UAP Unidentified Alien Podcast - UAP EP 47 The Other Worldly Secrets of Sound part 1

Episode Date: July 1, 2022

Did the ancients have it all figured out? We explore what ancient Greeks like Pythagoras and Herodotus knew about the secrets of sound and how something called acoustic levitation might be th...e missing link to every question surrounding structures like the Pyramids and Stonehenge.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Everybody talked about it since I first moved to Oregon. The big one, the earthquake that trashed the whole West Coast, total destruction. Officially calling it the largest natural disaster in American history. I just didn't know what would help me next. So I took it all. Even the gun. It was time. Cello?
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Starting point is 00:01:20 Good. And before we get into it today, because we are moving away from our three-part series. I guess you can say it was a trilogy. Which went wild. It did. There was a download. There was a lot going on and I'm glad you all enjoyed it. So hopefully you enjoy this as much as you did of our three-part series about alien hybrids and the agendas and everybody who is taking place in the hybrid, I guess, experimentations. But we're going to kind of move on into something that you and I, it's been kind of poking at our brains to talk about sound and frequencies and vibrations and all these things. And music. And the sound of our voices. And how it all connects into what might be a language that is out there in the universe that we are just not picking up on.
Starting point is 00:02:10 It actually may be the key to the universe. It might be the key to how things get done on Earth too. That's right. That we need to unlock a little bit more. So, yeah, there's a lot to get into with this. It's also how maybe they use sound to levitate things. Hint, who would have given them that knowledge? And some planets make a sound.
Starting point is 00:02:28 Okay now. There's a lot. This is going to be a lot of fun, honestly, and this is a two-part series, just to give you a heads-up. I'm going to play the sound, see if you can recognize the planet. Okay, we can play Guess the Planet. So it's going to be a lot of really intriguing, kind of mind-bending stuff. But I think you're really going to enjoy what we talk about here over the next couple weeks in this two-part series about sound and what it can do and what we're missing. But before we do that also, because you know we always get into the factoid first. But even before the factoid, I want to say two things. Number one, happy 4th of July weekend, everybody. That's right.
Starting point is 00:03:04 Right? So depending on when you're listening to this, obviously, this is being released on July 1st. You're listening to it. Maybe you listen to it right away before the 4th of July. Even if it's after, happy 4th of July. Enjoy, don't get too crazy with the fireworks and enjoy yourself. So there's that. And happy 4th of July to you as well, Karen.
Starting point is 00:03:23 Well, thank you. And the last thing before a factoid, is happy anniversary to us. Yes. It's our one-year anniversary. Oh, happy anniversary, dear. Unbelievable. Should I've gotten you a cake or flowers?
Starting point is 00:03:36 No. Okay. Absolutely not. What a ride is being. This is a labor of love, though, I must say. We totally enjoy doing it. I can't believe it's been a year. My gosh.
Starting point is 00:03:45 We've covered a lot of ground. And we're just getting started. That's true. Yes. Yes. I'm glad you made that clear. We started the first episode came out July 2nd, 2021. And here we are July 1st, 2022.
Starting point is 00:03:59 So, you know, just about a year, but close enough when this episode is being released. So thank you to everybody who has allowed us to keep this going for consuming the show like you have and for helping it to become one of the most downloaded podcasts in the country at this point. In the world. In the universe. Yeah, you're not kidding. So thank you to everybody. And like you say, Karen, we're just getting started. So how about that one year in for UAP?
Starting point is 00:04:25 Congratulations. Now, do you have a factoid for us before we get into the fund? I do. Okay, what do you got? You know how I always warned, don't mess with a moon? Yeah. Well, someone's rocket just hit the moon. They're not listening to you.
Starting point is 00:04:39 They need to listen to you. Oh, my. You could knock the moon off its, whatever, orbit. Yeah. And then we'd be doomed here on Earth. Don't want that. The impact occurred this week as an unidentified rocket stage. So it wasn't the entire rocket.
Starting point is 00:04:56 crashed into the lunar service. And we're going to put a picture of the new crater that was created up where at our Twitter thing? Yeah, we'll tweet that out. It'll also be on our blog posts on 850WFTL.com. You'll see that where you can, you know, we always had the blog post up there on the UAP podcast section, and you'll see that along with this episode. You can take a look at the picture. So this rocket formed a new interesting crater, and it's leaving us to wonder,
Starting point is 00:05:23 how is it possible to not know whose rocket this is and how it happened and why did it hit the moon and what the hell? It's a good question and apparently this is like you said this happened last year and we're just finding out about it. They're saying it happened last week. See, I kept hearing different reports, which is also weird. Because this was reported on the 28th and it said it was last week. Right. So I've seen different things. So it's almost like they don't know when this happened, what they're looking at.
Starting point is 00:05:50 But there's this big crater on the moon. I mean, again, like you say, Karen, well, how have the pay? picture up for you and you can see it yourself. It's in the satellite imagery. Or I guess in the resolution, the high resolution-ish picture. And they said by the size of the crater, it's a big rocket that crashed into the moon. And there's all the governments of the world, the space-faring governments of the world are like, not us. Not us. Not us. Don't look at me. We survived by the pleasure of the moon. So don't mess with the moon. Careful up there. Please.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Where was doing that? Be careful. Gosh, it's wild. I'm glad you brought that up. That's a crazy story. So, as we get into part one here of sound, I know you're itching, Karen. We did an episode on the moon. We did. Yes, I think that was a two-parter, actually, Secrets of the Moon. So if you want to go back and listen to those, feel free because that was, man, that was some interesting stuff, actually. You had the remember that woman who said she lived on the moon? And Barack Obama was on the Moon.
Starting point is 00:06:43 No, that was Mars. Oh, that was Mars. Yeah. The curious case of Andrew Basiago. That's another one. Oh, my God. Boy, all these, you can always get, if you haven't heard those, take a listen. I want to start off here with a quote that I'm going to let you know right now, spoiler alert.
Starting point is 00:07:00 This is a recurring theme of this two-part series. It's a quote from Tesla and it's really important to what we're talking about. He said, if you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration. Ha ha, ha. Keep that quote in mind over the next couple episodes. What's the frequency, Kenneth? Exactly. And Elon Musk continually says that music.
Starting point is 00:07:23 basically is a limbic resonator, like the limbic part of your brain. That's right. It causes emoting, but it also can move things. I mean, it's all connected. It is. No, you're right. And you're going to hear a lot of that here,
Starting point is 00:07:36 starting with what we got for you on this part one, because we are going to take a deep dive, Karen, into the deep end of this UAP discussion and explore the forgotten knowages of sound. What did the ancients know about its practical properties? Because we're going to talk about, basically the ancient kind of stories with this. Like 5 BC.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Yeah, I mean, and even further back possibly. Oh, yeah. That's right. The pyramids are right. Right. And we'll also look into some of the modern aspects of this as well. So you'll have modern and ancient takeaways from this all at once. What did they know about its properties and its uses back in ancient times? How does it connect us to the cosmos?
Starting point is 00:08:18 And where did the knowledge come from? I think don't, we are getting some sort of sound from the universe. It was picked up by the Chinese, right? Or then they said it wasn't a true story. Yeah, that was another one that was disputed. I think we talked about that in our factoid last week, I think, with the sound, that they didn't know what it was. It was a radio signal.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Yeah. Maybe I meant to, and I forgot to bring it up. But yeah, and then they said it wasn't true, but they didn't know where the radio signal was coming from. And then they came back out a few days later, kind of like Roswell. and this just happened a couple weeks ago in China where they said, oh no, that was a mistake. We didn't hear anything. And are we sending out a tone from Earth?
Starting point is 00:08:58 Yeah, I believe there's always things set out by SETI and looking for contact and places like that. Now, believe it or not, Karen, you might be surprised that our first subject has to do with someone more known for his math than he is for anything else. Believe it or not, the ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher, by the way, you may not know, Pythagoras. And I'll just tell you right now.
Starting point is 00:09:19 Yes. This is why I could never play the piano. My sister is totally like, is it right brain? No, left brain. And she knows, like, Rachmaninoff, black and white keys and the foot pedals and crossing over. And I was like playing a minuet that Mozart wrote when he was eight and I was 10. So, I mean, you either know math and then you can understand music or you don't. It's true.
Starting point is 00:09:43 I mean, you could always learn how to play piano in those things, but it's a lot easier for some people than others. I was like, all cows eat grass, bong. Every good boy does fine. Bong. I mean, it sucked. I hated it. Well, Pythagoras, you can thank him for the musical scale, Karen. You're going to be fascinated.
Starting point is 00:10:00 I think all of you will be fascinated by this because he did more than just come up with A squared plus B squared equal C squared. The theorem. That's what we know now, the Pythagorean theorem. We all learned that in high school. Is that a triangle? Yeah, I think it's like writing a triangle and all the stuff with triangles. He would actually, he did much more for the study of six. sound and for music, then our current education system gives them credit for it because we
Starting point is 00:10:22 focus on the math side of Pythagoras. So our story begins, I feel like I'm in Epcot, like in the spaceship earth ride. Our story begins in 535 BC when he left his country of Greece and traveled to Egypt. And he wanted to learn the so-called secret knowledge from Egyptian priests and their secret societies. So he did a lot of studying with them. And from that, they say a doorway was kind of open. He was enlightened in his mind, and he started to notice something different about how sound worked.
Starting point is 00:10:57 When he would walk by the metal workers. Okay, so imagine this. You're in Egypt. It's ancient times. It's, you know, the 500s BC. And you're walking by these metal workers. They're hitting the iron with, you know, hot iron with their hammers. They're fashioning weapons.
Starting point is 00:11:13 They're fashioning, you know, whatever they need out of steel. And you just walk by it. It's heavy and sound. Wait a minute. Did they have steel back then? Well, you know, metal, iron, whatever you want to call it. Okay. Okay. Getting technical with you here.
Starting point is 00:11:25 But if you're Pythagoras and you're learning these different things from the Egyptian priests, the sound to him struck a different chord, if you will. Because while he listened, he discovered to his amazement that the sound had mathematical properties to it. And this kind of started like a domino effect for Pythagoras. He began to make one discovery after another beginning. with this one. Pythagoras, in hearing these tones made by the metal striking the metal,
Starting point is 00:11:53 intuited that there was a mathematical relationship between the different notes and a scale. There was a proportional relationship of ratios between these different notes and the scale. Amazing. So this observation led him to at that time make a revolutionary connection between sound
Starting point is 00:12:10 and math. He realized it. And so we know he came up, like we said, with the famous Pythagm theorem, A squared plus B squared equals C squared. But his most important discovery may have actually been sound plus math equals music. Whoa. Here's a physicist from California. When you look at Western music, it all has its root with Pythagoras. And the great discovery he made is that the waves generated, say, by strings or wind instruments, could be converted into clear notes and scales by using fractures.
Starting point is 00:12:46 and discrete ratios. So we end up with thirds, fifths, fourths, octaves. By simply taking the string and holding it in these fractional ratios, you get sound in these ratios, and it's very pleasing and works very well to the human ear. So Pythagoras did this amazing job of taking math
Starting point is 00:13:06 and geometry and tying it to music, which then led to the entire Western musical scale. Hello. That's huge. It's incredible, isn't it? It is. I just want to say, I think, you know, oh, Einstein's so brilliant and Pythagra is so brilliant.
Starting point is 00:13:22 But what if they're really not that smart? And they were just told by an alien who went, hey, by the way, you need to know this. It's a theory. And they gave them the idea, the information, that any great breakthroughs were probably given to these people by someone not of this earth. It's possible.
Starting point is 00:13:38 Right? I mean, you know, I hate to take away credit from these ideas and these, you know, kind of. Or it's in the classic record or I don't know. These observations that they made. Did they have an aha moment or was it fed to them by another being? Well, that's the question that we ask, isn't it? We let you make up your mind on that yourself.
Starting point is 00:13:57 Can you just see it, though? Like Pythagoras, just like shredding a sweet guitar solo. His beard is blowing in the wind as he's discovering the relationship between masks and music. That's right. His guitar is spinning. That's right. But no, in all seriousness, though, the revelation that he made with music, led to the discovery that kind of leads us here today.
Starting point is 00:14:19 Sound in its purest, vibrant form could be a language of the universe. Yeah, I agree. He theorized that the universe and everything in it is in a constant state of vibration with a harmony throughout the cosmos and that the planets emit their own sound. Hello.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Pythagoras thought of the universe as operating as a harmonious whole, which he compared to a liar, an instrument that is a little bit like the modern harp and that it has different strings. Each string vibrates at a different frequency producing a different sound. He thought that each planet in the solar system
Starting point is 00:14:57 vibrated at its own unique frequency and produced what he called the music of the spheres. How do you like that? When you look at the individual planets in our solar system and around the universe, radiation that's admitted in each planet will be in its own frequency range, we can convert that to an audible signal
Starting point is 00:15:20 and think of each planet having its own signal or tone or music that goes with it. E.T. Phone home. I didn't mean to talk over a mystery speaker there. I apologize. I added it, you know. Oh, Karen special there. That's fine.
Starting point is 00:15:44 But the music of the spheres, and that's the thing that got me. That really kind of brings it all together because you're talking about the cosmos, right? The planets, the spheres. You're talking about music. His discovery that basically music is essentially the scale that we use today in the Western world is made from math with his observation that math is in music. And he gets that from the sound.
Starting point is 00:16:07 So it all ties together. A sound is like this language with math. Math plus sound equals music. And math, as we know, is universal language anyway. We've talked about that before, the universal language of the universe when it comes. the life on other planets, and you put this all together, and it's like, boom. It makes sense.
Starting point is 00:16:25 And, you know, it all ties together. Yeah, once again, I'll tell you what. You know, and it's funny, the planets all make a different sound, and I'm going to test you coming up. Oh, good. We don't have the sound of the Earth, but I believe if we did, it would sound something like this. Hey, I'm orbiting here.
Starting point is 00:16:45 Hey, my cousin Vinnie, that's what the Earth sounds like. Oh, no, I'm walking here. Oh, yes, that's right. What am I thinking about? I'm orbiting heat. Yes. Anyway. That's the earth.
Starting point is 00:16:54 The earth would be a little bit more, you know, petulant. That's Midnight Cowboy, right? I think so, yeah. I'm walking. It was Dustin Hoffman. Anyway. So, but that type of understanding, it could have helped those, you know, kind of in the know, like these Egyptian priests or Pythagoras in his time.
Starting point is 00:17:09 It could have helped them during those ancient times to use their knowledge to their advantage, which we're going to get to in a little bit. But how do we lose the knowledge? I mean, we still play. We still play music, but they were using sound to do all kinds of crazy stuff way back when, and we're like cavemen. It's like we just forgot about it all, moved on to different things. We get distracted, but we might be rediscovering it now, which we're going to get to. Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e-commerce in the U.S.
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Starting point is 00:20:15 Did he have help? In some stories, he actually credits Apollo below the Greek god of the sun with bestowing this knowledge about the vibrations of the planets and things like that. Again, because that was just discovered by NASA not too long ago, maybe a couple decades ago. And this is something that he realized, hey, these planets, they have all these different vibrations and make these sounds. It's the music of the spheres that he spoke about in the 500s BC. And the Beach Boys sang about. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, you go.
Starting point is 00:20:45 Good vibrations. Good vibrations. Another good song reference by you. Thank you. So make of that way you will. Bring you up Apollo and, you know, distowing this knowledge upon him. Well, look at that.
Starting point is 00:20:55 Apollo, a Greek god of the sun. That's some entity from outer space. You would think so. There you go. Right? Yeah. But believe it or not, like we said, our scientists have actually confirmed this theory of the so-called music of the sphere
Starting point is 00:21:08 is to be true. Now, I know this was, you said you're going to test me on this, Karen, because we have a few of... This is actually, what some of these planets sound like. And I like to call it the symphony of the planets. I kind of adjusted Pythagoras's name of the music of the sphere. As I called the symphony of the planets.
Starting point is 00:21:23 I just wanted to be different. I like that. I'm very good. Okay, good. I'm better than Pythagoras then. So here's our first planet. Let's play Guess That Planet. Sounds like a seashell that I held up to meet here recently at the beach.
Starting point is 00:21:41 What planet was that? I will guess. It's boring, right? It is kind of boring. I'm only going to say, I'm going to say Mars only because. we've actually heard Mars a couple of times with the rovers up there. That's right. And it's like a wind sound. Yes. So that was Mars.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Yeah, that was Mars. We have another one? We do. This one's weird. That is... Wow, that's insane. That's actually a planet? Yeah. That's the sound it makes? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:26 A vibrating planet. Right. With a big red dot. Ah, Jupiter. Yes. Holy cow. Yeah. All right.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Yeah. And then it gets even creepier. Okay. This one planet. One planet making the sound. Yeah. I just kind of edited it all together. Just to give you an idea.
Starting point is 00:22:49 That's insane. Yeah. Which one is that? Saturn. I was going to say Pluto because Pluto should still be a planet. Oh, by God. Wasn't that... It was wishful thinking.
Starting point is 00:22:58 Neil... Yeah, he stole Pluto away from us. God bless him. Bless his heart. So that's Saturn. Yeah. It's amazing because what they say is that all these sounds
Starting point is 00:23:10 that come from each individual planet's radiation signature. Oh, okay. So it's not like... Because, again, in space is not really like their sound. Plus a thing. You know? It's a vacuum. So there isn't sound.
Starting point is 00:23:21 Right. It's a vibration. It's a vibration from the radiation signatures. So what they did was they took those radiation signatures that the planets give off. And it creates their own unique vibration. So it's almost like they're translating it. I see. Language.
Starting point is 00:23:36 Thank you for clarifying that because someone out there's going, what are they talking about? You can't hear sound in space, you dumb people. Right. So I thought I would make sure. We make that clear. But they're translating those radiation signatures, which give off a vibration into sound. Realize, again, I want to highlight the word translation. Right.
Starting point is 00:23:55 Trick is we normally use that for languages. So we're able to find out what the planet sound like through their vibrations. So the radiation signatures. I see. It's insane, isn't it? It is insane. All right. But I love it.
Starting point is 00:24:08 Keeping our head above water, okay? It's a little deep, but fascinating, though, isn't it? It is. It's super fascinating. It all kind of comes together. and we'll continue to come together because we did mention that we would talk about those who used all these ancient knowledges of vibrations and frequencies to their advantage. But here's the catch. It wasn't just one person or even one civilization.
Starting point is 00:24:29 What if every single monolith and ancient structure surrounded by mystery that we've ever talked about could have one thing in common? and that is the use of sound for levitation. Oh, so they were able to move it through levitation. Also, they probably have the Fibranacci numbers in common, but anyway. Well, we've talked about that with our sacred geometry series, and that's why we wanted to actually get to this. I know what I said at the beginning of the episode, we've been wanting to do this subject for a couple of months now.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Yeah, I've been nagging you about it because it's so cool. It's just been nagging my brain. My brain has been nagging me. Come on, do this, do this, get this all down. And it was a lot of material and really kind of heavy to wade through it. We did a good job, though. And I was so fascinated how sound would make shapes and designs. That's we're going to get into next week, right?
Starting point is 00:25:25 Well, we kind of got into it. I didn't really include it in this series because we kind of got into it with the sacred geometry. But I will put it up again on our blog with the episode because we talked about how sound gets into the sacred geometry. portion of things and how it creates these perfect geometrical shapes. Maybe even creating the crop circles. Right. It could have been. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:48 When we talk about how sound is used for levitation. So if you miss some of that, I'll put up one of those videos again on how sound and the frequencies are used to create these perfect geometrical shapes. It's fascinating. And they're intricate. Yes. And we're not talking about like a circle with a square inside of, no. It would take an artist.
Starting point is 00:26:05 It looks like a snowflake. I mean, probably 30 minutes to an hour to create what. frequency creates in a snap of your fingers. It's amazing what frequency does, which it all kind of connects you with what we're talking. And levitation, sorry, I took you away from it. No, no, no, but it's true. It all, it goes together.
Starting point is 00:26:23 Because when we talk about the levitation side of things, though, and while we consider this theory that sound could have been used for levitation, the vibrations of the sound. Because some of these places have these humongous, 100-ton stones that are like 40 feet, the air on top of each other. How does that happen? How did they do that? And they're perfectly cut in all these things. We've talked about a lot of those places. We're going to get into a couple of them again. But take a listen to what a Greek historian named Herodotus had to say about
Starting point is 00:26:52 something like this. In the 5th century BC, the Greek historian Herodotus wrote that the Egyptians were given knowledge from the guardians of the sky on how to float the mass of limestone blocks with which they built the Great Pyramid. What we see it is the very real possibility that extraterrestrial civilizations visited Earth all throughout the world and that each time they did, they felt it was very important to impart this sacred knowledge about the importance of acoustic frequencies
Starting point is 00:27:26 in the keys to unlocking the mysteries of the universe. You know, we have people that just walk around the Earth and take everything for granted, like the pyramids. look, let's go see the pyramids. Well, aren't they fabulous? And then you have some people going, wait a minute. How did they do this? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:45 You have to ask the question because it's something we don't know about and we don't know how to do it. Right. And other people just don't even care. And they're just, right. To figure it out. Walk by it, whatever. And but when you really start to examine these things.
Starting point is 00:27:59 You have to start asking. Yes. Because it's impossible. It would be hard for moderate construction to create some of these ancient structures that are still standing today. I've seen the reenactment of where they try to take one of the blocks and put it on like a reed boat or raft and float it down the Nile.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Yeah. It gets, you know, completely swamped like 40 feet down the Nile. Sure. It just, how did they do it? Because the white limestone or whatever is came from another quarry. Right. Right. Hundreds of miles away. It doesn't. And just like Stonehenge, 200 miles away
Starting point is 00:28:33 in Wales. Exactly. Blue stones. So when you start to consider these things, You have to think about it. You have to. And Pythagoras, when you kind of connect it to what he spoke about when it came to like the vibrations of the cosmos and that quote from Tesla that we said at the beginning of the episode, they told you to keep in mind there about vibrations and frequencies and, you know, kind of the secrets of the universe and how they all go together, it's completely,
Starting point is 00:28:56 I mean, is it really completely out of the question to consider that the ancients could have used sound, vibrations and different frequencies to levitate. okay, I know it sounds crazy, but to levitate otherwise impossible to move boulders and stones. I mean, they have to be moved somehow. There's no other explanation. They didn't have the wheel. They didn't even have the wheel back then. In some cases, I mean, when some of these things were built.
Starting point is 00:29:24 Oh, my gosh. So it's amazing because, again, it's an irrefutable fact that these structures are built. It's not like these are mirages. You go and you see. And any ancient structure you can. can think of, okay? Exactly. They're there.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And it's still standing. Name one structure we've built in the last 100 years. It's going to be still standing in 4,000 years. And they're like, we don't even need the wheel. We've got this levitation thing going on. Who needs it? So we really stop to think about it. The mystery starts to kind of come together like a math equation.
Starting point is 00:29:56 You know, when you're in that moment, when you find out what X equals, it's like, aha, x equals. It's like, X equals seven. Now it'll make sense. Yes. So it could sound be that one missing link to answer, not just. how, say, the pyramids were built, but every single monolithic structure from the ancient world. Makes sense? Some ancient mythologies speak of the fact that some of these stones were put into place
Starting point is 00:30:21 with sound, that these things all of a sudden levitated into place. What the local legend of Stonehenge talks about is that those big stones were transatlantic transported by way of levitation. We want to thank, of course, ancient aliens and our friend Georgio. Yes. Yeah. They're always contributing with it. They don't even know about it.
Starting point is 00:30:49 Hey, look, we all work together. But when you think about it, like they said there, the pyramids, Pumapunku, Stonehenge, the giant heads in Easter Island, the ancient temples, and ancient structures in Cambodia, whatever you want to think about, all of these and more. Buckley-Tape. I mean, all of them. They start to make sense when you consider. And maybe I dare to say realize that they could have been built by a technology that was given to us by the so-called gods.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Right? Like Pythagoras talked about learning about the cosmos and the music of the spheres from Apollo. And then there's just kind of lost to time. We get distracted with things. And it's just kind of that ancient knowledge gets lost for whatever reason. and maybe it gets burned down in a temple or whatever. But all of this, of course, this technology being the levitation of objects through sound and certain vibrations and frequencies is just lost the time.
Starting point is 00:31:47 Because, you know, I would say probably 75% of the earth or more, they're just concerned with survival people on the earth right now, just how they're going to feed themselves, how are they going to have shelter? Really, think about it. Here in the United States, we don't really worry about that. but, you know, so we're able to sit here in a studio and contemplate these larger issues, but a lot of people are just trying to survive. True.
Starting point is 00:32:11 And so they're not thinking about Pythagoras and about levitation and how the pyramids got built. And so I think that through time, people just try to survive and they lost, you know, the ability to understand or ask about these things. Yeah. No, that could be it. I mean, you know, civilizations split up. You know, there's a lot of movement. throughout the earth as you know you start to get into different developments throughout
Starting point is 00:32:38 you know the centuries and you get into the middle ages and things like that things right times change yes they were just trying to survive the plague and yeah but you know you've got the dead sea scrolls and the bible has lived for so long because it was in writing uh in greek and in aramaic i think that's what jesus spoke aramaic and no one really wrote this stuff down yeah there was no you know, they didn't write it in the Dead Sea Scrolls and put it in a jar in a cave. And so we discovered it and went, oh, okay. People had to start asking questions. You know, and then maybe a lot of things, traditions were kept by word of mouth.
Starting point is 00:33:16 That's right. You know? Yes. And maybe the stuff was written down. Maybe, say, in the lost scrolls of Alexandria. Maybe. That's right. The whole library burned down.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Gone. So who knows? The knowledge that we lost at that point. But remember, Greek historians and philosophers such as Herodotus and Pythagoras, they spoke about this knowledge coming from the gods. By the way, I had to tell you that in the Greek version of the scrolls, Adam in Genesis, meant humans. The whole human race, not just one man. So in transcription to Aramaic, it became Adam the guy. So maybe some things lost in translation.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Yes. Possible. Because that makes more sense, right, that humans, God created humans. Right, right, right, right. And man, maybe man just means human kind, mankind. Yeah. So, well, that's a whole other podcast, I guess. But it's interesting for sure.
Starting point is 00:34:16 Because, you know, like, again, they're talking about getting this knowledge from they called the gods. And what we maybe say, well, were the gods, as they referred to, were they visitors from another planet? They didn't know how else to explain it because they're coming down from the sky where, you know, we believe the gods lived above them. Those things are documented. These statements, not, you know, visitation from gods, but these statements from Pythagoras and Herodotus are documented in historical text that they got this knowledge from the gods. So is it really that far-fetched of a thought at all to that all this maybe could make sense? It's like Eric von Danigan with his book, Church of the Gods, he asked, everything in the book is a question. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:57 He was just asking, well, were these chariots really spaceships? Right. Is it possible? And he was totally run up the flagpole for them. I know, but he could have been on to something, huh? Yeah. Well, now he's not, but back then when we first wrote it. But yeah, something to think about here. Hey, guys, so before we get back into the conversation,
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Starting point is 00:36:55 slash uapy and that's what we do too I mean we ask the questions right we bring up the details you have to and you know it kind of let you make up your own mind and what's amazing here Karen is because we said this is kind of
Starting point is 00:37:08 covering the ancient side of things and how it connects to the modern side of things when it comes to you know the experimentation with sound and maybe levitation maybe the knowledge isn't lost forever because believe it or not we may actually be starting to regain
Starting point is 00:37:25 some of this knowledge and technology. It only took a few thousand years, but hey, better late than never, I suppose. They'll make life so much easier. That would be nice, right? Maybe levitate things instead of taking them in shipping containers. That would be useful. But go back now.
Starting point is 00:37:40 This is something that's taking place. It would solve the supply chain issue. Hello? Can we get some levitation please? It's something they're working on because a few years back in 2017 there were some experiments being done at the University of Bristol in England.
Starting point is 00:37:54 And they successfully had researchers actually were levitating small objects using sound waves. So this is something that maybe is kind of coming back. On stranger things. Recently, the University of Bristol came up with a handheld device with an array of speakers
Starting point is 00:38:12 that allows the holder of this to actually focus sound waves and sound waves alone and then levitate small pieces of light material. When we look at this portable tractor beam, can we extrapolate the idea that this is a technology in its infancy where in ancient times it was actually being used to levitate large stones? There you go.
Starting point is 00:38:38 How about that? Can I bring it all together, huh? Yes. It's so cool. I mean, and they actually were doing this. I may put the little video snippet up for you so you can see it on the blog in 850WFTL.com. We go to the podcast section, search UAP. you'll see again the picture from NASA
Starting point is 00:38:56 that NASA put up recently of the crater on the moon from this mystery rocket that crashed into the moon and some of this video because it's fascinating to see this little handheld tractor beam it kind of for reference it kind of looks like a toy blaster gun that you might get at the store you know like a toy to buy for your kid made out of plastic or something I guess
Starting point is 00:39:16 and it has a bunch of like little speakers inside of it and they make it almost like a funnel shape at the end of this little tractor beam. So what they do is by focusing these sound waves, they're able to levitate small and light objects, almost like a, almost looks like a bead. You know, maybe not a pearl per se, but it's just like a tiny circle that it is being levitated.
Starting point is 00:39:38 A bea? Yeah, kind of like a bea. I guess you could say that. And so that's what they're using to levitate these small objects, these focusing up sound waves. Oh my God, these humans. We told them all about this.
Starting point is 00:39:51 told him how to do this. We told you guys thousands of years ago. Come on now. And now they're levitating a BB. But this is maybe the this is the talk about going backwards. Good Lord. Well, the thing is, and we've heard this over and over again, is that the aliens, if you will, as a whole, they have been waiting to reveal themselves when we were ready technologically. Right. And we might be ready. And that's why we're hearing about this from the government. we might be technologically getting to a point where we're ready for what they've got to tell us about. Because we obviously weren't ready in the past because they didn't continue doing it. Well, I like to think so.
Starting point is 00:40:27 I mean, I hope so. Who knows? I'm ready. It's interesting to wonder, you know, why? Why now? Or why not a thousand years ago? Why not 20 years ago? It's happening.
Starting point is 00:40:37 Maybe. Boy, we'd have a whole new subject to talk about. That's for sure. My gosh. But again, you know, coming back with this technology at the University of Bristol back in 2017, this is the kind of stuff that possibly the ancients did use thousands of years ago to move these giant structures and build these giant structures, to move these giant boulders and everything.
Starting point is 00:40:59 It's amazing to think about that they could have had this technology millennias ago when we are now just starting to kind of re-figure it out. See, look, I levitated a baby. I mean, what does that say for us? Why does it seem that they were given all this knowledge? but we have to kind of, like, been left to our own devices when it comes to these specific things. We just get so consumed in our own stuff and making money and owning things and all the wrong things that we put all of our emphasis on. Which I get. We all do it. You know, it's a part of life. We have to figure things out and we have to try to live and do our best.
Starting point is 00:41:39 It's the rat race of life, I guess. Right. We got, yeah, caught up in the rat race and we, we, we, we. forgot about the really important stuff like levitation by sound. Be nice to just levitate to work instead of driving. Wouldn't it? Nice. Because we're told aliens don't have any, you know, roads or cars or any kind of currency or any of that stuff. Yeah, there was something, you know, a couple weeks ago, Elizabeth Clary, when we talked in part two of our alien hybrid agenda series, she said that when she was on her account.
Starting point is 00:42:08 If you didn't listen to the episode, I know it sounds crazy if you haven't heard it yet, but you can listen to her account that we spoke about there on part two. a few weeks ago of the alien hybrid agenda series. But she said when she was on the planet Mitaon with the alien Aiken who she had a baby with, according to her story. I fell in love with. She said, you know, look, there's no roads, there's no vehicles,
Starting point is 00:42:28 there's no monetary system. There's nothing like that. It's just, it's hard to me. It's just love. It's what you would imagine, you know, like the Garden of Eden to be like, speaking of, you know, Adam and Eve before. But I guess to kind of bring this all together
Starting point is 00:42:40 before we're done here, Karen, could sound be a type of, of cosmic language, maybe even a portal, or a bridge to a lost sacred knowledge. Are we missing the big picture here when it comes to sound and what it has to offer to us? And I think next week we're going to get into things like Ome, because that sound is so important, especially to Buddhists, but certain sounds are so unique and have so much power. Sounds and frequencies, I think it's the main way to put it, how it translates into the vibration.
Starting point is 00:43:13 Yeah, and what type of frequency? I guess, you know, the certain measurement of frequency, I guess I should say, not to give away too much because we want to tease it a little bit. I want to give you the whole thing for part two just yet because we'll do that next week. Yeah, we'll probably have dogs all over the earth shaking their ears. But we're going into modern times next week on part two of our... Modern times. Are we really modern times? It seems like we're not modern.
Starting point is 00:43:39 I know. Compared with what they were able to do in the past. I guess in a linear scale. modern times. We're going to connect the dots. We're going to get more into Tesla. There's a lot that we're going to get into on part two of this series, which is the otherworldly secrets of sound.
Starting point is 00:43:55 I think he has something as well with all of that, the electricity, free electricity for all. Oh, just wait. Tesla's very fascinating. We're going to cover it all and kind of wrap it all up in a nice ball for you next time on UAP, the Unidentified Alien podcast for part two of the otherworldly secrets of sound when we get into all that. It's pretty good. If I say so myself, I'm looking forward to it. Oh, no, it's fantastic. Stephen does all the research and he goes into these deep dives and I'm just so proud of you because you're the reason we're doing this thing. You're the one that has been accumulating
Starting point is 00:44:31 knowledge about this for years and years and years and then when the government said, okay, we're going to talk about this. I went, Stephen, now's the time. Well, I appreciate that, Karen. I appreciate you because, again, I've said it before and I will say it again. And if it wasn't if you were saying, hey, you should do this podcast, all these things would still just be floating around in my mind. So I'm very happy that it's worked out the way it has over this past year. I'm very happy that you've all been enjoying it the way that you have. Because there's really no way.
Starting point is 00:44:59 You couldn't go on and just, you know, willy-nilly try to find all this information. You've been keeping it in your phone, just jotting these things down over the years. And you have a great treasure trove there. Probably over the past. 10 years. Really? 10 years. There you go.
Starting point is 00:45:15 Taking notes of all these things. So amazing. And like you said, we've only just begun. Yes. Especially with this series, because part two will come next week. Be sure to download, continue to download, listen, and subscribe to the podcast on Apple and Spotify, wherever you get the podcast. We're also doing a little bit of a YouTube series where we have a teaser for each episode
Starting point is 00:45:34 so you can check out UAP on YouTube as well. That's a little fun thing that we just started to do. And of course, continue to give us some, you know, well, tell us what we'll tell us what you think. Good feedback, bad feedback. Just let us know. Any feedback helps. Five extraterrestrial stars is preferable, but there's been a lot of good feedback, which
Starting point is 00:45:51 we appreciate from all of you. And on Twitter, at UA Podcast 850, you can follow us on Twitter, get all the latest updates and little things that we put out throughout the week as well. So again, thank you to all of you. Enjoy the Fourth of July holiday. We'll talk to you again next week on part two of this series. I'm going to levitate our butts out of here. The otherworldly secrets of sound on UAP, the Unidentified Alien Podcast.
Starting point is 00:46:13 Thanks again. We'll talk to you next time.

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