15 October 2024
#78 Unraveling the Mysteries of Extreme Weather with Maltese Canuck - E78
In this episode of the Disorganized Productions podcast, host Rob welcomes Maltese Canuck, an expert in extreme weather from Canada, known for his insights shared on the World Cast Digital Telegram group. The discussion dives into the fascinating world of solar storms, cyclones, and weather phenomena like the Coriolis effect and historical projects such as the Cirrus project. Maltese shares his unique approach to understanding weather patterns, emphasizing the importance of hands-on experimentation and critical thinking. The conversation explores the unpredictability of storms, the role of sea temperatures, and the impact of wind shear on hurricane formation. Maltese explains how weather events have historically influenced major events, like the Greek-Persian wars and World War I, highlighting the power of nature in shaping history. Rob and Maltese also delve into the controversial topic of weather modification, discussing cloud seeding, chemtrails, and the potential for weather to be weaponized. They examine the role of technology and the challenges in controlling weather patterns, emphasizing the need for critical analysis and skepticism. The episode touches on broader themes of human perception, the influence of media, and the importance of questioning narratives. Maltese shares insights into the cyclical nature of history and the potential for universal energies to shape events, encouraging listeners to remain open-minded and inquisitive. Join Rob and Maltese for a thought-provoking discussion that challenges conventional thinking and explores the mysteries of our natural world.
Maltese Canuck
https://t.me/beyondorwell
All my Links:
https://linktr.ee/disorganizedproductions
Skip me bridge like squirrel, baby.
[00:00:04] Unknown:
What we're dealing with here is a total lack of respect for the lore.
[00:00:30] Unknown:
Welcome fellow human to the disorganized productions podcast. The show that fuels your spirit, ignites your potential, and helps you become the best version of yourself. I'm your host, Rob, and each episode, we'll embark you on a journey to unlock the power within you, tap into your limitless potential, and conquer life's challenges. Hey there, fellow human. Real quick, if you wanna sponsor or donate to this show to get me through Peru, you can do that by hooking me up on PayPal or on Patreon or get some great merchandise at the merchandise store, TeePublic. And my book is out, Unbiased Convicted.
You can download it for a small fee on disorganizedproductions.com. Without any further ado, fellow human, have a great time listening to this new episode of Disorganized Productions.
[00:01:46] Unknown:
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, fellow human, welcome to another episode of disorganized productions. Today's special guest knows everything about extreme weather. He is, known from the world cast digital telegram group. His name is Maltese Kanuk from Canada. We're gonna talk about solar storms. We're gonna talk about multiple cyclones projects like the Cirrus project in 1947, 64, the solar storms, Coriolis effects. And, well, there are a lot of Skyfire 60, in the, in the sixties about forest fires, Sky Water in the sixties also. There are several, we're going to talk about all of them. And of course, current events, what happened in America nowadays.
Please welcome Maltese Kadok.
[00:02:50] Unknown:
Hi. Hello. Thank you, bro. Thank you. Just Organize Productions. No. It's great to be here. You might have, you know, embellished a little bit on that opening very well. But, yes, we're we're gonna go into a little bit of, the psychology of storms a little bit. You know, I was able to take some of the advantage of the the recent storms, put some different analytical data to it, but also had boots on the ground in both those tornadoes out of Milton as well as Helene. So, you know, able to piece together some things. I think the media will really got wrong.
Oh. Media definitely definitely definitely was fanning the flames of fear, but I don't think the socials were very accurate in their, dissemination of of the events either. So maybe we can, you know, provide a little bit more context to to what we consider weather modifications.
[00:03:47] Unknown:
Yes. And, would you please, stop sharing your screen so it's Oh. So people can see our beautiful faces right now. Oh, there it is. So everybody has a better picture of you. And please introduce yourself to the audience, Maltese.
[00:04:05] Unknown:
Yeah. So Maltese Canuck, I run the channel, Broadcast Digital, and it's, been on Telegram now. Just pushing the 3 years. And, what I'm exploring and I dive into is the style that is everything that we are living now as well as our past. So I I take a unique approach, as far as the information that is shared amongst the community and then find, unique, logical ways to drill down into the nuances of it, to get better understandings of viabilities of some claims versus, simple manufactured hysteria. Mhmm. Right? So, well, that's that's kind of what I'm at. So we cover all angles, on the hands on with experimentation as well. Right? So knowledge, without applying it is pretty useless. Right? Any one of us can read a book on how to make a a proper French souffle.
And no matter how many times we read that book, it it's not gonna turn out. You're not gonna have a nail at the moment the first time in the kitchen. Right? Right? So just like anything, you have to apply and put observations into the knowledge and the facts that you're learning, to get the value out of it and the true queuing experience.
[00:05:20] Unknown:
Right. And is it something that, that was, well, triggered your interest just by a hobby? Or is it maybe work wise, like job wise? Did you say, okay, I'm I'm dealing with some stuff. So I'm I'm gonna gonna dig into a little bit deeper than normal people. All
[00:05:41] Unknown:
hobby, all hobby driven. So when you get into weather and meteorology, that's driven by the time I spend outdoors. So any moment that I'm not, you know, turning labor for a paycheck, we're out exploring in the mountains and in the wilderness, whether it be by truck, by foot, or by bike. And you you have to start to learn how the world actually operates and read the signs, to keep yourself out of trouble and in good shape. Right? And it's just expanded from that. Once you get more of the bug of learning and understanding and making discoveries, it replaces the dopamine hit of of sharing, truth articles and the latest taglines and and hit pieces. Right?
[00:06:30] Unknown:
Right. Right. Yeah. Because, when we go to the to the news, like, it's 2 weeks ago now. Well, too strong as I would prefer to say. 2 big storms hit America. Yes. 1 in Florida,
[00:06:47] Unknown:
and one in the Appalachian Mountains. Yeah, they like the Carolinas, and it kind of just drove straight inland, yeah. Yeah.
[00:06:55] Unknown:
Is this something that's normal for a storm? Can you really predict what this path is and how strong it's gonna get?
[00:07:03] Unknown:
There's levels of sea conditions, wind conditions and temperatures and that, they give us an idea that, all the ingredients are necessary there, for a storm to generate. As far as their path and movements, no 2 hurricanes, no 2 tornadoes have ever touched the same spot, started in the same spot, moved the same way, come to land the same way. None of them have acted in the way they gained strength, lose strength. None of it's, repeatable. Alright? So it's much like the eclipse. If you're to take every eclipse that has happened from now and date it back 6000 years and draw it over a map of the realm, eventually, you'll see as the whole realm will be covered Uh-huh. With eclipse shadows.
So eventually, everywhere will see an eclipse. It's just a matter of time. So you can say just about every square inch of the shores of the Atlantic basin, would very much be touched by a storm at some point. Right. Just on scales larger than our very short human lives.
[00:08:10] Unknown:
Mhmm. Well, what are the perfect ingredients for a storm?
[00:08:16] Unknown:
Well, if we're speaking of the hurricane, the prime ingredient, no matter how you cut the data or the research, is your, surface sea temperatures. Right? Now some people are still, I guess, can remember when, there was holes in the ozone. We were going into, you know, was the climate freezing after, you know, some climate heating. You know, this climate talk has been on for a while. Mhmm. But it was, so hype put up around the El Nino and La Nina Uh-huh. Effects. Okay? And that has to do with, the amount of heat, in between the oceans, north and south of the hemisphere of the equator line. And those are your biggest predictors of the amount of storms to expect or intensity of storms to predict for that season. Right. Right? And then we add in, what's called wind shear, which is how the wind basically cuts across, the ocean and is allowed to disperse all of that heat energy.
Right? So a hurricane is really saying, look, we got this really hot ocean. We need to kick up some air currents and some waves. We need to get things tousled to move it around. So a hurricane a hurricane is the evidence of excess heat, and it's, nature's way of basically regulating.
[00:09:37] Unknown:
Right. So I always was fascinated by the weather. I was once in the storm myself. Well, several times in my life, but once I was really in it and I couldn't get any way out. And I had to rescue a few children because of the weather. Wow. With the dropping and stuff like that. That was a fierce storm. But what really interested me always was how does wind start? Because sometimes you have like a perfect day and there's no relief cracking or whatever, and then all of a sudden there comes a gush of wind. Just like, where does it come from?
[00:10:13] Unknown:
Where does it come from? It's a mix of, basically your hydrodynamics. We picture the air and the currents, just like you could water. Right? Mhmm. It's just a very, very little water that we see through. Yeah. Just the air itself. So everything's always moving in some form of vortex or bubble. Right? And there's constant motion. The easiest that anyone can do this is just take a little bit of your soap dish and blow a little bubble on the counter. Right? Have some, the light shine on it. Look close. You'll see some rainbow kind of colored effect. But when you look at the colors in that rainbow is you're going to see constant spirals. Just constant little vortex is just moving all over the place, and the bubble's just sitting there still. Right? So this bubble that's got this equalized tension, in order just to equalize, it has to keep sharing back and forth the energy that's within it.
Right? Because the other option is have enough energy to expand or no energy at all and collapse. So the bubble isn't doing a perfect dance of this, you know, I guess, charged energy and uncharged energy to to stay in existence. Right? And that's essentially what's happening through the atmosphere. So the wind is just gonna find a lower pressure or a lower charged area to move towards. And it's essentially like a wave is when the water hits the bow of your boat, you send ripples out to hit a shore. But it wasn't the molecule water that hit your boat that is touching the shore. So air moves much in the same way. You see, it generates a wave of propagation, and it just keeps nudging and spiraling, you know, its neighbor to its neighbor.
But what happens is now debris, pollen particles, odors get caught. And in those little vortexes, like tiny, tornadoes in the area. Tiny little tornadoes. And that's what allows the propagation and movement. So depending on the variances of the differentials, will then determine, I guess, the the extent of movement and the size of the system, right, between your high and low pressure zones. Wow. And all of that exists only because we get, differential heat from the sun.
[00:12:29] Unknown:
Mhmm. Right? Like, we're not It depends on, where you live, so place, because there are some places are more like haunted by the big, storms, cyclones. And I think that the difference between a hurricane and a cyclone, a cyclone is more in water areas like like Indian stuff like that. They have cyclones. They don't have hurricanes. Right? What's what's the difference between them? It's the same storm, just the the terminology.
[00:12:59] Unknown:
So hurricane terminology is what we've adapted here. And then typhoon, cyclone, remains more when you are over and towards India and on the other side of the Atlantic. All of the root word just goes back to, again, twist, spin, And that's exactly what these stowards do, whirlwinds. Right?
[00:13:20] Unknown:
Mhmm. We we talked briefly before we hopped on the show about several things, actually. Right? But but there there there's also a very big chart of storms and, events, weather events, extreme weather events, when it comes to history. And of course, we have 2024 election year, and boy, we got a year already. I mean, get your popcorn, your beer, or your water, and, you know, watch this shit show go by.
[00:13:51] Unknown:
Yes. You know, just taking a moment to step back and just observe will be in a very entertaining year. And when we view these things, we're like, oh, well, we're flooding Florida because that's where Trump is. That's where all the red voters are. They're all gonna leave, and then, FEMA and the National Guard are gonna lock you out and not allow you to return. It's just a big land grab. In the meantime, DeSantis has the largest army of electrical linemen and trucks ready to go to to repair this thing. Right? So, yeah, it's you you get into this realm of, are they doing this to change the course of history?
Right. So I I I took that history lens, and I said, well, let's look at history. What major events have happened? And you can go right back to everyone's familiar with Leonidas in his, army of 300. Mhmm. Right? And they held off all these barbarians. Spartans. Right? Now you gotta remember, the biggest thing about a Spartan is the Spartan shield was never meant for him. Spartan shield was only there to cover his fellow soldier. K. So just to give you an idea of their concept of, humanity, how you have to help a brother out before you help yourself, there's a very, I guess, prime example of it. Right? And then Right. That is their phalanx formation.
Now we're familiar with that story. What we were familiar with is, of course, after they finally fell and Leonidas was betrayed and the secret path was shown around their stronghold. We had a total of I think it was just shy of 3,000 men, the 300 Spartans, some, Thedans, and some Piasins, I think. Sorry. I kinda forget the name right off the top of my head. But, they were able to eliminate 20,000 elite Persian soldiers, right, by the time the last Spartan fell. That's the story that we're all familiar with that Hollywood's centralized, but the overall war still is raging.
And at some point, the Persians and their fleet chased the Greeks up a particular strait. And in this straight, though, the Greeks had a little surprise as they anticipated the easterly winds to come. So they went and held themselves in this nice little cove, saw this canal fill up with Persian ships to the point where a ship could not move. They were jammed side by side. There was no escape for these Greeks. None whatsoever. Uh-huh. So they send out a couple ships. You know? Little bait ships go out and tease the Persians, you know, give them a finger, you know, blur their thumb or something. Right? Uh-huh. And they they go running back to the protection of the rest of the Greek ships. Well, that was enough to entice the Persians to start heading up the channel and engage into combat. At which point, these easterly winds came and completely turned up the channel, jammed up all these boats, sunk most of them. The rest of the men were thrown overboard and completely disabled the Persian army, as far as a naval force is concerned, thus changing the overall tides of the war against Xerxes.
So that never happened. If the Greeks never kind of anticipated these easterly winds, we would probably not be where we are now as our current society. The outlook would be very different. Right? Now we're faced that the Greeks just knew of this wind to happen. The Persians, though, could have been faced as we would be putting ourselves. They called on their gods. The Greeks managed to call the gods, and the gods came and delivered this wind. They must have used some kind of god harp technology. Right? Run. Barb, Ohio. Yeah.
You know, it was just a stringed harp back then, but, you know, they play a nice lullaby and and come with Poseidon or Zeus and and then wreak havoc on the enemies. But we we know that wasn't the case. Right? And then you can go with, well, Napoleon want to get into Russia and, you know, destroy Russia and take the seas on Moscow. What he didn't expect, though, was resistance. So things got dragged out. And, of course, he had no clue, being a France dude, how cold a Russian winter is. Oh, yeah. They froze to death. So most of their army, over 300 some men, froze to death. Hitler had done the same thing as well, right, in World War 2 and kinda miscounted that. He didn't expect the opposition.
We've had World War 1 that could have been over probably in a heart flash, but due to unusual rainstorm Mhmm. All through of August, basically, Northern France, it took them, like, 3 months longer, 4 months longer to actually get into the battle, which greatly, you know, was a change of that war, which allowed it to drag out as your soldiers were literally drowning in mud in the trenches. Isn't isn't that the the the movie
[00:18:57] Unknown:
1916 that's been, for 1917, something like that. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's odd. You got to see that movie because it's one shot. It's like you follow that actor for the whole time. It's like, holy shit. But then you see also the, the scenes like it's muddy. It's dirty. It's
[00:19:21] Unknown:
Yeah. And it's supposed to be nice, hot, and dry, typically. Right? So that would change change. Yes. Yeah. And then, there's times where the weather can do nothing and change history. Right? Dunkirk. The battle of Dunkirk. Right? Right. Now we had just about 400 or 300 and some, 322,000 troops or something like that that their only escape was via a sea lift. And they were blessed with the fact that the weather completely stalled out, allowing for nothing but thick fog, cloud cover, and super calm water. Alright. So this allowed soldiers to swim out to the HMS and be rescued, and they were only able to swim out and do about 200 per hour.
The was held off due to the heavy clouds, so they can only just send in small planes and do some strife fire, do a little bit of bombing. But, of course, the RAF kinda kept the skies clear as best as possible to rid of that nuisance. You had a rearguard team of British and American troops that were just holding off the soldiers that were trying to advance to the beachfront, from the German side. And with this now newfound meteorology being able to look and potentially predict weather, particularly the use of radar, they realized that we might have a little bit of an extended moment of this calm weather, this stalled system. And that's when they put the radio call in to get as many trolleys and boats as possible.
And at the same time, the breakwaters, we're now able to use as an extended pier because the waters were so calm. And now we're loading thousands of men per hour. And the ultimate is the unthinkable was accomplished, and every single soldier was removed from that beach. Wow. And the minute those boats were just about out of sight, you had your German counterparts there staring with their binoculars at now what is windy, wavy beach, seeing their enemy completely escape. And that's a turn for the war because that was over 300 and some soldiers that still had not seen battle that were able to be reposted in other parts and then continue on with, the the siege of D Day.
[00:21:34] Unknown:
Wow. I'm a Dutch guy. So I know from the 1600s it was the VOC. There are a lot of stories about that. As a critical thinker, I like to dig into that kind of stories too. Mhmm. But these these guys, sailed the oceans. And of course, Vikings, you know, they sailed the ocean with their with their wooden, Polynesians. They did that. But if you look at, for example, the North Sea, which is upfront by us between Europe and Scandinavia. Yeah. That's a fierce sea. It's not like, Oh, you know, the Pacific ocean stuff like that. Yes, they are big. But the North Sea, the storms they, they produce is like, I think one of the, the, one of the top 3 fierce, fierce seas there are in the world.
[00:22:26] Unknown:
Correct. Yeah. And then you get huge title shifts, a lot going on. There's a lot of wind motion, you know, random icebergs and stuff. You know, you people think icebergs. They they think these massive ones, but, you know, they eventually shrink into littler ones and break apart. And these are all concerns to be had. Now I like how you mentioned Scandinavia, because we can pretty much say all of modern civilization that we kinda understand it, we can actually thank the weather for. We can thank the fact that 2 volcanoes had erupted off causing pretty much be a volcanic winter.
For the longest of time, that forced a certain amount of people to, obtain their provisions and survive throughly due to those, force of skill in battle. Right. Right? And it wasn't long then before, the clouds started to clear, the sun started to return, that they decided to take to the new highways and expand themselves, and that would have been the start of your Viking longship. Wow. So you see, if we didn't have these volcanoes, that valking Viking culture wouldn't have developed the way it was, and they wouldn't have been able to share some of that knowledge that the Vikings did share with the rest of the world in amongst their, conquest through Europe, the Americas, as well as into, deep Russia.
[00:23:43] Unknown:
And we we talked about Iceland very briefly. I think it was 2,001, but I don't know for sure when it was when the volcano
[00:23:53] Unknown:
erupted. I have the date handy here.
[00:23:57] Unknown:
2010. 2010? Yeah. Right. Yeah. So, I looked at, I think it was about 2 years ago, I really looked to look at, I think it's Aftas TV. It's about all the eruptions of, volcanoes across the world. And you can see every single day what their activity is and where something happens. But, boy, when there are 1 or 2 really erupting, we're gonna have a big, big problem. Correct. Because it could be for several years pitch dark. Mhmm. No soil will be ever grown any food because it's poisoned and there's too much ash. It's the volcanic winter, as they say. And I think that's a bigger concern than a storm which passes by, and which could, eventually, of course, damage a lot.
Probably that is why a lot of, indigenous people living down in the ground or in caves, because all the hectic around them. And, you you know, you you can't nowadays, we can build quite some good buildings. Mhmm. But that's not for that long time.
[00:25:14] Unknown:
No. You mentioned the caves. You know, the Mesotopian beginnings were the 7 tribes in the cave. Right? Or or I think it was the Incas where it was they they climbed up the roots of the corn stalks to to the upper world. Right? And that's an indication that if things are very turbulent above grounds, you do get end up with, these volcanic, you know, or in our case, it could be the nuclear winter. However you wanna fantasize and fear yourself on that, and all the possibilities exist. The bottom line, you just need enough particulate in the air amongst what they're already spraying to, limit the amount of sun energy that comes down. And that will greatly impact everything.
We live. We are sun energy. We are solar beings. We are solar panels. We can't exist without it. Nothing will. Nothing can. So in those time periods where it's barely making its peak through, the atmosphere, the underground is your only other option, because it's still continuously heated by the cosmic rays. Right? So you you've got warmth. You're gonna have fresh water, and you've got pretty much probably good access in some of these cave systems to all the necessary minerals that you're gonna need.
[00:26:26] Unknown:
Salt? I mean, one of the the the biggest that you need is like, well, let's say Celtic sea salt. It's been from France, but it's like 29 minuteerals of the 69, of the 96 you need. I mean, all you buy is salt. And of course, you need some vitamins and stuff like that. But I was, I was looking into maybe a completely different topic, but I was looking into some, digged in houses. So it's not like a normal level house, but it's a little bit digged in. And then you're gonna put a roof on it with some, some, vents, of course, and some windows so you have some, sunshine coming through, but also with some, soil upon it as the roof.
And it's always like 16 to 17 degrees. You don't need anything to heat up, or in the winter, you don't need to heat it up. And in the summer, it stays cool. So, there's a lot of benefits about that kind of stuff. But are we then so secure about our system and about, Industrial Revolution that we think, okay, now we can build brick houses, and, once in a while we're gonna be washed away or flown away by storms, and we take that for granted? Or is it maybe something on a larger scale that all these things could be fabricated to wipe us off the earth by some elites or whatever?
[00:27:58] Unknown:
Well, for all of history, the serfs, the regular people, they've always been in some form of, disposable domicile. You serve surfs? Yes. Yeah. Right. I ordered it. Right? We've always had the grass hut, you know, the log cabin or whatnot. So dwellings for the regular people have never been permanent structures. Mhmm. Right? In the past, the way you identified cities or or areas of great importance was by the the drawing of what would, like, represent a church or a temple, because where that's built, there was great importance for those tunnels to exist. They weren't, just the community hall.
Right. Now can can we create storms just to completely wipe us off this earth? And can we completely weaponize the weather as, the fear narrative is starting to drive? So far, all I've heard is what sounds like a lot of seals, and it's just ark ark ark ark ark ark ark ark ark ark ark. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What's that big light in the sky? Ark? No. I've been talking about the sun. You know? Settle down. And it's it creates confusion. Do we have some pretty fanciful technologies? Absolutely. Do we have patents? Sure.
Right? Why dare anybody to actually go read some of those patents? One of them is saying, hey, I can manipulate a hurricane. So none of these patents actually spoke about starting a hurricane. Right? The amount of energy needed, is well beyond the available electricity demand that we can provide as a whole world.
[00:29:49] Unknown:
Wow. Right? So
[00:29:52] Unknown:
We're talking going? Just to get it going. Right? But once it's going, hey. Alright, mother nature. You got this going. Can we nudge it? Can we entice it certain ways, by understanding what its principle is? Its main principle is, dissipating heat. Right? So, can we use some of these patents? Well, some of these patents, one of them says, yeah. We will, project sound at it at 1,125 feet per second. Mhmm. Okay. The speed of sound is 1,125 feet per second. Good on you. So are we playing Mozart? Right? Or do we need some more heavy rock to really get this hurricane going? What are you projecting in that 1,125 feet per second? And that was covered in the patent.
Right? So patents, a lot of times, are just more or less theoretical.
[00:30:47] Unknown:
Right? But there are applicable things that we're living in this world, right, if you're really looking at things, they're all theoretical. And because of the narrative says, okay, we're 80 against 20, we're going to take the 80%, so that's the thing we think. Is it proven? Well, no, it's not a fact, because it's theoretical, right? Right. Right. And we're talking about storm systems. Right? There's thousands of moving variables.
[00:31:16] Unknown:
Right? Like, we can't even predict the weather a 100% accurate 2 days out. Yet Some secret power somewhere, right, who has good advantage by telling us the weather more accurate. We'd probably be more productive as a society. Can't give us accurate weather forecast, but then can completely control the development of a storm when it develops and whereabouts it goes on land. And being able to control all of those variables is near impossible. Right? You got a stratosphere. As you go up in the atmosphere, it's constantly going from warm to cold to a freezing point, and then it warms up again to a freezing point, and then it warms up and then goes to a freezing point all the way up into, you know, I guess the outer space, the outer reaches of it. So that's a lot of layer of atmosphere, weights and densities to to try considering.
Then you've got overall pressure systems above, below, and around you. You've got the whole of the oceans. I don't know if I need to remind anybody how big these oceans actually are. Now, we're just gonna turn on this little harp thing and microwave it. Other than the harp, it's actually pointed up into the sky, not down. That's what we call waters below the harp antennas, and they're designed to radiate the ionosphere. So, HART being a tool, you can take that probably out of the ballpark and out of the game. Then using, like, satellites.
Is it lasers from satellites? Well, and then we got all of that satellites do exist, and they're probably orbiting the Earth at 17,000 miles per hour at 22,000 some, you know, miles away.
[00:32:54] Unknown:
So, problem with these kind of figures, to be honest with you. Yeah.
[00:33:00] Unknown:
Right? So we we've gotta keep the logic in check. You know? They're like, well, Disney shows us this video, and I've shared it on my channel, fifties video where they're showing this how we move in, hurricane. We're gonna have all our satellites go into position to give us accurate data. We're gonna send rockets in the chat. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right? But they're like, ah, see, they can manipulate the weather. I said, yeah. But Disney also has videos on rockets in space landing on the moon and, all that fun stuff. So we can't just arbitrarily draw a line due to the fact patents exist, some of the technology exists.
Mhmm. So it's true, but this side's completely fake. They're gonna have to work hand in hand. Right? So, yeah, as far as the weather goes, can we seed a storm? Can we see a big, call the cumulus cloud coming that's kilometers high? Right? And it's just been a super hot day for the last 3 days in the middle of July on the prairies here. Mhmm. We're anticipating that that storm's gonna pack a big, big old punch of hail. Right? She's gonna get angry. No. And that's gonna devastate not only property, lives, livestock, but also all the agriculture.
We got to a point where this was getting very expensive and costly as a society in this local area. And so we spray the clouds, right? We do cloud seeding when these big storms form. And the whole point of putting something like a silver iodide Mhmm. Now silver iodide really is silver and iodine. And that is essentially, doing colloidal silver with some Lugol solution.
[00:34:40] Unknown:
That doesn't sound that bad because I make colloidal silver right Yeah. In my kitchen.
[00:34:45] Unknown:
Yeah. So in and itself, it's not bad. It's the design. It's the molecular shape of those crystals, though, that allow quick adhesion of other ice crystals that are in that cloud. And so what you're gonna do is you're enticing more debris for more ice crystals to hook to so we get basically hail over a larger area, smaller in size. Right? Now the downside, though, if we keep putting, the iodine in the silver, as you said, colloidal silver is a great antibacterials. That's a lot of heavy antibacterial material that potentially be going into the soil, into the water systems, which if we destroy those microbes, we're now on a problem of Earth, having necessary microbes to do the regeneration, the breakdown of soils, and have this whole system continue.
But as far as initially to any kind of human, essentially, they're putting the cure of COVID in the air.
[00:35:40] Unknown:
Right. What we want About what they say What they want. Medium and,
[00:35:44] Unknown:
So the, Linum and boron, that's in the chemtrail side of things. Right? So cloud seeding for rain to control snow, will seed certain storms that aren't gonna deliver snow but are carrying good moisture. But because the wind is so fast carrying them over the mountains, they've learned if they do a little bit of the seeding, they can get some of that moisture to drop in the mountains, build up the mountain snowpack, which helps water tables come to spring melt. When we get into chemtrail, what we're seeing and the theory behind the chemtrail is blocking the amount of light radiation that makes it directly to the surface.
[00:36:20] Unknown:
Right. Right? And we I I went sorry to interrupt you. Yeah. What we talked about before, we don't call it chemtrails because that's not the official name of the stuff that we're seeing in the sky. It's SAIs, stratospheric aerosol injections. That's what we're talking about. Because when we say that now, every big govern, governor body, whatever, my minister will now jump off his fucking chair. It's like, oh, shit. Now they figured out. Oh, yeah.
[00:36:50] Unknown:
Yeah. All terminology, definitions matter, and that's awesome. Oh, yes. You're putting that out. And, yeah, what's the ballgame on that? Well, you know, that wrap all can take you down all sorts of things. Are we getting some independent reports, higher aluminum, higher barium, and all that kind of stuff in some of these mountains and in these snow packs where there is no immediate, industrial source for the pollutants. Yeah. For sure. But then we also gotta look, what are the largest sources of some of these that could come from industrial pollution, and what are the ultimate weather plans? And has that analysis been done? Not that I've seen. So, is it all just from planes? Yes. There's some damning evidence of what looks to be other jets shooting out something from the plane. However, there's also, a thing that's called dumping fuel.
Right? Now a plane will often need to dump fuel for certain reasons. And can we verify what we just see on the video, your aerosol injections? Or is that an actual fuel dump be taking place? Right? And the context is missing. So something that comes to mind that, you know, what else sprays out of airplanes? The other would be is the proper monitoring of the contrail, where you do have the condensation of the air molecules that create the vapor that eventually do dissipate. Mhmm. Right? Chemtrails, if we watch them, seem to not have a natural just dissipate to nothing, but tend to carry along with the higher winds. You see it spread out a bit different.
It can have, a bit of an effect if you're able to line that up in with the sun. Camtrails are very, very thin, but they block light in a very interesting way that only usually thicker clouds can pull off. Right. Right? So can we get better, images of how these things react to sunlight to better verify? Is it water vapor, or is it, more of a metallic substance that, would have a completely different, refractive index basically and behavior, especially when caught on cameras and then put through histogram analysis.
[00:39:07] Unknown:
Right. Right. And if if you're talking about, silver, colloidal silver, if I look back at some stories of the Anunnaki, there are stories that tell that they wanted the gold of this earth, because they needed to repair their ozone layer, on Nibiru. I think it's the planet Nibiru. And they figured out, I think it's not that long ago, and maybe you can say yes or no to that, whatever I'm gonna say. If it's the truth, yes or not. That if you have very small particles of gold, you can, repair a layer in the air, like an ozone layer, for example.
[00:39:56] Unknown:
The gold could have that that ability to do that. There is a lot of substances that could fall into that category. The only question, I guess, where I pump the brakes on the Nibiru and Anunnaki needing to mine gold, if we're talking about basically, an alien species that, can leave their planet, come to ours, create us in our DNA stature to, mine the gold for them kind of thing is kind of how the story goes vaguely. They would also then have the technology and the knowledge to know that you don't need to mine gold, but gold grows. Right.
That they would've just been farming gold. That they would need to send us down to, dig it up. Right. But that's not here or there. I guess that's something now someone can take that thread and run. So that's just where I'm like, if I'm a super available intelligent race, even a fraction, the let's say the Atlanteans were only a fraction of this alien Anunnaki in their intelligence and ability, It just doesn't make sense to to have to do the physical mining of gold. As I understand, the Atlanteans were great in their agriculture because they knew how to use the power that's contained within the seed. Right? That's atomic power within the seed. Right?
We operate at atomic level energies, and we are bombarded every minute by about a 1,000,000, radiation of a 1,000,000 atomic bombs that come in from outer space. We've just gloriously adapted to it. Mhmm. Right? So, when we start pulling other nuances and possibilities, especially writings of the past, it kinda changes some of our unidirection mindset that we have that, the medias have kind of steered us towards.
[00:41:54] Unknown:
Right. That's just what I wanted to say. Just like, if it's a story, well, think about who wrote the story and what the intention was about giving that story to whoever, right? So, basically, if you look at, because we were talking a little bit about it, space, is that something that we can is isn't something real or is it something that's that's also maybe just a story if we have to believe NASA?
[00:42:27] Unknown:
You know, NASA has applied their lens on how they want us to view space, just as the Christians have applied their lens on the past. K. I'll use just three brief examples. Baal, b a a l, which most people right now would say is the devil, was the Canaanite god of storms and fertility. Now, but he only became associated with a devil is because in, Christian canon in context, anything that worships, you know, anything but the god, our father. The only one. Evil. The only one. So that's where Baal got its evil name from. And then we extend it still, and we use the terms today pagan and heathen. Now a pagan all that pagan was was somebody that lived in the rural area and most likely were the agriculture farmers and sheep herders.
No. And they were they were normal people like you and I. They were just the last to get the doctrine because the Christian doctrine, of course, went to the city centers first. So all these city slickers that were buying all these great vegetables and and having this comfortable life in the city due to the backs of the agricultural community, would then go and snuff their nose up. I don't even call them pagans because they didn't understand the teachings of Jesus Christ, yet they were still using the almanac and understanding mother nature's, very patterns that allowed them to generate the very food that these people now soften their nose up at needed to eat in order to survive. The same for heathen.
Right? The heathens are just the hillsides again in Germany in your Germanic area. And, again, same concept. They were the last people to know about this new Christianity, and so they were called the heathens. But, you know, if you look at a lot of addresses worldwide, most people live, you know, within manors or heeds or places and parks. Mhmm. Mhmm. Right? But we still use it as a form of, weaponization in our communications today in social medias without even understanding the root of the words. Right? That's where it starts getting us into some trouble.
[00:44:48] Unknown:
And, boy, do we got some trouble sometimes.
[00:44:51] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Yes, sir. We've got lots come up. You know, this very psyop that I guess we call our current existence of 2024. Right? So Right. As it's and it goes through Is it real? Right. You know? We can't know anything is real. We don't know if anything is real anymore. How do we know anything?
[00:45:10] Unknown:
I think it's all a fucking scab. I think it's all a fucking scab. When they get off just like, oh my God, I had this dream. You know, just like And then you realize just like, holy shit, how did they pull that off? Because there is a script. Somebody wrote the script about all these things that have been lighting up right now. It doesn't matter what you believe, what you think, what shit show you're gonna look at. Take a helicopter, helicopter view, Somebody wrote a script, and they're all actors in play. How the fuck did he pull that off or she or whatever?
[00:45:53] Unknown:
You know, and this is something that I do explore very deeply as well in the channel, and it's something I was working on, before joining up here with you. So it's a quick sneak peek. Nothing new that I hadn't mentioned to say before, but, we're aware of, the katun cycle, or the Mayans. Right? And the Mayans had their short and long term calendar. And if I I'm old enough still to remember, 2012 was supposed to be the end of the world.
[00:46:22] Unknown:
Yes. Correct? Yes. And all computers would crash, and everybody would die.
[00:46:27] Unknown:
Well, that would have been the 2,000 was the computer crash. Right? 99 to 2,000. That was y two k. The computers can't count to 2,000. That's right. Yeah. And we saw how well that went. And if I I remember correctly, we really didn't have social medias. What we had was everybody had an email address. Yes. You were sharing email me. If you had a computer, you had. Yes. Right. Right. So that was kind of what was going on with that. So as we get into looking at these ages and these Mayans, these Mayans were very good at their calculations to the fact that we still had used a lot of their calculations even today. Why are we doing their math? They were good at it. So if I gotta do is try doing a share screen and hopefully with Yeah.
We'll get both. Just so we can play along with, the steps here. Right. Yeah.
[00:47:28] Unknown:
Blonde. Poppy.
[00:47:30] Unknown:
Click on. Let's see if it,
[00:47:33] Unknown:
switches. Why is it pop? There we go.
[00:47:36] Unknown:
Yes. Now does that come bigger when I click on this button? Do you see just the stairs? Or Click it. You'll have to adjust it. We just zoom in here on this energy pyramid for the katun, to AU cycle.
[00:47:51] Unknown:
Now it is, as big as I could get it, I think. K. Not. Here. I know what I can do. Let's say that. I'll just do it a different Oh, yeah. Sure. Yeah. Get get
[00:48:10] Unknown:
Alright. Close that out. And then
[00:48:14] Unknown:
Loading pump.
[00:48:18] Unknown:
And I think we're over on that screen. And one more button. We should have this figured out.
[00:48:28] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:48:29] Unknown:
How's that working? Yeah. Control and,
[00:48:32] Unknown:
your mouse, then it should be popping up big. Yes. Exactly. Yeah. It's not a basketball key, but we can see the pyramid. It's not a basketball. We get the idea of this pyramid. Right? Yeah. Energy So for a Ketan to a howl.
[00:48:47] Unknown:
Yes. So what we're gonna do is take a little step as, the minds broke down their ages into smaller steps. At the beginning on the left, there was your 2012. That was the end of the world. Mhmm. So it was the end of the old cycle starting of this one. If you notice now when you get to the top of the step, that's 22 and 23.
[00:49:09] Unknown:
Right.
[00:49:11] Unknown:
How did last year and this current year go? Right? Not so good. And now we're as we see into 24 to 25, we're on this dropping side of the steps. Now this also seems to correspond at about 20 25 would be about the midpoint of our current solar cycle. And then it starts declining in our current solar cycle is due to end anywhere between the 2030 and 2035, depending if it's gonna be an 11 year or bump on a bit longer. Uh-huh. So we've got a lot of dates that lead into this 2032 time frame that also, a certain narrative, I think, has a similar time frame alliance there. Yeah. It is. So is this script Just
[00:49:56] Unknown:
Something like that. Yeah. Some some evil people with, you know Starts with an n and ended with an o. Yeah. It was, new kids on the block. No. No. It was something No. No. No. It's on top, man. You know? It was new president state? No. No. No. No. No. No. It was some I think it was like the end boss of, Wolfenstein a little bit. You know? Like a German Nazi kind of
[00:50:24] Unknown:
race. Yeah. Opus, you know, it's the new world Opus maybe. Yes. Something like that. Yeah. Yeah. I was playing the game,
[00:50:32] Unknown:
Deus Ex. A friend of mine told me about it. I never knew that game, but yeah. I got it. The new world retards? What was it? New world Obstetricians? Obser observations? Order. Order. That's it. That's it. That was a hard one.
[00:50:57] Unknown:
Yeah. So, you know, I'm I'm really beginning to wonder if they write their own script or because they can't create so good, they had to copy someone else's maybe. And, you know, the other option is, the Mayans had great calculation of the stars in the skies and tracked it very well, very closely for, a very long time. Is it possible the the stage is more set by the universal energies? Right. Now these, these these these new wanker order people tend to know, I think, some of these energies and these cycles a little bit better than the average person. Mhmm. So I have the feeling that they they they anticipate these energies and have an idea just looking at history, you see, because they want history to repeat.
Yes. They know how to make it repeat. Where in our case, we forget history, which allows it to repeat.
[00:51:57] Unknown:
So it's a great possibility. We were killed. Right? Because all our generation were killed or were in feminine or were in, wars. So we can't recall our history because our parents were dead.
[00:52:10] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense, doesn't it? Yeah. And now, you know you know, there there's a round, or, unfortunately, some, I think, were being removed forcibly. But we're also part of a society that happily just, you know, sets them on the side shelf, called retirement homes and leaves them there anyway. Scratch 22. You know, we wanna keep them alive, but at the same time, as long as they're alive and not in my house. Right? So we have this ability not to remember things because we don't have the people to teach or show us or, or remind us of these stories anymore. So you do that enough to a population we forget, but they're obviously carrying their special schoolings and this information along. It's what we call our mystics, your occult knowledges.
They're not hidden anymore. No. But that's essentially what it is, is just this is information that we won't put into the school system. By all means, come find it and read it and educate yourself on it, but we're not gonna highlight it as a course option.
[00:53:10] Unknown:
Or in some universities, they will allow to preach that stuff, but you're not in it. Correct. You know, you don't have the the bloodline. You don't have the the whatever the fuck you need for preaching new bullshit.
[00:53:26] Unknown:
That's right. That's right. So we're seeing that these Mayans, 1,000 and 1,000 and 1,000 of years ago, knew exactly come 22, 23, you're gonna have a couple bad years, and then it was just gonna be down the hill, pump the brakes, the whole way slippery slope. Wow. Right? They're like the Nostradamus' of their time. Right? Nostradamus did the same thing. It was just a matter of cycles of the solar systems and the skies and the stars that allowed him to to nail down a lot of his predictions. So is it a new scripted narrative? Is this just new put upon us that this is the the new play? No. They just modernized the same play for the the new set of characters and audience to be paying attention.
Mhmm. And we fully understand we've got this, mass media, this all powerful entity that seems to be controlled by a very small few that disseminate the majority of the information to the populace worldwide. Mhmm. Now these very same people created an alternative option called YouTube and social media saying, here is something you can disseminate information on. Right? And what do we immediately do is we treat this system as it's from a separate entity. Right? And I did some high level numbers. I don't know if you saw any of the pie charts. Everyone loves pie charts. Why don't people click likes on pie charts more? Tell me. Because it
[00:54:56] Unknown:
depends on how they bake it if it's pie. It's a good pie. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:55:01] Unknown:
You know, like, I should probably just do a real pie and then slice it up, write some numbers on it, and we get probably a few more likes. But nonetheless, in this pie chart, it it definitely breaks down, content generated by the actual users and content creators like yourself, myself, and, the community that are fanatics and want to do their part and have some great art talent. We only account for 20% of the traffic. Now if you see how many you know, join a couple Telegram channels and some of these channels, you can have over a 1,018 posts a day.
Right. Information. Right. Right? If you're a guy like me, you've probably got about 30, 40 channels lined up that are pulling in this kind of amount of posts. But from only 20% of us. Now you mentioned, hey. You know, you've got a a full time job. You don't just get to sit here and do this podcast all day long. Right. A finite amount of time in a week, just like I do, just like any other person that's on YouTube. Who's generating all this content? Who is making all of this stuff so available if we're all working our own jobs because we can't get any kind of monetization on YouTube because we're talking about subjects that aren't allowed to be monetized?
Right. Right. So you start seeing the trap that we're in is we have 80% of our information is provided to us by state agents, special actors, governments, corporate industries, and any other person who has enough money to influence us enough to buy whatever product or do whatever it is they want. Right. New world retards. Yeah. But we treat it like it's the gospel truth. Right? The the Internet now has become the new bible. Our our potential controllers have become the new deities and demigods that we pray to and sacrifice virgins and throw people into volcanoes for, because they control the weather now. You see?
They control every light into the sky. Like, the latest comet I was photographing last night is your, c 203 dash a 3, the Tushnetian Atlas, that's available in the west sky. Apparently, now that's fake too. Right? So every light in the sky, every cloud is fake. Every weather event is man made, and it's all due to our controllers, our new gods. Now didn't we just make fun of some pagan people that would pray to their wind god, their sun god, and do rain dances? But we gotta call them pagan and devil worshipers.
[00:57:37] Unknown:
Right. Old into it. What are we doing now? You're old for us.
[00:57:41] Unknown:
Right? You know, we could have set it up a human chain and had enough gasoline to fill up a 110 times the amount of people leaving Miami, Florida, and thus going back into it after that hurricane, if we spent less time saying it was harp embarking like seals kind of thing. Right? More people pushed more fear around that storm, both of them, than was ever actually witnessed on the ground. The lies, the theme is gonna, you know, lock you out and all that stuff. Right? It was off the hook. It was off the hook. Right? Out of control. It was as far as a peer push. Yeah. It's a new thing.
[00:58:22] Unknown:
It's not like in the early days when you got a television that they want to see what's on it. Now they eat the shit that they're gonna serve you. They eat the shit. And that's, it's like, okay, the first time when someone faced an hamburger, can you imagine that? That the first time that you saw a hamburger on a plate with with some bread and stuff like that, it's like, what the fuck is that? And you taste it. It's just like, oh my god. This is this is so good. This is wow. You you gotta make more of that. The first time, that was gold. That was pure gold.
But now when you see, even if you drive by a McDonald's restaurant, how many times did it actually smell like a fucking restaurant, like Italian restaurant where you smell, you know, La mama's cooking onions, and, you know, the garlic and all this stuff, you know? How many times did you drove down a McDonald's and you said, wow, this smells so good, I need some. I never, ever had that feeling, although I ate it in the past.
[00:59:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Now, it's more like a vomit feeling when you smell it, for sure. Yes. But but, yeah, there was a little something there in it that, you know, tweaks some kind of, you know, primal sense and urge, and, you know, kids love it. And,
[00:59:56] Unknown:
little bit of diarrhea. Everybody knows. I'm I I was addicted to McFlurry. I quit it with all the stuff because I told you about my trip that I'm going to do on Friday. Yes, yes, yep. So, yeah. And well, maybe that's a nice segue. If you look at a lot, we talked about from Mesopotamian times, critical thinkers. It's not like conspiracies because a lot of conspiracies were true, first of all. Okay. 2nd of all, of course, there are some really good people at work to provide good weather models and good weather predictions and stuff in the air, not to have, let's say we have a big tournament like, football or whatever, big games or whatever that that's gonna be on TV screens all over the world, that's gonna rain like hell, you know? Okay. We we we can now manipulate the weather with cloud seeding, which is a good thing, I think, for most people.
And we got some really bad stuff going on about this, what was it? It? The the we thought of Wankers Club. No. The new world
[01:01:16] Unknown:
Yeah. It was the new Wank order. I don't know. I have a problem, man. The whole thing is such clown world.
[01:01:27] Unknown:
But that's the thing, you know? If you can see, well, I don't listening to the news or look at television and stuff like that. And sometimes things go through whatever all my filters, and I couldn't get them. I just like, oh my god. How the, did the, well, first of all, who wrote this story? And second of all, who's gonna believe this shit? Who's really gonna believe this shit? I don't get it. Well, of course, there's been shit going on. I mean, in Florida, that roofs were blown off, and severe storms happened here in the Netherlands too. Almost cyclone or tornado.
It's like it's not nice to be in one. No, no, not at all. But it's been raging across the realm of since the beginning of times, whatever time that is.
[01:02:27] Unknown:
Right. Right. You know, I I I took a I did a little, video monologue deal kind of just having some fun and playing with imagination is picture yourself as a real estate agent for aliens. And out of all the options you've got, you got, Hey, you see, there's this earth over here. We've got some really good prices going right now. You know, the, the inhabitants are lovely people. They're great little neighbors. You'll get along with them just fine. Lots of this sunshine. The beautiful blue, of course, is very unique for this end of the solar system. So you'll get this beautiful blue aspect. It's quite nice. And it, you know, the green complements it, definitely. But, you know, sometimes there is these, you know, weather.
Right? And, of course, you'd be, what kind of weather, sir? You know, oh, wow. A little bit of storms. You know? What do you mean a little bit of storms? Well, things can get whipped up to 200 kilometers an hour, and these storms can vast over 500 kilometers of wet. You know? Then there's these volcanoes, you know, just little pesky fire zits that pop off everywhere and melt things. You know? Yeah. They would move on. Mars looks by far more attractive.
[01:03:34] Unknown:
Right? Like Even if it's just Devon Island, I mean, it's just I think it's Canada. Right? Yeah. Yeah. That's my backyard. Just just in your area. Just like, okay. Why don't we go a little Mars? No. No. No. No. No. I I mean, I love my space around here where you live. Right? Yeah. Just that. But that's the funny thing. Right? They they they manipulate so many things. And even if they manipulate the weather, and even if they spray the skies and do do all the the the the the the the, talk to death kind of thing or whatever, Why do we talk about it and don't do anything about it? That's always my my biggest question. Of course, I talk about it because I have a fucking podcast, of course. Just to be aware, just like, okay.
You know? You know, people talk about this on just their on
[01:04:25] Unknown:
on open chats and stuff all the time too. So it's on everyone's mind. And we're getting to that point is, okay. So for 4 or 5, 6 years straight, we shared pictures of chemtrails and chemtrails and amount of barium, thorium, and everything else that might be mixed in with it. Uh-huh. And then? And then? Oh, no. We're just gonna share it again. Just in case you forgot. Right? To give you an idea, the quality of confidence that we have in fellow people's, memories. We gotta remind them every week. Chemtrail. Chemtrail. Chemtrail. Heart. Chemtrail. Heart. It's it's just become a new form of entertainment.
You know, some people play video games and press buttons and click buttons. Well, some people just play the socials, and they just click buttons and hit buttons.
[01:05:16] Unknown:
Isn't that isn't that really, the kind of stupidity that that that that we're allowing ourselves to be been fooled by? Because in the beginning, if you go, like, I say all the time on my podcast, when you dig into one rabbit hole, just like, holy fuck. And then you start digging, you keep tumbling like Alice, you keep tumbling down and tumbling down. You can go out. And the more you're tumbling down, the more sometimes your heads get a little bit weary, but it's also gives you a lot of rest, a lot of peace. Just like, okay, you know what? Everything is rigged. Everything is fucked up. I live my life like I do it on my best, but with love, with a walking middle finger, with love.
And just do the best I can, right? That's it. But if you see how things sometimes are being pushed, and pulled, and pushed into our faces all over again, that it makes so much sense. Like, oh, shit, it's chemtrails. Oh, now they're poisoning us. Fuck, they're killing us. Yeah, they're killing us. And the only thing is when you hear these, this echo, oh, chemtrails. Oh, they're poisoning us. Oh, we're gonna die. And that's been echoing and echoing. And nobody said, Oh, they're gonna poison us. What? Why don't we do that? Give me their phone number. Right? Finger baseball bat, boys.
Exactly. There's a And he on the door, what you gonna do, open up? Mhmm. It has a sign on his on his fucking suit, like, I'm a killer. Okay. Hi, mister killer. What'd you come and do? Yeah.
[01:07:02] Unknown:
Yeah. And we're that's where we're at. And this is at the point where, you know, if you just take a moment, sit, and watch yourself go by, you know, grab a seat on the park bench, where it it there's a large community where this new information, it's the repeated information, same old, same again. And then it's constant of fear. Right? So your air is poison. Your w your food's poisoned. The water you drink is poisoned. Your doctor's trying to poison you. Your teacher is trying to make you stupid. Mhmm. Alright? Your religious people are trying to attack your children.
And then you've got, you know, the drugs on the streets, the bad drivers, and everything else that we call our everyday life, piled on top of it. How much motivation would you have to wake up and do that day again? Right? Beyond that, let's say we go to our little buddy, Joe Normal. Hey, Joe Normal. See those clouds in the sky? They're not real. They're not real. And you bombard them with you see, when you know what's going on in the world, you're gonna fully understand that you're being poisoned. You're being killed. You're being attacked, and you are the target of the greatest military in the world.
Right? Yeah. Do you think dude's gonna have a good day?
[01:08:22] Unknown:
You think he's gonna go skipping into work? Oh, you wanna do it? I'm here today. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. We're getting killed. Well, this is so great.
[01:08:29] Unknown:
Right? It's no. No. So why do normies not give a crap? Well, because the fact that it rained on me, whether it was because they seeded the sky or god pissed on me, my day was adjusted or ruined accordingly because it just simply fucking rained. I don't care how it rained. It rained. Right. Right. Right? And, ultimately, what are we gonna do about it? What are we gonna do about are we gonna go, start a trucker convoy? Right? Everyone go with their windshield washer food, and let's go plug up a a state capital somewhere and tell them we don't like the weather change. In the meantime, you know, they'll just point at you and go, well, if you didn't drive across country, you know, we wouldn't have to now jack up the carbon tax to make up for all that unnecessary fuel you just burned.
Right? And then it could be, well, if they do control the weather, yeah, we control the weather. What are you gonna do about it? Oh, yeah. You just developed your basement, didn't you? Right. Right. Well, we just might bring a flood your way. So if we've got a government that's willing to kill us via injection, via food, via water, apparently they suck at it because none of those are working very effectively in the large scale of things. Now they need to involve, weather. But get this. We're going to spend all this money, gigawatts of energy. Who knows how many bazillion tons of silver nitrate and salts and that you'd need to dump into the atmosphere to generate a storm that's gonna push ashore, wreck a few small towns, implement the city for a couple days, maybe flood a few little areas, but then we're going to send electric crews and telephone crews out right away to make sure your power's up your internet. So we are going to make sure that those gas stations get delivery of fuel trucks. We're going to make sure that your grocery stores are all restocked.
Immediately, just about following the storm minus some areas, like, you know, we do see some troubles in some areas that aren't getting necessary assistance. But for the most part, most of these survivors of the Milton storm, were powered back up, you know, within the day. Some took a little longer, and that's mainly depends on what the storm destroyed is. You gotta get parts and equipment. What? What? What? Isn't that the best fucking alibi you can get? I'm gonna kill you, but, oh, shit. I failed.
[01:10:47] Unknown:
You know what? I'm gonna give you all the credentials that you that you that you relied upon so you don't see me as the big bad.
[01:11:01] Unknown:
Yeah. And what what was the death count? Maybe 47 people? I I don't know. In I didn't watched it. I only saw some some some flares of the news, and that's it. Yeah. Yeah. And most of the deaths were actually caused by the tornadoes, and that was another thing. Oh, tornadoes during a hurricane. This is this is so wrong. Well, no. If you just do a basic of search, almost every single hurricane comes with a plethora of tornadoes. I think the highest count is about a 120 some, and I think that was during Katrina. You know, and then I got I crunched some interesting data too, is just 2 out of 3 storms. We'll use Helene in 24, Helene in 57, Katrina in 2005.
Those 3 storms, I looked at where the moon was through those 3 storms. Now 57 Helane just skirted along the coast and just went off to the Atlantic and really was nothing to worry about. The moon was over over the Pacific ocean at the time. But when we get to Katrina, as Katrina kind of made a little right hand turn and headed inland and picked up speed, the moon passed directly over its path. That exact moment. So Lane, this one in 2024, also seemed to pick up a little bit of speed and just steamroll straight inland. And we had, sitting on top of that, would have been the moon as well as Jupiter and Mars floating right over the top of the Gulf of Mexico at the same time that that kind of picked up its speed.
Now that Mayan steps we showed you, those are 20 year cycles. Now 20 years are pretty solid number for celestial events, except for really one that stands out. And that would be a conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn, kind of the 2 most important celestial bodies in the skies and mythologies. Right? Oh. So how much influence does Jupiter maybe have on us being its big light that it is in the sky? It's, 12 year cycle. It does, has 11 loops, and those 11 loops time up to the 11, years of the solar cycle of the sun. Right now we have the Mayans counting off every 20 years, every time Jupiter goes and blocks Saturn.
And we have these weird storms going on in the Gulf right now, but we also have the moon Saturn and you know, the planet Mars, god of war hanging over top. Interesting indicating more of our chaos. Not only that, but we're inundated by comets in our solar system. And we as we can see in your naked eye right now, you can go out there and take a look. And so those are bringing different energies. Right? The sunspots on the sun have just been just
[01:13:46] Unknown:
crazy busy this year. The sun flares? What are the spots? Just the spots. Just the spots. What do you think? Is it is it 93,000,000 miles away?
[01:13:57] Unknown:
If you're to do triangulation based on 2 observers and calculate from each observer, 1 north, 1 south, of the equator or both on the same side of the equator, it doesn't matter, and take the angle to the sun at solar noon, which is when you're at a 180 degrees azimuth, you can then just simply do the math and solve for a triangle. And, every way I've tried doing it, it puts it out to that, 100,000 kinda 1,000,000 mile mark, right, in kilometers. So 93,000,000 miles in in miles. Sorry. 93,000,000 miles. When you then do the same on any other kind of shape Earth, particularly the flat realm, as you move your observers, the sun altitude changes in that triangulation.
So we could say if you put, 2 observers on the tropics, north and south of the equator, look at the sun, the sun's gonna have an altitude of about 50 to a 100 kilometers. And then you're gonna have your your friend, there standing on the equator looking up at the sun goes, yeah, it's 52. Now your 2 friends that are on the tropics are gonna go further out, and then they're gonna re triangulate the sun. And now the sun is only 2,000 kilometers high. And your poor buddy at the equator is now get completely melted by the sun. So it comes to a point when we can do basic geometry and calculations.
We can start getting an idea if something is truly viable or not. Mhmm. And we've done now multiple suns. There's groups on Telegram where we have the solar filters on our cameras, whether it's a p 1000 or some other zoom camera or an oscilloscope. Yeah. And we photograph this thing every day. I've got, one mate that's on to about, I think, almost now, a 140 days straight, minus our hurricane and the odd cloudy day. And you start to notice a pattern. You can really see what's kinda going on in the dynamics of this thing. And and that's creating some rifts in some people's minds because they think it's just this focal point of something that just floats in the sky, and is relatively close. But even using, let's say, local it's a local sun.
We do know that over 255,000,000 square kilometers of this realm, whether it be flat or around, gets lit up every day. Mhmm. In order to have a light only 5 to 9000 kilometers away, and then light up that kind of space, it would have to be over about 20,000 kilometer, in diameter sun. Now some of us can do some just angular math and look at, well, 20,000 kilometers sun, only 9,000 kilometers away, would not equal to the half degree that we see as its angular resolution in the sky. Right. Right. And that's just drawing triangles, right? Mhmm.
[01:17:04] Unknown:
Yeah. I did a podcast with, William Duffy, and he wants to go to Antarctica to prove. Yeah. Hey, you like that? Yeah. Just get me on that ship or on the plane. And everybody in my group said, yeah, you got to go because you're critical. It's not like I say I'm a flat Earth, or I'm a globe, or whatever. I'm just critical thinking about, okay, this could be possible. I, from my perspective, I tend more to the flat Earth realm, to be honest. But, is it sure? No. But he wants to fly me into Antarctica to prove there's a 24 hour sun so the earth is round. What?
No. You prove that there's maybe possibility to have a 24 hour sun. That doesn't prove anything about the shield of our earth. To be honest with you, if it's a flying phallus into this into space, what does it mean? What does it I don't care anymore. Because we got more problems. We talked about it before on the podcast. We got people that are intentionally want to kill us. With the food, with the water, with the weather. So, oh, if it's a pear shape, it's a group, it's a flat plane, it's a pizza, it's a dildo, you know? I don't give a shit. Shove it up where the sun doesn't shine. I don't know where the sun is, but you know, there are more problems than than than feeling that stuff out. But they give us so much food that's so poisoned.
[01:18:39] Unknown:
They give you lots to argue on. And the the flat earth one, I guess, is one that people can bite and hook onto, because it kind of involves just everyday observations.
[01:18:51] Unknown:
Mhmm. Right?
[01:18:53] Unknown:
As much as we can observe chemtrails, we can't test it. You know, put any kind of really fun content towards it. How many times can you watch an airplane fly spraying something before you're like, okay. Can we do this now for years? No. With the flatter side of things, all of the memes you can see, that in most of the true socials, the structuring that goes involved and the way these things are structured in order to make the meme in the first place. A lot of these, you have to have a full understanding of how the real realm actually works in order then to pull off the magic. You see, you you you can't be, a beginner magician and then go play with David Copperfield.
Right? Right. So David Copperfield, what he's doing is, he knows exactly how to distract you, when to have you change your attention, when to have you focus on something, when to listen closer for keywords and for the mentalist inputs in the programming. And which then he's able to do this magic trick. And we Theresa, like, dude, I know this guy that can levitate, man. It's so I've seen it in my own eyes. My own eyes seen this. I see your lady get cut in half every Saturday night. The bitch is still alive. Well, guys. Right?
So we live in a world of illusion, whether it be just the way our actual eyesight in our brain, decodes that electromagnetic signal or or the fact it's being intentionally perpetuated on us. Right? So what we have to start doing is we have to start learning how the magic tricks are done so we can be the pen and teller and go, nah. No. We know how you did that trick. You're not fooling us no more. Right. Right? Right? And that that's, I think, what we forgot about is we got so busy with the SIOP, we forgot to recognize that we are the SIOP. We are exactly because what you are see, what your kingdom sees is maybe not my kingdom.
[01:20:58] Unknown:
That's perfectly fine. If it's your plausible truth, then it's fine. If you can live, you know, just like the the the the normal Joe, which doesn't go to kids and ice creams, the normal Joe, that's fine. If you don't care about the weather and just sprayed or or whatever, you just do the stuff that you do for preventing, for your family and stuff like that, survive. Yeah. Fine.
[01:21:23] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, and to pull on that thread a bit more, as you said, does it matter the shape of the realm? This conversation actually came up with one of my chats today. And, ultimately, no. It does not matter the shape, the size, or any of these fandangled things that we want to spend endless hours arguing and debating over unless what you do in your life actually depends on the accuracy of that information.
[01:21:54] Unknown:
Wow. Yes.
[01:21:56] Unknown:
Yeah. So for a guy like me, I like to watch the skies. I like to know when cool events are happening out there because it is a great piece of artwork that every sunrise, every sunset, every day is a different cloud, different color, different tinge. And then the night sky for the most part is repeatable except for certain events when planets pass by that you may never see in your lifetime ever again, nor your family's lifetime. We talk grand periodicities of events that happen up there. So I find it exciting to try capturing them on film and go out and just look at the stars and go, what the hell were you here? Ask some questions. Right? Right. So with that is I need to use accurate information to know when to expect these events, when to find them so I can time my location, my equipment accordingly.
And I can't do that on a flat plane. It doesn't work on a flat plane. The flat plane can't provide me the necessary information. So, unfortunately, I'm using globe information that is, oh, so very eerily accurate to what I witness. So we have What about, Polaris? Right. So Polaris, yeah, is not a fixed point in the sky. It does have a little bit of a wobble. And you'll notice that if you watch it over the course of the year, that it has a bit of movement. Right. And the site indicates that there's movement, that there's, the precession of the equinox indicates movement.
The way the stars actually go through their seasons indicates movement. And, if we break it down, everything has spin as we kinda started in vortex and spirals. Right? How air moves, how water moves, how currents move, how atoms move. Right? The very existence everything is in motion. Right? The Fibonacci sequence, the fingerprint of God. But then all of a sudden, this realm is uniquely different and operates completely abnormally to nature's law. Right. Now I'm also part of a community that's pretty hard set on the value of nature's law. It doesn't care if a baby's gonna go fall off a cliff. Sucks. But mother nature don't care. My law is my law. It is blind to the reason.
That is the whole cyclops, the whole maw and eye, the one eye, the whole one eye and the whole purpose of the one eye is you don't have the second one to pass judgment. That's nature's law. Nature doesn't care who or what you are, how fabulous you are, how important you may be, or how rich you are. Her laws apply all the same. She's only got the one eye to apply the one law. And that was depicted again in the cyclops as the cyclops was this very strong, large, powerful being, but was dumb as fuck and would only do the instruction it was given. Just like a robot. It wouldn't think if it was right or wrong. And that was often depicted of giants too.
Giants didn't have like a moral compass kinda thing. Right? So ultimately, if you are not flying a rocket, you're not flying high altitude high speed airplanes, if you are not doing transatlantic, trips or transpacific trips in a sailboat of any sort, Mhmm. The shape of the earth should not affect how you conduct yourself as a human being right here on Terraforma. Right? And to give our sons a perspective, a perspective of how big we are to this realm, it's easy to not really appreciate the size, but if we were to put ourselves Robin to some hamster balls and go running around with hamster balls, one that'll keep us safe from COVID, it'll keep us safe from all diseases, the seasonal flu. It'll keep you safe from stupid people. It'll keep you safe from chemtrails. Right? So really a hamster ball is the perfect solution for most people right now in the truth community to ensure they live a good life, but we can measure the spherical area of that ball.
Right? Even if someone didn't know how to do a ball and they made a dodecahedron and just like Hell, yeah. Yeah. Cool. But but I I We want You know the size of that? Oh, okay. So just to I Go ahead. Yeah. I I just because
[01:26:06] Unknown:
I'm getting this information. I love it. And I never said, this is the truth, but it's more like the plausible truth. But how does water stick on a ball?
[01:26:17] Unknown:
How does water stick on a ball? So good question. And the way I would look at that and approach it is we understand that there is this force of what we call gravity. Now you can use whatever term you want, electrostatic downward acceleration. You can use unicorn fart dust. You can use, it's a suction force. You can use the earth is forever expanding, going upwards and rushing into you at 9.8 meters per second. I don't care how you rationalize the effect of 9.8 meters per second squared. Okay? And the fact you jump off a building, you are gonna meet the ground. Right? Yes. That that we do deny.
Right. We don't deny that in any way. So what's happening is you've got gravity is attracted to the individual molecule, not the object. It's the molecule that gravity is grabbing. So when we speak about an ocean being held to an outside surface of a ball, let's start with it, stationary, you have people well, the water weighs so much. But, again, gravity is only holding each molecule. It can't help the fact that all those molecules just like to bunch together and hang out at the same bar. Right? So that's the first step, is it's just the molecule being held. Now we see those molecules as a cohesive substance, but water is not. It works cohesively, but it is an individual molecule. And again, it just likes to party with its like kind people.
And it also dissolves and, you know, absorbs a lot. So it's very openly and very diverse that way. Now when we talk about spinning ball, I've actually done the experiment on my channel. And most people will take the ball, the sponge ball, and spin it real fast.
[01:28:12] Unknown:
Mhmm. Right? Water with just blowing 1,000 miles an hour.
[01:28:16] Unknown:
And that's where scale comes in. So as I was starting to say, if you are in your bubble ball Mhmm. Right? And you measure your spherical area. We then measure the spherical area of I think this is the last remaining globe I have. It's a Christmas decoration. But, you know, it it still gives you the idea. Is we take our hamster ball compared to this. Uh-huh. And we are 0.554 times 10 to the negative 13% the size. Alright. That's 13zeros. 13zeros. So 0? Yeah. 13zeros, 5 4%. You are the size of the realm. Okay. So, Rob, I'm gonna get you to, you're you're gonna counterfeit some Gucci handbags because you're in Denmark. You got the connections in Europe. I'm sure there's a nice underground somewhere around the corner. You can get me access to somebody and make me some counterfeit goods. So what I'm gonna do, Rob, is I am gonna take some photos Mhmm. Of my Gucci bag, and I'm gonna send them to you. K? Right. And then you're gonna go take these photos.
And with that, you're gonna get this, counterfeit Gucci bag made for me. So what I do then is if I'm understanding I'm 0.54% of the size of the realm, well, I'm gonna pull out a microscope, and I'm gonna go and look at the very, very corner of the Gucci bag. I'm gonna zoom in a 100000 times, snap the photo, and then I'll go to this corner, snap the photo. Maybe I'll go to this side of the the Gucci bag, snap a photo. I'm gonna send them to you, and I'm gonna be like, here. I took my photos and my measurements. Can you now produce me this Gucci bag?
[01:30:13] Unknown:
Probably not. Right? No.
[01:30:15] Unknown:
Too small of a data size. Right? So visual optics, when it comes to the ball, it's a small size. So when we deal with scale, scale all of a sudden now matters. So if we're only holding on to molecules, right, it's not holding on to a sheet of ocean. It's holding on to individual molecules of water that tend to make an ocean when they're collected together. When you I've got, again, on my channel. If I take a ball here it is. See in crystal globe, ball hair. Right. Is I have applied water to the top of it. Yeah. And the water, of course, will wanna drip down and fall off. That's what the memes teach us. Right? Yes. Every time, it'll just fall off. No matter how I position this, the water is gonna wanna fall off a bit. 100%. Yeah. Now if I put that drop of water on here and as it goes to fall off, I turn this at an appropriate rate. Uh-huh.
[01:31:08] Unknown:
The water will will stick
[01:31:10] Unknown:
to it, and it will stay and never fall off the ball and stick to the ball because water has a cohesive attraction principle. Right? It has a viscosity to it. It likes to stick to things. It's able to climb the edge of your glass. Water doesn't sit level ever until it's at rest. Exactly. Now our oceans and our lakes are never at rest. There's undercurrents, top currents, waves. There's it's filling. It's draining. But there are some lakes that are very, very flat and The surface. Surface. The surface will be flat. But underneath, you'll see that there's an undercurrent. And you can watch that with, how on fish finders when you get into the weeds.
Depending on the lake, if they're clear enough, you can see the motion of the weeds under there. So it's not a perfectly stagnant lake. Now ponds yeah. Yeah. Ponds, mud puddles, yeah, those would be stagnant at rest. So, I did yet another Yeah. Also oh, also So I did another big up things, but yeah. Another experiment. So I did so I did another experiment yesterday, to prove that water seeks different levels. You see? So I was able to fill a tube with water, and you can see how it leveled itself out between the two sides of the tube. So it was just shaped like a u. Yeah. Right. Yeah. And filled it with water and then started filling the one side of it, and I was able to get the one side to overflow before this side would even come to level.
Alright? And that was in the difference of the densities of the water. 1 was saltwater, 1 was freshwater. Our earth is combined of freshwater and saltwater. We have, a particular submarine that went underneath the ocean and found a freshwater lake with mussels. Right. And, apparently, that guy got killed for telling us that information.
[01:33:06] Unknown:
They said. Yeah.
[01:33:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. So water does some things that we don't quite expect. Water is also pretty much the only, substance on earth that expands when it's frozen. Right. Water would not exist, nor would we. Water is only water because it's holding onto sun energy. You see, if there was no sun to heat up that water, it would just be dry, dusty ice. Now water at 4 degrees is its most dense, and that's why the bottom is the lakes and that don't freeze and ice floats above it. Is that m b celsius or Fahrenheit? Celsius. Celsius. Worries. Right. Yeah. And that's and Victor Schoenberger, he shows that real well with his, log shoots.
And the design of the log shoot allowed for proper vortex into the water, but it allowed the coolest, most dense water to focus in the middle of the trough. Which then allowed to, float down larger logs because the water was more dense. Then when we start going up into the atmosphere, once the water's in the atmosphere, it doesn't freeze until minus 10. However, if the water is pure Mhmm. So no contaminants, contained within it, it doesn't freeze until minus 40 degrees Celsius. Now minus 40 degrees Celsius is also that magic number that's minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit. So water has some very interesting properties that very well could appear to how we graduated our, temperature scales on somewhere in the past, potentially. Is water a little bit same as the oceans? Like, okay, we know about,
[01:34:49] Unknown:
8% of all the oceans, although we don't know what's 100% because otherwise we can't partner it if it's 8% of 20%. But also with water that we only know with few things, but where it has memory, for example. Correct. It is, yeah. There was, I saw a picture, no, a TikTok. It was a guide. It was also on Instagram and TikTok. But what if God is water, the source?
[01:35:21] Unknown:
Well, his energy's in water. Yeah. God's energy. The creator's energy's in everything that exists. Right? Mhmm. Water is no different, but water gets a special role just as we have our special role as humans, and you you didn't get to come, above here as a termite. Now a neat thing about water is I've done some of the macro experiments, not quite the, how awesome Veda does hers, like, where she gets the images with just the micro layer freeze. I was doing just complete solid through freezes of mineralized water, reverse osmosis, distilled, microwaved, rain barrel, you name it. Mhmm. And the mineralized structured water, every time I froze it, it would freeze in 3 d tetrahedron type, triangle shapes.
And it would be bumpy. So you'd have a triangle, and it would be 3 d sticking out out of the water. Every time, it would freeze bumpy. Now, I'm sure everyone else out there that's ever frozen water, like in an ice cube tray or in a glass or in a bowl in the freezer, it you know, flat flat flat level. Levels. Right. Yeah. No. And if it's mineralized properly, it takes on, obviously, a bit of that that extra structure energy and will freeze in a geometric pattern in 3 d, meaning it'll have high spots, low spots on the surface of the water.
[01:36:42] Unknown:
Wow. Right?
[01:36:44] Unknown:
So then so we want to apply just the very basic concept of water on a sponge ball. And, well, if I spin a sponge ball, water flies off it. Why doesn't the world do that? So Mhmm. On the surface of it, the water, the world's not a sponge ball. And the laws of gravity you can't test the laws of gravity within the the system that it's that it's being functioned in. Right? Someone's like, well, we it needs to be scaled. I said, yeah. Well, yeah. You can scale a pool up. And if you can make a pool, you know, as big as, you know, a state, then you can definitely see how it will occur. Like, the the it's just the math of it. There are a lot of people that will disagree with that.
Absolutely. But, again, when we do any kind of long term view over only 15 kilometers
[01:37:32] Unknown:
Mhmm. Right? Can see a curve.
[01:37:36] Unknown:
Well, the end of where you can see is the curve, surprisingly. Uh-huh. Once you take in your refraction and the way light works, at least from what I'm experiencing, I'm still testing it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I have to. But but Well, I'm not I'm not testing it. I'm like, other people do that. Yeah. No. No. See, I do the testing. I I I do the cameras. I do the shots. I do the video, the calculation. Fascinating. You know what? And then so once you're out there actually doing it yourself, you start to realize that this doesn't work as it was told or as I was sold. Right? We were all sold those Cymatic stars. Oh, look at the star. This is what a star really looks like. It's Cymatic, and it's got all this you know, it looks just like, you know, you're doing sound on a speaker. Yeah. Yeah. Until you zoom in and actually focus properly.
Right? All those are just out of focus light sources. So you can make any light source look like that with a camera and have it unfocused. Right? And there's plenty of examples on it. And I put them on my channel because when I first got my p 1000, I'm like, yeah, I can see what stars really look like. Right. And and then I caught this red light somewhere in one of my images. I'm like, what's this red star all about? And then when I looked over the footage, I caught the antenna. We have a high antenna, so it's got a little beacon that flashes off for the air vent. And I'm like, oh, are you no.
No. So I went out with the video. Oh, yeah. It's flashing. It shows me Cymatics, and then I focus it proper, and you're just like, I can't believe this. Oh, no. Yeah. I just you know, whole bunch of posts with all these photos I'm seeing is a real star, and all it showed is I did not know how to focus my camera and just followed the hype and let the hype
[01:39:19] Unknown:
run away with it. Gravity where you hit at the ground about that. Right?
[01:39:23] Unknown:
Oh, my the ego, the mind, humbleness, everything.
[01:39:27] Unknown:
Wow. Yeah.
[01:39:29] Unknown:
And that's what's happening. And, yeah, I grant it. Not everyone can go out and buy a P1000 or anything equivalent and go out and try testing it so easy. But you can take your, smartphone into manual focus mode and then go take pictures of lights and just unfocus it and see what you get. Right? So we don't see these little cherries and observations yet. Yeah. Yeah. Although when you look at the night sky, there are some
[01:39:55] Unknown:
stars that are flashing several lights. What it is, I don't know. I mean, when you see the stars, you that there there's there's something in it. You know? There's the ether, the atmosphere, all that stuff. It's fascinating because we can't just, like, okay, grab 1. Oh, what what the fuck is that? Oh, that that's flashing. We can't.
[01:40:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. We can't. Like, Sirius is beautiful. Right? Sirius is that blue, red, green. Like, it goes through colors. Yes. And if you even just have binoculars, it's just a cheap binoculars from, like, a dollar store. Yeah. It's fast. Blow your mind. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Right? So Same with the moon. I mean, if you look at the moon, it's like, wow.
[01:40:37] Unknown:
And you got you got your, the the the the negative is the moon, the sun is the positive, the male. You got, this is salt in the sea. You ain't got salt in lakes, which is fascinating too. So you got salt water and sweet water. Salt so we do. It's called sweetwater.
[01:41:02] Unknown:
Yeah. You call it sweetwater. Yeah. Yeah. Because it's not salty or bitter, so they'd call it sweetwater. Yeah. You know, the virgin the virgin mare,
[01:41:09] Unknown:
is the virgin mare. And when you look at it, battery
[01:41:12] Unknown:
is also salt water. You can make a battery with salt water. Yeah. I've done some backup batteries and stuff using the magnesium and, graphite. And doing it that way allowed the magnesium to completely corrode into a magnesium oxide, at which then if you put it in a crucible and hit it with enough heat, you'll get a bar of magnesium back out of it. So essentially, it's a, it's a renewable battery system. Right? And then, yeah, you just gotta keep it powered up with the saltwater. So, yeah, does that help drive some of our electrics of the world? Yes. Because there's an electrical connection and everything, and that's exactly how we operate.
The moon's effect on it is huge. As I mentioned, as the moon passes over these two storms, there are some pretty noticeable effects. Now I'm not saying the moon for sure caused it. And to answer that, I've got my computer running, and it's supposed to take about a week, but we're going on, I think, 2 to 3 weeks by the time it's done crunching. Right. Weather data, storm data, planet locations, solar flares, as many angles as I kinda cut to go, hey. Do these things move normally based on these kind of parameters and and what we see in basically past patterns?
Or can we see something that sticks out like a sore thumb goes, that most likely is something that's created of abnormal nature? Right. Can we drill down in these things? And that's what some of us do. I think what we're just a lot of us are sort of asking the community is it's so quick to get your dopamine hit to share something without even doing the Google check or even reading the article. Oh. Now the title. World comes to an end. You read the article. Oh, the world's just starting off. Everything's great. And by the way, everyone's getting free money and never has to pay for anything again. So, like, the art the the the the taglines of the post don't even match the information being shared.
Somebody was sharing, frequency, like using ground radar, right, tomography, and comparing it to HARP to to completely different systems using completely different spectrums of the electromagnetic frequency range. But the but then the patent they share with it had nothing to do with any of it. Right? Right. But, oh, it added a patent number, so this one's gotta be more true. Quick. Share. Share. Like. Share. Like. Mhmm. We don't just take a minute to do basic Google search. The one I caught directly was during Milton. Someone did a screenshot of what looked like chat 40, and it goes, can you tell me of a movie that, you know, where Florida, you know, is attacked by a hurricane?
And it says, sure. There's this category 6 movie, and it's about these, twisters that are made that create this hurricane that destroy Florida. But then if you just do Google search category 6 movie, right, you find out it's a movie about 3 twisters that formed together, form a super hurricane. And at the same time, a cyber attack went out shutting down power, which means you couldn't send out warnings. You couldn't establish any kind of response and get people back in. And it all happened to take place in Chicago. So it's it's very easy to get chat GPT to type me what I want and then screen share it.
[01:44:31] Unknown:
Yes. But it's all very easy to obsess or or to upset CHAT gpt. When you ask the right question, it doesn't answer it because it's programmed.
[01:44:44] Unknown:
Well, try yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Go go ahead and pick a vaccine fight with CHAT gpt, I dare you. Yeah. You you can. Won't go anywhere. You get your canned, and it's just 100%. Doesn't respond.
[01:44:54] Unknown:
Pedophiles, pedophiles in in in higher ranks, no. No. No go. No go. Yeah. No. No. No. Have you have you have you really, because you know a lot about it, have you been fascinated by the subject like flat earth?
[01:45:12] Unknown:
Well, yeah, I I was just like anyone else. Right? Here you are, you know, you have your wake up moment however long back, and it was a long time ago for me where you're aware of the political shenanigans. Mhmm. Right? But then you almost get caught up in the truth community of the political shenanigans. And you're sitting there analyzing Every one person, you know, if this guy comes office, it'll affect this guy, and this guy runs with this guy, and if we have this guy. Right? So you just end up in the rabbit holes of infinity on that subject alone. But I started, you know, realizing other things didn't seem right.
So, of course, Flat Earth comes across to purview, and I'm like, whatever. But then you kinda look. You go, well, I only see this far. Okay. That makes sense. Yeah. I can only see the moon doesn't quite make sense. Well, okay. Maybe that is, you know, potentially plasma. And so I went through some of the motions. And being as analytical as it was, I'm like, okay. Well, can I apply this to a flat realm? Well, sure. It could. I can make my math work on this. I can make it work on that. I'm like, okay. These are some plausibilities. But the echoes and the sentiments of do your own research. Do your own research. Right. Still not at me. So, unfortunately, I didn't get the memo to stop.
I kept going with my own research. And then as you do the research, you, refine your setups. You refine your systems. You learn. So then you go, wow. Okay. Yeah. Doing this is wrong. I gotta do it this way. Oh, making a chart that's not centralized to anything is just a bunch of lines on paper and makes no sense as no value. Oh, so someone pointed that out to me. So then I had to learn how to do charts properly for analytical an analyzations. And so my channel, I have not deleted any of the past. So you can see where I go, you know what? I think that moon might very well be plasma. Is it? So I always usually pose things directly with a lot of questions. I got the P1000. I photographed that moon now for 2 years. I've got one where it was a month straight every single day to make it into an animation of its phases. And no, it's not plasma because then we gotta get the other question is, plasma is charged electricity. How does shadow get cast onto a ball of plasma?
You can't cast shadow on light.
[01:47:32] Unknown:
That's the first bulb. Transparent. Right? Because when you see them in the morning sky, you see them just as blue as the
[01:47:42] Unknown:
Yeah. So the What it looks like. Yeah. So I guess the the the term would be is, we see the blue sky behind the moon. So the moon is transparent, is quite what it is. But what that blue sky is the layer of scattered light in front of the moon. You see? So we don't see the black dark side of the moon during the day, just like we don't see the black of space during the day. The black of space becomes a backdrop for that scattered blue light that we call the sky. Mhmm. And in between that is you and the moon. So I'm able, in the mornings and then in the evenings, it doesn't work midafternoon because the overall intensity and brightness.
But, as we get towards, closer to a setting sun, but still fairly high up in the sky, good barbecuing sun kinda height, As I can zoom into that moon and you can I could take a photo? Again, it's on my channel. Blue sky, white moon. Then I zoom all the way into the moon. And now you have the black of space and you have the moon with its black body as expected. And what's happening is because I'm zoomed in so much, I am taking in less of that blue scattered light to be captured. So this now we can extend to our ancient knowledges. There is a town in Germany called Jena, And in this town, there is apparently a well so deep. When you're at the bottom of the well and look up during the day, you see the night sky.
So it eliminates that blue scatter. Oh, wow. The there's a house in Jena, and it has tubes that go from the basement all the way up through the roof. And the gentleman that owned that was a big astronomer. And that, again, when you look through that tube, you see the space night sky. The Japanese, 1000 of years before the invention of a glass piece for a telescope, knew that Saturn had rings and depicted and drew Saturn with its rings. And the way they do that is just by using a long hollow tube.
[01:49:45] Unknown:
All right. So the Okay. Just like it don't harm having bad, if you have bad eyes where you make little peephole from Exactly. Yeah. Right.
[01:49:56] Unknown:
Exactly. When you Exactly. So it's gonna give you a focus point. But Right. Also by doing that long tube is when we look at the night sky, all of those stars are bringing light into the eyeballs. K? So your eyes and your brain has to decipher all of that electromagnetic signaling. And we can call that, like, Ares disk or, right, is is your limit where two light sources become 1 in the distance. Mhmm. Most people would notice it. If you drive at night on a highway that's fairly straight and flat, the car's in the distance, it looks like one headlight. But then as the car gets closer to you, you can see it's 2 headlights and probably 2 fog lights. K. So that's the ARI 6. That's the angular resolution piece. So by using now the pipe is use a long enough pipe is you've eliminated any of that outside light getting into the eyepiece.
So now your eyes and your brain are only contending with the electromagnetic signal that is that item you're looking at. Wow. So you get by far a clear definition without any lensing. Right? And it's like when you do this, you're able to see the sun. Right? No problem with the naked eye. Right? So it's a Yeah. An interesting way. The sun gaze if you've missed the the first sunrise the first hour when it rises or when it goes down. That's new. I gotta go look at the sun. Yeah, right. You can do it with some caution.
[01:51:24] Unknown:
Right, right. Yeah. Yeah. This very interesting stuff. It has a lot of a lot of train of train for thought, what's it called,
[01:51:34] Unknown:
from Yeah. Lots of food for thought. There's a few train. We prob we probably derailed a few things. Like, I can leave this is, you know, we know train tracks as we look at them, as they run-in the distance, they converge and, Right? They converge, and you get your little pizza pie shape. Crepuscular rays are the same thing. They're actually parallel shadow rays. They only look to converge, and where they converge on is the item that's causing that shadow, and that would be your cloud. Mhmm. You're not giving you a shadow. Rainbows? Because rainbows are looking like the dome. That's right. The rainbow would be the reflection of the dome. No. That would be the 42 degree, magic angle that you have to be within, the sphere of reflection of the sun reflecting off of a sheet of water.
The rainbow vibrance in the amount of colors depends on the nanometer size of the raindrop and or ice crystal. The secondary reflection shows in every rainbow, because as the water comes in, it reflects this way and reflects back upwards. We can basically say that depending on the altitude of the sun will determine how high or how short that rainbow looks. Your proximity or distance from the rain screen will also change all of that as well. So it shows pure dynamics that it's essentially, a rainbow is God's, hologram in the sky. Mhmm. Because it works off of that holographic principle. And if you're not within the right viewing zone of the hologram, it will not show. Mhmm. And I've made a few fun holograms and have shown some of that on the channel as well.
That light will recreate an object so perfectly, even the polarized light that's on it, right, so the reflections and stuff that are on that object, you can eliminate with a polarized filter. When I have it in its hologram state, that polarization and everything carries through and acts just like the real thing. The only thing I'm lacking is the ability to physically touch it. And if we were going to the old day, that was attach. To attach meant to touch. Didn't mean to actually fix anything. Right? So, and and that's the joys when we go into old text is trying to apply the right terminology to the words used.
Passionate, you know, for anyone who is passionate when we read old text, they were suffering. They weren't in love. And, technically, if you're in love and head over heels, there's probably a degree of suffering involved at some point.
[01:54:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Do you think who went to the moon?
[01:54:11] Unknown:
I'm gonna go with, the Apollo mission as all the footage and analyzation show, leaves a high plausibility of probably not in 1968 or 69, you know, during that Apollo mission. That shows a whole lot of fabrication that was of, obviously, political and social design in in nature and structure. We had to move past the the whole Hiroshima thing and get people interested about something else and get money going. And, now as far as can we have items high up, very, very high altitude, extreme high altitudes Mhmm. 100% is we can't put a human at the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
We sure can put submersibles down there. So can we send robotics, into realms where men can go 100%. And can I deny that those are out there? Probably not. For all I know, my actual picture is sitting on a hard drive of a satellite that's, you know, en route to the sun. I don't know if that's ever gonna get there, if that's the true case or not, but I don't have enough ground based evidence to deny it. And it's very difficult to do from an armchair standpoint. Let's, like, we can go, here's the math mass of the Earth. Here's the mass of the moon. Here's the mass of the sun, reportedly. And then we can do your basic, math and apply, gravitational forces and realize that sun should really suck the moon right off the face of the earth. Right?
But then I'll pull up the actual calculations that are used for tracking and timing of the moon. And, just the one page of any written math formula is 127th of actually all the formulas involved. So there's over 1500 calculations that are put into keeping track of that thing we call the moon. And sadly enough, the ancients were able to use that as a very reliable time source. So there's a lot of dynamics going on, but the periodicities tend to turn out, like with your, lunar node cycles. Right? It's your draconic year. If we take that 18.618 years Mhmm. So we have the value of 5 already hitting in there with the 0.618.
It works out to about 68100 days. But if I were to just take a queue or an area, a square and go 18.168 and do it again on the other side, I get my 68,000 as an overall, cubed area. Right? So we have these periodicities that when we add and times them together, they come up to with what we count of the periodicity in days or in lunations. If you go 7 times, 5 times, 6 times, 4 times, 3 times, 2 times, 1, you get 5,040. Now if you take the reported radius of the earth in miles of that 3960, subtract your 5,040, you end up with a remainder of 10 80, and that also happens to be the radius of the moon.
Now we all like to talk about numerology and gematria that, you know, some of these numbers govern the universe. And right in there are measurements that I can't deny because the angular resolution of the human eye on a 6 foot man, right? Gives me a 2.9 954 distance to the horizon. I can then use those numbers based off of the altitude and degree. I look up in the sky. I'm covering 70 miles or 113 kilometers per degree. So if I go outside and I look south at Orion's belt and I measure my angle to it, I can then multiply that by my 113, and I come up with, like, 52,000 and change.
I hop on Google Earth and go, hey, Google. How far is it from my location to the equator? And it gives me a measurement within about a 100 kilometers. I can measure across my country from one city to another city with just the stars and the limit of the human eye, and I'm within 60 kilometers of Google Earth's some official stated distance.
[01:58:30] Unknown:
Well, you need math.
[01:58:33] Unknown:
You gotta use a bit of math. It's just basic trigonometry, so it it's not hard math at all. Trig trigonometry. Trigonometry. It's just basically solving for a triangle. That's all you need to know is you're solving for a triangle. Okay. And, plenty of calculators online. I've even set up a cheat sheet that can show you how to calculate the limits of your human eye just using, online calculators. So you don't have to go through and do the math, convert things to computers and all that kind of crap. Yeah.
[01:59:03] Unknown:
Alan. I'm very, very, very interesting in how you pointed things out, and you, also tell me where to look and how to look at.
[01:59:18] Unknown:
Yeah, it really is, my information, I don't think, is any more true than, what you might learn on Sesame Street.
[01:59:25] Unknown:
Right. So that's what Kind of probably a thought process, though. There was a thought process. Questions. Are you for sure, you know, with all the stuff that you
[01:59:32] Unknown:
Yeah. So my observations and my current math calculations, this is the net sum or result that it adds up to. But then when I go and present it, let's say, to a community saying, this is what all my measurements, this is the timings. Here's all my photos. Here's all the raw data. Here's all the websites that could do the math for you. Show me where I went wrong. Right? Show me how my I made a mistake. I didn't carry a one, or I'm using the wrong triangular formula, and that is now skewing my information, which then can give me bad results. Nobody has been able to look at that info and say, hey, mister Knut, this is actually where you went wrong. Uh-huh.
[02:00:15] Unknown:
Right? They'll just Price would say the same. It would say nobody proved
[02:00:20] Unknown:
flat earth that it wasn't flat earth as a globe. Because I think he he pointed out, like, 1 Bitcoin, 2 Bitcoins. I don't know. Whatever. Something like that. Yeah. And it'll be always in a state of denial. Like, we have shared our p 1,000 sun photos to him, but he still pushes a video that goes, you can't prove the sun is round by showing a picture of a train in the distance. And as the train gets closer, as we talked about the Ares disk, you see all the lights on the train. He's like, is it steering call? Right? So we've directly said, hey, dude. Like, this is all garbage. This is really Ares disk, and you can use it as a better form of, information. Because with the naked eye, I could look at the moon outside, and I've got photos as well. I went out, you know, 4 in the morning, snapped the sky. And in the camera and in the image, it looks like a full moon.
But when I was doing it, it was only a quarter. It was a half moon at best. Right?
[02:01:13] Unknown:
Right. Right. So don't you think don't don't you think that that that everyone from their perspective will only face the truth what they will bring to the plate? It's like, okay, okay. I believe this one, so this is my proof. This is it. And and and soon if if you would have debated with each other or get into a conversation with it, they will defend their faith till death. I think that's
[02:01:44] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. We're seeing, that we defend a certain ego or a mental bias to death, and that obviously didn't get you into this boat. Right? Right. Because we are all raised that it's a globe, and here's your following systems. Here's your planets. We all drew them and did dye you know, dioramas when we were in school. But all of a sudden, it's it's gay because one person on YouTube had said that. So it's amazing how we can feel jaded and then have a knee jerk reaction where everything in the world is now fake and potentially gay. Right.
[02:02:20] Unknown:
And and there's, of course And that's okay. Yeah. That's the reason. There's so many things that line up for, you know, it's, it's the same if, if you wanna, if I point out like a red car, red car, tomorrow you go to work, you only see a red car. So it's a, what the fuck do all these red cars? But they were still there, but you didn't pick them up.
[02:02:43] Unknown:
So Yes. So it's intentionality.
[02:02:45] Unknown:
When you're looking at something, right, then you pick it up because you're noticed about. Mhmm. So I think it's still fascinating for me. I just bought the book, Terra Infinitiate, about more than one world on this realm that we're living in. So multiple suns, all that stuff. It's really interesting to look at it. Of course, I love, love, love, love the old ancient texts where they have in several cultures a plain flat earth with a shield and with a toponym. So, that fascinates me. Do I know for sure? No. Do I care at the end? No. I go to Peru within a few days.
So Right. Who the fuck should I care if it's in Fallas, if it's, pizza dripping off? I I don't care.
[02:03:39] Unknown:
As long as the pilot knows which way to point the plane to get you to your destination Yeah. Or Peru, that's all that matters. And and that's the biggest thing is I think we we we we take too much personal, involvement in a lot of this information. Is this true? Is this this? Is this this? But if it doesn't really have a direct impact on your life, your occupation, or anything you're currently directly working on, it's essentially a distraction. Right? And it's, it's causing you to spend energy in, most cases, a negative hostile environment, where you're always having to argue, defend, or or have your information picked apart, which is probably worse for a lot of people, especially when they come across come across myself.
We we our egos will try protecting that. This is what I think so far. It's a belief. I need to protect it. But what we're not noticing is we'll make fun of the very people, let's say, that are Christian or Islam or Buddhist or have whatever religion or whatever thing they do, oh, that's so wrong. That's so wrong. But you see, the universe has us all live in a certain soul experience, and it's gonna be different for all of us. And the soul experience and what that person is doing is what the universe requires them to do, to learn whatever lesson they need to learn as goofy as it may seem to us. Right? So if we we approach with a little bit more compassion, and understand that, no, we don't know everything right out of the gate.
But if we work together, we can probably paint an accurate tapestry. Right? We can all look at a banana and at some point agree that after we've all touched, held the banana, it's yellow. And then we can use technology to verify that, yes, that is a yellow signature being reflected from that banana. And we can now have at least one objective truth. Now the joys about the banana is we find it all over the world, and it's written in all ancient cultures. But the only way to for that plant to cultivate is by the humans actually transporting it manually. It has no seed.
It it grows like a tree, but it's a herb. And it gives you all the nutrients you need. It falls under the lines of, like, potato. Right? A potato grows anywhere, everywhere. Don't care the soil temperature altitude. We've gotta ask the banana God. We do. I think we need to talk to potato gods and banana gods. Find out who it is they pray to that gave them their superpowers, and maybe we can find the real god.
[02:06:18] Unknown:
Why do we throw away the straight ones and we take care of only the the the curved ones? Right. That's really strange, right, because a lot of the bananas are just straight. But we just wanna have the curved ones because they look better.
[02:06:36] Unknown:
Yeah. Something like that. Right? Right? A lot of a lot of psyops on everything. Like, the fact we eat bacon every morning and consider bacon a breakfast food, was because of the psyop.
[02:06:47] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. And spells and all that stuff. Now I love it. Thing is really, really fascinating that that that, we're almost 2 hours ahead now. Well, 2 and half. 2 and half.
[02:06:57] Unknown:
Wow. Yeah. Burning the oil. Now now you've got places to be, and in a few days, you you need to be in Peru. So Yeah. Yeah. You got you got my mind cracked today, so fuck. You know what? Well, you go get it fixed here in Peru. I'm sure they'll crack your mind open a little bit more. Oh, 100%. One heart. It'll be it'll be awesome. So, I appreciate you taking the time to we can balance these ideas back and forth. Oh, that was amazing. Yeah. Yeah. That was great. I appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you very much for hopping on. And and before you go, I got 12 questions for my guest.
[02:07:32] Unknown:
Sure. Some are, easy. Some are, aren't. I don't have them with me, but I I'm, this is episode 678. So I have to figure it out, right? So the first question will be, what's your definition of God?
[02:07:50] Unknown:
So, my definition, I guess, of God would be the ultimate underlying, energy force that allows the very existence. So it's the underpinning of the existence of our our whole world. So God is, you know, it's you. It's me. We're him in that sense that we share the unified energy of this law of how to develop our soul to the ultimate of true human virtue. And that would be the ultimate in goodness, understanding, and really having the chance to get the most out of this experience. And eating Cheetos, playing Xbox, I don't think was really on his plan. It's part of your short journey now, but feel free to expand on your journey kind of thing. Right?
[02:08:37] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. That was a great period, though. Damn. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I,
[02:08:42] Unknown:
I I had my time at GTA. I learned some good lessons and some flying skills. Yeah.
[02:08:47] Unknown:
Well, well, we that's the complete other episode digging into games and all that stuff that we did in the entire. What's the definition of devil?
[02:08:57] Unknown:
The devil is, that very part of you that you do not care to recognize.
[02:09:04] Unknown:
Wow.
[02:09:06] Unknown:
The devil's within. It's never been a beast without. It's always been within. And then we just, well, get lazy and wanna blame the devil. It's easier to blame the devil than it is selves. And if we can't blame mom, we can't blame her sister, we can't blame the government for our troubles, it's definitely gotta be the devil's fault, to see he's got, I guess, shoulders,
[02:09:29] Unknown:
broad enough to bear the burden that we are lacking in in our own sense. So, yeah. It's like telling the whole world there's something going on with some disease, but you can't be shown out which one or where it is, but it's still there. Yeah, yeah. Nice. What's your, definition of value?
[02:09:53] Unknown:
Woah. Woah. Woah. I think the current rate is, 12.95 an hour. The the value is, my guess, my definition, how would I rate value is the quality of the engagement of your experience. Alright? So we value that that we've had the most learning experiences out of the most challenging of times are usually the most things that we value the most. The people that put us through the hardest points, we tend to value the most. The things that made us cry the hardest after the dust settles and the tears eventually dry up and the crocodiles go away, that ends up being the things that you value the most. It is those little tiny connections that truly light that spark and remind us this human experience that we're in.
[02:10:48] Unknown:
What's your last definition question? What's your definition of success?
[02:10:55] Unknown:
Success is the very fact that, you're a better person tomorrow than you are today. I love that. You understand one thing a bit more. You are gonna be gratuitous for that one thing more. You're gonna maybe just go up and just random person on the street just go, I like your shirt today, and just give that one compliment that little bit more. That is success. Because if you can't grow individually every day, you're not gonna grow in your business. You're not gonna be that next CEO. You're not gonna make those 1,000,000 of dollars. Everything has its level of initiation.
Mhmm. You can't be given the ultimate truth until you work up to the ultimate truth. That means you gotta go through all these small little truthers and truly and by truly meaning is get down to some actual objectives and be grounded, and then you can go to the next step and the next step. Just as you can't be somebody that's been poor your whole life and then expect to be better off because you win the lottery. Statistically, that shows those people's lives get destroyed. 100%. They weren't ready for it. Right? So the universe will only give you what you're ready for, and you could only be ready for what you train for.
So you gotta treat this kinda like, you know, football practice, hockey practice. That's what life is every day. And then life's just gonna throw life at you, and all of that is to prepare you for something that's coming. Right. If they oh, yeah. The yin and the yang, all the goddamn time. Oh, always. Always. Right? A little bit of trinity. The yin yang, you've got that opposites, but it's contained within the one circle. Right. Right? So we're always fighting a a trinity battle in our life, for sure.
[02:12:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Mel Ties, what's your favorite color?
[02:12:44] Unknown:
Blue. No. Wait. Oh, sorry. No. I was gonna say Yeah. Yeah. The the Monty Python, the holy grail. Right? Yeah. To cross the bridge. The answer to these questions 3. Yeah. Sir Robert never got it wrong, but, yeah, no. Blue is my favorite color. Okay. Yeah.
[02:13:00] Unknown:
What's your favorite book? Tobin.
[02:13:06] Unknown:
Woah. Woah. Woah. There's so many of them. I'm gonna go with, Boscovich's natural history or natural natural natural science, natural philosophy. Yeah. So that would have been the big book that, Tesla has seen photographed reading, all his around all his inventions. It really takes you back to a whole different core where, science, religion, spirit was still kind of all 1, and we recognized, those subtle energies a bit more. I still can't get through it confidently. It it's a big it's a tough book, and I think that's why it's my favorite is Right. It's it's it's it's a big challenge, right, amongst everything that I do have.
As we've seen, Internet Archive is down, and George ROL was actually forced to be removed from the Internet Archive. Funny. Right? The very book of the warning about this kind of thing, and it's one of the first ones that is making sure is coming off that Internet Archive. And they're actually under a big DOD attack, trying to get back online. So it's important. So if you have a chance to download books, get your hands on them, now is Oh, yes. For sure. Slipping quick. It's slipping quick.
[02:14:34] Unknown:
And the other thing is, if you do have downloaded them, please take care of printing them out, or get the real cover. Because if you don't have the book, within a few hours, or within a few days, or wherever, it could be gone. Because there are already models been pointed out that if you have some, like a document on your screen, like the Mandela effect that all of a sudden Right. Stuff is not there that you read for all your fucking life. Right. It was there right on the computer. Yeah. And all of a sudden just like that. I mean, we're living in strange times, right? So
[02:15:16] Unknown:
We are we are lots to analyze, and I'm sure we can, talk about that many more times another day, for sure. Yeah. All right? What's your favorite,
[02:15:25] Unknown:
movie or series? Oh.
[02:15:32] Unknown:
I'll go with Monty Python the holy grail for favorite movie because I don't think I've seen much since then. Yeah. Movies, they just don't work for me. I I I shut off my, suspended disbelief. Right. Right. You said So going Any movie, you just pick it apart on every angle. It's like, oh, shit. It's a it's a bad set design. So it it is pointless to put in front of a movie at the moment. But, I do enjoy kind of the the simple of the comedies back that Monty Python was is, they were poking hits at some political changes at the time, but they were also the very, snake in the weeds and, you know, opened up and were very, you know, men dressing as women and how they played the roles like that, like in Shakespeare days.
[02:16:22] Unknown:
I would Could be seen with a quest. With simplicity Yeah. Which was so funny.
[02:16:30] Unknown:
It was. Right? Yeah.
[02:16:33] Unknown:
Simple contrast. Snake. Hey, Urban Hand. I know you're still there. I know you're listening. I love you, motherfucker. Without Snake, this wouldn't this we we wouldn't be connected to each other because he's he's the man.
[02:16:50] Unknown:
Yeah. He's he's a interesting character, and, Yeah. It was interesting how we just ended up crossing paths. And, it was about a 20 minute phone call, discussion on an open platform about religion that, was a flatter pace type thing. Like, none of this makes sense. It's not what I came here for today, but, yeah, you know, we were able to to hammer through a few things. And I think if I remember right, the biggest was, it was science in the bible. That was it. What's the point of reading the bible? It's mind control. And I said, hey. Look. But you can take science out of it. Real brief, Leviticus 1919.
If everyone knows the Bible, Leviticus is all about the great do nots and the the horrible past. Apparently, people were living with, you know, bestialities and incest and all that. Mhmm. And near the end of this passage, don't mix your animals, don't mix your seeds in this field, and don't mix your wool and linen. Woah. How'd we go from incest and, you know, having my cows and horses get at it? And and where does the wool and linen fit in? And when you do the study of the fabrics and their energies, right, wool or just pure cotton, when you put it on you, it gives you, like, a 100 energy points. Yeah. But if you put on the cotton, you get your 100 energy points and then put the wool over top of it, you'd now have 0 energy points. Yep.
Right? So the the Bible is, of course, written, with information where they wanted people to live as good as possible, but you couldn't openly say it because, obviously, there was some overlord that didn't allow you to use the word energy or frequency. Like, we couldn't use the word vaccine for 2 or 3 years. So they had to code it. Right? This information had to be coded. And anything worth knowing is worth digging for. And I think that's the lesson that's right there, Alon, is if you want to know the truth, you've got to put the effort in.
[02:18:47] Unknown:
Absolutely. You have to read between lines. You have to be critical. You have to be, cryptic. And you have to be aware that there are a lot of books which are way, way, way, way much older than the Bible, but it's a nice collection of stories, and you can have faith in it. You find belief in it. You have, support in it. Mhmm. A guideline for life. There there are a lot of things you you can point out, but do not live by exactly the rules.
[02:19:22] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess, like, if you live by the exact rules that are fully written out in the text, you probably wouldn't have a problem because the chance of any human memorizing all of those, there's only a few that do that. We usually call them monks, in some cases, priests or whatnot. People have solely dedicated that to their whole purpose. With these books is if you read one to understand it, you do have to read them all. But, ultimately, I'm a supporter of religion. K? Is if you find, whether it be an official religion or you're a Pastafarian or you're a hemp, Californian Church of Hemp in Christ, I don't care.
If it gets you to a point where you have to at least look at your spirituality and start asking those tougher inner questions, and then also understand that there is a higher meaning in divine energy. There's a bigger purpose of your little piece contributing to the overall, momentum of humanity. By all means, man, do it. Right? Providing you're not directly harming someone to do that. Right? So that's you know, we can't just smash it down because the lessons are repeatable in all of them. Right? They're right. They all kind of each the same thing. Just different subset of population in a different area of which they were written. Right? So it's just like now, East Coast, West Coast, you get 2 different newspapers with a few that do still get printed. They'll talk about the exact same subject matter, but have them presented in 2 completely different lights because of the vast it's a difference between Eastlanders and Westlanders. Mhmm. Just like there's a difference between mountain people and valley people.
Right. So even though we live in the same community, same country, same province, pay the same taxes We're all just different. We're the same different in our little geological areas. We're all pre we read the same. Yeah. Okay. What's your favorite music? I am into I like the classicals. Like classic rock or classic music? No. No. No. No. No. Classicals, your Beethovens and all that. Oh, wow. And cultural, just live play in music. So I I I'm more happy listening to someone just jam on the guitar half assed versus listen to, the latest country song being blasted out over the JBL speakers. Right? Right. So it's the connection of what the music is. It's the tonality and understanding that, the mathematical genius that was put into some of these old works, we just don't do nowadays.
And if we do, we're doing it in a controlling manner with the new frequency and hertz range at 4:40. Right?
[02:22:04] Unknown:
So I find new music 2 would be better.
[02:22:07] Unknown:
Yeah. So I I I find new music irritating in that realm once you spend enough time, with the more spiritual types of musics, chants and those kind of stuff. Yeah.
[02:22:18] Unknown:
Have you ever listened to, sacred, Om Chanting?
[02:22:23] Unknown:
Yes. The sacred Om. There's also the other one, the Shepherd's one, which is one of the oldest gnostics that came in. And they actually chant, and part of it, the AEIOU, where the valuables were used as describing our creator. Right? Right. And we're in a subtendinary battle is you'll see that 7 is very important in the world, but there's also the 5 plus 2 that's important. And our vowels, a, e, I, o, u, are the 5, but then you have sometimes w and y, which is the other 2, which then completes the septenary of those magic, sounds that we can produce that are divine.
Wow.
[02:23:05] Unknown:
Yeah. What's your, favorite drink or beverage?
[02:23:10] Unknown:
Structured water.
[02:23:13] Unknown:
I love that. With some brainstorming and gravy salt. Man. 78 in. And I think more than 80% says water. 100%.
[02:23:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I got rid of the, I don't do any of the alcohols, especially
[02:23:27] Unknown:
after doing the opening. Mel, t's, everyone has this yell. Well, the old me and the new me. It's like, it's so crazy.
[02:23:36] Unknown:
The alcohol's been a long time, but, now I just pretty much really refuse it. When you get to doing some of the alchemy and you realize how much you use the alcohol to take the spirits out of things and consume things. Right? So the. Right? Yes. Yeah. So yeah. But good structured water, make for a good day. Yeah. Yeah. It really does. The body feels it, and the body thanks you for it. So yeah. What's your favorite,
[02:24:05] Unknown:
food?
[02:24:09] Unknown:
Oh. If I'm just gonna go with the culture, I'm gonna go Indian. Like spicy? So overall yeah. Let so the spice, combination and use of spice and the color, within Indian food, is definitely high ranking. So the Indian, the Vietnamese, the east east Asian Mhmm. Food would be definitely my most favorite. But being a Maltese guy, I'm a sucker for what we call the pastitsi. And a pastitsi is basically, like, filo pastry, and then they'll wrap it around ricotta cheese and just bake it in the oven. So it was like the original pizza pop. You could also get a pea mash 1, which is really good too.
And they're absolutely the only way you get them fresh so when you go to Malta and visit like I do, you just stay up night drinking all night at the bars. So on the way home, you'd stop at the bakery at 5 in the morning, get the fresh pastits, and then you're Oh, shit. Yeah. That's that's where it's at.
[02:25:06] Unknown:
So good. That sounds so good. What's your favorite holiday destination?
[02:25:14] Unknown:
The mountains. We we we tour the mountains, so we'll do, like, usually twice a year, 16 days in a row where we just live out of the truck and travel every back road. And, over that period, we'd be lucky to see maybe 6 people.
[02:25:31] Unknown:
Oh, that's the best period ever.
[02:25:33] Unknown:
Yeah. And you're right in God's country, the high alpine, the low valleys, you have nonstop waterfalls and everything to stop at. Like, the negative ion energy in a forest alone is huge in healing. It's a hundredfold when you're in and around the proximity of the waterfall. So taking all that to the advantage is we've chosen that. That's one of our most favorite destinations. But kid you not, you know, I've been to Costa Rica, Saint Lucia, Mexico. I've been to Malta, Belgium, France. Before England. I was in Holland. We were there for just a long enough time to get off of the train, checked in at the boat the boatel. We got off at the boatel. Right? Checked in at the boatel.
And, yeah, I know we smoked some hash joint, and I don't remember the 2 days after that.
[02:26:25] Unknown:
Right.
[02:26:28] Unknown:
So, I'm due back for for a little bit more exploratory front. It doesn't involve nighttime and and bloodshot eyes. It's a very common story. Yeah. It is. It is. Yeah.
[02:26:39] Unknown:
Last two questions, Maltese. What's, what's your, favorite quote?
[02:26:51] Unknown:
The one that I just made, if I can be narcissistic.
[02:26:55] Unknown:
Of course. Yes. Yes. Let let let our egos do not get in our way. Let's No. No. You know what the My favorite sentence of a narcissist? He. It's like, oh, you like the weather too? Oh, yeah. So sunny. Okay. Stop talking about the weather and all about me again.
[02:27:15] Unknown:
That's beauty. No. My favorite quote would be essentially is, a true wise man will plant, the seed of a tree full well knowing he's not gonna enjoy the shade of it. It's very less than that. Every endeavor we do now, really actually doesn't have an impact on our life. It has a greater impact and resonating effect on the future generations. Alright. So that's my favorite one. As far as the one I wrote, I just simply, I've I've coined a new quote that the controllers don't control you. They just set the game board and the rules, but it's your reactions to those rules that control you. So those are the 2 quotes. Yeah. I'd run with. They're they're my two favorites for right now. Cause they're life there.
Yeah. They they really show to the the times that we're we're battling in. Right? Like, do we wanna know the shape of the Earth? Well, do you wanna know it for yourself, or do you wanna know the true shape of the Earth so you can properly educate your children?
[02:28:22] Unknown:
Which what?
[02:28:23] Unknown:
Because I know a lot of people that talk flat earth, but they don't share it to their children. Well, if you're not sharing it to your children, what are you ashamed of or scared of or shy of? Or do you Right. Now I know that the world is whatever fucking shape,
[02:28:46] Unknown:
but now I can say it's not my fault. I told you before. Look at them.
[02:28:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And and by saying that, we'll see they have all lied to me. They've all lied to me. We're we're increasingly getting into this Stockholm victim syndrome. Yes. Of very Yeah. Exactly. We want more abuse. Please abuse me harder. Yes. We figured that out. Harder. Oh, man. Yeah. Yeah. We know that, you know, yeah, it's it's weird. And these are the psyops. Right? And we knew it was gonna get ugly. And as that little, Mayan chart shows, you know, it ain't even got weird yet.
[02:29:25] Unknown:
Right? Now This is What's your favorite motto?
[02:29:32] Unknown:
It's the kaizen model out of the Japanese philosophy, of constant improvement. So, again, as I said before, be better tomorrow than you were today in whatever little thing that it is, even if it's just learning a new plant name or taking a moment to recognize that new insect that lives in your garden. That's it. As this world is you're here for an understanding, and an experience. And the only way to do that is with intention and to immerse yourself into it. Time may fly by faster, but it's better than the slow boredom. Right?
[02:30:10] Unknown:
I really love this show, Maltese. It's, my my my head is still spinning around a little bit. But I don't know if it's it's a globe spinning or a flat spinning, but it's spinning around for sure. There's actually an optical effect to that too. You know when you spin and you get yourself dizzy, right? Oh, you saw Ben? Yeah. You saw Ben No. No. So with Shane? Right. Right. No. It's, No. You didn't saw him? No. Check my friend Ben from Unchained Brain. He's on Instagram also, and he does his own podcast. He's spinning upside down like, so Ben from Unchained Brain.
I'm writing that down without thinking about it. Yes. This guy invented a machine, shout out to Ben and all you listeners, where you can spin upside down, right? And even if you spin like 20 minutes, when you stand still, so you so you level again, you're not gonna be dizzy. There are some people in, I think it's in Turkey, they call it the the devil devilish spinners, I think it's the name. They go into trance, and they're gonna spin on their ax for 20 to 30 minutes in a, what's it called? In a, ah, fuck. In a state, in a unconscious state, in a trance. So that's, yeah, in a transcentric state.
Rumi is one of the guys that did that stuff. And he had some great, great philosophical quotes that you will love. So, if you put in Rumi in YouTube, for example, R U M I, dude, you're gonna love that stuff. And Ben invented this machine, which is for self by now, just like when we got 1 strong or 2 strongs ago. So, yeah, I will try to post on the short description, the link to his stuff, and also your link. Where can people find you, Maltese?
[02:32:31] Unknown:
Yeah. So, you can find pretty much all the information. I'm just got it kind of just being curated at Telegram. So Telegram, if you aren't using it, it's a it's a great little messaging app. It still allows for a little bit of privacy, and you don't have, quite the censorship concerns yet unless you're using it on an Apple product. Apple has their fingers and everything. Right? So there's ways around that. Look into it, but you'll find me. It's rawcast digital. The tag would be t.meforward/beyondorwell. So you've left Orwell long behind, and, that's how the channel started. And the broadcast came. Basically, I delivered a message like we're doing here, unscripted, just off the top of the mind, and sometimes with visuals and that where applicable.
So it's just, again, applying different ways of thinking and how to look at some of these problems that we have that, doesn't show up usually in the typical black, white,
[02:33:31] Unknown:
logical fallacies that is the arguments of the social medias these days. Right. And this is what I love. I just wanna get into a conversation, just see how it goes, see what we thought is gonna touch base on. And before you know it's 2 and a half hours.
[02:33:47] Unknown:
Yeah. Don't do that. Yeah, we're gonna scratch the surface.
[02:33:50] Unknown:
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, well, it's always just like, hey, hi. Well, well, now we're gonna get into the topics, right? Yeah, no, hi, it's fine. Yep. Yeah. I'm, for sure, dude, if I could do this for my daily job, we will go 2 hours, 2, 3 hours from now on, because there was just the introduction, right? Right, right. Exactly. But, yeah, as you mentioned with the YouTube, with all the stupid centering stuff and all that bullshit, what's around, I'd rather make money off telling bullshit to people, just as I did as a salesman and stuff like that. I just don't care. Yeah, I love to do this. It's Yeah. But normally I would edit the show right now.
I have to go to bed because tomorrow Yeah, I think, yeah. I think too would. But, I will do it to, well, I will rather some stuff. You know how it goes, right? You make pot gas. Yeah, yeah. Patience is, patience is kilo too, right? You know, sometimes Yeah, well, you know what I, I like to push it out directly, because then it's finished, you know? Because otherwise, it's just like, oh, yeah, I do this podcast, and here's one, there's one, there's one. And sometimes when I do 4 podcasts in a week, in a strong, shit, shit, and in a strong, it's gonna throw up my data because you only can enhance audio for 4 hours and stuff like that. So when you have, like now it's 12 o'clock, it's a quarter to 12 in the midnight here in the Netherlands.
So when I'm gonna do 2 and a half hours right now, and tonight I'm gonna record another show. I got another 2 and a half hours. It said, you can't do. So you can't edit. And it adds on and adds on and adds on. So it's like And a way of life. Right? That's that's Yeah. That's stupid. Adobe, it's stupid. I pay for the subscription. Give me the full fucking access. Come on.
[02:35:53] Unknown:
Right. That's how it should be. You know? And that's why I try finding ways around with the Linux systems, the free open source softwares, trying to find little loopholes. Right? But, everything's so costly these days. You don't get nothing for free. Right?
[02:36:09] Unknown:
Mel Ties Kanub, thank you very much for hopping on this.
[02:36:14] Unknown:
Thank you for having me. It was a a great conversation. It was fun covering a lot of that. And I would love to hear what you have to come back with your Peru trip. I think it'll be very exciting.
[02:36:26] Unknown:
Yes. I will I will, definitely, definitely, spout some beads here on on my podcast. Probably in the jungle, and I'll record it with my telephone, you know, just just basic stuff. But, there will be a lot of stuff going on on, on socials afterwards. I was not gonna sit with some indigenous Indians in the middle of the fucking forest, in the middle of the fucking Amazon jungle with my fucking telephone. Look, oh, guys, look at that. That, no, no, that's
[02:36:58] Unknown:
not. Bring out the Starlink everything, dude. Starlink it all up. Yeah. The green screen, you know, the little green sheet to put behind.
[02:37:06] Unknown:
Maybe if you're gonna put And
[02:37:08] Unknown:
and then to play display a fake forest behind you.
[02:37:12] Unknown:
Yeah. That's That that would be, you know, even
[02:37:19] Unknown:
it ain't virtual. It ain't real.
[02:37:21] Unknown:
Exactly. Question everything, motherfuckers. Everything. Absolutely.
[02:37:26] Unknown:
Absolutely. Especially your own mind. Alright? Oh, yes. True television is questioning what you do know. Thing is that what you see the real thing.
[02:37:34] Unknown:
Or is it just your indoctrination popping up?
[02:37:38] Unknown:
You never know, right? So you gotta question yourself more than anything. Yeah.
[02:37:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Biggest liar is our brain, dude. Awesome. Appreciate it. Absolutely. Thank you very much, Mel Teese. That's fine. And for everyone who is listening, thank you for listening to this, episode from Disorganized Productions. I hope you have a beautiful morning, a beautiful day, or a beautiful evening. No matter where you are on this beautiful plane, planet. Thank God.
[02:38:07] Unknown:
He's
[02:38:11] Unknown:
everybody. Keep running for all my life with a devil on my heels. He wasn't always kind, and he couldn't fulfill my dreams. I've been running for all my life with a devil on my heels. He wasn't always kind, and he couldn't fulfill my dreams. He's a pain in the ass. He's black
Introduction to Disorganized Productions
Meet the Guest: Maltese Kanuk
Understanding Extreme Weather
The Science Behind Storms
Historical Weather Events
Volcanic Eruptions and Their Impact
Weather Manipulation: Myth or Reality?
Chemtrails and Weather Modification
The Influence of Celestial Bodies
The Mayan Calendar and Modern Times
The Flat Earth Debate
Exploring the Night Sky
The Role of Water in Our World
The Moon Landing Controversy
Philosophical Reflections and Closing Thoughts