Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I don't know what it is lately, but my feeds
are really popping with all things Egypt and all things Antarctica,
and particularly what might behind the ice wall, which I
think you've you've seen the ice wall? What is behind
the ice wall?
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Wow, that's kind of the flatter theory model for the
edge of the Earth. And there is no wall for sae.
A wall says the ice would go down into the
ground and be secured. What's being confused is the ice shelf.
And there are many ice shelves, and we took our
sailboat right up to some of them. In fact, we
(00:45):
went in our dinghy to chip off some of the
blue ice for our cocktails.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
But is it fresh down there?
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (00:53):
Is it drinkable ice down there?
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (00:55):
It is, and it pops like popcorn when you mix
it with some mixers and the alcohol.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
Interesting, that seems like a whole that seems like a
whole bar plan for vegas, like actual Antarctica ice.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
And when it's real old, it gets blue and it
has little air bubbles in it, and that's what pops
when it melts.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
How old is that ice?
Speaker 3 (01:17):
Well, it'd be thousands, perhaps many thousands of years old.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
Do we have a way to track I know we
can do with carbon dating, you know, things like organic materials.
But how do you how do we have a way
to know how old water is?
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Well, sure they do ice core samples. There will They'll
drill down and pull out the ice core and you're
able to actually tell the dating of when a volcano
went off, for example, because it would throw soot over
that level of ice and then it freezes on top
of it. So you can actually use those ice cores
(01:53):
to monitor and tell time.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Oh wow, that's fascinating. Well, let me go back a
little bit. Let me go back to the beginning of
you and your travels, because I mean, the world knows
you as an adventurer. You've been doing this for about
thirty years now, and I imagine without like a sponsor
or something like that, traveling all around the world on
your own before YouTube and the Internet and all that
stuff exploded, was probably very expensive for you. But what
(02:19):
got you interested in? Kind of before we get to
you getting in a sailboat to Antarctica? What got you
started on this?
Speaker 3 (02:28):
Gosh, I guess it was just growing up in the
Midwest and not really being around mountains or oceans, and
always yearning for the great world out there. And so
when I finished college in Illinois in nineteen eighty eight,
I wanted to go to Europe. I wanted to see
all these places I had studied in history and art,
(02:48):
and that just kind of got my toes wet. And
I kept on traveling throughout my twenties and went to
Japan to teach English, and from there saved up and
all my trips are self financed. I did a three
year trip around the world, including the fourteen months I
lived in Japan.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Which place of all the seven continents do you most
like to go back to?
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (03:15):
Boy, well, there's so many places I still haven't gone.
In Africa. I've only been to Egypt in Africa, so
that's a whole tableau ready to paint. And I prefer
to go to new places rather than retrace my steps.
But I do find myself going back to Southeast Asia
quite a bit. I really like it there.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Okay, well let me say, let me ask it a
different way. What place should everybody go see if they
can only go one? You know, one or two advanced
travel around the world kind of places in their life,
what place, what must we see an experience?
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Well, I did a whole series of books on sacred
places around the world, North America and in Europe. And
for me, I'm utterly fascinated with the megalithics, and my
favorite are by far the Great Pyramids. There's nothing like
them in the world. And I know you're going to
talk about William Henry about the new discoveries below them,
(04:11):
and just makes that story all the more fascinating. But
in my top three, I would also say the Sacred
Valley in Peru for the highest concentration of megalists in
the world anywhere.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
I'd just talked to somebody that moved from Peru and
I was I was asking her about the Nasca lines today,
and what I said is, I said, our asked her,
I said, how different does it feel? Can you tell
there's something that's different going on there? And I want
to ask you the same question, because you talked about
the Pyramids, and I imagine that that has to light
(04:44):
up your DNA in some way, shape or form.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Yeah, it really does, especially when you have such mysteries
as to how they were built. All those megalists were
moved and shaped and put in place and such precision
form that they're still in tack today. Whereas in Peru
it's along the Ring of Fires, there's prone to a
lot of earthquakes. The newer constructions built by the ink
(05:11):
Ins and the Spanish, especially the Spanish who use mortar
and their stones just crumble during these big earthquakes. Yet
these megalists, which I would propose our pre inc in design,
are still standing strong.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
That's amazing. Now, one of the things that you have,
you have three books on on esoteric thinking, and I
need you to explain to me what that is a
little bit. I have read a little bit of your books.
I've dug into a couple of those. I've spent a
long time kind of researching you a little bit. But
can you explain to me what esoteric thinking is?
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Sure? Well, the word esoteric means subject matter that's known
to only a select view. So the rest of us,
the Plebeians, the general masses wouldn't know esoteric subjects. It's
information that's usually hoarded by the money to leade in
some cases.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
It's a that's a word. I love that, so I
want to get into that too. It seems like what
you discover is information that people are keeping to themselves
is a thing.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
It is a power thing, and that that's where writing
about them takes away the power, or at least gives
it back to the reader to say that, hey, there
really shouldn't be any secrets. Because I really believe we're
moving into the age of transparency rich where all this
information is now coming out the new Library of Alexandria,
and we have access to it through the Internet but
(06:46):
also through research and books and new new findings. So
it's just a great time to be a researcher and
a writer and m explorer to get into all these
subjects which before or hands hadn't really been available.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
What kind of things when you when you travel, do
you get new nuggets or nuggets of information you're like, oh, yeah,
that's something else they kept too. Does it does the
new information amplify or do you find that when you
travel you're learning less and less because you're like, yah,
already heard that.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
Oh no, I love to learn, and I'm always trying
to find new information. And that's how I write my
books is really just building upon what I learn and
new findings and talking to people and discovering new sites,
and also just taking time at some of these locations,
these sacred places, and just being quiet and listen to
(07:43):
what comes through, and oftentimes you hear a great story
just coming through your own mind telling you what it
is about this place that makes it special.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
The stuff that we hear about you've gotten to see
close up, like the the elongated skulls being it's like
they're not human, right, They've got to be something else.
Speaker 3 (08:06):
Well, they're human like, but they're not quite human. And indeed,
there are museums in Peru where you can go and
see them in Perracus, Peru, and we saw them in
the Sacred Valley of Peru, and their heads are just
so much larger than ours. It's thirty percent larger cranial capacity.
And that's measured with with bebes, remember when we had
(08:28):
bb guns.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
We are kids, yes, sir, I'm also from the Midwest,
of course.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
With the bebes in the cranial and determine the cranial
capacity based on how many bebes you can sit in.
And these elongated skulls have thirty percent larger cranial capacity
than the average human adult so there's something about them
that is human like but not quite human. For example,
they don't have the central suture crack down the middle
(08:55):
of the forehead that humans have, and their eye sockets
are also thirty percent larger as well as the final
connection from the head to the spine is larger too.
So bigger head, bigger body. Here we might have evidence
of the giants that once lived on earth.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
What do you say to people or doctors or researchers
that say, well, that might have just been a human
that got sick with something.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
Yeah, or deformation, and yes, yeah, thing is cranial deformation.
You can wrap thehead, you can put a board on it,
you can move it around. But what I would say
is you cannot add thirty percent larger cranial capacity by
just wrapping ahead. You'll still have the same cranial capacity.
If you do that, you can't have these elongated which,
(09:45):
by the way, rich have been found around the world,
in Europe, in Asia, in South America, even here in
North America.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
I want to before I forget, because I'm going to
get too deep into questions with you, I want to
make sure everybody knows that you have a lot of
books one of the newer ones being about us being
on a prison planet. And we've got all those links
at Coast to Coast, am And I want to ask
you about that book too, the prison Planet series, or
there's a couple of them for prison Planet, right.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
Well, it's the subtitle to beyond Esoteric prison Planet.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
Tell us a little bit about that for a second.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
Well, it's a presumption that we are in the prison
of our own making, or that it's been constructed for
us by other entities. This is where the word esoteric
comes in, known by a select few only. And so
we live, we work, we die by the sword, by
(10:41):
this system that we have been entrained into, little knowing
that we actually have great power of our mind, of
our bodies that has yet been untapped. And when you
know you have these abilities, you can escape the prison planet.
It's not to say that Earth is this lockdown, awful place. No,
(11:04):
it's a beautiful gem of a planet. It's the constructs
that have been built around us that are the prison
planets that we all, i think even subconsciously seek to
escape from.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
Is this kind of what you talk about when you
talk about the new fascism.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
Well, that's correct and the New Fascism section In Beyond Us,
Terek gets into the money masters and basically the controllers
of the financial system, as well as how they've infiltrated
governments and gotten into our intelligence corporations and are the
(11:43):
enforcement arm for basically the globalists is the CIA and
other alphabet agencies. And we're starting to see how deep
those tentacles go now with Doge and all the other
files being released, these JFK files being really is really
telling that they've been up to a lot of nefarious
(12:05):
activities for a long time. You know.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
It seems like whatever we do on the show, it
doesn't matter where I go, somebody's got to take into
that deep state or that thing. And I was just
thinking when you were talking about the prison plant a second,
I wonder if he watches the news differently and can
see the control trying to be laid down on people.
Are the message of like, here's what we want you
(12:27):
to know, and can you see through that? A lot
of times ago, here's what they're setting up for.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
It's funny you should bring that up because I really
don't watch TV, and I really don't watch much media
at all. I'm more of a producer of content than
a consumer of content. But every time I do rich
it's just excruciatingly painful to try to sit through a
news broadcast, kind of like that meme of Leam Hotter
DiCaprio with a beer in his hand and pointing it
(12:55):
to the TV's like, well, right there, there's mine control.
Right there. They're faking it.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
Right, yes, wondered every time you've got to be triggered
being like, oh here we go, here it is one
more time. I wonder if we're waking up to that.
Do you feel like we are? Do you feel like
the Internet has opened that up a little bit?
Speaker 1 (13:11):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (13:11):
Definitely. The Internet is a complete game changer. This is
the new Gutenberg Press, this is the new Library of Alexandria,
where we have so much information and no wonder that
there has been so much attempt to center it. Even
before the Internet became available. One of the Rockefellers, I
(13:33):
think with Lawrence Rockefeller, said we should have never allowed
the Internet to open up to the people. It's just
giving them way too much access to this kind of information,
this esoteric information. And now the cats out of the bag,
you can't put it back in, and we are living
in a world with so much information at our fingertips.
(13:55):
It's the old saying is we're drowning in information, but
we're starved for now. The reas good diamond, and the
rut is to find that knowledge in all this information, and.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
How do you delineate what is uh, you know, conspiracy
theory or myth and what seems like it rings like
there's a lot of truth to it as we go
down these uh, these mystical rabbit holes, these esoteric rabbit holes.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Oh yeah, now with AI coming online with with these images,
but people send them to me all the time, literally
what they just found an antarctica and they still have
that element that a little cartoony, so you can still tell.
But that's going to change pretty soon. So it's making
it harder as a researcher to discern what is real
(14:43):
and what is just AI generated And uh, it's it's
kind of easy to fall for some of these because
it's things that we all sense is happening down there.
So for example, videos of people photographers and uh wearing
their antarctica suits finding some kind of ancient civilization under
(15:04):
the ice, and it's just kind of still a little
cartooning my whole thing is. If it hasn't been recorded prior,
it probably is a deep take.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
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