Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey everyone, welcome
back.
This is your host, melissa atStrange.
Deranged Beyond Insane.
All right, today I have anotherfun episode.
You know, of course, I seethings on the internet and I
think that they're interesting,right, and there's just a lot of
conspiracy theories in my ownbrain, right, that I think hold
(00:21):
to be true.
So I did a little poll on myown and I messaged you know,
text, messaged a bunch of peoplethat I think hold to be true.
So I did a little poll on myown and I messaged you know,
text message a bunch of peoplethat I know and I said, hey,
what are some conspiracytheories, or like one conspiracy
theory that you absolutelybelieve is true?
All right, so we're going tostart off with my friend, eric.
Um, I've been friends with Ericfor a long time.
(00:42):
We've known each other fromschool, I think since middle
school.
So that was like dinosaur agesago.
Excuse me, but Eric, he is,he's fun to talk to because he's
very dry.
He's, like you know, black andwhite, right.
So he gave me a bunch and okay,so the first one he says that
(01:05):
our government allowed 9-11 tohappen, at the very least, or to
stretch it where, I'm sorry tostretch it and complicate it and
maybe even orchestrated it Alsothat our government purposely
kept on putting misinformationout and dragged their feet out
there during the COVID pandemic.
So the right people became morewealthy.
(01:27):
Black Swan events are very real.
Governments rely on them orthey orchestrate them to create
division or unification of itspeople, to pass certain agendas
and move money Attempted orsuccessful assassinations.
They do this also as adistraction to keep what they
(01:50):
are doing away from the public.
Totally agree with that, allright.
And then he says the divisionbetween the right and the left
amongst politicians is a showfor the public, but in back they
take care of one another byinsider trading and tips that
certain legislation will bepassed months, if not years,
(02:12):
before it actually does whichnot to get too political, and I
don't really give a shit becausewe can just talk about anything
on here.
I do 1000% agree with this,eric, and I have always said the
whole like left and right shit.
I honestly think that they'reall friends and they all have
meetings and we, the people, weactually look stupid because we
(02:33):
fall for everything.
Okay.
And then it says which is whythey have all become
millionaires when they earn lessthan 200K a year.
Although I do believe in thealiens, I don't buy into they
crash landed here, absolutely.
I believe that they've beenhere millions and millions of
years, right Before we even knewwhat this world was.
(02:55):
Then he says have me on yourpodcast one day.
I can go on for ages, lol.
Well, eric, I will definitelytake you up on that, all right.
Can go on for ages, lol.
Well, eric, I will definitelytake you up on that, all right.
So the next, um, like severalmessages, is from Dawn, and
again you guys.
Dawn is the leader, founder ofthe paranormal group, the ghost
(03:18):
whisperers.
Um, you guys can find her andthe group on TikTok, on Facebook
, I believe.
She's on YouTube.
I know that they have a podcastnow too, the Ghost Whispers,
but Dawn's awesome to talk toyou.
I mean, this woman is likeeverywhere and anywhere she
actually.
I was just messaging with herthe other night and I think her
(03:40):
whole 2025 is pretty much bookedfor paranormal expeditions
already.
All right.
So she says JFK, which we allbelieve in, 9-11, just like Eric
said, the political shit,basically, a lot of alien, you
(04:01):
know, conspiracies.
She believes in the moonlanding, which a lot of us think
it was not real.
The COVID-19, again.
She says I'm a huge, hugeconspiracy theorist person, lol.
And she says I have been formany years now.
The Illuminati inside music andactors, which is 1000% true.
(04:23):
And Carissa, another co-host onhere.
She always talks about this andshe thinks the government is a
whole setup too.
I said these are amazing and Iagree with all of them.
So, without going into detail,I mean it seems to be, like
everyone says, around the sametype of conspiracy theories,
right, all right, and speakingof Carissa, okay, so you know
(04:48):
what a shocker.
She says hmm for sure, 9-11 wasan inside job.
Also, jfk was an inside job too.
Same thing, she also believesin the actual Mandela effect.
So, without having to go intodetails about each Mandela
effect, I believe what she'ssaying is that she truly
believes that the Mandela effectis real.
(05:10):
Because when you know, whetheryou look up research or you talk
to other people or you see iton, you know, on the internet, a
lot of people refer to Mandelaeffect as just being a false
memory.
And if you're like her andyou're like me, we all know that
there's fucking Mandela effectsand that the actual Mandela
effect itself is real.
Okay, she also says oh, andpigeons are not real.
(05:34):
And she has a laughy emoji face.
You know everyone they havepeople have pointed it out that
you never see a baby pigeon,right, it's kind of strange, all
right, and um, someone that, um, our boss hired Jamie.
(05:55):
Super cool girl.
We are so fucking lucky andfortunate to have her come on
full time because God did, weneed help at our barbershop.
So, anyways, I asked Jamie whatis a conspiracy theory you
believe to be true?
She goes I mean, not toooutlandish ones, I guess.
(06:15):
Really, probably the basicsExtraterrestrials, illuminati,
the moon landing did not happen.
And she has a laughing emojiand then another emoji with,
like her hands up, like well, Isaid, okay, I'll take it and
thank you.
Um, she says okie, dokie,you're welcome.
(06:36):
I'm a very avid believer inaliens and that they have helped
create most of the scientificand technological advances
throughout history, which Ithink is awesome that she
pointed that out.
So that was cool and I've.
You know, jamie hasn't beenwith us very long, but I've
really gotten to know her.
She's actually, she'sdefinitely like a hippie dippy,
(06:58):
firm believer in paranormal.
Her family is actuallyoriginated from the Appalachian
mountains, so of course I waslike all over that right, okay,
and the one and only Kiki,another um podcast host that we
(07:19):
have on here, AKA Chris 10 T E N.
She's funny.
I said what is one or manyconspiracy theories you believe
to be true?
The first thing she says is thegovernment with the emoji
laughy face, and then she saysthe Mandela effect and I said
well, that's two for Mandela.
Carissa said the same thingearlier.
She goes.
I could keep going, lol.
I said keep going if you'd liketaking a poll for an episode.
(07:43):
But I think, like I said, thereseems to be a lot of
similarities going on here withthe conspiracy theories.
All right, so we got a lot ofthe similar conspiracy theories
out of the way, so I want totalk about some different ones.
(08:04):
So the dead internet theory?
The dead internet theory is abelief that the vast majority of
the internet traffic, posts andusers have been replaced by
bots and AI-generated contentand that people no longer shape
the direction of the internet.
The theory was floating aroundin the late 2010s, but it was
solidified and amplified in 2021, after a lengthy post
(08:28):
describing the theory was postedon a thread titled Dead
Internet Theory.
Most of the Internet is fakeand you know, I do believe in
this to an extent, and I willtell you why.
And that is because anytime,like years ago on Facebook, when
(08:48):
those trends would happen andyou know, you had to take your
picture on there or like, add apicture, and it would be like AI
generated or oh, this is whatyou'll look like in 30 years,
paul.
My husband would always say,the more that you do, that that
gives them like that's the bait,that's the algorithm, that's
the AI.
They're using your informationto build even more of an
(09:11):
internet.
So from there, I think it'sjust vastly like boom grown, you
know.
But I will say that thecelebrities, um, they definitely
have all bots and it's likethey buy their bots right.
And first of all, thecelebrities they don't even
fucking, you know, they don'teven whether they have access to
(09:35):
their own social medias or not.
They do not run their socialmedias, but a lot of their
comments, even from othercelebrities, it's all bot AI,
like it's not even fucking real.
I know that for a fact.
I mean that would be a long,long podcast episode to get into
that.
All right, now this one'sinteresting.
This is the burnt toast theory.
(09:56):
So the burnt toast theory is ametaphorical concept suggesting
that small, seemingly negativeevents life, like burning your
toast in the morning, mightactually be protecting you from
something worse or setting youup for a positive outcome,
essentially encouraging aperspective of optimism, even
(10:18):
when facing minor inconveniences.
It I'm sorry, it implies thateven small setbacks can lead to
unexpected opportunities orprevent bigger problems from
occurring.
So I do like this one and youknow they say that like when
you're about to walk out thedoor and you forgot something
(10:38):
that you have to have orsomething makes you go back into
the house and you know thatyou're going to be five minutes
late.
That could have been anaccident that you missed.
That could have been anythingbad that could have happened.
So I I do.
I mean not to say everythinghappens for a reason.
That's so cliche, but I dobelieve that most things happen
(10:58):
for a reason.
Yes, okay, so this one.
I mean oh God, we could be onhere for like hours.
So the dreams have meanings.
Theory, 1,000 million, whatever, whole entire universe.
I will bet on this that thisholds to be true.
I am one of those people.
I know a lot of people like meand they always the dreams come
(11:23):
into fruition somehow.
I do believe in this with mywhole entire soul.
So dreams can help us, you know, process emotions, practice for
challenges and express ourunconscious desires, which is
like the scientific side of it,right?
Um, there is no.
There's really, like.
(11:46):
I mean, you can go into likesleep studies, you know, you can
see psychologists,psychiatrists, um, talk to your
doctor, talk to hallucinogenicdoctors and stuff.
But there are theories, there'scertain proof, but there's not
like all the way around proof,right?
So we're not going to get intolike details on this.
It's really just do you believethat dreams have meanings?
(12:07):
I do.
I'm sure a lot of you out theredo.
I know, at least off the top ofmy head, 50 people that would
agree.
But yes, I am definitely a firmbeliever of that.
All right, and the next one isthe invisible string theory,
which I find very interesting.
The invisible string theory isa belief that people are
(12:30):
destined to meet and areconnected by an invisible string
.
It's based on a fate,spirituality and destiny.
How does it work?
This theory suggests thatpeople are often hidden from
each other, but will meet whenthe universe deems it's right.
It's possible to haveencountered a soulmate without
realizing it.
The theory suggests that loveknows no bounds and transcends
(12:53):
time and space.
I thought it was really cooland it's basically like an idea
that we are tied to certainpeople and we're destined to
have them in our lives at somepoint.
I like it.
I think it's fun.
I definitely could see thatholding some truth right.
(13:17):
All right.
So this person says quantumimmortality.
When we die, another dimensionopens up to where we survive
that event and we go on with oureveryday lives.
This can explain deja vu andrandomly forgetting what you
were doing, which is reallycreepy In a way.
(13:39):
I have watched a lot of videoson that and it does kind of like
freak me out because it's likehaving another, like have like a
split soul right, and like yourother part of your soul is like
in another dimension, time andspace.
All right, so you always meetsomeone twice, which that's
self-explanatory.
We've heard this for years now.
Um, I believe you meet the sameperson over and over and over
(14:06):
and over, for negative thingsI'll talk about.
The negative aspect is theuniverse is slapping you in the
fucking face and being like hey,you need to learn your lesson,
right.
And then I believe that, um,you're also meeting people.
You're meeting, like you know,random, you know, or I'm sorry,
(14:27):
not random multiple peoplemultiple times for comfort.
I think we've all lived a lotof lives.
I think we've known each other,sometimes in past lives, and
sometimes we've known each otherin future life and we don't
even know.
I do believe in likereincarnation and all that.
I think that's one of them onhere.
But yeah, there's a lot ofangles.
(14:50):
You can go with that right, allright.
So the broken bone theory, allright.
It is believed that if yoursoul is already carrying a heavy
emotional burden, the universesteps it into shield from your
extra suffering, like brokenbones.
This protection helps toprevent overwhelming you with
(15:14):
more physical pain when you'realready dealing with so much
emotionally, which I find thisis a very interesting topic.
I just seen this a couplemonths ago.
So what is the spiritual theoryabout broken bones?
The theory suggests that peoplewho have never had any serious
accidents or a broken bone arewell protected in the spiritual
(15:36):
world.
They are believed to have amantle of invisibility against
evil.
So I am one of those people.
Hold on, I got to knock on woodagainst evil.
So I am one of those people.
Hold on, I got a knock on wood.
I have never my dogs are goingto start barking.
I have never broke a bone.
Um, I, I have fractured.
No, not fracture, I'm sorry,I've sprained my fingers.
Um, I've broke toes before.
(15:56):
Um, yeah, so I think that wasthat.
That's an interesting one.
And then like reincarnation, um,a lot of people believe in.
There are so many differenttheories on reincarnation and
animals and humans and lives.
Sometimes they say, like, forpeople who have either a never
(16:18):
wanted a child or children, orjust have never had children,
it's supposedly you're on yourlast life.
You're like not going toreincarnate again.
Your soul has learnedeverything it's supposed to
learn, it's taken in all thewisdom, but then it's kind of
like well then what happens toyour soul if it's not
reincarnated?
I don't know.
I mean, like I said, there's alot of angles to go on that too,
(16:43):
okay, and I had never heardthis one until recently.
And this is the egg theory, allright.
So the egg theory it saysthere's multiple matches, but
this is including a short storyby Andy Weir.
I think he explores the purposeof human life.
(17:07):
In this story, the universe wascreated as an egg for the main
character, who will eventuallybecome a god.
He was inspired to write thestory after an argument with his
aunt.
So the egg hypothesis is ametabolic hypothesis that
suggests that the energeticconstraints of the mother and
(17:29):
fetus determine fetal growth andgestation length.
All right, so then the cosmicegg.
The cosmic egg is acosmological analogy that
compares the earth and the skyto an egg.
In this analogy, the sky is theouter shell of the egg and the
earth is the inner yolk.
(17:49):
This analogy is found in oh Idon't know how the hell to say
this Zoroastrian texts.
I think, all right then.
The whole egg theory.
The whole egg theory is theidea that food should be whole
and intact.
Like a whole egg.
An egg is considered a perfectfood because it is a rich source
(18:11):
of a balance and completenutrition.
Cracking open the egg theory,the egg theory creates a
concrete tie between every humanlife.
It emphasizes everything abouthumanity.
Let me open this up more.
There is just so much aboutthis theory.
(18:32):
Okay, so there's.
So this is saying there's manyversions.
It's like our differentexperience that make life more
importantly, like the unknownsin life, daunting to imagine an
approach.
What if one day, the stressabout fearing the unknown goes
(18:54):
away?
Would it make you feel betteror worse, if I told you that
your only real purpose in lifeis to exist, to internalize
every emotion and experience,that the time allotted for you.
The egg theory, initially coinedby Andy Weir, again attempts to
give insight into the purposeof human life.
In his version of the eggtheory, every human to ever
(19:19):
exist is simply a reincarnationof you.
This world as we know it ismade for you and only you.
Your soul contains every memory, every lesson and experience
from your past life, even if youcannot recall them.
The human mind, in all of itsglory, is too small to truly
encompass the entirety of whoyou are.
(19:42):
This idea is hard to comprehend, I know, but hopefully, after
this article, you will begin tointernalize what exactly this
theory suggests.
Every time that you talk toanother person, you are actually
speaking to another version ofyou.
Every time you help someone out, you are helping another
version of you.
Every time that you exploit orvictimize someone else, you are
(20:06):
bringing yourself pain.
So basically, like everyone isa God, I guess, little
narcissistic.
So this is by Hopelessly Yellow.
This is an article that waswritten on January 17th 2022.
(20:26):
Again, I never heard of thistheory until like a few weeks
ago, and it basically just sayslike this world as we know, it
is made just for you and onlyyou.
So that's kind of I don't know,that kind of makes me feel
lonely if I think of it that way, like you're basically telling
me that everyone around me isjust another version of me,
(20:49):
that's kind of I don't know,that kind of makes me feel
lonely if I think of it that way, like you're basically telling
me that everyone around me isjust another version of me.
Like that's that's boring,right, yeah?
So I don't know, take what youwill from that.
Like I said, I just learnedabout that theory a couple of
weeks ago.
Okay, this one, the butterflytheory.
It's always going to bring meback to the movie the Butterfly
Effect.
I remember seeing that movie asa teenager and you know,
(21:13):
granted, I used to get reallyfucking stoned right back in the
day, and sometimes, when Iwould get too stoned and I would
watch these movies, it's like Iwould just be in my head for
like a long time after and Iremember almost feeling like
depressed, being like holy shit,like what if we could really
change events in our life?
Like what if that was true?
Of course it's, you know not,but they say that you know.
(21:37):
The butterfly theory doesreally exist, so let's get into
it.
By the way, if you've neverseen the Butterfly Effect, you
have to watch it.
It's such a good movie.
All right, the Butterfly Effectis a theory in chaos that
describes how small changes canlead to big consequences.
The term is often used todescribe how small actions or
(21:59):
decisions can have big effects,and that's basically what that
movie is about, and it's AshtonKutcher back in his prime.
Oh my God.
I'll have to look up when thatmovie was made.
I know it was in the early2000s, all right, so the history
of this belief was originallyexplained by mathematician and
(22:21):
meteorologist Edward NortonLorenz.
In the 1960s, lorenz discoveredthe effect while testing a
computer model designed tosimulate weather patterns.
He found that small changes tothe starting point of his model
could lead to very differentoutcomes, such as sunny skies or
(22:41):
violent storms.
So here are some real worldexamples.
The butterfly effect can beseen in many aspects of life,
including business, theenvironment and personal
interactions.
So yeah, I mean yeah, I guess insmall versions it does exist,
(23:05):
but in the movie, no, like youcan't do the butterfly effect
like that, which would be reallycool, but would also be very
scary, because even if youchanged one thing, the outcome
of the other you know, followingevents could be catastrophic.
I was right.
This movie was made in 2004.
(23:25):
You're welcome, that was likeforever ago.
But yeah, great movie, greattheory to talk about a good
dinner conversation.
Conspiracy theories are alwaysfun, right, as long as no one's
getting too pissy and you're notthrowing hands over it.
But I love talking aboutconspiracy theories.
Honestly, I think it's just somuch.
(23:46):
All right, this theory may be alittle touchy for some people,
but I really like it.
It's definitely makes you thinkright outside the box.
So it's the theory that pain isan illusion.
All right, excuse me, you guys,you know it's still Michigan
kind of winter weather, althoughtoday it's going to be 60
(24:07):
degrees.
That's why we are all congested, we are coughing.
I'm drinking tea right now withhoney in it.
I'm trying to clear our throatsand get ready for summer, while
spring We'll see if we have aspring, okay.
So pain is an illusion.
So it's figuratively used, butit's not entirely accurate.
Pain is a real sensation.
(24:28):
We all know this.
But the perception andintensity of pain can be
influenced by the brain makingit seem like an illusion in some
situations and constructs theexperience of pain based on
various factors, not just thephysical damage itself, which
(24:55):
can lead to variations of how weperceive pain.
So, yeah, again, there are somany angles with this.
You know, this would be areally good episode to revisit
and have a bunch of callers callin some you know, guest
speakers to really heareverybody's angles.
But again, we would have to doat least 10 episodes right,
(25:18):
because with these topicsthere's just so many variables,
so many ways these can go right.
But I'm just kind of trying tokeep it simple and make you guys
think.
All right, so this theory is sointeresting in itself and this
is the doppelganger theory.
Now, tom, I know you're goingto be listening to this episode,
tom from Melvindale Hello,uncle Tom, aka.
(25:41):
He is the one who told me hetaught me this a few years ago
that supposedly if you see yourdoppelganger like physically see
them that you die shortly after.
So I hope none of us have tosee that Anyway.
So the doppelganger theory isthe idea that everyone has a
perfect duplicate or adoppelganger somewhere in the
(26:02):
world.
The concept has been a part ofpopular culture for thousands of
years.
So Otto Rank studied thedoppelganger in the early 20th
century, exploring its potentialin oh Jesus, psychoanalysis, I
think Sigmund Freud.
(26:25):
He considered the doppelgangerto be rooted in childhood
narcissism.
Fried believed that thedoppelganger could be a
manifestation of repressedthoughts.
Wow, that's wow.
After that sets in, you're kindof like, well, that's pretty
creepy, huh.
(26:46):
Psychological impactEncountering a doppelganger can
challenge our sense of identityand uniqueness.
It can trigger primal instinctsto detect threats.
It can lead us to question ourrole in the world and the nature
of reality.
All right, so there's othertheories about this.
(27:06):
The doppelganger is a figure ofa visual compulsion.
The doppelganger challengesreceived ideas of identity
through a double bind betweencognitive and carnal knowledge.
The doppelganger represents,but also appropriates and
(27:27):
diverts, subjective desire.
Hmm, um, a doppelganger isoften portrayed as a ghostly or
paranormal phenomenon andusually seen as a harbinger of
bad luck.
I'm just going to go over thisreally quick because Tom and I
were just talking about this.
I know you guys have heard alot about Pioneer Cemetery, the
(27:51):
things that we've encounteredthere.
Just to refresh, tom and hisbrother walked outside of the
cemetery One night.
We were all there.
There was a group of us.
Excuse me.
I did not see Tom walk outphysically.
I think Scott or him or one ofthem, both of them, I don't know
.
One of them was feeling sickand you know, the rule is you
(28:14):
walk someone out.
Okay, I see Tom, fast pacedwalking towards the back of the
cemetery.
I mean, I think I see Tom, so Istart following behind and I
said like hey Tom, who are you?
Or I don't know, what'd youfind or something, and he didn't
respond.
So I'm like that's weird andI'm like hey Tom, he doesn't
(28:37):
respond.
This physically like for realhappened.
And all of a sudden he startswalking real fast, like not
jogging but very fast pacedwalking.
And that's not like Tom.
I'm following, following,following him.
It's getting darker because onthat side, like right after the
middle, to the right of thecemetery, is like really
(28:58):
overgrown and it gets kind ofdark before it gets light again.
And I'm just like what the hell, tom, why are you not like
answering me?
And all of a sudden I finallyhear behind me Mel, mel and I
turn around and I start walkingback the other way and I fucking
see Tom and Scott standingoutside of the gate and he's
(29:22):
like Mel we're, he's like Idon't know if you heard us, but
we're, we walked out for aminute, dude, I never ran so
fucking fast.
I was like, oh my God.
So I told Tom, I said Tom, Iseen you, I literally just seen
you, and he's like that was notme.
So I guess it's good that Iseen him and he didn't see
himself.
Um, but there was definitelysomething dark.
(29:44):
Uh, I don't know if it, I'm notgoing to say it was evil or
demonic, but something got myattention.
But right here, like I said, itsays it's portrayed as a
ghostly or paranormal phenomenon.
So, yeah, I don't know whatmakes you think, and this one I
don't think ever it doesn't gettalked about enough.
But the multiverse theory, um,the multiverse theory is the
(30:06):
idea that there are manyuniverses beyond our own
observable universe.
The multiverse is a conceptthat has been discussed in
philosophy, physics andcosmology.
The multiverse includes aninfinite number of universes,
each with their own laws ofphysics.
Universe includes an infinitenumber of universes, each with
(30:28):
their own laws of physics.
These universes may beseparated by vast distances and
may contain their own stars,galaxies and intelligent
civilizations.
Some theories suggest that ouruniverse is one of many bubble
universes that are constantlybeing created.
So just to add my own littlepunch in again, when I used to
get super, super high when I wasyounger, I used to have this
(30:51):
theory.
I used to call it the mirrortheory.
I used to always tell my olderbrother I used to be like, hey,
what if, when we like, if wewere to look in a mirror and see
ourselves, we're actually likewe're looking at another, being
the same version as us inanother planet, which now being
(31:15):
older and like doing a lot ofresearch and you know,
paranormal investigations andjust I have like all these
fucking books that I constantlyread.
I'm always looking up andreading into everything and that
whole you know, um, we, wemight not be talking to quote
unquote ghost.
It could be another, likeanother one of us, or somebody
(31:38):
totally different, justdifferent time and different
time zone and or in a differentspace, a different dimension.
So I've always kind of been onthat track of thinking that way.
My brother and I both alwayssaid that we were aliens.
We're definitely both the blacksheep of the family.
We've always had these wildtheories, right.
(32:03):
So the whole multiverse,absolutely.
Why do you think they come outwith all these fucking movies
like the Marvel movies, themultiverses and shit.
Like someone out there, likesome crazy bald headed scientist
with hair that looks like ababy chicken and has these thick
glasses on right, like typicalcrazy scientist.
Look like he or she havealready known, like they have
(32:27):
found something right, they know.
Like there isn't just ourplanet, there isn't just our
universe, there's so much more.
Um, how we get to see it, Idon't know.
Is it an afterlife that you getto see it?
Do we leave this life and live,you know, and go on to a
different life and get to go seeall these multiverses?
I have no idea.
Do we go up with the aliens?
(32:48):
Do we go down in the ocean withthe aliens?
Do we just roam planets?
I don't know.
Obviously we don't have theanswers.
But this is why we constantlyare investigating, why we're
constantly researching, areinvestigating, why we're
constantly, you know,researching.
(33:08):
So is there evidence for amultiverse?
There is no statisticallysignificant evidence that the
multiverse exists.
Some physicists sorry, that's ahard word to say argue that the
multiverse is a philosophicalidea rather than a scientific
hypothesis.
The multiverse is consideredspeculative and untestable, so
(33:31):
it's not often discussed bycosmologists.
So the history of themultiverse, how it came about,
was coined by Americanphilosopher William James in
1895.
The idea of the multiverse hasevolved over time and has been
debated in many fields.
The idea of inflation in theearly universe gave rise to the
(33:52):
multiverse.
So it's, it's up there with,like the big bang theory.
Um, I mean, I believe.
I mean, like I said, I believein everything.
Um, I don't think, I thinkthere's truth to everything.
Now, I'm not saying like allthe details, but there's, like
(34:13):
every story that you hear outthere, there was some truth
somewhere about that, right,okay, so I'm going to save a lot
of details for the next episode.
But the sirens, you know, inGreek mythology, sirens were
dangerous Half bird, half womancreatures who lured sailors to
their doom with theirirresistible singing and
(34:36):
mermaids.
I don't know if there's.
I mean, well, I can't say thatbecause the next episode.
Let me just say this I dobelieve that there's truth
behind sirens, mermaids,whatever, um, and I think only
the elites know about it.
Um, this is why, again, theydon't want us or they don't
(35:00):
publicly explore the ocean.
Um, I do believe that they arein the Great Lakes too, but I
believe that they're highlyprotected and hidden from the
vast amount of world right.
So they were known forenchanting songs that lured
sailors to their deaths bycrashing their ships on rocky
(35:21):
shores.
So the origin?
According to some accounts, theSirens were daughters of the
river god Achelous and a muse,while others say that they were
companions of Persephone, withDemeter giving the wings to
search for her after abductionby Hades, for her after
(35:50):
abduction by Hades.
You know I love Greek mythology.
So, like I said, I thinkthere's truth to everything.
Okay, I think that the truthsget very diluted and diluted
each person's mouth, but there'sdefinitely truth to it, right?
Because why would their storystill be around?
I do apologize.
When I was talking about themythological stuff, it's
(36:11):
pronounced Persephone.
I always thought it wasPersephone, but it's Persephone.
I just wanted to clear the airon that.
So don't come for me, becauseyou know I get, you know,
researching and reading.
I get so excited to talk aboutthis stuff and you guys who have
been listening for quite sometime now, you know me and
pronouncing words don't alwayswork and I apologize.
(36:34):
Okay, aliens in the ocean.
Oh my god, I wish I hadunlimited time to just go on and
on.
I will have to definitelyrevisit this episode.
You guys have to email me, getahold of me, who's listening?
Because I want to hear all thedifferent angles and variables
on what you guys think.
But the aliens in the ocean, Ihave been fucking saying for
(36:57):
years why are we always up infucking space and we're not down
in the ocean observing enough?
Why, because it's scary.
There's a whole undergroundworld down there.
Let me tell you, given if I hadunlimited money and I had a
little cool spaceship submarineto go down and I was guaranteed
(37:19):
to live, yeah for sure I wouldnot want to fucking die down
that ocean.
The ocean is scary.
For sure I would not want tofucking die down that ocean.
The ocean is scary, and Iunderstand.
That's why I understand.
That's why people are scared.
The people that can explore andget all the way down there and
(37:39):
have the means to do it, theyfucking won't because they know
to do it.
They fucking won't because theyknow.
They just know too much.
Let's say that.
But I have been saying this foryears.
I will literally argue with my,my own, my man about it.
He's like well, you know, andI'm like Paul, you're full of
shit.
Okay, I know you love space,like I do and he's all into
(37:59):
SpaceX and all this shit, butI'm like you cannot fucking tell
me, you cannot even cause.
I get heated about this.
And he's like, why are yougetting upset?
I'm like because, like, we needto be down in the ocean.
And he's like, well, it's not,you know it's.
We can't do it because you know, blah, blah, blah, this can
happen and that can happen, andwe don't have the equipment for
(38:20):
it.
I'm like bullshit, we have thefucking equipment for it.
Equipment for it.
I'm like bullshit, we have thefucking equipment for it.
We do, or they can make it.
They don't want to and theydon't want the public to know
what's going on down there.
I mean, this is oh, I couldjust talk circles about this,
but there is definitely aliensdown in that ocean and sometimes
I think that they're down belowthe ocean and they're not even
(38:42):
up in space.
I mean, you guys have seen someof the fish that they're not
even up in space.
I mean you guys have seen someof the fish that they have found
down there, right, the species,how scary they are, and a lot
of them look like fucking aliens.
You can't tell me those fisharen't aliens.
Okay, now let's talk about how,um, people have always asked is
(39:05):
the Stranger Things um show anactual documentary?
And there's people that say,yes, um, stargate, kid here.
Sadly, it's not fun finding out.
Your mom sold you to thegovernment and your family has
known about it my whole life.
I know exactly what happenedand why it was done to me.
This person person says theStargate project.
(39:25):
This is what the show is about.
So you know, you can really digand get yourself in a rabbit
hole about this.
And you know I never finishedStranger Things.
I think I only got into thesecond episode season.
But I mean I would like, Iwould like to finish it one day.
(39:49):
I don't know if it was like mycup of tea, the show.
I thought it was cool andexciting at first and then I
kind of was like uh, um, butyeah, I mean people have
researched it and said that,that, that the actual show is a
documentary and that that's atheory that's going around too.
Then that's a theory that'sgoing around too, all right.
(40:12):
So the whole cloning thingright, I think anybody with
money can be cloned for variousreasons, right, but in Hollywood
, I truly believe this is what'shappening Now.
I'm not saying I'm not sayingexactly that they're like making
a whole nother person of thisperson like a, like a bot of
(40:39):
this person.
I'm saying I think that there'slike versions and like
different bots, different AIbots for these people, for
certain events.
So I follow this chick, alex, onTikTok.
She's fucking amazing, amazing.
She has like 20, hold on, letme tell you she has 1.1 million
followers and 23.7 million likes, which I'm sure about a million
(40:59):
are from me.
I'm just kidding, no, notreally.
Um, but I know she always willsay no, I'm lying, this is all
allegedly.
But she has to say that onTikTok, obviously, but on here,
when you guys hear that, youknow what she means when she
says that.
(41:19):
But I'm going to play a coupleof videos of hers because she
like really goes into depth.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
You guys have been
asking me how this works.
They get these parents who aredesperate for fame to get their
the parents to sell their kidsoff.
Speaker 4 (41:52):
Okay, that's why all
of these people in hollywood
usually started off when theywere infants.
They get sold off into theindustry and then they sell
their soul.
They sign these contracts once.
They sign these contracts.
Now they're getting all thefame, no fortune, because
everybody's milking them dry,but the parents are obsessed
with the fact that they're allover the place and they're
bringing in.
(42:13):
They're bringing in money forthe parents, right.
Then the people in the industryuse these people to use their
energy, their body, their fluids, and this is all allegedly
tiktok.
This is for entertainmentpurposes.
Actually, none of this is true.
This is all a TikTok.
This is for entertainmentpurposes.
Actually, none of this is trueand this is all a lie.
Okay, I'm lying abouteverything.
But let's say, hypothetically,this was real.
This would be the path thatthey would take, okay.
(42:34):
So then they which I believeher and Justin had a baby and
got pregnant had to give it upto the industry.
Another sacrifice, okay, theystart just doing all these
things with all these people,especially the women.
They just pass them arounduntil the real version of them
(42:55):
has been so destroyed thatthey're gone.
They have technology to be ableto duplicate these people, and
so they do, and that's why in afew days they'll be looking
completely different, becausethere's so many versions of them
, so many versions of them.
And then they just come out andwhy do you think she's with
that ogre?
That's her handler?
Okay, these, the real versionof these people, have been long
gone.
But then they just use theduplicate and they just transfer
consciousness and then theylike play different roles and
(43:15):
they can switch it because theycan transfer their consciousness
.
And I know this may sound crazyto people if you don't
understand what's going on, butlike, I'm trying to explain it
as much as best as I can.
Pretty much everybody inhollywood has sold their soul
not everybody, everybody, butmost people and they aren't
really there anymore.
Okay, they have beentraumatized and MKUltra'd and
(43:37):
brainwashed and had their memoryerased.
Like Ariana said, there's justso much that they do to them so
that they can have full controlof them, and then they just like
, make a ton of them and thenthey just use them for the
assets and the money and theresources, until the real one is
just not there anymore and it'sjust this.
And sometimes you'll see thereal version of them coming out,
because they're speaking outlike the Ariana one, and that's
(43:57):
because they're tired of beingin there.
They're trapped.
Their soul is trapped.
It's like, man, let me row.
Their soul is trapped.
Britney Spears' soul wastrapped.
So this is why sometimes yousee them acting out because
they're trying to break free,but then Hollywood keeps sucking
them back in because they'restill under those contracts.
Oh, and did you know that thatogre that she is dating also
(44:18):
sold his kid off?
Yeah, he was posting himunclothed on this very app, on
TikTok.
Did you even know he had a kid?
I bet you didn't.
I bet you didn't.
So my theory is correct.
Speaker 3 (44:30):
Your theory is that
I'm not me.
There is a Okay.
Speaker 4 (44:37):
I'm actually so happy
you brought this up because I
already had planned to make thisvideo, so I'm ready to go.
So what do I think happened toAvril?
Is she cloned or is it a body?
Double.
Okay, this one's interestingbecause Avril Lavigne was one of
the very first cloningconspiracy theories.
And people will ask why wouldthey clone Avril Lavigne?
Of all people, avril, who isshe to clone?
(44:58):
Well, wouldn't that be thesmartest thing to do is clone
someone who's like famous, butit's not like that, that
important.
So why would they clone her?
What would be the pointimportant?
So why would they clone her?
What would be the point?
Wouldn't it be easy to writethat off?
Also, avril is from Canada andthe cloning centers are in
Canada.
Do I think Avril is a clone or abody double?
That's a hard one.
(45:19):
I want to say that she's cloned, but I honestly think she might
be just a body double.
Avril Lavigne went on call herand she talked about how she
used to have curly hair and thatshe had to straighten her hair
all the time.
Child photos of Avril Lavigneshow her always having straight
hair.
You're what?
(45:41):
33 now, 30-something?
21 forever, 21 forever.
Paris.
Huh, I'm sorry.
Is this, this, is this?
Is Paris, this Paris?
So you're telling me that thisParis is?
Is this Paris?
Do you think I'm blind?
So it makes me wonder how isParis staying so young and 21
(46:04):
forever?
It's giving the substance.
If you guys haven't seen itwith Demi Moore, you should
watch it.
I did make a video on it,although that also didn't look
like demi.
More.
None of them are looking likethemselves.
It's giving they've beenduplicated, replicated.
They're shape-shifting aliens.
I don't know, but I mean thesecelebrities what they looked
(46:26):
like originally.
It's not giving what they looklike now.
That's Jessica Simpson thatlooks like some type of entity
has taken over an empty vessel'sbody with a replica of Jessica
Simpson's face.
Okay, I've made a few videostalking about people in
(46:47):
hollywood who have beenreplicated, and let's talk about
shania twain, because I got somany comments about her.
Yes, uh, what's going on?
What's going on here?
She's looking like a who, she'slooking like she belongs on a
snowflake and she's looking forthe grinch.
2023-2024, still looking verydifferent.
This is the original Shania at31 years old in 1996.
(47:12):
So I don't know what she did toher face.
Look at her Beautiful, gorgeous.
I don't know why she would everruin that.
Another beautiful, gorgeous,young photo of her.
Do we believe that that is thesame person?
Do we believe that?
I mean, even just here, thisdoesn't look like the same
person.
(47:32):
Guys, let's go ahead and talkabout Miley Cyrus and how I
believe that she's been held atthe Chateau Marmont and that she
has been cloned.
Now, if you didn't know, I didhave a celebrity page where I
would post all of these theoriesand my second account.
That's been taken down.
Thankfully, I did get this oneback, but I'm still manifesting
this one back On this page.
I would talk about a lot aboutMiley Cyrus, britney Spears,
(47:55):
paris Hilton and how I believethat they're all AI or cloned.
Tiktok did not like that,banned my page without warning,
saying I had too many violations, which I did not.
Whatever, I guess I was too onpoint.
That's what happens when you'realways telling the truth.
Now, if you look at MileyCyrus's Instagram, it's looking
just like a big fucking ad, likethere is no personality anymore
(48:18):
.
It's just Dolce and Gabbana,gucci, and she's literally just
being held at the Chateau.
Now I do believe I have a videoon here about that, but pretty
much Miley Cyrus has been livingat the Chateau Marmont since
like November, I want to say oflast year, maybe even before
that, I don't know if y'allmissed it.
I had made a video back ingoing into New Year's of 2023
(48:40):
when she hosted her show and shehad Dolly Parton and Paris
Hilton on there and how Ibelieve that they are all
plumped.
Now I want to talk about herspeech when she won that disney
award.
Let's okay, you guys know thatI have a whole entire theory on
the fact that paris's videos areall ais and that she's a clone,
and I don't think she's reallyreal.
I just feel like this is moreevidence.
Okay, first of all, like, let'sjust watch this little clip
(49:01):
real quick.
But why are they doing thistogether and how is Paris doing
this when she's literallyeverywhere at once and their
(49:23):
voices don't match up?
The video looks completely.
It just don't look like thiswas ever really real.
Okay, and listen to this.
Speaker 5 (49:29):
I got this message
from one of my followers over on
instagram.
Speaker 4 (49:32):
My sister works at
the walmart warehouse and has
for years.
They sent them to arkansas fora week to a convention.
Tell me why they have all thesecelebrities going there to
visit while they're there.
And paris hilton allegedlyshowed up.
But look at her.
I mean, you guys, she looks,she looks like I'm a Barbie girl
.
Oh, wait, wait, wait.
Look at her hands.
Look at her hands.
(49:52):
Look at her hands.
Tell me that's not the Barbiestance.
Tell me that's not the Barbiehook.
It's given Barbie.
It's given, not real.
And then this is the picturethat her cousin took, like she's
looking like a damn hologram,not looking real.
But if you look on Paris's page, it's completely different.
Now this is the picture Parishas got crystal clear.
(50:14):
Can we please talk about lastnight's Oscars and how nobody
looked like themselves.
Everybody literally looked fake.
This is supposedly Demi Lovato.
I'm sorry, but she's looking alittle bit like a wax figure.
Who is this?
Everyone was looking like theystepped fresh out of the clone
machine, like not even anyemotion behind the eyes.
Who is this?
Everyone was looking like theystepped fresh out of the clone
machine, like not even anyemotion behind the eyes.
(50:36):
What is going on?
Everyone looked so fuckingperfect, but none of them looked
real.
I could not deal with the poses.
Like Kylie Jenner looked likeshe was going to break her back.
You have Joey over here liketrying to stick out her
collarbones.
So much to be like look, look,how skinny I am.
I don't know what the fuckMargot Robbie was wearing.
Everybody looked so weird.
It was like everyone was tooperfect.
I could not deal with thisdress.
(50:57):
Like what is this?
And literally you can see hernipple, like it is attached to
her nipple right.
Like what the fuck?
I don't know, it was just givenclones.
These two also looked weird asfuck.
Don't even get me started onthis whole John Cena scene.
Like what is going on?
I'm telling you guys the worldended in 2020 and we're in an
(51:18):
alternate dimension or universe,because this is just weird.
Speaker 1 (51:20):
Okay.
So to sum up the whole clonetheory, do I think that you just
have to be in Hollywood to becloned?
No, but, if you have a lot ofmoney, for sure.
But I definitely believe inHollywood, once you get that
contract and you're selling yoursoul, you will be cloned at
some point, especially if theythink that they can make enough
money off of you, right, um,yeah, it's, it's fucking creepy.
(51:46):
I mean, you like you can'tunsee it, right, and people are
like, oh, they have a lot ofmoney for plastic surgery.
No, no, no, plastic surgery,don't do that.
And you know what this, theclone thing in Hollywood, gives
me?
It gives me the ick, becauseone of my favorite movies is
Death Becomes Her.
But it's like in Hollywood it'sa mix of Death Becomes Her and
the movie the Substance withDemi Moore and they like mixed
(52:09):
it together and that's whatreally goes on in Hollywood.
All right, so another theorythat's like circling the
internet is called a lavenderrelationship theory, or often
referred to as a lavendermarriage, and this is a term
used to describe a marriage ofconvenience where one or both
partners are not sexuallyattracted to each other, but
enter into the relationship forpractical reasons such as
(52:33):
financial stability or socialacceptance, and that is what you
are really seeing, like onceyou see it, or, I'm sorry, once
you like, either see a video onthis or read up on it.
It's literally what's going onin Hollywood, like recently when
you heard Alex talking aboutSelena's fiance, calling him the
(52:55):
ogre.
She's talking about BennyBlanco, which I love, benny
Blanco.
But oh my God, I don't need to,I don't need to go into detail
for anybody who watches them orsees them, even on floating on
the internet, he is sowoman-like and you can tell that
they don't have sex, you know,which is okay.
I mean, I guess not everyrelationship has sex.
(53:16):
I mean, I think it's weird tobe, you know, straight or gay or
bi or whatever in arelationship and not have any
sexual attraction, right?
Um, but like they promoted thisnew CD, like he just produced a
CD for Selena out of nowhere,and they're all like you know,
first it was, you know they weredating, then they're engaged
(53:38):
and then they were getting.
You know all this, you knowpublicity, right, and you can
tell it's not.
It's just not real, okay, and,of course, area 51 will be the
biggest conspiracy theoryforever.
And you know?
Do they have something thatthey aren't showing us about
aliens, right?
Did a UFO really crash in NewMexico?
(54:01):
Is the Loch Ness Monster real?
I mean, these are the type.
There's so many, so manytheories out there, but I always
try to do like the most popular, the most like-minded ones, and
then kind of dig into the onesthat aren't talked about a lot.
Right, one that I think istalked about a lot on the
(54:23):
internet but not within, youknow, amongst peers, I will say,
is the GATE program and that isfor the gifted and talented
individuals and what they wentthrough and like, where they're
at today and like.
Here's just some comments.
I further remember the teacherthinking I was cheating on
assignments simply because Iwould not show my work, which
(54:46):
meant I simply didn't break downthe entire process on paper.
Fellow gifted and talented kidhere.
Do you remember the headphonesand various sounds they would
play?
I found, after going through allthese gait tests and elementary
(55:08):
, I was no longer academic.
Ours was called Quest.
I have weird memories of this,but not solid.
It's so weird.
My sister says that she recallsbeing in a gait program, but I
don't recall anything of thesort.
My mom said it's a school forthe very smart kids.
(55:29):
This person says anybodyremember the film they would
play where different plants wereblooming and growing fast to
music?
The song was Minnie RippertonShapes.
I significantly remember shapesgetting into trouble for not
(55:50):
showing my work, and alsoheadphones hearing a lot of
tests.
The question that I was askedwas can you see people's
conversations and lip readingand the cubicle where you put
your face up to, where therewere flashing lights and weird
sounds and the flash ofsubliminal pics?
(56:12):
I used to go to a room by theteacher's lounge and all I
remember is puzzles and tests.
I remember learning signlanguage, how to develop photos,
science experiments, listeningto sounds, field trips to the
opera, study tactics, speedreading courses and then
spraying peppermint saying ithelped increase your memory.
(56:35):
I was in this program, but myentire memory of it is gone,
like I have maybe one memory.
I was also in those classes.
I have no memory of it otherthan the headphones.
I have not connected the dotsuntil I was about 30.
(56:58):
I was like, oh, hold on.
All of us were from differentfriend groups too, so we never
really talked outside of thatroom.
We never really talked outsideof that room.
Why can we find so many peoplewho were in this program but
nobody that ran the program.
I was in GT classes inelementary and intermediate
(57:22):
school in Texas Vag memories, Idon't remember any of my
teachers' names from K to fourthgrade.
I remember doing a lot of testson paper and the computer.
The project was funded by theCIA through a company called
Monotok.
I can't remember anyone's namebut remember the stories and the
(57:42):
problems that they have had.
Gate program kid also Mostlyconsisted of logic, logic
problem solving and deepimagining too.
We also did model governmentand something I don't know.
I think that was a typo throughthrough the program too, but
off-site at our state capitol.
(58:06):
Um, I was in the gate programfrom fourth 4th grade until 8th
grade.
In 6th through 8th theyhybrided with Odyssey of the
Mind where we competed withother groups of kids in things
like robotics, programming andsocial studies.
I remember some quote-unquotespecial teachers would come out
(58:30):
of somewhere.
I was tested in mathematics,mental math and something called
OM, odyssey of the Mind.
Our GATE program was calledQuest.
It seemed like every year weworked on some logic puzzles
where there was a statewidecontest.
Once it once it was word based,another it was math based.
(58:54):
See.
This person said wow, you guysjust triggered my memory.
For me we never left school,but we were separated from other
kids.
Um, I was in this program inthe mid 80s.
(59:22):
There were about five or six ofus taken out of class and moved
to the library or anotherclassroom.
I I remember the kids I waswith, but nothing else.
Basically the same stuff.
This person said they wanted meand my mom said no.
(59:47):
This person said they wanted meand my mom said no.
I remember I was pulled forwriting an entire journal about
a trip to Disney World with myfamily that we never took
Apparently.
My teacher asked my mom at aconference Hmm, I feel like I
(01:00:14):
was a test subject.
I got the answers right awayand they told me that I was
wrong and I knew I was right.
But then months later theywould come back, question and
give me my original answer.
I was in tag in 1978, 1979 and1980.
I thought it was way betterthan the regular class.
(01:00:34):
The activities were in stationsand self-directed.
Wow, this is cool.
This person said I was in inthe GATE program also, and so
was my husband.
Yeah, I mean, it seems to bepretty much the same answers.
(01:01:03):
So yeah.
So the gate program um, I see alot about it.
I actually my cousin was in thegifted kids program and pretty
much like a cousin growing upwith I mean, they were like good
friends in the family, I knowshe was.
She went to a different school.
Um, very, very, veryintelligent.
(01:01:24):
I just thought that's why theywent to those schools.
But you know, reading on this,they probably were test subjects
.
Morgan Wallen.
Do you guys know who that is?
Speaker 8 (01:01:33):
Yeah, so watch this,
this is crazy.
Speaker 5 (01:01:35):
So everybody keeps on
telling me that if you take
Morgan Wallen's vocals and youpitch it up, it's supposed to
sound like Miley Cyrus.
I'm a little skeptical, but Ithought we'd figure it out
together.
All right, so that was MorganWallen, obviously.
Girl, leave your boots by thebed.
We ain't leaving this room.
All right, so that was MorganWallen, obviously.
Now let's pitch it up and seeif it sounds like Miley Cyrus,
and let me know in the commentsif you think it does.
(01:01:56):
Girl, leave your boots by thebed.
Speaker 8 (01:02:02):
We ain't leaving this
room.
That is Miley.
Is that real?
Yes, that is literally Miley.
Yeah, so is Miley.
Is that real?
Yes, that is literally Miley.
Yeah, so is Miley Morgan.
Also, I said his name wrong.
It's Wallace.
Did I say Wallace?
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Okay, and that is the
music like conspiracy theory.
Now, there's been a lot ofthose and it's really fucking
creepy.
But I mean, I guess, if youlook at it, you can even with
like AI and music and the musicprograms, I guess you can make
anyone sound like anyone.
That's literally why they havemusic AI Like you can.
You can be the shittiest singerlike me and sing into this app
(01:02:39):
and I can make me sound like anycelebrity.
Um, but there's also the musictheory that when they play
backwards it's like a differentlanguage, it's like pig Latin or
they say, like very demonicthings.
So I definitely am a huge musicconspiracy fan and there's,
(01:02:59):
like I said, there's a bunch ofdifferent angles with that too,
blonde hair has been seen as thepinnacle of beauty for
centuries, but in Hollywood orwith the elites, it has a
different meaning.
Speaker 2 (01:03:14):
Have you ever noticed
a normally dark-haired celeb
suddenly has shock-only blondehair?
It usually happens beforesacrifices take place and or
before they have a big projectcoming out, please, and or
before they have a big projectcoming out.
Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
And of course, I have
to play a Joe Rogan clip
because I love Joe Rogan.
I don't know if everyone elsedoes, but I do, but here we go.
Speaker 9 (01:03:39):
This is scary.
I'm not sure if this is true ornot, but there's a theory.
Well, it's more like areligious theory.
I saw this TikTok and he was apreacher, right, he was saying
what if God is actuallyreligious theory?
I saw this TikTok and he was apreacher, right.
Speaker 8 (01:03:53):
He was saying what if
God is actually water?
Look, watch this.
Speaker 10 (01:03:58):
What if water is God
?
And that would mean God is bothin us and all around us, and
God is both above and below us.
Speaker 9 (01:04:02):
Why a woman's water
breaks when we're born.
Crazy, right.
But wait, that's not it.
You know how we say God iseverything right.
In this sense, like everythingaround us is what Death?
(01:04:26):
Death because of lack of water,and it's very hot Like hell.
And now check this out In theBible, when Jesus said he was
tempted by the devil, where washe In the desert he was looking
for?
Speaker 11 (01:04:39):
water, how people
say life doesn't feel real ever
since 2020.
Yeah Well, look, it's becauseit isn't.
For the decades leading up to2020, there was something going
on that the general public nevercould have expected.
Certain aspects of ourtechnology weren't only just
providing services for us.
They were planning a dramaticshift of consciousness.
Google earth, for the last 25years, has been creating a
(01:05:00):
completely digitized,three-dimensional blueprint of
the entire planet, a perfectdatabase of 3d tracked images of
what our external world lookslike, while all of our devices
that were inside the home,riddled with cameras, have been
slowly building back-enddigitized replicas of what our
households look and feel like.
Silently, this siphoned visualinformation was being harnessed
(01:05:23):
to build a massive digitizedreplica of our world inside and
out, a kind of complex virtualreality that perfectly mimics
the real one.
Our digital footprints wereused to create hyper-realistic
digital avatars in this worldthat look and feel just like us.
Speaker 10 (01:05:37):
It's a conspiracy
theory that you a thousand
percent believe in.
Speaker 3 (01:05:41):
So every year,
allergy season rolls around and
more and more people arestarting to learn about
botanical sexism, which isbasically that city planners,
who are mostly male, decidedthat female trees are too messy,
and so they plantedoverwhelmingly male trees that
release pollen, but not enoughfemale trees to absorb the
(01:06:02):
pollen, so we have more pollenfloating around in the air than
ever, which leads to increasedallergies.
But what everyone somehowforgets to add is that the
reason female trees are messy isbecause they produce fruit, and
I highly believe that botanicalsexism.
Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
I think that's so
funny that I just sneezed too.
Sorry guys, that was my nosegot itchy while playing this
Very random, okay, squirrelmoment.
Speaker 3 (01:06:27):
Sorry, it's driven by
capitalism and making sure that
people who live in urban areasdon't have access to fresh
fruits and vegetables thataren't provided by corporations.
Speaker 7 (01:06:37):
Darkest.
The darkest theory is one thatLazar talked about.
They said it's something thatthey talked to him about when he
was working on these packagingcrafts.
Is that what they use us as isvessels first, that we are souls
, we hold souls, and that thisis essentially a farm, and this
(01:06:58):
is how they we do.
Speaker 6 (01:06:59):
they develop souls
through us and this is why you
should never buy glitter again.
The main glitter manufacturercompany is called glitter x and
an investigative journalist wentfrom the New York Times to do
an article about it and therewere a lot of like top secret
spots in the factory that theycouldn't go to.
There's a worldwide shortage ofglitter.
So Chris went to ask like oneof the higher ups, like what's
(01:07:21):
going on?
Why is there a shortage Likewhat's happening?
He asked for a real tour of thefactory and the guy said
absolutely not.
You cannot come on a real tour.
We don't do real tours and hesaid that you absolutely cannot
see the glitter being made.
He even said that you can't goto a room nearby and hear how
it's being made.
He said that even like thecompanies that are their main
(01:07:42):
clientele don't have access tothese rooms and are not allowed
to know exactly how the glitteris being made, but like it's
really suspicious that no one iseven allowed to hear it being
made.
Now the company that is thelargest consumer for glitter was
asked what it is and she said Ican't even tell you.
And someone asked they said ifwe looked at the product that
(01:08:04):
you use to make glitter, wouldwe know that it turns into
glitter?
And and she said no, not really.
She said they don't want anyoneto know that it is glitter.
Do you believe all of this?
Speaker 1 (01:08:17):
That's probably got
to be the weirdest fucking
conspiracy theory I've everheard is about glitter.
But if you look into it it istrue.
Like nobody knows how it's made, no one has seen it, nobody
talks about it.
When they've been asked,they're like oh no, you cannot
have a tour.
No, you can't know what's in it.
Like, is it that bad for us oris it just a mystery?
(01:08:38):
Who knows?
I just think that's.
That was like a funny one toput on here.
Okay, and last but not least,although there is so many more
to reference on here, I do wantto talk about this wellness farm
thing that's been brought up inthe last month or so.
I have a lot of conspiraciesabout this in my own mind, and
(01:08:59):
I'm sure a lot of people wouldbe like-minded the same way, but
I'm just going to play a coupleshort videos going to play a
couple short videos.
Speaker 10 (01:09:10):
What's really
happening with RFK Jr S Wellness
Farms?
First, doge got access togovernment databases, medical
records, financial data, evendiagnosis history.
They say it's for efficiency,but what are they really using
it for?
Then mass deportations clearedout farms and job sites, not
just illegals, anyone withoutthe right ID.
Now there's a labor shortageand RFK Jr he wants to fill the
(01:09:35):
gap with wellness farms.
His plan take people withmental health issues and put
them to work.
No medicine, no choice, justlabor camps disguised as rehab.
They emptied the fields.
Now they're deciding whoreplaces them.
Speaker 8 (01:09:50):
What's all this mess
about?
Rfk Jr gonna put people withdepression, anxiety, ADHD to
wellness camps, wellness farms?
I don't think so.
First off, I have ADHD and ifyou put me out on some farm and
you plan on taking me off mymedication, ain't gonna get shit
done.
Ain't gonna get shit donebecause I'm going to be busy
talking to the other people nearme.
(01:10:11):
Horrible, horrible plan.
I am so tired of people tryingto tell other people what they
need to do with their bodies.
People need these medications.
Speaker 12 (01:10:20):
Why is no talking
about how?
Wellness farm is the same exactthing as concentration camp.
That is what it is going to be,just a different word.
There's rebranding all thesethings detention centers.
They're all the same fuckingthing.
I also want to add that that iseugenics.
Taking away antipsychotics andantidepressants from people that
(01:10:43):
need that that that's eugenics.
And they're sending you towellness camps.
To what?
To try to assimilate you,indoctrinate you into this
neurotypical system so they can.
What exploit you easier, right,sending the mentally ill to a
(01:11:05):
facility.
They've done this before ringany bells.
This is another nazi ideology,another fascist ideology.
And rfk is a fucking eugenicsofficer.
He's a fucking nazi.
Why is no talking about how?
Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
well, okay, she, they
blanked it out because it's on
TikTok, but she's basicallysaying that it's going to be
like a whole Nazi situationagain.
Yeah, I do not agree withtaking these people off their
medications I mean, thegovernment's, you know who puts
them on them and you can't justlike take people off their
(01:11:42):
medication and let them runaround, right, I mean, I know
they're going to be detained,but it is very scary that this
is like a thing that would.
I mean, it's real life, right,but people are making conspiracy
theories out of it and I cansee why.
All right, you guys, I thinkthat's enough conspiracy talk
today.
(01:12:03):
Please get a hold of me.
You guys know I'm here onBuzzsprout.
I have a basic, basically atext message that I will get
right away If you go onto theactual Buzzsprout site.
We're on TikTok, we're onFacebook, we're on YouTube,
we're on Twitter X, whatever.
But yeah, let me know aboutyour favorite conspiracies or a
(01:12:25):
new one, or one that's nevertalked about, or, if you want to
go into detail, about one thatwe already talked about,
whatever it is, please let meknow or email me at ghost
sisters 2124 at gmail.
Again, that is, ghost sisters2124 at gmail.
Thank you guys for listeningand tune in for some more.