#2185 - Bob Gymlan

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Bob Gymlan

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Bob Gymlan is a YouTuber exploring cryptozoology, unexplained phenomena, and other mysterious topics. https://www.youtube.com/@BobGymlan

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Timestamps

0:21Bob Gymlan’s YouTube channel, Bigfoot storytelling, and why the mystery resonates
9:55Spiritual consciousness, Bigfoot theories, and the primal fear of predators
19:51Continuation: Shark attacks, behavior, and underreported statistics

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Conspiracies

UFOs, aliens, Bigfoot, oh my

Episodes from 2024

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Transcript

0:00

Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out.

0:03

The Joe Rogan Experience.

0:05

Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day.

0:09

Okay, salute, Bob.

0:15

Salute.

0:16

Pleasure to meet you, man.

0:18

Pleasure to meet you, too.

0:21

How'd you start doing this YouTube channel?

0:25

I've always enjoyed talking about those things, because who doesn't?

0:32

Right.

0:32

And I was always kind of surprised at how shitty they're usually talked about.

0:39

I just saw the shooting star.

0:40

There it goes, yeah. It'll trick you.

0:42

So often you see this type of content as like, is there a monster in the woods?

0:48

Right.

0:49

And it's like, that's not the question.

0:50

The question is more complex than that.

0:54

And I often don't see it brought up that way.

0:57

There's something about these, like today I listened to the creepiest Bigfoot

1:02

story one.

1:02

That one that you had with the one where the guy wrote in the story about the

1:07

Bigfoot.

1:08

Burying stuff in the backyard.

1:08

Yeah, that one.

1:09

And there's something about those that like, even if you don't believe in Bigfoot,

1:15

because I don't necessarily believe in Bigfoot.

1:16

There's something about it that's so compelling.

1:20

There's something about things that you don't know out there in the woods that

1:26

know,

1:26

because you don't have an accurate, a real good account of everything that's in

1:31

the forest.

1:32

Of course.

1:32

You know, you look out there, it's dark.

1:34

And the mind is always looking for some weirdness.

1:38

The mind is always looking for something that other people don't know about,

1:41

or perhaps there's like a secret that the sheriffs know about,

1:44

that they don't share with everybody else.

1:46

It's like, why is that so, why does that resonate so much with people?

1:50

With Stephen King movies, like, or Stephen King books.

1:53

It's like that kind of a thing.

1:54

There's something about it that's like exciting.

1:56

Right.

1:57

I'm more of a Dean Koons fan than Stephen King.

2:00

Oh, okay.

2:01

Yeah, he's great too.

2:02

Yeah.

2:03

You don't like Stephen King?

2:05

You're trying to throw shade?

2:07

His politics ruined it for me.

2:09

That's the problem, right?

2:10

That's the problem.

2:10

His problem is his Twitter feed.

2:12

His Twitter feed's fucking brutal.

2:14

It's like, dude, stop.

2:16

Right, that's nuts.

2:17

These are like the goofiest low testosterone boomer takes I've ever heard on

2:21

anything.

2:22

Like, stop.

2:23

It's very true.

2:24

But he's such a brilliant writer.

2:25

I also think he's a different guy,

2:30

because the car accident, I think that was a big one.

2:33

You know, when you get hit by a van.

2:35

That'll do it.

2:36

Yeah, shit.

2:37

He was really, really fucked up from that.

2:39

And I also think it's getting off coke.

2:41

Getting off coke and booze.

2:42

Yeah.

2:43

That was the real Stephen King.

2:44

I mean, I hate to advocate alcoholism and cocaine use,

2:49

because I don't think either one of them is good for you.

2:51

But goddamn, they're good for writing books.

2:53

They're good for artistry, that's for sure.

2:55

There's something about his early stuff when he was off the rails.

2:58

Like, he said he doesn't even remember writing Cujo.

3:00

Doesn't even remember it.

3:02

It's my favorite book of his.

3:03

It's fucking great.

3:04

It's a fucking great book.

3:05

So is The Shining.

3:07

You know, it's another one where he was like deep in the throes of addiction

3:11

and just writing this fucking captivating book.

3:16

It just, what he captured is there's this part of our mind

3:21

that maybe we don't talk about too much,

3:23

where we always wonder if everybody really knows what's going on

3:26

and maybe something could happen that people didn't expect,

3:30

couldn't imagine is real,

3:33

and yet you're confronted by it.

3:35

You know, and that's like a lot of his stories.

3:37

And you do a really good job of finding that.

3:43

Also, you have a creepy voice.

3:44

No disrespect.

3:46

No.

3:47

I mean in a good way.

3:48

Like the way you tell the stories.

3:50

You know, like it's just something about it.

3:51

Like, it's like you're doing radio, man.

3:54

You're doing radio with illustrations, but you're doing it on YouTube.

3:57

Right.

3:58

Well, that's actually why I chose the name Bob Gimlin.

4:02

Because I, you know, Bob Gimlin's obviously the guy who was there when the

4:06

Patterson footage was shot.

4:07

Right.

4:07

And it has, so my Google account or my YouTube account name way before I

4:12

started the channel was Bob Gimlin.

4:15

Oh.

4:16

And my real name is Brian Gano.

4:18

And all I used YouTube for was Bigfoot content and like watching Bob Dylan rips.

4:24

I'm a huge fan of Bob Dylan.

4:26

Oh, cool.

4:27

So I thought Bob Gimlin was a cool name and it kind of evokes back to like just

4:32

kind of Rod Serling a little bit.

4:34

Just like a slower pace because so much of the content in that was just like

4:38

top 10 creepiest sightings.

4:40

Yeah.

4:40

It's like whatever.

4:41

It's like I like to be a little more immersed.

4:43

Yes.

4:45

You do it like radio.

4:46

You do it like old school radio, like creepy radio.

4:50

Yeah.

4:50

Like when they used to tell stories on like, you know, people would sit, you

4:54

know, before there was a television,

4:56

people would sit around the radio and they would listen.

4:59

Like that's where War of the Worlds, that famous thing with H.G. Wells where he

5:03

had a bunch of people believing that we're actually being invaded by Martians.

5:06

And you flee your state.

5:07

Yeah.

5:08

Yeah.

5:08

So that, when did you start this channel?

5:11

I think like nine years ago, 2016 maybe.

5:16

And was it the beginning?

5:17

Was it Bigfoot?

5:17

Yeah.

5:18

Have you ever had an encounter?

5:20

No.

5:20

Or is it just something that's been fascinating to you?

5:22

It's just always been interesting.

5:23

But, so I think my talent, and I'm not even saying I'm talented, but my, what I

5:28

have going for me, is I am so ready to believe that everything we know is BS.

5:36

Like people don't know anything.

5:38

They just don't.

5:39

I mean, people know stuff, but so much of what has been in history books is

5:43

already wrong.

5:44

You know, so, like have you ever seen a chimpanzee?

5:48

Yes.

5:48

Like would it surprise you to learn that like, oh, there's a smarter one, there's

5:51

a faster one, there's a bigger one.

5:53

Like if someone, if a Bigfoot got hit by a bus tomorrow, like I wouldn't be

5:57

surprised.

5:58

You wouldn't be?

5:59

No, I, well, I mean, yes.

6:01

I would be terribly surprised.

6:02

Really?

6:03

Yes.

6:04

Yeah.

6:05

I don't know if they're real, but I think they might be real.

6:09

This is what I think.

6:10

I have a very strange take on this.

6:12

I know it's going to sound super stupid to anybody who's like cynical, pragmatist,

6:17

but just bear with me for a moment.

6:19

I think the boundaries between this dimension and other ones are permeable.

6:28

And I have a feeling things can cross through them.

6:32

And I have a feeling we are like, if an ant is, like I have leaf cutter ants in

6:39

my yard, pretty wild.

6:41

It's so cool to watch them.

6:42

It sucks because they kill all your trees, but so cool to watch this long train

6:49

of these incredible little beings carrying around these giant pieces of leaf

6:53

that they cut off.

6:54

And they're all going into their little house, but you wave your hand over them,

6:58

they have no fucking idea you're there.

7:00

Like whatever senses they have, it does not seem to detect threats from things

7:06

above.

7:07

They don't seem to be worried.

7:08

Right.

7:08

You know, they don't, they don't perceive us.

7:11

Well, they're mission oriented.

7:13

Yeah.

7:13

And we are too.

7:14

So if something is happening that's beyond our mission, I think it's hard to

7:17

perceive it.

7:17

I think there's things that exist that are not perceivable.

7:22

Oh, I'm one million percent in that camp too.

7:25

And I think there's heightened states of consciousness that people achieve

7:30

under duress, extreme stress, fear.

7:32

I think that's one of the reasons why a lot of them happen at nighttime.

7:35

I think nighttime, it automatically fills people with a certain sense of

7:40

anxiety and fear because you don't know what's out there when you're,

7:44

especially in the woods at nighttime.

7:46

And I think in those times when your mind reaches this unusual chemical state,

7:52

you occasionally can access these, these other realities.

7:57

And I think that's where Bigfoot is real.

8:00

I know it sounds goofy.

8:02

No, I mean, that's, and I don't think you can go find it.

8:06

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9:17

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9:20

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9:21

That's why finding Bigfoot is on like season 80 and they haven't found shit.

9:24

Yeah, well, but see, even if it was real.

9:27

That they, I wouldn't expect them to find it either.

9:29

No, that show's just goofy.

9:31

Or even if it was flesh and blood.

9:32

It's funny you would say what you said because when I first started my channel,

9:37

I was very flesh and blood type.

9:38

I thought it was a very real thing, like just a bear or anything else in the

9:42

woods.

9:44

A lot of commenters said, though I appreciate Bob's take on that, he will get

9:49

to the woo-woo side or the spiritual side.

9:52

And I was like, I am not.

9:53

And I'm like halfway there already.

9:55

But I don't think that the spiritualism can be separated from anything.

10:00

What do you mean by that?

10:03

I mean, we're, I think we're spiritual beings and I think that we're

10:08

interacting with, kind of like the force from Star Wars.

10:13

Like I, I, I, I believe reality is permeable to an extent.

10:18

Um, yeah, I mean, the, the things that we see with our eyes and feel with our,

10:23

that we touch, there's more than that.

10:26

It's a fraction.

10:27

It's a fraction of what's going on.

10:29

I think so too.

10:30

I think, you know, um, I think that's, that's probably the source of whatever

10:37

psychic phenomenon that is real.

10:40

That's not bullshit.

10:41

And just a bunch of people, a bunch of hucksters robbing people.

10:45

I think there's some, I think there's some sort of telepathic connection that

10:48

people share occasionally.

10:50

And I think it's an emerging aspect of human consciousness that will probably

10:55

one day be as normal as hearing.

10:58

I think we're just emerging from the primal.

11:02

And I think also in the primal, they probably have it.

11:06

They probably have it in a different way.

11:08

Like animals are tuned in, in a very bizarre way.

11:11

They just know things sometimes.

11:14

And you don't know why they know things.

11:16

It's not, you're not even saying, like my dog sometimes knows when we're going

11:19

to go for a run.

11:20

Right.

11:20

He just knows it.

11:21

I've always been fascinated by how, um, animals, so many animals seem to innately

11:27

know that we can help them.

11:29

Yes.

11:29

And I, I, they shouldn't think that.

11:31

Right.

11:32

Historically, we are not the helper of animals.

11:34

Right.

11:35

And like, you know, be it dolphins or seals or whatever.

11:37

Or deer even.

11:38

Deer, yeah.

11:38

They're just like, I'm hurt, help.

11:39

And it's like, shouldn't they be afraid of the predator?

11:41

Deer have tried to contact people to get one of their friends free from barbed

11:45

wire.

11:46

Yeah.

11:46

Yeah.

11:47

There's something weird.

11:48

There's something weird going on that is not just as simple as we're the

11:53

dominant species.

11:54

We have language.

11:56

We figured out consciousness.

11:57

We write books.

11:58

No, I think there's, there's, there's another thing that we just don't, it's

12:04

not there yet.

12:05

You know, it's just like the original cavemen had some grunts and those grunts

12:09

became words.

12:09

And now those words become huge libraries filled with books that people have

12:14

written.

12:15

And I think that's what's going on with human consciousness.

12:19

And I think there's just got to be some reason why this Bigfoot thing has been

12:24

going on for so goddamn long.

12:27

I think it's an interdimensional existence.

12:29

I think whatever that thing is, I think it comes back and forth.

12:33

And that's why I don't find anything.

12:35

Yeah.

12:35

I mean, that's, as I said, I'm getting there.

12:39

You're getting there.

12:40

Getting there.

12:40

Yeah.

12:41

I mean, because as I said earlier, like, to me, the flesh and blood ape

12:45

hypothesis is not as impractical as everyone says.

12:49

Well, it used to be a real thing for sure.

12:51

The problem is the size of it.

12:53

You know, you can't really hide a 10 foot gorilla.

12:56

Why?

12:56

Why?

12:57

Because too many trail cams, too many campers, hikers, hunters, especially,

13:02

especially.

13:03

Well, it's not like people don't see it.

13:05

People see it all the time.

13:06

Yeah, hunters don't see them.

13:07

No.

13:08

No, but my friends, I have a lot of friends that are like long range backpack

13:12

hunters.

13:13

These guys would go 26, 27 miles into the forest with no access roads.

13:17

They just hike out.

13:19

Do hunters not see them or do hunters not say they saw it?

13:21

No, I don't know anybody who's seen them.

13:24

They'll tell you all kinds of other wild shit, but they would tell you if they

13:28

saw it.

13:29

None of them are, none of them believe that I know, but they are wary about

13:35

animals.

13:36

You know, there's real threats out there.

13:39

There's grizzlies, there's wolves, there's mountain lions.

13:42

Those are the things they're really worried about, and those are the things

13:45

that they see.

13:46

And, you know, I've had friends that have had encounters with them, and even

13:49

those encounters

13:49

seem, in some sort of weird way, spiritual.

13:51

Like, there's a weird connection with these predators and prey, I think, opens

13:57

up a part

13:57

of us that we don't ever experience.

14:02

You don't ever experience a thing that wants to eat you, and when you do, I

14:06

think your biology

14:08

is like, oh, you remember this?

14:09

Right.

14:09

And, like, a switch gets turned on, and these genes that we've had inside of

14:13

our body for

14:15

hundreds of thousands of years of us running away from predators, they get ignited,

14:19

and

14:20

there's this bizarre connection.

14:21

Have you ever, like, looked in the eyes of a predator?

14:23

I sure have.

14:24

What have you seen?

14:26

Well, I worked at a zoo, Brookfield Zoo in Chicago, for quite a few years, and

14:33

so just

14:34

this Christmas, we went there, and the lion was roaring, going nuts.

14:43

And I have footage of this I can actually show you later, but it was very close,

14:47

and it was

14:47

roaring, and it looked like it was going to pounce, and I had no faith that

14:49

that little

14:50

barrier was enough.

14:51

And I've literally worked at the place, and I know, like, there are fail-safes

14:55

and stuff

14:55

that they can't get out, but I was just like, nope, this is nuts, because, you

14:58

know, I love

14:59

cats, big cats, too.

15:01

And, like, have you ever, do you have a cat?

15:03

I don't anymore, but I've had cats.

15:05

Okay, like, just watching them, and now imagining that they are bigger than you

15:10

is so horrifying.

15:12

I saw my first large mountain lion two years ago.

15:15

Oh, yeah?

15:15

It was big, like about 170-plus pounds, and my friend Colton saw it under a

15:21

tree.

15:21

We were driving, luckily.

15:22

We were inside the truck, because it was only about 30 yards away.

15:25

I would have shit my pants if I saw this thing without a barrier between us.

15:30

It was so big.

15:31

It was so big and so terrible.

15:34

It looked like a demon.

15:35

Like, when you lock eyes with that thing, and again, I'm looking at it through

15:39

a windshield

15:39

and also binoculars.

15:41

So I had 10-power binoculars, and I'm zoomed into its face, and I'm seeing it,

15:46

like, just

15:47

looking right at me with this pumpkin head, the big mandible muscles that go

15:52

over the top

15:53

of the skull.

15:54

It's like, oh, Christ.

15:56

And again, I'm looking at it through a windshield and binoculars, so I'm

15:59

removed slightly from

16:00

the actual force of the experience of its eyeballs on me.

16:04

But if I was standing there just looking at it, I probably would have had a

16:07

psychedelic experience.

16:08

I probably would have tripped out.

16:10

I probably would have gotten into shock.

16:12

I saw a grizzly bear once in Alberta.

16:16

I saw one of those, and not even a big one, about a six-foot grizzly bear.

16:20

But it looks at you—I've seen black bears before.

16:23

That was the first grizzly I saw in the wild.

16:25

And they look right through you.

16:28

Yeah, that's the—to me, and I've only seen footage of grizzly bears, but

16:31

every once in

16:32

a while, they have, like, this crackhead look where it's like they're doing

16:35

that thing where

16:36

they're looking to see what you got.

16:38

Yeah.

16:38

Like, they're just like, what can I take from this?

16:40

And that you can't do anything to stop them unless you have a gun.

16:42

Yeah, we had guns, luckily.

16:44

We had shotguns.

16:45

But we—when we were looking at it, it looked like it's going to eat you.

16:50

It looks like, am I going to eat you?

16:53

Like, it looked like—couldn't care less if you live or die.

16:58

Right.

16:59

Like, just all it's doing all day long is searching for something slow.

17:04

Something with a limp, something that fucks up, something that leaves behind a

17:08

kid, something

17:09

that, you know, a dog's chained up to a tree.

17:11

Whoops, got one.

17:12

Right.

17:13

And that's all it's doing all day long, and it's just a big monster.

17:16

And if it didn't exist—if a grizzly bear didn't exist, and there was reports

17:20

of this

17:21

enormous dog-like creature that eats everything and can kill a moose and lives

17:26

in the woods,

17:27

it would be way scarier than Bigfoot.

17:30

Yeah, for sure.

17:31

Well, maybe.

17:32

Maybe not.

17:32

A Kodiak?

17:34

Yeah, but—

17:34

Kodiak bear would be scarier than Bigfoot?

17:36

The worst things can happen than be eaten.

17:41

Oh, like the Come For Me Bigfoot books?

17:43

Do you know about those books?

17:44

No.

17:45

Well, I've—yeah, obviously I've heard of them.

17:49

There's a whole genre of erotica written about Bigfoot.

17:53

Yeah, that's not my thing.

17:55

Well, you're a man.

17:55

Well, you're a man.

17:56

It seems to be ladies like the—they like their stuff in writing.

18:03

That's what they like.

18:05

They like reading their pornography.

18:07

Yeah, they also like monsters.

18:08

Yes.

18:08

Yeah.

18:09

Werewolves and vampires.

18:10

Vampires.

18:11

They like vampires that fall in love with them.

18:12

Right.

18:13

Yeah.

18:13

He's going to eat everybody else, so not me.

18:15

But you can change them.

18:16

Yeah, you can change them.

18:17

That's also why some crazy ladies like serial killers.

18:21

Yeah, even serial killers that kill a bunch of women, they write to them.

18:25

Like Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker, tons of women were writing to him in

18:28

jail.

18:29

Ted Bundy, too?

18:30

Mm-hmm.

18:30

Yeah.

18:31

Strange.

18:32

I'm a big fan of true crime, so I don't—I'm not sexually aroused by it.

18:37

Well, congratulations.

18:38

Isn't that—that's a good thing.

18:39

That is a very good thing.

18:40

Yeah.

18:40

But the thing about predators versus, like, Bigfoot or any of these things,

18:49

like, there seems

18:50

to be—the unknown animals, for whatever reason, are the ones that are most

18:55

perplexing to us,

18:57

the ones we're most fascinated by.

18:58

Like, an orca, I think, is more fascinating than Bigfoot.

19:01

Like, if Bigfoot was just Gigantopithecus, it was just an enormous orangutan-looking

19:07

creature

19:07

that lived in the woods and was omnivorous and ate a bunch of stuff and tried

19:11

to hide

19:12

from people, it'd be kind of cool.

19:13

But it wouldn't really be as cool as this insanely intelligent super dolphin

19:18

that—

19:20

—lives in the ocean and, you know, has this strong family bond and, you know—

19:24

Teach their different styles of dispatching prey.

19:27

Yeah, teach them how to knock over ice shelves to get a seal to slide off.

19:31

That seal footage is so tragic where it's waving it down.

19:35

Yeah, it sucks for the seal.

19:36

You're rooting for the seal, but—

19:38

You're rooting for him, but you know he's doomed.

19:39

I keep wondering—because you know how orcas are going after boats now?

19:43

Yeah.

19:44

None of them have—of the people that I'm aware of have successfully gotten in

19:47

the water.

19:48

So I keep wondering what they would do to the people.

19:51

I don't think there's any record of them killing human beings other than human

19:56

beings in, like,

19:58

SeaWorld and stuff like that.

19:59

But that's just—

20:00

Would there be a record?

20:01

That's a good question.

20:02

There would if there were survivors.

20:05

And there's a lot of record of shark attacks, obviously.

20:07

Well, those are—don't listen—I don't give any mind to those—the records

20:13

of shark attacks.

20:14

Do you know how—well, it is so hard to report a shark attack.

20:18

So, like, if I go swimming, right, and I leave my stuff on the beach, and I—someone

20:24

calls the police, they don't—I didn't come home or whatever.

20:27

Right.

20:27

And they find me mangled on the beach the next day.

20:30

I had a cardiac event and then was scavenged by sharks.

20:34

You think so?

20:35

I'm positive.

20:35

That's how the ISAF, International Shark Attack File—it's very difficult for

20:41

a shark attack victim to be reported.

20:45

That's interesting.

20:46

Do you think they do that so that they discourage people becoming vigilantes

20:51

and going out and killing sharks?

20:54

They're trying to make it seem—I think it's legit, like a Jaws thing.

20:58

They don't want to make it seem dangerous.

21:00

Right.

21:01

But they don't want to make it seem like it's a bad place for tourists.

21:04

I would not go into the ocean where there are sharks, and I know that sounds

21:07

nuts, but I wouldn't.

21:08

It's not worth it.

21:09

My buddy Duncan was in Hawaii either just after—I can't remember—or just

21:14

before a guy got killed by a shark at the same resort that he was at.

21:17

Yeah.

21:17

Some guy was swimming and a tiger shark just took him out.

21:20

No.

21:20

That's the—I'm actually working on a shark attack video now.

21:23

It was just—there's a lot of untruths people talk about with sharks, I think.

21:30

Or maybe misunderstandings.

21:32

They just caught a bull shark in Texas in a river.

21:34

Yeah.

21:34

They were real recently.

21:36

And those are the scary ones.

21:38

They are.

21:38

But—

21:39

Because those fuckers are super aggressive, and they go into freshwater all the

21:42

way up to Illinois.

21:43

They found them in Illinois.

21:44

Alton, yeah.

21:45

Yeah.

21:47

So you're deep in this.

21:48

So you think it's a Jaws thing, so they're just trying to not—what do you

21:53

think ever happened with that Egyptian one?

21:55

The Egyptian one's the craziest one.

21:56

You ever see that footage with the guys, like, screaming for his father?

22:00

Oh, my gosh.

22:00

Yeah.

22:00

Oh.

22:01

That's brutal.

22:01

Well, because—so, again, did you know that the shark that did that, like, paraded

22:05

the head around?

22:06

Yeah, like—and so that's one of the things that I said is misinformation.

22:10

Or—I hate that I'm using that word.

22:12

Yeah, that word's been tainted.

22:14

Yeah, that word's been tainted.

22:15

But, um—

22:17

So they say it's, like, mistaken identity, or—sharks attack because they're

22:23

pissed.

22:24

That's why they attack?

22:27

Yes.

22:27

They're not just hungry?

22:28

Correct.

22:28

I—that would—I mean, I can't be certain, but that would be my opinion.

22:33

Because do you remember, like, when we were—or I remember when I was a kid, I

22:37

saw all these shark documentaries that they would show, like, the surfer and

22:42

then a sea turtle or a seal side by side.

22:45

Like, from the bottom, these are—they don't look the same at all.

22:47

No.

22:48

And sharks are one big sensory organ.

22:49

They know—and, like, you know, where they hang out, they hang out at the

22:52

bottom.

22:52

They can—and then they're silhouetted by light from the top.

22:55

They can see perfectly.

22:56

They're in the water all their lives.

22:58

They're one big sensory organ.

22:59

They know what they're attacking.

23:01

And I think they want people out of their water.

23:03

Because that wasn't even a consumption with that guy, with the guy who was

23:08

yelling, Papa, um, whatever his name was.

23:11

While Stand By Me was playing in the background.

23:13

And that woman, oh my god, oh my god.

23:15

It seems like a movie.

23:16

Yeah.

23:17

It does.

23:18

And then, yeah, because—you know the part where it turns him underwater and

23:23

his legs go up?

23:24

Yeah.

23:24

It took off his jaw.

23:25

Because after that, it's—he's gargling.

23:29

And, uh, Popov's body was reportedly examined by forensic experts at a morgue

23:38

in Hurghada, who claimed he was disfigured and with many parts missing.

23:43

The shark said to have torn his head off, disfigured his face, and separated

23:47

body parts that were retrieved from the sea.

23:50

It's also reported the beast ripped apart his chest and ate parts of his

23:53

abdomen and hands.

23:54

See, that's not an attempt to predate, in my opinion.

23:57

Interesting.

23:58

So you think that people get in the way of fish and seals, and that's probably

24:02

what the sharks actually want to eat?

24:05

Yeah.

24:05

And they, like, these assholes are flopping around and farting in the water and—

24:09

Yeah.

24:09

And—or she just had pups nearby.

24:12

There's anything like that.

24:14

There was also the story that I read about that particular attack where they

24:20

were saying that, um, some ranchers had dumped sheep carcasses.

24:25

Did you hear about that?

24:27

I still don't think that that—sharks know what they're biting.

24:32

See, because if a shark bites something hard, it really damages them.

24:36

They know what they bite before they bite it.

24:38

Mm.

24:39

And I—I agree that sharks don't see us as food.

24:43

That we—sometimes they do if they're desperate.

24:45

But I do not—I think we're far from ideal.

24:48

Because if they did eat us, they would eat us all the time.

24:50

Right.

24:50

All the time.

24:51

Yeah.

24:51

So I think—because, like, you know how great whites in California don't eat

24:55

people?

24:56

Right.

24:56

They only attack people.

24:57

Because we're literally in the surf where seals like to be.

25:02

So we're in the way.

25:03

Right.

25:04

And they know that seals probably don't like to play around where surfers are.

25:07

So they're like, oh, these things are here, and I'm hungry if these things are

25:10

gone.

25:10

And they know that if they come up and mangle someone, the rest of people are

25:14

going to be gone.

25:15

Right.

25:15

It'll clear the area for a while.

25:17

Right.

25:18

Is this your own personal theory?

25:19

Oh, no.

25:20

There's an amazing channel called Sharks Happen.

25:23

Hmm.

25:24

And it's so funny, too, because the guy, he's not a marine biologist or

25:27

anything.

25:28

His name is just Hal, and he's a machinist in Michigan.

25:31

And it's so funny, because I fundamentally think he knows more about sharks

25:35

than anyone that I've listened to.

25:37

And I think it's funny how some guy in Michigan is the expert.

25:41

That is funny.

25:42

No.

25:42

Yeah.

25:43

Like, how are you getting your information, bro?

25:47

He's good at it.

25:47

He goes back on newspapers, because, you know, to him, all the marine biologists

25:53

are just so full of it.

25:55

And there is some of that.

25:56

There really is.

25:57

Because they will skew something so far to not blame the sharks.

26:02

Yeah.

26:03

Like, this kid, probably, like, 20 years ago now, had his leg ripped off by a

26:08

bull shark, which is terrifying to think,

26:12

because it, like, clamped onto his calf, and then it, in shallow water, and his

26:16

leg came off not where it was bit.

26:17

Oh.

26:18

So it, like, ripped it off.

26:19

Oh.

26:20

And I can't recall his name, but that was not in the shark stats as, that was

26:26

in the shark stats as provoked, because the kid was fishing earlier.

26:30

Oh.

26:32

So it's like, that's a provoked attack.

26:33

It's like...

26:34

So fishing is a provoked attack?

26:36

Being in, being, like, a seven-year-old in knee-deep water after someone was

26:39

fishing is a provoked attack.

26:41

That's crazy.

26:42

And that's not in the stats the same way.

26:43

So, like, that's not in a shark attack.

26:45

Oh, interesting.

26:46

So there's shark attacks where there's no possible evidence of provocation, and

26:50

then there's provoked shark attacks, like, oh, you were asking for it?

26:54

Correct.

26:54

Wow.

26:55

Yeah, and that's the video I'm working on.

26:57

I go through all the attacks in 2015, and I say, like, okay, these are, I think

27:02

it was, like, I hope I'm not wrong about this, but, like, 11 or 12 attacks that

27:08

they say are legit attacks because they were unprovoked.

27:12

They were, like, random attacks.

27:13

But then I talk about the other, like, 20 that were provoked attacks.

27:17

And so when you see shark attack statistics, they only say unprovoked attacks?

27:22

Correct.

27:22

So they're trying to downplay the shark attack.

27:24

Correct.

27:25

And as I said, there are so many people who, like, just get found bitten up and,

27:28

like, oh, they drowned and got scavenged because sharks are scavengers and

27:32

sharks don't eat people.

27:33

That's so crazy.

27:35

Yeah.

27:35

That's interesting.

27:36

I never really thought about that.

27:37

Yeah, the attacks are very skewed.

27:40

It's very fascinating to me how our attitude about sharks changed with the

27:45

whole shark fin soup thing.

27:47

Like, all of a sudden, everybody wanted to protect sharks.

27:50

Like, you shouldn't fish for sharks.

27:51

Like, you shouldn't eat sharks because, you know, Mako shark is...

27:55

Always been served in restaurants.

27:57

I've had Mako shark a bunch of times in restaurants.

27:58

It's very good.

27:59

It tastes like swordfish.

28:00

But suddenly, sharks were supposed to be protected.

28:04

Like, Jesus, shouldn't we protect the fucking tuna?

28:07

Like, tuna are delicious.

28:09

They don't kill you.

28:10

They're majestic, amazing creatures.

28:12

And we've killed, like, 90% of them in the ocean.

28:14

Yeah.

28:14

I mean, fuck sharks.

28:16

That's what I think.

28:17

I mean, I love sharks.

28:19

Me too.

28:19

But fuck them.

28:20

Yeah, I mean, they're assholes.

28:21

Yeah, they can go fuck off.

28:23

There's an area in Key West where people fish off the piers where you have to

28:29

pull in your fish so fast because the waters are infested with sharks.

28:33

Well, that's a whole problem now with sharks because they're learning it's

28:36

easier to pull it off our hooks.

28:38

Mm-hmm.

28:38

Yeah.

28:39

Which makes sense.

28:40

Sure.

28:40

So they hang around piers for people to fish.

28:42

And then when someone catches a big one and it takes a while to get in, they're

28:46

like, oh, here we go.

28:47

Dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun.

28:49

It's, uh, there's an incredible video of, uh, this guy is pulling in a tuna.

28:55

And as he's pulling in a tuna, this great white cuts the tuna in half.

28:59

Have you seen that?

28:59

I have seen that.

29:00

Oh, oh.

29:01

You know, there have been people swallowed alive by great white sharks.

29:04

Jeez.

29:05

No.

29:06

Look, they're, they're real.

29:08

And if they weren't, they would be the craziest monster ever.

29:12

We have this very bizarre thing with the human mind where we become accustomed

29:16

to things.

29:17

Mm-hmm.

29:17

You know, we're accustomed to cell phones, show a cell phone to a guy in 1400s.

29:20

He thinks you're a wizard, you know?

29:22

Mm-hmm.

29:22

And to us, it's like, oh, that one sucks.

29:24

You got a small phone.

29:25

Yeah.

29:26

Yeah.

29:26

But there's, there's something bizarre where we get accustomed to these insane

29:31

creatures like sharks.

29:33

I often think that, that because, you know, there are so many creatures right

29:36

now that I would give anything to be able to see that are, you know, that are

29:39

extinct.

29:40

Mm-hmm.

29:40

And, but there are probably so many alive right now that if they were extinct,

29:44

I would wish I could see them.

29:46

But I take them for granted that they're not extinct.

29:48

Oh, yeah, for sure.

29:49

The giraffe, I think, is one of them.

29:51

Right.

29:51

If I saw a giraffe, I'd be, or like the fossil or skeleton of one, I'd be like,

29:54

I wonder what that thing looked like.

29:56

Well, I found out about your page because I saw the video about the 50-foot

30:01

crocodile in the Congo.

30:03

And, um, as a person who's, I've always been obsessed with crocodiles.

30:08

Okay.

30:08

I, I think they're, you know, one of, one of the coolest animals that ever has

30:13

existed and the fact that they're with us right now and you get to see this

30:18

insane creature that can go without eating for a year.

30:22

Mm-hmm.

30:22

Lays completely still in six inches of water and then explodes and pulls a

30:26

zebra into the water.

30:28

Right.

30:28

They're just amazing.

30:29

They're amazing and they're, they're so fucking big, man.

30:34

Yes.

30:35

There's still, like, that alligator that we have out there that you saw in the

30:37

lobby, that's, uh, 14 feet.

30:39

Yeah, that's not even a big, I mean, it's a big alligator, but it's not a big

30:42

alligator, but it's not a big crocodile.

30:44

It's a little baby crocodile.

30:45

It's not a huge alligator.

30:47

No.

30:47

No.

30:48

No, like, what is the biggest alligator of the river?

30:50

I think it's 20 feet, right?

30:51

19, 19 feet, 9 inches.

30:53

Oh, okay.

30:54

Where, is that a Florida alligator?

30:55

I, I want to say it was Alabama.

30:57

Really?

30:58

Mm-hmm.

30:58

No shit.

30:59

Alabama, that's interesting.

31:01

Yeah, like, um, it's all up in that whole area.

31:05

Like, Louisiana has a bunch of them.

31:07

Texas has a bunch of them.

31:08

Northern Texas has started to show alligators.

31:11

There was a sighting yesterday, actually.

31:13

There was a video that these guys took of these two alligators swimming in a

31:17

lake in northern Texas.

31:18

People were like, what the fuck are they doing up here?

31:20

They're expanding.

31:21

When I was a kid, I lived in Gainesville, Florida, from when I was 11 until I

31:26

was 13.

31:27

And, uh, Gainesville had a lot of alligators.

31:29

Uh, it's like where the University of Florida is.

31:32

Mm-hmm.

31:32

And, uh, there's a place called, um, God, what is it called?

31:36

Lake Alice, I think it is.

31:37

And that's where the alligators used to be.

31:39

And I remember when I was there, this lady, she got her, her little dog got

31:42

eaten.

31:43

She was walking her little dog by the water and just jumped out of the water

31:46

and snatched her dog.

31:47

And everybody was freaked out.

31:48

Like, what the fuck?

31:50

It ate her dog.

31:50

Have you seen that footage of the alligator that grabs that woman's dog and

31:55

then she tries to go in after it and it gives up the dog and takes her?

31:58

Yeah.

31:58

Yeah, that's pretty brutal.

31:59

Very brutal.

32:00

Yeah, they target people.

32:02

Mm-hmm.

32:02

Yeah, they don't target people as much as crocodiles do, but they definitely do.

32:06

They eat people.

32:07

And they're everywhere.

32:08

No.

32:09

There's, there's so many of them in Florida.

32:11

They're just infested.

32:13

And they were protected when I was a kid.

32:15

I know, that's, there's, there's this great clip I found a long time ago online

32:19

about, it's like from the 70s.

32:21

And it's this woman talking about, like, how this might be the last alligator

32:25

we ever see.

32:26

Because, like, they're trying to make it seem so endangered.

32:29

And it's like, I don't think so.

32:30

They thought they were.

32:31

And I wonder why.

32:32

I wonder why they thought they were.

32:33

And I wonder what kind of an accurate accounting of the animals in the Everglades

32:39

they had.

32:40

I don't think we could, I mean, with poison we probably could.

32:42

But I don't think there's any feasible way to exterminate alligators, even if

32:45

we tried, which we weren't.

32:47

Well, certainly not now.

32:50

I wonder if maybe the ecosystem was better in check before people came along.

32:54

Like, you know, when you think about Florida.

32:57

So, right, Florida, I think, was the first ever city in the country.

33:03

Is that correct?

33:04

I believe St. Augustine, maybe.

33:05

Yeah, I think you're right.

33:07

So, that's where, you know, that's where Cabeza de Vaca landed.

33:13

He landed in Florida, right, when he made his trek across the country.

33:18

And so, it's a long, I mean, there's hundreds of years of people living there.

33:23

But cities don't really emerge.

33:26

Like, that kind of Florida life, when is that?

33:30

Like, when does Miami emerge?

33:33

You know, when is, when do you start seeing cities?

33:36

Like, the early 1900s?

33:37

What?

33:38

I mean, no.

33:39

It's got to be.

33:40

Earlier than that?

33:41

Earlier than that, yeah.

33:42

Well, it depends.

33:43

I mean, modern.

33:43

Right, but what does it look like?

33:44

You know what I'm saying?

33:45

Like, when does it start fucking with the habitat of the alligators?

33:49

Because a lot of Miami, they actually filled in.

33:51

Right.

33:52

Yeah.

33:52

Because they got to drain the swamps.

33:54

Right.

33:54

Said the thing.

33:56

Legitimately.

33:57

And they had to, I don't know how the fuck they even did it.

34:01

But that's the real concern about if the ocean level rises.

34:04

Like, a lot of stuff is super porous.

34:05

It's just going to flood all that area.

34:07

Yeah.

34:08

But I wonder, like, how much of an impact human beings have.

34:12

Like, maybe there was the Florida panther.

34:15

There was a lot of...

34:15

And then also, back then, there was no snakes.

34:18

Right?

34:19

So, right now, not no snakes, but no pythons.

34:22

Burmese pythons.

34:24

Which are an invasive species that...

34:27

Apparently, there's two sources.

34:28

One of them is pets, and the other one was there was a research center that got

34:32

hit by a storm.

34:34

And they lost a bunch of pythons, which is kind of hilarious.

34:37

And also, Nile crocodiles.

34:40

There's Nile crocodiles in the Everglades.

34:41

Really?

34:42

I didn't know that.

34:42

Yeah.

34:43

There's a breeding population, they think.

34:44

Wow.

34:45

They think they...

34:46

Well, they've already found several, and they have shoot-on-sight orders for Nile

34:51

crocodiles.

34:52

I've seen reports online, but unreliable.

34:54

Guys saying, really?

34:55

They took our cattle.

34:56

They're stealing cows.

34:58

Yeah.

34:58

I don't know if that's true.

34:59

Like, a 16-foot Nile crocodile stealing cattle.

35:02

It could.

35:02

That's what I was saying.

35:03

It certainly could.

35:04

But I don't know if they ever got to be that big.

35:06

And I do know that two that they captured shared the same genetics.

35:11

So, they're from a very close genetic line.

35:15

So, they think they were related.

35:17

This is the first number I could find about extinction.

35:20

Serious threat.

35:22

Oh, come on.

35:23

100,000.

35:24

Endoquine-disrupting pesticides like DDT.

35:27

That kind of makes sense.

35:29

The other thing I read was more about hunting for leather.

35:32

Oh, okay.

35:33

And meat.

35:33

Yeah.

35:34

It's up to 5 million now.

35:36

Oh, that's so crazy.

35:38

5 million.

35:39

They say if there is a pond in Florida, there is likely an alligator in our

35:43

pond.

35:43

Likely.

35:44

More likely than not.

35:45

There's a giant reptile that's swimming around the bottom of that thing and

35:49

occasionally poking

35:51

its eyeballs up and then dropping back down.

35:53

Yeah.

35:54

There is now, because of the pythons, 90 plus percent of all mammals in the

36:01

Everglades

36:02

are missing.

36:03

Really?

36:04

Yeah.

36:04

Wow.

36:04

Find out what the actual number is.

36:06

I think it's higher than 90%.

36:07

I think it might be 99%.

36:10

Like the sightings and the accounts of animals and the record of animals and

36:15

when wildlife

36:17

biologists do a count and they try to get an accurate assessment of what the

36:21

population

36:22

numbers are, it's down in some preposterous number.

36:26

And then snakes are everywhere.

36:28

It's the number one place for Burmese pythons on earth.

36:31

Yeah.

36:31

Well, in the Everglades.

36:33

Invasive species have such an advantage because no one knows how to deal with

36:36

them.

36:36

Yeah.

36:37

And these fuckers are huge.

36:39

Yeah.

36:40

And you see how they're eating alligators now, too?

36:42

Yes.

36:43

I mean, that would make sense, but I'm sure there's plenty of them are getting

36:46

eaten, too.

36:47

90% decline of animals in the area due to pythons.

36:50

Wow.

36:50

Nuts.

36:52

Yeah, they're eating alligators.

36:55

It's like a famous photograph of an alligator that's inside a python's body and

36:59

it burst.

37:00

Yeah, I have seen that.

37:01

So it burst out.

37:01

Yeah.

37:01

Isn't that a caiman, though?

37:03

Do not know.

37:04

Are there caimans in the Everglades?

37:07

No, I think just the picture I'm thinking of.

37:09

No, there aren't.

37:09

But there's a picture I'm thinking.

37:11

There might be actually caimans in the Everglades, even though they're South

37:13

American.

37:14

Yeah, I should have.

37:14

Some asshole might have let them go.

37:15

I should have said that to me, not to you, but the picture I was thinking of is

37:20

a caiman

37:20

that busted out of an anaconda.

37:22

Oh, okay.

37:23

Yeah, I'm sure that happens, too.

37:24

I think this one is different.

37:25

This is in the Everglades and it's a python and a smaller alligator.

37:29

I think it's like, yeah, there it is.

37:32

Oh, no, that's the one I was thinking of.

37:35

There's a couple different ones, unless they're all the same.

37:37

Oh, yeah, I'm sure there's a bunch.

37:38

There's one up top that's eating one.

37:40

Look at that one.

37:40

The one, the image.

37:42

Oh, that's an alligator eating a python.

37:45

So they eat each other.

37:46

Depending on who's bigger.

37:48

Circle of life.

37:48

Circle of life.

37:49

Yeah, depending on who's bigger.

37:51

Jesus Christ.

37:52

Just the idea that that thing could swallow a fucking alligator is just so

37:56

bizarre.

37:57

Yeah, that's another animal that if it didn't exist, like a crocodile, if it

38:02

didn't exist,

38:03

you'd be like, what are you talking about?

38:05

There's a 50-foot giant reptile that's hiding in the water.

38:10

And if you go out there, it'd eat you.

38:11

So I'm also a dinosaur nerd.

38:14

And are you familiar with the updated Quetzalcoatl?

38:19

No.

38:21

So they found this trackway.

38:22

Now we know that they were competent quadrupeds.

38:26

But this trackway abruptly.

38:28

So Quetzalcoatl was a real thing?

38:30

The giant pterosaurs?

38:32

Quetzalcoatl is the Aztec god.

38:35

You know, it's the winged serpent?

38:39

I think that that's where they named the flying reptile off of.

38:42

Oh, okay.

38:43

I didn't even know that there was an actual dinosaur named Quetzalcoatl.

38:45

Well, now you're making me nervous.

38:47

Well, we don't.

38:48

The good thing is we have Jamie.

38:49

I'm no expert.

38:51

But I remember Quetzalcoatl was this insane Aztec serpent.

38:59

Oh, okay.

39:00

Here it is.

39:01

Yeah.

39:01

Look at that thing.

39:02

So it's a winged reptile-like bird.

39:05

But they found this trackway that suddenly became much longer stride,

39:13

which means it started sprinting.

39:15

Whoa.

39:16

If you look up Quetzalcoatl compared to a giraffe,

39:21

they were, like, sprinting around.

39:22

So they thought forever that they had to jump off something to make flight.

39:25

But now we know that they were able to go fast enough to make their own flight.

39:30

So this thing is, they're as big as giraffes.

39:32

They're as big as giraffes, and they can fly, and they're predatory.

39:35

And it's believed that they're probably the only thing around

39:38

that would have given Tyrannosaurus rex paws.

39:41

Whoa.

39:42

In a fight, T-Rex could obviously win.

39:45

But imagine being able to sprint, because that spear would do some damage.

39:48

Wow.

39:51

I didn't know that they called them Quetzalcoatl.

39:54

Well, wingspan of 40 feet.

39:56

Yeah.

39:56

Quetzalcoatlus, the largest known animal to take to the sky.

40:00

Few fossilized, but known from only a few fossilized bones from West Texas.

40:06

Just how such a massive animal got airborne has been mostly a matter of

40:10

speculation.

40:12

Something it rocked forward on its wingtips like a vampire bat, or that it

40:15

built up speed

40:16

by running and flapping like an albatross.

40:17

Or that it didn't fly at all.

40:19

But according to new research, the mammoth creature probably leaped, jumping at

40:23

least eight feet

40:24

into the air before lifting off by sweeping its wings.

40:27

Whoa.

40:29

Yeah.

40:29

So imagine, like, you're driving at that thing in a car.

40:33

It could take off before you hit it.

40:35

You know, I don't know.

40:36

It's just nuts.

40:37

I'm sure you know about terror birds.

40:39

Of course.

40:40

Yes.

40:41

You know.

40:42

Those are here.

40:43

Yeah.

40:44

Right?

40:44

And didn't they exist?

40:45

Like, what was the most recent?

40:47

When did, how long ago did terror birds exist?

40:50

They existed with people.

40:53

No, I don't think so.

40:54

No?

40:54

No.

40:55

I don't believe so.

40:56

I believe they were like five million.

40:59

I think it's millions.

40:59

Yeah.

40:59

Right?

40:59

No.

41:00

Yeah.

41:00

It says no.

41:01

It says didn't exist with people.

41:03

Last sets of terror birds extinct over 10,000 years ago.

41:06

Oh.

41:07

Possible for that one.

41:08

But this says there's no way humans could have ever met the terror birds.

41:11

Why is that?

41:12

Yeah.

41:12

If it's 10,000 years ago, how could they say that?

41:14

It says the research regarding the possibility of humans living aside them says

41:17

that there

41:17

are no way.

41:18

So, I don't know.

41:19

Oh, I don't believe that.

41:20

A researcher said it.

41:21

Yeah.

41:21

You don't know, bitch.

41:22

There's no way you know what happened 10,000 years ago.

41:24

If they lived 10,000 years ago and we lived 10,000 years ago, it's open to

41:29

speculation.

41:30

For sure.

41:30

It's open.

41:31

This one says between 53 million and 18,000 years ago.

41:36

Oh, how weird.

41:36

That's a huge window.

41:37

What a fucking window.

41:38

Like, they don't know?

41:39

Hey, man.

41:40

You guys need to do some more work.

41:42

Don't be making me fucking look stupid from a Google search.

41:45

That's crazy.

41:46

That's such a wide stretch.

41:48

53 million to 18,000?

41:52

Well, if it is 18,000, people are here.

41:55

For sure.

41:55

They found footprints that are, I think, they're in the 22,000 years range.

42:00

Yeah.

42:00

I thought it went up even more recently than that.

42:02

I think you're right.

42:02

Yeah.

42:02

Yeah.

42:03

I think you're right.

42:03

And this is like what's thrown that Clovis first hypothesis into a sort of a

42:09

tailspin.

42:11

I suspect that there was a lot more civilization than we know about going on in

42:16

North America, particularly, but everywhere else, too.

42:19

I think you're right.

42:20

I think you're definitely right.

42:22

And I think a lot of Native American people take offense to the Bering Strait

42:27

hypothesis.

42:30

You know, that people all came over here from Asia into the North American landmass

42:34

through the Bering Land Bridge.

42:36

A lot of Native Americans say that's a crock of shit.

42:39

Really?

42:39

Yeah.

42:40

They think that people were always here.

42:41

They think people had come from South America.

42:45

They existed in South America before.

42:47

They made it up through here.

42:48

The people lived here.

42:49

And that we really don't have an accurate account.

42:51

Like, to say that, I think the idea behind it is Native Americans, if they

42:57

really did come from Asia, well, they're just immigrants, too.

43:02

Right?

43:03

And what they're saying is there's no real evidence of that.

43:06

And, in fact, the evidence of human beings being here is so far back before

43:11

that, before even the Ice Age, that, and this is pretty clear with the

43:15

footprints that they found, that there's other explanations to how humans got

43:21

here.

43:22

And perhaps, even though, the problem is there's no other primates here, right?

43:27

Like, North America.

43:28

Yeah, the humans didn't, as far as I know.

43:31

Didn't evolve here.

43:32

No.

43:32

Right.

43:33

Because wasn't it only the Caucasus in Africa, I believe?

43:36

Yeah.

43:36

And then, also, primates in South America.

43:40

That gets weird.

43:41

Because you have different monkeys.

43:42

That's a big mystery, in my opinion.

43:45

Yeah.

43:45

I mean, right now, the best hypothesis is that primates came over on floating

43:49

vegetation.

43:50

What?

43:51

Well, so the distance was less, but not by a lot.

43:55

Oh, so this is Pangea times?

43:56

No.

43:56

I mean, there are still continents, but it was...

43:59

But, I mean, as it's, like, separating?

44:00

Correct.

44:01

And, uh, I don't know.

44:03

That seems weird to me.

44:04

How many monkeys are going to get on a raft?

44:05

I mean, like, if there's a hurricane, and it's a bunch of them.

44:09

But how many?

44:11

How?

44:11

What?

44:12

That would be nuts.

44:13

That's crazy.

44:14

I think North America only has one primate that was not, um, believed to be

44:21

invasive, which

44:22

was Smilodectus, I think.

44:24

So, all the primates in South America are believed to be invasive?

44:28

Well, I mean, depends on how you define invasive, but from the old world is

44:32

what they're called.

44:33

Old world versus new world monkeys.

44:35

Wow.

44:36

There's so many mysteries, right?

44:38

There's so many mysteries with human beings, like, when they settled here.

44:43

Are you aware of, uh, there's a guy who's done a lot of research on that wall

44:47

in Montana?

44:48

Do you know that wall in Montana?

44:50

Mm-mm.

44:50

So, there's a, there's an ancient wall in Montana that some people have tried

44:56

to say is a natural

44:58

rock formation, and almost anybody looks at it and goes, you're out of your

45:01

fucking mind.

45:02

That's 100% placed in stacked stones.

45:05

But the problem is, this, this ancient wall, look at that.

45:08

I mean, shut the fuck up.

45:10

How is that?

45:11

Oh, yeah.

45:12

Shut, just shut the fuck up.

45:13

Can I see the other, the original picture, Jamie?

45:15

That one, we're, yeah.

45:17

I mean, shut the fuck up.

45:19

Someone stacked that, for sure.

45:21

It's in a straight line.

45:22

They're stacked on top of each other.

45:24

They form, fit together.

45:26

They're, they're placed, you know, at the same height.

45:30

They're carved and transported.

45:32

Yeah, something was going on, right?

45:34

So, some ancient, ancient civilization had this, and I think it's several

45:40

football fields long.

45:42

I think it's really long.

45:43

Like, I think what they, what they've discovered versus how much more of it

45:48

could be, because also, a lot of it is covered in dirt.

45:51

And if this thing is, you know, 25, 30,000 years old, who knows how long it is,

45:55

how long it's been there.

45:57

Like, who knows how deep it even goes.

45:59

The sage wall.

46:02

That's what it is.

46:03

Wow.

46:03

So, what is that all about?

46:06

Like, that was on private land.

46:08

And apparently, originally, it was covered in trees, and, and they cleared the

46:13

area.

46:13

Sure.

46:14

And, and, and so, initially, people were thinking that it was some sort of a

46:17

natural formation, but then as they cleared the area, they're like, wait a

46:19

minute.

46:20

Yeah.

46:20

What is this?

46:21

So, no explanation, no civilization tied to that area, especially one that's

46:26

capable of moving monolithic stones.

46:29

But then, 1996, they found it.

46:31

Yeah.

46:32

While hiking around the property, one day, we discovered the sage wall.

46:35

The wall is 275 feet long and 24 feet high, a jaw-dropping marvel.

46:42

In order to make these boulder areas more accessible and highlight their beauty,

46:46

we created a moderate two-trail, two-mile trail system.

46:49

Additional features of the trail include 400-year-old Douglas fir trees, the

46:53

spectacular views of the Ruby Valley 20 miles away, and the Highland Mountain

46:58

Range sitting at 10,000 feet in elevation.

47:00

So, this is it.

47:01

This is, like, high elevation, covered in trees, on a piece of private land

47:06

that these people just hadn't noticed that they had this thing on there.

47:10

You know, it's probably some massive ranch in Montana.

47:13

Right.

47:14

And then, like, okay, what's this?

47:17

No explanations.

47:18

Right.

47:19

No one knows what it is.

47:19

And I love how people try to write things like that off.

47:22

Oh, that's just a natural formation.

47:25

Well, fuck you it is.

47:26

Right.

47:26

You know it's not.

47:27

I know you don't have an explanation, and this throws your whole understanding

47:31

of human civilization in North America into the garbage pen.

47:34

It really does throw it in the garbage pen.

47:36

Because, like, what happened?

47:38

What was going on there?

47:39

Was this Vikings?

47:40

Who fucking did this?

47:41

Who did it and when?

47:42

Well, I think a lot of people make the mistake of thinking of Native Americans

47:47

as, like, one group.

47:48

Right.

47:49

Like, people, I'm sure different groups came over many times, and probably a

47:51

lot longer than 20,000 years ago.

47:53

They were before 20,000 years ago.

47:55

Well, we're not exactly sure when people started traveling across the oceans.

47:58

Like, when did the Polynesians make it to Hawaii?

48:01

I don't know.

48:02

We really don't know.

48:03

No.

48:03

It's just guessing.

48:04

You know, it's kind of guessing.

48:05

What is the – do they have any sort of carbon dating on any of the material

48:11

that's related to that stone wall where they have some sort of a rough

48:15

estimation of its construction time?

48:17

I was just trying to figure out where it was.

48:23

But, you know, just – one of the things that's interesting about the Bigfoot

48:28

thing is that, for whatever reason, Native American tribes don't have a bunch

48:33

of fake animals.

48:35

Right.

48:35

They don't have a bunch of – you know, they don't have dragons and werewolves

48:39

and shit.

48:40

But they do have Bigfoot.

48:42

Mm-hmm.

48:42

And not just one tribe, but many, many, many tribes has a story of this sort of

48:48

man that lives in the woods.

48:51

Right.

48:53

Which makes you wonder.

48:53

It sure does.

48:54

Yeah.

48:55

Like I said, there's – excuse me.

48:59

There's way too much going on here that, to me – because it's so easy to

49:03

laugh at.

49:04

Like, how long have we been here, Europeans, you know?

49:06

Right.

49:06

And how long have we had the equipment to even find it?

49:10

I do think that if it is real, which is a big if, I do think it's being

49:14

suppressed.

49:15

Really?

49:16

I do.

49:17

So the government's hiding Bigfoot?

49:18

Yeah.

49:19

Really?

49:19

Would that surprise you?

49:21

Yeah.

49:21

It would?

49:22

Yeah.

49:22

I think they're too stupid to hide Bigfoot.

49:24

They're too stupid to do it well, which is why so many people believe in Bigfoot.

49:28

Why would the government hide Bigfoot?

49:29

What would be the motivation?

49:33

If you were the government and you found Bigfoot and you're like, you know what?

49:35

We've got to keep this from people.

49:36

I think there might be something about them that – well, for the same reason

49:48

I think the wall is collapsing with UFO disclosure.

49:51

I think people only recently are starting to believe that people can handle

49:57

things, or the government is only recently starting to believe that people can

50:00

handle things.

50:01

That's why you think UFO disclosure is going on?

50:04

Well, that and they can't contain it anymore.

50:06

I don't share that opinion.

50:09

Really?

50:10

Yeah.

50:10

I think they're covering for some very sophisticated drone technology.

50:15

That's what I think.

50:17

I think –

50:17

Oh, really?

50:18

Yeah.

50:18

Well, that's boring.

50:19

Maybe.

50:20

But I think it doesn't exclude UFOs.

50:25

No.

50:25

This is my perspective.

50:27

This is – and again, I'm not married to this at all.

50:29

This is just something that I have in my head.

50:31

But I believe that human beings right now are capable of propulsion – I think

50:40

we have drones that operate on a completely different propulsion system than

50:46

standard rocket fuel, fire pushes out the back, and the thing goes forward very

50:51

fast like a jet engine.

50:53

Bob Lazar shit?

50:53

Yeah, Bob Lazar shit.

50:54

Exactly.

50:55

I think they have that.

50:56

I think they've figured out a way to engineer that.

50:58

The question is where they get it, right?

51:00

And that's where I think UFOs come into play.

51:02

So like you think that what was seen by the Nimitz is all ours?

51:06

It could be because it's where it would be.

51:08

But then why would they disclose themselves?

51:10

Well, I think they found it and they reported it and they did what they had to

51:15

do.

51:15

And they didn't really talk about it publicly for many years later.

51:19

There wasn't a big news story.

51:21

I mean, when they – Commander David Fravor, when I spoke to him, it was –

51:27

first of all, the guy is as rock solid a military man as you're ever going to

51:32

talk to.

51:33

Just by the book, disciplined fighter pilot.

51:36

Those guys are like detail-oriented.

51:38

They don't fuck around.

51:39

This guy's not making up stories about other shit.

51:42

And when he describes this thing and what they saw, and then there's multiple

51:49

pilots that see it, and then there's a visual.

51:51

They have video of this thing moving off at an insane rate of speed.

51:55

They have radar imagery that shows it goes from above 50,000 feet above sea

51:59

level to like 50 in a second.

52:02

They don't know how the fuck it did it.

52:03

It goes to their cat point.

52:05

So it leaves them once they see it, and it jets off to this point, this predetermined

52:10

coordinate where they were supposed to meet up as part of their training run.

52:14

So how the fuck does it know their cat point?

52:16

Like what is – and where it is, right?

52:19

It's off the coast of San Diego.

52:20

San Diego's a big military area, right?

52:23

And it's where they do testing, and it's where they were doing the training

52:26

runs with those jets.

52:27

That's why they saw it in the first place.

52:29

If I was going to have a thing, and I was going to test it, and I was going to

52:34

test it, I would want to know like what can we – how much do our equipment

52:41

show?

52:42

What does our equipment show?

52:43

Can we see these things?

52:44

You know, Ryan Graves, who is another very reputable fighter jet pilot, he had

52:50

his encounters when they upgraded their technology in 2014.

52:55

So they upgraded the – all the sensors that allow them to detect things in

52:59

the sky, and when they did that, he started seeing these things.

53:03

They're dead still at 120 knots.

53:06

Makes no sense.

53:07

Right.

53:08

They started seeing these things.

53:09

I always fuck this up.

53:11

Is it a – it's a cube in a circle, right?

53:14

Yes.

53:14

Right.

53:15

So it's a black cube inside some sort of a translucent circle that multiple

53:20

fighter pilots have reported.

53:22

Yeah.

53:22

And the idea of some sort of gravity distorting thing, one of the features of

53:28

that, they think, would be it would look very strange.

53:33

Like it would look very strange to you, like what you see.

53:36

And if we have some sort of a gravity distorting drone that operates on a

53:40

gravity propulsion system, like somehow manipulates gravity so it can move at

53:45

insane rates of speed, I think that's where I would test it.

53:49

I would test it where the military guys – I would test it in restricted airspace.

53:52

I would test it in place, and I would say, okay, let's find out if these guys

53:56

can see it now.

53:57

Now we have new equipment.

53:58

Put the new equipment in their jets.

53:59

Let's see if they could see these things.

54:01

The concerning thing about that is if it was done by our own government.

54:06

I worry that they're trying to set up for a false flag.

54:11

Like a false UFO flag?

54:13

Yeah.

54:14

Like an alien invasion to lock down our rights?

54:17

Dun, dun, dun.

54:18

I mean, if they could stage it.

54:19

Sure.

54:20

Because, I mean, with what you're describing, no one would assume that that's

54:23

human.

54:24

Right.

54:24

No one.

54:25

No one except for people that have followed the Bob Bizarre story.

54:28

Yeah.

54:29

Because if they were back engineering that thing in 1989, as Bob says.

54:32

That's true.

54:33

It's a long time ago.

54:33

It's a long time ago.

54:34

You know, that is, that's a long time.

54:38

And for them to have 35 plus years of working on that.

54:44

So you got to go back to how long did they have it.

54:46

He said they've had it for decades.

54:47

So, but I think what he was saying back then was they really weren't making any

54:51

progress.

54:52

They were trying to figure it out.

54:54

They kept bringing in new people to try to have fresh eyes.

54:58

And that's why they brought him in.

54:59

But they really don't fucking know.

55:02

They said they didn't understand how it worked.

55:04

And they were trying to get some sort of a working model of it.

55:07

But they were able to operate it.

55:09

And that's what he was able to observe.

55:12

And that was one of the reasons why he got in trouble, allegedly.

55:14

Where when he got fired, he brought people.

55:18

They said, listen, I'm not crazy.

55:20

Let me show you.

55:20

They have fucking UFOs.

55:21

I'm going to show you this thing.

55:22

He brought the people.

55:23

Yeah.

55:23

He brought people.

55:24

And those people all said the same thing.

55:25

They all saw.

55:26

And people have filmed it too.

55:27

They actually had to increase the restricted space around Area 51 because

55:32

people were going to a very particular vantage point.

55:36

And they were filming some of these things.

55:38

So there's footage of these bizarre crafts that seem to be moving through the

55:42

sky in a way that no conventional aircraft can do.

55:45

We don't really know what they are.

55:46

And we're assuming there's some kind of a drone or something.

55:49

But I think if you go to 1989 and they have those things, and then if you have

55:55

all the money in the world, which they essentially do, they could print money.

55:59

You have black ops projects.

56:01

You have things that we, you know, because of national security interests, we

56:04

have no idea what they're doing or how they're doing it.

56:07

And then you get some of the best physicists in the world, some of the best

56:10

propulsions experts in the world.

56:12

And you throw an ungodly amount of money at this problem every year for 30 plus

56:18

years.

56:19

Then you develop these things.

56:21

And I think that's one of the reasons why they would probably keep it secret.

56:26

Because I would imagine that money was moved around in probably an illegal way.

56:35

I mean, there's without congressional oversight, there's no legal way to do it.

56:39

Exactly.

56:39

Right.

56:40

So if these guys were doing that and they were funding this secret military

56:45

project that they kept from Congress, they kept from, I mean, who knows who's

56:50

qualified to be able to see these things.

56:53

But if I had something like that, I would, that's the best cover story in the

56:56

world.

56:57

We have observed crafts that are not from this world.

57:00

Oh, that explains everything.

57:02

That's insufficient to me.

57:05

To me, too.

57:06

Yeah.

57:06

But it's fun.

57:07

It is fun.

57:08

Both of them are fun.

57:09

And I think both of them, listen, the universe is fucking huge.

57:13

We exist.

57:15

We send things to other planets.

57:17

There is a rover right now on Mars, right?

57:19

We send James Webb telescope into space.

57:22

We send rockets.

57:24

We do that.

57:25

We do that.

57:26

We would assume an advanced civilization would do that as well.

57:29

And we would assume that if an advanced civilization was interested in studying

57:33

something, we are some of the most fascinating creatures that have ever existed

57:37

in our, at least our understanding on Earth.

57:40

We're the most fascinating by far.

57:42

As weird as sharks are and all this other stuff is, we're the fucking weirdest.

57:45

We're the weirdest and we're the craziest to study.

57:48

Right.

57:49

And we're intelligent and also stupid.

57:51

You know, we're capable of great things and also terrible things.

57:56

Like, we're a very, very, very bizarre creature.

57:58

And I think I would most certainly study us.

58:01

Have you ever thought that maybe we were created by their specifications?

58:06

All the time.

58:08

Me too.

58:09

Yeah, all the time.

58:09

Yeah.

58:10

That's the big mystery of the human brain size, right?

58:13

The human brain size doubled over a period of two million years.

58:17

And there's a lot of cool, like, my favorite story is Terence McKenna's.

58:22

He had this theory.

58:23

It's called the stoned ape theory.

58:25

And it's about psilocybin.

58:26

And that these chimpanzees and lower primates started experimenting with psilocybin.

58:31

And then over the course of a couple of million years, they developed language.

58:34

They developed this ability to hunt better, fashion tools, more creativity,

58:39

glossolalia, attaching sounds to objects.

58:43

And that makes sense.

58:44

Some sort of telepathy, increased visual acuity that does come from low-dose psilocybin

58:50

use.

58:51

That seems to me like that makes a lot of sense because it coincides with

58:57

climate change.

58:58

When McKenna did this whole theory about it, one of the things he talked about

59:02

is that the exact time that the rainforest recede into grasslands

59:08

because of this change in the climate is the time where these animals emerge,

59:13

start walking on two legs, and then start eating mushrooms, he thinks.

59:17

And then two million years later become people.

59:19

Okay.

59:19

Yeah.

59:20

That's an interesting one.

59:22

But the most interesting one is they came here.

59:26

They saw us.

59:27

We were like Australopithecus.

59:28

We were some hairy creature that was kind of primate.

59:32

Like, maybe we even started using tools.

59:35

And they said, well, how does fuck with that DNA?

59:37

Let's make a labradoodle.

59:40

I don't think people think big enough in regards to that kind of thing.

59:46

Because if we had the technology to do what allegedly the aliens, alleged

59:53

aliens do, we would be doing all sorts of crazy stuff all the time.

59:57

100%.

59:58

And I don't know.

1:00:00

If we could introduce intelligent life into a planet, if there was life on a

1:00:05

planet, and we could introduce our DNA into these lower primates and make them

1:00:10

more like us, you don't think we would do it?

1:00:12

Yes.

1:00:13

100%, right?

1:00:14

Yeah, for sure.

1:00:15

Yeah, I mean, we monkey with all kinds of things all the time.

1:00:17

We're always messing around with creatures' DNA.

1:00:20

And there's a story that we talked about recently during World War I in Russia

1:00:25

where Russia was experimenting with hybridizing human beings and chimpanzees

1:00:29

for soldiers.

1:00:31

Orangutans, too.

1:00:32

Yes.

1:00:32

They switched brains with an orangutan and a human.

1:00:39

And I guess the human with the orangutan brain never regained consciousness.

1:00:45

But evidently the human brain in the orangutan did regain consciousness.

1:00:50

Really?

1:00:51

Yeah.

1:00:51

How did they do that?

1:00:53

I don't know.

1:00:54

But I only know this from a monster quest.

1:00:56

Is that real?

1:00:58

Monster quests might be a little bullshit.

1:01:01

Although monster quest did bust one of the dumbest things that I used to

1:01:05

believe.

1:01:06

The dumbest.

1:01:08

Flying rods.

1:01:09

Just the moths.

1:01:12

Yeah.

1:01:13

It's just a visual artifact of cameras where the video cameras, they catch

1:01:20

these things moving fast, close up, and it leaves a trail.

1:01:24

And so there was this famous group of people that thought that there was these

1:01:28

things that were flying around faster

1:01:31

than we can see and that they were some sort of aliens that were amongst us.

1:01:35

That's orbs and ghost hunting to me.

1:01:37

Ghost is an interesting one.

1:01:41

What do you think about ghosts?

1:01:43

I would be very surprised.

1:01:48

Well, I don't know.

1:01:50

It's a tough one.

1:01:51

You know what I think?

1:01:51

What do you think?

1:01:53

You hear them from every culture.

1:01:54

That's what gives me pause.

1:01:57

This is not like something that's only with like Europeans and Christians and

1:02:01

people that have a specific religious ideology.

1:02:04

This seems to be in almost every culture.

1:02:08

There's this concept of dead people that return.

1:02:11

Right.

1:02:11

In some sort of a mysterious form.

1:02:15

I mean, it would be silly for a Bigfoot person to say this, but that could be

1:02:20

part of the human condition.

1:02:22

Certainly.

1:02:24

It's just no one wants to think that this is the end.

1:02:25

And I don't think this is the end, but I do think ghosts are – I mean, why

1:02:31

wouldn't a ghost be like, hello?

1:02:32

Because I think it's a memory.

1:02:34

Sure.

1:02:35

I think when extreme things happen, you know, when we're talking about the

1:02:40

levels of reality being somewhat permeable under extreme situations, what is

1:02:45

more extreme than like a murder or a massacre?

1:02:48

And those are the places where people tend to see ghosts, these horrific – I

1:02:54

think the earth has a memory.

1:02:57

And I think occasionally, under the right circumstances, with the right amount

1:03:01

of anxiety, the right amount of distractions, and the heightened sense that you

1:03:06

get from being in the dark and being afraid, you can access these memories.

1:03:11

That's what I believe.

1:03:12

Yeah.

1:03:12

I see.

1:03:13

But, I mean, the opposite argument to that is pretty obvious.

1:03:17

It's like just because your anxiety is up and because all those factors and

1:03:20

because you know what's happened there, you're more jumpy.

1:03:22

Mm-hmm.

1:03:23

For sure.

1:03:24

And you see things that aren't there.

1:03:25

Right.

1:03:26

But that does – but if you see something that's not there, does it really

1:03:28

mean it's not there?

1:03:29

It doesn't necessarily, right?

1:03:31

No.

1:03:31

I've always thought that because it's like if I say I saw a ghost and I

1:03:34

actually didn't see it, but in my brain I did, like isn't that seeing a ghost?

1:03:38

Right.

1:03:39

Right.

1:03:40

That's the argument that a lot of people have in terms of psychedelics.

1:03:44

Like psychedelics, you contact God and you have this extreme spiritual

1:03:49

experience where you're in contact with this all-knowing entity.

1:03:54

And people say, oh, that's a hallucination.

1:03:57

Okay.

1:03:58

But it's the same experience as if you actually did contact God.

1:04:03

Right.

1:04:04

Like whatever that thing is that you encounter in the psychedelic realm, let's

1:04:08

say that that is a figment of your imagination.

1:04:10

I'm willing to say that.

1:04:11

But whatever that figment of your imagination creates, it creates the exact

1:04:19

same experience as if you encountered some other extremely potent life form

1:04:26

that exists in some strange form that it's not tangible.

1:04:32

It's not like it doesn't register with you as something that it's not a normal.

1:04:38

It's not like a mug of water.

1:04:40

You know, it's a thing that doesn't exist in your reality and it's

1:04:43

communicating with you.

1:04:45

It's exactly the same experience as if it's an imaginary thing or if it's a

1:04:49

real thing.

1:04:50

The experience is the same.

1:04:52

I think that's what happens with people with the ghost thing.

1:04:55

There's too many stories.

1:04:57

There's too many stories of ghosts from rational people.

1:05:00

And one of the places that has a crazy history of ghosts is the comedy store.

1:05:05

I used to try to see ghosts at the comedy store.

1:05:08

I would stay there late at night when everyone was gone.

1:05:10

I'd like sit in the main room and just hope that a ghost would show up.

1:05:13

Nothing ever did.

1:05:14

But maybe it was I was too needy.

1:05:15

Maybe I was too try hard.

1:05:17

But there's something about, like that club itself was Ciro's nightclub.

1:05:24

So that club was owned by Bugsy Siegel in, you know, in the gangster era of Los

1:05:29

Angeles.

1:05:30

And for sure people were murdered there.

1:05:32

Like for fucking sure.

1:05:33

Right.

1:05:34

I mean those guys were killing people left and right.

1:05:36

And if there's ever going to be a place where you're going to see the memory of

1:05:40

some horrific experience that expresses itself in some sort of a spiritual form,

1:05:45

some sort of a ghost-like wraith type form, that's the place.

1:05:52

And you didn't see anything?

1:05:53

I didn't.

1:05:54

But many people I know have.

1:05:55

Many people I know have seen people walk through doors and they go into it and

1:05:59

it's in an empty room.

1:06:00

Like who's that fucking guy?

1:06:01

And they'll see it like at the end of a dark hallway.

1:06:04

And then they open the door to the room.

1:06:06

The room's completely empty.

1:06:07

Yeah.

1:06:07

Yeah, there's been a bunch of stories.

1:06:09

Bunch of stories at the Comedy Store from really like reputable people.

1:06:14

People that I know that aren't drunks, normal folks.

1:06:17

And they tell you and they look fucking terrified.

1:06:20

And no one wants to believe them.

1:06:23

There's a guy named Carl LeBeau.

1:06:25

Carl LeBeau was a great comic who used to tour around with Sam Kinison.

1:06:30

And he got kicked out of his house.

1:06:33

And I guess he was staying with his girlfriend and, you know, he was trying to

1:06:37

make it as a comic.

1:06:40

Comics, in the beginning, they make no money.

1:06:42

Of course.

1:06:43

A lot of them sleep in their cars.

1:06:44

Like my friend Tony slept in his car.

1:06:46

Like a lot of these, they're just, they have a dream.

1:06:48

It's not like YouTubing?

1:06:49

It is, except YouTubing has a more direct path to success.

1:06:56

With the YouTube, all you have to do is be, you have this platform that is like

1:07:01

the biggest video platform on earth.

1:07:04

And it's available to everybody.

1:07:06

As much as people complain about YouTube, I think YouTube is fucking amazing.

1:07:09

I agree.

1:07:09

And I think the real problems with YouTube is advertiser revenue and managing

1:07:14

at scale.

1:07:14

And then woke ideological crackheads that are running the helm, which is real

1:07:20

too.

1:07:21

People are banning people for specific content that's completely legal.

1:07:26

But outside of that, you have a path.

1:07:28

If you get a video and it's like your video, you're here because I saw your

1:07:32

crocodile video.

1:07:33

And then, bam, like, I want to talk to that guy.

1:07:34

Why are you doing that?

1:07:35

You know?

1:07:36

I can't believe that's the video that you saw.

1:07:37

Oh, yeah, man.

1:07:39

That's how you get me, folks.

1:07:40

Get me with a giant reptile video.

1:07:42

There was no 50-foot crocodile.

1:07:44

You don't think so?

1:07:45

No.

1:07:45

Do you?

1:07:46

Yeah.

1:07:47

Oh, real?

1:07:48

Yeah, I do.

1:07:49

Yeah.

1:07:49

Head transplant has been successfully done on a monkey.

1:07:52

Maverick neurosurgery.

1:07:54

Oh, this is a head transplant.

1:07:55

Yeah, I've heard of that.

1:07:56

So, yeah, it wasn't a brain.

1:07:57

I watched the – I went back through the MonsterQuest episode.

1:08:01

The one about the Soviet Union?

1:08:03

Yeah, they were talking about a supposedly successful test where they

1:08:07

transplanted a head from a monkey onto another monkey.

1:08:10

And it, according to the doctor, regained consciousness.

1:08:14

So, they said it was a success.

1:08:16

So, it wasn't – they didn't say you –

1:08:18

It died nine days later, and it was paralyzed the whole time.

1:08:20

Oh, yeah.

1:08:21

It has to be paralyzed, right?

1:08:22

Because you can't reattach the spinal cord yet.

1:08:24

Oh, that's cruel.

1:08:25

They had this one –

1:08:26

Oh, super cruel.

1:08:27

This one, which is – they're saying successful, happened somewhere else, and

1:08:31

they killed it 20 hours later.

1:08:33

But they said it – I mean, look at the picture.

1:08:34

It's crazy.

1:08:35

Oh.

1:08:37

This guy also – I found another picture.

1:08:38

He put a rat's – or a mouse head on the back of a rat, and I think it was

1:08:44

staying – he's trying to figure out how to do head transplants, and he's

1:08:47

testing it on all sorts of other stuff.

1:08:49

Yo.

1:08:50

Crazy.

1:08:52

Jurassic Park comes to mind.

1:08:54

Yeah.

1:08:54

Oh, yeah.

1:08:55

Just because we can, should we?

1:08:57

I mean, think about, like, then there will be a black market for, like, bodybuilders.

1:09:03

Like, if I was some rich guy, I would pay money to, like, have my head put onto

1:09:07

a nice body.

1:09:08

Right.

1:09:08

To kidnap a bodybuilder, snatch up his body.

1:09:11

I mean, I wouldn't, but you know what I'm saying.

1:09:12

Right, but if you're like Bill Gates.

1:09:13

Right.

1:09:13

I'm tired of being a pregnant man.

1:09:15

I want to get a body of some super jacked fitness influencer on Instagram.

1:09:22

Or what if it was, like, a closet full of clothes, only bodies, and it's like,

1:09:25

what do I want to do today?

1:09:27

Right.

1:09:27

Well, one day, that's probably going to be the reality.

1:09:32

When they have synthetic bodies, when they're, the idea that we can't create a

1:09:37

synthetic body, to me, seems kind of silly.

1:09:39

Because we've already created bladders.

1:09:41

They've used stem cells to recreate a woman's bladder.

1:09:43

Ooh.

1:09:44

Yeah, they took her own stem cells from her skin and constructed a bladder for

1:09:48

her and then installed it inside of her body.

1:09:50

Okay.

1:09:51

I think she had bladder cancer or something like that, and they had to remove

1:09:53

her bladder, so they built her a bladder.

1:09:55

That's nice.

1:09:57

Yeah.

1:09:57

Pretty sweet.

1:09:58

Yeah.

1:09:58

Right?

1:09:59

It's also your own stem cells, so your body's not going to reject it.

1:10:02

And, you know, they're looking at animals that regenerate.

1:10:06

Like, there's certain reptiles that, you know, amphibians, they chop their legs

1:10:10

off.

1:10:10

They grow new legs.

1:10:11

Lobsters.

1:10:13

A lot of animals do that.

1:10:14

And so they're trying to figure out, like, what is that gene?

1:10:18

And how can we switch that on in people?

1:10:21

So, like, people that have had their legs amputated, grow their legs back,

1:10:24

which would be fucking crazy.

1:10:26

Yeah.

1:10:26

Yeah.

1:10:27

I think that's coming.

1:10:28

They were about to do it to a guy in Russia when he backed out after he got

1:10:32

married and had a kid.

1:10:34

Oh.

1:10:35

Good for him.

1:10:36

They apparently had done it to corpses successfully, they say.

1:10:40

Corpses.

1:10:41

And they were going to, this guy was down to do it.

1:10:44

Well, makes sense.

1:10:45

I mean, even though he's paralyzed.

1:10:47

He has another option.

1:10:48

You know, with Neuralink and a lot of these new technologies, they think that

1:10:52

they're going to be able to send signals to your limbs and allow your limbs to

1:10:56

bypass the severed spinal cord.

1:10:59

Sure.

1:10:59

Which is.

1:11:00

That's amazing.

1:11:01

Oh, it's crazy.

1:11:02

Yeah.

1:11:02

But when you talk about Jurassic Park, are you aware of the Mammoth Project?

1:11:06

Yeah.

1:11:09

Did they manage to get the DNA?

1:11:12

Yes.

1:11:13

Okay.

1:11:15

They're growing a mammoth.

1:11:16

Like, it's actually happening.

1:11:18

And when it does happen, we're going to figure out a way to visit it.

1:11:22

No, these are American people.

1:11:23

Oh, okay.

1:11:23

I believe so.

1:11:24

I haven't met the guys yet.

1:11:25

I don't know their nationality.

1:11:27

I'm assuming.

1:11:28

But they're out of Dallas, right?

1:11:29

No.

1:11:29

I thought it was New York, but I don't know.

1:11:31

I think the thing was in New York.

1:11:33

Oh, okay.

1:11:34

Whatever.

1:11:35

Whatever they're doing, they're going to bring back a mammoth.

1:11:38

That's cool.

1:11:39

It's wild.

1:11:40

Yeah.

1:11:40

I would love to see a mammoth.

1:11:42

But where do they go?

1:11:43

How far do you go with that?

1:11:44

Do you bring back a saber-toothed cat?

1:11:46

What about an American lion, which was big as a fucking horse?

1:11:50

Yeah.

1:11:52

North American lion, a lot of people don't know, was larger than the lions that

1:11:56

are in Africa.

1:11:57

They're two-thirds larger.

1:11:58

Crazy.

1:11:59

Yeah.

1:12:00

That was right here.

1:12:03

Yeah, that was right here.

1:12:05

I don't know if you know this, but I did a video on the lions of Savo.

1:12:12

Oh, I haven't seen that.

1:12:13

Yeah.

1:12:14

And then that's the video, the first video of mine that ever got traction of

1:12:17

any kind.

1:12:18

That's the ghost in the darkness story.

1:12:19

Yeah, ghost and the darkness.

1:12:22

I thought it was ghosts in the darkness for the last time.

1:12:25

It's not.

1:12:26

But then I did a second video where the lions were so badass that they died and

1:12:30

went to hell

1:12:31

and were really nasty in hell and got kicked out of hell and were plopped out

1:12:36

in dinosaur times.

1:12:37

Oh.

1:12:38

And then the video is about the lions of Savo fighting a pack of Deinonychus.

1:12:43

Ha.

1:12:43

Yeah.

1:12:44

And the lions lost.

1:12:46

But in reality, I think lions would beat a bunch of Deinonychus.

1:12:50

Who knows, you know, but I mean, that sounds like something the Romans probably

1:12:56

would have put together

1:12:57

when they were doing those Coliseum fights.

1:13:00

Yeah.

1:13:00

But what this speaks to is what we were talking about earlier, like that what

1:13:05

happened to create

1:13:08

human beings and what would we do if we could do those things?

1:13:12

Well, we're showing what we would do.

1:13:13

We're taking people's heads off, put them in other bodies.

1:13:16

We're taking monkeys' heads off.

1:13:18

We're putting a rat's head on the back of a mouse.

1:13:20

Like we're doing all kinds of bizarre experiments.

1:13:23

And if they knew how to do it, instead of like we're kind of at the rudimentary

1:13:28

stages of this kind of stuff,

1:13:30

if they knew how to successfully implant their genetic material and hyper-advance

1:13:37

a lower primate

1:13:38

and make it in a short period of time much smarter than any other primate on

1:13:42

Earth, which is what we are.

1:13:44

We're so different than everything else that's remotely related to us.

1:13:48

The idea that somehow or another we exist in this form and our ancient

1:13:54

ancestors exist in the same form.

1:13:57

Like the really ancient ancestors, we branched off of a – we're like a cousin

1:14:03

of a chimpanzee.

1:14:04

Yeah.

1:14:05

And we share a lot of their traits.

1:14:07

Yeah.

1:14:07

They never found our chimpanzee-level ancestor.

1:14:11

Right.

1:14:12

Yeah.

1:14:12

Because it's on a fucking spaceship somewhere, bro.

1:14:14

Would that be surprising?

1:14:16

No.

1:14:17

It would be, sure.

1:14:19

Yeah, it'd be crazy.

1:14:21

I wouldn't be surprised by that at all.

1:14:22

I wouldn't be like, I can't believe this.

1:14:25

I wouldn't say that.

1:14:26

Yeah.

1:14:27

I would say, wow.

1:14:28

So that's what it was.

1:14:30

So that's why we're so different.

1:14:31

Well, I was having a conversation with a woman yesterday, Sarah Amari Walker,

1:14:37

who is a scientist, a physicist.

1:14:41

And she was talking about this thing called assembly theory.

1:14:45

And what she was talking about – did I say her last name right?

1:14:50

What she was talking about was like, what are the actual steps that are

1:14:57

necessary in order for life to be created and evolve?

1:15:02

And if you think about human beings, we're the one animal on this planet that

1:15:08

seems to have the same sort of impact as invasive species do.

1:15:12

Sure.

1:15:14

We swarmed the whole planet.

1:15:17

We're fucking up everything.

1:15:18

And there's no answer to us.

1:15:19

Ah, see.

1:15:20

But do you think humanity is something that needs an answer?

1:15:22

Well, there's no answer to us naturally, right?

1:15:25

Like, there's nothing that keeps our population in check other than disease.

1:15:28

No, normal population control.

1:15:31

Like, so while the left is talking about, you know, humanity, population going

1:15:36

out of control, like, are populations crashing?

1:15:39

Sure.

1:15:41

What is it?

1:15:42

Asia crashed.

1:15:43

Europe and America are crashing now.

1:15:45

India is next to crash.

1:15:46

And Africa is the only one left to boom.

1:15:48

Right.

1:15:49

In terms of, like, Japan, like, the children that are alive today, how many of

1:15:53

them will ever have grandchildren?

1:15:55

It's a very small percentage.

1:15:56

Yeah.

1:15:57

That's true.

1:15:58

Elon talks about that all the time.

1:15:59

Yeah.

1:15:59

I mean, because, like, you can look at more kids.

1:16:01

You can look at the charts.

1:16:02

Like, it's very clear, you know.

1:16:04

Right.

1:16:05

But don't you think, so this is nature's balancing act, right?

1:16:09

It has to happen.

1:16:10

It's not a matter of, like, it's going to.

1:16:13

It has to.

1:16:14

Those are the rules.

1:16:15

I think nature probably balanced us out when we developed cities, right?

1:16:21

Because what's the byproduct of cities?

1:16:23

One of the byproducts of cities is it's expensive to live there.

1:16:27

So a lot of times women get jobs.

1:16:30

And women don't want to give up their career to have a family.

1:16:34

So they hold it off until much later.

1:16:37

And if they have a child at all, they have less kids than people who start

1:16:40

having kids when they're 18 or 20.

1:16:42

Right.

1:16:42

And so this is sort of a function of having these extremely dense environments

1:16:48

where people are stacked up with each other.

1:16:51

And then competition inside that city-like structure is intense.

1:16:59

And financial competition is intense, and women engage in it as well, and it

1:17:03

lowers the population.

1:17:04

That happens to almost all westernized societies, first world societies, they

1:17:09

experience a drop in birth rate.

1:17:12

Right.

1:17:12

And it seems like that would be a natural feature of, like, high population

1:17:17

areas.

1:17:18

Because it doesn't even matter what it is.

1:17:20

Like, for a deer, it's just the availability of grass.

1:17:23

Right.

1:17:24

You know, so I find it fascinating to think that humans are not, we're very

1:17:28

different from animals, but the rules still apply to us.

1:17:32

Right.

1:17:33

You know.

1:17:33

But we are animals, for sure.

1:17:35

Yeah.

1:17:35

But we also are invasive.

1:17:37

If a pig, if a wild pig is invasive anywhere on Earth, right?

1:17:41

That's true.

1:17:42

Then we're invasive.

1:17:42

Because we weren't there, and then we were there, and then we took over.

1:17:45

Yeah, that's true.

1:17:47

And we're so different than every other animal in how much different we look

1:17:52

from each other, you know, the wide variety of sizes we have of people.

1:17:57

Yeah.

1:17:57

You know, it's just, it seems to me like.

1:18:00

I've thought about that before, though.

1:18:03

Like, what if seven gorillas that look exactly the same to us are all, like,

1:18:07

hyper?

1:18:09

Like, what if, yeah, like, they might all look really differentiated to

1:18:12

themselves.

1:18:13

I doubt it.

1:18:14

They look like gorillas.

1:18:15

I mean, just, like, look at what we see.

1:18:17

We see a gorilla, but when you look at human beings, we're like dogs.

1:18:21

Yeah.

1:18:22

We vary, like, like, there's Carl over there, and then there's my dog Marshall.

1:18:25

Marshall's a golden retriever.

1:18:27

Marshall, if Carl was a girl, or if Marshall was a girl, they could have a baby.

1:18:33

Those two, sort of.

1:18:34

Like, can he breed with someone?

1:18:36

I mean, we can find out.

1:18:38

We can find out.

1:18:39

He tries to fuck Marshall.

1:18:41

We can test it.

1:18:42

He tries.

1:18:43

If Marshall was a girl, he'd try to hump him.

1:18:45

Marshall just gives up sometimes, and Carl's just biting on his face while he's

1:18:49

lying on his back.

1:18:49

You know.

1:18:50

He just gets tired of this little psychopath.

1:18:53

But the point is, like, they're the same species.

1:18:57

They're just a weird breed of that species.

1:19:00

But they are the same thing.

1:19:02

Like, you could take a wolf, and you could breed it with a dog.

1:19:06

You know, they all started off as wolves, and we manipulated them to the point

1:19:09

where we have this incredible variety of shapes and sizes through manipulation.

1:19:14

Sure.

1:19:15

And that's what people look like.

1:19:17

I mean, that manipulation could be environmental, like the reason why people

1:19:21

that move to northern Europe develop very pale skin,

1:19:23

because their body has to act as sort of like a solar reflector to create

1:19:30

vitamin D, because you don't get it like the way you would get it in Africa,

1:19:33

where we originally started.

1:19:35

So we're kind of like a manipulated animal in that regard.

1:19:40

At least our appearance.

1:19:41

And that would make sense if somebody fucked with us.

1:19:45

Especially if they made a bunch of different kinds.

1:19:47

Right.

1:19:47

You know, like initially, like, the thought is, the fun stuff is the Anunnaki,

1:19:54

right?

1:19:55

That's the fun one.

1:19:56

Sure.

1:19:56

The Anunnaki came here, and they manipulated with humans.

1:19:59

And then you look at the Sumerian tablets, and you see the images of the giant

1:20:04

Anunnaki guy who has the monkey person sitting on his lap with a tail.

1:20:08

Have you ever seen that one?

1:20:09

Mm-mm.

1:20:09

You never saw that?

1:20:10

No.

1:20:10

Dude.

1:20:11

It's like a 5,000-year-old tablet of this guy who is this enormous person with

1:20:17

this beautiful, like, garb on, and he's got this person sitting on his lap,

1:20:24

this small person with a tail.

1:20:26

What?

1:20:27

Yeah.

1:20:28

Oh, my goodness.

1:20:29

Oh, dude, have you studied any of the ancient Sumerian tablets at all?

1:20:34

Honestly, that stuff, I'm, like, saving that for a rainy day.

1:20:38

Get into it.

1:20:39

Yeah.

1:20:39

Get into it, because the whole Zachariah Sitchin version of the Sumerian text

1:20:45

is really, really interesting stuff.

1:20:48

Is that, like, no, that wouldn't be where the Nephilim come in?

1:20:52

Yes.

1:20:52

Yeah, it is?

1:20:53

Yeah, yeah.

1:20:53

Their version of the Nephilim is the Anunnaki.

1:20:56

Oh, okay.

1:20:57

The Nephilim is those from heaven to earth came.

1:21:00

Nephilim were supposed to be giants, right?

1:21:01

This is the Anunnaki.

1:21:03

They're much larger than human beings, and they did something, according to the

1:21:09

Sumerian text, as translated by Zechariah Sitchin.

1:21:12

Okay.

1:21:13

And this is why the symbol for medicine was always the two serpents, right?

1:21:22

That looks like a double helix DNA.

1:21:23

Oh.

1:21:24

It's exactly what it looks like.

1:21:25

Yeah.

1:21:26

And that's the connection that he makes with all this stuff.

1:21:29

And a lot of people disagree with him.

1:21:31

I should just point out, if you're interested in this stuff, there's a whole

1:21:34

website called SitchinIsWrong.com, and I've read that, too.

1:21:40

And I appreciate when people have varying opinions, right?

1:21:43

But there's something about Sitchin's stuff that is very compelling to me.

1:21:49

And one of the big reasons is there's a lot of mysteries about the

1:21:54

understanding that the Sumerians had that sort of defies conventional logic.

1:21:59

Like, they had a detailed map of the solar system 6,000 years ago in these clay

1:22:05

tablets.

1:22:06

So, they have the sun in the center, and then they have all of our planets in

1:22:10

the proper order.

1:22:11

In the proper—not the exact size, but this one's bigger than that one, that

1:22:15

one's bigger than this one, and it's depicted on a clay tablet.

1:22:19

And you look at it, and you go, okay, what the fuck is that?

1:22:21

But would you really need an advent—well—

1:22:24

Yeah, you would.

1:22:25

Oh, you would?

1:22:25

Yeah.

1:22:26

Okay.

1:22:26

You need a telescope.

1:22:27

There's no other way.

1:22:29

Like, there's no way with the human eye you're going to see Uranus.

1:22:31

You don't see it.

1:22:33

There's no way you see Pluto.

1:22:34

You don't see them.

1:22:35

I mean, they—okay.

1:22:36

You're not going to see it.

1:22:37

They ain't saw it.

1:22:38

You know, they had—like, show the—find the monkey one first.

1:22:43

I was looking—

1:22:44

Did you find it?

1:22:45

I was looking for—I'm not exactly sure what I was looking for for that one.

1:22:48

Uh, Sumerian tablet Anunnaki with monkey person on his lap.

1:22:55

I don't know what I had in it, but it didn't—I wasn't getting what I thought

1:22:59

you wanted, so.

1:23:01

Well, I know you can find the solar system one, so find that one quick, just so

1:23:04

I could show it to them.

1:23:05

So, this is a giant mystery as to what—what this meant and how they knew this.

1:23:11

So, this is, like, in between two photos of these Anunnaki—or two images of

1:23:16

these Anunnaki's.

1:23:17

So, it has the sun, and it has all of our planets.

1:23:20

And it has all of our planets, not in the correct size, obviously, because

1:23:25

Jupiter is so much larger than Earth.

1:23:28

Right.

1:23:28

But, in—this one's bigger than that one, that one's bigger than this one.

1:23:32

It's, like, like a visual representation, uh, as much as you can in a small

1:23:38

area like that.

1:23:39

But, some of their tablets were just absolutely fascinating.

1:23:45

Not that.

1:23:47

No, but how cool is that, though?

1:23:49

I know.

1:23:50

So, these people were writing about the story of humanity, and they're writing

1:23:56

it down on these clay tablets, and it—it seems to be some bizarre story of

1:24:04

visitors.

1:24:05

A lot of them have wings, like that one that shows the eagle.

1:24:09

Sure.

1:24:11

Like, what's that all about?

1:24:12

Who's that fucking guy?

1:24:14

Ra, I think.

1:24:15

Yeah.

1:24:16

But, also, wouldn't that represent some sort of a spaceship?

1:24:19

Like, something that can actually fly?

1:24:21

If you—the only thing that you saw that could fly were birds.

1:24:25

Right.

1:24:25

And you were trying to represent something as something that flies, you would,

1:24:28

you know—

1:24:29

Yeah, didn't, uh, in the Bible—the, uh, the Jewish Bible, the Talmud, uh,

1:24:35

cloud—cloud get translated to—oh, no, what was it?

1:24:39

The shield got translated to cloud, with the pillar of fire.

1:24:43

Hmm.

1:24:44

I believe there was—that led the Israelites out of the desert, wasn't it

1:24:48

something like that?

1:24:49

Oh, no, but that makes sense.

1:24:51

I could have—I said I wasn't going to talk about anything that I wasn't sure

1:24:54

about.

1:24:55

No, that's what this show's all about.

1:24:57

Yeah, just being full of it.

1:24:58

I could have sworn that it was like—there was a—in the Bible, it says, the

1:25:03

pillar of fire and a cloud, and that's what the Israelites followed out of the

1:25:08

desert.

1:25:08

Hmm, it could be.

1:25:09

I've read that the more pragmatic translation is actually shield, and it wasn't

1:25:14

cloud.

1:25:14

Huh.

1:25:16

Here it is.

1:25:17

The pillars are said to have guided the Israelites through the desert during

1:25:20

the exodus from Egypt.

1:25:21

The pillar of cloud provided a visible guide for the Israelites during the day,

1:25:25

while the pillar of fire lit their way by night.

1:25:28

Yeah, so evidently it wasn't a cloud but a shield, and like what would a shield

1:25:34

look like?

1:25:35

Hmm.

1:25:35

Like that, we would call that a saucer.

1:25:37

Right.

1:25:38

Huh.

1:25:40

Well, then there's the Ezekiel story in the Bible, which seems very much like

1:25:44

some sort of a UFO encounter, like the way you would describe a UFO encounter

1:25:49

if there was nothing that flew and you didn't understand what advanced

1:25:53

technology would be if you saw it.

1:25:55

The Vimanas and the ancient Hindu texts.

1:25:59

I mean, there's just so many.

1:26:00

There's so much of it.

1:26:00

Yeah, there's so much of that stuff.

1:26:02

And, again, if life is out there everywhere in the universe, it kind of makes

1:26:08

sense that someone would visit us as we're emerging, as life is becoming more

1:26:14

and more intelligent over the course of millions and millions of years.

1:26:20

And they find this one particular animal that's very similar to what they used

1:26:24

to be at one point in time, and they just say, eh, let's speed this along.

1:26:29

Yeah.

1:26:29

I think we would do that.

1:26:30

I know we would.

1:26:32

If we found a planet filled with monkeys, you don't think we'd take a few of

1:26:35

them and shoot our stuff into it?

1:26:36

Like, let's see.

1:26:37

Let's just – it'll be fun.

1:26:39

It might also be a feature of the universe that that's what intelligent life

1:26:43

ultimately does, which is why we want to monkey around with these monkeys in

1:26:46

the first place and take their heads and put it on other bodies.

1:26:49

Yeah.

1:26:50

So I think that different planets, in order to meet the requirements of life,

1:26:54

would actually be quite similar.

1:26:56

That's just a theory I have.

1:26:58

It's a common theory.

1:27:02

Well, yeah.

1:27:02

Yeah.

1:27:03

Yeah.

1:27:03

Because, like, so people said, like, why are aliens, like, carbon life forms?

1:27:06

Like, well, that's what works.

1:27:07

Right.

1:27:08

Right.

1:27:08

Because they could be anything.

1:27:09

Not only that, that's ubiquitous, right?

1:27:11

Right.

1:27:12

Like, bursting stars create carbon.

1:27:15

Mm-hmm.

1:27:15

This is – carbon-based life exists here.

1:27:19

Why wouldn't it exist everywhere else where there's stars everywhere else?

1:27:22

Right.

1:27:22

It seems to be – it seems to be that, like, the – we don't find solar

1:27:26

systems that have something completely different than a planet.

1:27:29

You know, everything that we found outside of our solar system seems to behave

1:27:33

in a similar manner.

1:27:35

When we look at galaxies, they seem to behave in a similar manner.

1:27:38

They seem to look similar.

1:27:39

They're of different sizes and the like, but they're pretty similar.

1:27:44

Right.

1:27:44

Like, these circular spiral things.

1:27:46

It makes sense that if that exists everywhere, probably carbon-based life

1:27:51

exists everywhere, too.

1:27:53

It's probably a feature of these solar systems.

1:27:56

Correct.

1:27:57

That's what I would say, too.

1:27:58

Yeah.

1:27:58

And then there's probably, like, if you are growing a garden in your backyard,

1:28:03

you know when you planted the tomatoes.

1:28:05

You got, like, a little thing on it, 722 planted tomatoes, you know?

1:28:09

Yeah.

1:28:09

So then you check on them.

1:28:10

And then other tomatoes you planted, like, a couple of weeks later.

1:28:13

Like, oh, those won't be due in time.

1:28:15

So if you were planting humans on a planet, you'd go, well, they need a couple

1:28:19

million years before they get their shit together, but they've started to

1:28:22

develop nuclear bombs.

1:28:23

So let's, uh.

1:28:24

That's why they hang out over nuke bases.

1:28:26

Yeah.

1:28:27

Or they're foreign governments showing us that they have advanced technology

1:28:32

and they can hover over our nuclear bases.

1:28:35

I think there's some of that going on, too.

1:28:37

Yeah, but there's so many, like, oh, that fellow who, uh, I can't recall his

1:28:42

name, but he's, like,

1:28:43

the most popular video on, on, uh, Greer's channel, um, Richard Greer, Stephen

1:28:49

Greer?

1:28:50

Stephen Greer.

1:28:50

Yeah.

1:28:50

Um, he was, like, the guy who would discredit you if you saw a UFO.

1:28:57

Mm-hmm.

1:28:58

Um, he told a story about how.

1:29:01

Alan Hopkins, is that what you're talking about?

1:29:03

I believe so.

1:29:03

From Project Blue Book?

1:29:05

Yes.

1:29:06

Yeah.

1:29:07

Uh, well, actually, I don't know.

1:29:08

Well, Alan Hopkins was the guy who was hired to debunk UFO sightings.

1:29:12

No, it's not him.

1:29:13

He was, and then he later became a believer.

1:29:15

So he studied, he, he worked for Project Blue Book for a couple decades and was

1:29:22

sent out to, like, oh, we saw this.

1:29:24

And he would go, ah, swamp gas.

1:29:26

And then after the, his career's over, then he came public with everything.

1:29:31

Yeah.

1:29:31

So he's saying, I think UFOs are real.

1:29:32

I think we really are being visited.

1:29:34

Yeah.

1:29:34

Well.

1:29:35

J. Allen Hynek.

1:29:36

Hynek, Hynek, yeah.

1:29:37

Yeah.

1:29:37

What did I say?

1:29:38

Hopkins.

1:29:39

Oh, different.

1:29:39

J. Allen Hynek.

1:29:40

I was not thinking of Hynek.

1:29:42

It's, this guy was like a, uh, self-admitted deep state stooge.

1:29:47

Like, he was the type of guy that would go out and discredit you if you saw

1:29:50

something.

1:29:50

Oh, he would discredit you personally.

1:29:52

Yes.

1:29:53

Okay.

1:29:53

Um.

1:29:54

So he would turn you into a fool.

1:29:55

Right.

1:29:56

So if you went to Stephen Greer's channel and looked at the most popular video

1:30:00

on it, you would find it.

1:30:01

But he talks for, like, two hours about everything he knows, and it's nuts.

1:30:03

Really?

1:30:04

Absolutely bonkers.

1:30:05

Find that guy.

1:30:06

And I really, I believe him.

1:30:08

You believe him?

1:30:09

You want to believe him, right?

1:30:11

This stuff seems so much more, uh, likely than the alternative, which is

1:30:16

nothing.

1:30:16

Oh, that there's no life out there?

1:30:18

Yeah.

1:30:18

It's not even, because we don't even know what they are.

1:30:20

I mean, I'm not even saying they're extraterrestrials, really.

1:30:23

Not only that, but so much more likely that they would want to visit us.

1:30:26

Oh, I mean, yes.

1:30:29

Yeah.

1:30:29

Yeah.

1:30:30

So let's get back to the crocodile.

1:30:31

How come you don't believe?

1:30:32

Why would you believe if, I mean, why would, a 50-foot crocodile?

1:30:35

Sure.

1:30:36

They just keep getting bigger.

1:30:37

They don't, though.

1:30:38

How, how big do they get?

1:30:40

I don't know crocodiles.

1:30:41

Right.

1:30:42

So here's the thing.

1:30:43

What we know about crocodiles now are crocodiles after guns.

1:30:48

Okay?

1:30:49

Mm.

1:30:49

So guns change everything.

1:30:52

So that alligator out there that you saw in our lobby, that's 80 years old.

1:30:57

Yeah.

1:30:58

80 years old.

1:30:59

And a gun killed that alligator.

1:31:01

So guns get introduced in the 1800s, and then explorers start going through the

1:31:09

Congo in the 1800s, and they start shooting crocodiles.

1:31:12

They shoot a lot of crocodiles.

1:31:13

In fact, a friend of mine actually got hired to go to the Congo.

1:31:18

Was it the Congo?

1:31:20

Where?

1:31:20

Jim Shockey.

1:31:21

What part did he go to?

1:31:24

I forget.

1:31:24

I just found that guy.

1:31:25

But he went to Africa.

1:31:27

He's a hunter, and they hired him to shoot crocodiles.

1:31:32

Because so many people in this village, he went to this village, he said it was

1:31:34

so heartbreaking.

1:31:35

Like, this guy's missing an arm.

1:31:36

This person's missing a leg.

1:31:38

They have bites taken out of him.

1:31:39

And while he was there, a woman got taken out.

1:31:42

Like, while he was there, a woman was washing clothes, and a crocodile snatched

1:31:46

her and dragged her into the water.

1:31:47

Yeah.

1:31:47

And when human beings start bringing guns, the whole ecosystem changes, right?

1:31:54

So these 50-foot things that have been apex predators just sunning themselves

1:31:58

on the shore,

1:31:59

now some guy lines up a shot from the beach, or from a boat, rather, and just

1:32:04

takes it out.

1:32:05

And they're shooting all these different crocodiles.

1:32:07

And so doing this over the course of, you know, 50, 60 years, all the big ones

1:32:12

are dead.

1:32:13

Yeah.

1:32:14

And it takes fucking forever for a crocodile to become a 50-foot crocodile.

1:32:19

And they don't die.

1:32:20

Yeah, but what?

1:32:21

They just stay alive.

1:32:22

Like, they only die when something happens to them.

1:32:26

But there's one crocodile in a reserve in South Africa who was born in, like,

1:32:29

1890 or something.

1:32:31

And he's only, like, 17 feet long.

1:32:34

Right.

1:32:34

So you think that's because his environment wasn't big enough?

1:32:37

I think it's because he was born in 1890, not 1790.

1:32:39

Oh.

1:32:40

So they don't die.

1:32:42

Okay.

1:32:42

So if a crocodile's living in the Congo, okay, the Congo is rich with life.

1:32:48

There's life everywhere.

1:32:50

And certain animals have to cross these rivers.

1:32:52

And that's just a fucking meal train.

1:32:55

Yeah.

1:32:56

You know, you've seen those animals, wildebeest, trying to make it across the

1:33:00

river,

1:33:00

and then the crocs show up and just start snatching them.

1:33:03

I mean, some of them make it through, and some of them die.

1:33:07

And that's just how it's always been.

1:33:09

Yeah.

1:33:09

And so they've had enormous amounts of food forever.

1:33:12

And if they've lived for hundreds and hundreds of years, those things would

1:33:16

just continue to grow.

1:33:18

It doesn't seem outside the realm of possibility for something to be twice as

1:33:23

big as the biggest one that they've spotted.

1:33:25

Yeah, but that's long.

1:33:27

So, like, great white sharks, we're pretty sure that they get to 22 and a half

1:33:31

feet, and then they get fatter.

1:33:34

Right.

1:33:35

So, 50 feet is really big.

1:33:38

Megalodons.

1:33:38

Yeah.

1:33:39

But that's a different thing.

1:33:41

Right.

1:33:42

But it was also a giant fucking shark.

1:33:44

Yes.

1:33:45

I think it's possible there's a certain subspecies of crocodiles.

1:33:50

Yeah.

1:33:51

Just like there is, like, caimans.

1:33:53

Like, there's different subspecies of caimans, even, or crocodiles, rather,

1:33:57

even in the Amazon.

1:33:58

There's big ones that get to be, like, 16 feet long, and there's small ones

1:34:02

that get killed by jaguars all the time.

1:34:05

Mm-hmm.

1:34:05

You know, those are cool.

1:34:07

I think that Bigfoot is more likely to be real than a 50-foot crocodile.

1:34:10

So, you think these people that have these depictions of it being as big or

1:34:14

bigger than their boat, they're just exaggerating?

1:34:16

Yeah.

1:34:17

Yeah?

1:34:18

I do.

1:34:18

But not in a malicious or even a lying way.

1:34:21

Probably just freaked out by the size of the goddamn thing?

1:34:24

Not even freaked out, just like it was giant.

1:34:25

Right.

1:34:26

And then they exaggerate over time.

1:34:28

Like, it was probably 20 or 30 feet, maybe.

1:34:30

Mm-hmm.

1:34:31

But, like, twice as big, bigger, more than twice as big as the biggest ever is

1:34:36

pretty nuts.

1:34:37

It is nuts, but occasionally animals do have mutations that makes them much

1:34:42

larger.

1:34:43

And you see that with humans.

1:34:44

Like, the biggest human ever was, like, nine feet tall, wasn't he?

1:34:48

Yeah, but not 12.

1:34:49

Right.

1:34:50

Yeah.

1:34:50

Right, true, right?

1:34:51

Not double the size, right?

1:34:53

But he also was dealing with gravity.

1:34:55

Yes.

1:34:56

And, like, the real problems with being a gigantic human with all the bad bone

1:35:02

problems.

1:35:03

What is that?

1:35:04

That's the world's oldest crocodile?

1:35:05

Yeah, Henry.

1:35:06

Jesus.

1:35:07

How old's Henry?

1:35:08

They caught him in 1903.

1:35:10

Jesus.

1:35:11

Caught him in 1903.

1:35:13

How crazy is that?

1:35:15

They caught him over 100 years ago.

1:35:18

When I was working on the video, I don't know why this occurred to me, but he

1:35:23

was born roughly the same time as Adolf Hitler.

1:35:25

He's a man-eating croc?

1:35:27

Yeah, he killed a lot of people.

1:35:28

Nile croc, yeah.

1:35:29

So this guy's just hanging out with him?

1:35:31

What the fuck is wrong with this dude?

1:35:32

He's just assuming that that thing's not hungry?

1:35:36

How crazy are people that we want to sit right next to a goddamn giant monster

1:35:40

like that?

1:35:41

Look at the size of that thing.

1:35:43

I just can't imagine why anybody would stand next to that.

1:35:48

Can't you stand really far away and just film it?

1:35:51

That's how I feel about surfing.

1:35:52

700 kilos, so it puts it at, like, 1,500 pounds or so.

1:35:55

1,400, 1,500.

1:35:56

They're so cool, too.

1:35:58

Like, look at that face.

1:35:59

The way all the teeth, like, integrate with the gums.

1:36:02

And when you know that this thing, so it's captured in 1903.

1:36:06

When was it born, right?

1:36:07

I think it was about 15 years old when they captured him.

1:36:13

That is so crazy.

1:36:15

So this thing's somewhere around 135 years old.

1:36:18

Yeah.

1:36:19

This guy's just grabbing its dick.

1:36:22

Look at it.

1:36:23

He's like, hey, bro.

1:36:24

To compare that giant croc that always pops up on a golf course in Florida is

1:36:29

known to be about 10 to 12 feet and 1,000 pounds.

1:36:33

Yeah, that's an alligator.

1:36:34

I know.

1:36:34

It's like 15 plus feet and 1,500 pounds.

1:36:37

Like I said, the one that's out there is 14 feet.

1:36:39

Yeah, I was really surprised to learn how much smaller, even when the length is

1:36:43

similar, how much less heavy alligators are.

1:36:46

Oh, yeah, they're twice as heavy.

1:36:47

Yeah.

1:36:47

Yeah, crocodiles, rather, are twice as heavy.

1:36:49

They are so dense, and they're so aggressive.

1:36:52

Have you ever seen when they have, yeah, it turns towards them.

1:36:56

Like, that guy could just get taken out.

1:36:57

I like that.

1:36:58

But they drown.

1:36:59

That's how crocodiles kill.

1:37:01

Because they get too big, right?

1:37:02

No, I'm saying.

1:37:03

Oh, how they kill people.

1:37:04

Yeah.

1:37:04

Yeah.

1:37:04

So, like, a crocodile like that would, if he couldn't, drag you to water.

1:37:07

Isn't that nuts that, like, their actual method is drowning?

1:37:10

Yeah.

1:37:11

Well, they can hold their breath forever.

1:37:13

Right.

1:37:14

So, just like, I know you can.

1:37:16

Right, because, like, their teeth are just meant for holding.

1:37:18

Yeah.

1:37:18

It's their teeth aren't meant for chopping or chomping or anything.

1:37:20

Have you seen the one where the crocodile takes a pig and snaps it in half with,

1:37:25

like, a shake of his leg and chokes down the leg?

1:37:29

No.

1:37:29

Have you seen the one where the crocodile just, like, rolls and rips its friend's

1:37:33

leg off for no reason?

1:37:34

And the friend doesn't even flinch.

1:37:36

It's just like.

1:37:36

What the fuck, dude?

1:37:38

Yeah.

1:37:38

Yeah, the lady was feeding them, right?

1:37:40

Mm-hmm.

1:37:40

And he just, what do you got here, Jeremy?

1:37:42

Oh, yeah, here it is.

1:37:43

Look at that.

1:37:44

Oh, my gosh.

1:37:46

He just snaps that pig in half.

1:37:47

Yeah.

1:37:47

With a quick little fling of its neck.

1:37:50

Sure did.

1:37:51

Oh, that's my own Instagram.

1:37:52

Watch this.

1:37:53

Snap.

1:37:54

Like, it was nothing.

1:37:56

No.

1:37:57

Just wanted a bite-sized chunk.

1:37:58

No big deal.

1:37:59

Just an animal that's been around for how many millions of years?

1:38:02

I know he's strayed, but this is the guy you're talking about.

1:38:05

Richard Doty.

1:38:06

Okay.

1:38:06

That's it.

1:38:07

Spread disinformation about UFOs on behalf of the Air Force Office of Special

1:38:11

Investigations.

1:38:12

So, that's the guy.

1:38:13

Yeah.

1:38:14

So, his job was to make you look like an idiot if you believe in UFOs.

1:38:17

Now, why do you think they would do that?

1:38:19

To discredit people.

1:38:21

But why?

1:38:21

Why would they want to discredit people?

1:38:23

Man, you are, I don't know, I guess, to keep their secrets.

1:38:33

What secrets?

1:38:33

All right.

1:38:34

Then keep your secrets.

1:38:35

So, you think that they know something about UFOs.

1:38:41

They don't want people to believe these things are real.

1:38:44

They want to discourage people coming forward.

1:38:46

So, they mock them.

1:38:47

They turn them into fools.

1:38:50

This guy's job is to discredit all the stories and make the person look like a

1:38:54

crazy person,

1:38:55

gaslight everybody.

1:38:56

And it's because they don't want people to know what they know.

1:39:01

They would imagine that the truth is worse.

1:39:04

Well, yes.

1:39:05

But because what they know is really, really bad.

1:39:08

What do you think they think?

1:39:09

What do you think they know?

1:39:10

Do you subscribe to the Babazar Vessels of Souls idea?

1:39:14

I'm familiar with that.

1:39:16

Oh, you didn't know that one?

1:39:17

No.

1:39:18

Oh, okay.

1:39:19

So, I know Kathy Turner, a Dr. Kathy Turner, who wrote Taken into the Fringe

1:39:24

and Masquerade

1:39:25

of Angels.

1:39:25

And she said the only thing that's consistent throughout all abduction reports

1:39:29

is that the aliens are fascinated

1:39:31

with the concept of the soul.

1:39:32

So, I assume that works into whatever you're talking about with Babazar.

1:39:36

Babazar said one of the more bizarre things that he found out when he was

1:39:42

working at Area S4 was that they had this, like, very thick sort of document on

1:39:52

all that they knew so far about aliens.

1:39:55

And one of the things was it went back to religion.

1:40:00

See if you can find Babazar talking about it so I don't butcher this.

1:40:03

But I believe what he was saying was that they think of us as containers for

1:40:09

souls.

1:40:10

Now, let's imagine, before we show the Babazar thing, let's imagine how that

1:40:14

would happen.

1:40:15

Now, let's imagine that human beings, we are biological life, and so, therefore,

1:40:21

we have what we call a soul, and then we create digital life.

1:40:27

And maybe, maybe this digital life, maybe artificial creations are what we're

1:40:34

seeing in these gray aliens.

1:40:37

Maybe they are some sort of hybrid or some sort of, some sort of creation that's

1:40:44

outside of evolution, is outside of natural adaptation.

1:40:49

And they look at us as the source.

1:40:55

Like, they can't breed anymore.

1:40:57

Maybe for them to exist, maybe they need an actual soul.

1:41:04

And to think of us as a farm for souls.

1:41:08

I really do think that we're a farm of some kind to them.

1:41:11

Because it's funny, because people always say, like, they hang out over nuke

1:41:15

sites so that we don't bomb ourselves.

1:41:17

And it's like, sure, but not from a compassion standpoint.

1:41:22

It's like, if the farmer doesn't protect his cow because he wants it to find

1:41:26

some sort of spiritual thing.

1:41:28

And that's why I take issue with, like, Stephen Greer and all those people who

1:41:32

are like, you just need to expand your consciousness.

1:41:34

And then you see it.

1:41:35

It's like, that's a pretty, I feel like that's what they want you to think.

1:41:38

Did you find the Babazar thing?

1:41:42

Here, listen to him talk about this, because it's pretty crazy.

1:41:45

Yeah, the only hardcore thing is that there is an extremely classified document

1:41:50

dealing with religion, and it's about that thick.

1:41:52

Period.

1:41:53

Babazar on humans and religion.

1:41:56

Yeah, the only hardcore thing is that there is an extremely classified document

1:42:01

dealing with religion, and it's about that thick.

1:42:04

Period.

1:42:05

But, why would there be any classified material dealing with religion?

1:42:10

I want to go back to the religion thing.

1:42:13

I want you to say it.

1:42:15

It's just, it's so, it's so far out, it's, uh...

1:42:19

All right, your objection has been noted.

1:42:21

Okay.

1:42:21

What does it say?

1:42:22

That we're containers.

1:42:25

That's how, that's how supposedly the aliens look at us.

1:42:28

That we are nothing but containers.

1:42:30

Containers of...

1:42:32

Containers.

1:42:32

Maybe containers of souls.

1:42:35

You can come up with whatever theory you want, but we're containers.

1:42:38

And that's how we're mentioned in the documents.

1:42:40

That religion was specifically created.

1:42:45

So we have some rules and regulations for the sole purpose of not damaging the

1:42:48

containers.

1:42:51

Yikes.

1:42:52

Yikes.

1:42:52

Yikes.

1:42:52

I didn't think of it that way.

1:42:54

Yeah.

1:42:54

That you can actually damage your soul.

1:42:56

Yeah.

1:42:57

But it is almost like every holy text has that.

1:42:59

Well, it does make sense too, because if what is in religion, right, the idea

1:43:05

is like to save

1:43:07

your soul.

1:43:07

You have to abide by certain rules.

1:43:10

You have to be good to each other.

1:43:12

You have to live a just life.

1:43:14

All of these things are laid out so you don't damage the energy that is inside

1:43:19

you and turn

1:43:19

it evil.

1:43:20

See, it could be more pragmatic than that, though.

1:43:22

If someone is going to inherit your soul, they don't want it bogged down with

1:43:25

bad habits.

1:43:26

Right.

1:43:27

Yeah.

1:43:27

Well, they don't want it to be evil.

1:43:28

They want it to have negative energy attached to it and the karma of killing a

1:43:31

bunch of

1:43:32

people.

1:43:32

Right.

1:43:32

Like, who wants Dick Cheney's soul?

1:43:33

You know?

1:43:34

The alien's like, you could have that, dude.

1:43:36

Remember when he shot someone and then the guy apologized to him?

1:43:40

Isn't that nuts?

1:43:40

You know how gangster that is?

1:43:41

Yeah.

1:43:41

You shoot a guy in the face and the dude's like, yeah, I look like a bird.

1:43:45

Don't worry about it.

1:43:46

I look like a dude.

1:43:47

Can you, what is with, is there any way to you that we're not being gaslit,

1:43:53

like to

1:43:54

hell by Kamala Harris?

1:43:55

In what way?

1:43:57

Like, wasn't she like a joke even among Democrats?

1:44:01

Uh-huh.

1:44:01

Like, 10 seconds ago?

1:44:03

Like, literally.

1:44:03

Like, a day ago.

1:44:04

Yep.

1:44:04

And now it's like, the country's rallying around.

1:44:07

I know.

1:44:07

Yeah.

1:44:08

What?

1:44:08

I don't know.

1:44:09

I don't even.

1:44:10

Yeah, we're so easily manipulated, and they're all doing it in lockstep.

1:44:13

Yeah, no doubt about it.

1:44:15

There's no doubt about it.

1:44:16

She was, she polled as the least popular vice president of all time.

1:44:21

Yeah.

1:44:21

She is, you know, I had dinner with a friend of mine recently who actually

1:44:25

knows her.

1:44:26

He says she's very smart, but when she gets in front of a camera, she locks up,

1:44:31

and she's

1:44:32

just not good at communicating, and she tries to go off script, and she, you

1:44:36

know, whenever

1:44:37

you're talking in front of a large group of people, there's a bizarre stress

1:44:43

and pressure that really

1:44:45

constricts your ability to communicate.

1:44:47

I'm aware.

1:44:48

Yeah.

1:44:49

As of the last few minutes.

1:44:50

Yeah.

1:44:50

Yeah.

1:44:51

It's weird.

1:44:51

And this is just you and me, right?

1:44:53

This is just you and me.

1:44:54

And now imagine you and me, but we're in front of 15,000 people that are

1:44:57

hanging on our every

1:44:58

word, and you're kind of free-balling, and maybe you really haven't even done

1:45:02

the research.

1:45:02

Like, someone's asking you, how are you going to fix the economy?

1:45:04

You're right?

1:45:05

And then you have some not, well, the problem is everybody needs money because

1:45:10

the bills,

1:45:10

and we're working on that.

1:45:12

Like, what?

1:45:12

Well, and you can, that's so obvious when, you know, with the passage of time

1:45:16

is significant,

1:45:16

and the significance of the passage of time is significant because of the

1:45:19

passage of time.

1:45:20

Exactly.

1:45:20

Yeah.

1:45:21

So that's someone who is basically like a kid in the fifth grade who's writing

1:45:26

a book

1:45:26

report, but they haven't read the book.

1:45:27

That's every time I see her on camera, that's all I can think, is that she's

1:45:31

the kid who

1:45:31

didn't do her homework.

1:45:32

Right.

1:45:32

Because she just has that vibe.

1:45:34

Did you see the clip of her talking about how dare we wish Merry Christmas to

1:45:38

people?

1:45:38

No.

1:45:39

Yeah.

1:45:40

She does this bizarre, like, rant about how we shouldn't be wishing Merry

1:45:43

Christmas to anyone.

1:45:44

Is this when she was a senator?

1:45:46

I don't know.

1:45:47

It's recent.

1:45:47

It's recent?

1:45:48

Yeah.

1:45:49

Really?

1:45:49

It's so strange that, like, that was her, like, that's the only time I've seen

1:45:53

her passionate

1:45:53

about anything on camera.

1:45:55

Come on.

1:45:55

Really?

1:45:55

No, I haven't seen that.

1:45:56

I've seen the one she's telling that people need to be woke.

1:45:59

Everyone needs to be more woke.

1:46:00

Oh, yeah.

1:46:01

You should be more woke.

1:46:01

You should figure out who's the wokest and try to be the wokest, but she's,

1:46:05

whatever,

1:46:05

everyone should be more woke.

1:46:06

She's, like, laughing.

1:46:07

It's like, what the fuck?

1:46:08

And when we all sing happy tunes and sing Merry Christmas and wish each other

1:46:13

Merry Christmas,

1:46:14

these children are not going to have a Merry Christmas.

1:46:18

How dare we speak Merry Christmas?

1:46:21

How dare we?

1:46:22

Merry Christmas, everyone.

1:46:26

She invoked Greta Thunberg a little bit there.

1:46:32

Oh, that's so nutty.

1:46:35

How dare we?

1:46:36

How dare we?

1:46:37

How dare you?

1:46:38

Yeah.

1:46:38

No, we're definitely being gaslit.

1:46:40

And not only that, here's the big one, right?

1:46:42

She wasn't elected, right?

1:46:44

She was appointed vice president, and then they didn't do primaries.

1:46:50

They had no primaries for Joe Biden.

1:46:52

And now, all of a sudden, she is the nominee because he's stepping away.

1:46:56

And so then they bring in her, and they bring in this other guy who's radical

1:47:00

from Minnesota.

1:47:01

That's the vice president, who, he believes a lot of wild things.

1:47:09

One of them is transgender surgery for people who are under 13.

1:47:13

Another one is abortion up until nine months.

1:47:18

Ooh.

1:47:19

Yeah.

1:47:19

Obviously, there's reasons why people medically would, like, if the woman's

1:47:27

life is in danger,

1:47:29

if the child has something wrong, it's not going to live.

1:47:32

There's reasons why they choose to do things like that, but that stuff scares

1:47:38

the fuck out of people.

1:47:39

He changed the Minnesota state flag to make it look like a Somali flag.

1:47:44

Yeah.

1:47:45

Oh.

1:47:45

You haven't seen that?

1:47:46

No.

1:47:46

Yeah.

1:47:47

Show that video.

1:47:48

So the video of him taking down the Minnesota flag, and he replaced it with the

1:47:53

new flag that looks a lot like the Somali flag.

1:47:56

Wow.

1:47:56

Minnesota has a huge population of Somalis in it.

1:47:59

Well, isn't What's-Her-Face?

1:48:00

Yes.

1:48:01

Yeah.

1:48:02

Omar?

1:48:02

Yeah.

1:48:03

But there's a video of him doing it.

1:48:06

But I'm seeing false claims.

1:48:08

Well, okay.

1:48:09

Well, let's see the video.

1:48:10

But they did change the Minnesota state flag, correct?

1:48:13

Sometimes the false...

1:48:17

Yeah, that's the problem with, like, fact checkers.

1:48:19

Some of these fact checkers are completely full of shit.

1:48:21

Like, you're just trying to debunk something, especially now when there's all

1:48:25

this scrutiny being paid attention to what this guy's done.

1:48:27

Yeah.

1:48:30

What have you...

1:48:31

What's the false stuff, Jamie?

1:48:34

It's not the flag itself, correct?

1:48:36

Yeah.

1:48:36

I mean, I typed in...

1:48:38

I was just trying to even get to it.

1:48:39

A whole bunch of stories are popping up.

1:48:40

I'll just show you this.

1:48:41

Like, no, he didn't give them a Somali flag.

1:48:43

No, he didn't change it.

1:48:44

It resembles Somali, false Somali state flag.

1:48:46

But what does it look...

1:48:47

Okay, but what does it look like now?

1:48:49

So I was trying to get to.

1:48:50

Okay.

1:48:50

On the left is a Somali flag.

1:48:52

On the right is a Minnesota state flag.

1:48:54

Okay.

1:48:54

Same color as a Somali flag.

1:48:57

A white star, a different white star in it, like the Somali flag.

1:49:01

Very different than the original Minnesota flag.

1:49:04

And there's the video down below that.

1:49:06

That's when he changes it out.

1:49:08

So he takes out the Minnesota state flag.

1:49:10

Oh, hold on a second.

1:49:11

Wait a minute.

1:49:12

Turn the volume up, please.

1:49:14

So you can hear him say that.

1:49:15

All right, ready.

1:49:19

Whoa, wait a minute.

1:49:22

So he gets the flag, picks it up, moves it out of the way, and replaces it.

1:49:29

Look at this.

1:49:32

There, that's better.

1:49:37

Why is that better?

1:49:39

I don't know.

1:49:39

Why do you care what the flag looks like, first of all?

1:49:43

And why do you get to change the flag?

1:49:45

How crazy is that the governor gets to change the flag?

1:49:48

Like, who else is involved in that decision to change the flag?

1:49:51

I was going to ask, is that what happened?

1:49:52

I don't know.

1:49:53

Usually it's a big event.

1:49:55

They'll let people pick, you know.

1:49:57

Right.

1:49:57

No, we have a bunch of people that's a high population of Somalis in your state.

1:50:01

I would imagine they would want to try to get that flag a little closer to home.

1:50:05

You know.

1:50:05

The worst incident of fact-checking was the quid pro quo,

1:50:12

prid quo Joe clip where Biden brags about that time that he withheld a billion

1:50:20

dollars of aid to Ukraine.

1:50:22

So they fire a prosecutor.

1:50:23

To fire a prosecutor that we now know his son worked for.

1:50:26

And if you type that in, Snopes or whatever would tell you just like, oh, that

1:50:30

didn't happen.

1:50:31

Biden, there was no quid pro quo.

1:50:33

And Biden didn't want the prosecutor fired because he didn't know that his son

1:50:36

worked for Burisma at the time.

1:50:37

And it's like, how can you just say that's fake?

1:50:40

And it's scary to me that people will read that and be like, oh, it's fake.

1:50:44

It's like, no, look at it.

1:50:45

Like, with your eyes.

1:50:46

Yeah, fact-checkers are fucking dangerous.

1:50:48

And it's really, it's really, I mean, what you're seeing is kind of treason.

1:50:54

That's, it's kind of what it is.

1:50:56

If you're seeing that kind of fact-checking, you're lying.

1:50:58

You're lying and you're intentionally misrepresenting facts.

1:51:03

And you're doing so because you want a specific result politically.

1:51:07

Right.

1:51:07

And it should be illegal.

1:51:08

I agree.

1:51:09

Especially if people think of you as a fact-checker, you know, and what does

1:51:13

that mean?

1:51:14

What does it mean to be a fact-checker?

1:51:15

The problem with facts is a lot of them are very subjective.

1:51:17

And you can find one small inconsistency or one, you could phrase a question in

1:51:23

a certain

1:51:24

way and have your answer false in a different way because you're just finding

1:51:29

some nitpicky

1:51:30

way to look at things.

1:51:32

I've seen a lot of that to the point where you're like, that's not fact-checked

1:51:36

at all.

1:51:36

You guys just fucking, you're gaslighting.

1:51:39

It's just pure gaslighting.

1:51:40

This is what it says, who picked the new flag.

1:51:45

The emblems redesigned commission tasked with choosing the new flag and seal

1:51:49

made its final

1:51:50

selections this week and the new design will debut next year.

1:51:53

It follows four months of meetings, many spirited debates, and 2,500

1:51:57

submissions from the public

1:51:58

sharing their ideas for the new symbols.

1:52:00

This is why they changed it is, he said it was problematic.

1:52:05

Oh, I love that term.

1:52:07

Our current flag is problematic.

1:52:09

I think we all know that.

1:52:10

We've evolved from a more diverse state, evolved into a more diverse state, and

1:52:14

I think it's

1:52:14

more reflective of that.

1:52:15

Okay.

1:52:16

What was the original flag?

1:52:19

There's concern with the scene depicted on the old flag, which many found

1:52:23

offensive.

1:52:24

First adopted in 1957, the flag showed a white settler tilling land as an

1:52:28

indigenous man rides horseback.

1:52:31

Indigenous members of the state emblem redesigned commission said it was

1:52:35

harmful to their communities

1:52:36

and promoted the erasure of their people from the land.

1:52:40

What?

1:52:40

Well, can I see what it looks like?

1:52:42

Show me the original, just get a photo of the original Minnesota flag.

1:52:47

Okay, click on that.

1:52:54

Let's see what it looked like.

1:52:56

Okay.

1:52:57

So there's a Native American on horseback.

1:53:01

I see it, though.

1:53:02

And then there's a farmer tilling the land, a Native American on horseback.

1:53:07

Is that problematic because Native Americans didn't really ride horses and

1:53:11

people didn't

1:53:12

really till the land?

1:53:13

Like, I don't understand what...

1:53:14

There's a big controversy about that, actually.

1:53:16

Yeah?

1:53:17

Whether or not horses, how long horses have been in North America.

1:53:20

Well, horses originated in North America.

1:53:22

What?

1:53:23

Yeah.

1:53:24

Horses originated in North America, including zebras.

1:53:26

All of them originated in North America.

1:53:28

Then they were wiped out and they had been introduced into Asia and Africa and

1:53:33

all these other continents

1:53:35

and then reintroduced back to America.

1:53:37

Right.

1:53:37

I meant, like...

1:53:39

When people rode them.

1:53:40

Correct.

1:53:40

Right.

1:53:41

Because a lot of people are saying that First Nations peoples had horses for a

1:53:47

lot longer

1:53:48

than Europeans had been in America.

1:53:50

It's certainly possible.

1:53:51

There's certainly different segments, different North American tribes that were

1:53:56

much better,

1:53:57

including right here where we are, the Comanche.

1:53:59

The Comanche were notoriously good at raising horses and it was part of how

1:54:04

fierce they were.

1:54:04

They had so many horses and they rode them so well and they could ride sideways

1:54:08

and shoot

1:54:09

arrows underneath the horse's neck.

1:54:10

But I don't know why that's so problematic.

1:54:15

You've got to replace it with something that looks a whole lot like a Somali

1:54:17

flag.

1:54:18

Yeah.

1:54:18

The idea that it doesn't look like a Somali flag is kind of crazy.

1:54:21

I mean, it does.

1:54:23

It does.

1:54:23

It certainly does.

1:54:24

It's certainly the same color.

1:54:25

It certainly also has a white star.

1:54:27

It's just a different white star.

1:54:28

Correct.

1:54:28

Yeah.

1:54:29

Yeah.

1:54:29

So it's like, you know, the flag doesn't bother me that much.

1:54:34

If the people in Minnesota like it, like who cares?

1:54:36

It's just a star and some colors.

1:54:38

The real problem is when you hear discussions of things that are like openly

1:54:44

Marxist philosophies,

1:54:47

when you hear talk about equal outcomes and, you know, and not just equal

1:54:52

opportunity, but

1:54:54

that we all need to arrive at the same place, equal outcome talk.

1:54:57

There's only one way they can do that.

1:54:59

And it's by forcing you.

1:55:01

Well, it's by everyone having nothing.

1:55:02

Yeah.

1:55:02

That's the only way to have things totally equal because you can't have

1:55:06

everyone have everything.

1:55:07

That's impossible.

1:55:08

Right.

1:55:08

There's no way.

1:55:09

There's not enough resources.

1:55:11

And so for equal distribution, that has to be enforced by law.

1:55:15

So that has to be enforced by the government.

1:55:17

And the government generally does not have equal.

1:55:19

They have much more than you.

1:55:20

And that's Fidel Castro in Cuba.

1:55:22

That's, um, that's North Korea.

1:55:25

That's virtually every communist country that's ever existed.

1:55:28

You have a military dictatorship that decides what you can and can't do with

1:55:33

your time and

1:55:33

all under the guise of making it better for everyone.

1:55:36

And that's exactly what they did to North Korea when they took over people's

1:55:39

farms.

1:55:40

They said, we're going to take over the farm so that everybody has food.

1:55:42

Yay.

1:55:43

Good.

1:55:43

Now everyone's starving and the government has all the food.

1:55:45

And if you kill a cow, they'll kill you.

1:55:47

Yeah.

1:55:48

It's nuts.

1:55:49

It's nuts that people don't learn from history.

1:55:51

And it's nuts that people who, um, subscribe to this leftist ideology have this

1:55:56

very distorted

1:55:57

version of humans and, and how capitalism works and what's the benefits of it.

1:56:02

I think there's a lot of parts of progressive ideology and philosophy that

1:56:06

could be applied,

1:56:07

um, to society to make things better.

1:56:11

I think if we funded more things the same way we fund the fire department, the

1:56:16

police force,

1:56:17

these are kind of socialist things, right?

1:56:18

Everybody gets access to the fire department, right?

1:56:21

It's a part of being in the community.

1:56:22

We all pay for it.

1:56:23

Um, education is that way, but it should be much more funded, right?

1:56:27

It should be much more prestigious, much more, much better trained teachers, a

1:56:32

more esteemed

1:56:34

position.

1:56:34

I feel the same way about law enforcement, they should be much more respected,

1:56:38

much better

1:56:38

trained.

1:56:39

We should put much more resources into that and have them be integral and a

1:56:43

part of the

1:56:43

community and the, for the safety of the community, not, not the bad guys who

1:56:47

come in to pull

1:56:48

you over because you rolled through a fucking stoplight, you know, that kind of

1:56:52

shit.

1:56:53

And I think the problem is these people that have this idea of equal outcome,

1:56:59

this is the

1:57:01

worst version of all these leftist ideologies.

1:57:04

The worst version is open borders.

1:57:06

Everybody should have everything and then equal distribution of it.

1:57:10

And then what always comes with that is they unarm the citizens.

1:57:13

And if they don't unarm the citizens, you can't get away with any of this stuff.

1:57:16

But as soon as you have, no one has guns other than the police, everybody is

1:57:20

forced to comply.

1:57:21

And if the army and the police are the only ones that get to tell you what to

1:57:25

do and they

1:57:25

take orders from the government and the government is a communist dictatorship,

1:57:29

you're fucked.

1:57:30

And that has never been more evident than in all the versions of it that you

1:57:37

can see in

1:57:39

current world politics now where a government has been taken over by a

1:57:43

communist regime.

1:57:44

It's always bad.

1:57:46

It never turns out good.

1:57:47

Not a single fucking time.

1:57:49

People starve.

1:57:50

It gets horrible.

1:57:51

You know, there's, there's just terrible government overreach.

1:57:56

You're seeing it now in England where people are getting arrested for tweets.

1:58:00

Yeah.

1:58:01

England, you know, people talk about Soviet Russia, like how bad, uh, Russia is

1:58:06

in terms of, uh,

1:58:08

cracking down on thought police and cracking down on bad tweets and things like

1:58:13

that.

1:58:14

I think the statistics are, I think England in the last, I think there's

1:58:19

something like 4,000

1:58:21

people have been arrested in England for thought crimes where they've said

1:58:27

things online that

1:58:28

people find to be a hateful thing or a problematic thing.

1:58:32

And I think it's only 200 in Russia.

1:58:34

Oh, wow.

1:58:36

Yeah.

1:58:36

That says a lot.

1:58:38

Yeah.

1:58:38

Maybe in Russia, they're too scared to do it at all.

1:58:40

Could be.

1:58:41

Yeah.

1:58:42

But the fact that they're comfortable with finding people who've said something

1:58:47

that they disagree

1:58:47

with and putting them in a fucking cage in England in 2024 is really wild.

1:58:52

Yeah.

1:58:52

Especially they're, they're saying you get arrested just for retweeting

1:58:55

something.

1:58:56

And who's to, here's the problem with that.

1:58:58

Even if you say, yeah, well, people shouldn't treat hateful, hateful things.

1:59:01

I agree.

1:59:01

They shouldn't.

1:59:02

But who's to decide what is a hateful thing?

1:59:05

That's the problem.

1:59:05

It's subjective.

1:59:06

That's the problem.

1:59:06

It's very subjective.

1:59:07

And it still shouldn't be a crime.

1:59:09

And in our lifetime, we've seen that get moved, right?

1:59:12

So it used to be if a guy thought he was a woman and his name was Doug and you

1:59:17

grew up

1:59:18

with Doug and all of a sudden Doug wants to be called Debbie, if you call him

1:59:22

Doug, it's

1:59:23

no big deal.

1:59:24

Like, yeah, maybe you're being rude to call him Doug, but it's not a hate crime.

1:59:28

Okay.

1:59:29

Well, now a lot of people think it's a hate crime and that that got you banned

1:59:32

from Twitter

1:59:33

for life.

1:59:33

So if you dead named someone on the old Twitter, you were banned for life.

1:59:38

Dead named, not even making up a name.

1:59:40

You can call him an idiot.

1:59:42

You can call someone an idiot.

1:59:43

Okay.

1:59:43

Forget about a man and address.

1:59:44

Maybe that's a problem.

1:59:45

But if you call it a regular guy, an idiot, you stupid fuck.

1:59:48

Fine.

1:59:49

No problem.

1:59:50

But if you call Doug, Doug, you will get banned for life.

1:59:54

Okay.

1:59:55

That's the new hate speech.

1:59:56

That's crazy.

1:59:57

Now, if that keeps going, that didn't exist before.

2:00:00

If that keeps going, maybe you can go to jail for calling him Doug.

2:00:02

Maybe they think it's okay to put you in jail because you violated their hate

2:00:06

speech laws.

2:00:07

That's how nutty things can get.

2:00:08

And you've also seen during COVID how ridiculous people get with cracking down

2:00:14

and enforcing laws

2:00:16

like that.

2:00:16

You know, you saw it in Australia, people getting arrested for being outside

2:00:19

without a mask

2:00:20

on.

2:00:20

Which is like the opposite of what you should be doing.

2:00:22

Exactly.

2:00:23

I mean, you should be outside is what I'm saying.

2:00:24

Right.

2:00:24

You should be outside and you shouldn't have a mask on.

2:00:26

It's nonsense.

2:00:27

It doesn't work.

2:00:27

There's no evidence whatsoever that it's effective.

2:00:30

I thought it was funny how many people, like the mask was never intended to be

2:00:33

protection

2:00:34

for you.

2:00:34

Right.

2:00:35

It was to protect others around you.

2:00:37

But like I saw so many people putting it on like a shield.

2:00:39

It's like it doesn't, it's not a, not only that, it's the, you're using

2:00:43

surgical masks.

2:00:44

Those are designed to keep people from spitting into open wounds.

2:00:47

Right.

2:00:48

Dropping particles out of their mouth into people's surgeries.

2:00:52

It's, we're so susceptible to manipulation and that's what's really scary about

2:00:57

the time that

2:00:58

we're living in because we have so much access to information, but yet so many

2:01:02

people are willing

2:01:03

to put the blinders on and go full steam ahead with whatever their team wants.

2:01:08

You know, like there was this ridiculous video the other day, comics for Kamala.

2:01:12

Oh, did you see that?

2:01:14

No, what I saw, white men for Kamala.

2:01:17

Was that it?

2:01:17

There's the dudes, white dudes for Kamala.

2:01:19

This is all organized, by the way.

2:01:21

And there was a Twitch streamer, like one of the big time Twitch streamers, one

2:01:25

of the big

2:01:26

guys, who read out what they were offering him.

2:01:29

They were offering him money to advocate for Kamala Harris online.

2:01:33

He's like, I am not fucking doing this.

2:01:35

And so he's like reading this thing where they're, they're offering money.

2:01:38

They're literally paying for astroturfing.

2:01:40

Yeah.

2:01:41

The most egregious thing I've seen recently, you know, after everything of the

2:01:46

past eight

2:01:47

years, nine years, it's hard to get pissed off genuinely anymore.

2:01:49

But is now all the left people saying that Trump is afraid to debate Trump or

2:01:55

that Trump

2:01:56

is afraid to debate Kamala.

2:01:57

And I saw this meme of Trump is like the cowardly lion.

2:02:00

Everyone's like, he's never going to show up.

2:02:02

And it's like, you said the exact same thing about Biden, the exact same thing.

2:02:05

And Trump went in there and just like, yeah, like it was, oh man, the guy who

2:02:10

got shot in

2:02:11

the face like two days ago and said, fight, fight, fight is scared to debate

2:02:15

Kamala.

2:02:16

Yeah.

2:02:16

It seems ridiculous, but you know, that's just what they do.

2:02:19

That's politics.

2:02:20

They do it on the left.

2:02:21

They do it on the right.

2:02:22

They gaslight you.

2:02:22

They manipulate you.

2:02:23

They, they promote narratives.

2:02:26

And the only one who's not doing that is Robert F.

2:02:29

Kennedy Jr.

2:02:29

You a fan?

2:02:30

Yeah, I am a fan.

2:02:31

Yeah.

2:02:32

He's the only one that makes sense to me.

2:02:33

He's the only one that he doesn't attack people.

2:02:35

He attacks actions and ideas, but he's, he's much more reasonable and

2:02:41

intelligent.

2:02:43

I mean, the guy was an environmental attorney and cleaned up the East River.

2:02:47

He's, he's a legitimate guy, you know, before anybody started calling him an

2:02:51

anti-vaxxer,

2:02:52

which I thought he was too.

2:02:53

I thought he was just nut, this like conspiracy theorist nut until I read his

2:02:57

book.

2:02:57

I read the real Anthony Fauci and I'm like, what is, how much of this is real?

2:03:04

Cause if it's all real, this is fucking insane.

2:03:07

And we live in a world where we're being manipulated by these health

2:03:10

organizations that

2:03:11

are being paid by the pharmaceutical drug interests and these pharmaceutical

2:03:15

drug companies are

2:03:16

pumping these products out into the population and telling us that we need them

2:03:21

and then making

2:03:22

insane amounts of money.

2:03:24

And then also the government is in on it.

2:03:28

And also they share a patent with Moderna and also they, they share profits and

2:03:33

there's

2:03:33

$700 million, 700, I mean, however, however much money was made, whatever the

2:03:40

number is that

2:03:41

these guys made off of these products.

2:03:43

Like this is all of it is fucking crazy.

2:03:45

There's the revolving door between the CDC and the FDA and then these

2:03:49

pharmaceutical drug

2:03:51

companies.

2:03:51

So the people that make the regulations then go on to have these cushy jobs

2:03:55

with the pharmaceutical

2:03:56

drug corporations, like, Oh, nothing to see here.

2:03:58

It's like, it's open.

2:03:59

It's right out in the open.

2:04:00

Right.

2:04:00

And when he talks about all that stuff in his book, you're just like, what the

2:04:03

fuck, man?

2:04:04

If this wasn't true, he would be sued.

2:04:06

Yeah.

2:04:07

So it seems to be true.

2:04:08

Yeah.

2:04:09

And it's a scary thing because people don't want to talk about it because they

2:04:11

don't want

2:04:12

to be attacked.

2:04:12

You know, they don't want to be called an anti-vaxxer.

2:04:15

That's a big one.

2:04:16

Right.

2:04:16

You know, it cracked me up how a lot of the people on the right started to despise

2:04:23

the

2:04:23

vaccine.

2:04:23

And then Trump at the same time was like, it's my vaccine.

2:04:27

You guys.

2:04:27

And then he got kind of confused.

2:04:29

It's one of the rare times in politics that Trump like didn't seem sure of his

2:04:32

course.

2:04:33

Well, I think he was proud of getting it out there.

2:04:36

Warp speed.

2:04:37

Yeah.

2:04:37

And he was proud that they did it.

2:04:40

We got the vaccine.

2:04:41

It was a good vaccine.

2:04:42

I don't think he knows.

2:04:44

You know, I think he took it, which is crazy too, because the guy survived

2:04:47

COVID.

2:04:47

He got COVID before the vaccine was developed.

2:04:50

And then he still took the vaccine, which is like literally illogical.

2:04:54

It flies in the face of science and what we understand about the immune system.

2:04:58

But, you know, there's a video of Anthony Fauci from many years ago on a talk

2:05:03

show saying

2:05:04

someone got the flu.

2:05:05

Should they get a flu shot?

2:05:06

No, because if you survive the disease, if you recover from the disease, you

2:05:11

have the

2:05:12

best protection.

2:05:12

He's like literally saying that.

2:05:14

Right.

2:05:15

And then, of course, that was thrown out the window when they wanted to vaccinate

2:05:17

everybody.

2:05:18

Well, plus it's not a vaccine.

2:05:19

Right.

2:05:20

A vaccine is a flu shot.

2:05:21

It's the equivalent of a flu shot because a vaccine means you can't get it.

2:05:24

Well, it's even more weird because it's mRNA, right?

2:05:28

So it's like this messenger RNA.

2:05:31

It's basically gene therapy.

2:05:34

Like you're tricking your body into creating these antibodies.

2:05:38

Right.

2:05:38

And you're also doing a bunch of damage to some people.

2:05:41

Yeah.

2:05:42

Which is also their gaslighting.

2:05:43

Right.

2:05:43

About how many people are vaccine injured.

2:05:45

I fucking know a bunch of them.

2:05:46

We all do.

2:05:47

Yeah.

2:05:48

We all know somebody who got fucked up by that stuff.

2:05:50

It's all crazy.

2:05:52

I'm talking into the people arrested for tweets in England thing.

2:05:55

Yeah.

2:05:55

It's a very confusing story.

2:05:57

So it says 3,395 arrests have been made by 29 UK police forces for Section 27,

2:06:05

or Section

2:06:06

127 offenses, which is used for cases of online abuse.

2:06:10

According to the article, 1,696 people were subsequently charged.

2:06:14

Section 127 offenses cover harassment that takes place via electronic

2:06:18

communications network and is not limited to social media posts.

2:06:22

Harassment via email or other forms of online communication can also fall under

2:06:26

this definition.

2:06:28

So this video is going around recently.

2:06:30

Of the lady arresting that guy.

2:06:32

And this is going back to a discussion that Constantine Kizzen was having on a

2:06:38

YouTube video.

2:06:39

Right.

2:06:39

From before COVID, though.

2:06:41

So this was all from like 2017.

2:06:43

Yeah, but they've been doing it for a while, yeah.

2:06:45

I'm looking up and trying to find, like, I can't find any updated information

2:06:50

that says that this is still continuing to happen except for three guys were

2:06:55

recently arrested for, like, the Leeds riots because they were posting violent

2:06:59

stuff on Twitter or something like that.

2:07:01

I know there was one guy who was posting stickers.

2:07:05

He got arrested for posting stickers that they said were offensive.

2:07:09

It's just we take for granted what we have with the First Amendment, freedom of

2:07:15

speech.

2:07:16

Yeah.

2:07:17

Freedom of speech is gigantic.

2:07:18

There's only one way you find out what's right.

2:07:20

You've got to let people talk.

2:07:21

And you've got to let people, even like on X, say the wrong things or say

2:07:25

offensive things.

2:07:26

You find those people, you don't like them, block them.

2:07:28

You don't like it, don't listen.

2:07:30

Don't read.

2:07:31

Don't read what they're saying.

2:07:31

You know, it's disturbing.

2:07:33

It is very disturbing.

2:07:33

It's very, to me, when I really became, like, hyper aware of it was post-October

2:07:40

7th when you see so much anti-Semitism.

2:07:44

It's just like blatant out in the open and often incorrect and ignorant anti-Semitism.

2:07:50

Not just like, wow, look at all these Jewish people that are the head of these

2:07:53

banks.

2:07:54

Look at all these Jewish people that are running show business.

2:07:57

They're just ruthless, nasty anti-Semitism out in the open.

2:08:01

And then people agreeing with it out in the open.

2:08:03

You're like, ugh.

2:08:04

Like, this is crazy.

2:08:05

Well, it's almost, I, it's because it's coming from one protected class to

2:08:10

another.

2:08:11

Mm-hmm.

2:08:12

Is how I see that.

2:08:13

Because, I mean, like, you know, obviously if that was a stance of the right,

2:08:18

it would be immediately called out as evil as it is.

2:08:21

Right.

2:08:22

Right.

2:08:23

It's not, right?

2:08:24

It's a stance of the left, which is fascinating.

2:08:26

That's why those, when those heads of universities were getting grilled and

2:08:32

they were talking about whether or not saying death to the Jews is harassment

2:08:38

at MIT or at Harvard, rather.

2:08:40

And they were, she was saying, well, if it's actionable.

2:08:44

So, you're saying you actually, you gotta wait till they do it.

2:08:47

You gotta wait till they commit genocide before it's a problem.

2:08:49

Yeah.

2:08:50

No, that's pretty nuts.

2:08:51

It's nuts.

2:08:51

Yeah, it's nuts.

2:08:52

But it's also, it's like, you know, this is the consequences of having these

2:08:58

rigid ideologies where you think that your side has to be correct and the other

2:09:04

side is incorrect.

2:09:06

And if you think, you know, free, free Palestine, this is what we're into.

2:09:09

So, like, the people that are the most radical that are pushing that the furthest,

2:09:12

like the Antifa of that organization, are the death to the Jews people.

2:09:16

They're the ones that are going to take, like, remember during the George Floyd

2:09:20

riots and the Antifa riots, like, people on the left sided with violent mobs

2:09:24

and tried to gaslight you on what they did.

2:09:27

Yeah.

2:09:27

They said they're mostly peaceful demonstrations.

2:09:29

As the camera's panning around trying not to get something engulfed in flames.

2:09:33

Yeah, it's crazy.

2:09:33

That's gaslighting.

2:09:35

But the reason why is because those are the people that are going to crack

2:09:38

heads and get things done for our side.

2:09:40

That's the implication.

2:09:41

The implication is we are on the left and the most violent and aggressive

2:09:45

people on the left, they're going to push the envelope.

2:09:48

They're going to get things done.

2:09:49

So, they're mostly doing good.

2:09:50

They're mostly peaceful.

2:09:51

Yeah.

2:09:52

Well, I think the shame of it is that, like, I don't know, BLM, like, now it's

2:09:58

pretty well understood that they were legit a scam.

2:10:02

Yeah.

2:10:02

They made a lot of money.

2:10:03

They bought a lot of real estate.

2:10:04

They bought, like, six mansions and a bunch of cars and then they disbanded.

2:10:07

Yeah.

2:10:09

And it's sad.

2:10:10

Like, have you seen the exterminator footage?

2:10:12

There was this exterminator white guy literally got handcuffed and shot by the

2:10:17

police on camera in a hotel.

2:10:19

For what?

2:10:20

Oh, you mean the guy that's in Phoenix?

2:10:22

I don't know where it was.

2:10:23

It's in Arizona where he's crawling along the hallway and the guy, his pants

2:10:27

are dropping down and the cop shoots him?

2:10:30

No, I don't think so.

2:10:32

This is a guy who, he had, like, he was an exterminator and he had a pellet gun

2:10:35

and he was putting it in it.

2:10:36

That's it?

2:10:37

Yeah, it's in a hotel.

2:10:38

Yeah.

2:10:38

Yeah, it's in a hotel.

2:10:39

I just, I remember that.

2:10:40

And, like, that's one of the most disturbing.

2:10:42

Uh-huh.

2:10:44

What I'm trying to say is that if you're trying to solve the problem of police

2:10:48

overstep, looking at it through a racial lens isn't going to solve it because

2:10:52

that's not the problem.

2:10:53

Right.

2:10:53

Because it happens to white people.

2:10:54

It happens to a lot of people.

2:10:56

Right.

2:10:56

Yeah.

2:10:56

So you can't just blanket statement with it saying that it's about one

2:11:00

particular group.

2:11:01

Well, I think it was one of those moments in history where one thing sets off

2:11:07

and there's a bunch of tension that's, like, at the surface, racial tension.

2:11:13

And then one thing sets it off and then there's this narrative.

2:11:17

And then there's through social media, you get all these examples that you see

2:11:20

over and over and over again of white cops shooting black people.

2:11:24

And so people have it in their mind that black people are unjustly harassed and

2:11:30

are attacked more than anyone else.

2:11:33

And that's why that professor at Harvard who released that study showing that

2:11:38

there is not a difference, there's not a disparity, a racial disparity in the

2:11:43

way black people are assaulted or are shot by cops versus white people.

2:11:48

And people attacked him.

2:11:49

Right.

2:11:50

Because they don't want their narratives destroyed.

2:11:51

The problem is bad cops.

2:11:53

Right.

2:11:53

Of course.

2:11:53

That's the problem.

2:11:54

And the problem is sociopaths that become police officers.

2:11:57

This problem is cops with PTSD.

2:11:59

The problem is just like you can have bad anything in any walk of life.

2:12:05

You can have a bad doctor.

2:12:06

You can have a bad football coach.

2:12:08

You can have a bad cop.

2:12:09

And the bad cops are a real fucking problem.

2:12:11

They wind up shooting people that shouldn't be shot.

2:12:14

They're fucking crazy.

2:12:16

They've lost their soul.

2:12:17

You know?

2:12:18

The aliens wouldn't want them as a container.

2:12:21

No, they wouldn't.

2:12:21

No.

2:12:22

No.

2:12:24

The alien thing is crazy if that's – if what we're talking about when we talk

2:12:29

about like save our souls, like that we think about having like your essence is

2:12:36

negative and evil.

2:12:39

And that negative evil essence.

2:12:42

They're trying to minimize the amount of those.

2:12:44

Like if your crop has like a disease, if like some sort of a thing is – some

2:12:49

fungus is growing on your crop, you're going to destroy most of the crop.

2:12:55

Like what do we have to do to protect the crop?

2:12:57

When we give the crop religion, let's keep these mind viruses from destroying

2:13:02

us.

2:13:03

Let's keep, you know, war at a minimum.

2:13:05

Let's keep these people from doing things that are unethical and immoral

2:13:09

because they actually do damage the thing that we need the most that's inside

2:13:13

of it.

2:13:14

Right.

2:13:15

Have you ever had any sort of an alien experience?

2:13:17

Yeah, actually.

2:13:19

My roommate and I – this was at my college, Ripon College.

2:13:27

We were on this place like that's basically just a balcony and we just saw –

2:13:33

it was like 3 a.m.

2:13:35

We were – drank a lot that night and we're having our last cigarette of the

2:13:39

night.

2:13:40

And we just saw one triangle with red dots appear way in the distance and it

2:13:46

was by a radio tower, which I only mention because it's easy to say then you

2:13:52

saw the radio tower.

2:13:53

It's like, no, the radio tower was clear and then we watched it for like two

2:13:58

minutes and then another one appeared right next to it and then they both

2:14:02

disappeared.

2:14:03

And it was – it wasn't really a big deal at the time.

2:14:07

Like – and it still isn't now.

2:14:09

But it was something, man.

2:14:11

It was really something.

2:14:12

When you say it wasn't a big deal, what do you mean?

2:14:14

Like we weren't like agitated.

2:14:16

Like, you know, it wasn't – like it was more just like that's nuts.

2:14:19

Like it wasn't –

2:14:21

Well, you're probably a little drunk still too, right?

2:14:22

Yeah.

2:14:23

Oh, yeah.

2:14:23

Yeah.

2:14:24

Yeah.

2:14:24

But –

2:14:24

But you all saw the same thing?

2:14:26

Oh, yeah.

2:14:26

How many guys?

2:14:27

Just two of us.

2:14:28

And it was very far away.

2:14:31

Did anybody else see it?

2:14:32

Was there any other reports?

2:14:33

Not that I know of.

2:14:34

I never looked into it.

2:14:35

And so it was very far away and how did it move?

2:14:38

Didn't move.

2:14:39

It just hovered?

2:14:40

We know – I don't know if the first one appeared or not or if it was always

2:14:44

there.

2:14:45

But like I think he saw it first and I looked and was like, what is that?

2:14:49

Because it was dark but you couldn't see stars behind it.

2:14:53

You know, so like there was obviously something in between the three red lights.

2:14:56

And then the second one appeared overlapping it.

2:15:00

So like in front of it.

2:15:01

And then they both just disappeared.

2:15:03

Just disappeared?

2:15:04

Yeah.

2:15:04

Just blinked out of existence?

2:15:06

We didn't see them leave.

2:15:09

So just you were staring at it and all of a sudden it was gone?

2:15:12

Correct.

2:15:12

And did you both say, oh shit, it's gone?

2:15:15

I don't even remember.

2:15:16

Wow.

2:15:17

It was something though.

2:15:20

I have it.

2:15:21

I have photos of it on an old Blackberry.

2:15:23

Really?

2:15:24

Yeah.

2:15:24

How blurry are they?

2:15:25

Very blurry.

2:15:27

They just look like nothing.

2:15:29

What's the best photo of a UFO that's ever been taken?

2:15:33

I mean –

2:15:34

I don't know.

2:15:35

There's a bunch of old ones from like the 1960s I think that think are straight

2:15:38

horse shit.

2:15:39

Yeah.

2:15:39

There's this one guy who kept encountering him and it looks like hubcaps and

2:15:44

stuff that he's throwing in the sky.

2:15:46

Yeah.

2:15:46

Could have been that – I don't know.

2:15:48

I don't know specifics of photos.

2:15:49

Did you ever see the Mexico City footage?

2:15:51

I don't even know why.

2:15:56

That made me think of Signs, the movie.

2:15:58

Mm, yeah.

2:15:59

It's my favorite movie of all time.

2:16:00

It's a good movie.

2:16:01

The Mexico City UFO footage is interesting because it's in Mexico City and you

2:16:05

see this thing flying

2:16:06

and you see it like in the distance as it's going past these buildings.

2:16:10

And you're like, what the fuck is that?

2:16:13

And seen by thousands and thousands of people.

2:16:16

I would imagine that the best one is the Phoenix lights.

2:16:21

Mm-hmm.

2:16:22

That's kind of –

2:16:23

Yeah.

2:16:23

Clearest UFO photo ever taken was hidden from the public for three decades.

2:16:28

The Calvin photograph taken by two hikers in the Scottish Highlands.

2:16:33

The picture is handed over to the Ministry of Defense and was hidden from the

2:16:36

public for

2:16:37

more than three decades.

2:16:38

The unbelievable images show a diamond-shaped object hovering in the sky.

2:16:43

Hmm.

2:16:45

It looks like a saucer.

2:16:47

It looks like it's just pointy at the top.

2:16:50

Like, doesn't it look like it would be circular?

2:16:52

Why do they think it's diamond-shaped?

2:16:54

Oh, okay.

2:16:55

That way it looks diamond-shaped.

2:16:56

Is that a – that's the photo?

2:16:57

Mm-hmm.

2:16:58

Holy crap.

2:16:59

Yeah.

2:16:59

Wild, huh?

2:17:01

That is very wild.

2:17:03

Yeah.

2:17:03

It does look like it'd be circular.

2:17:06

I mean, it's hard to say what the fuck that is.

2:17:10

Go back to that other one where this – I think that the top one is, like,

2:17:13

enhanced.

2:17:14

I'm trying to read it.

2:17:14

There's some descriptions about it and eyewitnesses that saw it, too.

2:17:17

I'm just trying to read what it said.

2:17:19

It's just right here.

2:17:20

It says, there's something fishy here.

2:17:21

A huge pinch of salt, but I was trying to get to it.

2:17:24

Right.

2:17:25

It says, hovered for 10 minutes, shot upwards, which I've heard before.

2:17:29

Before disappearing.

2:17:31

Negatives of the picture dubbed the Calvin photograph were originally handed

2:17:36

over to Scotland's daily record newspaper, who in turn passed them to the

2:17:39

Ministry of Defense.

2:17:41

However, they were never shown to the public.

2:17:45

After decades of research, photos uncovered by academic and journalist Dr.

2:17:49

David Clark.

2:17:50

Dr. Clark reached out to – Clark is spelled in two different ways right there.

2:17:55

This website might suck.

2:17:57

See, he's got an E in the first one, and then afterwards, no E.

2:18:00

As the story goes, that Dr. Clark reached out to Craig Lindsay, former Royal

2:18:05

Air Force press officer, who had kept a copy of the photo after the story was

2:18:09

looked into back in the 90s.

2:18:11

Lindsay even kept the original envelope containing the Calvin photos in his

2:18:15

possession.

2:18:18

Hmm.

2:18:18

That's the dude?

2:18:20

I guess so.

2:18:22

That dude looks like he might sell you a bad car.

2:18:24

For instance, an astronomer was left amazed by a UFO caught flying across the

2:18:30

moon?

2:18:31

What the fuck's that?

2:18:32

Click on that.

2:18:33

Okay.

2:18:41

So he's looking at it through a telescope.

2:18:43

What's he see?

2:18:46

Did you see that?

2:18:54

What?

2:18:55

I did see that.

2:18:56

Something flew across the screen there.

2:18:56

Oh, yeah.

2:18:57

Happened fast, but –

2:19:01

Right.

2:19:05

I mean, there's a lot of space in between his telescope and the moon, too.

2:19:08

Yeah, that could be satellites, right?

2:19:10

It says not the ISS.

2:19:11

Okay.

2:19:12

Maybe it's another satellite.

2:19:13

Maybe it's a bug.

2:19:14

Or –

2:19:15

Rod.

2:19:16

Or –

2:19:16

Maybe it's UFO.

2:19:17

Aliens.

2:19:18

Yeah.

2:19:18

Yeah.

2:19:19

Or UFOs.

2:19:20

UFO – UAPs.

2:19:21

Yeah.

2:19:22

Why'd they change that?

2:19:23

Did UFO have a stink to it?

2:19:25

I think it was so Hillary Clinton had a sound bite.

2:19:28

Really?

2:19:29

Do you remember?

2:19:30

She was the one who announced it.

2:19:31

Oh.

2:19:32

That they changed the name?

2:19:33

Yeah.

2:19:33

She was the first one to do it.

2:19:35

Have you seen that clip where she's like – UAPs, actually?

2:19:40

No.

2:19:40

I haven't.

2:19:41

All of it's weird.

2:19:43

It is weird.

2:19:44

It's a waste of time, you know, because there's – if there's no real evidence

2:19:48

in front

2:19:49

of you, you're just sitting around here spinning your wheels, having stupid

2:19:52

conversations about it.

2:19:53

Finally tonight –

2:19:54

Oh, what happened?

2:19:55

Sorry.

2:19:55

What's that one about?

2:19:56

Hillary Clinton was promising to tell the truth about UFOs back in 2016.

2:20:00

Oh, she lied.

2:20:00

She's just trying to get – she's just trying to get elected.

2:20:05

Maybe if she won, she would have told us there was Charlemagne.

2:20:09

The God.

2:20:11

You think she smells like sulfur?

2:20:17

I do.

2:20:20

No, I don't.

2:20:21

Have you seen the remake?

2:20:23

The Alex Jones remake of that song?

2:20:25

Yes.

2:20:25

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:20:26

That's like the best thing I've ever seen.

2:20:27

Oh, it's amazing.

2:20:28

Yeah.

2:20:28

It's amazing when he goes on that rant and they turn it into a song.

2:20:31

Yeah.

2:20:32

Yeah.

2:20:32

Yeah, it's easy to get very cynical about our world now.

2:20:37

It is.

2:20:38

It's terrible.

2:20:38

I think that's also a feature of this whole UFO thing is that people want the

2:20:42

UFOs to come

2:20:43

and save us.

2:20:43

Yeah.

2:20:44

Because they think we're fucked.

2:20:45

I think that extraterrestrials, if they exist, are evil.

2:20:49

Really?

2:20:50

I do.

2:20:51

Really?

2:20:52

Well, I mean, if you look at the lion's share of abduction reports, they're all

2:20:55

really nasty.

2:20:57

Yeah, there's always an anal probe and weird being paralyzed on an operating

2:21:03

table.

2:21:04

Yeah.

2:21:05

But also, it's like you've got to imagine the fear that a person would have.

2:21:10

It's not evil in terms of like they don't get killed, right?

2:21:13

So they get released.

2:21:15

They get returned.

2:21:15

But they have this terrifying and frightening experience.

2:21:18

So you've got to imagine that just being taking aboard a UFO, even if they're

2:21:22

being kind to you,

2:21:23

it'd be fucking horrific.

2:21:24

You'd be so scared that you would kind of assume that they were negative.

2:21:28

Right.

2:21:29

Well, according to Dr. Carla Turner, so she has three rules or 10 rules about

2:21:35

UFO abductions.

2:21:37

The first one is that we don't actually know what they are.

2:21:39

So aliens are extra carbon or terrestrial aliens, interdimensional or something

2:21:46

else entirely.

2:21:47

And the second rule is that they lie about their origin.

2:21:55

Because they've given lots of places and none of them panned out, apparently.

2:21:58

And then the third rule is that they're full of shit and that they have total

2:22:07

control over the abductee.

2:22:10

So, like, you only remember what they wanted you to remember.

2:22:13

And, like, it's nuts.

2:22:14

So she was like a doctor of language, nothing to do with aliens or anything,

2:22:20

until in 1991 they let her remember that she's been abducted all her life.

2:22:25

Whoa.

2:22:28

Yeah, and then, strangely enough, same thing happened to her husband.

2:22:32

He remembered that he'd been abducted all of his life.

2:22:35

And evidently they told her something like, why do you think you guys married

2:22:39

each other?

2:22:39

And the implication was that it was just convenient for the aliens.

2:22:44

Whoa.

2:22:45

I know.

2:22:46

And it's so weird because, like, you can watch her lectures.

2:22:48

They're mostly blacklisted, but there are ways to find them even on YouTube.

2:22:51

Does she seem rational?

2:22:54

She seems so rational.

2:22:56

And she just has this sweet, she's not old, but kind of an old lady voice.

2:23:00

And she talks extensively about how all these abductees have terrible traumas

2:23:05

left from it, even if they have positive memories of the abductions.

2:23:09

Right.

2:23:09

Just because the subconscious probably has.

2:23:11

Correct.

2:23:12

Yeah.

2:23:12

And that a lot of them have terrible issues of cancer.

2:23:15

And then she dies of cancer everywhere in 1998.

2:23:19

Oh.

2:23:20

Yeah.

2:23:21

Like, it's, I only discovered her a little while ago.

2:23:25

And it was very disturbing stuff.

2:23:27

Like, really disturbing stuff.

2:23:29

Mm.

2:23:29

Whoa.

2:23:31

Um, Tucker Carlson seems to believe that they're, they've always been here.

2:23:36

He doesn't think they're coming here from another planet.

2:23:38

I think that that might be more likely.

2:23:41

He thinks that they're in the Bible, that this is something that's a feature of

2:23:45

human history, that people have always discussed, like, these beings, these

2:23:49

things that are with us.

2:23:51

And that somehow or another, they're, they're able to evade our detection.

2:23:54

Right.

2:23:55

On a regular basis.

2:23:56

However that is.

2:23:58

But he thinks they're like angels and devils.

2:24:00

Well, I'm sure that's the words we used for them.

2:24:02

Yeah.

2:24:03

Have you read the angel description?

2:24:05

Mm-hmm.

2:24:07

Like, it's a, a wheel with 16 eyes or something?

2:24:10

That's Ezekiel.

2:24:10

Yeah.

2:24:11

Yeah.

2:24:11

Like, that's a bizarre way to describe an angel.

2:24:14

Yeah.

2:24:14

I don't know what he's describing.

2:24:16

I think he's describing a craft.

2:24:17

And by eyes, he means, like, sensors or something.

2:24:20

Mm-hmm.

2:24:20

Like, the, the translation got wonky.

2:24:22

That's the problem, right?

2:24:23

The problem is the translations.

2:24:25

First of all, you have to think that a lot of those stories were told for

2:24:29

hundreds, if not thousands, of years before they were ever written down.

2:24:33

Sure.

2:24:33

And then they're told and written down in Aramaic.

2:24:37

They're written down in ancient Hebrew.

2:24:39

And then they're translated.

2:24:41

They're translated to Greek, Roman, or Latin, rather.

2:24:45

They're translated to English, French, German.

2:24:48

A lot is lost.

2:24:49

I mean, a lot is lost if you translate Russian to English today.

2:24:52

Right.

2:24:52

You know, like, if you see a Russian, I see a Russian post sometimes on Twitter,

2:24:56

and I'll hit translate.

2:24:57

And I'm like, oh, look at that wacky.

2:25:00

It kind of puts it together.

2:25:01

You know, it kind of puts it together in a wacky way.

2:25:02

Mm-hmm.

2:25:03

And that's common.

2:25:04

That is – but that's a language that we're well aware of.

2:25:08

Millions of people speak Russian.

2:25:10

Millions of people speak English.

2:25:12

This is the best we could do.

2:25:13

Right.

2:25:13

It's still the telephone game.

2:25:15

Yeah, still.

2:25:16

So now imagine a time with no science, no real understanding of what, you know,

2:25:22

the forces there at work in terms of, like, natural selection and all the

2:25:27

different things, space and all the things that we're aware of today, the

2:25:31

things that we do know.

2:25:33

And imagine these people are writing down these stories about the origins of

2:25:36

humanity and the origins of mankind.

2:25:38

And I think there's – there's some truth to what they're writing.

2:25:41

There's something to it.

2:25:42

I've always said that about the Big Bang.

2:25:45

Like, the beginning of the Bible is – in the beginning, there was light.

2:25:48

Boy, that sounds a lot like a Big Bang.

2:25:50

Sure does.

2:25:51

Like, what is it – if I was going to tell you the story of the Big Bang and

2:25:55

then you told other people for, like, a thousand years and then finally

2:25:58

somebody writes it down, what do you think that would look like?

2:26:01

Like, probably in the beginning there was light, you know?

2:26:03

What is it?

2:26:04

They say theologians need many miracles, evolution, Richard Dawkins type people

2:26:10

only need one.

2:26:11

Yeah.

2:26:11

The Big Bang.

2:26:12

Yeah.

2:26:12

Yeah.

2:26:13

How did it happen?

2:26:14

Oh.

2:26:14

But it just did.

2:26:16

Yeah.

2:26:17

And it created everything that we see.

2:26:18

Like, okay.

2:26:19

And doesn't Sir Roger Penrose – doesn't he believe that that wasn't the

2:26:22

beginning of the universe now?

2:26:24

I think Roger Penrose has a completely different theory.

2:26:31

about that now, which is fascinating.

2:26:33

Yeah.

2:26:34

My brain's not big enough for that stuff.

2:26:36

I don't think anyone's is.

2:26:37

That's part of the problem.

2:26:38

Well, but, like, I acknowledge it, so I don't even care.

2:26:40

Right.

2:26:41

Like, that doesn't interest me.

2:26:42

Like, I'm too fascinated by the smaller level.

2:26:46

I don't need the overarching giant one.

2:26:48

I need it all.

2:26:49

You need it all?

2:26:50

I need the overall – I mean, I'm just – it's all interesting to think about.

2:26:53

It's like, occasionally, I want to ponder how does this thing just expand to

2:26:59

some insane point and then come back?

2:27:01

What was before the Big Bang?

2:27:02

The theory of Roger Penrose.

2:27:04

Attempt to answer the question, what was before the Big Bang, led last year's

2:27:08

Nobel Prize winner Roger Penrose to an interesting cosmological concept in

2:27:12

which our universe is just one link in an endless chain of predecessors and

2:27:16

descendants.

2:27:19

I mean, why not?

2:27:20

Why not?

2:27:21

If there is a Big Bang, why not a series of them?

2:27:24

Why not an infinite number of different possibilities that these things could

2:27:28

play out in?

2:27:29

I mean, that's – it's all theoretical, though.

2:27:32

Right.

2:27:32

It's part of the problem.

2:27:33

So, like, none of it – I don't know.

2:27:34

It doesn't mean anything.

2:27:35

Right.

2:27:36

In terms of your real world.

2:27:37

Right.

2:27:37

Well, I mean, it does – everything means something.

2:27:40

Yeah, it means something.

2:27:42

But you're – yeah.

2:27:43

I mean, you're basically just spinning your wheels, just like you're spinning

2:27:45

your wheels thinking about aliens.

2:27:47

It's like we're just kind of spinning our wheels.

2:27:49

That's true.

2:27:49

Yeah.

2:27:50

That's true.

2:27:51

Until we're not.

2:27:52

Yeah.

2:27:52

Until they're gone.

2:27:53

That's the other theories, that they're giving us a slow trickle of disclosure.

2:27:58

Yeah, but why would they care?

2:27:58

So that we get accustomed to it.

2:27:59

So civilization doesn't collapse.

2:28:01

The stock market doesn't crash.

2:28:02

So that we don't, you know, start –

2:28:04

Wait.

2:28:04

Click off World War III.

2:28:06

Did you mean humans are giving us a slow trickle?

2:28:08

Yes, that's what I mean.

2:28:09

That's what I mean.

2:28:09

Yeah.

2:28:09

No, that's fair.

2:28:10

Yeah.

2:28:11

That's – I mean, have you ever read any of Diana Pasolka's work?

2:28:15

Mm-hmm.

2:28:15

Very interesting.

2:28:16

And she's a religious scholar.

2:28:18

And her take on this is very similar to, like, a lot of what Tucker Carlson's

2:28:23

saying.

2:28:24

And one of the things that she said with talking to people that – especially

2:28:28

Gary Nolan from Stanford,

2:28:30

the people that have examined materials, that these materials, like, whatever

2:28:34

the fuck this stuff is made out of,

2:28:36

is not something that we make.

2:28:37

We can't make it.

2:28:38

Or if we did make it, it would cost hundreds of billions of dollars or some,

2:28:43

whatever the number is,

2:28:44

some insane amount of money to create these composites, whatever this – some

2:28:49

sort of – whatever their metallurgy examinations of this stuff is.

2:28:53

And that they describe these things as donations.

2:28:56

These crashed crafts.

2:28:59

Oh.

2:29:00

Like a donation.

2:29:01

Like that these race – this race of super intelligent beings – hey, figure

2:29:06

this out.

2:29:06

Like, you know, you leave a 57 Camaro in the fucking – or a 57 Chevy in a

2:29:12

parking lot somewhere.

2:29:15

And then people stumble upon it and go, what is this?

2:29:18

What is it?

2:29:18

How is it – what's that?

2:29:19

Is it a tire?

2:29:20

Oh, if you get wheels and tires – oh, I can't get it to roll.

2:29:24

Right.

2:29:25

Oh, the engine fires, it spins this thing that is the transmission, it causes

2:29:30

the wheels to – we can make one of these.

2:29:32

And that's what they do.

2:29:34

And this is the Bob Lazar thing.

2:29:35

Like Bob Lazar said that one of the – in this – all these classified

2:29:40

documents that related to these UFOs,

2:29:43

he said one of them, they said, was from an archaeological dig.

2:29:49

That's the problem, right?

2:29:51

It's all nonsense.

2:29:52

We're sitting here just wasting time.

2:29:54

We could be very productive with our lives.

2:29:56

Yeah.

2:29:56

Instead, we're talking about UFOs.

2:29:57

Yeah.

2:29:58

I mean, you're doing all right, I think.

2:30:01

What else are you making videos about?

2:30:03

Anything interesting you got coming up?

2:30:05

I'm doing sharks because sharks are cool.

2:30:08

Who doesn't love sharks?

2:30:10

I'm doing a dream.

2:30:12

A dream one?

2:30:14

Yeah, about a dream I had.

2:30:16

Lanky – oh, no, I – Lanky Gray Aliens, but I finished that one already.

2:30:21

Yeah, I saw that one today.

2:30:22

Yeah.

2:30:22

Yeah.

2:30:22

Do you watch it?

2:30:23

Yeah.

2:30:24

Oh.

2:30:24

Is that your dream?

2:30:25

Yeah, that was me.

2:30:26

So you've had this recurring dream of Lanky Gray Aliens?

2:30:30

No.

2:30:30

Lanky Gray Aliens are just, like, a figment of my imagination and my – like,

2:30:37

you know, bogeymen that kids have that's, like, just in your liminal – is

2:30:40

that the word?

2:30:41

Subliminal?

2:30:41

No.

2:30:42

Oh, liminal?

2:30:42

Liminal space.

2:30:43

Oh, okay.

2:30:44

Like, if there's – like, did you have a basement when you were a kid?

2:30:48

Yes.

2:30:49

Okay.

2:30:50

Did you ever have to, like, turn the switch off somewhere and then go up the

2:30:53

stairs?

2:30:54

No.

2:30:55

Okay.

2:30:55

Well, I had that.

2:30:56

And then, like, when – it's the fear of what – where you can't see.

2:31:00

Right.

2:31:01

And I think everyone has a distinct thing that their brain imagines that's

2:31:05

pretty terrifying.

2:31:06

Mine were always Lanky Gray Aliens.

2:31:08

But if it's always this one thing –

2:31:10

Yeah, isn't that weird?

2:31:11

If you wonder, if these people are saying that their memories are erased and

2:31:16

then you do have an encounter or you do have a sighting of a thing.

2:31:21

Like, I – so I never gave that any thought whatsoever until I saw Gary Nolan's

2:31:27

– that's his name, right?

2:31:29

Mm-hmm.

2:31:29

Nolan.

2:31:30

His speech – or his talk on, like, Channel 7 News or something.

2:31:34

And he described this electric feeling that he experienced after something.

2:31:40

This is how you connect is what he said.

2:31:43

And that's literally the only thing of that entire video that ever – that

2:31:46

made me go, like, ugh.

2:31:47

Because I remember – I had this weird, weird-ass dream about a gray.

2:31:50

And then after that dream, I was just, like – I remember feeling very

2:31:54

electric.

2:31:55

I am not saying that I had an alien encounter.

2:31:59

I'm not.

2:31:59

I'm truly not.

2:32:00

But that did give me pause.

2:32:01

Excuse me.

2:32:02

I keep burping.

2:32:03

It's really embarrassing.

2:32:04

But it's interesting to me that these things always happen while people are

2:32:07

sleeping or they always happen at night.

2:32:09

Which is when the dream state happens.

2:32:11

And, like, so what is the dream state?

2:32:12

Dreams are bizarre.

2:32:14

Like, we have this very realistic thing that we're experiencing that we don't

2:32:17

really understand.

2:32:18

And we sort of just accept that we have this wild, imaginary experience that

2:32:25

seems realistic.

2:32:27

And you wake up, you're like, oh, my God.

2:32:29

You can't believe this dream that I had.

2:32:30

It's so nutty.

2:32:30

Like, what is that?

2:32:32

Like, what is this thing that's different than any other sort of imaginary

2:32:36

thing that you experience in your life?

2:32:39

All the imaginary things that you experience in your life are, like, they're

2:32:44

easily written off for the most part.

2:32:47

But dreams seem hyper-realistic sometimes.

2:32:50

They sure do.

2:32:51

And you have to remember, oh, this is a dream.

2:32:53

I had one last night where I woke up and I was like, oh, it's a dream.

2:32:56

Like, what the fuck is that about?

2:32:57

How weird.

2:32:59

They seem like real experiences while they're happening.

2:33:02

Right.

2:33:02

And if you are having dreams that seem like real experiences and they're

2:33:07

recurring and they're involving extraterrestrials and you've had this sighting

2:33:12

and there is this understanding that they could manipulate what you remember

2:33:16

and don't remember, you can kind of mind fuck yourself into thinking you're

2:33:20

getting abducted.

2:33:22

That's why I don't think I was because to think that you were or to think that

2:33:26

you have been abducted is, I feel like, it's strange.

2:33:30

Like, because I don't, like, I don't feel like I've been abducted.

2:33:33

Like, I don't feel like a weirdo.

2:33:34

I feel like you've been abducted.

2:33:35

Do you?

2:33:35

I don't know.

2:33:36

It's just fun to say.

2:33:37

It is.

2:33:38

It is.

2:33:39

But, yeah, I don't know.

2:33:40

That wasn't.

2:33:41

So, if there are people who are, like, suggestible and think they've been

2:33:46

abducted.

2:33:47

Right.

2:33:47

Then what I am describing is a good case study in that.

2:33:50

I think that's a factor for sure.

2:33:53

Yeah.

2:33:53

Well, that's a factor, too, with memories.

2:33:55

Like, people can place memories into a person.

2:33:59

Right.

2:33:59

And also, people can distort their own memories over time and then have this,

2:34:03

like, very rigid memory of a thing and you have it completely wrong.

2:34:07

That's very common, I'd imagine.

2:34:09

Very common.

2:34:09

Yeah.

2:34:10

Right.

2:34:10

Which is why the mind is such a bizarre thing in the first place because it's

2:34:14

how you formulate your view of reality, but it lies to you.

2:34:18

Right.

2:34:18

Well, but they're hopefully useful lies.

2:34:21

Yeah, hopefully, but sometimes not, you know.

2:34:25

Sometimes people have a very bad version of themselves from memories.

2:34:29

Like, maybe they have a lot of self-hate or a lot of self-doubt and then they

2:34:33

connect these memories to themselves and they distort.

2:34:38

Themselves and make themselves even worse.

2:34:39

Right.

2:34:40

Yeah, so hopefully, I mean, hopefully it's beneficial, but sometimes it's not.

2:34:43

Well, it has to exist from an evolutionary perspective, I'd imagine.

2:34:47

That serves a purpose.

2:34:49

That's not random.

2:34:49

Probably, right.

2:34:51

If you're remembering yourself as doing something obnoxious or stupid, that's

2:34:55

because the essence of you doing that is true and now you're ideally supposed

2:34:59

to overcorrect or supposed to correct that.

2:35:02

Right, right.

2:35:02

It's a lesson that you can learn from that.

2:35:04

Right.

2:35:04

Yeah.

2:35:05

But you're right.

2:35:06

If it just cripples you emotionally, it doesn't do any good.

2:35:08

Well, it's just fascinating that this animal, this calculating animal, it's

2:35:13

like constantly forming images of what's real and what's not real.

2:35:18

And, you know, what it is and it's looking at itself in some sort of a strange

2:35:23

way and trying to examine how it fits into the world.

2:35:26

Which is impossible for it to do.

2:35:28

Right.

2:35:29

So it's like an exercise of torture.

2:35:30

Yeah.

2:35:31

And yet we all engage in it.

2:35:32

Constantly.

2:35:33

Yeah.

2:35:34

Yeah.

2:35:34

Any other things you're working on before we wrap this up?

2:35:38

No.

2:35:41

I'm trying to get a book published.

2:35:44

Oh, yeah?

2:35:45

On what?

2:35:45

It's a novel.

2:35:47

So everyone, all my subscribers would hate it.

2:35:50

I don't think so.

2:35:51

I do.

2:35:52

Why do you think they'd hate it?

2:35:53

Because it's not about Bigfoot or anything.

2:35:56

What's it about?

2:35:58

Well, it's a, uh, it's high fantasy.

2:36:02

High fantasy?

2:36:03

High fantasy.

2:36:04

What does that mean?

2:36:05

Wizards.

2:36:06

Oh.

2:36:07

Knights.

2:36:07

Lord of the Rings type stuff.

2:36:09

That sounds fun.

2:36:10

People love that shit.

2:36:10

Yeah.

2:36:11

But, um, that there are two protagonists who are gay because I am gay.

2:36:19

So there's that.

2:36:21

And I think, I don't think that'll, I, I sent.

2:36:23

There's plenty of gay people.

2:36:24

Yeah.

2:36:25

There's plenty of people that don't care if someone's gay.

2:36:27

Why would that be bad?

2:36:28

I don't look at it all negative.

2:36:30

Yeah.

2:36:31

Maybe.

2:36:32

Look, man.

2:36:32

It sounds like fun.

2:36:33

Look, people love those kind of fantasy type books.

2:36:37

And I mean, think about The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings.

2:36:39

No, I, I'm aware.

2:36:40

Game of Thrones.

2:36:40

Like, people love that shit.

2:36:42

All the agents, they want magical realism.

2:36:44

Magical realism.

2:36:46

Magical realism.

2:36:47

What is that?

2:36:47

That'd be like Twilight.

2:36:49

Like, when magic ingrains in the real world.

2:36:52

Oh, that's interesting.

2:36:53

Magical realism.

2:36:56

Which is an oxymoron.

2:36:57

So instead of a fantasy world, like Lord of the Rings, they want it in the

2:37:01

modern world,

2:37:03

a realistic modern world, but with magic.

2:37:05

Correct.

2:37:05

Fuck them.

2:37:06

Even though none of the big sellers of all time are, are that way.

2:37:10

Well, a few of them are, but like.

2:37:11

Isn't that funny?

2:37:12

Yeah.

2:37:12

Like, but just the weird gatekeepers.

2:37:14

It's almost like you should write it on your own and not even talk about it.

2:37:17

Right.

2:37:18

And then get it to where you're done with it and then just try to pitch it.

2:37:21

Right.

2:37:21

Well.

2:37:21

Don't let anybody.

2:37:22

I have been pitching it.

2:37:23

Oh, you have.

2:37:24

Are you done?

2:37:24

Oh, yeah.

2:37:25

I'm done and I've got it proofread by, yeah, I paid, I paid an, or I paid for

2:37:31

an editor

2:37:31

and all that good stuff.

2:37:32

Oh, wow.

2:37:33

Well, so you self-published the whole thing.

2:37:35

No, it's not published.

2:37:36

Or at least self-wrote the whole thing and did it all yourself without a deal.

2:37:39

I self, yes, correct.

2:37:41

I mean, you know, a lot of times people get contracted.

2:37:43

Yeah, no.

2:37:44

And, uh, but like I gave up because it was like every day I was getting an

2:37:48

email back from

2:37:50

someone telling me my kid was ugly, you know, and I couldn't do it and it was

2:37:53

just too depressing.

2:37:54

Well, maybe you should self-publish.

2:37:57

Like there's a lot of people publish things just on Amazon, right?

2:38:00

I have pride.

2:38:01

Oh, you need to be with a legit publisher?

2:38:04

I do.

2:38:05

I would rather wait.

2:38:06

I mean, I'm actually very young by publishing standards.

2:38:09

How old are you?

2:38:09

33.

2:38:11

Oh, wow.

2:38:12

So you've been doing this YouTube page for a long-ass time.

2:38:17

So you're like 21, 22?

2:38:18

Yeah.

2:38:18

Wow.

2:38:19

Yeah.

2:38:19

That's cool, man.

2:38:21

Yeah, it is cool.

2:38:22

And I had other jobs most of the time.

2:38:24

I only recently started doing the channel full-time.

2:38:27

Oh, so now it's your full-time gig?

2:38:29

Yeah.

2:38:29

How recent?

2:38:29

Like two years ago.

2:38:31

So you basically like get ad revenue and stuff like that.

2:38:34

Well, it's very good, dude.

2:38:36

It's fun.

2:38:36

It's really fun.

2:38:37

Like I said, it makes me feel like,

2:38:39

old-timey radio, you know,

2:38:41

like I'm here in the spooky store.

2:38:42

I've listened to quite a few of them actually in my car,

2:38:44

you know, where it's just like you have all the animations

2:38:47

and like the Bigfoot one I listened to in my car.

2:38:49

Yeah.

2:38:49

The one where it was reaching in

2:38:51

and hitting the light switch and the laugh.

2:38:53

It's fun.

2:38:54

It is.

2:38:55

It's fun stuff.

2:38:56

It's fun stuff, man.

2:38:56

Scary.

2:38:57

Tell everybody your YouTube channel so they can find you.

2:38:59

My name, or my channel name is Bob Gimlin.

2:39:03

B-O-B-G-Y-M-L-A-N.

2:39:05

And do you have Instagram or...

2:39:07

No.

2:39:08

Nothing?

2:39:08

No.

2:39:08

Good for you.

2:39:09

I don't want it either.

2:39:10

Good for you.

2:39:11

Yeah.

2:39:12

Good for you, man.

2:39:13

That's rare amongst young people.

2:39:15

I just want to make my videos and that's it.

2:39:18

Good.

2:39:18

Don't read the comments either.

2:39:20

I do.

2:39:20

It's...

2:39:21

I do all the time.

2:39:22

It's so depressing.

2:39:23

You don't need to read them.

2:39:26

No.

2:39:26

How many subscribers do you have now?

2:39:28

I think 239.

2:39:29

Yeah.

2:39:30

Once you get over 100,000,

2:39:32

you got to stop reading them.

2:39:33

Yeah.

2:39:34

Too many humans.

2:39:34

Too many humans.

2:39:36

Too many opinions.

2:39:37

Too many crazy people.

2:39:38

Too many mind viruses that can get into your head.

2:39:42

They get you.

2:39:43

I enjoy it, though.

2:39:44

I think your channel is very good.

2:39:45

It's very interesting.

2:39:46

I like your calm voice through the whole thing.

2:39:50

Yeah.

2:39:50

It's really good, dude.

2:39:51

Cool.

2:39:52

Good stuff.

2:39:52

Thank you.

2:39:52

So thanks for being here.

2:39:53

Appreciate it.

2:39:54

Good luck.

2:39:54

Best of luck in the future.

2:39:55

Thank you.

2:39:56

And good luck with your book.

2:39:56

Thank you.

2:39:57

All right.

2:39:57

Bye, everybody.

2:39:58

Bye.

2:39:58

Bye.

2:40:04

Bye.