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Kristin Beck is a retired Navy SEAL and recipient of over 50 ribbons and medals, among them the Bronze Star with Valor, the Purple Heart, and the Meritorious Service Medal. She is now a lecturer, author, consultant, and civil rights activist.
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There is some very strange water experiments you can do with frequencies. Oh wow. You can set it down on plates and make some really cool stuff too. It all shapes down. Look at that. So the electricity running into the water makes it do that spiral? It's sound really. It's not even electricity. It's sound. Vibrations. Oh. The spout is connected to a speaker. The speaker is being controlled by an oscillation thing. Whoa. But if you do all the hurt, you can see it. Oh my god. This is incredible. What is the. And there are this is just one experiment for this. There's a lot of other really really cool ones. There's the ones that run through all the frequencies and you have these the balance frequencies which is. I'm messing up the frequencies right now. I can't remember. TBI. I just believe in a TBI. Let me smoke another joint. The change of shapes. So it goes into like this hexagram and all these different shapes. Yeah. Different patterns. So if you change the frequency the patterns change. Right. And so if it can do that and that's why I was talking about prayer and churches and singing. There was a time when a lot of humanity would get together at least once a week. I would sing together and I would pray together and no matter who you're praying to God or Yahweh or the creator or the maker whoever you want to pray to if everybody's on the same frequency everybody's on the same energy and they're giving you all this energy. How could that be bad. Look at this thing. Yeah. This is some weird shit. So the ultrasonic waves are causing these objects to levitate. So they're letter levitating in the ultrasonic waves. Is that ice. I don't know. I don't even think it says exactly what they're floating there. It's probably just a piece of maybe like rice or a piece of paper or something. It's shit. But I've people speculate this is maybe how the pyramids might have been made because of the frequencies that people think they make or could have made. You know back when they existed in the way they did in their original form. And if you think about all of it. I don't know how. This is part of like that is something that Eddie Griffin said outside the comic store wants high as fuck. I don't know how. The pyramids were made with sound. Yeah. I believe that. There's a frequency. There's a frequency. I remember one of someone's talked about there's a hum in there or there's a specific frequency in one of the pyramids. I don't remember. Well there's something certainly to like the shape of the stone and the fact that it's all going to echo like crazy. And there's that one pyramid in South America. You can yell at it and it gives you a bird sound back. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There's some going on with pyramids. I wonder if you've ever seen that Jamie. Where the guy stands down to the bottom of I think it's in Chichen Itza. And he makes some noise. What did he do to yell. I think you can make clap. You can make any noise loud noise that it comes back as a bird. It sounds weird. It's pretty cool. And that's like the temple of Quetzalcoatl I think too. I might have made that up. But that's like their bird sounded good. Their crazy bird god. Is it in Chichen Itza. Chichen Itza echo clap. What if you do the. Look at this. Oh yeah. It's like a bird. If you saw how big this pyramid is and how far away this guy is from it you would realize how crazy that is. If you're listening to this. This is a simple echo actually. It's very simple to explain. When you clap in front of a pyramid I mean of a slope the sound will go to the top. In this case a pyramid. And if there are a cavity or a temple in this case. We come back to you. If you clap in front of an Egyptian pyramid. Nothing happens. Because the sound goes away. Here. Sound. They did that on purpose. Why? Imagine if they figured that out on purpose. Imagine if they designed that. If they designed that we need to figure out what the fuck went wrong. What happened? Something happened there. What is it? The dryest section? Younger dryest impact theory. Nobody talks about that. Why don't we ever talk about the fact that we were very advanced human beings doing amazing things. The pyramids and doing this and floating rocks and doing space stuff maybe back in those days. And it always destroyed. Now we're rebuilding. Why can't we accept that fact? Well you know I think it's civilization has these rises and falls. And we always want to believe that we're in the middle of rising. That we're at the highest level that people have ever been. Because we're way higher than anybody that we know of. And when we look back a thousand years from now, yeah we're way more advanced than them. But when you take into account the younger dryest impact theory, you got to get, it gets real confusing. Because you start going well okay, if that did happen, like how smart were people 12,000 years ago? If the US was really covered, half of it was covered in a mile high sheet of ice. And people were creating these insane structures. Like insane, whether it's the pyramids of Egypt or I mean I don't know what year Machu Picchu was made but a lot of people dated back a long time ago as well. I mean is Machu Picchu from that era? Like when do they think Machu Picchu was constructed? But it's another one of those things that just doesn't make any sense. It's so amazing. None of it makes sense. Like how did you get these stones here? They're so big and it's so perfect and beautiful and the way they contoured the stone to fit into these slots, it's incredible. We can't do it. We still can't. 1450, really? That seems wrong. There's no way. Oh that might be just one of those things. There's one of those things where like archaeologists, they'll date a thing. You can't really date stone so they date whether it's biological material, they have to find a piece of wood or something. Something that they can do a carbon dating thing on. You can't date stones. So they're probably just kind of guessing. They might be off. The thing is like that becomes doctrine with a lot of people. They found that thing, Gobekli Tepe and that threw a monkey wrench into everything because for sure that's 12,000 years old. For sure. That means somebody covered it up intentionally 12,000 years ago. That means they could build this stuff 12,000 years ago. How? How were they able to make these immense stone columns when we think that these people are supposed to be hunted down? They might just be when the last occupied was 1450. That's what it makes sense. That's what it's just giving me the answer for. That makes sense.