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May 18, 2025 37 mins

Why do rulers—from ancient Sumer to modern Windsor—insist their blood came from the sky? In this episode we chase that claim across 5,000 years:Impossible reign lengths on the Sumerian King ListMerovingian kings and their sea-monster origin storyThe Habsburg double-headed eagle (and that infamous jaw)Rh-negative blood hotspots and the Basque mysteryCoronation stones that still anchor Davidic legend in LondonGlobal echoes—from China’s Mandate of Heaven to Ethiopia’s Lion of Judah and Meso-america’s feathered serpentAlong the way we test myth against genetics, symbols against skulls, and ask the question no palace wants aired: if power comes from the heavens, where’s the proof—and whose veins still carry it?-Subscribe for more deep dives into hidden history and Anunnaki lore-Drop your theories in the comments—sky-blood or clever propaganda?-Support the & unlock bonus content → https://linktr.ee/Jason_abadi

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Every crown carries A rumor thatits metal cannot hide.
It begins in ancient summer, where clay tablets whisper that
Allulim, first king of Eridu, ruled for 28,800 years.
The scribes wrote it down without apology, as if eternity
fit inside a single heartbeat. They ended each reign with the

(00:23):
same line. Then kingship descended from
heaven. That idea refused to die.
It marched with Sargon across Mesopotamia, sailed with
Pharaohs up the Nile, and rode with shepherd kings into Canaan.
It resurfaced in Roman Gaul, where Frankish chroniclers
insisted a sea monster fathered Merovic, forging a dynasty that

(00:47):
could never be truly human. Medieval monks called it heresy.
The Merovingians called it birthright.
Centuries later, the Habsburgs welded Europe together through
marriages that looped tighter than a double Helix, convinced
their right to rule lived in theblood itself.
Portraits from Vienna show the price.

(01:09):
Elongated jaws, swollen lips andeyes that stare past the canvas,
searching for a reason the sacrifice mattered.
Yet the trail does not end in faded oil paint in quiet
laboratories today, technicians still puzzle over RH negative
blood, an antigen missing from roughly 15% of Europeans but

(01:31):
nearly 40% of the Basque people,an island of genetics that
statisticians struggle to map. Some shrug and sight founder
effects. Others see an echo of those
first impossible rains. Follow the genealogy charts far
enough, and every royal house knots together like roots
beneath a single tree. That tree now flowers in Windsor

(01:56):
as the modern monarch waves froma golden carriage.
The ancient oath echoes under the cheering.
Our blood is not earthbound. Tonight we trace that oath from
the mud brick ziggurats of UR tothe vaulted halls of Buckingham.
We will weigh tablets against chromosomes, legends against lab
results, and ask a question no throne dares to entertain in

(02:19):
public. If even a fraction of this
lineage is true, what does it mean for the rest of us, the
people who were never invited into the Covenant of Skyborne
Blood? On the southern fringe of

(02:48):
Mesopotamia, where the Tigris and Euphrates roll out like twin
snakes, the first cities rose from reeds and river silt.
There, in the temple courtyards of Eridu and Ur, priests pressed
Reed stylus into wet clay and stitched the earliest royal
Ledger humanity has ever found, the Sumerian king list.

(03:11):
They begin with a Lulim shepherdof Eridu, who sits the throne
for 28,800 years. After him comes a Lalgar of Bad
Tabira with 36,000, then EnmenluAnna of Sipar, Enmengal Anna
Dumuzi the shepherd, and three more monarchs whose combined

(03:34):
rule stretches longer than recorded history itself.
The tablets do not hesitate. They state each reign with the
same flat certainty used for rations of barley or bricks.
This is simply how long the godsallowed their chosen to rule.
Between each entry, a refrain appears like a heartbeat.

(03:56):
Then kingship descended from heaven.
No court poet could have coined a phrase.
More direct Authority in summer is not granted by conquest or
election. It is lowered from the sky like
a bronze Plumb line measuring men against the impossible.
At the midpoint of the list, everything breaks.

(04:19):
A column of wedge marks records a deluge that swept over the
land, drowning the cities and wiping the slate of kings.
In that violence the centuries long lifespans collapse as if
water diluted divine blood. When rulership resurfaces after
the flood, the 10,000 year crowns are gone.

(04:41):
Gilgamesh of Uruk rules for a modest 126.
Later kings shrink further down to decades than mere years.
It is as though some celestial inheritance has thinned every
time it mixes with ordinary flesh.
Yet a residue remains. The post Flood rulers still
describe themselves as righteous.

(05:02):
Shepherds still keep court in ziggurats whose stepped terraces
mimic the stairway by which kingship once descended.
They carve their victories into limestone stellae, always
careful to thank the sky for favor.
Every coronation becomes an act of remembrance, an echo of the
moment when a throne first touched earth, still vibrating

(05:26):
through the Reed beds and mud brick walls.
Peel back the myths and you finda biological Riddle hiding in
plain sight. How did an idea so grand, so
mathematically absurd, survive aMillennium of war, diaspora and
shifting languages? Why did the farmers of Akkad

(05:47):
recite rain lengths that defy human mortality?
Why did priests 5 centuries later still assert the same
heavenly descent? The answer runs deeper than
propaganda. It hints that the earliest kings
were believed to carry a substance both precious and
perishable, something that couldnot be forged or stolen, only

(06:09):
inherited or lost. From this seed, the doctrine of
blue blood germinated. Every later dynasty that coveted
legitimacy would graft itself onto the Sumerian route,
claiming it's still pulsed with a trace of the heavens.
Whether that claim was divine fact or brilliant fiction, it
set the stage for every crown that followed, and for the long,

(06:33):
tangled bloodstream. We will track through the ages,
searching for the moment when Celestial Wright became mortal
lineage and wondering whether even now, a spark of that first
descent lingers in veins that have never known the plow.

(07:04):
As the waters of the great floodreceded, the Euphrates plains
took on the look of a fresh canvas.
The colossal rains of the antediluvian kings were gone,
yet the idea of sky sent rule clung to the survivors like
river silt. In this new era, power was
measured in generations instead of geological ages.

(07:27):
But every claimant still traced A lifeline back to the heavens.
It begins with the shepherd chiefs of Kish and Uruk, who
reorganize shattered towns into city states.
Their scribes write that the crown was restored rather than
invented, hinting that a spark of the old authority survived

(07:49):
the deluge. That spark soon leaps N to a
young cupbearer named Sargon. Legend says his mother was a
priestess and his father unknown.
Sargon twists that mystery into a brand.
He conquers summer, stamps king of the four quarters on clay
tablets and plants the idea thata royal lion can uproot itself,

(08:12):
March and graft onto new soil without losing its divine
charge. Trade routes become arteries.
Acadian merchants haul lapis from Afghanistan, cedar from
Lebanon, and words from every tongue between.
The Acadian word for King charu echoes through diplomacy the way

(08:34):
a drum beat carries over desert sand.
When envoys step onto Egyptian docks, Pharaohs adopt the title
in their own accent and add another layer of cosmic
legitimacy to their already solar bloodline.
The notion of a portable kingship has surfaced on the
Nile, while pyramids climb toward Orion, another branch of

(08:58):
the post flood dispersal snakes NW Semitic Amorites settle in
Babylon and Mari, blending Sumerian liturgy with their own
tribal law codes. From them comes Terra, a clan
Chieftain who leads his household out of Ur of the
Chaldees. His son is Abram, later Abraham,

(09:20):
whose covenant will anchor threeof the world's major faiths.
Most Sunday School maps show a wandering patriarch guided by
faith alone. Our story adds another layer, a
family carrying memories of the original God kings in its
bloodstream. Farther N the Mitani horse Lords
ride into the Anatolian Highlands.

(09:42):
Their treaties start with a curious formula.
May the gods of the sky and of the blood observe this oath in
their stables. The earliest named horses bear
Sumerian titles. Their Princess marry Egyptian
princesses, weaving Mesopotamianlineages into the Nile once
more. Hittite scribes chisel copies of

(10:06):
Sumerian epics onto clay. Ugaritic poets reshape Babylon's
storm God into Baal. Every time the story crosses a
border, it sheds a skin, yet keeps the promise at its core.
Real authority descends. It does not ascend.
By the Late Bronze Age, the web is complete.

(10:26):
You can stand on the walls of Thebes and recite oaths first
sworn in UR. You can open a palace archive in
Hattusa and find tablets sealed with a Sumerian style cylinder.
You can track the marriage of a Levantine Princess into an
Egyptian court and see a dowry inventory that lists lapis
lazuli, the stone the Akkadians called the Gem of Kings.

(10:51):
Each trade caravan, each dynastic wedding, moves a few
more strands of the sky blood myth into new territory.
When historians draw migration arrows on classroom maps, they
note economics, droughts and warfare.
Those forces matter, but they miss the psychic cargo carried
by every caravan, the convictionthat somewhere in their ancestry

(11:14):
stands a ruler whose veins once ran with something beyond human.
It is a conviction strong enoughto survive language shifts,
calendar reforms, and entire libraries of vanished cities.
It is the unseen passport that lets shepherd chiefs become
Pharaohs and wandering patriarchs become patriarchs of

(11:35):
nations. By the time a scribe in Babylon
writes the final line of the King Chronicle into his clay
notebook, the old realm of Eriduhas become a legend.
Yet the phrase kingship descended from heaven still
appears exactly as it did 1000 years earlier.
The words do not ask to be believed, they ask to be

(11:57):
remembered. And remember them we must,
because this wandering claim, the portable throne, will soon
find new hosts in the hills of Judea, the palaces of Persia,
and the bloodlines that eventually converge on a small
island in the North Atlantic where a crown still waits for
the next in line. The Merovingians ruled the

(12:36):
Frankish kingdoms from the late 5th to the mid 8th century,
controlling most of Gaul and large parts of Germania before
their deposition by the Carolingians.
Their dynastic name derives fromKing Merovec, whose birth is
wrapped in a single striking legend preserved in the 7th
century Chronicle of Fredegar. According to that text, Queen

(12:59):
Salte, wife of the Frankish leader Claudio, was assaulted
while bathing by the Kinator, A bullheaded sea dwelling creature
associated with Neptune. Merovec was said to be the
offspring of that encounter, giving the line a literal other
than human paternity and, by extension, a divine claim to

(13:20):
rule. Although later Christian writers
labeled the episode a fable or even a demonic deception, the
story functioned as political theology.
It framed Frankish sovereignty as an inherited gift that
preceded Roman law, Roman Christianity, and Roman imperial
prestige. That message resonated in a

(13:43):
fragmented post imperial landscape where supernatural
ancestry could justify rapid territorial expansion.
Merovingian kings reinforced theclaim through visible,
enforceable symbols. Contemporary sources call them
Regis crinity. The long haired kings Royal hare

(14:04):
thought to embody sacred power, was never cut.
Shaving or tonsuring a Prince legally disqualified him from
succession. Chroniclers record several
depositions achieved simply by removing a rival's hair and
sending him to a monastery, an act understood as severing the
Bloodborne right to rule. Archaeologically, Merovingian

(14:27):
power is evident in richly furnished burials, luxury trade
goods, and a network of monasteries that doubled as
royal archives. Genomic data, however, offer a
different perspective. Whole genome sequencing of late
Merovingian graves from coastal Flanders shows 2 ancestry

(14:48):
clusters, 1 closely matching local Iron Age populations, the
other tracing to Central and Eastern Europe.
The individuals intermarried extensively, suggesting that
dynastic elites were integratingdiverse continental lineages
rather than preserving an isolated pure stock.

(15:08):
No non human or unusually divergent haplogroups have been
reported. Instead, the genetic profile
resembles that of contemporaneous European nobles.
The dynasties fall in 751, engineered by the Carolingian
mayors of the palace, shows the limits of myth once

(15:30):
administrative control and military success shifted
elsewhere. Yet the underlying pattern
linking sovereignty to extraordinary blood survived.
It re emerged in later European houses, feeding a broader
tradition that equated hereditary rite with traces of
an ancient, possibly non human lineage.

(15:52):
That tradition is the connectivetissue between Merawek's
quinitor myth and the modern fascination with blue blood.

(16:14):
Imperial flags unfurled over Vienna always showed the same
creature, a black double headed eagle crowned, clutching sword
and orb. To most historians, it is a
straightforward emblem of Roman continuity, adopted by
Byzantium, inherited by the German emperors, and finally

(16:34):
claimed by the Habsburgs. Yet the bird's genealogy is
older than Rome. Stone reliefs from third
Millennium BC Mesopotamia depictthe warrior God Nenorta standing
on a lion headed eagle called the Anzu.
When Nenorta conquers the tabletof destinies, the Anzu's twin

(16:55):
heads symbolize dominion over both the earthly and the
celestial realms. Fast forward 2000 years, The
icon resurfaces in Hittite seal art, then migrates into
Byzantine court ceremony as an eagle that looks both east and
West. When the Habsburgs secure the
imperial title in 1452, they embrace this bird to broadcast a

(17:19):
message that their mandate flowsfrom the same unbroken current
of authority that once linked God, Tablet, and King.
The eagle's right claw holds thescepter of temporal power.
The left guards the Globus Crusigere, signifying sacred
oversight. Together, the talons echo

(17:40):
Nanuta's boast of ruling land and sky.
Behind that polished symbolism, Habsburg politics still relied
on blood. Strategic cousin marriages kept
crowns concentrated but also amplified recessive traits.
Most visibly, the prognathic Habsburg jaw portraits reveal

(18:02):
the deformity intensifying from Maximilian the first to Charles
the second, a biological reminder that sealing A lineage
can corrode it from within. The eagle, however, never
changed. Each new generation reproduce
the icon with almost liturgical precision, as if the image
itself carried the purity the genome could not maintain.

(18:25):
Court theologians doubled down on the link between emblem and
ancestry. Pamphlets describe the double
headed eagle as Avis imperialis Divinitus misa, The imperial
bird sent by divinity alchemistsat Rudolph the Second's court,
worked under its spread wings, searching for a stone that would

(18:46):
perfect imperfect flesh. Jesuit chroniclers trace the
symbol back not merely to Byzantium, but to Oriental kings
who first received the wisdom ofthe heavens, a polite euphemism
for pre biblical Mesopotamia. The implication was clear.
While mortal bloodlines might falter, the eagle proved that

(19:07):
Vienna's throne still tapped thesame well of skyborne legitimacy
celebrated on Sumerian tablets. By the 17th century, the
Habsburg eagle adorned Canon cathedral facades and coinage
that travelled as far as the Andes.
When Joseph the Second restyled the Crest, he preserved the twin

(19:28):
heads but placed a shining star above them, an astronomical
flourish that court astrologers quietly linked to Nanorta's seat
in the constellation Sagittarius.
Whether the emperor believed theconnection or merely enjoyed its
flourish, the star reinforced anolder idea.

(19:49):
True sovereignty is written in the heavens first and only
stamped onto vellum afterward. In the end, genetics humbled the
dynasty. Charles the Second died
childless, and Europe bled through a succession war to
decide who next could wear the double headed eagle.
Yet the symbol itself survived the collapse.

(20:10):
Today it flies over capitals from Tirana to Belgrade and
appears in countless coats of arms.
For viewers tracking Anunnaki fingerprints, the persistence of
that twin headed bird suggests more than medieval branding.
It hints that a very old image once paired with a God who
wielded the tablets of Destiny, still whispers of an ancient

(20:32):
covenant between sky and crown. Blood typing seems like a

(20:54):
strictly medical affair until you map it.
Most of the human population is RH positive, meaning their red
cells display the D antigen. Yet a persistent minority, about
15% of Europeans, 8% of North Americans, and under 1% of East
Asians lack that antigen entirely and are labeled RH -2.

(21:18):
Details make the distribution unusual.
First, the frequency spikes in isolated pockets.
Nearly 40% of the Basque population of northern Spain and
southwestern France, 30% among certain western Irish clans, and
25% in the Atlas Mountain Berbers.

(21:39):
Second, the trait appears to have entered the gene pool
comparatively recently. Ancient DNA from Pleistocene
Eurasia shows almost universal RH positive status.
Standard genetics explains RH negativity as a loss of function
event, most commonly A37 base pair deletion in the RHD gene

(22:03):
that prevents the D antigen fromforming.
In evolutionary terms, deletion mutations usually fade unless
they confer some advantage. For RH negative blood, a
plausible benefit is resistance to Toxoplasma gondi infection.
Several studies report faster reaction times and lower

(22:24):
behavioral alterations in RH negative carriers exposed to the
parasite. Another hypothesis ties the
allele to protection against severe hemolytic anemia caused
by Plasmodium vivax malaria. Neither hypothesis, however,
explains the Basque peak. The Basque speak a non Indo

(22:46):
European language, show distinctive mitochondrial
lineages and occupy a region that served as a glacial era
refuge. Genetic drift in a small semi
isolated group can amplify rare alleles, but drift alone rarely
pushes a deletion to 40% withoutstrong selection or repeated

(23:07):
founder effects. That statistical oddity fuels
alternative theories. Some researchers argue that RH
negative blood is a vestige of an ancient admixture event,
either with an archaic human population whose traces
otherwise vanished, or with an off World Group memorialized in

(23:27):
Mesopotamian texts as the Anunnaki.
They point to the maternal fetalincompatibility problem.
When an RH negative mother carries an RH positive fetus,
her immune system can attack thechild's blood cells, a reaction
that feels like biology enforcing lineage boundaries.

(23:48):
Medical technology softened thatbarrier only in the last 50
years, before modern prophylaxis, RH disease remained
a significant cause of infant mortality.
In a purely evolutionary framework, such incompatibility
is a disadvantage, casting doubton why the allele persists at
high frequencies. Perhaps the incompatibility was

(24:11):
never meant to be adaptive, it was collateral damage from
grafting a non terrestrial genome segment into the human
line. Whatever its origin, RH
negativity carved a niche in cultural memory.
Medieval physician astrologers labeled RH negative patients as
cold blooded or lunar types. 19th century French occultists

(24:36):
claimed the Basque people descended from survivors of
Atlantis and guarded A purer prediluvian blood.
Modern conspiracy forums link RHnegative elites from certain
royal houses to 20th century power brokers to an invisible
cabal maintaining extraterrestrial inheritance.

(24:58):
A single 37 base pair deletion generates a worldwide patchwork
that resists tidy explanation. It complicates any claim that
divine or extraterrestrial lineages vanished with the flood
myths. Instead, it suggests that if a
fragment of an unusual genome ever did infiltrate Homo

(25:19):
sapiens, it could persist for 10s of thousands of years,
hiding in plain sight among blood donors and maternity
wards. The Hebrew Bible ends the book

(25:56):
of Samuel with a covenant. The throne of David will stand
established forever. For roughly 4 centuries, that
promise operated within the borders of Judah.
In 586 BC, Babylon broke Jerusalem, and the last Davidic
king, Zedekiah, left the city inchains.

(26:16):
Official history says the line ended there.
Popular folklore insists it tooka different Rd.
One post exilic legend places the prophet Jeremiah among
refugees who fled W with Zedekiah's daughters.
Medieval Irish chronicles call one of those princesses T tifi
and credit her with bringing an arc shaped chest, royal archives

(26:41):
and a coronation stone to the Hill of Tara.
By the 12th century, the stone was known as Leophile, the Stone
of Destiny, said to roar when the rightful king set foot upon
it. Whether an Iron Age Oracle or a
medieval invention, it became the physical bridge between Near
Eastern monarchy and Celtic sovereignty.

(27:02):
Scottish tradition picks up the thread in the 9th century,
moving the Leah Fail to Scone Abbey and renaming it the Stone
of Scone. Every Scottish king, from
Kenneth Mcalpin to John Balliol,is crowned upon it in 1296.
Edward the First of England seizes the stone, embeds it in a

(27:23):
Gothic chair, and decrees that any future ruler of Scotland,
and by extension England, must sit on it.
A biblical guarantee has been annexed into English statecraft.
Enter the British Israel movement of the 19th century.
Writers such as John Wilson and Edward Hein pour over royal

(27:44):
genealogies, tracing the Stuart line back to early Irish
monarchs and through them to King David.
They highlight coronation rituals that echo Old Testament
practice. The sovereign is anointed with
consecrated oil, receives rod and scepter, and swears to
uphold divine law. When Queen Victoria privately

(28:08):
entertains the theory, it gains a veneer of respectability that
lasts into the reign of George the 6th.
Modern genealogists show that today's Windsors descend from
virtually every medieval royal house in Europe, Celtic, Anglo,
Norman, Plantagenet and Stuart. Because those houses

(28:29):
intermarried for a Millennium, mathematical certainty emerges
if even a sliver of the Tea Teffy story is true.
The Davidic line now threads through thousands of European
families, including the electorsof Hanover, from whom the
Windsors spring. Yet the coronation chair still
houses the Stone of Scone, movedtemporarily to Scotland in 1996

(28:55):
and returned to Westminster Abbey for Charles the Third's
enthronement in 2023. The ritual proximity of monarch
and stone signals continuity. Whether or not blood can verify
it, each era reinscribes the same message.
The Crown's authority descends from a single ancient covenant

(29:16):
recorded in sacred text from 1 horizon to the other.
Sovereigns have framed their blood as a conduit between earth
and sky. The particulars shift with

(29:36):
language and landscape, yet the pattern repeats with striking
precision. Chinese chronicles crown the
Yellow Emperor around 2600 BC and describe each succeeding
dynasty as holding the Mandate of Heaven, a celestial license
revoked only by cosmic displeasure.

(29:57):
Imperial seals feature clawed Dragons, creatures that bridge
clouds and earthbound rivers across the Sea of Japan.
The Chrysanthemum Throne rests on an unbroken genealogy that
begins with Amaterasu, the sun goddess.
Every emperor's enthronement still includes the transfer of

(30:18):
the Yata no Kagame mirror said to embody her light in the
Ethiopian Highlands, the Kebra Nagast 14th century AD claims
that Queen Makeda of Sheba bore King Solomon a son, Menelik.
The frail Solomonic descent justified imperial rule until

(30:38):
1974, when highly Selassie conquering Lion of Judah fell,
yet left the lineage myth intact.
A continent W The Yoruba kings of EFF trace their crowns to the
sky God Oduduwa, who is said to have descended on a chain
carrying a cock and a handful ofearth to cede the world.

(31:00):
Mesoamerican codices call Kitzelkoatl the feathered
serpent, part bird, part snake, symbol of a deity who once ruled
as a man and vowed to return from the stars.
The Inca of the Andes ground their legitimacy in inti the Sun
and designed Cusco's Seco lines as radial spokes pointing back

(31:23):
to that solar origin. Northward among the Hopi, the
Pahana legend speaks of a lost elder brother who will reclaim
sacred tablets and restore cosmic balance, another promise
of a sky linked ruler yet to come.
In Scandinavia, the early Ingling kings claim descent from
the God Friar, whose domain blends agriculture and celestial

(31:47):
light. Medieval Irish annals place the
Tuata de Danan folk of the goddess Danu arriving in
vaporous ships, conquering the island and intermarrying to
become its nobility. Even in remote Polynesia, chiefs
memorize genealogies that rise through Tangaloa, a creator who

(32:09):
lowers the first ancestor from the heavens on braided chords.
Taken together, these accounts form a global chorus.
Authority is not earned solely by force or election, it is
inherited from entities who cross the boundary between
firmament and soil. The motifs Dragons, serpents,

(32:30):
solar disks, twin tablets vary in artistic detail but converge
on the same claim. Blue blood is sky blood.
For cultures unfamiliar with summer or the Anunnaki, the idea
emerges independently, suggesting either a cognitive
universal or a shared, forgottencontact with beings once

(32:52):
regarded as gods. Bloodlines tangle, genes mutate
and dynasties topple, while their symbols, the eagle, the

(33:16):
dragon, the feathered serpent, keep gliding from one flag to
the next. Somewhere along the way, the
biology and the mythology drifted apart.
Portraits preserved the Habsburgjaw long after the double headed
eagle convinced anyone, and the Stone of Destiny still anchors a
throne even though no lab can isolate King David's Y

(33:37):
chromosome. So where does that leave us?
Step into any pharmacy and you can mail your saliva to a server
farm that will chart your chromosomes in 48 hours.
Walk into any cathedral and you'll see regalia designed to
signal a covenant older than science itself.
We live at the overlap of those two realities. 1 measured in

(33:59):
base pairs, the other in belief.Did the Anunnaki splice their
genes with ours? And blue blood is just a very
human metaphor. And maybe a few snippets of non
terrestrial code really did survive the flood and the
Crusades and the microscope hiding in plain sight.
This possibility is radical. If the myth is false, it shows

(34:23):
how willingly we bend history toserve power.
If it's true, it means our species has been sharing the
planet and the gene pool with somebody else all along.

(35:08):
NEC 2ES1 ESC tilhar NEC tilhar man U nesi to re feel you new
ring nesi ha man inside the shinhai yeah man inside.

(37:19):
None.
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