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August 9, 2024 53 mins

The Wizard thinks negative? Not a chance…...Listen to this!!

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM paranormal
podcast network. Now get ready for us Strange Things with
Joshua P.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Warre.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
Welcome to our podcast. Please be aware the thoughts and
opinions expressed by the host are their thoughts and opinions
only and do not reflect those of iHeartMedia, iHeartRadio, Coast
to Coast AM, employees of Premiere Networks, or their sponsors
and associates. We would like to encourage you to do

(00:32):
your own research and discover the subject matter for yourself.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Ready will be amazed by the wizard of weird. This
is Strange Women. Josh will be Warren. I am Joshua
would be Warren, and each week on this show, I'll
be bringing you brand new mind blowing content, news, exercises,
and weird experiments you can do at home, and a

(01:17):
lot more on this edition of the show. You are
living in a sea of this hidden spy tech. And
maybe you know about this already, but this was something
new to me, brand new to me, and it's it's
actually quite cool but also kind of spooky, as is

(01:41):
the case with all new powerful technologies. And before I
get directly into it, I want to maybe sort of
compare it to some other things that I have seen
in my life. You know, I love that movie Muppet
Christmas Carol, and I think at some point Ebenezer Scrooge says,

(02:03):
if you want to know the measure of a man,
you simply count as friends. And as a matter of fact,
Charles Darwin said something similar, a man's friendships are one
of the best measures of his worth. Well, in that case, I,
mister Joshua P. Warren, am a very wealthy man because
I have a lot of friends all over the world,

(02:23):
despite the fact that I can actually be quite a
grumpy and pessimistic person sometimes. And I know you may
find that hard to believe, since I'm always talking about
being positive and such, but that is why, you know,
I've said that you're not likely to solve a problem
unless you personally have it, And so I've worked hard
throughout my life to try to transform negative thinking into

(02:45):
positive thinking and faith. And that's why I started experimenting,
you know, so many years ago with self help and
self transfermation and manifestation literature because I wanted to shift
my way of thinking about the world. And then when
something actually worked for me, I was so excited that
I wanted to share it with others. And I think

(03:05):
that has been a big part of my destiny, you know,
creating these products. It's been a good business because people
thank me and they say what works for me also
works for them. It's all good karma. And as they say,
a rising tide raises all boats. So I'm very, very
fortunate to have so much support around the world. And

(03:27):
my point is that when you have a lot of friends,
sometimes you get to do special things. You get some
shall I say, like backstage VIP tours, that kind of stuff,
you know, behind the scenes, and sometimes it might just
be a concert or something like that, but occasionally I

(03:50):
get invited to privately go to some technical labs that
are off limits to most people. And many years ago
I was allowed to take a very special personal VIP
tour of a top secret facility here in the US

(04:12):
that creates various tools for the Pentagon, And of course
I had to get security clearance and all that, and
it was one of the most amazing days of my life.
I got to tour something, you know, I can't be
too specific, but you know in the James Bond movies
when they take him into the lab with I guess
it's Q, and they're showing him all the new gadgets,

(04:36):
and they're just people sitting around in cubicles making all
of this, all these amazing little inventions for him. That's
exactly what it reminded me of. And so as I
was walking around in this facility, at one point, one
of the head honchos there he took me into a

(04:58):
room where they test things, sort of like they would
be used in a field. We had obstacles and you know,
all kinds of odd stuff like that, and he took
out this device that was about the size of a
deck of cards and told me that that little box
was worth more than my house. And it had just

(05:22):
been created at that time. And essentially, this was such
a powerful type of thermal imaging unit that it could
in many cases literally see through walls. So that is
to say, if you had a person in a house
somewhere and you had this little box, you would be

(05:42):
able to look at the screen and you'd be able
to see where the person was in the house. It
was sensitive enough to pick up the heat signature through
the wall, and it was just mind boggling. And since
then I've always been very interested in things that allow
high height tech offices of the government to look inside

(06:04):
your house, you know, and I know that this is
especially handy when you have some type of a hostage situation.
And in fact, I know years ago that I started
hearing that the government was using the Wi Fi signal
inside of a house in order to be able to
see what's inside the house and see the people who

(06:26):
are moving around. And that makes perfect sense because your
Wi Fi signal, I guess to my understanding, it's kind
of like a radar signal. So you know, when you
have this this Wi Fi signal broadcasting throughout your house,
as it sends that signal out, anything that blocks it

(06:48):
is going to show up if you have the right
kind of tools. Because in it with with radar, you know,
you have a transmitter that sends out a pulse of
electromagnetic radio waves, and then the target there is an
object in the path of the waves that can reflect
them back to the radar, similar to an echo. And
then the radar has this thing called a receiver that

(07:10):
captures the reflected energy and measures how long it took
to return after the transmission. So I think what they're
doing with Wi Fi as something similar to that. In fact,
I'm looking at an article right now that was published
last year in Popular Mechanics, and this article is called
Scientists can now use Wi Fi to see through people's walls,

(07:31):
and the author here, Tim Newcomb, says researchers at Carnegie
Mellon University can map human bodies through walls using Wi Fi.
He says, it isn't immediately clear how using a Wi
Fi signal to track human movement through walls improves personal security,
but that's what they're claiming. And so I'm familiar with

(07:54):
all this kind of stuff, the idea that there has
been technology around for a long time that will allow
you to essentially see what's happening behind private walls. And
you might say, well, but that's okay, because you know
there has to be a warrant issued and that kind

(08:15):
of thing. But the problem is technology always falls in
the wrong hands because criminals they can get access to
the same stuff that the good guys have. We know
that this happens all the time, and so this next
thing is something that Okay, the point that I'm making here,
the big topic that I am going to dig into,

(08:38):
is something that not only I'd never heard of before,
but it also kind of makes me think about some
other metaphysical issues that might give us deeper insight into
the nature of reality itself. So this is not easy
for me to talk about in the podcast. I'm going
to do my best. There's this YouTube channel called Tom Scott.

(09:04):
I don't know who Tom Scott is, but he seems
to be like a technical adventurer. He's got a lot
of subscribers, six point four million people subscribed, and he
has these well produced videos about technology, and one of
them is called the Hidden Background Noise that Can Catch Criminals.

(09:24):
And it may have been Mobius who first sent this
to me, and so he explained that obviously it is
easy for you to forget as you live your day
to day life in this day and age, that we
are surrounded by electrical wires. And I'm not just talking

(09:47):
about the wires in your walls and in your devices.
I mean the big ones, the big wires that are
all overhead, running throughout every city. You kind of tune
them out because they're so ubiquitous, you know, the huge
transformers and the huge power lines. Sometimes they're underground, most

(10:09):
of the time, they're above ground, and you are wandering
around every day in this huge three dimensional field of
electromagnetism that is produced by all these wires. So you
can almost think of it as as if you are

(10:29):
a fish and you are walking through or swimming through
the water, and you don't even realize that you're in
the water because the water is invisible. It's just like
a medium that's all around you. You don't even think
about it. But in this case, instead of it being
a fish with water, it's you wandering through this sea,

(10:50):
this three dimensional sea of electro magnetic waves that are
produced by the current running through these wires. And here
in the US, a typical AC line produces sixty herts.
That means every second it pulses sixty times, and I

(11:10):
think in parts of Europe it's fifty herts. It varies
a little bit, but these lines are supposed to have
sort of a consistent rate. Well, when we come back
from this break, I'm going to tell you how that
scientists are now using information coming from those wires that's
getting picked up on every recording that you make that

(11:32):
can be used to determine where you were and at
what time the recording was made. And this has a
lot of implications for anything you put on the Internet,
and also, like I say, I think it ties some
into metaphysics as well. Before we hit this brike, you
know I have at least one more big announcement I

(11:55):
am going to be making this year, and that's twenty
twenty four. And so if you want to be the
first to know about it, go to Joshua P. Warren
dot com. Sign up for my free E newsletter right
there on the homepage. Takes you two seconds. Put your
email address in there, hit the submit button, and you
will receive an automated email from me with all kinds

(12:17):
of links to free online digital goodies, a good luck charm,
something to help you start making more money. I call
it a money miracle secret. All that and more go
to Joshuapwarren dot com. There's no period after the p
be sure to check out the Curiosity shop there, buy
something cool, support the show, and then on the homepage

(12:39):
that's where you'll find the E newsletter subscription. I'm Joshua
pe Ware and you're listening to strange things on the
iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast am Paranormal podcast Network, and
I will be right back.

Speaker 4 (12:57):
Hey folks, we need your music. Hey, it's producer Tom
at Coast to Coast AM and every first Sunday of
the month we play music from emerging artists just like you.
If you're a musician or a singer and have recorded
music you'd like to submit, it's very easy. Just go
to Coast tocoastam dot com, click the emerging Artist banner
in the carousel, follow the instructions and we just might

(13:17):
play your music on the air. Go now to Coast
tocoastam dot com to send us your recording. That's Coast
to coastam dot com.

Speaker 5 (13:30):
Hey, it's the producer Tom, and you're right where you
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Coast AM, aaronormal podcast network.

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Speaker 2 (13:58):
Of your mobile app.

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All the info is waiting for you now at Coast
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dot com.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast a m para normal podcast network. I am
your host, the Wizard of Weird, Joshua P. Warren, beaming
into your worm whole brain from my studio in Sin City,
Las Vegas, Nevada, where every day has golden and every

(14:55):
night is silver. I gietato zuume. That's the magic. Use
it whenever you need a little extra zing in your day.
And also, have you seen the new electroum wand yet
if not, check this thing out. It is amazing. Electrom
is spelled e L e c t r um. Go

(15:18):
to electroumshop dot com electroumshop dot com. It's incredible to
think about how much power there is all around us
that is essentially invisible, or at least it is to humans.
We just tune things out. So going back to this topic,
that's so fascinating. You right now have all of these

(15:42):
electrical wires around you producing these signals that you don't
even think about. And when you make a recording, whether
it's as long as there is some audio there at least,
and actually I'm not certain, I don't I'm not going
to pretend I know all the ins and outs of this.
It may be possible that you could also detect something

(16:04):
just with video without audio, but especially if you have audio.
If you release Let's say you record some little video
of yourself at your house and you don't want anybody
to know where you live, and then you put this
video out there on the internet, it is possible now
that someone can figure out where you are and even

(16:27):
what time you recorded this, because there is this barely
detectable little hum on that recording that has its own
sort of fingerprint. And that is because that all of
these wires around you. Yes, they may be posting at

(16:52):
sixty hertz or fifty hertz as a general guideline, but
it's not one hundred percent consistent. There are all these little,
tiny shifts, and so that means that every single second
there is a unique little hum that can be detected

(17:15):
in the background that can be matched up with what
that power line was producing at that time. This is
called technically a main's hum. And in fact, just I
don't want to get too technical here, but it says
here this is a sound associated with alternating current, which

(17:38):
is twice the frequency of the mains electricity. Because of
the presence of mainz current and MAINZ powered audio equipment,
as well as ubiquitous AC electromagnetic fields from nearby appliances
and wiring, this electrical noise can get into audio systems
and it is heard as main's hums from their speakers.

(18:02):
Main's hum may also be heard coming from powerful electric
grid electric power grid equipment such as utility transformers. This
says onboard aircraft or spacecraft. The frequency heard is often
higher pitched due to the use of four hundred hertz

(18:23):
AC power. Okay, so there is this unique sound that
can be detected to determine where you were and at
what time something was recorded if you have a database

(18:43):
that you can compare it with. And so the point
that this guy was making in this video called the
hidden background noise that can catch criminals, is that he
went out and interviewed these forensic scientists and they say
they've already used this in court cases to determine the
accurate time when something was recorded. They can go back

(19:07):
and they can access seven eighty nine ten years of
data from a power company that pretty much produces what
looks like a chart or a graph that shows this
specific this specific pattern. It kind of reminds you of
what a cellscope line looks like. And then you take
the recording that you get from the audio of say

(19:30):
the video clip, and you put both of them into
a computer, and the computer analyzes it and finds the
spot where they match up. And by finding the spot,
I mean, so you already have to have I guess,
some kind of an idea where the location may be,
to know where to go to the power company to
get the data to compare. That can be a pretty
broad area. But as long as you have access to

(19:53):
that power data, then you can take that and you
can plug it into a computer along with the recording,
and boom, it can find that water mark and say,
this is exactly the electrical signal that was coming from
the wiring at this location at this time when this
recording was made. Therefore, this is when and where it happened.
And know exactly where you live and exactly what time

(20:18):
you recorded whatever you recorded. And again, I mean, it's
like they're claiming that this is still sort of in
its infancy that there's still a lot of work to
be done, but now that AI is being introduced, work
is being achieved at a much much faster rate. I
watched a documentary on Netflix just last night, and they

(20:43):
had taken a book that a man wrote, the guy
I think He's dead now. They took a book that
he wrote, and then they took a video that he
did one time, which was an on camera interview, and
they just used AI to change the way his lips

(21:03):
moved and the way his words were put together, so
that it looks like he's sitting there reading from his
book and telling you, speaking the words from his mouth
that he wrote in the book. What that means is
that any book that I've ever written in my entire life,
for example, someone could now take and combine that with
a video of me sitting there on camera talking about anything.

(21:25):
You can imagine, you know, my secret recipe for lasagna,
and match my face and my lips up with the
AI voice, so that now instead of me talking about lasagna,
I'm sitting there reading my book to you, or I
am stating what I wrote in the book on camera.

(21:46):
This is we're very very quickly moving this direction. So
AI what's going to happen when we start applying AI
to this and see that anything you put on the
Internet has the potential now to reveal your location and
the time. And what does that say about your privacy?

(22:08):
Because again you might say, well, hey, you have nothing
to hide, right, you know, why do you care if
the government does this? Fine? But you know what happens
when the people who want to rob you do this?
They tested this in this video. This guy said, I
want to test this out. He found a bunch of
his friends who are content creators and producers of various kind.

(22:33):
They sent him clips, various random clips from them doing
some YouTube video. He sends it to one of these
forensic experts who did the comparison turn right around and
was able to tell him every single time exactly when
and where that was recorded and even detect an edit

(22:55):
that was in there. And you know this type Main's
hum phenomenon. I mean, it's been around, It's been known forever.
In fact, I was reading here. John Lennon had some
issues in the late seventies. Of course, one of the
Beatles there, John Lennon recorded some demo songs at his

(23:16):
and Yoko Ono's Dakota apartment, and they did not get
any official release at the time, and they weren't even
properly being recorded. And in the mid nineteen nineties, as
a part of the Beatles anthology series Paul McCartney George Harrison,
a Ringo star, they regrouped to record initially incidental incidental

(23:39):
music for the albums, but decided to rework some of
John Lennon's demos instead, and they had problems with the
HUM because he was not using appropriate equipment and they
had to go in and get some new technology to
kind of go in and manage that HUM. So this
is something that's been around since, I guess to some
degree the beginning of recording systems. But the ability now

(24:03):
to go in and forensically identify this, I mean, that's
pretty astounding, really, And where is this leading? Where are
we going to be in ten years? Is it going
to be possible to do anything without giving away your identity?
And in ways that you can't even think about. It

(24:25):
almost seems like a new form of DNA that you
may be putting all these recordings out there right now,
and just because you wipe the data off of it,
you say, well, nobody's ever going to be able to
figure out where I live or whatever. But that's like
people who committed murders years ago and thought they were
going to get away with it because they didn't know
they were leaving DNA behind, and now they're getting caught.

(24:51):
So it's kind of like a new form of DNA.
And it reminds me of that quote from the Bible.
I guess it was Luke, Chapter eight, verse seventeen. Jesus says,
for nothing is secret that shall not be made manifest,
neither anything hid that shall not be known and come abroad.

(25:11):
In other words, nothing is hidden, nor anything secret that
will not be known and come to light. It's like
everything is being recorded and we don't even know how
embarrassing is this going to be. If we find out
that every moment of our lives are being put into
some form of a gigantic recording device, this is what

(25:34):
reality is. We're talking about something similar to the acautic record.
And it reminds me there was some comedian who I forget,
who said something like, maybe if people commit a murder
and get away with it, that should be fine. It
might have been Jack Handy. That sounds like a deep

(25:54):
thought Deep thought by Jack Handy. If you commit a
murder and get away with it, I think that should
be okay as well. No, when we come back, though,
I'm going to tell you what I think this may
be showing us about something like the Acotic Record. And then,
way do you hear what happened to me the other
day on the Internet? I am Joshua P. Warren, and

(26:14):
you're listening to strange things on the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. And I will be
back after these important messages.

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(27:25):
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Speaker 2 (28:01):
Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast AM Paranormal podcast Network. I'm your host, Joshua
Pete Warren, and this is the show where the unusual
becomes usual. There are people of all ages who listen

(28:23):
to this show, and I realize, I mean, you could
be in your twenties and you were born in the
year two thousand. You know, if you're born in two
thousand and one or born in two thousand and two,
I mean a grown person. You can drive, you can
drink alcohol, you can buy guns. You mean like you

(28:44):
can do everything. And to you, it probably sounds kind
of old when you think of somebody being born in
the nineteen hundreds. I was born in nineteen seventy six,
so to me, even the eighteen hundreds don't sound like

(29:05):
that long ago to me. I mean, in the eighteen
hundreds they discovered dinosaur bones, like scientist acknowledge that dinosaur
bones were real. Before then, they didn't have any knowledge
of dinosaurs. Supposedly they discovered the mountain gorilla in the
eighteen hundreds. Technology is changing at an amazing rate. As

(29:28):
a matter of fact, the oldest woman alive, oldest person alive,
Maria branyas Morera of Spain. She's one hundred and seventeen
and she was born in nineteen o seven. That's not
too long after the eighteen hundreds. One hundred years ago,
there were people who were still riding horses in much

(29:51):
of this country. Getting old is so so annoying, isn't it?
You know It's like I, uh, you know, I'll be
forty eight this year, and so, you know, you start
having old age issues, like, for example, a lot of
times I'll go to a bar or restaurant and my

(30:12):
tailbone will hurt sitting on these wooden chairs, and so
what don't we always do? Eventually you get out your phone,
You're like, well, what's wrong with me? Go get medical advice?
Why does my tailbone hurt? And Ai pops up and
says telebone pain can have many causes, including suitting for
long periods of time, sitting on hard or narrow surfaces,

(30:33):
poor posture, repetitive motion, and age.

Speaker 4 (30:41):
Age.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
Well, what do I do about that one? That's why
that you should You really should not go online sometimes
and look up problems, because what's my problem. It'll scare
you to death. I asked some medical question one time.
I'm on the internet, and it said, if you go

(31:04):
to the bathroom and do a number two and it stinks,
you may have a serious problem. And I said, oh, no,
it does stink when I do that. I'm not even
joking here. Here's what I'm getting at. Though. Technology is

(31:26):
advancing at an insane, insane speed, and therefore, I mean,
I know it's easy for us to say, well, you know,
you don't need all this privacy. You should be an
open book. Let's just put cameras everywhere. Let's put all
your information into computers that everybody can access. Let's show

(31:50):
everybody where you are at all time. And a lot
of people are do that anyway. They get online and
they post, you know, here's here I am right now here,
I'm live streaming. Look at where I am. I'm at home,
and I feel like that, you know, people are voluntarily
giving away too much privacy. It's kind of like the
genie that you can't put back in the bottle. But

(32:12):
what if it is futile? What if there actually is
something similar to an acutionic record, that every single thing
you do is somehow being recorded or as recordable. And
because you are immortal and you're actually I mean maybe
like you're going to die in this life, but your
spirit will live on. I believe at some point you're

(32:33):
gonna have to look back and account for all of
the things that you did that you didn't like when
you didn't know anybody was watching. Oh, there was a
camera there. So it also makes me wonder if this
has a connection to ghostly phenomenon. But it's part of
this matrix, part of this recording process, that sometimes you

(32:59):
are being recorded in the environment in ways that you
don't understand, and then other people are able to see
that recording or experience that recording. I've often thought it
might be similar to r FI D chips. You know,
there are some RFI D chips that have a little

(33:20):
battery and they send out a signal, but a lot
of them are passive. They don't have any signal whatsoever.
They just sit there like a little dead coil of
wire with a chip. Like let's say you go to
a store and you're you find some pair of pants
or whatever that you're thinking about stealing, and so it's

(33:42):
got a little tag on it, which is a passive
RFID chip, and the tag's not doing anything, but as
you walk out the door, it gets hit with this
electromagnetic beam that suddenly wakes it up, and then it
starts communicating a signal back and the alarm goes off.
What if everything that you do is creating some type

(34:03):
of an impression on the environment, even if it's a
passive one. And then sometimes a certain person comes along
and shines his or her consciousness up on that space
by simply observing it and thinking about it, and it
wakes up those little passive memories and they activate, and

(34:24):
it's and for a moment, they come back and you
get to see what was recorded there. You get to
see the ghost, the imprint, the residual there. Look, it's
the show's called Strange Things. I'm allowed to make leaps
like this and take you down these rabbit holes. And

(34:45):
also I think that you know, we have to we
honestly do have to be concerned about what AI is
going to start doing to us. Something happened to me
the other day that's never happened to me before. I
have been on Facebook since December of two thousand and eight,

(35:05):
that's around sixteen years. As a matter of fact, Mobias
set up my Facebook page for me originally because I
didn't care about it, and now you know, I use
it on a pretty regular basis, and I don't think
I've ever in the past sixteen years posted one thing
that gave me an alert from Facebook. I've never been

(35:26):
to what they call Facebook jail, where they lock up
your account and suspend you. I've never had any of
that happen. The first incident happened to me, well, it
was yesterday actually, as I record this, I went to
Facebook and I did a screen capture this, and I

(35:47):
tried to post a link to my personal bug out bag. Now,
a bug out bag is something that you keep that's
got a bunch of survival gear if there is something
like a natural disaster or another emergency and you have
to flee your house within seconds. It's a bag you

(36:08):
can grab that It's got a lot of essential stuff
and it that will help you. And as a matter
of fact, I did a whole show about the bug
out bag that I have. It was episode seventy five
of this podcast called Strange Things, and that show is
called Watson, My bug out Bag and MK Ultra Mind Control. So,

(36:29):
for example, my bug out bag, I have a list
of everything I have in it. I'm looking at it
right now and I literally have fit all of this
into one backpack. I'm not going to go over it
right now. You need to place your bag in an
area where you can grab it quickly heading out the
door without thinking. It should be camouflaged in case you

(36:50):
need to hide it. And you also want to have
something like some pepper spray, because if somebody's going to
try to steal your stuff, you need to be able
to defend it. So it's got like toilet paper, allowed whistle,
alcohol wipes, some chapsticks, some nell clippers, some nia sporn,
a towel, emergency candles, eye drops, and a lot of
stuff that you just want to think of that I

(37:11):
thought about it for you. And if you want to
look at my list of what's in my bug out
bag and use this to help you put yours together.
Go to Joshua Pewarren dot com, click the link to
the Curiosity Shop and scroll down to where it just
says bug out bag and you can click that and
it shows you the list of what I have, as

(37:33):
well as of course my Sunshine Simple solar generator. So
I went on to Facebook and here's what I wrote.
The rest of this year is going to be a
roller coaster, and not always in a good way. Please prepare.
Here are some of the most important things I keep
and my personal bug out survival kit. That's all I wrote.

(37:56):
There was nothing political about that, there was nothing specific
about it, because we know every year there are hurricanes,
there are tornadoes, there are floods, there are wildfires, earthquakes. Okay,
so all I said the rest of this year is
going to be a roller coaster, not always in a
good way. Please prepare. And then I put a link

(38:19):
to my bug out bag list and instantly I got
this automated message back from Facebook and it said, we
removed your post. Why this happened. Here's their explanation. It
looks like you tried to get likes follows shares or
video views in a misleading way, and this goes against

(38:41):
our community standards on spam. What I'm not selling anything
directly on this page. There is a link to the
Sunshine Simple Generator at the bottom, but what's wrong with that?
It's just a list And I thought this kind of
gave me that feeling like it made the hair end
up on the back of my neck. Why right now,

(39:05):
is is AI or whatever saying Nope, don't tell anybody
anything about how to prepare for something bad or to survive.
This is I don't know, it's I'm not a doom
doomsday or and it just it just hit me the
wrong way. Okay, when we come back from this break,
I have an update for you on something that hatched

(39:28):
three days ago in my house. See if you can
guess what it is. Before I come back from the break,
I'm Joshua pe Warren. You're listening to strange things on
the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast. I am Paranormal podcast Network,
and I will be right back.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
The Internet is an extraordinary resource that links our children
to a world of information, experiences, and ideas. It can
also expose them to risk teach your children the basic
safety rules of the virtual world. Our children are everything,
do everything for them.

Speaker 5 (40:30):
On the iHeartRadio and AM PARENIL Podcast Network. Listen anytime,
any place.

Speaker 3 (40:45):
Hi, this is Sandra Champlain. Ever wonder what happens when
we die? Well, I'm going to make it easier for
you to understand. Join me for my show Shades of
the Afterlife. New shows come out every Friday, so I'll
be looking for you right here on the iHeartRadio and
Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
Welcome back to the final segment of this edition of
Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM
Paranormal Podcast Network. I am your host, Joshua P. Warren,
and a friend of mine is from New Jersey here
in the US. He actually is a tour guide for

(41:57):
my Haunted Ashville Ghost Tour in Asheville, North Carolina, and
he posted recently on his Facebook page a picture of
this little red and white bag of meat and he says,
oh my goodness, look, I found this at the grocery store.

(42:19):
They have it now in my area and it's Taylor
pork Roll. You know what I should have? Let me
let me see I think it's okay, it's yeah, it's
uh Taylor, John Taylor's pork roll, That's what it is.
And he was just like, yes, this is a you know,

(42:40):
this is a staple of Jersey. So I started looking
into it and apparently everybody in New Jersey grows up
eating this John Taylor's pork role that has been around,
I want to say, since the eighteen hundreds or something
like that. And I was able to find it here

(43:00):
in Vegas, and Brian told me that if you're from
North Jersey, they call it Taylor ham, and then elsewhere
they call it pork roll, and where he's from, they
call it a pork roll. But basically, you get this
and it's a lot like spam when you just look
at the consistency and you cut it into these little
slices and then you fry it up and then you

(43:24):
put it on a roll with some cheese and an egg,
and let me tell you, it's pretty darn good. All right.
It is not healthy, I don't believe, but it's if
you've never had John Taylor's ham, just look up some

(43:45):
recipes and you try that out on a special occasion
when you want to have a nice breakfast street in
the morning. But you know what, people love the guides
for my tour because they're all ash full locals and
they don't just read a script. I mean they'll talk
to you about anything you want to know. If you're

(44:05):
going to be in Ashville this year, go to Haunted
Ashville dot com. Ashville is spelled with an e in
the middle a s H E V I L L E.
Go to Hauntedashville dot com and just you know what,
don't take my word for it. Read the trip advisor reviews.
We have thousands of them, and you will see why
the drip Advisor gives us an award every single year.
Haunted Ashville dot com. But uh yeah, thanks Brian for

(44:29):
introducing me to that. It's not helping my diet out,
I can tell you that much. But in my kitchen
for a little over two months since I got back
from San Diego, California, I have had a little tupperware
container and inside that container has been the Mexican jumping
beans that I bought while I was in San Diego.

(44:52):
And I talked about this on a past podcast, and
how that these beans jump because they actually have of
a moth larvae inside of them, and the larvae hatches,
and then for months the larvae is it's feeding on
the inside of the bean, so to speak, and growing,

(45:16):
and it's the little worm in there is very temperature sensitive,
and so if it's not happy with the temperature, especially
if it gets too hot, you know, it'll start bouncing
around and that's what makes the beans jump. So you
warm them up in your hands. And I'd had these
beans off and on as a kid, and I never

(45:36):
really thought about what is it like if you actually
just kept them long enough to see if one would hatch,
Because it turns out that's it's very rare. Most of
them do not hatch. But I wanted to give it
a shot. So for over two months, I've had this
tupperware container sitting on my bar in my kitchen, and

(45:57):
I kind of forgot about it, frankly, But then a
few days ago, I said, you know, I haven't looked
in there in a while, and I guess I felt
a tremor in the force or something, because I opened
it up, and sure enough, one of these things had hatched,
and it looked like it had probably just hatched that day.
One of the jumping beans had this perfect circle in

(46:20):
it with a little like a trap door that had
swung open, and here was this tiny gray moth about
the size of my index finger fingernail, just a little
gray delta shaped moth with a couple of black antenna,

(46:42):
pretty lethargic, not very active at all, and I was
just astounded. I was like, oh my god, I can't
believe it. I have a living moth that has emerged
from a jumping beam. And so of course I looked
up how long do they live? And it says they
only live a few days, And so I tried to

(47:03):
take care of him. You know, I've put some water
in there and some watermelon, and he seems to be
doing okay. I mean, maybe he'll live longer than a
few days. But you know, this show is called Speaking
of Strange, and I've always thought Mexican, I'm sorry, this
show is called strange Things. I used to do a
show called Speaking of Strange years ago. This show is

(47:24):
called strange things. It doesn't matter, it's all strange. Mexican
jumping beans are strange, and to think that, you know,
you get them and they act like that. And then
a thing, living creature hatches it's part of the miracle
of life. So we'll see how long Mafi, my own

(47:44):
little moth man lives, who emerged from a jumping bean.
We'll put a picture of him or her. I don't
know what it is up on my Instagram page Joshua P.
Warren Podcast. That's the Instagram page where I post things.
Lauren post things that are related to the show. You know,
the world of little creatures, insects, and even micro organisms

(48:08):
is amazing. I have some news for you soon about
some stuff I've found looking through my microscope in my laboratory.
But you know, we often tend to forget that we
are sort of like, well, we are an earth for

(48:31):
all of these trillions of micro organisms that live on us,
and it's almost like that we are extensions of them,
and that when they're hungry, we get hungry, and when
they're not happy, then we feel bad. You know, we're
it's kind of gross, but it's like we're feeding all
these micro organisms. And lately I've been doing a lot

(48:52):
more to put healthy probiotics into my system, and you know,
just every day some probiotics into my stomach and it
seems to help a lot, because I've always had sort
of you know, acidic stomach issues. There's this Netflix documentary
that you might want to check out, and it's about

(49:13):
how the stomach bacteria they like to feed on certain things,
especially fruits and vegetables, and that if you eat enough
fruits and vegetables, well then they're happy and they eat that.
But if you don't, then they start eating you and
that's what starts giving you stomach problems. They're starving, so

(49:35):
they start eating your stomach lining. This Netflix show is
called Hack Your Health The Secrets of Your Gut, And
let me just warn you if you decide to watch this.
In this documentary, toward the end, people some people start
eating stuff that is so messed up. I can't even
talk about it on this show. It's got some gross

(49:57):
things in it, and I in my opinion, okay, but
it's weird when you think about how advanced that those
little creatures are, you know, that live in your stomach,
and how that you know that we ultimately live in
their world. They own this world. I want to leave
you with kind of a deep thought here that I

(50:19):
came across the other day from a philosopher named Alfred
North Whitehead. Okay, think about this one. He said, quote
the purpose of thinking is to let the ideas die
instead of us dying. End quote. So this starts with
kind of a negative connotation, right, because he's basically saying, well,

(50:43):
what if you come up with a bad idea about something? Well,
the purpose of a thought is that you can put
the thought out there and see how people react to
the thought, and see if they kill the thought without
killing you. So it's almost like that having thoughts that

(51:07):
we can express is a survival mechanism. If you have
a thought that's good and everybody likes it, then you
know how to act on it, and you say this
is going to be good. If you have a thought
that's bad and you put something out there, it's a
bad idea and people don't like it, when you go, no,
I'm not going to do that, it's almost like this
process of pulpa creation that it's more than just some

(51:30):
fanciful thing, that your thoughts have very physical, tangible impacts
on the way you live your life. And again the
quote is the purpose of thinking is to let the
ideas die instead of us dying. End quote. Again, kind
of a pessimistic thing, but interesting to think of reality
that way, and the power of thoughts, and why that

(51:53):
your mind is so integral to your survival. All right,
I could keep going, but the clock has godess, so
let's all put a positive thought out there. Take a
deep breath if you can here it is the good
Fortune tone. That's it for this edition of the show.

(52:32):
Follow me at Joshua P. Warren, Plus, visit Joshua Pwarren
dot com to sign up for my free e newsletter
to receive a free instant gift, and check out the
cool stuff in the Curiosity Shop. All at Joshuapwarren dot com.
I have a fun one lined up for you next time,
I promise, So please tell all your friends to subscribe

(52:56):
to this show and to always remember the goal didn't rule.
Thank you for listening, Thank you for your interest and support.
Thank you for staying curious, and I will talk to
you again soon. You've been listening to Strange Things on
the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal podcast network.

Speaker 3 (53:32):
Well, if you like this episode of Strange Things, wait
till you hear the next one. Thank you for listening
to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network,

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