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April 28, 2025 85 mins
Flooded over the top the town of Oscarville, Georgia in 1956, Lake Lanier has become one of the most dangerous bodies of water in America, with the remains of buildings just below the surface ensnaring hundreds of boats and swimmers. Each year, more than 10 million people visit Lake Lanier in Gainesville, Georgia, even though it’s considered one of the deadliest lakes in America. There have been close to 1,000 deaths at Lake Lanier since its construction in 1956. 250 families were displaced, roughly 50,000 acres of farmland were destroyed, and 20 cemeteries were either relocated or otherwise engulfed by the lake’s waters. The town of Oscarvile was not demolished before the lake was filled, and its ruins still rest at the bottom of the manmade lake, making it the single most dangerous underwater surface in the United States.

With the high number of deaths and accidents, it has a reputation of being cursed and haunted, from the encounters with the Lady of the Lake and hauntings by drowned swimmers whose bodies were never found. Nearly half of all lakes in the U.S. are manmade and are covering a rich history, from ancient temples and artifacts to pyramids and megalithic rock structures. Could it be that lakes across America have been created to cover the true history of North America? On this episode, Brice Watson of Esoteric Atlanta joins Jessica to discuss the cursed Lake Lanier and the lost civilizations covered up by manmade lakes in America.

Brice Elizabeth Watson grew up in the deep South with a love for folklore, legends, and stories associated with the South. Spending her summers with her mother’s family in the low country of coastal South Carolina, Brice was inundated with ghost stories, Gullah culture, and a deep respect for the mysteries of the world. As a lover of Eastern philosopher and traditional yoga, in her early 30s, Brice packed her bags and started one of many trip to India to study the lineage of Ashtanga Yoga at its source. After many years, Brice became the only female in the state of Georgia to carry an authorization to teach, a title she still holds to this day. After receiving authorization, Brice began teaching sold out courses on Ashtanga and Eastern philosophy until, like many, the lockdown of 2020, shut her business down.

During the lockdown, while stuck at home, Brice returned to her first love of storytelling and opened the YouTube Channel Esoteric Atlanta. What started as a way to explore the eccentric stories of the deep South, turned into a fast-growing channel of deep research and presenting alternative ideas to some of our wildest history. On top of running her YouTube Channel, Brice continues to teach two yoga classes a week in the Atlanta area. She also runs a nonprofit out of India to aid slum kids as well as a dog rescue for the street dogs of India. On top of working with countless children during her time in India, she has successfully brought six Indian streets to America where they were placed with loving families. Brice currently lives in Atlanta with her partner and her dog Ravi, who is also a rescue from the streets of India.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Well, good afternoon, everybody.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
What's up, y'all.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
It's the Crupted Huntress. Welcome into our wonderful Monday show.
I hope everybody had a wonderful weekend, y'all know I did.
We had a fantastic show Saturday night, didn't we. I
had Mark me check here Cryptoville. I'm not sure if
he's in the chat today or not. I hadn't even
looked yet, but we talked about the dark side of
chasing Bigfoot and dog Man, and we got into his

(01:20):
experiences out the land between the Lakes of in Kentucky
and so much more. And that was a wonderful show.
I also caught up a little bit. I caught the
audience up a little bit on my adventures this weekend.
I couldn't really talk about it too much on Saturday
night because I still had some guys out in field
who were there. They had so much more activity Saturday

(01:40):
night as well, and I'm gonna have those guys on
my show. Maybe they'll come on this weekend.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
I'm gonna put it out there and see if they
want to come on and talk about all of our
experiences out there. It was intense with massive Bigfoot activity
actually Saturday night. And so I'm gonna wait and talk
about it when they come on, Okay, and uh yeah,
I just I've done some debriefings with Harley and with
Drew Ski of Cryptid Warfare and uh yeah it's uh,

(02:08):
it was. It was wild and we had a wild
time when I was there as well on Friday night.
And where wherever we were this undisclosed location, it is
freaking amazing and uh and so yes, I was in
this Smoky mountains Okay, somewhere in the Smoky Mountains and
uh in Tennessee. And I know Bryce and I you know,
I got my good friend Bryce here today, y'all of
Esoteric Atlanta. We've actually we've kind of thrown her out there.

(02:31):
We want to do a little tour of like the
bell Witch Cave and go up to the land between
the lakes. You know, our buddy Derek lives up there.
And uh and so we might be we might be
getting a little trip together one day, uh girls trip
and uh and we'll go see some some interesting spots
up in Tennessee. Uh because these places and they are
teaming with cryptids, particularly big Foot and dog Man. So

(02:55):
today we are actually going to be talking about. We're
gonna be talking about at least one place in Tennessee. Uh,
man made lakes, y'all. I've been I've been kind of
touching on this subject quite a bit throughout the past
couple of years, talking about man made lakes and the
history that they are covering. Now whether this is on
purpose to cover up our actual history of the United

(03:16):
States or North let's just say North America, Okay, and
it was even before it was North America. Uh, but
what what is actually our true history here? It's not
all what we've been told and uh, and there has
been and it is documented in newspaper clippings and in
the records of some of the universities that there were mounds, okay,

(03:38):
and ancient Egyptian settlements temples that were covered up by
lakes like Lake Norris up in Tennessee. And we're going
to go there today. We also are going to be
talking about the haunted Lake Laneer that is where Bryce
and I we both live in Georgia, where Georgia peaches
and in north of US and Gaysville, Georgia is a
place called Lake Linear And we're gonna talk about that

(04:01):
is the most haunted lake in America, is what they say.
And I've spent plenty of time out there on that
lake and now I don't know if I'll ever spend
any more time on that lake. Actually, after doing this
research and locating a body or two through remote viewing,
it ended up being in that lake. Okay, the bodies

(04:23):
did surface, and we're going to talk about that, did
they as well? I even have the missing the missing
person's poster of the person that I was tasked with
remote viewing his whereabouts when he went missing. And I
guess it's okay to talk about it now I can
tell you who he is because it's been it's been
a little while, it's been a couple of years. But
that was one of my very first remote viewing high

(04:46):
priority target. I don't know it was moe of my first,
but it was one of the most interesting ones, let's
just say. And and I was right on target with
this one. And I even located where it was going
to start. His body with surface and that's where his
body surfaced, y'all. Okay, So, so buckle up, y'all. We've
got a wild ride today. And so and I've got
Bryce here, so let's get to it today. If you

(05:07):
guys would like to follow along with all of my
shows and check out my archives, go to the crypt
hunters dot com. I can also have a Patreon if
you guys would like to support my work. Thank you
to all my members at Patreon, and I have a
shop called war Woman Goods. It's on Etsy, and thank
you guys for all your support. I also will be
at the Myrtle Beast Conference. It's a Bigfoot festival coming

(05:28):
up in a couple of weeks and it's going to
be in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, So if you guys
are in that area, come and see us. I will
be speaking about Bigfoot, of course, with a bunch of
my friends there. And of course in July, come see
meet at the Full Disclosure Now Conference down in Saint Petersburg, Florida,
July the fifteenth through the eighteenth, I believe. Okay, well,

(05:50):
let's get to it. Let's get to it all right, Okay,
So let me give you a little overview of exactly
what we're talking about today, and then I'm going to
bring Bryce up flooded over the top of the town
of Oscarville Georgia in nineteen fifty six. Late Lanier has
become one of the most dangerous bodies of water in America,

(06:10):
with the remains of buildings just below the surface en
sneering hundreds of boats and swimmers. Each year, more than
ten million people visit this lake out in Gainesville, Georgia,
even though it's the deadliest, one of the deadliest lakes
in America.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
There have been.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Close to one thousand deaths at Late Laneer since its
construction in nineteen fifty six, now two hundred and fifty
families or more it was like seven hundred actually were displaced.
Roughly fifty thousand acres of farmland were destroyed, and twenty
cemeteries were either relocated or engulfed by the lake's waters.

(06:47):
The town of Oscarville was not demolished before the lake
was filled, and its ruined still rest at the bottom
of this man made lake, making it the single most
dangerous underwater surface in the United States. With the high
number of deaths and accidents, it has reputation of being
cursed and haunted from the encounters with the Lady of
the Lake and hauntings by drowned swimmers whose bodies were

(07:11):
never found. That's what people say. Now, nearly half of
all the man made lakes in America, or half the
lakes in America are man made, by the way, and
a lot of these lakes cover a very rich history.
And when you do some dig in, you see that
some of these lakes are actually covering up some very

(07:33):
key missing links to our history here in the United States.
And is this done on purpose? Yes, I think it is. Okay,
so we're going to talk about this today. I do
have my good friend Bryce Watson of Esoteric at Lana
here with me, and she has covered this topic. I

(07:53):
am positive over on her wonderful YouTube channel. It is
called Esoteric Atlanta. Bryce is a yoga instructor and has
a great like I said, that great YouTube channel. We
have had some adventures together, was you know, faced face
boots on the ground. We've done big footing together as
a matter of fact too up in North Georgia.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Please help me.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Welcome to the show, miss Bryce a Essoteric Atlanta.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Oh, I'm loving this. This is just right up. I
love the weird and the wacky. I think I think
most of the people watching also do too. And it's
it's you know, for most of our lives, the weird ones,
but now we realizing that we were probably the right
ones all along. So I love talking about this. Isn't
that right? I know?

Speaker 1 (08:36):
And when I was a kid, I spent not even
a kid, I'm gonna say, as a kid a little bit,
but as a young adult, I spent a lot of
time at late Lanear. How about you?

Speaker 2 (08:45):
No, I actually know my must speaking of Myrtle Beach.
My mom's half of my family is from Charleston, South Carolina,
so we always went to the low country, even though
Lake I've driven by Lake Linear, but I've never spent
like any time. My boyfriends had experience paranormal experiences on
Lake Linear. But here's the thing, and something my boyfriend
pointed out to me, because he's also a bit of

(09:06):
a weirdo too, Jessica knows him as well. I have
a really hard time being around that man made lakes.
I get rains of energy, I can't stay awake, I
lose my I get disoriented. And it was actually my
boyfriend who said, and I don't know where he got
this information from, probably the Cassiopeans. If I had to

(09:28):
guess that when you are sensitive to the paranormal. When
you're are an impath or just sensitive to anomalies in nature,
you are not going to be able to spend a
lot of time around a man made lake because it
pulls your life force, It pulls your energy to in
order to sustain itself. Because what did we all learn

(09:49):
from Moby Dick as a kid man versus nature? Nature
is always going to win. And if there's not actually
a lake there, it takes energy to keep it there.
And so that the lake then that the body of
water that has to pull from you, and if you
don't know how to control that, or if you are sensitive,
it is going to exhaust you. So no, I'm very

(10:09):
weary about like being around man made lakes. And also
because listen, Jessica, when I was preparing for this show,
I watched some people scuba diving Lake Lanier and I
was like, you idiots. I was like, who in my
white mind.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
I would have a hard time doing that myself because
it's just so it's so creepy down there. I'm not
sure if I've pulled it up, but I had a
picture of some scuba divers down there.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
Yes, well I do. These are some This is actually
under Lake Lanear.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
They do have some you know, there's a lot of
grave sites and things like that down there. I mean
they have full churches and steeples and walls and everything.
I mean, this is a huge lake. And you know
something something else prices. You were saying that about how
it dreams your energy. They had to build a dam
to create this lake, and that that really does block

(10:58):
the flow of energy movement, and so I would assume
that that has a lot to do with that, with
the draining of the energy.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
See, and I you know the funny thing about you know,
ever since the way that this this group, this nefarious
group of people whatever you want to call in the establishment,
whatever the Iluma Schmadi as I like to say on
the for the YouTube, for the for the Wars of YouTube.
Of course, you know, for me, it's now the way
they constructed these things over the years is they always

(11:28):
have a reasonable That's creepy, isn't it. I'm sorry, but
that is imagine scuba diving, and that's what you see.
I would want to get the f out of Dodge.
I'd be like, take me to the surface. I don't
want to be here anymore. They always create stories around
why they're doing something. And at the time the story
sounds legit, But then now we go back and look

(11:49):
at it and we're scratching our heads, like, what what
do you mean? You know, we know that I have
in my notes here because that's that's what we see
this with Norris Dan, with all these men. I guarantee you,
there's so many made lakes around the world. I guarantee
you it's going to be regardless of what country you're in,
there's going to be kind of the same story. And
this started, like for Lake Lanier in nineteen forty six,

(12:12):
ten years prior to the completion of the dam, Congress
officially authorized its constructions three later. Three years later, in
nineteen forty nine, the federal government gave the state of
Georgia seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars that's about nine
million in today's money to create this and they said
it was for what they gave. The reasoning for them

(12:35):
was that it was created for flood control and water
supply plus electricity for Georgia, Alabama, and Florida. So technically Georgia, Alabama,
and Florida have rights to the water. They considered an
inland Ocean. The Corp of Engineers regulates and controls it
to this day, so the government is still in control
the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Now what's weird

(12:58):
to me, Jessica? And I'm not a science to like
we all am not a scientist, but we are a
Georgia itself is a coastal state. It's a coastal state,
and we have natural rivers and lakes in Georgia. So
what are you talking about? Like I don't want what
do you mean? We've got water? Like what are you

(13:20):
talking about? I'm sorry, Like what are you talking about? That?
But it was also after the Great Depression, right, so
it gave people work, We gave people, so there was this.
But we also look at like the mud floods and
like Tartaria and all that kind of stuff, and it's
like what were they trying? Because they created this story
around America that I'm questioning a lot, like like are

(13:42):
we like I believe we're Egypt I mean Tennessee means
the land of Isis. They don't want us to know that.
So you know, there's gold if you look at all
the Egyptian and the Papyrus is they talk about this
particular form of gold that they used in Egypt. Riddle
me this, batman, Why is that form of gold only
found in the state of Georgia. It's not found over

(14:03):
an Africa. Are you serious?

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Oh my gosh, Well, I mean, well, I know we're
going to get into Lake North and just a little
bit here, but you know, in the Grand Canyon, I
just spoke about this not too long ago. I mean,
we have all these the Temple of Isis, we have
the what is that the Chiops Pyramid and the Shiva
Temple over there. And uh, I mean if you if
you look at a lot of places like the Grand Canyon,

(14:28):
like Pyramid Lake also in Nevada has a pyramid right there,
and and we're told that, oh, it's just a rock formation, right,
But are they?

Speaker 2 (14:36):
No? I have a book I should have. I should have.
It's called It's called Egypt in America. I gotta find it.
But it's fascinating. Do you guys know that? You know again,
check all these do all this this research for yourself.
The Egypt in Africa, they tell us in Egypt has
the least listen, the least amount of pyramids and the
least amount of Egyptian artifacts in the world. So they're

(14:58):
laughing at us. They they're literally laughing at us. They're like,
these dumbasses actually think that that's Egypt. Literally, most most
of Egyptian stuff is found really in the Americas is
where we're seeing a huge, a huge, a huge onslaught

(15:20):
of Egyptian mummies. I mean, look at the World's Fair.
Didn't they try to take out some of the Egyptian
stuff with the World's Fair too? Yeah? So, but yeah, Laniar,
I live like literally I wrote it down according to GPS,
I live thirty eight miles or sixty one kilometers away
from Lake Lanier and we never go We never go there,

(15:40):
and I haven't buy it.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
All the time I passed by it, but I don't
go there anymore. I haven't been a lot of time. This.
This is one of the pictures of I believe this
is under like this. Oh you know, maybe that's the
Great Lakes. We're gonna talk about that in just a
little bit. I thought that was the grave the gravestones.
That's something different. Yeah, I haven't been there in so long,
and it's so when I was reading about Lake Lanier
this morning, he said something that was so gross to me.

(16:04):
And it said that that people who swim in it,
and I started thinking back when I used to swim
in it.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
It's true.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
They said it feels like jelly. The water feels like
jelly and jello. Isn't that gross when you start thinking
about all the bodies that have been in there and stuff.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
Oh, it's just kind of gross. I was my boyfriend
was brave enough to come on camera because he's got
some wild stories. His family own land up in Gainesville,
Georgia when he was like in his late teens, early twenties,
and he's I always have to I always say, he's
eleven years older than me. So, but so when I
was a wee child. And yeah, some secrets. I love that.

(16:40):
Some secrets are drowned for purpose. Yeah, and he's had
he's very he's had a lot of experiences up in
North Georgia and on Lake Lanier. He used to go
out there and he would have some experiences. And I'm like, listen,
at this point, I don't know if we would come
back from Lake Lanier. We went up there because we're
so of what's what's going on? And and I wrote too,

(17:03):
I don't know if you got this in your notes
as well, that there is what they believe is a
vortex at Lake Flineer, which makes sense. Vortex is a
paranormal and it's around the Shoal Creek Church cemetery, and
it's some people, some some families, as you said the beginning,
fled and complained that their loved ones were not like
they told people. Listen, y'all, we know you got some

(17:24):
loved ones buried here. We're gonna remove trust us. That's
the serioust. What did Ronald Reagan say? The scariest words
you can hear as high I'm from the government. I'm
here to help or something. Yeah. Yeah, So the government's like,
trust us, wink wink, we're gonna we're gonna exhume these
bodies and rebury them. And they know they didn't, Oh
they didn't. They got a few.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
I think they got a few, but I mean there
were there were at least twenty thirty cemeteries, okay, and
that's just the ones that that were marked. Okay, mark cemeteries.
We truly don't know our history. We really don't know
how how deep it goes and what all was in
that land Okay, inside of it, and Caleb says, Hey, Caleb,
he says man made lakes were made to cover up

(18:07):
the entrance to the Chicana or the underworld, and that
would make sense too, actually interests to inner Earth potentially.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Well, and we know the Kaziopians talk a lot with
the undergrounders, so that makes sense as well. And I
think it was Bigfoot Long Island just wrote brought up
an interesting comment about linear meaning, like well, and well,
we know they tell us that Lake Lanier was named
after a poet named Sidney Lanier, and I've questioned that

(18:35):
as well. So it's interesting that Long Island Bigfoot put
this up because and this is what's weird, you guys,
And this is what I and I love your opinion
about this, Jessica, because I do believe our history is
not correct. I think we have been sold a load
of crap basically. However, I don't know when where the
crap ends and the truth begins. And we think about
the early nineteen hundreds, like my great one of my

(18:57):
great grandparents passed away when I was like three or four,
and I remember him Paul, and he was born in
nineteen oh one, so I remember him obviously. He had
a childhood. He told my grandmother, who told her son,
who told me. So I don't know when the mud
floods would have happened or whatever. So with the Sydney
the Sydney la Near story, I like what Long Island

(19:20):
Bigfoot said, because I don't know. Sidney Near lived in
the eighteen hundreds apparently, and he was a poet. He
died at like thirty nine, really young. We actually have
a big monument. I live right off of Piedmont Park
here in Atlanta. There's a big monument to Sidney Lanier
as well. He was a Confederate soldier. I believe he was,
and so that's who they claim the lake is named after.

(19:41):
But I will say from Long Island Bigfoot, as I
was like going over my notes again because it's been
a while sick, that does that could be correct, But
part of me feels like it's not Like I don't
feel like I like that what she said about are
he said about water and the French word, we do
know that they're a little Yeah. There there's a lot

(20:04):
of French heritage down here too, So I don't know
it's and yeah, that's interesting. Someone put put up the
comment about water being emotion. That is very true. Water does,
it is emotion.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
And you can close a portal with water. That is
what Dennis says. Hey Dennis, he said you can close.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
A portal with water. Interesting close. I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
Okay, that's kind of cool. I can see it being
a vortex for sure.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
Over there.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
And it's almost like a Bermuda triangle in Georgia because boats,
boats go haywire. I mean, there's here. But here's another thing. Okay,
And I'm going to pull these pictures up because this
is what I know of Late Lanear and and Bryce,
this is probably what you've heard if you hadn't been
there too much. There's something called cocktail cove. And this
is what it looks like today. And I know this
actually the people like that might have been from like

(20:54):
the early two.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Thousands or nineteen nineties, I don't know, but that is that.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
Is cocktail cove, y'all at late Lanear and this is
where people they put their boats together. Everybody's drinking. It
is a party lake. And when I say it's a
party lake, I mean this is party central. And so
lots of boating accidents can happen. Obviously with drunk voaters
and people getting run over by propellers and all that
kind of stuff. I mean, it's I had one of

(21:18):
a friend of mine. I was at Lake Altuna, which
is down the road from there, you know, and she
was she was with her family, her children on a
boat and a drunk boater hit their boat and went
over their boat and she broke her back and the kids,
everybody was hurt.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
It was it was wild. How is a fake lake too, right?

Speaker 1 (21:36):
I believe so, yeah, I believe. Oh they've got dams. Yeah,
it's it's wild.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
You know.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
I've had conversations with people talking about the energy flow
and the waterflow and these dams. They're not natural and
it cuts off the currency of the land. Okay, gosh,
there's so much symbolism in all this bryce there really is.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
When it comes to these lakes, it's war text, you know.
I am of the opinion, after setting in the Cassiopeans
for a while that we do have fifty percent of
our human population does not have the upper chakras. They
only have the lower chakras, which means they basically haven't
earned a soul yet, and so you can call them
non player characters or whatever. So I do think that

(22:19):
the powers that be look for particular areas of people
to pull energy. You can't pull energy for something that
has no energy to give, So I think they are
targeting particular populations of people to pull energy from because
the darkness can't create anything, It can only take from
the light and invert it. So the god given energy
of us with of those of us with souls can't

(22:42):
be pulled and harnessed. And so if you like, I like,
I feel like I'm giving my energy away. So it's
it's not only it's like they're killing multiple birds with
one stone, right, they're hiding up, they're hiding stuff, and
they're also taking as well. But I would take something interesting,
and I hope it don't get in trouble for saying this.
But you know, you know nowadays, I didn't know this

(23:02):
because growing up in Georgia, we would find like arrowheads
all the time, like arrowheads from the Native Americans, and
in your back find them. Do you know that now
it's illegal if you find something like that you have
to turn it over to the government. You can't keep it.
I don't I don't know what you're talking about. I
don't have any. We never. We never.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
Well, so my boyfriend like what you're talking about that
was a rock.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
Well, he goes to the lake Altuna Deer in the
winter months when the lake is preceded, and he'll go
like off trail to try to look for stuff. He
looks for rocks, rocks, Yeah, yeah, never found anything. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
Well, it's just like when we go to the battlefield's
like in Kennesau or Picket's Mill or the Kinnesaal battlefield.
You cannot dig. Remember if we were at that museum,
you and I went to that museum. Yeah, and that
the lady said. You know, I asked, I was like,
are these bullets real? You know these COFs the battlefield
here and the cannon shells and stuff. She says, yeah,
they're real, but there may not be from here. She said,

(24:03):
you know, it's illegal to dig for those here. And
uh so I was like, well, okay, So if you
were to go and spend the day and have a
picnic at Kennesaul battlefield you found one, you can't keep it.
You get in trouble for having it. One of those
little bullets.

Speaker 2 (24:15):
Does the government I know there are a ton of
third graders out there that have a room full of
their heads. They found their own damp backyard like insanity,
Like why all of a sudden are they stopping us
from being able to take like is it because people
are waking up? Is it because people are starting to
question reality? I don't know, but it's crazy. And so
with the Altuna reference, I would not be surprised, Jessica,

(24:37):
if they're if people actually now, Lake Lanier is known
to be kind of a party lake, like you showed
that picture. It's kind of a party lake. So I
don't know people are actually looking for anything when they're
there besides, you know, a good time. But I would
be shocked if you would find any type of artifacts
around Lake Lanear too that would have a different story
than what exactly.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Well, let's let's talk about the history of that land
before you know. And I was thinking about that movie.
One of my favorite movies is Oh Brother, where art thou?

Speaker 2 (25:08):
That movie?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
And uh, of course I love that movie. And uh
and and in that movie, they actually flood the community
out because they were building a dam and they were
gonna flood it out, and it was I don't know
if it was base. I don't remember if it was
based in Georgia or they were maybe they were basing
it on Latelanear.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
I just remember all that that hair grease, that hair
wax that that Dapper Dan kept floating through.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
It's a long time Sin says that movie. But what
it reminds me of the Lamp the Lake. We talked
about that with Derek and how they the people that
lived there actually fought back when they created it. Kind
of same thing, kind kind of happened with Austinville. It
was a little bit different. But yeah, where do you
want to start with that land? You want to go
back as forth as Americas or yeah we can.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Well, you know, I was just gonna I was gonna
talk about Oscarville, you know, because that's that's kind of
a big that's a big deal, y'all. Okay, if you
guys have never heard of Oscarville, this is this is a.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
Town that had a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
All it was mostly I think it was all African
American people that lived there. And like I said, there
were about two The records will say, like some of
the articles will say two undred fifty families were displaced,
but I heard I've heard it was up to seven hundred.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I think it's way more than what they're do too.
I wrote in my notes, the town of Oscarville was
a sacrifice.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
Oh gosh it it kind of could it could have been.
I know that sounds horrible, but I mean, why else
would they have picked this area in this place for that?

Speaker 2 (26:33):
Let me see.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
Here's here's a picture of the actual town right here. Okay,
this is a picture of a lot of people. It
just blows my mind as to why they would do that.
But it's almost like the imminent domain, you know, like
even the power companies home today. One of my friends
was a lobbyist for the you know, the EMCs here
in Georgia and stuff, and I remember when she would

(26:54):
tell me about how she would have to go, you know,
because I worked at the capitol with her actually, and
and they were it was really sad. With the power
companies pushing for imminent domain and all that kind of
stuff and having any lost password. I thought it was wrong,
you know what I mean, It's just wrong for people
who aren't familiar with what that is. It's where the government,
power companies, whoever it is, they can come in and

(27:15):
just take your land. They seize it yeah, if they need,
if they want it, and they can give you, like
they may compensate you a little bit, but it's not
what your land's worth. And you have to get off
of it or they're gonna they're gonna plow right through
your home, right.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
I remember learning about that, and like I have this
memory of the fifth grade mister mus Champs class in
the fifth grade him saying, if the government wants to
come and build a freeway through through your backyard, they're
going to do it. So do we really own our land? Like,
do we really? Like That's that's why I hate the
tax land tax, because that, yeah, you'd be out.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
You never really own your property. You're always trying to
pay to the man. Okay, we gotta put some money,
some money in the man's pocket every single year or
you'll lose your land, which is wild. Yeah yeah, yeah,
Oh I was gonna say. Moon Dog says land between
the Lakes that this is another place that they had
the issue with the eminent domain and they put the
lake right there in between the between the lands.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
That's a crazy I mean, but that's a crazy story. Interesting,
isn't it so interesting? What a coincidence that where all
these man made lakes are you got as on a
paranormal activity, a lot of.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Bigfoot activity and dog man activity and a.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Lot of and they have to all are they're all
owned by the government.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
The Army Corps engineers takes over. That's right, interesting, right,
it's a big cover up. Maybe this is for entertainment
purposes only today everybody.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
This is a.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
Yeah, oh my gosh and uh oh oh, let me say,
oh Long Island. Bigfoot said, the imminent domain is so overlooked. Yeah,
and it's it's really sad. And Kyle says Tennessee has
more man made flooted lakes than any other state.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
I'm weird that like that do not just common sense,
Like what point did we I know, they're trying to
like allegedly like take the sun away, But at what
point do we think that we know better than nature?
Like nature knows what it's doing. Yeah, yeah, exactly, Prince,
I don't. I'm a glass arcane. Yeah, so I have

(29:15):
like yet by nineteen twelve, it was a there was
a black town called Oscarville. It was along the Chattahoochee River.
So again, you guys like we've got rivers in Georgia
you know way down yonder on the Chattahoochie. There's a
whole song about that, whole country song about that GASOCHI. Yes, yes,
I'll let you say that far. That was just some slaves,

(29:39):
built by free slaves, okay, and they all worked in
cotton fields and they created this, this prosperous little town
around the Chattahoochie River. Yes, and a Kyle spit. There
were a lot of Indian barrel I have that in
my notes too about the Cherokey. There are a lot
of Indian burials there as well. We know that that
towns did. Yeah, makes sense, right, A lot of towns

(30:02):
do pop up around rivers just because that was the
highway during the steamboat era of our of our history.
But yeah, I mean it's literally like I'm in Fulton County,
so it's like literally right up the road Lake Lanier
from where where. And I've worried about that, Jessica, I
will say, because some people there is speculation that with

(30:22):
these dams and take lakes, what they can do is
open the dam. There is speculation that, allegedly for entertainment
purposes only, that when Helene hit North Carolina, they release
some of the dams mm hm. So I've worried living
in Atlanta. Yeah, if they release a dam, is it
going to hit Atlanta? You know, Like I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
But it's like the levees just kind of rote during
Katrina too, you know what I mean, mysteriously. Yeah, it's
all about control. Okay, it's all about controlling land grams too. Okay,
this is obviously a lang gram. But it's a multi
faceted issue we're talking about today because there's also the
cover up of our history. And I think that that

(31:04):
is the That's a big one. Okay, that is a
big one, because when we don't know our true history,
I mean, what else has been covered up?

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Okay? I know, and I know, yeah, it's wild. It's well,
I think I've told you before. I have this little
book here that I got in a in a antique
store in Connecticut a few years back, and it's a
it's an American history textbook from the Earth. I should
actually let you look. I should give you this book
next time I see you and lets you read through it.
It's from the eighteen hundred. It's an elementary school history

(31:34):
book that I couldn't read in the store. It was
taped up, so I paid the twenty dollars, got the book,
got started reading it. They taught the kids a very
very different American history in the eighteen hundreds than I
was taught in the eighties.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
Oh that's right, because I have I have a history
book right there where my finger is. That's a It
was written in the eighteen fifties, I believe.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
Yeah. And uh.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
And it even has like a Native American chief was
like the headdress like imprinted in the like it's rising
off of the leather cover. It's like beautiful. I love
that book. And the history is just you know, I
used to think, like, well, man, this is the true history,
but now I'm like, that's not even probably the real
history that's in that book.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Well, what's about this one is that they talked about
how the Native Americans were all races, that they had
rights too. They're blond hair, blue eyed Native Americans. There
were black Native Americans. And my thing is like, I
you know, we know, as an I've been lucky enough
to spend a lot of my adult life living in

(32:36):
other countries, and people either really hate Americans or they
really love Americans. But there's this whole like propaganda about
stupid Americans. Well, I think they're doing that intentionally to
try to destroy the mental and emotional help of the
American people, because I think there's something here they don't
want us to know. They want the world that I

(32:57):
believe America is the cradle of life. I think this
is where my Spotamia was. I think the Mississippi River
was the Nile. I think New Orleans is Alexandria. Maybe
that's why they can't find Cleopatra's body, because they're looking
in the wrong ocean. It's in the Gulf of Mexico
or America. Now should say, you know, I think that
there's just I think it's all flipped and I think

(33:19):
they don't want it for some reason. Yeah, bigfoot dwarf.
I have a Black friend who has done a lot
of research unto his own heritage, and he thinks most
of his heritage was actually native and not from Africa.
And so why would they try to destroy to destroy

(33:40):
the emotional health of a nation. While we also look
at the now, a lot of the missing books the
Bible have been found in the southeastern part of the
United States too, So are there missing manuscripts under these
lakes that tell a different story. And we know that
the Constitution of the United States is actually you could
find that in the a Scene Book of Peace, which
is one of the missing books the Bible. Oh, oh

(34:03):
my gosh. This is all it is, just wild and time.
And I'm glad.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
I'm glad it's being I'm glad it's being talked about.
I'm just glad it's being talked about. I mean, if
you're going to Tennessee. I was just in Tennessee, okay,
And and.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
I have not been to I don't think I've ever
been to Memphis.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
I got I got a friend who's who ran a
club out of Memphis. Okay, my buddy Darrel. He's in
the chat occasionally.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
What's up Crayon?

Speaker 1 (34:24):
Okay, Uh, he ran a club out of Memphis for
a while. And and I know they have from what
I've I've seen, I've read, I've seen pictures. They have
like pyramid like the bass pro Shop is a pyramid,
like a literal pyramid is like that glass pyramid. I
would love to go there sometime. Okay, I don't know
if the bass pro shops. I love bass okay, whatever,
but it's a fun place to go. But uh, but

(34:46):
that's that's interesting. And they had like pyramids like that
during the World's Fairs out in Tennessee as well.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
So well, and they say there's a there's Old World
World Florida. I think that's the name of the YouTube channel.
And this guy, I hope I'm saying is his He's
had some great stuff on Florida and that Florida has
a ton of pyramids and that's crazy because you think
of Florida is being flat. Well, apparently there are pyramids
under under from the fall of Atlanta. You know cs

(35:13):
T Keys, which is right off of Sarasota. That's a
little island a key that has the sand is crystallized.
It's the only sand in the United States that has
crystallized sand. And they believe it came from they the
scientist date came from Affadisia. We well, the helcome Atlanta
just on this one key, like we think it came
from Atlanta's that that this and we try to go

(35:34):
there as much as we can just to get get
soak off the crystals. But you know, it's it's crazy.
The more it's like the more you learn, the less
you know exactly. And when I think of Atlantis.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
I'm always thinking we're from atl girl, Okay, we're from Atlanta.
We live in Atlanta. Why I used to live Atlanta.
Outside here he was your buggy shirt. God, I was
just talking about Buckis on Saturday.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
This is from morn to Robins, Georgia. You know we're friends.

Speaker 1 (36:00):
You're over there wearing it. But I was talking about them.
I was talking about that store on Saturday night on
my show. I love that place. But they have good
food anxiety I love.

Speaker 2 (36:10):
I always want to stop at Bucky's on our way
to Florida because it's just it's fantastic. Oh god, it
bad food and stuff. But yeah, I I definitely Atlanta.
I've had that question before. Atlanta used to be called Elizabethstown.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
Well it used to be called Terminus too as well,
but it was called Terminus. Yeah, and uh, all the
all the railroads, you know, intersected right there in downtown Atlanta.
And but but it's Atlanta like Atlantis too.

Speaker 2 (36:39):
Yeah. Okay, somebody something they ain't telling us, I know what.
So so it's so funny. I've been looking at a
tartaria for a very long time, and my boyfriend just
now has gotten in the Tartar area, and he likes
to go down to Piedmont Park if you're in the
Atlanta area, Peedmont. We do have a central Park in Atlanta,
but Piedmont Park would be more like our central park,
like what Central Barcus in New York City. And there's

(37:01):
apparently they have like a World's Fair there as well.
And so you see some of these old structures in
in Piedmont Park, and he'd a look at them and
he was like, these aren't from this is from Tartaria, Like,
this is not from a World's fair. Look at the
architecture here. It's crazy. It's it's yeah, Prince Arcane, it's

(37:21):
there's a lot of filming, not just for Walking Dead,
but there's a lot of filming going on Stranger Things.
I could watching that show. I know exactly where they
are most of the time. Yeah. Well, and granted, look
at all the granite here we have. We have Stone Mountain,
we have Arabian Mountain. We have huge granite mountains in Atlanta.

(37:41):
And so Georgia. I saw somebody ask earlier, Yeah, I
saw I saw someone in the comments section earlier asked
are there bigfoots in Georgia? We got everything in Georgia.
Are you are you asking? Are you saying? Yes? They
are big books in Georgia about in the comment section
asked there are big foots in Georgia with the do
you watch my channel? You must not watch my channel?

(38:02):
Who is this is? Somebody new got here today? WI
is a very fascinating state to there's even and this
could be a totally show for a different day, But
you guys, there's even. Like I've been following the story
about this highway in South Georgia where notoriously people slip

(38:22):
in time. Oh where is that? What part? I'll have
to go back. I've been following the story. I will
text you after we're dying, because I would have to
go to my my, my, my my. But there's there's
all these stories that are now and it's it's near Valdosta. Okay,
is it Brunswick? Maybe?

Speaker 1 (38:41):
I mean actually Brunswick is opposite of Valdosta, down in South.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
Georgia, closer to Savannah, going up towards Savannah, which is
the coastal side. But in my mind's eye, I'm seeing
it closer towards like Equipment and which is my where
my grandmother's family is from like closer to like the
werewhealth of Georgia area is where I'm seeing this, but
it's all through by seventy five. It's an old time.
I'm gonna have to get all the information to send
to you because there's some crazy crazy. I mean, when

(39:08):
I started my channel, I planned on just covering stories
in Georgia, really, and now I cover everything. But because
that's how many stories there are in Georgia, and North
Georgia is Appalachia is the mountains. South Georgia is getting
into the plane lands because it's going into Florida. We
got swamps, we got it feels like a swamp in
the summertime here, but yeah, it's Oscarville. I guess we

(39:33):
kind of got lo off topic there, but we get
back to it. There's a lot did you get into
all the nineteen twelve when there were all these there
was a lot of rape, they tell us, they tell us.
Now I even questioned the idea of race tension, because
we see them trying really hard to start that today.
But it seems like a lot of people are resisting it,
thank god. But allegedly in like nineteen twelve, and I

(39:55):
don't know anybody alive today that was alive in nineteen twelve,
unless you're like a vampire. We got a lot of
like lynchings going on in this area. Uh.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
And then and there there were people that were being
accused of raping.

Speaker 2 (40:11):
Yeah, I think I don't. I can't remember the whole story.
I've got it right here.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
But there were there were some some young men I
believe that we're accused of raping a Caucasian woman.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
Am I correct? Yeah? Okay?

Speaker 1 (40:24):
And and and they were eventually I believe they were
hung and like five thousand.

Speaker 2 (40:29):
People showed up to to to see.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
It happened, and saying that a white mob had invaded
the jail and took the guys out. And I mean,
it's just a really tragic story. And and so that's
part of the lore. And the haunt of Late Lanier
actually is like the curt like that that cursed the land. Okay,
it just added to the curse of all the you know,

(40:52):
of them taking all the everybody's land and flushing flushing
the whole entire community out literally and and and oh gosh,
it's just it's horrible. It's just all that displacement there.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
It's horrible. They ended up. They even claimed that there
was a group of black men that formed a society
kind of like the KKK for white people. There they
and this couldn't because they had to they had they wanted.
People were petitioning the government to declare martial law. But

(41:26):
anytime we see this idea in my mind of marshal
what the citizens wanting, it's like, create a situation with
a problem and then give them the solution. You know,
so are they insinuating did this this is all being
insinuated to try to create martial law? You know, it's
it's just very fascinating. But that that is, there was

(41:47):
all this like crazy stuff happening right before. So this
was nineteen twelve, so just a couple you know, decades
before the government gave permission and gave what would be
the equivalent of nine million, I mean seven hundred and
fifty thousand dollars back then is nine million today nine
million dollars just round out a downtown and to create

(42:07):
more industry.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
Well and to have a water reservoir there. Of course,
it's I just think that if you if you just
kind of look at the progression of the cover up,
of history's cover up and uh, with the with the
floods and the Civil War. The Civil War came straight
through Georgia and Sherman burned everything. Okay everything, It was

(42:31):
so convenient just around the buildings. Yeah, every everything was destroyed.
And uh, it's it's really interesting how that works. And
and so and then shortly after after the reconstruction and
things started to building. You know, some towns were never reconstructed. Okay,
some towns were just gone and uh, and the people

(42:54):
were wiped out and everything, including the town that my
family would lived in and my two of my great
grandma there's four, I guess for them. All my great grandfathers,
great great great grandfathers fought in the Civil War and uh,
and some of them were taken off as prisoners of
warip to up north and stuff. And the towns were
completely wiped out.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
And well, look at what happened to the women. I Actually,
one of my favorite shows to watch is The Dead Files.
It's a homicide detective and cite that work together, and
I love the history. But they talked about this in
some cases in the South before, so back in this time,
the women on and my mind's gone Blake, one of
my favorite writer anyway writes about this. Old writers likes

(43:34):
about this. But nonetheless, women in the South, the white
women would be on these big plantations or houses or
farms by themselves, and the the the Yankee troops, the
Union troops would come in and basically pillage these houses
and r a r ape the women. I mean just
people often think Union sold Union troops good, Confederate troops bad. No, No,

(43:59):
this was war and they were brutalizing. So you think
about all that energy that's left, the terror that's left over.
I've told you, Jessica, I went to my elementary school, third, fourth,
and fifth grade. It's not there anymore. Was in an
old plantation house right outside of Atlanta where Sherman had
used that the story as Sherman used that house as

(44:21):
a like a a headquarters or when he was going
through and he came into that house in r ape
the sixteen year old daughter that hunger from the stairwell,
Oh my God, watered the family just to take and
you couldn't just kick them out. You had to do
that to them too. And when I was a little kid,
a lot of times myself included little kids will see

(44:43):
her hanging from that wanted putting kids in there, and
the kids would see her like hanging from the You
know this, the Union troops were not good. I'm not
saying that the that the competit was good. I know,
just war is terrible.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
War as horrible, you know, and even Okay, So you're
talking about like the residual haunting.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
I guess of that.

Speaker 1 (45:08):
And and that's part of the Late Lanear lore is
like people feel like they they feel like something's grabbing
their feet and pulling them under when swimming. A lot
of people say yes, and so they say some people say, well,
that's the souls of Oscarville down there, pulling people by
grabbing their feet and jerking them under the water.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
And uh. And so you got to be really careful.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
I've always been told like, don't ever dive headfirst in
the Late Lanear because you'll hit a sign, a steeple
at a church, a tree, and people get entangled in
these trees and in these they didn't I don't know
if they had power lines back then. I don't think so,
I don't know there's whatever's down there. They may have
had power lines, I don't know, because it was nineteen
it was only the nineteen fifties.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
Yeah, yeah, so well also you think about that with
the residual energy. I mean, that's when we think about haunting.
Sometimes we always think that it's a conscious haunting, but
a lot of times it's not the actual persons, what
the soul has moved on. But it's like you think
about like Poulter guys. Poulter Geist is an energy that
is created from a person or it's a telekinesis almost
like energy created. So there's a horrific event, like in Savannah, Georgia,

(46:13):
when the stock market crash, there was a guy who
jumped out of a window, and every year on that
date people see the jumping. It's like a video recording.
The energy is so intense. When the anger is so intense,
it will hold the energy in time. And so sometimes
I think when people are feeling themselves being pulled down,
it might not even be a conscious spirit that needs

(46:36):
to just be moved on. It might actually be like
more of a poultergeisty situation where it's a residual energy
because the terror was so horrific that it keeps froplaying itself.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
Oh my gosh, it's residual hauntings. Yeah, but my goodness
to get pulled down. I mean, you know, my sister
has a place on a lake out in Alabama, and
I've told the audience before that I'm I'm a little
hesitant to go diving into that late now because I've
done so many shows on the campus and different late
monsters and uh in Late Landear too. But I mean, now,

(47:09):
I think that Lake's a little cleaner than Late Lanear
that we go to uh Late Not to say Late
Lander's dirty, but if if they say it feels like jello, yeah, jelly.

Speaker 2 (47:20):
He pulled out us up drug.

Speaker 1 (47:22):
Dude probably fills a jell O shot.

Speaker 2 (47:28):
It is. It's a party. Lake is the lake.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
Yeah, let's talk about the lady of Lake because we've
talked about Okay, so there the the Oscarville tragedy. I'm
gonna call that a tragedy. Okay, it's a tragedy that
is that accounts for some of the hauntings that happened
there according to people. But yeah, Bryce, you know about
the lady of the late let's talk about let's talk
about the lady of the Lake.

Speaker 2 (47:51):
Listen, if I I've already said that I when I
go when the day goes. I don't want to go
in like a fancy way. I just want to like
go in a normal way because people who go and
sea ways. I'm trying to watch my words, because we
know YouTube's funny about some words. So this was in
nineteen fifty eight, you guys, when this tragedy happened. And
I that caused the Lady the lake. So that's like
literally right after the Formation. And it was two women

(48:13):
named Susie Roberts and Delia May Parker, and they were
driving across Lake lanear Bridge when Susie reportedly lost control
of her car. The women crashed into the lake, both drowning.
Since then people have seen the ghost of a woman
walking around in a blue dress with no hands. Thirty
one years after the crass, the car was finally recovered,

(48:35):
and a year later Susie was recovered in a blue
dress with no hands. Now here's the crazy park Okay,
so they say she actually pulls people into the lake,
and I don't know why she doesn't have hands, but
like here's the crazy thing, you guys. I was doing
further research on this today. Now this was nineteen fifty eight.

(48:55):
These are two young girls. They were coming apparently coming
from a dance hall down the road at a roadhouse,
and apparently they had left the damce hall they had
stopped to get gas. We say gas the United States,
and our British friends say petro, but we say gas.
And they didn't pay for it. They pumped the gas
and they ran. Now that's either because now you have

(49:18):
to repay or prey at the pump, but you could
when I was a kid, you could pump and then
go pay right, these are small country roads. Now there's
one or two reasons why they didn't pay. One, they
didn't have the money and they were just wanted to
get away with it and get a home. Or two
they were in a hurry and they needed to go.
And that with the missing hands. Like, what what's that about?

(49:41):
So what do you know about this, Jessica, I don't
know a whole lot about it.

Speaker 1 (49:45):
But people, people, that is one of the main haunts
of just like in addition to that big old campfish
that Scott was talking about, they claim there's a campfish
the size of a like a Volkswagen bug car, like
a I mean huge over by the Buford Dam.

Speaker 2 (49:59):
And Scott, what's up? Scott?

Speaker 1 (50:00):
He lives over there. He said, you'll hit a body
or two. I've been diving in Lanear and it's not fun.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
So you so.

Speaker 1 (50:07):
We actually have someone we have Scott here, who has
been diving in late Lanier before. Did it feel like
jelly and jello in the water, That's my question, Scott.
What was it like and did you did you see
any body parts.

Speaker 2 (50:21):
I've had my fair share of paranormal stuff happened. I'm
not freaked out with ghosts and stuff I was. I mean,
I go running in John Beney Cemetery and Wednesday morning's
at like three o'clock in the morning all the time.
I want to scare that. But if I had a
body in a lake, I think I would like crap
my pants. I think that would be that would be
enough for me.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Look at this, Scott said, a chicken truck when drove
off the dam, I guess, and the catfish were sucking
them through the cages.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
At the boy so big, isn't it. It's kind of notorious.
This these lakes, I mean, these these bridges areund to
have people just like sporadically drive their car off the
This is true. I feel like with the Susie Roberts
and the Delia A. Parker story, which is the Lady
of the Lake story. I just feel like there's more

(51:07):
to that story that we're not getting, and I'm wondering,
I think we have. It's Caleb still in the chat.
Maybe he would know more about this because she's missing
her hands, Like does that happen in decomposition to hands
like decomposite? Do they like?

Speaker 1 (51:21):
It just depends, I guess. I mean, who knows. Something
could have bitten her hands off. Maybe those catfish nibbled
on him.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
I don't know her in her ghost form two without hands.

Speaker 1 (51:33):
Yeah, well, I'm very.

Speaker 2 (51:35):
I just there's something about this Lady of the Lake
story that is a little bit more sinister to me
than I think that they're I mean, we it's nineteen
fifty eight, like we we can't. I was born in
nineteen eighty three, Like we can't. There's stuff we're never
gonna know. But I would be interested to hear from
people like Caleb if there's any ring a ding ding
like red flags in the story that would scream something

(51:58):
else other than what we've been taught. And if so,
were they dumped in Lake Lanear or was the car
pushed into Lake Lanear because Lake Lanear is a portal.
There is specific because we know what these rituals that
they that Luma Shmady do that they pick particular areas
for a reason. Does that make sense. I'm trying to
be careful what they do.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Well, it's a place, it's places of power and things
like that, and I wonder if there's a lay line
that goes through there. Actually, I'd like to pull up
my lay line map when I'm doing when we talk
about places like this, let's see, I'm gonna let's see here,
here's a lay line map. I mean you may have
to pull it up and like zoom in on everybody.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
It looks like though looks at the red line.

Speaker 1 (52:39):
There's a red line that goes right through where Lake
Lanear is actually, and it goes right through.

Speaker 2 (52:43):
It goes right through it.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
So if you guys are wondering where this is at, okay,
let me pull up the map of Georgia again. There's
a literally a red line that goes right through where
right there or right beside it. Okay, that little red
dot is where late Lanear is all and there is
a there is a lay line that goes right through it.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (53:00):
You know, so it's not only the lady of the lake,
not only the people that are getting their feet grabbed
and pulled under. A lot of bodies end up in
this lake. A lot of people go missing. And and
you know, I do remote viewing, and when I was
I can't remember, I don't remember what year this was,
but I got a high priority target Bryce and uh.
And whenever I get a high priority target, I just

(53:21):
get a set of coordinates. The head of my team
will send me some coordinates. And when I know it's
high priority, I sit down and drop everything I'm doing
and I go into remote viewing mode and I remote
view those coordinates. Well, I was picking up on I
picked up on foul play. Let me go ahead and
just say right now, the news says this was not
there was no found play involved. I don't believe that, okay,

(53:44):
because in my remote viewing data, I was picking up
on someone who I was picking up on like a
I remember saying, like I wrote down sonic blast or something.
I can't remember exactly, but I would I wrote down
a whole bunch of data and I was like, okay,
well I was hearing like white noise, and I was
seeing water, and I drew, what looks exactly like this.
I'm going to show you a picture of what I
mean this is. I'm not going to show you my data,

(54:05):
but I'll show you a picture of what I saw.
I can find my picture here. Uh. It is the
Buford Dam. Actually I just pulled it up here.

Speaker 2 (54:12):
It is.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
And I was hearing white noise, and I drew something
looks just like that, just like that, and and and
and I was I was seeing a body like someone
had clearly been unalived, and and I I saw kind
of how it happened. I saw that it was in
a body of water, and I was right by a dam,
and uh, and there was a recreational area like with

(54:34):
picnic tables and like a I couldn't tell what I
was looking at exactly, but it was like some kind
of recreation areas or entertainment area is what I wrote down,
or a recreational area and uh, and I even wrote
at the very end, I was like bloated body, and
it's gonna rise up near this recreational area, okay, like
I was in my data, and and I later found

(54:56):
out what that target was I didn't know what it was,
and it turned out it was it was this gentleman
right here and and his name was Killy Nash And
and he was last scene on I believe it was
on a camera walking down the road in the middle
of the night in his pajama pants. Okay, in a
jacket or a T shirt or something. But he was

(55:17):
walking down the road near near where the beuf for
Dam is kind of but I think it was a
month later, like he went missing and there was no
sign of him at all, and uh and r I
p uh my condolences to his family in case I
know Aaron Georgia, So if anybody knows him, I'm very
sorry for your boss. But this was given to me

(55:37):
as a high priority target and and I kind of
located almost to a t exactly where his body was actually,
and it was in late Lanear and that when they
got the data, they were they were like, oh, I
think this is the bee for Dam is what they
were saying. They're like, it does look like the Beau
for Dam. He's probably in the water. And I was like, Yeah,
his body's going to surface soon and it's going to

(55:59):
be blowed and it's going to be near this area,
and sure enough, that's.

Speaker 2 (56:03):
Exactly where it showed up and where he should up.
That's what I call it death. I just want to
be in my bed like I don't want And we had,
I mean, that's an rip that that makes you. It's
easy to talk about this story. So when you see
a face to the story that really hits you. And
we had somebody ask you Lake Laniers in your I

(56:23):
eighty five, that's of interstate that it's right off of
I eighty five, and Halob answered and said, when they
cut the hands off, it prevents magic workers from finishing
their spellcraft. That's not so, Jessica. You're my friend in
real life too, So if something happens to me, I
want to be cremated anyway, but will you make sure

(56:44):
that we need to be the honors of chopping my
hands off before chupping your hands off your wish? Can
you just do that all write it in my will
like just before. They just want to make sure. So yeah,

(57:11):
so he's yeah, removal of buddy par anything in the
afterlife to hinder anything. Okay, interesting, interesting, So that's that's see.
That was weird to me, Caleb and everybody else like
when you go off of I mean, unfortunately that happens. Right,
people sometimes drive but they're drunk, they drive, they drown.
But to have one of the women to have her

(57:31):
hands removed like completely, so that is really odd. It
is odd.

Speaker 1 (57:36):
And that her ghost is seeing like that too, exactly
one of.

Speaker 2 (57:40):
Their ghosts that are seen like that. That that like
that is strange to me, Like that does not seem
normal to me. So, I mean, honestly, accidents can happen.
Not everything has to be conspiratorial, Like people can just
drive off a bridge drunken and end up drowning like that. That,
but but to happen, it's just weird. To have the

(58:01):
hands removed, that is very strange to me. Yeah, strange.

Speaker 1 (58:06):
Now I'm gonna I'm gonna show a picture because I
want to move on to something different after it, because
we just got a few more minutes.

Speaker 2 (58:11):
So let's see.

Speaker 1 (58:12):
Hold on, let's see missing people. I'm gonna show I'm
gonna share my screen rin quick. We'll see if you
guys can see this there, If you just go do
a duck dut go search or whatever, a Google search
of all the missing people out of Late lanear you guys,
there's so many people that have drowned, gone missing boaters
of of camp size and uh their bodies were never found. Okay,

(58:34):
there's there's a good bit.

Speaker 2 (58:35):
Okay, I'm kind of.

Speaker 1 (58:36):
Moving quickly through this and uh so anyways, it's it's
just something something to take note of. And so I
want everybody to please be careful, please take heed if
you ever go to late Lanear. Uh it is super
haunted and and and curse as they say, it's still
I mean, I don't always. I don't want anybody to

(58:57):
live in fear. Okay, don't live in fear. Have some fun,
but just be aware of your strivings and stay away
from cocktail Cove.

Speaker 2 (59:03):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
And you're just watching people coming out of cocktail Cove,
they've probably been drinking. Okay, And uh so that's a
big that's a big thing out there. It's not fun
to be out there at night too. Uh on the lake.

Speaker 2 (59:15):
That's when my boyfriend had his crazy experiences were mostly
at night when he was just being a young who
again and running among Like Jessica knows, my boyfriend, he's
very he's not a hooligan anymore. He's he's very much
settled into his fifties. He's woodworking right now. But yeah, no,

(59:35):
I I definitely there's a lot. I just I'm very
weary of Lake Lanear and do you know, like, do
you know, Jessica, have you seen this that they're they're
trying to build like roller coaster rides, like water rides
on Lake Lanear. And everybody in Atlanta is like, w TP.

Speaker 1 (59:50):
No, that's not safe. Don't do anything this. Yeah, I
wouldn't go out of my way to do something near that.

Speaker 2 (59:56):
Oh I can't. People like, no, do not do that.
Not put any more contraptions that take out more people.
So yeah, people in Atlanta are like, there's all these
funny tiktoks and people being like, what are y'all doing?
This is a notorious lake what are you doing? He's
very notorious.

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
I mean there's so many there's so many strange areas
of high strangeness in Georgia that I mean, we never
are out of content. Do we brace these are of us?
We can just cover Georgia all the time with all
the wear I just did. I just did a show
on an actual werewolf attack out of Rome.

Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
I mentioned you during that show. Okay, I need to
send you to. There's a Joe Rogan episode where a
guy talks about all the safe Taitanic rituals down in Rome, Georgia.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Okay, and I think we're probably done where my friend
ed had his house and his house burn down, mister,
we never found him. I mean they were going on
out there, y'all in rivers in Rome.

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
That meet in Rome, and they have a private airport room.
It's very wealthy town. And I've started to request because
even and right, and we got to go in a
second in Rome before my family lived there, they did
this vote to see if they want to I seventy
five to go through Rome, Like, who wouldn't want the
freeway to go by your town if you're a business person.
But I think that those elections got rigged to isolate
it so they could do more of their satanic magic. Rome.

(01:01:17):
That is a crazy I do not. I do not.
I only go there I absolutely have to. Otherwise I
do not set foot from Doorida. I will not do it.
So yeah, yeah, well that's you know. Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
And used to tell us that the guy who owned
the property around his would fly in all the elites
once a year and they would do you know, they'd
ask him just to leave for the weekend and stuff,
and because they were doing weird stuff on the property
out there and he didn't even want to know what.

Speaker 2 (01:01:43):
We were doing. Yeah, I know where it's at. I
take Yeah, I know that there is. And in my opinion,
and my opinion only, they're they are questionable people. Oh gosh,
for entertainment purposes only all purposely, I know them, and
they are fucking you're they're not we are like they're
creepy with them. They're creepy, creepy, creepy people. So I said,

(01:02:08):
my opinion, for entertainment purposes only, I know. Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Well, let's let's get back before we have to go today.
Let's talk about a couple of places that have you know,
underground lost civilizations, I guess, and I say it like
lost civilizations because it's just I don't know exactly what
these what these were. Actually this is under Lake Michigan
or Lake Huron, I believe. And let me tell you
that comment down. It looks kind of like Stonehenge, Bryce.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
I know that's what I was actually, or maybe it was.

Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
Like a palace like out like a Roman you know,
architecture or something, because it looks like it's very very old.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
Yeah, you know, they found roads. There are also roads
under like the Pacific Ocean, yellow brick roads. This is wild. Well,
Lake Norris that we were, the lake up in Tennessee.
They have the Ices Temple. They drown out the Iis Temple.
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
Well we're getting to that one too. I've got pictures
of that as well. And and so it's like, well, why,
okay if these I don't know, is Lake Michigan a
man made lake?

Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
I don't even know. So I didn't say either.

Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
I didn't think so either, but it might be I forgot.
I forgotten to look that before we went live.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
So but there's this.

Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
There's just so much history this underneath all these lakes,
and even the oceans too, by the way, Okay, a
lot of a lot of a lot of interesting things
under our oceans. But okay, so there's that. And then
we've also got Lake Norris. Okay, And I know I've
talked about this a couple of times, but I have
bryce here now and and and talking about ancient Egypt

(01:03:45):
potentially being in the United States. Okay, Upper Egypt, right,
is that what they call it?

Speaker 2 (01:03:51):
Well, so so Tennessee translates to the land of Isis
so as c. That's how they used to spell isis
so like the the the a scenes from the Bible,
they were the priest and priest of Isis. So why
is Tennessee named the land of Isis? Now? What's interesting?

(01:04:12):
I don't know if I've told you this. Jess, my
boyfriend likes to go hiking, as we've been with Jess
come many many times, and he doesn't like to go
on the trails that most people go on. So what
he does is he likes to get old maps of
old logging roads in North Georgia. And I'm not gonna
he got He got access to the University of Georgia's
in Athens. He got asked access to their geological arch

(01:04:36):
their their department. Basically that's why he got into this,
and it was wild. All of a sudden, I hear
him call me in a panic into the other room
and he's looking at this map from the eighteen hundreds
of Northern Georgia and he's he's like kind of like shaking,
He's like, look at that, look at that, and I'm
looking at it. He's like, what do you see and
it says Egypt, Egypt. Ept there's an Egypt Georgia. I

(01:04:58):
think it's that Egypt. All across where it would say Georgia,
it said Egypt. And it was eighteen It was a
map from the eighteen hundreds from the University of Georgia's
archives that he had. He's supposed to pay for it,
but I think he got a password from Zone allegedly, allegedly,
And he was looking for old logging roads to hike on,

(01:05:20):
and he was going through old maps, and you know,
he's a of a pirate, so he loves his maps.
He does so on Lake Michigan. You guys know, while
Lake Michigan itself is a naturally formed lake, and this
is according to Google, so take this with a great assault.
Much of his shoreline, in some aspects of his landscapes
have been altered or created by human activities. For example,

(01:05:42):
Chicago's entire Lake Michigan shoreline is man made. The land
was filled in to accommodate the Illinois Central Railroad. Additionally,
there are man made lakes near Lake Michigan. Lake Hamlin
Lake was which was created by damning the Big Save River.
So Lake Michigan is natural, but they've done stuff to it.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
They've altered Okay, oh well, I mean they could have
like directed some you know, more water here and there,
just to make it bigger and deeper and gosh knows what,
just to make sure this is good and covered up
and nobody's ever going to find it.

Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
I mean, don't worry, guys. The government loves us and
they're just doing what they can to make our lives better.

Speaker 1 (01:06:24):
Right, Oh my gosh, yeah right. Well, you know what
what gets me is like the Lake Norris and Tennessee. Okay, uh,
the historical society and the local universities around the area.
They knew good and well there was an ancient Egyptian
settlement there. Now if you here, here's something really interesting.
So today I was I was pulling up some articles.

(01:06:46):
I went to Google. I'd already pulled it up on
ut dout Go to get all my you know, pictures
and stuff that I wanted to find. But then I
went to Google just to see, like, if I pull
up and I star, it's the same thing in Google
that I did on dut dout go, am I gonna
get the same results?

Speaker 2 (01:06:59):
And guess what?

Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
All the articles that I could find were like, oh,
it's all been debunked. This isn't true, right, this was
all that they just assumed it was an Egyptian.

Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
Why just trust us? True, just trusts us? Don't trust
Yeah no, yeah right, Like yeah, that's really terrible, it's crazy.
It's well, yeah, and the whole I mean, the Norris Dam.
I did a big, big show on the Norris damn
years ago, and the whole I mean it gets into

(01:07:32):
the way that dam was built. There is so much
just stinky stuff there with the government and different politicians,
and they absolutely knew that they were drowning out this evidence.
They absolutely knew. I think, yeah, it's it's wild. But
like Norris, from what I know, I've been to Lake Norris,
it's not as haunted as Lake Lanear. It seems like

(01:07:53):
they don't have the craziness that Lake Lanier has. Creepy
out there too.

Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
Well, there's not as many people at Lake Norris from
what from my experience from going to because I've been
to Lake Norris, I've been to Late Lanier and it's
it's a it's a big lake at Norris, but there's
not as many people there now.

Speaker 2 (01:08:10):
It may have changed.

Speaker 1 (01:08:11):
I hass I was a kid, okay, but but nonetheless
so there was there was a there was a British curator, okay,
named Rendell Harris, and he was I guess he's like
an Egyptologist too, I guess because he knew a lot
about Egypt, Egyptian settlements and things like that, and and
he was always convinced. He had written that the Egyptians

(01:08:32):
settled in North America. They came here way before Columbus
ever did. Okay, that was that was what he had
been putting out. And I said, they initially visited visited
the Bahamas. They eventually moved to the Gulf of Mexico
and then up the Mississippi River. Okay, I'm just saying.

Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
He speculated the Egyptian traders took copper from the America's
back to the Mediterranean and they established a large colony
in East Tennessee where I well, I was gonna say,
I just was there this weekend. Harley's in the chat
was up Harley. I was with Harley. He lives over
in East Tennessee, Okay, in that area, and and that's
where Lake Norris is kind of Lake Norris is north I.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Think, right, in your Knoxville then must be. Yeah, I
think it is. Actually he is a Knoxville. That's where
my grandfather, my dad's dad is. The Watsons are from Knoxville, Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
Okay, well, okay, well he he knew good and will
when he saw the pictures of this temple that I
was showing, it's like the ruins of an ancient temple.
He said that he knew that it was. The stones
had formed a square building and that sue this had
been formed over what they called the Hopewell era mound.
And it looked kind of like a Mississippian earthen mound. Okay,

(01:09:44):
like what we were We were told these are all
Indian burial mounds, right bryce, that's what we call and
and he said, no, this is actually an Egyptian temple.
It's got these two large boulders, like these two stones,
and this is just how the Egyptians made their their sites.
Now they were talking about how these were found, and
because they were excavating mounds like what we would considered

(01:10:05):
to be Indian burial mounds, so they could they decided
to put this lake over these mounds. There were multiple
mounds right there, full of all sorts of artifacts and bones.
Some people speculated there were probably giant skeletons in these
sounds as well. So they're covering up not only the
ancient Egyptian temples but also the giants.

Speaker 2 (01:10:25):
The giants too. I mean, that was one of the
most groundbreaking. That was one of the first big stories
I did. I don't even think those videos are up anymore,
but I was like, that's when I started to find you. Guys.
I will say, I know you got to get off soon,
but if you ever want really interesting reading, I'm not
gonna say, listen to my coat, the Schmishimonian, the Sishmonian,
the Smithsonian, I say it. It's okay because they've like

(01:10:48):
brought me through this. There's some lawsuits that have been
filed against the schmis Simonian pretending to them getting rid
of evidence, and those lawsuits are there's a lot of that.
I I, oh, thank you, guys. Price is a pretty
savage history buff.

Speaker 1 (01:11:03):
Thanks.

Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
I just listen. I'm petty. I'm a petty betty, and
so if I'm pissed off, I we'll find it. I
will find it and we'll talk about it. So so
and it just makes me mad. When I started beating
these lawsuits pertaining to the Giant Bones, I was like, wtf.
They are literally openly lying to us in these lawsuits. Yeah,

(01:11:24):
we have Freedom of Information Act and we can actually
see these lawsuits that have been filed against this. That
is fantastic too.

Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
Well, it just it gives us some It gives us
some proof that they're they're having We already know that
they've been doing that. And you know, and garyl says, hey, Giryl,
he says. Midwest Night Watchers says, Southern Illinois is called
Little Egypt, especially the Kahokia Mounds area in Illinois.

Speaker 2 (01:11:47):
So this whole area. If you guys aren't familiar with
the United States, if you just look at the United
States and map, so all these areas that we're talking about,
they are different states, but they're all this big geographical
so it's not like Illinois on the other side of
the country, right, It's like they're all there together.

Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
Yeah, the Mississippian Mound culture, Okay, there's just a bunch
of Egyptians out there. I don't know, it's just wild.
It's like what is going on here? And so they
went and they so in December of nineteen thirty three,
the Tennessee Valley Authority convene at a conference in Knoxville
with several university representatives and other governmental agencies for the

(01:12:23):
purpose of planning a survey of Native American sites that
were to be inundated after the Norris Dam was completed. Okay,
and let's see. Let me turn the page. There's some
pretty good information here, and I think that it's important
that we talk about it quickly because I got to
go in just a few minutes to go meet my kid.
But it says the chairman of the University of Kentucky's

(01:12:44):
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology and the chairman of the
university's physics department. All the excavation work was carried out
by students supervised by them at these universities. So they
excavated these mounds, and then it said they identified twenty
three sites in the area that soon became the bottom
of a series of lakes created by the dam. Now,

(01:13:05):
why why on earth? I mean, if these are these
are historical landmarks, why would they why would they just
wipe them out like that?

Speaker 2 (01:13:13):
I mean, take our history from us, Like, listen to you,
little narcissistic psychopaths, like that's not yours to take from us.
So I hope, I hope these lakes are curses and
curse and I hope they're going after I hope they're
going after the people that drowned about. Like I support

(01:13:33):
that ghost adventure, like you go, you go, get you
the dead people, you go do your thing with those
people who stole you, that took you out. So it's
just wild.

Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
I mean they say that one man the Irvin Mound
had a row of ten standing stones, most of which
were about two to four feet in height. Adjacent to
the line standing stones was the remains of a rectangular
building form by cedar post. Inside the rectangular building was
another line of small stones. Oddly, a copper point button
and bead were found in the depth of eighteen inches
inside another structure under an adjacent mound. And I don't know,

(01:14:07):
it's it's just really sad that all this has been
covered up. But you but you got to wonder why.
I think that we know why. It's not only I mean,
it's multi faceted. Like I said in the very beginning, Uh,
you know, we we do need power, we do need
water because we don't have free energy anymore, so they
had to dam up all the currency, the natural currency

(01:14:28):
of Mother nature that we have. They had to dam
it up so they could monetize it. Right, I'm just
saying this is for entertainment purposes only, and they had
to cover up our history in the process. We didn't
know what we had before, and now we had to
pay for what we got. And we are slaves to
the system, as they say. And and so maybe maybe,
just maybe we can we can make some changes and

(01:14:51):
maybe get back to the way it's supposed to be.

Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
One day. I don't know when I lost the comments.
Somebody sept golf courses are also covered. Bring up mounds
that gave me, like the shipper down my spine mound
in Atlanta, like the Midle of Atlanta. There's like these
random golf courses. So I need to look more into that.
Thank you for whoever put that comment in, because that
was interesting. You know, Jessica, I will say, I know

(01:15:15):
you got to go assume. But somebody said to me once,
and I keep thinking about this. After all this stuff
is being revealed, somebody said to me, I would not
be surprised if one day we learn that Christopher Columbus
sailed from America and discovered Europe.

Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Oh my god, wouldn't that be something I love the
way you think outside the box? Price Well, that was
somebody else who said that to me. Okay, Well, still
wouldn't shock me at this point either. At this point
I'd be like, okay, okay, yeah, ye's unacknowledged and unknown says.

(01:15:51):
I've been several talks about the mound builders culture, I
have several research. I have several research in the TVA
and featured mounds. I just go, oh, that's very cool.
Tennessee Valley Authority is what that is, y'all? The TVA,
And you know, I don't know if they thought they
were they meant well by doing that. I mean, it

(01:16:12):
can't be any kind of historical society. I mean, they
go out of their way to preserve landmarks, and so
how could they.

Speaker 2 (01:16:18):
Thought that was a good idea. I think there are
a lot of good hearted people in these organizations and
they think they're doing good. But I think the people
at the top of these organizations know that they're being
that they're good hearted people.

Speaker 1 (01:16:33):
So yeah, well they just don't Maybe they just didn't
know what they were getting themselves into.

Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
I just feel like it's just a bigger picture. We're
uncovering so much deception and manipulation. Why why would this
not fall in line.

Speaker 2 (01:16:48):
With all of that exactly? I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:16:54):
I think it's great to look into it. Bryce, thank
you for being here with me today, talk about it.

Speaker 2 (01:16:59):
See the bood Eye people live in this area as well?
Are their Moon eight things like?

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
Like there could be Can I just say that the
Chicana the underworld it could have been, you know, covered
up by these lakes as well, like entrances to some
of these inner Earth areas could be covered up.

Speaker 2 (01:17:17):
People just vanished overnight. I mean the Cherokee, they the
Cherokey did say they slaughtered them, they shmurdered them, as
we say, but they were just gone. Like the ones
that were left just disappeared. So you know, this is crazy.
It's it's just the more we learn, the less we know.
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
Yes, Oh, Dennis says, a lot of burial places lie
under subdivisions. I know that's that's where were got maybe
culture guys from. Yeah, all was that when I passed
away one day, cut my hands off so nobody can
use me for anything and then burn my body.

Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
That's all I want do, not do not for me
in a box in the ground. Please don't just get
rid of it. I'm gone. Oh my gosh, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
Girl says thirteen major mounths were destroyed when cities were formed.
Big Mound at Saint Louis was one of the biggest
males next to Kahokiah. Wow. Well, yeah, it's it's really
it's really sad that we've just been building on top
of our history and everything's just kind of been been
lost there.

Speaker 2 (01:18:16):
But but you know what we can do.

Speaker 1 (01:18:18):
We can't tap into you know, into our our go
go within, okay, go within and and really tap into
our true nature and you know, and and that's that's
the important is also of like oral tradition and and
stories being passed down because you know, book books can
be destroyed, Okay, books are history. Landmarks can be destroyed, obviously,

(01:18:43):
but but the light within us can't. Okay, I mean
I guess it can.

Speaker 2 (01:18:47):
But just keep keep we take that power back. We
hold that power, We hold that sense of self, that
sense of yeah, and I just you know, the more
though we can get sad about this and frustrated, but
I just it's kind of comical in a lot of
ways because like they look like such idiots now, like
like we can see you, like a little much body.
We can see you, We can see you, we.

Speaker 1 (01:19:10):
Can see we know y'all are in the chat sometimes
trying to throw us off.

Speaker 2 (01:19:15):
We know we see y'all yet, and we we look
wayater than you.

Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
So you totally and actually I have the best you
do too, we have we all have the best chats
on the internet, Okay, going, I know the best people,
and uh, I love it. We've got people hairs that
are like they're happy to see us together on the
show today. So thank y'all for being here. That's how
we do have a lot of fun fun.

Speaker 2 (01:19:39):
I was telling a friend today about you, and I
was like, Jessica's great. She wears a cameo, she goes out,
she hunts, and she's always got a red lipstick on.
I love that. Yeah, I trying to try to have
a little bit of bloss on or something. You know.
I'm out.

Speaker 1 (01:19:54):
That's why I away from cameras out in the woods.
All I don't I don't get a whole lot of it.
If somebody's got a video camera out, I run, okay,
because yeah, I try to. I try to be presentable,
and it's hard to be presentable when you got mosquitos
up your nose and in your mouth.

Speaker 2 (01:20:07):
And Mama always told me you don't leave that house.
That's some mascare. Some lips to gone. So we might
be hunting but trying to find the truth, but we're
always gonna have our lips to gone.

Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
So I got some powder on my face and some
some mass hearing, a little bit of lip gloss, okay,
and uh, even when it's pouring down rain. But that's
why y'all don't see a lot of pictures of me
out in the field, okay, and definitely no videos.

Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
There was a fellow out there this weekend that had
a he was videoing, and I actually ended up leaving
before he got there, So thank goodness, thank god. Okay,
So I know, well, this has been so fun today, Bryce,
and uh, and I think this was an important show.
I think this is we put out some really good
information today. Uh, where can everybody find?

Speaker 2 (01:20:49):
You?

Speaker 1 (01:20:49):
Tell the audience about your YouTube?

Speaker 2 (01:20:52):
Esoteric Atlanta on the youtubes have also got the rumbles
as well as sometimes sometimes YouTube don't like don't like
we talk about, so sometimes we're forced to go over.
I also have the Esoteric Academy, which is where I
do a lot of my studies from Eastern from India,
which is the shadow work finding Yourself. But we do
have a free page on the esoter Academy where we

(01:21:13):
put a bunch of our more scandalous shows on that
as well, so you always have a place that you
can go to find to find the more scandalous scandalous
shows I know I have. I want to bring you
back on my channel soon too, because I got some
stuff that I want you to present on my channel
to Jessica.

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
So okay, cool, Well, we have a lot of fun
doing these remote viewing targets too, if you ever you
ever got something, what do we do?

Speaker 2 (01:21:37):
We did the and we've done Moon eight. I think
we did the Moon eight people on Rognostic, we've done
I'd have to oh, I had to do some like
unike Unsolved mysteries from.

Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
Like yeah, yeah, yeah, I love I love the missing
persons ones too. Those are those are always fun. So
I mean I hate it that they're missing people. I
don't mean it like that, but I just I enjoyed.
We're getting to do remote viewing targets like that too,
So yeah, we've got more work to do.

Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
Girlfriend, give people closure that way, you know. So that's
people left behind or what need to know what happened
to their loved ones. So yeah, girl, yeah, girl. And
we want to do more on the road stuff too, so.

Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
Heck yeah, well maybe maybe we'll have this the girls trip.
Maybe we'll go up, maybe we'll go up and see Darren.

Speaker 2 (01:22:22):
See Derek. We need to go to the Bellwitch and
do everything.

Speaker 1 (01:22:25):
So yeah, yeah, oh my gosh, well thank you for
being here, Bryce, this has been awesome.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:22:30):
Please go over to Esoteric Atlanta and on rumble and
YouTube and uh and subscribe, okay, and and give give
Bryce some follows and some subscribes and some likes and
uh and please come back and see me Bryce, and
uh for sure, for.

Speaker 2 (01:22:44):
Sure, girl, you know, anytime you're well, and I can't
wait to have you on my channel again too. You're
welcome there anytime. And this audience, your audience is awesome. Here.
I'm watching this, this chat, this chat, and you guys
are so freaking cool. I think we have just a
little group of weirdos and I love it. I lot
weirdos you night. That's right, we are Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
Well everybody, have a wonderful day, you guys, please, like
like Jane sitting in the chat while I go, keep
your vibrations high, y'all. And uh, and please be careful
if you go to any of these lakes. It doesn't
matter if it's man made or not. Just be careful
out there. And uh, but go have fun. Don't live
in fear. Keep your head on a swivel. I always
say the same thing, just about every time. Keep a
hand on a swivel, you know, because we're living in

(01:23:23):
weird times. And uh, but and be aware. Do your
own research, everybody of these of these lakes, and and
get to know your history where you live as well,
and really dig into it, because history is not always
what we've been told and what we've been taught. And
if you want to, you want to learn more, and
go over to Bryce's channel and uh and go through
mine my my archives as well, and uh, well we'll,

(01:23:45):
uh you can learn some stuff. Maybe we're all figuring
out together.

Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
We don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
I don't know nothing about nothing. Okay, but we're having
fun talking about for entertainment, all for purposes only, that's right.
All right, everybody, have a great day and I will
see you guys back here on Wednesday at one pm
on a glitch in the matrix.

Speaker 2 (01:24:05):
Be there, be square, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:24:06):
And I've got a great remote viewing target for you
guys on Thursday as well. All right, y'all, I'll see
y'all on Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (01:24:13):
See you Bryce, guys. It's s
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