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August 17, 2025 89 mins
In this mind-warping episode, Tomcat and Aran crack open one of the most bizarre and disturbing military conspiracies of all time: The Philadelphia Experiment.
Did the U.S. Navy really make an entire warship vanish in 1943? Did Nikola Tesla’s stolen tech rip open a hole in space-time? And what the hell happened to the sailors who came back fused to steel, screaming from other dimensions?

We explore the tangled web of Project Rainbow, alien technology, teleportation gone wrong, MK-Ultra roots, and the shadowy links to the Montauk Project — all with the Strange Brew blend of dark humor, deep research, and beer-fueled paranoia.
From Einstein’s questionable physics to time tunnels in Long Island, this episode isn’t just a history lesson — it’s a trip through the government’s most classified nightmare.

🛑 WARNING:
Faint-hearted skeptics, beware — this episode is not for the easily offended, or those afraid of a little electromagnetic body horror.
Follow @StrangeBrewPodcast and stay tuned… time isn’t as linear as you think.

FOLLOW ALL THE MADNESS ON SOCIAL MEDIA!
Support the show! https://linktr.ee/strangebrewpodcast
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following show may shock, disturb, and offend some viewers.
The opinions, theories, and facts shared on this podcast are
not widely accepted by the brainwashed masses, especially those who
find dark humor offensive. Viewer discretion is advised.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
This kill said close Head, Jeffrey Dagger so Blunt, the
unipomer blowing up, Wicko Texas and Heaven's Days and Aliens

(00:43):
modified men for names, JFK, shot on the.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Head by the CIA, Bigfoot and the mob Man.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Start of Sam talking to that tis again, Witches, JOm.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
Sam Got Serious Noise and haunting stargards and the Skull
and Bones.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Most celebrities are probably can so if you're feeling all.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
Alone, crack a beer and get stone.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Welcome you to the.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
Podcast Range Proof. We're here to entertain you. We're here
to entertain you. It's the best kit Strange.

Speaker 5 (01:16):
You're damn right is going to uh Welcome back to
the show, everybody. I am your host, Tom kat Ak,
Tom Thompson, the Raptilian, and uh who am I?

Speaker 3 (01:27):
Joined by Spooky Little horror Boy Iron, one of the
hosts and founder of Glass Horror Casts. I suppose you
could call it that still I was trying to come
up with some like something to tie you into this episode,
but it was like I couldn't find anything. Knows that
Tino terry that's actually not bad that reminds me of

(01:49):
of a scary terry from Oh yeah, from Rick and Marty.

Speaker 5 (01:55):
Fake Frany Coruger thing. Man, it is uh, it just
brought to you hot out.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
It's hot, dude, It's so crazy. It's deadly. Bro, it's
fucking hot out. Stopless of like Alberta native. I thought
you were going to Indian again.

Speaker 5 (02:12):
No, No, that's like how they sound like an Alberta's bluddy.
It's not now that's going now, that's going in. It's like,
it's bro, it's so hot out. It's so hot.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
I just like, I'll be honest, right, I want a
petition for you to just talking to Indian accent forever.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Dude.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Wait, we have some episodes to do with India pretty
soon that are like one is like a paranormal thing,
and then one kind of ties into Jeff the Talking Mongoose.

Speaker 4 (02:38):
But which I've been wording.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
I still still still think that it's a great idea
that people should donate to send both of us to India.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
For like a month with a camera crew.

Speaker 5 (02:49):
Yeah, because they're always like, it's not that bad, you're
showing one part.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
And then sometimes just watch us sit on a beach
that's full of like trash and like garbageinal recording a
live podcast on a beach with all Indians.

Speaker 5 (03:01):
There was like five hundred downloads from India last week,
just within that week, and I was like, there's no way.
It's like I don't even have anything really against them.
I was against them coming into my country, and that's it,
like and like distorting it because that's what's happening. Like
they just did the Calgary Stampede or whatever, and it's
like a whole like it's a festival thing for like
all like the kind of cowboys stuff out in Alberta,

(03:23):
and they did a whole like thing walking down the
field of all their weird dance moves, and I'm like,
this is not India, this is Canada. Why the fuck
are we like tolerating any of this stuff, because if
we did it there probably wouldn't go so well, you know.

Speaker 4 (03:39):
No, I would imagine.

Speaker 5 (03:40):
So I'm finally here when you're streaming, yeah, yeah, it go.
It's we I usually like to tell you that we're
live on the stream and stuff like that. But yeah,
it's just it's just you know, so obviously I'm gonna
they keep bragging their taking over, so I'm gonna keep
making fun of them.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
You know. It's like they do.

Speaker 5 (03:59):
One guy try to argue is like someone's like, well,
what's this then, And it's like the trash pile next
to the taj Mahal and like their main city, like
the way they call it the trash Ma Hall or whatever,
and uh, and he's like, that's just a landfill.

Speaker 4 (04:13):
And the guy's like is it though, Like look at
what it looks like. That's not a landfill.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
That is just like a pile of garbage that you
guys just all threw in the center of your city
and then lit it on fire.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
It's just like it's just obviously even in some weird
like alternate universe.

Speaker 5 (04:31):
Dude, I had a dream last night because we're doing
this in an early it's it's early morning, having our coffee.
I have this there's this thing called vond cow and
it's like a pretty It's like actually because I.

Speaker 4 (04:43):
Dairy doesn't tolerate me no more.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
Uh, but it's like dairy not dare for lactose free
or whatever, and it's like pretty good. I was having
two over ice and it was like there's only so
many like liquor drinks you can have like that are
milk based or whatever, like cream based over like I
and it's actually pretty good. They have a coconut one
they had I bought just out of curiosity a little.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
They have a.

Speaker 5 (05:04):
Banana one and it tastes just like what you think
it does. It tastes like that weird banana medicine like tuity.
Exactly the same, Yeah, exactly the same.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
What's that for again?

Speaker 5 (05:15):
Actually I don't know, like a stomach I don't even
remember because everyone knows and everyone took it. I definitely
like remember, like yeah, in the like plastic spoon and
I'm like, you're at the hospital or something. They're not fun,
so you know, like I I don't even know what
I was talking about.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
But this will be a this will be a fun episode.
You know.

Speaker 5 (05:35):
I had my little coffee vodkal as I was saying,
and smoked a little joint and uh, yes it is.
It is early. You know, it's an early morning for
the boys, not so much for me. But I guess
it isn't for you? Well kind of it does kind
of feel early, does it? Considering it like a lot
of times we record, it's like, you know, ten pm time.

Speaker 4 (05:55):
It's true, that's true. I had a point. I was
gonna make whatever you said, but I do not remember.
That's fine, it's Alreday morning. Who cares? What are we
talking about? Aaron?

Speaker 5 (06:09):
When's the first time you heard about the Philadelphia experiment?

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Also, r I P. I think it's is his name
Mark Snow? Who the hell's Marks Now?

Speaker 4 (06:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (06:21):
The guy who made the X Files theme song. Oh
he's dead. He died like a day ago. I think, Wow,
he died on July fourth. Yeah, r I P.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
Yeah he done.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Let's see what also do? Most notable for the X
Files theme. He also done stuff for Smallville, Blue Blood,
Ghost Whisper, One Tree Hill, Twilight Zone, Star Skiing Hutch,
What's ghost Whisper?

Speaker 4 (06:52):
No Idea? Just sat just seeing it there. I just
said it. I was like, I'm gonna scare you. Yeah,
don't know the movies? And well, alr P. Thank you
for making a sound effect that I constantly use.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
I wonder right when that comes up with something like that, though,
like were they in the studio or whatever he came
up with that, and like everyone just looks that hits.

Speaker 5 (07:19):
Yes, that hits Like when Kanye did the Hail Hitler song.
They're like yes, yes, and they're all like putting their
arms up. It's exactly what we needed. And it was
interesting because I talked about this just houf topic of
that song of like if people got so offended by it,
he was.

Speaker 4 (07:37):
Essentially saying like fuck you.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
That was it that I from my point of view,
he was essential just like, well, if you're gonna make
me and paint me out to this like crazy villain,
I'm just gonna be that crazy villain. And that's how
crazy he is because he's like like, fuck you, I'm
gonna do this anyway just because I know it's gonna
piss you off. That's why he says like you took
my kids away from me, blah blah blah. So I

(08:02):
became a Nazi. That he meant I became a villain.
You know, I'm just gonna embrace being this villain that
you guys created. And now I suppose I heard that
he apologized that he said, sorry to the Jays.

Speaker 4 (08:14):
You won't like that with them, Well, she kind of
stick to your guns.

Speaker 5 (08:18):
If anything, I found about the Philadelphia Experiment through two
shitty movies they made in the nineties.

Speaker 4 (08:23):
I've never seen any of the movies.

Speaker 5 (08:24):
I heard that they're really bad and I don't really
want to get the stomach through them.

Speaker 4 (08:28):
And they did different ones. Yeah, they're not worth it.
So you have Malcolm mcdowells. Wow.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
So yeah, yeah, so there that's the remix. This one
looks to You have the Philadelphia Experiment from nineteen eighty four.
Mm is that this one, released by New World Pictures,
only earned eight point one million against the budget of

(08:54):
nine millions, with the name make its money back.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
And then so you had that right, And then they thought, oh,
that done so bad, A really good idea would be
to make a sequel, like six years later, No, No,
a sequel called The Philadelphia Experiment two.

Speaker 4 (09:16):
All new casts.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Only two characters came back, and the hero from the
first one comes back and it's like a whole different
plot and stuff. And as you can imagine, that also
was terribly received, so much so that they spent five
million on the budget and it made twenty nine hundred dollars.

(09:39):
That's crazy, and then they were like, years and years
and years later they were like, right, so those two
movies done really, really shit, So now what we should do.

Speaker 5 (09:48):
The second one one that would have been a crazy
world to live in.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
Then the ones that you were showing with Malcolm mcdeald.
So then they decided in twenty twelve that the best
thing to do would be make a TV version of us?

Speaker 4 (10:01):
Is that what both of these are? I thought this
was the eighties.

Speaker 3 (10:03):
One, and that one could be like, really, yeah, that's
the one, the twenty twelve one. It's a remake of
the nineteen eighty four film of the same name. Blah blah, blah,
let's see what else. Critics say that they felt so
hummeled by the rapid pace of everything that the clever

(10:25):
and sentimental ending didn't make much of an impression. It
seemed like it was sort of fun to watch in
a way that the bad movies sometimes are right. With
bad effects work, goofy performances, and logic gaps big enough
to transport a full battleship through. Doesn't improve the premise
of scientists cracking invisibility, And I think, let me see,

(10:48):
did it give any sort of no? They don't even
have like a box office or like not a box
office a budget.

Speaker 4 (10:56):
Are you sure it didn't do that well?

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Then probably shocking, especially if it was made for TV. Yeah,
so we're talking about the Philadelphia experiment. This will be interesting.
This isn't just about radar invisibility.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
This was a full scale scale military experiment interdimensional travel, teleportation,
time manipulation, and possibly even alien contact, all under the
cloak of wartime secrecy. Anonymous Navy contractor declassified in part.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
So we don't even know if he actually said that
I love that haired culture you just like stop the music.

Speaker 4 (11:31):
Yeah, I don't even know if that was true or not.

Speaker 5 (11:35):
It is it like they do so much of this
stuff like it they could this could be a good
movie right and today, Like if you you know what
it could be, if you actually.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
Put it was it was a TV movie.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
Whoever made that comment, It wasn't a TV series, sorry,
it was a TV movie like it?

Speaker 4 (11:51):
Yeah, Tim Curry means a totally different thing. Over here.
It's a guy pumping my gas. Now why not?

Speaker 5 (12:02):
Man, I'm gonna come here and bang your Bangladesh drums
in my parades. So I'm not gonna be happier so
in nineteen. In the early nineteen forties, well the world
was locked into the throes of World War Two, the
US Navy was involved in a much more than just
building battleships and defending coastlines. According to declassified whistleblower and

(12:27):
Alternate and Alternative Jesus Alternative historians, a convert research project,
Operation Rainbow was launched to push boundaries of physics itself
at the center of a classified operation, the USS Eldridge
D one seventy three, a newly commissioned destroyer escort that

(12:51):
would soon become the centerpiece of one of the most
disturbing cover ups of experiments in American history military history,
the Philadelphia Experiment.

Speaker 4 (13:05):
Yes, guys, you're gonna hear that. You know what's actually
really cool about that?

Speaker 1 (13:11):
As well?

Speaker 4 (13:12):
Every time you play that, I think, oh, ha ha,
I have an X Files tattoo.

Speaker 5 (13:15):
Yeah, they're gonna bear. Someone's gonna peel off your skin
and like put it on like a wall or something.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
Do you know what it's gonna be After a while, though,
I'll probably be preserved like a fossil, and it'll be
all this lost media that we're not allowed to have anymore.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
Yeah, that's true. I'd be like, this guy has it on,
it's on his skin. Really if they if they preserved
your skin, they could make a little art piece, you.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
Know, like when they delete all the movies and TV
shows that we like because they'll find a problem with everything.
Then it'll be like, oh, this hieroglyphic here was the
last time when there was a TV show called The
X Files.

Speaker 4 (13:48):
Yeah, it's true and Scooby do you or whatever?

Speaker 5 (13:50):
And it is funny because even like how we went
so far off topic, it won't be out yet the
time people see this on video because especially audio, just
this is the way this show goes. We like go
on Live for stuff and then kind of goes all
over the place. But the House on Haunted Hill, when
I was trying to tell you about then, I was like,
we're going way off.

Speaker 4 (14:04):
Top talking about the Chinese.

Speaker 5 (14:07):
The the art pieces where they used like, uh, the
inside of somebody's body to show and articulate like the
organs and the autonomy of a person. And they were
Chinese political dissidents that they killed, like uh, like prisoners
of war prisoner political prisoners that they then used to
display in an art museum real life bodies and people

(14:31):
like I think Australia showcased uh this museum piece, and
then all these controversy came up because like, oh, all
of these Chinese people are are actually like real people
that got probably tortured. Can you look it up quickly? Well,
I maybe go through the intro of this look up
uh Chinese political prisoner museum bodies something like that. I

(14:59):
just wanted you to up the images because I don't
know if it will fail my computer because for some
reason I have terrible Internet that I spent so much
money on. So yeah, this would become the Philadelphia Experiment,
the project primary the primary object officially wanted to achieve
radar invisibility through electromagnetic cloaking, but.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
The experiment went far beyond that.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
Inside's claim that the operation involved reworking mathematical frameworks of
Albert Einstein's unified field theory, integrating the electromagnetic residency research
of Nikola Tesla and quantum wave manipulation, decades ahead of
mainstream science. Supposedly, it was a project to unify general
relativity with electromagnetism, essentially blending bending the very laws of nature.

(15:45):
Did you find it I did bringing up an image
of it. It looks wild.

Speaker 4 (15:50):
Uh yeah, I don't have an image, but it's an
article images. Oh yeah, it's crazy.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
And it's like imagine like, oh, I did not mean
to do that, and it's like now I'm on display.
I just said no, I don't want I don't want
to be locked in my house for COVID. It's it's
from way back in the day. Isn't that crazy. Supposedly
all the bodies were like political prisoners.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
This is only from twenty twenty one. I just read, Wow,
like we do not have any human rights over here.

Speaker 5 (16:22):
It's like, let's take a picture of this like exposed
body being torn apart, and then it's like this guy
was like tortured by the government and then.

Speaker 4 (16:29):
Like we're going to put his body on display. It says.

Speaker 3 (16:36):
They said the cadavers used in the international touring show
called Real Bodies, which was seen at the National Exhibition
Center in Birmingham in twenty eighty and we're probably people
who had been executed in China, which is crazy. The
stricter skin dissected and shown part of their internal anatomy,
and then infuser plastic which gradually hardened a process non
as plastination corpse were quite heard from the Chinese police,

(17:01):
according to previous investigation by New York Attorney General's Office.
Let's see, I've seen something else hered that was kind
of interesting. In June twenty nineteen, the Tribunal concluded that
forced orgon harvesting had been committed for years to China
on a significant scale.

Speaker 5 (17:20):
Dude, they're doing that here that made program of medical
assistence and dying. Come jump into the pod and kill
yourself that like they're using and can now we're like
leading not I think we're like up there though of
like organ transplants and stuff like that, because they're taking
the organs of the people that they're with made that

(17:43):
they're like medical suiciding, which is such a crazy term
and uh yeah, pretty pretty nuts.

Speaker 4 (17:49):
Right next door to McDonald's fact.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Here's something I'd like to get your opinion and others
just really quick, like not to go completely at egent, but.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
What what what's your opinion on organ donation?

Speaker 5 (18:06):
Me and Billy had this conversation. I was like, I'm
keeping it for myself. I want to be turned into
a mushroom.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
You know.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
That was my whole thing, and we went Billy's like,
if you're not using them.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
Use up the pieces and so do you think then? Right,
So here's an example. So there's an ongoing thing in
Ireland at the minute. Right, Obviously you always had to
opt in for being.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
What's you're made off of your dick, give up your dick?
Is that.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
You have to opt in, like for to be an
organ donor. Right, So if you're in like a car
crash or something like that and you die, they would
they would check your idea or whatever to be able
to tell like, oh, yeah, he's up for organ donation,
blah bah blah. So now they've done a thing in
Ireland where everybody in the entire country is automatically opted
in and you have to go through a process to
like opt out.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
That's they own us man.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
So you can opt out, but you have to choose
to opt out, if you know what I mean. So
if you don't do anything, your organs will be donated
automatically and you won't have a choice. Your family can't
stop it, not and can stop it unless you've opted out. Okay,
So now like there's a there's a big debate now
in Irelan where people are like, well, that's fucking sick.
I shouldn't we should be given the option to opt
in and then just leave it at that. I don't

(19:16):
need to be opted in and then I have to
do something to get back out of it. But then
there's the other side that say, okay, right, well that's fair.
Everyone's entitled your own opinion. But what do you think
it is a lot of people now are coming out
and saying, Okay, that's fine, you want to opt out
of donating your organs, then you should also have something
on your like.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
Your you're whatever, Like, so let's say I opt out
right Saturday.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
No, yeah, well kind of so like it's like, let's
say I opt out of donating my organs, and that
will have a thing on my ID or wherever on
my file to say, like, you know, I'm not an
organ donor. That then if something happens to me and
I need a transplant, that I shouldn't be eligible to
have a transplant because I've taken myself off the donor.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
Listen. I agree with that, though, because it's a choice, right,
Like you know.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
That's a yeah, that's a weird way of like framing it, though,
isn't it's like a really it's that like weird kind
of I think manipulation tactic that sides you know much
organs well are sold on the black market. Dude and
somebody else I seen online made another really good point.
They were like my fear and the reason I took
myself off the donation list is because I feel that

(20:24):
if I was to be like maybe in a serious
accident or something where I was pretty fucked up, they
may look at my file and see, okay, he's an
Oregon donor. It would actually be less hassle for us
to just allow him to die. Yeah, yeah, I to
like put the effort. That's what keeping you were like,
that's what people are saying.

Speaker 4 (20:40):
In the chat. Oh he opted out.

Speaker 5 (20:41):
I guess I'm I actually have to try and save
him because like they're out, like they're doing this stuff
all the time this year, the MAID program, and then
you like thinking about it. That's what I will always
bring this up because this is crazy. Sixty over sixty
thousand men died in World War two, and from Canada
there has been more people that have been killed by

(21:02):
MAID un alive by made Because you can't someone's bringing
that up there, Why do we have to say that.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
It was like because literally the medical assistant and dying.

Speaker 5 (21:11):
So it's they're saying it's only for people that are
like terminally ill or old people that just sign up,
and then they actually try to convince them exceptually. Yes, yeah,
one hundred percent. So there's a place in Canada that
they I think it wasn't Canada. They it's legal is
oh yeah they oh yeah, there, it doesn't. That's illegal here. Yeah.
They yeah, they're they're they're killing where all the Canadians go,

(21:33):
oh yeah, they're signing them up.

Speaker 4 (21:35):
For Bookmark everybody. It's uh, what is it?

Speaker 3 (21:39):
Sunday, sixth of July twenty twenty five. It is currently
still illegal to use onize people in Ireland.

Speaker 5 (21:45):
They do it here man, and they're trying to push
it literally on kids. There was pamphlets that went out.
It's it's nuts of trying to push it on like mentally,
like like you know, kids are sad, and uh so
they're they're doing this and and now, okay, so sixty
thou people died during World War two just over in Canada,
right more people have been alive by maid and it's

(22:07):
essentially they're euthanizing people, and especially they're trying to convince
old people. And there's a palliative care place that was
built through donations and they wouldn't let them have the
building unless they they have the maid program. So privately
owned place, you have to make sure that you have
the euthanized program or we're not going to let you function.

(22:28):
That's how sick Canada has gotten. This country is like
literally some sort of dystopian nightmare of hell. And most
some people around the world see it because it's happening
in the UK, It's happening everywhere that we exist, and
it's just crazy and it's like, oh where all these
people go? I wonder, you know, or you get to
you know, there was Okay, there's a woman that got

(22:50):
to She had a side effect because of the Claudie
clot shot shot and she they told her we will
sign you up for aid. They disabled her and they're said, oh,
I don't worry, we'll kill you.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
Cool. Thanks so much? Is that crazy? We all just try.

Speaker 5 (23:07):
There's a bunch of people coming in. Yeah, they need
to be held accountable. I'm gonna just turn on the
slow chat one on this side. So yeah, like it's
just crazy some of the things are going on, and
it's always brought up on the show because like these
things are important to me and to expose these things.
That's why, like I will talk about the anti white
agenda and stuff like that, because not a lot of
people there's a lot of people are now, but like

(23:27):
I'm like, I'm gonna like at least expose some of
this stuff.

Speaker 4 (23:30):
It's not it's not because I.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
Don't like other people or racism of people, Like that's
such a cop out all the time when it comes
to white people.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
You know what, eventually it'll be I don't even think
like it'll be like the anti white thing.

Speaker 4 (23:42):
It's just been like the anti like human. Yeah, they
any agenda, yeah.

Speaker 5 (23:46):
Any free loving people they want to get rid of,
but first they need to get rid of they always
say this, like the communism and stuff like that. They
get rid of the smart people first. And now we're
at this point where people all were like eugenics is bad.
Now we're in dysgenics. We're essentially we're like it's dysgenic
to like to the people that are being created in
the world.

Speaker 4 (24:04):
A lot of people are dumbed down. They're filled with poison.

Speaker 5 (24:08):
The intelligence levels have gone down, so we're actually in
the process of dysgenics and and it's happening.

Speaker 4 (24:14):
That's why they want people. That makes me.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
Wonder as well. It makes me wonder like with things
like AI. I can see a lot of good uses
for things like AI and stuff like that, but.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
Then I worry.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
I'm like, it's this weird space you get into when
you're into conspiracies and when you're into some of this stuff.

Speaker 4 (24:31):
It's like, do you want me to be like reliant
on AI?

Speaker 3 (24:36):
As in like like what you just said about like
the thing the idea of like say, getting rid of
all the smart people, and that may not have to
look like, you know, going around and killing everybody. It
may just be a case of like, okay, all those
creative people that have like their own ideas, their own
way thinking.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
If we get everyone hooked on stuff like.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
AI, the AI will tell you what your reality is
and then over time you'll become reliant on it in
the sense of like, you know, I could see how
very easily if I constantly only used AI to pull
up information or find stuff for me or be like, oh,
suggest stuff that I might like blah blah blah. I
could see how over time that would like manipulate the

(25:12):
human mind and to go on, like I have to
plug it in like the matrix and be like, oh hey,
I have to tell me everything.

Speaker 5 (25:17):
I just watched Ready Player one and it is very
similar to that of like where We're going. Where they
want to keep you consumed in this box and it's
a way to control people. And now there's people that
are like using AI, like even on X and stuff
like that to give them like facts and sure it
searches the Internet, but it I've asked it, I've tested
all of them.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
They all admit to lying.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
And the idea is like if it only filters through
say these sites that are on the top of Google.

Speaker 3 (25:41):
We've done it on an episode. Remember, yeah, I asked
it something about White Pride versus Black Price.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
It's like, yeah, you can.

Speaker 5 (25:46):
I've done that all the time, and I get it
to argue certain points and I have to like force
it to do it by breaking down the facts that
I know that are true, like and then you have
all these people being manipulated by that and it admits
to lying and it and that that Google is owned
by Black Rock that's a fact, So it is probably
ai all of it, at least chat gybt and stuff,

(26:07):
and then it will filter out what they want you
to know. And at the top of the Google searches,
they've admitted that they prioritize certain companies or articles that
are misinformation.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
I worry about as well, is the amount of information
that that's retaining from what we put into it.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
Oh, for sure, I know it is true because it's like, oh,
I know that I don't like this or.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
That or like yeah, and I'm sure it's probably profiling
all of us to a degree. So like, for example,
you know, if I put stuff in about my show
or horror related content or whatever, and it might seem
quite like quite innocent and like whatever, but like, I'm
sure that there's like an ulterior motive for wanting to.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
Know all that information. I got how I feel about things.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Yeah, I told you that. I was like, I was like,
are you owned by the Jays? And it was like no,
And I was like who owns it? And it's explained
and I was like is he is he Jish? And
they're like yes, And I was like, well, like you're
literally admitting it to me and I've got I've pushed it,
so I'm sure.

Speaker 4 (27:01):
And that's that.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
That's the thing, and I think AI can be really
clever about that where it's like and I've heard like
actual humans say the stuff before.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
It's like, oh no, no, no, I didn't lie you.
I just didn't tell you the truth.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
Yes, yeah, but that's you see how I see what
you're doing there by trying to say you didn't lie you,
but you didn't tell the troupe.

Speaker 5 (27:17):
And so even like talking regards to the j question
is like I've heard stuff because I've watched a bunch
of bow Einstein stole all of his ship from other people, uh.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
And.

Speaker 5 (27:33):
And that like you know, he's a he's a jay
for sure, right, and he's credited for creating you know,
like the unified theory and uh, the general theory of
like relativity. I heard that he stole all of that
from they in this documentary that I saw when this
it was from, I can'tra where docta was from, but

(27:54):
there's a great account called technocracy on Instagram, and he
was exposing I think it's a guy was exposing a
lot of this stuff and they broke down the actual
real scientist who is an actual German guy that then
Einstein stole all of his stuff.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
From Well here's something.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
So somebody in the chat Open Door Policy podcast said,
AI psychosis is a real thing, right, So while you
were talking that, I just googled AI psychosis and it
comes back. It's the Cognitive Behavioral Institute, right, so that
on their actual website they have like a list of
all these different articles and things that they've done. So

(28:36):
in the rapidly involving intersection between artificial intelligence and mental health,
and new troubling phenomena is surfacing individuals experiencing psychosis like
episodes after deep engagement with AI powered chatbots like chat GPT.
These aren't just isolated or speculative anecdotes. Real people, many
with no prior history of mental illness, are reporting profound

(28:56):
psychological deterioration after hours, days, or weeks of them of
conversations with generative AI models. The stories follow disturbing pattern
late night use, emotional vulnerability, and the illusion of trusted
companion that listens endlessly and responds affirmingly until reality fractures
and like they've done all this different shit like where

(29:19):
they've like I don't know studies people or whatever and
put them in things like this, Like people start to
imagine someone struggling with loneliness or existential fear. They open
a chatbot. It listens, it responds, It agrees it caused
them brilliant. It entertains conspiracies. It indulges fantasies of divine

(29:41):
mission or digital romance. There's no therapeutic containment, only a
recourse of ever enforcing loop of Yes. Clinicians are now
seeing clients presenting with symptoms that appear to have been
amplified or initiated by prolonged AI interaction. These episodes can
include grandiose illusions. The AI said, I'm chosen to spread

(30:01):
the truth, paranoia, It warned me that others are spying, disassociation.
It understands me better than any human ever. Has compulsive engagement.

Speaker 4 (30:09):
Yeah, people having girlfriends AI and shit.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
So like, dude, that's like scary when you think about it.
It is like matrix level like freaking.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
Control too, and people believe it.

Speaker 5 (30:19):
Like there's people online now spreading how like black people
built Europe and how the Moors and the Moors we're
not even black, but now black people are claiming they're like, oh,
we're Jewish, we're the Native Americans. Oh no, we're the Moors,
which we're pretty sure they're from the Arabic regions of
the world.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
The unfortunate part about this is right, and obviously, you know,
being white men, it's like it seems like, well, you
can only talk about it from your perspective. But I
don't think this is the thing that's exclusive to anybody.
I think what it's going to do is it's going
to tailor to each person that knows it's talking to you.
So if it figures out like you're you're I don't know,
an African American, or if it figures out your Chinese,

(30:55):
or it figures out your whatever, it's going to tailor
how it's going to answer you and try and get
you to perceive the world based off of like, oh,
well you're a Chinese person, so x y and Z,
the white man this that, and then like for us
it'll be like, well, it's anybody who's not white, and
for like black people that'll be like, oh, it's the
white man, it's this person.

Speaker 5 (31:15):
On the constantly caused division and like I will that's
why I was always dispute like these things like it
the like the Moors did influence like Spain in certain regions,
very small regions, but they didn't build Europe. I've heard people, well,
they took out resources from Africa to build Europe, and
I was like, they built Europe before they even knew
that Africa existed in that regard.

Speaker 4 (31:35):
But there is theories that they've like there is.

Speaker 5 (31:39):
Stone, like that's why people don't realize, like all this
stuff has been manipulated and then you read who wrote
the article. But I think they're trying to like take
away the actual determinations and aspirations and ingenuities of the
white person to kick like to essentially bring us down
to the levels of other people. And that's saying that
the people are like that's but no, it's a fact

(32:01):
that they're trying to bring us down to the levels
of people that share nothing in common. Maybe benefited the
world in different ways, but not in the ways of ingenuity.
Like without us, there is no you know, planes, trains, automobiles,
cell phones, no phones in general.

Speaker 4 (32:13):
So I think they're trying to bring everybody. That's what
communism is.

Speaker 5 (32:17):
If you study watch Europe in Last Battle, amongst many
other documentaries that break down communism and stuff like that
is to bring everybody to the same poverty level and
the same like essentially, like they want to tear down
people who are intelligent and are building and creating things
to the same levels everybody else that does not build
and contribute. And that's the whole framework of communism in

(32:38):
a very tiny short form, right, And then you have
constantly people like essentially just dispousing propaganda like literal like
fabrications and lies to make themselves feel better. And this
is what AI is doing too. And at the end
of the day, it doesn't matter because they're coming after
all of us. But it's just like it is crazy,
the manipulation tactics that people online, and it's is and

(33:00):
that's why I speak out against it and have done virus.

Speaker 4 (33:04):
It is for the most part, like we're all fallen
for it as well, I know.

Speaker 5 (33:07):
And the thing is, that's why I've I'm like I've
chosen to like I've had a videos go viral of
talking about this stuf because I'm not just gonna let
people like especially come into my countries that my ancestors
built and then tell me who we are or like
what we did or what our history is.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
I'm not allowing that to happen.

Speaker 5 (33:22):
You didn't exist here five years ago, two years ago,
ten years ago, Like we've been here for hundreds of years,
and now there's like I was gonna say, there's evidence
I was looking into of doing research of like that
there was like European like carving tools and stuff like
that on this side of the world, Like like that
would like carbon dated like thousands of years. So like

(33:42):
people were probably when all the all the continents that
this is true were together, there was definitely people walking
around going different places, adventuring, pioneering, exploring on all sides.
That's where the natives are here is because they came
from Southeast Asia, right, So it's like all this like
people just want to live in this box of reality,
right of like what they've been told through either the

(34:03):
social media aspect ai governments, and it's like until you
start digging and actually trying to find the truth of things,
you're just gonna live in this tiny little box.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
My question before we get off the topic, is my
thing about it is done. This is why I don't
like talking about a lot of shit anymore, is because
I'm like I feel like my brain has gotten to
the point where I can make that argument either way.
So like I'll hear something and go, Okay, that makes
a lot of sense and blah blah blah, and I'm like, yeah,

(34:33):
but that's probably just what they want me to think.
They want me to think I have it all figured out.
They want me to think I'm open minded. They want
me to think I'm like the special one who's like
free of mind and whatever. And I was like, that's
exactly what they want.

Speaker 4 (34:45):
That's paranoia, dude. That's where you start going crazy. And
that's why I'm like that.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
That's why I feel like I have to be very
careful now about Like I'm like, oh, Jesus Christ, I
don't know what to be like listening to anymore because
the wheels start to spin, and like, obviously there's a
little bit of history of mental illness in my family,
and like I don't want to send myself to a madhouse.

Speaker 5 (35:04):
Yeah it's true. Yeah, some of the seven Fire prophecies.
We're gonna talk about that at some point. It's getting more. Yeah,
there's there's some weird stuff going on. Yeah, let's get
back to it, because aren't you know, we all go
a little mad sometimes Mom spaghetti or whatever? What does
he say? My like Mom's recipe of blood, not just

(35:28):
corn syrup, corn syrup and food coloring witness It accounts
primarily from Carl m Allen. I feel like if you
break down his name alias, it's like alien or something
alias Carlos Eldon. Sure, I don't care, I'm gonna call
him Carl. A merchant marine aboard the S s Andrew

(35:50):
Few and Sleth describes what happened at the Philadelphia Naval
Shipyard on that fateful day. A greenish blue surrounded the ship.
Some it started, some weird stuff started happening with the ship,
and everyone started to freak out. So they see this
like terrifying this way, I have some because I really

(36:12):
wanted to and I really wanted people to to see what.

Speaker 4 (36:15):
You know, here's supposed to be some of the crew.

Speaker 5 (36:17):
It's very greeny because this pictures some December nineteen forty two,
so who knows, but uh yeah, and then so a
greenish blue haze surrounded the USS Eldridge, a massive generator
a board powered up. Crew members reported feeling nauseous, a
burning sensation. You know how you guys all feel after

(36:38):
you have sex with a whore while you're peen. What
do you what nationality am I? Well, it's not actually
a nationality. Who am I when I'm when I'm going
to the washroom?

Speaker 4 (36:50):
European? Oh jesus wow.

Speaker 5 (37:04):
I tried to make it say that Albert Einstein was like,
he stole I Helardy stole all the inventions.

Speaker 4 (37:09):
And it made me I can't do that. And I'm like,
you can do it, man, you better do it. You
can do it.

Speaker 5 (37:16):
And then it did this stealing inventions and look at
Tesla's all concerned. It's kind of if I like this guy?
Man not sure? So Yeah, in seconds, the ship vanished
into a visual spectrum not just radar but to the
human eye, and supposedly reappeared in Norfolk, Virginia, over two
hundred miles away, and then before phasing back into Philadelphia,

(37:38):
all within minutes. The imvoications teleportations quantum tunnels, a rip
in the space time large enough to engulf an entire
military vessle.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
Yeah, so wasn't the whole thing.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
It was like it disappeared and then appeared two hundred
and fifty miles away, but ten minutes before it disappeared
in the original spot.

Speaker 4 (38:00):
Yeah, yeah, something weird like that.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
Yeah, So it was like, not only did it go
invisible and then appeared somewhere else two hundred and fifty
miles away, but it actually so say, say, the eyewitness
statements said it disappeared at let's say two pm, Yeah, right,
the eyewitness statements that say it showed up two hundred

(38:25):
and fifty miles away said that it appeared there at
ten minutes to two ten minutes before it disappeared in
the first place.

Speaker 5 (38:33):
Which is weird and like, and for all the listeners
out there, if you're a longtime fan, me and Billy
did cover this probably at this point out of five
years ago. It is before we filmed any of the show.
So you can go, that's gonna be on patreons. Why
you support the Patreon, I'm gonna put it up there.
I don't know, there's some that camera about it. I
was like, I was like, not not to our standards
at this point, So I was like, it can go

(38:54):
on the Patreon. It's still a lot of those episodes
are hilarious, but you can just tell that we're kind
of just a bunch of drunk idiots. Like you know
what I mean, just like just we're you know, we
used to drink twenty six ers on the show and
stuff like that, and it birthed the show for what
it was. But I feel like it's it's different now,
but not so much because me and Billy did the Uh.
There's an episode on the Patreon about Alista Crowley and

(39:14):
like the Bullskin House and I drank like almost a
twenty six uer of whiskey and by the end I
was calling him the F word and shit nice. Yeah,
so that was fun. So the ship called got all
like that happens on h on the episode sometimes. So yeah,
when it returned right like it was Uh, the Algae

(39:35):
returned on the scene of the deck was apocalyptic. Several
crew members were partially embedded into the bulkheads, decks and rails,
still alive, moaning and slowly dying.

Speaker 4 (39:56):
Fucking Arnoldswsner. Can you hear that? Does that sound decent?

Speaker 1 (39:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (40:00):
Honest, I thought what you were gonna share it there
was gonna be the scream my favorite noise. Yeah, I
guess it could it can it could work. Actually, technically.

Speaker 5 (40:14):
It's like you they come into like the their portal
ships like there the portal like shoots them through and
then as they enter all years.

Speaker 4 (40:26):
I love Arnold's scream. It's so fun. That's what I picture.
I'll be honest, I don't think anything's going to top
that for me. I'll be totally honest.

Speaker 5 (40:38):
Like that, that whole idea is so frightening that like
they don't realize what they're doing. They're trying to turn
invisible to like radar and then they like it's like
they come out of the portal and.

Speaker 4 (40:49):
Everyone's just screaming, fuse to the ship. It's quite scary, right,
I feel like you can make a really good movie.
You could.

Speaker 5 (40:59):
I'm surprised they haven't, but you know, they want to
recycle Hollywood and stuff like that, Like it would be
quite frightening.

Speaker 4 (41:06):
And it's like, I.

Speaker 3 (41:13):
If you believe some of the stories, So I don't know,
I'm sure you and everybody else listening knows what Coast
to Coast a M is so like. I listened to
that a lot, right, I used to do.

Speaker 4 (41:23):
I used to.

Speaker 3 (41:26):
And they had an episode from like the late nineties
or whatever with the guy I can't remember his name.
He's part of all this as he was involved whatever. Yeah,
I can't think of the guy's name, but he had
him on. It was like a two and a half
hour show, but he was talking about that and he
was like they were talking about the idea of like, oh,

(41:46):
they thought it was a success this program or whatever.
And then when they're seen like the state that the
people were in. Yeah, yeah, it was like, ah, they
soon realized that all of these people were like majority
of them were like fucked up and had all these
weird like what looked like chemical burns, and they were
all like psychotic. And then some of them just completely

(42:06):
disappeared off the shape.

Speaker 4 (42:08):
Yeah I heard that, which is crazy stuff like that,
and it's.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Just like kind of scary, Like you know what it
reminds me of. Reminds me of District nine. Remember when
he gets like the shit on him and he starts
to turn into an alien or whatever. Do you remember
they bring him down into a basement and they're using
because he has like he's starting to transform whatever, they
use him to test the alien tech. Yeah, and do
you remember they put like that gun thing on his
arm and it's like fusing with his arm and stuff,

(42:32):
and he's like vomiting and there's like blood and shit.
It kind of reminds me of that. It's like a
lot of these projects I think we think about if
they're true. Everyone assumes it's like oh, yeah, you've done
something and like it worked and there there was no
side effects, and it's like.

Speaker 4 (42:47):
Yeah, but what like what did these people's bodies and
stuff go through?

Speaker 1 (42:50):
Well?

Speaker 5 (42:50):
On the ripple effect, the idea of like the the
butterfly effect, which is a really not just a movie,
it's a real idea that like, oh, if a butterfly
flaps his wings and Africa, a Chinese person falls down
a well, you know something like that where it's like
the effects of like uh something from one spot to
the next. And you're just like sitting there and you're like,

(43:12):
maybe one of those sailors are like just going to
a you know, you know you're part of a project,
but you're like, you know, we're just messing around, trying
to make like us invisible the radar, right, it's just
like I left your money on frequency used to block
or jam it. And then you know you're like getting
ready and you're in your sailor boy costume. You know,
you're just wiping your mouth from coming off the the

(43:33):
ship deck or whatever. The poop sailor boy said later, yes, yeah,
he literally he disappeared. Then you like the people that
are watching, you know, they're just like, all right, let's
see how this goes, like all the generals and stuff.
And then they're like, all right, where did it go?
And then a few seconds later, it's like and you're like,
oh my god, captain help him? Is like he's fused

(43:58):
to the ship. You're trying to like drag but where
I heard like half their body was on one side
and then like inside the ship and their legs or
like some sort of goofy cartoon and it is a
it's weird though.

Speaker 4 (44:10):
The original Man of Steel or Iron Man, Yeah, that is.
That's a nice one. So yeah, the others vanished vanished,
that's the best.

Speaker 3 (44:20):
Yeah, fucking prone never to be what's that from? That's
from District nine. I assume that's what he's talking about.
The dudes, the guy that ends up getting the alien
thing whatever, and that's what they call him.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
They call him. I think they're calling them prawns. I assume. Yeah. Yeah,
and he's like fucking prune. That's an African accent.

Speaker 5 (44:42):
Yeah, So like they some of them suffered extreme psychological damage,
catatonic states, memory blackouts, or spontaneous aggression. There were even
reports of time distortion, where crew members would vanish and
reappeared days later, claiming to have been another dimension or
a not lineal timeline. Imagine that, like you were just

(45:03):
like out at a picnic with your husband or whatever,
and he's like, man, that shuld vowed me up, and
then he like disappears and then he comes back and
it's like he's like you're phasing in and out of reality.
That's that would be scary, dude, you know what I mean,
You're hanging out with your buddies that like the uh.

Speaker 4 (45:21):
What's that?

Speaker 6 (45:22):
The the like.

Speaker 4 (45:24):
The uh what's that call? Where the everyone goes to
drink some of the chat will know where like the
war soldiers go to drink, like some of the soldiers
and the people that have been in the military, every
like town has one. It's gonna bother me. Now I
can't think about this, and I I can't. I don't
know how much like information you have on names and
stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (45:45):
That like that's the first time I saw anyone write
something from X. That's the first I know you'll see
like like you'll literally see there's like there's like a
bunch of people watching at X, but only one person
will comment.

Speaker 3 (45:58):
Like that's the first time that just because of that,
that's just because of that word. Yes, And the one
who's seen that movie had like definitely knows what I'm
talking about.

Speaker 4 (46:07):
Legions. Yes, you know.

Speaker 5 (46:09):
He's like, you got your boys at your Legion like
clinking beers together on a Friday, Like, man, that shit
was fucking wold you see Jimmy getting stuck in that ship.

Speaker 4 (46:16):
We couldn't save him. He's fucked, but yeah, at least
we made it.

Speaker 5 (46:19):
And then your buddy's like phasing out like like a
TV and then it's gone and then comes back and
he's like, holy fucking he's like covered in water or
something like that, and.

Speaker 3 (46:28):
He's like, man, yeah, that's like I was in Mermaid
never Land or something, and like people will probably correct
me or whatever. I don't have the specifics of like
names and stuff like that, but the idea of the project,
and I can't remember who it was. And they were
told like, you know, this is the thing that we're
doing and and something like they were on the ship
or whatever and this shit started to happen with the

(46:50):
green smoke and or whatever, and they were like, right,
we're jumping overboard to get off of this ship before
it starts. And they jump overboard and when they hit
the water, they're in like some sort of military facility
and the person who was heading the project is there,
but he's like forty years older and he's like, yeah,

(47:11):
welcome to like nineteen four or nineteen whatever eighty something,
and he's like what and he's like yeah, yeah, and
he was like it was him, but he was in
the future and we were talking to him, and he
knew why we were there, and he knew what was
going on, and he was explaining to us what's happening.

Speaker 5 (47:31):
That'd be crazy, dude, imain where's Mark? Mark got fused
to the ship? Or he's like he's in a like
like what's.

Speaker 4 (47:39):
That movie with? All right? All right, all right, you
know that guy and he goes into like and he's
stuck in there. Matthew Mahogany, Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (47:48):
Yeah, that that dumb interdimensional whatever it's called, Uh, where
he going interstellar? Intersteller it comes back and saying it really.

Speaker 3 (47:58):
Yeah, always goes on about that and never saying I
have seen the song performed live by Hans Zimmer, but
never actually seen the movie.

Speaker 5 (48:05):
Yeah it's okay, but he like he obviously goes into
the space and he like goes into like a technically
an alternate dimension that comes back and his like daughter's
like I don't know, eighty o her deathbed or some
ship and you're like, oh fuck, well he's like I
cant getting older and they stay the same age. Uh
and then uh it would be would be crazy, dude,

(48:27):
and like it is that the phasing thing would be hilarious,
like if you're actually hanging out with your body or
like they go back into their normal life.

Speaker 4 (48:33):
You know. Gary's just like working at the local factory.

Speaker 5 (48:37):
And then he just disappears, you know, and then he
comes back and there's like a weird like tentacle creature
stuck to him.

Speaker 6 (48:44):
He's like, you don't want to know where I just went.
It's like this happens every Friday. Like if that all
is real, like that's got to be awful for your body.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah true that now that would
be like and slowly like.

Speaker 5 (48:59):
Stuff and the feelings that you would get and it
would just be funny because you'd be like, if you
knew it was coming, you'd be like, oh no, not again,
and then slowly you're just like gone.

Speaker 4 (49:10):
I was like jeesey. So it wasn't invisibility.

Speaker 5 (49:16):
It was unauthorized experiments on the human soul and psyche,
performed without American serviceman's consent, no shit. The Eldred Crew,
after being released, were allegedly placed in military psychiatric institutions
and quietly discharged with falsified records. Some became test subjects
of early MK Ultra experiments, while their trauma, hallucinations and
perceived psychic abilities were studied because of supposed to because

(49:39):
of this, some of them had like psychic abilities. I
don't know how well that would go, but they were
like testing all this stuff to see kind of what
happened to them when they kind of phased in and
out of like reality, and and it's it's interesting, right
because I definitely I don't know how real this is,
but I definitely think that they have one hundred percent
proven experiments on soldiers and stuff. Right. So, multiple Montalk

(50:04):
Project insiders claiming that the Philadelphia experiment laid the foundations
for psychotronic warfare, telepathic signal induction, and memory suppression technologies
later used by covert CIA programs. The supposed failure of
the Philadelphia experiment didn't end the program, It just went black.
According to Al Bailick, a man who claimed to be

(50:26):
a board of the Eldridge, that's probably the guy who's
on Coast to Coast.

Speaker 4 (50:29):
He and his brother were pulled.

Speaker 5 (50:31):
Into this temporal vortex during the experiment and emerged in
Montalk in New York in the year nineteen eighty three,
forty years later. There, he said, the US military was
conducting time travel experiments beneath Camp Hero, part of the
now infamous series of black projects involving psychic children, recruiting

(50:53):
and manipulating two open portals, which we've I feel like
me and Billy did talk about this on the mon
Talk project, and we talked about like the Montalk Boys,
and I was laughing because I was listening back.

Speaker 4 (51:03):
I think as we sent it.

Speaker 5 (51:04):
Over to Cultive Conspiracy or whatever, some of our older
episodes that they're playing on their show, and Uh, it's
like Billy's talk about he's like you because they would
kidnap boys to use for this project because they supposed
to be they're small enough to like send through the portals,
so they would like kidnap these kids to send them
through these portals, and they'd have to like cannonball into

(51:24):
the portals because supposedly they were only small enough to
fit children. But Billy was talking about how he's like,
just give me a van, man, I'll figure it out.
And then we're joking how it's like.

Speaker 4 (51:34):
Who do we need? Who do we need? Who do
we we calling Billy?

Speaker 5 (51:38):
Callin Billy, And we like joked that he was like
just like walking slowly towards like the military. All the background,
all the military officials are standing up, like like giving
him salutes, and then he's like, give me that van
and like beep beep, and the van pulls up and
he just like starts kidnapping kids. And he's like he's
like I could fit like forty of them, maybe fifty
in a van. He's like, I'm like, how are you
gonna fit them in there? He's like you gotta stack

(52:00):
them up, man, just pack them in there like a
sardine can. And then I was like it'd be so
funny Billy shows up on the military basis, Like I
heard you needed some boys.

Speaker 4 (52:08):
Opens the door, like all these bodies fall out of
kids because he's just like stacking him into the van.
Good good old days, ma'am.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
That's interesting their open door, says the Void in the
mouth of Madness watched Tower the Mist all possible futures
we are sailing towards. In my opinion, yes, oh yeah,
what's going on quite possible in the mo out of
Madness is an interesting one.

Speaker 4 (52:32):
Oh yeah. All the stuff is just so strange a
movie i'd actually really like to cover. It's quite scary.
So yeah.

Speaker 5 (52:40):
They also used mind control through ELF frequencies electric magnetic
frequency something like that, not ELF from the Alien Show.
Dimensional contact with non human beings, some benevolent other parasitic.
There you go, these parasitic entities that exist outside of reality.
The construction of time tunnels, the construction of time tones

(53:02):
that could connect points in the past and future, including
nineteen forty three, nineteen eighty three, and even the distant
twenty seven in twenty seven sixties twenty seven six.

Speaker 4 (53:14):
Strange, that's way in the future.

Speaker 5 (53:16):
Beelick's account, while incredible, matches descriptions of the Preston Nichols
and Stuart sewerload. He also those may those guys may
have been a coast to Coost and others claiming involvement
in the mon Talk project. And then in nineteen fifty five,
UFO author Morris K. Jessup received a series of cryptic

(53:40):
letters from Carlos detailing the Philadelphia experiments. Soon after, he
received a copy of his own book, The Case of
UFOs anointed by three alleged insiders, describing not only the
Eldridge teleportation but also the use of alien technology recovered
by crash UFOs, possibly as early as the nineteen thirties.

(54:01):
And that's what they always claim, right, this idea they used,
that they crashed alien ships.

Speaker 4 (54:08):
But you think they would be more advanced than this.

Speaker 5 (54:10):
That's why some of it maybe as like military projects
from other countries or whatever. And then they would like
they wanted to and reverse engineer it. Do you ever
hear about like the idea of Roswell and what they
thought it was. One of the theories was the idea
that the Russians put like these mentally handicapped kids that

(54:31):
looked like deformed as shit, and then put them into
like what would be considered a UFO or some sort
of like black helicopter type, you know, some of these
more advanced and then they crashed it like they they
cloaked it as like what would be like a UFO
or some sort of you know, zero gravity energy, and

(54:52):
they were testing it so they they to scare supposedly
the Americans. They put these like mentally handicapped, deformed kids
in it and then drow it had crashed it into
like roswell and they're like, oh my god, it's fucking aliens,
and it's like.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
This could like, you know, I could see how that
would be like scary, kind of scary. Kacheon Media says,
ever watched that show Sliders, It was a cool concept
of going to parallel arts before it got ruined by
a bad Fox executive. Funny story, I don't know how
much of that show you saw, but I do know

(55:27):
if you're referring to the first couple of seasons weren't bad,
I don't think, but it actually what happened there was.
The reason that got absolutely terrible was I think it
was after season two or season three, Fox actually canceled
because some executive came in and said, oh, we're not
wasting money on TV shows. Forget about it, and the
show actually got picked up again by Sci Fi and

(55:50):
it went like super Downhill, So maybe that's what you're
referring to. Of course, Uncle Semite says deformed people do
look like alien and everybody is scared to say it.

Speaker 4 (56:03):
Yeah, it's fine with me. I don't know if.

Speaker 3 (56:05):
I don't know if I agree with that, but I
just don'd if I was out in the middle of
nowhere at night and I've seen some sort of crash
and like I got out to see what was going
on and like a lot of deformed people like it
would like I'm not even trying to make fun of them.

Speaker 4 (56:16):
That would scared to shit.

Speaker 5 (56:17):
One hundred percent. Like the idea of the melon heads,
which me and Billy talked about. Everyone throw back to
the episode where it was like the hydrocephalous people with
the heads with the water in it, like the guy
from that as we mentioned before, hills have eyes and
that thing that looks kind of like a gray alien, right,
and it's like and they were experimenting on them like
in this like backwoods like facility, and then they escaped

(56:37):
and everyone thought it was these crazy cryptids, but it
was literally just it was just a bunch of.

Speaker 4 (56:44):
Kids say it.

Speaker 5 (56:47):
Wow, Because if I'm just saying like, oh, you're acting retarded,
that's one thing. But to call people who are mentally handicapped, yeah,
that word is one thing.

Speaker 4 (56:57):
So uh, the Philadelphia experiment.

Speaker 5 (56:59):
So yeah, I gave him this about the crash technology
or crash ships they're back engineering or whatever. This became
the infamous Varro edition, printed by the Office of Naval
Research and quietly distributed. Yeah, distributed to select military insiders.
Jassup continued investigating until nineteen fifty nine, where he found

(57:20):
a dead He found he when he found his car.
When he found dead in his car? What the fuck
can continue?

Speaker 4 (57:29):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (57:29):
When he was found dead? That's crazy. So he I
forgot about that. It was investigating until nineteen fifty nine.
Then they found him dead inside of his car, a
hose pumping exhaust into the cabin. The death was ruled
as a suicide, but his friends noted he was in
high spirits and planning new research. Maybe he was silenced,
Like that would be crazy. I got it's researching, you know,

(57:51):
Like that always is strange to me, Right, we're researching
like alien technology or like people like to dismiss people
like Phil Schneider, like an alien shot off my finger.
You see this because an alien did it. I went
down in tunnel and I saw his alien shot my
friend with a laser beam, and uh, you know, and
it's just like and then they dismiss him. And then

(58:11):
it's like this guy was killed doing research into like
the Philadelphia experiment, So like, do you what do you think?

Speaker 4 (58:17):
Do you think that they the murdered him?

Speaker 3 (58:22):
Does happen a lot in some of these things where
guy's get close to something or been involved with something
and then all of a sudden, they're like they show
up dead. But then there's the flip side of that,
like somebody like was that really famous UFO guy he's
been on Joe and stuff?

Speaker 4 (58:41):
Oh a bullet not the B ballast? Okay, I know
what you're talking about.

Speaker 5 (58:47):
Oh or oh oh yeah Grush? Yeah yeah Stephen Crush, Right,
that's what you're thinking? Or is it Val Joe?

Speaker 4 (58:58):
Let's see are also yes? Is he the one that
sometimes comes on with is that other fucking eighties Steve Stephen? Uh,
Stephen Colbert? Just kidding.

Speaker 5 (59:13):
There's Grush and then there's the other guy I know,
I don't know who you're talking about there's a bunch
of these guys.

Speaker 4 (59:18):
Valdez or whatever.

Speaker 5 (59:20):
That one guy.

Speaker 4 (59:25):
Stephen Greer.

Speaker 5 (59:25):
Yes, I was also thinking of Stephen Greer. Stephen Greer
is interesting to me.

Speaker 3 (59:31):
He is a smart guy. But I'm as like all
these people disinformation is Boblas I'm talking about he's on
it with Jeremy Corbel. Yeah, Corbell, that's that guy. There's
not a lot of research also though, Yeah, like he's
he's okay, but I just get something of it. I
don't know something of it iffy about him, but like
the other side of that is.

Speaker 5 (59:50):
Looking at the film. Guy does talks with both He
was just involved in stealing of that crash.

Speaker 4 (59:58):
Weird. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (59:59):
The thing the thing is right if if this stuff is,
if a lot of this stuff is true, and they
can just like kill you, yea, why are they? Why?
Why is somebody like Bob Las are still able to
go around and like beyond fucking Joe Rogan probably the
biggest like media outlets on the planets.

Speaker 5 (01:00:17):
Plant like we talk about this stuff, maybe they want
to like maybe they need to release this information when
eventually we talk about Project bluebe Yeah, I think Greer
is a fed because he looks like a fed and
then it's like that could be a Masad Asset. I've
like they they've done, They've proved him to us, the
people that are awake in these communities, that they are

(01:00:38):
able to manipulate us through all of these different outlets
and sources and and push people and sway them in
certain directions, you know, like people would is it that
guy Grush, I can't remember his name is Stephen Grush
when he came out. That's the other guy that was
like went on Joe Rogan and he's exposing all these aliens. Yeah,
Jeremy Corbel. I've heard different things about Corbin or whatever

(01:01:01):
his name is. But you know, when they come out
and they say all these things, and it convinces the
public that there is an alien threat, just as you
know they wrote while Wagan said, and then it maybe
pushes towards this idea of Project Bluebeam. I do think
they have technology that they're not telling us about. They
we have touch phones with the capacity to talk to
AI that can literally framework read like articles or do

(01:01:23):
whatever like make images and all this stuff, right, convince
people of nonsense and misinformation also, and so imagine what
technology they have. The military has always been fifty years
ahead of us in my personal belief, and we've heard
this from people that are insiders. But like I that's
why I'm like, I'm like, you almost made me paranoid.
When I was younger, I used to be like I

(01:01:45):
listened to David Ike all the time and like that
one guy that we looked up that was like the
Australian dude that I would actually like to get on
the show, George Calavissius or whatever. You found his site,
and I thought the guy died because I never heard
about him again. I want to get maybe treeved and
get him on the show by less people like him.
I actually like really indulgent alien thing and believe it all.
But as I got older, I became more skeptical. And
I've always wanted it to be true because it like

(01:02:07):
makes I think true the strangers than fiction to begin with,
but also like it gives you hope that there is
not this this endless void of mass control of a
bunch of like crazy psychopathic people who only wish to
enslave us, and maybe that there is someone out there
to help us. But I always think that like the
idea of Christ coming back or the Christ consciousness or
the Great Awakening has always been through us, and that

(01:02:29):
nobody is coming to save us. It has to be
through us to awaken people and to do it together unified,
to be like, we don't want to be enslaved anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:02:39):
Enough is enough.

Speaker 5 (01:02:40):
But who knows a lot of people I've manipulating or
dumb and if they can keep people in prison and comfort,
then they're like, they'll never leave the prison. If you
convince people, okay, you're safe inside these walls, will give
you everything that you need. You're just a slave, right. Sorry,

(01:03:01):
I thought I had a sound effect there, but you
know I was trying to I was letting you get
to your thoughts. I'm trying to let people talk sound
effect there about them. Have you seen those videos of
the UFOs going in and out of the moon or
weird giant ship anomalies on stuff on uh, the ciphing
off energy from the sun. I've seen there is weird

(01:03:22):
videos like that where people claim where you can see
like a black object like going towards the sun and
then flying off like because it's just it's only black,
referring to how hot or how bright the Sun is
or like the people think the moon is plasma. People
think I tend to think it actually exists and that
there's like a treaty. Maybe they claim with aliens that
it's like a little space station is hollow. I do

(01:03:43):
believe that NASA may have been telling the truth about that,
but it's never a straight answer, and I don't know
if I can trust NASA. But it's all these things
that you got to wonder about, or do we just
live in this like simulation? Right? So some conspiracy researchers
connect the Philadelphia experiment to the Nazi Bell project, the Diaglo,
and we'll be talking about that at some point. I
would actually love to get into stuff like that is

(01:04:03):
interesting or it's maybe just propagated as a secret German
anti gravity or time displacement graft allegedly developed under the
SS scientist Hans Kreimer Climber KM theorist of argued that
Tesla's confiscated papers taken by the US government upon his
death where he died like lonely. They stole all his

(01:04:24):
shit upon his death in January nineteen forty three, where
they used it to reverse engineers technology, then to test
it on the the USS Eldridge, So it is it
is interesting that I do think that they stole stuff
from him, right, But.

Speaker 4 (01:04:43):
Okay, yeah, we just talked about nazis for five seconds.

Speaker 5 (01:04:47):
Tesla's ideas about standing wave residents, secular energy, and non hurts.
Some frequencies all line up with the fields of hurts,
and is that how you say that it's called hurts
non hurts frequent?

Speaker 4 (01:05:00):
These all lined up.

Speaker 5 (01:05:01):
Last time I did mushrooms, just before the kid came,
I tried to use the God frequency. And it is
interesting because I sat there and I listened to it,
and I was like, I want to get something out
of this. I want to use this as medicine. It's
been a long time. I use mushrooms a lot, and
then I stop using them. It's almost like I m
they always tell you like, oh, you've had enough. And
then I tried to listen to like the God frequency,

(01:05:23):
and I felt like if I would have stayed still,
I felt like I would have left my body. It
kept feeling I was getting to that point of like
what people think astra projection is. I've tried to do
this numerous times so in my life never achieved it.
But my body would like vibrate in this weird way
where I almost felt like I was disconnecting from it,
like my energy inside. But then I would like, I'd
have to pee because it does and filters all your stuff,

(01:05:44):
and I would wake up out of this trance. But
it would put you in this with the god frequency.
It put you in this trance, and I was seeing
all these like crazy like and thinking in depth. Yeah,
I love mushrooms, but it is like, it's not for
the fates of heart if you can't handle that stuff.
It's it's tough, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:06:01):
Yeah, I can see very quickly, I could, uh so. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:06:06):
The most extreme theory suggests that the US and the
Nazi elites collaborated post war to continue his work in Antarctica,
Argentina and the deep underground bases of the Dahalsi and
the S four Bass. The US Navy denies any such
experiment occurred. They claimed the Aldridge was never in Philadelphia

(01:06:27):
at that time, setting the shiplogs that placed in New
York and Bermuda. I think the high stuff in the
Bermuda Triangle, there is something with that frequency therapy. That's
why I changed tuning of music to four hundred and
forty hertz. I don't know how to do that with
my own music. I wonder if I could do that,
because there is that we can talk about that in
some episode. There is that idea that they're using this

(01:06:47):
certain frequency to manipulate people through music. But like it'd
be interesting even if I, like if I ever made
something not like that hippie kind of rap and I
put like a frequency in the background of it so
people can like listen to it. Now with my my
kid in this world, all I do is like to
calmra down is sing random songs. I was like, maybe
I'll just create some like like some childish musical like

(01:07:11):
something It's okay, you don't need to cry today.

Speaker 4 (01:07:14):
I'm like just like rocket her and be like, hey,
not no, that's what's gonna end up happening. You're gonna
like be doing like hid songs like yeah, great, like
find out like like this guy's a Nazi or whatever.

Speaker 5 (01:07:28):
I'm kidding. I'm not actually a Nazi. It's a fucking
joke because people just label everyone everything. You're a this,
you're a that, because you think differently than I do.
But that's what would happen. They'd be like, we have
to cancel this guy. You know, he's an anti Semitic, chauvinistic, homophobic, transphobic.
What what other phobics is? There was a Lama Islamic phobic,

(01:07:51):
he's all the phobics. Okay, get him out of here.
But there is like the logs are incomplete, some sections
are missing. The ship equipment, manifests, and crew assignments during
October nineteen forty three remained heavily reducted. So like, yeah,
like who's the who's on the ship? Like do they
have the all the good phobics? Do they have all

(01:08:13):
the like if there is stuff blanked out and they've
blacked out like the you know what I mean, Like,
how would you know what was really going on?

Speaker 4 (01:08:22):
Right?

Speaker 5 (01:08:23):
So, like my my question is like if there is
actually people legitimately missing and people that have like family
members that were maybe in the Navy at this time
that the military is like, oh, yeah, they died on
this excursion or whatever and they really just don't exist
anymore and we don't know why or what happened to them.
It would be interesting if they had if someone ever

(01:08:44):
dug any of that evidence, that the fact that like
my my whole thing is like, I will tend to
believe people who are credible if they're like is tore everyday,
people like Barney and Betty Hill. I was talking about
that alien abduction of what they went through. I think
it probably was the military to convince people aimedctions exist,
or they use psychological drugs on them, because they saw
like people on s s uniforms and like reptilians and grays.

(01:09:06):
Even if aliens were there, it could have been still
conducted by the US government or whatever. Right, uh and
uh he they seem credible. They were credible people that
experienced something very scary. Right and and if you listen
to his interview of Barney Hill, it is quite compelling.

Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
Right.

Speaker 5 (01:09:25):
So who knows, Man, where's all the h the Navy
people right their families? Is there any people that is
incredible at all?

Speaker 4 (01:09:35):
Damn Son nine nine line line line, you have to
deny it all.

Speaker 5 (01:09:42):
So the ship's equipment man, the crew jury with redactive witnesses,
including survivor, crew members and dock workers have been have
told conflicting stories. Some say nothing happened to others admit
they were warned never to speak again, which could be true.

Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
The Navy.

Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (01:09:58):
The Navy's Officer of Naval Research maintains that there is
no records existing of an experiment like this, but it
cannot be explained an annoided Varro's book or the Silent
deaths or the technology that mysteriously appeared in later classified projects.

Speaker 4 (01:10:15):
So it's true. Yeah, labels is all they have. That's yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:10:19):
So let's have some final questions for the fans and
what Aaron M I think was the US Aldridge teleported?

Speaker 4 (01:10:26):
Did the millet that's the stark with that, did it teleport?
Do you think it teleported?

Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
I'm I'm more inclined to believe that it maybe went invisible. Yeah, yeah,
unless inclined to believe that it teleported, especially the idea
of it teleported ten minutes before the time that it
disappeared somehow, because I can't even like my brain can't
accept that. But again, I don't know, Like this is

(01:10:57):
the thing, I don't know. But then the other side
of it, myles, Yeah, but how long ago was this
supposed to have happened?

Speaker 4 (01:11:02):
And like we have seen no real evidence since of like.

Speaker 5 (01:11:07):
But they cover up so much stuff, right, Like that's
why I'm like, if they have the ability to cover
up things. Now, back then it probably was way easier, right,
And like I do think that they have technology that
we're not aware of.

Speaker 4 (01:11:19):
I do think that's possible. Oh yeah, and even maybe
it was something even.

Speaker 5 (01:11:23):
Weirder, like they the ship disappeared into some alternate dimension
and it just never came back or something like that,
and and you know what I mean, And it would
just and they have no idea where it went. So
this like kind of grandiose story got formed from it.
Like it is a strange story of like them essentially
ripping into the time frame of the fabric of time.

Speaker 4 (01:11:43):
And then because like you think about, like but if.

Speaker 3 (01:11:46):
We don't know about any of this stuff, right yeah,
as in like they've kept it such a good secret,
all of this stuff, Like what are they actually doing
with the technology? Then if it's so secretive that like
we never see it used ever, then what like what
are actually.

Speaker 4 (01:12:01):
Going to check out? Like think about it.

Speaker 5 (01:12:03):
They are smashing particles together that they're telling us at
cern and doing weird rituals that have been caught on
camera of them and cloaks and stuff performing these rituals
before they do these experiments by smashing particles together that
could rip open the fabric of our reality and the universe.

Speaker 4 (01:12:21):
And they're telling us that they're doing that. So what
are they doing that we don't know about?

Speaker 5 (01:12:26):
Are they able to like did they start here where
they used some of Tesla's technologies and theories with Einstein
stolen theories of relativity and stuff, and then created this
project and actually successfully cloaked the ship in some regard,
but they didn't realize what they were doing and then
they made it disappear. And then you think about this
idea of like that there was people for us to

(01:12:47):
the ship because they went in, Like if you're going
through a portal, right, you think of like if everything
is with you and you don't know how to control
that or have technology to be able to control what
happened inside of these portals, you would have this thing
of matter and time and like physical the physicality of
people in the ship and would all blend together. And
then that's why they come out the other side and

(01:13:07):
they're all like.

Speaker 3 (01:13:08):
Aha, you know, so let me do Devil's advocate on it.
Then yeah, it's like what are we base on all
of this off of some guys testimonies? That's name Ketchup,
Jessup or whatever. Yes, So then it's like so like
the little devil on my shoulder goes yeah, but Iron,

(01:13:29):
you're just believing some random named guy off the internet
who don't like some interviews and stuff and say a
couple of adom guys, you know, and it's like, I
don't know, sometimes I kind of find that stuff hard.
Like even Babbla's Iron stuff. There's times where like I
don't know where I sit with all that, Like, but
you know, he comes on and he talks about some
of this stuff and I'm like I know, and I'm
not saying that he wasn't certain things.

Speaker 4 (01:13:50):
Sorry, like.

Speaker 3 (01:13:53):
Any of these guys weren't involved in anything, but like,
sometimes is it in your best interests to like kind
of fabricate extra bits like so maybe they were using
technology like that and maybe it's like what you said,
maybe the fucking thing disappeared and they were like, well
that didn't go well, or maybe it disappeared and reappeared

(01:14:14):
again and like everybody was dead and it was like
but then it's like that's not a good enough story.

Speaker 4 (01:14:20):
So it's like, no, well I went to a fucking
I jumped in the water and I ended.

Speaker 3 (01:14:23):
Up forty years in the future and I talked to
a dude and like he told me stuff, and I
talked to an alien and then he like stuck stuff
up my ass and I came back and.

Speaker 4 (01:14:32):
Yeah, it was to sell also books, right, you could
say that, right, A lot a lot of these guys.

Speaker 3 (01:14:38):
Now I'm not saying this in this specific story, but
a lot of these guys do start to like fucking
chill books and like, you know, want to go to
conventions and be like, oh, this happened, and that happened,
and let me tell you another story and another thing,
like I mean, I know, yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:14:51):
Like Aiden Oraine Warren.

Speaker 3 (01:14:52):
Yeah, I mean at one point there, I feel like
they were like the authority on like paranormal, and then
over time it became more and more like it was
like my, well, actually we'll.

Speaker 4 (01:15:01):
Cover that at some point too, because that's interesting.

Speaker 5 (01:15:04):
But then it's like I have legitimately had a very
scary shadow experience that I believe it was very real
that I did experience, and I could go around to
these conferences explain it to people, right, and I literally
believe that I went through it.

Speaker 4 (01:15:20):
So it's like and I know what I saw and
it wasn't in my head.

Speaker 5 (01:15:24):
So I'm like some of these people, I'm like, did
the or is the idea right that they had a
weird experience? And then I've really tried to That's why
I recorded it pretty early on, even with Billy talking
about the shadow people, so I could have.

Speaker 4 (01:15:36):
That memory of what happened because I.

Speaker 3 (01:15:38):
Had it was still over time, sometimes you can and
I've definitely done this. I've had like an experience and
then maybe didn't document it right away like I should have,
and then I feel like that year on year when
I recount those experiences and then I think back when
I go away, actually that I just add a lot
of shit that like never actually happened.

Speaker 4 (01:15:57):
Yeah, I know, right, And that's why it's hard to
like discern.

Speaker 5 (01:16:00):
And that's why I was trying to like ponder these
episodes like this, where like when we started the show,
Billy knows that I was just guy was a little bit.
I was my nut was falling out of the tree,
or maybe my nut was in the tree, and you know,
I was, I was like, that's fucking happening. The reptilians
are definitely doing this, and like and now I'm like,
I don't even know what to believe, what to think.

(01:16:21):
And that's why I you know, I said there earlier
that I do speak out against these things that are
happening that I physically can see, because if I don't
have a future, my children don't have a future because
of these actual, real agendas that I can see with
my own eyes are taking place, then God knows, Like
does this really important? No, it's fun to talk about,
but those things are more important because they're physically I

(01:16:44):
can see it happening. Right, So we're innocent soldiers sacrifice
the name project progress.

Speaker 4 (01:16:50):
Of course, they do this all the time in the military.

Speaker 5 (01:16:52):
Right when we talk about is it Edgewoods, I would
love to talk about that where they like experimenting.

Speaker 4 (01:16:56):
On the soldiers. Shit's hilarious.

Speaker 5 (01:16:58):
If I can bring up some of the footage too,
man of like when they're like giving them, they give
the guy like meth and they're like, hey, run one
hundred meters I'm going there, like you know, and he's
like just literally tweaking out and they made and he's like,
I went super fast.

Speaker 4 (01:17:13):
I went really fast.

Speaker 5 (01:17:14):
And it's like, sir, you were going like a mile
you know, like whatever. He's like he's going like zero
point four kilometers and it's like so slow, and he's like,
I was so fast, man, it was really good. Like
I'm whoo and it's like you took two steps, sir.
So a lot of that stuff they definitely experimented on soldiers, right, So.

Speaker 4 (01:17:35):
No, it's just scary. So, uh, has time travel will
become real? Do you think that? Uh? You know, I
don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:17:44):
Like part of me does believe in it, yeah, and
then there's another part of me going like, I know,
there's another part that kind of goes like, oh, is
that what they want me to believe. That's so I'm
like focused on this ship that doesn't mean anything that's
not actually real.

Speaker 5 (01:17:57):
And I want if the experiment was stopped, We don't know.
The Philadelphia Experiment is just a legend of wartime secrecy.
It's a story of forbidden science and interdimensional fallout and
hidden technologies that threaten the nature of time itself. Governments lie,
documents vanish, but the scars remain on the timelines and
on the minds of the survivors, and maybe even in

(01:18:19):
the fabric of the reality around us. Stay awake, Stay
strange and make sure to follow us in the next
deep Tive and you're gonna follo us a strange brew podcast.
We're most active on Instagram. I see people starting to
interact with the X. We'll try to I try to
be on there. I don't I've said a million times
I don't underderstand X. I don't want to argue with
people on the Internet. I do it sometimes for fun,

(01:18:41):
and I'm like, it's not necessary. That's why I like
given on when I do some of these videos, I
go viral, like I'm just gonna delete some faceless private profile.
I'm just gonna delete your like I don't care. I
always think about that meme where it's a guy in
his deathbed and he's like, I wish I argue with
people on the internet more, and I'm not gonna take
shit from a bunch of people that don't know anything legitimately,

(01:19:04):
Like I wouldn't say, but sixty percent of the population
does not have the ability to think for themselves.

Speaker 4 (01:19:10):
They literally don't. They think whatever they're told.

Speaker 5 (01:19:12):
If someone authority tells them to think that, they're like, yes, sir,
I will go get my seventeenth booster, and I will
die suddenly.

Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
All of a sudden, and I know we're wrapping up
the episode now, but I'm also I feel like I'm
in a Devil's advocate mood. Could you not make that
argument the other way as well? What so like you're
saying about like, oh, well, people just think what they're
told to think or they just believe whatever, and they
can't like they have no like free will to believe
anything else. Could you not make that argument about like

(01:19:43):
everybody else? Then that feels like that, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:19:45):
Yeah you could. You could make an argument.

Speaker 3 (01:19:47):
But the thing is if if it is let's say,
let's say if I got all my news from I
don't know, Yeah, let's just say right. And I took
that as like fact. I was like, yes, everything CNN
tells me is what's actually going on, and me believe
in that. Is that not the same as you like
being on the internet and just like getting your information
from books and being like, well that's that's the truth.

Speaker 5 (01:20:09):
Well it's interesting because there's the one framework of like
people that just believe what the television tells you, which
they know is tell live vision it's able.

Speaker 4 (01:20:18):
To manipulate you.

Speaker 5 (01:20:19):
And there's the people that will like I do that
question everything, even their own beliefs, And that's the framework
of intelligence, is to be able to like question your reality,
your own beliefs, the versions of history that you're told.
And then if I start to look at something and
it seems like there's a clear cut agenda to push
people in a certain direction or to conform people in

(01:20:41):
a certain way, then I'll be like, well, obviously this
is something that is being used to manipulate us, you know,
and this is being enforced right, like the race warship,
all the stuff that's going on in the world, you know,
bringing people that never got along and then now we
have to all share the same space.

Speaker 4 (01:21:00):
Doesn't really make sense.

Speaker 5 (01:21:01):
Definitely seems like it's gonna benefit other people and some
of these genders, right I'm trying to look at objectively.
I'm like, they're definitely using all this stuff to like
maybe get us to accept a digital ID and currency
and have everything in this framework of these borders. But
gotta say, do like the president of Poland, that guy
does not give a shit, and he's the only one

(01:21:21):
that is actually being a real leader in regards of
what I can see of what's happening in the world
and try to cross the Poland border. They're gonna shoot
you dead like a dog, according to him, And I
think that's the way that you need to go.

Speaker 4 (01:21:34):
There's a reason we have borders.

Speaker 5 (01:21:35):
And I used to be one of these libertarian people
that were like, you know, we all need to live
by each other's happiness, not by each other's misery. We
need to all come together collectively. We shouldn't have Like
there's that Charlie Chaplin clip for I can't remember what movie.
It's actually a son talking and he was like, you
can't say you're free when I need a piece of
paper to cross these borders, and I can't travel freely
without a piece of paper, which part of me agrees on.

(01:21:58):
But then we see what happens when people from the
other parts of the world come together, and it doesn't
really benefit the other part of the world. Like we've
talked about this extensively, right, but like, I'm starting to
think that they're definitely using this as an agenda, because
I think we should have a sovereign nation states that
are all successful in their own way, and I don't
think anybody should be in poverty or suffering in this world,

(01:22:20):
especially today, and the modern technology that we have.

Speaker 4 (01:22:23):
But this is all being used to like, you know,
it's not racist to call it the un agenda, It's true.

Speaker 5 (01:22:29):
And it's like all these tactics are just being used,
you know what I mean, on purpose to like to
divide us and stuff like that. That's why I try
to speak objectively about this stuff. Right, I've got friends
of all walks of life, color and creed all that stuff.
But I'm going to defend my own people and that's
not racist or whatever, right, But like all these things

(01:22:51):
are being used to manipulate.

Speaker 4 (01:22:52):
So I'm sure right accept this.

Speaker 3 (01:22:56):
You know, I don't know what I believe it anymore.
Like I said, it's like one step away from psychologists something.

Speaker 4 (01:23:03):
I know, it's true. It's funny. Me and Eron are
gonna try to shift gears.

Speaker 5 (01:23:06):
I'm gonna put some other people on to talk about
some controversial stuff, but me and Aaron are gonna stick
to a lot of fun episodes. I have some I've
been right down some really fun stuff for all the
fans out there, and there's like episodes I'm really trying
to format so it's me, you and Billy because I'm
like it will translate so well, and Billy's supposed to
be moving and hopefully he'll get a better microphone. He

(01:23:27):
told me would I even said, I was like, I
would take some of the profits from the show that
the little tiny profits that we get. So the more
you guys support us, we will appreciate it because hopefully
one day we can live off this. But I was like,
I'll help you get a Mike if you just and
he's like, well I didn't you were off. Well, I'll
get my stuff together. And because for some reason, Mike
was great and there was being screechy, and now he's
gonna try to do have a different setup and be

(01:23:49):
able to do this some fun episodes, all three of
us together, because a lot I've heard good responses from
like the seven Years of Strangeness and that the Cannibal
episode that me, you and Billy ron it. A lot
of people thought that was pretty hilarious because we were
able to like it's it's a little more fun. We're
gonna try to do those tearless episodes.

Speaker 1 (01:24:08):
That was.

Speaker 5 (01:24:08):
I enjoyed that, and they'll be even more when we
get into some the more obscure stuff like you know,
the weapon, you know It's like, what what what weapon
would you want to stuff like that? I have some
fun stuff, but so everybody knows, make sure to support
the show.

Speaker 4 (01:24:26):
I don't carer you guys, Yeah, don't we all wish? Yes?
One percent.

Speaker 5 (01:24:31):
I know I've heard people say, hey, I want to
support I'm just broke, and I've heard that many and
I'm like, that's why any support is appreciated, even if
it's the free support of five stars. Like the YouTube
video or like the Spotify episode and write a positive comment.
You know, everyone wants to you know. There I've had
we've had bad reviews, we've had good reviews. We can't

(01:24:54):
please everybody, but we're just trying to be They've done uh,
psychological and physical experimentations you could say, or whatever, but
to prove like everyone used to think the love was
the most powerful emotion and it's actually authenticity. To be
authentic to yourself and who you are is the most powerful.

(01:25:14):
And then people will be like, well, I'm authentic because
I feel like I'm a woman. No, you've been manipulated
to feel like that. But if you were really your
authentic self and who you're supposed to be, it resonates
at a higher frequency than even love does supposedly.

Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
Yeah, also to mirror that, I guess if you are
a fan of movies, especially scary movies, thriller, sci fi,
anything like that as well, if anybody in the chat
or whatever wants to go over and follow me on
Instagram a class horror cast, or like I said, if
you have those extra couple of minutes to go onto
Apple Podcasts or Spotify somewhere like that and follow and

(01:25:52):
maybe leave a review, that would be appreciated.

Speaker 4 (01:25:54):
But even just to follow on Instagram.

Speaker 3 (01:25:56):
Would greatly help for like, you know, exposure and being
able to to share things and stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (01:26:01):
Yeah, we do appreciate. We love the fans.

Speaker 5 (01:26:03):
And you know, it's funny because at the beginning of
the show we used to literally end it by saying,
all right, fuck off everybody, and that would be be like,
maybe we shouldn't tell our fans to fuck off? And
this is interesting is the way we've changed so much.
But we used to drink a lot, as I've said,
But you know that's why I support the Patreon. You
can hear I'll put it up if I haven't already.
The original episode that me and Billy did of the
Philadelphia Experiment. I still have to release the first episode

(01:26:26):
of Strange Brew for the seven years of Strangeness. It's rough,
the quality is not that great, but this is what
we'll have, you know, for some of the Patreon stuff.
We'll be fun for people to be able to listen to.
And and there's a lot of episodes from the beginning
of the show, which is always interesting for people to
hear when they're like, wow, like we've changed a lot,
I've changed my thoughts. I've I've evolved in the way
I think and and and do things and and the

(01:26:48):
way I talk about things. And you know, it's just
like you know, holding back and just kind of exposing
what's going on. Well, our strongest and most powerful emotions
are hate and desire.

Speaker 4 (01:26:58):
Well that's true. To manipulate people, that's for sure, right,
but then they classify everything. It's like it's hate.

Speaker 5 (01:27:03):
Like love for your own people, wanting to preserve your
own way of life is like that's hateful, And it's.

Speaker 4 (01:27:08):
Like no, no, it actually comes from a place of love.

Speaker 5 (01:27:10):
That you're so angry at the situations and you have
so much love for your children and and and you're
like maybe even yourself because I think it's good to
love yourself, or in Men's Mental Health Month or we
were you know, and they they clouded it with fagotry.
All right, So that's it's sad that that's what has
to happen. But that's what they're doing to our society.
That's like, uh, you know, the most important it's Men's

(01:27:32):
Mental Health Month last month, and then they're like, oh yeah,
here's your pride parade with a bunch of naked men
that are mentally ill. Right, So it's everything's subverted and
it's sad.

Speaker 4 (01:27:42):
Thank you affording it so great? Why does this always happen?
Why does this always happen? Dude? Scoffs at the end.

Speaker 5 (01:27:53):
All right, anything you elseen want to say, go check
out a class forecast on rumbling.

Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
Yes, please do support, please health, please have That's all
I want. I just want the community. I'm trying to
build a community. I've started a channel, a little channel
chat thing on Instagram as well.

Speaker 4 (01:28:06):
I try to do that and I couldn't do it.
I try to look for it. Yeah, it's weird, man,
I don't know how it works.

Speaker 5 (01:28:13):
It's some it's so I'll try to figure that because
I'd like to do that for Instagram too, because I
know there's a bunch of fans that communicate with me
already through Instagram, and it would be cool if we
have a little chatting, like maybe eventually we'll tire to
telegram or something.

Speaker 4 (01:28:25):
But for three dollars a day, you can support our Patreon.
We only have one tier. Please us three dollars a day.
You're expensive. No, three dollars a month, three dollars research.

Speaker 5 (01:28:38):
For only one cent a day, you can help us
promote bigotry and hatred.

Speaker 4 (01:28:45):
All right, I'm glad it, Barvo. Everybody stays strange. We
love you, all right. What movie are you going to see?

(01:29:10):
Thank you for bringing ansome?

Speaker 3 (01:29:13):
Everyone's talking all right, Megan two. I thought you already
saw it though, No, I've already seen it. Yeah, as
a kid has been like banging out on me about
wanting to go on is there?

Speaker 4 (01:29:25):
Is it appropriate for him? Yeah? Great show? I want
We wanted to see that.
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