Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 307 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Jimmy Corsetti & Ben van Kerkwyk Et al.

Episode Date: January 24, 2023

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast. We find little nuggets, treasures, valuable pieces of gold in the Joe Rogan Experience podcast and pass them on to you, perhaps expand a little bit. We are not associated with Joe Rogan in any way. Think of us as the talking dead to Joe's walking dead. You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review. What a bizarre thing we've created. Now with your hosts, Adam Thorn. Might be the worst but casual the best one. Two, one, go. Draw the show.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Hey guys, and welcome to this week's, well, I guess it's a two part episode. We are focusing for the first episode on Jimmy Corsetti and Ben Van Kirkwick. It's important to do a whole show on this one if we can because it's so fucking interesting and just so wild and so thought-provoking and exciting. These are the sorts of conversations that in a lot of ways got me into Rogan in the first place. The fact that he asks these questions. I mean, don't get me wrong. Ancient aliens was a fun show, but you know, it started to get absurd. But Rogan is in a lot of ways added tons of legitimacy to this type of exploration. And with the youngest driest being peer reviewed.
Starting point is 00:01:21 So now that it's like, yeah, that should happen. Going back and exploring all this ancient, you know, walls and vases and sending in people really doing some research, it's fascinating stuff. What do you think, Todd? I absolutely loved this episode. I watched a lot of the YouTube videos on Jimmy Corsetti's bright insight. Just checked out Banvin Kirkwick's site on Chartered X. Haven't dived into dove into that yet, but plan to for sure. Just I mean just the five-minute video I just watched, you know, showing the sophisticated machine work on these stones. I mean to think that we used hand tools for this
Starting point is 00:02:06 is fucking absurd. There is no way. It seems unlikely. And I don't like it about stone masoning, but come on now. Well, for the types of tools that we even have now, and the machinery that we have now, and the CNC machinery that we have now still doesn't do the justice for what they had done in the past. I mean, the symmetry even, I mean, we'll get into it, but the symmetry of the faces, that one was insane, just to think that each side was absolutely symmetrical with each other.
Starting point is 00:02:42 I mean, like you said, he takes a piece of paper, folds it over, uses the same thing and they just flip it 90 degrees and it is lines up perfectly. On a piece of stone, you're gonna tell me that that was hand chiseled. I mean, you know, the big thing that always gets me and even from that ancient alien show, I mean there's like a lot of stuff that you can just kind of look at and be like, I guess, maybe, but who knows. But those walls in Peru with the giant blocks that are like, you can't even put a credit card between. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:13 There's no cement and they're all weird shapes and we had a, it's like, yeah, the polygon of walls. Yeah. Yeah. It's like they were just squished together like play. Yeah. I mean, it just always blew my mind. I'm like, is there any explanation for this?
Starting point is 00:03:29 Like that one from day one has always just been the, you know, the kind of compelling thing that keeps me wanting to be so curious about it. And the other thing is that so many archaeologists just want to dismiss it all the time. I mean, that gets me excited. They're almost doing themselves a disservice. If they don't want people to pay attention to it, it's almost better that they're like, yeah, we're looking to that. We could be open to this,
Starting point is 00:03:58 but instead, they're just outright. No, it wasn't done a long time ago. It couldn't have been known with those tools. That just makes me curious and suspicious. I don't understand why the ego would get into a way of something like that. It doesn't make sense to me. I was talking about this with my wife
Starting point is 00:04:16 when we were listening to it. Why do they care so much? Just because they thought it was one way and another. Isn't archaeology a lot like science? You have theories all day long. Kinda. So why wouldn't they just get excited thought it was one way and another. Is an archeology a lot like science? You have theories all day long. Kind of. So why wouldn't they just get excited about it? Basically what they have is an academic degree,
Starting point is 00:04:33 or PhD, or whatever, in the storytelling of a conventional timeline. That's what they've learned. So if something comes along and says, hey, we need to double the timeline. And also, there were advanced civilizations that you guys didn't figure out or know nothing about. I mean, that flips the whole exploration on its head.
Starting point is 00:04:56 Also, as more of these things kind of get proven by people like this that are not classically trained as archaeologists, it takes a lot of the credibility or it's starting to chip away the credibility of archaeologists as we know it, because they might not be as correct as they once thought, or all of us thought. Well, and didn't just say that most of them are probably driving around beamers and they don't want to lose their beamers if they're going to get discredit. They got they got tenure, bro. They got bills to pay.
Starting point is 00:05:31 They got books. That's just there's got to be some some outliers here. Like come out of the cracks here, guys. Let us know that I mean, even Joe was saying these guys that you know that are traditionally trained and whatnot, like you were saying, they guys that are traditionally trained and what not, like you were saying, they're academically superior, they think they are, come out and they fucking know that this stuff, that what they're seeing is correct. Let's get some brave ones.
Starting point is 00:05:57 They know it, they know it, they just don't want to admit it. How could you, how could you dismiss the Amazing amounts of what I see as evidence when you look I mean just for example those polygonal walls you're talking about They're in Peru. They're in Japan They're all over the world. They're in Egypt They were saying ancient Egypt in Japan. How how would they know each other at that point in time? it if our you our original theories of 6,000 years ago, if that's the timeline, there's no way they would have the same exact
Starting point is 00:06:33 construction methods, right? Maybe a carrier pigeon send a note. One with really good endurance. It's mind-blowing. You know, I would imagine that a lot of these traditional archaeologists aren't even looking at this stuff. Like maybe they've seen pictures of it, but it's not their focus. You know, they just follow the traditional route, and they've basically already been trained
Starting point is 00:06:57 to ignore this as soon as they see it as nonsense. Well, I'm glad there's people out there doing this, this work, because it is fun. It's really fun to, it's really fun to look at and think about. Let's get into some of the elements of this. I mean, what really stood out to me was them looking for Atlantis. Right. So they go that place in West Africa. Who knows if that could be it. The size of the sea is a bit off, but looks looks wild. Yeah, I mean a lot of the information he was sharing from Plato's description, right? Plato somehow had gotten that passed down from what some people he knew that were
Starting point is 00:07:42 From Egypt. He heard some stories. Or heard some stories. And they're saying now that the Egyptians are, that's where this story came from, right? Is the Egyptians. I think that, yeah, I think that's what they said. And the similarities between what he you know shared and what we're seeing is pretty freaking phenomenal.
Starting point is 00:08:02 Yeah, they did say the size would be way off, but then, you know, what was cool when they looked on that map, it off to the west, it was those waves, kind of wavy looking lines. And in the rock. Yeah, and he's saying, well, when you measure this, he's like thousands of feet tall and so many, you know, spread out like super far. The amount of force that you would need then would be tsunami's that you couldn't even imagine. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:08:33 Basically, like world killers almost. Like 400-foot tall waves. And I'm happy to have anyone else come on like a geologist and just give like another reason why that is. Was it just wind or you know, I mean again, we're just hearing this one story, right? We would need other someone else that just maybe has a more traditional view come in and be like, oh, well, there's another way that this kind of thing could be made. That would help us, you know, start to pass it together ourselves.
Starting point is 00:09:04 But yeah, but how intriguing day is. Dude, how do you explain all this? That would help us start to pass it together ourselves. But it's a intriguing day. Dude, how do you explain all those salt marks from where the obviously, at least in my mind, the ocean was at some point, ocean water, which is now sand, but there's all these salt deposits that are up to 11,000 feet high. Yeah, brings up good questions. So in Moas, you're finding Moas up there. So clearly the ocean at some point was that high. So whether it was a flood or maybe it was just deeper water than it, I mean, it just that
Starting point is 00:09:36 alone, like they're saying needs to be documented and researched. Well, just the fact that once we didn't know where Troy was for a very long time, we only recently discovered it, well, like 120 years ago, plus. And that was really just a myth before this whole idea. And it's been easy to just discount Atlantis as like the silly story couldn't possibly be real. But what's the harm in searching for and asking those questions? And why would it be made up? I mean, those old maps. Did you watch the Jimmy Kuer set
Starting point is 00:10:11 ease of film on specifically about the Eye of the Sahara? They have these old maps that were drawn out like 1200 AD. And if you flip it, you know, correctly, I think it was drawn. It was drawn by I want to say a Roman guy because the Romans were very, you know, concerned about where they were and concrete, concrete, everything they wanted to know where everything was. And it land day is on there. Mm. I mean, it's in its right there on the western upper western Sahara, and then if you look at the evidence, I don't know how they know that it used to be a lush green area.
Starting point is 00:10:52 Do you know how they figured that out? But clearly it was pretty much a jungle back in the day, and they say it land us was a jungle. They're saying up until 5,000 years ago it could have been a jungle. Freaking incredible. And if you, well hold up though, so years ago it could have been a jungle. Mm-hmm. Freaky incredible. And if you, we'll hold up though. So I'd look at this as the river, you know, the river, the Yellowstone flooded, right?
Starting point is 00:11:11 And we saw those, the massive amount of sand that got pushed up onto, you know, people's front yards because of the massive floods. I mean, the flood was like 40 feet higher than where the water typically is. Think about as a 400 feet higher, how much sand would go over all that shit and just demolish it. All the trees would be gone. Sand would cover up all that.
Starting point is 00:11:34 The sediment that he was talking about on the west side of Africa. What did he say? It was two miles long. It was well, two miles deep, sorry, of sediment. Yeah, I mean, just look at the Yellowstone like you're saying. Like, even now it's changed the look of that river. Oh yeah, right, it's not the same. I mean, we went down at what, maybe a month afterwards,
Starting point is 00:11:56 or maybe a bit longer, two months. Couple months after the floods here. And the beaches were all different, all through. It looked like we were in a new place. So you multiply that by 10, 100, or 1000. Good luck. You might as well, I mean, it would be, it would seem like a different landscape altogether for God knows how long.
Starting point is 00:12:16 And it would be very sandy. Super sandy. So a lot of sand, dude. Sand everywhere. It's cool to think about. I mean, it makes sense. It makes sense what they were showing. Well, it just makes sense.
Starting point is 00:12:30 There's a lot we don't know. That I think people should be able to agree on. There's a lot we don't know. There wasn't a lot of, or any written history after a certain time. Basically, all we have is some rocks and some monuments and statues of things. And it's like good luck figuring out where that is. And they said they can't
Starting point is 00:12:51 carbon date it because it's stone. So we're just guessing how long it's been there. We're like, okay, they probably could have made this between this range. But technically, if like the wall was built 10 million years ago and just hasn't worn out, it could be that old. It's probably not. But, you know, they just can't tell. I wish we could freaking carbon date those things. That would sort of right out. Yeah, but no carbon in it. I mean, go back, go back to the template. How did they carbon date that because they actually found some pottery inside those walls? That was 13,000.
Starting point is 00:13:26 Yeah, I think so. I think they found some other parts of things. And maybe some like wood pieces. And there's probably just some other, you know, you got to have organic matter, right? Something that was once living. And, you know, so maybe that was like hidden underneath something.
Starting point is 00:13:43 But here's the thing. It really all that tells you is it was there that long ago, but it could have been there longer. And then they just added this stuff out. But they know for sure that at least some of the stuff there was 13,000 years old. It's around that. Yeah. Right. So we know that humans were involved at that point.
Starting point is 00:14:06 So they, they're now saying they have a few of those sites. There's another teppy one, something, something teppy. So they, you know, before it was like, okay, they found this, you would, go peckily teppy, you would think, oh, that could be enough. Now let's rewrite the timeline. But no, they just redefined what a caveman was. And we're like, yeah, cave people just, you know, or hunter gatherers just also built this. And it's like, wait a second. No way. But now they found two of them. You would think also it's undeniable, but they're not really stretching. It's like how many of these places need to be proven to be that old before everyone takes a step back and goes yeah Yeah, we're way off here
Starting point is 00:14:50 I Just seems like a lot I think it's like too many it's so cool to see how we could have gone a different trajectory and gone towards sacred geometry and Some of this stuff that maybe doesn't require pulling oil out of the ground to get energy That is just such a cool thought. And it makes sense. I mean, I wish sometimes we would have gone a different route. And hopefully now, some of this, you know, this sacred geometry comes out like Randall Carlson
Starting point is 00:15:17 is talking about. And we see how some of this shit was made. I mean, the machinery is clearly, we don't even have strong enough machinery to do what they did with the precision that they did now. But there has to be a way to do that, right? We just don't know what it is yet. Yeah, I mean, I guess you got to be careful because let's be fed. They go wiped out. So how good was that technology? It was pretty good, possibly. I mean, we would get out to. Yeah, but maybe if we combine the stuff we have with what we could learn from
Starting point is 00:15:51 them, then maybe we got a fighting chance. I mean, it doesn't look like ancient civilizations got to different planets or the moon. We've done that. So we made, we're probably the most advanced version ever, at least in our reach for travel, which is a pretty good kind of sign, you know, a metric for measuring how good you are at stuff. Did you get on the moon? Yep, all right, pretty good.
Starting point is 00:16:22 We got on the moon, but we do not know how to create a symmetrical face and stone Kind of crazy. Yeah, we can't do some of that stuff Probably I like the idea of Joe had of Elon Musk just building the pyramid saying fuck it his ability to build me a pyramid Make it just as good use all your tools How about building one of those vases, dude, or Voss's Voss? Voss. One, what did he say?
Starting point is 00:16:49 Half of a human hair in width. One one thousandths of an inch in accuracy. So we clearly know that that was not done by hand. There's no freaking way. Yeah. Well, you wouldn't, you can't even like see down to that level. So how would they can do that? And that stuff's so hard as well. It's like super, super hard material. And then perfectly balanced. And it
Starting point is 00:17:18 doesn't look like it could be like put on anything spinning because those handles would be in the way. And yeah, there's no way it was done on a pottery wheel It's almost like they just dropped these things and we're like, okay You know, but we got to leave something behind so people in the far off future after all these floods And asteroids wipe us out that they know that we were bad ass and had cool stuff. All right We'll leave some of those parts they're hard to make. Let's build some giant, you know, obelisk and cut some massive rocks and leave some granite that's precisionally cut and see if they can figure it out. And then here we are in the future going, nah,
Starting point is 00:18:00 they just did that with stone tools. It's fun man. It's cool to see. How about when they talked about the 5,000 years ago, there was a massive crater that they found when the, under the Indian Ocean, that was like a kilometer long or two kilometers long. Well, or excuse me, wide. And so they're saying the biblical floods,
Starting point is 00:18:25 like the stories in the Bible that talk about flooding were actually from a different meteor. So it's before, obviously, way after the younger driest theory. So like 2,500 years ago. Yeah. It's pretty cool to think about. I mean, it was,
Starting point is 00:18:39 there's evidence of this under the Indian Ocean. Well, that should really wake us up because they're common. They're hitting that often. Then, you know, I'm just surprised though, like so we have the flood story everywhere. Oh, right. Hold on, hold on. I got my notes here, 482 kilometer crater. You'd think that would just wipe out the world.
Starting point is 00:19:04 It says it was in the Indian Ocean, 2500 BC. But this is what I don't get, right? So that almost every country has the flood story, and often they can be dated back to the same sort of time, which is like, younger driest area. Yeah. If the media started it or a media shower, how is that part of the story not in there?
Starting point is 00:19:26 You would think it would be. Obviously, the whole world wouldn't have seen the media shower maybe, but I mean, the earth is spinning and you would imagine for days you'd be being hit by the from the sky. You'd see it, you would see them, somebody would see them. And it's not like that's how all the story started. It would be way more compelling. It's like, why only keep the flood part of the story and forget about, oh, the giant rocks that fell out of the sky. I mean, you know, they were good storytellers back then. They went in the business and leaving out details that
Starting point is 00:19:56 were useful. They're like, I don't, I don't get why that bit is missing. That's a good point. I never thought about that. Yeah. But again, what else causes giant floods? It's got to be something like, like, giant floods that come very quickly, immediately. Yeah. What kind of disaster could cause that? It's really just giant impacts, right? To Nami's and then the rest of it. I mean, or an atomic bomb. Oh, it's got to be a big bomb. Yeah. It's pretty crazy, man.
Starting point is 00:20:32 How about them? What else did you get, man? There's so much to go over here. I was so interested by everything in this. I watched it twice. Well, there's once again that idea that the pyramids kind of all over the world, you know, and they're pretty similar in certain areas. You know, the argument with me still stands though, you know, it's just like an idiot listening to this like what?
Starting point is 00:20:59 Well, I'm at the gym. But you know, it is kind of like the easiest way to stack big things. I mean, I don't know how many like three-year-olds you need to put in a room with a pile of blocks each before some of them realize the only way to get them tall is to kind of just, you know, stagger them up. I don't want to take anything away from the amazing pyramids that were built, but it's like, yeah, I mean, they're not building them straight up in the air. There could be that reason. However, there are some major similarities, right? And how significant is that?
Starting point is 00:21:35 Is that enough? If you're somebody that studies architecture or something, and you're looking at different designs and building modalities, and then you're looking at different designs and, you know, building modalities, and then you're looking at them from the point of view of different countries or cultures that were maybe separated enough to where they weren't sharing their ideas. Are they coming up with the same things? Or does that not really happen? Does good knowledge need to be passed? Like, oh, we've created like the buttresses for churches to make them bigger So the walls don't collapse, you know, was there simultaneously other
Starting point is 00:22:13 Cultures the other other side of the world doing similar things because they just figured out that's the only way to make it bigger I don't see how they would know. I don't see how it would be exactly the same I mean it they look identical all over the world. They really do. Well, the Giza pyramids don't, because they're like filled in with stones. Yeah, but when you look at the, you know, pointing to true North and all the mathematics behind it,
Starting point is 00:22:38 you know, what was it, the circumference of, was that just the pyramid of Giza where the circumference is like the same as the circumference of the earth? Yeah, you like multiply it by like what is that? I thought it was like a thousand eighty or It was the amount of hours in a in a year. Is that what it was or minutes in a year? I'll look it up. Yeah, but there's like a formula for it. I get that Yeah, but well, but it was that justyser was that all the pyramids have that same
Starting point is 00:23:09 Mathematical I think it might be the yeah, it has to be the biggest one because the other ones would have different ratios But they're all pointing true north right of the three big ones. All right. It's let's see The pyramid itself sits on a platform called the sockle All right, let's see. The pyramid itself sits on a platform called the Socle. When the two sides of the Socle are multiplied by 86,400, the equatorial circumference of the earth is represented. But where are they getting that 86,400? And then half of that is 43,200, hold on.
Starting point is 00:23:46 I'm going down a rabbit hole here. Maybe the great pyramid is a scale model of Earth at a ratio of one to four. Or one to four, sorry, one to 43,200. It also encodes its own latitude and longitude. Its base pyramid is equal to half a minute of latitude. All this stuff doesn't make sense to me. Sorry guys, for being confusing.
Starting point is 00:24:11 But there was something here when it says when it's aligned to true north within three sixtieth of one degree, it is the most accurately aligned structure on the planet, but that's just the great pyramid, right? That's not every single pyramid. No, yeah, just that one. But that one is the greatest one. So maybe that one just has the coolest stuff. Yeah, I mean, who knows?
Starting point is 00:24:39 Who freaking knows? That's the point of this stuff, but why aren't we asking more questions, right? That's what it comes down to. What got me is when they were saying that the blocks in that pyramid are different sizes. Like wouldn't you have thought just for ease of construction that you would make them all the same size? Like exactly the same. You would think and that would kind of help you out, right?
Starting point is 00:25:02 I mean, you don't even build a brick wall today with different sized bricks, unless it's just a, you know, raggedy cool-looking stone wall. Well, look at all those walls with the polygonal shapes. They're all different sizes. And some of the stones are way bigger in the middle of the wall. Yeah, it's almost like it's just whatever stone you grab next. And then you use some magic and squish it in there. We just have to put magic in the way of the technology since we don't know.
Starting point is 00:25:29 It's kind of crazy to make them, you know, flat. They had like little stones that they it almost looked like they would knock them in there. Like you're saying with blocks with children to keep it flat. They have like little other smaller blocks and slivers of block that go in between some of these huge, you know, 2000 ton rocks. Yeah. I mean, those walls just look so cool. That it just doesn't make sense. I mean, this just blew me away. And the more that you sit and kind of listen and have fun with it, I mean, your mind just goes, well, I think the big reason why this type of stuff resonates, and maybe this is along the lines like conspiracy theories is because it really opens up your like creative
Starting point is 00:26:18 thinking like when you were a little kid, it's like your imagination can't help but get running again. And I think as adults, we're just not thinking in that way often. It could point, it just gets exciting. All right, there was a little bit about Elon that I wanted to cover, that picture that he had. Wait, hold on, before we get into Elon,
Starting point is 00:26:38 because I got one more thing with this. They talked about that 3,500 ton limestone pieces. And they tried to move it a thousand miles. Yes, they talked about that 3,500 ton limestone pieces. And they tried to move it a thousand miles, or it had been moved a thousand miles but up into a mountain, right? And then in the 1700s, they built that barge to put like a thousand, what did they say, a thousand ton stone.
Starting point is 00:26:59 So one fifth of the size that they found up in a mountain, and they tried to put it on that barge in the 1700s. And like, it was just tipping over. And then they get it on land. And they have all these wood pieces underneath it to try and roll it across the land. And it just like gets buried in the sand. Like they can't do it.
Starting point is 00:27:18 Didn't they say they could move it like a hundred yards a day? Yeah, or something. Right. And you're going to tell me that that a bolder, even bigger, they moved up into a mountain, up over mountains and hills. It's just, it's beyond comprehension, how do you do it? They also said there was like three battleships
Starting point is 00:27:35 holding the budge upright. So it wouldn't tip. Yeah. Yeah. Well, we knew they didn't, they definitely didn't have battleship, so. You just got a, Oh yeah, because the knew they did, they definitely didn't have battleship, so he just got a, oh yeah, because the ship they found, that dinky little ship is like the oldest ship they found in Egypt.
Starting point is 00:27:52 It looks like it would tip over. Rogan was saying it would be like a sprinter van on a speedway. Yeah, on a racetrack. Yeah, on a racetrack. It is surprising. They haven't found like really large barges in Egypt. Well, just because of the size of that whole... You would have thought they would have transport vessels.
Starting point is 00:28:16 They're right by the Nile. Didn't they ever want to move like an army? Well, yeah, but if those were made by wood, they'd be demolished by now. But they found that one. Yeah, but wasn't it in it was in like a tomb or something? Wasn't it was under it was underground? Oh, yeah. I guess that would make sense. It'd be too old. Who knows? Well, you would think it could be pictures of it though. Hieroglyphics. Right. I mean, enough finding that. And what did they say about the building of the pyramids in terms of the only Instructions for building that they found are the much later pyramids
Starting point is 00:28:54 where they were just doing it out of mud and they drew that right and It's so odd that technology would go so far backwards that you have these amazing structures and then really crappy pyramids for, you know, thousands of machines. That just isn't that just proof that it was an ancient technology that we don't know about. It kind of sounds like there was a reset to me. And the reset is the Egyptians that were there, the pyramid was already there. They just moved in. Yeah, they're like, oh yeah, our ancestors built this, The only set is the Egyptians that were there, the pyramid was already there. They just moved in.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Yeah, they're like, oh yeah, our ancestors built this. Or they maybe they didn't fucking know who built it. Just like, yeah, this is where we live now and there's this huge thing. We're gonna try to make some pyramids out of mud and they're gonna suck. You'd think they would be some stories, right? Like some.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Well, the story of Atlantis came from the Egyptians. I did not know that. Right? Like some. Well, Story of Atlantis came from the Egyptians. I did not know that. It's cool. Yeah, they shouldn't have burnt down the library of Alexandria. I think there were like scrolls in there probably talking about this stuff. We need to find a way. We're going to find out soon because Randall's coming back on with the Plasmaid implosion technology.
Starting point is 00:30:06 I wanna see it. Yeah. Yeah. They tried it. To the sphere of power. The technology's gotta be out there. We, I feel like it's coming. I think it's too dangerous
Starting point is 00:30:20 to for anybody to come out of it. It's like all the guys that say they've invented the car that runs on water. And then they're, you know, their workshop burns down or they get poisoned. It's yeah, was that in the 70s Roganjaddeckaion where he got poisoned. He went to a meeting and then he remember he ran out of the restaurant with his cover and his throat up and saying that he'd just been poisoned by these guys. He was meeting with like some car company executives, right? Yeah, we have to keep, when you're bringing out technology like this, you got to keep
Starting point is 00:30:54 it under wraps, man. That's why Randall was saying that was six, what, six or seven years they've been working in the mall dive secretly. Yeah. So now, how are they going to come out with it secretly without getting fucked up? I don't know. Well, number one, they have the biggest media platform in the world and they're super pumped.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Like Randall is, you know, becoming fairly legit amongst people that follow him and even some others. His work is good. Now, I don't know how else you could do it. Because to Elon, we were talking about it. Because everyone else is going to try and sense of this. I mean, this is, you know, like the misinformation of COVID. Every news outlet, everywhere, we're trying to downplay this.
Starting point is 00:31:38 If there's pressure from above to keep this quiet. Which, of course, there will be be because there's so much money. Well think about it. How many billionaires are in the organization OPEC? A lot. It's like all the Saudis. There's a lot of billionaires, a lot of super rich people. And if somebody came along tomorrow and was like, Hey, I'm vented this thing. There's tiny sphere, it floats in the air. It has infinite power and charges everything and you know it just run everything from that and it's free for everyone yeah there's these billionaires that are pulling in all this oil and power money
Starting point is 00:32:15 are gonna get pretty upset pretty fast and they probably run most governments is that why you think Elon's scared right now? Who knows? Do you think he's just trolling? Who knows? He said he's up to security. Let's look at that picture that they were talking about. We can get into that.
Starting point is 00:32:35 So he has multiple cans of diet coke, caffeine free, weird cosplay gun, George Washington gun. And and the bottom left a little Trident that in Hindu wisdom represents infinite power. Now, Elon is a fantastic troll, let's be honest. I mean, there's a reason he has the most liked tweet of all time. He's a funny guy likes to mess with people and You know, this is like reading into the Beatles and their songs and their lyrics. It's like people people love to read into things
Starting point is 00:33:18 and a lot of times it doesn't always mean anything Yeah, I mean, I thought there was some significance behind the Diet Coke because I know Bill Gates drinks Diet Coke But I'm reading right now that they both actually have an affinity for Diet Coke for whatever reason Elon just likes to cap from free shit. There we go. Maybe it's maybe that's just a billion and a thing But hold wait hold on though. Okay. It's on the Washington Post. So we know who owns last post Is that Jeff Bozos? Yeah, Bozo the No, okay, it's on the Washington Post. So we know who owns Washington Post. Is that Jeff Bozos? Yeah, Bozo.
Starting point is 00:33:48 The Bezo Bozo. I give him a hard time. I order a lot of Amazon stuff. So, you know, I'm a hypocrite. But a lot of these conspiracies, they're all coming true for whatever reason. Weird, we probably shouldn't call them conspiracies anymore. Probably just truth.
Starting point is 00:34:03 Well, talking about that, Elon mentioned with his Twitter buy and after massive investigations that on a podcast, he said, hey, most of the conspiracies about Twitter have come true. And that's pretty free control. About how our government was in on a lot of the stuff and messing with it, a lot of bots, a lot of problems, a lot of sex trafficking.
Starting point is 00:34:28 I mean, they were good. There was a lot of, you know, bad stuff going on in Twitter. And then he buys it and the, and what's shocking is the advertisers, a lot of them are now pulling out. It's like, oh, it's okay for you to be in there when it's highly manipulated and has all these issues.
Starting point is 00:34:44 Right. Because it looks good. There's no controversy. But when someone comes in just to try and make it like a free open space, you pull away? I don't know. I think we should look at those companies that pull away and decide whether we want to buy anything from them. Yeah, I'm not into that.
Starting point is 00:35:04 So what's next for these guys then? Dude, I mean, they're just going to keep putting out stuff on the internet here. It sounds like we need to go back to that Atlantis spot and do some real good LIDA, but they're getting some pushback, right? Because the government there doesn't want people in looking for gold. That was one of the theories. There's a bunch of minds down there too. He was saying he had two friends that went down there, remember, to see it in person.
Starting point is 00:35:37 Intrepid friends. Intrepid. Intrepid. That sounds intrepid. But there's like, there's minds. I mean, there was people like getting blown up, like just walking there. They said they saw some dead,
Starting point is 00:35:53 there were some bones laying around and shit when they were walking through there, through the desert. I mean, who knows? That could have been just some random fucking guy walking. I don't know who knows, but I wouldn't want to go there. Did it make you want to go there? No. I mean, that type of a trip just sounds awful.
Starting point is 00:36:10 And what the hell am I going to figure out when I gather anyway? I'll just be looking around and going, that looks weird. And then, you know, I'm not an archaeologist. I couldn't figure anything there out. But surely if they could, you know know if they had access to it and Lida and some other things I Feel like we should be able to do Lida from space
Starting point is 00:36:33 Instead of flying over it Maybe Elon already knows how to do it Hmm We got to get him back on what you were talking about that being that happening in the South America already right what there was some light are that was happening in South America they talked about it on ancient Wasn't it on ancient apocalypse? How somebody flew over South America and there's all these buried cities in underneath oh yeah, they've been doing a lot of light out down that right I think they've just found a new city
Starting point is 00:37:06 that's completely overgrown. But the thing is, I think the way it works is they can only map a fairly small area at a time and because that whole region is so ginormous that they just don't have the resources to go down a map at all. And then I assume you've got to analyze it as well. Put that price a lot of time and money.
Starting point is 00:37:30 But eventually, as that technology gets better, they're going to find a bunch of these things all over. And that'll be wild. It's like, think about it. Every time they find another one, there's another huge pyramid. It's like, how many pyramids we got now? What's the what's the number of giant pyramids in the world? That'd be a cool thing. Look up. I don't know. I was going down this rabbit hole of the plasmoid unification model. Oh, you're all over that.
Starting point is 00:38:01 You want this free energy to be true. Yeah, it's true. We just, yeah, it's been suppressed, man. So there's 118 Egyptian pyramids. Brace some small ones. What else we got? When the pyramids exist in the world, this is just a forum that's a bit messy. 118 again again, they probably Google the same thing I did. It's very little research going into this. It could be as much as in the 1500s. Well, that's less than, yeah, maybe quite a bit. 15 hundreds of a lot of them, paramets. I mean, then they're not easy to build.
Starting point is 00:38:48 They're not easy at all. Well, I would encourage everyone to check this one out and check out the both of their YouTube pages, the Uncharted X page and the Bright Insight page. I'm definitely going to be looking into this more. Yeah, we got to spend some time looking at that for sure. There's just so many good videos. And the other big question is, how many times have we been wiped out by these potential asteroids?
Starting point is 00:39:19 Right? Because they already know we've been around maybe half a million years as a homo sapient, possibly more. They keep adding time to it, right? So if it's happening like every, what, five to 10,000 years potentially, that's a lot of times. Well, and we're not counting super volcanoes, we may not know about too. And it seems like if that is where we're mostly getting wiped out and we're back to zero in technology, then it, you know, it's, it takes us four to five thousand years to kind of get closer to here.
Starting point is 00:39:58 We could have done this many, many times. I just wish we'd done a better job of leaving a bit of information for the next lot. I think we have. It's just buried under more shit that we haven't gotten to. Yeah, either that or we don't understand the message. Maybe, you know, we're too dumb to understand the message. It's like that face on the moon that we all see. Just like put there. We're like, let's just draw a face, then they know. And we're just like, no, that was just asteroids. That's just asteroids. Pretty cool.
Starting point is 00:40:37 Dude, so Randall's coming on fairly soon. We're not sure exactly how soon, but he, back to what he was saying, is he's got working with these teams, potentially have all this, you know, sacred geometry, free energy stuff. I mean, I guess the hope there is that this is a big bombshell. They release it. They got a time it right with him coming on. Hopefully people don't take Rogan's podcast offline immediately. And then what put all the schematics online so we can all across the world figure it out ourselves. That's why they're trying to steal the internet away from us.
Starting point is 00:41:14 You think so? I mean, I think the power is that B, want to control the internet, don't governments want to keep us from information? No, don't. But doesn't Elon have his own internet now, kind of? Come on. Well, he should. Well, he does.
Starting point is 00:41:29 He has this. What is it? Skylink, Starlink. Smart man. Yeah. He wants to keep that free freedom of speech and freedom of information. That's what we need.
Starting point is 00:41:39 We need more of that. Come on. Well, I love this one. We got to check this out. I'm going to put some links up to their videos. I mean, they're easy to find anyway, but we'll put some links, some articles, Delvin. Let us know what you think. Send us an email, hit us up on Instagram. How excited are you guys about this? I mean, it blows me away. These are some of my favorite pods, and
Starting point is 00:42:05 this one was incredibly compelling. So, love those guys. Anyway, thank you, Todd. Love it, Doug. And I appreciate you all. See you later in the week. Later. Later. you

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