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Fladge Rants Live #1 Giza ................. (Apologies for Bad Audio)

Full Transcript (901 lines)

00:06:03 What are they doing?
00:06:08 Try that again.
00:06:10 Hi. I'm Gary.
00:06:11 Gary, what's the topic today?
00:06:14 Sweat shorts.
00:06:16 Pros and cons. I'll start as the best.
00:06:18 They're a little too revealing.
00:06:20 At their worst, they are way too revealing.
00:06:25 But the.
00:06:36 This is Gary.
00:06:37 And I don't know how you stumbled across this video, but
00:06:40 you should do something else.
00:06:42 I would recommend macrame.
00:06:44 I'm not qualified to tell you anything about anything.
00:06:49 But if you're willing to listen,
00:06:51 I want to talk about the Great Pyramid.
00:06:53 Geyser.
00:07:08 Human beings are remarkable.
00:07:11 We have the ability to adapt, change on a dime.
00:07:16 We're so good at thinking on our feet.
00:07:17 We can just
00:07:20 roll with the punches.
00:07:22 We've got talents and skills and abilities that just keep on improving our.
00:07:26 Each generation improves on the last.
00:07:29 It's really quite remarkable
00:07:32 and it seems
00:07:32 like we're progressing forward it
00:07:36 at a faster and faster clip.
00:07:38 It's it's impressive.
00:07:41 I'm sure aliens think
00:07:43 we're just the monkey people and that's fine, too.
00:07:47 What doesn't make sense to me is how
00:07:50 we lost the ability to fly to the moon.
00:07:53 But that's a rant for a different day.
00:07:56 The Great Pyramid of Giza is what I'm here to talk about.
00:07:59 And once again, I'm not an expert
00:08:02 and the experts can laugh at me and they can ridicule me.
00:08:06 But if my viewpoint doesn't stand up to scrutiny, it's not a viewpoint
00:08:09 worth holding.
00:08:11 So I'm willing to field any of that.
00:08:14 Now, what we think of when we think of Egypt or ancient Egypt,
00:08:18 the hieroglyphics and mummies and the pyramids.
00:08:21 What's missing from the Great Pyramid at Giza
00:08:26 is a mummy or any hieroglyphics,
00:08:29 we're told.
00:08:30 I was told in school anyway that the Great Pyramid of Giza
00:08:34 was built during the reign of Khufu.
00:08:38 So roughly 2020 to maybe even 23 years.
00:08:42 And it's 2.3 million blocks, about two and a half
00:08:46 tons of piece.
00:08:51 And that's remarkable.
00:08:54 It's impressive.
00:08:55 I'm not saying that they could not have done it,
00:08:58 but it's kind of ridiculous to say
00:09:00 that they could have done it in that short of a time.
00:09:03 But what tells us that it's not a burial tomb
00:09:06 for an ancient Egyptian pharaoh is the lack of the
00:09:12 the all the things that would make it a burial site
00:09:15 like all the other ancient Egyptian burial sites include hieroglyphics.
00:09:20 They're ornately decorated.
00:09:21 They've even got pictures of
00:09:24 various life
00:09:25 events and accomplishments of, said Pharaoh.
00:09:29 So that it was devoid of.
00:09:30 This tells us that it wasn't
00:09:34 only not built for Khufu for his burial,
00:09:39 but not built by that culture at all.
00:09:42 So I posit that
00:09:45 it was built not 4 to 5000 years ago,
00:09:48 but I bet if you travel through time.
00:09:52 So I've covered aliens and time travel so far,
00:09:55 you would find it was there
00:09:58 twice as long ago as that.
00:10:01 I've even heard 80,000 years.
00:10:03 And that's I don't I can't even speculate.
00:10:07 But I know it's older than 45,000 years.
00:10:13 I don't know about you,
00:10:14 but I would rather embrace
00:10:17 a cold, uncomfortable truth
00:10:20 than a warm, soft, fuzzy lie.
00:10:25 I can only speculate as to
00:10:27 why we're being told something that's demonstrably false.
00:10:31 This false narrative that the the great Pyramid of
00:10:34 Giza was built 4700 years ago
00:10:38 for Khufu
00:10:40 by the ancient Egyptians is ludicrous.
00:10:42 Nonsense.
00:10:45 People say people like to say that it was built
00:10:48 to perfectly honestly, I don't even follow that line of logic.
00:10:53 It look at it.
00:10:54 It looks like a pile of rubble, a giant pile of rubble.
00:10:58 But it's just it doesn't look perfect. It does.
00:11:00 You can see, you know, marks and scrapes on it.
00:11:04 What I think happened is the Egyptians,
00:11:06 as they were developing as a society,
00:11:10 just walked through the desert, found these things and decided to set up
00:11:13 Cairo right next to it.
00:11:15 And that makes sense.
00:11:17 They discovered it, but it was left over from a society,
00:11:22 a civilization that is part of this,
00:11:27 you know, the the continuous society that we've got going.
00:11:32 Now. I think the oldest society we have is China.
00:11:36 It's 8 to 10000 years old, continuous.
00:11:40 But we know
00:11:41 that there have been mass extinctions, extinction events, you know,
00:11:46 the one that killed the dinosaurs, the Younger Dryas event, these things,
00:11:51 life squeezed through a little tiny bottleneck.
00:11:54 And and perhaps that's why they won't tell us the truth about it.
00:11:58 But if you're not going to tell us
00:11:59 the truth about it and you're going to tell us a lie,
00:12:02 I would prefer to say we don't know.
00:12:06 I don't know.
00:12:07 I can only speculate.
00:12:08 I would love to know how they built it.
00:12:10 A lot of people say we couldn't recreate it.
00:12:13 I disagree. We're pretty impressive.
00:12:16 Like I was saying earlier, humans are good at doing stuff.
00:12:20 We would have to discover how they did it first.
00:12:23 And a few of the fringe alternative theories are
00:12:26 it was poured as a liquid or using harmonic resonance.
00:12:30 They were able to levitate the giant rocks.
00:12:35 And as far as I know, the Great Pyramid of Giza only has like
00:12:39 I think 480 ton blocks.
00:12:43 And those are right above the King's Chamber.
00:12:45 Of course,
00:12:46 they call it the King's Chamber because they call the sarcophagus inside.
00:12:50 Now that was carved and put in while
00:12:53 the thing was being built, because it's too big to fit through the entrances.
00:12:57 It's just
00:12:59 I think the history books belong
00:13:02 in the fiction section of the library,
00:13:06 and that's why I'm pissed We've been duped.
00:13:12 Your thoughts, Brady?
00:13:17 I agree completely.
00:13:19 Oh, that's fantastic.
00:13:22 We could figure out how they did it,
00:13:24 if it was part from a liquid core sample and if it's homologous of the mixtures.
00:13:30 Same throughout.
00:13:31 Then it was poured as a liquid into molds and that would be a faster way to do it.
00:13:37 But they say they can't carbon date it because there's no organic material,
00:13:40 which is true of rocks but not of concrete.
00:13:44 Concrete always ends up with, you know, human hair inside of it.
00:13:47 So there would be trace amounts of human hair if it was poured.
00:13:51 So that would be a very easy way to carbon date the pyramids.
00:13:57 I'm still speculating.
00:13:58 Okay. So let's go to fiction right now.
00:14:01 Men in Black, great movies.
00:14:04 The premises, as I'm sure you're aware,
00:14:08 the government or a clandestine
00:14:11 agency is trying to keep the truth from us because we freak out.
00:14:14 We absolutely lose our minds.
00:14:16 Well, if we found out that civilization rises and falls and a solar flare
00:14:22 or a comet could wipe us out, and whatever
00:14:26 we squeeze through, the bottleneck is all we get to start rebuilding again.
00:14:30 And if we found out that this happened many, many times in the past,
00:14:34 people would freak out thinking the end is near.
00:14:38 But what if that is the truth?
00:14:42 Like it could end today time and
00:14:46 I'd still rather know that than be told.
00:14:51 Everything's just fine. We're perfectly safe.
00:14:55 But if these
00:14:56 if there was an advanced technology
00:14:59 before us and the archeological evidence doesn't back it up, the fossil records
00:15:04 say I'm wrong, I'm crazy.
00:15:07 I, I even speculate.
00:15:10 What if I went to school, did become an Egyptologist, you know, went to,
00:15:14 whatever, years of school and did my,
00:15:18 you know, advanced degrees in Egyptology.
00:15:21 And I did know that the 99.9%
00:15:24 of the facts that that back up this
00:15:28 this narrative that is clearly false,
00:15:32 maybe I would actually jump on board
00:15:34 because if 99% of the the facts
00:15:38 demonstrate that the Great Pyramid of Giza was built during the reign of Khufu
00:15:44 for his burial site, even with the lack of hieroglyphics and mummy,
00:15:49 I you'd have to say, you know, 99% of it, that's that's enough.
00:15:53 That's the most likely theory.
00:15:58 I think we can rule it out.
00:16:00 So a theory that I can safely rule out
00:16:04 can't be the most likely theory cannot.
00:16:10 I don't think so.
00:16:12 There's this speculation that the Sphinx is way, way older.
00:16:16 I, I agree.
00:16:18 They're pointing at the water erosion
00:16:21 and that's that's legitimate.
00:16:25 This doesn't rain in Cairo.
00:16:27 Maybe once a year,
00:16:32 but that's my rant.
00:16:34 And the Great Pyramid at Giza,
00:16:44 which
00:16:50 that should open up Pandora's box, though, because now
00:16:54 we can look around other megalithic sites where
00:16:59 advanced archeology
00:17:01 advanced, let's say God architecture was used.
00:17:04 And then, oh, apparently that that society was lost.
00:17:09 Folks stumbled across this cool.
00:17:24 We we advance in advance in advance.
00:17:28 The two notable exceptions are
00:17:31 building these megalithic structures and flying to the moon.
00:17:37 How how exactly we lost the
00:17:49 we're not being told the truth,
00:17:52 even if the truth is we don't know.
00:17:59 We can go over some of those truths here.
00:18:02 Okay,
00:18:04 let's see what they say.
00:18:06 What do they say?
00:18:06 Here's some pyramids of Giza Facts. Mm.
00:18:11 Well, they're the only remaining wonder of the ancient world.
00:18:14 That's true. Yeah. Yeah. There.
00:18:17 I think the Great Wall of China is pretty magnificent.
00:18:20 Is that considered one of the.
00:18:21 I think that is considered one of the great wonders, isn't there.
00:18:23 There's one lie already we found right.
00:18:26 Okay.
00:18:27 This may be hard to read on the screen, but I'll figure that out next week.
00:18:30 Okay.
00:18:31 There are many other pyramids in Egypt.
00:18:33 Yes. As a matter of fact, there's an older one that is a burial site.
00:18:37 It's this one
00:18:39 and it's a tiered ziggurat.
00:18:43 And I think it's got six levels.
00:18:44 One, two, three, four, five, six.
00:18:47 But it's older than they say.
00:18:51 The great great pyramid is Khufu's, the servant.
00:18:54 This one on number four here, the first yeah, it's
00:18:57 loaded with hieroglyphics.
00:19:00 Says it was built around 2630 B.C..
00:19:04 Oh, see, the Great Pyramid was constructed.
00:19:07 Constructed? 25.
00:19:08 60. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
00:19:13 Says the pyramids of Giza have been looted by grave robbers.
00:19:15 And I had I have I heard an expert on a podcast earlier
00:19:19 this week or last week saying that there is not one.
00:19:23 There's never been one Pharaoh, one dead pharaoh, one grave,
00:19:26 one body found in any King Tut oh oh, in any government, any pyramid.
00:19:31 Actually, that's. Yes, yes, yes.
00:19:33 Because they weren't burial sites
00:19:35 that see that.
00:19:36 That's another lie then, because that's what they claim they are. Right.
00:19:38 Right, right.
00:19:40 Which we shouldn't really say lie misconception.
00:19:42 Right. I don't want to make anybody. Right.
00:19:44 All right.
00:19:44 But these are really smart people with huge degrees.
00:19:46 It costs a lot of money.
00:19:48 And. Okay, a popular opinion doesn't make it the truth.
00:19:53 However, we sound ludicrous saying that the experts are wrong.
00:19:58 We sound absolutely ridiculous. Why?
00:20:00 As soon as somebody says they're an expert,
00:20:01 then that means they don't have any more to learn.
00:20:03 And I really don't want to trust them too much.
00:20:04 Right? Right.
00:20:06 Oh, well, every question I answer, I get some more questions out of it.
00:20:10 Well, that's good then. That's good.
00:20:13 Expansion of your.
00:20:15 Yeah. Yeah. Concepts.
00:20:17 So it says thousands of people helped build the pyramids.
00:20:19 Discoveries made at the geyser made at the Giza Workers Village show
00:20:23 that a permanent workforce of about 20 to 40000 people helped build the pyramids.
00:20:28 Some people say they were slaves.
00:20:29 Some people say they were highly paid
00:20:30 engineers, architects, builders, stonemasons, laborers and more.
00:20:34 Yeah, lately they've been saying that they were well, well looked after people.
00:20:37 Not not slaves. That's. That's the latest.
00:20:41 Oh, I've got a
00:20:42 cockamamie scheme about the Star Trek teleporter.
00:20:46 If you could leave me up a stone
00:20:49 that actually solves the cutting and the placement pitch.
00:20:54 Sure.
00:20:54 So aliens or just alien technology?
00:20:57 No, no, no, I.
00:20:59 I see a lot of people say aliens.
00:21:02 I'm saying, well, our own our own advanced so advanced that it's alien to us.
00:21:06 Technology, right? I'm saying us.
00:21:09 Well well, see, there's there's there's us of them.
00:21:12 We know there's an us.
00:21:14 We've never seen evidence of them.
00:21:16 So I always go with us.
00:21:18 How about future us time travel back?
00:21:22 I mean, if time travel exist, then that means
00:21:25 we're everywhere or anywhere, any time I should say.
00:21:28 And I'm not just saying like Homo sapiens sapiens are incredible.
00:21:32 There have been two dozen species of humans on earth
00:21:36 that is part of archeology, mainstream archeology.
00:21:41 We know that.
00:21:43 And and we look like the smartest monkey.
00:21:46 But there have been humans on this planet.
00:21:51 Now they can see it for more
00:21:54 than the 300,000 years that we've been around modern, agreed.
00:21:59 One of the concepts or
00:22:02 possibilities that I think and this is no evidence,
00:22:05 I just think yeah, yeah, yeah that's right that the
00:22:08 candle the weight issue that the pyramids could have been built
00:22:11 completely or partially underwater.
00:22:13 Underwater?
00:22:13 Yeah. Yeah, I've heard that.
00:22:17 I don't know if their boat technology was good enough.
00:22:20 They're saying they were they took, they floated the blocks on, on the Nile
00:22:26 and I don't like, I don't like that idea, I don't like the underwater idea either.
00:22:30 But I, I don't like my high minded president's idea either.
00:22:33 So you're saying it's not denial?
00:22:37 No, it's just denial.
00:22:40 A good joke.
00:22:43 Okay.
00:22:43 So in other fact, 2.3 million blocks of stone you probably went over.
00:22:47 There were 3 million blocks of stone. Yeah.
00:22:49 So I averaged about two and a half tons, which isn't bad.
00:22:54 Phi Phi Phi.
00:22:55 5 million tons of limestone.
00:22:57 8000 tons of granite.
00:22:59 Yeah. Stone weighed 2280 tons. Limestone.
00:23:02 Not a problem.
00:23:02 You can chisel that with bronze tools, and they've even got arsenic in there.
00:23:06 Bronze in the Egypt area, which makes it a little harder.
00:23:10 And they do say you can see scrape marks.
00:23:12 Okay, Well, okay, imagine the scenario.
00:23:15 You are a budding Egyptian culture and you stumble upon the pyramids
00:23:20 and you want to claim it as your own.
00:23:23 First thing you do, carve some hieroglyphics in there.
00:23:25 Oh, sure. They didn't do it.
00:23:28 Do you know why?
00:23:29 Because bronze tools don't cut granite.
00:23:38 It's a demonstrable fact.
00:23:40 Oh, that's a good fish.
00:23:41 I like that one.
00:23:42 It's the Sphinx with the firmly behind that side.
00:23:44 Khufu Khufu's missing, the chief cornerstone.
00:23:48 It's flat on top.
00:23:51 It's really whatever.
00:23:54 Whatever you want.
00:23:55 The Greeks named it pyramids, which doesn't mean strong structure
00:23:58 with three sided
00:24:00 triglycerides, it means weak.
00:24:03 We ache. So.
00:24:05 So it's like the bread or pastries that the Greeks made with pulling it up.
00:24:09 That's what it's named after.
00:24:10 Sounds to me more like a pyramid.
00:24:14 Higher like
00:24:18 that to the center.
00:24:19 That kind of lines up with the also cockamamie theory
00:24:24 that they were power plants because fire in the center
00:24:28 that that describes an internal combustion engine like my car has
00:24:34 some power plant
00:24:38 possibly,
00:24:40 but it's got crystals running through it because granite
00:24:43 you know, I've got I've got
00:24:46 crystal countertops.
00:24:48 I just got my kitchen redone
00:24:49 and and I was like, wow, quartz crystals running through the rock.
00:24:53 That's there's the three of them. Okay.
00:24:56 Yeah.
00:25:00 Yeah.
00:25:01 It'd be the one missing.
00:25:02 The missing, the top. It's the first one.
00:25:05 The one that looks more blocky.
00:25:08 The one on our left.
00:25:09 No. Far right. Mm hmm.
00:25:12 Yeah. And it's the biggest.
00:25:14 And what are the camel's names?
00:25:15 And that's Geoffrey and Hank.
00:25:18 And Eleanor. Oh,
00:25:22 very ago.
00:25:23 Had a boy.
00:25:27 No, no, no, no, no.
00:25:29 Oh, I like your buttons.
00:25:31 That's cool.
00:25:38 Now, how about recreating
00:25:40 the pyramids ourselves?
00:25:43 They say we couldn't get the alignment right.
00:25:45 They couldn't chisel the perfect fit.
00:25:48 We could do all that.
00:25:49 We could lift this the heaviest stones we can.
00:25:53 We could.
00:25:55 Yeah, we could do all that.
00:25:58 But what we can't do is go back
00:26:02 5000 years in technology and do that.
00:26:05 We can't do that.
00:26:07 Going back, I think, is the difficult part of that.
00:26:09 Right?
00:26:10 Well, all it take is okay, how would this hypothetical
00:26:15 I don't want to kill them all off,
00:26:16 but how about all the engineers on earth get amnesia
00:26:21 and can't remember their craft?
00:26:23 Every engineer can't remember how to do engineering.
00:26:26 We wouldn't have to start from scratch.
00:26:28 So we got the books and the internet
00:26:31 and we could relearn.
00:26:35 But if there were no
00:26:38 engineers available, we could
00:26:43 get to where we are now.
00:26:45 And you mean just by chance again, you're saying or lost?
00:26:49 You lost me a little bit on that.
00:26:52 That's an interesting question.
00:26:53 What I'm saying, lost high technology society.
00:26:57 I don't mean exactly the way we did it with
00:27:04 with power lines and and internal combustion engines.
00:27:08 What if they just went on a different tangent
00:27:11 or started like looked at things completely differently
00:27:15 and we wouldn't recognize their technology even though it was more advanced
00:27:19 than ours?
00:27:21 I'm not I don't even know what an example of that would be.
00:27:24 But why would Alexander Graham Bell, when he invented the telephone,
00:27:28 say he didn't invent the telephone, he just rediscovered it.
00:27:32 Why did he say that?
00:27:33 Because his staff invented it.
00:27:35 That would happen? I think so.
00:27:37 A lot of really ideas and inventions.
00:27:39 Yeah.
00:27:40 They would take other people, right? Yeah.
00:27:43 Allegedly.
00:27:44 I've heard the real mastermind behind evolution was Darwin's assistant.
00:27:49 Please don't see me that
00:27:54 wasn't Edison, the thief to.
00:27:58 I think all the people that write history
00:28:00 may have a tendency to lean toward their right greatness.
00:28:03 Right.
00:28:04 And that's why I'm saying his is true or not, Right?
00:28:07 That's why I'm saying history books belong in the fiction section.
00:28:10 Maybe in fantasy.
00:28:12 Like I said, we lost Star Wars here.
00:28:16 We got eight myths of the pyramids.
00:28:18 Oh, okay.
00:28:19 The pyramids were built by slaves.
00:28:21 No, they were not.
00:28:23 This.
00:28:24 There's only one Great pyramid I've been talking about.
00:28:26 What a great pyramid.
00:28:29 They're debunking me already.
00:28:32 Well, what do they say about that?
00:28:35 The problem is, can you read that And your three or four?
00:28:38 Yeah,
00:28:39 read it.
00:28:42 I put it on so they can see it
00:28:45 for we don't want it there.
00:28:51 Queens.
00:28:53 Oh, my son shared a fun fact with me.
00:28:56 Do you know the 10th largest pyramid in the world is ten times larger than it?
00:29:02 Apparently it's a vast pro shop in Kentucky or something.
00:29:05 I could have the wrong, so I got to look up where it is, actually.
00:29:07 But it's. No, we're going with Kentucky.
00:29:09 I got to look at it. I'm going to hold you to that.
00:29:11 We'll verify that momentarily.
00:29:13 The stream is going to be choppy.
00:29:16 I got too many windows open.
00:29:17 Yeah, I still say fact checking the live and in person,
00:29:21 because if my ideas don't stand up to scrutiny,
00:29:26 I don't want to hold them
00:29:30 somewhere.
00:29:31 We have checked, but I don't know if we have any viewers to chat, but oh, we do.
00:29:35 We'll work that in there somewhere.
00:29:36 We could have imaginary chat. Yeah.
00:29:39 I'm going to take the call line.
00:29:40 Dave. Dave in Toledo on line six is asking,
00:29:45 why do you call yourself fladge?
00:29:47 Oh, and actually started out as a screen
00:29:51 name for leaderboards and arcade games.
00:29:55 I'm going to go to the video game arcade
00:30:00 and put in a new name that no one else used
00:30:03 and they may find it for three digit 66.
00:30:08 I had to change it from 80
00:30:11 because no one would play me without them too.
00:30:14 I guess I didn't do that and
00:30:20 really
00:30:22 and that's that's really, really how it happened.
00:30:24 And then Urban Dictionary came with what I had and defined it.
00:30:29 But the definition is hilarious.
00:30:32 No reason to ditch a 40 year old nickname.
00:30:37 Seriously, I was ten years old
00:30:39 and then after you made the nickname the internet came along,
00:30:42 I decided to make a couple of urban dictionary definitions of it, which
00:30:46 that's not really fair.
00:30:47 Fun could be fun, but it is fun.
00:30:49 You were you were by far first.
00:30:51 I was way ahead.
00:30:54 I just wanted a unique name.
00:30:55 Yeah.
00:30:57 And I ended up naming my dog Platzer
00:31:00 Yellow bcr.
00:31:04 Come to find out.
00:31:04 No one's used that as a
00:31:08 an email address, so I got my dog.
00:31:11 An email address is no and thought to use
00:31:14 a nonsense word,
00:31:16 but those are the only two real good nonsense words
00:31:18 that I can attribute solely to myself.
00:31:24 But if you can think of it, someone else has already done it.
00:31:27 So nothing's original?
00:31:29 Oh yeah, sure enough.
00:31:32 The 10th You said
00:31:35 10th largest family in the world.
00:31:37 It's beautiful.
00:31:40 Vast pro shop in Memphis, Tennessee.
00:31:45 How does the the the
00:31:48 the ziggurat near Mexico City compare to the Great Pyramid?
00:31:52 I think it's older
00:31:54 or claim to be older
00:31:59 because I want to go to Mexico City, too.
00:32:01 Yep, yep, yep. That's the one.
00:32:04 I don't know how to pronounce it
00:32:06 till to cook it,
00:32:09 but I think the footprints figure
00:32:12 how many how many acres,
00:32:15 because I know the the great pyramids.
00:32:17 13 city.
00:32:19 Oh, yeah.
00:32:20 That's way, way too big. Right.
00:32:23 Actual size of it of the moon is that I believe it is.
00:32:28 Let's click on that.
00:32:30 Okay.
00:32:30 Yeah.
00:32:33 218 somewhere between.
00:32:35 Oh that's that No or.
00:32:38 Yeah I was thinking
00:32:41 it was bigger not taller but, but a bigger footprint.
00:32:45 But that's probably not true either.
00:32:48 Oh I see.
00:32:48 It's got all sorts of things here.
00:32:51 Oh those are all the.
00:32:53 Yeah.
00:32:55 Is that the hotel in Dubai.
00:32:58 Well okay, see, we go extinct tomorrow.
00:33:02 How long before Dubai is just ruins?
00:33:06 A couple hundred years out of granite.
00:33:08 So right.
00:33:10 So the pyramids will outlast Dubai.
00:33:12 Dubai's presumably
00:33:15 incredible unless somebody or something destroys it.
00:33:19 Right. Nature won't, right?
00:33:22 Well, it will, but it'll take it, right?
00:33:25 I don't know how long it'll take. It will take a long time.
00:33:27 Love of my men in black theory.
00:33:29 Are we being kept from the scary secret?
00:33:31 Because it's terrifying to think that we're all going to die all of a sudden.
00:33:36 I think if anybody knew anything, they would risk everything to reveal it.
00:33:40 People can get more rich than their ends nowadays by telling things.
00:33:44 So I don't if we don't know, I don't.
00:33:46 That's naive.
00:33:47 That's naive of me, Right.
00:33:48 Are you counting on a whistleblower?
00:33:50 Exactly. Yeah.
00:33:51 I have faith in humanity that they would do that.
00:33:53 And that would love to have faith in humanity.
00:33:56 Well,
00:33:59 hell, yeah,
00:34:01 they sure did.
00:34:08 But I just think that
00:34:10 a lot of these megalithic structures were built from a different society.
00:34:14 I don't want to go
00:34:16 Atlantis on this, but it's a great example
00:34:20 of what quite possibly is this guy going to go on a rant?
00:34:24 He looks like a rancher.
00:34:26 So I don't know what the rules are for playing other people's podcast.
00:34:29 I think if we comment on it and change it, it's okay.
00:34:33 References.
00:34:34 Yeah.
00:34:36 Oh yeah.
00:34:37 Questionable.
00:34:38 The more sophisticated, conscious and aware.
00:34:42 Let's go back to.
00:34:44 Let's go back to yeah, to Yom Kippur.
00:34:48 Most Jews are taught
00:34:51 that Yom Kippur means the Day of Atonement.
00:34:54 But if you break the word apart,
00:34:58 it becomes a process.
00:35:01 Atonement really is about at one minute
00:35:08 it is the process of return.
00:35:11 And if we look at the Old Testament,
00:35:15 it is a it is an attempt
00:35:18 to move from selfishness, arrogance and pride,
00:35:23 which is the whole all the way around the pyramid.
00:35:27 And then you stretch that piece of string out.
00:35:29 It is exactly
00:35:32 the only thing more accurate
00:35:35 than the Great Pyramids measurements
00:35:38 is satellite imaging.
00:35:41 And that didn't that didn't happen until like the seventies or the eighties.
00:35:46 But let me give you a little background on the Greek.
00:35:51 So the Great Pyramid does not have four sides.
00:35:54 It has eight such.
00:35:55 I won't go into all the reasons, but they're very technical.
00:35:59 They're contained in a book like this.
00:36:02 This is a great book.
00:36:04 It's called Force Architect of the Universe,
00:36:08 and it has really good information on the Great Pyramid.
00:36:12 And I'll mention one other book that I highly recommend.
00:36:16 This was written by an English linguist named Pearl
00:36:20 Peter Lemercier, called The Great Pyramid Decoded.
00:36:25 So when we look at the Great Pyramids technical specs,
00:36:29 if you take Pyramid, let's just say, here's my phone,
00:36:33 let's just say this is square and you take a piece of string
00:36:37 and you ran it all the way around the pyramid,
00:36:40 and then you stretch that piece of string out.
00:36:43 It is exactly 1/10000000
00:36:46 the distance around the equator of the earth.
00:36:50 And then if you take the height, which is 481 feet,
00:36:55 the great
00:36:56 if you take a string and drop that from the missing capstone
00:37:00 to the base of the pyramid, it is exactly
00:37:04 1/10000000 of the distance from the North Pole to the center of the earth.
00:37:09 Now, furthermore,
00:37:12 the Great Pyramid has some really I mean, I could talk to you for hours
00:37:15 on the great Berryman's measurements, but let me give you a couple of them.
00:37:19 Well, I can.
00:37:20 When you said from the.
00:37:21 From the center of the earth, you mean to the core or do you mean
00:37:25 from the North Pole to the equator or to the calendar?
00:37:29 And some some.
00:37:31 Let's draw logical astrological things.
00:37:35 We're though too, because a lot of people, they say,
00:37:38 and I want your reaction to this. Yes.
00:37:40 If you put apply a bunch of numbers and formulas to anything,
00:37:43 eventually you'll come up with some facets that make sense.
00:37:46 Oh, goodness.
00:37:47 That is.
00:37:48 Is it possible that it's just a coincidence? Yep.
00:37:51 Oh, absolutely. There.
00:37:53 That's what the Great Pyramid of Giza is so enormous.
00:37:56 You could throw numbers at it all day,
00:37:59 pop up with the golden ratio of pi and all sorts.
00:38:02 Yeah, You just came up with my most rational explanation for it all.
00:38:05 At least we still don't know how they move the stones, but right.
00:38:08 Well, I think the precise missal was they right.
00:38:12 They had a pharaoh that was cocky.
00:38:15 He wanted to show everyone else in the world
00:38:16 how smart they were, how perfect they could design.
00:38:19 Like. Like, like Japan and Germany nowadays.
00:38:22 Right.
00:38:23 I, I think it's even I think all of that's true, but they just found it.
00:38:28 Yeah, I think they just walked up and said, hey, this is cool.
00:38:31 Let's say it's ours.
00:38:33 Why is the answer always the most boring?
00:38:35 Usually the most realistic answers, usually the.
00:38:38 Yeah. Common.
00:38:40 Well it's still doesn't answer they they just they found it and claimed it
00:38:44 as their own but that doesn't answer who built the pyramids.
00:38:50 But I do still say it was us.
00:38:51 Is that our primary question?
00:38:53 Who? Who built the Great Pyramid of Giza?
00:38:56 Well, the answer is I don't know why.
00:38:59 I don't know
00:39:02 what else.
00:39:03 Yeah, well, what is it for?
00:39:05 I guess, who and why
00:39:08 or how.
00:39:08 How how did they fill the pyramids?
00:39:11 And the answer once again, I don't know.
00:39:15 And that's what it should.
00:39:16 That's how it should be written in the history.
00:39:19 Are we allowed to say. I don't know.
00:39:21 Yeah that's, that's what you say until you have a consensus viewpoint.
00:39:25 And that's, that's what mainstream archeology is giving us
00:39:28 is built in 23 years,
00:39:32 5700 years ago, which is just ridicule.
00:39:36 It was about we don't know yet.
00:39:38 We don't know yet.
00:39:40 You can test all my theories.
00:39:42 I mean, it'd be really easy to test the core sample one,
00:39:46 but you do have to kind of ruin something.
00:39:48 But gosh, they've blown up those things with dynamite.
00:39:53 They've really wrecked the pyramids.
00:39:54 I don't think the ancient Egyptians could get in to them
00:39:59 because that box we're calling a
00:40:01 a a tomb or a sarcophagus, it's
00:40:08 I've heard it has the same dimensions that it would fit the
00:40:11 the Ark of the Covenant inside of it.
00:40:17 That doesn't make a lot of sense.
00:40:19 Small, big.
00:40:22 The Ark of the Covenant was how big it is.
00:40:24 I've only seen it in like, you know.
00:40:28 Right?
00:40:28 Yeah. No, they used the real one for that.
00:40:30 No, they, they do say that it's in Ethiopia and
00:40:35 the two guards that guard it all the time go blind every couple of years.
00:40:39 So they have to put new guards in place because apparently they're showing
00:40:44 signs of radiation sickness
00:40:50 from the.
00:40:51 Well. They don't know
00:40:52 that.
00:40:53 Well, from the from the is it made out of.
00:40:56 But when I say last week, it's made out of the silver, shiny liquid stuff.
00:41:01 Oh, Mercury, that's it.
00:41:03 I mean, maybe
00:41:05 maybe there's some of that in there and that's why they maybe
00:41:09 all I've got is speculation.
00:41:11 We're all exposed to radiation all the time.
00:41:14 We're radioactive.
00:41:17 That's a good sign,
00:41:20 though, that we should play for our right.
00:41:22 Sure. I'm radioactive.
00:41:26 We'll be right back as well.
00:41:27 So below.
00:52:09 Oh, I've got another couple of foil dancers
00:52:13 who call this bonus material.
00:52:18 Ever heard of
00:52:21 Panpsychism?
00:52:24 Panpsychism? Yeah. No.
00:52:26 Do I have to Google?
00:52:27 Are you going to tell us what it is and what is the ability
00:52:31 for information to
00:52:35 disperse throughout the ether?
00:52:38 Now, as crazy as it sounds, a couple of colleges, one in the UK,
00:52:43 one in the United States did the same maze experiment on mice.
00:52:48 We saw art and the
00:52:52 the one that was on a different continent.
00:52:54 We later the mice learned faster.
00:52:59 These were mice of the same species, same breed, same.
00:53:03 I think they were faster than the previous group of mice.
00:53:06 Correct. And they,
00:53:09 they were testing something else, but they managed to prove panpsychism.
00:53:13 So that's just a little
00:53:17 Rupert
00:53:18 Sheldrake If you look up Rupert Sheldrake you'll come up with Panpsychism
00:53:22 and he thinks it's a real thing and it sounds, sounds cockamamie, but man,
00:53:27 that the mice proof proof is compelling.
00:53:31 But I've got another foil hat concept for you and it's so neat theory.
00:53:34 Of course I heard it from Joe Rogan's podcast,
00:53:38 but there are it's got legs.
00:53:41 Stone Theory basically tells us that
00:53:46 life on this planet is has been directed
00:53:50 and controlled by fungus.
00:53:54 And the reason the initial ape brains
00:53:56 were able to expand to intelligent brains is psychedelics.
00:54:00 But the two compelling proofs of this,
00:54:03 which I just find so fascinating,
00:54:06 is they put in Tokyo,
00:54:09 they built a model of of Tokyo
00:54:13 and put slime mold in the middle of it
00:54:17 and oat a single oat in every transit
00:54:23 hub in the city.
00:54:25 And then after about a day or two of
00:54:29 of expanding
00:54:32 it, a circle straight, just straight expansion,
00:54:37 it developed at the after the second day and developed
00:54:41 a more efficient transit system
00:54:44 than the current transit system
00:54:47 that the engineers took decades to develop in Tokyo.
00:54:52 So slime mold smarter than humans.
00:54:57 The other the other thing is the
00:54:59 and they're the largest organism on planet earth, I think is is in the Pacific
00:55:02 Northwest and it's hundreds of acres and it's a single fungus network.
00:55:08 It looks like a neural network.
00:55:11 How do trees communicate chemically?
00:55:14 Right.
00:55:15 It says they use a network of fungi.
00:55:17 Network of fungi. See?
00:55:19 There you go.
00:55:19 All these.
00:55:20 I forgot where it is, but this whole forest isn't touching with roots.
00:55:24 It doesn't touch branches.
00:55:26 But when one tree needs something, the other one's know and they communicate
00:55:30 and you somehow give it more.
00:55:31 Like I always thought it was fascinating
00:55:33 that the fungus could kill a tree or let it live.
00:55:37 And sometimes it lets it live for 200 years
00:55:40 to strangle it out for a big drink of water.
00:55:44 Who has the patience to wait 200 years for a big,
00:55:49 tall drink of water fungus?
00:55:53 Does that know some women?
00:55:54 Right. Exactly.
00:56:00 So you
00:56:00 got anything more about the fungi you want to do our random number?
00:56:03 Yeah, I want to do the random number news, and I've got a piece of wisdom
00:56:07 for everybody.
00:56:08 All right, so here's our random number news.
00:56:11 What this is, is we're just going to simply pick a random number.
00:56:14 0 to 1000. Yep. Hit it.
00:56:16 516. I'm going to Google 516.
00:56:21 We're going to pick the not top news story.
00:56:24 Yeah. Um,
00:56:28 well, I don't know if that worked out very good.
00:56:31 No, it didn't.
00:56:34 Okay, let's pick another number.
00:56:36 All right.
00:56:39 I tested it about ten, 20 times.
00:56:41 It was.
00:56:41 It was great.
00:56:42 Nine of them were local news.
00:56:44 668. Ooh, that was a close one.
00:56:46 Yeah, it was.
00:56:48 I don't want to Google the other one. No,
00:56:52 today's word.
00:56:52 Well,
00:56:54 here we go.
00:56:55 Yeah, that's a story.
00:56:57 Oh. Oh.
00:56:59 So we start with the headline UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak
00:57:02 wife loses 6668 million in value.
00:57:08 Okay.
00:57:08 I don't know if we care about this or not.
00:57:09 Let's see if we care.
00:57:11 I doubt it.
00:57:12 Doubted.
00:57:14 Do I read it?
00:57:16 Are you able to read? Yeah.
00:57:17 British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Sunak and his wife,
00:57:22 Akshara Murthy's Consulting wealth declined in the last 12 months.
00:57:26 However, the couple with a net worth of 668 million
00:57:30 still remains immune from the cost of living crisis,
00:57:33 which remains dominant on the political agenda of the United Kingdom.
00:57:37 Power Couple is currently ranked two of the 75th position
00:57:41 in the Sunday Times Rich list, falling from 222nd position
00:57:45 last year because of the declining value of their stake in India's I.T.
00:57:49 giant Infosys, which has been founded by Sharda Murthy's
00:57:55 father and R Narayana murthy.
00:58:01 How about that?
00:58:03 It's I don't know if we care.
00:58:05 Right.
00:58:06 That was from the W I own news website.
00:58:10 I would assume in
00:58:15 the UK.
00:58:16 Okay. All right.
00:58:17 My, my, my advice is just healthy skepticism.
00:58:20 I don't care who tells you something.
00:58:22 If I tell you something, fact check it.
00:58:24 If if.
00:58:25 Like I said, I'm going to say it again.
00:58:28 If it doesn't stand up to scrutiny, it's not a viewpoint worth holding.
00:58:33 Yeah, we will eventually set our facts, but at the moment
00:58:35 we're just ranting. Yep,
00:58:39 668 million.
00:58:40 They lost and they're still okay.
00:58:43 Can you afford to lose 668?
00:58:45 Oh yeah, absolutely.
00:58:47 100 million. Sorry. 660 billion.
00:58:50 I recently read that less than 2% of our
00:58:55 the money in the world is actual physical money.
00:59:01 What does that mean?
00:59:02 It's all just thin air numbers.
00:59:04 Well, then she's telling us that Bezos
00:59:07 and Musk keep going back and forth to the person on the planet.
00:59:11 What? I don't know. The Rothschild fortune.
00:59:13 It's not the point that was in the quadrillions.
00:59:15 I think they learned they should stop advertising
00:59:17 and they diversified and created a bunch of shell companies or whatever.
00:59:21 So they were the wants to be listed as the richest all the time and have.
00:59:25 Right. Yeah.
00:59:26 Well yeah.
00:59:26 The Rothschild fortune was valued at, I think like four orders.
00:59:32 The banks put them in front locals greater.
00:59:35 There you go.
00:59:35 Then there is money on earth means they should be able to turn you.
00:59:38 They've got a thousand times more money than there is.
00:59:45 Good.
00:59:46 Is there?
00:59:48 Yeah.
00:59:48 I think it's a okay quote me on this.
00:59:52 I'm going to say 4 to $600 trillion.
00:59:58 4 to 600 trillion
00:59:59 is there in the world right now
01:00:03 in 2023
01:00:05 trillion of the total, total global money supply.
01:00:08 Oh, no kidding.
01:00:09 48.9 trillion, which is number one.
01:00:13 I have no idea what anyone means.
01:00:15 No, no.
01:00:17 Sure.
01:00:17 Why not let that one
01:00:21 kind of looks like the abbreviation
01:00:22 for Michigan.
01:00:28 Uh, each level one.
01:00:32 All right.
01:00:33 Have zero refers to as monetary base.
01:00:36 Zero includes all the money in circulation, includes
01:00:39 money banks held in reserve.
01:00:40 According to the Federal Reserve, there is about 2.3 trillion in circulation.
01:00:43 Oh, so that that goes with what you're saying.
01:00:45 There's a lot more money than there is the actual money, right?
01:00:48 Yes, exactly.
01:00:50 It sounds like actual recorded tangible money, 2.3 trillion.
01:00:53 Which is it all the way down to the
01:00:56 they said the total house
01:01:01 kind of drives me crazy when
01:01:04 when someone offers you cash and it's always a check.
01:01:07 It's always a check.
01:01:09 A cash prize is never a cash prize.
01:01:13 Cash means currency.
01:01:14 Federal Reserve Notes 2.1 21.27 trillion.
01:01:19 So ten times as much.
01:01:22 That would make sense because fractional lending.
01:01:24 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:01:26 If you give a bank a dollar, they get to lend out $10 immediately.
01:01:30 Instantly that, that $9 just Yeah.
01:01:33 Yeah.
01:01:35 And they get to keep doing it over and over.
01:01:41 So we got about 4 minutes to wrap up.
01:01:44 Do you want to thank everybody.
01:01:46 I've got a few people to thank.
01:01:47 I want to thank Rumble, want to thank Gary. I want to thank Health side.
01:01:50 I want to thank obese peer to Jeff Bauman for the theme song. Um,
01:01:57 my family, my God, my country, all that good stuff.
01:02:00 Gary, you want to thank anybody?
01:02:02 I want to unpack myself,
01:02:04 okay?
01:02:05 I don't want to think here either of them take that back
01:02:08 and then
01:02:11 leave a word to the weak.
01:02:12 Anything else but any last words before we say that?
01:02:15 Hopefully we'll have a hopefully we have a surprise guest on next week.
01:02:19 It's skepticism is my word of the week.
01:02:21 And as always, skepticism as above.
01:02:25 So below.