Broadcasts live every Thursday at 8:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
A discussion about the power of words and their true meanings. Eli James, joins us where we explore the significance of words like 'testament,' 'gentile,' and 'lost,' revealing their true meanings and how they have been misunderstood over time. Eli shares insights into the historical and linguistic connections between the tribes of Israel and the Anglo-Saxons, shedding light on the origins of words like 'Saxon' and 'Scythian.'
We also touch on the fascinating topic of frequencies and their impact on our well-being, discussing the differences between 432 Hz and 440 Hz, and the significance of the Schumann resonance.
Well, well, my slider works. How about that? It's, Thursday 4th April 2,024. How about that? Got it right this time. Ruined the whole thing. This is Paul English Live. Welcome to the show. Oh, I've had a frazzle of a day. I don't know what kind of a day you've had, but mine's been a bit frazzly. This is Paul Inglis live here on WBN 324. And on tonight's show, on this afternoon's show, because it just gone 3 o'clock in the the US. We're back on the proper standard difference in time again. My guess is gonna be Eli James. We've got a few clips lined up and hopefully a bit of a rambunctious eclectic discussion for you coming up this evening. And apart from looking at certain words like shoe, plimsoll, and xylophone no. We won't be looking at any of those words.
I've also got a few clips lined up about the climate. You know that thing? It's just sending into an ongoing comedy show. Love it. And I'm just getting my feet under the table as they say. Welcome
[00:03:00] Unknown:
back to the show. After, after a lovely week of, whatever you've been doing, really. We've had a lot of rain here. We start off with the weather, don't I? Just
[00:03:07] Unknown:
sort of getting my audio feet under the table with the whole thing. So lots of rain, lots of rain today. It's been really rather marvelous, but a beautiful weekend over the Easter. I don't know what you got. We got a beautiful, a beautiful Easter weekend here. Lots of sun, lots of things bumbling around, and lots of walking by the beach. Sounds awfully exotic. And then followed by lots of rain and all that kind of stuff. So maybe you had something similar. I didn't eat one of those chocolate egg things. So, you know, how good is that for me? I mean, I thought it was pretty good really. And may maybe you did. Maybe you did eat lots of Easter eggs, and they're groaning about it, and all that kind of stuff.
My guest tonight is Eli James, but, he's been having fun with bureaucracy today. He just sent me a message literally about 30 seconds before showtime. So this is the fun and joys of live radio. I I know you all like it so much. Me too. So, but he will be here. I think he's sending me messages saying that he's trying to put his broadcasting trousers on and get ready and this that the other. So I'll be zoning him in or bringing him in as we go. So you might hear me rummaging around in my technical in my technical drawers. Look at that.
There we go. Sorry. I just have to send him 1, send him a a mess send him a message. And, yes. So we're gonna be talking a little bit about words, but before we kind of do that, I had something that came across, my desk, oh, a little bit earlier today, which was to do with the Internet. You know this thing that we're actually using? Now you may be familiar with, a gentleman called Tim Berners Lee, and if not, oh, shame on you. I'm sure most of you are. Mister Lee, mister Berners Lee used to work at CERN, an area which, of course, is of great concern these days. Look at me using words in a silly way.
Because of what people perceive may possibly be going on in the subterranean caverns down there. So there's lots of awkward speculation about it. But, many years ago, mister Lee, mister Berners Lee invented the Internet as we know it. Well, he certainly invented the World Wide Web and the use of hypertext marker markup language, the links that make the whole thing going on. So, hang on just a minute. No. Just a minute. So I've got a little problem here with my guest who thinks that a password is needed and one isn't needed.
Let me just check here. Right. What shall I do? I know. You would be listening to certain things. I'll tell you what. I'm just going to put a record on while I just sort this out. Hang on. Let me just go and see if I can usher him into the studio. What should we put on here? I should put something on, shouldn't I? Dumdi dumdi dum. Look at me pressing buttons all over the place. How about oh, I know. I've got this little thing. It's really silly, but we'll just stick this on and then we'll fade this out pretty soon. I'll keep this just hold your horses everybody. Let me just see if I can bring him in. Which I will do now.
Back with you in 30 seconds, hopefully.
[00:06:57] Unknown:
I want you to get together. I want you to get together. I want you to get together. I want you to get together. I want you to get together. I want you to get together. Put your hands together
[00:07:58] Unknown:
with
[00:08:27] Unknown:
I want you to get together.
[00:09:25] Unknown:
Hey. Welcome back. Did you enjoy that cheesy music? Probably not, Let me just bring it to a little halt here. There we go. Hi. Welcome. Welcome back everybody to me. There we go. So, my guest has now arrived. Eli, could you, could you say a word or 2 to see if I've got you, coming through? Looks as though we have. Hang on just a second. Let me just get this, sorted here at this end. And, Eli, are you with us?
[00:10:02] Unknown:
I think so.
[00:10:03] Unknown:
I think you are. There we go. You're pretty quiet. Let me just bring you up. Let me just bring you into the show if I can. I'm gonna give you some extra decibels. See? Okay. Could you just say hello again? Yeah.
[00:10:15] Unknown:
Give me some extra decibels. I could use some extra decibels Yeah. For the rest of my life.
[00:10:21] Unknown:
There we go. That's pretty cool. Let me just check a few levels here. So just say something again. Say say hello everyone or something like that.
[00:10:31] Unknown:
I I hate bureaucracy.
[00:10:33] Unknown:
Oh, well, that's a good start. That's great. I'm gonna give you even more decibels because you're just whispering out there. Hi, Eli. Anyway, listen. Yeah. We've all had a real chilled start to the show, so that was great. And, it's always nice for you to put me through the ringer there. So thanks for that. Yeah. Right. Exactly. Yeah. So where have you just come back from? Where have you just come back from? Oh. What fun have you been having with bureaucracies today?
[00:10:57] Unknown:
Bureaucracy in the town of Harrison, Arkansas, the retirement bureau, income tax, etcetera, etcetera. You know, that's what I've been dealing with today. Fun. Fun. Fun. Fun. Fun. Great stuff. Oh, that's that's the that's the song I should have sent to you. And we'll have fun fun fun. Well, we could still daddy takes her t bird away.
[00:11:20] Unknown:
We could still probably work it in. I'll tell you what. I just started off talking about Tim Berners Lee, and and this is just part of my opening thing. So I just wanted to do a sound check and make sure we could get you in, which we've done. So that's pretty good. It's nice sort of bumbling start to the show, but I think people are kinda used to that. And you know what? I've got the date right this week as well, but there's always something at the beginning of my shows that make it fun. So I think it's a trade Right. Mark. But I was just about to read something out, which is gonna take me 3 or 4 minutes, but I want to read it. So just to catch up to where we were at, prior to the little musical interlude and the start there, everyone. Thanks for your patience.
Tim Berners Lee, 30:35 years ago, 1989, was of the World Wide Web. And I started using it about 1992 or 3 in some sort of rarified space, but it wasn't until the browser came out with Netscape Navigator. But because of this, he, back in March, just a couple of weeks ago, and I only stumbled across this earlier today, he wrote a little open letter. It says it's a 5 minute read. I won't go too quickly. It'll be about 5 I haven't even read this through, but I thought it it seemed relevant. I've read bits of it. So let me just go through it. This is a little reading exercise. So if you're sat comfortably and you got your cocoa or your gin or your pint of mild or your cup of tea or whatever, here we go. I just want to run through this and see what it brings up.
He writes he says, 3 and a half decades ago when I invented the web, its trajectory was impossible to imagine. There was no road map to predict the course of its evolution. It was a captivating odyssey filled with unforeseen opportunities. I'll tell you what. I'm just gonna mute you, Eli, whilst I just do this. Hang on. And, let me just go through this. Yeah. It was, underlying its whole infrastructure was the intention to allow for collaboration, foster compassion, and generate creativity. What I termed the 3 c's. It was to be a tool to empower humanity. The 1st decade of the web fulfilled that promise. The web was decentralized with a long tail of content and options. It created small, more localized communities, provided individual empowerment, I hate that word, and fostered huge value.
Yet in the past decade, instead of embodying these values, the web has instead played a part in eroding them. The consequences are increasingly far reaching. From the centralization of platforms to the AI revolution, the web serves as the foundational layer of our online ecosystem, an ecosystem that is now reshaping the geopolitical land landscape. This is true. Driving economic shifts and influencing the lives of people around the world. 5 years ago, he writes, when the web turned 30, I called out some of the dysfunction caused by the web being I called out some of the dysfunction caused by the web being dominated by the self interest of several corporations that have eroded the web's values and led to breakdown and harm. Now, 5 years on, as we arrive at the Webb's 35th birthday, the rapid advancement of a high of hei AI has exacerbated these concerns, proving that issues on the web are not isolated, but rather deeply intertwined with emerging technologies.
There are 2 clear connected issues to address. The first is the extent of power concentration which contradicts the decentralized spirit I originally envisaged. This has segmented the web with a fight to keep users hooked on one platform to optimize profit through the passive observation of content. This exploitative business model is particularly grave in this year of elections that could unravel political turmoil. Compounding this issue is the second, the personal data market that has exploited people's time and data with the creation of deep profiles that allow for targeted advertising and ultimately control over the information people are fed. He goes on, how has this happened? I'm just jumping down a little bit.
The the to truly transform the current system, he writes, we must simultaneously tackle its existing problems and champion the efforts of those visionary individuals who are actively working to build a new improved system. Eli, what do you think about
[00:15:34] Unknown:
this? Yes. Well, I was trying to jot down some of the buzzwords used in that statement, even though the statement is very accurate. Right? Yeah. But, it use it uses what we would call, AI jargon Yes. Like, em empowerment. Yes. Right. Yes.
[00:15:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Did everybody feel a bit ill when that word comes out? I do. I'm sort of sick of it. Yeah. Absolutely.
[00:15:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Now I I recall the days when empowerment was having a sidearm on on your
[00:16:04] Unknown:
Yeah. On your holster. Right? Okay. It was. And And it's been, you know, it's been I've I got exposed to that word in the 19 eighties when I was training and doing things about this is going to empower you and of course it's just been non stop for the last 30 or 40 years. Let me just read this last paragraph here. I've just jumped ahead Okay. But it's useful because it indicates some other economic things that are going on. He says, call for action. This is his closing paragraph. He writes, realising this emergent movement won't just happen, he's he's talking about the re decentralisation of it.
It requires support for the people leading the reform from researchers to inventors to advocates. We must amplify and promote these positive use cases, and work to shift the collective mindset of global citizens. The Webb Foundation that I co founded with Rosemary Leath has and will continue to support and accelerate this emergent system and the people behind it. However, there is a need, an urgent need, for others to do the same. To back the morally courageous leadership that is rising, collectivise their solutions, and to overturn the online world being dictated by profit to one that is dictated by the needs of humanity.
It is only then that the online ecosystem we all live in will reach its full potential and provide the foundations for creativity, collaboration, and compassion, the 3 c's, which were his original intent. And that was written on the 12th March last month. And I think you're right to a degree. I mean, it's got that kind of modern jargon to it the way that he writes. But the point Yes. Of it the point of it is, I see great similarities with the arrival of the web and the and the fantastic heyday of it in the nineties, in the early 2000, which, of course, for people born this century will sound absolutely absolutely nonsensical and ridiculous what I'm saying. But I've mentioned it before that the the sheer loose nature of the whole thing made it quite quite brilliant back then, in terms of just moving around. And as he said, you know, connect collecting up in small communities and probably even more prominent in America than it is here with the rise of the press in the 1800, and then the slow acquisition of all the newspapers into the same hands.
Something, I guess, you're quite familiar with. Yeah?
[00:18:24] Unknown:
Yes. Very much.
[00:18:25] Unknown:
Absolutely. Yep. Yep. Yeah.
[00:18:28] Unknown:
And, yeah. Sorry. Go ahead. Well, I was just gonna say Well, I was just get Yeah. You say.
[00:18:34] Unknown:
Please continue. Please hey. You go first. Right? You're Okay. You're British.
[00:18:39] Unknown:
I I I need to be more, polite. You don't. In America. Yeah. You don't. You don't need to be more polite. It's fine. Oh. No. I don't think you could be more polite, actually. Now, what I was gonna say, I understand his yearning for that. I've got it too. But if you look at things in the past, they're only going one way, I would suggest. And I'm coming back to the old hobby horse all the time. But because the financial power lies invested interest hands and has done for centuries, Every single technology or movement of improving communication always ends up going down this same old route. I mean, just look at television.
I mean, television did exactly the same sort of thing, you know.
[00:19:21] Unknown:
Mhmm. Mhmm. Well, what we need is more sustainability. Do we? How about sustainability of liberty? Maybe, yeah. Okay. I I get the author's drift, but it sounds like he grew up in a sustainable bureaucratic universe. And somehow he's struggling to get out of it?
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Maybe.
[00:19:48] Unknown:
Maybe. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Maybe he's trying to do that. Are good. Yes. Yeah. His intentions are good. Yeah. He he meant, another word he used was decentralized. That's a good word. That's a good word. The society used to be decentralized when we had farmers and small town folk and Henry Ford. Right? Before big corporations took it, which was the point of his papers, the big corporations have taken over the universe. Right? So Well, they did. And we need to fight against it. Yeah. Well, they did.
[00:20:23] Unknown:
I mean, I mentioned it Yeah. I mentioned it before back in I think it was back in the eighties. By the way, Elo, is this is this some noise in the background there? I'm sort of picking up someone's voice. Yeah. I can't can't do anything else, about it right now because,
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we're she's online with a bureaucratic dictatorship that's Alright. Demanding information. So, yeah, please continue.
[00:20:47] Unknown:
Well, it it was just it was just my opening shot for today's show, really. It was to just I wanted to just roll it through. It's a it's a a steady theme of this, really ever since the net got in ever since we got into this century, although we've obviously had the unleashing of tons of information in the naughties as it were from 2,000 to 2,000 and 10 roughly. Much of it kicked off and amplified by the events of 9:11. We've seen since then this whole thing of called social networking, which I've never really participated in because I've always remained in love with the email, which I've drowned on about here before. And I still think email is the true essence of it, in the way that he was talking about, that we would connect up. I made many of my connections through email, connections that I still have to this day.
Sounds awfully quaint to say it, doesn't it? But, the whole sort of huge scale of things with X or Twitter. And I saw a little thing on on X before, recently the other week, which was that, they're gonna start asking for ID on Twitter I believe. Some message has come through. I think it was on PC Mag, which is a massive PC, magazine out of the States. There's a UK equivalent here. But they were talking about the fact that, you might have to provide a photograph of yourself and stuff like that. And, yeah, absolutely, which is a bit odd. I've never even had a web camera in my entire life on the Internet. I'm serious. I've never had one and, I don't see what the point of them is to be quite honest. But, that direction, you're going in that direction all the time is not good for any of us.
Anyway, let's just push that let's just push that on. That was just an opening shot really just to get the thing rolling. I I titled I made a little comment about today's show that we were gonna talk about words and about the misunderstanding of certain keywords. And, you and I, of course, have talked about this for years, certainly with regard to the Anglo Saxons, and with regards to the Israelites, and with regards to certain keywords in scripture. Yes. We have, haven't we? We've talked a lot about this. Oh, yes. And I know that when I when I was speaking to you either earlier today or yesterday, just to get this, this, you know, this organized with all the fun that we've had at the start, which is great.
I was I was talking about these words because they keep coming up. And, the main pitch, you know, because recently I've been looking at Bibles again. I've got I was counting the ones I've got in the house, and I've got about 7 or 8. I've got about 7 or 8. It's ridiculous. I haven't read any one of them all the way through, because not because they're necessarily bad. I remember a few years ago you suggested to me that the Jerusalem Bible, the one that Tolkien was involved in the translation team, was a very good translation.
[00:23:48] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. And it is. And the reason why the reason why sorry. My, guest finally departed here. And the reason why is because it actually uses the word race Yeah. In the translation, which very few other translations do. It uses, the the name of Yahweh instead of, l o r d, which is a Jewish substitute for the name of Yahweh. Yes. And things like that, which are very fine. I understand the vast majority of the translation committee were Roman Catholics, but that's not a strike against the Jerusalem bible. Oh, yeah. And it has the apocrypha, which is really good. The the original king James used to have the apocrypha, but it was deleted there somewhere along the line. And now you have today, Judeo Christian pastors is, oh, that Apocrypha. That's not that's not worth a damn thing.
Okay. What have you seen the 16 11 version of the King James Bible, sir? Have you seen that? It's got the apocrypha in it. Oh, really? Okay. This is what we're dealing with It is. With modern churchianity.
[00:24:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay? It It is. And it's just it's it it pivots on a clutch of for me, I mean, there's probably more than just a small clutch, But there's a small clutch of words upon which if it seems to me that if you do not know the true meaning of those words, and I guess this plague of word deception, word deceit, word distraction has been going in in so many fields for so many years. You know, the more you look at a deceiving word, the more you realize how massively important words have become to us. You're almost unconscious of them as they run through your head. And the impact that they have.
Yeah. And I I you know, so although my actually, I had a conversation with one of my sons about a week ago and he said that, you know, basically the question was, dad, what's this Bible lark all about? I said, it's a very good question. It is. What is it about? He said, because he'd just been over to Ireland. Right? This is a good little tell. He'd just been over to Ireland to drink some Guinness over the Easter weekend, I think it was, or something like that. That. And, he didn't drink too much because he doesn't do that sort of thing, but they had a good time, over in Dublin.
And, one of his friends had gone with him and got confirmed into the Catholic faith. And, yeah. And it was quite interesting, really. I didn't sort of jump all over and go, that's terrible or anything. I mean, I just, you know, because it's he was saying, dad, what what is that all about? I said, you know, honestly, I said, I couldn't really tell you. I said, I I got confirmed I got confirmed into the Church of England in 1974, I think it was, by the Bishop of Ripon, who probably was some big squeeze in the Church of England at the time. It seemed to be quite an important place. And, I couldn't really tell you what it was about at all. I know that that, we turned up one night and he put his hand on my head and said, you're confirmed. And I thought, oh, good. Right. Okay. Well, that's great. Whatever that might be. Confirmed what? Yeah. Absolutely.
And yet this was before I'd started started asking any questions. Anyway, a friend of his had gone over to and and I said, why did he do that? He said, well, he wasn't raised as a Catholic. I said, okay. But why why did he do it? It turned out that the backstory was quite interesting. He'd actually stayed over there, maybe about 5 or 6 years ago when things were pretty tough for him, probably in his late teens or something like that. And a woman there who'd who'd who's had a very tough life I mean, he went through the dramas and the tragedies. She suffered and went, okay. He said, I think maybe because of all these tragedies, she's become very religious. And so it's a religious is a very interesting word. But she was she's become an ardent devotee of the organized religion of Catholicism. And he was saying he thought that out of a sense of honor to her, he decided to enroll himself, as it were, in the same fan club. Let's put it that way. I don't want it too dismissive because it's easy to just write all of these things off as if no good people ever went through the portals of any church ever, and this is simply not true.
But the overall context for them is is really a terrible mess. And so I was I mentioned to him I said, really this discussion, you know, that we're having now about this clutch of words. I said there's certain key words in it which, as I see it right now are massively misunderstood by the vast majority of all these denominations. And I said the first one to start off with, the one that, swings us right into the field of race, which it does, is the third word in, which is testament, which I know you and I have discussed before, haven't we? And, so I was I said to her, I said, look, I said, I'm gonna get a little bit technical with you right now, but it's important. I said, as I understand it, it comes from a Greek word.
This word testament is a translation of a Greek word, which is diaphyche, and its true sharp defined meaning is contract. And, therefore, it is much better for understanding to view these documents as what they actually are, which is 2 contracts, the old and the new. What do you what do you think about that?
[00:29:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that's that's interesting. Although the word testament also applies to, a will. Okay. As a last will and testament. And that would only apply however to the new testament, because the old testament is not the old testament talks about the heirs, namely the Israelites and not Jews, the Israelites becoming the heirs of whatever Yahweh will to us through Jesus Christ, Yahshua. Right? So, but, yeah, technically, that's correct. Technically, that's correct. It yeah. I mean, it cleared up my thinking really
[00:29:52] Unknown:
very quickly with that. And it seems to me that if you this is the 3rd word in that we're talking about. We're only in 3 words, the Old Testament. And I suspect that if you ask the vast majority of people who purport or say that they are Christians or whatever that might mean, that's another word that's very confusing, I think. They won't be aware that it's a contract, and so my little exposition goes something like this. A contract is a formal agreement between 2 or more parties to do and or refrain from doing the things that are itemized and detailed in the contract. Yeah? Right. That's what that's what a contract is. So the next question would be, okay, if these documents are contracts, can we find the parties, you know, party of the first part, the party of the second part, can we find the 2 parties or more that are party to this contract? And the answer is we can. It's actually written in
[00:30:53] Unknown:
the documents. Okay. And and Okay. Well, let me ask you a question. Yeah. If it's possible to find them, why don't the churches ever know who they are?
[00:31:04] Unknown:
Well, that is a very good yeah. That's a brilliant question. And and I was I mean, my response to that, you know, in a is it doesn't suit the designs of an organised religion to start talking about contracts. Does it? There you go.
[00:31:19] Unknown:
Yeah. Because,
[00:31:22] Unknown:
apart from them formalizing agreements, which everybody's familiar with contracts, the world runs on them. It's run on them for a long time. That's right. Particularly on complex things, you need them, otherwise, you wouldn't get any performance out of party a or party b by, you know, March 31st or April 1st or whenever it may be. Things wouldn't happen and there wouldn't be consequences. Nothing would get done. But Yeah. Obviously, this is the key thing why I don't think they talk about it. An inherent quality of a contract is that it is exclusive, isn't it? That's right. That's right. That's why we draw a mark. Exclusive.
It's exclusive. If you're not on it, you're not in it. If you're not in it, you're excluded from it. So it seems to me that the third word in undermines practically every organised so called Christian religious orthodoxy or flavor. Yeah. But there is. That's And Judaism too.
[00:32:19] Unknown:
Yeah. And Judaism too because the Jews don't recognize They pretend that's how contracts can go wrong. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:32:29] Unknown:
I'm not
[00:32:30] Unknown:
They pretend that that's Contracts can go wrong. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. That they're one of these parties to the contract, and so, you know, the idea is if you're then reading it, you go, oh, this is an exclusive document, and it's addressed Yeah. As we well, as I understand it. It's addressed to a particular race of people. That's why the word race comes up on the third word, doesn't it? Really? You're going, oh, it's a contract. It's exclusive. It's between Yahweh God, and it says his people. It doesn't say all people. Not that I read in the Bible. It doesn't say that. It doesn't say I and I don't know if I've told you years ago, I had a a fantastic conversation with, a very bright, technically very bright Indian chap.
I think he'd studied at MIT, so he was a bit of a computer whiz. He really was. He knew he was a geek and he was quite happy about it. And he had he was a nice guy. He really was. But as the years went by, he got more and more sort of interested in the history of England, actually, and and of the root of the law here, or what he perceived to be the law, the control of the Pope, and and started to write all these incredibly esoteric emails to all sorts of interesting individuals. Anyway, at one point he sent me one, and he said blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. Jesus came to save everybody.
And I said, oh really? I said I haven't read that bit. Can you point that out to me where it says that? Because I've I'm not aware that that exists anywhere as being written down. And then he got really angry with me, and he sent me this email that was just full of effing and blinding all the way through. He's a very intelligent man. Right? But he'd obviously lost his whatever rag he had. Cool. Yeah. And he said Well, yeah. That's cool. At one point he said, anybody that thinks Jesus didn't come to save everybody is an effing effing effing effing effing effing effing effing effing effing effing effing. I said, alright. I've got your point. I said, so I quoted him something back. I said, I'm gonna stand with what he said and not what you are imagining. Yeah. You're imagining things.
And that's why, Eli, going back to what you just said a few minutes ago, this is why churches don't talk about it. How are you supposed to build a church bums on seat business if the if it's the only way you could build a church is by having the people of this specific race or on this contract in it. You can't have all the other races. And nobody else. Nobody. No black bums. No no pink bums.
[00:35:02] Unknown:
No yellow bums. No? Only white bums. Yeah. How can you have a church that way? A bureaucratic church, no less.
[00:35:11] Unknown:
And, of course, I bumped into you on this ticket, really, 10 or 12 years ago when we first made connection over this topic. And I've mentioned before, when when that went in and I saw that, it kind of blew my mind and my heart and my everything just went bang all at once. It was instantaneous. And I went, holy moly. This is why I've never wanted to read it. I've never wanted to read it, in the guise that it was brought to me by official representatives of any church at all. Because it just it never felt right what they were saying. It was all too lovey dovey, and I mistrusted that immensely. I didn't think it was right. It seemed to be only one little part of the story. And on the misunderstanding or the misapplication, the misappropriation of one word, testament, The whole thing, it seems to me, is flipped through a 180 degrees and you're looking at something completely different to what the church has told you you were looking at.
[00:36:09] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. Well, it's it's very exclusive, and the covenant is made with no one else but the descendants of the of Jacob, the 12 tribes of Israel. Mhmm. And only it it begins with Abraham and Isaac as well, but then it became more exclusive under the 12 tribes through Jacob. And because, the, other descendants of Abraham and Isaac were not present at Mount Sinai when the law was given. So the law was only given to the 12 tribes of Israel and nobody else. Okay? So that's the party of the second part Mhmm. To whom the covenant applies and, of course, the party of the first part is, I don't know, some powerful guy up in the sky. Right? He's the party of the first part and that's it.
Yep. End of the matter.
[00:37:02] Unknown:
It is the end of And that does
[00:37:04] Unknown:
right? And it doesn't change in the New Testament. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Please continue. No. So we've sorted it out. Brilliant.
[00:37:12] Unknown:
Because and I'm not trying to be facetious. I mean it. Yeah. I think it's We can all go home now. Yep. We can if you get it. But most people sort of don't want to get it. I mean, what is there to not understand about it? I'll tell you. What makes it so difficult, of course, for the I totally understand why a lot of people just go no to that, is that we are on the long line of an abuse of that word and several other words within that those documents. And we know, you know, we're talking about the King James. That's not that's not accurate. It's got some beautiful language in it if you're into that sort of thing, and I am. Oh, it is. Yeah. The Psalms are astonishing the way that they're written in the King James and all sorts of other things. They really they just ring with a kind of poetic spirit that's just at times amazing. It really is. If you if you like that sort of thing, I do. I happen to really like it a lot. I don't know what like means in this case, but I get moved by it.
But no wonder the vast majority of people just say, no. I mean, I've had I have Jehovah's Witnesses call on my house here. Mhmm. And they all I always look How dare they? I would Sorry. Well, they came. But the last time they came, I said, do you know how many Bibles I've got in the house? They went, no. I said, I've I've got 7. Yeah. Right now. They said, what really? I said, which one do you wanna talk about? I said, they're all slightly wrong, you know. They said, well, we read this one. I said, well, you know,
[00:38:36] Unknown:
Yeah. That's even worse.
[00:38:40] Unknown:
Right. I know. So why is it that people like you, me, maybe many of the listeners here listening to the show, are the sort of people that go, hang on just a minute. Something doesn't add up here. What is it that doesn't add up? And surely, it's the definition, the abuse of the definition of certain keywords send everybody off in a wild goose chase. Yeah? That's right. That's right. Yeah. It's like,
[00:39:05] Unknown:
in fact, we can talk about the word Jew and gentile a bit later, but, those words have been so horribly mis translated that you might as well go when the light turns red and stop when the light turns green because the meanings of those words have been drastically redefined. Yes. Okay. Drastically redefined.
[00:39:29] Unknown:
Well, it it took me a long time to understand the word Gentile. Right? Only 2000 years. Only 2000 years. So Yeah. If we were to ask anybody, just about anybody at all, who is in our race, if they think they are a Gentile, 99.99% of people will say yes. They think that, don't they? Mhmm.
[00:39:57] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:39:57] Unknown:
And yet They would. As I understand it, correct me here because I don't I'm happy to be corrected. No individual can be or ever has been a gentile. You can't Right. Be 1 as an individual.
[00:40:12] Unknown:
Yeah? That's correct. Well, both in the Greek and the Hebrew, the Hebrew is goi Mhmm. And the Hebrew means nation, a collective body of people of the same race living in the same territory. That's goi. That's nation. Okay? Same is true of ethnos. Yeah. Ethnos in the Greek, which even even a better definition, it says race, comma, nation. It's how can are you a race?
[00:40:40] Unknown:
Yep. You you individual? Are you a race? I I I'm not. Apparently no. I've not worked out if I am one. It appears not very strongly. Most the evidence in my life suggests that I'm not an entire race of people. No. I'm not. Yeah. Are you a nation? No. I'm not. No? I'm a nation. You're a person.
[00:40:58] Unknown:
A person and a nation are two different things. Right? Yep. Yet the Jews have managed to redefine the word goi because they don't don't really use ethnos because they're not into the New Testament like we are. And they have redefined the word goi to apply to individuals, which the bible never does. That just shows you that the the foul foul wordplay. I guess foul wordplay is what we're talking about here. The the means by which to confuse people, it's really easy. All you have to do is redefine words and you you get people to accept your definitions, your redefinitions, and they don't know how drastically they have been tricked.
[00:41:43] Unknown:
Who would why would they? That's the other thing. I mean, when I first came across this, you make everybody wrong, don't you? When he gets hold of a piece of truth, you go, oh, look at them. They don't know anything. Come here. I wanna show you something. Oh, no. That that can't be right, they say. What do you mean it can't be right? I've just given you the absolute definition of the word. No, I don't think it's like that. It's not about what we think, it's about what is, surely. And Yeah. Why is it it just why is it that it hits people like a sledgehammer and other people just go back to the default position? That's a bit that I'm permanently puzzled about because, you know, you were talking there about the misappropriation words by other parties.
And I've often thought it's a bit like suppose you you mentioned a will earlier, didn't you? And it's as if there's the reading of a will, and we're we're in the room because the will is addressed to us, but there's a lot of juicy stuff in this will. Right? There's a lot of really good stuff in it if if we can obey, what the Yeah. Test of yeah. If we can do that, there's a lot of us. And someone is in And somebody else wants to get all that
[00:42:42] Unknown:
somebody else wants to get all that juicy stuff Yeah. And has, gone to the will reading testament
[00:42:49] Unknown:
in your place, and you don't know it. That's it. They're hanging around in the corridor to start off, and they hear it getting red. They go, oh, this sounds pretty good. What's this? And they got their ears Yeah. As they go, oh, I think I'm going into this room. And when and when someone says, who who's of this tribe of people that this wheels for? They go, it's us. I go, what? Oh, yeah. We we like that. That's great. We'll have a bit of that. Yeah. We we think that applies to us. Yes.
[00:43:16] Unknown:
Goods included. Scotsman included. Irish included. Yep. Germans included. Danes included. But not Jews.
[00:43:24] Unknown:
Jews Jews are never mentioned as well. Well, not anybody not anybody that's not of that specifically defined because that's the next question that comes up, you know. I get this. Okay. If this is this contract, which it is, between Yahweh God and his people, who are his people? Who are they? And for most people that we know who are not aware of this knowledge, they will obviously say, well we believe that those people are the Jews. That is the Jewish people that are of the Old Testament. And given what they've seen in the world, it's completely understandable why they would think that. And yet and yet, it turns out that if you start to scrub some of the dust off and look at things, it becomes pretty clear that it could only apply to one group of people and it's not them, and it's not Eskimos either, And nor is it the people of South America, nor is it the people of China, or of Northern India, or of Guatemala, or any of all the Aborigines.
Yeah. It doesn't apply to them. Or or of Kyrgyzstan.
[00:44:29] Unknown:
The people in Kyrgyzstan
[00:44:30] Unknown:
are not included either. There's a lot of people that are not included. Yeah. And Right. Because it's an exclusive agreement, isn't it? So that was that's part of this thing about this abuse of words. If you can get I mean, and we know that Marxist attack policy is to begin to shift the language all the time. We've been enduring it since the middle of the last century in a big way, courtesy of their use of newspapers and other things, to drive home into people's heads and hearts a different definition of certain words, which leads to massive confusion,
[00:45:02] Unknown:
almost permanent. Yes. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Confusion, confusion, confusion caused by because the people who are abusing the definitions of the terms know the exact meanings. Yes. They they absolutely know the exact meanings, but they have pervade false meanings in the stead of the exact meanings in order to confuse the rest of us so that because they can never forget the real meaning. If they forget the real meaning, then they'll get confused too. Right? So they have to make sure the confusion devolves only upon us, the real heirs.
[00:45:36] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:45:38] Unknown:
Okay. It's
[00:45:39] Unknown:
it's such a beguiling, if that's the right word, and astonishing piece of information. I mean, I had I may have quoted it here before. I've got a lovely there's a whole series of these little memes that try and get these points across and it is building up. I know it's slow, but it's quicker than it was. It's not as slow as it used to be. Okay. A lovely one from Henry Ford. And, it it said it's just a picture of Ford in front of his car and someone had put this quote over it. And he's it's something like he says, the problem is, he said, is that most Christians read their Bible through Jewish spectacles and therefore That's right. Read it wrong. And they do.
They read it wrong. It's such a You know who said that? It was it was Henry Ford who said that. That's right. That's who I was quoting. It's exactly Henry Ford. Oh, well, okay. Yeah. Because when I was He's a good friend of mine. He's a good friend of all of us. Of course, he's a terrible person really depending on who you read, but Yeah. It was through to him. Anti semite supposedly.
[00:46:43] Unknown:
Yeah. It's another word, semite. What's a semite?
[00:46:46] Unknown:
Who am I? I think I'm a semite. Isn't that right?
[00:46:50] Unknown:
You are. But, man, why you're smarter than than than heck. Right? Oh, I've learned from somebody
[00:46:57] Unknown:
I've learned from a very good person, Eli. I really
[00:47:00] Unknown:
Alright.
[00:47:01] Unknown:
I've I've learned I've learned my lessons well. But yes.
[00:47:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Are we are we due for a break? Because I have a legal matter that's just come up that's been, you know,
[00:47:14] Unknown:
requiring my attention all day, and I think we finally got it resolved. Alright. But, I sent you a a song or 2. Right? You did. But, if if we can take a break now, although we can wait another 10 minutes. No. No. It's fine. We we could take a break now. I could play the long song for about 6 minutes or so. By the way, just to let you know, if you can, I'll send you the link to Rumble. It's worth you getting over. There's some tremendous comments coming in. Someone's asked for us to go through the line of, from the Israelites, who are the people on the contract, through to the Anglo Saxons and the Saxons. That will be a good line. Yeah. That would be really good Yeah. Because there's a lot of confusion over there. And I think the picture for today's show is really good. I I I stumbled across it. It's got the word sleuth on it. I think it's some kind of a game. I just came across this image. Yeah. And I just want everybody to know the actual base image, the photograph, as far as I'm aware is taken from The Third Man, which is an outstanding film with Orson Welles. It's a sequence where he's running away. They're about to capture him, and he he's legging it off down the street. Basel Rathbone?
Not Basel Rathbone. It's gotta be Basel Rathbone. What do you mean as in Sherlock Holmes? That kind of thing. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. With the looking
[00:48:22] Unknown:
glass. Yeah. In fact, I just bought myself one of those magnifying
[00:48:25] Unknown:
glasses just in case I have to read the legal fine print on a document. Right? This is very I've never done it. I've never done a show when someone's reading a legal brief, Eli. You're really throwing me some curveballs here. It's fantastically interesting. Well, it's it's interesting because a contract is legal language. Mhmm.
[00:48:43] Unknown:
That's the bottom line. But but most people never read the contract. Right? This is true. I'm sorry. I'm having too much fun. I'm having too much but this this is the reality of the situation. Christians haven't read the Bible. They've allowed their phony pastors oh, I'm sorry. It's alright. I'm teasing you. I got a I have a a soapbox. I'm not sitting. I'm standing on the couch. You're allowed a soapbox. It's really, really important stuff. I mean, if if we if shouting did it, Eli, I'd be out there shouting all day. Right. It would. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Shouting always sounds better with a British accent for some reason. I see. But in any case, we have all these yeah. Right. There you go.
[00:49:26] Unknown:
Well, listen. I'll tell you what Although Why don't we play? Okay. We've got your long song. Song. I'll play the long one. So you've got 5 Okay. This is 5 minutes and 41 seconds long, this one. Okay? Alright. So that gives you 5 minutes. I mean, I don't know whether you're gonna return after 5 minutes. It's all quite exciting for me. Yeah. I'll I'll try my best.
[00:49:45] Unknown:
Oh, thanks. I'm gonna That's great. Sign my name to the contract. I will be back in 5 minutes. Okay. Fantastic.
[00:49:52] Unknown:
Alright. Hey. Yeah. Alright. Off you go, and do your stuff. See you in 5 minutes Very good. Thank you. Eli. Okay. Look forward to it. Okay. Okay. So I'm I'm here on WBN 324, talking to Eli James. This is Paul English Live. We're here every Thursday, 3 PM US Eastern, 8 PM in the UK. And as some of you know, I ask well, as most of you know, if you've been tuning in recently, I often ask the guest to come up with a couple of songs. One never knows what one is going to get. And, I didn't I didn't know what I was gonna get from Eli. And we got this. So this is a revved up I think you'll recognize the tune. I'll I'll name it out afterwards when we're finished. But here we go for 5 minutes, and I'm gonna scour through the, through the chat and pick up some of the key comments that you've been making excellently.
Here we go. 34
[00:56:22] Unknown:
Attention all listeners. Are you seeking uninterrupted access to WBN 324 talk radio despite incoming censorship hurdles? Well, it's a breeze. Just grab and download opera browser, then type in wbn324.zil, and stay tuned for unfiltered discussions around the clock. That's wbn324.zil.
[00:56:45] Unknown:
The views, opinions, and content of the show host and their guests appearing on the World Broadcasting Network are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of its owners, partners, and other hosts or this network. Thank you for listening to WBN 324 Talk Radio.
[00:57:02] Unknown:
Hi, and welcome back to, daily part 2. We haven't even finished the first hour yet, But if you've been tuned in, the first hour has been a bit lively. We've had lots of things going on. Contracts are being signed in the background. So, Eli, I'm hoping will be back with us at some point soon. I'm sure he will be. Maybe he's here right now. Eli, are you there?
[00:57:21] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I'm I'm there. So we just played everywhere.
[00:57:27] Unknown:
We just play we just played, that first song of yours,
[00:57:31] Unknown:
the very long writers in the sky by the outlaws. Oh, man. Good stuff.
[00:57:36] Unknown:
So basically, what's being revealed here is that there's a small part of you, maybe more than a small part, there's a bit of a head banger. What do you think? Is that the right is that am I being fair to you? Yeah. Yes? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You're a you're a rocker fan. Song done by done by multiple artists. So that was The Outlaws. Very good rendition. You know, I liked it. I thought the I thought the bit at the end was a bit over the top, but then I'm very English. Yeah. And I need my cup of tea and muffins. It's a little bit. It was but it's yeah. I remember that. It's cracking song. When did you first it's about 1947,
[00:58:09] Unknown:
48 or something like that. Isn't it? Yeah. Yeah. It's an old song. Yeah. Probably before the era of rock and roll, but that was a rock version of it. Right? Okay. It was. So yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:58:20] Unknown:
It was appropriate. It's it's very
[00:58:23] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. It's very visual. I mean, you can see you can see the the the the hordes of cattle coming down from heaven trampling the enemy. Right? Oh, I'm longing for the day.
[00:58:35] Unknown:
It's a gallop it's a galloping song, isn't it? It's galloping along. That's right. Yeah. It is. Right. Exactly. Fantastic stuff. Yeah. Yeah. That's it. Yeah. Okay. And just it just so happens I I've been dealing with a legal contract issue right here in reality. Right? And that's that's why I have been go ahead. I obviously picked the right theme for the day then, really. I mean, what you've done Yeah. You sure did. We're talking about contracts and you've decided to actually, in real time in the show, sign 1 and get on with it. That's right. Did it all go quite well? Do you is your signature lovely? Is it are you happy? Are you satisfied?
[00:59:11] Unknown:
It's it seems to have. You never know with contracts because, these days people don't honor contracts anymore. No. Today, it's just a piece of paper, but the bible is in fact a contract.
[00:59:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Period. I mean, Eli, do you think I could do you think I could get on that contract that you've just signed and have some of the benefits of it? What do you think? Okay.
[00:59:33] Unknown:
Let me check here. Can you do a 23 and me swab test?
[00:59:39] Unknown:
Okay. So swiftly moving on. Yeah.
[00:59:42] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:59:44] Unknown:
Swiftly moving on. Alright. Listen, I wanna I tell tell peep go ahead. Yeah. Go on.
[00:59:49] Unknown:
Well, I tell people who are unsure about their ancestry. Well, if if you're not interested in your ancestry, then you're probably not one of us.
[01:00:00] Unknown:
Right? Okay.
[01:00:01] Unknown:
Mhmm. If you're if you're determining who your ancestors are is of great interest to you and you really wanna find out, well then probably you are one of us because other races don't give a damn about their ancestry. They just exist. Right? And they never had the list. Only we have the list. Not even the Jews have the ancestral list of what tribes they come from. Only we have that. Well, you know, I had Thomas Anderson on here
[01:00:27] Unknown:
a couple of weeks back, and he will be returning. He's a lovely guy. German, speaks fantastic English. We were talking about not necessarily this topic, but when he was on I was letting everybody know, and and Thomas as well, just reminding him that when our very first conversation I think I may have even mentioned this to you as well at the time. He did a screen share of his family tree going all the way back 2 and a half 1000 years. I'm serious. Wow. It went all the way back to Adam and Eve. He'd kind of plotted it and spent 6 or 7 years doing this. And of course Yeah. There'll be people out there going, yeah, well it's probably not right. Okay, maybe. I don't know. I can't actually vouch for every single part of it. But the pursuit of it is very interesting and I get, you know, communicate We've got one somewhere but ours only goes back to about 1630, which is the the as far as my dad could get and maybe it's the thing that you pick up in in later years in life, so maybe that's a task yet to come to me.
[01:01:26] Unknown:
But I think you're right. I mean, everybody wants to know about do I don't know about the other races. All I know is that ours seems to have a lot of people that are very keen to know what their lineage is. Why why would they? Yeah. But other races don't. They have no prayer of discovering what their lineage is anyway. Okay? If you're an Asian, you know you come from Asian stock, but if you would have any idea who your great great grandfather was, there's no records of it. Yeah. Okay? Our people have kept rec records going back millennia.
And, you know, I have them of German ancestry. I might be of the tribe of Judah. I might be of the tribe. I forget which other tribe that, I really suspected I'm from. But, as white people going back 1000 of years, we never even saw a black person until we came to America. So so don't don't tell me that we're mixed race. We're not.
[01:02:21] Unknown:
Yes. Okay? We're Another abuse of language.
[01:02:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. There you go.
[01:02:26] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, katty7 here, writes, this is a little while ago in the chat. What is pastor Eli James' favorite go to Bible translation? At the moment, Eli? Do you have do you have a favorite or is
[01:02:42] Unknown:
Well, there's a there's a couple of them that come out recently, but, there's there are still works in progress, but it's the Jerusalem Bible. Mhmm. The Jerusalem Bible for me is the best because it uses the word race, which is very rare for any bible translation to use. Mhmm. And, it it does not use the Jewish version of Yahweh, which is l o r d because they've written that name out of the bible because they don't want us to know who our father is, what his name is, etcetera, etcetera. So the Jerusalem bible, for for most for the most part is the best.
Plus it has the Apocrypha which, are are really enlightening. They really deserve real as far as I'm concerned, the apocrypha are canonical. I don't care what the, you know, the the, household and I see it determined was canonical. No. So you're not too you're not too enamored of that decision, are you? No. I tend to agree with you. No. They all they almost excluded they almost excluded the book of Revelation. They only stayed in by one vote. So, you know, it's it's a it's one of those bureaucratic decisions. Right? Yeah. So we're the ones we're the Israelites. We're the ones who determine what our literature is and nobody else. Okay?
[01:03:52] Unknown:
And it's it's not that hard to do. No. It's not. I mean, let's try and sort of come up with a simple sort of pitch on this. What the I'm with you, but I don't want to come across as it's all sort of one. I'm just trying to sort of throw an unintentional spanner in the works or to sort of illustrate it in a slightly different way. What we're saying here, what is being said is there there the Yahweh God, in the narrative of the scriptures, as it is laid down, has a contract with a particular tribe, series of tribes of people of a certain race. Those tribes are referred to throughout the Old Testament and onwards as the tribes of Israel, which and the assertion that we are making, and it's not just simply a blind assertion, it's based on a lot of books that have been written that the vast majority of people don't even know these books have been written.
A lot of extremely learned research into tracing the lineages of people, looking at evidences. Yeah. Absolutely. And much of this much of this started in the 19th century with the, cracking of the Rosetta Stone and Champollion and the English guy that helped him out. And suddenly, all these documents, which hitherto had been a bit of a mystery, still remained a mystery but far less so. Some key components came up in these things. And of course, over here in England we had the arrival of the British Israelite movement based on all the much of these archaeological findings and studies that were taking place at the time. Right.
Which is correct, isn't it? And and of course, I I think they've gone slightly wrong in certain regards. But as you mentioned to me years ago, much of the work that they've done has laid this hard base of understanding, which yet again, understandably, very very few people are aware that this body of knowledge and research really exists in such a precise way. They just why would they think otherwise if they don't know this other information?
[01:05:49] Unknown:
You know, it's understandable to a people. Well, I just came across a book called Hermeticus Scythicus. Okay? Say that again. Which is kind of Hermeticus Scythicus. Scythicus. Which is, Hermes being referred to as the Scythian people. Right? But it's actually it traces the language of 3 groups of people the Greeks the latins and the Scythians. Right. Now the author of the book doesn't realize that the Scythians are actually derived from the Israelites of the 10 lost tribes. Okay? Mhmm. But, the the linguistic evidence he presents presents proves the point and it's, the value of literature. This all this is book written in 18/14.
Okay? Yeah. And the Jews didn't have a chance to well, it has been suppressed. Okay? Mhmm. Because I didn't hear about this book until very recently. Right. Yeah. But it has the evidence of the interrelationship between the Greeks, the Latins, and the Israelites. Right. Which we in identity have been teaching all along. Yes.
[01:06:53] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. So identity, for those who haven't heard the phrase before, is basically a shorthand summing up of saying, what is the identity of these people that were referred to as Israelites all that time ago? What is their true identity? And can they be found? Can their children be found today? And the answer with identity is absolutely they can, and here's a colossal amount of evidence that you're not aware of to show it.
[01:07:22] Unknown:
Yeah? Yeah. And for most people listening, all they have to do is look in the mirror.
[01:07:27] Unknown:
That might frighten a few of them. Okay.
[01:07:30] Unknown:
Yeah. There might be 1 or 2 exceptions. But here, let me go through, for somebody asked about what was the question, You said we might talk about this, this hour.
[01:07:44] Unknown:
Mhmm. But,
[01:07:45] Unknown:
somebody asked about, the the how do you know you're an Israelite and or how the contract is enforced?
[01:07:53] Unknown:
The line from the Israelites to the Anglo Saxons, that line.
[01:07:56] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. Right. So we can yeah. We can talk about that a little later. But first of all, I want to explain how the New Testament verifies that the covenants are exclusive to the 12 tribes of Israel and to no other people. First of all, Yahshua said, I come not but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
[01:08:19] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:08:20] Unknown:
That's it. I come only I come only to the people of Israel and nobody else. And by the way, the word lost, again, here's one of those definitions comes from the Greek word apollumi Mhmm. Which does not mean, lost and no not knowing who I am. Mhmm. Although, there are those among us, right, who don't know who they are, but it means put away in punishment. Otherwise, exiled. It's a very exclusive reference to the 12 tribes of Israel who were Yeah. Exiled from Samaria by Yahweh himself into the wilderness of Europe.
[01:08:58] Unknown:
So what you know, it's great that you bring that up. That's is that part of the that scene with the Canaanite woman where he addresses the disciples to correct them? Or where where does he say that? They ask a question to them, why are you not helping everybody else or something like correct me. Where where does he actually occur?
[01:09:19] Unknown:
Well, that phrase is in Matthew 1524. Yeah. But since you brought it up and since I already have it up on my screen Well done. Do it. Okay. Alright. Then then Jesus went to just verse 21. Then Jesus went then and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon. And behold, a woman of Canaan Yep. The Canaanite woman That's right. Came out of the same coasts and cried unto him saying, have mercy on me, oh lord, thou son of David. My daughter is grievously vexed with a devil. It's common in those days. It's actually very common today too. Mhmm. But most people don't recognize it. Alright. My screen's up. Hold on. So let's scroll back down. Okay. And now his but the he answered her not a word.
He ignored her. Yep. Now is that is that the Jesus most people are taught? The Jesus that loves everybody, and he ignored this woman? No. It's not Eli. He's supposed to turn around and say I love you, isn't he? Yeah. I love you, and you love me back. Right? Yeah. No. Nothing like that occurred here. Yeah. Yeah. But he answered her not a word. How rude. Isn't that rude Very. To not answer her a word? God manners. And his discip Yeah. Right? And his disciples came and besought him saying send her away. Of course, she crieth after us. Mhmm.
Very loving, isn't it?
[01:10:46] Unknown:
Mhmm. Very.
[01:10:48] Unknown:
Yeah. But he's but he answered and said now listen up everybody. I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel. There's your answer, bro.
[01:11:00] Unknown:
That's where that verse is found. I am not sent but unto the lost you guys. You well, you know when I just mentioned that exchange I'd had with this gentleman some years ago where he started swearing at me a lot in the email, That was the bit that I quoted back at him. I said, you're saying all this. I said, this is what Christ said. I'll stand Yeah. This is what he said. I'll stand with him, if you don't mind, and I'll leave you to your own views. Robert, you're in you're literally contradicting what you say you're supporting, so you're just about to go mad because what you've said is patently not correct, Right? At this moment, in time you need to reconsider what you're saying because it contradicts. It runs completely counter. So I'm going back to that word, you know, lost as you said, put away in punishment. So he's, I've only come back for the people that have been put away in punishment and they were put away in punishment for breaking the agreement in the contract.
They didn't stick. There was a penalty. Yeah. Yeah. The penalty was but here's the contractual terms. You're not keeping them, so you're gonna you're off. Right? You are now gonna be put away in punishment, and then Christ returns to reset the contract to right effectively.
[01:12:13] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. So it means nothing like, you know, going to the lost and found. No. Or it Or or spiritually lost or, lost because you got dementia or anything like that. Let me give you the exact definition of the word. Okay? It is epilumie, which literally means to destroy literally or figuratively. Destroy, die, lose, mawr, perish. So he's talking about the old testament, divorcement that Yahweh had with the 10 tribes and to and some of the other two tribes as well because of their bad behavior. Right? Which caused them to be put away in punishment. Yes. Alright. If you don't know the meaning of the word, you can't connect it historically to what happened.
[01:13:02] Unknown:
So this little this last minute alone has in it Mhmm. Basically, atom bombs to destroy organized Christian religions.
[01:13:14] Unknown:
Because they're literally Universalism.
[01:13:16] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. And I I've often thought that that, I think, you know, to be fair or to take a more conciliatory approach to the word Catholic, everybody understands that the word Catholic means universal. That's fine. And maybe I was thinking recently, I thought, well, maybe in the early days, when they used the word universal in whenever it was, whenever it got coined up, was it Constantine and Nicaea and all that? Maybe it had been existing before that. Oh, really? When the when the Romans decided to sort of take over the whole thing because it was proving a bit of a problem for them or whatever. Yeah. Then I thought, well, if I take a sort of kindly view of it, maybe they meant at the time that it was universal to all the dispersed tribes of the people that it applied to. This is the universal understanding for Uzla. But of course, what it's morphed into, courtesy of potpourri on steroids, is that that, you know, you now have this man masquerading as being some kind of spiritual leader, whereas he basically looks like a tobacco salesman. He loves everybody.
I know. He's a ridiculous Do you know that? He loves everybody. Well, I'm so relieved to hear that. He like really cheers me up a lot. Makes me happy. Yeah. It's like a But he's saying Yeah. Yeah. They they acquired this title for the pope. Or they they say, well, the pope is the vicar of Christ for the whole earth. I'm going, well, hang on just a minute. Where's that in these documents? I can't read that. Yeah. Where's that in the Bible? Sorry. Where is that in the Bible? No. No. No. You're making a claim for something that doesn't exist. And, that's what's happened to it. It now means universal, which now in this context is literally the direct opposite of the word testament because contracts are one of their inherent qualities is exclusivity I e the complete opposite of universality, isn't it?
[01:15:05] Unknown:
There you go. And then, stop using logic, Paul. That's not permitted in modern Christianity. No. I This is not permitted.
[01:15:14] Unknown:
Mhmm. But it's fabulous Okay. To go down this. It's really enlightening, literally, to see that Right. If we understand the clutch, it's only a small number. I'm sure there's a whole bunch of other words in there that are all messed up. But this small clutch alone reframes your entire understanding of the document. And I was I was talking to Chris the other day, you know, a good mutual friend of ours and I was saying that, you know, I often think if I had to teach this to say 12 14 year olds, I mean, people, of course, try to teach it to people that are younger, but I remember being a kid going to school and Sunday school not knowing what on earth they were talking about, except that I really like the story about Samson and Goliath and all these other things. They were really exciting stuff. Yeah. Count me in. This is fantastic. Right? Yeah. Absolutely. All all those things. Absolutely brilliant. Yes. Didn't know really what they were banging on about. But if you were to you would have to say, if you were being a sound teacher, you would say, look, this document is written to one particular race. That must almost like be the very first sentence of that before you say anything else and until you understand that, do not under any circumstances read this document. I've said it to people, said I'm gonna read the Bible. I said, please don't. They go, why? I said Right. Because you're gonna do a Henry Ford, you know, you're gonna they're gonna do a Henry Ford. What? You're gonna read it wrong. You'll read it wrong. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Or or read the International Jew first, then read the Bible.
Well, you never you never know. I mean, it's just, I mean, I I still think, I still maintain to this day, of all the pieces of information I've come across, you know, and as I've mentioned to you and I've probably mentioned here as well, my path was looking at banking. I start looking at banking. Don't worry everybody. I'm not going to go on about banking tonight. Okay? Just as soon as the show's finished, I'll just drown on about it 247. Yeah. But you look at banking and then you start looking into the roots of usury. This was my path. Then I start looking at things about Babylon.
There was Astel, a guy wrote about Babylonian blah blah blah blah. I had this years ago. Canadian Babylonian woe. Yes. That's it. Babylonian woe. You read that, it's and then I start coming across a load of biblical references thinking, oh, I forgot to go and look at that. It was completely not a part of my thinking or makeup in the world. I just didn't even think like You never knew it was in the Bible, did you? No.
[01:17:36] Unknown:
Economics.
[01:17:37] Unknown:
Economics. Right? I didn't I didn't at all. And then you see the abuse of the sound principles of biblical economic law, which are absolutely perf work perfectly, of which none are being applied now. Not one. And Not one. Not one. Not one. None of them. Everything is a complete inversion of the instruction set, the actual laws that we've been given. And also, you then see the damage that the Israelite people had to endure and suffer as a consequence of moving away from these principles. You were When you were talking there about the Jerusalem Bible, and I agree it's a fantastic read, I think. The only book I actually sat down and read over last winter was the book of Jeremiah and that's really really really heavy.
It is. It's so awful what is happening in that book. You go,
[01:18:31] Unknown:
oh. Remind us of today.
[01:18:34] Unknown:
Yeah. It was just, it's horrific. There's something Yes. Emotionally really upsetting about it. The whole thing, know, if you're tuned into what you think the real story is, that these people willfully continue to ignore the the guidance that they've been given to such a degree that God, completely effective in modern parlance, loses his rag with them and says, I'm gonna allow an army to be built up and wipe you out. I've had enough. That's right. And Jeremiah is running around. Several times. Yeah. And Right. My dad used to say this, you know, we it's like, oh, he's like an old Jeremiah going on about things, you know. It's like it was a common parlance phrase that and I never really understood what it meant, but you look at his struggles and of course, it didn't even benefit even he succumbed to the terrible things that happened even in spite of all that's what really depresses me. I'm going, oh, I don't know whether I even want to talk about anything. Does it does it mean that even if you have a go Yeah. At trying to wake people up, but my Right. Kiddie auntie couldn't get through to no one, not nobody, not never. I mean, it was just amazing. Virtually, yeah, virtually all the OT prophets were either killed by the Israelites themselves or met some seriously bad demise
[01:19:43] Unknown:
because they angered the people so much for pointing out their sinfulness.
[01:19:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay? Yeah. Yeah. That's the reality. Yeah. Someone writes here a rising tide media, high rising tide media, nudge, nudge, wink, wink. Is the Jerusalem Bible better if it is pre 1980? In other words, do you need a 1966 edition? Have they done further revokes of it?
[01:20:08] Unknown:
It probably is. I have a a really old version which is in tatters. Right? So I'm sure I have an older version, but I don't think that the Jerusalem bible has been subject to the quote unquote modernization that the other translations have been. I I really have no use for the King James Bible at all because it has been it's based on the Masoretic text, which is a Jewish revamping, for lack of a better word, of the original old testament Hebrew. Okay? So they changed it a lot. They changed it a lot It's mainly to try to write out the prophecies that result in our Messiah. Okay? Yep. That was the original intention.
However, since they weren't Israelites, they were edemites and they really didn't know the language that well. It took them a 1000 years to make the Masoretic text, but they failed to write out the vast majority of the prophecies about him because they simply had no idea. Mhmm. You know like Isaiah 53. Look just read Isaiah 53 and it talks about well, you know, they they will the dogs will encompass him. Right? Meaning, the Canaanites that will encompass him when they crucified him. Right? Amen, Canine, Canine, you get Yes. You get the joke, folks. Alright?
I mean, the the book of Isaiah itself is nothing but prophecies about his coming and what he would have to endure when he came. Mhmm. The Jews that had they were clueless that that that this was about him. Right? Yes. Etcetera etcetera. So it's very important that you know the history of the bible. Yeah. So the Jerusalem bible, I believe it still has the word Jew in it. It's been a while since I've had to refer to it because I've been looking at so many new translations that, some of them are pretty good actually. But, yeah. So, I haven't and plus I've I've been moving, a lot the last year or so and You have. You've been a human firefly. Is. I don't know where you're gonna do next.
Yeah. Yeah. So it's packed away in a box somewhere, and I'll have to dig it out eventually. But, yeah, that is my go to bible. And the, questioner is probably correct. The older the version, probably the better. Yeah. Yeah. I wasn't aware that Here. Let me Go. Yeah. Yeah. Go. Sorry. Yeah. Go on. Well, there's also the new Jerusalem Bible. I don't know if that's any good because I don't have a copy of that. Okay? So it's it's probably not any better. It's probably not better. No. I managed to get a 1965
[01:22:36] Unknown:
or 6 version off of Abe books, Abe books, which have got a lot of text. Yeah. Get a used one. Yeah. It's just a used one. And, my only complaint about it is that it's in single column type. Drives me crazy. I I like a 2 column, you know. So have you got a 2 column one, have you? It shows in 2 columns. I I believe so. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But, yeah, I'm not bothered by that. You're you're just a fussy Englishman. That's what I am. I really am. It's getting worse. It's like, it's terrible. I'm so fussy and prissy about things. Look at this. Look at the color of this. It's outrageous. Yeah. I do. So
[01:23:11] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's that's based on the fact that you like the page 2 of the, newspaper there.
[01:23:20] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:23:21] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:23:22] Unknown:
That's a joke, but most people won't get it. Anyway No. Alright. So Matthew verse 25. Now this is about persistence because, even though she's he's told this Canaanite lady, I have I wasn't sent to your people. I was only sent to the Israel people. You know, what's the matter with you? And then she says, then she came and worshiped him. Yes. Now before she was just asking a question, but now she is worshiping him. Saying, Lord help me. But he answered and said, now again underline this isn't the King James and because it's a new testament the Jews were able to mess it up.
It is not meet or fitting to take the children's bread and cast it to dogs.
[01:24:18] Unknown:
What kind of who is this guy? Doesn't he love her? Yeah.
[01:24:22] Unknown:
Is is he just Jesus loves everybody character we hear so much about? Is this the same guy? He's basically He called her A dog. Yeah. The teller called her a dog. And now what here's this is what she says. She knows who and what she is. And she said, truth, Lord, yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters, s apostrophe, table. She knows that the Israelites are the covenant people. She's not one of them, and she refers to us as her masters.
[01:25:00] Unknown:
It's an amazing scene.
[01:25:03] Unknown:
Mhmm. I mean, that one It should be made into a movie.
[01:25:07] Unknown:
Well, it it it just should. I mean, the language that he uses, his attitude to water, of course, he helps her in the end. I understand that. But still, even after this exchange, he doesn't turn around to and say, because he says that your faith is great, your daughter is healed, doesn't he? A little bit later on, something like that. Yeah. He does. Yes. Yeah. But even after that, he then doesn't say, oh, and you can come and join us.
[01:25:33] Unknown:
He's not No. He doesn't say that at all. Because he kept So go go back to your daughter. You will find out that she's been healed. Yeah. Okay? So she had more faith than our messiah than most Israelites do. Yes. That's why he rewarded her. Yes. Okay.
[01:25:51] Unknown:
It's such a conundrum in many ways, and yet so clear. So Yes. I mean, you know, if we were to build if you were to seek to build a teaching space for this, which I know has been your life's work and Right. It's something I'm very passionate about as well. But trying to, you know, if we were I was speaking to someone the other day. I said, I I really wouldn't mind organizing a church and I know it makes people go, what? You know, but my understanding of the word church Uh-huh. I mean, what what we're doing right now is a church. It's it's a meeting of the elders, as I understand it, to discuss the affairs of state. That's what we're do we're we're discussing the condition of our life under the law, what's wrong with that. But, of course, what churches have morphed into is these very odd spaces full of, rituals on steroids.
[01:26:43] Unknown:
Morbid Christians Yes. Morbid Christians who who are full of a certain kind of attitude they call love Yeah. But they really don't know what biblical love is. They have no idea what biblical love is. I I completely agree. I I remember I've said before, I think I was amongst the last generation
[01:27:00] Unknown:
of and I was saying this to my sons the other day. I said, probably the last generation of young children in England in the sixties seventies whose parents regularly took us to church. We did. Right? I didn't really fully understand. I didn't mind. I I thought the the structure of Sundays, once we got out of church, was pretty good. There was always a roast lunch and things like things that are frowned upon. Oh, those boring old English roast lunches. You should have been at our house. It was fantastic. We had a great time. It was absolutely brilliant. But, I always remember coming back not really understanding why the people in the church looked to be so dull.
[01:27:40] Unknown:
Right? They were dull. That's because the servants the servants put them to sleep. That's why.
[01:27:47] Unknown:
Never did I Yeah. If you imagine if you heard this when you're 9 or 10 or 11 and it's addressed literally to you. You know, listen. This is what this book is about. It's directed at you. It's actually you're in it. This is a story of your great great great forefathers and foremothers and this is the line, and you might find that difficult to take on board right now as I'm saying it to you, but there's an absolute wealth of documents that we can point you towards as if you want to increase your study and you will know because it could not be anybody else. That's the main thing. Right. You know, because how do you know it's you? What's that? Like because it couldn't be any no one else even comes anywhere close to fitting the qualities, the characteristics.
[01:28:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Absolutely no one. Prophecies made about about the Israelites confirm it because it's the Israelites will be in such great numbers as the descendants of Abraham that they will be as the sands of the seashore and the stars of the sky where the Jews never increased beyond the number 6,000,000 for some reason. And they're always a small population within whatever country they live. So that prophecy can't be about Jews. It can only be about our people who used to be the most populous people on the face of the earth Yeah. Before being exterminated in World Wars 1 and 2, etcetera.
[01:29:05] Unknown:
This is true. There's a little exchange taking place, with in the rumble chat with regards to the Welsh language. And, Sussex man has written, interesting that you speak Welsh, addressing someone else, you'll be able to read Egyptian. Which is true. And he goes on to say Yeah. Read Egyptian hieroglyphs as Welsh is the only language is the only language can translate them discovered by Alan Wilson. Now, I don't know if people here are familiar with Alan Wilson. Yeah. The Welsh language, they can read Egyptian hieroglyphs because this is to do. Let's move over to this thing about this line from the Israelites into the Saxons, the Anglo Saxons, the the north the people of Northern and Western Europe, and Wales occupies a very important position.
In fact, Wilson, who shuffled off this mortal coil, I think within the last 2 or 3 years, has done some amazing work. These books are very difficult to get hold of, but the he knows he says, one of the books which I'm due to get from Sussex men very soon, I'm very keen to read it, is that he knows of the resting place of Christ. It's all to do with this connection back to these islands. Because part of the story is that he studied here when he was very young, when he came here a lot with Joseph of Arimathea, his uncle. And there was a lot of study involved in that.
So people go, oh, that can't be right, those people. You know, they say, well, we're not brown and everything. Of course not. We just happen to be out there. We just happen to be out there. Right?
[01:30:37] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, well, maybe Jews are brown, but Israel Israelites are. No. But they got bronze in the sun, doesn't it? Go yeah. Yeah. Well, that that's true. That is true. Okay. And that's actually what the word Ethiopian means. The word Ethiopian means sunburned faces. It doesn't mean black.
[01:30:55] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:30:56] Unknown:
Mhmm. I know. But, yeah. So, okay. So we can go into great detail, but this book Hermes, I just shared the book with, with, Chris Oh, great. Because it is such such a good read, and, he he linguistically, it puts the pieces together how, Latin, Greek, and Gothic, which is Gothic. What is gothic? Gothic is Gotish, auch, the original Anglo Saxon language of the god god like god's people. That's what gothic means. It means God's people. We are God's people. Only our people have ever called themselves God's people except, the the fake ones.
They call themselves God's chosen as well. But we we beat them to the punch. We've been calling ourselves God's people for a lot longer than they have. Okay? So but it gets lost in translation because one of the prophecies is that the Israelites will have a new language. Which I And how do we yeah. How do we get this new language or languages? Right? A new tongue it says. Okay? It's because we developed English and English comes from Anglo Saxon, which includes German and the German language comes from the tribe of Judah which stayed they stayed the longest in Parthia which was a a a an Israelite enclave named after, pharaohs our forefather pharaohs because we had pharaohs and zara the 2 sons of of David.
I'm sorry Judah the 2 sons of Judah and pharaohs turned out to be the older one and he stayed with Moses but Sarah he, migrated across the Mediterranean be while the Israelites were still captive in Egypt speaking of Egypt again, okay and he took the language we spoke then brought it across the Mediterranean into Gaul into Spain into guess what, the British Isles. Yes. Okay? Mhmm. Yeah. There there's where your Welsh comes from. So your Welsh has a more an ancient history behind it and that's probably why it hasn't been tampered with like the Anglo Saxon has gone through several permutations into English and Germanic and and a couple other languages, but the Welsh has pretty much stayed true to its original form.
Okay? I think most most speakers will tell you that. Yeah. Yep. Okay? Yeah. So but they are not, at the same time, Israelites. Okay? They're still Israelites. They never learned to speak German or English, although they have recently right they have recently yeah they have yeah yeah they have but they struggle to maintain their identity and for a good reason because it's part of our history and we should know our history. Yes. Right? So then the other, all 12 tribes, The members of all 12 tribes, were part of the migration across the Caucasus mountains which left Hebrew inscriptions in their graves.
They left battle axes and only the Israelites used battle axes in their battles And, they had stone circumcision knives, so they practice circumcision. Mhmm. And somewhere along the line in their migrations because they probably started to get hungry, crudging through the swamps. Right. And then somebody killed a boar and cooked it and said, hey, this is good, man. Have some roast boar, but our our laws prohibited. No. You're starving. Have some roast boar. So that's how our people started eating pig.
[01:34:45] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. Okay. I know. And, of course, Germany is is known as the great sausage maker of the world or one of the great sausage makers. Yeah. Right. Pork
[01:34:54] Unknown:
porkalor. Pork galore. Yeah.
[01:34:57] Unknown:
So I mean, it's interesting with Germany as well in the sense that, I I mean, I look for tenuous things that appear to me to be tenuous, but I kind of hang a few thoughts on them. We've got people will know about the Battle of Jutland, in the First World War, which is north of Germany in the sea up there, great big naval battle, the Battle of Jutland. But I've often thought that Jutland is an abbreviation of Judah iteland because It sure is. Yeah. You know, if we go if we look at this thing of the migration, there is this pass, is there not, called the pass of the, in the Caucasus, called the Pass of the Israelites, which is there to this day where and this is what Josephus talked about that there was a huge body of them, a couple of million they say, walked off, literally walked off up into Europe and the path is still there to this day, worn down half a foot or a foot deep. You can see it going through there. And I've got this is a great, another considerable sort of bit of glue to hold it together
[01:35:59] Unknown:
because that's why we're called Caucasians because our forefathers passed up through the Caucasus. No. That doesn't make any sense. No. What are you talking about, Paul? It's too complicated. It can't be right.
[01:36:14] Unknown:
But it can be. But it's obvious all the clues are there and you suddenly go, I've been looking at this my whole life and I never saw it type thing because Right? Because if you if you don't have the key of that word testament, that is a contract with a particular group of people, you're never gonna look for it, are you? Why would you look? You would never look. That's right. And we know as well, don't we? The one of the tribes, the tribe of Dan, which is described as a tribe that would move around the Earth like a snake. It didn't mean poison Right. With cunning. It meant, if you watch a snake move across, it goes all over the shop, doesn't it? It goes here, there, and every it just Right. Everywhere. So Dan moved in that way. They they come up with through the Pass of the Caucasus. They go up a river, which they name after themselves, which is the Danube.
Danube. Yes. They, there's another town called Danzig, which which is part of the process. They end up in the mark of Dan, Dansmark, Denmark. They're the Vikings. Right. Part of the Vikings. They then, as Vikings go all over the all over the world in boats as he hits his microphone. Getting all too excited here. They go all over Oh, your microphone. Yeah. And, so you go, alright. There's another ticket in the box. These things, the more of them you know, it just it's a bit like a jigsaw puzzle. It starts to build up and build up and build up and you start seeing a clearer picture with every bit of information. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Another of the prophecies is that Israel would be a hidden people.
[01:37:42] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:37:44] Unknown:
They're hidden. They didn't they're hidden. They didn't deliberately hide themselves. It just worked out that way. Yeah. Now the Jews have been a source of thumb on the on the, pages of history ever since they made their appearance. They've Yeah. Everybody knows where the Jews are. That's why we don't go there.
[01:38:04] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:38:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Because he said I will send them didn't he always say I will send them a great delusion. I've often felt There you go. Yep. That the vast majority of our people are in a condition of spiritual amnesia, which has been designed that way. Almost hidden from themselves, not knowing who they Right. And that, in part, maybe explains what you were saying a little bit earlier. This great quest that many of our people have to discover their family tree. That's part of the sort of rub, the internal rub. You go, something's not right. We gotta find I can't I don't know whether I really fully believe all this stuff. Who am I? Yeah. Who but white people ask the question,
[01:38:44] Unknown:
who am I? I know it's a philosophical question, but the other races don't ask this question. They don't care. Yeah. They just are. Yeah. They're happy to be what they are. Yep. Feed me. You know? That that's it. They're not on the spiritual level that we are and for example, during the COVID crisis, thousands of white men in America committed suicide. Why? Because the their purpose in life was lost. Mhmm. Did did any blacks commit suicide because of covid? Did any Asians commit to us? No. It's only white because their purpose for life was destroyed by the by the system. Mhmm. Okay. Yeah. We white caucasian Israelites need to have a purpose. That purpose is given to us in the bible.
Yes. And if we fade away from the bible, we lose our purpose and therefore we commit suicide. Okay?
[01:39:41] Unknown:
That's a very good point, Eli. It is. It's it's kind of it's hard wound into us in a way that people can't see can't see it. Mhmm. Because it's obscured to a modern lens. Yeah. It is. It's just Yeah. You know, people say to me, well, all people are good at going. I don't know that and I'm quite happy to accept it. Right. But I know how my own people behave and they're the only ones I fully understand. You know, I've mentioned before, people get very crossy. Are you a racist? I'm going, well, actually, I think it's the other way around, actually. Are you Yeah. Are you seeking to discriminate against me? I've got no truck or animosity towards people for other races. The main problem we have is with our own people,
[01:40:19] Unknown:
including myself at times, you know. I'm getting in the way of myself going, good grief, you know. How can we Yeah. How can we sort this out? It's it's Well, you know, I I found that the best way to diffuse a situation like that is okay. Somebody calls you a racist or an anti Semite Mhmm. And you just ask them, what's a racist? You know what a racist is? I am a black some as a white guy who hates black? Well, it's not me. I don't I don't hate black. I'm a white guy, but I don't hate blacks. No. They they shouldn't be living with us, but doesn't doesn't mean I hate them. No. Okay. And, what about Semite? How what's your definition of Semite, which is the correct pronunciation.
[01:41:01] Unknown:
Mhmm. And I'll bet they have no clue what their Shamai is. Okay.
[01:41:08] Unknown:
Yeah. And, this technique worked great with, when I was with Art Jones and you remember the days that I was campaigning with Art Jones. Yeah. And because he denied the holocaust. Right? He's a holocaust denier. Oh, God. Right? And so I tell and then every single reporter that came up to his oh, what's your position on the holocaust? And then they knew what his position was. They were just kidding me. Right? Yep. And I said, oh, okay, Art. Here's what you do. You just ask them a question. Which holocaust?
[01:41:39] Unknown:
Mhmm. Which one?
[01:41:42] Unknown:
And the Trump Trump. The the reporter with stumps or Trump, whatever. Okay? Yeah. Right? Yeah. What what about what about, what do you call it? The president. Was that not a holocaust? How about the the Yes. It was. Millions and millions of white people that were exterminated in Bolshevik, Russia. Was that not a holocaust?
[01:42:07] Unknown:
Mhmm. Apparently not, Ibad. Because the newspapers don't say that it is, so apparently it can't be one. Right. Because the newspapers don't say that it's 1. You see? Right. Right. And so, we we have to be here. Here's a verse from scripture folks.
[01:42:23] Unknown:
Be ye therefore wise as serpents yet harmless as dove. Yes. Okay. You have to be wise. You have to know your enemy. You know the word tricks they use against us and turn them around against them. They won't know what to do because they're not used to having anybody confront them with their own verbiage.
[01:42:50] Unknown:
It's to do with this That's what it is. The theme for today's show is accurate, as I said. We've got the word sleuth on the image. We're like word sleuths Right. Detecting things. I know you haven't got your deerstalker and your Meershon pipe yet, but we can get one ordered for you. And then we can, you know, we're tampering around with these these documents saying, does this really mean what the vicar told me it meant when I was 10? It doesn't look as though it does. It looks as though it means something Does the vicar know? Does the vicar even know? Yeah. Right? You know, well, why would he know? He's been to sort of salandary and everything. He's been trained in a long line of play all new. No. They didn't. They didn't
[01:43:28] Unknown:
know. No. They didn't. They didn't know. The truth has been squeezed out of the book by with false definitions.
[01:43:36] Unknown:
I mean, it's an amazing process because you can give that book to pea or any book. You can get maybe the question is, can you read this book and I can't. Why? Because I don't understand these words. That's the honest response. I I can't. Why? Because I don't understand these words. That's the honest response. I don't understand what these words mean. Would you like to know what they mean? Yes or no, I guess. Yes, I would. Okay. Well, get ready for a roller coaster ride because something is gonna be revealed to you. Yeah. The the ride never You never suspected. You never suspected it. No wonder you didn't suspect it because you've been misguided by wearing the wrong spectacles. You've had the wrong spectacles on while you've read this. We're gonna take them off. Yeah. And we're gonna show you what these words actually mean and there's a story in here that will probably blow your mind,
[01:44:25] Unknown:
you know. It will. It will. It will. It's mind blowing. Yeah. Literally. It is mind blowing. Yeah. Christian identity is mind blowing. You never suspect the truth, but it's it's actually the same thing happened, in New Testament times in the book of Revelation where it talks about the the, the little book. Yeah. The little book is the episode where, the Bible was submitted to the printing press. So the Catholic Church lost control of publication of the Bible and so the protestant reformation was majorly responsible for, you know, presenting it to the people and it says of the little book that when the Israelites first the people first ate it that it it was sweet in the mouth but bitter in the belly.
Now why would it be well, sweet in the mouth. Oh, I got this bible. I can read it in my own language. I don't have to have a Catholic priest interpret it for me. Yes. Here it is. Mhmm. In plain well, it's German. It's primarily German in the early days. And then but then when they realized what they had read and again it got to their belly, they realized, man, these Catholic priests have been lying to me constantly about this book. What they teach doesn't even resemble a word of it.
[01:45:46] Unknown:
No.
[01:45:48] Unknown:
So this has happened before,
[01:45:50] Unknown:
and this You don't say. This is the last time or the last go around. Well, it's happening right now today. Not not necessarily in the
[01:45:56] Unknown:
sphere of scripture, although it is happening in the sphere of scripture, but with regards to everything, all the words that are flying in and out of our balls and ears all day long courtesy of what's taking place, you know, just coming back to what Right. The inventor of the web was saying, you know, basically that, it started off decentralized and now has gone centralized just like the newspaper industry did. And of course, when you've got the editorial control in Yes. Your mind Yes. Into a able to afford to do that, pound Yes. Your mind Yes. Into a mangled shape so that no other people Yeah. Literally.
You've got no other voice to go to. You've got newspaper a says pretty much the same as newspaper b, and c, and d. Oh, this must be the truth then. No. It's still not Right. True. Right. You're you're now suffering a really coordinated and sophisticated lying program to disabuse you of the truth. Mhmm. And it's working. Right. Right. It's working. Yeah. And so
[01:46:58] Unknown:
once you go down this path of knowing the real meanings of words, it's like well, if you've read the book, I've I've heard talked to people who bragged. I've read the Bible once through every year every year of my life. You know, I said 52 times. And if they haven't got the identity message, they haven't read it right yet. They simply haven't read it correctly because they're reading it all from the past. I bet you're off from the past. I bet you're off from the past. Oh, yeah. I am. Yeah. Yeah. They throw me out. I know.
[01:47:27] Unknown:
I'm terribly sorry. You're breaking. Right? Yeah. I mean, it's knowing how to introduce what's a very unpalatable sort of observation Right. To people and and with some, it's not it's not possible and I don't like that either. I think it should be possible to say, look, you know, and I'm trying personally always to sort of move my language around a bit so that people can latch onto it and not feel completely insulted because it is a pretty insulting message. There's nothing you can do about it. Look, I know you're 50 odd or 60 odd or whatever, you've read it all your life. You've read it wrong all this time. That's really I wouldn't say that directly to someone, but that is understand what do you mean I don't know what I'm reading? Well, you don't. Tell me what this word means. It means it doesn't mean that. It means this,
[01:48:10] Unknown:
you know. Yeah. An American humorist said it best, Mark Twain. He said, it is much easier to fool people than to tell them that they've been fooled.
[01:48:21] Unknown:
Spot on. Absolutely 100% accurate. It is. And that's where we're at. Mhmm. It never stops, does it? People are being fooled all the time right now. Better the comfortable lie than the unpalatable truth, it seems. Oh, yeah. Oh, come tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies. I'm trying not to. Do you think it's time for another song? Well, you've got your other song here. We've got, we got about Well, yeah. Well, how long are we going? We're going another hour? Well, we Why? We we end on the radio broadcast with WBN and Speak Free and Eurofote Radio because it's going out across all these platforms, in about 12 minutes. So we'll be off the right but the actual post show here on Rumble often rumbles on do you see what I did there? Often rumbles on for at least another hour. So if you're if you've got the chops for it and you're all happy because you've signed your contract and you're full of beans, yeah, we can go on. We can run it right through into Rumble for a bit longer. So we've got time. I think we'll put this song in now. Should we just do that?
[01:49:17] Unknown:
Yeah. You wanna do that? Full of beans is a pejorative here in America. Is it? Yes. You're full of beans. Alright. Right?
[01:49:27] Unknown:
That causes you to blow blow I see. I see. Okay. Alright. Okay. Whereas over here No. No. No. It's a it means you're full of energy. Over here, it means you're full of energy. Right? Oh, I never would have suspected that. Well, well, look. We both learned something. We've been lying to him all these years, Eli.
[01:49:43] Unknown:
Right. We just learned the meaning of a word that has a different meaning
[01:49:47] Unknown:
in England than it does in America. I know. I know. Where do beans come from anyway? How's American? Are they American beans? I always thought they were No. They're everywhere, but, they're actually very good for you. Yeah.
[01:49:58] Unknown:
They are.
[01:49:59] Unknown:
Now that we're speaking of beans. Right? Yeah. So anyway, you're full of beans is a pejorative here in America, but it's a compliment in English. Very interesting. Is. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. Here's a song. Yeah. Let's play this. 3 minutes. We'll Alright. Take a short break, and then we'll be wrapping up on the radio, but we'll be carrying on a bit
[01:50:17] Unknown:
longer on Rumble. Here we go. Very good.
[01:50:31] Unknown:
The eastern world, it is exploding. Violence flaring. Bullets loading. You're old enough to kill, but not for voting. You don't believe in war. Boys ain't gun yet toting, and even the Jordan River has bodies floating. But you tell me over and over and over again my friend. I don't believe we're Don't you understand what I'm trying to say? Can't you feel the fears I'm feeling today? If the button is pushed, there's no running away. There'll be no one to save. Will the world enter grave? Take a look around you, boy. It's bound to scare you, boy. And you tell me over and over and over again, my friend.
I Yeah. My butt's so mad. Feels like coagulating. I'm sitting here just contemplating. I can't twist the truth if there's no regulation. Handful of senators don't pass legislation. And marches alone can't bring integration when human respect is disintegrating. This whole crazy world is just too frustrating at you. Tell me over and over and over again, Think of all the hate there is in Red China. Then take a look around to some Alabama. You may leave here for 4 days in space, but when you return it's the same old place. The pounding of the drums, the pride and disgrace.
You can bury your dead, but don't leave a trace. Ain't your next darn neighbor. But don't forget to say grace and tell me. Over and over and over and over again, my friend. You don't believe we're on the eve of destruction. No. No. You don't believe we're on the eve
[01:53:49] Unknown:
And that was The Eve of Destruction by
[01:53:53] Unknown:
Barry McGuire. Eli, why did you pick that song? Any good reason? Well, it's it's a great tour. It's an anti war song. Yeah. Would you you don't hear anti war songs anymore, do you? You don't. No. They've gone out of favor because our rulers want war. In those days, they pretended not to want war. Yeah. But they wanted it anyway. Right? But now they they don't even pretend pretend that we don't want war, you know. And and it's all about hypocrisy too. Right? So, a very good song. Although it's got a liberal pinch to it, but nevertheless a lot of truth in that song. There was. What when is that? Is that late sixties that? Is it? Yeah. It's middle sixties. There actually, one of the reasons why I picked it is because I don't know if you follow the I I like to follow black people who just become aware of white the white man's music, especially rock and roll. Mhmm. And, all these black people, doing reaction videos to to white people songs and it's amazing how little these black people have ever listened to white music.
Black people are actually very racist. They don't like to listen to white people to be able to say they listen to their rap and other, you know, soul and that kind of stuff. Yeah. And the the the comments from these black, reaction artists says, I've never heard of this song. I've never heard of this band and then but I'm gonna play it because my listeners asked me to to react to it. And then they'll play a song by Boston. Wow. That's awesome. I never heard anything like that before. That is this what white people actually play?
[01:55:33] Unknown:
And You know universally, that's how they react. Okay? I've I've seen that. Although, one must take some of it possibly with a pinch of salt is that it's better that they react that way to get their hits and likes upon on you. But some of them are really quite lucid. I've watched a few of them and they're pretty good at their analysis and taking things apart Yes, they are. And looking at things and musically they are it's one of their strong points you know, in certain areas. Not currently, I mean Yeah. But that's not really down to them. That's really down to the abuse of the music industry. But in the past, they've done some great stuff. I mean really, you know, when they I I just think swing and things like that. I'm not a jazz guy. I just think there's far so much diddly diddly diddly going on with that. It just drives me crazy. But the songs and stuff, some of the stuff is is you just go, that's good. I mean, I just do. I I go, it's good. I mean, that guy Prince from Minnesota, he basically ended up playing white guy's music as a black guy. I mean, because in Minnesota at the time, that's all he could hear was all these these bands. And there's also, I haven't got it but I need to dig it up somewhere. I've been, ever since I started, I kept on playing quite a bit of Van Morrison. I haven't played any recently, but he's just out there still. I don't know what old he is. Just banging albums out every 12 or 14 months and they're all throughout it.
Patriotic. So listenable to it. But there's an interview with him years ago because he was talking about the Irish slaves, you know, being brought into America. And he said something along the lines of blues music is Irish. He said it's a derivative Oh, good. Of Irish and English folk music that was then taken and added beats by the African people and so on so forth. Of course, they would Yeah. Probably argue against that. And this is not to deny the good stuff that's been that's been made. But it's Mhmm. It is it's it's a fascinating sort of tell is music. It's quite it's such a personal thing. Right. And you know, you were saying earlier there about being a racist. I as a clever dick, I actually say to people, well, I'm actually a race is individual because I see that race is.
And, of course, those that attack us as racists, are the greatest racists on the face of the earth because they're seeking Right. To destroy all races by getting them all to be confused by living with one another. A thing that's just completely mad, which is like playing reggae music in d minor against Chopin at the same time. You go, what is this cacophony I hear? Well, that's what it's like when you mix people together. It seems to me, it's just completely pointless and mad. It's totally mad.
[01:57:59] Unknown:
And this never worked anywhere. Never. Integration has never worked anywhere. Never will. It's not impossible Yeah. Because the races are too fundamentally different. They really By the way Yeah. That was Lincoln's position during the entirety of the civil war, but you're told that Lincoln is the great emancipator. Right?
[01:58:19] Unknown:
We are. That was Yeah. We we can talk about Lincoln after after the after the end of the show. So we're in the last minute. I'll just do a quick wrap up here. You've been listening to Paul English Live here on WBN 324. Be back again same time next week. That's 3 PM EST, 8 PM in the UK. My guest this evening has been Eli James. We've been having a very good old chinwag about words. This discussion will carry on on Rumble. And if you wanna get over to Rumble, go to paulenglishlive.com. You'll see a big Rumble link over on the on the left. Click it, and you'll come over here, and you can join all the other reprobates in the chat room and carry on talking about this fantastic topic that we've been talking about tonight.
Eli, it's been great having you. We'll have you back again formally within the show. But we'll carry on talking after the break. Brilliant. Okay. Alright. Wonderful. Okay. Thanks, everyone. Yep. So that's it. Thanks. Also, big shout out to Paul b for doing the mixes on the songs. Those songs were remixed at 432 hertz. And Paul's also giving me feedback that I keep playing the music too loud and blowing the speakers out because it's a bad habit I've got into, but there there we go. So
[01:59:26] Unknown:
yeah. You're a rocker, Red Heart. Headbanger.
[01:59:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Headbanger Polish. Yeah. I don't play all my rough stuff here on this show. See you next week, everyone. Bye for Oh, okay. And we're off the air. So we're off the radio and, we're, we're just on Rumble for now, Eli. So brilliant. And Well, yeah. Okay. Well, are we live on Rumble now or, is it? We're still live on Rumble. Yeah. We're live on Rumble. Okay. Everything's, everything's live on Rumble. And,
[01:59:56] Unknown:
okay. Yeah. Yeah. So what I'd like to get into, you know, carrying on the subject matter is the parable of the wheat and the tares and, why the apostle who heard that parable were asked to Yahshua to explain it to them. They didn't understand what he was talking about. And that's true of most people who read the bible. They don't understand the parables because they're they think that he was a Jew speaking to Jews. No. He was a white Israelite speaking to Israelite, and he actually did not intend for the Jews to understand what he was saying. Well, of course. And how how dare he?
How dare he? You know? And then we can maybe go into the word gentile and explain why that's such a horrible
[02:00:44] Unknown:
translation. We can. Let me just give a I'll just give another bit of information out here. So if you're still tuned into us on Rumble and I can see a goodly number are so that's fantastic. Thanks for Yeah. Sticking out. We'll we'll carry on. And we're watching the Rumble chat. I should send you the link actually, Eli, so that you can go and have a I'm gonna send it to you Skype so you can at least have a look at it as we're we're chugging on through. But I wanna what I wanted to say is that if you want to call in and speak to Eli or myself or whatever, not me probably, but you want to put some questions to Eli, you can call me in to Oh, God. Oh, God. Yeah. Go over to, paulenglishlivedot com and if you look towards the bottom of the page, there's a green link that's that will bring you through to the studio. I know that we've got some regular people that call in and they're more than welcome to do so again. But if you if you ever had the urge and you haven't pressed that button, take the plunge.
I'll be happy for to hear from you if you wanna come on in. So we're gonna be around, I think, for a little while, and that's that's I love what we're gonna be doing. Hello, Paul.
[02:01:47] Unknown:
Are you taking the plunge? I am. Hi. Oh, okay. This is the other fault. Of course, I took the tonight. You know, I took I took the plunge before the show even started. I've just been sitting here listening to you guys. I love this. This is amazing.
[02:02:03] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. So is this your alter ego, Paul? Or Yeah. Well, we it's all happened quite quite naturally, Eli. What what's happened is that we've got 2 Pauls separated by the pond and Oh, okay. Paul has just helped me immeasurably. It's just fantastic to work with him and he, on the fly, produces gets hold of your songs. So that's why I asked you earlier, this happens with all guests. I see. We get the tunes in and they're retuned at 4 32 hertz and we broadcast them like that.
[02:02:33] Unknown:
Because Oh, he's one of those. What are they called? 10 tinfoil hat 430
[02:02:38] Unknown:
432 guys. That's right. Hertz. Yes. That's right. Y'all gonna be Actually, I'm gonna hit 1 soon. Hey, Eli.
[02:02:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Resolve that one, Mark. Yeah. There you go.
[02:02:49] Unknown:
Actually, I know about that. I've I've known about that for, oh, a good 40 years that, Bach detuned the musical scale. He did it for actually a good reason because the resonance of the string dissonance, when you play a string dissonance, the one next to it resonates at that same, frequency for a while. If you don't dampen the string the the the it really messes up the music. Really. So but, yeah, the 432 is a Schumann resonance, A 440 is not. So a lot of people have been arguing if 4 32 is actually the true a, not 440. Okay?
So, I think this is 444.
[02:03:31] Unknown:
Mhmm. 444, what they're talking about is, like, the 528 thing. Really? Puts middle c at 528, I think. Oh, wow. Leonard Horowitz is he's really pushing that. But the Really? Problem with going 444 is if a song contains 440, 528, and 741, which is another one of the solfeggio frequencies, it generates the devil's chord.
[02:04:01] Unknown:
Oh. The devil's That's what he wants, isn't it? Isn't that what he wants? Well, that's what
[02:04:06] Unknown:
that's what they all want. Mhmm. They wanted okay. Here's the deal. I had an Internet music radio station, okay, 8 years ago, 10 years ago, something like that. Global Voice Radio. Everything I played was in 528. Everything. And they left me alone for 2 years. Absolutely left me alone. And then I made the change to 432, and I'm telling you my life literally fell apart. They came down on me like a ton of bricks. If I was doing 528, they would let me play to my heart's content. But as soon as I went to 4:32, they went nuts and postal on me. And guess what? Right.
When I was doing the 528, I was filtering 440. I was squashing 440 out of the song, the single frequency, pulling it down 32 dB. It was not there. So the devil's chord never existed in anything that I could Interesting.
[02:05:08] Unknown:
They didn't know. Right. Right. Right. I'm glad to hear that, Paul. I'd hate to think you were a devil's court broadcaster. That would be very worrying, wouldn't it?
[02:05:17] Unknown:
That wouldn't be any good. Right. Right. Well, I I mean, it's a matter of debate. Yeah. But 432 is the Schumann resident resonance, isn't it? That is the frequency at which the planet Earth is in harmony with. Yes. Right. It is. Why shouldn't we be in harmony with our own planet? Oh, you're a troublemaker again, Eli. Harmony. What's this? Yeah. Right. Harmony. Real harmony.
[02:05:41] Unknown:
I know. Right? Yeah. Well, just just look at harmony. Just look at harmony. You know? 3 part harmony. Okay? And, let's see. Tesla, Nikola Tesla, you said the world was built on the numbers 3, 6, and 9. What are they? They're all evenly divisible by 3. 432, evenly divisible by 3. 528, isn't that also evenly divisible by 3? What do we have here? And, let's see. 440, that's not divisible by 3. No. Oh, it's divisible by 2, which which which is why it causes separation. It it it causes separation between you and the earth and between you and the creator and between your your heart space and your head. It just puts you in a dissonant state.
[02:06:29] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. Okay. So now now that we're on the subject, how do you feel about because I know in America, we have 60 hertz, electricity whether it's 120 or 220 doesn't really matter. But in Europe, it's 50 hertz. What's up with that? Do you know? Have have any idea what that's about?
[02:06:50] Unknown:
That, I don't know. Okay. Yeah. I don't know. It it it I don't know if it's by design or if I don't know. The jury is still out on that. You know? I've never actually contemplated that. But if I just had thought, I might have I might have something to say about it. I guess
[02:07:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. But I know that AI, that they're they're scrambling our brains with the frequencies. There's no doubt about that.
[02:07:19] Unknown:
Yeah. Of course they are. Gentlemen, I'd I'd like you to know, as part of, as part of the development of the show, we've been joined by Sussex man. Sussex man, come in. You are you're on air.
[02:07:32] Unknown:
Oh, good evening, Paul and Eli and the other Paul. Yeah. Very interesting. And by the way, thanks for that link, Paul, Eli. Very interesting. I I I've been so busy. Haven't had time to look at it yet, but I'm gonna be tapping you up for that link, Chris, later on. So
[02:07:54] Unknown:
Alright. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. Hermeasythicus,
[02:07:57] Unknown:
the book on linguistics. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:08:00] Unknown:
Thanks for that, Eli. Yeah. Yeah. I I'm going to realize how important speech is, because I hadn't realized before. And when you go into the legal side, legal side of things, we realized they're using 2 languages, our language, special language to trick us. And from my researches, other thing, so joining the dots. I think Francis Bacon was a big, contributor to altering the language. Because a lot of people don't know him and probably others were the actual Shakespeare and not Shakespeare himself.
[02:08:54] Unknown:
Right. Yeah.
[02:08:56] Unknown:
And he did actually leave his signature in the bible because when it was first published in 6 16/11 at Hampton Court, he so happened to be 46 years old. Now if you go to Psalm 46, count 46 words down, you come to the word shake. And then if you count 46 words up from the bottom, you will come to the words, spare, Shakespeare. And the reason I've I discovered for choosing that name is it's a warning of war to come. You know, like in the old days, the tribes, the neighbors when behaving themselves, they go on up on the hill and might shake their spares at them. You better be have or we'd be coming after you if you get my meaning. Alright.
[02:09:59] Unknown:
Very good. Now that's some real word sleuthing. Right? And, excellent. Yeah.
[02:10:09] Unknown:
And,
[02:10:10] Unknown:
I have one. Because,
[02:10:15] Unknown:
Shakespeare, he his plays were actually introducing new words into the language and I think it I I might be wrong, but that's one of the first times the word due became mentioned. So they were Mhmm. Hearing the public for themselves, writing it into the bible. It's strange how they destroy all our other works, but Shakespeare is the one that's, you know, promoted all the time. So, obviously, it's in the head and hands to keep it in place.
[02:10:53] Unknown:
Very well. It's quite interesting what you're saying, Chris, because, not next week or maybe not even the week after that, but in a few weeks time, I've got a guest lined up who is a Shakespeare expert and that's
[02:11:07] Unknown:
Oh, it it probably
[02:11:09] Unknown:
It might be problematic. Hey, do you think it's gonna turn into a bun fight online? This could be really interesting. So Yeah. Yeah. Someone coming in, who understands it. In in fact, just about to go to Portland, I'm assuming that's Portland in Oregon, is it? That's the one I'm on the Oh, it could be Portland, Maine. Okay. For a Shakespeare convention. How about that? And that's coming up. So we'll we'll have I'll have to just stand by. I mean, I'm very interested in finding out more about Lady Macbeth, you know, because I just think we live in a world of Lady Macbeth, it seems to me. Half of them are men. Yeah. But, it's it's gonna be it's gonna be quite interesting. So please call in Chris and cause a ruckus because it's gonna be fun. Yeah. I would like to do that.
Oh, I'd like you to do it. It makes a good radio. We want that. That would be great. Oh, yes.
[02:11:58] Unknown:
You know, so that'd be jolly good. Well, yeah. But what about the other name? You know, you've got Shakespeare. You know, Shakespeare. Okay? Right. You forgot about will I am.
[02:12:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, William is well, William is a popular one for the, especially, Chew's and Masons because they like William because it's like a mirror nearly reads the same as a mirror. Because it's got the word I am in it, which is the tetragonal tetragram of the name of Yahweh, I am. And you got the 2 l's, the 2 pillars, you know, like the mace and stuff. And, that's basically why, a lot of the Jews. Well, I did look for I think Eli sent me a list of Jewish names sometime, particular surname, and I was amazed how many of them chose William. And when you look back and when you look back at our English history, I don't can't speak for American history.
Well, we have, William the Conqueror. He was a bit of an ogre. And then William Clinton? Oh, William Clinton. Well, there you are. Yeah. I didn't know about that one. Oh.
[02:13:29] Unknown:
Slick Billy. Else. Right? Yep. Slick Willie.
[02:13:33] Unknown:
Yeah. And then you had Oliver Cromwell. He's his real name was Williams. He changed it. Okay.
[02:13:45] Unknown:
And and there's another William. I've got Is it a troublesome name, Chris Williams? I mean, because my my wife's maiden name is Williams. Am I in trouble? That's is that what you're saying? I don't. I think Oh, serious.
[02:13:58] Unknown:
You know, it's shucked out of Wales. Yeah. A lot of them chose the name Williams or Davies, to identify themselves, but it was probably genuine Williams there as well. But if you look up the genealogy of, Oliver Cromwell, you'll find that it's the case. Because he's, one of his ancestors, Richard Conwell, he was involved in all the thievery going on with the reformation during Henry the 8th time with the anti, monist disestablishment of the monasteries. And he was, collecting all the, good, you know, all the valuables, you know, and dishing them out.
Well, a lot of them went to the king, and he obviously kept a good bit himself. But, in the end, he he came to grief. He got filled out, and his head was chopped off. And it was a rogue like his, you know, the other William, the, conqueror. There's another William. I can't figure who it was now. But, anyway,
[02:15:21] Unknown:
Another one?
[02:15:22] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:15:24] Unknown:
Yeah. I can't they got out. Old age coming up. It's gone out the top of my head. Oh, it's alright. Oh, that's those are fascinating things though. They really are. Just to let you know, Eli has dropped out of the room. I don't oh, he's back. There we go. I didn't even need to say that. So I just, I think it was a technical doodad. Here we go. Eli, you're back with us. Yeah.
[02:15:47] Unknown:
I I guess I was put away in punishment.
[02:15:51] Unknown:
Yeah. You've been causing trouble ever since you came on. You came it's just been nothing but trouble all the time so, you know.
[02:15:58] Unknown:
I don't know how that happened but fortunately, I was able to log back in. Right. Yeah. Very interesting stuff. I mean words, I mean words are so important. We take them for granted. We take them for granted when one person uses a word that we're very familiar with. We assume that he has the same meaning for it that we do or that I do And that's that's actually fairly rare that people have the same meaning for any word that they use. Right?
[02:16:27] Unknown:
It's very true. Yeah. Absolutely. They're like little programs. I mean, you know, here we are talking and, you know, so people are listening to us and I listen to other people talking and every time someone says something or maybe evokes something, you run a little movie in your head, don't you? We all do it. There's little movies running in everybody's head. You're making movies play. They're that powerful. I mean, you know, we're not even here. We're not even physically together. We're using this incorporeal medium as Marshall McLuhan would call it. We don't even have a body in this thing. We've got sound whistling up and down these lines. And every time someone says something, we're all imagining slightly different things, slightly different. That's right. You know, but I guess we have to take a view that the truth is knowable. Otherwise, we might as well just throw ourselves off a cliff right now because I think, you know, it is knowable. Yeah. It's just that it can be a bit arduous getting there at times.
[02:17:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, in terms of my keep my keep
[02:17:19] Unknown:
yeah. Go ahead. Sorry. Sorry, Eli. Yeah.
[02:17:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Go ahead. Go ahead, Chris. I was I
[02:17:27] Unknown:
was just going to say the other William I forgot, of course, is William of Orange. He was very controversial figure and was the bank imposed on us from the Central Bank of Holland. Yeah. And there's some and I think, obviously, his artist, you know, painted him, you know, without his hook nose. But there are some pictures showing with a, you know, a distinct hook nose because some of them refer to him as that hooknose monarch. Oh, really? I wasn't aware of that. He's a and he's, of course, close to your heart, Paul, because he he under him, they brought him the Bank of England.
[02:18:14] Unknown:
Yeah. My I'm I'm right there. I'm a number one fan, Chris. Thanks for bringing that in. Of course, he was he was used as the he was used as the emblematic personage under which it was to be brought to give it some sort of credibility. The thing is is he not he's parachuted in here which is basically what's been happening with most of our prime ministers recently. These are people that just flown in by parachute and just dropped into this seat and apparently that's okay. We all agree with it. Apparently, so we're told, but no one actually ever had any role in in making a decision and saying, I think not. Yeah. So, yeah.
Yeah. Things went very bad for us in this in the, 5th in 17th century. Not good. 16th century, 15th. Who are these people?
[02:18:56] Unknown:
Who who are these people? Who are your prime ministers? Do you know any of them? Who they are? What they what they believe? Anything like that?
[02:19:05] Unknown:
No. Isn't it that thing? I mean, it goes back to that medical thing as well, Eli, that we were you know, this thing about this thing about mixing races on the same bit of real estate is bad for everybody. No one benefits from it, but where is it? Is it Deuteronomy where it says, if you allow the stranger to live with you, in due course they become the head, you become the tail,
[02:19:28] Unknown:
you can't lend to them but they can lend to you and you're done for. That's right. And The exact wording is the alien within you within you will lend to you, but you will not lend to him. The alien within you.
[02:19:42] Unknown:
Yep. It's happening all the time. I mean, I have to say is Islamic banking standards are actually better than the current ones that we have to endure but that doesn't say too much, does it? It's not as if I'm a fan. No. They're they're actually they understand usury better and they don't allow it. The reba I think it's called. You're not allowed to do it, but they they circumvent that by charging service fees and certain other things within their structures. But then, this is something I shouldn't even know anything about. Why am I paying interest to a banking system from an alien people who are currently living amongst us and nobody ever asked me whether I wanted that or not. And yet again, we got to come back to this. It's not about hating them. It's about hating the circumstances. The circumstances are hateable because they're gonna harm a lot of people.
They do harm a lot of people. They just cause harm which otherwise would never ever take place. And of course, Europe is facing this escalating harm all the time because of a situation that nature, I would suggest being the handmaiden of God, does not allow. There's blowback every single time. It never ever works because it's not designed to work, it's not supposed to work, it's not wanted to work, and therefore it will not work. And it's currently not working. So it's ticking all the wrong boxes. It's gonna collapse collapse. Mhmm. It will collapse. There's no doubt about it. Yeah. They're trying to manage a collapse at the moment, but it's it's eventually gonna get out of hand, and they won't be able to do anything about it.
[02:21:04] Unknown:
So no no amount of, what what's the crisis management?
[02:21:09] Unknown:
Yeah. Is gonna prevent this collapse. It's gonna be a global collapse. It's gonna be it's gonna hurt everybody. Yeah. It's gonna be real serious. Listen, I've gotta just take a short break, but Paul's more than able to a a new Eli as well. Yeah. Chris, was if you're not talking, could you just put yourself on mute? I don't know if you know how to do that. You know the Because we've just got a little bit of echo coming back from you. So if you see the green telephone over on the left, if you just click that it'll go black and that means you're muted. And then when you want to talk, click it to turn it back green again, and then we will get the echo coming through into the circuit. Is that is that workable? Can you do that?
[02:21:47] Unknown:
That's on the telephone microphone.
[02:21:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Where where where it says Sussex man, you've got the green telephone just to the left of it. If you click that telephone, it will go black and mute you. So if you're not talk there we go. Brilliant. So you can still hear us, and it stops the echo. And then if you want to talk, unmute yourself, and you're back in. I'm just going to take up I've got a I have a little task to do at this time, but I'll be back in a few minutes. I won't be too long. Okay? Right. Okay. So, Paul,
[02:22:18] Unknown:
unless you have, you know, some more to say about the Schumann residence, it would be, very interesting, or anything else to say, you know, I'll just keep quiet, but I was gonna continue with the parable of the wheat and the tares at some point but over to you, Paul. Okay. Are you there? Uh-huh. Okay. I'm not hearing anything coming from, oh, okay. So I'll just go ahead and continue with the, week oh, okay. Are you back?
[02:22:54] Unknown:
Alright. Yeah. I'm back now.
[02:22:56] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. I,
[02:22:59] Unknown:
I do have I do have some some interesting, some interesting ideas on the difference between 60 Hertz and 50 Hertz, but I would I would like to wait until Paul comes back because I think he would find it exceedingly interesting as well. So
[02:23:18] Unknown:
but, I don't know. Well, actually
[02:23:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Go ahead. Actually, we can we can force him to go back and listen to his own archive. Wouldn't that be horrible? Right.
[02:23:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Well I've known for a long time for the musicians. Yeah. Right. Excuse me. Go ahead. Sorry. Okay.
[02:23:39] Unknown:
According to Google, alright, the difference in frequency has implications for the design and operation of electrical equipment. Sixty hertz systems tend to be more efficient over longer distance transmissions and are better suited for higher power applications, while 50 hertz systems are more suited for low power, local distribution. So I think they use 50 hertz in the countries that don't have, like, these vast transmission lines and and and travel long distances. And they're also using 220 volts in most of those countries, which means their current would be lower. So the losses would be less over the transmission lines. And, let's see.
A couple of interesting things to note is 60 is evenly divisible by 3. 50 is not. 432 is not evenly divisible by 60, but it is evenly divisible by 3. And 432 divided by 3 is 144. And Wow. This is 60 cubed or 60 squared. 60 times 60 is 528.
[02:25:09] Unknown:
Okay. So there is a how should I put this? A kind of harmonics of the universe that we should be tapping into. Right?
[02:25:21] Unknown:
Should be. Right. Yeah. I mean, yeah, we're That's what I'm
[02:25:26] Unknown:
thinking. Right. Well, a long time ago, this is like 1980, I was in touch with musicians in a town called Allegan, Michigan who were already experimenting with the 432 hertz frequency in their music and they're all telling me well this music sounds way better it's sometimes it's unbelievably better at 432 than 440 and I and I have never had a chance to experiment You know, I I play I play the accordion. Right? And, it's hard to do that electronically, but I guess you can manipulate music on at least a specific interest. I don't know if you can do it to a whole band, change the frequency from 440 to 432, and what they tell me is it really it sounds more etheric. It sounds it sounds awesome in comparison to the other. I I don't know. If that's your been your experience, I don't know.
[02:26:24] Unknown:
Oh, absolutely. I I retune everything. I don't play anything in 4:40, not for any reason. Okay. If I have to go get it from YouTube or something like that, I will download it. I will recode it. And if I wanna retain the video, like, for the, for the lyrics and stuff on the screen, I'll actually replace the audio track on a YouTube video with a 4 32 version of that audio track. So I I don't play anything in 4:40. So and I actually have it's like 20 or 30 minutes long on Global Voice Radio, and the, the link for that is radio dotglobalvoiceradio dotnet. Okay.
A long time ago, I did a comparison between 432 and 440, where I used, actual examples of music tuned. The same song, the same original song from the same original pressing, 1 and 440, and one that I had recoded to 432. And you can hear the difference. You can feel the difference. The the difference between 440 and 432 is the difference between just hearing something as a distant observer and actually feeling enveloped by what you're exposed to. It's like a whole body experience. Experience. It's Yeah. It's like a it's a religious experience where you can actually feel the energy channels opening up in your body.
[02:28:10] Unknown:
Well, that would make sense to just Schumann resonance. If it's a Schumann resonance that would make perfect sense. It's a natural resonance of, the key of a. You're mister 432,
[02:28:22] Unknown:
Paul, aren't you? Yeah. Alright.
[02:28:24] Unknown:
You are. You missed the 430 train.
[02:28:29] Unknown:
I I I can go through the through the numbers that I shared while you were gone very, very quickly just so people don't get bored and and, some Yeah. Some people might have missed it, before. We were talking about the difference between 60 Hertz and 50 Hertz as far as electrical transmission lines. Mhmm. Okay? Well, according according to Google, the difference in frequency has implications for the design and operation of electrical equipment. Sixty Hertz systems tend to be more efficient for longer distance transmission and are better suited for high power applications, while 50 hertz systems are more suited for low power and local distribution.
Now because the United States is so vast, I'm not gonna say that that Britain is itty bitty. It is. I mean, I'll say Britain's itty bitty. It really is itty bitty.
[02:29:21] Unknown:
So I said I saved you the trouble.
[02:29:25] Unknown:
Well, because the United States is so vast, that's probably why they're doing 60 hertz here. But, interesting Okay? 432 hertz, Okay? 432 Hertz is evenly divisible by 3, but it is not evenly divisible by 60. However, 528 is evenly divisible by 3, and you get 144. But guess what you get if you square 60? You get 528. Alright.
[02:30:13] Unknown:
Okay. Now what's the significance of 528?
[02:30:17] Unknown:
528 Hertz is one of the solfeggio frequencies. It's the one for it's the it's the heart chakra frequency the frequency for, DNA repair and manifesting miracles. Interesting. This, that, and everything. Do you think you know, the other thing with, with bells,
[02:30:36] Unknown:
physical bells, obviously, we associate them with churches with, what do they call it? Are they clackers or clangers? The the the big thing that's inside it. I always called it a clacker, I suppose. I don't know what it is. But
[02:30:49] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:30:50] Unknown:
Well, one of the things with these buildings of the past, much of this inquiry into the realm of Tartarion architecture and older buildings, for which the construction is supposedly not known or is a bit of a mystery. I know that, in Russia, the the during the revolution, a lot of bells were taken down. In fact, they've said, I think, in just about every, you know, village up and down Russia after the revolution or during it, there were hardly any bells left. And they were smashed to bits and some of these things were enormous. But the interesting that we suppose are churches, were in fact healing centers and that the bell, the shape of it, it would there would be a hole in the top of the building, in the dome, for example, or in the roof. But I'm just gonna say a dome. And a bar or a series of bars, a couple of bars would be laid across iron bars or steel bars or whatever they had. And these bells would just hang there suspended on these bars, not moving.
No clacker, just sat there. And what occurred is that in due course, they began to reciprocate with the Schumann frequency or the frequency of the earth and emit a healing frequency. And if you were there, it would basically tune you up, courtesy of of frequency healing, which seems to make an awful lot of sense to me given that every single particle that we know of is vibrating at some frequency or another. Single particle that we know of is vibrating at some frequency or another. And to sort of bring it back to a sense of harmony, I guess. I don't know if you've read any things like that. I know it's a bit of a stretch. I don't have much to back it up with, but it kind of it appeals to my heart. I like that a lot. It's just something that I like, you know. Yeah. It's probably good for your heart too. Yes. Right? One would think so. What is it about bells? Well, yes, wait a minute. We have a bell ringing on Tuesday evenings here. There's a church nearby and they still do bell ringing practice on a Tuesday evening.
And, it's just fantastic. I just love the sound of it. It's like the sound of of the town, of this hot part of the town. And, it doesn't have to be it's just the sound of it ringing through the air. It's a very potent thing is the sound of a bell, a big bell. So the churches knew what they were up to by hanging bells up there and doing things to call, you know, the congregation in, I guess. But is there more to it than that? Probably. There probably is, I suspect. There's probably more to it than just that.
[02:33:20] Unknown:
Mhmm. Okay. My numbers are wrong. No. 60 squared is 36100. I gotta figure out where what I what buttons I hit when I actually came up to 528.
[02:33:31] Unknown:
Well, what key is that? So you got 440 is a, 520, is what what is 528? That's gotta be the next be middle c. Should be. Middle c? Okay. Should be middle c. Yeah. So, yeah, it's, solfeggio b, do, re, b, fa, sol, lat,i, do. Right? That's the solfeggio scale? Mhmm. Is that what it refers to? Okay. Yeah. Alright.
[02:33:53] Unknown:
Well, maybe we'll get to a point where we can broadcast this entire show in 4 32 and I don't know. I get retuned and we get all the microphones tuned or something or whatever is going on. I wanted to just go back to that harmony. There was a point that there was a a thing that we're discussing towards the end there, Eli, of the second hour. Maybe to talk about here. This, because we didn't cover it for this line, I want to just go over it anyway, even though I kind of know a bit. But I think it might be useful to just cover it again. This line of the, tribes of Israel, their migration, and the root of them into the word Saxon.
Would you like to talk a bit about that? Because I'm pretty sure you know it. How Right. The the the Saxons, there's a reason why it's that word. Why it is the word Saxon and not something else.
[02:34:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Well, Genesis 20 21, explicitly states that speaking to Abraham in in Isaac shall thy seed be called. In other words, your descendants will be known by the name of Isaac. Yes. Okay? Yeah. And the Jews never quote that verse because they're not known by the name of Isaac, which is Saxon. Right? And, the Israelites and not just the Israelites, but a lot of cultures in the old world when, they came across a name that begins with a vowel such as Elizabeth is a good example. They tend to drop the vowel and say call her Elizabeth Elizabeth instead of Elizabeth.
Yes. I guess this is kind of lazy lazy talk Elizabeth. Yeah. Elizabeth's quite common. It is. Yeah. Right? It is. Right. So we drop the, the original vowel and then begin the word with the next consonant. So so, Anglo Anglo Anglo. Yeah. Sack. It becomes sack. Right? Instead of Isaac, it's sack. And so that's where we get the word section from. And this word section also I think it transmitted or transliterated into Scythian. I think The Sakai. Skithian is a The Sakai. Right? Yeah. Right. Sakai. And Skithian simply means tent dweller.
And the fact is that our ancestors, after they were evicted from, so Samaria, they had no choice but to live in tents. Right? Which is Mhmm. Hebrew word for that is Succoth Succoth, Scythian, Saxon, all those words are really related and the Saxons and the Scythians were known for their horsemanship, for their great archery, for the use of the battle axe,
[02:36:34] Unknown:
and living in tents. Right? So yeah. And all of that And that seems to ring. Yeah. That rings in our bones, all of that imagery that you just caused to run-in my head by using those words. It rings true for us, doesn't it? Yeah. Hit hit me hit me with a gong and I ring. Yeah. So Isaac has sons. Isaac sons. Yes. But we dropped the I, so it's Saxons. Isaac's sons That's right. Without the I. Exactly. Sac. Saxons. These are sons. Saxons. Other
[02:37:05] Unknown:
cultures did that too. For example, our people are also known as Khmerians. Well, that was, that's, I'm trying to remember now the name of the Israelite king, that I have to go back to, Hebrew to remember what the Hebrew word for Camarion is. Maybe Chris can help us here, but, it's also Samarian Amri. Okay. So Yeah. Camarion is an alternative different language version of King Amri. I think if you put king and, excuse me, Omri together, that's when you get chimerian. Okay? Not Sumerian. Chimerian is the original pronunciation because in Greek it's Kimerioi.
And so, yeah, if you put King Omri together, who do who do you have? You have the king of Israel in the time of the deportations. Right. That's why we're known as chimeras or many of us are. Yep. Okay? Or or Celtic. Celtic is also another, appellation given to our people. Okay? So once you realize and that's what the value of this great book is that Hermes Scythicus.
[02:38:23] Unknown:
I can't wait to read it. These words.
[02:38:26] Unknown:
Yeah. It takes all these different terms and puts them together to find their true origin and that's why the tie the subtitle of the book is on the, is similarity or your relationship between Greek, Latin, and Gothic. Gothic is the language of God's people and of course that was originally Hebrew. Okay. But we lost our Hebrew and we developed new languages as a result of our migrations. Right? And that's why we became known as Saxon because the prophecy says we will be known by the name of Isaac.
[02:39:04] Unknown:
Alright. Yeah. Great question. I hope I answered it well. You did. You did. I mean, I just I like to hear it. I like to hear the exposition of these things over and over, because there's this clutch of real meaty pieces of, truth. That's one of them. This way, it suddenly, as you piled it, like I was saying earlier, as you piled one detail on after another, the jigsaw starts to fill in and each bit that you're expecting to see, you find it. It it keeps working. It doesn't sort of break down. It just keeps building up. The picture keeps building and building and I know it's it's obviously a thing that one can and many people do spend their entire lifetime studying, But I'm I'm very interested in how how we get this transmitted more rapidly to our people. I guess, we just do the best that we can and keep working as hard as we can to keep coming up with ways to get this across. But they're such simple truths and yet they cause such a eruption in the head. And this seems to be all always the case, you know, and we're all facing this problem in different areas, you know. Maybe I feel reasonably knowledgeable in this space but there's other things where I'm a bit blindsided and it takes me time to get my brain work improperly to actually see what's almost in front of my own eyes. And no doubt, many people struggle with that as well. Although, I think recent times have propelled the the process in a really positive way even though we live in pretty negative times.
[02:40:29] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Well, again, it's a as I've said this many times, the Judeo Christian world has no interest in real history even though the bible is a very much historical book and that's really what it is. It's a book of history of the covenant people and, but the the Judeo Christian world perceives it as a book of well, and correctly so morally. Okay? But, they totally ignore the history and then, they they they preachify. So they see the book of, the bible as a preachifying book and the preaching is all wrong. The preaching doesn't do the bible justice. Absolutely no no justice whatsoever. No. So it's a real shame. Absolute shame. Yeah. It is. Because is it not I mean, I I describe it to people because I had to come up with some kind of shorthand description for myself to try and arrest the
[02:41:26] Unknown:
Bible as a tactical and spiritual field combat manual for white people, purely to give it a different hue. It's just me talking to myself. But I do mention it like that because it's obviously a book of law primarily and it's a book of history and it's the history of a people in relation to a law and what happens to them when they go along with it, which is always very very good and what happens to them when they fall away from it, which is always very very bad. And without that sort of context for the whole document, it doesn't make too much sense and it's bound to drift into this lovey dovey clap happy nonsense. I mean, it's just blather the whole thing. It's not that I'm against lovey doveyness, I'm not. I actually quite like it as well. But there's a little bit more to life than just that. It's, you know, there's struggle involved and scripture is full of that. It's not short on struggle, is it?
[02:42:23] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. I was going to I'm just yeah. Go ahead, Chris. Yes. I screwed you around. I was just going to say, Eli, another good way of identifying us identifying ourselves
[02:42:36] Unknown:
is for our heraldry. The Jews don't have any heraldry of their own. Although a few they've they've taken over other people's heraldry where they've married into Israelite families. But other than that, they they don't have heraldry. And, another good way I find, you know, getting people to understand the Jews aren't true, Israel. Well, I say, if that they they claim their descent through the mother, whereas true Israel traces their descent, through the paternal line. So straight away, they're they're proving they're not, true Israelites.
Mhmm. And Yahweh said warned us about the seed of the woman who crushed Jacob's neck. Something I'm just paraphrasing that.
[02:43:36] Unknown:
There's some interesting comments just tumbled in from Warren. I'm gonna read them out, actually. Actually, I might not be able to read them out because one of some of them are Welsh words and I'm gonna muller muller it. So if you So the first word is spelled c y m r a e g. How's that pronounced? Kimreig? I don't know. That's how I pronounce it. Kimreig.
[02:43:55] Unknown:
Yeah. No. It's Kumreu. I think it's actually pronounced. Kumreu. Is it really? But that means Kymriyan. It means Kymriyan. Well, yeah. Let's not go it's just if you King Omri. Yeah. So is is Kymriag,
[02:44:05] Unknown:
Nagumri or maybe the Russian. Is numeri. Cumri equals Cumri, which is Cimmeria, Cimmerian, or Cumrian, or Cumbrian or Cumbria. Cumbrian means Cymregr, or but as I muller it, c m c y m r a e g. Sorry, Warren. He said he writes here. Now this is this is a bit to get you thinking. There were no Celts in Britain or Ireland not ever. There are no Celtic histories on these islands. No laws, customs, alphabet, language, poetry, documents, maps, kingdoms, and no place names. I'm not qualified to even respond to that, Warren, but that sounds really interesting. You're gonna have to come on as a guest. Oh, you're you're gonna have to come on and tell us about this because that's intriguing and very provocative what you've said, but I'm all ears.
[02:45:03] Unknown:
Right. Well, it depends on what you mean by Celtic. You know, the vast majority of Celts lived on the mainland mainland and some of them did cross the the, what's the the channel into England, but, you know, historically, you know, when did they do that? You know, that would be another question entirely. Yeah. Chris, you were gonna say something there.
[02:45:22] Unknown:
Yeah. I can say the problem is these peep our people are given different names by, you know, the Germans. You know, they will call us something and we call them something. And Welsh really means foreigner. It's not saying Kimru. But in fact, the Kimru or where the ancient Britons in in, that was the language through most of Britain up to the I think right up to the middle of Scotland. And of course, when the Of course our people have been in captivity and we went through different captivities. So our language is changed. And, when we came back, recalling our ancestors foreigners, you know, the Welsh was, I think, Germanic name for foreigner.
[02:46:28] Unknown:
Mhmm. See, these words were were tumbling around in confusion. Less confusion than others. But we it's e it is easy to do. You know, I'll tell you there's a that group that came to England. When was it? 7 or 800? The Jutes, j u t e. Right. Now, Chris, do you have a take on that? What's the origin of their name? I often thought, is that That that that kind of Judahites.
[02:46:51] Unknown:
Judah. Well, actually, Jude is an interesting one because, it changed from being due to toot, and that's where we got the word Teutonic from. Really? It was a word shift. Yes. Yes. And the toots were mainly they they a lot of Ireland Isle of Wight was was in, in house by the Jutes.
[02:47:21] Unknown:
They're just down the road from me.
[02:47:23] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:47:26] Unknown:
I think that I prefer the Jutes to the toots. The toots doesn't come across America, does it? We are the toots. Pronounced poit. Poit. Is it? Toit.
[02:47:38] Unknown:
Mhmm. Toitonic. Yeah.
[02:47:41] Unknown:
But that's where we get the word Deutsch from. Deutsch comes from toit. Yep. So would that be similar is the Jutes the similar thing to that root of Jutland? What I was saying, which is Judahiteland. And the is the Jutes in as we know of them back then, would that be sort of an abbreviation or a a moving of the word Judahite? Is that what it would be?
[02:48:02] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:48:04] Unknown:
I mean, I'm guessing here. I never know. I never actually read anything on that. I just always sort of semi assumed it, but I you probably read other histories that say, no, their name comes from, you know, they were named after bales of cotton or something or whatever. Right. But I it just seemed to make sense to me. Jutland and Jutes seems to make sense, you know.
[02:48:24] Unknown:
Of course, it does. Yes. Yeah. But the original pronunciation was Ute Ute. It comes from Ute. Yeah. Ute. Silent j. Oh, the Ute's, not the Jutes. Right? Silent j. And, it the the letter j did not actually appear in English until, like, the middle of 1600. That's right. Okay. Up until then, it was, if it appeared it was it was pronounced like a y. Okay. So here's a here's a sample from the book Hermes Scythicus, about the word Saxon. It's just, it doesn't appear too often in his book, but he he said okay. The Saxons, a nation of Scythic origin, so he's using the word Scythian as a very broad, your term covering the various Israelite tribes, the Saxon tribes, and other tribes that lived in what we would call southern Russia today, but also in, Madea and Mesopotamia because that's where our people originated from before they migrated west. Okay?
So the term Scythic is a very very broad term even though it does have a Hebrew origin. Okay? Anyway, he says the Saxons a nation of Scythic origin worship Saturn under the name of Satar as we're probably good satyr from you know the satyr maybe he he became a satyr later in history you know that that half goat half man Mhmm. He was he was represented as an old man holding a wheel in his left hand and his right hand a pail or basket containing flowers and fruits. The same day of the week was consecrated to him which bore his name according to the old Roman calendar, the Anglo Saxon version of Matthew 16:1 it is called Saturnus dog or Saturn's day.
In Belgian Safer dog this deity was by the ancient sections also called Grotto Godo or Grodorus this name has been traced to goth. Okay? Right. So here's the connection between the Saxons, the Scythians, and the Goths. The linguistic connection. Interesting stuff, folks.
[02:50:43] Unknown:
It is. Gothic architecture is godly architecture then, is it?
[02:50:48] Unknown:
There you go. Yeah. Yeah. Is godly in English.
[02:50:54] Unknown:
And we love gothic architecture. We like gothic novels. Yes. We do. We like the we do. The the it's it's full of a there's a kind of dark romance to the whole thing and it's got an extremely defined sort of presence in your head when you think about gothic novels and gothic architecture and the goths and all this kind of stuff. Frankenstein?
[02:51:14] Unknown:
Well, yeah. Right? Really? Yeah. Okay. Yeah. There's a whole goth movement here in America. I don't know if it's true in Europe or they they wear tattoos and rings in their noses and stuff like that. Right? So, yeah, it's not what the well, actually, come to think of it, the early goths probably did that.
[02:51:34] Unknown:
Okay? Yeah. Well, they're going down in my estimation rapidly as you describe it like that. Yeah. I'm getting quite worried. Yes.
[02:51:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. Yeah. Well, I think we came out of that phase when Christianity came along, although it's not entirely gone.
[02:51:48] Unknown:
No. It keeps yeah. I just I don't I just don't get all that stuff, but let's move let's not talk about it. It's just too miserable. Yeah. I just don't don't about other things. I mean, I remember some time ago, Eli, we talked about Odin. You remember we talked about Odin once? Or you've talked about Odin? Right. And I'm sure you were saying that really Odin is in fact Yahweh just sort of seen through a different lens or a different period of time. Am I close on that or is it slightly askew?
[02:52:25] Unknown:
Okay. Well, the Odin was a historical character, you know. It's a Right. Wotan is another version of his name. Mhmm. He was a descendant of King David, but a very pagan I just send it of King David who basically created the Germany and Denmark and he was the the the most famous of the paganized Judahites that wandered through Germany and and for points north. Okay. And, yeah, he was definitely a Judahite. Yeah. He was probably known as a jute or a youth in here in his day. Right. So there's that linguistic connection but here here's another, example on page 4 He says it is unquestionable that the Anglo Saxon is merely a daughter of the ancient gothic.
It was introduced into England about the year 450 or nearly a century after the date of the version of, version of Ulfilus. We have indeed no ace Anglo Saxon writer older than Edmund who flourished about 3 centuries later than the Bishop of Moetia, but so close in is the affinity of these two languages that the learned hicks included both in the same grammar. Okay. So here we have the Anglo Saxon, Germanic, and Gothic being identified as coming from the same source. Okay. But he says the gothic is the is the main is the oldest is the oldest version, and that would be Gotish, the the language that would be Hebrew.
That would be Hebrew is what it is. Okay? Yeah.
[02:54:06] Unknown:
Hebrew. Yeah. We've covered a lot tonight, haven't we? Yeah. Yeah. We have. Yeah. And probably only a smattering of it as well. There's so much more to sort of cover, but I think, what what if we look at the words that we've covered, we've covered testament, We've looked at Gentile. There's no no individual is a Gentile. No. That's right. It's an ethnicity. It mean the Gentiles are the ethnicities out there, the other nations as it were. That's what it means. It's not an individual. All nations. Yes. Yes. Yes. That's right. We looked at the word goi, which is connected to that. Is that right? Yeah. Yeah. Ethnos.
[02:54:44] Unknown:
Ethnos? Yeah. What do you call it?
[02:54:49] Unknown:
Lost. We looked at that word. Lost is amazing. The put away in punishment people.
[02:54:55] Unknown:
Right. It's amazing. We're still here.
[02:54:58] Unknown:
I've I've only come for the people put away in punishment put away in punishment because they've been disobeying the contract. They've not been obeying the law. Yes. And I'm here to get them back on track. We've gotta redo the contract. They've gotta get back on. They're gonna get their bottoms kicked, but I'm gonna do it in a particular way. Yeah.
[02:55:14] Unknown:
Amen. Yes. Which, which, reminds me of the word maranatha Right. Which, in which means I will visit but not in a good sense. It means when I return I'm gonna take you guys to the woodshed with my switch. Okay. That's what Maranatha means. Mhmm. Okay? Right. When he comes back he's gonna be angry with us,
[02:55:41] Unknown:
the whole world for that matter. Okay. It's it's not difficult to to understand that. I mean, we're all a little bit frustrated and angry and, you know, casting about, seeking to do things as best we possibly can on many people. I know there's a lot of people who are completely clueless and will probably remain that way. But, but knowing these things are I find them extremely useful and very supportive and encouraging to know these things. They they make a difference internally to the way that you operate and think about things and what's important in life. And also to appreciate what we've been given, in spite of all the, the challenges. Let's put it that way. We've been given a great gift.
You know, I do think there's a lot. And it's almost as if as times have got tougher, I found myself more and more appreciative of what I've been given. And what we are being given now as well is more connection points like this one, and communications and connections with other people who are moving in this direction. And I do think it's it's inevitable. It's inexorable because there's nowhere else to go. There is no other direction that's gonna yield it. No. We're out of we can't migrate any further. Yeah. We can't self distract. I don't mean self destruct. We're good. But we can't self distract anymore because the distractions don't work. They fall apart so fast. Nothing so it so it's almost as if, you know, they're waking us up by the sheer speed and scale of the madness that they're seeking to actually bring to bear on everybody.
So, you know, I wouldn't have talked like this 15 or 20 years ago. Well, maybe 15 years ago I would, but not 20 years ago. I wasn't capable of having a discussion like this. So, it's all been incredibly encouraging Yeah. Really.
[02:57:39] Unknown:
Yeah. In the best possible way. Knowing the meanings of words that we've been misusing for our whole lives, it's incredibly enlightening.
[02:57:47] Unknown:
It is. I maybe should pull one out every for every show. Just this week's word of confusion is, you know, because there's a lot of them. I'll probably put a list down. And they don't just have to be script, they can be all sorts of words. I mean, you know, we note in their language whenever they use the word we, whenever they use the word we, you know, supposed spokespersons for this, that, and the other, some self appointed non governmental universal agency that really cares for us, that kind of stuff. When they're talking about we, of course, they're never talking about all of us. They're just talking about them and their compatriots in crime.
This is, you know, we have really benefited from this, making you want to think that it's the whole nation, but they actually mean themselves. They never mean anything else other than that. Right. And, it's getting to see through that as well. Although it's kind of a complex thing to have a discussion about that with the man in the pub as it were because his attention span is possibly not gonna be that long And I'm not trying to be patronizing, it's just true. I've tried to have more conversations like that. You've got to have a lot of the person on the other side needs to understand a few key concepts before we can get into this, like the meanings of these words. It's absolutely vital, really. Then we can get somewhere.
Paul? Paul? Yeah. Paul. Okay.
[02:58:58] Unknown:
I have an idea. I actually have a pretty good idea. Yeah. I'm kind of a visionary Okay. But not really. Yeah. Well, you wanna go through you wanna go over words like a different word a week Yeah. And spend 2 or 3 minutes actually defining the word and correcting people's understanding of it. Wouldn't that be awesome to do YouTube Shorts of commonly misunderstood words and their definitions, 2 to 3 minute, 4 minute shorts, and you can promote those on YouTube. Maybe they'll go viral, and every single one of them would have a link
[02:59:43] Unknown:
to Paul English live dot com. Good idea. Yeah. I think so. I've often I've off I think it's a good idea. It's a very good idea. And to keep them short, light, simple, and really directed a person, a boy or girl of average intelligence aged about 14. That's who Hilaire Baloch, directed his book at. He wrote a book called Economics for Helen, which is still although parts of it are inaccurate from a technical point of view, it's still a fantastic introduction to economics. And he wrote it about 1912 or something like that. And Helen, in his mind, was a girl of average intelligence to whom he would address these concepts of the economy and how it works and banking. And it's brilliant. It's absolutely brilliant. And we need those things as well. I think I need them Because although you can say, hey, here's an 800 page book. Okay. Fab. I'll give it a go. It doesn't sort of transmit that well to the huge numbers of people. But if we can get short things, like the word testament, like the word gentile, like the word Marxist, Oh, there's tons of them. I better start writing a list. I don't know why it's like racist. Racist would be a good one to cover. Although, I doubt if that would last very long on YouTube, would it?
It? No. Wouldn't last at all. I think you're right. Yeah. But but, yeah. Maybe maybe listeners could put in a word that we will discuss or at least not make the whole show about it, but just a little highlight in the show. The word of the week is, you know, apoplectic, which is what most of you gonna feel you've listened to this
[03:01:10] Unknown:
show. You know? And and if and if someone suggests a word and you actually pick that word to cover the following week, they win a box of toffees. Yeah.
[03:01:21] Unknown:
Toffees. Absolutely. Although toffees are very bad for your fillings, aren't they? Dennis was on last week. I think it was Dennis who was on Monday. He was on last week and I'm forgetting everything so fast. Dennis was on last week and he was saying, I don't know if he's a bit on air or to me maybe he did. We were talking about stuff and he said that his dad never gave him sweets, would never ever have sweets. That is toffees, those chewy things, nothing out of sugar. He was allowed chocolate, but nothing else. The reasoning being, and rightly so, that you crunch the stuff, the sugar goes straight to the teeth and just starts to smash them to bits. So toffees are actually a very bad choice. They're a great way to remove faulty fillings, aren't they? Which is why I kind of picked toffees. I do like toffee though. Right. But there we go. Yeah. Okay. Free bag of toffees or something else. I don't know. How about a free dictionary? It's exciting.
You know, so yeah.
[03:02:12] Unknown:
An order of fish and chips from Arthur Treacher's?
[03:02:15] Unknown:
Oh, stop it, Eli. I don't know what you mean. Stop it. That's not that's uncalled for. That's wrong. That is. It's it's dinner time here. Sorry. Hey. I'll tell you what. I'm gonna end it on a food note. So, Chris is still here, and I'll just end up so I'm meeting up with Chris tomorrow actually, aren't we Chris? We're meeting up somewhere. Yes. Can't tell you. Secret squirrel and all that. And it's actually for a discussion pretty much along the lines of what we've been talking about today with somebody else, somebody who's, who I'm hoping to get on as a guest in a few weeks time. And if I can get that sorted out, then I'll I'll let you know who it is, but I won't do it just yet. And, although we're going to discuss serious things, there's a problem, which is that we're going to a place that sells English cream teas.
And, have you ever had one of these, Eli or Paul? Have you ever had an English cream tea? Never heard of them. Never heard of them. Guess they have a lot of cream in them. Yeah. Well, I I I'm reasonably sure that if you had one, you wouldn't be able to have just one. They're just Really? Yeah. You wouldn't they're as good they're the on the level of sweets, they're as good as fish and chips. They're better. They're absolutely unbelievable things. So it's a scone or some people call it a scone. Right? What what, Paul? Go on. Ask me. Ask me. It's very interesting. Go on. What did you wanna say? My grandmother.
[03:03:34] Unknown:
My my grandma Middleton, cute little, like, 4 foot 6, 4 foot 8. She used to drink tea all the time, and we went to visit her in Penticton, British Columbia when I was a kid. Right. And I just got hooked on tea
[03:03:55] Unknown:
with heavy cream and, like, a couple of teaspoons of sugar in it. It was just absolutely the best thing in the world. Oh, god. Really sick. Is that is that something close? No. It's not. I feel ill about that. I just drink I'm very boring. I just drink tea with a bit of milk in it and no sugar. I can understand the appeal of what you've said. Now what I'm describing is something it comes from heaven or something. Chris will go on about it even more. It's quite a thing. So it's, you get clotted cream. So the cream is not as hard as butter but it's very thick. You have to you have to put a bit of elbow grease to push your knife through it. Okay. It's like a very condensed form of cream. I can't describe it any other way. And the scones Yes. Or a a scone is what some people call them. Right? I doubt because I'm from up north. It's a scone I call it from. And, it's it's a kind of well, it's a pastry sort of I can't describe it. It's just lovely and it's made with butter. And if they're still slightly warm, well, what you do is you have them cut in half and then you plaster lashings of cream on it. Right? And then on the top of that, you put strawberry jam and then you have a cup of tea or Earl Grey, if you're really pushing the boat out. Earl Grey is fantastic.
And then you put it in your mouth. And when you put it in your mouth, you don't want it to end. No. It's that good. And I got it I had an American friend. I was I was saying this earlier today, so I'm like a broken record. So an American friend when I was in London in the eighties, I made a good colleague. I ended up playing baseball in London. This is absolutely bizarre, right? But I did in the mid eighties because for something to do, I was working in this agency and everyone's playing softball, but I I didn't wanna play softball and I wanted to see if I could hit a baseball. So I ended up playing baseball for about 3 years, which was ridiculous because I've never played before. But we had a lot of fun. And the team had Japanese kids on it, and who couldn't speak a word of English. And I learned the only bit of Japanese I ever learned was which means throw strikes, and that's all it really meant. And, but a lot of Around. Yeah. That's it. Three strikes and there and, these there was a Japanese catcher and a Japanese pitcher. He was pretty good actually. And they obviously they've been playing since they were young, so they just knew. It's a bit like Americans playing soccer for the first time as an English kid. You just grow up with it. So it's all those sorts of things. But there's a guy called Joe from Brooklyn, who was of Italian descent. He was a fantastic cook, absolutely brilliant cook, absolutely brilliant cook, naturally just gifted at cooking, and he actually worked for the Leroux Brothers. Now they've got 5 star Michelin star restaurants at the time. They were kind of a big deal.
I should they're knocking on if they're still alive. I don't know. But they had these real Rolls Royce type restaurants in London. And he was the fish sauce chef. That's all he made. He made the sauce for fish, very high position apparently, in the kitchen. But he said to me he said, when I first came to England, he said, I, he got taken to an English tea rooms, which he'd never he didn't even know they existed. I said, oh, yeah. He said, I had we had a cream tea. I said, right. He said, I didn't leave for 3 hours. He said, I had 3. I said, oh my god, really? So he said, they're just unbelievable. So I think you'd like them lads. I really think I think you would like I'm banging on about it a bit. Chris was telling me that he used to drive all around Sussex stopping off at every tea room going and just feed up on on cream teas. Isn't that right, Chris? They had the best.
[03:07:27] Unknown:
Yeah.
[03:07:28] Unknown:
Well, what I did say, I had to know to them all. And when I had visitors, you know, we'd pop in to 1. But then as the years went on, they gradually closed down. You go along, I'll take you to a cream tea. Yeah. And you find it's turned into a Chinese takeaway or something. Yeah. And we were going to visit another one tomorrow. I found out last minute that was closed down, so we got a grab bag. I better come soon.
[03:08:03] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Eli, if you're ever over here again, we'll take we'll we'll ply you with cream teas. You probably won't leave. You won't get back to America for a few months. I'm telling you. You probably won't be able to get on the in the in the plane. You'll be that large. But, Right.
[03:08:16] Unknown:
You won't regret it. Honest. It's it's like a sweet tea in the south. Yeah. They put way too much sugar in their tea in the south. Too late. Too late. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, that's why they all have diabetes.
[03:08:28] Unknown:
Alright. My sons are quite cross. My sons are quite cross. I said, look, I'm I've gotta go out tomorrow to meet this troublemaker called Chris and a couple of other people. And they said, where are you going? So I told them and they said, we're gonna have a cream tea in their face. I went, that's not right, dad. I said, yeah. You're not coming and I'm off to have fun. It's So there we go. So Thou shalt not serve green tea
[03:08:50] Unknown:
to strangers.
[03:08:51] Unknown:
We will tomorrow. Listen, everyone. It's been brilliant today. We've we've overrun, but well, we not overrun. We've done the hour the post hour show here on Rumble, which has been absolutely fantastic. Really good.
[03:09:02] Unknown:
Very interesting free roaming conversation all over what with frequencies whole thing. Yeah. That was it. That was fascinating. Legal stuff. Right? Yeah. Yeah. That was fascinating. Legal stuff. Right? Yeah. Yeah. That
[03:09:07] Unknown:
was
[03:09:13] Unknown:
to the whole thing. Yeah. That was Yeah. That was fascinating. Legal stuff. Right?
[03:09:17] Unknown:
Okay. Amazing. We're gonna have to do it again real soon. Yeah. We will. And I need to get a second show in during the week something probably a little bit more like this and more I keep on banging on about it but it's getting closer because I'm my workload is go it's still going up but so at one point it's gonna actually
[03:09:33] Unknown:
disappear and enable some to do some more things which would be fantastic. Just remember guys, words are frequencies that make sense, or they're supposed to anyway.
[03:09:43] Unknown:
Alright. Yeah. Any last words, Chris? It's it's
[03:09:49] Unknown:
no. Just
[03:09:50] Unknown:
My brain's gone to sleep. I'll see you tomorrow for a green tea. Paul, any last words? No. He's gone. Paul's gone. He's already he's he's gone for a cream tea right now. He's been driven crazy. There you go. Eli, how would you like to sign off? What would you like to say? Any any any final closing words?
[03:10:10] Unknown:
Remember the expression dig it? Mhmm. What does that mean? What does that mean? Dig it means understand. Do you get it? Do you understand it? Do you comprehend it? There you go. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. Well, meanings change. Alright. Very good. They do. And meanings of words are yes.
[03:10:30] Unknown:
Under you can't underestimate the value of the correct definitions of words. Cannot underestimate the value. Well, we're gonna have you back on again really soon, Eli. You too and and Chris are okay. Fantastic. We'll have you on Gong soon, and we'll do more words, and we'll pick a few more out of the bag, and we'll go for it. So hopefully, not as big a gap as last time. I don't know when it was last time but it was a few a few months. So it's wonderful to have you back. Aunt Sally says thank you lads. Thank you aunt Sally for your comments and contribution and to everybody in the chat tonight. It's been lively and good. So we're gonna head on off now out to the west, the Wild West. We're gonna gonna go and, we'll be back next week at the same time. Thanks everyone for being here, and I'm gonna de plug us right now. So wonderful. See you all real soon. Bye for now, everyone. Bye bye.
Introduction and Show Start
Guest Introduction: Eli James
Discussion on the Internet and Tim Berners-Lee
Technical Difficulties and Music Interlude
Eli James Joins the Conversation
Tim Berners-Lee's Open Letter
Misunderstanding of Words and Contracts
The Concept of Testament as a Contract
Exclusivity of Contracts and Organized Religion
Word Deception and Redefinition
Music Break and Technical Adjustments
Return from Break and Sound Check
Discussion on Bureaucracy and Personal Experiences
Tim Berners-Lee's Vision and Modern Challenges
Misinterpretation of Biblical Words
The Canaanite Woman and Exclusivity of the Covenant
Historical Context of Israelite Tribes
Modern Implications of Historical Misunderstandings
Music Break: 'Eve of Destruction' by Barry McGuire
Post-Music Discussion and Listener Interaction
Listener Call-Ins and Further Discussion
Technical Issues and Return to Discussion
Historical Linguistics and Migration of Tribes
Cultural and Historical Connections
Final Thoughts and Wrap-Up