Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
what's going on?
Everybody, it's ron brown lmt,the people's fitness
professional, aka soul brothernumber one, although shick l
from syracuse says I'm sobrother number three because
somebody's number one and he'snumber two.
So now I'm going to take numberthree for now, just out of
respect for Shea L.
Okay.
(00:31):
So thank you for coming out, drAlim Bey.
We got Dr Alim Bey in thebuilding.
Peace to you, peace, peace,peace.
All right, today we're talkingabout the Moorish indigenous
roots in America.
This is a very controversialsubject.
Some people say we were broughtover here in chains.
(00:53):
Some people say we weren't.
Some people, you know they liketo kind of like, kind of clown
this theory sometimes kind ofclown-ness theory sometimes.
So I want to talk about thisand build on it with some
informative information and seewhere you take us today Before
(01:17):
we start how you doing thisevening I'm doing good God.
Doing good.
That's peace.
That's peace.
So now let's go right into it.
Now we can go off of how youwanted to present it, or we can
go on my questions, or we coulddo a mixture of both, how you
want to set it up.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
Yeah, we can do a
mixture.
Yeah, let's do that.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
Okay, Okay.
So let's go with what you haveon the slide right now.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
All right.
So this is Michelle Gibson, asaid European, and this is what
she says about it.
I'm seeing that there is anancient, events, global or
worldly civilization called theMoorish Empire.
Now, why she can see it and youcan't, that's the question to
(02:03):
those that want to debate it.
That's the question to thosethat want to debate it.
It was, it was global, it wasworldly, it wasn't just in one
area.
You think that the mall justcame out of africa and went into
spain?
You didn't even realize thatthey rule all of europe.
You know.
So, instead of the historicalnarrative we have been taught
(02:25):
about who built the world'sinfrastructure, perhaps with
different roots in Mu or Lemuriain Atlantis, the Ouachita Mules
(03:01):
are an ancient people presenteda charter by the United Nations
in 1993, recognizing theOuachita as the oldest
indigenous civilization on Earth.
Relative recent worldwide mudflood liquefaction event that
(03:29):
wiped out this advancedcivilization.
Then there was a subsequenthistorical reset of the timeline
by those responsible for thecataclysm.
I do not believe the mud floodresulted from natural causes.
I'm going to leave that rightthere?
I do not believe the mud floodresulted from natural causes.
All right, I'm going to leavethat right there.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
Because that's a lot
that she said Right.
She said she doesn't believethat this civilization was wiped
out by mud floods, by mudfloods that resulted from
natural causes.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Right, right, exactly
.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
So where could these?
What is she insinuating?
Speaker 2 (04:09):
She's insinuating
that there was advanced
technology in which that wasutilized to wipe out the
civilization.
Because New York been there forthousands of years.
The indigenous people built NewYork.
Been there for thousands ofyears.
The indigenous people built NewYork, you know.
They built the various citiesaround the so-called country I
(04:34):
hate to use the word countrybecause it's not vast enough but
around the so-called America,north America, america, north
America.
So we are talking aboutadvanced technology and it came
from the Lemurians, came fromthe Atlantis, atlanteans, via
(04:59):
the Omex, you know, and we arethe descendants of the Olmecs
okay now.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
I've heard this
before, right now.
The Olmec civilization was theOlmec head and their artifacts,
and were found right in Tabasco,mexico.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Right San Lorenzo in
the yucatan peninsula now,
without.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Would mexicans refute
what you're saying right now,
or no?
Speaker 2 (05:37):
no, not inlantian
ones, because we was told this
by um, a mayan tour guide, um,who was an anthropologist, he
told us that they didn't buildit.
He said we built it and he wastalking about the pyramids, the
(05:58):
temples Got you.
And for people who want to seehim talk about this, they can
actually go to my YouTube pageand I have the videos right
there of Jesus telling us this.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Now I want to go into
this question because I never
I've never heard it from youlike your breakdown about it.
But what does the term moretruly mean historically, and how
has it changed its meaning?
Sorry, how has its meaningchanged in America?
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Well, the oldest, the
oldest Moore term, mary or Meru
, and that is the oldestterminology that we know of.
There is in Kenya a tribe knownas the Meru people known as the
(07:24):
Maroo people.
Okay, and a lot of us about 60some odd percent of us who have
E1B1A haplogroup type arerelated to these Maroo people,
(07:45):
okay, so that's the proof rightthere okay, now what would be
the difference between nativeand more?
um.
Native means immigrants whocame here at a later time and
embedded themselves within aculture of the American culture
(08:11):
and mixed in with us, such asthe Chinese who came in 459 AD.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
OK, so the Chinese,
so the Native Americansicans,
would you say, are a mixture ofchinese yes okay all right
chinese.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
A lot of times, when
you see them, their eyes are
enfold and they look evenMexicans.
To this day, some of them lookChinese, oriental, and that's
the reason why is because theChinese came here for 59 AD and
(09:01):
they mixed in with the Omex andthe Ouachita AD.
And they mixed in with the Omexand the Ouachita are
descendants of the Omex who arethe Atlanteans and the Lemurians
.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
So if you had to come
up with a percentage of
bloodline within the bloodline,the Native American is a mixture
of Chinese, omec and Spanish.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
Right Even to this
day.
If you do like for the Cree,you do a blood test analysis,
dna test.
They're more than 20 percentso-called black.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
OK, Okay.
So if we had to ask a questionindigenous versus Moorish, who
are the real Americans?
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Right Now, the term
Moorish, like I said, is Miru,
and we are the oldest people onthe face of the planet Earth.
You can spell it M-U-U-R,m-e-r-u, M-O-O-R Many ways you
(10:39):
can spell it, but it comes tothe same.
People now want to make adistinction between M-U-U-R and
M-O-O-R, but there is nodistinction.
The emperors use those termsinterchangeably.
OK, ok, and, like MichelleGibson just said, the United
(11:00):
Nations in 1993 recognized theOuachita as the oldest
indigenous civilization on Earth.
So we are the originalAmericans, the first Americans.
Okay, our bloodline comes fromwho we call the Tewa people, the
(11:24):
Tewites, or what is known asthe Pygmies Misnomer.
The Twa people, the Tahites, orwhat is known as the Pygmies
Misnomer, the Pygmies, and theypopulated the whole planet
before the Europeans and theAsians was even on the planet.
Just 3,000 years ago.
(11:44):
There were no Europeans, therewere no Asians on the planet.
They are recent Italy, italianstudy was done.
And the scientists I can'tremember my name right now and
(12:05):
the scientist I can't rememberher name right now, but she said
that those recessive genesmutations came into play over
the last 1,400 years.
Well, 14,000 years, and cameinto play fully, with the blonde
hair, light eyes, so forth,wasn't until 3, until 3000 years
(12:33):
ago.
And we know that the Asians istwo thirds European and one
third so-called African.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
That's interesting.
I've never heard that before.
Okay, that's something I gotta.
I gotta go study myself.
So when we talk about themorris science temple, I don't
like to say versus, but for lackof better term I'm gonna say
versus.
Morris science temple versusindigenous identity what is the
difference?
Speaker 2 (13:05):
well, prophet nobadri
ali um.
They already said that he hegrew up on a cherokee
reservation.
I mean, I don't know why youcan't get more distinctive than
that.
You can't get more distinctivethan that if he grew up on a
Cherokee reservation, you knowNow is that he was telling you
(13:30):
that he's indigenous.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Now, is that folklore
I mentioned?
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Cherokee.
Well, it could be folklore, butwhen you look up the word Drew,
the name Drew Drew ties back to.
If you go to the OklahomaHistorical Society site and go
to the Dulse Row and put in thename Drew Drew ties back to if
you go to the Oklahoma.
(13:56):
Historical Society site and goto the Doss Road and put in the
name Drew it pulls up Cherokee.
Ok, historical Society websitethe Doss roll, put in the name
Drew and you'll see that itpulls up Cherokee.
So that made Prophet Nobodraliright in the sack.
(14:18):
Mygreat-great-great-grandfather
was Frederick Deacon Drew.
You're great.
Yes, mygreat-great-great-grandfather,
my third great-grandfather, is aDrew Matter of fact, the
(14:43):
brother to John Washington Drew,who is the father of Prophet
Muhammad Ali.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Yeah, you
demonstrated that probably like
almost a year ago, somethinglike that, on the podcast on
that one.
Now, if you want to presentwhat you want to present from
your slide, you can.
I have more questions if youhave.
You want to proceed.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
All right, well, I'm
going to Fast forward some
things.
So here scientists orScientific American magazine,
the June 5th 1852 issue, and itsays contain a report about
(15:29):
blasting carried out at Meat andHill Rock in Dorchester,
massachusetts.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Wait, one second
brother.
One second brother.
It's not up on the screen.
The people can't see it.
Huh, well, your screen is up upthere, but you didn't go to the
slide.
There we go, perfect.
There we go.
Now, let's get there, yep.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
All right.
So it says, the blast disgorgetons of rock, described by the
United States Geological Surveyas putting stone over 600
million years old.
Now this 600 million years old.
(16:25):
This happened in Dorchester.
Massachusetts, right outside ofBoston so that was in America A
bell shaped metallic vessel wasblown out of the rock.
That was about four inches highand was covered with exquisite
carving, indicating the presenceof artistic metal worker over
600 million years ago.
(16:47):
So this was not recent 600million years ago.
Yeah.
Here we have another strangeartifact, a hammer that was
found, and it dates back as 96%iron, which is more than
(17:15):
anything that can basically beachieved today, and it dates
back to 400 million years ago.
Now, all of this is before theso-called continental drift.
This is when we're talkingabout Pangaea.
Pangaea didn't happen.
(17:35):
Continent didn't drift apartuntil around 200 million years.
So we're talking about 400million years, 200 million years
before the continental drift.
We was able to walk here.
If life started in Africa whichof course, it didn't start in
Africa it started on otherplanets In particular.
(17:58):
In particular, the last planetwas Mars.
All right, this is the seventhplanet that we have come to.
That's another story.
Then get my book PlanetaryGenesis, stargate DNA for that
information.
(18:18):
Here are some examples AntelopeSpring, utah, prince, of a man
wearing shoes in which the leftfoot had trotted on a chocolate
bite A creature, 260 to 600million years ago.
So we talk approximately 440million years ago, approximately
(18:44):
440 million years ago.
Man-made artifacts found in 300million-year-old sandstone.
And where was this?
At Areas of Oklahoma, kansasand Missouri.
Once again, this is in America.
So we've been here.
(19:06):
This is 300 million years old.
This bell clapper Okay.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
What is that?
That figure up top looks likesome kind of yogi position.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
Right, exactly.
And then it got wings, gotwings, got wings.
That's deep, isn't it?
In a prayer position, yogiposition with wings?
And it was made from copper,zinc, arsenic, iodine, selenium,
(19:49):
tin, excuse me, and this is a290-year-old, million-year-old
(20:16):
human footprint that had, asexperts baffled, or it don't
have me baffled because it'ssimple we existed, period 299 to
251 million years ago,discovered in New Mexico, new
Mexico, Once again, northAmerica.
(20:37):
Another human shoe print wasdiscovered in 1927.
Preserved on Triassic limestone, dated back to 220 million, 225
million years ago, where FisherCanyon, persian County, nevada,
1997.
(21:02):
There was a case of a 200million year old shoe print
discovered on Red Mountain inChina.
We'll have to go that one.
We'll be coming on down to more.
In America, st Louis, missouri.
Footprint in premium rock, 200million years old.
(21:25):
Barrow, kentucky.
Footprint in Pennsylvania, rock, 20 million years old.
We go to Glen Rose, texas.
Footprint in Croatian rock, 70million years old.
Fisher Canyon, nevada.
Shoe print with the trace ofstrong thread in a cold scene,
(21:49):
12 million years old.
So, in order to verify thisinformation, get the book the
Hidden History of the Human Race, because this information is
hidden.
Michael Cremor, richard LThompson, why do you think this
information is hidden?
Speaker 1 (22:05):
Michael Cremor,
Richard L Thompson.
Why do you think thisinformation is hidden?
Speaker 2 (22:09):
Think about it Not
only shows that we are the
original Americans, but the landis ours.
So if they can say that theybrought all of us here from
Africa, then we would have noland ties here and we wouldn't
think about the fact ofretrieving land.
That's how it was, just no morethan probably 15 years ago,
(22:32):
until I did the video againstSarasota and SETI, and I already
told them that you're not goingto know what happened here
until five years down the line.
And then, sure enough, all of asudden, everybody is Indian,
native American and all of thisnow, but they didn't know
(22:56):
anything about that.
We was in a room of 400 peoplein New York and we was at the
National Black Theater and theydidn't.
There was nothing to be said.
(23:16):
You know, once I showed them theteeth of indigenous people and
then the majority of them, whenI showed them them the teeth,
only three people raised theirhands and I said stop lying, get
them goddamn hands up.
This is a stick-up.
Get your goddamn hands up.
And then, all of a sudden, 99%of the audience had to raise
(23:41):
their hand Because they weretrying to lie to themselves.
They thought they were justAfrican and that's something
that we don't have Africanbecause there was import and
export between the Africans andthe Americans, but we are
primarily.
(24:01):
85 percent of our ancestrycomes from right here.
Only 15 percent of our ancestrycomes from Africa recently.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
So they know nothing
about being indigenous.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Lean Bay ended the
black conscious BS at that
lecture right, that was 2009, onmy birthday, april the 19th,
and I told them y'all not gonnaknow what happened in two years
down, five years down the line,and, sure enough, that's when it
started clicking now all I'msaying they get the serious
(24:39):
debates.
Sure enough, that's when itstarted clicking.
Now, all of a sudden, they getthis serious debate because now
Africans ain't Americans, ain'tAfricans ain't African,
African-Americans ain't Africanis the slogan now, and all of
these different things, things.
But you know, they gotpopularized based off the fact
of um, the debate that I hadwith seti now the, the, the foot
(25:07):
, the shoes and things like thatone thing that that that's not
connecting with me is how wouldthose shoot?
Speaker 1 (25:15):
now I can go by what
I learned from the five percent
nation, or 120 lessons andthings like that.
You know us not having abeginning or no ending and you
know us being the roadcontroller of the universe, the
original people of the planetlike I can go.
I can go with that.
However, like which is showingme?
For me, it's not showing andproving that those shoes are in
(25:37):
fact, excuse me, original people.
Well, I guess they would beoriginal people, right.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
They have to be.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
They have to be yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Based on information,
there was only up until 3000
years ago.
It was only us on the planetearth.
Then the Europeans came.
The Asian came about a thousandyears later, around 2000.
That's why the history don't gono further, back to 2000 years.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
Okay, well, I figured
it doesn't go back until 2000
years, based on the Roman empire.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
Well, there's more to
that, but we continue on.
All right.
Humans have been walking theearth for hundreds of millions
of years.
The hidden history of the humanrace.
Over the past 200 years, thescientific establishment has
(26:44):
selectively ignored, suppressedand forgotten some remarkable
artifacts and bones thatcontradict the dominant view of
human origins and antiquity.
Evolutionary prejudices haveserved as a sort of
informational filter system thathas left us with a radically
(27:08):
incomplete set of facts forbuilding our ideas about human
origin.
The hidden history of the humanrace is a call for change in
today's arbitrarily rigidmindset.
Deploying an unexpected greatnumber of convincing facts,
deeply illuminated with criticalanalysis, readers will find
(27:30):
themselves compelled to rethinkour understanding of human
origin, identity and destiny.
That's what we're trying to dohere today Get you to rethink.
Speaker 1 (27:45):
Here's Pangea and you
see Africa North and South
America fits onto Africancontinent, right, right, oh, I
want to see that picture again.
That.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Pangea picture.
So, like I said, we walked overhere.
Okay.
Now in the book Gods andSpacemen in the Ancient West
written by W Raymond Drake, hesays this is that he states that
(28:27):
the pygmies inhabited Earth for30 million years.
All right Now continue on 28million years old skeleton in
the British Museum In thebasement.
We went to the British Museumin 2008.
(28:48):
Right before Obama becamepresident, obama became
president and what happened wasthat we asked the individual,
the museum curator, if we can godown into the basement in order
(29:10):
to see some of these artifacts.
The head curator wasn't therethat day, but he said that if we
came back, we could probablyset up an appointment in order
to do so.
But this is what was down inthe basement a human skeleton 28
million years old.
But I thought the Anunnaki justcreated man 300,000 years ago.
(29:37):
See, this shit here destroysall that information, or that
nonsense in which that BillyCarson is talking and others.
Who's biting off Zachariah'ssentient?
Who was that.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
Yeah, I forgot about
that guy.
Zachariah's cinchon, right,okay, Okay, makes sense.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
Right here.
Signs and symbols of primordialman, written by Albert
Churchward, states that thepygmies are the original and the
oldest living people on theface of the planet Earth.
The now Negroes were probablyone of the first of the ant root
race and the race that was thefirst and oldest race of men
(30:34):
after the pygmies.
The hidden life in FreemasonrySee, this is Freemasonry that
I'm talking about.
This is by CW Ledbetter.
That Pygmy race is a relic ofthe old Lemurians.
So I just told you who's theLemurians earlier.
(30:55):
He tells you too who are theLemurians and represent them
more purely than any otherpeople.
Now we just showed you how thepygmies look, the light Negroes
(31:27):
to me.
Yeah, the Lemurians were at onetime a gigantic people.
Yeah, who are usually calledthe Australian Aboriginals,
except that in their casethere's a very admixture of
Aryan blood.
At one time the Pygmies werespreaded over a great deal more
(31:47):
of Africa than at present, andsome of them was the first
people to enter Egypt.
Now we go back to the originand the evolution Of primitive
man.
This is what it says From here.
These little men Spreaded allover the world North, east,
south and west.
They brought news Until notonly Africa, but Europe, asia,
(32:13):
north and South America andOceania Was populated by them.
All right, there's our answer.
They've been on planet Earthover 30 million years and they
was in North and South America.
Simple, we was all over theworld.
(32:34):
He was the first, the littlered man of the earth.
From the pygmies.
Evolution continuedprogressively in the following
order One Bushmen, two MasabaNegro, three Nalik Negro, four
Maasai and five Mongoloids, andthen the so-called Aryanists.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Ooh, that's deep
right there.
That's a good breakdown rightthere.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
Yeah, and it's in the
book.
That's why I'm showing thebooks.
That way we put all thisinformation together here.
All right, In this book,Wonderful Ethiopians of the
Ancient Kushite Empire byDrusilla Ndungi Houston this is
(33:27):
what she says In Africa, theEthiopians, the Egyptians,
Liberians and Canaanites andPhoenicians were all descendants
of Ham.
They were a black or darkcolored race and pioneers of our
civilization plains of Shinarand the Valley of the Nile, from
(33:58):
Morro to Memphis.
In Southern Arabia they erectedwonderful Ephesus.
They were evident, responsible,excuse me, for the monuments
that dot Southern Siberia and inAmerica, along the Valley of
the Mississippi, in other wordsthe mound builders, down to
(34:22):
Mexico, the pyramid builders andin Peru, their images and
monuments stand a voicelesswitness.
This was the ancient KushiteEmpire, Ethiopia that covered
three worlds, Ethiopia thatcovered three worlds.
(34:46):
Some of our later booksrecognize their indisputable
influence in primitive culture.
Speak of them as a brunette,brown race representing a
mysterious in a mysteriousnilotic culture.
No, a helotic culture.
In other words, the sun.
All right, All right here.
(35:23):
Webster Universal Dictionary1937.
It defines an American, anaboriginal or one of the various
Capucin natives found on theAmerican continent by the
descendants of European settlers.
On the American continent bythe descendants of European
settlers.
The following is the originalapplication of the name Maru.
Okay, of the name Maru.
(35:47):
Now let me go through somethingright, quick because you asked
(36:14):
that question.
All right.
So here we get.
Mer or meru means the guardianof.
This is from the teachings ofPahato Tep, the oldest book in
the world.
So in the oldest book in theworld the word Maru or Mer is
(36:39):
found and it means the guardians, guardians of the galaxy.
All right Is an owl in themouth of Ra, which is Ru or you,
so that's M-R-U.
Meru.
(36:59):
Now, it's no coincidence thatthe Tartarian Empire symbol is
also an owl.
So we just seen that the nameMaru is the original application
(37:20):
of the name American.
And what does what's thedictionary and the source says?
It says more.
And what is in parentheses?
Mirror.
Exactly so.
(37:43):
More and mirror are the sameword.
Moorish is the adjective Mur toMoor came in until now by Cosmo
(38:08):
L.
Wow.
Governor Chief was to be commonusage of the title Murr.
This term is prefixed to othersin order to identify their
states in a head of particularindustry or post.
(38:28):
We come down in the eighthcentury.
The Moors native of Mauritania,north Africa invaded Spain and
took with them the Egyptianculture which they had preserved
.
Knowledge in those days wascentralized.
So we find out that Meru orMoor is Meru.
(38:50):
They are synonymous.
Keeping in mind, the vowelsA-E-I-O-U-Y are interchangeable.
Thus more mer are synonyms aswell.
Emphasizing the word Moroccan,the latter O interchangeable
with the E for American orMoroccan.
(39:11):
All right, reference Barry WEncyclopedia Hereticate,
moroccan being a derivative ofmore.
Thus American Moroccan,al-moroc, al-moroccan are
(39:31):
consistent.
Ok, they are consistent?
Okay, they are consistent.
So once again, that shouldanswer the question.
(39:59):
An aboriginal or one of thevarious?
Once again, this is thedefinition of American An
aboriginal or one of the variouscopper-colored natives found on
the American continent by thedescendants of European settlers
?
The following is the originalapplication of the name Meru.
See, everything comes togetherAll right.
(40:26):
So between 1894 and 1921,mineralogists, archaeologists,
william Nevin, discoveredancient cities in Mexico that
dated to the beginning of thePlaciosene era, which was 2.5
million years ago.
So there were cities in Mexico2.5 million years ago.
(40:50):
Some other cities were builteven further, into the Tartarian
era, beneath volcanic ashes.
Nevin discovered over 2,600stone tablets as well as the
(41:13):
moderate human skulls, moderatehuman skulls dating back 2.5
million years ago and furtherback.
That showed what Negroidgenetic markers Okay, negroid
genetic markers.
Well, where is they hiding itat?
(41:34):
Well, nevin's Guerrerocollection Are now in the
American Museum of NaturalHistory and the Peabody Museum
Of Harvard University.
In 1887, florentino Amiciglodiscovered apparently man-made
(41:59):
heaths, primitive flintstonetools, carved bones and a
moderate-looking human spinebones and a moderate looking
human spine bone in plasio andstrata five to three to five
(42:25):
million years old.
Away at Monte Hermosa he alsomade similar finds in Maceo,
myocene strata in Argentina, 5to 25 million years old Monorid.
Once again Now, these apecreatures they keep showing us
(43:07):
Right.
This is Virginia Stein onMcIntyre, and she found once
again, cities, human habitation,250,000 to 350,000 year old.
All right, and the governmentof Mexico asked her to take off
(43:31):
a zero to, and she refused.
The book Susu Economics thehistory of the pan-African trade
, commerce, money and wealth,part one by Paul Alfred Barden.
The mound builders.
(43:53):
They were dark-skinned andwoolly-haired Blacks who were
indigenous, native to NorthAmerica and kin to the Olmecs of
South America.
The Olmecs and the OuachitaBlack Californians, yamasee,
kalafonami and otherpre-Columbian Blacks of America
were part of a prehistoric tradenetwork that began in Africa
(44:17):
and spread it worldwide over100,000 years ago and at various
periods afterwards.
So once again, the European wasnot even on the planet, nor the
Asians, the red, brown andblack men of America in
Australia.
The pictorial history ofAmerica these two books get them
(44:44):
.
We ask the question who lived inAmerica 50,000 years ago?
Well, that was James ChurchWard, colonel James Church Ward,
who's the brother to AlbertChurch Ward that we showed
earlier.
This is Chief Tariano ObaShango L.
This is what he says here.
Introduction to Anthropologypublished in 1863.
(45:14):
Page 195 states that a man bythe name of Dr Loon infers that
the population of America ismore ancient than that of the
whole world.
Dr Watts further documents thatduring excavation for gas works
(45:44):
in New Orleans, a humanskeleton was found at a depth of
16 feet under the cypress treeon forest excuse me and the age
of the skeleton was calculatedat approximately 57,000 years
old during the period ofdiscovery.
So you want to know who livedin America during 50,000 years
ago?
He just told you.
All right, so we're thePaleo-Americans, or rather the
(46:04):
Ancient Americans or theOriginal Americans.
All right, another professorverifies this information.
This is South America.
Dr Albert Church Goodyear, aSouth Carolina University
(46:24):
professor, say humans livedalong the east bank of the
Savannah River 50,000 years ago.
The 51,700 year old NorthAmerican site found in Allendale
County, south Carolina, by theSavannah River, is less than 30
miles from the Atlantic Ocean.
The evidence for the ancientAfrican migration came in
(46:50):
multiple forms skulls andskeleton, footprints and lava
campsites, genetic M174 anddehaplo groups, linguistics,
paintings, carvings, artifacts,egyptian writing 50,000 years
ago, artifacts and structures.
(47:15):
This data exposed the falsepremise that the first Americans
came from Asia once and for allBecause this is way before the
last ice age.
So who were the pre-COVIDpeople?
(47:40):
The pre-COVID culture is reallybelieved to be the first
Americans, as in the firsthumans to populate America.
They arrived perhaps as earlyas 50,000 years ago, according
to carbon at some sites like theTopper site in South Carolina.
They are hunter-gatherers withtools distinct from Covis.
(48:00):
Get the book Ancient Encounters, the Kennewick man and the
First Americans, james C Chatterand the first Americans James C
Chatter and COVID is on theedge of a new understanding by
Smallwood and Jennings.
Well, I simply went to GenMatch, did my DNA and you can see
(48:24):
here in blackvis, montana, andlook at all that orange that you
see.
So that means that my ancestryties directly back to the
Americas.
The Kennewick man you see alsoorange, not as much, but once
(48:50):
again means that it ties back tothe Americas.
Speaker 1 (48:55):
All right, so I want
to ask you this before you
continue Hold that thought whatis the difference between
ancestry and genealogy?
Speaker 2 (49:09):
and genealogy.
Speaker 1 (49:10):
Ancestry is basically
knowing your people based off
of oral tradition, while DNAgenetics means not only will you
know your people, but you'reable to identify your people
through various tests in whichthey give you an outline and a
(49:33):
tree in order to give you umknowledge of who you are okay so
one is oral, one is scientificokay, so what I'm referring to
as far as Ancestry, like youknow, like you have those sites
called Ancestrycom, and then youhave 23andMe, and then there's
(49:57):
also another, I guess I wouldsay, company that breaks down
your genealogy based on yourfamily tree, right, genealogy
based on your family tree, right, and they go by your last name
and then they they dig up, Ithink like Dawes files, and I
think it's something deeper thanthe Dawes files, you know.
(50:18):
So, um, that's what I'mreferring to, like the one
that's based on like the actualDNA and one that's based on,
like going through your familylineage and and and history.
Speaker 2 (50:29):
Right, I don't, I
don't know about that one.
Okay, I'll check.
I'll check that one out, butthat sounds like a real good one
yeah okay, but normally theones in which everybody go
through is like what you saidancestry 23.com.
23 and me yeah, yeah,myheritage.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
Which one would you
say is better, like you found
that was the best.
Speaker 2 (50:55):
Ancestry, as far as
being able to do your family
tree, because they give youhints.
They calculate who's the motherand father of the individual
based off all the informationthat they have gathered.
So they give you hints on who'swho.
So you read the information,study it and you come to the
(51:22):
conclusions that you know.
Okay, this is a malignant kid.
Speaker 1 (51:31):
Okay, so we have
about four minutes, right.
So before we cut out, first off, I want to keep doing this one
like more rich slash indigenousroots in America, because it
seems like you have a lot ofinformation there that the
people need to definitely seeand hear that the people need to
definitely see and hear.
(51:52):
So as far as oh man, I lost mytrain of thought, pardon me,
pardon me, go ahead, continue,continue.
Speaker 2 (51:59):
You're right, this is
from we're Not Just African,
written by Dr Clyde Winters.
He says this chapter two thefirst Black Native Americans.
Several types of Blacks enteredthe Americas, including the
Kowisan, anu or Negrito type andthe Proto-Saharan variety of
(52:25):
Blacks.
Up until now, recently, it isbelieved that the first human
crossed the Bering Strait 12,000BP and to enter the North
American continent.
That view was never accepted byphysical anthropologists, who
have founded skeleton remains,and we showed you the skeleton
(52:48):
remains in which that dates backmore than 50,000 years ago, to
100,000 years, to 2.5 millionyears and more.
Speaker 1 (53:02):
Right Now.
Yeah, here was the question.
So it seems that thisinformation in regards to how
old our people are and been onthe planet and, um, just race in
general, seems like a areawhere they really spent a lot of
time masking and destroying and, you know, changing up the
(53:27):
truth.
So why do you think that theydid that Peace?
(53:47):
I think this thing went out.
I think it's this thing wentout, think it went out.
Okay, that was a great question.
Yeah, I want to know.
Why did they?
Why did they mask the truth,like why is it so important for
them to mask the truth?
(54:08):
Who are they?
That's another question I wantto know, I want to be answered.
Who are they exactly?
Because I think this is anissue that is deeper than we
truly understand and know.
We are out of here.
Thank you all for viewing.
We really appreciate y'all.
(54:29):
We have a Web site NYP talk showdot com.
Nyp talk show dot com.
Is the site?
Now, just real quick, I'm goingto explain this.
The writer who wrote on thisWeb site put a lot of black,
black, black, black, black.
So don't be you know, don't runaway from the website.
(54:51):
We're slowly building up thewebsite.
You know we're new to this, youknow, having a podcast website,
so be you know, just be patientwith us, but we have a website
out right now.
We have an in-person podcastcoming up this Saturday with
Wise Asia and et cetera, so staytuned.
Paul Dyer coming on in fiveminutes.
(55:14):
See y'all later.
Peace.