetime warranty. The happy with Helix guarantee, rest easy with seamless
returns and exchanges. The happy with Helix guarantee offers risk-free customer
first experience designed to ensure
you're completely satisfied
with your new mattress.
It's award-winning. Helix is the most
award-winning mattress brand.
Tested and reviewed by experts
like Forbes and Wired. So here's
what you do. You go to
go to helixleep.com
slash tinfoil, okay, for
dude, you're going to love this, guys.
20% off site wide.
That's why. 25% off
Lux mattresses.
Whoa, 30% off
Elite mattresses. It's their TBC, prime time sale.
So go to HelixSleep.com for their prime time sale.
Make sure you enter our show name, okay, at checkout so they know we sent you.
That's helixleep.com slash Tim Foll.
And we thank them for sponsoring the show.
Hey, guys, listen, I want to tell you about our good friends at Mint Mobile.
There are things in life you don't want to be transparent.
like your swimsuit or your search history.
But when it comes to your wireless bill, transparency is everything.
That's why Mint Mobile's wireless plans have no gimmicks and no gotcha.
Just high speed data, reliable coverage on T-Mobile 5G network.
And right now, all plans are $15 per month.
Even unlimited.
Bang BangPowl.
Mint Mobile took what's wrong with wireless and made it right with premium wireless for $15 a month.
All plans come with high-speed.
data, unlimited talk and text delivered on the nation's largest 5G network.
You can even bring your own current phone and phone number.
Thank you.
Choose from 3, 6 or 12 month plans and say goodbye the monthly bills.
Dig high price wireless with MintMobil.
It's so easy.
Sign up online and get three months of premium wireless service for 15 bucks a month.
To get your new wireless plan for 15 bucks a month, go to mintmobile.com slash
tinfoil. That's mintmobile.com slash tinfoil.
Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month on mintmobile.com slash tinfoil.
That's it.
Up front payment of $45 for three months, $90 for six months, or $180 for 12 months.
Plan required $15 month equivalent.
Taxes and fees extra.
Initial plan term only greater than 50 gigabytes slow when the network is busy,
including up to 20 gigabyte hotspot.
Capable device required.
Availability, speed.
and coverage varies.
C. Mintmobile.com.
We thank that for sponsoring the show.
So you see the Plato quote?
Yes.
There have been and will be again.
Many destructions of mankind arising out of many causes.
The greatest have been brought about by the agencies of fire and water and other lesser ones by a numeral causes.
I'm sure you guys have talked about here with Randall Carlson stuff.
I don't know.
Have you had Ben Davidson on too?
No.
He does the,
he does the sort of pole flip stuff.
So I've been just sort of putting this together.
It's just a collection of all the different slides.
I mean, I'm not going to do the whole presentation here.
It's not really the right form of it for.
But we've got different stuff like the black mat layers out playing for you guys.
Now the black mat.
Yep.
This is this layer stuff that's found all around the world.
It's a thin layer.
So this is the same sort of layer they find when the dinosaurs were killed.
but obviously the one when the dinosaurs
went extinct is a lot thicker,
a lot further down in the sediment.
This one's higher up.
Dates down to about 12,800 years ago.
And it's got nanodiams,
platinum, meridium,
all this other stuff.
That makes them think that this is from an impact
of some sort,
which Randall says, of course,
the comets impacted the ice sheet,
and this is what caused all this crazy flooding
in North America.
Then you got this also this Greenland
Platinum spike, which is
independently dated to also around
12,800 years ago.
Damn.
So what we're looking at is
what is that like just a
ice? Is that ice?
Yeah, this is in the ice course.
So they've got a sudden sharp increase in platinum
and the ice course 12,800 years ago.
This is interesting because it's like a completely sort of separate line.
This is where people that aren't looking for common impact research or anything like that,
they just sort of stumble upon this.
And the date survived.
We've got other stuff like you can just look at the Colorado River.
You can see I got the arrow down here in the middle that shows how little this river is.
Yeah, look how small that river is.
When you look at the canyon around it, it's just crazy that to think,
think that this little river was able to carve you know because it's not just a slot canyon
it's also carved all these back canyons and plateaus and everything right that go on for a while
right right right right that's crazy what so your thought is what on that well this is going to be
randall sing so just for it to get contacts the if you just damned up the end of the grand canyon
and let the colorado river run it would take 212 years to fill up that hole
So if we get into the stuff Randall's talking about over here,
which is a dot impacts into the ice sheet causing catastrophic failure.
So let's just stop at this one quick.
This is Lake of Gazas.
This is,
this is in the mainstream geology.
Mainstream geology says this happened.
The glacial lake let loose and let,
let go of five sphere drops,
which is 177 million cubic feet per second of water.
This is peer-reviewed stuff.
that they say happened
from the glacial lake.
Now what Randall says is that the impacts caused it
caused the ice sheet collapse
and we're talking about enough water
to fill the canyon
and a day and a half, which is sort of
what you expect when you go back and you look again,
I got the arrow looking down here at the river
and just look at the, if you look at
how sharp these cliffs are and stuff like that,
that is just evidence of fast-moving water.
It's not something that slowly
happened over a while or you just sort of
have a nice, you know,
sort of marauding thing coming down.
And it's not just the Grand Canyon.
You got, here's the Minnesota River.
This lighter blue line.
The more
dense blue line here is,
that's the modern Minnesota River.
But where this other water is showing here,
that's where the entire canyon is
that's carved out.
And then you got Randall's here.
Up in, so this one,
here, this waterfalls five times the size of Niagara Falls.
It's not a waterfall anymore because there's no water anymore.
There's no river.
It's completely dry.
Any of this water that's left down here is just sort of left over in the coolie from the flood.
I've been here a bunch of times with Randall.
It's pretty wild to see.
So this was once the largest waterfall on earth when it wasn't submerged.
It was submerged by about 400 feet of water at its worst time.
and there's supposedly over 150 of these.
I've only been to about 30,
but there's about 150 of them in Washington
and the Washington scablands.
I was talking to Dan Richards,
Dan the D-Dunker.
Dan to the Dunker. We love him.
Yeah, I was talking to him.
He was on a trip a couple weeks ago.
We were hanging out with him.
And he said that when they damned up,
when they did the Grand Coulee Dam,
they figured they submerged another,
around 100 coolies.
So this here's a west bar.
Now I've been here as well with Randall.
There's a highway that you can't see that would be just off the north of the screen here.
The highway comes around here.
And we can park there and you can sort of see this from above and the guys can fly the drones down and take a look.
Ripple bar here.
Now it doesn't look like much here.
But when you get down in it, these ripples are about 360 feet apart, center to center.
So from the center of one of these to the center of the next one, about 350 feet.
they're 25 to 30 feet high.
And so mainstream science says that in order to form these ripples,
it's funny because this came up as a short on our Instagram
with the facts that because with the mainstream science,
not what I'm saying, not what Randall's saying,
this is what the mainstream geologists are saying,
that in order to make these ripples,
the water would have had to be in 650 feet deep
and traveling at 65 miles per hour.
We posted that on our Instagram and everyone's like,
bullshit.
So that's like
the North America, so that's where like
Randall sort of leaves it.
And now he will sort of talk about some of the other stuff.
We do get into it with them.
But his main thing is sort of North America.
And what I've been doing is sort of
dabbling into Africa a little bit here.
This is Africa.
Oh, I think Darren's
froze.
Yeah.
But he's, a lot of this is coming from,
a very long.
You're back.
You're back.
When you went to the Africa thing, which is also like mainstream.
Like this is all not, this isn't like just us, Darren making stuff up.
Like this is sort of accepted that the way Africa used to look like, right, Darren?
That's right.
I do, I do have, it's getting windy out there and I'm using a starlink up on the roof of my camper.
But, uh, you're fine.
It was just one moment.
So this is, anyway, this is what mainstream science says is a hair.
looked like, you know,
notice Lake Mega Chad in there.
Like Mega Chad, Lake Megachad, like Megaphazan.
This Lake Magachad, the biggest one, this would have been the biggest lake on Earth.
It would have been bigger than the Caspian Sea, 361,000 square kilometers.
And you can see that you got these big lakes in a nice green Africa that somehow has
disappeared.
And if we start looking into, I've got some arrows on this one.
Now, these arrows aren't just speckxed.
This is sort of based on elevation.
It's from Drake, Ital, 2011.
This is sort of, now you can see the inundation lines
in North Africa.
And this is sort of, if we follow these arrows,
this is where the elevation sends it, right?
Like we've got the water coming through here
because this is a mountain here.
This is higher here.
We've got the same thing in Africa.
We've got mountain ranges here, here, and down here.
So this is the drainage.
Now, for the stuff on the west side of Africa, it's pretty accepted that this stuff went west.
The stuff on the east side is the stuff they seem to have a harder time with.
But the thing is, we've got the Mauritania slide complex, which sort of makes it hard for them to argue because we've got sediment from the east side of Africa that ended up in this Mauritania slide complex, which I would have.
like to see Randall get in two more, but this was documented by Antibray and Crastle in 2007.
It's one of the largest submarine landslides in the entire Atlantic.
34,000 square kilometers of affected sea floor.
And so that's basically...
You're saying this is where it drops off.
Yeah, so this, this Mauritania slide complex is where they have evidence of basically
34,000 square kilometers of Africa dumping into the ocean.
It ran out 300 kilometers from the point of failure, which would have been the coastline,
300 kilometers into the ocean and three and a half kilometers down into the ocean.
And the interesting thing on it is the dating on this thing is 10 to 10.9,000 years before present.
So we're talking about the exact same time that Randall's Younger Dryas happens.
The exact same time we've got the black mat layer.
the exact same time we've got the Greenland Platinum spike.
All this stuff is the exact same time in history.
Now the mainstream mechanism for the slide in the original 2007 paper is excessive poor pressure and retrogressive failure.
Translated in a normal language, water saturated sediment on the continental slope, lost cohesion and collapsed in stages.
So that's fine.
I agree with that.
That's the physics of how it failed.
now I think what they leave out is why
where did the excess poor pressure come from
and what put 34,000 kilometers of sediment
under enough stress to fail
at the exact time in Earth's history
as the younger dryest fallout
as happening in North America
so what we're saying here is that you
that there's evidence that
Africa used to be lush
green and then something happened and now it's desert?
Yeah, exactly.
Which is, you know, I think what mainstream science says is that the like the rain, the rain system moves south.
So that's why you've got the Congo and all this area down there is nice and lush and green because the,
the Gulf Stream or whatever it is that affects the rains there move south and now it doesn't
rain up north anymore.
or it just rained south,
but I think that sort of fails to explain
why we've got 34,000 square kilometers of Africa
out in the Atlantic Ocean,
which includes 61,000 square kilometers of diatomite.
The interesting thing about diatomite is the only
the way diatomite conform is in standing freshwater
that's basically microscopic algae.
So you need a deep lake.
That's stable enough for the,
things to die for a long time because they sort of build up a layer of their dead bodies,
the dead bodies of the diatomes. So this is kind of how we know Lake Chad was there, and that's
how we know that it was stable for a long time because there's all these diatomes there. Now,
mainstream says that those all disappeared from gradual wind deflation and steady erosion.
That's crazy. Slide complex in the Atlantic is dated basically to the same pie, some same
point as the younger dryas. So the same moment in time that that lake should have been at its
maximum extent, it seems to end up in the Atlantic Ocean. Now I got a slide here that just kind
of hones in on some of the, you can see some of these floodlines here over on the north,
northeastern Africa. This is the Nile here coming up at the middle to this green here.
But you can see this sort of textbook flood striations here coming down through here.
over here is all flooded out.
Now these are receding shorelines,
which would have been from kind of slowly,
the sea slowly going back
to where it's supposed to been,
and we got some more stuff. You can sort of really see it.
Here, now this is,
this one gets interesting.
This is, so this is the Emekaso Volcanic Pass
in northern Chad.
Emikusu is a stratovolcano,
10,500 feet tall,
the highest mountain in the Sahara.
The last major eruption,
is important was between 12 and 15,000 years ago.
Okay, it depends on who's dating you use,
but all the dating from the scientists,
not for me,
is coming up between 12,000 and 15,000 years ago.
Which is right around this.
Which is before that.
That's why it's important.
It doesn't before that.
So now if you look at the markings on the desert floor around it,
we have inundation striations here.
inundation striations here
these in the geologists call those
inundation striations are cut into the rock by fast moving
water carrying sediment directional consistent
and at altitude the red bars mark between
are they sorry these red barks bars mark
2355 feet above current sea level
so that this is again this is not me saying this
this is science saying that these are in
indiation striations.
And this is saying that these inundation striations are 2350 feet above the current sea level, right?
Now you want to know the real interesting part about that?
The striations cut through the lava flows.
That means that whenever this water happened, this inundation happened after the last eruption.
The last eruption, they say was 12 to 15,000.
years ago. Okay. So this water was there 2,300 feet above sea level since then, because it's
cutting through the lava from the last eruption. So this giant event happens and it cuts through
this, this. So we know that this is 12 to 15,000 years ago that this cataclysmic event happens after
because it cuts through it. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. So you have the volcano erupt 14,000 years ago or something
like that. I argue and
others argue that the
science points to that the
striations happen now in the striations.
If the striations did, the lava's not there,
it gets hard to say this water
was there in the last 12,000 years.
Could it have been part of the same event
in a way? It probably could have been
part of the same event. Yeah, I don't think that's
I don't know enough to say that's true. I got another
Oh, he's
that's okay. This is
crazy. So this is
Chad again. That's that mountain he was talking about
highest peak. So I think that, yeah, you were, you were frozen for a bit.
It's fine. It's fine. It's okay to freeze once in a while. Yeah.
So is it connection is unstable. It's fine.
So this is showing the elevation of Chad with the water?
Yeah. And I don't have it here. I don't have a slide for it yet. But if you, like,
have you guys been following the new, the new Noah's Ark thing? They're going to send a
under earth drone down to the spot.
get the name of it starts with the D and Turkey where they think this might be.
Erarat or Mount Ararat?
It's on Ararat.
It's on one of the southern slopes of Ararat, but I think the elevation is at like 2340 feet.
So it's almost like exactly where we've got the high watermark.
Oh, that's interesting.
So they believe that it's possible that Noah's Ark is down there?
I mean, I don't know how much that's true.
I mean, I think there's something to Noah's Ark, which we'll get to in a bit here.
I think Noah's Ark is sort of part of a cycle,
but this is the Sphinx here,
which I'm showing,
because we know if you see this Sphinx face here,
I'm going to focus on the Sphinx face,
which is dated to around 2,450 BC,
which I think probably everybody in this conversation
is sort of past thinking that the pyramids were built
2,500 BC, right?
I think they're much older.
Yeah, I think we can look at the face of the Sphinx,
here and we can agree
that maybe it was made in 2,500 BC
because if we look at everything below the
face, the weathering
starts to look a lot different.
Do you think they added it?
Yeah, yeah, I think they
rebuilt the face to look. It was either
destroyed to the point that didn't know what it
looked like, but I think they remade the face
in their own sort of image.
I don't think I'm the only one that thinks that.
I think Robert Schock has said that.
I mean, he thinks the weathering is from
from rain, but my
my buddy Roger Cunningham,
who's an engineer
that spent 25 years in the Navy,
is convinced that this is karst erosion.
He's the ethical skeptic on Twitter.
People can follow him there.
But he thinks this is karst erosion
and it's his experience with water and erosion,
and I tend to believe him.
And if we look down here,
he's saying that this limestone shows
karst erosion from a...
What is karsteroge?
I see you on the slide,
it says carc carbonic acid erosion.
What does that mean?
That's basically how limestone erodes with sea level.
Karst erosion patterns.
It's carbon acid dissolution.
It's the kind of weathering you get from water, basically,
is what I'm trying to play.
Being at that level, like constantly beating at that level,
like that's where the sea level would have been beating away
at the side of the pyramid is, I think, what he's saying.
Yeah, I've got this blue line here because,
because I think that you've got this up here is carsterosia.
So you've got sea level here.
Whoa.
Now I see it.
You got sea level here for maybe 30 or 40 years.
And I think you've got a smaller band here that shows where the sea level came down.
Then it came down to here.
Then it came down to here.
Then I think as it starts getting lower, we start to see these same lines on the sphinx.
As it does the same idea as the sort of receding shoreline as the...
Whoa.
Oh, that is crazy, dude.
Like if you look at the top of pyramid, no erosion.
Well, obviously over time, it'll have some erosion.
But then there's like huge erosion at under this certain point.
Yeah, and we know that the Great Pyramid looked exactly like it did today in 1,200 BC.
That's crazy, dude.
So this is just sort of, this is not my.
The water wasn't obviously still, right?
It was obviously running.
Do you know how fast if that affects it of those?
I think, no, I think that I think the water at this point was still, because what I think
happened is we, we have an event that causes the water to move around and jostle around.
And I think just like, you know, if you jostle your bathtub or a container of water, it sort of does
it staying.
And I just think that when you're talking about the oceans and the scale of the earth and
the rotations and the gravitational forces and all that kind of stuff, I don't think
it's out of the realm of possibility to think that if you can upset this thing enough to get
the ocean's coming out and moving around,
that for it to take 40 years or 50 years for them to,
even 100 years to find their way back to where they need to be,
I don't think that's,
that's out of the realm of possibility.
This is,
again,
this is Roger Cunningham's slide.
But I think with Darren's,
I think the question is still,
actually correct,
with Darren's theory that he'll show you,
I think it's going to,
you're going to see that the water did run, right?
At some point, Darren, but then it settled, right?
Well, I had to, right, to fill up.
They had to like gush.
Yeah, yeah.
So my buddy, Roger, this is his sketch here and all his calculations.
He's a much smarter man than I am.
But what he says here is this pattern.
This pattern is a signature of standing or wave action seawater at specific heights,
repeated over enough time to leave a measurable erosion pattern.
So what he's going to argue is this is the reason the top of the pyramid looks different
than all the way down.
this part looks kind of unique to the rest of it right here because this is where the water was sort of for the longest time.
And not only that, well, the water's here.
Everything below it is sort of eroding as well.
It's eroding all the capstones on the pyramid.
And so basically he's saying that this is this is the, this was the waterline in his opinion.
He thinks that proves it.
And I'll just switch gears quick to I'm sure you guys have heard about the Alaskan mud, bone yards and that kind of stuff.
No, I haven't.
All right, so this guy's been on Rogan.
His name escapes me off the top of my head.
But it goes all the way back to the Klondike gold rush.
When they used to try and get gold,
they'd just get this high pressure water lines.
And they'd just blast the side of the cliff with water.
And it would just wash out gold or whatever.
They'd wash out stuff to check for gold.
But what they kept hitting and what kept jamming up the equipment
and what kept getting hauled away in train loads was bones.
frozen silt deposits
up to 100 feet thick across
central Alaska and the Yukon territory
over thousands of square kilometers
and packed into it in numbers
of the miners couldn't believe
were the bones of extinct ice age animals
mammoths, mastodons, bison's
horses, muscocks
saber-tooth tigers, American lions,
camels, gazelles, antelopes,
bear and sheep.
Not all Arctic animals, a lot were temperate
grassland creatures that lived in a
camel's. Yeah, that lived
in a climate that didn't exist there today.
Now, what the miners saw is that a ton of broken bones,
which are consistent with massive blast forces,
trees torn out, twisted, splintered, mixed in with the animal remains,
with volcanic ash threading through the deposits.
Animals, trees, and ash jumbled together and frozen,
not laid down gently over thousands of years,
slammed together by something fast and violent,
and then frozen so completely
that the soft tissue is still preserved enough
that the bone came out of the ground white and fresh looking.
So I'll just do a quote here from Frank Hibbon.
He's an archaeologist from New Mexico in 1946
in his book The Last Americas.
The bones of extinct animals
in unbelievable quantities and sound condition.
In some places, even,
they were an actual impediment to mining,
packed with animal
bones and debris
and train loads
can't you go to this guy's property
and like go kind of looking for his bones
yep yep exactly
he's got
he's got I think an Instagram account
if you guys track it down
put it in the show notes he's been on Rogan a few times
I think Rogan's maybe been up there
but he's got a YouTube channel and stuff
where he's got warehouses
and warehouses and warehouses
just full of this stuff
These are priciesies.
These bones are pricey too, right?
I don't think, yeah, you can sell these for a good amount of money.
Yeah, the Lonear it, I think.
Alaska Boneyard, yeah.
Some of the mammoths came out of the permafrost with food still in their stomachs,
multiple specimens.
Alaska, Siberia, in Alaska and Siberia, had undigested vegetation.
The most famous is the Berezavka mammoth in Siberia.
Vegetation still in the mouth and between the teeth.
The plants identified in the stomach.
include buttercups, sedges, grasses, bluebells, and wild beans,
summer plants, and temperate plants that the mammoths were grazing on.
So this thing, this means something hit, hit quick.
Yeah, it means it froze within hours, maybe days at the most.
So it went from being somewhere where it could eat temperate foods to freezing to death
within at most a couple of days, long enough for the food not to digest,
and fast enough for the soft tissue to preserve.
The flesh when it was excavated in 1900
was so well preserved that they fed it to the dogs.
Now, I did this presentation.
That's just the crazy shit.
Let's take this crazy artifact
and let's feed it to the dogs.
Yeah, the most expensive beef jerky
ever given the dogs.
I did the presentation.
Did they feed the animal or the grass?
No, they fed the meat of the mammoth to the slag.
Oh, my God.
crazy, dude. So, and then
I did the presentation at Serpent Mountain
buddy. That is the
crazy shit I've ever heard,
dude. That is
so fucking nuts, dude.
Goulagercull, Alexander
Solzinnichin, and he directed
me to a couple paragraphs in his
book that I went and dug up
where he's talking about when they were
working in the gulags in the
permafrost in Siberia,
they would come across frozen
streams that would still be full of fish and
lizards and they were eating them. They would eat them raw on the spot.
Amazing. That is insane, dude.
We could probably skip the Scotland stuff. I wanted to show you guys this.
So this is Vladimir Alexandrov, Janubek of.
Bro, imagine learning having a spellbag in kindergarten.
Right. So this guy, uh, in 1985, he's, he was on the Sallute 7 space station unpacking
supplies. There's a wing nut on a bolt and he spun it off in zero gravity. And it startled him.
It flew through the cabin spinning on its access and then without warning it flipped 180 degrees.
Then it flipped back again over and over with no forces acting on it.
The Soviets classified the footage for years as they thought he'd discovered something.
The Americans shouldn't see. What he'd actually observed is a theorem that had been buried in classical
mechanic textbook since the 1800s.
The intermediate axis theorem, every rigid object
has three principal axes of rotation.
Two of them are stable. The third intermediate axis,
the one between the longest and shortest,
is unstable. So this should just play that clip of this thing spinning.
Whoa.
Whoa, that is crazy.
Now I got another one.
This one's just a little slower.
That is crazy.
doing it and doing it, right?
I'm guessing it don't stop, but it doesn't stop.
It never stops.
So what we're watching here is a computer rendition of the motion of this piece,
and it's going, it's going around, round, and then the base kind of flips up,
which takes it off its normal trajectory.
Yeah, like if you throw a tennis racket up, spin a tennis racket, apparently it'll do it, too.
So it's a normal effect.
What is this mean?
well down at the base at the mantel 3,000 feet below your feet there are two of these giant LLSVPs large low sheer velocity provinces that geologists call the blobs each one's about the size of a continent though on a hundred times taller than Mount Everest together they account for six percent of the entire volume of the earth not just the cross the entire six where is it underneath uh one's underneath uh Africa
I think, and the other one's underneath the Pacific.
One's called Tuzzo, and the other is Jason.
Jason.
They sit exactly across the planet from each other.
And in the standard textbook is described as a stable configuration.
Oh, no, I know where this is going.
Oh, no.
Hey, guys, real quick, listen, we're getting busier and busier, okay?
Which makes it harder and harder to make a proper meal for you and your family.
And that's why I'm excited to tell you about our good friends.
at Home Chef America's number one home meal kit. Okay, let me tell you about Home Chef.
I'm not organized enough to be a meal prep person, but with Home Chef, my meals are on point
every time. The meals are widely impressive and so easy to make. I count on Home Chef weekly
delivery to stock my fridge and take care of my meal planning. I'm not only saving time,
but I also reduce dishes and clean up. Home Chef makes cooking
simple. Fresh food delivered, easy recipes to follow, and meals that actually taste great. No long
shopping lists, no complicated prep. And best of all, easy cleanup. I love easy cleanup.
Yeah, I love easy cleanup. Number one priority. It's perfect for busy lunches, whether you need
a 30-minute meal, an oven-ready tray, or even a quick microwave lunch. Home Chef has you covered,
and people really love it. Home Chef is rated number one by users of other meal kits for quality,
convenience, value, taste, and recipe ease.
Customers say they spend less time planning, shopping, and prepping meals.
Plus, it's affordable.
Home Chef customers save an average of $86 per month on groceries.
Home Chef takes the stress out of your week with convenient weekly deliveries to keep your fridge stocked
and eliminate meal planning and grocery runs, making it easy to eat well, save time, and enjoy
quick and delicious meals even on your busiest days.
So here, for a limited time, Home Chef is offering.
our listeners, 50% off and free shipping for your first box plus free desserts for life.
That means life, okay? Go to homechef.com slash tinfoil.
That's homechef.com slash tinfoil for 50% off your first box and free dessert for life.
That's homechef.com slash tin foil.
Must be an active subscriber to receive free dessert.
and we thank them for sponsoring the show.
So I want you to just focus on the word conditional.
The blobs balance each other like two weights on a spinning top.
As long as they stay balanced, the planet stays balanced.
But if you shift one or change the density, change the height, change the position,
you change the moment of inertia.
Mainstream geology accepts that.
Second, Tuzzo, the African blob is less dense than the Pacific one.
And it's actively rising.
mass is migrating upward
beneath Africa right now in real
time it's not a static configuration
um
so I just uh I got another
little video here that just
holy shit dude shows us this thing spinning
and now while this is spinning
I think it's worth picturing
a giant ice cap
on the bottom of it
because that's the sort of situation we have that's not showing
here is a giant ice cap
only in Antarctica it's on the bottom right
we I think we were in
position before where we had the Laurentide ice sheet on top and you had the Antarctic ice sheet on
the bottom so you can see how that sort of creates a new stable access.
You know these things on the sides and you got these other things on the top.
Something happened, which will get into my idea of what happened here in a minute, but something
happened that caused the Laurentide ice sheet to basically disappear.
But so now we've only got one right down here, the Antarctic one.
so so
these are called earth blobs
what are they called?
Yeah,
the geologists call them the blobs
they're just basically
I mean I don't know exactly what they are
but the giant chunks of mass
that are sort of forming
underneath the earth
and it almost seems like
the rotation could be kind of helping that
I don't know exactly how that works
we don't really need to get into this
this is just a breakdown of what we saw there
but I want to take a look at
I mean what I do want you to sort of
key on that the
configuration is
what physicists now call
conditionally stable
so it's conditionally stable
quick question about the blobs
is that kind of new because I mean when you
I mean you know how there's the magna the crust
never heard about the blobs
is that just
I would remember blobs in elementary
be like hey these are the blobs
these are the blobs
did it give us I thought I had a date
in there but
So this is 2015.
So yeah, I'd say newer than when we were in school.
I also did learn about the blobs.
But I also am an adult.
I haven't learned about the blobs anywhere else either.
It seems like it's just not important.
But I want to take a look at this here.
So if we just ignore this dotted red line I got here for a second.
This other red line underneath it with the dots, 2017, 2007.
That's tracking the magnetic north pole.
Now, there's also, if you go back before 1831, you can find some other dates that jump around over here.
The reason I don't use those is because those were all sort of calculated from people taking readings on other places on the earth.
They weren't sort of confirmed.
1831 is the first time that someone goes and stands there.
Ross went and stand on the spot where he can have his compass spin around so he can confirm.
physically that he's in the North Pole.
Now what I've done with my line
is just connected this sort of line
that we have here and extended out
in my opinion logical conclusion
of where it seems to be coming from.
The reason this west coast of Hudson's Bay is important
is because the west coast of Hudson's Bay,
the west side of Hudson's Bay,
was the center of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in North America,
which is now gone.
which seems weird to me that
the center of the Antarctica
ice sheet is at the South
Geographic South Pole
why would the center of the North American
ice sheet not be at the North Pole
or you know
wouldn't the thickest part of it be up further
at least like up here is the thickest part
maybe but it's not
it seems to be down here
on the west coast of Hudson's Bay
where is Hudson Bay by the way
Hudson Bay is like
just above New York
and Canada kind of
Boston. Oh, God.
Yeah, so I'm going to jump over here.
Now, geographic north, magnetic north, different things.
Supposed to be different things.
I agree they're different things.
But it just seems to me that it seems to be leaving this
and it seems to be heading almost towards
and overshooting where the North Pole is now.
Into Siberia, I think, right?
Into Siberia, yeah.
So I want to jump over now to Charles Hapgood in 1958, Harvard-trained college professor
wrote a book called Earth Shifting Crust.
The foreword for that book was written by Albert Einstein, by the way, who agreed with
Hapgood's conclusions.
He just couldn't find a mechanism for it.
In that book, Hapgood proposes what I've been sort of describing,
I haven't said yet, but that the earth can sort of, the crust can slip on the earth.
um whoa
1970 he came out with another book and sort of walked it back
and uh but the dude also spent a bunch of time in the os s
and the cia so it's hard to know
maybe why he walked it back
but i want to focus on chan thomas
because five years after half good uh before hapgood walked it back
an aerospace engineer named chan thomas
dr chan thomas
um he wasn't a fringe dude he worked at
Aerospace, worked at McDonald-Douglas, who was trusted by General Curtis LeMay, the head of
Strategic Air Command, the guy who ran the nuclear bomber fleet. In 1963, he wrote a book
called The Adam and Eve Story. In that book, he basically said that an earth crust can happen,
and it doesn't happen over centuries. It can slip within hours. He basically plays two recent shifts.
he says that there was one around 11,500 years ago
which was before pre- oh yeah okay sorry go ahead which was
which Adam and Eve so in his take Adam and Eve are the survivors of that
so the Adam and Eve story starts after this younger dryest cataclysm
oh wow and then he said that around 6,500 years ago
Noah's flood is also another remission of the
same sort of thing.
The interesting thing about this book
is that what do you think the CIA
did with it?
They promoted it and
told everybody to buy it.
Yeah, it wasn't a bestseller. Nobody really
knew about it. Just this obscure book.
The CIA classified it.
They didn't flag it, not reviewed it.
They classified it and kept it classified
for 47 years. Holy shit.
When a Freedom of Information Act
finally forced its release in 2013,
they gave back 57 pages out of 284.
So the other 184 page,
or the other 227 pages have never been released.
The rationale for classifying it in the first place has never been disclosed.
And the pages that were released were described in the CIA's own FOIA office words as sanitized.
What they released, they say they sanitized.
So we don't know what they sanitized and they kept two,
220 pages of it.
That's kind of fucking with us too.
Oh, by the way,
we sanitized it.
Yeah, exactly.
So here's just...
For your own good.
Yeah, trust us.
You want us to do this.
Here's just a couple of quotes from the release pages.
Page 13 and one quarter to one half day,
the geographic pole moves to the Taurus zone and all hell lets loose.
From page 14,
the atmosphere and oceans don't shift with the shell.
They just keep on rotating west to east, and at the equator, that speed is 1,000 miles per hour.
The winds and oceans go eastwards blowing across the face of the earth with supersonic speeds,
inundating continent with water miles deep.
And once more, the earth has shifted its 60-mile thick shell,
with the poles moving almost to the equator in a fraction of a day.
Again, the atmosphere and oceans refusing to change direction with the Earth's shell have wiped out almost all life.
now I've got some
some Genesis
stuff here
that because he kind of points to Genesis
the Genesis 7
verse 11 the day the flood started
now the verse doesn't
just say it rained it says the fountains
of the great deep were broken up
and the windows of heaven were
opened so that's
kind of his idea that
I think the Bible kind of ties into some
of this now I don't
I don't really
fully prescribed to
Hamptor's take or to
I think like
Roger, the ethical skeptic
and Ben Davidson
has a different look on it. I don't think that
so I do think that the earth is constantly
in this sort of Zanny Beckoff
balance because of all the moving parts
but I do think it is conditionally stable.
I don't I think there's too much
mass and weight and moving parts
for the earth to just flip
out of the blue. I think that, and I could be wrong, but I think that physicists could be right
when they say it's conditionally stable. What I think is that the conditions for it to become
unstable might be less than we think. And I think that, you know, Ben Davidson thinks that the
sun can do it. The sun can basically liquefy enough of the lithosphere that it lets go.
What I think is that I like to combine both of the, both of the tracks of work of those guys and
Randall Carlson because I think what's happening is that an impact from comments that I think
in the next 10 years will be proven to have happened into the North American ice sheet.
This is a comet research group.
Randall Carlson, Graham Hancock talks about this.
Everyone sort of talks about that younger dry as impact into the ice sheet in North America.
Now what I would propose is that when those comics did, comets did impact.
the Laurentide ice sheet.
That Hudson Bay, or just on the west side
of Hudson's Bay, was the North Pole.
And that
when the
when the comets impacted into the ice sheet,
they shifted it.
It was enough to shift across 2,000 to
2,500 miles south.
I think that's...
Wow.
So if we push North America south,
which kind of explains why we find
mammoth bones down submerged
under the water in the Gulf of Mexico now,
But if we push the water, if we push North America South,
then we're pushing Siberia north.
So now these mammoths that might have been down in a spot that was okay,
just got moved 2,500 miles north in an afternoon.
Plus there's impact so the sun is knocked out.
It's fucking miserable weather.
And now you're 2,500 miles north of where you want to be.
You don't have time to migrate out of it.
Because none of these animals wouldn't have migrated away before they froze to death.
if it wasn't, in my opinion, catastrophic.
So I just have a picture here.
This one on the left is what the African side of the globe would look like
if my proposed North Pole location, not just my proposed North Pole.
I don't know if you guys know.
I forget his real last name, but he goes by Mario Build Reps.
But he's released some papers.
I think they're peer-reviewed.
but there's a couple of guys
that have pointed to this Hudson's Bay
as being a previous North Pole.
So this is what it looks like
if you have Hudson's Bay
on the North Pole, this is what Africa looks like.
Now this is what Africa looks like right now.
So I just want to just kind of go back
and forth between those two.
Yeah.
And imagine this thing.
Shifts it like this.
Yeah, and then in an hour,
a few seconds, however long it takes.
But just what's going to happen?
That is crazy, dude.
While we're here, picture, so you can see these little dark marks.
Can you guys see my pointer?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So there's the Lake Magachad Basin.
Here's these.
So picture these are all lakes right here, right here, right here.
What happens to them when this thing twists counterclockwise like that in an instant?
There you go all right.
End up over here.
Which kind of matches this, I think.
Because now if we took this,
This one, we would basically rotate this down.
So this Mauritania side, this arrows would come up to here.
We shift it down to here in a second.
That's my sort of take on it.
Bro, that is not.
So this is my take on this would be your North American ice sheet.
Now what I'm saying is right now, this is, here's Hudson Bay right here.
And this is your North Pole.
This is the center of the Laurentide Ice Sheet right here in this area.
So what I would argue was the reason this became the center of the ice sheet and the
thickest part of the ice is because it was at the top of the world.
Now it's important to note that if you take a globe in your hand and you spin, it's not that far.
It's not, you know, it's a couple of thousand miles.
So if you spin that over so that my dot here is the North Pole, it doesn't change Antarctica
that much.
It kind of moves it from one side of Antarctica to the other, which I would have.
argue is why we have sort of one side of Antarctica ice sheets melting today and the other side
seems to be getting bigger.
So my thing is that basically we have our comet impact here.
It hits.
It causes all the catastrophic drainage that Randall describes because it does melt that ice.
We need to find a mechanism here.
And this is what I think the pole shift guys are missing is no matter what happened, we need to find a mechanism to melt the ice sheets.
very quickly.
When I don't think that just shifting the,
if you shift the ice sheet to the equator,
I still think it takes hundreds to thousands of years
for that ice sheet to fully melt down,
even if in the hot blazing sun,
it's not that hot for catastrophic collapse.
So what I would argue is that Randall's impacts happen.
They cause this to disengage at the same time.
This arrow here is showing the direction of the crust coming down,
and which causes the
basically the Gulf of America
to come up here
and all inundation along these coasts.
Well,
you've got blood water coming down
from the north from the impacts.
Same thing over in Africa.
Here's our pre-Africa picture again,
pre-event.
And I think you have your impact
and you basically have.
Now, because the reason that
I think you need a shift is because
if you look where my thing right here
is right around here
should be the continental
divide. So we should have evidence of half of this water going east, but we don't. We only have
evidence of it all going west. It all seems to end up west right here in the Mauritania
slide complex, up to 300 kilometers, so basically 200 miles offshore. Whatever happened was catastrophic
enough to push debris from Africa 200 miles out into the ocean. Which happens to be pretty close
to the Azores and where Atlantis was supposed to be too back then, I mean, which is interesting.
But also keep in mind that the comets that you're talking about are on cycles as well.
Like Randall always talks about the Torrid complex has got a timeline, a breakup of a giant comet 10,000 to 100,000 years ago.
So it produces annual activity, but it also like goes on these millennial timescales, like major peaks recurring every 2,500 to 3,000 years.
So some of these cometary things are coming back around and they're also on these long-term cycles.
yeah i'm i'm none of this is my work i'd say you know i just i'm just combining i've got to spend a ton of time
in the field with randall listening to him we've been talking to roger and ben and douglas vote
for years about this kind of stuff and i'm just sorry i think they're all i think they're all right
you know i think they're they've all got a piece of the puzzle which is basically all i'm
trying to do here which sounds crazy but i'll just finish up with we've got to you've got
this is doggarland this is made this is actually using my disaster map at disaster map.
At disaster map.ca where you can like you can simulate asteroid impacts or you can change the sea
level to whatever level you want. You can do nukes, that kind of stuff. But for this instance,
and this is all scientific, right? So what I did is I downloaded all of the bathymetric data on the
ocean floor and built it into the model so that when you drain the sea level, it shows you exactly
what the ocean floor would look like.
And if you raise it 30 meters, it shows you based on elevation and data points where the
water goes.
You could play with it and show what the water, how much water would take to get exactly
to your house.
But this is just doggarland.
I just bring it up because this isn't catastrophism.
This is just common sense, right?
This is England on the left.
Netherlands over here on the right.
This whole area, which is now the English Channel, in the last 12,000.
years, had people 12,000 years ago, you could walk from here to there, and by 8,000 years ago,
it was completely submerged. There's river channels carved into the seafloor, and we get human DNA
from the bones that these like dredgers in the channel are constantly still pulling up today.
That's just kind of to show that submerging giant continents of land sort of happened in the same
time scheme. We have the sunderland here. Because what happened,
It was when the ice sheet collapsed, everyone agrees that the water came up 400 feet.
Damn, dude.
And you can just set the map for that parameter, and it just shows you can scroll around the whole world and see where the water was with 400 less feet of water and or all the land that was exposed, you know, between Australia and Papua New Guinea, Sundaland, Indonesia.
Yeah, it's now under 200 feet of water.
And even the Persian Gulf is just a river.
Like it wasn't a golf.
Oh my God.
So I'll leave with this.
Every culture that survived this thing remembers it.
The Hebrews remembered Noah,
a family who survived by building a vessel
and repopulated the world from a single bloodline.
They also remember Adam and Eve,
the first humans cast it of paradise into a harsher world,
made to till the ground and made to suffer for survival.
The Mesopotamians,
I mean, that verse really,
there just things of like if that culture suddenly got shifted north from being somewhere
near the equator where the fruits just falling off the trees and all of a sudden this post
cataclysm world.
I think that's what the metaphor of leaving the Garden of Eden is.
The Mesopotamians older than the Hebrews, remember, Houdna Pishdam, yeah.
Upenipisham, the same story.
A man who survived the delusion of boat and was given immortality for it.
the Greeks remember Decalion and Pura, same flood, same survivors, same vessel.
The Hymdues remember Manu, warned by the divine, builds a ship and survives and repopulates.
The Aztecs remember Coxcocks, the Maya have their own version, the Inca, the Inuit,
six Americans, and six independent oral traditions from languages that have no historical contact with each other
and cultures separated by oceans and millennia.
The same story.
A small group survives a world-ending catastrophe
involving water and fire, the Hopi's.
They carry the memory forward.
The story becomes scripture.
The scripture becomes myth.
The myth becomes folklore.
The folklore becomes a children's bedtime story.
Somewhere along the way, we forget that it all actually happened.
The official explanation for why every culture on Earth
tells the same flood story is that they,
all invented it independently by coincidence.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The geological record we looked at tells a different story, I think.
The Mauritania slide is real.
The drowned Texas shelf is real.
35 extinct mammal genre on North America is real.
Black mat layer is real.
Doggerland is real.
The younger dryest impact proxies are real.
The Fountains of the Great Deep written down 3,000 years ago.
Those words were chosen carefully by people who knew what they meant.
They weren't metaphors.
They were memories.
I could just finish that presentation by saying I did release a little book called Adam and Eve in The Great Reset.
It has all 57 pages that were declassified by the CIA in it.
And then the second half of the book has Ben Davidson stuff, ethical skeptic stuff.
It's just sort of got five or six different versions.
of what could have happened.
What I don't get to in the book,
of course, what I'm working on now is
because I don't think
all those guys have two good points
for them all to be completely wrong.
So what I'm trying to do now
is pull apart
the parts of each
one that are
correct and try and,
because that just seems more important in politics and stuff,
you know,
most of the time.
Yeah,
I think this is extraordinary.
This was insane.
That's crazy for that all to happen in hours.
Yeah, we all went, could have happened in days, could not have happened at all, I guess,
but I think that the evidence is sort of getting more and more.
It's like the myth and the evidence that we're finding are sort of coming together
in the middle.
And I think when you look at stuff like the Alaskan bone field, the Mauritania Slide complex,
all this stuff happening at the same time.
I don't know if I'm right about what happened,
but it seems pretty obvious that something crazy happened,
and I'm just trying to bring it all down to a level.
Because, I mean, you dig into Randall's stuff,
and it can be a little overwhelming at times,
and same with the ECDO theory is pretty overwhelming at times.
So I'm just trying to, like, merge it together
and bring it down to a level.
It's just sort of like very simply show all,
these different lines of evidence of what's going on crazy dude great episode dude great
great episode guys graham darren awesome episode crushed it that's incredible uh one more
time tell them where they could find you great america.ca.ca.ca.ca.ca.ca. All right guys. Great
guys. Yeah, thanks. Let's not go this long with doing I know we're trying to coordinate it but we'll
definitely make it happen sooner and looking forward to having you guys on again.
All right, guys.
Let's break down the episode.
All right.
What did you guys sing to the Grimes in Graham Dunlop?
Dunlop.
We got to go to one of these like these things, these events that they do.
We got to go tag along with Randall Carlson.
I would love that, dude.
Do you think you'll be the first Mexican to go there?
No, they're using Mexicans for fossils.
They're just not, they're not saying that they found them.
They're like, I found them.
And the Mexicans back there, you know.
doing the work.
Yeah.
I mean, that's crazy to find a fucking woolly mammoth and just feed it to your dogs.
I mean, nobody goes, should we not do this and just call scientists?
I wonder why.
I mean, I'm sure they tried it too.
I wonder if they were a little scared to have some type of parasite where they're like, just give it to the dogs.
Just give it to the dog.
Yeah, it sounds like the beginning of a like a resident evil franchise, you know, like where you get some million year old.
Yeah, a million year old meat next thing you know, you're fucking guy.
got red eyes here, red-eyed demon in Ravens' house, beating your dick while him and his wife sleep.
Would you eat that, though, if you could, like, just to say it, that's a good story.
Would I eat willy mammoth meat?
Yeah.
If they told you, it's like, it's safe.
Who are they?
It's disgusting.
The Gramerica guys.
And what do they look like?
Oh, the Grimica guys?
I mean, I would have to watch them eat at first.
but i'm with johnny even if it was edible it'd be tough it would not be a good good piece of meat to like say
oh that was delicious sammas developed some techniques for swallowing disgusting uh fluids and i see what
you did there i see what you did i'm sure i'm sure he could manned johnny i saw what you did
i'm sure you could handle it sam oh my god you did that i bet you could handle that mammoth meat no problem
All right, guys, go to samtriplea.com.
Check out my dates.
Check out dirty dancing.
Havana nights.
Miami, joke world, St. Petersburg, Lawrence, Kansas.
I got to get those tickets up, Tulsa, and then Truther Khan.
I got to change the name of that in Dallas and November.
And then Skangfest in New Orleans and Austin.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. Get out my newsletter, guys. Come on. Get that shit. Join my newsletter, find out what I got going on.
All my premium contents there. More stuff. I mean, I'm just banging out bangers, dude.
Banging out bangers, dude. Talk about cash studies, dude.
Yeah, Howie Dewey is one of the smartest people I know.
On planet Earth. Yeah, yeah, especially when it comes to investing in stocks and Wall Street.
and he is killing it so far this year
on the Cash Daddy's Patreon
Patreon.com slash Cash Daddy's check it up.
Yeah, very excited about that.
Go down.
We should be having new t-shirts coming out.
Chaos Twins, I'll give you that new t-shirts.
Hopefully, I got a call on.
He hasn't put up any of my new t-shirts.
Oh, there's one.
That's a nice one.
Look at that.
Got to get it before July 31st.
Do limited edition.
10th, 1,000th episode. T-shirts.
New shirts. Oh, yeah, old shirts up, new shirts up.
Great Ray's Support Show. Buy Gold and Silver. We love everybody, Wolfpack Gold.
We're so thankful for their sponsorship.
Aquacure hydrogen brown gas. If you want to stay looking young, you need more hydrogen.
Our good friends of Harley Ray, grab that.
Chemical-free body took it today, feeling like a million dollars.
Grab that. EMF rocks, Brain Supreme,
Nuked, if you want, a very decentralized social media from around the world.
There's tons of people on it thinking and I'm believing the same things you do.
Check out Nuked social.
And then if you go to World War debate real quick, World War debate, big things happening, dude.
Big things happening.
Okay?
Big things.
so we should have a date and we should have some
debates coming up for the next one
and then if you go to our YouTube channel
it's been cooking with gas
we're looking good what are we up to how many subscribers
almost 60 we need to almost 60 thousand
go
YouTube.com slash tinfoilha official
and then my my comedy page
Sam Tripoli comedy I have a new
I have a brand new
uh
I might my
set I did for
gas digital should be out in August
and then I have another crowdwork special
coming out anything XG
hit that like bar and subscribe and don't forget
leave a comment we're trying to leave you reply
to everybody all everybody leaving the comment go do that
please
Johnny
yeah we'll have a new broken Sam out here
sometime soon
please help us battle the
forces of evil and subscribe
how about the forces of evil
yeah so I thought it was good episode man
I was very, I love those two guys.
We got to get them on more.
You know, it's a nice change of pace, too, on episodes.
We've been doing a lot of hidden stuff lately.
Nice change of pace.
Nice change of pace.
And, you know, at first, there was a lot of deep, deep, deep data you had to digest.
And then it just starts cooking with gas, dude.
Isn't that crazy?
Imagine in an hour the whole fucking earth shifts.
but the water doesn't.
It stays where, I mean.
Well, how crazy was that video on the,
on the, what, the space station, the Russian space station?
With, with the.
I didn't know where he was going to that.
And then I realized that I'm like, oh, no.
I was like, no, with the blobs.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Crazy, yeah.
But just the video of that wing nut, though,
the way it was flipping like that was mind bending.
It was my.
Imagine seeing that for the first.
time freaking out.
I get why they classified it originally.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Great episode, blessings. I hope you guys enjoyed it.
Enjoy these highlights.
Here's a clip from the latest broken sim.
Now, we talked, we cocked a couple of months ago.
We talked a couple of months ago about this mushroom in China that they'd found that makes, it does nothing, but makes people see little fellas, little trolls.
Isn't it all shrooms?
No, no, no, no.
No, this, okay, and they're now studying this.
It's in China and a couple of other places, other cultures that aren't connected to China, and they have the exact same experience.
You eat it.
It kicks in, listen to the timeline.
It kicks in 12 to 24 hours after you eat it.
Oh, God.
And it lasts for days.
And all it is is, is in 3D vivid reality, you see.
see little people in your environment, interacting with your environment, and teasing you occasionally,
like being kind of mischievous and annoying. But nothing else. None of the heightened sensory
perception, no heightened colors or taste, no nausea, no weirdness, nothing, no sweating. Just little
people enter your reality. And they're studying it now to try to identify the content.
How long until we can get this here? Let's go, bro.
Oh, you can get it now. It's not illegal, if I'm not mistaken. It's, it's, it is called L. Asiatica is the name of it. It's a type of bolite mushroom. It's native to the pine forest of southwestern China and the northern Philippines, where it's harvested and sold in local markets and used in culinary cuisine. I'll show you this guy talking about it briefly here. It's the damnedest thing, though, dude. Because it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it. It's, it's, because it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's it's, it's, it's it's, because it's, it's it's it's it
obviously triggers something in the brain. They call it the Lilliputian mushroom, you know,
because of Lilliput, you know, from Gulliver's travels. It triggers something in the brain
that specifically causes you to see little fellas everywhere. This is one of the researchers
who are studying it. Johnny, would you like to do it on a show? Dude, it's get so maxing.
I've been talking with people who for the past four years, I've been studying this new type of
hallucinogenic mushroom. In talking with people who have experienced this effect firsthand,
they've described the effects as first seeing several hundred, if not thousands of little people
embedded in their environment. They're often reported as interacting with the real world,
jumping on chairs and tables. One person told me, as they were eating soup, the little people
were jumping off their spoon into the bowl of soup, swimming around, and as they scooped their
spoon to eat them, the little people remained in their mouth. 90% of people actually see little
elves or clowns or other fairybts. God, I want to do this so badly, dude. The depiction of this
effect through Gulliver's travels, where he lands on an island called Lilliput, which is, of course,
the namesake. Reports of this actually first comes from the early missionaries embarking into
Papua New Guinea. Decades later, in the 1990,
reports of a very similar sort of mushroom began emerging in southern China.
Not until recently in the past summer did it come to my attention that a remote
culture in the northern Philippines had been also reporting this sort of
Lillipushian hallucination from a locally collective wild mushroom. I actually
ventured there last summer to perform...
John Kusoppa...
And found out that...
for a second.
I mean,
this guy is not excited about what he's reporting.
I would be going there.
He's a scientist.
Dude,
I mean,
bring back the Muppet guy.
Oh,
yeah,
he should do research papers.
Little people everywhere,
golly.
We see little people
that jump in your mouth
and twist your nipples.
Some will work your balls.
It's pretty cool.
And last,
yeah.
Now,
we'll say it lasts as much as two to three.
If in four days,
some people,
some pictures.
Or does.
My God.
The exact same
species that was
previously known only from China.
So the fact now that we have
three independent cultures
reporting the exact same phenomenon.
And in two of them, we've been able to verify
it's the exact same species.
Dude, this is the energy you keep when you're talking about
flock cameras.
Not when you're talking about eating
something and seeing little
Bobby Lee's running around everywhere.
this is like something from axios yeah and are they Asian tiny people like if I'm in Asia and I'm
eating mushrooms am I seeing Asian tiny people question it is it is fascinating though right that
these are independent cultures one of them was like an isolated culture that that has no connection
so you can't say it's like oh because you know how they say like well you see God because that's your
your religious uh frame of reference
Everybody sees elves when they take this, no matter their culture.
That's weird, dude.
That's really weird.
So they're studying it.
They're digging into it.
And I think we should, somebody should, maybe we get XG to do this.
We buy some of this stuff and get XG to do it.
Now, I did read, because I wanted to do exactly what we just talked about, get somebody to try it.
I did read that you got to be careful.
They examined, this guy said, examined a bunch of the mushrooms now that they're
selling that are supposed to be this and some
non-zero percentage of them are
poisonous mushrooms that will just kill your ass.
So be careful if you
go to find them, I will say.
I want one, dude.
Are you familiar with this, last
couple things here, are you familiar with
this
woman
whose name, she's an Ottawa police detective,
Helen Gruse,
and she,
there's been a cover up around her. This
is from a couple of weeks ago.
She was at the center of that high-profile
disciplinary case because she was asking questions
about, I'm trying to think about
how to say this, babies
who had problems, maybe
living after certain
injections happened to them.
Yeah, I like that, Johnny.
I like that. I like how you said that.
So, of all the people,
this is a real surprise to me,
John Cusack, who's got some of the
dumbest politics on record.
Of all time.
Yeah.
Supporting this lady.
So check this out.
Hey, Helen.
I know.
Don't you clear your voice.
If you're John Cusack, a famous actor,
don't you clear your voice before you start recording?
Do you just have Flem sitting right on your vocal cords?
Or maybe do you hit cancel and start over instead of letting us hear your disgusting
flim get caught?
Who might have judged John Cusack outside of?
Helen.
Hey, you're an Ottawa police detected.
And I know you're racing.
He said you're an Ottawa police detective.
Thank you for telling me what I am.
You're an Ottawa police detected.
And I know you're raised some concerned about.
Does he have lung cancer or something?
I don't know, dude.
Why is he whispering?
COVID-19.
I got to protect my voice.
I'm doing a high fidelity on Broadway tonight.
So I got a gross.
point blank. We're doing a gross point blank reunion tonight. I got to protect my voice.
Vaccine related incidents. Yeah. And yeah.
We had real evidence to your superiors and he got shut down. And you chose to keep going.
And to ask questions. And that took a lot of courage. And I know you're facing some meat because of that.
Um, there's a pretty good doctor.
This is so weird.
I'll put the DMs for you, um, open so you can get it.
Uh, and it's the best work I know on this.
Um, I salute you for your courage.
God bless you.
Respect.
I love me.
I guess he's just like Canadian Jesus or something, you know,
So if you get tapped at that in fact like you've done well in Canada,
that's like the Medal of Honor for Canadians.
If John Cusack makes a little Twitter video about you.
It's a big deal, Johnny.
So strange, dude.
Big deal.
What is?
I don't know why he's whispering.
Yeah, it's really weird, right?
I don't want my Uber driver to hear me espouse any kind of, you know,
anti for jerk
Uber driver
is a pretty big
he's wearing a mask right now
so he can't talk that loud
I just want to say man
good job
and I'm gonna send you a couple
dick picks in your DM
and you tell everyone you got
Graham QSex dick picks
it's important
I also want to send you this study about sunscreen
sounds like Carmen D. Frog
this guy I know it talks like a
Muppet and it's the funniest thing
ever. He's the best I've seen on the subject. This is weird, dude. So these people, it's probably
fake, but they're out on horseback in the desert in Mount Shasta in California, and they come
across these solar-powered speakers that are just projecting some kind of bizarre vocalization.
Some people say it's to kind of put animals in fear and get rid of them, but you wouldn't
need so many of it. It's really bizarre.
Look through this now.
Noah seems unfazed by it.
But then look, over here.
They're in the middle of nowhere.
Is that an animal right by it?
If you'd like to hear the rest of this episode,
subscribe to Broken Simulation in your podcasting app
or check us out at YouTube.com slash sam Tripoli.
Everywhere.
That's some interdimensional shit.
Wake up, Aaron.
This is only the beginning.
Dude, you just blew my mind.
Tim Foil hack.
