Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:30):
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Speaker 3 (01:02):
Welcome to the One on one podcast with your host
one a Yala.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Welcome back to I would say the first episode of
the year, but unfortunately it's not slick because I actually
did record an episode with Homi Rome last night for
the Patreon where we got into some pseudo Monarchia Daimonum
(01:57):
by Johann Weyer, and we went hard in the paint
on this, and we also talked a little bit about
the combalistic trees. Well it came up in conversation, but
the next we're gonna be talking about that. But I
had predicted that I wasn't going to be able to
sleep after doing Johann Veyer's prayer that you're supposed to
(02:19):
do before invoking demons, because I did read it on air,
half of it because it was a lot and I
couldn't sleep last night. So if you want to check
that out, that is on the Patreon. It's a Dopamine
Deep Dive number eighteen with Homie Romi where we talked
about demons and invoking demons. We talked about Cornelis Agrippa,
we talked about Trent Atheis, we talked about all those dudes,
(02:40):
and it was a great time. But that was the
first episode of twenty twenty five.
Speaker 4 (02:44):
But here we are on Are you telling me that
we're number nineteen? He was eighteen and we're nineteen.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
Yeah, sure, No, Well this is going to go out
to the public feed, so this is going to be
on the Hang one.
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Oh all right, all right, well, yeah, eighteen is a
very magical number. Jumping between eighteen and nineteen is the
monotonic lunar stand still code, and that's actually really heavy
with my weavesour Oh eight Yeah, I got something for everything, buddy,
(03:21):
I got something for everything.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
So dude, welcome to the show Slick once again. We
always go everywhere and anywhere. And you know how it
is with the old Slick dissident. What you've been up to, bro?
How's your New Year's? Hopefully everyone did have a happy Holidays,
Happy New Year, Merry Christmas Saturday, ayly freaking back in
(03:45):
Aily whatever sullen victis, So whatever you celebrate, more power
to you. But how was yours? Dude?
Speaker 4 (03:53):
It was wonderful. Yeah, some real quality time with my
kiddo and all the matriarch in my family. We have
a huge collection of birthdays near and around Capricorn and Sagittarius,
and almost all of them are the are the ladies
and the family. So I've been dishing out birth Christmas
(04:14):
and birthday massages for the past couple of weeks, and yeah,
just gave a beautiful gift to pretty much everybody. I
kind of went into dishing out books. You know, I'm
kind of getting into like, let's use the old technology,
let's not get too caught up in the new technology,
(04:36):
and let's just have the actual book in our hand,
you know. So, Yeah, I dished out a ton of
books for Christmas and got my kiddo the Neil Gaiman
comic book series on Magic. I think she's going to
be tripping on that and a lot of the imagery
you and I pull up here on the channel that
comes off of the Neo Gaming Magic series that you
(04:59):
put on.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Up interesting and where can people find you? Bro? Where
can people go to your website or your podcast?
Speaker 4 (05:07):
Yep? You take a channel, yep. I got the YouTube.
Slick Dissident on YouTube is my channel, and then you
can find me at Slickdissident dot com is my website
where I sport some of these shirts and some of
my carrot cards with some of my original thought logiz
moy on offer for the people. And also I get
(05:28):
down with Chance Garton over on the Interverse quite regularly.
But I think we're all on a winter hiatus for
a little while.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
Yeah, I had to take a break too, dude. You
got burned out quick and I think I took half
of November and all of December off kind of sort
of a little bit like I think all the podcasts
are a few times. So this is gonna be the
first official episode of twenty twenty five that we're going
into now, and we're gonna be just banging these out.
I got a fully booked week next week, so we're
(05:56):
gonna go hard on the paint and yeah, make sure
out the show. Social media at the hon on one Podcast,
pretty much all social media platforms www dot TJOJP dot com,
Patreon for all those that are interested, Patreon dot com,
slash the hon on one Podcast and all that good
stuff links down to the description. But this this guy, dude,
(06:19):
I've never heard about them. So DC Comics, Neil Gaiman,
the Books of Magic. Apparently it is a comic book
mini series and the art looks pretty dope. Dude.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Yes, it's quite exceptional. And I really love keeping an
eye on these guys because they really are the grand
culture creators. You know that term vanguard, We talked about
it on the last time I was on with you.
You know, the word vanguard is kind of what we
call today the avant garde and the avant garde are
(06:48):
pretty much the where I think the military industrial complex
and Hollywood meet and the you know so yeah, a
lot of the symbolic literacy is very dependent on keeping
a breast to what these guys are putting out.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
So check this out, dude. So we have d C,
which is important because it's got one of my favorite
movie series. Whatever, I guess you want Watchman by the
old Alan Moore, right, who is an occultist. Right, he's
on par with what's the other guy that did the
(07:27):
hyper Sigils. What's his name? Hyper Sigils, who did the Invisibles?
I think it is, Yes, I know who you're talking about,
but I forget Grant Morrison.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
So you have Grant Morrison, who is also a he's
like I believe he's a chaos magician. And this is
a guy who's written about He did one of a
very popular series called I think it's the The Invisibles
and I haven't ever checked it out, but apparently allegedly
he says that this is a hyph persidual of his
(08:01):
and that he whatever he did in the comic book
to his character that was modeled after him. Also whatever,
happened to the character in the story also happened to
him in reality. And so we have again this idea
of some sort of mimetic magic occultism in there. And
Grant Morrison is also up there, or I'm sorry, Alan
Moore is also up there. But check this out, dude.
(08:22):
As Moore's proposed story would have left many of the
characters unusable for future stories, managing editor Dick Giordano convince
More to create original characters instead. Gidano, Okay, he was,
so he's he's gotten passed on, but I wonder if
he's part of the bloodline of Giordano Bruno in some
(08:45):
sort of way. But I'm gonna check these out, dude.
This actually looks pretty dope.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
Yeah it was. It was. I don't think I got
all the way through it, but I think I got
the book number two and it is really good stuff. Now,
doctor a cult uh huh, Yeah, it kind of has
a he echoes Warshack in interesting ways, you.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
Know, Constantine number seventeen. All right, Yeah, I'm gonna have
to check this out again. Being a abilities expert user
of magic, spell casting, summoning, scrying power, siphoning, conjuration, magical amplification,
magical chance, eldritch blast, energy transference, horse field generation. This
dude's going in. I wonder we can become mounkelous necromancy.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
The homunculous meteor shower is coming up.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
So last time you and I got together, Yeah, buddy,
we dropped some bombs there at the end. Right right now,
we've got some craziness going on. Twenty twenty five. We
have the exploding cyber truck, we have the Illuminati fog.
Everyone's freaking out about it. At first it was the drone.
Then everyone always forgets about everything, moves on to the
(09:55):
next power siphon, attention siphoning thing. It's like, well, the
I forgot what it was. What was it before the drones?
What do we have before the drones? Do you remember?
Speaker 5 (10:08):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (10:09):
Well, uh we had Putin coming on the air threatening
a high explosive retaliation. Things kind of went crazy on
the international scene, and then it came local with the drones.
You know, it was kind of on a on a
macro large scale threat, and then it became like no,
it's already in your backyard.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
Yeah, it's in your nipples. And then it's like, oh,
here's this this fog that everyone was talking about. They
never seen a fog in their life before. But at
the end of our last episode of I recall correctly,
we talked about the I think it was the homunculous nebula.
Was that its you got it.
Speaker 4 (10:51):
With the baby homunculous inside of it?
Speaker 2 (10:54):
So it's actually a homunculus within a homunculus. Is there
a dark mode for freaking Wikipedia?
Speaker 4 (11:02):
A good question?
Speaker 2 (11:02):
Can we go dark maga on Wikipedia? Because this thing
is like here you go dark? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Baby?
Speaker 2 (11:09):
All right, cool, this looks a lot better. All right,
So the homongulous nebula is a bipolar emission and reflection
nebulus rounding the massive star system edna karina. Is that
supposed to be like the dog something dog related?
Speaker 4 (11:25):
Then that one is actually the keel of a broken
up boat called the argos.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
All right, let's start peeling this apart, because I I
what was it that I found out? It was in
the in the It was like in the same timeframe
as the day that Trump was elected the first time around?
What was it? Dude? When I go back and watch
the episode that you and I did watch the ending
(11:55):
there because it was like towards the ending.
Speaker 4 (11:57):
It was right at the end and it was too
much to handle for the end of the show. We're
closing up. It was there's some sort of an effect
inside of the babymunculus.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Here we go, I got it, ud let me let
me pull this up because we were dropping we were
dropping bombs chrome tab sure sound all right, here you go?
Is this it all right? Can you hear this?
Speaker 4 (12:23):
Yep? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Cool. So let's go to the end here because it
was towards the ending, and we'll pick we'll pick up
right where we left off.
Speaker 4 (12:29):
All right, perfect, it'll be great.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
So here you go. All right, so yeah, here it
is for sell code.
Speaker 4 (12:35):
It's telling you that you were more of a ninja
than you ever ever could have imagined.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
You will and you will like it. And it's the NW. Oh,
here's the here's the last one, bro. So we got
the Homunculus and Eda Carne are assumed to be at
approximately the same distance as trumpet sixteen.
Speaker 4 (12:53):
Choppercardyll.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
What year did Trump win the first presidential election?
Speaker 4 (13:00):
These high threests, Man, they got their head in the stars.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
We're lucky to have Dan Clue Trumpler. Oh man, we
can't make this up. But anyways, Happy Halloween. Everybody, Happy Halloween.
That was on everyone. That was on Halloween too. On
top of that, dude, we recorded that on Halloween. That
came out on November eighteenth, So Trumpler eighteen sixteen. Yeah, yeah,
(13:24):
So what do you got for saying that the homunculous
shower is coming up? Dude?
Speaker 4 (13:28):
What? Yeah? The edit KOREENID meteor shower happens on Inauguration Day.
It has a broad window, but the peak of its
expression is right on January twenty.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
First shower twenty twenty five. Let's look this up.
Speaker 4 (13:47):
And the sigil for this constellation has three three it's
a kind of the mast of a boat or the
heel of a boat, and three lines dropping down out
of the keel, which I've also correlated to the umbilical cord.
You know, the umbilical cord has three veins vessels, and
(14:11):
then there's a mucosum kind of like your your Yeah,
you're what is it called the green ow? It's your
waste removal, That's what it is. It's your waste removal.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
So what do you think is going to happen?
Speaker 4 (14:31):
So?
Speaker 2 (14:31):
Are they using it to fuel some sort of I mean,
obviously the inauguration is one of the biggest initiations that
there is right.
Speaker 4 (14:40):
You're exactly right. And it's also drumming into our most
animal like nature because it's in the depth of the winter.
It is really droning into our hibernation habits and our
seasonal immune response. The winter is the quintessence of white fragility,
because the ice and the snow and the frosty, the snowman,
(15:03):
all of the constellations down there are white fragility. There's
a goose, there's a swan, there's the pegasus, and then
there's I often incorporate this river because I see the
river as frozen. It's a frozen river that you would
slip and fall on it. So there's even aspects in
(15:26):
the heavens in the winter time that are telling you
tread carefully, be extremely fragile, because this is the time
of year when things are really dangerous and you're gonna
have to hunt for your food. It doesn't just come
out of the ground in abundance right now. You've got
to go and hunt and risk your life to even
eat at night. So yeah, a lot of the signs
(15:48):
and symbols in the winter are very primal.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
So here I'm trying. You said it was the keel
of a boat.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
Yes, at the Kreenid there and there are many other
co terminal constellations near and around it. Here you go,
this is great.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
Yeah, I'm trying to find a picture of it because
is that like, uh, what is it the Argonauts with
the boat? You remember that one on that long time ago?
Speaker 4 (16:18):
Absolutely, buddy, yep. So, Jason, the word j A s
o n is the Nottorah con sequencing of January, August, September, October, November.
That spells j A s O n and the Argo's
boat that he rides on it starts in January or
(16:40):
I'm sorry in July, along with the Jay of his name.
So the phrase Jason and the Argonauts is actually painting
a zodiac with our with our words, and.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
This is Karina is part of the former constant Argonavis,
which represented the ship with Jason. So it is part
of that totally.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
Yes, And you've heard the philosophical conundrum of the Ship
of Theseus. Yeah, So if you take this boat and
you spread it apart and replace it with all new pieces,
it still is going to be called the ship of
Theseus because in theory, it's the same even though you've
placed all the pieces. Well, that's exactly the metaphor for
(17:21):
what I do with mythology.
Speaker 2 (17:23):
Oh here it is right her, Yes, And so what
I do.
Speaker 4 (17:27):
With mythology is you can interchange all the pieces of
the telemetry data of a complete hermetic system, but it
just looks slightly different, but it's still kind of anatomically
perfect for the psychology of mankind. And so yeah, this
boat used to be the biggest constellation ever until like
(17:49):
somewhere in the eighteen thirties, somewhere between the two World Wars,
or maybe right before the First World War, they decided
to break up big ups to PK on this research
rabbit trail, by the way, they decided to break up
the Argo Navis because it was actually like immensely the
largest constellation ever, and they spread it around in the
(18:13):
Southern hemisphere and then they re standardized all the constellations
around the time that they broke the ship up. But
some of the things that they did to trim the
ship down to size actually turned it into a submarine.
And this was the time that the submarines were changing.
(18:35):
The tide of the war was at the time that
they actually reconfigured the Argo Navis at large and so
after that, and.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
That is that Zebra homage to a PK. D.
Speaker 4 (18:50):
By the way, I had no idea that he was
into the Zebra. I actually know. I found the Zebra
in my own path and I find out he was
into it too the Pink Light.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Dude, that book goes so hard. Vallas is such a
crazy documentary like that that's not even a book, dude,
Like that that book changed my life. Like Philip K.
Dick's writing opens up your mind so wildly that you're
(19:23):
not ready for that. You know how they talk about
like Kundalini and how people go crazy after they awaken
their Like that was me reading Philip K. Dick. He
was like boom boom boom and this, and I was like,
and that's the like that's one of the three books, right,
So yeah, man, yeah, it goes so crazy, dude.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
I couldn't believe it because, uh yeah, I kind of
came to the Zebra thing on my own path and
I find out that Homie's talking about it on a
whole nother level. It's it's a trip and a half.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
So life imitates art. My bun so life imitates hard.
They switch it over and they turn it summary.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
And you.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
That whole riddle or myth or whatever you want to
call it, an analogy of if you replace all the
planks of wood in this boat or whatever it is,
does it is it still the same boat? And you know,
on the topic of politicians and people in power, who
I believe at some point in time, are all amalgamations
(20:26):
of the previous person. Right, They're creating these new homunculus
over and over again. But if you take something you
turn it into a camera, does it is it still
the original thing? Or does it become something completely different
in the end? Does it continue to evolve or how
does that work? Because we can take that into the
into the homunculous argument of like if the original alchemists
(20:48):
right use his seat to create that homunculus, then the
next alchemist takes that homunculous and does something with it
to create another homunculus or whatever it is, is it
still like retain some of that magical lessonce of the
first I think I think so because I learned yesterday
on an episode with Homieromi that there is five four
thousand year old sourdough dude, huh and like thousand year old,
(21:12):
one hundred year old sourdough starter. Kids, whoa did you
ever hear about this?
Speaker 4 (21:17):
No? Bro, Wow, that's profound. It's like eating history.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
You can buy allegedly a five thousand year old red
sea Egyptian sourdough starter and sourdough if anything, is a
real life homunculus like sourdough. I haven't made any because
it's like a lot of work. But sourdough is alive, dude. Wow,
sourdough moves. It's a you have to feed it. And
(21:43):
if you think, let's say that the let's think about, right,
if the homunculus was faking gay, right, which more than
likely it was, right, let's say that it never existed.
And these guys yesterday we talked about how maybe the
Goetia and the lesser kiss Solomon, which was modeled after
the pseudo monarchia. Right, But here's the thing with the
(22:06):
pseudo monarchia, dude, that our boy vey are here Johann Bayer,
who was a living student at Fort is Weird, fourteen
years old, living student with Cornelius Agrippa. Okay, make of that,
make of that way you will okay, kind of whatever,
living student, a pupil of Agrippa. He put this out trolling,
(22:30):
and there's sixty nine demons in this particular grandmar okay,
sixty nine instead of the seventy two. And from this
work is where the Lesser Key and everything else came
forth from. So again we go back to that question
of the ship. If the original was faking gay to
begin with, slick, does it make everything else after that
(22:51):
also faking gay? How does that work? Please explain that
to me, you know what I'm saying. So you have here,
you can buy a five thousand year old. So where's
the you know, the original was five thousand years ago allegedly.
Uh huh, you got these works? I called him the first.
I want to say, Johann Veer was the first mimetic
(23:12):
magician troll.
Speaker 4 (23:14):
He was trolling, Yeah, I mean yeah. You know. One
thing that comes to mind is how much the word
sour dough just kind of rhymes with your shadow, you know,
and there's uh, we look into shadow work and you
kind of got to consider that some of it is
way beyond just one lifetime. That's a lot to be
(23:35):
carrying around in your backpack, just.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
Taking a look here at sourdough, see if it rings
with anything? Here? You see any numbers that stand out
to you? Bro got the four to one one here?
Speaker 4 (23:50):
Yeah, i'd see a three six nine in there with fibonacci. Three.
That's gonna happen. That's totally gonna happen. Three is close
to I've been buzzing on forty two, the answers to
the universe and everything. Yeah, forty two has been on
my weave recently, supposing you equals forty two and Anyagraham
(24:14):
equals forty two, both with nine letters.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
But yeah, interesting, So yeah, I didn't know. Again, look
forty five hundred year old, nine hundred year old, thousand
year old? Are they really? Who knows?
Speaker 4 (24:29):
I mean?
Speaker 2 (24:30):
But I learned this yesterday because I was talking to
Romi and he's been cooking up pizzas, and I was like, hey, dude,
how similar is it cooking pizzas to you're an alchemist? Dude,
you're working in front of the furnace, cooking up the bread.
And if anything was to be described with the homunculus,
let's say it wasn't what we've been told that it's
(24:51):
a little man in a jar it's sourdough.
Speaker 4 (24:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
I mean, and think about it because bread is such
a pivotal thing any major religion, you know, the Eucharist,
you do what you eat bread and wine or which
is symbolic. So bread has a very powerful, uh you know,
religious meaning significance throughout all of history. And I'm sure
(25:18):
bread was even major in Mesopotamian times, where I'm sure
you could probably baia of bread. Mesopotamian bread. Is there sourdough?
Speaker 4 (25:33):
Yeah? And even you know, symbolically, a lot of aspects
of virgo are intrinsic to the you know, the harvest
season and the bread, but also like breeding practices, you know,
and keeping eugenic pure blood bloodlines. All of these are
kind of very much how big Pharma is still conducting
(25:58):
the big farm of.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Look at what they call the first component, the mother.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
Is it a mother feeder?
Speaker 2 (26:06):
Yeah? Yeah, all right, mother feeder. So you got the mother.
So dude, this is alchemy. I'm gonna I'm gonna make
a sour dough.
Speaker 4 (26:17):
It's interesting if you think about the mother ship, the
iron iron Randy and mothership.
Speaker 2 (26:23):
Three to four hours to come to life, five to
six days to develop a personality, what what dude, I'm
telling the secret is in the sour dough slick?
Speaker 4 (26:37):
Can we cheer? Let me see if I could turn
that sour dough into the word gullum.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
Well, uh so, here, let's look at what were the
numbers saying?
Speaker 4 (26:47):
Here?
Speaker 2 (26:48):
Oh dude, we're going down the sour dough, the sour
dough rabbit hole. So gollum is okay, it's twenty two
sixty six. All right, Well they're not complete, you know,
they're not matches one hundred percent, but the gall them again.
(27:08):
And if it didn't, didn't Jews make donuts or bagels? Right?
Speaker 4 (27:12):
Bagels?
Speaker 2 (27:13):
They made bagels? Can you have sourdough bagels?
Speaker 4 (27:16):
Oh? Man, I hope.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
So the history of the bagel and the anti Semitism
bagels and sourdough are both associated with Joe shit. So
sourdough is associated with Jewish culture, but bagels are more
commonly associated with Jewish history and culture, while sourdough is not. Okay,
(27:37):
huh so sourdough. Who created the sourdough? Who created sourdough?
The Egyptians, of course, right, sour dough around fifteen hundred BC.
The most popular theory is that it was discovered by
accident when breaddough was left out and wild, these spores
in the air cause it to rise. The Egyptians realized
that this meant to created a light bread with that
(28:00):
or taste. They're like, this has been infused with the
soul o God right now, so we have to treat
this with respect. And that's how the first well. And
that would make sense, dude, because the first alchemists allegedly
the land of Ken the Egyptians Hermestris magistus.
Speaker 4 (28:23):
Yeah, buddy, yeah, yeah. And even you know, in the
translation back to the word for chaos, a lot of
people think that it justifies you know, nothing or something
coming out of a nothing. They think that the primordial
chaos means the kneehilo. But I always want to point
(28:46):
out that it's also linguistically rooted in the word gas
and also the word cause. The word cause, gas and
chaos are somewhat interchangeably. And what I'm doing here very
much like the ship of theseus, I'm kicking these phonetics
and I'm re amalgamizing them around these projections into uh,
(29:12):
you know, creation mythology. The gas, the cause, and the
chaos theory is all phonetically harmonic, and it's just kind
of uh making a claim. It's stating, you know, a
verbal mouth sound claim on where everything comes from. And
I just find it fun to do a ship of
(29:32):
theseus with these words because they all kind of come
from the same mother feeder. You know what I mean?
That all comes from the same symbolic one mode time
I doubled there you mother feeder.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
So check this out. The alchemy of sourdough bread this
is the ai over. I love it. Some say sourdough
bread making is magical and that the process is similar
to alchemy. The starter also known as the mu there's
a living organism that's fed flour and water to create
a cycle of growth, multiplication, and death. The long fermentation
process breaks down wheats, gluten, and carbohydrates, making sourdough easier
(30:11):
to digest than other types of bread. Dude, sourdough is
the elixir of life. It is right because you need
carbs to survive, like you. And this is the crazy part.
I don't know if you've ever seen that show alone
on Netflix. I've ever seen that show?
Speaker 4 (30:29):
I No, I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
So there's this show called the loan, it's I think
it's Netflix. And what they do is these people go
out and it's they I think they win a million
dollars or half a million dollars, but you go out
and it's whoever survives the longest. There is no end,
like it's until last man standing. And one of the
(30:53):
interesting parts of the one of the seasons I saw
there was this dude who was crazy with the belt
and he shot a I believe was an elk or
a caribou, one of the two. He shot it, and
he's like, you're gonna win, right, you shot this huge animal.
You're gonna have meat. He's trying to like hide the
meat from the bears and all this crazy stuff because
(31:14):
they're like they're deep in the in the woods. And
he's like, I need a source of fat or something
because the meat itself, the protein isn't gonna sustain you.
So even though he killed this huge animal, he has
all this meat, you'd think like, oh, he's gonna win,
Like this is it? Like this dude got food. Like
(31:35):
that's the main thing that people struggle with, right. It
wasn't enough, right, And just to bring that into like
the whole bread like you need carbohydrates, you need you
need a balance die obviously to make it. Now, you'd
probably last a little bit longer than than another guy
who was I think it was this guy was an elk.
Speaker 4 (31:53):
Dude.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
This guy killed it with whoa He had a like
it's like a regular not even a compound, but just
like a you know, drawstring bow. And he yeah, season six,
episode five, the kill and he took down this giant
el dude. But I think spoiler, I think he did
win this this season because it does give you an advantage, right,
(32:18):
but it's not. It wasn't enough. He's like, I need fat,
and I think one of the Knights, some some honey
badgers I think, broke into his camp and stole his
can of fat that he had that he was just
starting up and like eating out of supplement some stuff.
But yeah, dude, this show is crazy. You should check
it out. And isn't this an elk on the cover
of the behind? That is right?
Speaker 4 (32:39):
Yeah, yeah it is. You know that's fascinating.
Speaker 5 (32:43):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (32:43):
I've been looking at the constellation of Centaurists and just
when I look at the image of the constellation, it
looks so much like a giant buck with a you know,
with a glorious rack on it. It's supposed to be
a bull with the human torso, a bowl man with
the human torso.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
But what oh, yeah, centaur, a centaur's dick. Is it
in the front up here or is it back here
like a horse?
Speaker 4 (33:10):
I think it's at the back. That's a good question, though.
Speaker 2 (33:14):
Where does the centaur's dick go? Dude, like it would
it be too too distract? What do you have to
wear like a skirt in the front to cover his
he like, have you ever come across a centaur? It's like, oh,
that's where the dick goes.
Speaker 4 (33:27):
Maybe that's what the spear represents.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
A hey, dude, maybe that is right, the spear and everything. Yeah, yeah,
it's the body of a horse, right.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
Right, yep. Yeah. In some depictions, it's like in the
story of the the Maze of the Island of uh Crete, Yeah,
I think it's the Island of Creek. There's a maze
with the centaur in that story he actually has bullhead
(33:59):
a bull head with then then yeah, yep.
Speaker 2 (34:03):
Yeah, that's the story of find Too Close to the Sun.
What's his name? Deadalist or I say didalis However, you
want to say dedalist idalis where he was the first
like drinker, right, he was like the first guy to
ever make like robots and stuff like that. And I
think he's in a book that I got, really crazy book,
(34:25):
so George R. Heresy actually how you say his name? Hersy?
He wrote a lot about like statues and animating and
all that stuff. But talking, I'm going to get that
book so I can read some stuff from there because
it's really interesting.
Speaker 4 (34:41):
Yeah, yeah, because that's a that's some primordial uh what
are they called Uncanny Valley? You know, they used to
stun people psychologically by animating a mannequin and convincing people
at could talk or play chess. They get people's mind
just broke out of reality showing him some of the technau.
(35:03):
And you know, Socrates's father kind of had a name
that was related to the word dadalus because he was
a craftsman. He was actually a sculptor, a famous sculptor.
But yeah, he's from the bloodline that has the root
in Deadalust.
Speaker 2 (35:18):
So this book you're not gonna find it online because
that's how hard in the paint it goes. I've taken
some notes already from it. Because he does talk about
homunculus and everything in here, but it's called artificial humans
from Pagmillion to the present. Oh Man falling in Love
with Statues all right, and hersy George L. Hersey, which
wrote Pythagorean Palaces, by the way, this is the guy.
(35:40):
This is the Pythagorean Palace guy.
Speaker 4 (35:42):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (35:43):
And when I found him, I fell in love with
his work. He's probably I bought all his books, by
the way, because a lot of them aren't available online.
I had to buy all his books. And I don't
know what to say about it because it's it's so
in depth with everything. It's very he goes hard in
the paint on architecture like resonance and proportions and everything.
(36:04):
But I came across this particular book where he talks
about again artificial humans. From Greek statues to porcelain dolls
to digital avatars. Countless generations are artificial humans have fascinated, seduce,
and earned the devotion of their flesh and blood creators.
Falling in Love with Statues reveals that these relationship that
have played an instrumental role throughout human history and our
(36:27):
efforts to understand, improve and empower ourselves doving into this
phenomenon with erudition and sparkling pros. George Hersey begins in Cypress,
the home of the sculptor Pugmillion, who famously grew enamored
of his own creation. And so I believe in this.
He also has talks about Ovid, talks about Aristotle, talks
(36:51):
about Circe. Maybe, yeah, Circe's in here too, And let
me see if I can find the I believe he
has a Didalus thing in here because the labyrinth there
might have been another. So yeah, I saw Didalas, so
thirteen and thirty four. Let's see what he has here
on that. Because the labyrinth is very important when it
comes to the occult, because it's supposed to signify. And
(37:17):
this is why in a lot of these cathedrals you
have the labyrinth the maze, right, and allegedly it's got
to say it has something to do with a dance
of some sort, right, yes, and it's always underneath the
cathedral in some sort of weird way. Okay, so uh,
living statues in the west, it see here Dadalus, but
(37:38):
he was because he was the first or so as
for ancient Greece, they're the most legendary opener of statues,
mouse with undoubtedly die Dalus. In her notable book Didalus
and the Origins of Greek Ark, Sarah P. Morris describes
many many living statues attributed to him. The statues were bathed,
(37:59):
given changes of clothes, and otherwise cared for as if
they were living beings. The best documented such images are
of Hara, who was not only bathed and dressed, but
regularly had her virginity restored and was remarried. What though,
what dude, that's bizarre, man, because this is this is history, Like,
(38:22):
this is something that has been done throughout all of history,
right that we have records of. Now, if you want
to believe history, now, that's a whole nother podcast, another show.
But the fact that they're doing this right in this
symbolic sort of we have Didalus, who was the first
I want to see, it's like the first tinker, like
inventor or something like. He's like, you know, that's what
(38:43):
he's like really known for. Yeah, and didn't he imprison
the minotaur because he wanted to marry it off. Let's
let's look up the story of the minotaur.
Speaker 4 (38:51):
Well, I know that the Minutar was constantly fed a
regular regiment of the stal virgins seven at a times.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
You gotta feed it the blood of virgins. I gotta
feed my sary. No, the blood of virgins every full moon.
Oh dude, so and Greek mythology, the story of the
Minitar and the Labyrinth is about a monster with the
head of a bull in the body of a man
who was in prison in a maze on the island
of Crete. Remember you and I talked about the statues
(39:27):
and the Titans and everything on the island of Crete.
The Minatar was the child of Pacife. Pacife, the wife
king of Minos of Crete, and a white bull sent
by Poseidon for sacrifice. She got freaking with the with
the bull when Minos kept the bull alive instead of sacrificing,
and Poseidon made Pacife fall in love with the bowl
(39:48):
and conceived the Menotaur. The Minataur was said to have
an incestible desire to eat human flesh. The labyrinth was
an intricate maze design by Didols to contain the mentaar
and hide its ferocity from the world. Thesis and the
Minitar Thesis is said to have killed the Menitar and
escaped the labyrinth with the help of a ball of
thread given to him by Princess arident Aradn.
Speaker 4 (40:14):
Aridani.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
So irakan that's where from?
Speaker 4 (40:18):
Or maybe yes, your Radney, maybe that's the best play here.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
I'll show you so uh huh. You can see how
it's said, because I don't know how to read, so
I read ane.
Speaker 4 (40:34):
Yeah, you say that totally. So she is the Eridanis River.
It's a minor deacon of Aquarius, and I believe that
this river is frozen on ice. I think that the
whole film about Frozen is really very Ariadne oriented. But
(40:56):
what's fascinating is in the constellation there is a quantum
entanglement location that actually connects to another place in the
sky called the Great Void of Bewotes. And they kind
of make it sound like you remember in Mario Brothers
when you go into one place and come out in
(41:19):
the upside down in another tube. Yeah, they make it
sound like there's a huge warp zone between the Aridani
constellation and the Belots constellation.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
It's funny you bring up Mario because I bought my
son for Christmas a or I'm sorry, Santa Claus brought
him a he wanted, like some dance dance revolution, and
so I got him like this thing. And it also
brings like some classic games, and one of them was
Super Mario. So we were playing Super Mario and I
was I suck, dude, like the classic Super Mario, and
(41:54):
I like the like the newest stuff the old stuff, right,
and I'm just like trying to beat it. And then
I was like whatever, Like I kept dying on the
second level, like where you have to jump over bowser,
and I was like, all right, I'm gonna look up
speed runs of this game, and dude, people, there are
speed runs of the like four minute speed runs of
(42:14):
the original Super Mario. Yes, it's crazy, but they go
in and they kind of jump in and they know
exactly where to go, but there's so many different selections
of like which tube to go down to, and it
determines which next level you go into. And I remember
I did an episode that that episode that I put
(42:35):
together the presentation which I'm going to be doing soon
on the palm Trees and Arthur, what's the guy Kertcher.
I've always forgot how to say his first name, but
Kercher Athanasius Kircher, Athanasius Kircher, he did some sketches not
only of the pineapple, which I brought up on an
(42:55):
episode with with Old World Florida, but he did these
sketches of like these flying turtles, and it reminded me
of the turtles in Super Mario. Right, But anyways, that's
just a little side note, Like it's like I drew
a connection there. I did a whole thing because he
also has his own sort of a tree of life
(43:17):
and et cetera, et cetera. But point being that, I
think that maybe reality, maybe Super Mario is like this
reflection of what reality could be. Like. There are different
endless rabbit holes metaphorically or literal. I mean, however, literally
we know that they're metaphorical for sure. Now at gorec Or,
(43:39):
you can go down these rabbit holes all day long.
But I forgot what somebody I brought up something earlier.
I was at the furniture store this past weekend and
I said something to the guy who was talking to me,
and I told them life imitates art. Forgot what it
was about, though, But anyways, yeah, so either life imitates
(44:02):
are imitates it imitates life in some sort of way,
and I know we did an episode on the super
void that was not too long ago. This Buotes void
where it's like, what is It has the least amount
of stars and systems within it out of any place
in the sky.
Speaker 4 (44:21):
It is such a fascinating enigma to me. But that's
exactly correct. It is the largest absence of stars and
it is sometimes has nicknames like a kite, the great kite,
and in fact, some of I've seen it depicted in art,
(44:42):
particularly in the scenery where Benjamin Franklin is inventing the
light bulb in the strange poetic harmony to that. Mythology
of him inventing the light bulb is that he needed
to create a vacuum of space in order to capture
the energy of Prometheus to make light stay inside of
(45:04):
a jar, maybe like sourdough keeping something alive inside of
a jar. How do you do this? You need to
have a negative space somehow, So bewotes being the shape
of a kite. Benjamin Franklin capturing the spirit of lightning
and putting it in a jar in a vacuum. It's
(45:28):
so strange, how yeah, our art is Actually it's actually
way more reinforced than I think i'd ever have imagined
when I was learning these things. But yeah, there is
a consistency to the Benjamin Franklin in the Kite being
actually a constellation that he was mastering. And also, I'll
(45:51):
say this, Belotes is very much in September and into October.
It's at the equinox of the fall time of year.
And sure enough, that is also the X on the onalima.
It markets uh spark gap symbolically on the analima. The
x is the very sacred time of the tax day zodiac.
(46:13):
You got it, It's the anode of tax today.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
Yeah, so check this out here again. In home we
recall that God had hammered gold into the shapes of
moving statues of robot servant girls in whom was understanding
in their hearts and them speech and strength, and they
knew cunning handywork. And by the way, yeah, did you
ever hear about Descartes robot girl, robot daughter.
Speaker 4 (46:38):
No, you gotta be kidding me.
Speaker 2 (46:39):
You don't know about that story.
Speaker 4 (46:42):
You gotta tell me about that, because I'm actually digging
into the the Hesiod's theogony and realizing that this is
about Pandora and the idea that women were sitting here
to torment men at large.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
Well, relax, all right, I know, I know, it's very proviable.
We have I think twenty percent female listeners, so we
want we don't want to upset them.
Speaker 4 (47:04):
Okay, it's amazing how old that story is.
Speaker 2 (47:08):
So Hefestos also made a giant bronze automaton named Taylos
to fight off the enemies of crete. You and I
talked about that, and that's the in the Argonautica more
artificial life, of course. And then speaking of that island,
there was Didalis, who is said to have made several
moving statues along with a wooden one of this is
what you were talking about, this empty space afro deity
(47:29):
who was moved by an internal supply of mercury sourdough
or you got to feed the You gotta feed the mercury.
Heated the sourdough to keep it alive, and all this.
Hefestos and Dadallas were perscient, perscient, they foretold modern theories
about automaton robots. They anticipated this book, he says, footnote
(47:50):
thirty three. So we have here anyways, check out Hersey's book.
He was introduced to his work through the Pythagorean Palaces,
which I still I talked about that book and it
went from like eighty dollars to like six hundred bucks.
I don't know what it's at now. And I'm sure
(48:11):
there's like an algorithm or something that tracks people talking
about books Thagorian palaces, heresy. It's at how much is
it now? So it's one hundred and fifty Oh so
I went down, all right, I went down, but it
was like, yeah, it was a lot. Anyways, Yeah, I
(48:32):
purchased it August eleven, twenty twenty two.
Speaker 4 (48:36):
And so.
Speaker 2 (48:38):
That book. I don't know what to think of it.
I don't know if it's like gram Moore of Swords
or what the hell it is. But you can find
a copy of it online. This is I think why
internet archive is so important, because there is a copy
of it on internet archive if you want to check
it out. I don't know how complete it is, if
it's been changed or not, but again, how about it.
I have the physical book because they can still change
(49:00):
through Mandela effect. But anyways, the story of Descartes and
the Robot Girls, so Descartes.
Speaker 4 (49:15):
And let's just make sure we mentioned drones right now,
there's a big thing about automated you know, war machines
floating through the sky. So this conversation about Descarte and
a robot chick, you know, it's very prescient even in
modern events.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
Interesting. So check out this article here, Descartes's robot daughter
and the zombie problem. You've heard over Nadia Kartes, seventeenth
century French philosopher Cogito ergo some I think therefore I am,
which is one of them. A lot of people know
that I think therefore I am first principles of Enlightenment
philosophy and science and all that. You might be less
(49:54):
familiar with the Karte's robot daughter, Francine, and I did
a short on this a while back. The tale of
her birth and gruesome death makes for a while historical
ish ride in its own right, but it's also finding
new relevance in oriot oriot oria in the twenty first century.
The people who study artificial intelligence and robotics are finding
it a helpful tone thinking through one of the most
(50:17):
controversial problems now rolling these academic disciples disciplines, just how
human like should we make AI in robots?
Speaker 4 (50:26):
Right?
Speaker 2 (50:26):
So, yeah, you're right that that was a big thing,
the whole drones thing. Before everyone moved on to the fog,
and now they're moving on to I think like the
Tesla truck blowing up in front of the Trump Tower.
And I don't know what they got lined up next.
But it's only it's only the third day of January,
(50:48):
so we'll see what happened. Anyways, it's back it up
before we all get all those bleed. In sixteen thirty five,
Francine de Kart was born the real flesh and blood
but illegitimate daughter of Descartes and a Dutch servant girl. Yikes.
It seems that he loved them both so much that
he broke with his fairly serious convention to live with
(51:08):
them just as he was getting ready to bring five
year old Francine back to France. It's interesting Franccene back
to France for a proper education. However, the little girl
contracted scarlet fever and died. And that's when things get weird,
or when when things got weird. So you're sending me stuff,
do you want me to pull that up here a
little bit?
Speaker 4 (51:29):
And yeah, in a little bit, when we're done. I'm
seeing a very large theme regarding we should pay more
attention to the female side of these biographies. I'm actually
seeing a pattern here that I never knew. There was
a Yeah, there was such a story.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
Oh it gets weird. So the brief existence of Franccene,
the cars all properly substantiated. But it's not where her
story ends if you believe some slightly less regular, rigorously
documented but widely replicated lore and ash into coining a
foundational principle western philosophy. De Carr was also famous for
building intricate automata, so he liked to build little automata.
(52:09):
He loved clockwork dolls and mechanical creations, clockwork elves, perhaps
too right. And then the Voyage to the World of
Cartisius one of my favorite episodes ever. And I think
that book is real. And so when Francine died, he
was so rapped with grief that he decided to build
a mechanical replica, supposedly indistinguishable from the girl as she
(52:32):
had been in life. Now, I don't know if you've
ever read this book, Descartes's Black Book. So I really
wanted to interview this this author. And this is not
a good look, right, this secret black Book. Now what's
(52:53):
it called, The Cart's Secret I'm sorry. The Cart's Secret
Notebook a true talement so, dude, this book is wild,
so a true tale of mathematics, mysticism, and the quest
to understand the universe. The Cart's Secret Notebook. This guy's
passed away. Now, Okay, I couldn't, I couldn't interview him.
But this book, yeah, is wild, dude. This book is crazy.
(53:22):
You can find a copy online somewhere if you. If
anyone wants to read it, hit me up. I'll send
you a PDF copy. It's bananas, Okay. Anyways, I think
the cart regardless of what they say in the mainstream,
I think he was into some deep stuff. I think
he was. Yeah, bro, he was having visions, dude. Yeah,
he was having visions on the battlefield like he was.
(53:43):
This dude was a mystic, like he was hardcore into
the occult in my opinion. And I think that the
Cartesian coordinate system is a tablet of manifestation. It's something
that brings forth the two D into the three D
space and you're able to manifest things. And I think
that's how they were able to do, you know, Enochian
squares and all that stuff. But that's besides the point.
(54:03):
But the cart goes hard, all right, So here we
have him reanimating. Right, maybe some necromancy, which was he
was accused of. Details vary from account to account, but
most agree this robotic Pranccene traveled everywhere with him. She
would sleep in a kind of casket next to his bed.
And then this is where it gets you and not
again we're touching on stuff that we've talked about before.
(54:25):
So in sixteen forty six, Christina of Sweden with the
Porta alchimica the alchemical door, Right, we have that connection
with Christina of Sweden. She had copies. Dude, She had
so many crazy books in her library, in her collection,
and she was so baller that she was like, Hey,
(54:45):
I want the best of the best to teach me
about philosophy and teach me about everything else. Mind you,
she was an alchemist, so she calls for Descartes. That's
how baller she was, dude, that she calls for decart
to be her tutor. Right, right, it's one problem.
Speaker 4 (55:04):
She would see, Uh, what he's a pussy. He got
sick in the snow.
Speaker 2 (55:11):
Well, I was gonna say that he loved to sleep
in and she killed him because she would make him
wake up too early.
Speaker 4 (55:20):
Well that really that actually kind of vindicates the theory
that women were put here to make men missing.
Speaker 2 (55:25):
Well you said that. I didn't say that, but yeah,
so if we're being if we if we want to
follow the lore and be correct, Christina of Sweden did
kill the cart because she made him wake up to
That's how the story goes. He contracted pneumonia and like died. Okay,
so whatever this is, Uh, this is how the story goes.
But Christina Suita was hardcore in to alchemy, and she
(55:47):
had some crazy books in her library. Let's look up
some of the book because they're actually book collection here,
because there's some some that are interesting in there. So
let's see here owned to see own.
Speaker 4 (56:09):
You know, for some reason, I'm reminded that Mary Schelling
when she wrote the story of Frankenstein, she was on
a literary holiday and she was reading. While she was
writing Frankenstein, she was reading Marquis du Saud. She was
studying the namesake of Sado Masochism. Really yeah, and that
(56:31):
was kind of what was fertilizing her mind space while
she was writing the Frankenstein, which is basically you know
another mech bought concept mind control, man made.
Speaker 2 (56:42):
Sex bought no sexpot. Yeah, so here, let me see
if I can find there was a is this one.
Speaker 4 (56:51):
And I've been I've been saying that it's not climate
change at it's actually climate bitch agony, which Pandora was
given the spirit of a bitch in heat by Hermes
as the final gift before she was launched onto Man.
I'm not saying it's true. I'm just saying, if you're
going to read it honestly, that's how it comes through.
Speaker 2 (57:14):
So we have here. I'm trying to find the books
that she had because she has some crazy books. Dude. Anyways,
I can't find it. But yeah, this is again her
connection with the Alchemical Door and the cart Again. This
is all around, you know, the same time kind of
sort of And if you haven't heard about the Alchemical Door,
did a whole episode on it. I think you were
(57:34):
on that episode where you slick I think so yep, yeah,
portole Chemical Anyways, here you go. So in her list
raw she had Asclepius tri Themius is Stenographia John D's
monas Hieroglyphica. So her involvement tended to increase toward the
end of her life. In the summer of sixteen sixty
seven in Hamburg, Christina experimented with the messianic profit alchemist
(57:56):
with Seppe Francisco Bori, which I translated a book on him.
It's in the Patreon, and from what I've heard time
from time, every now and again, translations of books pop
up on the Patreon every now and again, right, So
if you want to read about with Seppi Francisco Bori,
the elusive alchemists that jumped through the all chemical door
(58:18):
one night, right, he broke in and jumped through. So
Christina at this time also corresponded with alchemist Johann Rudolph Globber.
She also took interest in the phosphorus discovered by Hennig
brand Brand and her collection of spiritual medieval manuscripts counting
over two thousand items. Also, she had some relics from
(58:41):
the Habsburg from Prague as well. In there are included
text by Joaquim de Fior and Campanella, also on the
list hermetic Asclepias. Her collection includes tri Theenius's Stenografia, which
that he was the mentor of Agrippa. Yeah, and he
(59:02):
also inspired John D. John D's Monas Hieroglyphica. She also
owned parts of the Pickatrix, which the Pickatrix also has
some parts on how to create a homunculus. So I'm
just gonna put that out there. It's got parts of
the liber Vak in there, and Latin versions of the
Cepharra cepher Ha Raziel. A book of Angelic Magic or
collections of printed books counted to several thousand. Items included
(59:26):
Paracelsus works, aw chemical works of Johann Johannes Theornisier. I
don't know who the hell that is Andreas Libavius. In
sixteen fifty five she gave a large collection of out
chemical manuscripts from Pronk to her librarian, Isaac Vossius. These
were once owned by Rudolph the second and are written
in the German sech and or that's how you say,
(59:48):
he's that I've gotten cooked before? Is it? How do
you say? Is it Zech? All right?
Speaker 4 (59:56):
Whereas it maybe Zech?
Speaker 2 (59:58):
No, that's not how you say anyways, there's a saying
who cares? Yeah, something like that. Anyways, I've been cooked
before by saying it wrong? And Latin language is a
collection one now, which now resides at the codices uh
yosign Vossiani kimi Ici at the University of Leyden. Christina's
books are are listed in a document now at the
(01:00:20):
Bollidian Library, Oxford. Is prefaced by a drawing of a
rose in full blom with the text the corresponding list
of the Vannekin carries a biable dru So I think
she was part of the Rosicrucion movement, dude, I think
that they were like the first uh you know, Rosicrucians
carries a buyable and well check this out, honey, we'll
go to your business. Emblems That combine reminds us of
(01:00:42):
Robert Flood's be adorned rose and cobweb of the Suman
bunum a perhaps may indicate a more mainstream mysticism Robert Flood.
Robert Flood was another hardcore I fucking love Robert Flood.
Dude's take a look at this real quick. Oo oh
yeah right there, Yeah there it is, dude. All right,
(01:01:04):
So back again to the So Christina Sweden hardcore into
alchemy killed our boy to cards. She took us too soon,
She took us, She took him from us too soon.
Because she made him wake up too early in the morning. Yeah,
and allegedly that's how he came up with the idea
of the Cartesian coordinate system, which I remember reading something else.
(01:01:28):
I remember this is Mandela effect. I remember reading something
else that he actually discovered it through a series of dreams.
But how the mainstream story goes that while laying in
bed one day because he liked to sleep in he
was laying down and he saw a fly on the wall,
which is really interesting because the way that animals and
(01:01:50):
mimetics work. You know, they say that God or the
Source or the One or whatever it is, sends messages
to people through the use of animals. I guess you
could call animal right. It's part of the insect realm
whatever totally.
Speaker 4 (01:02:03):
And you know Socrates was called the gadfly of Athens,
really yeah, and that's because he had a damonic spirit
that would buzz in his ear to give him warning
signals of what not to do in life. And so
this is very symbolic of like Jiminy Cricket and the
idea that even when a bug a bug flies through
(01:02:25):
your space, you should take that as an augur because
they are tuned into the detritus as a substratum of
the divine.
Speaker 2 (01:02:33):
Whoa, oh dude, that's crazy. So the the fact that
he was allegedly laying down and he saw a fly
on the wall and he wanted to coordinate how he
could tell somebody where the fly was on the wall.
So he said, you know X two. Why blah blah blah.
Speaker 4 (01:02:56):
Right, Oh, yep, I.
Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
Just came up with one of the greatest discoveries of
alt right, So whatever, that's the mainstream story anyways.
Speaker 4 (01:03:04):
That's right, it's his brainchild. He named it, he gave
it its destiny when he conceived of it and put
it on paper.
Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
Dude, right, it's gonna be in the title of this episode.
Let me be right, let me make sure I haven't
taken and used that before. So shout out to the
Emperor because he knows what's up. He's been pounding me
hard about the sourdough. All right, So sourdal home ankeys,
here we go, all right, And.
Speaker 4 (01:03:33):
I love how you know science is a seance and
you know the terms in these concepts that are born
out of these guys who are long dead men of renowned.
We still have to pay their due props. When we
use their formulas, you know.
Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
Yeah, and that plays a role into like how you've
always said. One of the things that when we first
started podcasting together all those years ago, one of the
things that you've always said that there are a lot
of gods encoded within our language. Oh, we always talk
about and always.
Speaker 4 (01:04:04):
Mas and you know, Nietzsche kind of says that we
get weird when our words get close to causality. We
start doing little language tricks on our own mind. We
do sleight of hand. And so one example is we
would say that the lightning flashes, but really, because he
was a real nerd about philology, we're actually kind of
(01:04:27):
saying the flashy thing flashes. We're repeating the same thing twice.
There's actually no object in the sentence, and we're doing
slight hand on ourselves. And I would say that it's
because the real way to say what we want to
say is to say, zeus flashes. We're supposed to have
deified characters as standing in for the object we're trying
(01:04:49):
to articulate. Well, but yeah, we're supposed to have elemental
godlike language around causality, But we do slight of hand
on ourselves because we've been christianized, We've our mind has
been colonized by the Christian mentality. There can only be
the Holy Trinity. But back in the days, there were
(01:05:09):
many things like when the earthquake, what is the cause
of the earthquake. It's a neptune, It had an actual
causality elementally, so yeah, yeah, you're gotta be ranting, you
gotta be ranting.
Speaker 2 (01:05:22):
That would that would kind of be like animated, so
in a way like animating statues, to where you're using
language to animate the ideas in some sort of way
giving them power, right like they say that you know, spells, spelling, grammar,
grammar like that kind of plays a role into that
dude an etymology and even the you know Folkanelli talked
(01:05:45):
about the the phonetic kabala right about how that also
plays a role into everything. He was hardcore into a
whole bunch of different stuff which I'm going to bring
up here. He talked about the argonauts too as well,
in the Golden Fleece and all that. So we have
sixteen forty six, Ristina of Sweden summoned Descart to her
(01:06:06):
castle and sent a ship for him. As ever, the
casket went where he went, and at night he would
take her out of the casket in his cabin and
wind her up and talk to her. This is how
the story goes, right, So check this out. He goes.
Accounts very on what happened next, but most converge on
the idea that the ship had encountered bad weather and
the superstitious crew was getting spooked hearing the chatter in
(01:06:29):
the karts supposedly single room at night, suspecting some kind
of witchcraft. It's always witchcraft. Apparently, eat of the captain
of the deckhand broke into the philosopher's cabin while he slept,
opened the casket and were horrified by what they found there.
Some accounts insist that she sat up on her own
volition volition, but this tax is even the most credulous mind.
Speaker 4 (01:06:52):
So so.
Speaker 2 (01:06:56):
Check this out. And this is uh, this kind of
plays into what he've been saying that women were put
here to torment men a little bit, because these guys
were kind of kind of based a little bit. In
any case, the petrified crew grabbed the robot France and
ran her up to the deck, where they smashed her
to pieces threw them into the sea. According to one
obscure account on Earth by mean Sue Kang at the
(01:07:18):
University of Missouri Saint Louis. The Captain Tassi automaton overboard,
the Captain Tasiti automaton overboard because quote it worked well
enough like a woman with a soul, meaning not very
much so so his dude's like throwing jabs at women
(01:07:40):
there though those were his words, not mine. Oh all right, soah,
that's uh, it's kind of weird there. Faced with the
unbearable grief of losing her a second time, the story
goes the carts succumbed to death shortly after. So it
wasn't Christina Sweden that welcome up too early and all
this shit. It was actually that he they threw away
(01:08:02):
his his sex doll or something ship that he had.
I don't know. This is bizarre, man like this is
so the car with Christina switching shortly before his death. Again,
you know, we have this concept now of how you're
saying these drones people are freaking out or the AI
or they of the government or they they say Iran's
(01:08:25):
or something like that. Who's who's funding them? And if
it's Iran, then it's Russia or blah blah blah, like
all this shit, right that never really what happened to them?
Did they go away? Or what? Have you heard anything else?
Speaker 4 (01:08:40):
Well, you know, one thing that's kind of fascinates me
is how so many people are like they've been here
longer than you know, longer than people started making a fuss,
and internationally speaking, you know that people are just basically
being conditioned. I'm thinking a great deal about future shock.
(01:09:00):
It's becoming harder and harder to hit people with a
sense of oh this is progress. Oh, look at how
the new innovative way to terrorize humanity. And you know this,
this Tesla truck that exploded. I just keep seeing a
flashback to Demolition Man. Do you remember Demolition Man with
(01:09:22):
Wesley Snipes. No, there's a scene in Demolition for Okay, okay,
there's a scene in here where a group of rebels
actually raid a Taco Bell, and I kid you not,
they pull up in a vehicle that looks just like
the Tesla vehicle that exploded. No, I'm not even kidding you.
(01:09:46):
If you maybe, if you pull up the Taco Bell scene,
yeah and press play, you'll see they pull up in
something that looks very much like some kind of tesla.
Want to be.
Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
Listening. Let's see the other pizza. Huh yeah that Mandela effect.
Speaker 4 (01:10:04):
Oh they switched it.
Speaker 2 (01:10:05):
Yeah, they switched it on us. Dude, it's Mandela effects.
So the taco bellscene, demolition man here, it's play this
so they the writing round is ninety three, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:10:16):
Ninety three illuminate.
Speaker 1 (01:10:18):
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Speaker 2 (01:10:48):
Just want to remind everyone, make sure to check out
the show on Patreon Patreon dot com Slash the one
on one podcast. I constantly get emails only one episode
a week, yeah, one episode of a week for the public,
but for as little as five bucks a month, you
can get up to two, sometimes three, sometimes one episode
(01:11:08):
per Day on the Patreon as well as on the
YouTube channel as a member for as little as five dollars,
and there's also on the Patreon over two hundred and
fifty episodes only found on there. There's an extensive backlog
of episodes, so check that out if for those interested.
For those asking, make sure to follow the show on YouTube.
(01:11:29):
Juana Juan Podcast also Wanahuan Media. I am going live
every Tuesday on there streaming. I also go live on
twitch dot tv slash one on Juan Podcast, so make
sure to check me out on there Tuesday's six pm Eastern,
and make sure to get your copy of the Occult
to Monday Homunculus Owners Manual all that good stuff at
(01:11:52):
tj ojp dot com. Can pick up your copies there
or go over to the cofi. I'm on Facebook, Twitch,
kick rumble, all that good stuff, you know where to
find it and enjoy this episode.
Speaker 4 (01:12:06):
And he confirmed and then here here here they come,
and yeah, these are the the you know, the under
What the hell is that the underworld dwellers age of
Aquarius on the plate there?
Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
Oh it didn't they didn't show the scene where they
pull up.
Speaker 4 (01:12:25):
No, they didn't show the vehicle but it is also
it's at the uh, you know, fancy entrance of a
fancy location.
Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Pizza. It's not. It's not Taco Ball. That's why Pizza
Hut pizza. Yeah, listens longer, here you go. I don't
have to watch this movie. I've ever seen this way.
So these guys are here here pulling up.
Speaker 4 (01:12:52):
You should totally watch it. He even has like, you know,
the aspects of like social credit scores and losing your
check mark. If you don't if you speak out to turn,
they literally give you a toilet paper. Well, he uses
his his tickets for toilet paper on Bro.
Speaker 2 (01:13:10):
There's no test, there's no Tesla cyber truck here. Man,
you it's some heavy Mandela effect going on.
Speaker 4 (01:13:15):
Dude. Maybe they wiped it.
Speaker 2 (01:13:16):
They knew. They're like, no, it's not it's not Taco Bell,
it's Pizza Hut, and it's not a cyber truck that
came out of the walls.
Speaker 4 (01:13:26):
Totally, they've wiped it all.
Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
They wiped it, dude, they wiped it.
Speaker 4 (01:13:30):
Brodmn freaking Belfa gore toilet paper. Spell y'all. Prime bird
flu is an ndigram for bell y'all. All right, So.
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Yeah, so the the main thing right now people are
freaking out about is And I don't know if you
saw this clip that Rogan had put out with the
guy was a Don Lemon from I don't know which
mainstream media, but he was talking about how Elon Musk
is actually the president.
Speaker 4 (01:14:07):
Now basically you heard about that, well, you know, if
I don't, I guess that's just a really shortcut way
to say, yeah, we know who's calling the shots. You know,
we really know who's calling the shots. Did you see
the display of thousands of dollars per rice grain? And
(01:14:29):
this is how much rice one hundred thousand dollars income,
This is how much the senators make. And they were
using rice grains and little piles of rice, and they
had Trump's pile of rice and how much he was worth.
And then they showed everybody Tesla's pile of rice. It
was it was insanity. It was just insanity. This thing
(01:14:51):
there it is, Yes, this was on.
Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
TikTok Man uses rice to visually represent Jeff Beasils and
that worth that guy.
Speaker 4 (01:14:59):
Yeah, I think he actually does Tesla ultimately. So maybe
this is an earlier version here, let's pull this up.
But it does say a million words. You know, you're
just seeing these piles of rice and you're like, oh, okay,
this or four years ago?
Speaker 2 (01:15:14):
Can you hear this?
Speaker 5 (01:15:15):
Million? One billion Jeff Bezos is one hundred and twenty Okay,
So the moment you've been winning for one hundred K,
one million, one billion Jeff Bezos is one hundred and
twenty two of these or fifty.
Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
Eight pounds of rice. Well, each grain of rice was
one hundred k.
Speaker 6 (01:15:31):
The scale of a billion dollars is really crazy. So
let's say one grain of rice is equivalent to a
one hundred K, and ten grains of rice would be
then a million. Well, how much is a billion? So
my Saturday night consisted of counting ten thousand rice one
by one, just to show you, guys, how much a
billion dollars is. Of course I filmed it, and of
course I've time lapsed it, and this is playing it.
I don't even know, God knows how fast it's playing at.
(01:15:53):
But oh my god, I'm proud to present to you
the results. That is a billion dollars. Each grain of
rice is worth one hundred k. Look how much race
this is, guys. That's crazy. I just bought you like
a Lamborghini right here, and I didn't even notice it
was gone. Here's a five million dollar house in California.
Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
And oh look, I still have all this money.
Speaker 6 (01:16:16):
A lot of you guys asked me, well, how much
does Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.
Speaker 2 (01:16:19):
Have in terms of rice? So that was my mission.
Speaker 6 (01:16:21):
I went to Target, I bought a digital food scale.
I came home and then I weighed the rice that
was worth one billion from earlier. I did the math
in my head.
Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
Oh, I got the rice.
Speaker 6 (01:16:31):
I brought it home, and once I brought it home,
I went to work. Five families are going to take
this on your rice.
Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
It's totally not wasteful, or at least you don't.
Speaker 5 (01:16:42):
K one million, one billion, Jeff Bezos is one hundred
and twenty two of these or fifty eight pounds of
rice if each grain of rice was one hundred k,
Like look, how big this is.
Speaker 2 (01:16:53):
Guys, Brocale. You know, money is one of those things
that unfortunately we all know it's a scam, Like we
know that the government is corrupt, and we know that
there are a lot of things happening behind the scenes.
Is there a lizard people cabal in charge of everything?
I don't know, right, Like, that's like the conspiracy of
(01:17:16):
things because it always seems like you have a end
product of something, and then the conspiracy is how did
we get there? But the thing already happened, right, So
we have the Luigi guy, which I know you wanted
to talk about. We have the Luigi thing. But then
the conspiracy is like, oh, why do you do it?
Who was helping him? Blah blah blah. Is it the
(01:17:38):
same guy? The eyebrow doesn't match, the nose doesn't match,
like all this craziness, right, And I love people who
give I love people who give evidence for a conspiracy
is other conspiracies. So we go back again. Dude, the ship, right,
so if you replace all the boards in the ship,
(01:17:59):
is it the same ship? So if your replace I
don't know, we can tie that into conspiracy somehow. But anyways,
I mean, how many conspiracies does it take to get
to the center of a Tutsi pop? Who knows? We
won't ever know because it's just an endless rabbit hole.
And I think it's part of it. And I think
money is like the same way too. It's like you
can work all your life to make money, does it
ever really matter at the end of the day, like
(01:18:20):
how much money you made, Like no, and it's it's
something that people have been sucked into since the beginning
of time, since these freakin' alchemi has got their their
hands on it.
Speaker 4 (01:18:31):
Yeah, man, yeah, so uh A great amount of my
holiday was taking in more films than nice. Yeah, totally watching,
watching way more of the modern cinematic investments, and so
three films have really impacted me heavily, I mean all
(01:18:53):
at once. In the past week, I went back and
I rewatched Showgun, which is a favorite book from when
I was younger. I think I read the whole series twice.
I think I've seen the cinematic episodes that they released
in nineteen eighty I've seen that twice now. And then
they just released a new Showgun on Hulu and I
(01:19:17):
went through and I bene watched the whole thing, and
it is amazing the scale of international intrigue and cloak
and dagger and manipulation of the masses that I see
put on offer. But yeah, this is something I'm going
to be weaving on here soon because the actress who
(01:19:42):
is the kind of the love interest let me just
let me tell it this way forty four years ago,
John Lennon was assassinated at the front of the Dakota
Building and this was encoded into Ghostbusters film. And John
Lennon was falling in love with an Asian woman and
(01:20:03):
that was what broke up the Beatles is because this
Englishman was marrying an Asian woman and this caused the
breakup of the Beatles. Well, sure enough, at the same
time nineteen eighty that he was assassinated is the same
year that Shogun came out as a mini series on TV.
And it's about the Englishman marrying an Asian woman. And
(01:20:26):
so there's a lot of I see kind of royal housing,
royal houses signaling to each other, you know, in plain sight.
But Motico in the new series has been repackaged into
the craziest social engineering dynamic I've ever seen one. Can
(01:20:48):
you in our text messaging? Can you pull up the
first one I sent to you?
Speaker 2 (01:20:55):
Are those all the images you're going to send me?
Speaker 4 (01:20:57):
Yeah? I'm done, I'm done sending them. But can you
pull up the earliest one I sent? Because Madico, the
love interest of Shogun, she's been packed into a modern
day pandemic relief character named when lyn Yon and more
of her name Linyon. Thank you. Yes, this is crazy, y'all.
(01:21:25):
This is absolutely blonkers. But this character, so in the
film Shogun, the fictional character in the background, her name
is Madiko. She has a death scene where she puts
her body up against a door that's about to be
exploded with detonation device. This lady when Linyon, she was
(01:21:47):
a crisis actor at the Boston bombing, and so her
real biography is a perfect overlap onto Mariko from Shogun.
And so they are taking the fictional sentimental value of
the protagonists in film and they're harmonizing it to the
(01:22:10):
real biography of world manipulators on the stage. And so
she's also a whiney lamb is kind of the King's gallows.
Humor is an anagram out of her name. But this
is the chick that's going to bring us bird flu.
And they put everybody's harmonic correspondence into her biography. That
(01:22:33):
is the correspondent to the fictional story of Monico from Showgun.
It is so potent and powerful.
Speaker 2 (01:22:40):
So are all movies just a way of right. We
have Grant Morrison and we have Alan Moore putting their
occult stuff into their works of art. I mean I've
called them, right, the cinemagicians. So is all cinema us
that dude, A way of it is some here for
(01:23:03):
entertainment and then some here for these magical occult purposes
or like how how does it work? And then yeah,
what happens? Because you have life imitating our art imitating life?
Which happens first? Which is the mother?
Speaker 4 (01:23:20):
You know? I would say there is a fine line
between imitating art or uh or rather, if art is
imitating life, I often might tweak this to art is
mocking life to provoke it into a reaction. Oh okay,
(01:23:41):
and that that might be an interesting alchemical tweak to
the formula that art is actually provoking or persuading or
coercing life into a response. Can you slip to the
to the next one.
Speaker 2 (01:23:58):
And also let me know which one because I got
a few here?
Speaker 4 (01:24:01):
That was it? The one with Bannon?
Speaker 2 (01:24:03):
That's there?
Speaker 4 (01:24:04):
You go, Yeah, this is funny.
Speaker 2 (01:24:06):
So here really quick, because I think i've i've I
was on a podcast recently with the with the Occult Rejects,
and I forgot who it was. I think I don't
know if it was Gin or who who it was.
But they talked about doing might have not been them,
(01:24:26):
but talking about met meta I think it was called
meta fiction. Yes, where you take reality and turn it
into a story and you do something with that. Like
I think that's that's my medics there, that's like the
most powerful. Yeah, I mean of magic in a sort
(01:24:46):
of way. How you're saying you're you're that that you
put in such a great way. They're using uh these
stories to tempt uh reality to invoke a change, which
is is kind of cerum ceremonial magic. Yeah, way you're
invoked like me last night doing the prayer that theyer
(01:25:07):
does before invoking the demons, where the demons pay more
attention to you totally.
Speaker 4 (01:25:15):
Yeah, And you know, and what's fascinating to me is
that these this aspect of near rhymes like right here,
I have you know, Bannon is in the war room.
And why is it that the word wolverine has to
be just like just one harmonic away from a perfect
(01:25:36):
anagram to the truth of what they're trying to convey.
And so this is I'm seeing this as twisted. It's
round about, it's not direct, it's just outside of perfect
candor and high fidelity to the truth. It's just lying
a little bit into the gray space. And I think
(01:25:57):
this is a good example how Wolverine and Steve Bannon
has been encoded in the great many of the you know,
Hollywood heroes. When Mark Mark Hamlin, the guy who plays.
Speaker 2 (01:26:13):
Luke Skywalker, Hamil Hamil, thank.
Speaker 4 (01:26:15):
You Mark Hamill. Yes, Mark Hampbell came back as Luke
Skywalker and he looks so much like Steve one plus
seven Anon. Yeah, they're totally uh playing around with our
heroic associations.
Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
And this isn't just any like Joe Schmoe cartoon, right,
this is like cultural shifting, you know, like these drawings
have shifted entire cultures and communities. I mean, you know
this is not is Wolverine? What is that Marvel? Or
(01:26:53):
is it DC?
Speaker 4 (01:26:55):
Good question.
Speaker 2 (01:26:56):
Wolverine is and we'll find out here in a second.
It is part of the.
Speaker 4 (01:27:04):
X Men?
Speaker 2 (01:27:05):
Is Marvel?
Speaker 4 (01:27:09):
Okay? Thank you. I'm very gray on some of the
corporate overlapping.
Speaker 2 (01:27:16):
And it's interesting. Let me see here something because stan
Lee he was part of what he was part of
Marvel and stan Lee I heard somebody, right, stan Lee,
spider Man, Deadpool, Avengers, woof. I mean so many And
it's interesting, right because we're talking about using Bro, Spider Man,
(01:27:36):
x Man, Iron Man, Thor Hulk, ant Man, The Wasp,
Fantastic Four, Black Panther, Daredevil, Doctor Strange, the Scarlet Witch,
Black Widow. This guy's like in there, and it's interesting
that he would put himself in his movies. And I
heard there was somebody talking he was actually part of
(01:28:00):
the military too, right.
Speaker 4 (01:28:03):
I always point out that Marvel Avengers sounds so much
like Meryl Vingi and.
Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
I love that, dude, I love that. Yeah, hell yeah.
So the there was an actor who was talking in
that stand. I think they were doing like a tribute
to him or something like that. That Stanley has been
in more movies than any actor that he has ever known,
you know, professional actors. I wonder how many how many
(01:28:31):
movies was stan Lee and stan Lee he would put
himself in his work of arts, he would insert himself
in there. He's been in thirty seven Marvel movies as
a cameo character, and.
Speaker 4 (01:28:46):
He's always got one quick line. I've always wanted to
see every line he's ever said on a list. And yeah,
big puzzles, big puzzles.
Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
Oh dude, stan Lee, are they one liners right, one line.
Speaker 4 (01:29:02):
Almost almost always, which is uh, which is kind of
the stoic epicurean nod to the inner circle of like
brevity is the marcation of wit.
Speaker 2 (01:29:13):
Let's uh. Let's ask the old divination table here akachat
GPT to see what it says. Compile a list of
all the one liners stan Stane Jesus stan Lee has
said in his thirty seven movie appearances. I was gonna
(01:29:35):
say if he was in more movies than Nick Cage,
But nobody goats the goat right right, right close. He's
not even close to.
Speaker 4 (01:29:47):
Yeah, thirty seven is a very magical number. It's the
twenty first prime or twelfth it's the twelfth prime number.
And three, the law of three in the law of
seven are very pivotal to the.
Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
Any god, dude, hold on, hold on han.
Speaker 4 (01:30:00):
It's also the Mason Dixon line, hold on dude.
Speaker 2 (01:30:03):
Wholl I just read something? Hold on, so, I asked,
Chad Gpt. Compile a list of all the one liner
Stanley has said in his thirty seven movie appearances. Stan Lee,
the legendary co creator of numerous Marvel superheroes, made memorable
cameo appearances in many Marvel films, often delivering brief but
impactful lines. Now, I don't know if these are one
(01:30:25):
hundred percent, so just in case, we'd have to fact
check every single thirty seven one of these. Okay, so
just in case, but some of them stood out to me. Okay.
Hulk two thousand and three, as a security guard, he
remarks to his colleague, you know, I know some people
who are gonna be pretty upset. Okay. That was two
thousand and three, two thousand and five, Fantastic four, Portraying
(01:30:50):
Mailman Willie Lumpkin, he greets the team with welcome back
to the Baxter Building, Doctor Richards. Spider Man three, standing
next to Peter Parker. You know, I guess one person
can make a difference enough, said iron Man two thousand
ain't mistaken for Hugh Mistaken for Hugh Hefner, He responds
(01:31:11):
with the surprise, Hey, Tony. When greeted by Tony Stark
iron Man two, this time mistaken for Larry King, he
exclaims Tony. When Stark passes by Thor after attempting to
pull Thor's hammer with his truck, he asked did it work?
The Avengers? In a news interview, he skeptically comments superheroes
(01:31:36):
in New York, give me a break. The Amazing Spider
Man twenty twelve is a librarian oblivious to the battle
behind him. He hums a tune while wearing headphones. Oh yeah,
I remember that scene where he's like in the library
and he's like, the craziness is happening behind him. Iron
Man three, appearing as a beauty pageant judge, He enthusiastically
(01:31:56):
holds up a scoreboard exclam, exclam, exclaiming yeah thor The
Dark World in a mental institution, he asked, can I
have my shoe back? After leading it lending it for
a demonstration?
Speaker 4 (01:32:10):
WHOA just like chumping the shooting when he doged.
Speaker 2 (01:32:13):
The bullet whow so no, no, Well did he ask
for a shoeback?
Speaker 4 (01:32:17):
He said, I need my shoe? He left his sobeck
on shoes His subconscious was left open for the teachable moment.
No for real, Yeah, when Chump got shot he lost
his shoe.
Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
That was before The Dark World twenty thirteen.
Speaker 4 (01:32:32):
Wow. Very fascinating is that they have pumulgated that entire
ritual a thousand times in cinema before they put it
up on the barnyard wall, literally on the backdrop of
a barn door. You know, you couldn't shoot the broadside
of a barn door. We're looking at the broadside of
(01:32:53):
a barn door. When that when the chump shot when
he doged the bullet.
Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
So allegedly, this is the movie that from okay, uh
Thor the Dark World and Ancient Times. The gods of
Asgard fought in won a war against the evil race
known as the Dark Elves. The survivors were neutralized. Their
ultimate weapon, the Ether, was buried in a secret location.
Hundreds of years later, Jane Foster and Ali Portman finds
(01:33:20):
the Ether and becomes its host, forcing Thor to bring
her to Asgard before Dark elve Melkith captures her and
uses the weapon to destoy the Nine Realms, including what Yeah,
he finds becomes its host. Dude, it's like again the
Mara of Vingians is ringing a lot more true with
(01:33:40):
what you just said with this movie, dude, the Holy
Grail big time.
Speaker 4 (01:33:45):
I'll tell you what. Pulling up the next little graphic
I said to you, the one with the uh. Remember
she's talking about the Ether and uh. This in this
inception of a of a of a power, of an
alien power or an alien force, the one with the
geometric shapes. This one. So Kenneth Arnold's account of the
(01:34:12):
first UFO that they originally called flying discs, and the
word flying discs was a common sport back then. It
was a household terminology, and so he describes having seen
a flying disc. I just want to point out that
ken f R. Nolled has the word eth r in
(01:34:35):
the middle of his name, and his description of his
vision of what he was seeing is actually encoding the
Thoth Deck Tarot cards in particular. And so nineteen forty seven,
the CIA is founded, the Dead Sea Scrolls are inseminated
into the next wave of religious zeal religious zealotry. They've
(01:35:02):
paved it all from nineteen forty seven on and they're
never off the script. This is my point that they
have inseminated the visual ingredients of the tarot cards into
the entire culture that LSD and an analytic philosophy and
analytic psychology is built out of. We are all inside
(01:35:25):
of a shared psychedelic experience, and the Thoth Deck Tarot
cards are kind of the map of the art that
is provoking life. You keep saying art imitates life. I
want to say art is provoking life because it's time
for action. It's time for action. So yeah, I just
(01:35:47):
made this graphic to kind of convey how Ken E.
F Arnold has embedded the both deck tarot cards into
the ethers of the culture, your cult of culture.
Speaker 2 (01:36:02):
So we have here one of the ones that stood
out to me, which is going to be uh interesting
to you, I believe in let's see here. Where the
hell is it at? Oh? Man, I just so Doctor
Strange twenty sixteen, Laughing on a bus, he exclaims that
(01:36:27):
is hilarious while reading The Doors of Perception? Was he
really reading The Doors of Perception?
Speaker 4 (01:36:36):
Yeah? I remember that. I totally remember that one.
Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
The door. Yeah, the Doors of Perception a book where
the author experienced a great changes perception and external world.
But isn't that all this? Huxley dude.
Speaker 4 (01:36:52):
Died on the same day as JFK C. S Lewis
all this? Huxley and JFK All died on the exact same.
Speaker 2 (01:36:59):
Day, eleventh, eleven twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:37:01):
You got it?
Speaker 2 (01:37:01):
Yeah thirty three? Yeah, man, yeah, eleven twenty two. Wow,
age sixty nine, that wow, dude, A brave new world. Yeah,
that's that's actually from Shakespeare too, A brave new World. Yeah,
it's from the Tempest, right. Let's she's talking about a
(01:37:23):
brave new world. You know they before they depart.
Speaker 4 (01:37:26):
Yes, And you know bravery is actually on my enneagram.
It's it's basically bringing my thoughts to this number six
is a loyalist with a shadow of fear and the
remedial virtue of bravery, courage, or valor. So that's to
say that they want to harmonize people's associative principle around
(01:37:48):
the number six personality type, which is good, that's all fine,
but it is also it maps out on my system
very clearly with specific words that are related to the
sexiness of the six and the sex in the city.
Even fifteen MANNT cities, all fifteen reduces to the six.
(01:38:10):
So there's a bunch of seduction around all things sixy.
So yeah, then I went and I took my all
the matriarchs in my family to go see Wicked and
oh yeah, bingo banngo home run out the park, buddy,
that's amazing, that's amazing. So these little these characters I
(01:38:32):
can see right through them because of my works on
with the Tarot cards, but one. For almost twenty four hours,
I was seeing things incorrectly. I kept thinking, why does
Wizard of Oz need to fulfill the Tarot cards? Does it?
Why is it again expressing high fidelity? And I realized
(01:38:53):
I got it wrong. It's actually the Tarot cards are
based on the Wizard of Oz. And when I made
that realization, I think I've found a deeper source code
to the culture creation that these that these cards have
been doing for so long. Can you bring up the
larger scale with the Tarot cards around it? The next
picture over? Maybe? Keep going.
Speaker 2 (01:39:16):
No, that's all I got from you, dude, Oh is it?
Speaker 4 (01:39:19):
Hold on, I'm going to send you one more because
I've I've discovered that their costume is the tarrort cards
are the costume department of Hollywood.
Speaker 2 (01:39:30):
Oh, I think I got it. Hold on, No, I
have another one with like a red hat.
Speaker 4 (01:39:36):
Here, I got you. I'm going to send it right now.
Speaker 2 (01:39:38):
Oh I got it. I got it, And then I
got the one with the red hat. Now I just
didn't download.
Speaker 4 (01:39:42):
Oh okay, okay, but I'll send them now.
Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
But yeah, I actually I was at Universal Studios and
they had a whole exhibit thing on the the Wizard
or Wicked or whatever it's called. Yeah, and it had
real big and before we left the park, we went
in and we had they had like this whole thing
(01:40:05):
with like the props like the movie, you know, like
I'm sure that up because and all this stuff. But
it stood out to me because really big on the
side of the building that they had this exhibit on
it freaking showed eleven twenty two and I'm like, I
look over at I think it was my wife's best
friend's husband and I was like, do you know that
(01:40:28):
that's when JFK was assassinated at eleven twenty two, And
I had to let her know real quick because again
not everybody knows that. One'm like, well what and it
also equals thirty three, So yeah, man, what an interesting
day to pick huh.
Speaker 4 (01:40:43):
Yeah. Man, It's so amazing how how consistent it is
for so long, you know, but that's part of the provocation,
and also it's giving us future shock. That's another thing.
This was forty four years ago that the from the
John Lennon being executed outside the Dakoder building, and sure enough,
(01:41:07):
their Hollywood is triggering our fear response. So tactically, it's amazing.
So you can see the Uh. Her name is Glinda.
She's the one who floats around in the pink bubble. Right.
She has always been the star card wand she's been
the Star cards since these cards were invented.
Speaker 2 (01:41:28):
Well, this is a this is a kind of creepy resemblance, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:41:33):
Yes, And even Alphaba the Witch, she's a black actress. Well,
she the Witch has always been based on this death
card in particular. And then these characters, you know, these
stories are so old and they're just bringing them to
the to the big screen. And when they do it,
(01:41:54):
they are dressing them perfectly into the the costumed apartment
of the Alistair Crowley Thoth Tarot deck. And I got
to tell you something. So I'm ninety nine percent sure
I'm not even missing a single character. I'm ninety nine
(01:42:16):
percent sure that I've got this locked down all the
way down to the goat. There's actually a talking goat
in the story, and sure enough, that's the Devil card here.
But dude, something weird happened over the holidays. I was
watching Nuke's Top five is like haunted House videos of
(01:42:37):
people catch paranormal stuff on video Doude wasting time.
Speaker 2 (01:42:42):
Yeah, yeah, Mail was caught on camera. It's fucking nothing,
It's nuts.
Speaker 4 (01:42:48):
You know what happens. I find out he's actually running
through the tarot card sequences and he's he's selected the
videos in a stride with the archetypes of the Tarot deck,
and I think by doing that he can actually charge
the Tarot deck with emotional investment. It becomes you know,
(01:43:12):
sigilh sigil capture of a sort.
Speaker 2 (01:43:17):
So damn, it'sick okay, the Wizard of Oz. Yeah that
we should do a deep dive on that and let's go.
Let's go not the ship that we've all seen that
we all know, like the Wizard of Oz, the Yellow
Brick where like no, no, I'm talking about like go
(01:43:38):
because he was he was a theosophist, wasn't he That
he was heavy into like Helena Blovatski and like and
he wrote, like what thirty something books? How many Wizard
of Oz books are?
Speaker 4 (01:43:47):
Let me check here, I feel like thirty nine.
Speaker 2 (01:43:50):
Many Wizard of Oz books are there? There is forty books.
Speaker 4 (01:43:58):
Wow, that's a forty degrees of virgo.
Speaker 2 (01:44:02):
There are forty books in the Wizard of Oll series,
including the original fourteen books by L. Frank Baum and Bomb,
and twenty six additional books by other authors. So there's
the original of fourteen right, and then additional twenty six.
The Wizard of Oz franchise has also been adapted to
seventy movies, TV shows, and stage plays.
Speaker 4 (01:44:22):
The culture Total Corner Shoot.
Speaker 2 (01:44:25):
One hundred percent. The nineteen thirty nine version of The
Wizard of Oz is considered by many to be the best.
I've never seen it. I'm gonna be honest with you.
I started watching it one day with my wife because
she's like, oh, you've never seen the Wizard. I was like, no,
say let's watch it. We turn I I was like,
what is this bullshit? Like turn the shit off, Like
I don't want to watch this. So there's something to
be said about the Wizard of Oz, and I think
(01:44:47):
maybe it has something to do with him. They sacrificed
that poor girl, that first girl that they used.
Speaker 4 (01:44:52):
For those movies. Yeah, they even the tin man he
died from the.
Speaker 2 (01:44:58):
Witch, the original dude, They've sacrificed all those people, bro.
Speaker 4 (01:45:01):
Yes, all of them were suffering horribly for the entire
film because they were basically being cooked under an oven.
Speaker 2 (01:45:08):
Yes, dude, and the makeup was too thick, and so
we should do we should do a deep dive on that.
But I want to just touch on this what I'm
gonna dub the Tarot technology, because yeah, buddy, dude, this
is bizarre. Like if you look at this, you go, Okay,
(01:45:29):
it's skitzo whatever. But there's a resemblance.
Speaker 4 (01:45:34):
Bro, You're feeling it, don't you.
Speaker 2 (01:45:37):
It's kind of scary the like for those listening, just
pop up, you know, the YouTube video and look at
the resemblances. If you have never for the regular person
going to watch this on eleven, twenty two thirty three, uh,
you know, same day. JFK, what's assassinating all? This suff
near the baph of met Head. By the way, the
regular person would never ever see this. It took slick
(01:46:01):
dissident to put this together, to bring it to the world,
to show that there's like this crazy resemblance. Now, my
whole idea, my whole question is like, like what forward, dude, Like,
what is it? Is? Hear me out? Is Taro faking gay?
Or is it is there something let me rephrase this,
(01:46:24):
Is there something to the original tarot which goes back
all the way to Milan and the original family, this
force of family that was that was integrating family members
into the earliest Tarot deck, which, by the way, the
Devil card is missing because some people suspect that it
(01:46:46):
was stolen to be worshiped, which is crazy, which is wild?
Is there something to taro and not the bullshit that
people do with it now where they put their hands
over it and they feel their nipples and they all
the energy is here, and then that's it, Like is there?
(01:47:10):
What is it? Like? Why do they use it? Why
does it have any signal? Why does it have any power? It?
Is it bringing forth the archetypes from the abyss and
doing something was Crawley tapped in by him putting this
deck together, which looks really eerily similar to this movie,
(01:47:34):
and you would think, like these bright colors that they
use in this movie and like, I don't know if
you saw all the interviews with the Ariana Grande, which
if you look at the before and after pictures of her,
she looks sick in this new one, like again like
the original Wizard of Oz, but it's almost mk ultra
(01:47:58):
if you look at the inner reviews that they do,
it's almost very inauthentic the way they promoted this movie.
But what is it, dude, about this tarot technology? Is
it real? Does it? How big was this movie? How
much did it the box? Did it?
Speaker 4 (01:48:17):
Well, that's a good question. I didn't actually pay attention
to the numbers that put up.
Speaker 2 (01:48:21):
Was it good? Did you like it?
Speaker 4 (01:48:22):
I actually did enjoy it, but primarily because I see
it as you know, social engineering, and I call it
the promulgation protocols. You know, promulgation is actually a public
display where they're serving you notice, just like Martin Luther
(01:48:43):
going out and nailing a public notice on the door
of his ninety five theses, this is promulgation. Literally has
the word hammer in it. The mole is the hammer
of putting this on notice. Mala that Mela car bro Witch,
the witch of the Wicked Witch bro Vayer.
Speaker 2 (01:49:03):
Dude looking to von Also, yes, have you ever seen
the movie Witch with uh with the girl from the Queen's.
Speaker 4 (01:49:10):
Gambit nos a goat? It sounds like it loops right.
Speaker 2 (01:49:15):
In with the top with the top with the talking goat.
Damn brou By the way, this movie grossed six hundred
and thirty five million dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:49:29):
Interesting it's got a three sixty five kind of scrambled
in there.
Speaker 2 (01:49:33):
Yeah, so it's not it wasn't as unsuccessful as I
had originally thought. So six hundred and thirty five million
is not not too bad. But I wonder what the
uh what the so the Wicked musical budget, let's see
what the budget was. One hundred and fifty million.
Speaker 4 (01:49:54):
Okay, okay, well, you know, uh, some fascinating things we
were talking about earlier about I'm starting to realize that
we should pay more attention to the female biographies of
these of the masculine culture creators, like we did with
Descartes earlier.
Speaker 2 (01:50:13):
You know.
Speaker 4 (01:50:15):
I'm actually I've always corresponded to this death card, which
is in the shape of the Hercules constellation. I've always
associated it with Freud. But after I went to see
The Wonderful Wizard or no, this new film, The Wicked,
I'm looking at the death card, oh dude, relating to
Freud's daughter, Anna Freud. And so now I'm looking at
(01:50:38):
the female correspondences to the biographies. And Anna Freud was
put on the map because of her relationship with Frederick
Nietzsche's unrequited love Simone Louis Simone, go ahead, what you
got there?
Speaker 2 (01:50:55):
It is Wicked, the most wickedest man. Oh yeah, or
something like that in the world.
Speaker 4 (01:51:02):
That's right. That is the title, isn't it? Isn't it? Good? Call?
Speaker 2 (01:51:08):
What the fuck? So?
Speaker 4 (01:51:10):
Yeah, I'm gonna be looking into Simone. I'm sorry. Yeah. Louis, Yeah,
Louise Salome that's her name. Lulu Salome is Nietzsche's unrequieted love.
And Anna Freud was a close friend of hers. And
Anna Freud was actually taken in by the Gestapo and interrogated,
(01:51:33):
and she had some poison on her that she and
her brother were supposed to take too much if they
if they got tortured, they were going to commit suicide
if the torture was too much. So they have some
really tripped out biographies hiding just off other people's radar. Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:51:50):
By the way, there's a second part coming out releasing
November twenty first, like a year later, huh, called Wicked
for Good And it's the upcoming music fantasy film by
John M. Chew and Winnie Holsman and Dana Fox, the
(01:52:11):
sequel to Wicked. It is the second assignment of a
two part film meditation of a stage musical of the
same name by Stephen Schwartz and Holsman, which is loosely
based on the nineteen ninety five novel in turn based
on the Oz books and the nineteen thirty nine film
The Wizard of Oz. So Stephen Schwartz and holtzmanth we
(01:52:32):
gotta start peeling apart the layers of these people because
this guy contributed to lyrics to a number of successful films,
including Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Prince of Egypt, Enchanted, Disenchanted, Bro.
This dude's going in. Who is this guy? And he
went to Carnegie Mellon University.
Speaker 4 (01:52:54):
Very interesting, very very interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:52:57):
They have a I think it's a pineapple on their
old sigil there. He's a lyricist and composer. Man.
Speaker 4 (01:53:04):
Huh, so you know the pineapple is the symbol for swingers. Yeah, apparently, yeah,
and apparently, Uh, I see the ace of swords from
this deck. The ace of Swords of the Tholt deck
is a giant pineapple. It's also corresponded to like a
nuclear explosion or a volcanic explosion on the horizon, but
(01:53:27):
it's also encoding a pineapple, and it has a sword
in there, and so it was one year from the
Tonga explosion when, uh, who's Snoop Dogg's girlfriend is Margaret
Margaret Stewart. When Margaret Stewart did a commercial with a
(01:53:48):
sword and a pineapple and uh, yeah, that was a
really dark spell. But whenever you see the pineapple, just
think of the Ace of Swords from the Tholth Deck.
Speaker 2 (01:53:57):
The Ace of Swords from the Thold Deck.
Speaker 4 (01:54:00):
Yeah, and they said that the Tonga event was not
really a volcano. Maybe that was a rod of God.
They might have been testing the rod of God technology
on that volcano, which is kind of what that card
looks like to me.
Speaker 2 (01:54:15):
Which one are you talking about?
Speaker 4 (01:54:17):
The Thilth Deck.
Speaker 2 (01:54:18):
No, the you said Tonga Tonga.
Speaker 4 (01:54:21):
Volcano event was exactly one year before Martha Stewart did
a commercial with the sword in a pineapple. That is
basically a whole ritual to that card, to the Ace
of Swords of the Thilt Deck.
Speaker 2 (01:54:37):
Oh this look are you talking about in twenty twenty one?
Speaker 4 (01:54:40):
I think?
Speaker 2 (01:54:41):
So? This this look s gnarly And they said that
was a volcay. So the twenty twenty two Hunga Tonga
Hunga Hi eruption in tsunami. Excuse my pronunciation there, Let
me pull this up. This is crazy, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:54:56):
Yes, it was exactly three hundred and sixty five days
before Barb Great Stewart Or is that am? I say?
Your your name right? Margaret Stewart, Martha Martha Stuart Stuart?
Speaker 2 (01:55:07):
Keep her? Who cares about her name? So? The yeah,
January fifteenth, seven dead, nineteen injury, ninety point four million damages.
So they said this is an eruption a submarine volcano
in the Tonga Archipelago on the southern Pacific Ocean. The
(01:55:29):
auction reached a very large and powerful climax nearly four
weeks later, on January fifteen, twenty twenty two. I never
heard about this, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:55:37):
Yes, it was in The ripples went all the way
around the Earth. It was a real, real big to do.
And it's amazing that they just happened to have a
satellite exactly above it to catch a perfect you know,
it's so scripted. It's so scripted, bro, what yeah, baddie,
And it was on a very sacred date as well.
Speaker 2 (01:55:57):
It looks like a like a hurricane taken off there,
you see that, like.
Speaker 4 (01:56:01):
Kind of yeah, the ripples. That yes, bro, what really
powerful that one? And yeah, and I also, you know,
I believe that they can kind of I don't know
that they can play these trauma events very much like
(01:56:25):
music into the DNA of the earth, you know, of
the collective m h. And so. So they laid this
one out in three hundred and sixty five days later,
they do ritual with corresponding aspects and ingredients in Margaret
Stewart's kitchen.
Speaker 2 (01:56:44):
I never heard this, dude, never nothing, And this is
this is like, this is only two years ago.
Speaker 4 (01:56:53):
Bro. Yeah, it was a big one. It was a
real big one. They said that, you know, the smoke
from it went around the world for a couple of days,
just like a Krakatoa way back in the day. Krakatoa
erupted exactly on Volcanoia on the holiday of the Volcano
way back in like eighteen eighty three. Krakatoa popped off
(01:57:14):
on the volcano holiday and went around the world seven times.
That's the river sticks goes around hades seven times around.
It's also there's seven holes into your head. That's the
river sticks into your hades. Mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (01:57:30):
All right, so well, okay, this is this is really interesting.
I never heard about this. But let's continue here with
the uh okay, yeah, yeah with the taro. Are you
done with this one? You want me to continue the
next one?
Speaker 4 (01:57:41):
Yeah, let's see what the next one is all about. Okay, yeah,
I can weave on this. This is pretty far.
Speaker 2 (01:57:46):
It's got to do with Luigi or boy. It's a
mem it to.
Speaker 4 (01:57:50):
Be a madio. Yeah, so Luigi Mangina he uh he pops.
It happened that in that CEO, in the CEO is
wearing a color of blue that is so uh it's
a signal flare. It's such a bright color blue that
(01:58:11):
I'm just seeing, you know, the symbolic triggering is really
overt to my eyes. And so I took the two
cards that looked the most like it, and sure enough,
I was instantly seeing that we were in the same
exact time flow as when the John Lennon's sacrifice happened
(01:58:36):
on the front doorstep of the Dakota Building. And I
happened to know that the John Lennon in the I
think the guy's name was Mark David Chapman, was the
assassin that whole ceremony, that whole ritual of chill of
killing John Lennon. It was encoded into the Ghostbusters and
(01:58:57):
the chandor building that the Ghostbusters use, and so some
of my decodes around the Ghostbusters kind of focus on
the death Card here, which has ghosts coming off of
his weapon. You know, he's got these spirits floating around
as he's slicing the ethers of the spiritual realm. And
(01:59:18):
so sure enough, Mark David Chapman had a copy of
The Catcher in the Rye on his person that he
had asked John Lennon to sign earlier that day, and
so John Lennon signs it with a little self portrait caricature.
And so I've been breaking this down on my channel recently.
(01:59:40):
But what's amazing, Wan. Can you see the black collar
of the book, The Catcher in the Rye. You see
how his black collar is just like a black scribble.
But look how it is a perfect overlay onto the
death card skeleton.
Speaker 2 (01:59:55):
Yeah, I was gonna say it looks like a grim reaper,
like the Deathly Hollows from like Harry Potter or whatever
they're called.
Speaker 4 (02:00:02):
That's it. But yeah, it's a perfect fit. And also
we know we've actually seen a transparent X ray footage
of lou Mangione. We've seen his back X ray pictures
of the spinal column where he has a bunch of
braces put into his back. Look at the death card,
(02:00:24):
we could see the spinal column of the death character.
And so they have infused his biography with these tarot
cards in the most deep and profound ways. And so also,
you know, Luigi is a booger hanging off your nose.
It's a loogie right in the wintertime. You like, you
(02:00:44):
like sniffing a little booger off the end of your nose.
That's actually a correspondent to the mew is the thirteenth
letter in the Greek alphabet, and there's a big booger
dripping off the nose of the mew. Well, this is
card number thirteen, and the mew is number thirteen in
the Greek alphabet. So the mucus off the nose is
kind of part of Slimer from the Ghostbusters was actually
(02:01:07):
embodied in this death card. It's got Slimer all over it. Well,
Mangione was wielding a ghost gun. Ghost gun is what
the Ghostbusters use. They got these guns that are spraying
all over the place out of control and he had
totally and he had a proton pack. He's got a
backpack on it. And another thing about the backpack, it's
(02:01:29):
in all the trauma rituals all the way to the
Boston bombing, which has relates to that other character we
talked about earlier, who was a crisis actor at the
Boston bombing. But I just want everybody to consider the
word backpack is an instant infantilization spell onto our psyche. Culturally.
It makes you sympathize to when you were young, to
(02:01:51):
when you needed backpacks to carry all your books uphill
both ways to and from school. And then launch story
short one. I mean come over to a slick dissident
for more details. But it turns out in my Territory's map,
the Emperor card is the orange Man bad card that
(02:02:12):
they put him in the dressed him in orange and
did the purp walk. Well, the Emperor card's face is
in the silhouette off the coast of California. And this
is crazy because I was doing an episode on what
Eureka means. It's the epiphany moment that Archimedes had when
(02:02:35):
he learned how to submerge something underwater to measure its volume,
and he went bunkers when he had the breakthrough epiphany
and he started running naked in the street street screaming Eureka, Eureka, Eureka.
And that's because he discovered the secret recipe to increasing
or measuring the volume from submerging something under the waters.
(02:02:58):
In just this week, the headline to come out that
they think this is the year that a big earthquake
pops off right off the coast of Eureka, California keep.
Speaker 2 (02:03:07):
Saying that, dude, They've said that every year for the
last however many years. It's gonna break off. California is
gonna break off and become its own shitthole island. It's
gonna be a piece of shit floating out on the
Pacific Ocean. Yeah. Due, And it's interesting right because I
just open up my Facebook and speaking of the Orange Man,
(02:03:29):
reports indicate that a judge has denied President elect Donald
Trump's request to dismiss the hush money case. Sentencing is
scheduled for January tenth, just days before his inauguration. Trump
is expected to attend either in person or virtually, with
no jail time anticipated January tenth.
Speaker 4 (02:03:49):
They're not gonna miss any opportunity to hit all the triggers,
all the way whatever is most provocative. So then I
did a big antagram, and I gotta I gotta hell everybody.
The longer the anagram, the more room there is for wiggle.
You know. It's almost like I prefer a short anagram
because there's less options to you know, project your own
(02:04:12):
whatever opinion onto it. But can you move over a
little more where it's got the holding call field to
the left, left and down here we go. Yeah, so
Lou Mangione holding the call field. Holding call Field is
the name of the main character in Catcher and the Rhye.
(02:04:34):
And I'm just kind of reading these names loosely to
see what little anagrams come out. And I started thinking about,
imagine how you're done in brad codified. Done in Brad
Street is where all of our Social Security numbers are
trademark captured.
Speaker 2 (02:04:53):
Well yeah, it's kind of sort of like with his
with his whole spiel about you know, the system and
whatever it was that he was the healthcare and being
denied and then the secret code that he had on
his Twitter or something people are going crazy about big time.
Speaker 4 (02:05:16):
So one more thing, one Can you notice that I
put the constellation for Hercules into the skeleton of the
death Guard there, and you see how it's kind of
got some swastika to it.
Speaker 2 (02:05:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:05:29):
Yeah, I'm also I'm I'm attributing that shape. It's the
constellation Hercules, but I'm going to be attributing it to
the drones at large because they have the four legs
with propellers on it on the end of each of them.
And I'm just seeing a very powerful correspondence between the
(02:05:51):
drones and the ritual where this guy is pretty much
acting out the likelihood that he is a mind controlled assassin.
Speaker 2 (02:06:07):
Yikes. Uh, what does Hercules represent as far as like
in the occult? I know he was he was in
the roomb for ten months. Oh yeah, I believe it
was like it was like longer we would he represent
anything as far as like supremacy or maybe like uh,
because he was a demi god was he was? He was?
(02:06:29):
He was a Nephlum essentially, is.
Speaker 4 (02:06:31):
What he was. Great point, man, this is a great point.
You're really nailing it. Yeah, And uh, he is the
hero of the Fall time of year. He's the exact
opposite of Orian. Orian is like the springtime of year.
It's kind of optimistic, whereas Hercules is like he's in
it for the self, uh, for the self struggle. But
(02:06:54):
you're totally right. I think he is kind of a
half breed, so to say, because Zeus has to sneak
him in to Harrah's bedchamber and allow Hercules to suckle
on her breast without her permission, and she wakes up
and she's really pissed off because he stole some sort
of divine breast milk that turned him into it.
Speaker 2 (02:07:18):
They don't show that on the Disney interpretation of Hercules.
They don't show him sneaking him into his what Zeus
was a freak dude. Zeus was a freaky motherfucker. Like
he was like doing some vile shit. You know what
I'm saying that he was crazy.
Speaker 4 (02:07:36):
Dude, right, Yes, even the word you know, I always
talk about crypto zeus ology because he was a shape shifter.
You know, he could he could get in to fit
in no matter where you tried to hide it.
Speaker 2 (02:07:47):
Yeah, he was just trying to get the pickle well
wherever he could. It was just like a swan. You
like birds. I heard you like birds? They just going
in and just like doing his Like, Bro, this guy
was a freak man. Fuck zeus. It was a It
was an asshole, is what he was.
Speaker 4 (02:08:06):
So he picked that lock with this foul language.
Speaker 2 (02:08:09):
Yeah, I think Swans have cork dicks, don't they like that?
It's like a corkscrew. Let me look it up on
off screen here, so swan penis uh yeah, that's a
huge uh yeah, it's like a corkscrew. Bro. What though?
All right?
Speaker 4 (02:08:30):
The Force multiplayer, By.
Speaker 2 (02:08:33):
The way, there was cultures that made weapons out of
walrus baculums or vaculas or whatever they call, so you'd
literally be death by walrus dickbone. So I'm actually waiting
for a an auction to go ahead and see if
I can snag one of those walrus dickbone clubs that
(02:08:55):
the certain cultures use. I think it's like Inuit or
something like that culture.
Speaker 4 (02:09:00):
So, oh, my goodnis with.
Speaker 2 (02:09:03):
That walrus dick bone.
Speaker 4 (02:09:06):
So I am of the impression that the totem of
the walrus is intrinsically hailing Frederick Nietzsche himself.
Speaker 2 (02:09:16):
Another because well, I canna say another freak, but that
was Freud who was a freak. But Nietzsche too, Nica was,
Oh yeah, was into some stuff.
Speaker 4 (02:09:25):
But I think you know, when the Beatles talk about
all hailed the Walrus, I think they're actually talking about
Nietzsche because of this giant mustachio.
Speaker 2 (02:09:34):
You ever listen to Beatles pre drugs and then after
the drugs, they're way better after the drugs because it's
a whole different sound. Bro. Yeah, yeah, it's a whole
different sound. It's it's crazy, man, what what they were
looking into?
Speaker 4 (02:09:49):
And yes, weeps. The Latin word for a beetle is
like scott abajo, and it means they're face to the ground.
And this is because both the scribes are kind of
stuck in their books and they even have near sightedness
because they're they're kind of shut in kind of personalities.
(02:10:11):
But they're worshipful and they're always pious, and they're always
making themselves small. And so there's something to be said
about how scott Abajo of book worship is actually self diminishing.
You become kind of closed in on yourself when you
become a bibliophile. So yeah, I just love pointing that
(02:10:31):
out about the Beatles. And then, of course, Carl Young,
one of his most synchronous moments was when he was
talking to one of his clients about a beetle, and
then a beadle came flying on the windowsill at the
exact moment that she needed to be become a believer.
Speaker 2 (02:10:46):
A synchronicity, as she wanted a sign, and it was
a beetle. But it's interesting you say that, because, I mean,
who became the ultimate biblio file of anything if not
Carl Jung when he would literally end or within his
books and his journals. I mean, and the scare beetle
is interesting because if it makes life out of shit,
(02:11:08):
like that's what it's known for, right, that's maybe perhaps
why they were worshiped by the Egyptians like this, the
scare of beetle.
Speaker 4 (02:11:15):
Right. And I always loved pointing out how the scareb
is also an anagram for the ribis, and the ribis
is a word puzzle, and that's something that I do
a great amount of kind of you know, linguistic kabbala
is something that I'm really into. And so the ribis
(02:11:38):
it's said by Lacan, a philosopher, I think, a French philosopher.
He says language is a ribis. That's one of my
favorite quotes because I do believe that what the Knights
Templar discovered when they went to the Middle East to
turn the tables on the Vatican was they discovered algebra.
(02:11:59):
But they just covered that language is like algebra, and
it has puzzle pieces that are interchangeable. And so I
think they found not just algebra. I think they found
the word puzzles of the ribis of the English language.
Speaker 2 (02:12:15):
Barbus. You mean rebus like the alchemical rabis.
Speaker 4 (02:12:18):
It's same, yep, one in the same yep. It's the
ability to kind of mix and matter. Uh yeah, yes,
and it is. It's also a very hermetic concept intellectually.
Speaker 2 (02:12:31):
Wow, dude, So our boy Lugi here or Mangina whatever
you call him. U. So what do you think is
to come here? Uh slick with this tarot technology? Is
our boy Luigi. He's kind of like a Rebus. He's
kind of he's a pretty guy, right, he's got he's
kind of handsome, you know, he's kind of flirting with
(02:12:51):
the girl, and allegedly that's what got him kind of
zeus Like, right, he's flirting with the girl and that
was his downfall, wasn't it that that's what they were
talking about? But you think they're going to sacrifice him,
then they're gonna. What do you think is gonna happen
with this here in these upcoming weeks. Now I'm getting
uh sour dough starter kid groups on my Facebook now, literally,
(02:13:13):
I didn't look it up. I didn't look it up
on my phone. I looked it up on my computer,
and they're they're already telling me.
Speaker 4 (02:13:19):
Already going for you. They're gonna that's the art of
fishing the shoal of the content that shows you noise.
Speaker 2 (02:13:26):
Bro, I was talking with you, uh huh, And now
it's on my Facebook recommendation for groups.
Speaker 4 (02:13:37):
It's so fascinating, dude. So so I want to say that, uh,
I think that this uh, this drone programming is actually
going to valorize the idea of uh.
Speaker 2 (02:13:52):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (02:13:52):
I was triggered. I was triggered to do this. It's
not my fault. I was triggered. I love pointing out
that the word triggered only became a verb exactly in
stride with the film Manchurian Candidate. Before the film Manchurian Candidate,
triggered was only a noun, and it's only been a
verb for this long, And think of what a think
(02:14:15):
about how powerful that verb is now, the fact that
we use it as a verb, it's really potent. And
so I do think that this drone programming of this
character Mangina is going to continuously erode people's sense of Hey,
I was triggered. I was triggered to do this. I'm
(02:14:36):
just it's not my fault, it's a yeah. And also
I think that they're flipping our sympathetic resonance. Our elders
were going to sympathize with John Lennon, who was the
victim of the ritual.
Speaker 2 (02:14:48):
What was the name of the movie, you said, Manchurian candidate.
Speaker 4 (02:14:50):
Or book candidate? Yeah, Yet it was a book first,
and they actually delayed the film release for a many
years because they didn't want people to realiz is how
programmable we are, and they didn't want us to have
trigger become a verb too soon. They needed to seed
our consciousness before they let us use the word triggered
(02:15:12):
as a verb.
Speaker 2 (02:15:13):
So, yeah, by nineteen eighty six, it became to cause
intense and usually negative emotional reaction a person or animal.
And the book came out and I was published April
twenty seven, nineteen fifty nine.
Speaker 4 (02:15:27):
Yeah, man. But what's amazing is the technology of triggering
people's emotional andal response is hundreds of years older than
we have the word to identify it. And so the
ramifications of the fact that they've been triggering people with
the mk ultra ever since the Nights of Malta in
the caverns underneath that they've been doing that for hundreds
(02:15:48):
of years. We're just now reaping the benefit, the privilege
of having the perfect word to describe triggering your consciousness
because we are the original program. Our epigenetic memory is
the original program. And yeah, so they put these rituals
right in stride with sacred trauma rituals from our ancestors,
(02:16:09):
and all that packaging, all the baggage, all the memory
from childhood and even your ancestors who came before you.
They got these guys wearing backpacks every single time. So yeah,
all the emotional unpacking becomes emotional anchors that we pass
like a trauma torch. And there's a lunar stand still
coming in March. Heads up on that. I'll just leave
(02:16:31):
it at that. That's my big weave right now, looking
at the lunar stand still in March in the likelihood
of the draft coming over the next few years.
Speaker 2 (02:16:41):
Where the fleas in the jar that the cap put
on them and we're being trained and we're not ever
going to be able to jump any higher than that
top of that cap because our genetics have been tainted
by the indoctrination of the cap. Up right, they put
the cop on there, and any offspring of those fleas
(02:17:03):
from there on out can't jump any higher than from
the bottom of that jar at the top right before
they hit, which is wild, dude.
Speaker 4 (02:17:12):
So it makes me think of a turpentine and the
loosing ritual that they do or no, excuse me, absent,
the loosing ritual of absent. Yeah, I think that's deeply encoded. Well,
let's unpack that with the Wizard of Oz project when
we come back around.
Speaker 2 (02:17:29):
And one of the things that you know, before we
go here, one of the things that makes you question
this whole narrative of him, you know, being this rogue
gunman and you know, having a cause when he's apprehended
and all this stuff, like he's not yelling, you know,
fuck the system, you know, more power to the man
(02:17:51):
or whatever. Sticking it to them is like he's just
if he hasn't really said anything, right, He's kind of
been quiet, like you would think that somebody trying to
make a point, trying to push a movement would say
something in core or like you know, when they capture him. Nothing, Yeah,
silent treatment, that's the goal. The Golan doesn't talk, It
(02:18:11):
can't talk. It doesn't know how to communicate.
Speaker 4 (02:18:14):
So I don't know, and even you know the Greeks
that the verbs controlled the sentence, and so there is
a certain spirit of letting your actions speak for you.
You know, there is an aspect of that, and that
is kind of one of the keys. The stoicism is
you don't talk about it, you'd be about it.
Speaker 2 (02:18:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly, Let's talk more, do I guess?
Speaker 4 (02:18:37):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:18:37):
All right, Well listen, dude, always mind blowing. We're starting
off the new year as skitzo as we could with
the old like dissident here, very interesting connections, talk about daycares,
talk about the sour del Homunculus, Tterot technologies, and whatever else.
You enjoyed this. Make sure to leave a comment, leave
(02:18:59):
a review, leave whatever thumbs up. Who cares? Go follow
the show www dot TJJP dot com and slick where
can people find you, Bro, You put out videos, let
people know and links will be on in the description.
But tell people one more time where they can go
support you.
Speaker 4 (02:19:16):
Yeah, brother, the big love and respect man. Thanks for
having me on Happy twenty twenty five The Magical Year
of Venus Slick Dissident at on YouTube. I got the
Slick Dissidant dot com where I got some of my merch,
some of my ciphers, my slick distant authentic little gizmoy
(02:19:36):
and then I get down with Chance Garton on the
interverse every now and again.
Speaker 2 (02:19:43):
Much love and respect to you, bro, I appreciate you
coming on first, well, first public episode of the year. Yeah,
I mean with the old Slick Dissident. We'll be seeing
more of him later on. And yeah, we'll do a
dive into the Wizard of Oz. We'll have to call
Paranoid American on that one because he knows a lot
more about that than I do, so we'll chop it
(02:20:06):
up with him. And there's always everyone. Make sure to
speak Oh, speaking of the venture in Canada, have the
room two thirty seven here. Make sure to check out
the Patreon if you want to check out the episode
on the Pseudomonarchiamnum that I just recorded last night with
(02:20:26):
Homi romy and all the other backlog of hundreds of
episodes that are on there, and there's always everyone to
catch you on the next one, and I'll see you
very soon, and that's it, bye, thank y'all.
Speaker 7 (02:21:28):
It's important to take care of yourself when you're feeling unwell,
and if you have symptoms of a virus flu or
COVID nineteen, the best thing to do is to rest
up and stay at home, because you won't just be
taking care of yourself, you'll be helping to protect other
people too, people close to you, like family and friends
and people you've never even met who might be at
(02:21:51):
higher risk than you. And don't forget to visit HSE
dot ie for advice on getting better from the HSE.
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