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October 24, 2023 118 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Good morning, my friends and weirdos. How's it going out there in the
world that yours truly? Jeff WhitebearKingsbury today on Strange recon we are talking
about personally multi domain all domain.The word domain is invaded UFO town and
everyone's using it and they don't knowwhat the hell it means. Or of
course, if you do know whatit means, you're really not going out

(00:21):
of your way to help people gainsome clarity on the topic. So we're
gonna go over that a little bit. It's confusing the heck out of people.
Secondly, we're gonna address some reports, or rather claims from the David
Palaites conspiracy groups. Of course,David Palati's was pushing you know, underground
waterways, and you follow these groupsand you see what they're talking about,
and a lot of the things areeasily debunkable. Now I'm not saying that

(00:44):
I'm out there just trying to ruineveryone's day, but when the evidence they
put up is pictures of faraway helicoptersseemingly chased by by you know, strange
shapes or something, and then othersadding to the conspiracy, and we're gonna
get into what I don't even talking. One here is that they're actually looking
for underground hidden passageways for you know, the deal. I don't know,

(01:06):
David Poletti, that's made some significantor wild claims. Rather, and finally
we're gonna wrap it up with aconversation about Ligo, because well it's back
into UFO town again. What doyou know, the whole time everyone was
waiting for Louel Azando and friends torelease some secret technology that they know can
track the the you know, thesignature left behind by UFOs from other worlds.

(01:30):
Blah blah blah. And then itends up being Ligo, something we've
heard multiple times as being you know, could possibly be used to see gravitational
waves. Chant all, we're gonnachat about it. It just once again,
I feel it might be important toat least consider to be open to
some claims. But once again,in the context of what that was given.
We were told for a long time, but there was this like the

(01:51):
secret tech that he was sitting onessentially that he knew about, he knew
about a frequency, he knew abouta way to make a pulse in order
to attract or see where you phoesare going, and stuff and that was,
of course completely nonsense. Ladies,guns, boys and girls. Let's
get today's episode going. This isstrange racon. Thank you for being here.
It's tech Tuesday. Let's get iton all right. Good morning,

(03:10):
my friends, welcome back. Thisis Jeff Whiteberg Kingsbury. You're watching us
right here on YouTube. To dome a massive favor before we begin,
support the show by hitting that likeand subscribe if you haven't yet, and
also is super helpful to leave acomment below after the show is done.
And if I've inspired your curiosity,make sure you click those links and brush
up on some of these facts foryourself, because we're gonna engage in the

(03:32):
conversations. At least have a littlebit of knowledge and something we're talking about.
If I've inspired that curiosity, though, also please to be a massive
helped support the show in other waysby clicking the links below. To help
support the show monetarily speaking, theyhave PayPal, cash, app, Google,
and of course I put the Patreonback up and I will start to
upload stuff if we need to.I mean, we had members before,

(03:53):
we don't have any now. Iliterally shut it down for over a year,
so we do have other ways tohelp support the sh though, and
we need your help. But I'dbe lying if I said that wasn't true.
We absolutely need your help. Ifyou're a member here and take part
here and go over and watch othershows and fund them, but then hang
out with us here every single day. You need to understand that this is

(04:14):
free for you but not for me, and I cannot do this forever because
I do have a life. Now. I'm not saying one way or the
other. I'm trying, but rememberthis is free for you, but not
for me, and it costs alot to get it out there. So
if you appreciate the information that wefling your way every single day and all
of the stuff we dig out ofthe Internet to pull up and inspire,

(04:36):
you do me a massive favorite.Help support the show by leaving a like,
subscribe, comment, whatever, share, or click one of the links
below to support us. Monetarily speaking, we could use your help seriously,
Stranger Econ makes like you've seen thenumbers I've showed you. We really need
help paying the bills around here.Thank you very much. Let's get today's

(04:58):
episode underway as we get into someof the things, of course, that
are constantly reference here and you followsyou, What do you know we are
talking about domain? It wasn't longinto the word multi domain reached UFO town.
Of course, it was being misused, mishandled. People were describing it
in context that it didn't belong in, and of course taking the most hopeful,

(05:23):
most hysterical, most ridiculous, mostillogical, most irrational, most I
don't know, you know, crazyperson on the street holding a sign,
crazy statement you could ever take outof what all domain or what multi domain
might mean, and then giving itto eufology and saying, here's what I
think is actually going on. Ithink Kirkpatrick is working for the aliens,
and I think that they're all lizardsor something. I know. Don't be

(05:46):
insulted by that. You don't policeyour own community, So why should I
have to worry about what I sayabout it? If you don't stop someone
from saying the president is a lizardwho sniffed children to get energy from his
soul in order to hop back ona spaceship and make it back to his
world domination over this world? Whyshould I be afraid to make fun of
someone anyone? And eupology, Ireally don't understand it. You won't police
it, but I'm not allowed tomake fun of it. That's funny.

(06:10):
Anyways. The people that have constantlyspread utter nonsense about what these offices do,
what these technologies do, what it'sall about, have profited the most
of it off of lies, offof lying to you in your face and
your excitement has only fueled them andambitions for their engine of nonsense horseshitticle like

(06:30):
articles and stuff they push out toeuthology every single day and hopes to attract
more hopeful people with extreme titillation thatgoes nowhere. First, one of course,
is like what technologies, what itmeans? What programs? What is
domain? Multi domain, all domain? What can you tell us about it
that can give us something other thanI swear every time you see the word

(06:50):
all domain, it's related to amias. Come join my quantum yoga class.
That's the problem. I you know, people think that you know, I'm
gonna give some sort of rosy versionof it, but I'm pretty fed up
when I see when I saw whatrecently was going on with what who Kurt
Patrick really is? What these programsthat he's worked on are really all about.

(07:19):
We have people that don't even understandthat the Marine Corps in the Army
can't even easily communicate on a singlemission, and you think that the military
has some sort of supreme control overthe entire planet in regards to a suppressed
I tacked out. What anyways,let's get into it, because it's beyond
ridiculous when we have to dismiss someof these things. So why not.

(07:39):
First things first? Okay, multidomain. You hear this term all the
time, and I'm sure if youat stranger econ hanging out with this yere,
remember the team has probably heard mesay it multiple times, including different
directions and perspectives on where it's beingused and whatnot. The term multi domain
has gained major popularity over the lastdecade or two because in the mid eighties

(08:01):
there was a recognition right that wehad to at least join communication from certain
branches of certain organizations that were nevercommunicating before for obvious reasons. Reasons the
same reason you can go back to, say, before we had the ability
for ground troops to communicate with anairplane. Could you imagine an airplane flying

(08:24):
around a battlefield with no ability tocommunicate with anyone on the ground except a
single person who was using this singlemachine made to talk to the aircrew radio
tower, who then transfers information backput yourself at a time where there was
no cross communication other than word ofmouth between different military branches forces, you

(08:48):
know, in organizations and intelligence groupsor whatnot. So all domains has its
origins or multi domint has its originsin history. Just get into some basic
little, you know, segments ofwhat it could mean in this context or
where you're what you're hearing it nowin eufologing twenty twenty three, as I
said, has gained popularity over theyears, uh you know, in circles

(09:11):
due to evolving nature of the modernwarfare and modern battlefield, the realization that
conflicts no longer occur in isolated domainslike a battle. A war doesn't just
happen on the land, It doesn'tjust happen in the air, It doesn't
just happen on or under the ocean, and it certainly doesn't just happen in

(09:33):
the cyber world. They across domainsnowadays, especially when you have soldiers and
security personnel operating in battle space wherethey never thought they'd have to look up
unless they hear a plane coming,unless they heard a helicopter unless they heard
mortars or artillery or something. Imean, I've heard those, but at

(09:54):
least heard them fired or something.But now days, just the basic infantry
soldier like myself. You know,it's no longer you you you cover this
direction to the north. You coverover here to the south, you cover
over here to the west, andI'll get the east right and and we'll

(10:15):
make sure that when I get up, you cover my little area as well,
and I'll go around and check oneveryone. You drone will crash into
your head who's looking up? Adrone will target you from far away and
relay your position to a military thatwill send long range ammunition, domain and
cross domain platforms. In battle spacesare are have evolved so dramatically and then

(10:41):
gone away, but then come backagain in including what's happening right now?
Uh, it's it's it's all therage. You're hearing it more and more
and for we're gonna get into whyhere. The complex battle space says military
confrontations involve simultaneous operations across land,you know, sea air, Like I
just said, in cyberspace, dominancein one can leverage extreme advantages in the
other right, Like, if youcan infiltrate someone's you know, cyber warfare

(11:05):
capabilities and shut them down, youobviously can make major leeway in places that
there were security where there isn't anymore, where there is eye, where
there were eyes, there isn't anymore, you know, And so you
have yourself the ability to in onedomain, gain tons of dominance. You
come in and bomb the crap outof a place, and then you send

(11:26):
in some armor with infantry behind it, or you know the opposite, take
out the head of the snake acouple of times the hydra and then then
go in. But but you know, the complex battle space in the evolution
of our adversaries have pushed the ideathat we must continue to grow assets that

(11:46):
work across multiple domains in the handsof most operators out there and in programmed
as well. So interconnectiveness, whichis a massive one we all and we're
going to get back to it again. But interconnectiveness, we heap hearing about
it. Everyone's talking about musk andwhat's Starlink's offering. If you remember,
I've had guests on the past thattalked about using uplink stuff back in the

(12:11):
sixties and seventies, in in eightiesand having it essentially being used as like
a full blown encrypted secret communication,real time communication with other assets in the
air and stuff doing secret missions orsecret agencies and stuff you know. And
then it came out years later andeveryone's like, I love the Internet.

(12:31):
Where did this come from? Whowas using these things first? But interconnecting
this allowing multiple networks to join togetherlike satellites pseudo SATs hi hi. I
can't play right now, buddy,I'm sorry, high altitude planes and stuff
like that that are used for IRand of course a multitude of out other

(12:52):
things adapting to adversaries, Potential adversarieshave also recognized the significance of multi multi
domain operations and have developed capabilities ofchallenge and disrupt the US across these domains.
Since we've been using utilizing them forfar longer than most of our adversaries,
A vulnerability or action in one domainby US tours an adversary has inspired

(13:16):
them to produce countermeasures or measures,or at least the connectiveness so they do.
They no longer can be separated,isolated and taken down. They can
stay connected and they can keep communicating. The force multiplier you've ever heard of
that expression before. Coordinating actions acrossdomains can magnify the effectiveness of military operations,

(13:37):
and for instance, cyber operations canbe used to disable air defenses,
paving the way for air strikes.And we've seen that there's multiple ways to
achieve that, right decoys, electroniccountermeasures, electronic warfare pods being put on
drones and stuff. There's all typesof interesting stuff to do in there.
Holistic approach. You've heard this,You've even heard Kirk Patrick, I believe,

(13:58):
used the word holistic approach to multidomain domain underscore is a shift from
domain centric approach to a more holisticone, recognizing that integrated operations can achieve
more than operations in siloed domains.One not centralized necessarily, but one network
to bind them all or ring herno, but seriously on the ability to

(14:20):
essentially to observe, to command andto control multiple militaries, multiple organizations or
you know, groups in that effortinvolved in that mission and real time information

(14:41):
going back and forth and not reallyhaving to again communicate through entire talks or
radio tax shacks or whatever you wantto call them. You know, like
it's crazy, Like I was tryingto explain to people when the show first
started going. One time I wasin you know, I was in this
room. Let's just say, andthere's a lot of people from outside of

(15:05):
our unit that also use this roombecause it's the biggest one in the area,
And so people from certain groups comeover and pass information on, saying
we're looking for these guys, we'vebeen following them, they're in your area,
YadA, YadA, YadA. Wellthen I told people one day the
Air Force guy showed up and theywere trying to get us to use their
air two ground munitions on these missions. And I remember them talking about not

(15:30):
only would we have no ability tocommunicate with them directly, but it would
also be like a I wasn't youknow. They weren't talking to me.
I was just some junior soldier,but they were. They were talking about
how it was onmost a three anda half minute to four minute return on
your investment. Those things would flyaway and come back and then re acquire
targets and fire again. And andthere was a patchy pilots in there talking

(15:52):
about how they could lay the sameamount of munitions on the target in that
three minute span or whatever. AndI was like, so basically we can't
even communicate with the people, andthat takes four minutes from them, they
get back here and drop some moreweapons. I was like, this is
insane. But there was no multidomain platform in the sense that the service
person on the ground could be talkingto the Air Force. We couldn't call

(16:12):
up the Air Force on our radiosand say, hey, air Force,
don't think that's weird in a battlefieldand twenty well, twenty twenty three,
it started to happen. But ofcourse that wasn't the thing. There wasn't
this one joined network that we couldall engage in, even our allies,
in order to achieve a mission.So a lot of missions failed or couldn't

(16:33):
be achieved or was what's called thescientific and military term, very scientific and
military or you know security term.It's called a goat fuck. And you
notice that a lot of shit thathappens in war zones are goat fucks.
The wild fucking West, they havepeople, you have civilians, you have

(16:53):
civilians that live there, you haveyou know, all types of people.
You've got people working for Security Agencyand Tellen's Agency, State Department. You
got people driving around doing all thesetypes of nobody. Who the hell is
in this car driving right at us? It looks like a nice car,
but we've seen this before. Maybethere's a group of guys in there that
have stolen this car, and whenwe let them in, when we let

(17:15):
them near us, they're gonna comeout whatever, Like there is no way
to see that vehicle and know thisis an Allied vehicle. Confirmed, it's
an Allied driving it. Look who'sdriving it. This is the person's name,
pops right up. That's who's drivingthis car inside of a bunch of
operators that are securing some diplomat takingon. There's nothing like that. There
is nothing that crosses these networks andbrings them together in order to prevent fracticide.

(17:37):
Land Warrior the system that I usedduring deployment, and of course we
trained with it and helped get itto where it was as best we could,
I guess, you know, forlike three years before deployment, but
we we it did just that,and it really did work in that sense,
like I'm never gonna fire my weaponthis direction, even if someone pops
up and starts shooting at me,I'm not earning fire in that direction until

(18:00):
I've confirmed through my land Warrior thatthat squad that is only two hundred meters
on the other side of that treeline or that you know, that jungle
line there is actually got some goddamncover, and I know they're back there.
I know that I cannot engage thisenemy no matter how bad I want
to, because this motherfucker is standingbetween my friends. I'm not gonna go

(18:22):
shoot this guy because I can seeon land Warrior there's a fucking red dot
back there signaling that I don't knowthird squad is. It was setting up
machine guns over there for so withson machine guns, and I don't do
it. Land Warrior offered a littletaste, just the little faste you just
the little taste of it. Butit was also at the cost of goddamn
being heavy as hell and you hadto walk around and uh and uh,

(18:44):
you know, there just was nuts. I mean, you can ask anyone
that carried land warder's a pain inthe ass, and uh it's I know
You're gonna think again, mister cash. Sorry, friends, I have a
dog trying to tear up clothes rightin front of me because I'm not paying
attention to them. Let's relax,on that. No, you're literally holding

(19:08):
your toy on the other pop,eat your toy. Okay, last night
was rough. He didn't stop online, Okay, so that was something.
In regards a holistic approaches is thefuture preparedness. As the nature of warfare
evolves, the military wants to beprepared for any potential scenario. All domain

(19:32):
focus ensures they are not caught offguard by unexpected challenges in any domain.
You know. In how of course, the multi domain reflects a modern understanding
of interconnectedness and the nature of today'sbattle space and the need to operate seamlessly
across all domains to achieve desired outcomes. I know, I keep saying the

(19:52):
word domain while using description, butyou kind of get what I understand by
that, Like, there has neverbeen a time where I can press a
button in every service, every securityoperations person, every every intelligence person,
every person working for the State Departmentand for the Department or the CIA or

(20:17):
whoever the hell else just suddenly appearsat this place. You just arrested this
person at Like, how did youget it? You drove here in a
civilian car with a group of contractorsand we didn't know it. What if
we just thought you were here torescue this guy, so we just started
lasing you up through the trees.You don't see any of that on the
battlefield. So the idea that youcan at least get to the point where

(20:37):
you can reduce fracticide. No onewants to go accidentally be the person that
shoots an ally. That isn't Imean, I've heard horrifying stories. The
point where it gives you, youknow, the point where you were checking
your firearm safety like eight thousand timesan hour, and so are you doing

(20:59):
to follow your guys as well andopen there, you know, thinking the
same of you, but fratricide oncethe once the operations started, not talking
about being in some jammed up helicopteror striker or vehicle or getting dumped out
the side of something in the middleof the night. And everything you're doing
is through night vision, so youcan't see jack shit really like you could
in real life. And so like, you know, that's all one thing

(21:22):
you're talking about moving to a levelof once the you know you're you're bounding
around, you're moving around between verydangerous places. You could be ambushed at
any moment, and you want youdo not want the ability or you do
not want it on yourself that youknow that you that you engage in the
target believing it to be a badguy, when in fact it wasn't.
It's already bad enough when that happensto service members and civilians, because no

(21:45):
one trains the civilians of a warzone how to be You would think,
right, you would think that ifyou saw a military convoy or people all
over the place and like gilly suitsand machine guns and stuff on the side
of the road near river in themiddle of nowhere in the jungle, that
you would stop. You would thinkthat, you would think that, But
no, you know, people don'toftentimes get trained for the battlefield. So

(22:07):
it would be as awesome as wellif drones in the area could mark these
targets like civilian vehicles that do notbelong to some huge corporation that is serving
in the same area. Since wehuman beings have never stopped using mercenaries our
entire that's it. All nations ofpower will pick up retired soldiers and former

(22:30):
intelligence people whoever else, former securitypolice officers, whatnot, and make them
into professional soldiers and add them tothe battlefield. Who's marking their vehicles,
who's marking civilians vehicles? Who's sayingwho is what? When they are you
can fucking take a soldier to courtand be like this dude, some serial
killer on the battlefield. He shotthis family in a car. Meanwhile drones

(22:51):
were following the car. There werethe car match that. Like, It's
like, dude, are you serious, Like we have the technology, we
know how to do it, butit's like a lot of people believe that
that because so much money is goinginto the hearts of the military complex,
that no one can stomach the ideaof saying, give us five billion dollars
and we'll turn the battlefield into afucking video game that no fracticide happens,
that you can click command and controlon anything you want on anywhere. We

(23:15):
can turn someone's whole nation into athree D or a holographic three D space
where we can walk up to anobjective but be a thousand nine one thousands
of miles away and literally touch atarget and say all right, let's look
here, and then you know,the technology is insane, but the cost
of scaling that to the entire militaryis is is almost unthinkable to some degree,

(23:37):
But according to what's happening through youknow, modern day semiconductors and stuff
like that. You have the abilityto produce much smaller technology and a lot
of these things are capable. Imean, a lot of these dreams are
capable of being completed. And oneof the big things you can think about
when it comes to all you know, the word domain in the military or

(23:59):
multi domain is when it gets upgradedto all domain because of course we've heard,
you know, when it comes toKirkpatrick's All Domain Anomaly Research Office,
everyone thinks it's about aliens. Ithink it's a perfect test bad for what
is to come all domain anomally.What is it resolute? What does it
called? I don't even damn name, but what exactly is it? Okay,

(24:22):
okay, hold on a second,guys, one second, I'm sorry,
I have a puppy that can't stopacting like the alright, guys,

(24:45):
one of the when when let mejust give you some advice in the world.
If you don't know this advice abouta pause or second when it comes
to animals, since I have abit of a temper, but if you
decide to buy a dog, right, if you decide to buy a dog,
step up, because if you owna dog and then lock it away

(25:06):
somewhere, so then the dog islike mentally broken for the rest of the
life. And then someone else comesalong and tries to save it because they
don't want the dog to be abandonedor thrown away or whatever else. And
the dog is now mentally stunted becauseall you did was lock it up.
I don't know what I Don'm nottrying to be too much, too hard
or anything on the subject, butI I, you know, I can't

(25:30):
even believe that's a thing. Likeyou own a dog, but then you
just lock it up and then neverlet it out. So the dog is
now forever thinking, like any momentthat it's loose, it has to be
destroying, it has to be doing. It's just I feel terrible. I
get angry sometimes because I can't.It's like to the point of like,
oh my god, can we I'venever seen a dog so stunted like this.
Talk about like like a like aimagine always being in a place like

(25:53):
I'm frank, Oh my god,I'm finally out of the cage. Like
that is the constant state. He'she's such a good boy, he's such
a good mannered dog is such afriendly personality. But you know the unfortunately,
the people that owned him, likeliterally decided that the best thing they
could do with them, because Icould they didn't want theim to mess up
the house, was just to lockthem in a cage in the garage.
And now he spent the first yearof his life essentially locked away. And

(26:17):
I mean, some people have todeal with things that way, but like,
it's just it's hard. It's hard, and I'm trying my best to
to not lose my shit. Thismorning, I did a little bit because

(26:37):
I came out in the kitchen andfound all my stuff destroyed. But whatever.
Anyways, you know me Ricon,I love the dog goes, but
I'm sometimes against I get to mywits end, but recon can we get
back to this now, and Iapologize about that. I apologize about the
doggy conversations. I lost seven people. That's great, Okay, let's get

(27:07):
back to this real fast. Herethe term all domain, which is an
evolution evolutionary step from multi domain.We're gonna get into some technology technolog technological
specifics in a second era, butall domain takes the concept fro multi domain
step further emphasise not only integration ofoperation, integration of operations across traditional domains

(27:33):
like land, sea, air,and space and cyber space, but also
the complete complete interconnectedness and interdependence ofthese domains. All domain is now being
used because a complete integration of everythingfrom under the sea to space into cyber
warfare as well is connected, orthey're at least almost complete at doing it,

(27:56):
and which equals real time coordination acrossthe world and across all domains,
and not just about operating in multipledomains, but ensuring those operations are closely
interwoven, something that that was realhard because we got really good in the
West, the English and in theUnited States because or I'm sorry, the
UK and the United States because ofour ability to plan, move, shoot

(28:21):
and communicate. And now taking thatto a step further where our way we
figured out how to communicate that prettymuch has been this way since World War
Two is going to upgrade to adifferent level like never thought of before or
only dreamed of by people. Thatwas like, man, I wish we
didn't have to do all these proceduresand protocols, acronyms, initialisms, names,

(28:44):
you know, all these different thingsyou have to do. Corporations you're
involved with, just a punch anda goddamn en crypto key, whatever it
is you have to do all Whatif you didn't. Oh, you're not
going to get into the contractors,But what if you didn't And I'm not
saying you should, but what ifyou didn't have to do all those protocols.
But if you didn't have to doall these methods, these ridiculous routes
in order to achieve something that isjust watching a building get blown off its

(29:07):
foundation, the speed and decision makinghas decreased so dramatically. The not only
is it real time intelligence, it'salso real time decision making. The fast
paced nature of modern warfare, especiallywithin advancements and artificial intelligence and autonomous systems,

(29:32):
requires real time data sharing and decisionmaking across all domains, providing solutions
faster than ever before. Never havewe ever been able to see a live
battlefield. It sounds like, yes, you have what about drones? No,
no, no, I'm talking aboutthe ability to implement all of your
assets just because you could use adrone or a satellite or a plane or

(29:56):
a reconnaissance team to go look atsomething. Maybe take some real live video
and send it back. Oh wow, we're talking about almost like creating a
meta of the battlefield and turning itinto uh, you know, turning it
making it vulnerable for every single everysingle military involved with that operation or branch,

(30:21):
connecting twenty three different intelligence organizations,four different military, five different military
branches, and a number of othergovernment departments all at one, including civilian
corporations and maybe even our allies.What is our adversary going to do if
we can complete compete, if theycan, if they can actually complete this,
I don't know. Well. Multidomains often emphasizes that the the the

(30:48):
traditional ones, and so does alldomain some degree. You have to remember
that they are also emerging spaces thatwe don't really know about. We talk
about the space race again, wetalk about cyber warfare, but you know,
there's I'm guessing I'm guessing that youknow, it's kind of like a
modern hound soldier, I mean AIessentially is that like they're going to be

(31:10):
able to essentially release the hounds inwarfare and allow AI to operate in like
well, according to this speculative thing, like you know, created networks on
the go, attack and move ontype of thing that might not even be
considered in a traditional space like cyberwarfare. We ultimately speaking is not that

(31:33):
traditional, but it's been around forof course forty years, thirty years.
Resilience and redundancies. Operating effectively inall domain environment ensures that if one domain
is compromised, operations can continue andadapt using capabilities from other domains. I
make a missile and I want tosell the missile to the Department of Defense.

(31:56):
The Department of Defense issues me backa piece of paperwork that says,
okay, we got some requests fromthe Army, the Navy, the Air
Force, and the Marines and SpaceForce as well. You know what,
Coast Guard wants one of them aswell, but we're not going to give
one of them. And in everysingle one of those products comes out with
it as a different variant, differentskin, different you know, capability to

(32:22):
not capability, but a different it'sfulfilling a different mission, a different role
in a different domain. Well,if you have two of the same products,
one made for one domain, onemade for the other, obviously they're
not going to be the exact same. But if you can complete the mission
with a system that almost entirely operatesin another domain, but you couldn't use

(32:47):
it before because you didn't have anintegrated network that can do this. Here's
the biggest one, though, here'sthe biggest one that I want you to
think of and not forget, becauseit doesn't just come in the traditional platform.
It's not just some new side scansonar radar thing whatever. It's not

(33:08):
just some new multi platform radar system. It's also you and myself. It's
also everyone else shared awareness and figuringout innovative ways to share awareness, real
time cell phone towers, cell phones, Wi Fi oders, the ability to

(33:37):
utilize assets that only certain groups wereable to utilize for a long time.
All domain networks with the military intelligenceorganizations allow for access to some of those
things, like, of course,like of course, turn your cell phones

(34:00):
into an observation tool that could beused to target systems that are hard to
find. Like for instance, let'sjust say let's go back three or four
years, right, and I'm runninga secret program. I have civilians working

(34:20):
with me, I have two differentmilitary branches working with me, the FBI,
I have the DOE. I've gota bunch of stuff. We're all
in this little secret operation I've gotNow, there's a public version, but
there's also a secret part to it, because that's kind of how we'd like
to run things. We'd like torun one public and at the same time
something secret. So if anyone isever googling keywords related to what was going
on at the time, they usuallyfind things that were super impressive in the

(34:43):
public eye, but oftentimes unrelated towhat we're actually looking for, only related
in the sense that they share thesame keywords like hypersonic anyways or decoy.
But you can bet yourself that youknow three years ago, four years ago,
if I wanted to put up asecret test trial of drone swarms,

(35:07):
and I wanted to see the publicresponse, and one of the responses was
an endless submission of photographs and videos, even chasing down of the swarms.
Maybe you can even get the paraphrasingtype or you know, power of reference.
I don't know what I'm saying,I'm an idiot, but I would
watch and see that one of themost effective tools that might exist maybe the

(35:31):
public. Wait a second, hasthis ever worked before? Has there ever
been a war when the public wasactivated and utilized for I don't know,
looking for ships, helping manufacture stuff, volunteer. Oh wait, the list

(35:55):
goes on and on about how peoplehave been turned into you know people,
you know, part of the warmachine, even if it's good or bad,
regardless if you hate it or justlove it, whatever it is.
You can see that there's been along history of the public being utilized before,
during, and after wars in orderto help the United States military achieve
a goal or intelligence organizations achieve agoal. To some degree, one might

(36:17):
suspect that utilizing endless submissions of cellphone, mobile phone information metadata and whatnot,
including storm chaser like behavior with peoplesaying I see something, I'm gonna
say something. I'm also going tochase it down and video record or video
tape it. But you see thatit actually became a super handy tool.

(36:43):
Some of the first people to spotthe Chinese spy balloon were civilians. I
tried to shoot it down. Ididn't even see it. I just started
shooting up. And you know whatyou have? Your sense is you have?
Yes, I was trying to stressthat I'm sorry with my bad discussion.

(37:04):
Welcome from Twitch. There is uhthere is, of course, this
this understanding that the public can bea part of increasing our situational awareness we
have we don't traditionally have platforms ormultiple platforms in order to scan low cross
small cross section area platforms uh andand you know, getting returns in order

(37:28):
to track down where this has comefrom. You have the civilians what you
don't really you can get radar returnsand whatnot, but to have civilians report
to see the last known location,all that stuff you're talking about. The
ability to zero in on where thesethings are coming from way easier than you
than you realize. Uh. Usingopen source intelligence mixed with metadata, you
you essentially have the ability to findthe origin, the launch site or the

(37:52):
you know whatever you're calling it,way quicker than any traditional method without you
know, telling pe. But wewant to start putting you know, uh
the you know it's a it's like, what do you call it? Uh?
Could you you know Nike missile sitesall over the country or missile sites
all over the country. What's whatcan you sell easier to people? Some

(38:15):
sort of I S R platform,some sort of large platform that destroys it
in the sky, could possibly blowup and destroy your whole neighborhood. There
is uh, you know there's alltypes of things, but you have to
keep in mind that there's you gottayou gotta keep in mind that there is

(38:36):
a huge asset really yet to betruly utilized. And I think that the
drone swarms and other stuff like thatis a great way because remember this,
the this has its origins before thebefore this was going on, not before
the all domain thing, but beforethe UAP discussion was happened. We have
to remember what was actually being claimedto a toy drones and uas and balloons.

(38:57):
Before anyone starts saying those aren't drones, those are belo, I mean,
those are aliens. And you hadthis issue where multiple military branches,
multiple different organizations within the same branchwere suddenly needed in places they never went
needed before. And that continued.We had the world at bay for quite

(39:24):
some time, did we not.And now it's the point where some of
the most effective ISR tools, someof the most effective weapons in the world
costs next to nothing, and ofcourse AI is awful cheap. So you
know, you have you have abig change for this all domain stuff,
and I believe we're a big partof it, and that's why it's part

(39:45):
of this conversation that could just beme for multiple reasons, my bias,
but what I don't know. Insummary, while multiple domain and highlights the
significance of multiple domains in modern warfare, all domain underscores the absolute necessity for
a holistic integration and operation across allpossible domains in a unified manner. Fully
networked and interconnected nature of modern combatenvironments is a must in order to dominate

(40:12):
a nearly well I'm not we're walkingon near peer competitor. You can't sanction
that type of thing. Let's talkabout a technology that you can't point to
and say, oh, multi domain, easy to understand technology. Let's talk
about the F thirty five two.Oh my god, YouTube's gonna kill me

(40:32):
this whole time. I didn't havea single photo op. What am I
gonna do? YouTube said? IfI don't have photos up while I'm talking,
I'm never gonna get subscribers. Let'stry to Let's try to get over
twelve hundred substance. We just wentback well back under again. Okay,
here we go. Ready, we'retalking about the F thirty five deuce,

(40:55):
the F thirty five two, orthe F thirty five lightning too is a
family, single seat, single engineall whether stealth multi role fighters beyond its
primary role as a fighter, whichsome would argue, sensors, networking,
electronic warfare are all examples of thingsthat have been adapted into the all multi

(41:16):
domain thing like. It contains amyriad of advanced sensors that can gather intelligence
of aands or reconnaissance and transfer thatinformation instantly between you guessed it, different
domains. It's networking has the abilityto share the data real time. It's
considered an information node in the sky. And every F thirty five flying near

(41:38):
any of the battlefield, including thedrones that fly with it or near it,
or it's utilizing or are also thebattlefield, are also these relay points
of real time intelligence, which Ithink people really I think unless you've you
know, unless you've really studied war, I think you'd have a hard time
understanding like just how what you know? Goat fuck it is? But moving

(42:02):
on here. The F thirty fiveoperates primarily in the air domain, of
course, but that capability to effectand gather the data from the land,
sea and octromatic domains electromagnetic domains,making it a good example of a multi
domain platform that is utilized heavily inthe all domain world. And since I'm
giving you a multidmain technology like theF thirty five, let's quickly talk about

(42:23):
something like the jad C two.I think that's how it said. According
to this which is pronounced jad Ctwo over at BAE dot com, it's
a program in a combination of multipletechnologies in order to utilize the information that

(42:43):
drones in the F thirty five fromthe multidomain technology give to it. Here
are some key points in what itis. First off, it's an acronym
from the Defense Department of the UnitedStates, which stands for the Joint All
Domain Command and Control, a strategicwarfighting concept that connects the data censors,
shooters, and related communication devices forall US military services Army, Navy,

(43:04):
Air Force, Marines, and SpaceForce, and eventually Allied partners into one
integrated quote networks of networks. Now, I said earlier about Kirkpatrick in this
all domain resolution thing like it,the United States and Western Allied nations do
soft tests on everything. If it'snot all soft tests in a war zone,

(43:25):
it's a soft test in the sensethey set up an office. You
know, things like that you haveyou have multiple domains needing resolution on catching
hard to identify objects that they witnessor see your capturing camera in a place

(43:45):
that they believe they're gaining or theyhave extreme levels of intelligence, right like,
why are we gaining this level ofintelligence but we're seeing something that we
can't easily identify that is happening onall domains. The very first tempt at
an all domain resolution, we seedoctor Kirkpatrick doing this. Now, what

(44:08):
did they show us in videos?They showed us, you know, things
that were like it looked like missiles, maybe one was a bird we saw,
you know, other departments talk aboutthings that were clearly not, you
know, anything mysterious, but tothem they were they were It was a
It was like a ground force recordingan air borne unidentified object an ultra light

(44:35):
plane and required a resolution since it'snot in the platt the domain they operated.
Normally, we look for drug runnersacross the border. Now we got
people using ultra light wing aircraft thatit can't be identified, had no ID,
aren't taken off from an airport witha flight plan, a flight plan.

(44:58):
You know what I'm saying. Weneed a resolution. For the first
time ever, we need resolution acrossall domain because if you want to combine
these systems together, they're going tocontinue picking up things that are hard to
identify. Not possibly aliens, forgiveme, possibly aliens, but what is
it more likely? You know,something clips the wing of something and it

(45:19):
only captures it for two seconds.One two clips the wing. It's too
hard to tell what it is.The pilot couldn't even tell through investigating the
aircraft. They didn't see debris froma destroyed bird, they didn't find parts
from a drone, but something clippedthis aircraft wing. They need a resolution.
They submit to the all domain resolution? Am I the only one trying

(45:44):
to understand? Trying to get youdone? I just don't get the confusion
behind like the advent of something ifwe see the term all domain being used
so heavily or multi domain being usedso heavily, and then suddenly we see
an all domain resolution office type ofthing on All domain office. To get
going and look at these videos thatare hard to tell what they are.

(46:06):
That doesn't stream. They set thisup because it's alien time. It streams.
It sets it up because it's alldomain time. Does anyone else get
what I'm you know? Just smellwhen I'm bacon. Can I hear it
in the chat for a second?The whole military in western world is going
all domain. You mean to tellme that we just got lucky that at

(46:30):
that very same time the aliens arecoming out? Or is that that now
all of their problems can no longerbe just their problems. This is a
cross platform all domain system will putin together. Their problems are now someone
else's problems. Their problems are nowthe all domain resolution queef office. Anyways,
Sorry, I'm done. Oh thecoffee is not metallic tasting. I

(47:01):
don't know why it would be.I drink wine out of a can.
Sir Bob says that you try tosay that u UFOs to get money or

(47:24):
refuse to believe that nice looking doggo. So, so you know, I'm
not asking you to say, don'tbelieve that that we're the I mean,
don't believe that we're the most specialthing in the universe. So it might
appear that way so far to someagree. I'm asking you to understand that
that if the whole world is goingall domain and all their networks are joining

(47:46):
together, that means they're baskets oflost and found is now joining a larger
basket of lost and found, somuch so that there needs to be a
single unit with employees that gets intothese because now this small little groups problems
have joined in a larger group,and all of their baskets of problems all

(48:09):
need to be joined into a biggerbasket of problems because they're all together.
Now, Is everyone getting what I'msaying? All right? Maybe maybe I
just suck. I don't know,I'm the worst. Moving on here.
When we're talking about the jad CT pronounce jad jad these two as in

(48:38):
tu jad C two again is thedefense departments are the Department of Defense acronym
which stands for the Joint All DomainCommand and Control, a strategic warfighting concept
that connects the data, sensors andshooters and related communication devices for all US
military devices Army, Navy, AirForce, Marines at Space Force. Now,

(49:00):
if you don't realize why that networkof network matters, and you want
to constantly talk about what kirk Patrickis or is, and you should look
at the SA I see and seethat they are almost entirely involved with supporting
the technologies, the organizations, thetroubleshooting, the completion and object of of
what's going on here. And uh, and of course the jad SEE is

(49:20):
deep, like I was saying,deeply linked. And so you have people
that their names are involved with civilianorganizations. Why while they serve the government
or they're like you know, oncontract between one or the other. It
doesn't necessarily add to the conspiracy.It just kind of shows that people don't
recognize there's only a few organizations andthe entire planet that are actually trying to

(49:42):
solve some of these issues. Eventhough they're huge organizations made up of multiple
companies they've gobbled up or whatever overthe years s A. I C.
That that that you know, publicowned or employee owned company has been producing
you know, along with other companies, has been producing technology and stopping other

(50:05):
countries from both bring our technology likeJapan for a long time Kirkpatrick. You
know to some degree obviously has tobe connected just for the command and control
from space. I mean we knowabout that it has there. If you're
going all domain, you have tobe bringing multiple organizations under this big one
umbrella of companies that are involved withsay I see and all the stuff.

(50:27):
So you have you have some ofthese things being unified and they need resolutions.
That's all I'm trying to say.I'll just shut up now, I'm
an idiot. Unified Operations the JAZZtwo promotes inter service co operation, ensuring
the Armies and Army, Navy,in Marine, Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marines, and Space Forcecan effectively work together. It's the first
time ever the network of networks thatI was just talking about. The advanced
technologies it needs to disseminate. Itneeds to get these technologies in the hands

(50:52):
of people that didn't have them.If I created this device back in nineteen
eighty eight, it's a lighter justfor you. Know. This isn't a
real device that's related to spying orgod like military capabilities. But if I
created this device back in nineteen eightytwo, okay, and we're allied across
the world with a bunch of otherpeople, maybe maybe they have five eyes.

(51:15):
What happens is you can't rely onthe intelligence quality from this group far
off in away if they don't havethis impressive piece of tech that you've kept
proprietarily like in your own military orIR group or intelligence community for so long.
So people like in jad see makesure that this technology is also in

(51:38):
the hands of our ally, sincewe can't rely on their technology unless they
have the beautiful tool that gets theclean tech data like we have. Do
you understand, Like, imagine imaginethat you have five people in a group
to solve a problem. Right,you have five people working on a group
effort in school or something You're inuni. Okay, five people working on

(52:00):
this Four people are all extremely intelligent, industrious, and hardworking. One person
is an idiot and spends the entiretime in the group making fart jokes like
me and stuff, I'm losing everyone. This is Oh, this is the
most important part. Imagine for asecond what it would be like to have

(52:22):
five members of the group that workedjust as hard, rather than one that
was trying to essentially passively sabotage youwithout recognizing kicking that member out of the
group or making sure that person issmart enough or capable enough to actually do
the mission. Is what this systemnetwork. That was a terrible example,
but is what this system is for. You cannot have an ally with lesser

(52:45):
capabilities, a branch for the militarywith lesser capabilities than the next one,
and them all in the same alldomain network of networks. It doesn't make
any gonna everyone come on every here'sa better example. Everyone. We're gonna
get everyone together from the neighborhood.Bring your video game systems over. You

(53:06):
think everyone's gonna bring Xbox, Andthen someone shows up with an Atari is
trying to figure out how to plugZatari into your network. That was weird.

(53:39):
The funck was that did I wantto see that? I just watched
my mouse move and my the pictureI had up change. Okay, that's
normal. That not a room inthe joke. I was about to make
it a little bit, but it'suh, it's obvious that that the the

(54:00):
these these systems have to be drasticallyupgraded in order to have these people compete
on the same jad C two level. If you show up with an Atari
and want to play Halo with us, how are you gonna do it?

(54:20):
Sure you have a fine military,Sure you're flying around some pretty cool looking
aircraft. But some of the technologyhas been specifically left out out of what
we can give you know, becausethere have been questions in the past,
sometimes certain nations finding ways and routesto order to sell certain things or supply
technologies, and nations that then supplythem to people we consider our adversaries at

(54:42):
least competitors, So you cannot showup with an atari. We have to
give you the technology. The jadC two office finds a role in that
a lot of people think when theyhear the term seating or or like they
handle the dissemination of technologies to howthey think they're talking some sort of fucking
flying saucer, when in fact ithas nothing to do with that. It

(55:04):
They have no evidence that has anythingto do with that. They have no
evidence whatsoever it has anything to dowith that, except since they don't understand
it, they assume that that isthe key point. I have no understanding
of what this means, so thereforeI have the authority to make up what
it means. It's not fair.And yet these people have all the attention
and narrative and they're a bunch offat wet queefs. Let's move on.
So there is uh, there's thisconstant push of course that that that that

(55:29):
if anyone five eyes of freaking whatever. Uh you know what's that fruit bat's
name from Australia with the the guythat looks like he's he got he was
transformed from a bat to a humanbut froze the middle of the process.
He's a journalist, disgraced lies constantly. What's his name, Oh, Ross
Coultart, that's it. Ross Coultart. Will push the idea that this is

(55:49):
complete, really completely related to findinga bit of technology and then disseminating it
to the world like like some sortof I don't know, like a genie's
lamp that they're rubbing an out,asking the genie for stuff, and then
giving out the technology that people nowthat they have this magical technology has nothing
to do that whatsoever. It hasto do fully with partnerships around the world.

(56:09):
We found this out with Edward Snowdenquite a bit that there there's just
different levels of capabilities, a lotof which are proprietary or under a no
trade option, you know, theF twenty two things like that that are
you cannot that's just one open onething, but there are plenty of other
little tiny things that you would neverguess this, this little you know,

(56:30):
thing you put in your hand thathas a little wire sticking out of it
as simply proprietary and can never bein the hands of anyone else side of
whatever group. Because it's things likethat that separate us. Right, if
we can communicate longer and faster,if we can put rounds on target from
further away, and if we cando everything more discreetly with losing less lives.

(56:54):
We want that technology in the handsof our nations, of our allied
nations that are closest to our enemy. Do you think it's weird that Australia
and other nations and stuff are allgetting their hands on some pretty potent pieces
of technology that maybe some would think, what the eff are we doing with

(57:15):
a nuclear power drone submarine? Whatthe eff are we doing with these F
thirty five? Why are we figuringout Why are there certain companies from Australia
that are figuring out ways to essentiallyhave like like you know, Boston level
dynamic robots on the battlefield with lethalauthority. You know, it's it's just
you might ask yourself, what aboutAustralia, Like what is going on?

(57:37):
Australia is just near China, simpleas that. Don't you think the Chinese,
if they had to fight the UnitedStates, would choose to fight one
of the people that we're giving allour tools to in order to keep them
at bay. They're gonna bomb Guam, They're gonna hit the Philippines, They're
gonna hit Australia, Japan, SouthKorea. In a brief summer of the

(58:01):
Joint All Domain Command and Control jadC two is an ambitious initiative that seeks
to unify and enhance the US militarycommand and control capabilities across all domains,
leveraging advanced technologies that once only existedin space, that once only existed under
the surface of the ocean, thatonce only existed under or inside a very
high class sophisticated airplane that no oneelse is allowed to fly or know what

(58:22):
we're doing with it. We're bringingeveryone up to speed because we don't want
a chance for the Chinese to getan upper hand on something like destroying an
ally that doesn't have the technology theyneed to deter something like that. A
ross Coltartan friends, what have youbelieve? It's of course, I don't

(58:42):
know there's a F and UFO ontoWembley Stadium or something. So while the
F thirty five operates and affects multipledomains, the jad SEA is about the
total INTERCONNECTEDUS operated in awareness across alldomains, ensuring that every asset, regardless
of its primary domain is fully integratedinto the larger network. The F thirty
five is a bit of technology thatoperates and utilizes information and distributes information through

(59:07):
multiple domains, while the Jazzy twois a network of networks incorporating what the
F thirty five does in all domains, in all assets, allowing. So
if you take one out, itain't gonna do shit. We have the
ability to keep communicating. You canstop the Navy for like five seconds,

(59:29):
but then there is the Marines,there is the Army, and Air Force
and space Force. You may beable to shield yours the view of a
certain site of yours from say SpaceForce, but it isn't gonna stop someone
like the Navy from operating stealth dronesmoving at hypersonic speeds through your AO.
I mean, there is just anability for you to stop it once it
has happened. And every other nationof any major prowess is of course a

(59:52):
military prowess, an intelligence prowess isof course moving as fast as they can
towards an all domain type of interconnectingnessbetween their military branches in their the command
and control of those So do youfeel armed up at least a little bit
at that one hour mark just crushedit perfectly. Times it out. Do

(01:00:12):
you feel that you have a littlebit of knowledge on what all domain,
multi domain, what the Jazz twois, what the F thirty five lightning
two does? And before you engageagain in a conversation when someone says,
what is the all why would theyever create an all domain? This has
to only be about aliens. Thisnothing else that's even closely related to the
words multi or all or resolution orwhatever. It just has to be what

(01:00:38):
I dream of. I'm gonna takea quick break recon and when we get
back, we're gonna address something elsehere now that we figured out what the
hell domain and why it's constantly beingused, and what my feelings those are
my opinions when it comes to whatthe All Domain office is about. I

(01:00:58):
personally think that Kirkpatrick's office is asoft step into something that eventually we'll see
kind of not exist in the wayit does now, but a common standard
operating procedure to solve or mitigate ordiscard these things. Because I bet a

(01:01:19):
lot of the things we're picking upare actually O their branches, other intelligence
gathering groups, other contractors being utilizedon a battlefield, the near battlefield,
or in an enemy country, andwe were seeing something that we think is
theirs, they think is ours.They don't know whose it is. We
don't know whose it is. Whyis it there? Why did it fly
past us? Why did it almosthit us? Why did it hit us?

(01:01:40):
Could you imagine if you end upfinding out that a good percentage of
these things being sent to Kirkpatrick's office, or in fact us or our allies.
You mean, how upset would yoube if you found out that literally
the Air Force couldn't identify something fromthe Navy. I gotta tell you,
because though I love the military,things are misidentified all the time, and

(01:02:00):
they're far worse than misidentifying a flyingsaucer and an F twenty two at ten
miles away in the sky or whatevertwenty miles away in the sky. We're
talking about fratuside. We're talking misidentificationin the doubting of aircraft. We're talking
about things that are just jacked up. Learning lessons, we get better,
it happens. Less technology is invented, and this is one of them right
here. Sorry, UFO Joe andthe guy dressed like a jackass named Jesus.

(01:02:24):
I don't know what to tell you. Sorry, Ross Coltart. I
just don't feel like you know whatyou're talking about. I feel like you're
selling stories because you're a thief ofjoy. And I also don't really feel
like it's very honorable to push stuffunder the guise of, hey, this

(01:02:45):
according to journalism, as long asI vet my source and see they have
credentials. If I'm just repeating whatthey're saying, then what do you want.
I'm just sharing a I'm just sharinga Holocaust never happened video. That's
not meaning I endorsed it. Ladiesand gentlemen. I'm gonna take a quick
break. I'll be right back,and when I get back, we're gonna

(01:03:07):
put to rest the stupid David Plaiti'sconspiracy that I've been seeing quite a bit
people keep saying. And I'm notgonna I'll show you some of the pictures,
of course, but people have postedpictures from Louisiana a couple of years
ago when they're back again in waysthat it's like there's UFOs chasing helicopters,
people viewing them from far away andthey're not UFOs. And then these other

(01:03:27):
group that comes to help them understandwhat's going on, and they just lie
to them. They're like, they'renot actually UFOs. It's the government looking
for underground waterways where secret beings areliving and they're stealing your German sperm or
something like that. Ladies and Jensare right back. Take a quick minute.
Here's some music from our friend Robinthe UK. Do some push up,
do some squats or not, Idon't know. Smoke them if you
got them, Eat a pancake,pet your dog and forgive yourself. Should

(01:04:35):
you think of abacla green? Don'tsee samon growing injuries, star and bushes
on them in the grow comfort,gentle passage of me machines giving them.
They study cree stamp with them likea stand with me. Gum all jumps

(01:05:01):
there. I went to the timeI know not about what's about the choking
gloves See Stucksure Girl to be superWell. See the travel show Bunny Cheese,

(01:05:58):
Say Stuts God What Don said?Finished Local Metal and Musty My Shoes.
Ptian Nominies study the Cree step withMulla stem with mad Doon work Finish
Year Valenti tib I know Rod aboutllar stround what's about the choking clothes down

(01:07:05):
to the time I'm talking about,and what the mother joking gloves lit down

(01:08:17):
on the butter side to touch ourselveslike a paraside. You can't stop a
looking down of burn our eies kindaboot it and a jar of a mountain
hide and stop budding nothing until wegot our phone by me and something more
flesh shot side. I thought atakeet home, steer in my phone to

(01:08:42):
the publics a fashion mom it,I'll love it all, mommula as the
clash on as shut ud you momio, mommy, look at yo cloud draft
that shot said udeo, moyo,mommula, got yo tell me about a
passion love ye natural subpassion, mynatural subpension, my natural subgepsion, my

(01:09:17):
natural submoption, my natural subcution.Sons of m pat outdries tell out children

(01:09:54):
head another lies can have a lookingat a bud our eyes gonna bud it.
The jap lamada had stop but nothing, so Nader's fine. You can
make me someone that would ask whateverI would. I got a vat spine
you'd stick in my boat and thoughtthe specsion, mommy, I'm mommy mommy,

(01:10:17):
look at yeah. Clash of molassation, Mody Alamia, Mobby, look
at yo, got raps then SepastiMondio mommy, mommy, look at yo.
Then tell me about the something thatmommy A money how mommy, the

(01:10:38):
guy yea rabb to the season Anatural solutions, the national solutions, the
natural selections, nature selection. Wegot the Buddy, we got THEMS.

(01:11:25):
We love the mass lad out thebay, we got the bay, got
the bay lad up the Bay stormscommon storm that's coming. You love it?

(01:12:10):
I love it, mommy, lotslash of morassation, Bubby, Mommy,
Mommy, lookt y god Blatter,then Sebastian, Bummy, mommy,
mommy, the GotY. They justtell me by the stuff you're at you
bubby A mommy, how mommy gotyo ba? Then Segasti the natural sunaption

(01:12:40):
my natural selection, A natural subsamptions natural selection, the natal selection,
natural selection, then selection. Welcomeback, my friends and weirdos. Thank

(01:13:40):
you for being here. This isyours truly. Jeff white Bury Kingsbury,
welcome back to the show. Thankyou Rob for the music. Remember,
if you haven't yet, please helpsupport the show. Every little bit counts.
You can share, like subscribe,hit something under the show notes,
read the links I leave after theshow's over all that good jazz, you
know, the deal that will besuper helpful to us. Of course,

(01:14:00):
growing the show. We are stuckat a number and go oftentimes below that
number. If you'd like to helpsee straight see strange, recond grow,
one of the ways to do sois liking, subscribing and all that good
stuff. Okay, ricon, herewe go. As I said, I'm
the grand harvester of nonsense, andone of the things that I've harvested as
of recently was an old David Poladi'sthing that came back up again and though

(01:14:20):
I though I couldn't really find alink between it and tech Tuesday, I
suddenly recognized something that had been proposedin the past and brought back up again,
and it was the hunt for aquabfires and understanding water. Now,
let me give you a quick littlebackground on something people were taking pictures of
from their home country. When thesetests were going on in South America and

(01:14:42):
New Zealand, Australia, we sawpeople report them in Louisiana and if you
google you can actually find the originalscientific experiments When they went down between like
twenty and seventeen and twenty twenty one, a lot of them were going down.
But uh so, for instance,if you saw, if you hear
a story in your hometown of somesort of you know, cryptid like thing
that happens, balls of light thathappened, YadA, YadA, and someone

(01:15:03):
comes along and makes some mockumentary sayingthat if you get kids see a ball
light in the woods, you couldget kidnapped and brought to some sort of
underwater aquifier where they're going to stealyour German sperm and turn you into an
alien, abduct the Bigfoot victim orsomething. I don't know exactly what David
Palletti's is suggesting, because his workis all full of shit and wrong,
but I will say that not allof it. I like the Maccabees.
I'm not saying she was full ofshit. I'm just saying that David polettes

(01:15:26):
amidst legitimate information that is needed tosolve a case, and in doing so,
he is actually making it seem likethere is a mystery in certain areas
where there is not fueling the ideathat people cannot be found when they certainly
can statistic analysis shows through Lost PersonBehavior that you, of course can locate
people and statistically speaking, they arein the place where you know. The

(01:15:49):
algorithm shows where the place where theyalways end up being found. Everyone performs
their own thing. I've said thisa million times of the show. I've
even tried to watch it with you. You can go watch Lost Person Behavior.
I'll leave the link in the shownotes. After the show. It's
an hour long presentation and after you'redone, you can say to yourself,
Oh, David Poladi's is full ofcrap and the story could there be an

(01:16:15):
invisible cryptid stealing people in the middleof the woods are bringing you to weird
caves and turning into people who usedto know Sure, but since he's used
plenty of cases that that wasn't thecase whatsoever, I'm guessing not anyways,
moving on and know when people aregonna hate me for that one, I
really hope you don't. Let's lookinto something real quick here together. Let's

(01:16:39):
take a pic. Let's take alook at a photograph that you might see
circling the internet, and someone mighthave a caption under it that says something
like this helicopter was flying around inmy town. I saw something chasing it
that looked like a UFO or Isaw a helicopter fly over, and it

(01:17:01):
looked like it had some strange forcefield around it or some I don't know.
It just didn't make any sense.It was just this strange thing I've
never seen. It went right overhead. Then I lost sight of it just
a few hundred yards away because thetrees. But when I was right underneath
it, it looked like some sortof saucer shaped helicopter. I don't get
it. In this case, we'retalking about systems like this. Have you

(01:17:28):
yourself ever witnessed something like this?Nowhere? Sorry? Do you know where
I'm going with this? When itcomes to the David Polidis story and the
beings that travel by underwater highways undergroundunderwater underground waterways and are able to live
and steal us and steal our childreninto the into the underground waterways you hear
about, Well, it turns outthere are crews out there that actually run

(01:17:51):
the scientific experiments for hydro hydro geologicalstuff and a bunch of other stuff as
well. But they look for aquifiers. Now, I'll go back to this
real quick. But now that you'veseen this. Let's quickly pull this one
up. You've seen that right there, right, you see what that looks
like. It's for those on theaudio Side'm sorry. That is a helicopter
with a rig underneath it. It'sdangling something. It's dangling this this how

(01:18:15):
many sides that have one, two, three, four? Five? Is
it octagon? Is that an octagon? No, that's a whatever it is.
Don't ask me questions like that.I'm a weirdo and don't know anything.
But it's dangling. The shape underneathit looks like a circle or something
almost like a stop sign, butthat's not and it's flying around with it
from afar, from far it wouldlook really weird. I'm sure. Right.

(01:18:38):
Let's let's go back to this ina second ago in a second though.
This here, this here is anaquifier. This is what David Pletti

(01:18:58):
suggests that there are beings living inand they're traveling under the United States,
stealing your children and then returning toaquifers and then hiding away and then traveling
across the country in these underground,secret waterway like highway systems that they can
go probably near light speed and comeout by the rockies or come out by
some waterfall somewhere or some underground wellor any well into the aquifer. Anyone

(01:19:23):
who digs into the underwater table oraquifer could find themselves with the ability for
a being to come out of yourbackyard and steal you, your children,
your dog, your parakeet, whatever. That's not what he's saying, Jeff.
He's saying that this only happens innational parks. So let's go back

(01:19:47):
real quick. Now that you knowwhat an aquifer is, the can fined
aquifier, the unconfined, the lakeuh Artesian. Well, okay, you
see what that looks like. Holdon here, one more picture to bring

(01:20:13):
up for you. Since we don'tlike to confuse, we like to inspire
curiosity here. We don't know weaponizeyour ignorance. That would be reckless,
that would be sick. I don'tknow who. I don't know who the
hell would do anything like that.Who would weaponize ignorance? That seems like
a really dangerous thing to do.What's that? There's a favorite podcast out
there that actually holds a major narrativeand authology called weaponized Okay, Sky Sky

(01:20:47):
tem System. Oh my god,you really can't see that on here?
Can you sorry, Here's what we'llexplain the thing you were just looking at
from underneath. If you were actuallyon the ground seeing this from above and
being downright confused, if you thengo somewhere to report it and people go
to explain it to you and addsome sort of story behind it, like

(01:21:08):
they're actually trying to search underground aquifiersfor the phenomenon or one of the phenomenons.
I'm gonna get you German sperm hunting, underground aquifer traveling suns of bitches,
all right, anyways. The airborneGeophysical detection helicopter rig is used primarily

(01:21:30):
to detect in map subsurface water bearingformations. Here's a breakdown. Identify and
map the extent and depth of theaquifers, Understand the flow dynamics and volume
of groundwater, Assess the quality ofwater by detecting the presence of minerals and
potential contaminants, and guide groundwater managementstrategies drilling activities in water resource planning.

(01:21:56):
Imagine adding AI to this and reallyunderstanding why nature looks the way it looks
right there and trying to utilize thesame. You know, it can be
there for millions of years and stillbe rather useful. Not the same water
it's flowing obviously, some of thekey components about the time domain electro another
domain time domain electromagnetic system, thet DEM. This system is particularly suited

(01:22:21):
for detecting variations in subsurface conductivity andin respect for just aquifiers right now,
because we're gonna get into a littlebit deeper thing here. The design similar
to mineral export explorer exploration forgive meuh. The equipment is mounted on a
boom or a stinger to a distanceit from the helicopter's electromagnetic interfit to prevent

(01:22:49):
it from interfering. Rather, thehelicopter flies in a predetermined grid or pattern
to ensure uh, systematic coverage ofthe survey. You know, you'll see
things online in these groups like itwas looking for something. Hey, did
you know David Plaid's actually did amissing four one one in that area and

(01:23:10):
his recent work suggests that his recentwork, his recent scientific work suggests that
they're actually utilizing underground highways made ofwater. I think SKYTEMP Systems is really
working for the government. They arethe geological oh oh oh oh oh oh,

(01:23:34):
I'm sorry, I stop doing that. Character by transmitting electromagnetic waves and
measuring the Earth's response. This systemcan identify layers of rock or sediment that

(01:23:55):
have different conductivity profiles, and theaquafar that lie in between them, especially
those that are fresh water, willshow up very easy as regions around them
reduce conductivity. So by rapid andextensive coverage in flying these helicopteres around like
this in serving large inaccessible areas,oftentimes you can't walk there and run the

(01:24:19):
system by drilling a hole in theground or bring in large equipment. These
provide comprehensive pictures, offers three dimensionalview of subsurface hydrogeological conditions. So if
you have some sort of conspiracy outthere that you're like, there's a cave
down there or a freaking thing downthere, and I wi want to get

(01:24:40):
in there and see what's in there, maybe you can hire one of these
helicopters to fly around. With theserigs. It's much more cost effective to
fly these drigs around than it isto travel make a road out into mill
of nowhere and then dig a hugehole and drill and drill and drill.
So you'll see these things everywhere inareas where they will be doing massive geological

(01:25:02):
surveying or work. Because there's alreadysomething down there. They recognize that,
anecdotally speaking, is evidence from otherassets that there is cavities in space of
low conductivity around there. They bringthese other systems to look really specifically,
and sure enough they find huge reservoirsof water that a lot of people end

(01:25:23):
up using for industry and things likethat. So just look, let's look
real quick at a few Oh mygod, with a clip button click and
I apologize, RecA on. Thisthing is all over the place. Let's
look at a few things here realquick. M They are not the only

(01:25:49):
ones, though, I need youto quickly look at this air just so
you get a reference. My friends, Oh my god, you jerk.
Can I open this thing up?I'm bad at clicking. I think that

(01:26:12):
worked. I think that worked.All right, here we go. I'm
losing everyone. It's an hour andthirty and okay, ladies and gentle remember
if you want to help sports Strangrican, you can do so by clicking those
links below. Thank you very muchfor doing this hour into the show.
Christ I wish I would give youmore pain during stuff, but unfortunately.
Anyways, take a look at thisthing and ask yourself. If you only

(01:26:35):
had three seconds to see a helicoptersthat flew past you, would you sure
you'd get a good glimpse of itand know exactly what you were looking at.
It was like there was a portalopening up underneath it. I swear
to God, I only saw itfor like two seconds, but I saw
this thing like trying to suck thehelicopter into it. They don't always look

(01:27:00):
the same way. They can looklike things that have been created and look
for submarines and stuff too. Theycan look very different. You know,
what is it a magnometer magni metior, however it pronounce. I don't know.
I mean, I'm not a scienceeasy hugician o'logists. But of course,

(01:27:23):
as I said, it's not justabout aquifiers, which then some people
step in and say, hey,that's why there's other things going on.
Dude, this computer is like aliveor something. I swear to God,
Man, this stuff happening in frontof me that I can't stand. I'm
not saying it's any paranormal mind.I'm saying that this it's just this something.

(01:27:46):
It's almost like there's a remote access, but it doesn't say there's any
remote access happening whatever, maybe Ican just do a screen record and capture
it one day. So this isthe this is a different version of one
of the same products offered. Butof course, I mean, if you
know about like the evolution of blimpshunting submarines and using magnometers to uh to

(01:28:15):
look for munitions, you know,by and now there's all types of modern
ways to do it to like actuallyturn this like hit the surface of the
water and make a sound wave directlyfrom that point in a direction, in
a specific direction, like like likebasically sonar for drones that are flying well

(01:28:36):
above the surface. And were itall started with using it like flying around
with these like systems to look forfirst magnetic fields and electromagnetic and possibly gravitational
fields. And so people have thensaid, well, it's not just about
water. They're obviously looking for somethingelse down there. And I'm like,

(01:28:57):
nah, nah, nah, Idon't know the dances, but I'm just
trying to keep up with the kids, and so they but they're you know
that they're suggesting these other things toit. And so since we do know
in fact, there are other assetsout there that do not look like that,
and do serve multiple purposes, notjust looking for aquifiers, but also
you know, detect and measure variationsin Earth magnetic, electromagnet impossible gravitational fields

(01:29:17):
used extensively in mineral and hydrocarbon exploration, as well as for environmental and archaeological
surveys. Components, magnometer, magnimeter, whatever you want to call it,
measures changes in the earth magnetic field. Uses for use for detecting magnetic minerals

(01:29:38):
below Earth's surface, transmit electromagnetic wavesand measures the response from the ground.
Useful for detecting conductive materials below thesurface. Gravimeter measure minute variations minute the

(01:29:58):
moops variations and Earth's gravitational field helpfulin identifying subsurface density variations areas that surround
those caverns are looking for in areasthat are specifically different because they surround something
very conductive. Radiometrics measure natural gammaradiation from the ground, which can indicate

(01:30:18):
certain rock types or the presence ofparticular materials. It could be rather valuable.
GPS systems essential for determining the exactposition where the reading is actually coming
from. You know, you canlocate the submarine by its munitions. You
can locate the you know, themagnetic field. You can locate all this,

(01:30:40):
But what good is that if you'renot identifying it exactly because the same
system isn't you know, drilling orlooking for the minerals or looking for you
know, has some boots on theground. You're just flying around above.
It's like an airplane with light iron it. You know, you need
other systems working together, and ofcourse people eventually return to those sites or
a weapon system to be dropped onlocation. Geophysical equipment is often attached to

(01:31:05):
helicopters via a stinger or a boomto distance the census from the helicopter.
As I said before, obviously frominterfering with the systems on board. The
rig must be designed to ensure safeflight operations while accommodting in the specific need
of the survey. In the operation, the helicopter flies in a grid pattern,

(01:31:25):
like I said before, in orderto cover the most amount of land.
There's something that looks mysterious and youwouldn't really understand why, and if
you're looking in a very especially abrief sighting, which the world isn't Montana,
right, The world isn't some purplesky or purple mountain, whatever,
big sky country. The world oftentimesis, you know, covered the trees

(01:31:51):
and buildings and hard to see,so things are obscured out of your site
just after a few moments of thembeing there. Because of that, do
not deny that you, like everyother human, are capable of misidentifying something
that is explainable. It's interesting,cool, you don't see it every day.

(01:32:17):
Maybe you get interested in the sciencebehind it and want to learn more,
maybe become a contributor to that fieldafterwards. I know these are my
dreams. I don't think it's happening. But Marie con I just don't want
you to sit there with no informationother than what you follows are telling you.
Because I was there, I spentmy life there, and if you

(01:32:43):
only listen to the information you followjust tells you you will surely be looking
at a rig or a stinger carryingone of these systems one day or sometime
or whatever else we're covering and misidentifythe living poop out of it. Is
that not at least fair? Becauseyou, myself still in question, and
everyone else on the planet, justlike the pilots with the Supreme credentials,

(01:33:06):
the people looking at the high contrastI our videos and investigating and be like,
you know what, I can't tellwhat it is, Bob, So
you know what I think it actuallyis. I think it's actually an alien
for another planet. What gives youthe thor to say that? I just
said, I don't know what itis? Okay? Uh, you know,
just just trying to arm you up, just trying to inspire your curiosity

(01:33:29):
rather than weaponize it. And ofcourse, what's wrong with having a drastically
larger economy of information inside of youif you're going to take seat at some
of these tables where these conversations aretaking place. Anyways, I'm just for
circular cyclically talking around here, youknow, I said, finally today on

(01:33:49):
today's show, we're going to talkabout Lygo a little bit. What time
are we now? We are atWe're at one thirty three into the show.
Okay, we got time, We'vegot time? All right? What

(01:34:13):
have we got here? What dowe have here? Can we watch this
little video real quick? Oh wait, this is the first one I actually
want to watch. Hold on,Rica, give me one second. Here

(01:34:57):
here at Hawk's Bay Regional Council,we're proud to be the first council and
youth. I was trying to talkto that whole time, even though I
was muted. This video here isage appropriate. I don't know. It's
about from Hawks Eye Council over theirgeological scan. It's the R three D
arc Pire mapping project, but justone of them. I just want to
show a little cartoon like video,not like video, it's an actual cartoon

(01:35:19):
of what they're doing here, justso you know. Here at Hawkes Bay
Regional Council, we're proud to bethe first council in New Zealand to use
the latest airborne technology called SkyTeam.We're finding out more about our equifers because
managing water is vital for the futureof our region. We're flying over the

(01:35:41):
head of Tongue, that offshore areaand the planes. Okay, that's all
I'm gonna share. I feel likethey'll leave it in the show notes.
But you know these are being adaptedall over the world, and I'm sure
they've upgraded how they look the waythey're designed today. Maybe they're even easier.
But one of the most affordable waysis to do it that way.
Some nations have never really had achance to map a lot of these undergrounds
fires or aquifiers rather and ended upcontaminating things that they could have had on

(01:36:06):
reserve they could have used, Theycould have figured out a way to keep
them completely separated, but instead,while digging and looking for I don't know,
you know, they're fracking whatever,you know, they end up destroying
something because they only had older versionsof these, like ground penetrating systems that
gave very limited views of what wasactually there. Just contrast. Really,

(01:36:30):
that's it, and so of coursethey are doing it again, So go
check that out afterwards, and let'smove on to the ligo thing here now.
Sorry, I was just trying tolook for something. I knew I
had that video and I forgot toplay it for you earlier. Apologize,
rehau. You know what. Ialso didn't show this picture, so I
have to show this one real fasttoo, because this is just a beautiful

(01:36:53):
shot. Whoever took this one,good job. This is the high rest
shot of of them flying around somewhere. And look at that beauty. That's
pretty slick. Huh. Sorry,I'm jumping back and forth here. I
just had these up and I forgotto use them. Sorry about that.
My by it. Okay, friends, what's up my green screen? Not

(01:37:20):
using my headphones here, I don'tknow what's up. Also, I have
this huge hole in my chest.I don't know if you've seen it,
but no, I have a Neonshirt on today this show up. I
was trying to get this huge jackdude on the green screen so I could
stand and have my face poked outlike right where, you know, right

(01:37:41):
where his head would be, solike it looked like it was my huge
body. But I couldn't get itlined up fast enough. Okay, Rica,
let's move on here real quick.We're talking about Ligo real fast.
If you look up any information onLIGO, you're gonna find it. In
twenty fifteen, Ligo made its firstever direct detection of gravitational wave, which

(01:38:03):
are ripples and space time caused bymassive celestial events like merging of black holes
or neutron stars. This was spokenabout across all scientific publications and whatnot,
and of course you had people fromeuthology like Jeremy Corbell and others who were
going on Joe Rogan's show and sayingthings like, you know, this proves

(01:38:28):
it, this proves Bob is ourright, because he said that they manipulate
gravity waves or whatever, and JeremyCorbell is just you know, he was
just lying. You know, he'snot lying because I truly believe he is
a reject who believes everything he says. If you think that's too harsh,
go cry about it. He's aprofessional liar. You think that's my opinion.

(01:38:48):
He's getting paid, it's his profession, and he lies constantly to the
public. He is a professional liar. So if if you have if you

(01:39:09):
think that's too harsh, I don'tknow what you I don't know what you
want to tell you. You know, this person literally makes a living misleading
people. So we're looking into thisreal quick. He was basically pitching the
idea that that this he was alreadyputting in the minds of people that this
was securing. Uh. You know, this made Bob Blazar right, which

(01:39:30):
was completely illogical. It also putin mind just that it's just attached now
right to like multiple people have mentionedit that like if ligos can if ligo
can do this or make gravitational waves, is there a way that we could
somehow, you know, detect UFOsthat are visiting that are too fast and

(01:39:51):
too stealthy for our censors or something. It was there. You know,
one of the biggest names in thisgroup in this this unstructured chaotic like multi
camp field of ethology or whatever itis called UAP. Now you know,
we have this guy merging these thingsand making it one in the mind of

(01:40:13):
people that have a real hard timediscerning who's telling them the truth. Everyone
just seems to agree when they're beingpressed. Oh, we know he's just
speculating. It's like, really,because then why when he was saying that
he had these unsources he couldn't namedbeyond approach where you're sharing it and saying
finally the Amasiah come all this zelotlike shit, it's crazy. Anyways,

(01:40:36):
he put it in the mind ofthe people and now of the euthology people,
and now they really can't get itout there. For a long time,
we heard luel Azando talk about afrequency or piece of technology or a
way to attract or a way tomonitor or like this very ambiguous, shadowy,

(01:40:56):
snaky snake like way of ad hoclike way getting out of some of
these things that people are are pushing. And you know, and one of
the things that a lot of ussaid was if he's talking about gravitational waves,
this is not new. He didn'tcome up with this, and could
it be related? Is there somesort of secret attempt to monitor gravitational waves

(01:41:17):
on Earth with this thing? Maybewe have a ton of information about the
stuff they already did and they sharedtheir work around the world. And so
I don't know what to tell you, because it's like when someone tells you
that they're you know, someone givesyou something ambiguous for a long time where
you think they have a lot morethan they actually have, and then you
find out they had nothing. Theyhad the same thing you had. Do

(01:41:40):
you think lou has access to Lagoright now or ever? I think we're
making massive assumptions here. The world'sgoing all domain now. But you know,
back in twenty and eleven and twelve, you know they were already that
Apparently some of the limitations from thegravitational waves a gravitational observing or creating machine

(01:42:11):
of Ligo, they have noticed thelimitations, like Ligo's ability to detect these
waves has been limited by quantum noise, which is a background disturbance at the
subatomic scale that hinders precise measurements,And there's been real no fixed to it.
There have been massive upgrades and percentagelike how accurate it can be,

(01:42:32):
but there has been no major fixfor the quantum background noise of the universe
the squeezing. To address this,LIGO the term quantum squeezing. LIGO researchers
introduced a quantum technology called squeezing thatreduces the impact of quantum noise. This
frequency dependent squeezing allows LIGO to measuregravitational waves across a broader range of frequencies

(01:42:59):
enhanced detection capabilities. Above all else, LIGO provided the ability significant improvement sixty
to seventy percent better than the lastobservation tools in celestial merger devices. LOGOS
has a much much higher clarity toits information. Coming back mit Caltech,

(01:43:25):
two different observatories and a myriad ofother organizations helped develop the technology. Not
just one secret unit working out ofArea fifty one on the technology that Bob
Lazar once had his hands on.It wasn't just some small, little tiny
effort that one day Igo started doingresearch. This is built on the backs

(01:43:48):
of hundreds, if not thousands ofcontributions in the form of you know,
peer view papers and you know,very radical but competing conceptions of what's going
on. The article that was broughtup when it came to Jeremy Corbel talking

(01:44:12):
on Joe Rogan, all that allthat time ago, which is back now
because now we know what Lo's talkingabout. It was mostly the intricacies cover
the incustracy, incuratius. Oh mygod, I can't talk the increase,
the incondicacies, the incontro damn.That is my seventh time drying intricate sees.

(01:44:46):
I'm an idiot of quantum physics explaininghow articles including photons pop in and
out of space, causing quantum noise. That noise that the popping and out
of actually produces is measurable, andthat trying to get rid of it.
But the squeezing technique essentially manipulates lightto reduce this noise. And I'm gonna
show a little video here in asecond. The history of the idea of

(01:45:08):
squeezing light has been around since thenineteen seventies, and its implementation in LIGO
has undergone extensive testing and trouble shootingthroughout years. In years, multiple people
universities, they're postcrab programs, andthe students that go through the professors on

(01:45:30):
board, the people that submitted majorpapers years go, buy nothing happened,
and someone takes that paper and waslike, holy yeah, like cat I
figured out all of that. Howcould that be an entirely secret operate?
Could there be scientific? Could therebe something under the name scientific going on
as well? That maybe the datais being given to a non I mean
technically speaking of scientific, but amore aerospace or military aspect of it then,

(01:45:50):
sure, of course. But tosuggest that its entire existence is it's
just so frustrating. It's just whateverbenefits in future technologies that are future understanding
and data that LIGO, that Belcherthat is producing aims to capture more cosmic
events, particularly neutron star collisions thatprovide more data in the quantum level than

(01:46:14):
anything they've observed essentially so far,and further improves its sensitivity to measure and
to reduce the noise. Other gravitationalwaves detectors globally are also likely to benefit
from these advancements. The effort andadvancements of LIGOS partner observatories around the world,
but two main ones in the UnitedStates. I'll leave the information in
the show notes. Science foundations throughEuropean Gravitational Observation Observatory GEO. I'm sorry,

(01:46:44):
EGO, the European Gravitational Observatory,you have others in Europe and in
Japan as well. In total essence, before the confusion, before people sell
you what it is and what itis in Ligo's new quantum tech chnology represents
a leap forward in our ability todetect and understand the ripples in space time,
expanding our knowledge of how the universeeven holds itself together or seemingly doesn't,

(01:47:12):
you know, employers right anyways,Moving on the idea that LIGO is
somehow a secret in an entirely secretmilitary operation makes no sense because a lot
of the work has been done inthe public sector through people that have never
no real classified I mean that there'sstudents and postgrad programs they're working you know,
part time, and some observatory youknow, in in offering interesting aspects

(01:47:39):
to help advance the understanding of whatthis thing is picking up. So I
can't for the life of me understand, you know, Lord Ludacris has a
good point there. There has been, obviously he low integrity attempts in the
past to get funding. There hasbeen, which we see from p in

(01:48:00):
the UAP community big time. Wesee in scientific community. We've seen that
once in a while, but noton this level. And we've seen people
basically cry a wolf when there hasn'tbeen, and it's they've been mistaken for
all types of things, you know, fingerprint on the sensor, a cell
phone and the next room over,no one realized there was a phone line

(01:48:23):
running through the wall where the thingwas pointed. It doesn't matter what it
is. They managed to, youknow, report first, find this,
find the problem in the remedy forit. Second. When it comes to
a lot of these things, thoughit seems like LIGO though remains rather unique
in the sense that, you know, it kind of gave up a lot

(01:48:45):
of good information for a lot ofpeople around the world to use that were
waiting for it. Could you essentiallyWEAPONI some of that information? Of course
could NASA? And it's I think, look at all the things that we're
launching a space under the term scientificendeavor. But does that mean that the
most radical theory out there, supportedby nothing but a bunch of people that

(01:49:05):
are super into the topic and confirmedliars, are right. Does that mean
they're right? Because Ligo could giveup data to support some sort of military
endeavor. That that means that Corbelis right and Lazar has proven correct.
The military created Ligo in order tofind aliens flying around planet Earth. And

(01:49:27):
lue Lauzando was right when he saidthat he knew of a secret technology or
capability that detects these things. Whathe was saying was potentially speaking, now,
do I know they haven't detected something? I find it real hard to
believe that the limited time and capabilityand objects they can point this thing at,
and so in our known universe they'rebeing used to you to track alleged

(01:49:49):
UFOs over planet Earth. You know, what do you think, friends?
Do you think Ligo is what's beingclaimed it is. Do you think Luilazanda

(01:50:11):
is right that this device that heknew about that could detect UFOs? Like
once again, by the way,this isn't the only time he's done that.
If you think hard enough, youcan think of other times where we've
heard, you know, something likehere's the question lobbed at him. Ready,
Hey, lou have there ever beentime times where that you guys tried

(01:50:33):
to trick the phenomenon into showing upand he goes Heck, yeah, when
I was doing some investigations for theNavy, we used to notice that they'd
show up during during war games andbig practices and pre deployment trials and stuff.
They would show you ap would beeverywhere. So he's already done it.

(01:50:58):
We know what he was talking aboutwith that. Yes, if you
put a bunch of big warships nearislands and near where fishing roats are and
have them do military exercises, guesswhat the spies on those fishing But the
Chinese, like you know what,we have very good integrity here. No
one get on a fishing boat,and no one used the DGI drones that

(01:51:18):
our country has managed to get everywhereseventy something percent of the whole market.
No one used those, and noone going fishing boats. We're trying to
be fair. Everyone agree, everyone, Everyone agree here, Chinese all agree,
every Chinese person hear me? Okay, everyone agree that we will not
try to spy off a fishing boatsto get to go right through passages where
the military is training anyways, needto do what they do. So I

(01:51:44):
have nothing else to say about aboutwhether or not Alu or friends would use
this ambiguous answer or ambiguous kind of. I know of a technology that can
detect UFOs. We just got toget our hands on it. But first
I'm gonna lie to you and sayI've been using it for years. Okay,
it's a load of shit, boysand girls, cats and kittens and
poochas and pound puppies. I getto get out of here. Today we

(01:52:05):
covered what the domain word all inour multi in all domain is what technology
you can reference like the F thirtyfive working in multi domain platform obviously,
what all domain means the terms oflike the the jad C two program,
and in the sense that making anetwork of all networks, incorporating these multi
domain platforms and bringing it into thehands of every single service member makes it

(01:52:29):
so you have a unified battlefield thatmakes it almost next to impossible for your
adversary to get the upper hand inany one place because you're all connected,
which we weren't before. I knowa lot of people don't understand that there
wasn't some room. We're like theArmy, Navy, and Marines and Air
Force all hung out together. We'rejust like ready slap hands. Okay,
let's go to work. No,Yeah, Joint target. Never mind,
I'm not gonna Okay, so youknow that a big part of this as

(01:52:54):
well is is related to the modernizationof the battlefield and the idea that we're
not our next adversaries on a bigway are not necessarily going to be a
terrorist organization. They're going to be, of course, a large near peer
competitor that is to some degree capableof at least stopping one force in its

(01:53:14):
tracks and at least one domain,uh, you know, to some degree.
So if that can happen, youknow, biological warfare or whatever else,
ship's taken over, you have youknow, other domain other forces that
can come in and essentially kick assin that domain. Okay, my friends,

(01:53:46):
we got to wrap up today's show. Have you have you been inspired
to any any bit? Has mypessimism turned you off? I'm sorry.
I just don't like seeing people thatI care about taking advantage of. And
I'm not saying that I know there'snot a cryptid being using underwatering aquarifiers.
I'm not saying I know there's noaliens here. I'm just saying the people

(01:54:10):
that claim they know have provided youthings that are on the same value as
a pie that comes out the assof a cow, And if you have
something to say about that, I'dlove to see some evidence to support what
they've claimed they know, because gettingan office created when there needs to be

(01:54:30):
one at a time where it's goingall domain isn't proof that you dipshits have
had any success when it comes togetting a locker opened where a little green
man comes out and he says,you know what, those videos that look
like the worst CGI horseshit movies youever seen in your life? They were
right. I was real, Iwas being interviewed. Okay them a boys

(01:54:55):
or girls, cats and kittens,the pooches and pound puppies. I gotta
get out of here. Give mea massive favor. Please look for what
they say as it actually is,versus how it appears to be because they're
trying to make it appear to besomething else. They show you a patch
with ones and zeros on it andthis strange looking object, and because you
don't know what that object is,which is a very common thing in their

(01:55:15):
job, the person selling you thiscontent in this context is like what am
home run just gave got thousands ofviews. Look for things how they actually
are versus how they appear to be. Like, literally, ask yourself.
It appears to be this, butwhat is it? Actually? It appears

(01:55:35):
to be a metal orb? What'sinside the orb? Is it filled with
you know, acting like tools tospy on drones. We've gone over these
things. Things appear a certain way, things are another way. I'll let
you know when I find out,honestly, when those two paths cross and
I'm so wrong that the aliens arehere, the aliens are shaking our hands

(01:55:59):
and all that stuff, when Eisenhoweris out there on the dance floor playing
twister with the Grays, whatever youbelieve, I'll let you know if I
come across it. So far,honestly, for twenty seven freaking years,
I haven't ladies, gents, boysand girls, cats and kittens. I
get to go out of here.Keep it weird, keep your third eye
peeled, all that good jazz,take care of one another, and do
me a massive favor forgive yourself.Ricon. I've never heard anything like this

(01:57:26):
before in my life. It's likeWi Fi intelligence. The guy from Boston
told me he knows that people atBoston are smarter than everyone because look how
many schools are around in all directions. I said what he said. We
got Havid, we got Suffolk,we got all these schools around, We've
got Mi T look out. Thisis the smartest state. This is the
smartest city. Well, I'll bedamned. You just have to live in

(01:57:49):
the proximity of a school to becomemore intelligent. Wi Fi intelligence in the
city of Boston
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