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October 2, 2025 96 mins

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Love is the most practical power in the world—and the hardest to fake. We dive straight into why loving God first is the key that unlocks self-love, tames ego, and steadies you when life tests your courage. From there, we move into the daily mechanics of faith: what evidence looks like in real life, how repentance clears karmic debt, and why knowing the difference between responsibility and duty can change the way you lead, forgive, and act.

Then we pressure-test these ideas against the modern world. Robots sprint, AI flips burgers, drones crowd the sky—so where does that leave human connection? We explore promising uses—disaster response, rescue, hazardous work—alongside the risks: lost jobs, hollow service, a cloud that could lock up when you need it most. You’ll hear practical resilience advice—keep hard copies, hold some tangible value, diversify your dependence—as well as a reminder to treat tech as a tool, not a master.

We travel further back to examine the echoes of Lemuria and Atlantis—peaceful cultures, kahuna wisdom, and the soul-level virtues that persist across time: humility, detachment, service. Finally, we reframe the Ten Commandments not as control but as a portrait of people aligned with the divine: “My people don’t” as identity, not coercion. It’s a throughline that connects ancient law, modern ethics, and your next brave choice.

If this conversation stirred something in you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Tell us: where do you draw the line with tech, and what does loving God first change for you today?

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Announcer (00:00):
Welcome to Wake Up with Dr.
Douglas James Cottrell, yoursource of helpful information
and advice.
Hims to live your life in amindful way in this increasingly
chaotic world.
For over four decades, Dr.
Douglas has been teachingpeople how to develop their
intuition, live their lives in aconscious way.
His news and views of the worldtomorrow today are always

(00:21):
informative and revealing.
And now is your host, Dr.
Douglas James Cottrell.

Douglas (00:30):
I'm your host, Dr.
Douglas James Cottrell.
And as always, we're here tobring a little light into those
hidden truths and spiritualinsights and timeless wisdom
that guide us through theseextraordinary times.
Are you ready?
Okay, well, tonight we're goingto explore the deeper currents
beneath the world events.
We're going to discover howspiritual laws are at work in

(00:50):
our daily lives.
We have an excellent episode.
We're going to talk about AIand AI robots and share special
uh information on awakening yourinner awareness to these
upcoming events.
This is your place for truth.
Here on the Soul Report, we aresetting the vision, the
soul-centered understanding foryou, my friends, in

(01:11):
understanding the world as weknow it.
So settle in.
I'm here with my good friendand co-host Les Hubert.
Open your mind and prepare tojourney with me into the
mysteries of the soul and thedestiny of humankind.
Welcome to the show, Les.

Les (01:26):
Thank you, Doug.
Uh, tonight we're going to betalking about the dynamics of
love.
Why did Yeshua say to love Godfirst?
And with that in mind, how dowe go about loving ourselves and
others?

Douglas (01:40):
Well, if you can love God Almighty, you're loving
yourself.
We're all creatures of God.
You know, we all have a soulwithin.
But how many times do weactually love God?
I mean, embrace God as a realsentient being that's in the
same room with us.
You know, God is not deaf,dumb, or blind.

(02:02):
But there are many people whoproclaim to be believers who
forget or they don't understandthat God is not deaf, dumb, or
blind.
And so they kind of like mayberepent on Sunday, but Monday to
Saturday they get away with allkinds of silly things in life.
But if you love God, then youknow whatever befalls you, there

(02:26):
is a purpose for it.
And to love God with every cellof your being, that is the
mission of your soul for yourentire lifetime.
And so love God with all yourheart and all your mind and all
your soul takes on a moreimportance than just words.

(02:51):
And so here we are by anavatar, a spiritual master, a
divine soul, the first one thatfound a way to conquer death in
order to lead us, humankind,into salvation.
And we're not talking aboutreligious beliefs and
understandings and and and likethe like.

(03:12):
We're talking about our soulfinding a way, a path through
that forest or jungle that wehave up until that time not
achieved or accomplished.
And so he was the first one,Yeshua, the Christ, the Messiah,
was the one that led us, isleading us, and has shown us the

(03:35):
way out of the quagmire we'rein.
And so this particular beingthat was highly spiritually
developed didn't come onchariots and fire and flames to
announce his presence.
He came quietly into the worldand lived his life as a human

(03:56):
being, following in thefootsteps of his father.
He was a tradesman as acarpenter, listened to his
mommy, he obeyed whatever shesaid.
He was a good boy.
Remember the first time, firstmiracle that's recounted in the
good book was that his familyran out of wine at a family
wedding, and his mother cameover and said, Hey, son, you
know, do your thing.

(04:16):
And he said, Mom, it's not mytime yet.
I, you know, I'm I it's not mytime to be public.
But anyway, he pleased hismommy and he produced the best
wine at the end of the partywhere all the patrons were quite
happy at the time.
But somebody in the back cameby and said, Hey, you know, why
did you save the good stuff tothe last?
Usually, you know, we give outthe cheap stuff at the last when

(04:40):
people are a little, you know,like happy, but he did the best
he could to please his mommy.
So he came into the worldacting as a good son and grew
into the spiritual being, theavatar, the saint, the
illuminating light that he was.
And so he's giving us words todo the same.

(05:00):
If you love God with every cellof your body, then whatever
befalls you, you can survive itby saying, All right, God, I'm
not going to abandon you, I'mnot going to turn my back, I'm
not going to disbelieve.
Even to the point of yourdeath.
And if you can believe that,and you have the faith to

(05:22):
believe it, and you have theevidence that you've learned
along the way that strengthensyour belief and strengthens your
faith, then even at the momentof death, you won't be afraid.
You might not like how you'regoing to die.
Nobody, you know, I've everheard people say, Oh, I can
hardly wait to get to heaven.
And then I say, Yes, but it'sgreat to death is beautiful, but

(05:46):
dying's not.
So that's one of those, youknow, like I got to go to the
hospital and have an operation.
Oh my God.
After the operation, oh wow,look at it.
I can move my arm, my leg,whatever.
It's wonderful.
But going through and gettingthe healing part, that's
terrible stuff.
Well, that's part of life.
And I don't know how bad thatis.
People sometimes go to sleepand they're gone.
They the soul leaves the body.

(06:08):
And I think that's one of thethings, a blessing for somebody
that's loving God.
So to love your love your Godwith every cell, every part of
your body, every cell of yourbody, you can then look at
yourself and forgive yourself.
You can then love yourselfbecause we really don't, you
know.
We kind of, you know, we're tootall, we're too short, we're

(06:29):
too thin, we're too thick, we'retoo this, we're too that.
And that is a condemnation ofthe temple.
This body is your temple.
In other religions, they havehats and headgears to show that
they represent, and by wearingthose headgears or hats or
whatever's on their head, thatthey they understand that this

(06:50):
body is a physical temple forthe divine soul within.
And hopefully the soul willwake up.
Well, that gets into anotherkind of struggle within, you
know, the ego versus thespiritual, and you know, back
and forth.
As you get older, sometimes youget wiser, sometimes you don't.
But the point is you begin tounderstand the difference

(07:11):
between this temporal physicaltemple we have and the immortal
spiritual soul that you are.
That's who you really are.
So coming to understand that iscoming to understand God.
And when you love God, youobey.
There's no ego that says freewill and free choice.

(07:33):
No, I'm not going to do that.
You know, I'm not going to gofasting, or you know, I'm going
to drive my car as fast as Iwant, or I'm going to eat
whatever I want, you know, andthen people become dis-eased,
they're out of easement withwith life, and then they're like
paying a doctor money, orthey're, you know, they're

(07:54):
they're going to a therapist orthey're coming to people like me
to get some some information tofind their way.
Well, when you're in harmonyand you love God, you have
dreams, you are accepting of thespiritual information that
comes to you.
You learn not to doubt.
So this answer is a little biton the philosophy, but back to

(08:17):
love God with every soul ofevery cell of your body that
your soul loves God, that'slearning to love not just what
we call corporal love or life inthe world love.
We're talking about a divinelove, and that's called
unconditional love.
Oh, and that's a hard one.

Les (08:40):
Well, so the question is, and just I've had this question
asked for me uh as well, is thatif we're supposed to love God
with all our minds and all ourhearts and all our souls, what's
left for us?
I mean, if you're giving alland and literally all, then how
do you have love for yourself?
Or does God transmute that andbring that back to you and then
you convert that into self-love?

Douglas (09:02):
Interesting point of view.
So love is a commodity.
Give me a handful of love, Les.
Come on, give me give me twohandful of love.
Okay, so that's a good point ofview uh or or a good question,
because you see, love is like aclouds in the sky.

(09:24):
They're always there.
Sometimes they're scattered,sometimes they condense,
sometimes they're powerful.
Love is not a commodity, it'smore like an envelope, it's more
like a cocoon, and you're inthis essence in love, in a
cocoon that radiates out likelight.

(09:47):
When you look at a light bulbshining in this in the ceiling,
the light's going everywhere,right?
It doesn't just go in onedirection unless it's a
flashlight or unless it's gotyou know some sort of uh
covering on it, it goeseverywhere, it's illuminating.
And so the question is if youlove God with all of your heart,

(10:09):
what about yourself?
Well, that's the ticket.
You love yourself by loving Godbecause you are part of God.
Oh, okay.
Okay, so you have to think ofyourself as you know, like the
internet, right?
God is the cloud somewhere.
I mean, okay, nobody knowswhere the cloud is.

(10:31):
I don't know how they came upwith the name cloud, they should
have come up with universalwhatever.
Yeah, you know, but the pointis when we say the cloud, oh
yeah, yeah, the cloud.
It's my all my stuff is up inthe cloud.
I have all my stuff up there, Ihave all my photos up there.
Well, from my perspective, wehave a different name for that,

(10:53):
and it's called the AkashicRecords, or the Akashic Field,
or the Tree of Life, or theCelestial Library.
So you see, us spiritual folks,we were way ahead of ourselves
saying that every thought, everyword, every deed that you do,

(11:16):
my friends, is recordedsomewhere up there in the
celestial records, which againis uh Kashic field, cashic
records, whatever dimensions,heavens above.
Okay, so to understand that iskind of like God is everywhere,
your consciousness iseverywhere, you're plugged in
everywhere.

(11:37):
And because you're plugged ineverywhere, you're also plugged
into yourself.
But here's the ticket you haveto take the steps to be
illuminated.
It's like you're an ever glow,you're a little glowing light,
and as you go through thelifetimes experiences, that

(11:58):
light becomes brighter andbrighter and brighter, and you
become aware of who you are.
You become very aware, and thenyou become self-realized, and
then you become more realizedand fully realized, and then you
become an avatar, a spiritualbeing in a physical body, having

(12:19):
the best spiritual life one canhave in a physical body, and
that's when you're illuminatedand you understand unconditional
love because you areunconditional love.
If you look at all thespiritual leaders, they had
their times when they becamepolitical leaders, Moses, for

(12:40):
instance, uh Muhammad, peace beupon him, uh, religious leaders
in in India and avatars uh thatwould be in charge of uh you
know organizations like Buddhahad temples and whatever.
I know the whole idea isdetachment in Buddha in
Buddhism.
I don't want anybody tocriticize me.

(13:00):
I understand, but there weretemples and there were monks and
there were organizations, thesame as in any organization,
religious organization, if youwill, of all the different
faiths or beliefs.
And somebody has to controlthat in a loving spiritual way.
Well, there's a lot ofcontention.
I mean, Pope Francis was uhpretty upset with uh with things

(13:25):
in Rome after he came fromArgentina, and I'm not mean to
speak for him, but I heard himin a lecture one day saying the
church had disease, the diseaseof vanity, the disease of
conceit, the disease, thedisease of self-importance.
And when I was listening tohim, I'm wondering, I just tuned
into the show, I'm wondering,who's he talking about?

(13:45):
And then I realized he wastalking about the cardinals and
the Vatican itself.
Wow, yeah.
And as he saw it, as instead ofa love, there were all these
different fragments or diseasesor diseasement.
So getting back to the questionabout love is everywhere, and
as one becomes illuminated, theybecome like a light bulb.

(14:06):
360 degrees in all quadrants.
That's what unconditional loveis all about, and along with
that comes all the things aboutlove: patience, tolerance,
forgiveness, on and on.
Because when you're totallyaware of things like an avatar,

(14:28):
you're aware of the weaknessesin your friends and neighbors,
and it takes a lot to forgivesome of the people that are
closest to you, especially whenthey think you don't know.
But remember, there are peoplethat think God is deaf, dumb,
and blind as well.
Keep that in mind, my friends,you know.
Okay.

Les (14:51):
So was it Yeshua's way of saying that uh by also by loving
God first, it kind of keeps ouregos in check.
I've I've met, and I'm sureyou've met people, uh, and we
see it all the time, you know,on the internet, on TV, and
these people that lovethemselves a great deal, but
they kind of forget to loveothers.
And you see, they have all thetrappings of they have the
wealth, the power, the fame, butyet they really don't seem to

(15:13):
convey a love for their fellowsouls.
Is that the reason?
Another reason why Shua wantedus to love God first, to keep
that ego kind of at bay.

Douglas (15:20):
You see this hat, I can still wear it.
Whoever I am is not going to myhead.
And you see, uh, that's thething about spiritual
illumination.
Because you begin to controlthe environment, you begin to
become um somebody important,shall we put it.

(15:46):
You rise to spiritualimportance because of your uh
ascension within the ranks tobecoming a spiritual leader.
And it goes right to the pointthat uh the disciples who were
Christ's best friends, theyargued with him, but he was
their teacher.

(16:07):
And he had that ceremony uhjust before he was crucified,
and he took them down and he satthem down and he washed their
feet.
Oh, yeah, yeah, and he said,Remember, I am the rabbi, and
I'm doing this to you, the leastof you, which he was attempting

(16:29):
to show them that the moreimportant you are in your own
mind, the more wonderful andgreat and amazing you are in
your own mind, the further awayyou're going from the path.
Oh, and the answer to that oneis the greatest master of among

(16:50):
among us becomes the greatestservant for us.
And he was attempting to showas above as below, the
macrocosm, the microcosm, thegross of a divine person becomes
the greatest servant, so thatyou don't get yourself out of

(17:11):
sorts.
And when the time came and hewas in front of those terrible
judges and those deceitfullawyers and those unbelieving
religious beings.
I was going to call them Magi,but whatever they're that's not
really a megai, a differentthing.

(17:31):
But those uh judges and lawyersand religious authorities at
the time, that's the word I waslooking for, they wanted to get
rid of him because he was takingup their market share.
More people were following himbecause he was telling the
truth, and they wanted they wereafraid that they were going to
like quote unquote what abusiness.
Oh my God.

(17:52):
Well, that's all the trappingsof as you become important, as
you become beloved by God, asyou continue to take your steps
and come closer and closer toGod, there's a whole lot of
people behind you, and they comefrom all ranks, backgrounds,
belief systems, and they're fullof bad stuff.

(18:17):
But inside there's light, andso a master among us, it's very
hard because we talked aboutthis before in a previous show.
When you're in the world,you're full of aggrandisement.
How much do I have?
I have more than somebody else,and I'm better than they are.

(18:37):
I'm more important because Ihave a higher position in
society, therefore I am betterthan they are.
Forgetting there, but for thegrace of God, when you look at a
homeless person, there I am aswell.
There go I.
So if we come to thatunderstanding that uh in the

(18:59):
worldly things of accomplishmentand materialism, as Buddha
would say, detachment is thefreedom.
Because when you have stuff,you gotta take care of it,
right?
You gotta watch out somebodydoesn't take it away from you,
or on and on it go, you just youlose it.
So you become loving of yourstuff, and when you love God,

(19:23):
it's like God's above me here inthe in the painting.
You love the universe, you lovethe consciousness, you become
aware of abundant andunconditional love.
And that's the thing, like whenyou're wrapped up and you feel
so nice and warm and you got noworries, nothing on your mind,
nobody's bugging you, you knowyou're okay.

(19:44):
That love sustains you forever.
And so to be not of the worldmeans to be loving of God and
not worried about the trivialthings about what you have or
don't have.
Have you ever noticed that wealways think we need more stuff,
and then it hangs up on agarage, you know?

(20:04):
Like, oh my God, um lookaround, everybody.
All that stuff you got in yourroom under your bed, and you're
finding little nooks andcrannies to stuff it in.
You don't need it, but youthink you do.
But if you believe in God, thenyou will know that whatever you
need will be provided.
There was a story about Christ.

(20:24):
They were walking along, and aman was uh uh was in need of his
um of a cloak.
So Jesus gave it to him.
And somebody said, But youknow, master wanted to say,
Master, you're gonna need itlater.
And he said, I don't worryabout it.
Later on, the man came back andgave it back to him because he
found his one he missed, and hethen came back and gave the show

(20:48):
back his.
That's some story like that inthe book.
So we think we need things, butwhen you're in harmony with
God, everything you want or needwill appear in front of you,
and that's one of the magicalthings of faith.
Faith is built upon belief, andbelief is built upon evidence.
And as we teach at manymansions, international

(21:09):
ministries, ministries all overthe world, when I tell people
about this, when I teach themhow to do these things, I'm
giving them the secrets, aren'tI?
Well, the secrets areeverywhere, but things happen to
them.
They get the parking spot wherethey need it in front of the
grocery store.
Somebody comes and helps themwhen they need it, when they

(21:31):
maybe do something outside andthey've dropped something.
Or I saw this in New York.
I there was a lady, uh, she wasroyally, uh, of royal blood,
and we were on the street.
She was in a nice business uhdress and tight fitting around
the hips and that, and uh, andhigh heels.
And we're and she was tellingme about how she leaves little
crumbs on the end of her tablefor the angels all the time.

(21:54):
This is we're talking here,serious people on you know,
Manhattan, right?
You know, right down in uh inthe center of Manhattan in the
business district.
And and she says, It happens tome all the time.
I find money all over theplace.
She's a very wealthy lady, verysuccessful, had her own
business.
You've seen her on TV, some ofyou.

(22:14):
Anyway, we're walking acrossthe street, and she's kind of
struggling with her high heelsin this tight dress, and and and
in front of us where it was asshe just said that were all
these brand new pennies.
Oh wow, there was about 60 or100 of them on the ground, and
she said, See what I mean?
And I looked down, and then sheproceeded to wiggle down and

(22:39):
pick them up.
I naturally assisted, you know,I was a good helper, you know.
We picked, and I'm going like,I'm gobsmacked, you know.
I'm going like, What this isamazing.
And then as we're walking alittle farther, she which we had
all the panties, she put themin her purse.
I had some in my pockets, andshe said, See, it happens all
the time.
I just I talk about put leavingcrumbs on the table for the

(23:03):
angels.
And then she looked at lookthere, there was $20 on the on
the sidewalk this time.
Wow.
So again, she got down.
You know, ladies with highheels would know what I mean,
and they were pretty big highheels, and she was in a business
outfit, so uh it was formfitting, and she went up, picked
it up, and put it in her purse.
And she said, I I looked at herand I'm going, like, you know,

(23:24):
wow, that's amazing.
But she all she was verygenerous to help people in a
business way, and again, everyand she would be having
expensive dinners or whatever,and she'd always put some crumbs
on the end of the table for thefor the angels to get.

Les (23:40):
Wow.

Douglas (23:41):
So the question is, yeah, did the waiter come and
sweep it up, or we know what wedon't know, but they were left
there for the angels, and I'msure they appreciated the offer.
But the point is when you loveGod, you can walk and go
anywhere and not be afraid.

Les (23:59):
Yeah.

Douglas (24:00):
And know everything is going to be provided for you.
When people in monasteries goout, they go out with a bowl
under their robe and it getsfilled up every day.
They have no doubt that thepeople in the community or
village, whatever, are not goingto be generous.
And for that, they pray forthose people in the temples and

(24:22):
they do spiritual things andhelp the people in the village
or the community like I do.
We pray for people all the timethat we don't know, or we have
spiritual requests at ourservices on Sunday, and there
are people we've never met wedon't know, and we send them
virtue healing energy, likewe're like Yeshua taught us to
do.
And people have had miraculousrecoveries.

(24:45):
Now we also know that when itcomes your time, there's no
miracle or magic that's going tostop your death.
It's going to happen, but wecan pray for a peaceful
transition.
We can pray for all yourrelatives to come over and say,
Hi, we're here.
Come on, home.
It's really nice over here.

(25:07):
Where you're coming from, youknow.
We've been there, so come on,the party's on this side.
So as you become aware of thesethings, you become unafraid and
you have peace in your mind.
And then whatever befalls you,you're not provoked emotionally.

(25:29):
You have emotional maturity,and you are confident in your
life, and you know that GodAlmighty is watching over you.
Just like any parent watchesover their child and allows
their child to make the mistakesto grow up to be the special
person that they become.

(25:49):
God is the same with us, all ofus.
Even those kind of, you know,souls that are still got a
little, you know, a little stainon their on their spiritual
part, and they uh and they haveto learn how to get by and
overcome.
Because what we're talkingabout here is temptation.

(26:10):
And uh when you get into thespiritual world and you have
people who admire you and peoplewho put you up on a pedestal
and people think you'reimportant, if it goes to your
head, then you are tempted bymoney, by sex, by uh extremes

(26:33):
and indulgences, by abuse ofyour authority or power.
And what's happening?
You're starting to go, what offthe path, off the mark, and
then some karma comes along,whack, and it puts you back on
the path.
That whack is pretty tough, andthe more diversion you are with

(26:58):
preaching the path and therighteousness, and the more you
go off the path, bam, the harderthat lesson is or that process
is that teaches you the lesson,and you get back on the track
and you go, Ah, please forgiveme.
I am so repentful, I'm sosorry.

(27:19):
And then this is where learningto love yourself is you you
learn to regret, and then youlearn to repent, and repenting
wipes out the karmic debt.
Oh, all right.
Takes a long time, it's hard toovercome the things you do in
your life that you regret.

(27:39):
So if you want to have aperfect life, do everything so
that you never have any regrets.
Easy said.
Yeah, right.
Okay, so that's about lovingyourself, though.
If you can if you can learn tolove yourself, to forgive
yourself when you've donesomething that you're ashamed
of, or something you ought notto have done, but now you learn

(28:02):
from it and you never do itagain, you'll be okay.
And it takes a long time toremember humans as we know
humans.
Remember, you're human.
That's why they put erasers onthe end of pencils.
That is my day.
I like that.

Les (28:21):
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, it's it's it's in my ownlife.
I know I had a friend of minewho uh he was very, very
successful, he was also verymaterialistic, he and became
very wealthy.
He and he had multiplebusinesses all over the country.
Um, but he let it get to himand he ended up coming down with
lymphoma.
And and then I was with him onthe we thought he was gonna die

(28:42):
that day.
And he looked at me and hesaid, You know, he said, Lester,
you see all this around me, allmy houses and my cars, and he
said, The only thing thatmatters is love.
He said, Love for God and loveof others, and love.
And that night he it was amiraculous recovery.
He just flipped right aroundand he started coming out of it
and like wow, he finally got it,and he got a second chance.

(29:02):
It was amazing, absolutelyamazing.

Douglas (29:05):
And that's why that whole lesson happened to him.
He was overwhelmed with things,physical things, got to the
point, like Job on the ash pile.
Remember that story?
Likewise, he believed hisspiritual importance was was
wrapped up in all his personalbelongings, and he lost

(29:25):
everything.
And there he was sitting on theash pile, a pile of bricks, the
garbage.
He was out in the laneway allby himself, just like your
friend.
And then he realized, wait aminute, my belief is in God, my
love is in God, and then thestory goes on as the parable.
Job got all this stuff back.

(29:47):
You know, it's like thosewestern songs, right?
You know, you those where youplay the record backwards, you
get the dog back, you get thehorse back, you get the woman
back, you get your money, youknow, you get your ranch back.
I'm no, please don't.
Please don't send me any Matsyemails.
That's a joke about how youplay records backwards and you
get all the things.
It's obviously a loss.

(30:08):
Okay.
I apologize if anybody's takingoffense, but don't.
But the point being is that Jobwas in the same point, and
that's the lesson in the goodbook.
All the lessons of life arethere if you look for them.
And your friend, that was awonderful story, and that you're
absolutely right.
He got to that point where hesaid, everything doesn't matter.

(30:28):
You know, the richest man inthe world when it comes to the
last day of his life can't buyone more day or one more hour or
one more minute.
Cannot.
And so the wisdom is my faithand my love is not in things,
it's in the divine.
And that is why you should loveGod with every cell of your

(30:51):
being.
Because you get to that point,somebody does something bad to
you.
You you uh try not to let themsteal from you and things like
that.
But you don't go out and killthem.
Right.
You you stole my car, I'm gonnakill you.
No, no, no, no.
You say you stole my car.
Well, I'll get another one.
Or you say to God, please sendmy car back, and the car stalls,

(31:17):
somebody finds it, whateverhappened to my son.
Somebody stole his car one dayat the at the movie place in the
big plaza.
I saw it going down a certainstreet, and I saw it stopped.
And what happened is the carstarted to overheat and smoke
coming up under the uh the uhfront of the hood, so they
abandoned the car and they leftit running in the middle of the

(31:37):
street.
Oh wow.
Somebody called the police andthey said, Hey, your car's over
here.
We went and picked it up.
Okay, so there's ways now.
The car never smoked andsteamed and over got got hot
before, and the person was uh,I'm gonna say this for the first
time.
He left a little trinket thatwas really, really important to

(31:59):
him.
Oh no, he left it on the floorof the car.
Oh no, oopsie.
Oopsie, it was a symbolic thingof his spiritual being, and he
left it on the floor.
I I still have it in the garageon the nail.
You could say we're hangingaround, you know, the guy we got

(32:19):
that guy's soul on a yes.
Wow.
I'm not trying to make fun, butthat's a true story.
He lost something extremelyimportant to him because he was
trying to take my son's car,which was really important to
him.

Les (32:33):
Wow.

Douglas (32:33):
Like I said, divine intervention, the car kind of
had a radiator, you know, thekind of steam coming up, it
looked like that.

Les (32:40):
Oh, yeah.

Douglas (32:41):
I don't know what it was to this day.
It never did it uh after that.
And we went and got his carback.
However, so the point is uh ofthe story is that no matter
what's in front of you, and I'mnot here to tell you that I uh
lived as perfectly myself, Ihave worries, I have and I have
difficulties, I haveresponsibilities that only I can

(33:03):
do.
And then when you realize thatresponsibility comes in two
forms.
One, you can hand it off tosomebody, like doing your taxes,
you hand off the responsibilityto the accountant.
No problem.
But there comes a time when youcan't do that.
You can't, you know, forcutting your grass, you can hire

(33:23):
the responsibility getting thelocal kid to come and cut the
grass.
Okay, you can do those thingshanding off that responsibility.
It comes to a point where youcannot hand off the
responsibility to anybody else.
And knowing this, my friends,if you're in the chat, think
about this and ask each other.
If you're in the chat, when isit that when you can't hand off

(33:45):
responsibility to anybody else,what's that called?
And I'm gonna tell you now,it's called duty.
So if you can ascertain thatit's your duty, nobody else can
do it for you, you can't hand itoff, you can't buy somebody to
to or or pay somebody to do it,you have to do it yourself, then
no matter how difficult it is,get on it and get it done

(34:08):
yourself.
Because nobody else is going todo it.
Why?
Because it's your karmiclesson, it's your spiritual
lesson, it's something you haveto do.
And the sooner you learn thatin life, the more successful you
will be.
You won't procrastinate, youwon't blame other people, you
won't find fault, you won't findways and means to avoid it,

(34:30):
which we all do, but you'll say,I gotta get this done.
My responsibility, I gotta goout and wax the car.
Okay, I'm getting her done.
And then you get it done andyou feel good.
Yeah, yeah, you do.
There might be other moreserious things about that, like
going and having a confrontationwith somebody or trying to work

(34:52):
out something that's difficultto work out with or making some
amends.
The story just a little whileago where we had somebody in a
family, there there wasgrandparents involved and
grandkids involved, and therewas tension between the family.
And uh, with some direction,they made peace.
And now the kids have parentsand grandparents that they never

(35:15):
had before.
And so that's how families cometogether.
It's difficult, it's not easy,but it's the right thing to do,
and then everybody's happythereafter.
But until somebody takes theresponsibility, the duty, and
steps in to make amends, whathappens?
The environment just keepsgoing in circles.

(35:38):
So it's like everything else.
When you realize it's yourduty, step up, get it done.
Right or wrong, by the way.
If you're right and it worksout, great.
If it's wrong and it doesn'twork out, great.
You stepped up to do it, andthat's all you need to do to
understand that lesson.
It never comes back in yourlife.

(35:59):
That once that lesson is met,never comes back.
So, again, knowing thedifference between
responsibility and duty isloving yourself to the point
where you forgive yourself, orthe point you get you're a
little tough on yourself, andyou say, Come on, Douglas, get
it done.
Nobody else is gonna do thisfor you.
Nobody can, should, or oughtto.

(36:19):
It's yours to do.
And once you get to that point,then life becomes a little
easier.
Hmm.

Les (36:26):
All right.
Uh, after a short break, wewill be back with news and
views.
And this is gonna be prettyinteresting, people.
So stand by.
We'll see you right in aminute.

Douglas (36:35):
I hear robots in the future.
Oh yeah.

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(37:25):
Douglas James Cottrell.

Douglas (37:44):
Uh to work with uh the Oz, our producer behind the
curtain here.
And uh we're gonna talk aboutsomething exciting.
What are we gonna look at here,uh Les?

Les (37:53):
We're gonna be looking at robots who are actually able to
play a primitive form of uhfootball.
And you can see how they theykind of like they look like
toddlers almost, but it's uh itit's not gonna be too long
before they continue to grow andand evolve as uh learning
machines.
It's kind of kind of creepy, ifyou ask me.

Douglas (38:12):
Oh boy, is there penalties?
Do you get penalty shots orwhat's going on?
Look at these guys.
Oh my god, there's one that'ssick.

Les (38:21):
But it's amazing how they can actually get up on their
own.
Uh, and it's they can find theball, they know where they are
on the field, uh, they caninteract with each other, and uh
and they're not very heavy.
They can actually be picked up.
But I mean, it's amazing howquickly the the uh technology,
and this are this is fromcollege kids in China.
Uh so this is a majorbreakthrough.
And I remember as a kid, I usedto watch the Jetsons, and there

(38:42):
was this one episode where theywere playing football with
robots.
Uh, but it was the type offootball in that we play here in
the United States.
Uh, and uh on either side ofthe field, there was a coach
that was running the the theirspecific team via automation.
And here we are, not too longnow, later, and that we actually
have this actually occurring.

(39:04):
Uh my guess is the next once weget down the sports down, it's
gonna be they're probably gonnago for military application.
What's your feeling on this,Doug?

Douglas (39:12):
Oh, come on.
Every thing's military here.
I mean, uh they already have uhdrones, they have uh um
pilotless uh jet planes that areflown by pilots who are sitting
in a nice, comfortable littletrailer somewhere or a bunker.
Uh, you know, this is this isbeyond.
Uh I was I was looking at thatand I and your comment about

(39:35):
like little kids playing uhplaying soccer or football or
whatever, uh they behave thesame.
But I saw a couple of them weretrying to run and they got they
their feet, their their headgot a little further ahead over
their feet and they fell down.
So um the question is, why areyou doing this?
You know, if I if I was one ofthose athletic uh superstars,

(39:57):
baseball, maybe that's next,soccer, hockey, I'd be kind of
thinking, oh my god, am I youknow am I gonna be they're all
millionaires, right?
They all have big money thatthese guys I'd be thinking, oh
my god, is that the future?
I can't see that.
I hope not.
But uh yeah, militaryapplication, no doubt, will be
along.
The the drones are uh if you ifyou understand, um not if you

(40:22):
understand, if you're aware ofthe power of drones, drones can
be controlled by somebodysitting back behind the lines,
flying with a little camera infront, uh directing the drone,
and they can pick up and attackone soldier, they can go into an
open uh carrier of military orinto a tank or into a bunker.

(40:43):
Uh that's how effective theyare.
So you have one explosivedevice attached to each drone,
and the drone, which is cheap tomake, gets blown up and
somebody perishes.
So, okay, we know that.
And uh uh I'd rather see thatthe technology is gonna go now
and uh uh and I you know I thinkof that uh Will Smith movie i

(41:05):
Robot as I'm watching this.
And for people who may it's afew years old now, and in that
futuristic film, um Will Smithplayed a cynical uh police
officer who didn't like, matterof fact, extremely suspicious of
these robots, which were ineveryday life.
They were waitresses andwaiters, they were uh attending

(41:28):
people, they were, you know, howcan I be of service?
was I think their opening lineto humans.
And there were three rules, onebeing that they have to obey
every order and they have toobey the uh, you know, to take
care of everybody.
And of course, they didn't.
So some somebody decided to uhuh show that they could be could

(41:52):
be uh terrible to society.
And then at the end of thepicture, all the people are
gone, and the only ones that areleft are the robots.
And so when these things arecreated, they're not gonna wear
out.
I mean, they're they're goingto be uh servants.
That would be nice if theywould do all the tasks we don't
want to do, like farming, um,you know, policing.

(42:15):
Remember the day the earthstood still back in the when it
was black and white?

Les (42:19):
Oh yeah.

Douglas (42:19):
Remember that one with Tobar, the robot, which was the
word robot spelt backwards, anduh that it was a 10-foot-high uh
uh solid metal uh robot thatwas a galactical policeman.
And and uh the whole galaxy uhrelied on these robots to be
policemen because they couldn'tbe bought off or intimidated or

(42:43):
whatever.
Well, I I was a young guy whenI saw that and I thought that's
amazing, you know, that toe barwas a solid piece of metal
rocking around.
But here we are.
Are we looking at a policemanin training here?
Or uh I I can't I I mean you'reasking intuitive what I see.
It's I had a dream vision nottoo long ago where um there was

(43:06):
an issue where we were going tohave to uh try to discern
between the replica people andthe real people.
So my visions of the futureusually come true.
So that means that we're goingto have replicas of ourselves,
and we have to distinguishbetween the two somehow.
Does that mean they're gonnalook really, really lifelike?

(43:29):
Well, you know, we have AI, wehave uh this these programs now
where they can generatelook-alike people, they can have
the people talk, and and the AIputs in the the vocabulary and
the sentences and words, andit's really hard to tell the
difference.
Apparently, it's notimpossible, but it's to the
average eye, it's kind ofdifficult.

(43:51):
But it's along the way ofalready having images like you
and I being projected by AI.
So, oh my god, yes, there'sgonna be those things in the
future, but um I you know, likeI can see these young, they got
a big prize for that 80,000 yenor whatever it was.
Yeah, I mean, I I can see whythey would be doing it, but then

(44:13):
the people behind the sceneswatching like all these young
guys do, they develop this newtechnology for free and try to
win a prize.
Meanwhile, if somebody'sgobbling it up or patenting it
or doing something, I suspect,being cynical.
But so what?
What is the answer?

(44:34):
And as we saw here, uh that wasa pretty fun thing.
But understand Oz has anotherclip for us about McDonald's.

Les (44:43):
Yeah, robotic McDonald's.
There's one in China, Ibelieve, and there's another one
located somewhere in Texas.
Uh, and there was this one man,I was watching his little uh uh
video.
He went across the entirecountry and the United States
and he sampled all of thesedifferent McDonald's.
Some of them were robotic, somewere human.
Uh interaction occurred.
Uh, and he was of the opinionthat he did not really care for

(45:06):
the AI McDonald's because hesaid uh they were having trouble
dealing with uh understandingdifferent accents.
Now, the one they have inChina, from what I understand,
is uh simply it it you interactwith an app, so there's no
speaking to this restaurant orthe AI at all.
Uh and it's very eerie when yougo inside because there are no

(45:27):
people, it's just totallyautomated.
I guess somebody has to overseethe mechanisms and make sure
everything that you know thesupplies are there.

Douglas (45:34):
But um well, baby steps less.
We're we're they're alreadyimplementing it.
I mean, think about it.
You're leaving your house to godown to a fast food place and
you don't meet anybody, and it'slike, why not just have it
delivered to your door, right?
But I wonder, I guess the thelogic behind that is these

(45:58):
robots or these AI uh actuators,they they don't need coffee
breaks.
Uh they they work 24-7.

Les (46:11):
I mean, we've already how long have we used them in car
manufacturing now?
I mean, for decades, right?
I mean, they these robots thatmake that do auto welding and
which is pretty dangerous workfor a human being.
I mean, so they can do the moredangerous work.
My thinking is if we can playsports with these things, why
don't we use them for also forlife-saving capability?
Like if there's a god forbid aforest fire sending them in

(46:33):
because they would be imperviousto damage.

Douglas (46:35):
That's well done.
Yes, that's exactly right.
They could send them into uh uhinto into fires, right?
They would be asbestos coated,whatever, and I don't know if
they would have like fire hosesor you know, like CO2 gas
containers.
Remember, they don't need tobreathe, so they could have

(46:56):
obnoxious gases that would putout the fire like CO2.
Uh that's correct.
And then I was thinking as youwere talking, uh, they could go
into uh rescue people who are inthe water, like lifeguards, and
also they could wrestle sharks.

Les (47:11):
Yeah, I mean, look at the look at the people that die in
mine accidents.
I mean, they could literallysend them into the mines, they
could see them in all the smokebecause they could have
infrared, you know, visioncapability.
They could locate.
I mean, if they can locate aball on a playing field, they
can all you know use differenttypes of uh apparatus to locate
somebody in in adverseconditions.
I would I would think thatwould be the next natural
natural step.

Douglas (47:31):
Well, here we are in the Seoul report giving the
people out there in the worldideas and how they can use it.
Like, you know, like they coulddrive fire trucks, they could
be over them, you know, theyjump off and they got hoses all
over the place that they coulddrive right into the fire.
Oh, look at this.
Here we go.
Robot Olympics.

Les (47:51):
Oh my god, look at this.
They're actually running.
Holy moly.
I didn't know they could dothat.
Wow, that is that is reallyincredible.
I didn't know they could that Ididn't know they had mastered
running by now.

Douglas (48:06):
Look at this.
Wow.
There are some winning therace.
Oh my god.
This one looks a little wobbly.
Hold it, you're done.
Oh my god, that's incredible.
That is really fun.
Oh Ryan.
Look at that.
He's going around again.

Les (48:27):
That was fascinating.
Thank you, thank you, Jack.
Yeah, so we have them insports, so why not in life
saving?
Uh, I would think they makealso great foot soldiers for I
mean, why bother throw peopleaway when you can just send them
into harm's way, you know?
And it's a it's a myriad ofthings we could do with them.
I mean, we're already we coulduse them for space travel, for
studying volcanism.
I mean, there are people whohave died on volcanoes being

(48:49):
trying to take samples ofdifferent types of uh chemicals,
and they could they could do itvery easily.
So the only thing that the onlydownside is all these people
that were working at McDonald's,they're out of work now.
Here we go.
Yeah, this is the one that'sin, I believe it's in Texas, and
there are no people thereexcept for the person that comes
and makes sure that everythingis supplied so the the the uh

(49:11):
automation can actually work.
Um but as I said, they have alittle trouble with uh voice
interaction.
But this man who was doingthis, uh he literally preferred
human interaction.
He said, because he actuallygot a compliment on a shirt he
wore, and he said, Hell, youknow, I love compliments.
He said, I'm a littleprejudiced towards people in

(49:32):
favor of people.
So, but uh I don't know.
It's uh I just hope it doesn'tput people out of work.
You know, when I was a kidworking my way through college,
I worked at the phone company, Iwas a janitor there, and we had
about 15 people in thebuilding, and 15 people went
down to two because they broughtin this massive computer.
And they um and there was twopeople, and they said the only

(49:56):
reason we're air conditioningthe building is for the machine,
not for the people.
So I thought, you know, is thisgonna be replacing people who
really need work?
I don't know.

Douglas (50:05):
Well, I that's let's uh you could see there at the at
that last little bit of thatclip that uh that they obviously
don't they the food didn't passthe taste test.
I mean, yeah, I mean if you'rea robot and you throw something
on the grill and you take it offthe grill and put it in there,
there's no basic, you know, likeoh look, it's it's is it rare

(50:27):
or is it medium or well done oror what?
But look at this.
I mean, I was thinking aboutthis when COVID came along.
There was a lot of imp uh umwhat would you call it
implementation of you know,handing things out, uh bags, you
know, because we didn't havethis interaction.
I wonder if that was kind ofthe start of what's going on

(50:50):
here.
Yeah, but again, fast food uhby robots, uh, it's coming,
right?
Because they already have thisthing, they have to work out the
kinks.
It's like, oh my god, we havedriverless cars.
You know, if you look at ArnoldSchwarzenegger's shows or
movies, think back, he had thattrip to Mars and they had

(51:14):
driverless taxis.
Well, now we have one, we havecars that do that, and uh the
with the with the drones andwhatever, we have now
deliveries, people that droppackages off at your house.
And it's kind of like in in uhwhere I live, there's uh
legislation coming up abouthaving drone highways in the
air.

(51:34):
Wow, okay, that would be likethe pilots have certain um
corridors in the air.
Everybody from the from the uhNorth America goes to Europe at
night, so they go from west toeast, and everybody from Europe
the next day goes from Europe tothe west in the daytime, and so

(51:54):
they don't have head-oncollisions, if you will.
Is that what we're gonna havewith drone highways in the
neighborhood?

Les (52:01):
Yeah, I remember watching uh the movie Back to the Future.
They made two or three of them,and you see these highways in
the sky, these cars zipping by,um, just like the Jetsons, I
guess, too.
I guess it would be possible.
The tech guy I listened to, whocomes on GBH every every year,
usually twice a year, and theyasked him about the flying cars.
He said, We already have them.
He said the FAA has alreadyapproved of them.
He said, but uh, because ofhuman error, they don't allow a

(52:25):
lot of them into the sky.
He said they would have to beprobably controlled uh via AI to
be safe.
Uh and he said it is possible,it's just a matter of time
before they implement it.

Douglas (52:34):
Yeah, I've seen them uh the prototypes were they're
like drones, and in the in themiddle of the drone, there would
be like a uh compartment wherepeople could sit, four people
and uh one person or severalpeople.
So they're already out there,and instead of having four
propellers, they have eight, andso they're quite maneuverable,

(52:55):
you know, they have theirstick-oriented, or maybe they're
computer directed.
So we already have them.
And I'm thinking, oh my god,you know, like now the good side
of that for all us goodSamaritans out there and saying,
look at all that land that wecan reclaim, get rid of all
those highways and bottles.
Yeah, wow, yeah, and grow foodon them and things like that.

Les (53:16):
Oh, there was an article years ago, it was in popular
mechanics, and they before allthis AI came out, they were
thinking of uh delivering peopleacross the country via
pneumatic tube.
Just imagine you get in thetube and shoop, you're off.

Douglas (53:32):
Yeah, yeah, well, anyway, the the the way the
world's going.
Like, I mean, uh from the frommy father was born in 1910 uh to
here I am in 2025.
Uh the world has changed.
We've we have men on the moon,we've had landers uh devicing.
We got a helicopter on Mars.

(53:53):
I've also seen that we havelanded on Venus.
The Russians had 10 differentattempts, and they now have uh
pictures of Venus, and thetemperatures and the gravity is
so so uh difficult there, like Ican't remember 500 degrees or
something on the surface, but wehave pictures of other planets

(54:16):
now.
That's only what we know.
I didn't know about the Venusone until recently.
Have we gone and landed onPluto?
Has a Voyager that's stillgoing, going, going, going, has
it bumped into some other raceout there?
I'm a little nervous that youknow we send out these vehicles
and what's the reception gonnabe like at the other end?

Les (54:40):
Yeah, you know.
Well, you got a good pointbecause even Stephen Hawking he
said, you know, you sure youwant to let people know where
you are?
Uh, but I think the farthestplanetary uh body we land on so
far is the largest moon inSaturn, which I think is Titan.
I think we did land on Titan.
You can actually see that onYouTube.
It's it's intriguing uh towatch that.
But yeah, who knows?
Where all I know is I hope itwe're going to a good place and
we continue to help people withit.

Douglas (55:02):
Yeah, well, as as somebody in Ostradomas said, in
the future he had a vision wherepeople were talking to bricks.

Les (55:11):
Really?
Wow.
Oh my god, that's cool.

Douglas (55:16):
A brick.
Yeah, it's a brick.
It's a brick.
And there was another one wherehe saw people, he called them
the pig men.
It was humans with a mask on,and he called them they look
like a snout.
That was the uh World War IIfighters in in England.
They had these masks on.
That's right, yeah.

(55:36):
They looked like they werewearing snouts.
So uh, my friends, if you'reout there in one and you're
talking about this in the chat,it's like images that you you
know, he didn't know what itwas.
He didn't know that this was aphone and that people would have
phones.
He just saw a square thing andit looked black and it looked
like a brick.
So he said what it was.

(55:57):
That was hundreds of years ago.
And so the images that you seein prophecy, you've got to watch
jumping to conclusions.
I do that sometimes when I seesome event that's gonna happen
in the world.
I kind of think, well, it'sgonna happen in this place and
that place because they're atwar.
And then lo and behold, it's atanother place that's gonna
start or is starting a war.

(56:18):
But you're seeing something andyou're trying to, in your mind,
recognize it.
And we have a tendency to likethis this phone, who knows?
He wouldn't possibly understandthat we would have such devices
as phones, so he called it abrick.
He could have called it astone, or maybe he did.

(56:38):
I don't know.
But the point is that when wesee these things in the future,
like these robots, and my visionof in the future, we're gonna
have some difficulty discerningbetween the replicate people and
the real people, that's youknow, that's how lifelike it's
gonna go.
That's how these inventors go.
They don't stop.

(56:58):
Right?
They get an idea, they havethese uh these athletic robots.
I mean, they got in the back oftheir mind have some idea of
where they want to go.
And of course, it's fun now,but what if we're developing a
police force that's gonna berobotic?
What if we're developing rescuepeople like fire, uh fire

(57:21):
police, ambulance?
What if?
That's where it's probablygonna go.
However, things might change,and the internet, which I've
seen, is gonna be locked up inthe future.
I had a vision that the cloudis gonna be locked up.
So beware, my friends.
Store your data on one of thoseexternal hard drives on your

(57:42):
desk.
Don't depend on the on thecloud because one day it's gonna
be locked up and it won't work.
Wow.

Les (57:49):
Okay, that's interesting.

Douglas (57:51):
You can you can all you can all talk about that in the
chat and say, hey, this oldguy's crazy.
That's never gonna happen.
But when it does, maybe I'll belaw, I'll maybe I'll be dust.

Les (58:01):
Okay.
So you really there's no uh andhis wife is a photographer, and
she said, I don't, you know,there's no master prints,
there's no negative, it's alldigital work.

(58:22):
Matter of fact, I had uh I wasjust talking to a fellow uh uh
client of mine who's an artist,and she's lost stuff that she's
uh that she has actually savedon some of these websites.
Uh the prints just disappeared,and she said, Do you have any
master print?
And she goes, No, it's it'sjust gone.
Oh boy.

Douglas (58:38):
Okay, there you go.
You've heard it on the SoulReport Live, my friends.
You know, have a hard copy,whatever that means, you know,
you know, like print it out.

Les (58:48):
Yeah, it's some kind of a yeah, that's the trouble.
But even the digital art, thedigital artist is saying there's
no master painting, it's it'sall digital now.
So yeah, I guess we gotta goget a look for that.

Douglas (58:58):
Well, I think people being people, they'll always be
artists.
And you know, remember alwaysthe pendulum swings one way, and
the pendulum swings back.
And uh, we went from anagricultural society uh you know
with horsepower, real horses,and uh and and and organic food,

(59:18):
you know, that was made uhwithout chemicals and things,
and we've gone all this way, andnow we're coming back, and more
and more people are growinggardens in their back, and more
and more people are going backto the old ways.
So it's the same as we moveforward with all this AI stuff.
I mean, somebody in the futurecan just say, some politician,

(59:39):
say no more, we're stopping it,and they throw the little
switch, and all theseinterconnected uh mechanical
beings are turned off.
Yeah, so remember uh you know,Skynet and uh Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Terminatormay happen, may happen, but.

(59:59):
But they eventually, humans, aswe know, humans figured out a
way how to get around thattragedy after a lot of you know
ruckus.
But anyway, uh if you haveimportant stuff, keep them on a
hard drive.
And remember uh Bitcoin and uhvirtual money uh can disappear
in a flash.
If you can't access your uhaccount, you're broke.

(01:00:23):
So keep some cash, have a shoebox, have a safe, have a hole in
the wall, but uh for a rainyday, just in case that
eventuality happens.
I've been saying for years,save some uh silver coins, gold
coins, copper, uh slugs now, uhdifferent things of value, uh
stones, jewels, semi-preciousstones.

(01:00:45):
You should all have a littleall the ancient societies always
had that.
There's always um wealth in thehouse.
Matter of fact, uh back in theDepression days, there were
people alive when I was youngerwho never trusted the banks
because of what happened in thedepression.
And so you have to be the samething.

(01:01:06):
When you give your money awayfrom you, you have no control
over it anymore.
And the whole idea is to getthat control over and have
portable wealth, especiallystolen coins and things like
that.
Word to the wise.
If you're in the chat, let meknow what you think about that.
Are you big on bitcoins?
Because what when you don'tthink about this, last everybody
say, Wow, the bitcoin is worthtwelve hundred dollars now.

(01:01:30):
Yeah, twelve hundred whatdollars.
Okay, so you bought thebitcoin, and now what are you
gonna do?
You're gonna sell it and getthe dollars, right?
So somehow that does notcompute.
You're you're getting acurrency that's imaginary, you
know, it's it's on the internet,and then you're going to wait
till it goes up and they go up alot, and then you're gonna cash

(01:01:52):
in and get the dollars.
Okay, I understand that you'retrying to make money, but you're
trying to get the dollars soyou can have the money, yeah,
like real money as wealth.
So it's it's not like crypto isgonna go forever, and you know,
you can buy it and sell it andtrade it.
I understand.
I don't do that myself, butkeep in mind that it's all based

(01:02:14):
on money, gold, or silver orproperty.
So convert it.
I think the term's calledconversion, and get some real
property.
So, anyway, enough about that.
So uh well, that's gonna belong before we'll keep on going
long, but long long after I'mnot here, so I'm not gonna worry
too much about it.
What's next on the list here?

Les (01:02:35):
Uh well after shrub break, we'll be back with uh the time
machine.
And we'll be speaking aboutsomething very mysterious that
nobody usually talks about.

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Les (01:03:52):
So we hear a lot about Atlantis.
Uh many psychics and sages havementioned Atlantis.
Many books have been writtenabout it, but nobody really
talks about Lemuria or Mu, assome people refer to it.
Uh, we know it was somewhere inthe Pacific.
Uh, but and it was but wereally don't know what happened
to it, Doug.
Uh what became of Lemuria?

Douglas (01:04:14):
Well, Lemuria is described as a vast land or
continent that existed a long,long time ago, uh, often
believed to have been located inthe Pacific Ocean, and you've
alluded to the land of uh Mu orOg uh as those continents were
worth, uh, were known at thetime.
The idea uh first appeared inthe 19th century when scientists

(01:04:35):
were trying to explain uh thedistribution uh of uh lemurs and
other species in distant lands.
You know, animals weretraveling, they were where'd
they come from?
Over time, spiritual and occultwriters expanded the concept to
mythological civilizations suchas Atlantis.
Now, right, my friend andteacher Ross Peterson and Edgar

(01:04:56):
Casey spoke about this that uhyou know these these uh this
land in the Pacific was awonderful place.
There was no money, everybodyhad uh a wonderful, you know,
life living from the uh thesurrounding areas uh was one of
the earliest great uhcivilizations predating

(01:05:20):
Atlantis.
So the people were morespiritually advanced, they lived
in harmony, and uh they wereguided by higher consciousness.
You know, they're they're kindof like the Titans and the
Aztecs and the Egyptians.
They were kind of likeinfluenced by the lands in the
muriah.
Uh many tr many uh manytraditions describe them as

(01:05:43):
graceful beings and deeplyconnected to the earth uh with
uh mystical telepathicabilities.
They live close to nature.
So they were actually like thefirst, if I can say this,
hippies.
You know, they were likehanging around, they were like
having fun, they were lettinglife go by.
But some of the remnants ofNamiria are are uh Hawaii and

(01:06:06):
Easter Island.
Uh they were they were alsoparts of present-day Polynesia
and Australia, and even extendedtowards India, uh, because that
Pacific Ocean is gigantic, youknow.
It's just and you look at it,and there is absolutely nothing
there.
There's some islands uh in thelittle teeny ones in the south,
and there's some little uhmountaintops that we've call we

(01:06:30):
call Hawaii.
And then, of course, Japan andand the Ring of Fire, uh, which
is all of the uh the coastlineof Japan and and the countries
in the east and then the westcoast of North America, uh, they
all were part of it.
Um California, uh as weunderstand it, was part of the
murier.
And there's no other place inthe world like California.

(01:06:53):
It is uh it is a land all byitself.
It is so strange.
Well, strange, unusual.
I mean, you could look atAustralia and say the same
thing, Australia and uh Northand South or New Zealand.
Islands onto themselves,there's no other place in there.
So uh as we look towards that,there's um location that

(01:07:16):
reminates like places like MountSasha in California.
Um I used to listen to a radiostation there and I was drove by
it, but I never got to go upthe mountain when I was visiting
California years ago.
But apparently, when Lemuriasuffered a catastrophic um
episode, just like Atlantis, thewhole continent went down.

(01:07:39):
And uh Ross Peterson once saidthat Peru was part of Lemuria,
and uh Lemuria was in a westerlydirection.
So Peru, with all those Mountuh, you know, those uh NASA
lines, and they have those uh uhin Peru, they have those uh um
what you know what's up in themountain there, those uh those

(01:08:00):
uh gosh, what are they?

Les (01:08:02):
Yeah, they call them the isn't the NASCA lines?
Yeah.
They look like runways and theyhave those large uh
hieroglyphic, like the thespider and the and the man, the
different I mean map youcouldn't even realize what they
were until you saw them fromspace or from uh great height.
Yeah, those are so those areremnants of Lemuria.

Douglas (01:08:19):
Yeah, and and uh again, uh it would be a huge
continent.
Oh wow in the Pacific Oceanthat stretched, you know, again,
there was one time where NorthAmerica was underwater, uh at
North and South America, andthen if you if you look at South
America and you see that littlebulge on Brazil, and you kind
of look over at Africa, theykind of just come together

(01:08:42):
perfectly.

Les (01:08:43):
Yeah.

Douglas (01:08:44):
And I did see that there was a rock that was split
in the middle, down the middle.
One half was in uh in SouthAmerica and the other half was
in Africa.
Some somebody found theserocks, it was the same rock cut
in half, split in half, I shouldsay.
So the you know, so what ifthat was attached South America
into uh Africa and it made upthis continent with maybe Pan or

(01:09:07):
whatever, and then in the Westthere was this huge continent uh
that was called Emuria with theland of Mu and Og.
And what if when it went downthe continents uh of South
America and Africa split?
Okay, that's my my uh personaluh uh submission, uh just for

(01:09:28):
intuition speaking.
So it would make sense that asthe Pacific went down, the South
American continent split awayfrom Africa, naturally, because
the world was splitting apart.
But Lemuria sank uh beneath theocean following uh, you know,
like I'm saying, thesecataclysmic events.
And so maybe the RockyMountains were born at the same

(01:09:50):
time, where as the as theshelves go down in the Pacific
and they push up towards theeasterly coast of North America,
and you have the RockyMountains from Alaska all the
way down to um, well, I don't asfar as as uh Latin America and
maybe a little into SouthAmerica.
So, you know, people say, whathas survived?

(01:10:13):
Well, there's Easter Island,for instance, but uh spiritual
memory carried forward, like theKahunas in in Hawaii.
That was a very unusualreligion from you know religious
traditional things.
I mean, it was all there out byitself in the in the in Hawaii.
They have traditions and theybelieve the kahunas believe that

(01:10:35):
thoughts are in a uh amaterialized area where uh it's
like a sandstorm.
And in that in that cloud ofmovement, thoughts take shape,
and as they uh coagulate orcreate critical mass, they kind
of drop down into the mentalrealms and in the minds of

(01:10:56):
people, and then from that intothe into the hands of people,
and whatever that thought wascreated in that mind is
produced.
You know, it's it's kind ofokay, that makes sense.
You know, you for you form athought in the mind, and then
somebody gets the idea of makingan invention, and then they
actually work on it, they try tomake it with their hands, and
then they rework it, and finallythey have this uh invention

(01:11:20):
that oh my god, now we have acanoe with with a log on the
side and we won't fall over.
Uh and you know, but there wasalways this longing for travel,
and um many of the people in thePacific were going about
looking to connect with other uhnative people because when it
went down, there were islandsall over the place.

(01:11:40):
Oh, and people had migratedfrom Lemuria eastward.
And as such, um uh that's wherethe the thing or the thoughts
are, or there, or some peopleare putting forward that that's
where the uh highly advancedbeings who lived on this vast
continent of Lemuria when theymigrated, or they were, you

(01:12:04):
know, when they I guess theybecome uh refugees, they
migrated eastwardly.
And there's some remnants aboutsayings about there were these
people coming in ships, steelships or something from the
West.
And as such, these these peoplemigrated from Nemuria onto
North America, and the NorthAmerican continent was well

(01:12:25):
populated with with NativeAmericans, uh, Indians and and
tribes, um, long before the uhEuropeans showed up who brought
diseases to them and andbasically catastrophic uh um
sickness happened and wiped outmost of the people in in uh
North America anyway, that's sothe story goes.
But the uh the point being isthat there's a migration and

(01:12:48):
even into Atlantis, and thenfrom Atlantis into Egypt.
So think about it, thesocieties in Egypt or Central
America are similar, and theyare similar to the I'm not gonna
say they are the same, butthey're similar in some ways to
the kahunas that now survived inHawaii.

(01:13:09):
Interesting.

Les (01:13:12):
So did Lemuria coexist with Atlantis?
Did they actually overlap for awhile before they went down?

Douglas (01:13:19):
The theory is kind of like you're asking me, I I think
it was Lemuria was the place.
And then uh Atlantis was asecondary place.
It's kind of like um theydidn't they they I think it was
a matter where Lemuria when itwent down, Atlantis came up.

Les (01:13:39):
So you have Atlantis was the they said that was that was
the home of the red race.
Uh so Lemuria was the home ofthe brown race?
Is that what is that what no?

Douglas (01:13:50):
I think you could look at you know look at look at the
remnants of the society inHawaii.

Les (01:13:55):
The Polynesians, yeah.

Douglas (01:13:57):
Yeah, that's it.
They were the same.
Oh wow.
The they probably were red raceor red in color, and that's why
the Native Americans were maybethe same, although I understand
there's a theory that the NorthAmerican Indians were the lost
tribes of Israel that migratedfrom uh Israel uh when there was
the twelve when the twelvetribe tribes were uh twelve

(01:14:19):
tribes were fighting, a lot ofthem, the ten uh Dan and and um
Benjamin, the the tribes movednorth and they went uh across
Africa and they made their wayup to um to the UK uh and and
were and these became uh theearly Britons, if you will.

(01:14:40):
And uh wherever they went, theyum the tan of the tribe of Dan
would name landmarks after theirtribe, and that's why you'll
find from Israel goingnorthwest, you'll find many
rivers are named have they havethe prefix of Dan in them.
And so that's kind of like ahistorical, you know, domino

(01:15:04):
effect.
So and then when they went touh England, there were there was
uh you know, this is this we'regetting into now conspiracy
theories as to why the GreatCrusades happened, because the
crusaders in England wereactually trying, they were the
ancient tribes of uh of Israelgoing back to you know claim the
land back in in Jerusalem.

(01:15:25):
You know, the Great Crusades,that's that was the impetus for
them to do them.
But I digress.
I mean that's that's a storyfor another show.
But the idea is that thesethese um uh this great society
of Namiria, where it was justplain and simple pleasure all
the time, no fighting, uh nomoney, uh no land acquisition,

(01:15:49):
and they were of higher learninguh culture, philosophy, things
like that.
The spiritual memory carriedforth into uh theosophy and the
new age uh has gone back andchanneled information from these
sacred sites.
Easter Island and Hawaii andthe Andes are thought to hold
Amerian energy, if you will, orremnants.

(01:16:11):
Many mystics uh believe uh thatuh it's an inner city of the
Amerians, and still beneath themountains in California, there
are ancient Lemurias living inpeace, waiting for humanity's
awakening.
Hmm.
You know, like the thing aboutAtlantis and these other places,
they knew it was coming.

(01:16:32):
They knew there wascatastrophic things coming
because they were elevated, theywere aware, they were
intuitive, they were smart.
Uh the more we find about uhmore find about ancient India,
we found out they had uhadvanced uh mathematics, they
had uh uh ships that flewthrough the air, they had

(01:16:55):
batteries and and uh weapons.
Uh and and people even gofurther to say that you know
they were inspired by beings whoand that visit them from uh
from other um uh off-worldplaces.
Well, what if Lemuria was theplace where that happened to
start with?
Again, this the NASA lines,Mount Pitsu, Pishu, and things

(01:17:17):
like that.
Um, you know, like we don'tknow what happened 5,000,
10,000, 30,000 years ago.
We we don't know as humans, wedon't know our our origins or
where we came from.
We don't know how we first camehere.
But if you go back to theancient Vedas and and the the
oldest society in the world inIndia, uh there's lots of

(01:17:39):
explanations.
And um, you know, this wholething about you know looking at
rock formations where they builttemples out of rocks, and you
can you can't even put a creditcard between them.

Les (01:17:50):
Oh, yeah, that's incredible.

Douglas (01:17:51):
Yeah, well, the theory is they knew how to melt rock.
Wow.
Yeah.

Les (01:17:56):
Well, it makes kind of sense.

Douglas (01:17:57):
And when you look at how tightly packed they're
together, yeah, and it's uh theymelt the rock, they formed it,
they had tools that would wouldcut holes in it and things like
that.
These are all uh, you know, youcan you can go on AI and and
the internet and find uh TikTokand you find these things.
Now, I uh you got to do it witha sort of a skeptical uh um

(01:18:18):
mind that some of these thingsare hoaxes, but uh a lot of them
are not.
They're famous, they've been inin existence, and and more
recently people are being ableto use AI, are uh they're able
to ascertain that they weremachined, that these devices,
these rocks, whatever, are thesame all over the world.

(01:18:39):
The same rock formations.
Have you ever noticed thoserock formations they're kind of
like they're like odd shape andthey fit together?
All over the world.
How did that happen all overthe world that that was gonna be
that?
Well, not I'm I'm asking itrhetorically, but you know, the
DNA and soul memory, uh, as someof the metaphysical teachers
claim that people today havestrong spiritual intuition of

(01:19:02):
healing and gifts to carry onfrom the murier, the murias soul
lineage.
So maybe maybe uh, you know,people today can remember if you
had dreams like it would beancient Persia or someplace that
it was uh or I you know I'venot been to Hawaii myself, but I

(01:19:23):
I would like to go therebecause I think I could pick up
a little of that uh advancedsociety.
What did the people in the chathave to say?
Anybody out there been toHawaii and discovered any
mystical things of the greatkahunas and the teachings uh
back in the day?
I mean, they were uh was asociety that was very peaceful
and loving.
The same in the Polynesians, uhuh the same tranquility.

(01:19:46):
You know, there was nocompetitive sports, you know,
there wasn't football.
There might have been canoeracing, you know.
And I mean the great chiefcomes out and says, Okay, the
good news is it's a holiday.
The bad news is the chief wantsto go water skiing.
You 300 guys get out there.
They had surfboards on thesurfboards were like 14 or 18

(01:20:09):
feet long, and they were likebig planks, right?
You know, yeah.

Les (01:20:12):
So uh reminds me of the movie.
Uh, I don't know if you eversaw the movie Mutiny on the
Bounty, and uh Captain O'Crock,and he was a he was supposed to
get some breadfruit, and theyended up landing in Tahiti, and
the people were apologize, andthey were so friendly and
loving, and the and the thesehardcore sailors fell in love
with the women and they didn'twant to leave.
They said, This is paradise,we're we're not going, we're
we're staying here.

Douglas (01:20:32):
That's the word paradise.

Yeah, think about it (01:20:35):
no taxes, yeah, no loans, everything you
need.
You walk over to a tree and yougrab a pineapple, you take a
spear and you got a fish, andevery night, you know, it's like
barbecue on the beach, and uh,if you like each other, well,

(01:20:56):
you disappeared in the bushes,and you know, everybody was
having a wonderful time.
What kind of life would thatbe?
Paradise.

Les (01:21:05):
Yeah, I mean, they literally the authorities had to
come back and drag the men backto England when they they it
took them years to get backthere, but they dragged them
back to England and they wereheld in trial.
But uh they didn't want toleave because they said the
people were so lovely andgentle, and there was nothing to
do but uh eat, sleep, and drinkand be merry.
What a wonderful life.

Douglas (01:21:24):
Sure beats being on some little ship with scurvy and
uh somebody cracking a whipover your back, and you know,
like uh getting seasick andgoing back to some you know
place in England that wasn'texactly clean, you know, like uh
anyway.
So uh we can fantasize aboutthat.
But what if our friends say onthe on on the chat?

(01:21:45):
We we should have somequestions coming up here now,
uh, and the question and answerperiod.
What are you saying out there,my friends?
Uh, what's your comments abouttonight?
What do you think about roboticathletes and robotic food
stores and fast food places?
And what do you know aboutLemuria?
It's one of the mostfascinating continents uh or

(01:22:07):
historical uh accounts of theearth changes back in the day.
You know, the earth haschanged, according to Casey,
five times there have beencatastrophes that almost wiped
out everybody.
And we're apparently headedtowards another one.
So uh, you know, again, uh youknow, probably not going to be

(01:22:28):
in our lifetime, but again, youknow, what do you think about
this?
Uh what's on the chat?
So let's ask the producer areyou looking at any of the chat
that we have now, Les?
Any questions?

Les (01:22:37):
Oh, yeah.
We've got uh one from uh his uhit's uh from uh Luke Carpenter.
It's a rather lengthy one.
Uh basically, could the TenCommandments, traditionally seen
as divine commands given toMoses, be a mistranslation or
intentional reframing?
Given God's emphasis on freewill, is it possible that these

(01:23:00):
were not strict rules, butrather characteristics or
descriptors of God's people?
For example, instead of thoushalt not steal, might God have
been saying, My people, don'tsteal, don't murder, love me,
and love their neighbors asthemselves, offering examples of
what it looks like to liverightly as his chosen rather
than imposing commands that seemto conflict with free will.

Douglas (01:23:24):
Well, rules always conflict with free will.
That's why they're calledrules.
Uh it would be better to callthem God uh guidelines.
But here's the differencebetween man's law and spiritual
law.
Man's law is the letter of thelaw, God's law uh the spiritual

(01:23:45):
law is the justice of the law.
So in order to control ancientcivilizations, which it was
perfectly lawful to kill eachother, uh rules were set down.
And uh I think again, goingback five thousand years or

(01:24:05):
whenever, uh looking back, uhwhat language was Moses speaking
when God communicated to him?
Well, Moses was an Egyptian.

Les (01:24:20):
Oh, that's right, yeah.

Douglas (01:24:21):
Yeah, he was maybe he was being shown tablets of
hieroglyphs.
I don't know.
I wasn't there, I don't rememberbeing there, I don't remember
being down at the the the footof Mount Sinai, but uh the
question is asked in thecontemporary time.
I agree that there could havebeen these my people don't

(01:24:44):
steal, don't kill each other,don't do this, don't do that.
But at that point in society,however it was established,
because the entire um religiousview uh that Moses brought
forward was built upon onething.
Do you know what that is, Les?

(01:25:05):
Friends, you know what that'suh out there?
The entire Jewish faith as weunderstand it now, and I'm not
Jewish, and I don't want topropose that I'm an authority,
but from my teeny tinypermission uh uh perspective is
the entire Jewish faith wasestablished on Moses seeing a

(01:25:25):
burning bush.
Wow, really?
Think about it.
You don't have to be a scholarto have that opinion, but it was
uh Moses had a religiousperspective, he was highly
trained, he was going to bepharaoh, was he not?
Yeah, that's right, yeah.
So he was highly educated inthe Book of the Dead, the

(01:25:49):
Egyptian Egyptian uh theology,symbolism, etc., etc.
Okay.
So he has this awakening, andhe decides not to become the
pharaoh anymore because he hasconnections to the Hebrew
people.
And for whatever reason, hegave it all up and he became the
prophet of the Hebrew people.

(01:26:11):
And you know, he he let mypeople go.
His mission was to free themfrom the enslavement of Egypt
and take them to the promisedland, which nobody really seemed
to know where it was.
It ended up to be in Syriaactually after when they left.
However, they went and theywere took the spoils of Egypt,

(01:26:31):
all these slaves and and and uhand people who were you know
under the under the whip of theEgyptian people at the time, and
they left.
And where did they go?
Well, they went down to the RedSea and they found a way to
cross over.
Apparently there was a landbridge that popped up underneath
it, and it's still remnants ofthat to this day.
But when he got went up toMount Sinai, he was called up to

(01:26:54):
the mountain, and there he hadthis communication with the
divine, in which there was aburning bush that wasn't
consumed.
And then he came down withthese commandments.
Again, now we're going from uhearthly or sorry, uh yeah, an
Egyptian uh mystical templepriest kind of uh knowledge,

(01:27:16):
about to be feral the mosthighly trained metaphysically,
to this middle land now ofcombining the prophecies of the
Hebrew that they were lookingfor the Messiah and things like
that, to the point where hecomes down with the Ten
Commandments.
Now, I had it from somebodyelse tell me there were actually

(01:27:38):
144 commandments.
There wasn't just ten.
But uh we're not on the insideof that, okay?
We're just uh on the Christianshave this Ten Commandments,
which kind of is like a skeletonoverview on how to be a decent
person, you know, don't commitadultery, don't steal, uh, don't

(01:28:00):
overindulge, you know, and anduh covet your your neighbor's
property, including his his uhanimals and his wife.
So that that was for thatsociety at that point in time.
You know, Jesus came along andhe said Moses was known as the
lawgiver, and they strictlyfollowed the letter of the law.

(01:28:23):
And Jesus came along and said,you know, I'm here with
compassion, and it's the spiritof the law, so that if somebody
was doing something on theSabbath, meaning the day off,
uh, you didn't stone them todeath.
Okay, Jesus himself was uh wasaccused when there was that

(01:28:45):
story about the the the crippleat the well, and he went over
and he healed them.
The man picked got up and hepicked up his cot, and he and
Jesus said to him, Look, you'vebeen made whole, God has blessed
you.
Go your way, but don't tellanybody anything.
It's there, it says he tellsthem, Don't tell.
And what does the man do?
He walks down this street, he'sgot his cot under his arm.

(01:29:07):
My god, he's been years on hisback.
Now he's walking.
People came up and said, Wait aminute, hey, whatever his name
would be.
Uh, weren't you the guy at thewell?
I mean, you know what's goingon here?
You you're walking, and hesaid, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah.
That guy, you know, Emmanuel oror the son of Joseph, because

(01:29:30):
he wasn't called Jesus at thetime.
He healed me.
And instead of everybody in thelocal church going, they said,
Well, wait a minute.
He's working on the Sabbath.
You can't do that.
And they wanted to know whereyou know the Christ was at
because they wanted to stonehim, they wanted to kill him.
He was working on the Sabbath.

(01:29:51):
That's a true story.
If you read it in the book,it's there.
And the point being is that theletter of the law would be You
were working on Sabbath.
Saturday, so you should getwhipped or stoned or beat.
That keeps people in line,real, you know, unfortunately,
from those people who now wereare now in the temples who make
a living being in the templesand then being uh let's say uh

(01:30:16):
tyrannical to the people uhenforcing these laws.
But the point is that uh thethe compassion of Christ with
the spirit of the law was like,who among you?
I think there's a story thatsomebody tells in the Bible is
that who among you, if your ifyour animal fell in a hole,
which was they called a hellier,or that's where the term hell

(01:30:38):
comes from, by the way.
Who among you, if your donkeywould fall in a in a hole on the
Sabbath, wouldn't try to rescuethe the animal?
Who would wait until the nextday and let the animal die?
Nobody.
And so that was the counter tothat letter of the law versus
the spirit of the law.
So getting to the the questionhere, it's a long answer, but

(01:30:59):
it's very important that uh wedon't need to uh sorry, we we
should keep take intoconsideration that Moses was was
an Egyptian.
We don't know what language thetablets were put into.
I know there's people who areof the Jewish faith are going to
correct me on that because theyknow more than I do.

(01:31:20):
But from my perspective andanswering this question, it's
like those were the spirit ofthe law and how we can live in
har harmony.
I mean, if somebody hurts yourfamily, you're going to hurt
their family back.
And there was trying to getthis away from hurting people
because it was your duty to goand do so.
But I hope that answers thequestion.

(01:31:40):
Another one.

Les (01:31:42):
No, that's uh we're gonna wrap up the show, uh, Doug.
Uh any final comments on uh onMoses and uh you know a lot of
people don't realize that he wasEgyptian.
That was a huge leap of faithfor him to take in order to
leave one religion and go toanother.
That must have been reallytraumatic for that poor thing.

Douglas (01:31:58):
It wasn't a leap of faith.

Les (01:32:00):
It wasn't.

Douglas (01:32:01):
God was with him.
Remember, when the ancientpeople, the higher you go up in
their priesthood, the closer youget to understand God.
And he was having trained inthe in the works of the divine.
But I'm going to I'm going tointerrupt you because we well,
last week we promised people theanswer to riddle me this.
So what was the riddle lastweek?

(01:32:22):
And what was the answer?

Les (01:32:25):
Uh the last week was uh yeah, forget actually I forget.

Douglas (01:32:30):
It was a number one, take a number away or something
like that.

Les (01:32:34):
Take one.
Take an odd number if you takeuh if it is an odd number, if
you take two letters away, itends up being no.
If you take an even number andyou take two letters away, it
ends up odd.

Douglas (01:32:44):
There you go.
So that was the answer lastweek.
This week, before we go, wehave riddle me this.
What's the riddle this week,Less?

Les (01:32:55):
When is a door not a door?

Douglas (01:32:59):
Hmm.
I don't know.
When's a door not a door?

Les (01:33:02):
I know when it is a jar.
And sound the trumpets.
Anyway.
Any final thoughts on the show?

Douglas (01:33:16):
Where's the applause with our with our sound effects
from uh uh our producer here?
So anyway, do we have any morequestions?
Here we go.
Okay.

Les (01:33:29):
Well, just wrapping it up, we're gonna let people know uh
in our up and coming shows,we're gonna be talking about the
Beam Raider Triangle.
Uh Nicola Tesla, was hepossibly an extraterrestrial?
And what is going on in themoon right now?
And there seems to be some veryinteresting footage happening
up there that is being filmed aswe speak.
Uh so if you want to tune innext week, we shall partake of
that.

Douglas (01:33:48):
I just thought of it, Les.
We can have these roboticpeople playing soccer on the
moon.
There you go.
Or doing other things thathumans can't do on the moon,
like farming and mining andstuff like that.
Okay, till uh until next week,you know, my friends.

(01:34:08):
Uh remember uh you're you'relistening to uh Les and I here.
We're having a lot of funtonight, and uh what we're
looking forward to is having youum, you know, ring that bell
and and uh so you'll get anotice when we're on next time.
Please like us and tell allyour friends uh about uh this
show.
It's called the Soul ReportLive, and it's Les Hubert and

(01:34:32):
myself, Dr.
Douglas James Cothell, alongwith our producer uh Jack Balak,
who are bringing us to you.
Uh that's our Soul Report Livefor this Monday night, August
25th, 2025.
Thank you for joining us onthis journey of discovery and
higher understanding.
You know, remember, your soulis eternal.

(01:34:53):
You live forever.
Your choices now shape yourdestiny.
And love is the greatest powerof all.
If you found tonight'sdiscussion meaningful, please
share this show with yourfriends and family and don't
forget to subscribe so you'llnever miss being part of our
show on the Soul Report Live.

(01:35:13):
Until we meet again, keep yourlight shining bright, keep your
faith strong, and may the peaceof the divine be with you
always.
Good night and God bless.

Announcer (01:35:25):
Thank you very much for listening to Wake Up.
If you enjoyed this episode, besure to subscribe so you'll be
notified when a new episode isposted.
And we'd greatly appreciateyour review of our show on
iTunes or wherever you get yourpodcast to let others know about
the great content we'reproducing.
For more about Dr.
Douglas's self-developmentclasses, books, and other

(01:35:46):
related products, please visithis website,
DouglasJamescultural.com.
Until next time, we wish youall of God's blessings.
Health, wealth, and peace ofmind.
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