Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, anybody home today, I want you to open your mind.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
I've almost done.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
On the conclusion that the story is subdamning that the
mass of Apple people can't deal with it. We are
in process of developing a whole series of techniques to
bid people actually to love their certitude. We face a
hostile ideology, global in scope, atheistic in character.
Speaker 4 (00:29):
Ruthless in purpose, and insiduous in memo.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Before we are opposed around the world by a monolithic
and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for
expanding its sphere of influence.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
To change the minds and the attitudes and the beliefs
of the people to bring about one world socialist totalitarian government.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
It is patterned itself after every dictator who's ever planted.
The ripping imprint of a boot on the pages of
history is the beginning of time.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
If you can get people to consent to the state
of affairs in which they are living, then you have
a much more easily controllable society than you would if
you were relying poorly on clubs and firing squads and
concentration camps and tools that conquest do not necessarily come
with barns and explosions, and followed there are weapons that
(01:21):
re simply fight out prejudices.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
As you connect the dots between different people, organizations, religions, history,
suddenly the picture starts to form.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
The Kingdom of God is within men, not one man
nor a group of men.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
Someone born in the United States is not more special
than someone born in Mexico.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
Someone who is white is not more special than someone
who is black.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
They're just vehicles for the consciousness to experience. They do
not want your children to be educated.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
They do not want you to think too much.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
It was learned that the aliens had men and were
then manipulating matters of people through secret societies, witchcraft, magic,
the occult, and religion.
Speaker 3 (02:04):
They're reach into our children in music, television.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Books, right, children's eistence. How can I just advise that
are standards an efficiency.
Speaker 4 (02:11):
So if you have the opportunity to stand next to
one of these machines, it feels like an altar to
an alien god.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Genetic powers the most awesome forced the planet's ever seen.
But you wielded like a kid that's found his dad's
a gun.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
You on the airport has an ounce, but applying this
there is now in the provection of the army.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
Too many others know what's happening out there, and no one.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
No government agency has jurisdiction over the truth. Any state,
any entity, any ideology that fails to recognize the worth,
the dignity the rights of man, that state is absolute,
a case to be found under m from mankind in
the Twilight Center.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
A long time some of.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
You got acquainted with the real hard truth. It's the
haw that says I will not acquiesce.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
Freedom is the freemager to be right.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
Freedom from the disasters in the state.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
If you don't connect the dots, just a mass of
what's all this about? You are listening to the Secret
Teachings Radio. I'm your host, Ryan Gable, and thank you
for tuning in to TST Radio. Tstradio dot info is
(03:20):
the website already. Gable at yahoo dot com is the email,
and if you'd like to join us on social media,
you can find all the links on the website I
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you scroll past the description of the show to our
(03:44):
social media platforms, as well as the various places that
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Unless you miss a show or something like that, you
(04:05):
can go back and listen in the archive, the free
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to get rid of them, you can subscribe on our website.
However you support us though, thank you. Earlier this week
I gave a shout out to all the people that
bought a book, or subscribed or became a supporter of
(04:30):
us on buying a coffee. Those things keep us independent,
they keep us uncensored, and they keep us on air Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday. And also because of all the support,
we're doing those Friday live video shows on YouTube, X
and Facebook. I would do them other places, but we've
(04:50):
been removed from pretty much every platform. We've even been
removed from those platforms, but we're back on and I'm
trying to have a little bit of a presence, but
I don't want to put too much effort into it
because things just get deleted. Anyway, Thank you again for
joining the show tonight, and I really mean that. That's
not just something I say. I really appreciate you sitting
down and listening to the show, or working and listening
(05:11):
to this show. We like you. I don't know what
the next episode's going to be. We jump around to
different topics. We've done very unique I guess you could
call them sort of health conspiracy shows. This week, we've
talked about censorship this week, and as has been a
regrowth of an interest for me. We've done a lot
(05:35):
of recent shows on megaliths and ancient archaeology, and I've
noticed something in reading about megaliths and archaeology and finds
that are outside of the acceptable paradigm of human history.
And I've noticed that there seems to be and this
(05:57):
could just be because I'm not really in the whole
UFO whatever it is community, but it seems to me
that for a long time, maybe it was because of
ancient aliens, but people were pretty convinced that aliens built
(06:18):
all of these megalithic sites and all of this incredible
architecture and all that, And now it seems like people
are coming around to the idea that it probably wasn't aliens,
it was probably us. Now we can look into the
past and we can say, well, based on what these
(06:42):
places imply, what a go Beckley Tepe implies, What some
of these far older sites and kind of anomalist finds
indicate is that whoever whatever was here before us, another
version of us. They had a level of sophistication that
was in some ways equal to our own in regard
(07:07):
to being able to build what they built, which would
require language, communication, writing, math, things that weren't supposed to
be settled in the remote time periods that we're talking about,
going back even before go Beckley Tepe. So maybe whatever
(07:29):
it was, whomever it was in the human past, they
were and they kind of are like aliens because they're
nothing at all like us. I mean, maybe they looked
like us, but they're in essence alien to us. We
have no idea. That's the Solarian hypothesis too, that if
there was an advanced civilization or several if it was
(07:52):
so long ago, we're talking like a million years ago,
even a few hundred thousand years ago, there probably wouldn't
be any evidence at all that we would find. Think
about our modern civilization. Think about what you can ascertain
(08:13):
from modern life by studying a butter knife. And these
are the kinds of things that we find over and
over and over again. We find a fork, we find
a knife, a kitchen utensil. Usually we find tools of
some sort, and that's it. And we try to figure
(08:36):
out who these people were based on something they cooked
with or based on something they used to fix things.
And that's not really it's the best way we have
if we don't find anything else, but it's not really
the best way to if you look at the modern
(08:56):
world determine what our world really is. You live in
the modern world like I do. But if you were
to go into your kitchen or go into your shed,
or go into your garage and pull out a tool
or a utensil and try to explain civilization as we
know it based on that utensil, you cannot really do it.
(09:24):
There's no context for spaceships and intercontinental flights, planes, cruise
ships and all that. There's no context to those things
with a fork or with a hammer, and a lot
(09:44):
of things we have today are so synthetic anyway that
they would deteriorate much faster than a lot of the
artifacts that we have in the archaeological record. As a
matter of fact, I just read a story about well,
actually utensils. I just read a story about this that
archaeologists have discovered. I think it's the first ever set
(10:10):
of a full set of utensils. I thought that was
really interesting. And it had a stamp I believe, like
a like a name or a family kind of a crest,
and it is I think the oldest and I think
(10:33):
it's the believe I was reading it's the oldest and
it might be the only complete set of like dinnerware
that's ever been found. I thought that was really interesting.
I read that and I thought, well, that kind of
goes along with what I was thinking about for tonight's show.
I wanted to do another one of these archaeology shows.
(10:54):
I love these shows. And I read about this and
I was I was thinking, you know what else I
saw recently? This is what I was thinking. I said
to myself, you know what was that other thing I
saw about go Beckley Tepe And I had to think
about it for a second because I didn't know if
it was real or it was fake or something like that.
So I started the scroll through my social media page
(11:19):
where I had seen it, and I tried type in
go Beckley Tepe and I couldn't find it. And then
I went online and I started because I thought the
social media would be the best place to find it,
and I couldn't find it. So I went to social
media to the internet and I started typing in go
Beckley Tepe fines or you know, something like that, and
I pulled it up and it's really interesting. It's a
(11:42):
ritual statue that is human, and like everything else that
comes out of Go Beckley Tepe, it appears to sort
of change the maybe the narrative of what the site
actually was. We'll talk about that tonight. A twelve thousand
(12:02):
year old human statue discovered at Go Beeckley Tepe. The
thing is, though, if you know about Go Beckley Tepe,
you know that they've only excavated approximately five percent of it.
Some parts have been reportedly recovered, some parts have been
damaged because of the trees planted, and there are other
sites other complexes near Go Beckley Tepe. That are equally
(12:25):
as under excavated. One of them is mandic Tepe, the megaliths. There,
these big rectangular stone structures. They estimate them to be
about fifteen thousand years ago, so it's what twelve thousand,
thirteen thousand BC, and they might even be earlier than that.
(12:51):
I think it's somewhere around fifteen thousand years ago. And
this whole area in Turkey is an indication that we've
all been well. I haven't because I have never thought
about it one way or the other. But all the scientists, archaeologists,
everybody's been wrong about human habitation and agriculture, that it
might have been human settlement that came before agriculture, which
(13:13):
we used to think was the basis for the settlement,
and Turkey has completely destroyed that idea with only a
very small percentage of stuff even being excavated. I just
imagine if out of five percent, the entire history of
the world changes, the entire evolution, and I don't mean
Darwinian evolution, but the evolution of human civilization changes with
(13:36):
five percent, that's it, five percent, and really it's less
than that. That's what they've like physically excavated and then
compared to what they know is also underground would have
basically time capsules. There's all kinds of theories, but we
don't really know for sure what it is. There's astronomical,
cosmological significance to it, there's agricultural significance to it. Now
(13:59):
they find this humanoid statue, and it may maybe it doesn't,
but it may have something to do with with some
sort of what we would call today probably supernatural, but
it has some sort of you know, statue that's like
a it's a sacred image that if you look in Hinduism,
(14:20):
they refer to this as and I believe I'm pronouncing
this correctly, myrtipuja, which is a consecrated statue that's worshiped
as a divine embodiment of whatever the god or the
goddess is. The Romans were famous for these household statuettes,
and in the Egyptian religion as well, statues were seen
(14:42):
as vessels for the ka, which is the spirit. So
the archaeologists who uncovered this little statue are saying that, well,
it's not really little, it's it's a relatively big statue.
But they're saying that it's probably has some role in religion,
probably us, but just like so many other things that
(15:04):
we find in our past. I think it's overstating the obvious,
but this means that whether you're in Turkey, or you're
in India, or you're in Egypt, or you're in ancient Rome,
or you're in Asia, or you're in Russia, or you're
in the Americas, everybody had the same practice that we
(15:25):
all used statues or statuettes to embody gods or goddesses
or spirits of ancestors, whatever. And we still do that
with Halloween, the Hungry Ghost festival at the Day of
the Dead, And despite the fact that we're separated from
these people by twelve thousand or so years, it provides
(15:45):
us with a sort of wormhole or a rippen time
to peer through to recognize that twelve thousand years Okay,
it's a lot of time, but these people were really
no different than us. We do the same exact things
that they did. And maybe it's not so much that
we need to figure out what did this statue represent.
(16:06):
It's a big fine what does it represent? Well, just
look no further than the modern world, where we still
have statues of Mary, we have statues of Egyptian gods.
We have statues of Jesus, of the archangel killing serpents.
We still have statues of all this stuff, all these
gods and goddesses and the things that they represent. We
(16:28):
still do that today, twelve thousand years later, and we're
practicing the same sort of religious veneration, religious practice, the
same kind of iconography, the embodiment of the soul, the
embodiment of the divine essence. So call it fetishism if
(16:48):
you will, avatars, vessels, etc. And this isn't just an Egypt,
this is all across Africa. Fetishes and sacred objects, the
health spirits like the Roman household gods, the statuettes or
the little I think that was what was that in
the Gladiator he had his his wife and his son,
(17:12):
these little carved figures, same thing. And I think that's
cool that we can look back twelve thousand years. I'd
assume you think that's cool too, probably if you think
about it from that perspective. You know how, you've heard
me say before, You've heard other people say before that
if you listen to music from someone who died, like
(17:32):
if you listen to Elvis, you're listening to a ghost,
they're dead. Well, some people think Elvis is alive. Maybe
that's not the best example, but you're listening to a ghost.
It's weird listening to myself on old shows, like, that's
a ghost of me. That's a me that's not the
same me. It's like disincarnate. It's strange if you think
(17:54):
about it like that. But we can apply the same
idea to this statue that was found and go Beckley Tepe,
and I think it's so weird but so cool. But
so it is kind of unnerving that one find I mean,
go Beckley Tepe. Rewrote the history books and you find
something like this statue. And it also kind of for
(18:16):
some theories, it sort of rewrites the idea of what
go Beckley Tepe is. And that's only with five percent
or so roughly uncovered. I was also looking into some
other stuff. I was looking into something that really has
(18:39):
stuck with me, something that's really fascinated me since I
first talked about it a couple of weeks ago, something
that I had come across, never thought much of it.
But it is a massive, incomprehensibly large stella or stella
(19:00):
in China. It's actually the largest it's called the Yangshan.
It's the largest in the world, and it looks like
a natural formation, but it was actually carved sometime in
the fifteenth century by a Chinese emperor I believe their
(19:21):
name was Zudi or Yongol, the emperor Yongol in the
fifteenth century. It's called the Yangshan Mountain Stella or the
Mountains yang Shan. It's also referred to as the Zudi
Stella or there's lots of different names for it. And
it was left in the quarry. Now, when I read
(19:44):
about this the first time, I thought, hmm, were they
going to move this? Because if they were going to
move this, you just need to burn all the history
books right now. If they were going to leave it
in place and carve it, that's not as I mean.
It's an incredible piece of work if it was finished,
(20:04):
but it's not as incredible as if they were to
move this. I mean, it's one thing to move the Moi.
It's one thing to even move some of the blocks
for the Great Pyramid of Giza or any of the
other structures in the Americas or across Asia Europe. It's
another thing to look at this yang Shan Stela and
be like, I don't think there are enough are enough
(20:27):
Chinese people in the fifteenth century to move that if
the entire Chinese gene pull got together and tried to
pull it. It's hard to talk about this on a
radio show because you can't see it. But this thing
is massive, like incomprehensibly massive, like something that if you
(20:49):
just glance at it just looks like a natural formation.
But if you also just glance at it and you'll
notice that it's been cut out of the surrounding rock,
you'll notice that it bears a similar similar motif to
(21:11):
those things that you find in Jordan Petra I Believe
in Jordan, and also one of my favorite temples kind
of reminds you of what you find at the Temple
of I Believe. They call it the Alora Caves, but
it's the Kailasa Temple, and the Kailasa Temple is one
(21:37):
of the most incredible things in the world. It really is.
It's one of the most incredible things in the world.
It was carved directly out of the rock, very similar
as a matter of fact, to Ishino Hoodan in Japan.
But that's just a really small example. So what does
this tell us. This tells us that whether you're in Jordan,
(22:00):
whether you're in China, whether you're in Japan. And we'll
also talk about what we find in the Americas. This
wasn't just a matter of one society or another one civilization,
or they're having ambitions to build big. This isn't just
(22:24):
like the Chinese built the Great Wall, or you know
there's the Pyramids of the Sun and the Moon, or
the Great Pyramid at Giza or something like this. Now
this is an international This is a universal This is
a worldwide practice between very distant peoples where they not
(22:50):
only had the ambition to do it, but they were
able to carve things out of rock and different types
of rock that are so incomprehensibly large that we look
at it and we think there's no possible way they
could have done that without the assistance of advanced technology.
(23:10):
In fact, there isn't any way that you could have
done it without some sort of advanced technology. I think
the idea of melting rocks makes sense for the polygonal architecture,
but not when it comes to these temples that are
carved out of rock, like in Jordan, or in India,
or in China or in Turkey, because it's not just
(23:35):
a temple or something like that. It's Darrenkoya is an
entire city that's carved out of the rock. That place
is shocking, actually, it shocks you. Darren Coou is an
underground city in Turkey, and there's I believe two hundred
or so of them that connect. So again, I'm trying
(23:58):
to put a different angle on this, trying to approach
this from a different point of view. But it's just
this idea that it's not just about building similarly or
having similar having similar you know, mythologies or beliefs. It's
(24:20):
about doing things that are more than ambitious and more
than big and it's all done kind of in the
same way. So you obviously can't see any of this
right now, but you can look this up for yourself.
Let me give you a couple of things to type
in so that you can go and see this for
yourself and see, you know, the same practice and how
it was done on a small scale. Type in I
(24:43):
S Hi space, N O space h O d E
n is she no holden ish No Holden is located
on the grounds of the O Shinko Jinja Shrine, in Japan,
and it's carved out of the surrounding rock. They also
(25:06):
refer to it as the floating stone because the way
that it's built appears to float on water, which for
those of you who don't know anything about Japan, I
noticed this. I guess you could say it was kind
of just by chance, but I noticed. If you go
to the island of Miyajima, they built the shrine there
(25:28):
called Itskashima, one of the most famous shrines in the world,
and it's also built to appears of it is floating
on water. And this is a small scale. If you
go up a little bit bigger, you find these carved
temples and gates in Jordan. You go up a little
(25:48):
bit bigger than that, you find the Kailasa Temple in Elora, India.
If you go up a little bit bigger than that,
you find entire underground cities in Turkey. And if you
in a slightly different way. But if you go it's
one thing to I guess, carve out of the ground
(26:10):
because you don't have to move it. But if you're
trying to move something. Then you go to China and
you find the yng Shan Stella and you're thinking that
is not I don't. It's the largest in the world
by far, And how were they going to move that
because it was supposed to have been moved from the quarry.
(26:32):
How would you move that. There's no modern machine that
could even come close to moving that. You'd have to
have like zero point energy I think to pick the
thing up, or you'd have to be a giant. And
the Chinese are pretty ambitious. They got stuff done, but
I don't know if they're that ambitious. Clearly they were
(26:53):
able to move stuff like that and build stuff like that.
Mean the Great Wall of China is just beyond comprehension.
So clearly we're missing something, clearly. But if you go
further than that, there's there's more in the Young Shan
quory than just that stella. There's also other megaliths. And
then if we go to the United States, you find
(27:15):
in Wyoming something called the Falling Block. And the Falling
Block kind of reminds you, kind of reminds me a
little bit anyway, kind of reminds me a little bit
of is no hodin it is cut. At least if
it is cut, it was cut in a very similar
way where the back end of it, or maybe it's
(27:37):
the front but appears to be the back end has
it's almost like a rectangle, but the back end has
a separate section that comes off of it. And again,
maybe it's natural. It's possible it's natural. But the falling
block in Wyoming, I don't think we're really sure if
(27:58):
it is natural or if if it's artificial. It appears
to be artificial, and it is massive. You can find
pictures of people climbing it and they look like ants,
But it does appear that it's at least possible. Maybe
we'll say a fifty to fifty shot, it's at least
(28:20):
possible that this thing is unnatural. And then there's also
the giant obelisk that also remains in the quarry, the
Unfinished Obelisk, as it's known in the stone quarries of
(28:42):
ancient Egypt in Osfon, And if you look at that
image it is it is stunning because there's plenty of
pictures of people of tourists standing on this thing, lots
of tourists, and it is huge. In comparison, there's a
(29:04):
whole bunch of these types of things all over the world.
As a matter of fact, there is I believe it's
called the Stone of ball Back. Believe is the name
of it, ball Backstone. And it's also just like the Obelisk.
Just like all of these other places. It is massive, massive,
(29:26):
and you can see people standing on it or walking
next to it, and it's incomprehensibly large. It's something for giants,
or appears to be something for giants. Huge, massive, And
then on a smaller scale again you can find moi
that are carved and not moved on Rapanui. So this
is a probably a rational style of construction. You know,
(29:52):
it's not like you have businesses to go to to
get large amount of rock like you do today. You know,
this is a community effort to build these things, probably,
And everywhere you look in the world, they're just going
to the source. They're carving it out of the source,
and then they're moving it, transporting it somehow, we don't
know how, but they're transporting it. Some places there's quarries
that are closed, someplaces they're very far away. Doesn't mean
(30:18):
aliens did it, but some fascinating stuff. Look up the
ball backstones. Look up this is another fascinating one. The
Sage Wall in Montana, or the playground of the Giants
in Montana. The Sage Wall might be one of the
(30:39):
most underreported things in the United States, might be the
one of the most unreported things in the United States,
in Canada, in Central America, and in South America. Might
be one of the most unreported things in the history
of the Americas. The Sage Wall is really really interesting.
It's as I said, it's in Montana, and you can
(31:01):
go to I believe it is the Sage Mountain official
guessing the state runs at the Sage Mountain State website
and they have a whole section on this thing. And
it's so weird because I read about the Sage Wall.
(31:22):
They said it was created and maintained by Sage Mountain
Center in Montana, or was discovered and it's maintained and
kind of kept up by the Sage Mountain Center in Montana.
I was discovered in nineteen ninety six. And the official
story is this is crazy. Now if you read their website,
(31:42):
you like the Sage Mountain Center website that they say
that it was found it, you know it's somebody built it.
It was found. It's not built by modern people. But
you'll also find a lot of people saying that the
Sage Mountain, the Sage Wall, was natural, and I saw
(32:02):
a lot of that. I'm thinking, these people can't be serious.
That is not a natural phenomenon. That is a human creation.
I read through some different articles about this massive stone wall,
believed by some to be an ancient megastructure. It's not
a matter of believing it to be an ancient megastructure.
It is an ancient megastructure, and it is very similar
(32:25):
to what you find all across South and Central America.
I had never heard of the damn thing until relatively recently.
You see that, You're like, wow, so there's a lot more.
It's like all the mounds across the world. We did
a mound show last week, Kahokia, Newark, Serpent Mound, Poverty Point,
(32:50):
Lower Jackson Mound, and so on and so forth. And
how a comet or something the younger dries impact theory
of around that time, that's correct, you know, twelve thirteen
thousand something. Around that time, you know, the Quebeckley Tepe
time blew up across the what we call the state
of Mississippi. It's massive and probably wiped out parts of
(33:17):
or civilizations. There probably a lot of comment strikes like
that if that impact theory is correct, and we find
all kinds of stuff all the time and it's not
really reported. We find things all the time that are
just kind of left out of the conversation and they
change human history. That's weird to me, really weird to me.
(33:45):
I mean, we find things and they just go unreported,
and maybe it's like a there's like one archaeology journal
that reports it or something. But things that are just shocking.
I mean, how many people know outside of Indiana Jones
about the antiicatherean device. A lot of people know about
(34:05):
it because of that movie. That's why a lot of
people know about it. And that's okay if that's what
people learn it from. But I feel like we should
be having a bigger conversation or a conversation for that matter.
We should be having a conversation about this. To me,
(34:27):
this is pretty fascinating. I think to most people, this
is pretty fascinating, and it really is important to understand
that this should be a very important topic. And let
me give you a kind of a modern example of
(34:47):
why it should be an important topic. I'll give you
an example because you remember when nine to eleven happened, right,
And then we had Wesley Clark confirming that the whole
response was scripted to take out a handful of countries
in a short number of years. And so we started
(35:09):
in Afghanistan, going to Iraq, and even stuff happening today
with the overthrow of Syria's part of that plan, still
some twenty something years later. But what happened in the
Iraq is one of the greatest atrocities in human history,
but one of the greatest atrocities against human history and
(35:32):
human civilization. It really is. And you might wonder what
I'm talking about what happened. You mean the killing of people? No, no, no, no,
I don't even mean the killing of people. That's bad enough.
I'm talking about the total erasure of Iraqi history. And
you might not care. What do I care about Iraq
and some people in a cave? You know, if you
(35:54):
have that old kind of George Bush conservative, even kind
of Obama liberal point of view, I mean you should
care about those things. You should, because it doesn't matter
if it's your history or someone else's history. But in
two thousand and three, when the United States invades the
(36:18):
United States, admittedly after the fact, admittedly did nothing to
stop the looting and the theft of precious antiquities in Iraq.
In fact, some believe on one of them that the
US helped to orchestrate this in order to collect those antiquities.
(36:40):
Some go further and claim, which I believe this is
part of a government disinformation campaign. Some go further and
say the US government was looking for stargate projects. Yeah,
I don't think they were looking for stargate projects. I
think they were looking to commit acts of genocide against
the Iraqi people because they allowed, and I think participated
(37:02):
in the cultural destruction of Iraq. Thousands, if not tens
of thousands of artifacts and antiquities that went missing, that disappeared,
probably ended up on Sea one thirties going to US
military basis. But they also let people loot these museums,
They let people loot these places and carry away this
precious history. We already have so little about the past,
(37:27):
and Iraq's a pretty big part of human history, modern Iraq,
and we allowed that to be destroyed. And so I
ask you this question, are we any different than Isis?
Because what did ISIS do When we heard about Isis,
we heard Isis was cutting off people's heads. ISIS was
(37:51):
destroying statues and artifacts and temples, and and if you
were me, you know, you were in the back of
the class, and you were just like, yeah, I got
a question. Yeah, you way there in the back. What's
your question? My question is why didn't ISIS, the Islamic
extremists group, why didn't they attack the Vatican? And why
(38:17):
didn't ISIS because they're like Muslims protect the like Arabic heritage.
Why did ISIS try to destroy the Arabic and the
Muslim and the human history. To me, that sounded like
something that the US government and the Israelis were doing,
(38:37):
not something that Muslim extremists were doing. Right, That's what
it sounded like to me. In the same way that
people hate their freedom, so they decided to attack financial institutions.
This makes very little sense. And then we found out
all the US government helped to finance and run ISIS,
and they're driving around in Toyota pickup trucks, and we
(38:59):
learned that actually did as an acronym stand for Israeli
Secret Intelligence Services, which used to be the MOSAD phrase
on the website, and they took that down. It was ISIS.
And then we found out that you know mostly isis
al Kaida, all these groups talked about earlier this week.
(39:21):
There's a plan for al Qaida to carry out another
nine to eleven in the next few months. How do
you know that because you're planning it. So they allowed
for Iraqi history to be eradicated, erase destroyed, and that,
(39:43):
in regard to our archaeological discussion, is important because what
they did in Iraq is exactly what Isis did everywhere.
I think the famous case was what they did to
the Assyrian lion statues. They literally blew the entire thing
thing up and destroyed it. The winged bulls of Nineveh
(40:05):
destroyed them. The Islamic State I've destroyed the mosque of
the prophet Yonas Jonahs temple or Toom. Why would an
Islamic terrorist group destroy any mosque, let alone that mosque.
(40:29):
They destroyed so much history. Islamic State militants took sledgehammers
to an ancient artifact in the Ninevah Museum and mostly
racked that. That was a famous one. They just it's
on TV. They smashed it. I'm always curious why they
(40:49):
never show their faces and why they're always in like
New pickup trucks with American weapons. And also why, like,
what's the pipeline of getting those videos to like ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox.
I mean, if our government's after these people, like with
O some of them and Laden and the bin Laden tapes,
(41:10):
if our government's after these people, why don't they just
like somebody at the NSA. I don't know how it
goes down, but you know, ISIS calls the FBI or
calls the DOJ or I don't know. They call some
government office, they call Pentagon, call the Secretary of Defense,
and they say, we've got some videos of us destroying artifacts.
(41:32):
Would you like to get a copy of that so
you can send it to your media, Or they just
call CBS or NBC or seeing in directly and say, yeah,
this is ISIS. We're gonna send you a video of
us smashing these old statues. Can you play that on TV?
What's the pipeline to get these videos into the hands
of the media, Because what you'd be like, oh, this
(41:54):
is ISIS. Oh yeah, hold in one second, and then
you put the phone down, you put your hand over
the receiver and you say to your boss it's ISIS
And your boss does that you know, keep them talking, motion,
keep them talking. We're going to triangulate their position. All right,
So isis So what did you say you have? You
(42:15):
have like statues you have? What do you have? Yeah?
We got statues where destroying You want to play that
on the nightly news. We can get you a copy
of this video at asap. When they find out where
they're at, who's making the call and just like drone
bomb them. None of it makes any sense, does it.
I want you to remember this, this is important. I
(42:36):
want you to remember that the US government did nothing
to stop the destruction of Iraqi history. They did nothing
to stop the destruction of those antiquities, of those statues,
of those scrolls, of all that stuff that was in
those museums in Iraq. And that's just Iraq. That doesn't
even account for what ISIS did outside of Iraq. And
(42:58):
that doesn't account for all the things they did that
we didn't get videos of. This has always been my theory.
My theory has always been that ISIS is Israeli, British
and American and they are teamed up against the air
world and they dress up like quote terrorists, and they
take control of countries and so the US government doesn't
(43:19):
look bad when the US government goes in and confiscates
it publicly. They have Isis go in, or they have
random people go in and steal it. I'm sure they
bring it right to the local military base. And then
they have videos where they smash stuff, and then somehow
that makes it into the Associated Press. Like, if you
know where these people are, just go kill them. I
(43:40):
don't understand why the AP has a line of communication,
but we can't find them. Didn't they reportedly just kill
all Bagati like a few months ago, a few years ago,
and that guy was running around for years. We don't
know where he's at, but we got videos and we
got pictures, and we got you know that, they're always
sending us stuff. Yeah, but who runs the media in
(44:02):
the United States. It's not Isis or Muslims. So it's Christians,
it's Zionists, and it's Jews. And that's why that's why
you get these images on TV. They've got Time magazine
article from the headline, actually the front page, the starving children,
and then there's a picture of somebody taking the picture
(44:23):
of the fake starving kids to discredit starving kids, and
the newspapers not owned by Hamas So why did were
the magazines on owned by hamas So? How did that?
How did that slip by the people at Time magazine
that it was fake? No, they put it in their
intentionally to discredit the claims. It's the same thing happening
(44:44):
with all these ancient artifacts, the same thing happening with
all of these museums that were looted and destroyed by
either the US government, which they're probably i'd say third
in line. It's more so locals. It's also random people
that work for the government, and it's also terrorist groups
that we finance and fund. It's just weird. You can't
(45:08):
trace who sent it to you. You don't know where these
people are. They completely obliterated the nin of a museum,
and that matters, that really, really, really matters. They looted
and destroyed to face statues and other things at the
Temple of Hatra, which looks Greek by the way, Greek
(45:31):
or Egyptian. They looted, and I think they well, I
guess it's part of the looting. They dug thousands of
pits into the Mari site or they I believe they
call that tell Harriri, and that's in Syria back to
(45:52):
the Mesopotamian civilization. We're talking like cradle of civilization, mainline history.
They destroyed and looted ancient settlement mounds in northern Syria,
Tell Brac and tell Ajaja. This should make you angry,
(46:16):
This should make you very mad. And this stuff has
to constantly be brought up because the last fifteen minutes
we've talked about this and it might sound irrelevant to
our discussion on archaeology and megalithic sites and all that,
but it's not irrelevant. It's a part of it. It's
(46:38):
part of it. And hey, our country was complicit in this.
In fact, our country I think took part in it.
They say as soon as Baghdad fell, American troops marched
into Baghdad, and then suddenly everybody was like, let's go
(47:02):
to the museum and loot it. Who does that? Who
does that? Like, if you have maybe it racks a
different culture. It is a different culture. But like I
don't know if you had what happens in the US.
Hurricanes come in or there's a natural disaster, hurricane hits,
(47:22):
and what do people go and loot? They don't go
to museums, They go get stereos, TVs, jewelry, iPhones, tablets.
They don't go to museums and steal things. So like
American troops are marching into Baghdad and everybody that was
(47:46):
left in bagdads, like, let's loot the museums. And the
US military didn't see that, couldn't stop it, wasn't aware
of anybody doing it. Get the hell out of here,
Get the hell out of here. The US military had
a lot to do with the destruction of all of that.
And then it's like, well, the US military didn't loud it.
(48:06):
Criminals and thieves louted it, okay, and what did they
do with it? They just I'm expected to believe that
there was a giant conspiracy of Iraqis that marched into
the museums the minute that the United States entered Baghdad
and they stole everything. How exactly are Iraqis going into
(48:29):
these places and stealing large statues and then hauling them
off in the back of their ford f one to
fifty I mean, is that what was happening. Get the
hell out of here. This is a military operation. They
destroyed those artifacts, they stole those artifacts. It's that fact.
It's the same lie that they told us about the Nazis,
(48:53):
the same lie they told us about the Nazis. And
Hitler he we destroyed all this beautiful art. No, they
burn smut in Berlin. It's like King Louis the Ninth
did in France. It's weird comparison, isn't it. The Muslims
went around and destroyed their own artifacts, their own museums.
(49:16):
The US, Britain and Israel had nothing to do with it,
really nothing to do with it. It didn't seem to
care killing half million kids in the nineties because that's
just collateral damage. You don't seem to care about the
millions that you murdered after that. It sounds to me
like an actual genocide was waged against Iraq and it's ongoing,
and they destroyed the history, so you don't know where
(49:38):
you came from and where your people are on the
historical timeline, which for Iraqis is much closer to the
source than it is for Americans or Brits or Israelis.
And it's weird too because you hear this and there's
people that are thinking crazy. Goawn Radio thinks the US
(50:01):
government or something. I think it's the military. They like
hired people to raid these museums. Well, what's the alternative.
Random people got together and threw these giant statues in
the back of their cars and drove off and nobody
saw anything. Like, how how can people be that dumb?
This is important, This is really important, whether destroyed or
(50:24):
looted and sold or stored like in Indiana Jones. There's
a modern example of this. One week ago. Last week,
the state of Israel threatened to strike a museum storehouse
(50:45):
containing very unique Palestinian artifacts, which you know they don't exist.
There's some thing as Palestine. There's Palestinian newspapers and it's
in New York Times back in the eighteen nineties about
Palestine being colonized by Zionis. It doesn't matter. The point
is Israel is reportedly now targeting this international news, mainstream news.
(51:09):
They're now targeting, or they're going to as the next
phase the operation target museums. Hmm. Sounds like what isis did?
Archaeologists are scrambling now to save just the archaeological finds
(51:29):
that have been discovered in what is called Gaza, and
not even necessarily about Palestinians. It's just anything that's found
there because the building that was housing them was threatened
by and Israeli strike. So they've not only threatened to
blow it up, they've actually hit it in part with missiles.
(51:50):
Whether that's intentional or it's just like a kill everything policy,
Archaeologists are scrambling to save these are artifacts. The French
Biblical and Archaeological School of Jerusalem said it moved the
artifacts after Israel ordered it to evacuate It'skasa City storehouses.
(52:10):
Now you might think, oh, that means that Israel wants
to save those artifacts. They're not going to destroy it
because Israel ordered them to do it. Yeah, but that's
also kind of like when they said that you can
flee and then as you're fleeing they shoot you or
(52:31):
they bomb you, which is basically what happened. You should
get those artifacts. Missile comes in and blows people up.
We told them to move them. Very sick and evil
and wicked twisted psychology being employed here, and you know
(52:53):
when they did it, they did it as the military
marched in, which is exactly what happened in Baghdad. The
United States military reportedly too also said hey, you should
be aware that these museums are going to be looted,
and then as they're marching in, oh my goodness, look
(53:14):
at that they've been looted. We have no idea what
happened to the artifacts. The same thing that happened back
in two thousand and three and onward is literally happening
in twenty twenty five in Gaza where the Israelis almost
blew up the museum or where the storehouse of artifacts were,
(53:37):
and then the archaeologists are freaking out and these really
governments said, well, we told you to move them. And
then we find out that this is all happening as
the Israeli military marches in boots on the ground into
Gaza City. That is verbatim what happened in two thousand
(53:59):
and three in Iraq. It's the same thing. Corporate needs
you to find out the difference between this picture. It's
the same picture. It's really clear that it's the same picture.
What does that tell you? That tells you that the Israelis,
the Americans and the British had something to do with it. Now,
(54:20):
I think it's weird going back to archaeology and going
back to magaliths and things like this. I think it's
really weird that there are detractors of what I'm saying.
A lot of them. Now I'm not generalizing a lot
of people that don't like my interpretation of this, but
I have detractors. And I'm only telling you this because
(54:41):
you might find this interesting. As being the majority who
are not detractors of what I'm saying. You're open minded
to what I'm saying, and it might make sense to you.
But if you have people that are saying, why are
you so obsessed with those Arabs? Why are you so
obsessed with those tale heads? Those Muslims are Muslim, I
(55:02):
don't understand what that means. I don't get what the
question is. It's I don't want precious artifacts of human
history destroyed, and that makes me a Muslim. I don't
get it. Which again, I thought it was the Muslims
who were destroying the precious artifacts. At least that's what
(55:26):
seene In in Fox News told me that isis was doing.
I don't get it. I'm a little bit confused. It's
not about me being a Muslim. I'm not a Muslim,
and that's not a crime. If I was. What is
that even supposed to mean. It's like an accusation that's
supposed to mean that you're like discredited or like you're
(55:49):
a terrorist or something because I'm asking questions about antiquities.
Help me out here, folks, Does that make any sense?
Some of you might have experienced this too. I'm pretty
sure a lot of people discuss this When it was
happening with ISIS, and going back to two thousand and three,
(56:13):
I think this was a pretty discussed subject where the
official line was oh my, oh my, oh my, I
had no idea they were going to loot that museum,
and people were like, now, you did have an idea. Actually,
we think you looted the museum. It's going to be
getting harder and harder to be able to say those
kinds of things because of the crackdown on free speech
(56:34):
we talked about on Tuesday, And again, let's make this
really clear. You might think, why are you talking about this,
I wanted to hear about megaliths. Well, you are hearing
about megaliths because we are destroying history, committing cultural genocide,
(56:56):
and then we're calling it like liberation, democracy, freedom, liberty,
destroying terrorists. This is as much a part of the
discussion on human origins as the statue found to go
(57:21):
Beckley Tepe or these megalithic obelisks and temples and underground
cities and stellas that are found all over the world,
in Egypt, in Jordan, in Turkey, in China, small ones
in Japan, large temples carved out of rock, in India.
(57:45):
Cambodia has some too. This is a really important part
of history. And it's also one could argue that humans
didn't come out of Africa evolutionary speaking, and I don't
think that's accurate. Some think maybe China. I don't really.
(58:05):
I mean, honestly, this is an issue that it's not
a hill that I choose to fight on. I don't
really care one way or the other. I don't care
if the missing piece is found in the backyard of
some archaeologist in London, like the pelt down man. I
don't care. If it's found in Africa. I don't care.
If it's found in you know, some remote part of China.
I don't care. If it's found on Malta. I don't
care if it's found a rap Anui. I don't I
(58:26):
don't care where it's our Antarctic. I don't care. None
of that matters. It's not it's not an identity thing
for me. I just want raw information and we can't.
We can't get raw information because there's always some angle
(58:46):
or some slant or some bias to it. And furthermore,
I want raw information because raw information is what we
can work with to sort of develop a or an
idea of, in this case, what our past is. And
we can't get that when regardless of where humans came from,
(59:08):
at least by mainline standards, this part of the world,
you know, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, one of the oldest countries
in the world. This is like the area where we
believe civilization developed, and so it's not some remote place.
(59:29):
It's like considered the cradle of civilization, and we neglected
to protect it. Well it was. It had to have
been intentional, had to have been because the people that
drove this were Christians and Jews that hated Islam and
hated Arabs, and they probably burned and smashed and blew
(59:51):
up and destroyed much of this stuff. The ones that
were worth something, they probably brought back and sold on
the black market to private collectors. Yes, I am charging
the US government with this accusation. I'm pretty sure they
did that. I'm pretty sure it was part of a plan,
not a conspiracy. It was a plan. Look, they plan
(01:00:14):
that invasion for years. Say what you want about the
US military and the precision of their smart bombs, but
they're pretty they're they're pretty scripted, they're pretty you know,
pretty good at planning. But they just overlooked this fact.
(01:00:40):
This doesn't make any sense. Plus, the propaganda about Iraq
makes even less sense. Because if in America we're supposed
to be the smartest and brightest of everybody in the
history of the world outside of Israel, what do we
do when there's a disaster and people loot. We loot nikes,
and we we loot speakers, and we're supposed to be
(01:01:02):
the smartest. But those dumb Iraqis they tell us, were
really dumb, but they decided to raid museums. They wanted
the money, so random dumb Iraqis that don't have any
IQs at all, according to the US government in Israel,
decided to loot places of wisdom and antiquity, and they
(01:01:26):
conspired to do that and were able to evade the
US government and the military. Sure that makes perfect sense,
you know, or the Pentagon and Israel and the British
were involved in a conspiracy, or rather a plan to
strip the history from this region of the world. And hey,
(01:01:48):
I don't believe in the stargate nonsense, but I do
believe that they might have been looking for something in
the area. I mean, imagine if there was some thing,
not a stargate but mattere if there was something, any
rock that we knew that they had that changes the
course of history. Maybe there was a manuscript, maybe there
(01:02:10):
was something that changes the narrative about Israelis. And so
we go into overkill and in order to it's one
of the parts of the plan, in order to destroy
that one thing we can't get our hands on. Otherwise
we just destroyed the whole country. And nobody would ask,
(01:02:32):
hey did you or suspect, hey, did you destroy a
whole country because of some manuscript that says that, you know,
God was a real human being or wasn't a real
human being, or like everybody's a Jew, or you know,
Christianity is not what we thought it was. Like do
you think that that would be would is like our
(01:02:53):
government's above doing that? No? Do you think that the
Israelis are above doing that? Absolutely not. You think that
the British would be above doing that. No, so let's
think about all of this and let's put this into
context with what's happening today, and that is the same
exactly thing that happened in two thousand and three in Iraq.
(01:03:16):
Oh yeah, but the Israelis told the scientists and the
archaeologists to move you after a missile blew a hole
in the wall. Well, yeah, shouldn't have been there then,
which I don't think it's like necessarily directly intentional. It's
just like a byproduct of leveling the whole area. And plus,
(01:03:37):
where are they bringing these artifacts back to their bringing
them back to Jerusalem? You think that the French archaeologists
are going to get to hold onto these You think
the Israelis are going to take control of them, probably
burn them, destroy them. Isn't that the weirdest thing in
the world. They tell you there was no Palestine, it's
(01:03:58):
all made up. Meanwhile, these rarely governments is like, hey,
we need to hold onto all those Palestinine artifacts. Yeah,
so you can completely destroy them and you can complete
the genocide, which is what they tried to do in Iraq,
and that is what it is what they did in
Iraq was cultural genocide. And what we are doing by
ignoring countless cultures, countless artifacts, countless discoveries, is we are
(01:04:26):
committing genocide against ourselves culturally. Anywhere you look in the world.
I mean, it should be at least at least like
nutrition is like a three hour course for doctors. It
should be at least three hours and four years of
high school where you set down and you explain to kids, Yeah,
(01:04:48):
they found an analog computer in Greece in nineteen oh one. Yeah,
they found something in Africa that is dated to somewhere
around like four hundred thousand years ago. You'd think, hey,
(01:05:09):
that's pretty important. We should know about that four hundred
thousand years ago in Africa. I know, I mentioned that
on the show before. Do you remember that story. Every
one of these stories is just utterly fascinating. Four hundred
(01:05:33):
thousand year old plus would I think it's closer to
five hundred thousand years In Zambia or the Zambian Tanzania border,
it is a structure connected to that part of it.
What they found was pieces and then they found a
structure which indicates that a half million years ago our
(01:05:57):
ancestors were making wood for construction. This indicates math, This
indicates science, This indicates carpentry, This indicates architecture, engineering. It
indicates that they had a lot of knowledge of these
things to be able to do this. And then you
(01:06:21):
have to consider how many thousands of years before those
pieces of knowledge can be collected. And right now, ladies
and gentlemen, right now in the world, there is evidence
of complex It must be complex. Maybe archaeologists and journalists
would tell me I'm using the wrong terms, but I
(01:06:42):
don't think I'm using the wrong terms. I'm pretty sure
what we have is evidence of a complex and sophisticated
people building things half a million years ago. This is real,
(01:07:03):
This is not disputable. This is mainstream in a few
archaeology science journals, and yet you'd be hard pressed to
find anybody who's ever heard of it before. Don't you
think that's pretty important? I mean, this is where the
whole Smithsonian g it comes into play, right, because how
(01:07:24):
many people think I don't know how I feel about it,
But how many people think already that they find stuff
and then just destroy it, dump it in the ocean.
And that's the claim. I don't know why you dump
it in the ocean. But you just destroy it, you
just burn it, you smash it, you get rid of it.
(01:07:49):
And there's all kinds of reasons for that, right. I mean,
you look at countries that have faked archaeological discoveries. China's
done this, the British have done this to make them
seem as if they were the first people or the
missing link. And then you have some weird thing, I
(01:08:10):
don't know what it is, some weird fetish thing, especially
in Western liberal politics of like Africa is the seat
of civilization and of mankind and everything was built by
Africans and if you don't agree with that, you're like
a racist and you're saying, well, there also are, like
there are other people in the world that contributed to civilization. No,
(01:08:33):
Africa's built, Africa built civilization. I don't think that's true. Racist, Yeah,
it's it's not true. I mean, I think civilization probably
came out of many places, like India is one of them,
and I think China is another one. And then again,
I guess you could ask, like, what exactly is what
(01:08:56):
is civilization? Right? I don't know the things that we
use every day, the things that make our lives easier,
the things that make us live in the modern world.
You know that the windmill is Asian, just like I
thought it was like wooden shoes and you know some
blonde haired kids running around, you know, like a windmill
(01:09:19):
and some flowers or something. No, it's actually Asian. The
windmill is Asian. It's not Western, it's Eastern. You think
about what the Chinese invented. The Chinese invented. I mean,
I've done shows in this paper printing gunpowder, compasses, silk, porcelain,
bows and arrows, crossbows, iron and still smelting, the seismograph,
(01:09:41):
the abacus, the kite, the umbrella, fireworks, the mechanical clock, paper, money, tea, cultivation, astronomy, medicine, agriculture, injury,
and mathematics. They were some of the greatest contributors to it.
Like China basically built human civilization, and we have weird
people with dishes that are claiming, no, the Africans build everything,
(01:10:03):
or we have weird people on the other side of
the aisle with weird fetishes that are claiming, yes, white
people build everything, and we needed to be more like
the white Romans, Like there weren't white Romans. The Romans
didn't classify people as white. They classified them as You're Germanic,
you're Syrian, you're African. It's weird, isn't it. It's really weird.
(01:10:30):
I'm trying to put things into a digestible context, but
it is. It's like blacks build everything or white spilt everything?
What is that? But is that supposed to mean? That's
so stupid, It's so silly. You can find a little
bit of contribution from everybody. It's also weird how we
break the world down and we speak in these terms
(01:10:52):
like Western and Eastern. I mean, I get it for
sake of trying to explain a very large area. But
we look at the world and we say, uh, yeah,
the Middle Eastern countries, like Syria is not Middle Eastern.
Syria is Asia. Iran is Asia. They're Persian. They call
it the Persian Gulf. It's technically Asia. As a matter
(01:11:13):
of fact, if you divide the world I've seen the
map before, if you divide it directly, like most of
the Middle East is Asia. In fact, parts of Eastern
Europe are held there Asia. You might think that's some antics.
What does it matter? No, it does matter. If it
matters in terms of conversation, Western civilization, well, Western civilizations
(01:11:36):
is by a product of Eastern civilization and in a
product of whites or blacks. Is the product of humans
that built it, and it's also a product of humans
that have tried to destroy it, so that we don't
know where we're from, we don't know our history. I mean,
this is an enduring mystery. What did they destroy? What
(01:11:58):
did they save from those museums in Iraq? And what
did they do in Afghanistan? And what did they do
in Libya? And what did they do in Syria? It
physically hurts as someone who loves knowledge and wisdom, and
it physically hurts to sit here and think, Holy Hell,
(01:12:23):
our government destroyed a lot of human history or took
it and hit it. Not with the Smithsonian, although maybe
they were involved, I don't know, in order to essentially
ethnically cleanse parts of the world. And that's not like
an anti American thing. It's like a anti lie thing.
(01:12:45):
It's like a fact thing. And it ain't the only
ones to do it. The British do it, the Americans
do it, the Israelis do it. You don't think like Mexicans,
or you don't think like Chinese, or you don't think
like Russians have ever done something like that. Of course
they have. Look at what the Japanese did at Nanking,
look at what Jesus Christ folks. It's universal. It's just humans.
(01:13:11):
Humans do stuff, and they're doing in Gaza what they
did in Iraq. It's like the same playbook. But they're
trying to say, no, we didn't do that. That was
the random people that conspired to steal all that stuff
that we don't know how they carried it all away.
(01:13:31):
Same thing is happening right now, same exact thing, and
that's important to recognize. That's important to point out. So
when we discover something new, like a twelve thousand year
old statue at go Beckley Tepe, everything that comes out
(01:13:52):
of that site rewrites history because the site itself rewrote history.
So anything that comes out of it's going to continue
to rewrite history. And that's only about five percent plus.
Archaeology isn't like a directly sound science. It's based on estimates,
it's based on assumptions. It's based on processes of dating
(01:14:16):
that are usually between you know, a few hundred years,
or I guess on the the opposite side of a
few hundred years. You know, an object is that it
gives you a general idea. Depend on the type of
day they do, like carbon dating things like that. It
depends on the kind of dating, and its depends on
(01:14:36):
what you're dating too. I mean, you could find something
there that was just left by a more recent people
and they oh, that's old the site is, which is
really stupid. But if that's all they have, I mean,
that's all that they can do. So everything that comes
out of go Backley TEP is the point. It's it's
it's it's going to rewrite history. I mean, we should
(01:14:57):
have we should have a discussion on what happened in
Ecuador in twenty twenty four, the Opino Valley platforms in
twenty twenty four. No big story about that. Just six
thousand interconnected earthern mounds from five hundred or so BC,
and that's the early estimate, or rather the late estimate,
detected by light are proving that a vast, complex Amazonian
(01:15:20):
society with roads and agriculture far larger than previously imagine,
existed in Ecuador. Oops, somebody forgot to tell you that
on the news. Well you think that would be a
little bit more important than whatever it is that's on
the nightly news tonight, something about racism or trans people,
or how Jews need to be specially protected in our society,
(01:15:43):
or how Islam's evil, or how we need to go
to war to fight somebody's wars and we need to
crack down on you know, I don't know anti white
hate or pro white hate. I don't know what the
hell's going on. It's talking whites and blacks and trans
and Jews in them. We just fight, fight, fight, five fight. Meanwhile,
scientists are finding an entire civilization in Ecuador, an entire
(01:16:06):
civilization all across the Amazon, with jiglyfts and roads and
highways and pottery and giant temples and giant pyramids and
basically everything that some of the original explorers had found.
And then we called them crazy. That's not true. You
didn't find that. Yes they did, and now we're discovering
it with light ar, and we're discovering that the giglyphs
(01:16:29):
that are down there are just like the ones up
here in the North part of America, and that the
mounds here just like the mounds over there in Japan,
and they're just like the mounds and the hinges and
the different burial style chambers, and the pyramids and cigarettes
are found all over the world. One of my favorites
(01:16:51):
is the Canaanite deep sea shipwreck that was also I
believe last year would have been nice if we had
gotten a phone call about that, that one three hundred
year old Bronze age vessel found. I think it was
two kilometers underwater, fully intact, proving that ancient sailors navigated
(01:17:13):
open oceans, not just coastal routes where they held onto
some seaweed and pulled the ship. Now, don't you think
that that deep sea shipwreck, which proves that ancient sailors
navigated the open oceans, don't you think that that might
be something you could kind of compare to what they
found next to the Pyramid of Giza. What'd they find
(01:17:36):
next to the Pyramid of Giza? Oh on a long
time ago, like three decades ago, that nobody bothered to
tell you about except a few authors and archaeologists. I
learned about it from reading fingerprints of the gods. They basically,
in essence, found two seafaring ships that could be disassembled
and then reassembled, or rather when they found than they
(01:17:57):
were I think mostly assembled. They could be dia disassembled,
and they could be taken to the ocean, which is
pretty far away from Egypt. And they weren't necessarily for
the Now River because they had other boats for that.
They could have been taken to the ocean, reassembled and
then used to navigate the ocean. So the Canaanites had
ships that they used to navigate the ocean. The Egyptians
had ship they used to navigate the ocean. What is
(01:18:18):
happening here? Will they just discovered that in twenty twenty four.
It confirms what they found in Egypt back thirty something,
forty years ago, thirty five years ago, something like them
been forty years ago, fifty years I don't midn't even
longer than that. I don't know when they found those
ships in Egypt. I'd have to look that up. I
don't know that number. You think that these should be
these would be important things that we should discuss, but
(01:18:39):
we're just so consumed by nationalism and race and all
these different little dividing points. I think it's pretty interesting
they found like basically an entire civilization in Ecuador, and
we're just like, yeah, that's okay, So what's your opinion
(01:18:59):
on Israel. We found proof of that, like navigating people
navigating the ocean thousands and thousands and thousands of years ago.
But what's your opinion on Putin? It's really stupid. I
think Dave Chappelle said something, but he had like a
whole bit on that one time. He said, you know
(01:19:20):
what the it was a young Dave Chappelle. He said
something about the Dixie Chicks, and I could find that bit. Actually,
let me let me safe. I can find that bit
rather than butcher it. If I can find that old
Dave Chappelle bit about the Dixie Chicks and joh I
think it was jaw rule. He says something about like
(01:19:41):
why we listen to celebrities or why we should stop
listening to like why does it matter what a celebrity thinks?
And we type it in Dave Chappelle. He spelled two l's.
He has two l's, Dave Chappelle, Dixie Chicks. That's mine.
Speaker 5 (01:20:03):
That's all I'm saying. I almost protested the warning beginning
almost until I saw what happened to them Dixie Chicks.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
I said, fuck back.
Speaker 5 (01:20:17):
If they'll do that, the three white women, they will
tell my black ass the pieces.
Speaker 1 (01:20:21):
I don't want to hear that shit.
Speaker 5 (01:20:23):
Yeah man, they would, but I'm like, for real, why
are you kill so much? What the Dixie Chicks say,
not like they political scientists, and then they just us
that can say good, you know what I mean? Stop
worshiping celebrities so much, no one less, don't pay attention.
I remember right around September eleventh, joh Rule was on MTV.
Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
I think that's that's the whole clip. There was another
one about Josh Rowley. It's like they had job rolling
TV and like something happens, something about nine ladies. There's
not eleven disasters happen. Let's somebody get on the phone
called jo Rule. See what joh Rule has to think
about this this disaster. Who cares what jah Ruhl thinks.
It's just that kind of thing. You found a civilization
(01:21:05):
in Ecuador and we're just like, yeah, so what do
you think about Putin? What do you think about Israel?
It's such nonsense. I think that we need to talk
about these types of things more often, not just as interests,
but I mean injecting them into conversations that I've been
(01:21:27):
trying to do that. I've been trying to kind of
inject this into conversations with people and say, you know,
having a conversation about whatever and say, hey, by the way,
do you know that they discovered a civilization in Ecuador.
It seems like that's pretty important. Hey, you know they
found like Bronze Age people navigated the oceans. That's pretty important.
(01:21:50):
You know. If you play those old games like Age
of Empires, well, I remember that there's like you know
that they go through the different ages. There's Bronze Age
and it's just like people with sticks and maybe a
pickaxe and you're getting rocks and berries. They need to
update those games because the Bronze Age they had ships
that went across the ocean. I couldn't build a ship
until I was in Like, I don't know the what
(01:22:11):
were the ages of that game? See Age of Empires. Yeah,
let's see if I can find what were the ages,
because I think it went all the way up into
modern like contemporary times. Age of Empires, Hold on a second,
(01:22:32):
I want to find this. I think I think it
went up into modern I don't know when it started though,
first level or first level or age mhm, the Civilization Guide,
Iron Age, Bronze Age. Yeah, so you go through the
(01:22:56):
different age. I don't know when it started. Anyway, I
would have looked up real quick. But yeah, so you
have to like I couldn't build a couldn't You couldn't
build a boat until you got to the next age
or something like these Bronze Age people are navigating the oceans.
It's it seems to me that our perception of history
is primarily fixed by Hollywood movies and by really bad
(01:23:20):
but you can't blame them teachers, and also by people
that don't really have because we were never taught an
interest in these types of subjects. Were more interested in
you know what the Dixie Chicks or jaw Rule think
about something like I would this is me. I live
in a totally different world than you do, I guess,
(01:23:42):
or most people do. Like I. If that was like
a breaking news story, I would want if I was
at home, my wife to wake me up. If I
was with a friend, my friend to wake me up.
If I was in a hotel, I'd want the concierge
to call me and say, hey, Ryan, get up. They
just found a half a million year old structure in Zambia.
I think that shit's really important, folks, But the reaction
(01:24:03):
that we should have to things like the anti Caatherean device,
or the Zambian discovery or the Canaanite discovery, or I
mean there's you know, go Beckley Teppe or whatever the
case is is the you know, we should have a
reaction to those things like we did to I mean
(01:24:24):
to everything whatever Trump said today, or whatever the new
enemy is supposed to be, the Russian menace or the Chinese.
What do the Chinese doll upset? Oh my god, Oh
my god, Shine, Oh my god, Russia, Oh my god, Israel.
It's like, there's more going on in the world, and
there's a lot of really fascinating stuff going in the world.
(01:24:45):
And it also overlaps too, because, as I said, look
at what the US government, the British and the Israelis
did in Iraq, and they're not the same thing in Palestine.
What do you do with that information? Just leave it?
Or do you try to show people that it's the
(01:25:08):
same thing. I mean, I would guarantee you there is
nobody else in radio anywhere in the world talking right
now about the fact that what the Israelis are doing
to Gaza is verbatim identical to what the US military
did in Baghdad with artifacts. Soldiers marching in and the
(01:25:30):
artifacts start disappearing and getting blown up. It's a coincidence. Wow,
it happened again, and it's weird that we try to
pretend like it's not happening or it didn't happen. That's
really bizarre to me. It's really strange. There have been
(01:25:53):
a whole lot of things that have been found all
over the world that just never really get reported. I
mentioned these dining sets that were found. One of the
most remarkable discoveries recently that was found is that a
(01:26:13):
site called I don't know how to pronounce this kara Hoyuk,
probably not pronounced that any in any way, that's maybe
mildly right, but it is a a site in Turkey.
I believe it's in Turkey, which is turning out to
(01:26:34):
maybe be the cradle of civilizations, like civilization, not evolution,
but civilization. And it apparently is a three thousand, five
hundred year old dining set totally completely intact. It's one
of the very few full dining sets ever found on record.
(01:26:55):
It contains a tray foil rim jug as well as
a handled up and a clay serving dish also found
in the area where a selection of children's toys and
small animal totems. Additionally, researchers excavated an eagle headed human seal,
which that when I read that the first time, I
didn't even think about the significance of an eagle headed
(01:27:16):
human seal that is astrological and cosmological and a bone
pen from the site. The seal, which also dates back
thirty five hundred years, depicts an eagle's head atop a
human's body. This was just discovered, or at least it's
just now being reported in Turkey, and this was on
(01:27:38):
the seventeenth of September, this was announced. It's just it's
a question that I have for you as an audience.
It's a question I'm asking myself too. It's not a
new question, It's just a question. I'm thinking, why aren't
we made more aware of this stuff? Like why this
(01:28:01):
wouldn't this drive clicks and views? I mean seen in
what wants to make money? Wouldn't you make a lot
of money if you just started announcing all these archaeological discoveries.
What if people think is going to happen, like the
world's going to fall apart and deteriorate overnight because oh
my god, oh my god, oh my god, they found
(01:28:22):
something really ancient in China. Is that what people think
is going to happen? Two countries are going to go
to war because they found something older in one country
that takes the credit away from the other country for
having the oldest I don't know, ankle bone or something.
Is Is it all about nationality? Is it all about
(01:28:47):
like regionality? Is it all about race or ethnicity? Which
is where we again forget that we're humans and that
as humans, it really shouldn't matter if you know, there's
like red skin or yellow skin or black skin or
(01:29:10):
whatever the skin color is, because once all that's washed
away and you just have a skull, you just have
you know, a dinner set. It's all the same anyway,
minerals and things like that, it's all the same. Ethnicity matters, yeah,
and like racial things in a sense matter. But why
(01:29:31):
aren't these bigger stories This would drive a lot of
attention a lot. I mean sure, when go Beckley tape
was found, there was like a note, but news is
all political. News shouldn't be all political news should be
about other things too, And in fact, the news used
(01:29:53):
to be about other things, and a lot of those
things now we think that they were. I don't necessarily
this was all that they were, but a lot of
that news used to be like hoaxes to get people
to read the newspapers. You don't need hoaxes to get
people to read the newspapers about these types of things.
You just need what has been found with a dig.
(01:30:15):
And even the official narratives about a lot of these
things are incredible, and you need all of it. The
more that you have, the better understanding of human history.
We go back to Montana. Look at these what they
call the Playground of the Giants in Montana. It is
(01:30:40):
a captivating archaeological site, very large megalithic structures that I
mean some of these, the walls, the drill that look
(01:31:00):
like modern One of them looks like a modern pipe.
The dolmen looks like a modern pipe that's put through
concrete or something. This is in Montana. It's also all
the way down in the Amazon stuff like this too.
And you find stuff. I love the Sage wall, all
(01:31:25):
the stuff that I read about the stage walls. It
could be an ancient megalithic structure or an ancient megastructure.
Well what else is it? Well, what else would that be?
If you don't know what the sage wall is, just
type in sagewall and you'll see it. It isn't natural.
Some people claim it's natural. Yeah, and the Empire state
(01:31:47):
building is also natural. It's the same type of engineering
an architecture that you find in Cusco, Socks, human Italy, Japan, China.
(01:32:07):
You find this all over the world. It's in Montana.
You think, like I do, Montana is just it's like
it's like a lot of Americans. No offense to you
of your Montana. But most people think Montana is a
nothing state. Most people think that Dakota is Wyoming and
Montana are nothing states. And just in this one wall
(01:32:28):
in Montana, there's a lost history. The ball backstones, the
unfinished Obelisk of Asfan, and I think thematic the enigmatic
falling Block of Wyoming is very similar to the young
(01:32:52):
Tin Stella in regard to just how massive it actually
is and the idea that anybody could carve that and
move that. The Wyoming one is not for sure man made,
but the yang Shan Stella is, and it is so
big that it just looks like part of the mountain.
(01:33:15):
But it's it's not real. Well it's real, it's just
not it's not naturally it was carved kind of like
the I think it's really fascinating. I always bring up Khalula,
the Great Pyramid. Khalula is bigger at the base than
the Great Pyramid of Geese, I think, maybe bigger by volume.
(01:33:35):
And in the time of the Spanish conquest of the area,
they didn't know it was a pyramid. They thought it
was a mountain, and they built a church on it.
That's crazy, especially because all over China we've heard speculation.
We've seen pictures here or there of pyramids that are
the size of mountains or you know, maybe not mountains
(01:33:56):
like Mount Fuji, but they're like hills, like large hills,
not a mountain, but like a pretty decent hike if
you're going to hike up it. I can't imagine what's
in China. And hey, you know what the Communists did
when they took over China. They eradicated the Four Olds.
(01:34:17):
You know what the Four Olds are? Most of you
are pretty smart. You probably know what they are, regardless
if you've listened to this show or not. But the
Four Olds for people who don't know, were old ideas,
old culture, old customs, and old habits that included destroying
manuscripts and books and statues and history. So they basically
(01:34:41):
committed cultural genocide against the Chinese people. So communists too,
you know, kind of like when I was living in Rochester,
New York, and I heard about it in the news
and thought, oh, I work right next to that. And
what I heard of the news and what I worked
right next to was a statue of Frederick Douglass, who's
kind of a badass. And the protesters who are protesting
(01:35:05):
against slavery or blacks or I don't know what it was,
but they tore it down. You saw that all across
the country. Remember, they tore it down, statues, they vandalized statues.
It was like every day it was the fall of
that Saddam Hussein statue in every American city. Yeah, because
(01:35:27):
the same people that orchestrated that looting and destruction of
those museums and artifacts and antiquities in Iraq are the
same people behind ISIS that did that to Syria and
Libya and Afghanistan, and the same people that are dying
and itching to do it to Iran and the same people.
Just imagine what they have in Iran. Holy shit. And
(01:35:49):
the same people that are behind doing that to the
United States by tearing down statues and destroying things that
are of the past. Whether you agree with the time
period or not, it's a very similar thing. And as
I explained on Tuesday show, you know who Antifa is.
(01:36:10):
They're the same people that looted those museums in Iraq.
They're the same people that destroyed through Isis. All of
that history in Syria sound familiar because they're the same people,
the same communists that destroyed Chinese society in the nineteen forties,
late forties, early fifties, and then into the sixties with
(01:36:31):
the Cultural Revolution. They destroyed all things that were old.
Anything that could remind people of the old world had
to be destroyed because they were making a new world
in a new order. So yeah, contemporary events and historical
(01:36:55):
events are really one and the same. We keep doing
the same thing over and over and over again. If
that's not clear, what happened in two thousand and three
in Iraq is similar to what happened in the nineteen
fifties in China. It's similar to what happened last week,
(01:37:19):
last month, and last year in Gaza. It is similar
to what has happened in any country that has been
overtaken by communists, in particular, who go another step beyond
simply year conquered and women get taken as wives and
(01:37:41):
children get raised, and men maybe get killed or turned
into slaves. It's a step beyond that. It's the total
destruction and the militarized and today industrialized destruction of culture.
While we fight about race of ethnicity, which is what
(01:38:01):
we should more so be focused on in terms of
learning and respecting each other's cultures. And this is what
happened in the past, what happened today, And that's why
these things are really important. They're important to understand, they're
important to put into conversations. You want to have political conversations.
(01:38:22):
My opinion, your opinion on this or that. Great, let's
inject this into the equation because this is exactly the
same thing happening today, that was happening in two thousand
and three, happening in the fifties, happy the all throughout
human history. It just kind of makes you stick to
your stomach. You know, if you play in a video
game and you get really far and forget to save,
(01:38:43):
and then the power goes out, and oh my god,
oh my god, did I save that? And you get on.
I didn't say, oh my god, I lost like three
hours of gameplay, and you just you know, I can't
play this game for a couple of weeks. If you
lose a word file you've been working on, accidently delete
it or something, it just takes a chunk out of you.
(01:39:08):
I don't know. Maybe it's a genetic I don't know, but
I feel the same way about this stuff. I feel
it just takes a chunk out of you. There's so
much opportunity to learn about the past and to learn
about who we are, and we just we keep destroying
it intentionally for like, I don't know what the reasons are. Really,
(01:39:33):
there's a lot of possibilities to suppose, but I don't
know what the full reasons are. We do that kind
of stuff. And yet there's some things you can't destroy,
but you can not make it a big deal. You
can just not talk about it. It's another it's like
(01:39:54):
a lie by omission when you just sort of keep
out of a American schools the fact to keep the
fact out that there was a culture that built the
Sage Wall and built you know, those mounds, and they
were very advanced in astronomy and very advanced in cosmology
and mysticism and mathematics and engineering and all that. But
(01:40:19):
it's let's focus today on why black people can't use
water fountains. Yeah, it's an important piece of history, but
that shouldn't be like one of the main things about
North American history. This is important, but there are things
(01:40:39):
that really should take precedent over all of that. They
really should. And maybe that's just a terrible example, but
if you look at the education system, that's what that's
what it breeds. I mean, what do you think about
social justice? You think of blacks on the back of
a bus drinking out of a water fountain. What do
(01:41:01):
you think that does to like black kids. It's like
it radicalizes them to think that this is how they're
going to be treated in whites of the enemy, and
that's what they do. In schools, you can teach that.
That's like a maybe a weak course, Okay, the rest
of it should there should be full classes on not
(01:41:22):
like the country's history, but on like human history, where
you bring all this together and show it to people,
what is so dangerous about that? What is so offensive
about that? Which you know as another thing too. It's weird.
You know, when Graham Hancock went to Serpent Mound and
(01:41:43):
they wouldn't let him film and they accused him of
racism and trying to appropriate the local culture that supposedly
built Serpent Mound and to take away you know, their history.
And it's like, you don't have to know anything about
(01:42:03):
Graham Hancock except that he's a journalist. Listen to one
thing that the guy says, and you realize immediately this
guy is a kind, genuine human being, and he's pretty
rational about what he says. And if you hear his theory,
it's the opposite of that. He's actually saying that clearly
(01:42:25):
there was a people who built this stuff and it
was pre European. I love when they accused Graham Hancock
of racism. It's so it's so rich. It's like that.
Another day, another Dave, I was watching Dave Chapelle, so
I got these Dave Chappelle bits in my head. Dave
Sapelle's talking about that one. Here was a more recent
(01:42:46):
bit that he did. He was talking about there's some
like Mexican guy in the audience with a with a
with an Asian wife, and he said, he said, you're
a lovely couple. Where are you from. The guy's like, Mexico, bro,
And then the girl's like, well, I'm American, you know,
but you're asking my race. I'm Asian. And he gets
(01:43:08):
to a fight with her and she says something about
him being a racist and all that, and Dave Spelle's like,
and if this woman would have just done a little
bit of researching to realize that I too, am in
an interracial relationship. Surprise, bitch, I'll see it Thanksgiving. It's
(01:43:29):
like Dave Chappelle, the same thing with Graham Hancock. His
wife is not quote white. What is that supposed to mean? Like,
what is that? Why do people do that? It's the
last thing, the last line of defense against your pointless
bronic theories and commentary on whatever the subject is. I mean,
(01:43:56):
there is a hint of that, that's the thing. There
is a hint of that. There are people that think, oh,
there's no way that primitive people could have built this.
It must have been the Europeans. It's like, well, that's
just stupid, because I don't know if Europe. Europeans invented
a fraction of the stuff that Chinese invented. At least
(01:44:19):
in terms of going back into antiquity and history, China
is way older than civilizations in Europe. You know old
China is, you know old India is, you know Iran
is and pert ancient Persia. You know how old Syria is.
Siria is one of the oldest places in the world
for human habitation. But I guess people don't want to
(01:44:41):
give that up or something we don't want to give up,
like it's European or it's Asians feel the same way
it's Asian or it's it's like the pilt down man scam.
I don't know why we can't just agree that we're
humans and let's figure out the origin of humanity together
rather than fighting about what race has the rights to
this or what nation has the rights to this artifact
(01:45:02):
that I mean, that's a thing, Yes, that should be
a thing, like in terms of maintaining order, but it
really belongs to everybody. I think a lot of people
are waiting, just like with you of those, a lot
of people I think are waiting for there to be
(01:45:23):
some declaration and that'll ever come. There's never going to
be a declaration where the president or Prime minister whomever
stands up and says, you know, well, after doing a
little bit of investigation, we found that based on all
of these ancient artifacts and megalithic sites around the world
(01:45:43):
and mounds, and we've discovered that there was a lost
is a lost ancient earthly civilization and we don't know
anything about them, but they were maybe more advanced than
we are, and we don't know what I really think
about it, but there's definitely something there that will never happen.
You're never gonna You're never gonna see that. But with
(01:46:06):
all the evidence, it's very clear that that's the case,
that that's that's reality. Same thing with UFOs. You're never
going to get into acknowledgment. Yes, aliens are real, they're
here now, we've been covering it up. That's not gonna happen.
I mean, that's the thing is that's also what you
just expect to happen, because that's what you see in
(01:46:27):
movies where eventually the president has to give a speech
about the earthquake or a speech about the the the uh,
the natural disaster that's happening. The alien invasion or whatever
it is after they denied it for for for so long.
That doesn't happen in the real world. But we're kind
of convinced that that's that's what's that's what we need,
(01:46:52):
Like that wouldn't mean anything. They really wouldn't mean anything,
And that's part of the miss of life, because you know,
ultimately it doesn't really matter what government says, doesn't really
matter what some official says. Look at all the things
these people say that are that are false and wrong.
You want them to be the the the the bearer
(01:47:14):
of the truth. It would be nice, but there's no
motivation to do that anyway. There is motivation to raid
museums in Iraq. There is motivation to destroy everything that
you find in Palestine because you can't have proof that
there was something there before. There is motivation in discouraging
(01:47:35):
you to connect the pieces between all of these incredible
places like Ishi O'hodan and Petra, Jordan and Kylasa Temple
and Allrea, India or Darren Couyu or the yang Shan Querry.
Part of a part of that is the yang Shan
Stella or the Falling Rock of Wyoming or the Unfinished
(01:47:58):
obelisks of obelisk, there's only one obelisk of Oswan or Egypt,
or the ball back stones very similar to the obelisk,
or the Sage Wall, or the playground of the Giants,
you know, or any of that stuff go Beckley Tepe,
(01:48:18):
or the discovery of an entire civilization in Ecuador. But
you know, we don't have time to talk about that.
One of the most overlooked historical finds I think was
in twenty nineteen they found an archaeologist found a shaman
pouch dating back a thousand or more years, containing physical,
(01:48:41):
not just auditorial evidence, physical evidence of the ayahuasca preparation process,
which is ancient pharmacology and science, which goes back way
further than one thousand a d way further. That was
found in Bolivia, and it's like physical scientific proof, physical
(01:49:03):
archaeological proof rather, I should say, of a scientific people.
And unless you're a nerd or something, you probably didn't
hear that. I didn't even I didn't know that either.
I learned that before tonight's show. Here's another great one,
the Nabataean Temple. It's found last year in Italy, a
(01:49:27):
two thousand year old offshore shrine to a god named Dershara,
and it had Latin inscriptions revealing what the I guess
you could say the archaeological team. What the archaeological team
said was an unexpected Roman Nabataean cultural fusion far far
(01:49:54):
far from the Middle East. And for context, Shara or
Doushara is a pre Islamic Arabian god worshiped by the
Nabataeans of Petra and Madane Salah, and this, prior to
(01:50:15):
the discovery was not thought to have been a thing.
I guess. I don't know much about this when I
was reading about this and I thought, well, that's interesting.
In fact, I watched The Mummy the other day, the
New Mummy, which I wasn't very good. But I watched
the New there's actually a new new Mummy coming out.
But I watched the tom Cruise Mummy. I like the Originals.
(01:50:38):
I don't really like this Mummy. I watched The Mummy
and it starts out with the story of the Egyptian
queen and they take her out of Egypt and they
bury her. They bury her somewhere in Iraq, and so
they the movie starts, they find this, you know, sarcophagus
and so the things from Egypt all the way in
Iraq and it's this big, big find. And it's kind
(01:51:01):
of the same thing with this nap Bettean temple, and
they had this like blend because there's Latin inscriptions on them.
It's found near Italy. But this was these were these
people were in Petra and other parts of the quote
Middle East, and here's one of their temples off the
coast of Italy. I think it was found. You know,
it's found under water. There's a lot of a lot
(01:51:31):
of things. I'm I don't know if you heard about
this one, but they found what was at a one
point eight I did mention that on a relatively recent show,
one point eight million year old skull in Jordan. I
think it was slightly older than the Demonisi skulls, if
I'm even recalling the name of that right, which were
(01:51:53):
five very early human skulls that were like one point
eight million years ago, which kind of up ends the
idea that there was a single uniform human migration out
of Africa, which was always stupid to begin with. Just
keeps getting older, things keep getting more interesting. Anyway, That's
(01:52:17):
what I've got for you tonight. I think that the
real underlying point of the show was too pronged. The
first prong was comparing all of these sites that I
mentioned to you Montana, Wyoming, all the way to Africa,
to China, and also Ishinojoden in Japan and the places
(01:52:41):
we've talked about before. I think Kaylasa Temples on my
favorite temples, that place is incredible. So looking at all
of that, but then also looking at the similarity between
what the Iraqi museums experience in two thousand and three
and what's happening to those listening artiffects today, right is
(01:53:02):
the Israelis march in just like the Americans marching into Bagdad.
Same thing is happening. It's not really repeating of history,
it's repeating of the playbook. It was carried out before,
it's being carried out again. That's kind of the base
of the show tonight. That's what I want you to
(01:53:23):
take away from this. Think about that, and again also
go look up all this stuff that I've mentioned to you,
because it's pretty fascinating. All right, TST Radio dot info
is the website. Let me take just a moment here
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(01:53:45):
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(01:54:05):
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(01:54:30):
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(01:55:11):
hearing this, you miss the whole show. Remember you should
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is meant to be listened to in a single or
at least maybe in two separate sessions, and you should
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I do the same thing myself. I'm always taking notes
(01:55:32):
and trying to reassess things that I thought before and
trying to figure out maybe what something means. And I
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of looked at the Secret Teachings as being what a
comedian does, except it's not funny, and I point make
(01:55:54):
a lot of observations. You ever think of this, you
see it, but I don't really there's no punchline. It's
not it's not comedic. It's kind of what the show is.
And you walk away from thinking that's really and I
never thought of it that way. But I'm also not
trying to get you to believe it. It's just it's
not a joke. But it's also not an ideology that
(01:56:16):
I'm trying to impart to you. So anyway, something that
I hope you enjoyed. I know a lot of people
like the Megalithic shows, and we'll probably do more of those.
If I missed anything this week, again, I apologize because
I've technically been out of town and I recorded this
show ahead of time before tonight Thursday, you probably didn't
(01:56:37):
even know the difference. Did you please support us? Please
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Thank you for doing that. We will be back tomorrow Friday,
(01:57:24):
live and on video if all goes well. Not sure
if the subject, but we will be there, so don't
miss it. Talk to you in the next broadcast. This
(01:57:53):
is Michael Strange from Troubled Minds. You're listening to The
Secret Teachings with Ryan Gable buzz Song of Late Night.
Our phones are black scrying mirrors. President Obama carries lucky
charms in his pocket. The Clinton's attended voodoo rituals. George
Floyd was turned into a black saint and buried in
(01:58:14):
a golden coffin like Osiris, and NASA has used myth
for the naming of their programs and reenacted Egyptian rituals
during an eclipse in twenty twenty four. What do you
think all of this stuff is?
Speaker 4 (01:58:23):
The Secret Teachings to those one of the best discussions
I've been on a long time.
Speaker 2 (01:58:28):
You guys are running on it today.
Speaker 1 (01:58:29):
This is Jamars and you're listening to the Secret Teachings.
If I've learned anything in fifteen years of radio, it's
not just the generic question everything rhetoric. It's that in
order to truly understand or comprehend a subject with objective reasoning,
you have to listen to that rhetoric, to those echo chambers,
to the group think, to the propaganda, to all of it.
(01:58:50):
But you also have to listen if you can, to
silence and let the brain process everything, then you have
to set that stuff aside and try to figure out
what you actually think without all that noise. Never jump
to conclusions, but listen to your intuition, and never take
anyone's word as gospel, even if you trust them. Find
the source and find its source, cross reference, triple check,
(01:59:10):
and then do it over again and make sure you're
not aligned to any specific group. And on my show,
never forget that mythology, ritual, magic, and symbols are as
useful today as they were ten thousand years ago.
Speaker 2 (01:59:22):
The Secret Teachings Monday through Friday on Ground zero Dot
Radio and twenty four to seven in the free archive
at TRIPLEW dot, The Secret Teachings dot infoos.
Speaker 3 (01:59:35):
All things encompassing AH life, embracing.
Speaker 5 (01:59:43):
I am anti life.
Speaker 1 (01:59:50):
The Beast of Judgment, the doc at the end of everything.