Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's going on? Guys? Back with Another JT's Mixtape, episode
number twenty five. And if you guys are enjoying these podcasts,
give me a five star review on either Apple or Spotify.
And if you're watching it on YouTube, hit that subscribe button.
And guys, please support our sponsor, Modern Roots Life. If
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(00:22):
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Speaker 2 (00:37):
Thank you, guys.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Come closer, my child, Brian, what's going on?
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Brother?
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Not that much?
Speaker 2 (01:16):
Man?
Speaker 4 (01:17):
So official? You're like, still, so, I gotta get used
to the sponsor thing, but it was legit, legit. Support
them and support us. We're going to be so we're
gonna be so official soon and we're gonna try to
make cool things happen for you guys.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
So yeah, yeah, we should probably just say we So
we were chatting off air, and we were we had
the idea of potentially making one day one day hopefully
soon that we wanted to have your favorite podcasters on
one place, because I know that certain other podcasters have
had little kind of things like Blurry Creature said, Blurry
Cohn and things like that. But we had this idea
(01:52):
that maybe potentially your favorite podcast could all show up
in one place and we could have like booze and
people speaking and a wide range of things.
Speaker 4 (02:04):
Christian Mustian conspiracy people.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
Right, you know. So it's funny. So I branded that
a while back, and I've got some heat from certain
people about it, but I don't shy away from the
term conspiracy theorists. I'm a Christian first. That's why it's
Christian Conspiracy Network is what I have on my little
Instagram broadcast network. But I thought about it would be
a great idea to have a conference it was the
(02:28):
Christian Conspiracy Podcast Network, and then you get all your
favorite podcasts you guys enjoy on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, and
we could all be in one place and we could
there'd be so much going on. I think that I
think it would be awesome, dude, it'd be sweet.
Speaker 4 (02:44):
We could have like little we could have people speaking
for hours. And then I was thinking about, you know,
doing little badges that people could like see all their
all their podcasts that they're subscribed to, and then it'd
be allowed people to communicate with one another and find
new friends. You know. I think it'd be a really cool, fun,
communicative building environment.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Yeah. I think from our perspective, it's just like it'd
be awesome to see all you guys, but it would
also be awesome to see all the people that we
enjoy listening to, because we we are like you guys.
We're not different. We're normal, normal dudes who like podcasts
and we like to consume content too, So it would
be great, I think to meet and greet and talk
(03:27):
to people about every variety of topic because I think
that if you like JT's mixtape, which you guys do
because you're listening right now or watching, we talk about
so many different things. And that's me and I. I
was joking with one of my friends today and I
was saying, I'm really add so I'm not really good
(03:48):
at certain things. But maybe podcasting is what I'm not
too bad about, because a little add mind is not
so bad because there's so much to talk about and
so much to watch and stuff. So I like a
little bit of everything. So I think that would be cool.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Put in the comments what you guys think about that idea.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Yeah, not only that, if put in the comments your
other podcasters that you would like to see at this event.
I think that'd be fun because I mean, like literally,
this is literally just something that me and Brian just
were talking about just the last five minutes, Like this
was not something we talked about before. And it's like,
so if you guys are interested in this idea, this
is a new idea. And if you guys want this
(04:28):
and obviously can based on demand, is how this is
something like this could come to fruition. So comment below
who you'd like to see there m m, and there
are friends, Yeah, then we could reach out.
Speaker 4 (04:41):
Sweet sounds fun. I'm excited to see how this what
direction this goes.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
And speaking to add, let's watch some videos because I'm
already bored with this conversation. Just kidding.
Speaker 5 (04:54):
Have you ever seen Alexander the Great's ruins in Afghanistan?
Speaker 4 (04:58):
I don't want to go there focus photographs Afghani. Yeah,
that's the problem.
Speaker 5 (05:03):
Archaeologists can't go to their studying. But they have ancient
Greek cities. They look like beautiful ancient Greek cities that
are in the middle of Afghanistan. My friend have served
over there was telling me about it. He's like, you
go there, you can't believe what you're saying. He had
a bunch of pictures of it, Like you're in Athens.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Have you heard about that, Brian? Do you know there
was ancient Greek looking things in Afghanistan?
Speaker 4 (05:25):
No? I didn't. I've seen videos of people destroying ancient
stuff in Afghanistan where they were like blowing up the
some of the what's it called Zoranthianism religious temple spaces,
and they were like blowing up some of the earliest
sort of sacred seeming spaces, which is to me is like, oh, dude,
(05:50):
don't do that because, like you know, even though it's pagan,
I'm like, that's research. I want to see that. I
want to know what that is. And so it seems
like they were just they were destroying a lot of
stuff in Afghanistan at one point. But I didn't know
about that. I don't know about the Alexander the Great
connection there.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Well, you know, it only makes sense that that that
area is if the Greeks ruled a large portion of
the world that there would be Greco Roman things in
a place that was pretty old, right. I think that's
the thing that we, you know, like our Western mind
based on Bin Laden and al Qaeda and and all
(06:31):
the things. And who is it the Taliban, So the
Taliban who rule Afghanistan. So I gotta be honest, based
on our Western propaganda, my perception of Afghanistan, it's got
poppy fields, it's got caves, it's got a lot of
just poorness, like even like that, it's got desert, desert, poverty, mountains,
(06:56):
just an awful place like I can't perceive any place,
you know, just like for my And I'm not saying
this is correct. I'm saying it's likely incorrect, is what
I can vision in my head about Afghanistan. It's got
to be one of the worst places on earth, just
based on my own Western brain of what I've been taught.
Now again in this process of looking into all the
(07:19):
things and revisiting everything, I likely understand that that's incorrect.
So when I hear that, it makes sense to me.
And it makes sense to me also that what you
were saying about them trying to blow those places up,
is it because that does not fit the narrative about
(07:39):
like why that exists there and like what's the remnants
of it, because it could be one of these situations
where like is Afghanistan much different than a place like
Turkey that's got all this melted stuff, you know that
like it once was this great place but now it's not.
It's kind of like in that last video we talked
about the Bullets Slayer's video about that's evidence that somebody
(08:02):
got smoked. What if there's lots of evidence that things
got smoked in Afghanistan. But not only that, there's actually
still some really nice parts about it, but propaganda by
the MSN, the bushes and people like that, we think
Afghanistan is this, but it's really not that.
Speaker 4 (08:25):
You know, I totally am right there. I followed this
guy actually that travels the world and he specifically went
to Afghanistan to travel there, and it is the It's
pretty eye opening because he's just like on the border
of like India and Afghanistan, and he's like talking and
they apparently they have like a rivalry event where the
Army of Afghanistan fights the Army of of India or something,
(08:49):
and they have like a show off where they do
like marching tricks. It's like it's like it's not for contact. No, no, no,
it's like it's like a performance dance off kind of
thing apparently, and like they have and I'm like and
I'm like watch this. Yeah, yeah, like literally between their
military people and it's kind of comical, and there's like
all this other stuff that they were talking about. I
(09:12):
believe it was Afghanistan pretty sure. And then so he
goes in Afghanistan and he's on like these on this
boat in this paddle boat and there's like and he's like, oh,
that's the Taliban over there, and they're the Taliban are
on these duck paddle boats with guns machine guns, and
they're like they're like paddling and he's just like, oh,
I want to go over there with the Taliban. I
want to ride with them. And the guy's like, nah,
(09:32):
I don't think you want to ride with them. Like
he's just like he's like no, but like he's like
joking around, hanging out with the people. And when you
see it, and like I think a lot of Americans
see it and they're like like whoa, it's like a
culture slap in the face that like, wait, those are
normal humans. Yeah, they're normal people, bro, They're normal freaking
people over there, and it's very interesting. I gotta send you.
(09:54):
I'll find the guy's page and said it to you.
It's it's pretty hilarious that he goes actually into the
caves of one guy's house and he's like, dude, it's
like air conditioned in this cave. And he's like, he's
like because the cave apparently is like set up to
where it like deflects heat, so it's like burning hot,
but when you go into the caves, it's like cold.
And this guy has this like little mansion set up
(10:17):
inside of one of these caves, and he's just like
chilling in this little his little uh that you would
see him from the outside look like some rock hut thing,
but in the inside, it's like perfect and wonderful in there.
And it's just like blown away.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Is that because it was once a building and it's
all melted now and so it only looks bad on
the outside.
Speaker 4 (10:36):
Yeah, No, I don't know. It's it's either way. It's
fascinatingly interesting, to say the least, because it's like there's
a bunch of stuff like that. You know, it reds
you of It reminds you of like, you know, the
caves like that they say the Christians dug underground to hide,
you know what I'm talking about, Like and like they
have them all over the world, like where there's like
there's some in like I think there's some in Turkey
(10:58):
where this supposedly the Christians like dug underground and like, Yo,
you haven't seen those.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
No, my god, I mean I mean I've heard about that.
There's a city under Turkey like underground city.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
I think they said there's it could fit up to
twenty thousand people.
Speaker 4 (11:12):
Yes, there's something. And it was like the Christians supposedly
built it, they said. And you're like, you're like the
Christians built this while they're hiding, and you're like what,
like where did they get the time to just start digging.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Holes, digging into a mountain, digging out.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
Of the ground and like the solid rock and you're
like where did when did this? Like come on? I
mean they were hiding, like they just like kept digging
at like made a whole living center there and like
all kinds of dude, it's fascinating the underground stuff. Honestly,
my thought is that the underground stuff was built by demons.
This is my end. It's been there for centuries, and
(11:48):
demons built stuff to hide underground. And I think what
happened was later the Christians came around, and the Christians
and you had the authority to cast the demons out,
and they to make them obey them. So they just
like basically took over the demon tunnels and we're like, okay,
demon get out in the name of Jesus, like come out.
And so the Christians like took over the little tunnels
that everybody was afraid to go into because they thought
(12:09):
demons were in there, and the Christians were like, yeah,
demons are nothing to us. I think that's what happened.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
I think that the things that are underground were once
above ground, or that the mountain that that was dug
into was once a building. I don't know. It just
seems it just seems unlikely because a lot of people
have said that Let's just say you had an enemy,
right and you were worried about this this army that
was going to come against you. It's not advantageous to
(12:36):
dig into a mountain and then leave yourself one opening,
because what could the enemy do? All they'd have to
do is just cover the opening. Well they staying on
fire like a love lock cave right, Well, they could
put potentially smoke you out. But what they really could
do is just like a lot of old army or
a lot of old siege tactics, like again like in
(12:58):
places like Jerusalem, actually reading the well it talks about that.
That's why in the Bible it talks about how women
ate their babies and stuff like that. I mean obviously
really sick stuff. Because what armies used to do would
be they would surround a city. They'd make a blockade
so no goods could come in and out of that place,
so they would starve the people. So if people were
(13:21):
in this cave, well again like it's a waiting game
if you're an army, and it would make it really
easy to fight against those people. Like I said, they
wouldn't even have to fight against them, they could just
wait play the waiting game where they could never allow
them out to gain supplies or people could go in
to gain supplies. So to me, it's there's way more
(13:42):
going on about those caves that any humans would use
them for any kind of really practical reason unless it
was like I mean, like that's the concept of like cavemen,
which we don't believe in, but it would make sense.
If you're just worried about like animals, maybe you would
go into the ground. Because animals are not going to
do that. But but if people who can think, they
(14:02):
would say, there's not a lot of resources in the cave,
so we'll just hang out out here and we'll wait
till you come out, and we'll kill you when you do.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Cave men, Bro, That's that's what I'm saying. That's why
I think it's the demons. I'm saying demons built them.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
I'm gonna give you a get once again, the dumb
and dumber one million chance that that's that's whatever. So
that folow.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
Demons built the caves, bro, telling you that folo of
demons have ability to manipulate rocket. They built these caves
and the humans just took them over all, Right.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Let's continue the theme of ancient things that were once covered.
Speaker 6 (14:38):
I mean, there are megaliths around the world, including in
the United States, huge stone structures, and nobody, including any
structural engineer in the United States, has no idea how
they were built in the pre industrial age. Like, there's
literally not even a good guess as to how.
Speaker 4 (14:52):
This was built.
Speaker 6 (14:53):
And I, of course I don't know the answer either,
but I mean, that's such an amazing thing. When were
the pyramids built? Nobody knows? How were they built? Nobody knows.
I can't get that out of my head.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Again.
Speaker 6 (15:01):
I'm not pushing our conspiracy theory. I'm just noting what
we don't know. Yeah, I don't know why, like everyone else, like,
shut up, shut up what.
Speaker 7 (15:10):
I'm glad you said that. And there's a lot of
other structures that are popping up more nowadays in archaeology.
And there's even guys that do like surface lidar and
they're seeing things in fields and such. It shows the
exact typography of the ground exactly without vegetation, and it'll suggests
underneath it. Yeah, so if you start seeing geometric shapes
and stuff might be something.
Speaker 6 (15:29):
It might be man made, you know, or at least made.
Speaker 4 (15:36):
I like that guy. Tucker's great. I want to be
friends with Tucker. Tucker. Can we be friends?
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Bro? I you know, it really bothers me in this
community where every time we showed Tucker, every time, we
show candas Owns every time. Obviously before we showed rogue.
Everyone's like, oh, they're controlled. Opposition is like, no one's
saying you have to believe everything they say. Nobody ever
says that we don't believe anything. Any man's ever says.
(16:04):
We are Christians first, we believe in our leader is Christ,
and so we don't submit to any man one man.
That being said, yes, Tucker is likable. I don't trust Tucker.
I mentioned his connections with his dad and Project mocking
Bird and all that stuff, but I do think it's
really interesting the amount of truth that he's revealing on
his show every week these days, and so he's talking
(16:27):
about the same kind of things we're talking about. And
so Tucker, if you guys want to have us on.
That wasn't me just defending them because I don't. We're
probably not going to Tucker, but we would. That being said, yeah,
I mean, the funny part about what he said is
is kind of what I say. It's really interesting these
different megalists, And of course I would put it more
(16:49):
of like I think that I'm not sure how it's done,
but I believe giants were likely involved in certain of
these projects. I don't know if he goes that far,
but I think that it's it's funny to see how
the more these sites that are revealed, the more that's
the mainstream just tries to brush it to the side
(17:11):
and act like it's not real because it just does
not fit. And it's like there's enough of this where
like we aren't specifically saying we know, But I guess
that's that's always been my real problem with science and academia.
It's just the unwillingness to admit what they don't know,
because they act like they do know even I was
(17:31):
I mentioned on the last podcast or two podcasts that
go about them dating everything in ancient Egypt. Those are guesses.
They make you. They make people think that they have
this ironclad timeline of ancient Egypt, the Dynastic Egypts, and
even before the Dynastic Egyptians. They don't, and if they
(17:53):
act like they do, they are liars. It's the same
way they would say that they teach evolution in schools
like it's a fact. But we in this community obviously
know it's a theory. That there's a theory of gravity. Again,
whether you believe the Earth is flat or it's a ball,
gravity is still a theory it's not because people are
(18:14):
debating whether things fall down or not. It's it's the
idea of like all the other things, it does. But
they teach certain things like their facts, which are theories.
So to me, it's again, this is a lie. That's
that's all around us, is that we got it all
figured out. We don't. And in this community, as we
(18:37):
continue to ask questions and dig deeper into these subjects,
we know, based on things like the Book of Job,
we'll never know how this whole place works. We'll never
know how all the celestial objects move and what they do,
how the wind works, and how it rains certain times,
and how it snows and sleets and drops hail. We
don't know how much fireways is. Like in the Book
(18:59):
of Batters, we don't know. We can't measure the wind.
There's certain things that we will never know. And I'm
okay with admitting that, and I wish that other people
would admit that too, So you know what, because if
they did, there's a lot of people who just believe
people but they're actually really smart. And if they said, hey,
(19:21):
we don't know how this was built, and they allowed
people to go look, and we all put our brains
together and researches together. Man, you just think about this community.
How much more we've learned based on people like Brian
and myself bouncing things off each other. And this is
two people. But then all the podcasts we listened to
(19:41):
and all the people the videos we watch, Man, we
have figured out way more things in the past year
than I could imagine. Right, maybe not fully, but you
know I'm saying like that. Can you imagine if as
Russia Lumbo used to say, every skullful of mush every
kid just said, you taught them, Hey, there's a lot
(20:03):
of mystery out here, and they and you allow them
to grow up and try to figure these things out.
I imagine that there could be a lot more knowledge
gained through that.
Speaker 4 (20:13):
I think knowing that there's a mystery in the world
that you need to pursue, I think. I think that
drives human nature, and that drives humans to be better
people and to be more intelligent. Your brain is a muscle, guys,
and if you don't use it, guess what happens to
your muscles when you don't use them. They don't work
very good. Okay, your brain is the same way. You
(20:35):
don't use your brain guess what. It don't work very good,
and it is so dangerous with our world today and
the internet. People think that everything's already figured out, and
when you don't realize that not everything's figured out. And
where if we can just admit, like, hey, maybe we
don't have the full answer yet, we don't know, like
that would be so helpful to society and a whole
as a whole, I think in a lot of ways.
(20:58):
But I think the world is it definitely needs like
some do overs. I mean that, And here's speaking of
a do over, you know. Side note the the thing
about those pyramids that had the spirals underneath it and
stuff that they recently found or whatever that showed a
clip in that one thing where the pyramids supposedly have spirals.
(21:18):
So found out that later that that those art artist
renderings are from like some whack wacky site, some wacko
made them. They're not. It's not like legit science. It
was like wacko science. There still is something underneath the
pyramids potentially, but the just the descriptions that they showed
everybody is not it. Okay, it's not it.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Yeah, I showed you on that one podcast or at
least I overlaid it for the audience. Yeah, you can't
make out much of what's under there. You just there's
something under there, but like you can really not tell
what it is now.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Yeah, yeah, I was kind of I was.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Kind of bummed there wasn't obelisks.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
I know, the so bummer but you know, I know,
I was like when you when it first said light
ard j tu me, you know, I mean, I was like, lighter,
it can't be lighter because lighter doesn't work like that.
And then and then I finally did some digging and
was like, yeah, it's not light er, it doesn't work
like that. Okay, like lighter is light based, it's not
shooting through the ground. So yeah, you know whatever, there's
(22:16):
no there's no way to determine what's underneath it. There's
definitely something under there, though. No.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
I like what you said though that I feel like
that maybe this is what made me pursue what we're
doing right now, is because I like that there's mystery
in the world. I think it's exciting that there's mystery
in the world, and I think that I think it's
really cool when you think that there's ancient knowledge to
(22:42):
be gained and this is not like this gnostic idea.
It's just like that that people were really smart a
long time ago, and if you ever learned some of
the things they learned, it's like it's just exciting. It
just seems like that there's like something could be discovered
that was there for you know, like Solomon said, there's nothing,
nothing new under the sun, but it's all been done,
(23:04):
and so I think about like that, and I just
think that's really cool. I relate. I don't know, I
really like to think about that during the days of Noah,
there was really advanced things, and it's really interesting to
think about. And I think that just it's really obvious
during the Roman times there was really advanced things. But
I don't think even the Romans were unique, because you
(23:24):
have Babylon first, then you have Persia, then you have
the Greeks. They were all really advanced. So like the
kind of mysteries again, like if there was Greek things
in Afghanistan, there was like the Greek things all over
that whole realm when Greece ruled the world. So in
order for these empires to be that widespread, they were advanced.
(23:49):
They didn't just have like this certain technique when they
were fighting people like they were bigger than that, you
know what I'm saying. So I think that to me,
I like that there's mystery because if you think this
is the most advancedst place has ever been, then you're
just looking at the smartest guy down the street and said,
don't worry, he'll figure out more from here. But like
I can't improve on an iPhone, but if I can
(24:12):
look back, you know, but if I can believe that
there was advanced things earlier, I can read through old
books and I can gain knowledge of things that are
technologies that we don't even know about that actually are advanced,
which is in a different way. I don't know, what
do you think?
Speaker 4 (24:28):
I think you know, the Bible says it's the glory
of God to conceal a matter, and it's the glory
of kings to find it out. So I think you're
spot on like saying that, like wanting to discover things
is like in our nature in a sense, right, And
so I think I think there's a detriment to chat
GPT thinking that it has all the answers, and that
(24:48):
is assuming that the answers that it gives you is correct,
you know.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Yeah that recently too. Yeah. The chat GBT is is
you got to take it with a grain of s
all because even it was funny because I was trying
to find, like churches in the area that believed a
certain thing, and I went to visit one on Sunday
and I was asking. I was like, is there any
churches in this area that believe this X, Y, and Z.
And then I went to it and I was like,
I heard something automatically. I was like, wait a minute,
(25:14):
they don't believe this, And I asked it again. I said,
actually I was asking. I was like, is there any
post millennial churches in my area? And so then I
went and I found this list of like there was
really close one down the street. So I went to
go visit it, and when I heard messages about Jesus
coming back right away, I was like, I was like,
(25:35):
is this like? I said, I said, what what made like?
I said, where did you get the information that you
made this church? You know that that gave you the
conclusion this church was post millennial? And it said, my
apologies this church, Yeah, it said, my apologies. We don't
even have any information about this church. What they believe
in eschatology at all, and I was like, that's what
(25:59):
I was thinking. So yeah, so let that be a
lesson to you. And I'm sure a lot of people
in the comments section will say ZJT chat GBT as demons. Anyways, Yeah,
maybe guys are right. Maybe guys are right. I mean
the point is is like that you can't trust this stuff.
But again, like I love the analogy of the matrix.
Just think about like that, the CHATGBT doesn't know anything
(26:21):
unless somebody programm did to say something. But we as
humans can actually do way more because we don't live
in the rules of this computer network. We can find
out things that are they're far beyond it. Again, like
obviously all the old Roman manuscripts and things how they
did certain things we're not put into computers, at least
(26:41):
the ones we don't at least the ones we have
access to. So it is interesting to think that there
there is way more advanced things out there based on
the research we've done. And I don't know, I do,
I just I think it's fun because as a kid
of the eighties, I loved Indiana Jones, and I think
(27:03):
it's so cool to think that there's ancient mysteries and
relics and things that. Yeah, just like that. It's like
things have turned from legend to myth to fable, but
they're real, you know.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
And it's like because they have a root of something.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Yeah, they came from someplace. And I think that I
don't know, I do think that as I'm not saying
it's not for girls too, but I'm just saying as
a as a boy, like my little old self thought
that sounds so awesome. And I feel like I've regained
that kind of child enthusiasm as I've become an adult.
Speaker 4 (27:42):
Because that's cool.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
It's all real. It's all real, bro.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
It's funny because like as a child, we do have
that natural like desire to discover and find and like
adventure and create, like yeah, and then they give us
these white blank walls with no art and it's just
like this dult world that we live in to like
pressure it. And then it's like wait a second. When
you start digging and you know where to look, all
of a sudden, you're like, wait a second, are you
(28:08):
telling me elves are real? Oh? Yeah, elves were real?
You know what I mean. You're just like yeah, like
wait a second, that's in the Bible. Yep, Dwarves are
the Bible. Just telling you, dwarves are in the Bible, guys.
If you didn't know that, okay, And there's like all
these other things that when you don't realize like that
it was all that stuff was there and it was
(28:30):
fascinating to us for a reason because God put whatever
desires in us, they were there, and like this historical
context is so fascinating. Dude. I'm like digging through things
every day discovering stuff. I'm like researching new topic. Dude.
I have a list of things and books that I
can't even get through that I want to get through
that are just like so many interesting topics and so
many interesting things, and it's just like, dude, it's it's fascinating.
(28:53):
It's very fascinating. Chat GPT is demons, Okay, guys. Look,
so this is in computing, the call it diomond's which
I'll just I'll read you the definition of daomond, which
is the root word for demon, which, by the way,
diomon and Greek means the ones that know. Okay. In computing,
it says, in multitasking computing operating system, a demon or
a Daomon is a computer program that runs as a
(29:17):
background process, okay, rather than being under direct control of
the interactive user. Okay, So when you type in things
to chat GPT and it runs in the background and
goes checks things, guess what operating is doing. Guess what
that operating process is called. It's called demons. So chat
(29:37):
chat GPT really does run off of demons. I just
think it's a funny, a funny little historical fact, but
or or terminological fact, I guess, I don't know what
you could call that, but I think it's hilarious. I
think it's so funny that chat GPT runs off debits.
But you know whatever, Solomon put used demons to build
the temple, so you know, hey, like.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
Some kind of go off the rails too, go What
do you want to say with one thing you said?
I thought it was funny that you mentioned that, like
children are creative and they like color, and we mentioned
we showed on that last podcast, we showed the color
palette on the cars. It's been wave dulled down, if
(30:17):
not muted. And I saw another video from the same guy,
and of course it's exact same subjects.
Speaker 8 (30:23):
Really, this is a McDonald's in twenty twenty five. This
is the same McDonald's in two thousand and nine. Don't
go about attention to detail. This looks like a safari
outside of that building. Check out this McDonald's in twenty
twenty five. Now look at the exact same McDonald's in
two thousand and nine, out as detailed as the safari.
But look at what's going on here once again, attention
of detail. Look at how these logos look in twenty
(30:45):
twenty five, look at how they used to look like
in the two thousands. They're really taking the color away
from life. They're taking the enthusiasm away from life, the flavor.
Speaker 6 (30:54):
Of the spark.
Speaker 8 (30:55):
Now all of these establishments, down to the logo be
looking like a gray factory. And the thing about it
is all by design. It's all by design. It would
be one thing if the aesthetics was taken away from
the overhead, that you would make as a profit every month.
But that's not the case because McDonald's win, these etc.
They're making money, and a lot of money every year.
So why take away the personality, the flavor of the
(31:16):
building itself, Why take away all those colors and all
of that. Because I'm assuming that the agenda is to
make everything monotune, everything with no spark, with less flavor.
Like the creativity level in this eraror right now is
at an all time low. I've never seen nothing like
this before, all the way down to the logos, like
everything is just depressing with it. We need a renaissance
(31:38):
and we need a fast.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
Is that exactly what you were saying, Brian.
Speaker 4 (31:42):
That's pretty interesting, you know? Would I would? I would
argue that maybe maybe they change the McDonald's building because
the artist it takes to like maintain the cracking when
those elephants and those giraffe safari creatures, it got more expensive,
or maybe maybe it got more impossible to even find
(32:03):
the proper person to even be able to work on it,
you know what I mean. So they just converted to
a more I don't know, easily repairable or easily manageable
thing like, but yeah they do. It does seem like
they took a lot of the color out. I mean,
it was known for being red and yellow, like it
was the red and yellow thing. Now McDonald's is gray
and brown like yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
No, I mean I know for sure, and I'm sure
everybody else. I mean obviously that McDonald's is a good
example of it. But I remember when sometimes these fast
few changes that have been there forever, they literally just
shut down to renovate completely, because obviously they they refacaded
the whole building. They basically made the whole building again.
(32:46):
And yeah, so these places used to be when I
was a kid, and even not that long ago, because
that was two thousand and nine that they these places.
You know, like, it makes sense if you want kids
to want to go to McDonald's that it is this fun,
colorful place with this awesome playground out front, zoo animals, whatever,
(33:09):
versus this very sterile looking gray and brown box.
Speaker 4 (33:16):
I think they took away all the little playhouses at
McDonald's too.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
Actually, I'm sure they did, and I probably they probably
said it's because of insurance reasons, which I don't doubt
that either, because of lawyers and insurance.
Speaker 4 (33:27):
Yeah, our lord, that's because our laws here suck. You
should be able to get hurt. You should be able
to fall off a bridge and be fine, and like that,
that's your own dang fault.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
Yeah, we all assume the risks of the of the
stupid games we play. But you know that again, the
funny part is is that it went from this very
vibrant thing, which again McDonald's is not new. So you
think about McDonald's, was it started like in the fifties
something like that, So why was it harder to maintain
(33:59):
and two nine, you know, like harder to maintain a
twenty twenty five versus two thousand and nine because that
business model was working fine before then, so they could
have kept going. But yeah, like you can imagine big
corporations like McDonald's and all the other pizza pizza kind
(34:21):
of fell off the map. Honestly, pizza used to be
like the pizza to get and now nobody gets pizza pizza.
It sucks. But that being said, like you don't think
that every one of those corporate logos there was representative
that they don't have like these polled, product tested things
where it's like they're showing you different colors and like
(34:44):
what are you feeling based on this? And if you
don't think these people know about the AI or the
MK ultra mind control stuff that mean Brian talk about
all the time, you don't think that they know what
those three letter agencies figured out about how to get
people to want to consume you're crazy again. I think
(35:04):
this is an agenda thing. This is kind of like
the stuff where what was the what was like the
point system that like Blackrock came out with was about like.
Speaker 4 (35:14):
The it's not the point system though, yeah, basically the.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
Will Cup points system where it's like that we mentioned
that the last podcast about how the New snow White,
like almost everything Disney does is stupid, right, I mean
it's stupid. It seems from a business model, from a
business model, very stupid, right, yeah, because like you have
a brand, people like the brand just keep doing with
(35:39):
work what works, but they continue to do things and
it's like it it does seem like you have this
point system that black right black Rock puts out and
that's above and beyond what your normal point system would be.
Like I don't know what generates income, so they seem
to do what goes against a good business model. But
(36:02):
it does seem like there's a greater agenda because I
can't see how making a McDonald's look like that sells
more chicken McNuggets.
Speaker 4 (36:13):
You know what's even funnier is like that our culture
is becoming more rainbow haired, crazy looking, like you know
what I mean, Like alphabet community, but like our buildings
are becoming more it's like it's like this weird dichotomy
flip thing happening, and it's, you know, like and here's
the thing, Like I I gotta say, the newer McDonald's building.
(36:34):
I'm a designer, Okay, so I'm a marketer and designer actually, doff,
I've done stuff for McDonald's quite a few different things.
But the so like made their advertisements, their windows stuff before,
and like, it does look nicer the newer building to
some degree, but I feel like it's used not to
a child, and maybe it maybe the color still could
(36:55):
have been better, Like they still could have kept the
red and yellow and kept that cool looking design, but like,
I think it would have been. I think it looked
way cool still, I think it would have been it
still would have just been equally as interesting looking. And
I think it's fascinating that they're trying to like suck
the color out of all of our society. And it's
almost like what's happening is people are like, I need
(37:17):
color in my life and it's making them crazy, and
then they're like dyeing their hair blue because they like
they don't they're not getting enough color. I guess maybe
that's maybe that's what it is.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
Could be. I mean, you really do think about it though,
Like if you're a smart ad exect, which I'm sure
that these people have, they probably don't listen to them
now because these people do other things eventually. But you
would say because obviously as an adult, I can think
back when I was a kid. You know, how you
get people to McDonald's. You have their kids whining in
(37:51):
the back seat, saying, I want this toy that's in
this happy meal. I want to go to the fun
place and I want to spin on the hand and
go climb up the Hamburglar's tower or whatever. Like that's
how you get parents there because the kids want to go.
But like again that this does not help the children.
(38:14):
But maybe it's like it's an agenda where it's like
the kids are looking down at their their tablets or
their phones and they don't care anymore either because those
little toys do not fix them anymore. That's apps and
all this other stuff. I think that there is clearly
a broader agenda because we're not seeing it all come
to fruition, but we are. The picture is becoming more
(38:38):
clear what they're trying to do. They're trying to make this,
make this, make all the things monotone, and they want
the people to be monotone. They want everything to be
sterile and colorless, so people like that are easier to
be ruled, it's easier to roll over people like that.
Speaker 4 (39:01):
Well, well, I don't know if they want the people
to be monotone as much as they want the display
of society's perspective to be montared. It's like, think about
the future right now, Like what the globalist agenda is.
They want gray buildings, white and gray buildings with bathrooms
that just show human, one human and there's no boy
(39:21):
or girl bathrooms. Yeah, and it's just like and in society,
they want them to be like these freaking crazy, multi colored, pierced,
random three everything weird and unusual crazy people that are
just like not even resemblance of any kind of order.
(39:43):
They want the people to be complete disorder, and they
want the buildings and the structures and everything around it
to be perfect, white stained. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (39:52):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (39:53):
They want people to have blue hair. They want you
to be pink haired, blue haired, you know, like pierced
all over your face, but then also live in a
world where it's just white walls. Like that's what that's
what they are wanting. And I wonder if if it's
encouraging the dulness is actually that they're adding into the world.
Is encouraging this sort of rebellious hopefully response in people
(40:17):
is what I think it is doing in some degree,
you know what I mean, well, not hopefully way, Like
it's making them like chaotic. It's like making people like
want to like do erratic things and go get piercings
all over their face. You know.
Speaker 1 (40:29):
You know what the irony of all that is is
that there was a time where things were punk rock. Right,
so this is before even me I'm not even that old.
But when people are becoming pump punk rock, they did
not want to fit in. So now when people get
their hair dyed and all the weird piercings and do
all the weird things that don't make them fit in
(40:50):
with kind of like the patriarchy or whatever people would say,
they still they're doing that to fit into this other group.
Speaker 4 (40:58):
Right.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
It's like I want to do all these unusual things
to myself, but I want you to accept me for that.
When the punks used to say mm f you, like,
we're doing this to not to not fit in, and
now people do that to fit into this other weird
and they still want to be accepted. It's like it
is kind of like that. That's how twisted people's brains are.
Speaker 4 (41:21):
It's kind of it's kind of comical. It's like, you're
I saw a meme once and it was like it
was like this punk rock looking guy and it was
like your original just like everybody else. It's like, that's
like it was like pretty buddy forget. It was pretty hilarious.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
That makes sense, all right, Brian, I'm gonna give you
a choice on this one. Do you want to see
outer space stuff or do you want to see Disney stuff.
Speaker 4 (41:47):
Let's go Disney. Let's go Disney.
Speaker 1 (41:49):
Okay, got this, That's what I wanted to do.
Speaker 9 (41:53):
It took me ten years to realize that all the
girls on Neverland were killed by tinker Bell in the
story of Peter Pan. Apart from tinker Bell and the
murmur Ad, it's almost impossible to see the presence of
other girls on Neverland, and Wendy is definitely not the
first girl that Peter Pan brought back to Neverland. So
where on earth have those girls who had been to
Neverland before gone? The truth might be really cruel. They
might have been killed by tinker Bell, who seemingly looked
innocent and naive. Tinker Bell always harbored deep hostility towards
(42:15):
the girls who appeared around Peter Pan. When she first
met Wendy, she spoke ill of her, saying that Wendy
was fat and ugly. When Wendy first arrived at Neverland,
tinker Bell manipulated the others and told them that Wendy
was a big bird, inciting them to shoot her down.
If Peter Pan hadn't shown up in time, Wendy would
have lost her life long ago. In the face of
Peter Pan's questioning, tinker Bell nodded indifferently and admitted that
she knew that her behavior could kill Wendy. This was
obviously far beyond the scope of an ordinary prank. What's
(42:37):
even more terrifying is that this malice didn't stop in
peter Pan too. Wendy's daughter Jane accidentally broke into Neverland.
When Peter Pan was flying in the air with Jane,
tinker Bell actually kicked Jane down from a great height. Fortunately,
Peter Pan came to the rescue in time.
Speaker 4 (42:50):
Again, she's just jealous.
Speaker 6 (42:53):
All girls get like that around me.
Speaker 9 (42:55):
Tinker Bell is by no means as harmless as she
appears on the surface. She might be the hidden big
villain behind me. In order to defend her unique status
in Peter Pan's world, she gets rid of every girl
who appears around Peter Pan.
Speaker 4 (43:06):
Bro. She straight tries to drowned Wendy too. I think,
didn't she try like drowned her? Wait, the Mermaids.
Speaker 1 (43:15):
I'm gonna do a follow up video, so you just
hold that thought. Okay, I got two, but I was,
I was, I thought about sharing them both, So I'm
gonna do that next. What do you think? I think
what's interesting is the connection Brian and I've I've always
made Brian. What were fairies in the ancient mythologies?
Speaker 4 (43:32):
Demons? Bro, They're demons. There were always demons. You can
look up the historical context of fairies. They were evil,
they were wicked. They're Nephlum offspring, Bro. They're angels hybridized
with like small creatures and made some kind of weird,
deformed little miniature demon thing that was terrorizing people. They
(43:53):
kidnapped children, They kidnapped babies and eat them. That's what
fairies are. They're not good.
Speaker 1 (43:59):
Yeah. That that's the craziest thing about Peter Pan when
you actually just if you just talk it out, just
think about what this movie is about. It's about this
character who's got pain in his name, Pain, the deity Pan,
the goat demon Pain yep. And so before Peter Pan
goes into these children's room when their parents go to
(44:24):
bed or parents go out for the night, I think
something like that, he sends a little scout first, this
little orb. This orb goes into the room to check
it out, and Peter Pan is like literally like leering.
He's at the roof like looking, and he looks all sinister.
He comes in the room, and then he takes the
(44:45):
children who are in their pajamas out their house to
this place called never never Land. And they say, you
don't come back from never Never never Land, probably because
nobody's allowed to come back, because it's like they're they're
taken by demons out their window under the noses of
their parents.
Speaker 4 (45:05):
Oh and you left out that sometimes Peter Pan's shadow
goes into the children's room by itself. So if you
ever see a black shadow in your room, kids, don't worry,
it's just Peter Pan. He's friendly. Oh and by the way,
another side note, and we have this, we talk about
this on Ancient Angels movie. So if you guys haven't
seen the Ancient Angels movie, go watch it because they
break this down and break it down in so much
(45:25):
more detail. But his shadow or Peter Pan, the word
neffer Land he goes to. They goes to neffer Land,
and nepher is like another root derivation for the word Nephilim.
It's where you get like nepfer tds. It means beautiful
in Egyptian. Neffer is like the prefects for Nef Nephelim.
And so that's where they're going to, nepher Land. And
(45:47):
and literally his his his shadow is like obviously a
demonic ode to whatever it is.
Speaker 1 (45:53):
Right and shadow, his shadow is independent of himself.
Speaker 4 (45:57):
Yes, And the word Peter became anonymous with a phallic
term two years before look it up nineteen oh two.
Speaker 1 (46:06):
Right when Peter, they show him, they showed him shadow,
his shadow like, yeah, they show up Peter Peter.
Speaker 4 (46:14):
Yeah, And then they edited it out supposedly, but like
here's the deal. Like the word Peter Pan, the goat
god Pan was known for using his peter on people. Okay,
if you get yeah, he was like he was, he
was a.
Speaker 1 (46:29):
He had a lot to do with fertility.
Speaker 4 (46:31):
Yeah, well forced for fertility, we'll say, guys.
Speaker 1 (46:34):
Well, it's like it's very interesting like that you had
Sir new Knows, who's very similar to Pan. So Pain
is the goat demon. Sir new Knows is a dear demon.
Same thing probably regional thing that like up in probably
the northern part of Europe it was, Sir new Nos.
(46:55):
Southern part it was Pain. Yeah, same thing.
Speaker 4 (47:00):
Was the original kidnapper because kids are children of the goat.
But he was he was also a he was a
peter poker guy, all right, and like literally.
Speaker 1 (47:13):
That term becomes picked up pickled peppers.
Speaker 4 (47:17):
Peck of pickled peppers. Yeah yeah, he picked all kinds
of pickle peppers. I'm sure they like he was a
pickle poker.
Speaker 1 (47:26):
He was.
Speaker 4 (47:27):
He's like terrible. So like the thing is like if
you look up the stuff that's he named him Peter
Pan because he was the goat god Pan and goat
got Pan was known for having his weg out. Okay, sorry,
the truth.
Speaker 1 (47:43):
Well you know the truth. So the crate when I
what I meant to say first?
Speaker 4 (47:47):
Was it?
Speaker 1 (47:48):
Yeah? So they always say you don't grow up and
never never Land. It's because you don't have a chance
to grow up, because you die. Yeah, because you're dead.
So yeah, Hook is the good guy in Peter Pan.
Peter Pan is evil. And you know, speaking of evil,
let's watch his second video. I was gonna say this
for another time, but you know what, I don't feel
(48:09):
like talking about Peter Pan every week, so let'll just
watch this one too.
Speaker 9 (48:14):
It took me twenty years to realize that the Mermaids
and Peter Pan are actually sirens. The Mermaids and Peter Pan,
at first sight are so graceful, hey, frolic in the
clear sea water, and their fishtails glisten with a charming luster. However,
when Wendy shows up, all the beautiful illusions shatter in
an instant. Wendy, a girl from the real world, enters
Neverland with innocence and curiosity, but her appearance seems to
(48:34):
have broken some kind of taboo. The Mermaids have their
eyes on Wendy, just like sirens eyeing a sailing ship.
When Wendy approaches the reef, instead of being friendly, they
all grab her ankles together, trying to drag her into
the sea. Terrified, Wendy cries out for help from Peter Pan,
but Peter Pan's reaction is really disheartening. Instead of stopping
the Mermaids, he just holds his belly and laughs. And
when Wendy takes out a seashell to scare the Mermaids
(48:55):
for self protection, Peter Pan steps in to stop her.
Speaker 4 (48:58):
Hey, we're just having a little fun bunch of girls.
Speaker 1 (49:01):
So we were only trying to drown her.
Speaker 9 (49:05):
This shows that Peter Pan is not a good guy either,
which has been proven in my previous videos. In this way,
the relationship between the Mermaids and Peter Pan becomes clear
as Peter Pan's accomplices. The Mermaids are naturally not the
kind hearted images and traditional animations. They are more like
a group of dangerous sirens testifying to the unknown darkness
behind Neverland.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
That's what I wanted to say.
Speaker 4 (49:25):
Yep, that's what I'm talking about. We're only trying to
drown her, and they're so evil. And on top of that,
guys sirens are in the Book of Enoch. They were
the women that slept with the fallen angels. Okay, they
slept with the fallen angels and God turned them into
sirens and sirens they were also depicted as birds, but
and and fish half fish or whatever. But the reason why,
(49:47):
I think is literally because how the mermaids pro create
what There is no such thing as fish sex, right,
so there ain't fish sex.
Speaker 1 (49:56):
Do they do it somehow?
Speaker 4 (49:58):
No, it's just like eggs and they just it's not
there's no fish sex. So like God, God, God turned
the women into mermaids close their legs up permanently so
that they couldn't continue to sleep with the angels. And
I think that's probably partially why, and there's probably genetic
stuff to it, which I talk about. If you watch
the Ancient Angels documentary, watch Engian Angels, guys, by the way,
(50:19):
you learn all kinds school stuff. But anyways, when you
learn this, it's like very clear and God like shut
their legs up. And that's why you see the two
tailed mermaid on the Starbucks logan, because it's like it's
literally like a middle finger to the Lord, like, oh,
you want to give us a tail. Fine, we'll have
two tails so we can spread our legs. Again. That's
literally what's what that is on the Starbucks logo just
(50:40):
so you guys know, it's like straight up like it's
like saying close our legs will open them anyways, and
it's literally like a it's like it's so it's perversion, guys.
The Mermaids, we were demons. They were the women that
went against the Lord and and created the children of
the Nephilom. So those things are all wicked. They're not good,
(51:00):
they're evil, wicked thing. Yes, anyways, Okay.
Speaker 1 (51:04):
Yeah, when you think about it though, it's like, so,
where are Mermaids represented other than Disney movies for a
large part, because yeah, you have probably way, you know,
way earlier than The Little Mermaid is Peter Pan and
then eventually you have Aeriel from the from The Little Mermaid.
It's like, you know, it's really kind of weird when
(51:26):
you really actually consider it. Why do they make the
Mermaids appear so attractive? Why are they trying to sexualize
these very weird creatures that have fish tails? Like can
you madge, you know what things that swim in the
sea look like they have gills and they have scales
(51:50):
and they are not pretty. So it's like it does
kind of seem like that there's this agenda to make
these hybrid beings look sexual. What is that? But not demonic?
And that's kind of like what you hear about like
the siren mythologies is the sirens lure sailors in to
(52:12):
get them to crash their ships against the rocks. How
weird is it that Disney has sexualized this mermaid creature,
Like you wouldn't find that attraction, Like that idea is
not attractive a part fish woman like to me, like
you would immediately think be repulsed by that idea, But
(52:32):
they have made Aeriel very attractive. And then like a
lot of these mythologies, she's like topless, so she's like
have a really good looking woman, and then the other
parts of fish parts, it's like a pretty good looking
But when you actually see what sirens are representative in
like in the mythologies, it's like they appear attractive to
(52:54):
lure sailors in and then they crash their ships against
the rocks and drowned. And then when you actually see
what they really look like, Yeah, they look like fish
demons yeah, they're idiots, but Disney is promoting this idea
that that's a good thing, right, These things are actually beautiful,
(53:15):
even though yeah, they're clearly evil. But it's a joke.
It's a big joke in Peter Pain.
Speaker 4 (53:22):
Mm hmmm, we're only trying to drown her, like, are
you kidding me? That that is a wicked These are
wicked creatures and in fact, some of the earliest cave
drawings we know to men is actually humans fighting mermaids.
Did you know that that's the earliest cave drawings.
Speaker 2 (53:37):
Yeah, I know that.
Speaker 4 (53:38):
Yeah, yeah, the earliest cave drawings. You can, you'll show it,
I'm sure, but it's it's, uh, the mermaids. It's like
a race of mermaid people being killed off by humans
with spears. It's very fascinating. That's the earliest cave drawings
we have.
Speaker 1 (53:53):
That's no, that's interesting, you know what. On that note, actually,
I want to shift to a different video. This is
kind of all over the place, but it's we'll get there,
We'll get there.
Speaker 10 (54:04):
Phoenix Arizona was founded by multiple Freemasons and soon after
became home to other fraternal organizations. What's interesting about that
is Phoenix sits on the thirty third parallel, which this
red line represents. In previous videos, I've discussed all the
anomalous events surrounding the four Corners area, which is why
(54:24):
I found this hotspot interesting on a lay line map.
And the symbolism behind naming this city Phoenix is because
the mythological phoenix represents rising from the ashes and this
land was once home to the Juhokm people, which is
an ancient civilization said to have been around three hundred
(54:45):
BCE to fourteen hundred CE. Their largest hub was called
Snake Town and now sits the Bellley of the Sun
because the Sun's east to west travel runs parallel to
Phoenix's grind like design. Back to the thirty third parallel.
The Great Pyramids of Giza sit on the thirty third parallel,
(55:08):
as well as Bagdad Iraq, which is interesting because there's
a Bagdad Arizona, a mining town near the thirty third parallel,
not far from Phoenix or the Polite's geoglyphs which sit on.
Speaker 4 (55:20):
The thirty third parallel.
Speaker 10 (55:22):
Roswell Crash site is on the thirty third parallel. How
about the symbolism behind the first Atombaum because during the
term of Harry Truman, the thirty third president. Trinity Testing
Grounds was on the thirty third Parallel, two hundred and
ten miles south of Las Alamos, New Mexico. If that
isn't crazy enough, both Nagasaki and Hiroshima were detonated on
(55:44):
the thirty third parallel back to Phoenix. I'm sure most
aren't aware of Hunt's tomb. Governor George P. W. Hunt
and tombed his wife in nineteen thirty one, and then
he was put in there in nineteen thirty four.
Speaker 1 (56:00):
Hmmm, did you how much to do that? Did you know?
Speaker 4 (56:05):
Probably like none of it, Like most of it. I
didn't know, like most of it. I mean, like I've
heard of the lay line thing before that, but like
I've never looked into lay lines. I'm not one.
Speaker 1 (56:19):
Well, no, this is not like a lay line. This
is a latitude line. So I mean, it's like the
thirty third parallel. So that's a real thing. That's not
a conspiracy theory. Yeah, yeah, but you know what, I'll
just let's just try to take this slowly because he
covered a lot of stuff in there. I would just
say this, so I try to ask questions about almost
(56:40):
everything now, and I probably always have, but I mean,
my questions are different now. So I went out in
November of twenty twenty three. I went and got married
in Sodona, but we flew into Phoenix, and then we
drove to Sedona, and then eventually we drove to Flagstaff.
So I got to drive around on a good portion
(57:00):
of Arizona. When I landed in Phoenix, I said, why
did they build this city here? It seems like, like, like,
what would make out of all the places in this state,
why would you put the biggest city right here? Because typically,
you know, especially being out of East towns, across the coast,
(57:24):
on the bank of a river some kind of way,
that it's like there's something significant about trade, right, they
would create a city there, right, maybe mining or something
like that. But if you go to Phoenix and you're like,
this place is kind of built in the ugliest part
of Arizona? Am I wrong about that? Sorry? If you
(57:44):
guys are from Arizona, If am I wrong about this?
I think most people have agreed with me. The mountains
around Phoenix are look like brown or black. They're ugly looking.
And then you go to Sedona, it's beautiful. Flag staff
is beautiful. It's like, once you get to like northern Arizona,
it's more like it looks a lot more like Colorado.
(58:06):
And then if you get to like a different part
of Arizona, it looks like Utah. It's it's the worst
part in Phoenix.
Speaker 4 (58:13):
It is pretty. It is pretty, just dull in the
middle of nowhere.
Speaker 1 (58:17):
Yeah, it's in the middle of nowhere.
Speaker 4 (58:19):
So that name suburbia everywhere.
Speaker 1 (58:23):
That name though, the Phoenix, So that is interesting. The
phoenix is a symbol of the Illuminati, very big symbol
of that. I learned a lot about the phoenix when
I started to research like Apollo and things like that.
So what people don't know about the phoenix is the
phoenix willingly sacrifices itself and then praise to the sun
(58:45):
god Apollo in order to be reborn. So it's kind
of a weird name for a new town unless you're
planning on one day sacrificing it. But what if it
had already been burned, Because that's what that's what the
phoenix does, is like it it prays to the Sun God,
(59:06):
it builds itself a funeral pyre, and then praise to Apollo.
Apollo burns it and then it's reborn after that. M
it's a willing sacrifice to the sun god. People don't
know that part about the phoenix mythology. They just think
it's like it rises from the ashes, but it sacrifices
(59:26):
itself in order to be reborn. You know, words have meaning,
names have meaning, So what does that mean? Unless there
was something there before that the phoenix rose from.
Speaker 4 (59:44):
Yeah, I do wonder where that name why they decided
to call it Phoenix Arizona, Like, that's that is pretty interesting.
Unless there was something significant about it being burnt in
that area, or they saw something burnt in that area
and they were like, oh, let's just resurrect a town here,
or like there was some symbolism there. I don't really know,
but I do know. So my buddy was telling me
about some space in Florida where he said that he
(01:00:08):
was doing some work on it, as like a journeyman
linement or whatever. And they went out to this middle
of this field, he said, and it was like, no,
it was just like fields of grass everywhere, and there
were streets, and he said, and all that was in
this big empty field where it was a pyramid. He said,
a pyramid and some free Mason symbolism stuff everywhere, and
(01:00:31):
I guess his friend there was also Freemason, was like
left it and but he was like, yeah, dude, this
is a lot of this town. This is being prepped
by a Masonic like thing here and blah blah blah blah,
and that's what this stat And pretty soon these were
all the houses. But as of right now it's just
you know, whatever it is there. He was like telling
me about it. It's pretty it's pretty interesting it. So
(01:00:53):
it makes me wonder if like Mason set up things
often before they become what it is, and maybe there's
some connection to that. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
So there's your phoenix, there's your Arizona state flag pentagram
with six sunbursts off it. You think about it's even
got in Arizona. So Arizona State. Let's see, is Arizona
State is.
Speaker 4 (01:01:24):
Those are seven six? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
I guess the yello so Arizona State is the sun Devils.
Speaker 4 (01:01:32):
That's yeah, wow.
Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
You think about the the baseball team is the Arizona Diamondbacks. Snakes, Yeah,
it's it's a snake. We sens in a theme here,
serpents and the sun and symbols of the Illuminati, because
(01:01:57):
again in that video we clearly saw lots of pyramid symbolism.
I almost made a video about that when Oppenhammer came
out about where they detonated the first atomic bomb. Whether
you guys believe they were real or not, they there's
still this weird pyramid to represent it. And then Hunt's toomb,
(01:02:18):
the governor had a pyramid supposedly where he buried his
wife in and then he was buried in there later,
but I don't know that the Hunt was buried in there.
Like it's this The pyramid stuff is obviously unusual. There's
something going on there. And that's even the one thing
(01:02:39):
he didn't mention that I don't know, maybe because it
wasn't on the thirty third parallel, But there was that
weird pyramid that's supposedly like in the Center of the Earth, Brian,
you know, I'm talking about this in California, that some
weird eccentric billionaire or whatever built the Center of the
Earth Museum complex or whatever. It has a yearmid, it
(01:03:01):
has a church, it has all kinds of just strange things.
And that's not real far from there either.
Speaker 4 (01:03:10):
And they also I think they like have a thing
where you get to sign an agreement just to go there. Yeah,
you have to, like and you can't record or something
there too. There's like some situation where you can't record
certain things of it or something. Yeah, pretty interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:03:25):
But you know, the thing that really tripped me out
about that thing because a lot of those things I
had heard, but what I hadn't heard is the blithe geoglyphs.
Do you know about that, Brian?
Speaker 3 (01:03:41):
I have.
Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
I didn't actually send it to me. I looked at it,
but I didn't know too much about that.
Speaker 1 (01:03:46):
Brian. What the heck, dude, you're from California. How did
you not know this was here? I don't know, man, No,
this is again, this is one of these things where
I feel like I've been lied to that no one
told us this was here in California. And this is.
Speaker 4 (01:04:05):
See that one before the bottom walking one.
Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
It's it's kind of like this is not quite on
the level of the NASCAR lines lines, but these are
still gigantic, and I think they said they were not
discovered until the thirties, the nineteen thirties, So who did
this and why.
Speaker 4 (01:04:28):
How do you discover that?
Speaker 9 (01:04:31):
You?
Speaker 1 (01:04:32):
I mean, you'd have to fly over it.
Speaker 4 (01:04:34):
I guess, I mean if you're well, I guess if
you're standing next to you're like, huh, that's a weird structure.
Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
That is so barret.
Speaker 4 (01:04:43):
He's a little cow person.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
It's so bizarre because it's like it's very rudimentary and
its design.
Speaker 4 (01:04:52):
But if it's like what if it's like they killed
the giant and they did like one of the chalk
lines early it's early chalk line all of the giant
that killed They're like, remember it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
He had really little arms.
Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
They're like, let's remember how big he was. So they
just marked it out and then they connected the dots
after they killed him and he skipped. Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Well you know, they just drew the it's for the reference.
It's not necessarily trying to like map him out and
chalk perfectly. Serpent that killed snake, Yeah, what about that thing.
(01:05:29):
I don't know if he's he's it's interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:05:34):
He's got a little what he's hanging out with his
waning out a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:05:37):
Yeah, yeah, it looks like we were trying to check that.
I was gonna say something, but then I decided not to.
Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
You're gonna say he was a Peter he was a
he was a Peter Payin.
Speaker 4 (01:05:47):
Yeah, he's definitely Peter In there for sure.
Speaker 1 (01:05:51):
It's it's just so bizarre. I mean, like, so they
don't tell us this stuff exists.
Speaker 4 (01:05:58):
Yeah, I didn't know about it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:59):
What's what's up with all the circles and stuff around
there too?
Speaker 4 (01:06:03):
I think maybe those are are those lines? You think
those are like cars or something.
Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Oh, man, dude, that that's part of the design. I think.
Speaker 11 (01:06:14):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
What I don't know is like, so, what what's up
with like the who outlined them afterwards? You know what
I'm saying, Like, what's up?
Speaker 4 (01:06:22):
But if it was, like the reason why they fenced
them was because people were doing.
Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
Oh those are just defences. Oh yeah, I should have
saw that. That's dumb question.
Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
Yeah, they fenced them because they were like, people were
doing donuts around them. Maybe who knows, or maybe it's a.
Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
Big donuts though. Giant figures made of the desert floor
by ancient man protect them by keeping all vehicles and
established for thank you. It's pretty weird.
Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
Man, you don't know who made it, liars, don't pretend
that you know who made it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:56):
That's true. You're correct about that.
Speaker 2 (01:06:58):
Brian.
Speaker 1 (01:06:58):
They they often act like they know how some of
this stuff happened.
Speaker 4 (01:07:03):
Yeah, made by ancient nelm.
Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
Like there's another one, you know, that's a different one
right there.
Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
Yeah, I'm tempted to go to that sign and like
print out a sticker that is the same size as
man and put Nephilim and just like cover it up.
Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Ancient nefhyl Man.
Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
Ancient Nephilim. Who made it? You don't know who made that.
That's nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
That's pretty weird though, man, Like I said, maybe that's
kind of the the topic du jour of this this
particular episode is that, man, there are so many more mysteries.
It's like that I've never thought that I knew at all,
but you are kind of surprised to things that are
in America that you just had no idea about. Because again,
(01:07:48):
Brian's in California. California is a gigantic state. There's a
lot of territory. But I really do think that so
much of the real mystery and the thing is really
got me my kind of child like curiosity going was
going out west. I really feel like, so my my
family lived in Utah for a time, and I had
(01:08:08):
family from Idaho. I don't know, it does feel like
I don't know how much of that just kind of
gets into your DNA of like, I am really really
fascinated with that part of the country. That's why I
said I've been I've gone out to Nevada, Utah, and Arizona.
I'm just like, I want to go back. I'm going
to show one more video, and I thought this one.
Speaker 4 (01:08:30):
Was really Nevada. Like how you say Nevada?
Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
Did I say, did I say it weird?
Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
No? I just I just I just say it in Nevada.
Speaker 1 (01:08:39):
Now this one is this video I'm gonna show. This
one is just like it's a classic video that there's
I don't know how much Brian's gonna say about this,
but I might have a lot to say about this
if Brian's ever seen this, because Brian's again he's not
a child of the eighties, so he might not have
a big connection to Roddy Roddy Piper.
Speaker 4 (01:08:59):
I mean, I am a child of the eighties. Audience
watches wrestling and they are in on the joke. That's
not an insult, So you're trying to say, is what
I mean? People are just dying for an insult.
Speaker 11 (01:09:10):
I do too, but they're dying to find out.
Speaker 4 (01:09:14):
You're telling me that you're really hitting each other. The
sound of the chair is real.
Speaker 5 (01:09:18):
Okay, what we are entertainment, But when a metal chair
crashs your back, that's not fake.
Speaker 4 (01:09:27):
Never a bruise on any.
Speaker 11 (01:09:28):
Of you old goods.
Speaker 4 (01:09:48):
You got rested seven years has been broken? Oh? Heart dead?
Why don't you go tell missus Hart what a joke
it is? Huh Oh, it's just a phrase, right, You
want me to be truthful with Yeah, the difference is wow,
just don't show me your ass again. Listen I backstage man. Yeah,
(01:10:17):
well all right, you know I'm not rapping my pants
in front of other men, but go ahead. Okay, Well,
how'd you get the job? Oh shoe?
Speaker 1 (01:10:28):
You've seen that, Brian, no comment?
Speaker 4 (01:10:31):
How did you get the job?
Speaker 1 (01:10:32):
Oh shoe?
Speaker 4 (01:10:33):
He's just straight called him.
Speaker 1 (01:10:35):
Out, did you see? Like Bill Maher is a comedian,
and he can be funny at times, and he can
say things that are true at times. But him being
a comedian and not realizing that that was a brilliant comeback.
Whether it was a burn on yourself or not, right,
(01:10:57):
but the way he reacted in the wait that ruddy
Piper was so quick with that line. It seems like.
Speaker 2 (01:11:06):
That is how he got the job.
Speaker 1 (01:11:09):
Yeah, wrong about that.
Speaker 4 (01:11:10):
Seems like he knows something. Seems like you know something
based by that quick witted response, because I don't know
if it was that well known back then by most
common folk, you know what I mean. People probably thought like, oh,
they're good people like and he was like, how'd you
get the job? It was like so it was almost
like he knew something.
Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
I think that he definitely knew. I think that that
was kind of like the P Diddy joke before people
knew about P Diddy. It's like that Bill maher Is.
You know he was a stand up comedian, right, and
then he gets his job on you know the You
think about like comedians, we know them because they did
(01:11:51):
they do movies. You know, some people go to the
clubs and watch their do them do stand up, but
a lot of them do stand up, then they do tea,
then they do movies. But you can think about it
like from a stand up comedian to go get a
job at HBO where you have this regular talk show.
That's pretty good gig. Right, you have this regular show,
(01:12:14):
probably get paid a lot of money, get to mingle
with all the famous people. You imagine how many other
comedians could have done Bill Maher's job. You think about
like that famous quote from George Carlin, George Carlin is
the famous one who talks about it's a big club
(01:12:35):
and you're in. And so George Carlin very funny, not
my favorite comedian. He was very profane and he would
also be very sacrilegious. He was very blasphemous at times.
But I could sense this bitterness with George Carlin that
it was like he knew he was funnier than Bill Maher.
(01:12:57):
He knew he was funnier than lots of comedians, but
he did not get the same gigs as certain comedians,
right because he was not willing to do what they
were to get those jobs, and so like so he
kind of had this cynicism and that was part of
his humor. But you could tell he was upset, and
(01:13:19):
that's where his humor came from. I think I think
that's really interesting because it does really seem like that
when Roddy Piper delivered that line, he knew what he
was talking about. And that's why Bill Maher didn't let
because if it because if he didn't drop his pants
to get the job, then he would have left. Because
(01:13:40):
you know, if somebody like I said, I am a guy,
and you guys probably can tell by the way that
I react to people and I tell jokes the same
way I was in college once. I remember being in
the dorms where we would be ripping each other merciless, mercilessly.
So every now and then you'd have to give the
guy credit. You said something, you set them up, they
(01:14:03):
fired them back, and you have, like you have to
be able to laugh at yourself. Why didn't he laugh
at that joke? Because it was true?
Speaker 4 (01:14:13):
Because it's true, literally literally how it goes. Yeah, I
don't know. I don't have to say about that. I
just think I think it's pretty interesting that a lot
of people are ignorant to how these things work. But
I think people are waking up now and realizing that
the Diddy game is how this thing's work, how all
(01:14:33):
these things work. Hopefully that doesn't crush people's dreams to
want to be an actor and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
Or hopefully, because maybe it doesn't know, yeh like.
Speaker 4 (01:14:41):
Your motivation, you should you shouldn't want to be an
actor because yeah, because what I mean by crush your
dreams is like maybe your dreams should be to discover
new things instead, we'll bring it back to the beginning.
Discover new things around you, to go go uncover some
stuff hidden in the forest. That's probably what we should
be doing, not trying to be dancing clowns on the
(01:15:02):
stage that get pipered down.
Speaker 1 (01:15:05):
Well, you know the funny thing about the the other
thing to kind of get like a whole meta view
of what that was, because it was about like that,
you know when you're when you grow up watching pro wrestling,
you don't know this fake, but then one day you
realize it's it's it's mostly just show business. Yeah, like Sting.
(01:15:26):
Sting was one of my favorite wrestlers. Roddy Piper is
on of my favorite wrestlers. I loved those guys when
they were doing WWE, well actually was WWF Roddy Piper,
And then you have Sting doing w CW. Now what
they were saying is like it's it is real, but
it's scripted, so like you can't fake certain things, like
(01:15:47):
eventually these these guys do get hurt. I mean, these
guys are incredible athletes, and the fun part about it
is is the theatrics. And I think there was like
a really famous wrestling story where it was maybe it
was the Iron Chic and somebody else who was supposed
to be they were supposed to be in it. Maybe
it was Hacksaw Jim Duggan and they were they were
(01:16:09):
hanging out together and they got in trouble that I
think they might have got pulled over something like that,
but they were hanging out, and so Hacksaw Jim Duggan
was like the great American thing I think came into
He came all worked up with the American flag, and
the Iron Chic was Iranian. He was like pro al Qaeda.
(01:16:30):
Not really, but I mean, you know what I'm saying,
Like that, that's kind of the the image that was
presented and then people are like, oh my gosh, this
is fake. I think that that that whole view of
what pro wrestling is. I think that it's a more
exaggerated view of all the things we see politics, you know, celebrities,
(01:16:52):
all this fake.
Speaker 4 (01:16:53):
It's all fake.
Speaker 1 (01:16:55):
It's kind of like when you watch reality TV and
you think, like that the card, Like if you guys
don't know the Kardashians is not real like those those
reality TV shows. The early ones, people did think that
they were real, but then you find out later obviously
they have producers and they certain people play characters. I
think that that is the television, right, Brian, that's the broadcasting.
(01:17:19):
It's like they're telling you a vision, and that's what
pro wrestling is. And so when these guys do get
to be themselves. I think that's why Roddy Piper was.
He was a great character on those shows because he
is a great he is awesome. Of course, Roddy Piper
also from the famous somewhat maybe documentary style movie They Live,
(01:17:43):
he's the one who wears the glasses, right he really? Yeah,
Roddy Piper was. That was one of his movie roles,
is that you were the glasses and when the glasses
were on, it was revealed all the sublim subliminal programming
in the culture. Sure, and also the people who ran
the place. We're not human.
Speaker 4 (01:18:05):
That's funny. I didn't know. So that's the actor, Is
that actual? That's the dude.
Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
Yeah, that was Roddy Piper.
Speaker 4 (01:18:11):
Oh that's hilarious. So well he probably you know, what
a fitting role for him to play, like you know
what a fitting role for somebody that's like saying things
like that out loud. You know who knows.
Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Yeah, he was revealing the truth, right, I mean he
was revealing the truth on that and then on Bill
Maher and guess what, Roddy Piper is no longer with us.
A lot of wrestlers do not live that long. But
but man as a kid, actually.
Speaker 4 (01:18:43):
Wrestlers don't live that long. That's like a thing, a
known thing. Pro wrestlers they don't live that long. That's
like a known thing, is what.
Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
They are. Rock stars on steroids and I mean that literally,
like they take steroids, they take pain pills. The storyori
of the pro Wrestlers. If you ever are bored, go
watch these pro wrestler documentaries. These guys lived fascinating lives
like guys like Andre the Giants and hul Cogan and
(01:19:14):
Rick Flair. Those guys drink like a hundred beers in
a night. These guys were in like literally they go
from town to town like rock shows and then they
do all the things they do. And that's why when
like Bill Maher saying it's fake, these guys get hurt
and they have to perform every night the kind of
(01:19:34):
thing they could do. It's like that they have to
be such in a choreography to do the stuff that
they do and not get hurt. And it's it's pretty
insane that, Yeah, like you could do that and maintain
a physique and be on the road all the time
and all the stuff that they do. Yeah, it's his fake,
but it's obviously not easy to fake all the stuff
(01:19:57):
that they do. And yeah, Logan Paul does it.
Speaker 4 (01:20:00):
Now, Logan Paul's a wrestler.
Speaker 1 (01:20:02):
Well again, those guys, well, I mean it's it's similar.
It's probably similar to who was it was Logan Paul
versus Mike Tyson. That's as real as pro wrestling.
Speaker 4 (01:20:13):
Yeah, well it wasn't Logan Paul. Was Logan Paul's brother
versus Mike Tyson? It was Jake Paul? Was it?
Speaker 1 (01:20:19):
Which one is the older one? Well?
Speaker 4 (01:20:20):
I think the older one is is Logan.
Speaker 1 (01:20:24):
But okay, so Logan Paul.
Speaker 4 (01:20:26):
But I'm pretty sure I thought it was Jake that
fought Tyson.
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Let's let's look that up just to confirm.
Speaker 4 (01:20:32):
Yeah, it was Jake Paul that fought Tyson?
Speaker 6 (01:20:34):
Is it?
Speaker 4 (01:20:34):
But yeah, but I'll tell you, I'll tell you what
you don't know? A funny thing, you know, the logan
Paul's fighting career. I helped kick that off. Did you
know that?
Speaker 1 (01:20:42):
I did not know that.
Speaker 4 (01:20:44):
Yeah, he sword fought me. I sword him on the
streets with the lightsaber. I literally ran into him on
the street.
Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
Do you have any video of that?
Speaker 4 (01:20:51):
I do, Actually I have a video of it. You
want to share it, I'll send it to you can
put it out here.
Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
All right, we're going to show Brian fighting right now.
Speaker 4 (01:21:04):
Paul.
Speaker 3 (01:21:20):
He's been lightsaber death.
Speaker 4 (01:21:22):
I literally know know exactly what it feels like to
be bro starting logan. Paul's whole fighting career kicked off
fighting me with a lightsaber. I'm not even joking. I'm
not even joking.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
You got million hopefully you got millions to do that,
you know.
Speaker 4 (01:21:38):
I gotta I gotta call him up, but we gotta
we gotta fight again. Actually, so Logan Paul, if you
see this again, it's on. Bro, We're going. It's going down.
Me and you, buddy, we're sword fighting. If you ever
call it out, we're going, it's going down. But I
ran into him on the street and then just saw
him and I was like, hey, aren't you that internet
guy like this is a long time right before he
blew up and I was like, I was like, I
(01:21:59):
feel like I've seen He's like yeah, but don't tell nobody.
And I was like, I was like, okay cool. And
then and then I realized, I think he's that face.
I think he's like a famous internet. I was like,
what's your name, bro? He's like is logan Loco Ball,
And so I was like, okay cool. And I had
lightsabers with me because I was in l A doing
some event.
Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
I had lightsabers with me because I was my warm lightsabers.
Speaker 4 (01:22:19):
So of course, so I went over and I like
and I performed, and then I like threw my lightsare
and I pointed at him. I'm like, let's go, bro,
and he's like, oh, okay, let's go. Let's do it.
And then like we totally fought. It was hilarious, and
then he was like he was pretty cool. We got
what was fun. So then that and then people were like, hey,
don't fight Daca with the lightsaber, fight ks I, fight
(01:22:40):
KSI or whatever. And then all of a sudden, he
started his fighting career with fighting KSI because everybody was like,
don't fight the lightsaber guy, you need to fight KSI
So I like to think I kicked off Logan's fighting career,
but uh, you know, we gotta we gotta go again sometime, Logan.
Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
When once we met, I was the learner, but now
I am the master. Yeah, fun, fun, Yeah that is
that's amazing, That's honestly amazing. Yes, and I would I
would say that either Paul brother we want to have
a rematch at the Christian Conspiracy Podcast Network conference, and
(01:23:22):
yes we will. You guys can live stream that as well.
So you guys are interested in that idea, let's make
let's make that happen and maybe we can have a
lightsaber battle. Well maybe not even just We're not gonna
limit to the Paul Brothers. Brian's gonna take on all takers.
Speaker 4 (01:23:36):
Yeah, yeah, anybody wants to fight, let's go, let's go.
Should go get my fencing masks? Will we go get
my fencing mask? Yes? And flamethrower and flamethrower.
Speaker 1 (01:23:46):
Yeah, well on that. No, guys, appreciate you guys hanging
out with us. Brian, what do we have going on
for the next Ancient Angels podcast?
Speaker 4 (01:23:55):
Oh, we might have a guest. I have a friend.
He's a little person and I was just talking to
him on the phone and he said he might have
time to jump on the podcast. He's going to share
some of his supernatural experiences. If not, we're just going
to talk about probably like little people and like nephlum,
the genetic connections to that kind of stuff and dwarves, gnomes,
(01:24:18):
duendes you know, you know what I mean, Like all
the weird unique nephylum genetic small people things. So jump on,
learn some crazy stuff. Maybe we'll have a guess, maybe not,
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:24:30):
We'll see that sounds awesome. So once again, guys, please
check out Modern Roots Life support the podcast. If you
can support them and support us at the same time,
that'd be awesome and we look forward to you hanging
out with us next time. We love you, guys, God
bless Later. Everyone left me, everyone deserted me.
Speaker 4 (01:25:12):
Jesus was always there when everyone hated me and walked away.
Speaker 2 (01:25:17):
Jesus never walked away.