Rambling 292: The Lost City of Dwarka

What is the ancient city of Dwarka? What is known of it? What is it no longer around? The duo comb through what is known of a lost ancient city found beneath the ocean by researchers. From its structures to its technology and its ultimate downfall, no stone is left unturned. What is discovered adds a new layer to what we know about ancient civilizations.

+Episode Details

  • Ancient City
  • Advanced Technology
  • Sonar Scanning
  • Historical Records
  • Solar Energy
  • Flood Prevention
  • Mysterious War

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling Podcast. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And this is a show where we ground humanity's most baffling and absurd ideas. Or is it absurd and baffling ideas? One of those two something there, right?

Cristina: Baffling, absurd ideas.

Jack: Like how world's most absurd and baffling ideas. No, it's actually that order. At least we usually do most absurd and baffling ideas, not baffling and absurd. Although it doesn't really matter. No, because they're both baffling. Like, wow, how jarring and absurd. Like, this is crazy.

Cristina: This is crazy.

Jack: Yeah, for the most part, it's very crazy. Anyways, we have, as of late, been kind of diving in and out, looking at random crap, and that has been connecting dots for us by looking in different directions and random crap associates back to all the previous crap. Because everything in the universe seems to be one giant megastructure. All lines connect.

Cristina: Yes. It's just hard connecting them. But like, with enough information.

Jack: Yeah, with enough information, all the dots eventually come together. But I've been looking around and I found something interesting that, weirdly enough, has not come up before, although could be very relevant, actually is really relevant. I made sure it was relevant.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So apparently there isn't just the Persian Gulf oasis that is underwater and abandoned, but rather other locations that similarly exist underwater abandoned. We've seen, you know, trails, but it's usually associated with the Elysians.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like if we look at the path in Bimini going straight down to the Atlantic Ocean in the direction of the suspected location of their current home, and the sculptures and statues and things in that direction, they kind of just line up with the Elysians.

Cristina: Yeah, like the lion statues and stuff.

Jack: Yes. And pyramids down there and all the usual kind of crap. Right. Now, interesting enough looking in other locations and kind of combing through random data, I've come across a couple of other places that fit these suits but aren't related to the Elysians. Not directly. Not that the Elysians built it. They related to the Elysians in a different kind of way. Which we'll get to.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And so I did some deep dives, I read some books, I looked through some articles and some research papers, and I've put together some of the information on one of these locations. We're going to go through all of these locations eventually.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But one of these locations stuck out to me very, very specifically. And hopefully when we go to the other ones, this will enlighten them. The place we're going to be talking about is called Dwarka.

Cristina: Where's Dwarka?

Jack: Dwarka is a sunken city off the coast of India.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. Okay, so there's a bunch of cities underwater. That's what you're saying?

Jack: There's a bunch of cities underwater. Wow. Now, Dwarka is first mentioned in some scripture related to some of those we know now are fairies. But yeah, related to scripture.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And the Indians have all the scriptures about these deities that turn out to just be part of the fairy cluster. But we do have some other mentions starting all the way in the year 300 BC. Now, I went through all of this, but there were a group of people who were already putting this information together. And so I went through their collective works that kind of unpacked all of these other works that exist throughout history and time. So we're going to be looking at some specific texts, some research papers and some collections.

Cristina: What's the name of the place?

Jack: Dwarka. Now, the things we'll be looking at are the Lost City of Dwarka by S.R. rowe. Marine archaeology of the Indian Ocean Countries, edited by S.R. rowe. Excavations of Dwarka by H.D. sankalia. The Archaeology of Bet Dwarka by A.S. ghaur and Sundarash. And Archaeological Survey of India Reports, which is a collection by various individuals and they all use research with sonar, deep dives, they have excavations happening down there. They have a bunch of random all. All the different crap you can imagine on top of all the different mentions of text that existed and both public records that existed in the past and of scripture that has been written relative to this place. So all of the above is in these. And so I went through their works and as I was going through their works, I was cross referencing by going and looking at the original thing that they're talking about to make sure they're not putting their own twist on things. But I use these as a guide ultimately.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Now, there's a lot going on here. And I'll tell you what is included inside of these texts so you have some idea of how we know the things we know.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Within all of the research, we have archaeological findings, we have marine exploration data, we have underwater scans, we have, which also includes like sub bottom profiling and scans of below water level. That's basically what that is. We're getting scans of what's directly over the and scan. Not over the water, over the ground, underneath the water. And then scans of what's beneath the ground.

Cristina: Beneath the ground?

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: There will be diving expedition reports, artifact documentations which include stone anchors, pottery and actual structures that have been seen, located and scanned. Carbon dating maps of the city and layout reconstructions.

Cristina: Cool.

Jack: Based on old texts, geological and environmental studies, comparative studies with other ancient cities, cultural and trade connections to the region, non religious historical records and interpretations of religious records, and scholarly analysis of the scripture and inscriptions for historical correlation.

Cristina: Deep dive crazy. That's mad info on this city.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. People have been trying to figure it out. If we use all of that data and what we personally know, that is not considered part of the canon narrative because you got to cross reference such a plethora of data, you're going to see how this starts to form into a very cohesive image. So let's begin. Now, basically, this was described as one of the most advanced cities to have ever existed. And we know like, that's a huge statement considering the Egyptians existed, the Greek existed, the Mayans existed.

Cristina: And how old is this supposed to be? As old as those or older.

Jack: So weirdly enough, we know that the Egyptian and the Mayan are no older than 6000 BCE. They were given things provided by the Elysians in order to catch up in the first place.

Cristina: Around the same time around.

Jack: Well, no, I believe it was first the Egyptians and then the Mayans much later. But this city is actually 9,000 BCE, which gets way close to the first mention of Jehovah ever. 12,000 BCE. Fascinating. Yeah. This is older than Maya and Egypt and actually even older than Greece.

Cristina: That's crazy. That is old.

Jack: And claiming to be one of the most advanced cities ever. Now this is obviously without the. The knowing of these other locations, how would they know? They could totally have just been. It's the most advanced at this point. And then later these mega cities arrive. So by reference point, they wouldn't have known. And it could have been without knowing about the Aletians, they could have definitely 100% been the most advanced. And then later more advanced civilizations came to be. This is located on the western coast of India, near modern day Gujarat. Gujarat. And this emerged in the Gulf of Combat, which is close to the present day city of Dwarka, which is a city of the same name. There's a currently Dwarka.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And there's this ancient Dwarka that's underwater. That's underwater. And again, constructed about 9,000 BCE older than that, roughly According to archaeological evidence.

Cristina: Was it always underwater though? Like does. Did something happen that put it underwater or something?

Jack: Put it underwater? Yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It was not always underwater. Now we're just gonna break down how advanced the city was. For the most part, we're gonna talk about the details of the city and just kind of inform people on what the city kind of was like. Now keep in mind everything that's being cross referenced to prove this. So first of all, the city had a grid type of layout. So it has a grid layout and text described that this had wide roads, structured grid system, advanced urban planning, and was efficiently distributed to kind of look like a modern day city. Now this is proved by sonar scans that we can see collections of structures together with gaps in the middle that if you were to map it out, would essentially just be roads, streets, straight shot streets, because collections of structures would be to either side and then emptiness straight down the middle and Sounds pretty.

Cristina: Advanced for the past. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jack: And it would have, you know, would like create blocks. Basically it would just create city style blocks in a like literal grid. Squares. It's just squares. So in theory, you could just walk around a block and you moved a square and in the block itself, many different types of structures of different sizes, of different widths, of different heights. Interesting design. According to texts, there are zoned districts. So the city was divided into sections for residential, commercial, governmental use, suggesting highly organized zoning, which could be supported by the fact that we do see the city blocks. Additionally, in the scans, you also see collections of different sizes of buildings. So there'll be many small structures in this area all together, rather than one really small, one really big one. You know, it'll be a lot of really small ones and then over there a lot of really big ones. That's kind of showing that there was at least correlation between the structures. Maybe this was residential and houses, or maybe those buildings were where they lived and these were all government buildings that were the smaller ones.

Cristina: Okay, yeah.

Jack: So there was a distribution according to size and width, which could support the idea of zones, allowing for things to work. There was also in the very center of the town, what appears to be a sort of. How do I explain all the roads ultimately lead to a circular center, which could be the market, based on everything else leading in that direction, which happens to be next to one of the oddest shapes. Not oddest shapes, but oddest collection of buildings that don't kind of match anything on the outskirts, which would assume residents lived on the outskirts and towards the center was the market. And the government things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: As well as possible recreational areas, they had multiple gates and entrances to the city.

Cristina: There's a lot there, like, that's still there too. The gates, like, how much can they actually see from the scans? Or this is part of the.

Jack: All of the above. Okay.

Cristina: Just combining all the information.

Jack: This is combining all the information. I'm not going to break down what was what in crazy detail because we would never make it through this. But. And where it matters, I'm going to tell you. You don't have to ask about it. I will tell you specifically what we do see when it matters. But strategic gates at different points of entry provided access to the city while enhancing security and traffic flow. So there was ways in and out through different entrances and exits. A comprehensive large scale wall has been caught on sonar. On sonar. Surrounding the entire city. Well, so a quite large wall, the size undefined, but definitely could be easily over 30ft tall, surrounding the entire city. And then the gates are on this like giant wall, allowing for entrances, roads. The empty gaps that we would believe are roads kind of seem to go straight into where the gap in the wall would be, which would suggest that is the gate itself.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So they definitely had the city protected from the outside. Maybe you needed kind of passes to come in and out. Especially if this is such an advanced layout of a city. Everybody else who didn't have the technology was not gonna scale the wall. And these are poor people walking in. Not poor people, but unadvanced people.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Coming to this mega, super futuristic, comparatively place. Now, in the text, it suggested that there were grand palaces, so palaces made of gold and precious metals, which would suggest a monumental architectural ability with reinforced designs in the buildings themselves. Now, sonar scans can't actually detect the specific materials the structures were constructed with, but marine archaeological dives near the site have located all the materials mentioned.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: They can't prove any structure was made.

Cristina: Of these materials, but those materials are there.

Jack: All the materials mentioned are there.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So at least they had the ability to create the materials. That seems accurate. The idea of having an entire building made of these materials kind of immediately becomes questionable because how would you even source all of these materials in high quantities enough to make your city out of it?

Jack: That's where it kind of gets iffy. And it relies a lot on, well, the tech save. Like that's about as far as we can really honestly prove other than, well, they had the materials. We don't know if the buildings were made out of the materials.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Water management and engineering was fascinating. In this place, they had canals, waterways. And descriptions mentioned that the canals were running through the city potentially for transportation, irrigation and water supply. Fascinating that transportation is one of them, because it's not transportation of water. Water supply is part of it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But the canals were used to navigate through the city as well. A counter to roads.

Cristina: Oh, that's cool.

Jack: Venice, Italy, essentially.

Cristina: Yeah, but they had roads too.

Jack: Yes, they had both. Venice has both. It's not just water, but is it.

Cristina: Mostly water or is it equal parts water and road?

Jack: It's definitely way less water. Navigation, it was way more roads and, like, just a few canals here and there that you could use for navigation.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But it's. It was there, which was an interesting idea to just that they also included this. Now, sonar scans have confirmed this alongside, detecting numerous thinner structures deeper than the canals themselves, and the waterways that scatter in every direction beneath the city. So there's the canals on the surface of the city. And then scans into this through the surface get you to what seems to be smaller structures going in every possible direction, which would suggest localized distribution of water to all structures within the city.

Cristina: That is crazy. That's crazy. Advanced.

Jack: Crazy advanced. Way more advanced than we would think for something 9,000 BC, which is 11,000 years ago.

Cristina: Whoa. How.

Jack: Crazy. So those are likely thin pipes underneath the canals which are delivered in the water. Now, reservoirs are said to be in the city. They're mentioned in all the texts that the city had large reservoirs ensuring a stable water supply, which would indicate advanced hydraulic engineering as well, in order to distribute it. Now, sonar scans can't actually confirm this, although large anomalous shaped gaps within random parts of the city suggest these might have been reservoir. They're just weird gaps on the surface and structures are built around them, and they're not of any specific shape, but they're just holes.

Cristina: So the best guess.

Jack: The best guess would be that those would have been the reservoir. If so, the city might have been selected specifically because of the reservoirs. So they chose this location to build the city because they had had places where they could naturally collect clean water.

Cristina: Nice.

Jack: Now we get into something a little more interesting. The flood prevention systems. This is going to come in very handy later.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yeah. Now, flood prevention systems are described as protecting Dwarka from floods, suggesting an early form of flood defense, or levees. Right. Scans show some distance far from the city, like away from the city walls themselves. Deeper down, thicker than the city walls. A second set of shorter perimeter walls with connecting canals and unknown structures surrounding them likely Water pumps to drain the water out of the city.

Cristina: That's crazy. What happened.

Jack: This also suggests the possibility of flooding being a real issue they faced. So they built ways to counteract it.

Cristina: But it wasn't enough for whatever happened to them.

Jack: You think that a flood took them out?

Cristina: I don't know. It's hard to imagine what happened to them if they were already prepared based.

Jack: On all the technology we're talking about. Flooding is not what took them out. They have everything in measure. You know, the colossal size of the flood. That would have to catch them off guard with this level of technology.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And even then, they're ready to. If their structures are as strong and hard as they claim. The floods weren't gonna take them out. The floods weren't gonna remove them in any manner, shape, or form, so nothing was gonna happen. You know, go to the top of your buildings, and we'll drain the city.

Cristina: But something happened to them.

Jack: Yeah, I'm gonna get to that.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Now, building materials. Here's where it gets kind of iffy and hard to believe. Golden towers is a claim. Within the texts. Oh, palaces with golden towers were mentioned, possibly indicating advanced metallurgy and material strengthening techniques, which we can find the materials again, but we can't prove what the structures are made out of. It simply can't be proven, and it kind of exists in the text almost exclusively. Acquired materials from archaeological dives does in fact suggest dense reinforced gold. But this is actually. When it comes to gold in particular, it's kind of easy to do this with a lot of primitive techniques. We don't need particularly advanced anything. If we can create heat enough to melt other metals and mix them with. With the gold, that would dodge the need for any kind of advance, anything. Enough heat. You could just throw iron into the gold. You'll dilute the gold a little, but it'll still be gold. Yeah, and it'll be stronger. So it's not the. You don't need rocket science. Now the question is, what kind of reinforcement? None of the ones we found are particularly astounding when it comes to gold. There are many other materials that are astounding that probably shouldn't have existed at that point, but the gold wasn't one of them. So assuming these towers were made of gold. Well, you didn't do anything too impressive. And also, what the h*** would even be the benefit?

Cristina: Yes, you know, this is pretty.

Jack: Yes, it's pretty. But on the flip side, if you're so advanced, then you leave the realm of danger, especially with your walls. Being so defensive. And you land that. Why not make things look beautiful?

Cristina: Put a tower.

Jack: Why not?

Cristina: I guess you're not afraid of your neighbors, but then you have a. I don't know. Well, you're the most advanced as far as you know. As far as you know? Yeah.

Jack: Like, what do you. A couple of people with some sticks and rocks are gonna come and take your metal golden building. How?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Additional materials include crystals and precious stones. Gemstones adorn buildings, which could indicate knowledge of decorative stone working. And again, more reinforced materials. Although can't be proven purely within the texts. No amount of sonar or archaeological dive.

Cristina: Has proven this, so they haven't found any of that.

Jack: Well, we can't prove that the buildings are made with gemstones. Yeah, we'd have to go to that level of depth underneath the ground and look at the building. We'd have to excavate the whole city out of under the water. Under the water's dirt. Oh, we'd have to pull the city out of under the water's dirt in order to look at the buildings. The problem is the city sank and crap fell over the city. The city is not just underwater. It's under dirt. We can't look at the city.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: That's why scams are so important. But because of this, we can't tell what the decorations look like, what metals are made out of. When we're doing dives, we're diving and reaching the bottom and touching dirt on top of the city, and that's where we're finding the materials we locate. We would have to drill into the dirt to reach the buildings underneath us. Now, again, no amount of archaeological diving or sonar scans could prove that the buildings are decorated with gemstones. We can find the gemstones.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: We don't know what the buildings have on them, though, so only really excavating the city would prove this. Now, durable foundation. Coastal buildings suggest strong foundations, you know, to resist the sea's impact, in the case of storms, to resist flooding and all this kind of crap. So it would require innovative underwater construction techniques if you're on the coast. And the fact that they had walls for flooding proves that water was a problem. Sonar does confirm that below the city, there are additional structures almost always tied directly to buildings and canals.

Cristina: Okay, that's more water protection.

Jack: More water protection. This is assuring the buildings themselves aren't gonna have their foundation erode and fall. So they didn't just build up, they built down.

Cristina: That's pretty advanced. Oh, my God.

Jack: Pretty advanced and pretty deep down. If you're trying to stop a building from tilting or something, which would suggest, you know, additional reinforcement to withstand in a case of a flood overcoming the city walls. Impressive. Additionally, this. This leans into some really more advanced engineering. There are mentions within the text of earthquake resistant structures.

Cristina: Earthquake as well.

Jack: Yeah. So Texan implies that structures could survive natural disasters of all sorts, including seismic resistant architecture to withstand earthquakes and strong winds. Swaying buildings. How the h*** are they hard metals and swaying?

Cristina: They can tell that the swaying from the scans as well.

Jack: This is text.

Cristina: Oh, that's the text. Okay. That's crazy. That's crazy though.

Jack: Yeah. They can't tell that they can sway. Nothing can sway underneath. Tons and tons and tons and tons and tons of dirt.

Cristina: Dirt and water. That's crazy.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay. Whoa.

Jack: But if this is the case, then it would suggest layered construction. So that means beams on top of beams on top of beams that aren't a singular beam so that they can move out of each other's place and instead of a giant wind, snap the thing. But also, if you have a giant metal building, no amount of wind is gonna f****** do anything to that.

Cristina: So you think the text is wrong?

Jack: Well, no, I'm sure they had different kinds of structures.

Cristina: Overall, I guess it's all pretty advanced. Whether it's swaying or not swaying. Like it's. It's kind of crazy.

Jack: Yeah, it's. It does definitely hint to at least our level of technology. Every. Minus giant metal buildings. We do not have the resources. If they did, how. Where the h*** did you acquire this to make entire towers. Skyscrapers that are one solid block. How the f*** would you have done it? The only way would have been to melt steel all the way up there onto the existing steel framework and keep doing that progressively up to make it one giant chunk. Weird. But other than that, you had buildings that were composed of multiple pieces to allow swaying. An earthquake is not gonna shatter a giant steel building. No amount of wind is even gonna push that slightly. But there's no way all their buildings were like that. Those had to be special buildings.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You know, you're burning a lot of resources. Yeah. You're destroy you. You. You're wasting material just to make one of those. So you would need all kinds of buildings in order to have a city.

Cristina: Unless they're also known for having mines nearby as well or something.

Jack: I'm sure most of this was mines. And there's no amount of mine. A single mining operation with hundreds of mines would get you one building. Maybe.

Cristina: Maybe. Okay.

Jack: Skyscrapers. Nah, it would get you one, dude.

Cristina: But they described having a tower.

Jack: At least many towers. Oh, many towers and many towers made of different materials, but many of them were solid, which is like how. How the h***. Oh, okay, so you used everything you had and there was nothing left?

Cristina: Everything and more. They were seven. Trading with a bunch of people too.

Jack: Yes. They must have been trained. With this level of technology, it's easy to believe that they were traveling great distances with some and delivering things to themselves.

Cristina: That's the only way. That's crazy.

Jack: Now, the city also had public spaces and temples. This is all mentioned within the text. And a lot of this could actually be seen on scans. Temples were described as aligned with celestial bodies, indicating knowledge of astronomy and its incorporation into building orientation. Now, although whether the structures detected are in fact buildings or monuments of sorts is unclear, sonar scans do confirm absolute alignment of a large portion of structures within the city with celestial bodies.

Cristina: And that's not just random?

Jack: That's not random. That had to be super intentional. Now this hints to a couple of things. This does hint to complicated astronomical knowledge. And? And some texts go as far as suggesting the awareness of objects deeper into our star system and even some outside of it. Which would require a minimum of interplanetary traveling technology.

Cristina: No, no.

Jack: A minimum. Some things today we could have never seen without being at the edge of our own star system.

Cristina: How's that powerful?

Jack: And they have knowledge of those things that we have only recently, within the last hundred years, come across.

Cristina: That one's hard to imagine.

Jack: It's in the text. That one we can't even deny. It's in the within. Old texts, they mention things we have only recently discovered.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: What things we have just stumbled upon in the last hundred years? They had 9,000 BCE they knew about. At least they knew about.

Cristina: How is that even possible?

Jack: They got structures aligned with crap we didn't know existed in our own star system, in the belts and s***. They got Planet Xmax mapped out somewhere. It's like get the f*** out of here. How?

Cristina: That's ridiculous.

Jack: You knew about some s*** we just theore still theorizing about. That's crazy. As for the public areas and the markets, Dwarka had public squares for gathering and markets, which implies well designed public spaces for trade and community activities. Text also mentioned trade with other like minded civilizations from both near and far.

Cristina: Like minded?

Jack: Yes. That doesn't mean that they were equally technologically advanced, but that they were at least friendly.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now it does claim that there were a few trades with rivals that they had in Peace treaties.

Cristina: But they don't mention who these rivals are.

Jack: They don't mention who these rivals are specifically. At least not as far as me writing those notes. Weirdly enough, they had like public polling areas in their texts as well. Pooling pool pools, public pools. People go swimming.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Without it having to be the ocean.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Different from their reservoirs that they kept clean.

Cristina: Yeah. They have mad water stuff.

Jack: Yes. The city very connected to water.

Cristina: Yeah, that's pretty cool.

Jack: The outside all surrounded by water, at least in one direction within the city. Natural collections of water, natural water distribution. Water canals that travel on top of having a bunch of locations just to go in water that doesn't taint their drinking water.

Cristina: That is crazy. That's so advanced and so cool to imagine.

Jack: So sophisticated. Yeah, it sounds so elegant. And then you consider everything has water. Everything is made. Marble and gold and shiny metals and gemstones on everything. And then you consider current day designs in India that definitely took inspiration from structures they've seen in the past. And you consider all of their walkways are white, all of the buildings are gold, silver with green, red and yellow stones on them. And the natural water resources everywhere. Beautiful city. Had to be such an astounding thing to look at.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So mind boggling now. Now we start getting into something a little more interesting. Transport infrastructure as we've described. They had roads and avenues. Some of them were pretty broad roads nevertheless, which allowed for easy travel. Reflecting on well planned transport networks within city, they also had harbors and docks. Because of their position as a cold SO city. Dwarka's advanced harbors and docks worked for ship docking, pointing to a lot of maritime infrastructure and integration. But it also suggested many, because of the size of the coast and the amount of infrastructure along the coast, that there were not only their ships taking off, but many, many, many receiving ports. Okay, so there was a lot of ocean trade.

Cristina: Yes, there is a lot of trade. That must be how they got material. If this whole, if the text is.

Jack: Correct now one of the only groups of people I could think about that they would trade. That would be. This level of technology would eventually be the Mayans. How would you. Who else are you trading with that could cross the ocean in such vast repetition? They would need equal technology or somewhere near you at least. And that's, you know, they can get from Mexico to travel the water to India. So there's likely a trade line in between those two points.

Cristina: Like the way they made up.

Jack: No, just for them to get to. From all the way in Mexico to the ports over here in India. And then from India, they were probably getting easily to ports in Maya.

Cristina: Yes. Maya has mad material, right?

Jack: They had man material. Yes.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But it's not even about the material. It's just about the fact that they, at some point, could have easily been trading with these people. So there's definitely connections. What's weird is the lack of mention. That's where it gets iffy.

Cristina: Who they were in contact with. Who are these friendlier foes?

Jack: No. Why didn't the Mayans mention these people? Why didn't anybody mention these people? Why do we have to look specifically at India? They clearly were trading with people.

Cristina: There has to be. Maybe they mentioned them as something else. Like the people. The sea people was the same way. Like there was a different word that we had to look into that was.

Jack: Oh, yeah, we found the Aletians much later.

Cristina: Yeah. They always mentioned them, but we just. It wasn't the right words that we were looking.

Jack: Yes. So it's completely possible that they were being described under a different term. Yes, I believe maybe among some of the texts that looked arbitrary and random to us. Again, perspective matters. A lot of the time we get informed, go back looking, we're like, oh.

Cristina: So we gotta do that. Okay.

Jack: I mean, we're gonna look at Maya anyways, because we already know that they had cities developed to transport people to the shadow realm and bring people from the shadow realm to live amongst.

Cristina: That's pretty crazy discovery. Yes.

Jack: So we still have. There's a lot in the text that was just not obvious.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah, we got that way later on from anything else. That's the most recent thing.

Jack: Again, we already knew that they had portals, but we had no clue that this was just right in front of our face.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So it's possible they did mention trade with these individuals. But interesting, though.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They also had some bridges over canals, which is just interesting. Some. A few of the canals had breaks over them, thin breaks, which, you know, suggested easy mobility for vehicles and things over it.

Cristina: And both like.

Jack: Yes, very Venice, Italy.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now, diving into some of their defensive situations here. We know the city walls were heftily fortified and tall, which was obviously for protection of the city, showcasing defensive architecture to withstand attacks. These are the inner walls. It had nothing to do with the flood walls.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The gates were fortified. Each entrance to the city was fortified, further enhancing their defensive capabilities. Watchtowers mentioned in text. And at each meeting point of the gaps leading to the gates, there are taller structures to either side.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Of where the gate would be. So where the gap exists to both sides of the gap in the wall.

Cristina: Some type of tower.

Jack: Some type of taller structure. That had to be a tower. Could have been decorative design. But presumably those are the towers they're talking about. Those are the towers are talking about. Which would help for ensuring surveillance, security and defense. I'm sure they were shooting right out of there. Something was a problem. And naval fortification, seaside defenses included potential underwater barriers, which we can see with the combination. This is a weird one. The flood walls that existed in full perimeter towards the water side, towards the coast were connected. This is the only part where they're connected to the wall surrounding the city. So there's two layer of walls. The smaller outer wall, which is for flooding, and the taller inner wall, which is for defense. Towards the coast. Those walls are connected with different beams and connect. It's a full different interesting structure that creates one giant. If we get attacked from the water, those people are more f***** than anybody could ever be f*****.

Cristina: They have protection for that.

Jack: That is a protection I'm talking about. The protection is that.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: If somebody attacked from the water, they have their defensive wall and their flood wall as one giant series of pillars. And it looked like they just had thousands at this point of watchtowers, all aiming towards the water.

Cristina: That is kind of crazy. But I mean, you have to do something like that. Yeah, I guess if you're that advanced and that's your weakest spot.

Jack: Yes. So this was obviously for. For naval protection. There must have been problems. Now diving purely into texts and what they suggest. Their technologies according just the text go the extra mile. This gives us a better hint as to what we're talking about here. Keep in mind we can prove most of what we've talked about. So we can assume the texts aren't bullshitting because we can prove almost everything. So when we dive into the technologies, we have to question. Holy s***. Did you just start bullshitting? But it's tied in equal parts with all the stuff we can prove now. They had advanced energy systems. So free clean energy harness from natural sources, which included water. That makes perfect sense.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Solar. Okay. Weirdly enough, cosmic. What does that mean the Egyptians technology where they go into space and transport crazy amounts of energy.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: It suggests they also had that they were maybe not as deep into space as the Egyptians were. All the way in the great Void. Literally creating an infinite amount of Dyson spheres to the point that we look up there and we just see darkness. But likely taking energy straight from not just solar, but rather sending things into the sun that weren't getting destroyed and bringing back mass amounts of plasmic energy. That's leaps and bounds of tech.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Just to accomplish something to gather energy like that. We are talking way more advanced than any other civilization without reaching the Egyptians and the Mayans. Definitely at least comparable to the Greek.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They're at least tied with the Greek.

Cristina: The Greeks are the ones with the ones not once I forgot there was like pillars that helped gather energy. I can't remember if that was Greek or Egyptian.

Jack: That was Egyptian.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Egyptians had mastered energy. Okay, so that was the. Are you talking about. I forget what the obelisks.

Cristina: Yes. Did they have something like that as.

Jack: Well that there's no mention of it here.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: But they definitely. I'm assuming they must have had something comparable or something slightly more primitive. Again nobody's with the Egyptians when it came to energy.

Cristina: But plasma energy you said what?

Jack: That is still way more primitive than going across all of space and creating Dyson sphere that enclose multiple stars.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: At no point is this the mention of a Dyson sphere. At most they're sending something into a star to capture energy. A Dyson sphere would be so far ahead of sending something into a star that like this is primitive by comparison.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: Now it's still way more advanced than any city that exists today. This will s*** on any technology we have ever seen in person. Any technology anyone alive today has ever witnessed personally. This is way ahead of that. Still miles behind the Egyptians and the Egyptians were miles behind the Alicians, but still overpowered that is.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Now here we get somewhere that we've not seen mentioned anywhere else. Flying vehicles referred to as vimanas. Vimanas. I don't know how I would say that. V I M A N a S Anti gravity and energy based flying machines capable of both local transportation and possibly inter regional and interstellar travel. Now we're elevating to getting closer to the Egyptians. Probably farther away from the Mayans. But we still don't have a true perspective on the Mayans because when we think about what we're talking about here, the Mayans technology would look closer to magic for us. While the Egyptians technology looks closer to our traditional sciences.

Cristina: Oh, science, yes.

Jack: So the Mayans are masters of crossing to the other side, while the Egyptians are masters of controlling things on this side. Two vastly different types of technology which as we found out with the Shadow. The Shadow gods. The crossing of technology is something important. Mixing of these two worlds matters. And there's zero mention of these Individuals having any connection to the Shadow realm.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: To this moment, there's not. And I guarantee you through the entirety of what we're going to talk about, there's not one mention. They seem very, very, very exaggeratedly on the side of earthrealm, but technology wise.

Cristina: Interesting.

Jack: While the Egyptians had shadow people and Alicians had shadow people, and the Mayans had shadow people, and the Greek had shadow people.

Cristina: No shadow people. I wonder if there's any mention of Maga. That usually helps.

Jack: I don't know who built the city. It's unclear who was leading, which people were involved or anything.

Cristina: No leaders mentioned. Whoa.

Jack: No one specific. Just breaking down the city specifically. Maybe at some point. I'll try to see if we can find names or something. But as far as we know, there's nothing. No. None of this technology at least connects to the Shadow Realm or even Alphan. Just straight up tech. Straight up Earth Realm tech.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Advanced. They're specialists. Clearly specialists in Earth Realm.

Cristina: No help.

Jack: Don't know.

Cristina: As far as we can tell. That's crazy.

Jack: We don't know. We have no reference point to tell whether they did or did not. But we just know all of it seems to be earthrealm based. If they had people of Val Fame and people of the Shadow realm involved, even those individuals were entirely focused on earthrealm tech, because that's all we're saying. And I guess based on the difference of technologies between Maya and Egypt, we can assume that the Mayan and Egypt were equal just in totally different technologies. Which would mean that these individuals are catching up to the Egyptians and the Mayans. Based on the quality and complexity of.

Cristina: Their technologies, they gotta be equal. I don't know. They sound ridiculous.

Jack: Yeah. And we can assume that the Greek were also pretty up there. The Greek, the Mayan, the Egyptian, the Elysians, and now the people from India, from Dwarka, at least. Very interesting flying vehicles. We've seen this nowhere else. But if you got portals, you don't need to fly anywhere. You can just pop up places. So none of those individuals needed them? Them. These people don't seem to have portals.

Cristina: But what does a flying vehicle mean? Like, what is it made out of?

Jack: It's a machine. I don't know.

Cristina: It's a machine. It's crazy. I don't know. It's just hard to imagine.

Jack: Imagine a car.

Cristina: But would it even look like a car? Would it look like.

Jack: No, it would look like their version of car. It looked like their ancient primitive.

Cristina: Not primitive, but ancient descriptions of what this Flying vehicle looks like.

Jack: No.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: They just what it could do. It was capable of vertical takeoff. It could travel interstellarly. Which is nuts as.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But we know there are people who could instantaneously cross the universe. So that's still primitive as compared to that technology. They did not have that sort of Egyptian teleportation tech that existed which probably wasn't even Egyptian to begin with. That was probably given to them by the Mayans who were the masters of creating portals and bridging gaps like that. Possibly it existed in the pyramids and the pyramids existed in both locations.

Jack: You know, that's the kind of thing that is like. Well, if you guys are sharing tech then that. That one probably came from this group of people.

Cristina: Yes, yes.

Jack: Knowing what they specialize in. They had advanced shipbuilding and maritime technology. So sophisticated ships, navigational tools, water defense ships, submarines for protection, trade and possibly automated. Nevertheless. So like no people are in there?

Cristina: No.

Jack: What they have AI navigating these ships.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: This is in their text. Like this should just worked on its own. But again this is where we have to be like d***, bro. So scientists have to scientists looking through these ancient texts. I'd be like oh no. This is. This is a 100% just myth at this point. But it's like come on bro, we could do it. Why do we have to be the pinnacle always?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: It's weird. Weaponry and defense systems Here we dive into weirder things. Okay. We have interstellar traveling. That's right. We have automation. So AI. So some of that leans into. When you think about what it would require. Right. To interstellar travel you need mass amounts of energy. But if you're going straight into the sun and acquiring energy, you have mass amounts of energy. High energy weapons that include laser rifles.

Cristina: Oh my God.

Jack: Laser missile technology. Precision destruction capable of energy dispersion higher than current day nuclear weaponry.

Cristina: How is.

Jack: How are what and defense shield and barriers probably energy powered.

Cristina: No way.

Jack: So they can in. Now here is where it becomes interesting. The outer wall is way shorter and thicker. The inner wall is taller and thinner. The side of the wall connecting facing the water connects to both walls connect. If you were to draw this out, you could easily flick a switch and a dome would farm over with support. Weird. The structure without having to read any of this bullshit would tell you you could easily form a dome around it. How out of all the s*** that's weirdly the closest one to being proven. A weird energy shield.

Cristina: An energy shield. How are they doing this, this is way too advanced. Now I'm questioning the city. Maybe they were gold, I don't know.

Jack: Yeah. As we get into their tech, it starts to kind of go into the deep end.

Cristina: That sounds ridiculous. Maybe they're mining in the sky. Like why do they have to trade?

Jack: I mean, once we establish that they could do interstellar travel and they could acquire energy from a star.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Acquiring pure materials from space becomes easy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So you don't even have to go that far. You could just go to the first belt, start mining.

Cristina: That ridiculous. Okay.

Jack: The fact that they would have had to be able to exit our star system at all means the outer belt. Easy. You don't have to leave our star to get there. You just stay within our own solar system and you could mine the outer belt infinitely for all of infinity and.

Cristina: Have just infinite resources with this crazy advanced technology. They were letting people into their city. That's crazy.

Jack: Totally primitive people. But these people are going to come in. Nobody's going to hurt anybody. How I know he's going to come in for trade and whatever. The cities surrounding this location that are around today. And their historical records do suggest that although they weren't advanced, they had access to already existing advanced materials that they didn't have the ability to make. So they were going to places to shop for things they couldn't replicate. And these people weren't afraid to give to them because how the f*** are they gonna learn how to do it?

Cristina: They're not.

Jack: They could just come buy it from us and they'll always have to come buy it from us. For all of infinity they'll have to come buy it from us. Because they would never learn with their primitive s*** how to replicate it.

Cristina: That's crazy. There's no way they were like doing that with their ships or that.

Jack: No way.

Cristina: They were not using their technology.

Jack: They were just letting people come in and take the things that wouldn't be able to be used against them.

Cristina: Insane, insane technology.

Jack: Now when we revisit the automation and artificial intelligence, it makes way more sense that they definitely had access to all of these things. And it suggests that their automated systems were used to manage everything from city infrastructure to trade and defense. So AI could have been integrated to everything. What they had Internet?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They had a stock market, likely. And that this would choose prices that made sense and allowed every outsiders to come and trade. Allowed civilized equally powerful civilizations to come and trade and primitive civilizations to come and trade in a fair way that it's all calculated and you don't have to.

Cristina: I have to believe that the Mayans and the Egyptians had this type of tech as well.

Jack: Well, we know they did. We know they had AI and we know that at least the Mayans did, which suggested the Egyptians and the Elysians did, since they were always sharing. The minds at least had the ability to store all this data.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Which required sorting through it, which would require something with the ability and capacity to run through it.

Cristina: So they all had some type form of Internet and AI.

Jack: Yep. Interesting. And the Internet would probably suggest how the libraries made it to these separate locations. The Sphinx and El Castillo.

Cristina: It makes sense.

Jack: They just needed a hard copy in case of s***. Which did happen. So the hard copy did pay off.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: Interesting. It's interesting that like Jesus knew about the technology too. I remember we learned that he just stuck to writing paper because it was more trustworthy than.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Using anything else.

Jack: Yes, yes, yes.

Cristina: He.

Jack: He did not trust. Using whatever current. And the fact it was. It sounded stupid at the time. Oh, he. And he found that writing was more effective at keeping secrets. And it's like, as compared to what?

Cristina: Dude, it has to be this.

Jack: It had to be this. He was trying to evade the modern mode of communication. Right? Now if we were trying to evade the government, we would do it by sending handwritten letters that would look like any normal male. Is how you would evade the technologies that are being surveilled by the governments of the world. That's exactly what he was doing.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Crazy Jesus was actively coming up. He was a rebel. And like, to the realest, most exaggerated. He was the rebel of rebels.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Yeah. He was the golden standard. Medical technologies. They had advanced health care. And here's where it gets a little weird. Genetic engineering capable. Capable of extending life, curing diseases and healing injuries instantaneously.

Cristina: How. I mean, I understand. But like all of them, they always. This always ends up. They all seem the same.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Once they reach a certain.

Jack: And it looks like when you think about it. Right. Who is super overpowered? All first world countries are first world countries and they're equally first world countries to some degree. Yes. Some are slightly better, some are slightly worse. But they're all First World countries.

Cristina: These ancient first world countries are all.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: Like that.

Jack: They're all roughly equal. And yes, there's the one mega super like Russia, United States equivalent, which was the Alicians. Oh, we're all scared of you.

Cristina: Yeah, but. But everyone has their unique.

Jack: Yeah, but it's more or less there. Everybody's kind of on the cusp of the same thing. It's just again, we can think. The United States. Oh, they're strapped with nukes. There's the most dangero. I was like, all right, those were the Alicians. They had the most nukes. We'll just call it that. They had the most nukes.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And so people wanted to trade with them the most so that they're on their good graces, like the United States. And people wanted to, you know, always be on their happy side. The Elysians all feared to the point that if you're gonna talk s***, you're gonna talk s*** secretly, you're gonna come up with a different word. Sea people. The sea people. F*** them.

Cristina: F*** the sea people.

Jack: I hate them all. The Alicia.

Cristina: There has to be word. I can't wait to find what these people are called. Really or not really. We know their names, but what other people were calling them.

Jack: What other people calling them and what they were calling other people.

Cristina: Oh, okay, yeah.

Jack: Now, computing. How do we get to AI? Well, they. According to the texts, they don't use the following terms. This is what it would translate to if we were to assume what it meant, which is the ability to compute infinite information almost instantaneously. They must have had quantum computing. They must have had quantum computing. It's the only way for any of this we are talking about to be.

Cristina: Possible once we get to sun power. Like, okay, okay, you must, you must.

Jack: How are you building anyway? No, it's not a stretch. In fact, quantum computing would be primitive comparatively. You must have had past the. Out of that threshold long ago before.

Cristina: You're taking energy from this within the sun.

Jack: Like, okay, you need something that can process making a material that won't melt. Like how?

Cristina: Like how exactly? Yes.

Jack: It needs to withstand the pressure and heat of the sun and then somehow have thrust enough to pull itself out from that gravity.

Cristina: That technology is the true advanced technology. Like, what is that?

Jack: Yes, yes, but also, that's still way primitive than a Dyson sphere. Yes, because the Dyson sphere that isn't collapsing and falling into the star, you must have figured something out. An instantaneous transportation. Crazy. These was leaps and bounds so far ahead of what could be understood. But yeah, definitely quantum computing. They also had environmental control systems, so controlling the weather, obviously, and environmental conditions to manage heat flooding, even manipulating the climate in general to have the most ideal climate at all times. Now we get to scaling, right? Now we get to scaling. Yes, within text alone. There's no way to conclude or prove this any other f****** way than reading it. One Part of this very easy science wise and terminology wise, we can compare this to other civilizations, which is dimensional physics. Opening and closing portals. Now we've gotten to portals. They have the ability to open and close portals now it does not mention at any moment crossing a portal to another realm. It sort of looks like folding space onto itself. So warp technology that allows them to cross huge gaps of space in short time.

Cristina: That's how they're traveling to the sun.

Jack: That's how they're traveling to the sun. And probably entering the sun effortlessly. Maybe it's not even that kind of tech. Maybe it's not something going into the sun in the same way we think maybe they're folding the sun in a way that allows them to put something in there, extract energy and unfold it and be safe.

Cristina: That is ridiculous.

Jack: Weird.

Cristina: That is so, I guess, possible.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: So if you have that tech now.

Jack: We can compare that to other civilizations and be like, yeah, okay, sure, whatever. The other side that is mentioned in sync with this, we don't necessarily have equal, which is time manipulation.

Cristina: Whaaat?

Jack: Potentially mastery over time dilation.

Cristina: What? What does that mean? How?

Jack: Well, the text suggests that they can manipulate time.

Cristina: And what?

Jack: I don't know, it doesn't specify. Just talks about that being among their technological capabilities.

Cristina: That's kind of insane.

Jack: Yeah, that puts them way up there, right next to the Aleutians. And based on how long ago this was made, maybe.

Cristina: But no one can wrestle time. I mean, besides the necromancers.

Jack: The necromancers, exactly. So we know of people who can. And if the Elysians had access to the necromancers without ever explicitly mentioning time manipulation, they had access to it, they just didn't mention it. But the necromancers did. And the necromancers could easily, almost effortlessly, and it wasn't a problem, it was an afterthought. And the Elysians had access to the necromancer.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So they had access to time. We just hadn't stumbled upon this before.

Cristina: So these people possibly did the same. Because without a necromancer.

Jack: Oh, right. How the f*** would you do it? Without a necromancer?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So they must have had a necromancer. But also, we know Jesus was fond of India.

Cristina: Yes. And we also know what's his name?

Jack: Hermes.

Cristina: Hermes likes to travel.

Jack: Yes. And Hermes was also fond of India.

Cristina: Oh crap.

Jack: And Hermes, although close to the Elysians, was a neutral party.

Cristina: Yes. Yes. So.

Jack: The homie, both the homies might have. They might have Traveled here.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: Both the homies might have traveled and given tech or helped with developing tech. Teaching them, okay, you can't do what we do, but maybe we can make some technology that can, man.

Cristina: But, man, that's. That's too much. That's too much. That's more. I don't know. Time tech is just crazier than any type of tech there is.

Jack: Yes. I think it violates anybody f****** with you.

Cristina: Yeah. And yet they were f***** with. At least they had to be. Like.

Jack: Now. The question is, why isn't the city standing today?

Cristina: That is a good question. I want to know. Death friendly. I have guesses.

Jack: Go for it.

Cristina: I don't know. The Elysians didn't like what they were doing. They had to have enemies. Of course.

Jack: Other than the Elysians, what enemy could they possibly have that could do anything?

Cristina: If they weren't friends with the Shadow Realm people, maybe the Shadow Realm people didn't like them.

Jack: Who's gonna have the tech to f*** with us? Who in the Shadow Realm could possibly. We're talking. These people seem kind of ridiculous. Ridiculous.

Cristina: But they were taken down. Like, that's pretty. Like, whatever did do this, it's kind of crazy, whatever it is. It's very scary.

Jack: All right, so the likely possibility is obviously war and some kind of conflict. Now, trade rivalries. Dwarka's role as a major port city likely placed it at the center of competition for trade routes with other civilizations, which may have made it a target for civilizations seeking dominance over those Earths. In a geopolitical context, its strategic location and advanced infrastructure would make it a likely target for power struggles or military conflicts. But nobody surrounding them could have had the ability to f*** with them in any magnitude imaginable.

Cristina: So they could have taken themselves out.

Jack: Mentions of civilizations with equal or superior military power were perceived with the threat of invasion. This is mentioned within.

Cristina: Okay, so then someone else could have.

Jack: They mentioned equals. They were unclear about who those equals were, but there were people who they did fear.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Leaders of Dwarka had mentioned evacuation as a possibility to a large conflict with the rivals.

Cristina: That's how scary their rival was. They're like, let's just abandon everything.

Jack: Abandon.

Cristina: The most man city we have ever heard of was like, we just gotta get out. Yep, there's no solution here with this enemy.

Jack: Yep, yep, yep, yep, yep.

Cristina: What is that? Scary from what? Everything you've mentioned. What could possibly be more scarier than that?

Jack: Now, this is where the environmental controls and those really advanced water pumps kick in preemptive sinking is loosely. In different texts. Not one piece says explicitly. But some will mention flooding the city, some will mention sinking the city. Some will mention creating storms to protect the city. Some mentioned evacuation of the city. All of that is one scenario. So the water management systems that the city had were quite advanced, as we know. They included the reservoirs. They included the canals and flood defense systems. This indicates that Dwarka could have easily controlled natural water flows. And it's possible that this was used to deliberately flood and sink the city, ensuring rivals wouldn't capture their technology. It was about.

Cristina: This was the runaway situation.

Jack: This was a runaway situation.

Cristina: What?

Jack: But this tells us something very, very, very, very interesting.

Cristina: This is the second time we saw something like this.

Jack: Yes, exactly. Now, it's not a matter of, oh, the Elysians blood. No, these people sank this before the Elysians did.

Cristina: The Alicians were scared of something. They ran.

Jack: These people were scared of something and they ran. They sank the thing trying to get rid of the potential of whatever other f****** s*** it was. And this is long before Jesus. Now, this was built around 9,000, but this city went down around 2,000 BCE.

Cristina: And when did the Elysians do it to their own city?

Jack: Year one, year one. Which would be 2,000 years after this.

Cristina: What is happening? What could be a threat like that?

Jack: What could be a threat that something as overpowered as Dwarka and Elysium.

Cristina: Like, they look like they got infinite amount of power.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: What is scarier than that?

Jack: Unstoppable forces of nature.

Cristina: God.

Jack: Tier. The Almost the highest level we can think of when it comes to the Kardashev scale. At least localized level 4. Without counting, you know, bending the literal fabric of space time in the universe. What the f*** could you be dealing with that these people also had the fear of something stronger and actively sank super ridiculously advanced technology trying to avoid it being captured by something stronger. Who could be the rivals? And who are these people who are still lurking 2000 years after this city sank and made the Elysians paranoid? So then the creation of Jesus was only trying to stop whatever the f*** that was.

Cristina: So you think there's something bigger than the Elysians? Okay, what? That is so crazy. What could possibly be this?

Jack: They needed Hermes and Jesus and it still wasn't enough to somehow deal with whatever this other thing is. Presumably these people are still also around somewhere so deep and hidden.

Cristina: I would think the. I guess the biggest option would be Mel.

Jack: I guess. But the weird problem is we can't get information on that.

Cristina: I know we can't, but, like, that's the biggest. Like, maybe she can delete things. I don't know. Maybe she could delete things from her program if we're just in her program.

Jack: Well, at this point, I'm not even sure if it's still a program. But, like, I don't. I don't know what any of this means anymore. And the fact that, like, who can f*** with these people? This is two different cities of the most advanced anything that has ever existed in all of. Anything that we have ever conceived that feared something more complicated. And even the they made at the very end was so overpowered that it would on the entire Jesus alone. Would. On the entire Elysian civilization and every bit of technology they've ever had. And still that wasn't enough.

Cristina: It's gotta be the fairies doing their thing. The fairies are so advanced and we never actually know what they're doing.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: And look, we just know they're safeguarding the program.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: This would make so much sense.

Jack: Yeah. The. It looks like the. The elves fail when we get to Jesus.

Cristina: Yes. But maybe not.

Jack: Maybe not. Maybe not. Maybe successfully breaking apart the group or how. Making them abandon their level of progress.

Cristina: Yes. Like, that's pretty.

Jack: That's.

Cristina: That's wild. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. They're forcing these individuals to control. Alt. Delete.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You know, they're just forcing them to delete their own.

Cristina: Yes. Because, like. Or you'll get deleted.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: You'll delete it. Or you get deleted.

Jack: Like something is going. It's you or it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it's like. I don't know. Maybe.

Cristina: Yeah. That makes a lot of sense. Because it's just too advanced to imagine something. Like, what possibly could they fear besides, like, being wiped out?

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know. It's too. It's. It's incomprehensible that there would be an issue.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So these people flooded their city.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Snapped it off the side, sank it.

Cristina: Into the ocean, and then covered it up.

Jack: Well, no time did that. They just f****** sent it into the ocean.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And time buried it. But it's like, leave it f****** down. Let's get the h*** out of here. They vacuumed the whole b****. They evacuated everything and just dipped. Crazy. So records. The earliest records of the city date back to 574, which mentioned previous records that got washed away and things that disappeared over time, dating its sinking to 1500s BCE. Somewhere between 15 and 1900s BCE, so about 2000 years before the Elysian sank their city.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And this kind of ties them to the beginning of other civilizations like the Indus Valley civilizations and whatnot that would then settle within the regions. I know. It's f****** weird, man.

Cristina: I think we have some. We're getting a picture of something at least. What could possibly be going on?

Jack: This puts the Elysians equal to the city of Dwarka. So that's two different cities, not countries. These are cities. Elysium at the bottom of the Persian Gulf oasis and Dwarka at the edge of India. Two highly advanced civilizations that just were.

Cristina: Taken down by themselves like nothing else.

Jack: Yeah. They themselves took. Sank their everything. And the mines ran away, the Mayans ran away. Probably to the Shadow Realm. Originally, we thought, because it didn't look like there was no trail. There was no trail outward. Our conclusion was they went underground, but they didn't need a trail outward if they just left the f****** realm.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Which would explain that. And the Egyptians were like, f*** Earth.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There's a lot of evidence of that. They're just like, we made rockets. We made this, we made that. And dipped. F*** everything.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Something. But no, no, because. No, no, it's not. It's not the elves or. If it is, it's not. It can't be the system logic we applied to it before.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because the Elysians took as much tech as they could underground underwater, and the Mayan took a bunch of their tech too. We assumed underground, but likely to the Shadow Realm. And the Egyptians took their tech across the universe.

Cristina: Well, we don't have the proof of what tech they took. Like maybe it's safe tech that the fairies wouldn't be bothered by and they probably destroyed.

Jack: Take tech that allows you to cross the universe. You're talking quite advanced. You're talking the most advanced of the most advanced. Something that could withstand the pressure of the deepest part of the ocean, is the weight of Earth on top of you and it not collapsing. We're talking advance.

Cristina: So what's going on? I don't know. Interesting.

Jack: Minus the fact that we have no proof of the Greek running away. We don't actually know where those people might be at this moment. Minus that. That's four different examples, two of which are colossally overpowered. Way more overpowered than the other two, which are the Elysians and Dwarka.

Cristina: Destroyed their crap and ran away.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: Weird.

Jack: So what is it that everybody was horrified of that was so colossal it was more important to dip everybody? Full mass evacuation. That's four full mass evacuations.

Cristina: What's that about? What's that about? I don't know. That's crazy.

Jack: Yep. So there you go.

Cristina: I wonder if we'll find out. But like, I hope we do. I doubt we will.

Jack: But like, slowly but surely, I guess it's just crazy. I don't even understand what could be this overpowered. But for all this data, anybody who's interested, all this is available online. All this is available in different series of books. I'll tell you the names of those books again. You can find the lost city of Dwarka. You could find marine archaeology of the Indian Ocean countries. You could find excavations of Dwarka. You could find the archaeology of Bet Dwarka. And you could find archaeological survey of India reports. All are heftily including all of this information. And you can go through it yourself, find which details matter. And all of this is, you know, you could cross reference it with other data that isn't within the books that are mentioned. You could find a lot of the original texts.

Cristina: That would be so insane. I just don't understand. It's ancient and advanced.

Jack: Just like the Elysians. Yeah. Yeah, just like the Elysians. That's crazy. And this is just one we're going to be going through. There are others.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Yeah. So, yeah, if you guys want to talk to us about this, anything you find while looking at this, feel free.

Cristina: To see a connection that we're missing.

Jack: Yeah. Feel free to contact us on our socials at. Just convopod on X, on Facebook, on Instagram, on wherever the h*** you want to type. Just convo pod and we show up.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate and review. Let's share.

Jack: And word of mouth is the most exaggerated thing on Earth. Share it so that we also get hunted down by whatever this crazy force is.

Cristina: What? And this has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening. Bye.

Jack: Sabbath.

Cristina: Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by great dots.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 219: Planning the Future

What was the ultimate goal of the Sea People? Why was it so important? And why the sudden need to live hidden? The duo try to unravel the ultimate motivation behind the decisions and goals of the Sea People.

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • The Sea People
  • Egyptian Transportation Technology
  • Mayan Energy Storage Technology
  • Complex Language
  • Space Exploration
  • Population Technology

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling Podcast. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And this is a show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas. That intro, I do it so silky smooth.

Cristina: So good. Yeah, except for that part. Yeah.

Jack: But no, listen. It is with great pleasure that I say that we somehow have missed the entire point and still haven't solved our problem of getting Jesus that's in cryostasis out of that block. We've discovered nothing useful for that.

Cristina: I don't know if that's that important.

Jack: Well, can you imagine what he can tell us?

Cristina: What if he is a vampire and he just tries to attack us?

Jack: I don't think that's how that works.

Cristina: Why not?

Jack: I'm sure that's just movie stuff.

Cristina: Mmm. I don't know. I'm still scared.

Jack: Still scared?

Cristina: Yeah. She's a vampire and he wants to drink her blood. That would suck.

Jack: I don't think he just casually wants to drink random people's blood. You're assuming that Jesus is a zombie, not a vampire.

Cristina: Well, he wants. I don't know.

Jack: Because vampires aren't under control.

Cristina: They are, but they. He's. Well, from his stories, he pretty much turned everyone around him into zombies. And I don't want to be a zombie for Jesus.

Jack: Vampires.

Cristina: No. He was a bad part, but everyone following him wasn't.

Jack: The apostles were definitely like he was.

Cristina: You think he let us be like them?

Jack: He. They had weird abilities. They weren't like normal people.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah, but they were. Yeah, but they were working with him. We're not working with him or for.

Jack: Him or anything that they were definitely, you know, they were vampires. The other people were probably zombies because there's mindlessness to the behavior.

Cristina: Yes. And I don't want that to happen to me.

Jack: Weird notion that a vampire would tame a bunch of zombies. And it's never displayed that way. But it seems like such a vampire thing to do. They're already mindless zombies.

Cristina: Who is?

Jack: The zombies?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So they can use zombies for a lot of different things. And vampires never displayed that way with an army of. I mean, vampires never display with an army of zombies.

Cristina: Yeah. I think he is, though.

Jack: Yeah, he's probably definitely a vampire, not a zombie.

Cristina: No, but I mean, like, he turns people into zombies.

Jack: I think that was back then. I don't think it was everybody either, because he could have just done that to the people to the Persian. Which by the way.

Cristina: Way.

Jack: Was it the Persians? No, he was dealing with the Jews. Never considered this. But what interaction was there between. And it seems like nothing as far as I can tell. This probably a pathway I should be looking into. But I wonder what connections there are between the sea people and the Hebrews of the time. Because the Bible has a lot of war with Persia.

Cristina: Does it?

Jack: That's the main big bad guy other than Satan.

Cristina: Yeah, that should probably be the main big bad guy.

Jack: Yeah. That's the boss of the whole book essentially.

Cristina: Right. Besides God himself.

Jack: Well, it's we I guess. I mean God is painting himself as a good guy there. I mean yeah, there's a lot of follow law or punishment is way harsh and that's a bad guy over there. But there is war with the Persians. That's ultimately like the biggest enemy.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Other than the moral of the story, your worst enemy is yourself. If you're Jew. I guess. I mean isn't that what happened? I mean. But the Jews don't believe that. That being said, of course your story isn't gonna say that. You up halfway.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Right. Like you're not going to write in your Bible. And so we f***** up and killed Jesus.

Cristina: I guess.

Jack: My bad. But it cleansed our sins and here we are doing it all over again.

Cristina: So dumb. So. Okay. I mean it could only be them who killed. Like it doesn't make sense. It wouldn't have been anyone else if there was no one else religiously. Like that doesn't make sense to blame them on his death if that was the people around. You know, like if it was just white people and a white person died, you wouldn't say those white people killed him. It was just people.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Killed another person.

Jack: See, this same thing happened on that. It was like a mall or just a place that there was a bunch of Asian people at.

Jack: And a guy went on a shooting spree there and he killed some people. And they called it a hate crime.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And that went everywhere very quickly. A hate crime. And it turns out that the guy they were talking about was the same type of Asian as those people. The only people in that area were those people. Just have. They happened to be the people around him specifically.

Cristina: So it wasn't really a hate crime. He was just.

Jack: It was. He hated something. But it wasn't like a race hate crime.

Cristina: Yeah. It was random to him.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: It's just. This is the local area. Those are local people. Like like not really looking out to get anyone specific.

Jack: Yeah. You just. Like, I. This is. This is where I live, I think.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I think it was literally personal, actually.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: But I don't think it was race motivated. I just think my co workers or whatever, you know.

Cristina: Yeah. And they just happen to be his race.

Jack: They happen to be his race. Which was Asian.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I don't remember specific. Like rain or something and. Yeah. Sweet.

Cristina: So it's not really.

Jack: Yeah, it's not a hate race. Crime.

Cristina: Race. Race.

Jack: Race hate. Yeah, that sounds right. Race hate.

Cristina: I don't know. Yeah. Because he just hated the people. Not the skin of those people. Just the people themselves.

Jack: The individual. He hated those individuals.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: So, yeah, that's kind of how it goes. I wonder how. But, like, what. What the. The play here is between Israel, Jerusalem, and. And the sea people, the Persians. I wonder what that. What's the deal with that? Like, if there is any. And how far down that rabbit hole goes relative to all this? Like, is it connected to this freaking mountain? Because everything is probably Israel in Jerusalem.

Cristina: No, but that mountain has nothing to do with them. Where's that mountain to them?

Jack: That mountain is in Greece.

Cristina: Exactly. That's nowhere near them.

Jack: Well, the Persians are also the people who tortured and were the main enemy of the Greek.

Cristina: They were?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Oh, those other places.

Jack: What other places?

Cristina: You said Israel and Jerusalem.

Jack: Yeah. I don't know.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But I know they were the direct enemy of Greece, but they were probably.

Cristina: An enemy to a lot of people.

Jack: And they were definitely on the side of a lot of people. This is a weird thing. We don't think about the sea people. They. They were just people. They happen to be way technologically advanced. Okay, whatever. But they were just people, ultimately.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And so they had alliances, which were the people they helped. They were very generous with the alliances, but it seems like they bullied and pushed around a bunch of other people kind of easily.

Cristina: But why?

Jack: But why? I guess it's just race preference favoritism.

Cristina: I don't know. It feels like when countries attack other countries, it's because they want something specifically from that country.

Jack: So what could the sea people, the Egyptians, the Mayans, what could those kinds of people have in common that they would want from a place like Greece?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: Because they're alliance. Or would they also have to be attacking the sea people?

Cristina: Who was attacking the sea people?

Jack: I mean, not attacking sea people. The Greeks.

Cristina: The Egyptians are attacking the Greeks.

Jack: The sea people.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Are attacking the Greek. I wonder if the Egyptians and the Mayans also have to be attacking the Greek. In order for them to be.

Cristina: Probably not because of how far they are. You can't see the Mayans attacking anyone in the middle of nowhere into the rest of the world. Where are they?

Jack: Mexico.

Cristina: Yeah. Like who was around them during that time when they were around?

Jack: Nobody. They were the most over exaggeratedly dominant thing in that area. There was nothing. Even a little.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Till the Spaniards showed up and like wiped them out with smallpox.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Quickly. It wasn't war or anything. It was just that.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's crazy.

Cristina: Right?

Jack: So the one thing that stayed on my mind after we went through this giant rabbit hole of Jesus, I guess Jesus. It's weird that we started there and circled right back. We lost him somewhere in the middle.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like this began about.

Cristina: We quickly abandoned them.

Jack: I should begin about Santa Claus.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But then like it was a little about Jesus. And then we spun out and looked at a bunch of other stuff all connected to Jesus. Little did we know we lost them. Little did we know though it was.

Cristina: Always about Jesus or it's really about Mary.

Jack: Actually, it's not about Jesus at all. There's something weird about Mary.

Cristina: So there's something about Mary.

Jack: There's something about Mary and something about Jesus we don't quite understand. And there is still something about what's the real reason for the leaving, the hiding, the secrecy. Like we're assuming a lot in those areas. We don't know what the boogeyman was or if the whole point was using the technology. We can with quite heist or ntps together that it was probably some form of technology that the Garden of Eden was.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But what was the real reason that they hid? Was it because they wanted to protect that technology and use it? Send some out, store some, secretly manage it while hiding in secrecy? But then questions like why didn't you go to space and hide there?

Cristina: Yeah. Why stay on Earth?

Jack: Why stay on Earth?

Cristina: I don't know. That's just a weird situation. Why stay on Earth? I mean, I don't know. It's hard to leave Earth. I don't know because you can go somewhere else. But it's just. It's too perfect of a planet. I mean, for humans. I mean, we're here for a reason.

Jack: A sufficiently advanced civilization doesn't matter. You terraform your planet.

Cristina: Maybe we suck at it. Maybe they suck at it.

Jack: Do you think they'll suck at terraforming? With how much time they've had? I doubt it. If they have the ability to just create life in general.

Cristina: It makes sense that they should Be able to do it to other places. But then why come back here then?

Jack: Even when I come back here, they stay here. Why are they here? Yeah, we know they stored all of their data in three separate locations, bare minimum. We know the other locations, but we always speak of the same location.

Cristina: They don't know really know that they're still here, do we?

Jack: The sea people?

Cristina: Yeah. Like maybe they do have stored data here, but they dipped. Yeah, like we don't really know.

Jack: We don't really know.

Cristina: It could be gone. Living on other planets.

Jack: Yeah. Within the lifespan of Jesus Christ they moved an entire civilization from one side.

Cristina: Of the planet to the other. Yeah.

Jack: One side of planet to the other.

Cristina: They could have been left.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: It could just be storing areas, just backups and stuff. They really needed it.

Jack: So the possibility or. Look man, it could be. I don't even know how to explain it. It could be that everything is still functional. Works in a way that we just don't understand. Like why do they need to. Why either? Or why do they need to be here and why do they need to stay? Who says they don't come and go effortlessly? Since the time we're talking about to now, there's been giant leaps and bounds in our technology. But they would be growing exponentially. Always faster than before.

Cristina: So you think they could be coming and going?

Jack: I think they're so advanced that they just. The aliens we see are the sea people. It's nothing from outer space. It's earthlings. But. And we've. It's interesting that we've come to this conclusion in the past before about people from the future visiting back. Yeah, we think those are aliens. As well as having few sites of the future. Tears. What do you thin place slices that you see.

Cristina: You see the past or the present? Like ghosts. Like that's what ghosts are.

Jack: As well as echoes. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like space time vibrations that replicate existing moments and it's just a faded image. But if you were to see a plane before planes were invented. And you're just seeing into the future. But you don't know that and you can never prove it because it comes and goes.

Cristina: Alien. Or some masking alien creature.

Jack: Yes, like a dragon. Exactly. So like. Yeah. It could just be them the whole time.

Cristina: Yeah, it could be.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. Because think about it. There is. There are some things that we still have to question. Right?

Cristina: Like what.

Jack: Why a transportation device if you're already creating a launching system and both in the same place. So you're gonna send someone across the universe and start Populating the world out there or exploring or whatever you need it for. And you're starting at this end too, just for that purpose. Then you're never using this thing again. As opposed to. They pop up through there frequently. They come and go.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There's more of these. This is just the only one we know. This is a primitive, ancient relic version of it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Prototype.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they abandoned it. Cuz f*** this project. It's a Minecraft map. You make a thing, you keep moving.

Cristina: On, go somewhere else and make a better one.

Jack: Yeah. Make a better one. Start a whole new game. F*** it. Waste no memory.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Start a whole new game. You can terraform a plan. Yeah. Do whatever the h*** you want in the plan. You can fix it if you needed to. If a tragedy happened, you could just solve it.

Cristina: Yeah. By that. Like if they're that events. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Shouldn't be a problem.

Jack: So they could be coming and going through transportation through just space travel. Again, the same location. We're talking about these pyramids. And these pyramids have blueprints for transportation devices or teleportation devices of some manner. And blueprints for rocket ships design. Rocket ship design. And like tech to power it. And pyramids that could be used as launch pads. Like. Whoa. Fantastic. All of this is telling us back then they were designing different kinds of easy maneuverability devices.

Cristina: Yeah. So who knows how advanced they are now and what they're using now.

Jack: They could be in something too futuristic. I mean, they would be.

Cristina: Mm. They're already using teleporters on the mountain and you can't even see it. Like it's there. The clearing is there. It's just a clearing. They don't see anything there. There's not something physically there.

Jack: That's so freaking alien, right?

Cristina: Yeah. It just looks like they pop out of nowhere, but it's not.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Or they think they're flying there with a horse, but of course they're not.

Jack: That's so crazy, right? This works. This explains a lot. So scientifically, maybe they weren't running from anything. They were scientifically advanced enough to not need to run away. But the argument would be they've become so technologically advanced that they resemble science. They resemble magic to us. In most instances, yes. And then the shreds that look like anything familiar, we can only theorize about what the f*** it is because they.

Cristina: Are too advanced and we turn them into stories.

Jack: Yes. Because an ant knows I exist for sure. Could it grasp 1% of the world that I live in?

Cristina: No. Well, I Can't even grasp you completely.

Jack: Exactly. It. It's not fully aware I exist as an individual. It just knows I'm physically present. Even if it could think, it would have a hard time wrapping its head around. Like, if it could think profoundly.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It would have a hard time wrapping its head around the fact that I am a thing that's alive.

Cristina: Mm. That's ridiculous to it. Yeah.

Jack: Why wouldn't that be the case with something so much more astoundingly advanced? Why would we even be able to tell that they are there? If we tried to talk to an ant, would it know?

Cristina: No.

Jack: What if the task here of the Sea People is let's try to communicate with them and we're just too stupid to grab it? We don't even know there's something trying to communicate.

Cristina: I guess they're probably trying to communicate all the time.

Jack: Yeah. Or to permanently.

Cristina: They were able to once upon a time.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: That they got to it. Right.

Jack: So you think they got to. Well, no, they were helping people.

Cristina: Well, yeah, they weren't that. Well, what they were to them then is ridiculous compared to now.

Jack: Yes. And now it's that much farther.

Cristina: Yes, yes. It's so much more farther now from us to them. To them to the other people back then.

Jack: Yeah, The Sea people to the Egyptians, the Mayans, all these hyper advanced civilizations and then those to us. Yeah, no, they're just.

Cristina: We think we're more advanced than those people, but they were closer at least to the waterfield than we are.

Jack: Yeah, the Sea People.

Cristina: The Sea People.

Jack: Closer to the Sea people than where now. It's weird that they were called to Sea people. Right. Because they weren't in the water at first. They were just in the Persian Gulf oasis.

Cristina: That wasn't the water.

Jack: No. That happened later with the flood. They were. There's water there. There's bodies of water there, but they weren't like underneath it. That happened when the water came up and swallowed it all.

Cristina: Oh, now they're the Sea People and. Or the Atlantic people.

Jack: Well, they're the Sea People at both cases. I just don't know because the Sea people is a name that came from the Egyptians. Egyptians named in their writings and stuff. The. Also their freaking language is so complicated. The Egyptian language was and is like the written language or their hieroglyphic language was so complicated. It conveyed emotion, imagery, perspective, color, sound. Just like. It was so descriptive. You get all of this through the series of images. You have to understand it. And people were just raised on it, so it was easy for them to get it, But. Whoa.

Cristina: What? That doesn't make sense.

Jack: Yeah. It's just a really absurdly advanced language. It's crazy because they also invented paper.

Cristina: Okay. Really?

Jack: Yeah, the paper. They invented glass work. Weird things that stood out about what they came up with. They had really complicated astronomy.

Cristina: Of course they did.

Jack: Yeah. Really? Really. They had real advanced record keeping. They had an absurdly advanced calendar. They had obelisk sundials.

Cristina: What is that?

Jack: It's just a giant, like, clock. Essentially extremely advanced and successful grow and eat crop distribution methods. That's when you grow it in the same neighborhood, essentially, that you're about to feed it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So it goes straight through. And there's a clean line of production. So nothing is ever wasted and nothing is ever in abundance.

Cristina: That's cool.

Jack: It's just random things that they've figured out and, like, done well. Right. And most of this happened after a suspiciously common day that all of them seem to follow. They came up with the concept of furniture.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah. And surgery.

Cristina: Surgery?

Jack: Yep. I can't imagine what surgery was like that.

Cristina: Yeah. I guess they were just killing people.

Jack: Well, no, not necessarily. If they were this level of advanced, like, we don't really know.

Cristina: So hard to imagine people weren't dying.

Jack: Like, what if they had sweet tech to do it? What if they beat us at it?

Cristina: Because I know they were doing surgery on their dead people, but I didn't know they were doing surgery on their living people.

Jack: We do surgery on our dead people.

Cristina: Yeah. But I guess that means they might not have been doing surgery on living people.

Jack: Why? We do surgery on living people too, Man.

Cristina: The rate of survival, though, couldn't have been that high.

Jack: Why? What's the difference if we have. If we're to assume they're at least as technologically advanced as we are, or were at least as technologically advanced as we are, what would be the difference?

Cristina: So it's hard to imagine. I don't know. Because it's so far behind. It's like the birth rates how they used to be before people realized you got to be clean when you give birth to a baby.

Jack: We're talking about a civilization that isn't the same people that are currently there. We're talking about people who dipped.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Like, they straight out left and just have a bunch of ruins and crap left behind.

Cristina: Yeah. What kind of surgery were they doing, though?

Jack: I'm assuming surgery for whatever normal things, you know, normal ailments and stuff that came through. They had toothpaste. That was great. And also they had really complicated irrigation systems because they had this kind of straight grow it, eat it situation going on.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They had really complicated watering systems, so the plants would all get watered in the neighborhoods, which means they had an abundance of water, as well as the fact that they had really complicated piping systems for both suits.

Cristina: Well, this was all happening. Were other places getting this stuff?

Jack: No.

Cristina: Are they the only ones?

Jack: Well, it's weirdly enough, a lot of these same places that mention the sea people.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Kind of just them.

Cristina: We're doing this kind of stuff.

Jack: Yeah, we're doing this kind of stuff. All the ones with mention to them are similar concepts like pyramids and crap like that. Strange those seem specifically when it comes to sewers, sewage systems, water distribution system, irrigation systems, stuff like that. That seems to be the most related to the sea people, as well as really advanced crop situations, all of which are very different, but all seem to be the most advanced and the least, I guess, the most stable among the countries that are tightly connected to the sea people, either be it through the equator or dimension.

Cristina: That's interesting, huh?

Jack: Yeah. Random facts.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Weird, right? Just coink a dink. But the weirdest thing that they did create is the pyramids, as far as we know, because we can't find structures that are for the sea people that are pyramids, other than in the Atlantis side of things. Because in the Persian side, we don't find pyramids. All the other structures are the same. No pyramids. But in the Vimini Islands and not be many islands a little underneath the water, underneath the sea, the Bermuda heading towards there, there are pyramids as well as a bunch of other sketchy stuff like the lion and whatnot.

Cristina: There's pyramids as well.

Jack: It's just small structures. Looks like essentially replicas of the ones.

Cristina: In Egypt, but they can't be that big.

Jack: Not small.

Cristina: Oh. Or is it like something that looks like it's probably buried as well?

Jack: Oh, crap. I never thought about that. I was just watching images of the.

Cristina: Like, it could just be the tip of a pyramid.

Jack: It could just be the tip of a pyramid. Yeah. Interesting. Something to look into. Maybe there is much more going on.

Cristina: Ooh, that's interesting. Weird. Very weird. If there's that there now, that's just.

Jack: Egyptians, they had all that going on. The Mayans essentially had a lot of the same stuff, but there's some shifts from flight technologies and from transportation technologies that are on the side of the Egyptians over here. One of the most interesting things that the Mayans came up with was Energy storage technology, which again follows the Matrix. The matrix situation or the information storage situation.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They had really advanced factories. Like these were the introverts essentially. They were self sustained.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So really advanced factories, Real complex calendars as well for timekeeping. There was something really important about all the countries along the equator that have these structures. They are all also had really accurate really advanced calendars. All of them. There's no exception.

Cristina: Does it make sense that these people weren't on that line?

Jack: It doesn't. Right. What's up with the Mayans? And they specifically mentioned the sea people. What's up with that? Yeah, there's something different about them that we need to look into.

Cristina: Mm. Maybe that's not their original spot. Maybe they also moved.

Jack: You think that was relocation?

Cristina: Yeah. Wouldn't that make it make sense? No. Still probably on this continent, but somewhere that matches the line.

Jack: It doesn't touch the Americas whatsoever.

Cristina: Not even the tip anywhere. How, how's that possible?

Jack: It goes through. Wait, does it go through Argentina? The very tip at the bottom, maybe.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah. It has to be touching. Like it's America's. Like, you know. Really?

Jack: No, it might just go next to it. All things considered, like America might just be on the hole on the side next to the line.

Cristina: That's a really strange line.

Jack: But no, it could be. If I'm not mistaken, it would need to touch like Argentina and India simultaneously or something like that. Which means it is touching the Americas. South America, the lower part, doing something.

Cristina: It has to. And I bet they were there and.

Jack: Traveled all the way to Mexico.

Cristina: I guess to be more hidden. Just like the sea people.

Jack: Interesting. And they were for a long time. Okay. In a lot of these cases it was important that they would hide within a time frame, which I don't know.

Cristina: If it's hiding, but they just want.

Jack: To be more private.

Cristina: More private, exactly. Because like the Egyptians seemed at least the ones around the pyramid. It was just that the pyramids and that area.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: You know, like they were already kind of separate. So maybe they all wanted to be.

Jack: The problem is you create these really impenetrable borders that lead through the jungle into no man's land. Where your structures blend into nature and it's hard to even spot them until you get to the heart of the city and it starts to look like stuff is around you that's really trying really hard to be invisible. Yeah, I guess that's trying really hard.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's not normal.

Cristina: No.

Jack: And then going into the underground as an entire population and just off the face of the Earth.

Cristina: They're in space. Probably.

Jack: You think that was only temporary?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Everything seems to be like, so who's watching the data? Or maybe it's not even a problem. This is the other problem. Maybe there's not even an issue. Maybe it really is just like these are storage systems. If we tried to get in there, they could just land on the planet super quickly and stop us and they.

Cristina: Have noticed or something or whatever. Their technology version of something that guards those things.

Jack: Fair enough. And they would have copies of it everywhere.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So what was the point of storage on Earth? Both of them are claiming storage.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: One under the Sphinx and the other one under the Mayan temples.

Cristina: Mmm. Just in case they want to come back. I don't know. Or if they're not coming back. It's not really storage. I mean if they are coming back, enforce whenever they want. It's not really search.

Jack: So the question is, was it left there for us? Think about it. Civilizations, they will know. They. Why would they need it if they can already put it anywhere that they need it?

Cristina: But they need a. Like if they're going to come visit, where are they going to hang out?

Jack: Why would they hang out at the Sphinx data center? They just love data.

Cristina: Oh, it's their home, the data.

Jack: No, I think Atlantis would be.

Cristina: Oh, I think they all just go to Atlantis.

Jack: You think? Fair enough. No, but like, I don't know. Everything that we can see from the Mayans is destroyed and rotted away. So it would have to. They would have to be going to the underground facilities. Like oh yeah, Maya is still real to them. It's just somewhere we can't access.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Egypt went to space for the same thing. Just cause. Why not a place to chill people we're familiar with, we can explore, spread our seeds across the oceans of the world.

Cristina: That's their plan.

Jack: Maybe.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They still have this Garden of Eden, population, technology.

Cristina: That's somehow important.

Jack: That's somehow important. There's so many holes here. So fair enough. They're not even running away. Wouldn't make sense. They are the dominant thing out here.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: If this God like thing wanted to get to them, well too bad. They can easily protect the garden. That's why they have this entire thing set up.

Cristina: Yeah, so.

Jack: So that's not even a problem. They just come and go effortlessly. They got locations we can't find so that we don't see their stuff. But this is their home. They like to come back. Yeah, we see them in the sky often. We just don't know it's them.

Cristina: There's nothing we can do about it.

Jack: Yeah. And they're like so advanced, they not even really trying to hide. They don't care.

Cristina: Yeah. Even if we try to attack, it wouldn't do anything. Yeah.

Jack: And half the time we can't even comprehend what we're looking at.

Cristina: Yeah. We're too shocked to do anything. Okay.

Jack: It's. It looks like nothing. Was that it? Was that a cloud that moved? In a weird way, it's probably my head.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: No, it was. You saw the thing and it was happening, but it wasn't a cloud. But they don't care. Like you're not gonna grasp it. You're like, yeah, it was probably just my head. Sigh. TikTok about that.

Cristina: What?

Jack: That no matter what the guy did, he was being controlled. He's like a character in a game or something. And this guy was just randomly altering the code and no matter what, he would like rationalize it away.

Cristina: Okay, I see. Yes.

Jack: Yeah. And it just reminded me that.

Cristina: So we would do the same though.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Because we're on PCs, but. Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. Interesting little details about things the Mayans had that are inscribed on their structures.

Cristina: Robots? No. I don't know.

Jack: I can imagine hydraulic piping systems.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Water would flow directly from holes. They'd cut out, clean the water, and then deliver it to the people directly. Very important because this technology is specifically for indoor water collection and distribution.

Cristina: That's important.

Jack: Very important. Because the idea is you create cavities in the ground in areas deep enough where the collective moisture and pressure squeezes water into that hole. Then that's going to go through a series of minerals, rocks, and different kinds of. Just by the way, it's all nature. They could replicate this underground forever.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So it's easy to just use what's around you if you're underground, excavate a bunch of crap and use that same crap you excavated in the first place to clean all your water. So water goes through a bunch of things in a certain order that they have the. The, I guess a compound structure arranged in. There's an order arranged in. So it goes kind of like sharpening a knife where you go from a certain blade to a certain blade to kind of get the fine cut.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The same idea was applying here. The water would go through different stages and come out purified on the other side, all replicatable underground. Just a fine tuned water distribution system entirely designed for underground water distribution. And also using natural underground lighting how bouncing the minimum light off of itself Repeatedly to create giant luminescence. And then you, for example, light a fire in one spot. A million mirrors together would create a really bright other spot.

Cristina: That's pretty cool.

Jack: And then you could light many places.

Cristina: Awesome.

Jack: Indoors.

Cristina: Yeah, that's. That's pretty interesting. I feel like I see that in video games all the time when you're solving puzzles. For some reason, it's always with fire and mirrors. Yeah, that's so common. I don't know what's happening there.

Jack: But yes, they had systems like this that allowed for that kind of thing in order to create really energy efficient botanic facilities indoors.

Cristina: I wonder what those for besides living?

Jack: Besides living underground.

Cristina: Underground. Okay. Perfect.

Jack: Yeah. Interesting. No?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Did they have ipods?

Jack: Maybe. They also invented the concept of zero. It came from that civilization, as far as we can know.

Cristina: Really.

Jack: Well, here's the weird thing about the concept of zero. The concept of zero seems to have been created in two different forms at exactly the same moment in two different locations. One was in India and the other one was in Maya. India created the infinite symbol and then the Mayans created zero. But they both essentially meant the same thing.

Cristina: Interesting.

Jack: And that happened with the prediction is within the five. The same five year period. But these people are very, very, very far apart.

Cristina: And one of them is sharing it with everyone and the other is just keeping it to themselves. I'm guessing because they're. I don't know, they're just very secretive. Like no one was. No. No one around in. Anywhere around the world knew what was happening in Maya.

Jack: No, that was the idea was you don't get to the heart of the city no matter how hard you try. If you're not one of us, you'll never see the inside.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: In fact, coming in means you never came out. Simple. They would easily end people trying to cross into their territory.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Except they can't do that with diseases.

Jack: Nope. But also, here's the thing. That kind of stuff at this point in the future feels like narrative modification. There's a lot of narrative modification happening everywhere.

Cristina: So it might not be the truth.

Jack: I don't think it's the truth because there's too much evidence for an underground evacuation or just going underground for whatever reason. Maybe not an evacuation at this point, but leaving everything that's on top and going underneath the very ground you were just living.

Cristina: Okay. Does that make sense?

Jack: Yes. Mad crap tells us that's what was happening.

Cristina: That probably did is what happened now.

Jack: They had really, really, really extremely complicated astronomy as well.

Cristina: Of course they Did. Okay.

Jack: But it didn't ever seem like they use it for anything.

Cristina: Calendar.

Jack: What?

Cristina: But their calendar.

Jack: Well, yeah, it was essentially entirely designed to keep track of time.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: There was no other purpose in any context for space for them. All their. All their writings, all their records, all their data. Space was not a thought to go visit never crossed anyone's mind. It was like, why?

Cristina: Why?

Jack: But they use it to calculate really hyper specific time. And that is very interesting things that we know the sea people have based on little bits and pieces we can ascertain from the Bible, from Mayan records and from Egyptian records and from some Greek records.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But I'm confused at this point about which records are like the Greeks are.

Cristina: The farthest from the truth because they were seeing these things magically and with magic wise, you know, like.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: They weren't seeing the truth the way the other ones were. Which.

Jack: The people that were actually in on it.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Which is an interesting idea by the way. It looks like they would just. The people that they weren't siding with, they would appear too godlike almost.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Like maybe the Greek were talking about the sea people, this collection of people who show up on this mountain. And like, maybe. Should I be looking at Olympus as well?

Cristina: Is that a different mountain? Is there stuff happening there? Oh, you think that those gods are these people?

Jack: I think those gods are the sea people. And Mount Olympus is just another place.

Cristina: Another place. Okay. You gotta go look into that. Okay.

Jack: There is a tradition with power and wealth to want height because you can always look down. So mountains make sense, especially when you're talking about the tallest mountains in the region.

Cristina: Yes, but this specific mountain was the one that they were talking about with the sea people.

Jack: Athos.

Cristina: Athos, yes.

Jack: Yes. While the mountain of Olympus is mainly used for their mythology. But what if we're talking about the same people?

Cristina: Wouldn't they notice the difference?

Jack: Well, no. The scientists and scholars wrote the records and the theists and believers wrote the mythology. And actually the gap in time here is huge too, because we're talking that these narratives were originally just spoken wor for huge portions of time.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There wasn't even written record. They were just talking about these gods who hung out over there.

Cristina: Okay, so then everything that they were talking about was probably correct. Like they probably even had the mountain incorrect. And it was all one mountain.

Jack: But they were saying, no, maybe it's a lot of mountains. Maybe they just chill on top of mountains when they want to see the world.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And not just be hiding somewhere.

Cristina: Although this is the one mountain that the priests are hanging out on. They're not on Olympus too, are they?

Jack: No, I don't know. Actually, I have.

Cristina: Oh, we got to do research on that. Okay.

Jack: I don't know anything about Olympus.

Cristina: Well, let's figure that out.

Jack: But I. I'm definitely. That's an interesting thing to think about.

Cristina: Find out Jesus was on that mountain.

Jack: That'd be crazy. But I'm probably gonna find something like that.

Cristina: I bet.

Jack: I bet there is some weird occurrence like that. But the sea people things mentioned that we can just kind of piece together. In the Bible, they were said that the Persians. This is the Bible's name for the sea people. So the Persians, the people from Persia. Right. I guess the argument would be that.

Cristina: The people of the Persians.

Jack: Yeah, I guess the argument would be that the people of the Persian Gulf oasis were. That's just a city. That's not a country.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's just a city of people. Yeah, in Persia.

Cristina: Yeah. And so how do we know who they're talking about?

Jack: Exactly. Okay, so this is what I mean by. It's probably the sea people. Okay, so the Persians are very dominant force and are always the winners of all the wars. But weird things that would happen is they would be chasing someone in the Bible and just disappear behind them. Well, they just vanished. Like they're not thinking beyond. Oh, like. Yes, there's no way we ran them. But God helped us. We moved faster than we had to or whatever. But no, they disappeared by every possible variant of this text. They just disappeared behind you. That sounds like advanced teleportation technology to me. God didn't just blink people out of existence.

Cristina: It totally could, but. Okay, I guess they could also just decide to blink out of existence. Not really, but teleport.

Jack: But the Jehovah we're familiar with probably didn't even create life.

Cristina: No. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. So why would he be doing anything like that?

Jack: Unless he did.

Cristina: Unless he did what?

Jack: Hear me out. Hear me out. He's running a project called the Garden of Eden. He alone runs a project. He fires people if he wants.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: He doesn't have to be one of the sea people. Jehovah might not be one of the sea people. Jehovah might just have preferred the sea people like Adam, Eve, Lilith. But what if he created this system? The life that later became the sea people happened as well as everything else on the planet. All of it is a product of the Garden of Eden. Okay, this is the same guy who did it with his advanced technology. He comes from a Race even more technologically advanced. He's trying to create the perfect life.

Cristina: Okay. And the sea people must be this what he was trying to do, though?

Jack: Close enough.

Cristina: Close enough. Yeah.

Jack: So with the sea people, who are as perfect of a life as he's made so far, he waits until they get to their technologic peak, and then he jumps into the picture and he starts tinkering and getting help from them to see how much farther they can push it.

Cristina: Hey, what about angels? They're people that just teleport from place to place. Right. They don't actually have wings, do they? They're just people who just pop up and then pop out.

Jack: I think angels are also just the sea people.

Cristina: Exactly. That's what I'm thinking. Like, that's possible.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah, 100%. Oh, you're saying that there's a lot of mentions of that in the Bible.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Specifically, the Manji were really weird people. They seem to have strange, kind of I'm just here all of a sudden abilities.

Cristina: Mm. Well, they were like, we followed something to be here.

Jack: Fair enough. They're claiming a narrative happened, an adventure.

Cristina: Yeah. While these angels are, like, God sent me here. Yeah.

Jack: I magically appealed, like, a second ago. He just told me, and here I am.

Cristina: Oh, yeah.

Jack: Yeah, I guess. But they're still working for Jehovah.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Interesting. So he makes the tech. He's from some other civilization. Some really uber, mega crazy.

Cristina: He's a cat person. What if that was the answer all along?

Jack: That would be crazy. But the cat people aren't advanced enough also.

Cristina: Yes, they are.

Jack: You think cat people?

Cristina: Weren't they originally the people that did the pyramids? Weren't the pyramids related to cat people? And that's why they have all those cat people statues and the lion statues. What are the lions about? Maybe that was about cat people this whole time.

Jack: Hold up.

Cristina: Who knows?

Jack: Interesting point. But the cat people are. The ones you're talking about specifically aren't on the planet anymore. In fact, we don't know why. We know they left.

Cristina: We know they left, but there are some here.

Jack: Not advanced ones like that, but they're.

Cristina: Protecting technology, research and stuff. Yeah.

Jack: At the bottom of Lake Loch Ness.

Cristina: Yeah. So they might be in other locations protecting things like the pyramid and.

Jack: Right, because there's a bunch of rusted old things that are abandoned.

Cristina: If there's one Lake Loch Ness lab thing, there's others.

Jack: Yeah, no, you're totally right. There would definitely be other locations that have different resources. But then the question is, why keep it On Earth?

Cristina: I don't know. But we know that they live out there and they have their own.

Jack: And can we. Do we have to assume that even though they're descendants, it's the same purpose and same goal they're trying to achieve? It looks like whatever happened with the civilization in Egypt, it did split because there were Cat people and humans. And the Cat people kind of assuming they were forced to leave because of the Atlanteans. But even we can't reach the Atlanteans.

Cristina: No, I don't know. And now I think the Atlanteans were working for Cat people. I think God was a cat person.

Jack: That doesn't make any sense.

Cristina: So advanced. They, they, they have the whole that space in that space in space, that giant space in space. That's where they live.

Jack: We don't know that they're there, but.

Cristina: It'S most likely them that's in there.

Jack: Well, based on the narrative that we're going by, the Cat People have been many, many, many, many, many, many, many, many, many almost million years later. So that hole is the Atlanteans. That's where they're getting their energy from.

Cristina: The Atlanteans?

Jack: Yeah, that's where they're getting their energy.

Cristina: You think the Cat People are newer than the Atlanteans?

Jack: Yes, the Atlanteans are a million years old. The cat people are 10,000 years old.

Cristina: How do we know they're just 10,000 years old?

Jack: Because they are Egyptian.

Cristina: Well, we know.

Jack: And they must have happened after Egypt got its technology. Presumably after they created some sort of genetic problem and then led to the Cab people's birth in the first place. And then the Cab people overthrew them, literally forcing them to create statues and crap. But at this point, I'm assuming during the power struggle, the dip, the first dip happened. I guess maybe they were just trying to get the h*** out of there too. It was like, yeah, this is all falling s*** anyways, get the f*** out of here. And then they left, which is why we know that they were leaving in the first place. And then the Cat People took over whatever was left.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And then the Cat People had to leave when the Atlanteans were like, shoot, cat, don't bother me. And then normal everyday Egyptians settled and they just continued.

Cristina: I guess that could be it.

Jack: So if we can get to Atlantis, then we can probably get help in stopping the Cat People. Maybe that's the answer and we didn't need Jesus all along. But. Although I guess it's the same idea because Jesus is just a sea person too.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So we were on the right track.

Cristina: He could help us probably get down there.

Jack: Jesus could probably help us get down.

Cristina: He helped him.

Jack: He helped it. No, he didn't. He died.

Cristina: Well, she went to the mountain looking for him. So did he really?

Jack: She went to the mountain after his death and prayed to him.

Cristina: Oh yeah. And somehow that works. I don't know.

Jack: Jesus popping in and out of random locations is definitely another example of angel like behavior of this kind of hyper advanced technology poofing in and out.

Cristina: Yeah. So he'll help us. Oh crap. You know, wake him up.

Jack: Yeah, we need to get Jesus Christ out of that. It comes back to that. Everything circles back. Anyways. Okay. So basically we just trying to come up with some plans and future intentions. But it seems that there's definitely. We got to look into Mount Olympus, that's for sure. And we have to figure out what's happening there. And are those sea people? Maybe we're just hunting sea people now and we got to see if we can get the sea people to help us. And we need. Probably need Jesus for that.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But he's a. This is stupid plan already. This is like when we're trying to catch Santa Claus because he's specifically the one person who's not allowed to know where it is.

Cristina: Huh?

Jack: Yep. I mean, there must be some use to him.

Cristina: Yes. Oh, that's really complicated. I forgot. He can't go there.

Jack: He's the one person who can't go.

Cristina: There because then everyone knows crap. So he's useless. Ah. How does every plan just end up being useless? Every plan. We thought Santa Claus would be a great plan.

Jack: Of course he saw it coming. Yeah, we suck.

Cristina: We thought. We can't predict people who could just predict us. Pretty much is.

Jack: Here's the problem. Here's a problem. Most of the issues we deal with are pretty easy to solve. And they're like no f****** problem. I. This effort. Effortless. Effortless. Set an afterthought. But because of what we've been dealing with as of late, we're talking really complicated problems to solve.

Cristina: Yes. But all of these, they're so advanced. They're so ahead of us. It's just impossible.

Jack: Yeah. We're. We're really far behind. How this is.

Cristina: Getting them is like getting Santa. Like, it's. It's how. How do you do anything? But they would know. They would not let us with Jesus. It doesn't make sense.

Jack: Jesus knows the Maji. The Maji can get us there.

Cristina: Okay. That's a start. Okay, that helps.

Jack: There we go. You see, there's a path we can take. This is futile and lost.

Cristina: All right, that's. That works.

Jack: Anyways, if you guys got some ideas on how we can find some more of this stuff and which direction we can go in. If you know anything about Mount Olympus that I should be looking at, reach us, contact us, hit us up on our socials at JustConvopod, on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate and review the.

Jack: Show and tell people about the show. Word of mouth is very important, so everybody knows and comes and checks it out.

Cristina: Yeah. This has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening. Bye.

Jack: I think conditions warp how we behave and how we think and how we process information and how we receive the world. But including Hitler, you gotta understand, as a kid whose entire country was ravaged and he had to deal with the aftermath of World War II and understood what pillaging was. And he was one. Oh, yeah, World War I. And he's like, Austria got shafted, Germany got shafted. Like, what? So he had this warped point if he wasn't a bad guy, like, really, really. He was a scarred, hurt, broken person who saw a lot of tragedy that changed how he behaved. And he found other people who went through what he went through, talked to them into, we can stop this from ever happening again.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then they went on the move like it's. It made sense in their eyes.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Eventually spiraled way the f*** out of control, don't get me wrong. And it was entirely because of the idea that there is an us versus them mentality. And look, we're going to save the world for everybody. We need everybody to agree. And then. Well, that's impossible, bro. That part. You. You dropped the ball on that last bit. Everybody can't agree that's we're human. Like, bro, when have you seen Unanimous Agreement?

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by great dots.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 212: The Old Equator

What’s on the equator? What’s the significance? Has it always been the same? The duo discovers the equator has moved gradually over time and was once in a different location, now trackable by ancient structures. They deep dive to find the significance of this line circling Earth.

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • The Great Circle
  • The Old Equator
  • Mysterious Ancient Sites
  • Pyramid of Giza Hidden Equations
  • Constellations
  • Speed of Light
  • Signaling to Alien Life
  • Comet impact
  • Noah’s Flood
  • Scientifically Advanced Ancient Civilizations
  • The Persian Gulf Oasis

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Ramwin Podcast. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm Christina.

Jack: And this is the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas ever fathomed by the human brain.

Cristina: Like what?

Jack: Like stuff. A lot of it. Amazing sums of stuff.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But listen to me. Some of this stuff is amazing stuff. It's not just normal stuff. There's normal stuff. There's actually some kind of lame stuff too.

Cristina: Yeah, there's a lot of variety.

Jack: There's a lot of varieties of stuff. It's. It's the world, it's Earth. There's a lot of stuff, but some of the stuff is really high caliber stuff. And that stuff, that stuff is a bunch of. Are you ready for it?

Cristina: What?

Jack: Old stuff?

Cristina: Okay. What?

Jack: Mm, a lot of old stuff. So let me begin. I was on my road towards investigating some unicorns.

Cristina: Yay.

Jack: You know?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That was the plan. That was the goal. That was the original thought that I began this quest with. And I decided, hey, let's start this search on this path. And I'm sure I, at some point began investigating unicorns. I'm sure that began. I don't know how far I got.

Cristina: Because you straight away, I have no idea.

Jack: Maybe I don't know where I began, where I landed.

Cristina: You don't know how you landed at where you're at?

Jack: Yes, I began at unicorns. I've been trying. I've been trying to retrace my steps. I don't know how I got there, but. But at some point, I come across a single thing. The equator. I'm like, okay, yes, I'm familiar with the equator. Sweet. What equator? I'm like, whoa.

Cristina: How did you get from one to the other?

Jack: Well, okay, no idea. But as I am investigating the equator, or not investigating the equator, but as I come across the equator, what I come across specifically relating to the equator is that it shifts gradually, but at some point it shifted dramatically. And this lines up kind of neatly with a bunch of ancient civilization monuments.

Cristina: I don't understand.

Jack: Neither do I. Okay, so take a look at this image.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That is Earth.

Cristina: Yep.

Jack: And that is the new equator. Well, that's the old equator. My bad. The equator, that's new to you. That's your new equator. But that's the old equator. That's if you follow the rotation of the Earth and how it's spun and all whatnot. Far back enough, you Land here.

Cristina: Okay, but that means that the Earth.

Jack: Was also impacted at a random moment by a comet that altered its speed and rotation just enough to tilt it to where it is now. And, and two, there was a string of monuments lining up just along the entire equator, encircling the Earth.

Cristina: The old equator.

Jack: The old equator.

Cristina: Were there people alive back then when it was the old equator?

Jack: Don't know. The people that settled along the old equator are people who were alive before the old equator. I mean, after the old equator long ceased existing. Without the means to find out what the old equator was. What?

Cristina: How's that possible?

Jack: There is in fact a list. They call it the Great Circle. And all these monuments exist along that equator.

Cristina: The one that they were not even aware of, the one they couldn't have known of. Like, I don't understand.

Jack: I don't either. All of these monuments, the Naga Temple, Easter Island, Machu Picchu, the Great Pyramid of Giza, just a bunch of. A bunch of all of it. All of the important things, all the things that are important are along the same line.

Cristina: The line that doesn't actually exist.

Jack: A line that doesn't actually exist. There's no way they knew it existed. They just. They were surrounding a line. But then, just a couple of years ago, a scientist discovers that there was an old equator. You trace far back enough, taking into account the impacts we can track and taking into account the rotation of the Earth, where it is now, where we can track it was thus telling us where it would be in reverse time. I guess you throw all those calculations in and you end up where it's going to be in the past, or where it was, I suppose is what I'm trying to say. Where it was and what you end up with is a line that falls on top of all of these monuments and statues and some our entire civilizations.

Cristina: But these happened after way after.

Jack: We're talking that the old equator is 480 million years ago and that the people who somehow all aligned themselves with it were about the furthest back 12,000 years ago.

Cristina: Okay, but they're not all in the same time either. Right. Where are they? A lot of them are around the same time.

Jack: Now, a lot of these monuments are spread out in age by quite a bit. They're really, really old by huge margins. But a lot of them are also quite recent. And it's like, how did you accomplish.

Cristina: So was it random? Because it's not like they could have talked to each other or anything.

Jack: Or could they have?

Cristina: How?

Jack: Well, that would be the question. Right. The question would be if in fact this was intentional, how was it orchestrated surrounding the earth?

Cristina: Mm. You have an answer to that? Mm.

Jack: Okay. So in order to figure out what's going on, we gotta go further back in time. Right. We gotta go back to see where the old equator lands, trace everything that happens and see kind of where it falls. So things we do know roughly about 450 million years ago was the line where it felt fell most exact over a list of over 20 different monuments. And now the molly the monuments are spread out through thousands, hundreds of thousands of years. Sometimes some before we believe people existed.

Cristina: What you're saying they're. That they're so old.

Jack: Yeah. That it's like okay, we know that people must have made this but how old it tells us there are must destroy our understanding of like where humanity began or some crap like that, you know. Okay, so some of those are that there's a lot of gaps here, a lot of missing information. We just know that somehow throughout the course of time people have aligned again. Sometimes they were at the same time, but a lot of the time they weren't. I don't understand how weird aligned just encircling the earth. So some key places that this touches include Europe, India, Australia. So you gotta orient the earth in such a way that this line is going to cross these points. The equator we have runs from our proverbial left to right. If you look at our traditional map, it's just slightly slanted like it starts to lower United States.

Cristina: And the headline.

Jack: Yeah, the current equator. But you'd have to tilt this almost vertically to go through England, to go through India, to go through Australia. Okay. Never really weird line.

Cristina: That is very weird.

Jack: That is strange. But that's how everything is rotating, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So and this pushes the North Pole and the South Pole onto the equator.

Cristina: What do you mean? Wait, those.

Jack: They would have landed on the equator there. That's a consistent temperature at all times. Which is proven with the fact that it has been shown that both the north and South Pole were you know geologists were not discovered long ago that the there were rainforests there.

Cristina: Were there people there?

Jack: Were there people?

Cristina: Yeah. They haven't found any ancient anything on those parts of the world.

Jack: Well that's an argument for a different day. But there is a lot on how to. That's kind of question whether or not there is or isn't. There's some evidence that. But it could have been left afterwards or by travelers coming through in much later years and preserve. The problem is being Preserved obscures your time.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Okay, so it becomes difficult to say whether it was this long ago or this long ago, but there were rainforests there now.

Cristina: What a ridiculous line.

Jack: Yeah, it's. It gets more ridiculous than that. It gets so much more ridiculous than that.

Cristina: How.

Jack: Okay, here is the pyramids of Pizza.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: There is a beautiful line from the tip of all of them.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That is the tip of each one is aligning perfectly to a constellation. I believe this is Orion. And so weird. The weirder part is that the coordinates, I believe, for longitude towards north or something like that is 29.979245. Okay, whatever. But the speed of light is 299-79245, right?

Cristina: Stop lying. What?

Jack: So these are just some interesting tidbits about something that lands on the equator. Now, we already had theories about there being ancient civilizations, and usually it aims towards the Mayans or aims towards the Egyptians.

Cristina: So this lining up does like. That makes sense. It's possible. They see the stars. It looks doable. It makes sense that that's possible. Yes, but the coordinates matching up to.

Jack: The speed of light, how would they know? How would they know? How would they. This suggests that they had knowledge that was discovered and or invented thousands of years later.

Cristina: What were they doing with that knowledge? What would that help them with? What, how and why? And what?

Jack: The problem is, if they have this information, that means they have the capacity to acquire this information, which means they were way more advanced than we thought they were.

Cristina: What were they doing with that information, though?

Jack: Interesting. No?

Cristina: Were they space travelers? This is where we're getting to the point, I think.

Jack: Is it? We're talking about highly advanced civilizations, I don't think. I mean, they're probably space travelers too. Come on.

Cristina: This is crazy, but this is crazy.

Jack: I mean, we have. We're not space travelers. When we have the speed of light, we understand the speed of light.

Cristina: We're traveling in space, at least above us.

Jack: Locally. Yeah, locally. And we're. We're probing a little farther, I suppose. So most of this information is totally impossible that they had based on what we understand, which means we.

Cristina: We understand nothing. We don't understand anything.

Jack: Yeah, that's the usual conclusion.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But they should, in theory, possess in order to accomplish these things, knowledge about geometry and knowledge about physics and mathematics in general that was invented or discovered much later that we believe we invented and discovered recently.

Cristina: Yes, we're wrong.

Jack: But we're wrong because they clearly had it, which means they were about, or at least as good as we were. With evidence. They were as developed as we were with evidence. What does that mean? And we can. I don't know why. When we think back, we think back at outdated people. This information is. Again, I'm framing it in a way that's just changing how you're thinking of something you've been told a million times. Everybody knows this information. But when I word it the way I've worried it, it's suddenly like, wait, they were like us? Exactly, but way back then. Not too different. No, they had our exact capacity, or bare minimum, our knowledge, understanding of how the universe works in their hands.

Cristina: That is so weird. That is weird because you think like, yeah, they're.

Jack: They're long ago.

Cristina: They're long ago.

Jack: So we call them, you know, we call them advanced civilizations. But in comparison to old civilizations, we're like, okay, they were. You know, this is a very. We use words like developed. They were well developed. But we don't like. No, no, no, no. They understood. They got it, man.

Cristina: They got the speed of light. How does that make sense?

Jack: That's. Yes, that's high advanced science. They acquired things we're holding up now as prize, proud possessions.

Cristina: We don't have any of their. Whatever they were studying, like books or anything. They're papers. Can we translate anything?

Jack: We have things that survived time. Papers would be swallowed up. So immediately, no books. No, we got things drawn on a wall. We got, you know, rocks carved into things.

Cristina: None of that means anything.

Jack: Yeah, things that withstand long periods of time as opposed to now. This brings up an interesting different idea, which is maybe a lot of the time. I mean, we build statues just to remember things, but statues tend to be like, some of the stronger things that withstand time. Like a flag is gonna dissolve quickly. This is gonna be eaten up. It's gonna become just organic matter for something simple Rock, statues, things like that. Monuments, the things that get left behind. These giant pyramids, all that stuff. No, that survives time. Maybe the point of that is to leave information behind.

Cristina: Yes. Well, for some reason, because of the whole speed of light thing, that reminded me of the thing we sent into space. Like, what if that's what the pyramids are? We're not meant to understand what's in the pyramids. All those symbols, the. What are they called, the symbols that they write on the walls?

Jack: Hieroglyphs.

Cristina: Yes. What if that's for aliens?

Jack: What if that's for aliens?

Cristina: I mean, the ones outside.

Jack: Yeah. Like ones we can't figure out. The ones we couldn't decipher. Fair enough.

Cristina: Like what if they really believe there was life outside, even if there wasn't?

Jack: Like they were doing what we were doing.

Cristina: Yes. Like we throw things in space hoping to find someone.

Jack: They were out exploring. They were sending messages.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Except they got way more clever about it. They designed the pyramids. Maybe the pyramids were a physical manifestation of something letting space know that we're here. Yes, we're here. Look at what we under. This is how well we understand that you're out there. Look at what we did.

Cristina: Yeah. They not only knew science, they believe in aliens.

Jack: They believed in aliens. Not only did they believe in aliens, they were making. Taking active steps to communicate.

Cristina: Mm. Where everything else on this line doing the same thing, though, because this is one great example of it. But what about everything else that's on that line?

Jack: Okay. Everything on this line is one of these weird monuments like Stonehenge or something like that, that they're a clock that somehow aligns with all the. The constellations in a certain order, the ones that calculate an entire year. And it's a single location. Just impossible. Of knowledge that shouldn't have. We don't. One, we don't know how it was built, thus showing advanced construction knowledge. And two, we. It the symbol. Symbology of it so advanced that we are definitely not understanding what the h*** it means, which is probably some form of communication. The ones we don't get is probably because we just haven't discovered that level.

Cristina: Because it's not for us anyway.

Jack: But we're eventually going to get there anyways. It'll make sense. Like right now we can look at the pyramids and be like, ah, Ah, look at that. We can see the pattern. We get it all. That's advanced. Yeah, but if we're just cavemen, we don't get it.

Cristina: No.

Jack: And a bunch of cavemen must have stumbled upon these things and been like, okay, whatever. But we get curious. We start excavating, like, what? Oh, there's something here. Fascinating. As we get through, we discover, oh, wow, There's a pattern. It is aligned perfectly with this constellation. Interesting. That is interesting. So as we advance, so did they as. Oh, first, we didn't even know how they built it. And I was like, how the h*** did they do this? And wow, they were way more advanced than we thought. But they were all this way, all of them.

Cristina: It was all different time periods. That's what's strange.

Jack: All different time periods.

Cristina: Different time periods, different locations.

Jack: Are they doing it? So we're just a little blip of the many times this has come and gone.

Cristina: It makes sense. We're as obsessed with science. Like eventually every civilization gets to that point where they want to know what's out there. And like, how do we say hi I guess is the next step to that?

Jack: Yeah, reaching out, using it. It's so complicated, Right, because they're also recording information. This is just imagine the complex nature of this. They are informing aliens. Because of the size and magnitude and complexity of the structure visible from space, you can see this magnificent thing.

Cristina: But what does the equator have to do with anything?

Jack: Well, this is a really weird thing, right?

Cristina: Yes. Because like, what about all the other civilizations?

Jack: Well, the same thing applies here across the board.

Cristina: Not on this line. I mean like all the other.

Jack: Well, that's what's really weird, right. The minority of them exist off of it all the ones we consider advanced civilizations in any manner, shape or form minus two or three outliers seem to primarily exist along that ancient equator line.

Cristina: Okay, but the ones that are outside of it, do they also seem to be this type of thing of like, hey, space.

Jack: Okay, one, yes, it seems consistent across the board with all the more ancient ones. There seems to be messaging through size and engraving really complex level of information. Again with the pyramids as an example. They're used to record information as much as to create a signal. So there's. They're letting whatever can see it know we have advanced construction, we know advanced science. And it records the information of that constellation as well as places them directly where something like the speed of light. So look, we have this level of information. If you've acquired this much, this is one we haven't gone beyond. Look, with this advanced. That's how they're communicating so much.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: With placement, with size. And the following argument would be that the way the stones are laid themselves, there's also conveying some next level of information that all the monuments follow this logic. As we become more advanced through civilized. Through our own courses in civilization will sort of level up and find the next understanding of what the next rock meant, what the next big stone left over there was. We're gonna be like, ah, we get it. Because we just got there ourselves. We discovered the thing.

Cristina: Yeah, but you're saying also the places outside of this line are doing the same thing.

Jack: The place is outside of this line have two interesting constants that seem to apply to all of them, including everything in Mexico and Brazil, which I say because primarily in Mexico and Brazil it seems that all of the infer it seems are highly advanced. But nothing screaming into the void, whatever was happening over there had everybody fleeing. Like we said before. There was the sudden absence of people from the Mayan temples and the entire Mayan civilization subsequently suddenly. Okay, this happens over and over through a bunch of the ancient Brazilian civilizations as well. Mass evacuations and sudden disappearances of entire civilizations that are just gone. But they were all about as developed as would have to be for the ones that land on the equator or the ancient equator.

Cristina: Is this. No, but these places are on the new equator.

Jack: These places do not land on an equator.

Cristina: Okay. Not. Oh. Not new.

Jack: These places don't land on an equator at all.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: I'm sure at some point in time they must have. Everything must land on the equator eventually. It slowly rotates along the entirety of the planet. But the fact that there was an alignment to an exact moment of one is an amazing feat done throughout time. Strange. With civilizations we did not know had the knowledge required to do so.

Cristina: We're trying to speak to aliens, maybe.

Jack: I believe the best example of that, which is why I keep coming back to it, because I find it the most fascinating and seems to show the most information is the pyramids. Pyramids. That's a lot. You're recording information. You're showing information, quite specifically, two large bits of information. Constellations, thus understanding of space and the speed of light. Explaining understanding of physics. You're showing and understanding how the world is round. You're conveying that through showing coordinates in the first place.

Cristina: What's the chance that it's coincidence that the coordinates, the coordination matches up so well with the speed of light?

Jack: That is highly exact.

Cristina: But it's not equal. It's not the same. It's just. It's the same numbers.

Jack: Yes. Okay.

Cristina: It's not, you know, so the tip.

Jack: Of the tallest pyramid lands to the millionth decimal point. That is amazing.

Cristina: That is okay.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: So what were the other places like, though?

Jack: It was just all the monuments we are used to. Okay, is this a bunch of trivial crap that we don't understand? For the most part, a bunch of ancient advanced messaging systems, presumably based on the logic we're following, that I guess ultimately resulted. Now, the. The pattern here is that there anyone that was along this exact line was reaching outward and anybody who wasn't on this line was reaching inward. What's the disparity with what's happening here? Which is also familiar. Again, everybody discusses the Mayan evacuation and the disappearances of the people like them just kind of vanishing from either large famines or something that collapse all of society. Very quickly.

Cristina: That's possible.

Jack: Yeah. Like it's discussed very often. But the. The without a trace part is the. The complex nature there, which is people. Why people suggest there must be mass grave systems underneath, which is why there's no trace. People went. Because they would just continuously bury everybody within these structures that we're not going to destroy. Trying to get to.

Cristina: Okay. Like people were dying.

Jack: Yeah. The people disappeared.

Cristina: Plague.

Jack: They don't know people were dying. People just vanished.

Cristina: But a theory is that they just died.

Jack: Yeah. A theory is that maybe famine or some plague or something pretty dark hit them. And they probably have mass grave systems underneath it. With our advancing technologies, we'll be able to excavate without destroying anything eventually. Truly witness and see. But that's the ongoing theory that that's probably really what happened.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That they're just all down there. Catacombs that stretch on to forever.

Cristina: I just don't understand why these places. The old. The old line and.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Why the new line isn't doing the same.

Jack: Why the people on the line just continued to change and evolve and move on. I do not know. I do not know. It's very, very, very strange that that happens at all. That's. It's haunting to me that this is the case. It's. And again, it's just information that we have casually laying around. Anybody can just look this up and see. But why isn't this like more of a. Interesting pursuit? I guess. How. What?

Cristina: It's so weird because it's on the equator. Like the equator has the least time. Like, isn't their nighttime less than the other. The rest of the world?

Jack: No, the equator is. Wait, their nighttime is less. Yeah, I think the equator gets more light.

Cristina: Yeah. For them to be so obsessed with the. Or maybe that's why they're so obsessed with the night.

Jack: Or I guess it's not necessarily that. The equator. I guess the equator is hot. Right. Because the equator has the most consistent temperature. I believe is the case. Or it's the turning point.

Cristina: Yeah. But I feel like it is the hottest point for us.

Jack: But you gotta. You one. You're spinning the earth a different way.

Cristina: So you think it was different?

Jack: Yeah, it would have to be because the sun is still in the same location relative to where the Earth is. You're just changing how the earth is spinning.

Cristina: So you think they had more time in the night instead.

Jack: It depends how the earth rotates relative to the sun. I gotta see the rotation and where the sun rests relative to Earth. Answer that.

Cristina: Because that would make sense of why. Maybe they're way more into space and stuff. If they had spent way more time or way little time at night, like to become obsessed with that.

Jack: I don't know if they had longer nights.

Cristina: Yeah, if they had longer nights, could.

Jack: Definitely be the case. So first, how did we get to a point where the equator shifted so dramatically? The first theory is that there was a comet of some sort of course that at some point hit the Earth. That is the ongoing. This is how we got from here to a point A to point B. Hit it hard enough to force a little bit of quicker before the pull of the moon settled us again.

Cristina: Okay, that was just a little, you.

Jack: Know, a small enough rock with enough speed, Bloop. Tilts just a tiny little bit. But the moon is more powerful. So the moon's gonna stop it, but the wobble just kind of. You. You moved it enough that a little spin happened before it totally stopped. And now has a new rotation, whatever the case might be. So that 100% alters the rotation, changes it from one set to the other. You turn, changes the amount of degrees required.

Cristina: And there's more than one theory?

Jack: Well, this is the important theory because it lines up with everything. This specific theory falls along with the fact that we can prove there were rainforests in the Arctic and Antarctic. Okay. Because if they were getting consistent light, if the equator is the line that's getting the most heat.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: If that's the case, then that wasn't frozen. The poles would be what we look at a map and think of as left as right. And right now.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That would fall more accurately. Those would be frozen over, getting the least amount of sunlight on average. Or unless the sun was located in those positions. I guess that would be just if the sun was located towards the North Pole, but our equator was what it still is right now, the North Pole would be a hellscape. The South Pole would be a frozen shitstorm that nobody could live on. And the equator that exists now would be the most balanced temperature relative if the sun was directly on top of where we consider to be the North Pole right now.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: So we can still have an equator that doesn't fall where the sun is. The sun could just be on top of us. The equator is the turning point. So the line you would draw as to where the Earth is turning by so we can put the sun on top. And so now this s***'s still getting blasted, but it never ends.

Cristina: I really thought that both poles, though, were.

Jack: No. Well, right now, both our poles are frozen. I'm trying to visualize where the sun lands. Right. Because both our poles are frozen now, but they were both rainforests before. So however the turn is, it was still facing it's directly opposite. It shifted just enough so that the rotation was sending all of those things to face the sun consistently. Somehow we just ended up in the same situation. That's weird. It's weird that it happened that way. It almost feels designed.

Cristina: Is that a theory?

Jack: No. But like I think I just invented my own. It feels too intentional to be almost polar opposite is too exact coincidences of Earth.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So weirdly enough, the change in rotation, the beginning of rotating periods, the beginning of other rotating periods led me down the rabbit hol of looking into the shifting tides of Earth and how ice ages come and go and how information gets lost as the Earth gets shifted. So some of this knowledge gets obscured and it becomes harder to tell what the original intention for a lot of this stuff was.

Cristina: Yeah, ice ages.

Jack: The comet hits shifts from where we were over millions of years gradually being slowed down. But over. It took millions of years to slow down, but eventually it did slow down. But again over the course of millions of years. But it was tilted already. The change was there. It was already affected. 480 million years ago. It was here. And over many millions of years it slowly slowed and slowed and slowed. And it went again exactly 90 degrees before it stopped. Boom. And now the rotation is the other way. It spun and spun. It spun until 90 degrees and it just. It slowed down more and more and more. And that's where it's finally stopped and settled. And now we have a different equator, probably by comet. But in that amount of time the poles begin to shift as heat begins to shift and everything starts to change and the planet's temperatures start to move around and we get new tropical areas.

Cristina: Is exactly the opposite. Or no.

Jack: Yeah. If you were to be. Not to. Luckily no, it's not an exact difference. But close. It's pretty close. If you were to look at it at a distance and draw the two equators, you'd be like ow. And presumably it hasn't stopped shifting. Maybe it will hit the exact 90 at some point. It's just we got to look at this in a millions of years scope as opposed to our blip 5,000 years reaches it.

Cristina: I wonder if we're going to be starting. We're going to start to see people do weird things on that side or what if there are things on that side. Have we looked? I mean, yeah, I guess we Have. And that's why we see places with stuff that's not on the equator or the old equator, but it's not on the new one either. But maybe one day it will be.

Jack: Maybe. Maybe. So the argument would be, has the Earth already gone through a phase in which every point has been on the equator, or are there many points left? When we think of the 90 degree we're going to hit, was there 80 degree before that? Has it? Are we close to completing a circle? How far from a full circle are we? Yeah, you know, that's the ultimate question. We don't really know how far along that line. So it's possible that we either have more to go because it's gonna keep changing forever, as is the nature of a random spinning sphere. Yeah, like, it's eventually gonna be everywhere. But has it already? And would that explain these other locations? Because there are arguments in that favor. But also, it looks like the equator is essentially a lifeline towards the opposite of a death line. When you think about it, anything that the further away from the equator you are, the more hostile the environment is going to be. That's why right now, the north and South Pole are inhospitable. But when they were on the equator, we had two locations that were inhospitable that weren't on the equator. And that's always going to be the case. Every point on Earth as it continues to spin is eventually going to be an inhospitable shithole that's totally going to be frozen over.

Cristina: Mm. Where was the old north and South Pole?

Jack: Okay, so after looking at it, after.

Cristina: Looking at a globe.

Jack: After looking at a globe, the poles end up in such a way that the. That one of the poles is South Africa and the other one of the poles, it's somewhere in the North Pacific.

Cristina: So those would have been code.

Jack: Those would have been frozen over. In order for a line to go through India, Australia, and Europe and the Earth to be rotating in such a way that the north and South Pole become tropical rainforest areas. In order for that to be the case, it was spinning along that equator. And thus the other two locations got hot because it was spinning in such a way that that was. The equator was still facing the sun. That's the requirement for the equator to be hot. It must be facing the sun. And it looks like the spin changed in such a way that that used to be the case and now is not. So South Africa and the North Pacific are the two extreme poles of the old equator.

Cristina: There's nothing in this Pacific, is there?

Jack: Is this water inside the North Pacific? Nothing particularly astounding, just frozen back. But that does. So what have we covered so far? We know that a lot of these structures are informative. We know that the ones that don't land on the line are the least informative and tend to quickly dissolve. Like they were recording, not screaming. The ones along the line were screaming as much as they were recording, although most of it seemed like it was screaming. But also, we don't understand and we're just assuming they're trying to tell us something. Maybe they are. Maybe it's both. Maybe all of them. Both, but not along the equator disappear, usually. Famine, starvation, some theory of a total collapse on the equator. Survive, thrive, become highly advanced, and then become the people that today we know in the countries that moved on to be the places that today we know. So weird pattern that only exists for that moment's equator again. The equator has shifted and been everywhere at all times. Why are they still thriving when the equator is no longer gracing them? Those kinds of weird things are the ones we gotta consider when we're looking at this kind of stuff.

Cristina: But why is equator important?

Jack: I don't know. They just. The ones that survived, the ones that were highly advanced. And the majority of these structures, all of which are built in, complicated. The ones we could, like, tell you how it was built, not on the equator. The ones that were on there, we have no idea how the h*** they were put together. Something about that line was a line of information outward and inward collectively. Now, the changing of the tides, the changing of the currents that happened with the shift of the equator led to the possibility that the events of the Great Flood is the biblical Great Flood, are what was really happening. They're describing the true nature of what happened as the polar ice caps melted and the sea levels rose dramatically, drowning essentially everything as a redistribution of water.

Cristina: Are you even alive though, then?

Jack: Well, that's what's weird about this, right? So the change of the equator was placed somewhere where the people who built along that line, that was millions of years in the past, from their time, all thrived. There's some reason that they placed their civilization or their structures that to this day have withstood the tests of impossible amounts of time where other crap has completely disappeared. And they're all along the same line. Something about this has protected something about this. The conditions are just right, just something. Something allows this to be the case, that these are the thriving, successful things while everything else collapse and falls apart. And we have traces that are just hard to understand in bits and pieces, trying to piece a message together. While here we have entire messages that we just don't understand because they're too complicated.

Cristina: It's so weird because they place their things, or at least the Egypt one. I don't know if all of them. They place it there because of the stars. It had nothing to do with the equator. It just happens that they all line up on the equator. But if they're all looking at the stars, what. What weird connection is happening?

Jack: Interesting, no?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: The Egyptians have the most complicated of all the structures. Again, we have clocks, we have astrologic alignments of the constellations. We have tracking day cycles. We have explanations of different physical, you know, problems in physics. Physics. Solutions, equations, many different things. Nobody is keeping up with the complicated nature of what was accomplished with the pyramids. And to then lay on top. That it's possible that the bricks were laid out in such a way that they themselves contain information goes back to the people of the village in. I think it was. It must have been a. Either a Mexican or a Brazilian civilization that keeps track of their information in knots and inches.

Cristina: That's very strange.

Jack: Yes. But it. It makes me think of that when somebody says the bricks are laid in such a way that they have information we're trying to decode, I'm like, well, yeah, I guess I get it because I have a reference point.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Of like these people also did like a physical weird other way that isn't writing.

Cristina: Yeah. It made something outside of what we consider normal.

Jack: Yeah. They went a whole other route with it. And that these pyramids, again, position both relative to constellations and the alignment of stars and relative to specific. Like, how do you accomplish that? That's a pretty complicated one. And then you're still at the equator at the time that you're doing it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They were aligning. Yeah, they were aligning a couple of things.

Cristina: Did they have unicorns? I still wonder how you got to from unicorns. This I have any idea how the.

Jack: H*** I got from one point to the other.

Cristina: Did you talk about unicorns?

Jack: Maybe. But the theory and the story as pieced together would go that 150,000 years ago the normal tides were taking place.

Cristina: What does that mean?

Jack: Okay, so 480 million years ago, we were at the end of the old equator.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And that from that point forward, we were moving towards the new equator. Right towards the end of that period, about 150,000 years ago, the Earth still had its north. Because again, we're talking millions of years in scope The Earth in a million years, barely moved. Things barely changed. But still the Earth has its normal rhythms that it goes through. Tides come in and out. Seasons change, all the things that happen. So every couple of hundred thousand years, the Earth tides shift, water recede. This built into the the current ice caps. Then later they melt down, fill the oceans, and the tides come back in and like infinite cycles of crap. So as we're getting towards the end, this is a weird moment where two things are happening simultaneously. We have the normal tides coming to an end, and we're reaching the end of our new equator, getting to a point where it's stabilizing as the moon's gravity is forcing us to stop. So we get where we're going about 150,000 years ago, where we're entering the end of the receding water. I guess the beginning of the water starts receding for the new tide era, and we're reaching the point where things are about to stop. So there's less water than there has ever been to the point that land mass is about the size of Great Britain. Completely rose from the water. That's how far the water pulled back. It just released land masses that size. But 150,000 years is a long freaking time. People spread like roaches on these lands.

Cristina: There aren't lands anymore.

Jack: Well, they're not lands anymore. They got swallowed back about 12,000 years ago.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But in that time, people spread out and went all over the place.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Right. This. This began. This process began 150,000 years ago. That's where the water begins to recede. People start to notice. They start to come into these lands and settle as the water starts to go away. We're talking thousands of years pass as the water keeps going back and, oh, yeah, water keeps going, you know, build our houses and whatever the narrative, how I think the events went by.

Cristina: And is this gonna be explanation of Atlantis or something?

Jack: Literally, yes.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. Okay.

Jack: Literally, yes. Because apparently there was enough information to corroborate the existence of Atlantis for quite a while. It's just we don't have the actual proof of the place. But everything tells us there must be, in fact, an Atlantis factually, without a question. It must. Outside of fiction. It must. Outside of fiction, it's probably there, and they were probably advanced. That's probably a real place. Why everything lines up. They seem to have been the most advanced out of all these civilizations. And it landed precisely in the Persian Gulf that happens to be on the line. And all the underwater monuments we have found for the oversized civilization that we don't really have any are all in the Persian Gulf. All of that was in there. So they had the clocks, they had the. They had space mapped out in the constellations. They had designs for batteries on the pyramids that they had and inscribed on. There's some stone walkways that go in their direction that they had pillars of. I'm sure you've seen the photos of them. It's like they just go into the water. Yeah, it's like pillars that just walk into the water.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And they have. That wasn't water before.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Dry land.

Cristina: There's nothing there now.

Jack: There's nothing there now because as the. What you got to understand, the Persian Gulf is also in the cross section of four rivers.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The water didn't rise around you. Rivers race towards you.

Cristina: Okay. But there's no nothing in there now. There's not people.

Jack: The amount of pressure that the water slammed into that place with, why did.

Cristina: You slam into it?

Jack: Because it was rivers.

Cristina: Yeah. But this slowly happened. If it slowly became land, it slowly became water.

Jack: Well, the problem is that we're. You're just thinking of the equator. We're also counting the fact that the waters are receding and that we're entering a period of. So 150,000 years ago. The water pulled back, the people settled. These events that are then going to collapse the society happen about 70,000 years ago when we're still reaching the very end. But now we've totally swapped poles. Things in the previous poles are so hot that they're just falling into the water in giant chunks. There's that hot. At the same time. The water is at halfway now it's coming back anyways. So the water starts to come back in as it naturally leaves and then comes back in at the. So usually they go and become the polar ice caps. The polar ice caps collapse over time, fall back into the water. This is how it naturally happens over millions of thousands of years. But the course of the equator changing happened over millions of years and was resulting in the same thing the previous. But it's collapsing the previous polar caps completely in order to make new ones at the same moment that those were already gonna break down a little to follow its normal. So you got twice the force of these polar ice caps completely collapsing, falling apart and melting into nothingness. Hitting the water all in one shot. This then leads to the biblical flood that we find out about when that happens. About 12,000 years ago now, again, the waves start coming back. The pressure, the current, the tide returns about 70,000 years ago. But it starts slowly and these things start to line up. And the thousands of years start to line up with the millions of years where they hit the one moment where on both South Africa and the North Pacific, these previously frozen points are so gone. And they're just collapsing and falling in huge chunks into the water Back to back to back to back to back. There's just pure sunlight hitting them all the time now. That's just falling apart, hitting the water. Water levels rising like crazy. But anything not touching any of the coasts is safe to some degree because water will rise slowly around you. You can run away from that if you are along the old equator. So you're alive, you're safe. You're dodging all of the giant waves from all the colossal ice that's falling, except the people in the Gulf. Now, everybody who is not in Anybody who is in the old equator survived because there's nothing but land stopping them. There's land and stop and land and stop and land. So the water hits and falls and hits and falls. Okay, it's collapsing around them. They're safe. It becomes problematic specifically for the Persian Gulf, where you are connected to the oceans, Even if you yourself are very, very, very far from them. And as the water over there in west h*** starts rushing down that river from one side, and over here, north h*** starts rushing down your way, and one from the south and the one from the east are all rushing. Everybody around you is fine. But you're where there wasn't even water. There's just crevices from the previous time that there was nothing but water there. And you set your home there, you set your civilization there. You developed into the most advanced civilization of that time. And you were the closest to the very center of that equator. What a weird coincidence. The closer you were, the more advanced you were and also the safer you were. Except you the closest to touch it.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: Except you the closest to touch that line. Everybody else stationed themselves around it. You who falls on the line, gone. You're in a place where all of the worst is gonna hit you. No trace of your existence. Rivers with the pressure of the oceans raced at you and then gone. And there's nothing left. And you are just a story. But yeah, there was probably, definitely something there. And it was probably really advanced and probably more advanced than the most advanced that we're looking at, which seems to be bare minimum about as Vance as we are. And we still wouldn't be able to do what they accomplished. So they were probably more Advanced that we are, which are the Egyptians.

Cristina: But there's no proof.

Jack: Nope. Yet there's a bunch of just.

Cristina: I mean there's proof that there was civilization.

Jack: Civilization. We can't prove how advanced they were.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Based on all the other things, how it lines up, you would suggest that. Yeah, I guess in theory. Then it's the only ones who didn't make it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The ones who touch the line don't make it. The ones surrounding the line do really phenomenally well. And the ones furthest from the line go away with a whimper. What does that mean relative to that line? What's happening with that old equator? Why were.

Cristina: Why does being there it seems really random?

Jack: The problem is if it's really random, then the entire assortment of civilizations that built everything along that line at totally random moments all just happen to do the most complex known to man thing at the same spot.

Cristina: Yes. I don't know. It doesn't make sense.

Jack: It breaks logic to some degree because we're not sure what it is we're even discussing at this point. How, why. What's the ultimate goal? What information are you trying to convey? What information are you trying to record?

Cristina: Where did they get that information?

Jack: Where they get the information? Yeah. So as the water comes up, people flee, people spread out. The idea is that the civilizations that settled along the line, the old equator, Mm. If it was by total random chance, did so because it was also simultaneously the safest place. And they were. Who would survive the great flood that overtook the earth. And by being on that old equator, it's not that the earth was spinning in that axis, but rather that that old equator just happens to be along a line that's.

Cristina: Were they around the time the flooding was even happening?

Jack: Yes, they are. The civilizations that immediately follow the flood, Ancient Egypt, Jerusalem, all the Bible people, all of that follows the great flood. Which kind of falls perfectly with where history tells us it would be that we got flooded. That, that does line up clean. The fact that there was an actual flood, we can calculate. And that happened roughly around the time that it happened biblically. And then we have these advanced civilizations station themselves. Then something within that thousand year period happens where these people get. Or I guess the problem is they had the knowledge, but they lost all the everything else. So they had to recreate along where they are. We're gonna. We're gonna fall apart at some point because we've lost what we were because of this crazy flood that hit us. So they made settlements that then evolved into Egypt. Settlements that then evolved into Whatever the h*** made the Machu Picchu thing, You know, all these things along the equator, they made the settlements that happened and became advanced with what they had from the previous people that they were. And they left the signals or messages or whatever. Probably not even reaching out to space, but more just like this is what we were capable of before. Before the flood. This is a. This is a capacity of our people. These monuments are how great we really are capable of being.

Cristina: But they did that after the flood.

Jack: After the. Well, all of these civilizations come after the flood.

Cristina: Okay. Well, does that one place that is. Might have been flooded have to do with anything?

Jack: What place that might have been flooded?

Cristina: The one in the middle of the line.

Jack: That would have been Atlantis. That would have been the most advanced of them all. But something about it being dead on the line prevented it from being safe like all the others. As opposed to all the things that are surrounding that line. As opposed to all the things that are surrounding. Anyways, I thought that that was kind of crazy that we have this old equator that has a bunch of monuments and old ancient sculptures and fascinating things that we can't unravel or understand by any means.

Cristina: Very interesting.

Jack: And they all land on the line that they could not have had information for unless they were significantly more advanced than we thought. Probably as advanced as we are now.

Cristina: It's a crazy thought to you, but it could be.

Jack: It's probably. It's. It has to be for them to have that knowledge. We just have to stop being egotistical and assume that they were at least. At least as good as we are.

Cristina: Whoa. Yeah.

Jack: Because have we done that? We have not aligned.

Cristina: We threw stuff at space.

Jack: Yeah, I'm sure they did that too. But what's interesting enough is that we haven't done that, but I'm sure we could. It's probably really easy for us to build three buildings following Orion or something like that, you know, like, it's probably really, really ridiculously easy.

Cristina: Who says we haven't?

Jack: There are clever things. I love some of the buildings in New York that are angled in such ways so they look like different structures. That's cool.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I guess if an alien were to like, travel and they'd be like, wow, these people are serious, they'd see that and still be pretty impressed. I guess art does that in general, right?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Science and art. That's it. The conveyance of intellect, anyways. Yes. I thought that was interesting. There was way more, but it's.

Cristina: It's too much.

Jack: It's just too it's too much to be coincidence. An excessive amount. A ridiculously excessive amount to be coincidence.

Cristina: But there's no proof of anything.

Jack: There's no proof of any. I mean they all do fall on that line. And that line is the problem is it's all provable. What does it mean really? That's. That's.

Cristina: Yes. What does it mean?

Jack: A bunch of coincidences. But okay. So they were probably really advanced. Okay.

Cristina: And what? Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: Okay. This is fascinating. But okay.

Cristina: Great one. They will find their rocket.

Jack: Yeah. I just love that it does reframe how we think of them though. To have proof that they were at least as developed as we are. It's like. Oh, I pictured what they pretend when they show us in movies. I guess.

Cristina: Definitely wrong.

Jack: Definitely wrong. You know they were all doing the. The. The Egyptian dance when they walked and they only drew on walls because they didn writing yet or something. And it's like nah bro, they know the speed of light. Do you?

Cristina: No.

Jack: Like what?

Cristina: That's so crazy. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. But it is what it is. Anyways. Anyways. Just thought that was interesting and very weird. So I hope you enjoyed that information that I stumbled upon.

Cristina: Maybe the audience. I did.

Jack: But yeah, maybe I'll do the rest of it eventually. It's just so much. I just can't. Kept falling down this rabbit hole. I don't know how I landed there. But it was fascinating. And I don't know what the point of it is. There's probably a point to it. It just kept going. So there's way more to look into do it. But it literal just portals into websites of documents completely just documenting anything and everything surrounding all of the details surrounding all of the civilizations and all of the monuments and all the stuff. It's like real complicated. Deep dive.

Cristina: That's interesting.

Jack: It is. It looks like thousands of pages worth of work though. Pretty cool. But yeah. So I hope you enjoyed that. I hope everybody, the audience, you and you guys should look into it. Really weird.

Cristina: Really weird. And we have other weird episodes. There are many space related.

Jack: Probably space. There's also ancient civilizations. Many ancient civilization episodes.

Cristina: Space episodes.

Jack: Many space episodes.

Cristina: Aliens.

Jack: That was actually one of the theories for the pyramids I really got. I really fell into those pyramids. I was so obsessed with the pyramids. It's so complicated. The suggestions would be they either possessed knowledge themselves that was beyond our current understanding of who they were or they saw something that was beyond us both fear and our understanding of what was possible. And they recorded that without knowing what it meant. Maybe they saw the equations and were sophisticated enough to break it apart and put it down in something like the pyramids without knowing what they were doing. Maybe that was their attempt at figuring it out. Make it bigger so I can read. Oh, not big enough. Make it bigger and see what we get. Just people trying to figure things out.

Cristina: Yeah, that could be it.

Jack: Anyways, I hope you guys enjoyed that. Let me know. Go to the socials, inform us. Go to Twitter, Instagram, tick tock, just convopod.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate and review the show.

Jack: Yes. And tell us about. Not tell us about. I guess tell your homies about the show. We're of mouth is overpowered. Talk to them, inform them. Be like, bro, you like weird things. Here, check this out.

Cristina: If they're not weird, you can still check us out.

Jack: Check us out.

Cristina: Anyway, this has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening by. I don't know what else shows everyone loves. We. What was that movie that everyone was crazy about too, because of the memes? The bird box.

Jack: The bird box. Yeah, we. We got to that after the memes.

Cristina: Oh, we did. Oh, crap. We're never.

Jack: Did we watch it before the memes?

Cristina: I think at the same time, I. I'm not sure though. We might have been late too.

Jack: No, I think actually I saw the trailers to it and then you're like.

Cristina: We'Re gonna watch this. We watched it. But there's not many times we watch things when everyone else is watching it.

Jack: Well, actually I think we watched that the day it came out. So we were like, there's no hype around it.

Cristina: It had to be like the day after because I remember, like everyone posting something about it. Oh, but it could have been after, like right after.

Jack: So either that or people were talking about it. And like, I didn't. Like, maybe they were talking a lot about the movie, but they. They weren't discussing any part of it.

Cristina: No.

Jack: And they were. And I was like, f***, everybody's talking about this. We gotta watch. We gotta go in blind. Did I say that about that movie?

Cristina: I think so.

Jack: You gotta go in blind and find out what the big deal is about. No judgment. This turned out to be great.

Cristina: It did. I know people that didn't like that movie. Ah, but I liked it. It was good.

Jack: It was pretty good. Pretty good movie.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and Published by Great Thoughts.in Fox, art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McAllister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 178: Secret Spy Time Machine

Do spies have secret advanced technology too advanced for a commoner to know? Was Austin Powers frozen into the future while a time machine was sitting around? Is the CIA better than the Navy Seals? The duo jumps head first into a dissection of Secret Agent Spies and their lifestyles!

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • Spies
  • Austin Powers
  • Secret Advanced Technology
  • Mariana’s Web
  • Time Travel
  • Time Paradox
  • Are Spies People?
  • Crack Sniper
  • Dumb Pirates
  • Tom Hanks as Jack Sparrow

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean? Welcome to the Rambling Podcast, the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideals in childish ways. I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And I'm Jack.

Cristina: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe button. Get notified the second new episodes are released.

Jack: Yes. And also remember that this show is best with a listening partner. So just send somebody a lovely letter.

Cristina: No.

Jack: That makes them come to you, then you listen to the show together.

Cristina: Lovely letter. A lovely letter it's gonna be.

Jack: In that letter, it's gonna say, hey, you're real cool, and I think you're awesome, and I'd like to share listening to this show with you.

Cristina: And if they decline?

Jack: Well, then the letter explodes.

Cristina: Mm. How's that gonna happen?

Jack: I have no idea. But this has happened in movies. Like, they send you the letter, and then you read the letter, and then spy movies load or some s***. It's like. It's a piece of paper, dude. How do you make exploding paper?

Cristina: Because spies have things and that normal people don't have.

Jack: Also, like, a little TV of some sort.

Cristina: Right.

Jack: Or recorder. It's usually something already.

Cristina: Yes. Yeah.

Jack: It'd be sick if it was a letter.

Cristina: If it was a letter, it's like a button on it that's.

Jack: But it's a bomber. What if it's just paper, and then still somehow this is gonna blow up.

Cristina: Or it's gonna set on fire. It's gonna just. I don't know.

Jack: How would they. Okay, it's gonna set on fire. Sweet. How does it work?

Cristina: As soon as you open it, it just.

Jack: That's the only way. That means you'd never.

Cristina: Have to put it back together. It's part of the job.

Jack: This is easy to solve. If we're talking about, like, in some place that has magic, right? Like Harry Potter or some s***, this message is just gonna, you know, spontaneously combust.

Cristina: I mean, I guess you would expect that in that type of world.

Jack: Exactly. That's less weird. It's like this message is private, and then it just disappeared. Yeah, but in the real world, allegedly, wherever spy bullshit's taking place, you get a letter, you read it, and then it lights on fire. It says, throw it away. It's gonna light on fire. And then the letter just burns.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And leaves no electronic anything behind. It just burns up into nothing. How the f***.

Cristina: Because we have the technology to look like magic. I don't know. Or at least the spies do. I'm guessing aliens, though. The spies get their stuff from aliens.

Jack: Here's the thing. If spies like James Bond.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They have crazy advanced tech that even governments of the world don't have.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: If that's real, then the like New World Order or the secret government or whatever, that has to be real. Right. Because there's too much power. Just they're suppressing us intentionally. Because they literally have the stuff. Why aren't they sharing it? Right. It's because they. There's some advantage there.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Like in the real world, who could f*** with James Bond? People who aren't from his world of spies and super villains.

Cristina: Exactly. Spies are dealing with super villains?

Jack: Yeah. Like one on one. No. He could kill everybody in a room.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's how skilled these individuals are. Allegedly. He could off everybody in a room without a gun. Just beat them all to death.

Cristina: Like Spy Kids. That's a horrible example. But they have technology too.

Jack: They do. Is spy inherently techie?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Right. Because James Bond has a f*** ton.

Cristina: That guy that can travel to the past, what's his name? Well, he travels to the future, I guess, first. Oh my gosh, that old movie.

Jack: Old movie? The Time Machine.

Cristina: With a spy.

Jack: With a spy.

Cristina: Michael.

Jack: Michael Cera.

Cristina: Mike. No, he has the same name as a villain that murders people.

Jack: Mike Myers.

Cristina: Yes, right, that comedian guy.

Jack: Okay, yeah, Mike Myers.

Cristina: His movie.

Jack: Michael Myers is the killer.

Cristina: His movie.

Jack: Austin Powers.

Cristina: Yes, there you go.

Jack: Okay, what was your point?

Cristina: He has a. He can travel through time.

Jack: Wait, they had that level of technology. That's how that happened. I don't remember that. I know he was.

Cristina: They froze him to take him to the future, but then they had an actual time machine to take him to the past.

Jack: And then the joke is, if you had a time machine, why do you freeze me? Well, I get. Haha, that's funny. Yes. So they had a time machine, but they instead opted into freezing him. Most of them dying of old age. And then a whole new group of people with the same time machine just being like, here, go back.

Cristina: Yes, I guess. Right. That's. That's very strange.

Jack: Unless they didn't. Unless the time machine got invented within the time that he was frozen.

Cristina: Yes, that's possible.

Jack: Solved. But they still have that level of technology.

Cristina: They could have used it and I don't know.

Jack: I'm saying they're absurdly advanced.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Aliens, man. Right. Unless. No, see, here's a problem. If we can't. If we can't conceive of how to do it. We immediately think aliens. But it's like how the f*** would.

Cristina: Blow up the moon? Isn't that his evil plan was to blow up the moon?

Jack: Look, that doesn't make him an alien. Or that or even suggests that he got that technology from aliens. That suggests that maybe that's super our technology. No, no, no. We just have secretly enough steps already that we could just build something like that casually. But normal people don't have that. Can you imagine if a normal person had access to that information? What would a normal end of if. If it was just here. I'm gonna upload onto the Internet how anybody with enough funds can create a time machine. A nuclear bomb. Oh, just. You can make a nuke in your house. Here's the blueprint.

Cristina: Yeah. That's crazy.

Jack: That's crazy. How many we got? School shootings, bro. You can. I don't have to go into school. I could just throw this in through the window and clear the block.

Cristina: Oh, let me.

Jack: Let me do that instead.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: Oh, man. That bully from next door.

Cristina: Even if they give out the blueprints, is it even that easy?

Jack: Depends. Is it? Have we secretly moved so forward in technology that we've figured out how to do it in few steps, but we can't give the normal person that information. If we gave that to the normal person. There's too many crooked m************.

Cristina: But could they do anything with it?

Jack: Yes. That would be the super villain. Those are the normal people who got a hold of the f****** thing. They became super villains. Some of them. Some of them got a hold of the thing and became superheroes.

Cristina: Or his super villain has his own technology. It doesn't look like.

Jack: Well, no, not everybody has access to it. It's just again, because it's hidden, different roads lead to different secrets. You get my point. It's not that there's some spy Internet that he connected to and he's like, oh, here's the one thing we're all gonna see.

Cristina: You don't know.

Jack: I mean, that'd be crazy.

Cristina: They have a spy Internet. They have so many things.

Jack: There's a lot of dark web. It's huge. It's way bigger.

Cristina: There's a spy social media in there probably.

Jack: Maybe the FBI has stuff like that. They scramble things through there.

Cristina: I mean, they have messages.

Jack: Basically everything exists there. You can think of the levels of the Internet as the dimensions. Oh, you kind of exist in all of them.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That's the same thing. So every website exists on every level of the web.

Cristina: Okay, well, scratch that.

Jack: No, everything in the surface that we see exists in every level below it.

Cristina: But not everything below it.

Jack: Exactly. So the dark web exists in the deep web and in the other thing, but it doesn't exist in the surface web, which is the normal web most of us see.

Cristina: And what's the deep web?

Jack: The deep web is only in the deep web and in the following thing, but it's not in the dark web or in the surface.

Cristina: Is there a following thing or is that how far you know that it goes?

Jack: I. There's. It's theorized, you know, it's conspiracies for the Internet.

Cristina: That there's something deeper than the deep?

Jack: Yes, that there is. The. The marionette. The marionette or something like that.

Cristina: That's what it's called.

Jack: Yeah, it's. Man. What is it called? The Mariana. Deeper than deep web. The Marionetta. Yes. The Mariana's web. Yeah, I was close.

Cristina: What, so it's a urban legend type of thing?

Jack: Well, it might be real or it might not be real. Because the deeper you go, the more obscure. And by the way, I got that wrong. It's deep, then dark. But the less. The more obscure it is, the deeper it is. I mean, the more obscure it is, the harder it is to find. To the point that if there are these really secret.

Cristina: Why would they name it that? I feel like it's not.

Jack: Nobody named it that. It was just like the urban legend is called that.

Cristina: Yeah, but like, why didn't they stick to what it was? Like, it's deep and then it's dark, and then I feel like the next thing is scary. I don't know, like, you know, deep, dark, dangerous web. Dangerous.

Jack: Oh, that's a book. Deep, dark and dangerous.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Well, why. Why didn't they stick to it?

Jack: I don't know.

Cristina: Because they didn't want a name after a book that's probably unrelated. Interesting, because this has a really cool name, but it doesn't fit.

Jack: Yeah, who cares? Why does it need to fit?

Cristina: I don't. Because it's weird.

Jack: Paths for symmetry.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Yeah, no, I would rather if it did blend in.

Cristina: Yeah. Or if they called the other two something nice, like Mariana. What is it? Mary?

Jack: Mariana.

Cristina: Mariana.

Jack: Mariana's Web.

Cristina: How do you know that's not a book character?

Jack: It could be. I have no idea. But there is the possibility of deep things, and I don't think spies would use that.

Cristina: Why not?

Jack: I mean, they probably have their own thing again, like FBI. But I don't think it would have, like, the secrets of the world, you know?

Cristina: Oh, no. But it will be somewhere in the deep or dark.

Jack: Yeah, they're like, but would they up? I mean, how do you get the data to somebody? Right?

Cristina: I don't know. How did the FBI do it?

Jack: Well, they literally just use that. Yeah, but like, if you're more secret than the FBI, are you still on the Internet? It's. At some point you have to remove the possibility of anyone finding. Anybody finding out. So how far do you go before even Mariana's web is like, no, they.

Cristina: Can'T even get letters. Then this whole letters thing in this.

Jack: You have to personally deliver.

Cristina: You have to see them face to face.

Jack: That's what I'm saying. You have to personally deliver whatever it is.

Cristina: Yeah. Yes. You have to verbally tell them the message. Because outside most likely. I don't even know if that's safe. I don't know. It has to be somewhere where no one.

Jack: No, no.

Cristina: And the person.

Jack: Because maybe the fear isn't. Because you're assuming all the situations are. Nobody can know.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Maybe a lot of the time it's about just getting the information without it being corrupted. So I can get it to you and tell you, who gives a f*** if anybody finds out? But it didn't change between me and you. Somebody needed to tell you because somebody could see the message. If somebody could see the message, they could tamper with the message and let's say press the button, right? Are there. Did Russia hit the button? And United States is about to blow up as a whole because of some super mega duper ultra spy weapon that Putin has. Right? Press the button. Nuke is coming. Well, we gotta confirm. Maybe this is bullshit. So in the time we're trying to confirm, instead of us hitting the button. Well, somebody has to go, I can send him an email. But how many people are okay with this happening? Maybe a Russian want to fear and change it so that it says yes, yes or no. They didn't. So that they don't press a button. He doesn't want us to press a button. So he's like, no, it was a hoax. There's nothing coming.

Cristina: So then what's the new.

Jack: The person would just walk up to you, the president, with the button, and be like, hey, it's real. Hit the button. Instead of me sending an email and then I'm changing it.

Cristina: So it says to go from Russia to back to America.

Jack: Well, no, the. This is just a cycle of information, essentially, that. That's. Maybe that's the goal. Maybe the goal Isn't like, who cares who hears it? There could be a million people with you in the room when I tell you. Mm, doesn't matter anymore. It's mainly about the information making it to you uncorrupted.

Cristina: Yeah, but if the person is on the other side of the world, do they have to physically reach you?

Jack: I mean, yeah, in this specific scenario, that would never work and we'd all die.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So just hit it just in case. But maybe sometimes it's not time sensitive. It's just I need the information to get to you uncorrupted.

Cristina: I feel like just a phone call would be easy. And just using code words like, why would anyone know if you have a secret language already?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I mean, if someone's hearing, but it has to still sound normal.

Jack: Yeah, I guess if it's about no one hearing, then yeah.

Cristina: Yeah. Like, if they're asking about the nobody.

Jack: Hearing before you, that's also a different one.

Cristina: No one hearing before you.

Jack: Yeah. Maybe the information needs to get to you first.

Jack: That's also a scenario in which me telling you matters more than me sending you something. Because somebody could. Yes, maybe delete it.

Cristina: And they know I know, but I don't know. Like, if there was a spy, I still am thinking of the spy in Russia. He would have to give a message. Of course in America. But how? Like, it wouldn't be like, yes, they have a bomb or they touch.

Jack: Look, in a situation like that, yes, they'd use a phone or something, but.

Cristina: They wouldn't, like, just straight out say what it is that they need to say.

Jack: They. Yeah, they'd have some codes and stuff.

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, that would definitely be it.

Jack: And probably nothing even crazy. It's just, you know, I already know what certain things mean when I say them, and so do you. And then we could just talk. A casual conversation.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah, I guess. So they don't need to know super technology then.

Jack: No.

Cristina: But they have super technology or something futuristic technology.

Jack: Do they? That's the question, Right? If they do have super futuristic technology. It's not that. The super futuristic, as opposed to that. They're just keeping us. Not super futuristic. They're making us slower than the capability.

Cristina: Yes. But it seems like they also are ahead of, like, the army. And the army always wants that information.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: So how do they keep it away from them?

Jack: The same way they keep it away from us. They're great at their jobs.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Okay. Because they would very much bother them.

Jack: Here's the thing. If you have if you're in the. In the military and you rank up a million billion times and you're really important in the military, high rank, you're old. You're not gonna do that really young. You're gonna have positions leading people for a while. And you got to be in there a certain amount of time before you become big boss. Guy that just hangs out at base giving out the orders. There's time requirements and there's rank requirements.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Or something like that. But in the spy world. In the spy world. Well, first point is if you'll be old, too old if you're high rank. So if you have the authority to think I want spy tech. Well, what are you gonna do? You're gonna send a soldier over there? That doesn't make sense. How do you know they don't go rogue? You gotta go do it yourself. But you can't do it yourself. You're already too old because that's the only reason you became the rank you are. You've been here a while.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So? Okay, that scenario would never happen. Second, you do send a soldier in. Soldier goes in, and then he learns the tricks of the spy trade. Why the f*** would he go back to the military? Just become a spy now. You're way better than they'll ever be. There's no reason to go back to that garbage.

Cristina: That'd be so funny if that's what happens. Every time they send an army person over there or even groups of army people, they just.

Jack: They lose them all. Because the problem is, how would the military ever get a hold of the tech? Well, they wouldn't. Everybody who can will just stay over there. Why would they go back? Would be the point. Just weird abstract loyalty to military is.

Cristina: Don't they have that?

Jack: They have loyalty to the comrades, to your team, to the homies? Yeah, that's nothing to do with the military. Your homies have the skill. If you have the skill. You all just become spies at that point.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: You're only as good as your unit. You're supposed to behave like equals, so nobody's better. You're supposed to be on top of that we are one mentality. So.

Cristina: So they'll give up on the mission though. Just cuz spice stuff is cooler.

Jack: Spice stuff is the mission Wouldn't make sense. You'd eventually just be. What? You're both working for the government?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So what? Just one response to the government. The other one is authorized to behave outside the bounds of the government's demands.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: There's only advantages in Being part of things like the CIA, you know?

Cristina: Yes, like time traveling.

Jack: That's crazy. But like they could totally. Or there's something way deeper than something like the CIA because we're assuming, you know, spy is CIA. But what if there's more secret spy? Something way better than even CIA. That being said, the military has its equivalents like Navy seals.

Cristina: Oh, okay. You think they have the. You think they have the technology? Like spies though, or similar, maybe.

Jack: That's interesting. Right?

Cristina: Except for the time traveling, of course. That's just a crazy thing to have.

Jack: Yeah, and it was also a comedy movie.

Cristina: So how many spy movies have time traveling? Time traveling?

Jack: I don't think I've seen another one.

Cristina: Okay, but if James Bond ends up with a time machine, then what? Then do we believe they have time?

Jack: We'll assume they all have the same technology. And yes, they all have a time machine. But why? Doesn't mean aliens. Maybe they're just highly advanced. Keeping everybody down. Yes, or not keeping everybody down, but we also can't share. It's dangerous.

Cristina: It feels like you can't even use it though. Like you have it just to have it because you wanted it. But like, what can you really do with a time machine without messing things up? It feels like just a toy that you can show off. Like, look, I have a time machine, but I can't actually use the time machine. No one can use the time machine.

Jack: Yeah, it would be impossible, wouldn't it?

Cristina: Yeah. So it's just like, it's just there to show off and maybe someone unlucky will go into the time machine, I guess.

Jack: Forward time. Yes, that makes sense. Backward time, that doesn't. But if somehow we figured out backwards time, we'd have to consider all the f****** problems. There's so many.

Cristina: Exactly. There's no way we could.

Jack: I'm saying we're assuming we figured it out. Yeah, but that doesn't change all the crap you can do. You just, you can never go forward if you go back. That should be the rule.

Cristina: Okay. Because they're spy. So they might just do it because they, they don't have anyone to. I mean, the point of being a spy is not having any connections, right?

Jack: Yeah. To just be an anonymous no one.

Cristina: Yeah. So I guess they would be the right person to send through the time machine. Cuz like they're never coming back. And that's fine because they're already kind of a ghost.

Jack: Yeah, that makes sense. That checks out.

Cristina: Yeah, because they're already pretending to be someone else that they're not in their real life. Well, they're a spy. That's. Their real life is being a spy. And then their fake life is the character that they're acting as while they're living as your neighbor or whatever.

Jack: Fair. But I'm assuming they have off time, too. Or you're assuming that the spy is who they really are. And, like, deep down, they don't even have an identity.

Cristina: No, I think it's part of the job is to give up that identity.

Jack: And be good enough to truly believe it. Or you like. Well, yeah, I remember my name was this, and that's really who I am, but I don't go by that. And so then there's awareness. You are a person.

Cristina: Yes, but your job is so important. You understand how important your job is, and that's why you are doing this job.

Jack: No, no, no. You're missing what I'm saying. You're not pretending to be anybody's neighbor. You're really their neighbor. You just happen to be their neighbor who goes by a different name and this and that. Yeah, but, like, who you are to them is a real person.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And you interact. Being the real you. You're not acting for no reason.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You're just you. But under this name and whatever.

Cristina: Yes, but your job is the most important thing to you.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: So you would still be. You would be an excellent person to go through that time machine.

Jack: Yes, 100%.

Cristina: Because you'll just wait for that order that you need in that past. I guess.

Jack: Not in the past. They'd give it to you in the present.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: And then you go, and you're like, hey, we're never going to see you again. You're going backwards. Or we're going to see you, but we're never going. We're not going to remember you.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And you can never come back because nobody could be a witness to what would be the alternative. That's why I say you can't go forward if you go back. If you go back, you should never be allowed to go forward in time, because then there was a witness to a different timeline.

Cristina: Yeah, but they wouldn't. I mean, they would understand that.

Jack: Yeah, they would understand that, but what would that even mean? Right? Yes, he went back. Is the point of him not coming forward again? No. I don't even get it. Because he would go back in time. He could change anything. He could change everything.

Cristina: Yes, but then that's not even the same timeline, so why would you even send someone back?

Jack: That's the question. Right. That's the real question. Although it is it or is it not, I guess, is the question.

Cristina: I guess you would have to test it out.

Jack: You could never. Because you can never. You can never. There's a couple of ways this could happen. So as we're moving forward in time, we can assume that every single point you choose goes. If you were to draw a line with a pencil. Right. You draw a point, and then you pull the pencil out in any direction from that point, and then you go back to the same point and you draw another line out in any direction.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So you go up one of those lines. That's a single timeline.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then if you stop at the very tip of that line, you point. You draw lines out of that same new point in every direction. You'll have this sort of collapsing thing, right? Where you have one line equals many lines, equals many lines equals many lines. Each one line you follow. You can go in any one direction. Up. Now, if you were to go backwards to the first line you drew.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The probability that you'd go up the same line and take all the same paths to the same spot are infinite. So it's impossible you'd never go back up through the same timeline.

Cristina: No.

Jack: So the question is, did you create a different, alternative branching timeline? Is there a way for you to go back to the original? Or is it like I've just explained and you can't because it's an entirely, literally different path? Did you change the current timeline? Is it the same timeline but different, or is it a literal different timeline and there should be a way to bridge the gap to the original. If the choices you made.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Changed the same timeline, you'll never see the original timeline. There's too many nuanced things you'll never figure out. Yes, but if it's a literal different line, if there's a parallel universe where you did make, then you should be able to traverse it somehow. We don't understand, but we could figure it out. But it should be physically traversable and you get back to your original timeline. That should be possible.

Cristina: That seems really complicated.

Jack: It would be astoundingly complicated if it's the same timeline. Impossible.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So that he change one or make one person.

Cristina: I don't know how they'd figure it out. Unless we have the spies also have these scientists who are figuring that out.

Jack: Before sending you to the past. A time machine.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's good enough. They figured out.

Cristina: But they need to figure out how to send you back and then make you go Back to the right timeline as well.

Jack: Yeah. I'm assuming they're not just gonna blindly. How would they would have tested the time machine? I don't know. I don't.

Cristina: How would they test out the time machine? I feel like if they test it.

Jack: Out, how did they make a time machine?

Cristina: Aliens.

Jack: That is the real problem here. This already kind of goes off into madness because they have a freaking time machine. So we're assuming they get the point of a time machine, I guess.

Cristina: But it still feels really hard. I mean, I guess making the time machine.

Jack: Making the time machine is probably harder than figuring out how to return you to the same timeline.

Cristina: And also, is that even important? Why is that important to get to the right timeline?

Jack: Because that's where you come from. You don't want to get the order, go back a certain amount of time, get back, and they don't even. What was the point of giving me the order?

Cristina: Not supposed to return. You stay there.

Jack: That's the only way this could work.

Cristina: Yes. It's the most high thing ever. You just live there.

Jack: Yeah. But then you're. Yeah. Now you're just committed to being this person.

Cristina: I don't think they're like James Bond who I guess goes home. I don't know what he does. But other spies just live where they're at and do their thing, don't they? They don't go back home, do they?

Jack: Yeah, I'm sure many spies just got to go home. You live a double life. You live a normal life, and then you're like, hey, man, this is the assignment. Sometimes a lot of the time it's paperwork. Sometimes it's field work.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And me? F*** it. Maybe you're just a field agent, but when the mission is done, you just go home. Until there's another mission. I guess you don't just hang out in the building. Wa.

Cristina: I wonder if they do have multiple missions. What if they just have one mission and that's it? Because it's too risky to spend send the same person out doing spy stuff, actually. So it would just be one mission.

Jack: No, no, no, no, no. You're assuming somehow that these. That there's like, you know, criminal Internet, and on this criminal Internet, this guy's a spy. I'm going to put his face on here. Now all criminals can just tune into this website we know to look for spies at and know what this guy looks like just in case he tries to infiltrate us. That's not happening.

Cristina: Was the guy in Burn Notice, the spy?

Jack: Yes, he was.

Cristina: Okay, then. That happened.

Jack: And he got to go spy everywhere he wanted to, but he got burned to spies, not the criminals.

Cristina: Oh, but still, everyone knew. Well, the.

Jack: No, only the. All the spies. Yeah, only the spies his agency knew.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: That was told to the agents of his agency. And now he doesn't know the agents of his agency. That's part of the point.

Cristina: But they know him.

Jack: Well, now they do. Because he got fired.

Cristina: Yes. What did it even mean, though? Because it wasn't just that he was fired.

Jack: He was fired and he could never work. They gave him a s***** identity and sent him to the middle of nowhere so he can't get jobs. That's why he started working, applying his skills to help random people because he's not allowed to be a spy.

Cristina: But why are people still trying to kill him? Isn't that a thing? That's not a thing.

Jack: Well, he's doing jobs with criminals. He's trying to get unblacklisted. They're not spies. Aren't trying to kill him.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: He's trying to get unblacklisted. Essentially. Unburned.

Cristina: Unburned. Okay. Because there was a spy that betrayed him then. Or something. I don't know.

Jack: He did something and then he got himself and some other guy screwed.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Later he comes and meets that other guy.

Cristina: Yes. And that other guy was trying to go home.

Jack: That other guy had a grudge. That was very specific to him also getting fired.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Because he got fired because of this guy.

Cristina: Yes. All right, that makes sense.

Jack: And then they became homies. He got Goku'd.

Cristina: He got Goku'd. Oh, okay, now I remember. So that's gotta be the closest thing to spy life, right?

Jack: Yeah. Well, both of them are now just ragtagging with an ex Navy.

Cristina: No, no, no, no. The part where he gets abandone to be a nobody. A new nobody, and he has to live that way.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. That's not. That's no longer him working. Yeah, that's him Will kill you if you don't do this because you know too much.

Cristina: But even while he was working, he was pretty much doing that of pretending to be somebody while doing spy stuff.

Jack: No, no, no, no. You're missing. Yeah. While doing spy stuff. Yeah, but then he gets to go home. He wasn't exclusively living that.

Cristina: Are you positive?

Jack: Yes, because he had money. One of the things about him getting burned is all his money was tied to. And CIA seized all his money so he can't use it. I feel like he's stranding him in Miami.

Cristina: His spy life was his real life. He's like, he was also dating a person who he met through the spy life. And so like everything was.

Jack: But they knew each other outside of the spy stuff. She knows his real name. They really dated and they did things outside of crime related things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That had nothing to do with work for either of them.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they also had things that did have to do at work. But he's also dated people who had nothing to do with work and maybe didn't even know he was a spy.

Cristina: But he was his original self while he was talking to those people.

Jack: Yeah, could have been.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: Because hey, I'm not at work. My work is over there where nobody knows what I look like.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So I go to China and pretend to be an American tourist or something and then infiltrate. Or American business guy and infiltrate their business or whatever.

Cristina: Alright. I guess.

Jack: Or I go across the country. I'm from J. And then I go to Cali where nobody knows what I look like.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Go to the middle of the country, some desert.

Cristina: You're always going somewhere to pretend to be someone else.

Jack: Yes. Somewhere you've never been.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It's possible somebody might recognize you if some. Occasionally somebody. But it'll never be like another. Unless that criminals, you know, looking for employment elsewhere.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: I traveled from Jersey to Cali to learn how to be a better arms dealer. Greener pastures.

Cristina: You accidentally run into him.

Jack: Yeah, that'd be crazy. You know, but like, okay, I guess crime is a job. Maybe I need you to, you know, we're gonna move offices. We're going over there for your fire.

Cristina: Happens.

Jack: Yeah, it could totally happen. So. Yeah.

Cristina: Maybe it's not alien technology.

Jack: Well, I don't think it's. Yeah, definitely it's not alien technology. But also spy doesn't necessarily just live a spy life.

Cristina: All right.

Jack: I'm pretty sure they just have a life.

Cristina: I don't know. They never show that in the movies.

Jack: Because that wouldn't be the interesting part they actually do for Mr. And Mrs. Smith.

Cristina: I don't remember that movie.

Jack: Well, two spies. The best two spies are so good. They don't know each other as a spy.

Cristina: Ah. Okay. Yes. But are they acting as someone else while they were dating or were they.

Jack: They were themselves while dating and they were a different person while they were not dating. While they were not dating.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They have one identity that they sustain always. And they just live life and like you could trace their childhood and. Yeah, this is really my mom. Come and meet my real mom.

Cristina: Is that how Spy Kids happen. Like how did those two. And like how they had real lives dating each other. Did they accidentally.

Jack: They probably fell in love at work.

Cristina: Yeah. It has to be. That can't be the chance. Mr. Mrs. Smith is super.

Jack: Yeah. That's a specifically like weird premise.

Cristina: Yes. But normally it's probably you guys met at work and you like each other.

Jack: Yeah. That has to be the majority of it, right?

Cristina: Yes. That makes sense.

Jack: Yeah. It's totally fine. Like you working for the same company doesn't literally mean both being spies. Maybe he was a paper pusher and she was the lady on the field. And she was. He was her contact. She's. He's who she calls.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: When she needs information or backup or anything.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And so they got really familiar with each other. Cuz they.

Cristina: And then they started dating.

Jack: And then they start dating. Now he's also capable of. They. They should all be capable of feeling maybe at some point she was somebody else's contact. Depends on the mission. What you're doing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Hey. This lady's really smart with the things on the field. But they've seen her there before. So we're sending you who doesn't know s***. But she. She's going to be your contact so you have all the information in Metal Gear.

Cristina: Are they spies? They're spies. Right?

Jack: Metal Gear is a weird. Weird. But they're spies, are they? They don't work for any organization that they didn't invent. Well, one of them. No. I don't even know. It's like weird organizations.

Cristina: They're doing spy stuff.

Jack: They're doing spy stuff. But they're a military. So they're military spies.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But. But then everybody's a military spy.

Cristina: Huh? Then the military would have access to the time machine. No.

Jack: All the top guys are military. Most militaries are made by the spies. That's literally what the Diamond Dogs are.

Cristina: You just can't share the time machine with military.

Jack: Yeah. Because that's a problem.

Cristina: That sounds like a problem. I don't know.

Jack: Fair enough. Time machine for advantage purposes only when it comes to survival. Right. So if I learn how to make a time machine to solve the military getting a hold of a problem.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: I would need to figure out how to limit how far back in time. Right. And simply say my time machine only allows you to do something a day in advance.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: That's it. You could send something back one day and then it stops working. You have one use for this.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Useful Bombs coming Jump back a day. Hit the button early. We're safe. Bomb stops.

Cristina: Well, that's the message, I guess.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Secret message.

Jack: That's great.

Cristina: Send it back in time.

Jack: And now you can't just go and change the universe by. Hey, I was curious. Jump back a hundred years back and saved Hitler. Now we got a problem.

Cristina: Okay, so just one day back.

Jack: One day back or some limit. Yes, if you can figure out any type of limit. Because you've already figured out how to literally come back to the same timeline. You've. You figured out kind of amazing things that you've made a f****** time machine. And you learned how to return us to the same exact point.

Cristina: And it looks like a car.

Jack: It could, I guess, but he kept changing s***. He had to go back in time again to kind of like fix things so that it would turn out the same way. So he's not really returning to the same timeline. He's really just trying to alter all the little details. What are you talking about in Back to the Future?

Cristina: Oh, no, I was thinking about what's his name. Oh my gosh, the one that I mentioned before. Mike Myers.

Jack: His look like a car.

Cristina: Yeah, he traveled back in time in the car.

Jack: Why is this movie so fresh in your mind?

Cristina: I don't know. I don't know and I can't think of the name. It's so crazy.

Jack: Austin Powers.

Cristina: Austin Powers. Freaking Austin Powers has a time machine.

Jack: That's the one for gold member.

Cristina: Yes. And then I think he stays there because that's his time, I think. I don't know what he would do with a car. I guess he would have to destroy it. Unless they let him keep it. I don't know.

Jack: In the first Powers, he was just like in current Day.

Cristina: Yeah. And then they froze him.

Jack: But he came back from a time when he was very groovy.

Cristina: Yes. And then he went back in the second movie or third. Isn't there more than one? I have no idea.

Jack: There's many.

Cristina: Well, whatever. He goes back in time. Oh, he might in the end go back to the present or the. I don't know. Like, where do you travel to? To the present. Like if he already in your present, why would you go back to the future? But I think he does.

Jack: Okay, so he's frozen 40 years, wakes up current day. It's 2020. Right. He's from the 70s, frozen 50 years. He was already 40. Now he's 90 years old. Right. In the 40 over 10 years here. Now he's a hundred years old, goes back in time.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And in that time decides. I'm gonna stay here and lives to be 90.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: He has been around for about 140 to 150 years since he was born.

Cristina: That's really interesting. So they kept him. I don't know. What's the advantage of that? I don't know. I guess freezing people isn't that bad. Because if they.

Jack: They're the same age, I mean, look, if. But then again, why do they have the technology hidden? If we figured out a time machine. Yes, man, we have the cure for cancer, but also like money. But if we have the cure for cancer, who the s*** gives cares about money? Dude, we're mortal. Money ceases to matter. Money is mainly a desperation kind of thing. Yeah, but if we can stop ourselves from dying, that would be cool. Money ceases to exist. Yeah, we don't need survival, anything. I'll just wait long enough and I'll make that money.

Cristina: Mm. So we should have.

Jack: We should have the cure for everything? Yes, Cancer, aids.

Cristina: So then, you know we don't have a time machine.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. Until the AIDS is cured, we don't have a time machine.

Cristina: Okay, but the day the AIDS are cured.

Jack: Well, no, because the problem is it doesn't mean we have a time machine. A time machine, like, we're definitely like a hundred percent certainly gonna figure out AIDS way before hundreds, thousands, maybe millions of years before we figure out time travel. That's a fact. Any amount of time, no matter what. Again.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Living forever, though way sooner than time travel.

Cristina: Living forever.

Jack: Living forever. Way sooner than time travel. We're sooner gonna figure out the biological conundrum of death. Then we are gonna generate infinite energy to travel back in time.

Cristina: That is a think we'll figure out. Freezing people.

Jack: H*** yeah. H*** yes. Forward travel is gonna be easy. A time machine. Forward, we're gonna have that. That could happen in 100 years. Just create enough energy to accelerate a person's position relative to anything else. The end. You move forward through time. Easy. You don't need infinite energy for that. You need infinite energy to do it at the speed of light.

Cristina: How many you said?

Jack: Yeah, infinite. Many energy to travel at the speed of light, forward through time. But you don't need that. You can just make it so, boom, now it's tomorrow. I can send you a month into the future.

Cristina: A month?

Jack: Simple. That's nothing. Go back one minute. Too much energy required.

Cristina: Too much energy.

Jack: Too much energy required.

Cristina: Okay, so that's probably never gonna be a thing.

Jack: Probably never.

Cristina: Energy, power. Never goes back in time. Then he's just stuck in the Present.

Jack: Yeah. Maybe delusional.

Cristina: Maybe delusional.

Jack: But isn't that crazy? You can travel forward in time. You can't travel back in time. There is an infinite amount of energy required to travel backwards. Then everything you do makes it so you never traveled backwards. So not only is the requirement scientifically impossible, but also just rationally, it breaks how reality works.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because you'd never be able to. Anything that you change willingly is altered so that you didn't go back in time to change it in the first place. You cancel yourself out. So you have to affect something that's irrelevant to you.

Cristina: Oh, yeah, that's true. Well, then maybe it's like that movie where they die and they just end up at that place. They travel sort of back in time and then change everything. I don't know the movie's name. Ah. Oh, my gosh. The movie where everyone's killing themselves because they finally found out what happens when you die.

Jack: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. The Secret.

Cristina: It's called the Secret.

Jack: No, it's not the Secret or the announcement or. I think it's called the Secret or the Truth. Something like that. With Jason Seagal.

Cristina: Yeah, that movie. That's. Is that more realistic of time travel than a machine?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: H***, yeah.

Jack: By my.

Cristina: It just happened naturally.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. Because we assume. We assume that what we want perceive to be reality is the way reality works. And that's wrong, because time, although we as a creature perceive it in a linear forward fashion, nothing tells us in physics that that's how it works.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Yes. It's in a linear fashion of some sort, but it's not one directional. It could be sliding back and forward at random moments in random directions and. Yeah, actually, random directions. Reality could be morphing consistently. We would morph accordingly with it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So everything I believe is the past, I'll believe is the past, even if it just got generated 10 seconds ago. Because I'm morphing with all of everything.

Cristina: Yeah. So you can lose the things. I mean, you and I can split up and not even know that we're in different realities.

Jack: Yeah. Because we would just be like. Yeah, I've always been here by myself.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. And it wouldn't. Like we. It would be so seamless. We wouldn't question each other being here.

Cristina: Yeah. That's weird. Yeah.

Jack: So those kind of problems are present with time travel, you know? Yes, it's weird.

Cristina: Time gets complicated.

Jack: Time gets complicated.

Cristina: Time is complicated.

Jack: Yes. Time is so f****** complicated.

Cristina: We're just seeing the simple.

Jack: Yes. And we assume our perception Isn't reality. And it's not. It doesn't necessarily have to be nothing inside the world.

Cristina: It's simple enough to not drive us insane.

Jack: Yeah, pretty much.

Cristina: Because we couldn't get it. We couldn't get it. We were seeing all of it.

Jack: Even the things we try to comprehend that we kind of don't. Too much. It's absolutely too much.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So one, reality doesn't make any sense. And two, it would be. There's too many barriers to backwards time travel.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Too many.

Cristina: Too many.

Jack: If it does exist, we've solved too many problems. And unless somehow spies can still profit. And why do you need money if you're so overpowered anyways?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Having a time machine means no diseases by default. It means multi planetary. Like the men in black are real. Do the spies know about aliens? Yeah, because holy s***. Time travel, traveling. Do you generate enough an energy you could travel from star to star in no time.

Cristina: Okay, so no.

Jack: Any rocket. Well, the question is, are there people traveling this from star to star super quickly? Do we think Earth is where it is? Because they want us to think that. And there's way more going on and there's people living on other planets and they're just like, you can't know about it. We're just experimenting to see what these. Maybe the Galactic Zoo theory or. Not the Galactic Zoo theory. That's actually one of our episodes. But the zoo hypothesis about us being watched and like, kept and seen to see how we grow and evolve and change is done by humans. Very advanced humans who decided, okay, we are.

Cristina: Okay, so they're alien to us.

Jack: They're alien to us.

Cristina: So you won't say aliens gave us.

Jack: Time travel, but it's just humans who have so successfully suppressed our understanding of the tech.

Cristina: Yes, humans that are alien to us.

Jack: They're not aliens, literally, that they're not on Earth. They've always been here and they've always been among us. And they're always. But they're part of a group of people who have, throughout the years, continued to change technology and forward it at a rate 30 times faster than the regular population.

Cristina: Mm. And they're doing crazy things and you're.

Jack: Doing crazy things and they just don't let us know about it.

Cristina: Mmm. That's too.

Jack: Man, that's very spy.

Cristina: That's very spy. That is very spy. Oh, they have to be spies.

Jack: Yeah. If this happens, we also gotta assume that spies are the best of any society. Right. Maybe seals are spies. That's the military spy.

Cristina: And they're Thought of as pretty high up there.

Jack: Pretty high up there. Navy SEAL could probably compete with the CIA agent one to one. Chances are the Navy SEALs may be more lethal.

Cristina: I guess.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: But no time machine.

Jack: The difference between a Navy SEAL and a spy is a Navy SEAL is probably there to, like, off someone. While a spy might just be there to collect information.

Cristina: Yes. Or maybe off someone. I mean, maybe.

Jack: I guess maybe a Navy SEAL might also be there for information. For information. But ultimately the information is gonna lead to somebody being offed.

Cristina: Yes. Well, the spy. No. Yeah, it's just an option. They have many options.

Jack: Well, it depends on this specific mission.

Cristina: No, yeah, that's what I'm saying. Like, there's a possibility that he could be there.

Jack: I get what you mean. I thought you were giving, like, him the choice.

Cristina: No, no. Yeah.

Jack: Okay. So there's different mission types.

Cristina: Yes. Way more variety than the military guy. Like, it could be as varied, but it all ends with death for the military guy.

Jack: Or Most of the time. Most of the time.

Cristina: While the spy, it's. Yeah, it could be random.

Jack: Might just be. There's, you know, they made the best Pop Tart machine in the world and President wants it. So I'm here infiltrating Pop Tart headquarters.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Who knows why they need a spy for that rather than just hire somebody to go work there. But whatever.

Cristina: That would be a spy.

Jack: That would be by default. Even if it's just a normal off the street person. Now you're a spy because you're just here to learn. Yeah, I guess that's the difference. That's why a Navy SEAL is more elite, because you got to go through s*** to get there. You can't just be a Navy seal. They can't just be, hey, you're one of us now. No, but that could probably happen. You're spy by the fault. Maybe you can't enter. Like, maybe for the CIA there's requirements, just like a Navy seal. But being a spy doesn't require you in the CIA or in the Navy seal. I could pay a child to be a spy. To go into his class and just copy his teacher's phone number.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then bring it to me so I could call her. Yeah, that kid was a spy.

Cristina: But yeah, anyone could be a spy.

Jack: Yeah, anybody could be a spy. Not everybody could be an avc.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Or a spy for the CIA.

Cristina: No.

Jack: AKA an agent.

Cristina: Yeah. But anyone could, I guess, shoot people like the Navy seal.

Jack: No, no, no, no. Then again. Oh, my God, that freaking. Whatever the Canadians equivalent of a Navy seal. That's not. A lot of people are doing that.

Cristina: No.

Jack: That's so absurdly complicated. That was ever done. Shooting from one boat and to another boat. One tiny boat to a giant boat. So it's a completely different boat sizes. Moving completely differently over kind of turbulent waters at a distance of about a mile and getting a clean headshot on your first shot.

Cristina: That's impossible. He had a lucky day.

Jack: Dude. What? I couldn't think of anything more precise ever. That water is just water. Even if it was calm. That's hard. How are you doing this on shaky water?

Cristina: A lot of video games had to.

Jack: He had to play Call of Duty every day.

Cristina: That's the way you train.

Jack: That's too amazing.

Cristina: That is so spy. Military dudes, yo.

Jack: For real. But this wasn't a spy. He wasn't like blending into them or anything. This was just a soldier.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: A sniper. Just a sniper. But like. God, you snipered the f*** out of that guy. You. You sniper like no other sniper snipers. Or is that just a quality? Did they send their best? They're like, bro, we got random boat with people who are kind of disposable but you know, send the best soldier we got. Or more likely their s*** is just up to that f****** bar. Are you What? You're telling me all your guys could do this? Which is the more. It wasn't that big of a. It was not important of a situation. It's just a bunch of pirate idiots and like. Oh, it's a captain. Is he an important captain? Not really. He's just a guy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So like, you're gonna send your great. Whatever else he could be doing. No. We're gonna pull you out of that. We're gonna pull you out of stopping the greatest terrorist ever known to man. And we're gonna put you to stop this pirate moron with a rocket launcher.

Cristina: The rocket launcher. That's pretty dangerous. That's dangerous. You know, what if he gets to wherever they're going. I don't know if they're going somewhere. Then he brings a rocket launcher.

Jack: We were just in the middle of the water stealing a boat or holding a guy. Like old school pirating. That's crazy. Dude. This is boarded somebody's ship. I don't know what they wanted. It just typical robbery bullshit.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: As opposed that. Why would that merit their best sniper? It wouldn't.

Cristina: Yeah. Maybe he was the only one available.

Jack: Their best sniper.

Cristina: Yes. Like what if it was.

Jack: Hey, man, you want to totally. It could totally be possible. Look I'm not saying it's not, but, like, what's more likely here? That that situation happened? Is it more likely that that happened? That he was just available that day? And also, yeah, totally way the f*** below my pay grade, but I' pro b**** for you b******.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Like, what? Is that the most likely option? Or. Or is the more likely option, hey, just put a sniper over there. Who? Yeah, whoever. But whoever. It's just a freaking boat with some pirates. Say we did some stuff. And then this super absurdly crack shot that looks that amazing to us is just proving how whack our military is as a whole, because that's just a casual sniper to them. Yeah, this Bob. What does Bob do? Bob's done f****** nothing. It's garbage. He's like the. The third from the bottom, this Bob here. Out of the snipers.

Cristina: No. Maybe trains on the water. Maybe they all do over there.

Jack: Or not. Maybe they all do, but fair enough. Maybe this guy's specialty. Maybe there's a unit. So maybe it was an average thing, but every mill, every country has water. Military.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We got the Navy. This water. Military.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah, yeah.

Jack: This makes total sense.

Cristina: They gotta learn how to shoot on the water.

Jack: They don't shoot on water. Maybe they're did. This is just from their watermelon. It's on the waters. It's in the water, guys. There's the best of watering.

Cristina: Yes. And so they have to learn to shoot.

Jack: Yeah. And, like, why wouldn't there be snipers?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: It's safer than shooting a cannon and murdering a bunch of people. Or tearing a hole through a boat.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Maybe just put a sniper from one boat, catch them on the other boat. Like, they already trained doing this.

Cristina: Yeah, they have to. They have to.

Jack: Have to. So he's just like, yeah, another Tuesday.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But they were all like, yeah, bro, what a boring job. You just shot the guy with an idiot. The end to us. Whoa. But, like, any Navy SEAL could have done this.

Cristina: Yes. What if that's why we made it a movie? Because we were still very impressed. Even if they're, like, made that into a movie.

Jack: You saw the movie with the sniper on the water?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: What was the name of it?

Cristina: I remember, but Tom Hanks was on the boat. Who's being rescued?

Jack: Well, I don't remember.

Cristina: You don't? This was a movie, but based on a real life situation.

Jack: Oh, s***. That was. I remember seeing the movie. I don't remember the movie.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: I remember seeing the movie. I'm aware that I watched it.

Cristina: Yes. Okay. Yeah. So Tom Hanks was the guy being rescued off the boat.

Jack: He was a spy.

Cristina: No, he was just the boat guy.

Jack: And the sniper saved him. It's literally. We're watching, man. Why didn't they make it about the sniper?

Cristina: Because they hired Tom Hanks to make.

Jack: Him the sniper then.

Cristina: Because he's not believable. He only plays believable roles.

Jack: He's the opposite of Johnny Depp.

Cristina: Yes, yes.

Jack: He plays.

Cristina: Only does what is really. Like, I can see him do this.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Cristina: I've never. I don't know. Does Tom Hanks have anything that's like, oh, wow. I couldn't imagine this guy doing this. I don't know.

Jack: What's weird is that happens for Johnny Depp in both directions where it's like, unbelievable, but it's like, yeah, it's him.

Cristina: Yeah, it's him.

Jack: But also it's not. Which is the most impressive part about him. He literally disappears into the role. There's no more Johnny Depp when he's acting. He visually and personality wise, ceases to exist.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: There's no trace of him in any character. That's crazy. Usually there's a little something. That's also what makes Heath Ledger's Joker so impressive. There's no trace of Heath Ledger there. His other performances are astounding, but you can see him in a lot of it.

Jack: As opposed to the Joker. Not a trace of him. He disappeared. His facial expressions, his body movements, his speech patterns, how he thinks, how he behaves. Everything changed there. The way Johnny Depp does for every role.

Cristina: I feel like Brokeback Melon. He was very different from how he normally is, too.

Jack: Yes. He was very different there. He had a lot of the same facial expressions, though.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: You gotta change in such a way that we're like, do we do. If you saw the movie without being told who's in it, you wouldn't notice it's them.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: That's the Joker.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's every Johnny Depp character.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You would never know that's him because even his facial expressions change.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That's totally morphing into this other person.

Cristina: Mmm. Okay. We can't say that about Tom Hanks.

Jack: No. Because Tom Hanks is just Tom Hanks. Yeah. And usually the roles are very similar. Yeah, they're great. But he gets. He chooses a very safe road.

Cristina: Mm. You know, but they're all so good.

Jack: Yes. He's really skilled. Which puts to the question, why does he choose really safe roles when he can kind of outperform anyone in any role. Or maybe that's not the case. And maybe he knows his limit. And by staying away from the limit.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He can do the best in the box he has. And so he shines really bright because he's so good at what he knows he's good at, as opposed to just doing random s*** that he wouldn't be able to do.

Cristina: I would love to see him try something different, though. I want him to be the next pirate. I want him to replace Johnny Depp because the.

Jack: The llamas aren't paying it.

Cristina: Yeah. So let Tom Hanks have the llamas.

Jack: Yeah, that's fair.

Cristina: He can do. What is that character?

Jack: Tech Sparrow.

Cristina: Yes, imagine.

Jack: So I guess that's the conclusion of this episode. Spies probably don't have a time machine because AIDS is still a thing that checks out. And also, Tom Hanks should have a hundred thousand llamas.

Cristina: I thought we made it to a million.

Jack: A million? Well, no, that was for Johnny Depp.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: We're just gonna give Tom Hanks the original offer.

Cristina: One hundred thousand.

Jack: A hundred thousand llamas.

Cristina: Okay. I'm sure he will be fine with that. Still an impressive amount of llamas.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah, it is, but it's. I don't even. I couldn't visualize that many llamas.

Cristina: Exactly. Like who? Like, you just look at it and you're like, okay, that's a lot of llamas. You're not saying, oh, wow, that's a hundred thousand llamas, or what? Where? You're just saying, that's a lot of llamas.

Jack: Yeah, exactly. There wouldn't be. You wouldn't quantify it. You'd just be like, wow, there's a lot. You wouldn't. If the number is big enough, you wouldn't think about counting. Like, that ceases to make sense, you know?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: If you saw, like, 10, you've been. How many years there are here.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: If you. Even when you're talking about, like, how many people are in this stadium, like, if you don't already know off the top of your head, you're not gonna count. You're not really putting realistic numbers, just tossing random s*** out. Yeah. Because you're not really thinking about how many people there are.

Cristina: Yeah. It's just a guesstimate.

Jack: It's a guesstimate that's not even accurate, probably.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Who cares? It's just numbers.

Cristina: Yeah. It's just random, but. Yeah.

Jack: So those are the conclusions. Spies don't have Time machines, because it's still a thing. Tom Hanks Next. Jack Sparrow. You guys, if you want more episodes, I wish I could do, like, a solid Christopher Walken. No, I just sound like a robot at that point. Yeah, guys.

Cristina: Yeah, guys, continue. Do the sentence. At least one sentence.

Jack: No, I don't even know how to. I gotta hear him.

Cristina: You can do it.

Jack: You guys gotta find the official website, greatthoughts.info Apple Podcast, Spotify, or anywhere you get your podcast. And in those locations, you'll find us.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok @justcombopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to subscribe. That's the most important part always, of the process. You subscribe, you'll hear more conversations. Usually aimless. We're rambling here, literally. And rate us. Rate us. Give us the stars you believe we require and review the show. Tell us what you think about the.

Cristina: Program and our suggestions with Tom Hanks.

Jack: Yes, that's important. Tell us what you think about Tom Hanks.

Cristina: I let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yeah, it's. It's important. Word of mouth is overpowered with a lot of. Yeah, that'll blow up at the end.

Cristina: Yes. And this has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal, and thanks for listening.

Jack: Bye.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. Okay. Okay.

Jack: Boom.

Cristina: I think it also does other things, too. Like, I don't remember. I think, like, people can't sleep because of it. Like, it causes a bunch of problems, probably mentally, I don't know.

Jack: Just out here causing brain damage, I guess so.

Cristina: With the cancer.

Jack: Makes sense.

Cristina: They're very loud. Are they even loud? Can you. How loud are they?

Jack: No, you can't hear windmill.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: I mean, unless they're rusty as s***, in which case they're super loud. They're so loud. Rusty windmills. So loud.

Cristina: So what is his solution? He didn't really give a solution. We just.

Jack: No, he's saying we don't need the windmills. We got to stop using windmills.

Cristina: And then Russia will stop attacking.

Jack: Yes, it makes perfect sense.

Cristina: Russia, he said, doesn't actually want to attack Ukraine.

Jack: Trying to stop the windmills. Yeah, Russia's trying to stop the windmills. There's so many windmills in Ukraine.

Cristina: You don't even know how many windmills are in Ukraine.

Jack: Most of them.

Cristina: Most.

Jack: Most windmills are in Ukraine. You don't even know, bro. That's why.

Cristina: That's why all this happens.

Jack: This whole thing only occurred. The only reason Russia ever attacked Ukraine was because the windmills are in Ukraine.

Cristina: That's crazy. Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by greatthoughts.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister, with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 174: Alternative Civilizations

Is the universe identical across the board? Would other advanced civilizations have math as their baseline for all technological advancements? Is deception a biological trait? The duo decide to unpack whether scientists need to be better informed on how to find alien life in space as opposed to outright introducing them to alien life.

+Episode Detail

Topics Discussed:

  • Language
  • Telepathy
  • Alternatives to Math
  • Religious Science
  • A World Without Fiction
  • The First Lie
  • Lying Dogs
  • Our Quantum Computer

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling podcast, the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childish ways. I am your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I am your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to subscribe so that you get notified the second new episode is early.

Cristina: Also, this show is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yeah, it's important that you, like, find somebody and you're like. You sit them down. You're like, hey, man, this podcast just conversation and talking is. The microphones. This is so I.

Cristina: And I. I'm not sure.

Jack: And I press going on and then plays. And you can hear them. And they're talking.

Cristina: But they're not making fun of people who have stutters.

Jack: No, because the stutter would be like, this is.

Cristina: And what were you doing before? It was very similar.

Jack: It's like a really nervous person talking.

Cristina: That's a NERV person.

Jack: Yes, like a person who's not a nervous person. They're more like a. Like somebody with schizotypal language, I guess. Like, their. Their linguistic patterns are of schizophrenia. Almost like they're trying to tell you, like, this. It's a podcast. And like. So I hit the. I hit play and like. And so on the. But they're. It's. But they're not here when they're talking. They're just over there. But you could. You could hear the speaker. The speaker. You can hear through the speaker. But they're not here. They're just talking over there. It's not live. It's in this. Recorded. There's. But it's. It's not. It's not live. And. And it is recorded. Probably not like, not like in a big studio or something. You know, it's probably. Probably the. Probably they just came together and, you know people.

Cristina: It's very close to the other thing.

Jack: It might. You know what? It might be a type of stutter.

Cristina: It might be. It could be pretty bad.

Jack: It could. It totally could be, man. Okay, here's a problem. He's a problem. He's a problem. He's a problem. His problem. He's a problem. His problem is a problem. I don't know.

Cristina: Do you have a stuttering problem?

Jack: No. What's crazy is people who do that. Is that a stutter, too?

Cristina: It might be because it's not like you're.

Jack: You're not stuttering in the word. The word isn't stuttered.

Cristina: It's repeating the word.

Jack: Yeah. That's why I'm not calling it a stutter. Because you're not stuttering the word.

Cristina: It feels like you're stuck on the word, and that makes it feel like a stutter. Even if you're not messing up the word, you can't move past the word.

Jack: So it's not moving past it. The. The base principle of stuttering.

Cristina: I'm saying yes now. I don't know.

Jack: So what if you're, like totally being racist and insulting the stutter race?

Cristina: That's not a race.

Jack: How do you know?

Cristina: I hope they don't see themselves as a race.

Jack: They probably do. And they see themselves superior to everybody.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because maybe they are. How do you know they're not?

Cristina: What if we're just equals? Why do one have to be better than the other?

Jack: They're faster, they're stronger, they're smarter, the cooler.

Cristina: All of that from. I don't know. Why. Why is that the case?

Jack: Did the master race.

Cristina: Obviously they're not a race. They're not a race.

Jack: You don't decide what a race is.

Cristina: I don't know what a race is.

Jack: To be fair, neither do I. Okay, but listen to me. My whole point in talking about stutterers and stuttering and the fact that stutterers tend to be stuttering is because. No, I was just thinking, like, we stutter because language and there's a certain thing happening in our brain that's not allowing the person who. It has to be neurological or something. Right. That's not letting the person get the word out efficiently, but they're still getting the word out. Neural pathways are there. There's just something happening.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I don't know if it's neurological or if it's some cognition based thing like motor functions. But regardless of what the case might be, there is something there. Now my question is, is this specific to language? So we have an alien race and they don't develop language.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But they have some other means of communication.

Cristina: Would there be a form of stuttering as well?

Jack: Like is a. Can a dog stutter in their communication to another dog?

Cristina: That is. I don't know.

Jack: Right, right.

Cristina: That is weird.

Jack: But if we take it to the next level and say maybe it's an advanced thought. We process a lot of thoughts in a very short period of time. Maybe it's advanced civilization kinds of things and it's just human. Particularly as a stutter, because it makes sense for us to be caught on some complex linguistic problem. So then the question would be, if we don't have language, could we have an equivalent of a stutter?

Cristina: I don't know, because I think of, like, sign language, and there's no way of stuttering for sign language. I think, like, you can mess up.

Jack: No. Well, I wouldn't. No, no, no. It's totally possible to have a stutter while doing sign language.

Cristina: How?

Jack: That's very interesting that you would bring that up. And I would have never thought about this otherwise. But if you have a repetitive tic of some sort and it, like, manifests itself as your. Maybe it's very physical. Like, very physical, and it happens to be in your hands and you sign in. Communicate also. D***, bro. You're both death. And you got this tick like your hand was crappy, but yeah, I guess you could stutter. Yeah, it's crappy. They. They got. Yeah, you're. The hand you were dealt is crappy and the hand you were crappy.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So, like, it sucks to be you, bro. Yeah, you should. You're that person who should have been convincing yourself a long time ago. I think I should have been born without arms. And then you go through that surgery and get your arms detached, but then you get robot arms that are way.

Cristina: More efficient and somehow they stutter.

Jack: They don't stutter. I mean, I guess if they glitched. If they glitched, D*** computers stutter.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, they can get old and the technology is not advanced enough.

Jack: Yeah, s*** could stutter. But that's my point is stuttering. Because at the end of the day, language, linguistics and sign language is language.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Just signing words. Essentially, we're trying to convey the same information.

Cristina: Like animals stutter. Birds while they're singing end up stuttering. Although when people sing, they don't stutter. So I would assume it's not a bird problem.

Jack: My. Well, my thing would be let's move beyond the simplistic stuff and assume that there is something other going on in an intellectual mind. Can a life form from another place that never had language stutter in whatever means of communication they have? If they're doing telepathy, can your telepathic thoughts stutter? If you're trying to convey your emotions as they are, can you stutter and overemphasize something? Or can you. You're trying to show a sequence of images of places you've seen to convey a really complex thought that requires these images. Could you get stuck on an image?

Cristina: Could you get stuck on it?

Jack: You know, could you look at. Is there a lag?

Cristina: Like, wouldn't it be like a mess up? I don't know about an actual lag.

Jack: Yeah, it would be the perfect word. It would be the human lag equivalent if it was telepathy. Because you could stay on the wrong image too long and it's just because you're like failing to. And I guess we would. Right, because things that we don't even consider stutters are probably stutters.

Cristina: Like what?

Jack: Like if you are holding your keys and looking for them at the same time. Oh, is that a type of stuttering? That your brain is kind of like stuck?

Cristina: Yes. Like the lady holding the baby looking for the baby.

Jack: Yes, that's a weird. Like you're kind of stuck there. You're stuttering, you're lagging, you're lagging. The system is glitching.

Cristina: That is weird. Okay, so there's some real world things happening like that.

Jack: Yeah, it's so it's not linguistically alone. There is. Everything can get stuck somehow.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Which goes to say that if there was an alien life form that did develop something elsewhere, totally different thing. That might not even be biology. Biology is the study of cells and anything that comes from it, Life and whatnot. If these life forms are made from like helium or some s*** and develop some other crazy way to communicate, they could still stutter in theory, however the f***. Yeah. Glitching is inherent. Yes, it's universal.

Cristina: But is it stuttering or is it just making a mistake? Like, what's the difference?

Jack: A mistake is something you could have done properly but didn't. As opposed to a stutter which is out of your control.

Cristina: Okay, I guess. I don't know. I can't even imagine what they would be doing that's different from language besides like animal sounds.

Jack: Yeah, well, yeah, it's. Of course we can't comprehend how something that one, we can't prove is even out there and two, they develop something we don't understand. We're supposed to conceptualize that thing that we can't conceptualize.

Cristina: Yes. I don't know there. People try to do it in movies, I'm guessing. I just can't think of any.

Jack: It's based on our already existing wealth of information, which is based on our own existence. So there's no way anything that that really happens out there would look remotely similar. Because everything is based on what we have already experienced anyways. Even our new unique, not language way of communication only came to our mind because of our current existing way of communicating how we think Affects how we. I mean, how we communicate affects how we think.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So does language. Which is precisely what they wouldn't have.

Cristina: So how would they communicate, though?

Jack: Yeah. We couldn't. We could never think about it.

Cristina: Don't worry.

Jack: There's no point. We could never. Because we'd have to come up with something that we couldn't come up with. Because we don't have the tools to come up with it. Because it would have had to take a path that we can't understand.

Cristina: Like, even if they were talking to each other from mind, like, telepathy is how it's called.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Like, what would that sound like to us if we heard what? Like, would it make sense?

Jack: No, it wouldn't. It wouldn't be a sound. You're. No. It would look the way your thoughts look. Except you'd know they're not your thoughts. But my thoughts would be telepathy.

Cristina: Thoughts are complicated. I don't know, there's words sometimes images, other times.

Jack: Then it would play out like that.

Jack: It would. Whatever's necessary in your way of thinking. You'd think their thoughts. That's celebrity.

Cristina: But it would equal to my thoughts. It'll be similar. It will be understandable. Just because it'll be somehow trying to relate to something I've been thinking.

Jack: It wouldn't try to relate to something you've been thinking. You'd apply your already existing filters of life and experience to process the thoughts.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: And you'd also feel the emotions that go with it. That's why telepathy is so overpowered, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So you'd feel the emotions, you'd see the images, you'd hear the sounds, you'd. Every you. They're conveying to you the experience itself. There's nothing really for you to think about and be like, well, I didn't get it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: No, because the point is, you instantaneously understand. They sent you the experience and you're like, ah, I get it.

Cristina: Ah.

Jack: So, like, it transcends the need for language. If an alien who's mastered telepathy were to show up right now, although you couldn't send them the message, they could send it to you and you understand it perfectly.

Cristina: Okay. And if we ever do figure that out, at least with technology, would we be able to communicate like that or. They would have to. They would need the technology as well. Probably.

Jack: No. If they can already communicate telepathically, why, what would they need the technology for?

Cristina: To receive our. Because we don't really have the ability.

Jack: They can Read our minds. They're telepathic.

Cristina: Oh. Okay. I don't know how telepathy works. It's like. I thought they were just giving you information, but they're also taking information from you.

Jack: I'm assuming they could. Unless it's one way. Telepathy.

Cristina: Which.

Jack: That could be a thing.

Cristina: That's what I was thinking. I don't know.

Jack: I was thinking of just our generalized telepathy. We can communicate back and forth. So you don't really need telepathy.

Cristina: No.

Jack: To communicate to someone who has telepathy.

Cristina: Because they should be able to do it back and forth.

Jack: Yes. They should be able to take your thoughts and put thoughts in your head.

Cristina: Yes. Unless you learn how to protect your mind.

Jack: Yes. Like Professor X. Yeah. With his helmet. No, wait, it's Magneto. Magneto, Meant to protect himself from Professor X.

Cristina: Yes. Who's a monster.

Jack: No.

Cristina: No spying on everyone.

Jack: Who? Mac? Professor X?

Cristina: Yeah. He's a creep.

Jack: I mean, he's a creep. He's not a monster.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's interesting. I wonder. Man, there's so much weird s*** about. It Lands like, man, what if they took a different path? It wasn't. I'm always fascinated by that. Like, we have science and we call it science and whatever, and we'd call their stuff science. What if their s*** wasn't based on numbers? Like, what the f*** do we. What?

Cristina: Yeah, what.

Jack: What do we even do? At that point?

Cristina: It's pretty cool. I don't know.

Jack: We call it tech. We call it tech. A hundred percent. It shows up and we're like, oh, this is alien technology. Fine, fine. That makes sense. It's not. We're not wrong in calling it science and we're not wrong in calling it technology. It's exactly what we would call technology if we made it. And it's scientific now. How the is it? The question is, is it scientific? Right.

Cristina: Is it scientific?

Jack: Is it based on math?

Cristina: It has to be. I don't know. It doesn't have to be.

Jack: We think math is universal, but we also seek math in the universe and then find it. What if they're like, I don't know what the f*** math is. Never in my life have I heard about math. We just think logically and somehow have figured things out.

Cristina: That is crazy. I don't know what that would be like. That's crazy. That's really something. But I always like to think about the aliens that are. We can't even communicate. Not in any way. Like the moon, Water and the silent Sea. Yes, that's pretty alien. But you can't communicate with that.

Jack: Well, is it alive, is the question.

Cristina: I think it's alive.

Jack: The water's alive.

Cristina: Well, it's alive in the way that.

Jack: Like a. Like a regular cells. Yeah, that's garbage. We can't communicate with that. I mean, like intelligent life, because we're not like. Well, is that thing technologically advanced? Like, no, it's like a f****** puddle of atoms or some s***. But if we said, like, what creature came from that planet is more intelligent or advanced? If we were to. Whatever thing they used, they're just more advanced than we are. Is it math? They got them there.

Cristina: Is it math? I wonder. It has to be.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: It has to be something similar, Something. I don't know. It's hard to tell. But, like, what else could there be?

Jack: I don't know. We could. We would. The point is we wouldn't be able to think about it. Yes, but it's interesting to think about.

Cristina: Yes, it is.

Jack: But we wouldn't think of the thing like asking, what is it? Like, I don't know.

Cristina: Of course, we can't figure out what it is that we haven't met yet.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Or if we have met it, we don't know that we've met it.

Jack: So this is crazy to think about. Like, the fact that there could be a way to get to the same place without numbers.

Cristina: To the same place. Oh.

Jack: To same level of technology.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now, here's the problem. We always look at space and we use our fancy super awesome telescopios and we.

Cristina: We make them bigger and better and stronger.

Jack: We're looking for us. We had a whole f****** episode about this. We're always looking for ourselves.

Cristina: It's the easiest thing to look for. Maybe. Yes.

Jack: But, like, the amount of crap we're probably missing in looking for ourselves, there's.

Cristina: No way to even imagine how you look for the other thing that's not like ourselves.

Jack: I know, that sucks, right? We're sort of trapped by our experiences.

Cristina: Yes. We have to meet this unknown thing to be able to find this unknown thing in other places. Like, if it turns out that the clouds are alive and can communicate with us, then we could find the technology we'll need to find other clouds that communicate. Like the first clouds that we meet.

Jack: Yeah. You mean the first clouds we already met?

Cristina: Oh, yes.

Jack: Or I guess the clouds we've listened to.

Cristina: Yes, because we have communicated with him already.

Jack: No, that's what we're training Steve for.

Cristina: Yes, well, that's what I Mean, like, once he's able to do that, then we'll be able to do it anywhere else.

Jack: Well, yeah, but I mean, like, people who aren't us, just normal scientists who doesn't know about the realities of the world, and he's out there looking for life and he's like, life? Life is entirely based on cells. Always. 100% of the time, it's like, you can't possibly know that, bro. Like, maybe. I'm not saying it's not, but just like, I'm definitely, like, sure. Like, I'm man, like, Neil Degrasse Tyson is the kind of guy who would 100% be like, no, if there's life, it's cellular.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: No, dude, you follow f****** science like it's a religion, bro. Then again, most scientists do whatever it is a religion.

Cristina: It is, it is.

Jack: I mean, they have a holy book, essentially, these science journals. It was written by people I don't know, and I will take their word for it. And his facts, the laws that were written long ago in numerology, tell us. And we follow those numbers according to the letter. We don't alter them. That's not the right way to do it. You follow the numbers as they are presented. Reinterpreting. No, no, no, no. We tell you what these numbers mean and you follow those numbers, you plug them in.

Cristina: Well, you do the same thing yourself, and then you can figure it out.

Jack: No, but you got to do it the way they told you to do it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then you got to get the same result.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Here's the prayer. You can go pray the same prayer that I gave Bob over there.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then when you get. You're going to have a spiritual experience. Be sure to have that spiritual experience. You're going to have that spiritual experience. Don't forget. And it must be very enlightening. Just like Bob. Just like Bob's experience. If you didn't have what you didn't.

Cristina: Believe hard enough, I guess there's something was wrong with your science or your.

Jack: Math or your belief. Maybe you. Why didn't I feel the relief after I prayed? Pastor or priest or father? There you go, Father. Why didn't I feel better after praying? My son. So much darkness in your heart. You weren't convinced. You must truly want. And then pray, you. You have to believe it's gonna work before it works.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then it'll work. And so here's an equation. And you have to do it the way I told you and believe you're gonna get the result that we told you're gonna get. And if you get the same result, then it worked. If you don't get the same result, then you did it wrong.

Cristina: Yes. And you should try it again for like a hundred times.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: And then we'll question it, go back.

Jack: And do it again. Can I do it my own way? Well, that wouldn't follow our logical steps. You got to do it the same way we did it and try to get the same result. That's the point, man.

Cristina: It's all the same.

Jack: Yeah. S***. There's nothing isn't f****** religion. Everything, everything is religion.

Cristina: How do we turn science into religion?

Jack: I don't.

Cristina: It is the same.

Jack: Yeah. Atheism is a religion. I have faith that there's nothing there. Let's get the f*** out of here, bro. What? Dude, the lack of religion is religion.

Cristina: Yes, because we can't help it. We can't help it, dude.

Jack: Everything is religion. Oh, my.

Cristina: You think aliens have to have religion?

Jack: Then that blows my f****** mind, right? They would have to.

Cristina: They would have to.

Jack: Or at least some of them. If there's more than just us, I am sure at least one civilization doesn't have religion.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But I'm sure, like, some out there must have religion. There must be somebody who's. Well, maybe there's s*** we can't understand.

Cristina: There has to be religion. If there's mystery for them, there's definitely religion, even if it's not equal to our religion. Like we just said, science is like religion. What if there is witchcraft is religion.

Jack: What if there is no religion, though? How would that look? How did they tell themselves how? Oh, so we go. We go to an alien planet and it's not advanced, it's an alien planet taking place in their equivalent of our 1800s. I mean, it's not gonna look the same, but I'm saying their technology is around that point. If we were to compare whatever thing technology they have, whether math or not, and we go and communicate with them and we find out they've never had religion. How do they explain their origin? Or are they just like. We don't f****** know.

Cristina: But they're not superstitious either. They're not like.

Jack: No, just like, way honest. No, just way honest. Just like if. If it's not provable at this precise moment, then it couldn't possibly be. Like, we just don't bother.

Cristina: There's no way. I mean, maybe, but it's just like, there's not many people like that.

Jack: Yeah, but think about it. There has to be a culture, an Alien civilization, that's just about being in the present. It's just the whole s*** is I'm now. I don't think about later or back then. It's just now. So. Hey, where'd you come from? Don't know. Never f****** thought about it. Not going to start now.

Cristina: What? How do they live?

Jack: Why?

Cristina: Why do they live?

Jack: No, not why do they live? What do you mean when you ask, how do they live? I'm like, why does it matter?

Cristina: Because it's weird. I don't know. They just live in the moment, but they don't have anything going on in the future or their past. Like, I don't know. They don't have anything. Like.

Jack: Yeah, okay, so the question would be. No, listen, the question b. If you don't have religion.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You're an alien civilization. You don't have religion. What motivated you to make your first rocket? You have no right. So, like, we are gazing into the stars in the first place. Was looking for God, because we'd already thought about God. So if we hadn't thought about God, we're like, oh, just crap up there. Not gonna give a. Or would we be like, although there's no God up there, and that's still believe in something.

Cristina: Because even the scientists believe in something greater. They look up into the skies, they're still motivated.

Jack: Yeah, but scientists are following their religion.

Cristina: Yes. So, like, how could an alien not have something? But again, that's motivating them.

Jack: No, that's us just trying to push forward our own belief that based on our experiences. How you need motivation.

Cristina: But go into space.

Jack: Yeah. What if it's just like a natural conclusion as opposed to motivation. Like, they're not striving for space. As opposed to, oh, the planet's running out of resources in about this long. We should be out or find more resources. Other stuff up there. Our telescopes showed us. Or we built telescopes looking for more stuff.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then we found it. And so now we build a rocket and go get it, and then we bring it back.

Cristina: What made them want to look up?

Jack: Running out of resources. Oh, they're running out of stuff on the planet. They're like, okay, it looks like we have.

Cristina: They're motivated to survive, at least.

Jack: Yeah. But not by religion. Not by something greater, just survival. And so they're sitting around and it's like, okay, we have a hundred years worth of resources left. That means we only have about 50 years to find new resources and begin acquiring that resource. And then they decide, okay, we're gonna find everywhere we're gonna look in our oceans, we're gonna look in space, everywhere. And then looking in space, they look up and I, oh, there's stuff up there. So then we need to get up there. And then they go ahead and make the rocket that would get them up there.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And then they acquire the thing at no moment that they have like, oh, God is up there or some s***. Never cross their mind. They've successfully just kind of been in the now.

Cristina: Like, I don't know how that's not possible, how that's possible.

Jack: I just explained it.

Cristina: But I understand. But like, if you have fear, then there's got to be something motivating too. I don't know. I don't know.

Jack: We don't know what comes after death. And we're terrified of what we don't know.

Cristina: And you think they know? They don't care about what happens after death.

Jack: They don't know what happens after death.

Cristina: And they don't care.

Jack: Who said they don't care?

Cristina: Because they don't. I don't know. Like, what do they think is gonna happen? They don't have any curiosities. They probably don't make up stories.

Jack: That's the part they don't do.

Cristina: They don't make up stories.

Jack: They don't make up stories. They. They prove things. And we can't prove that part. So why bother with it? We don't know what happens. I haven't the slightest clue what happens when you die? Well, your body stops moving. Do you go to heaven? What is that? Do you go to h***? I don't know what that is. Is there reincarnation? Not a clue what that is. It's when you come. I wouldn't know. Because that person comes back as a different person, back from when they're born. Do they retain their memories? Can I ask somebody? Were you in previous life? And they recall it as if. No. Okay, then doesn't matter because I can't prove anything.

Cristina: Ah.

Jack: What if that's their approach to everything?

Cristina: To everything?

Jack: To everything?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: There has to be at least one. There has to be at least one infinity. There has to be at least one.

Cristina: But how many could actually be like that?

Jack: An infinite number of them in infinity.

Cristina: An infinite number of them, but not most.

Jack: No, but infinite numbers of them. Because now we're entering though the problem of, like, multiple size infinities, right? So you can have. What is it? Regular numbers versus prime numbers. You can have an infinite number of prime numbers and an infinite number of regular Numbers. But there would still be more regular numbers than prime numbers, even if they're both infinite.

Cristina: Yes. Yes. So I don't know. Like, there can't be that many. I don't know.

Jack: Yes. There's an infinite amount.

Cristina: There's infinite amount.

Jack: Infinite amount of. So crazy. Just civilization. Yeah. Or just not having religion. Something happened without religion in some civilization. That's the most important part.

Cristina: No religion.

Jack: No religion. They never made up a story. No. They don't know about lying. They don't know about storytelling.

Cristina: They don't know about storytelling. They don't know about lying.

Jack: Storytelling is making up.

Cristina: Oh, no fiction.

Jack: No fiction. There you go. No fiction. Everything is reality. Everything is fact.

Cristina: That's. That's really hard to imagine, but it could.

Jack: Maybe it's a thing. Is that what the Vulcans are based on?

Cristina: You don't think they have stories? I mean, like, even stories based on real events become legends and then become.

Jack: No, because then you're just remembering.

Cristina: Yes, but it changes over time and becomes a bigger, better story than it was before.

Jack: But you're not allowed to alter it for flare. You just say the same exact carbon words that you were given in the exact same way. Lucy went to the store. In human language. Lucy went to the store. Lucy walked to the store. Lucy was walking to the store. Lucy likes to walk to the store. Apparently, Lucy buys things at the store. Little by little, the same s*** is just said different ways. Lucy walked to buy some stuff at the store. Lucy walked to the store and didn't buy something. So maybe something happened at the store, and that's why. Okay, so little by little, s*** starts to change incrementally. Before long, Lucy was in a sword battle with the demon in front of a store to save the store from the f******. Okay, whatever. Okay, now Lucy walks to the store. Alien that doesn't tell fibs of any sort. Well, Lucy walks the store.

Cristina: That's it.

Jack: Lucy walks the store.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Tell it to the next guy. What do you tell you?

Cristina: So, will they be living that thing where. What was that movie with the guy who. I guess everyone couldn't lie, and then he eventually was able to lie. But before he was able to do that, all they had was history.

Jack: Yes. Yes, exactly. There's history. And only exactly as it was recorded.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Not as somebody told it, because their perception could affect it. So it has to be like, what's on camera?

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And like, before cameras, that becomes weird, right? Like, how do you remember? Well, we. We didn't we didn't record anything because we didn't have the means. Eventually, we recorded the means, and now our wealth of knowledge exploded dramatically. And we have all this information before then. It would literally just be repeating things as exactly they were.

Cristina: That's how it was for us. You're talking about us now?

Jack: No, aliens.

Cristina: Talking about the aliens. Oh. Man, that's how they live. So lame. Or not lame, I guess. Like, for them, it's whatever. They don't care. But what would they think of us, though?

Jack: What do you mean?

Cristina: Seeing how different we are after learning about science. Like, they will learn about the science if we were to meet them, what would they think of us? Are we a mess?

Jack: I don't know. What do you think?

Cristina: Maybe. I don't know.

Jack: I don't know. I have never met. Never met an alien in this situation. I don't know how to answer that question. How would an alien that we could not conceive think of us, this fictional.

Cristina: Alien that we just made up?

Jack: I mean, it would baffle them. Can you imagine discovering what telling a lie is for the first time? Like, it's never existed in your life?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Making some s*** up has never crossed your mind. You've never had that thought ever. And then we're like, why don't you say something that's not real? Like, what.

Cristina: What if they can't?

Jack: Well, I mean, the concept might not exist in their head.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Look at it like this. Can your dog lie to you?

Cristina: probably not. I don't know.

Jack: Like, there's. There's deception, but is there a lie? There's like, if I walk away from it, maybe they won't see it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But if you were to ask the dog, did you do it? Would he be like, no, that dog did it. Even if they did it, you know, is that a thought they can have?

Cristina: I wonder. I feel like I've seen videos of dogs looking at other dogs and exactly.

Jack: What video you're talking about, and the little dog is the one who did it.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: So the big dog is like, it wasn't me. Go f****** take charge for your f****** thing.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Who's being honest?

Jack: Yeah. My question is, could he avoid that and not be honest? Can your dog lie to you? Or is that a thing that we came up with? And, like, if you tried to explain lying to your dog, would your dog get it?

Cristina: I don't think so. I don't know.

Jack: Like, if they've never had the thought of lying ever.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Like, okay, we haven't Done this one in a while.

Cristina: What?

Jack: But we have a f****** quantum computer to run experiments on. We've been thinking about what to do with it.

Cristina: Are you gonna seem dogs can lie?

Jack: No. We're gonna take the quantum computer. We're gonna simulate a person who's been raised in a situation where nobody has ever discussed lying, ever lied, or told anything that wasn't factually part of history. And then when they're 50 years old, after never ever being presented with anything even close to what a lie might be. Mm, no fiction, no nothing. Everything is based in reality. And then somebody says, because you. The problem is to this person, you can never say something and then doubt the reality of it. So you can't be like. And even if you walked up to them, so you say something that's wrong, and they'd be like, okay, I guess that's right.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then you're like, okay, I'm just going to tell them I lied. Well, they don't know what the f*** a lie is.

Cristina: How do you explain it to someone who doesn't get it?

Jack: Yeah. To somebody who's never had the thought. How would you explain this alien? How would you explain this person who's never experienced. How do you explain a lie? So we simulate this person in order to understand the alien that we're talking about. So we simulate this person 50 years old, never experienced a lie, never experienced a fib, never experienced fiction. Everything is science fact. Everything is in history books.

Cristina: Maybe it is impossible. I think of, like, if you try to point out things, they will still not get what you're trying to do. Like, you were just pointing out the sky, and we're like, okay, that's red. Like, if they knew the language and they knew what you're saying.

Jack: Yes. A human.

Cristina: Yeah. And you're like, that's red. But I know it's not red, But I'm telling you that's red.

Jack: They might think you're telling the truth and they don't understand how it's red.

Cristina: Yes. Like, yeah, okay. From your eyes, it's probably red. I don't know. But like, yeah. So what other ways will you try to convince them?

Jack: Okay, I grab a card. I grab an index card, and I'll write the words, this is an index card. And I'll be like, this is true. This is. This is true. This is fact. Put that one down. Then I get another index card and I say, this is a car. And then I show them the card. I'm like, this is what the lie is. That is talking about the card. This is saying the card is a car.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That's a lie. Do you see how that works? And they won't necessarily get it. But with enough examples, you are. We simulate, you know, 50 year old guy, whatever, you are a male, and say, okay, yeah, it's true. Okay, okay, so what's the example you're trying to give me? I don't get where you're coming from. All right, now brace yourself. You are a female. That's the lie.

Cristina: Mm. Would they get that?

Jack: Well, with. Again, with enough examples. Yeah, we just keep doing that over and over. And presumably the stacked evidence or examples.

Cristina: If they understood it, would they get it, like, a point?

Jack: H***, yes. They would definitely be like, why would you do this?

Cristina: Yeah, I don't know if it'll be entertaining to them. Like, then if you show them a fantasy movie, would they be like, I don't. I don't get it. Like, interesting.

Jack: It would be a great party trick for everybody he knows who also doesn't know about lying. It'd be like a weird party trick to show up and be like, look what I learned how to do. Guys, this is you. Nep. Guys, gather. Gather round. Show them how to lie. Gather round. Guys, I'm gonna show you a thing I learned how to do that. You. It's gonna blow your f****** mind. You've never, never seen society, never heard, heard anything of this nature whatsoever. I mean, he's not gonna explain. He doesn't really know. It's like, you've never seen or heard anything like this before. He's gonna be f****** billionaire, bro. And he's like, okay, check it out, Check it out. Check it out. You guys. Blowing away. Blown away. Stacy's naked. Like, this is naked.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Wait, no. Stacy has clothes on.

Cristina: What are you talking about?

Jack: Yeah, you're. You're. You're confused. Stacy has clothes on. No, no. Stacy's naked. What are you saying? It's like. It's a cool trick, right? But what.

Cristina: What is happening?

Jack: Yeah, it's like the craziest magic trick. Like, I just walked out that door down the block, and you just saw me pop up in the door next to you. It's like water. Like, whoa.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: It's like Stacey's naked. But. But I know. I don't. I know she has clothing. Then that meme of that lady with the numbers ones and zeros flying in front of him, like, equation s***. Yes, that happens real time. Stacy has clothes. I know she has clothes, but he's saying she doesn't have clothes. I don't understand.

Cristina: Is there something wrong with him?

Jack: Yeah. Is he sick? Is there something. How, how, how, man? Maybe. Maybe I'm the one who's f***** up. Something's wrong in my head. It's wrong in my head.

Cristina: And I keep hearing. They think he's like, if enough people are listening, just think, oh, there's something wrong with him. We gotta take him to the mental hospital or to the. Where do old people go? Home care.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah.

Cristina: Like, they'll be worried about him.

Jack: Worried about him.

Cristina: Because even if he tried to explain it, he wouldn't be able to explain it.

Jack: He wouldn't be able to explain it. It would sound like gibberish.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: What the bomb say. He said, Stacey's naked.

Cristina: Like, even if he tried to ex. Yeah, like, even if he's trying to explain. To not go into a home care, like, it's too late. They're gonna put him away.

Jack: No, I mean, it would be. It would be too confusing. It would be too confusing. I don't think they would just default to that. They would really? Because he already, you know, warned them.

Cristina: That it's a magic trick, but they.

Jack: Don'T have a magic trick. But he said, I have a trick for you guys. Oh, so they're already thinking of it as a trick as opposed to. He just shows up, said, stacy's naked. What the f***? What just happened?

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: No, he's like, I got a trick, guys. It can blow your mind. Stacey's naked. What the f*** is happen. It's impossible. What? No, she has clothing. Why is he saying that?

Cristina: So they wouldn't think there's something wrong with him.

Jack: No, he just said it was a trick ahead of time. So they're thinking of it as a trick. It'd be crazy if I'm like, hey, I got a magic trick for you. Pick a card, any card. I don't get how this magic trick works. Send him to an asylum. Like, that's not how we react to things. He told us it's a magic trick.

Cristina: In the old days, it was like that.

Jack: Yeah, but he'd. Like. He told us it's a trick. It'd be crazy if it's like, I don't know what's happening. I've never heard of magic. So, you know, he said, I don't.

Cristina: Think they heard of magic, though.

Jack: Who heard of magic?

Cristina: Those people.

Jack: Well, no, you're talking. I'm giving you a different example about actual magic dude doing a card trick or something.

Cristina: Yeah, but would they know Magic. Would they know tricks? Like, if he did announce, I got a trick for you, would they know what he means by trick?

Jack: Who, the guy who's lying?

Cristina: Yeah, to the people who don't know what lying is.

Jack: Well, no, it would be like, I got a trick for you. Look at me flip my hat midair and catch it on my head. I did. Ta da a trick. And then you're like, oh, cool. It required a lot of skill and training to be able to flip it perfectly and land it on your head.

Cristina: Okay, so that gets picked.

Jack: Any card. Your card is Ace of spades. Oh, wow. Nice trick. It's very interesting. I don't know how he did it, but Stacy's naked. What the. What the. I don't get it. How.

Cristina: How.

Jack: They're not like. Well, it's f****** send a twin asylum. They're like, wow, this is the greatest trick I've ever seen.

Cristina: This crazy trick.

Jack: This is a crazy linguistic trick. Wow. It's like a tongue twister about that time Hitler did the thing.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yeah, because they all. Everything is based on history, you know, as opposed to. As opposed to making up that, like, Peter Piper didn't pick no pickle. Doesn't make sense.

Cristina: There's a time a tongue twister about Hitler, about history. Oh, history.

Jack: Yeah. It has to be all there. Everything is based on history as opposed to making s*** up.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They've never made something up.

Cristina: No. Okay.

Jack: And this is crazy, right? Because the other argument is everything that they've ever constructed needed to be built on, on top of something else with total awareness. Like, nobody ever had an original idea.

Cristina: They wouldn't have cities. They wouldn't know.

Jack: They would. They would. It's innovating. You'd innovate your way there as opposed to invent your way there.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Because you don't make anything up. Everything is based on crap that you'd had to have a thought about something that wasn't real first and then be like, no. It would be like, well, we need to push things. Well, how do we push things? Well, it looks like that round thing. When we put the rock on top of the hill, it just moves easily. Rolls all the way to the bottom. It's like, how do we put that rock on a box that we can push it in? Thus, carriages came to be.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Okay, well, pushing this carriage is fine in town, but I gotta take this s*** across town. Is there something that could pull this s***? Well, horses. Yeah. Okay. So far, we haven't had, like. We haven't vented S***, we just, you know, stuff that's already there, I use, you know, I put stuff in my crate, I pick up the crate, I walk to Bob's house. Okay, great.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: I want a crate with wheels so I can push it across town. Okay. So the Brock rolls. Put the Brock on the crate. Push the big crate. Okay. Got across town. Well, I need to get it to a different town. I need to get the crate to move fluidly and something that won't get as tired as I do. Oh, well, a horse. Okay, well, the horse is gonna die if I try to cross the country with him. Only on a carriage. So I need something. I need a way for this already. Well, what do we know?

Cristina: Five donkeys.

Jack: Five donkeys. Well, we already know that we can get energy, heat from like he creates energy. Maybe, maybe I could build a thing. Maybe I can use energy, trap energy and then make it shoot out some other place. And then that's gonna propel it so that it's not a living creature slowly dying. And I just need to fill that. Just cold. Yeah. Let's build the thing in. It's gonna shoot out the back. Okay. Coal like a train.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Eventually. Well, how do we. How do we make this self contained so the energy is happening inside? Well, gasoline, you know, get oil so they'll have oil.

Cristina: Pretty much a lot of the same things that we have.

Jack: Yeah, but innovating. Well, no, this guy that I'm talking about is just based on a society that doesn't lie. But of course the steps are there. It's just they only followed it through clean process. As opposed to somebody like, what if I put a f****** radio in a car? You know, it's like I'm a. Yeah. Car radio venting s***. Then again, somebody was like, well, I want music that isn't just sung. What if I can trap the. Their singing?

Cristina: Would they have music? They would just be based on history. Just be based on history or life history.

Jack: Like, and then some dude with a boombox because he wanted to record the thing was like, what? I carry my, my boombox in my car so I can music while I'm driving. What if it was part of it.

Cristina: Would have strange things like animal breeding.

Jack: What?

Cristina: Like, you know, like what we did with dogs. Like, I can see that with farm animals because you're trying to make it have more meat on it.

Jack: Yeah, 100% that would still happen. Most of to be real. Most of everything would be identical.

Cristina: But what about the crazy buildings we have or the crazy art on those buildings?

Jack: Probably not art would be problematic.

Cristina: It was just. It's just not art.

Jack: Mostly it would be art based on history.

Cristina: That is very interesting.

Jack: Make a fictional universe.

Cristina: You just accidentally make a fictional universe.

Jack: That's crazy, right? Because it's totally just s*** inside your head.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: And like, if you mess something up. Well, no, maybe they're always correcting it.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Like something like they put a window too big, they got to throw out the whole thing.

Jack: Like throw out the whole thing. It fits a painting. Well, I gotta wait until it dries and then, you know, shrink that window.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Again, everything would work appropriately. It just would function based on history. It doesn't seem like we need religion. It just seems more like we want it. Like after really thinking through the steps that would lead us right to where we are without ever lying about anything, without needing fiction, without even creating something original, you're just consistently innovating something that already existed. Base the thing on the previous thing, the end.

Cristina: There has to be differences. I don't know, but it's hard to imagine because we're still just basing it off of what we are.

Jack: Yeah. Let's say before we had mass travel and stuff like that. Right. Civilizations that didn't have a lot of contact with one another. What were the major differences? Right. What were like the real big. Wow. So we have. We had cowboys and drip, had pirates. More or less the same concept, but one on land, the other one in the water. That's differences, I guess. Like what, what are notable differences?

Cristina: We can find notable differences between countries.

Jack: Yeah. Countries that didn't interact for a really long time. Like the people there, but they had their own path they were taking.

Cristina: There's not many countries like that. I mean, I guess today P is the most.

Jack: Yeah, today. That's why I'm thinking backwards. I immediately said pirates and.

Cristina: But even in that part, that point, we were starting to like.

Jack: Yes, but we were. Starting is exactly the right set of words. So we weren't there. It was beginning.

Cristina: But you'd have to think of before though, because you're still getting some influence from somewhere else. The new place that you're. You're working, you're trading with and stuff.

Jack: Well, let's think just basic things. Some civilizations used a lot of copper, some used a lot of stone. So materialistically there were some differences.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Some civilizations built erect towers, others built pyramids. Weirdly enough, a bunch of people who did not interact ever had pyramids. Total opposite sides of the world. There are pyramids in Mexico and in Egypt. And it's like a highly impractical thing to construct.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Why they both have pyramids. Of course. The pyramids are vastly different.

Cristina: Yes, they are.

Jack: But like, what?

Cristina: There must have been a good reason. I wonder what the reason was. Need of time travel.

Jack: I mean, like, we know, we know that the pyramids of Giza had the f****** transporter and laser thing and that the pyramids the Mayans made had both rockets take off and had a matrix style system underground.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So like they're vastly different in that aspect as well, man.

Cristina: But even I don't know, I feel like everyone still get like, when they weren't traveling the world, they were still learning things from their neighbors.

Jack: Yeah. And their neighbors learned things from their neighbors and their neighbors learn things. So far enough, you learn from the guy across the world.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So if we got a telescope, aimed it at west, bubba. F****** the galaxy of who the f*** knows, where will we see pyramids? Will there be f****** alien pyramids? That's crazy, dude.

Cristina: North Korea is hiding pyramids. Maybe because they're like the only ones not communicating with everyone. But at the same time, everyone's sneaking in things from other places.

Jack: I mean, little by little they're opening up. In fact, we're pushing Russia into that spot now and we're taking them out. We're like, we already talked to Cuba and we're starting to talk with North Korea. F*** talking Russians. F*** the Russians.

Cristina: But the Russians will still get their information about other countries and will not.

Jack: As countries start cutting them off from who are they gonna get their information from their homies?

Cristina: Only from the web.

Jack: From the web, the Internet is going to be cut off. Oh, I mean, they'll have their own Internet, but they won't have access to connected to everybody else's. Internet will just be chopped off at every entry.

Cristina: The average Russian person, Russia the country.

Jack: The whole country from within Russia the country. You won't be able to do s***.

Cristina: Why would we do that?

Jack: Because they are attacking an entire other country and we're trying to stop them without war, which seems to be the only way. No, we're just gonna do what we did to the other countries that we didn't want war with. We just can f****** cut them off the same way we do with Cuba and the same way we do in North Korea. Just cut them off. You're gonna be cut off. You're gonna have no resources, gonna suck where you are and f*** you and your people, because we can't have you harassing everybody else and f****** attacking and Murdering everybody else. So we can do that. Then they won't have. They'll have their own Internet to communicate one another, but they can't communicate outwards. You leave Russia if you want to communicate.

Cristina: Mm. What would those. Those countries, those worlds, the one that doesn't lie. Would they have pyramids? What would those be for?

Jack: That's an interesting question. And they probably would, because nobody made a pyramid to lie in the first place.

Cristina: No, but they have the stories written on pyramids. I don't know.

Jack: Not all of them.

Cristina: Not all.

Jack: Maybe there are pyramids without stories written on them that just happens to be that they already like to write stories and there happens to be a pyramid.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Why not write the stories in the pyramid? But if you didn't have the stories, why would that mean you don't have the pyramid?

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: It could be like, well, I need. I want a monument that represents me.

Cristina: Well.

Jack: My favorite shape is a triangle.

Cristina: Make a giant triangle.

Jack: Make a giant triangle and everybody's gonna know, oh, that's Pharaoh Bob.

Cristina: I don't know. That's so weird. I don't know. Such a strange thing.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: Because a pyramid doesn't have a purpose. Or it does, but we don't know what it is. So for someone to be like, imma make it just to represent me.

Jack: I mean, people do that all the time, I guess. And they don't need to lie to do it.

Cristina: No, guess not. Like, we have a pir. Not pyramid. What is that? The statues of the presidents all together?

Jack: Yeah. And those were all real people?

Cristina: Yeah. That's lame.

Jack: It's like a huge thing based on history.

Cristina: Yeah. So they should probably have all that stuff.

Jack: Yeah. I think really, really very little would change. A lot of it would just be the same s***.

Cristina: Yes. What would they do with their free time? I guess. No hobbies.

Jack: Read history books about the world. Build chairs. Because they're practical. They only build practical s***. They don't build non practical s***. Because it's all based on history and logic. You know, everything must serve a purpose. They'd be very literal metaphor, like poetry would tease. Unless it's poetry. It's just. No, because it couldn't. The word play would be hard. Right. So you would need lyric and flow, but you wouldn't have metaphors and wordplay, really.

Cristina: When it comes to Bob with. He's learned this trick of lying. Will he eventually learn other things by himself?

Jack: Maybe he would apply his entire wealth of knowledge to the fact that he just learned how to lie.

Cristina: Mm. So, like, would he be able to make art not based on anything.

Jack: Maybe if he was already a guy who. It would only extend from what he already does. So if Bob was already an artist, then. Yes, if Bob wasn't already an artist. There is nothing about learning how to lie that suddenly just makes him an artist.

Cristina: No, but I'm just saying, like, yeah, if he was artist.

Jack: Yes, if he was an artist. Because he's all red. He'd be like, how do I incorporate the lying into the painting?

Cristina: He remembers you saying, hey, the sky's red, so he paints the sky red. And what would people think when they see it?

Jack: They would be blown away. I mean, he would definitely open the floodgates.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it'd be like, f***, that's crazy. He painted that sky red, but we know the sky is blue. It's just how. Wow, I need this art. He went the extra mile and did something I've never even conceived of. He made the Skyra.

Cristina: That's insane. That should be insane, right?

Jack: That would be crazy.

Cristina: First he said she was naked, now this.

Jack: Yeah, he's. He's just super, mega, ultra celebrity. He does the thing everybody's confused about. It's like hearing Alan Watts talk for the first time.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It's like, what? What?

Cristina: I wonder if it's the only trick, though, when he's telling the lie. Like, everyone wants to hear the same thing.

Jack: Oh, that would suck. It's like, no. Say that thing you said about Stacey.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Do the Stacy thing, man. Do the Stacy thing.

Cristina: That's all they want to hear. They don't care about anything else. Just tell us that thing about Stacy.

Jack: And maybe it's like.

Cristina: And then their p*** is just him saying it.

Jack: No. Maybe it's like, america's Got Talent. And it's like, yes. They think he's gonna do the same thing, right?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And they want the same thing. But then eventually, he tops it off by doing something else. And holy s***, he just brought the fire.

Cristina: What could be crazier than Stacy is.

Jack: Nake points at his car and calls it a truck. What? What?

Cristina: What?

Jack: Do it again. Do it again. That's a truck. Oh, my God. Everybody. Yes, yes, yes, and yes. Oh, yeah. You're going to the next round.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: Takes it to America's Got Talent.

Cristina: He wins.

Jack: There's a girl who just sings about history.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: There's a guy who tells a bunch of jokes about stuff that has happened.

Cristina: Maybe he can combine that with his art, because it's about making a huge performance type of event. Right. American Scout Talent.

Jack: Yeah, but what was he going there for? He was just showing the trick.

Cristina: Yeah, well, he can combine the trick with his art.

Jack: What, like painting?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Oh, like, here's my painting.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, whoa. I mean, yeah. He'd break the Internet.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, can you imagine the first time a red sky has ever been shown? Just. Dude. Everywhere on the Internet. Everywhere on the Internet.

Cristina: People would worry if people who don't know he's doing it. I guess that's why he has to announce it. But even if he announces it, there are gonna be people online who don't know, like, the video just goes to.

Jack: He came straight. There's no. Because that's not a concept. Anything that's not provable. They have no reference point to be freaking the f*** out, because that would violate their already existing nature.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So they would just be confused. The worry wouldn't make sense because they're worried about what?

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: You know.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Man, I love this quantum computer. We could do f****** anything. Why don't we use this thing more?

Cristina: I don't know. We need to be more creative.

Jack: I know. We just need things to throw in there. Because we could do anything with the quantum computer.

Cristina: Yes, we should ask our listeners to give us some things to do.

Jack: Yeah. Tell us what the f*** to do with our quantum computer. What a perfect way to end this episode. Yes, Just tell us what to do with our quantum computer. We can simulate anything to any scale.

Cristina: Just tell us do to Bob next.

Jack: Yeah. What we'll do to Bob next. Yeah. Anyways, when it comes to all this kind of stuff, you guys know. You guys know what I'm about to say. There's other episodes, and you guys can go listen to those other episodes. Stuff.

Cristina: They don't know if it's their first time.

Jack: Well, if it's your first time, you can find all that stuff on the official website. Greatthoughts.info on Apple, podcast, Spotify, or anywhere you get your podcast. Presumably wherever you're hearing this at the moment is one of those locations.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. JustConvopod.

Jack: Yes. And if this is your first time, then you should leave a rating and you should leave a review. And also make sure to subscribe so that you know when all the new stuff comes out, because that matters.

Cristina: And if you're not new, you better.

Jack: Have done all those things because we will come for you.

Cristina: Yes. And let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Or we will come for you. But also, word, of mouth is important.

Cristina: Yes, it is. This has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal, and thanks for listening.

Jack: Bye. Are we ever gonna address the fact that Hot Ones is basically stealing the hot pepper challenge or whatever? The. This. The one where they, like, review s*** or ask questions to each other. It's the same s***, but it's totally stolen idea, right? Answering questions while spicy s*** is destroying your mouth. He didn't originate that idea. He's just a really good interviewer who innovated it.

Cristina: Yeah, he made it better. He's an Elon Musk interviews Steve Jobs.

Jack: Yeah, he's the Elon Musk. He's a Steve Jobs of hot sauce interviews. I invented, but I made it worth it.

Cristina: Yes. What?

Jack: That's how it goes, man. Innovation is important. We need innovation in the world. Eventually, he's gonna become obsolete, and somebody's gonna innovate hot sauce.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Well, it's no longer gonna hurt. It's gonna be real uncomfortable only for that moment, and then there's gonna be a switch. You could turn. So we're really just gonna inject hot sauce into your veins. A new kind of genetically engineered hot sauce that, when I give you this antidote over here, disappears instantaneously. And now you get the experience of hot sauce and the instant cooldown of when you're done with the interview. And Elon Musk is gonna make that.

Cristina: Elon Musk.

Jack: He's gonna invent the thing, and then this guy's gonna be like, ah, we can use it for the hot sauce show.

Cristina: So what do you think he's gonna do with the country if he wins it in that epic battle with Putin?

Jack: That could already have happened. Depending when this happens.

Cristina: That could have already happened. Oh, yes. Good morning. Good morning. This podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by Great dots.info art by Zero Lupo, and logo by Seth McAllister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 168: The Bermuda Triangle

Why do the clouds have a cult in the Bermuda Triangle? Who is their leader? Why do people keep disappearing? And what is up with the electrical interference in that region? Fresh out of things to do, the duo decide to investigate the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle, but the rabbit hole runs so deep they land at an entirely different investigation. Little do they know, they’ll discover something that was hidden right under their noses the entire time!

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • Bermuda Triangle
  • Powerful Downdrafts
  • Ancestors of Mayan and Aztec civilizations
  • Bimini Road
  • Atlantis
  • Technologically Advanced Civilization
  • The Garden of Eden
  • The Great Flood
  • The Secret Doctrine
  • The Secret Doctrine
  • People of Atlantis
  • The Shadow Realm
  • Mermaids & Merman
  • Sirens & Tritons
  • Succubus & Incubus
  • Creatures of Atlantis

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram -https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling podcast, the show where we bring on humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childish ways. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe button to get notified the second new episodes are released.

Cristina: Also, this show most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes. So be sure to pull somebody nice and close so you can keep following the great investigations that we've gone on as of late because of weird things that are happening.

Cristina: And like, it just keeps getting weirder.

Jack: And weirder as s*** keeps hitting the fan more and more. Essentially what's happening s*** just keeps hitting the fan more and more. And so it gets weirder as we need more desperate measures.

Cristina: Except this time, though, like, is it all our fault?

Jack: No.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: I mean, the subhumans do their job and we were trying to defend everything, so it's not really our fault that cat people are crazy. That's not really our fault.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: Yeah. But today we, instead of having something that's following that logic and diving further into how we're going to solve the problem, we still have a bunch of pending solutions in the works. So we instead followed a lead you were curious about.

Cristina: Yes. Can't wait to find out.

Jack: And so we recently found out about cloud civilizations and how they interact with one another, the fact they are heavily militarized and the fact that there are some criminals to which they are militarized for. And in doing that, we found a couple of weird things, including one specific region of our planet that where there is a bunch of clouds that have decided to just rebel even against cloud shapes in general. Just, they're so outside the box that they've just given up in general. And so there is a series of wind currents that have boxed them in. We know this area as the Bermuda Triangle. And the Bermuda Triangle is just essentially.

Cristina: What looks like a cult of clouds of hexagonal cloud. Yeah, same.

Jack: Yeah. They're just there being weird and doing weird thing with exception for very, very round cloud, which is said to be part of reason that either things happen very strange or things are accelerated or people go missing or this or that or blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Cristina: So one specific cloud's fault.

Jack: Well, it's not necessarily this one specific cloud's fault, but you know, they're on all the reports about anything that happens in the Bermuda Triangle. This cloud is referenced. So, yeah, a lot of stuff about that going on. Anyways, so what we do in return is we get a team of subhumans together and start to investigate things as we do, because that's our job. Like, people hear us and they're like, you know, they're always going on these adventures and, like, start trying to stop the evil cat people and s***. And, you know, trips to Mars where a bunch of creatures are. Are held so that we can study them and stuff, and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But we're researchers primarily. We learn about stuff.

Cristina: Not really traveling everywhere.

Jack: I mean, we do, but that's not really our primary job.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: It's not like what we do primarily there. We get informed.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We. We find humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas and we ground them. We bring them down to reality so that people know what's really going on instead of the crazy s*** that they think is going on. Because they try to piece it together and they don't have all the information.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Our real job is to get the information, to get the real. Now, because we're so informed, we're also the most qualified people to go handle a bunch of horrific things and to piece together different kinds of knowledge in order to create innovative solutions. You could call our division the Innovative Solutions Division.

Cristina: That's pretty cool.

Jack: I guess that's kind of our job at the end of the day anyways, because we've already come up with innovative solutions for all our current standing problems, and we need to wait to see if these solutions could be applied. After enough experience is acquired for Steve the groundhog, and after we get Steve the groundhog at peak capacity, then we send him communicate with the cloud people. Now that we understand their structure a little more, try to either find their leader or get in communication with whoever of them want to help us so that then we can talk to the stars, and then the stars can talk to the nebulas, and then we can get a whole thing going on.

Cristina: But I'm sure it's gonna work out.

Jack: So we can work out. Totally gonna work out. Especially because the star could just destroy this whole system, which is definitely in the benefit of, like, every creature here to side with us. If we can get the clouds to pass the message on because they're like, what? Our brothers are being captured. Let's do this. Or whatever is gonna happen. Because they speak like a broad out Hulk Hogan.

Cristina: That's what the stars sound like. That's awesome.

Jack: Maybe. Who Knows. Anyways, so we talking about that weird cult. You were quite interested in what was happening there.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And so we. We went investigating, and as usual, we start with what we can find without having to talk to any of the culprits themselves because they're likely to bullshit us.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So we dove into records. We looked up. Usually we go to the Freemasons library that seems to have books for everything. I don't even know how the f*** they gather all this information, but it has all the information we'd ever need. And so we went there and looked through many, many, many, many, many, many, many books. Got all the subhumans involved. They were not all sub humans. That's an unrealistic f****** statement. But we got a bunch of subhumans involved. 30, 40 together. Just kind of looking.

Cristina: Seems like a lot, though.

Jack: There's billions of them.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And so they came up with a couple of interesting things about the Bermuda Triangle. Now we gotta break down the lore that society has built. Basically the absurd and baffling ideas that they had.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Right. So the absurd and baffling ideas. People fly through the Bermuda Triangle and weird paranormal things happen. People go missing, people die. Time speeds up, time slows down. Enter a different realm, we see things or whatever. All that's probably wrong. It's just a bunch of bullshit. It seems like most people just kind of go straight through. In fact, there's just kind of no f****** record proving any of this.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah. It seems like anxiety is the majority of the f****** thing. It's just a f****** myth, like urban legend at this point.

Cristina: It's an urban legend? No.

Jack: Yeah. It just turned out to be an urban legend. We couldn' find s*** about actual reported cases. Mainly what we looked at was whether or not there was a higher frequency for activity of people going missing and planes going down and ships sinking. And it's absolutely the average of all the oceans. It's.

Cristina: Oh, my God.

Jack: Exactly the same. What happens is a lot of the times reports have people going through.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And they'll be delayed or lose contact. And the story gets written as that. But they never report the fact that the people do arrive where they're going. They just get there late. And so writers and articles and stuff, they always write the first half. Oh, they disappeared. And we didn't hear about them for a while. And then they leave it right there.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Instead of. Well, yeah. Eventually they came back in range and we heard them.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: So it was a weird urban.

Cristina: But even those type of things are normal of planes Being delayed. Like that's not.

Jack: That's absolutely normal. Totally normal now.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: Where we do have to consider differences isn't that this is an anomalous, but not anomalous, but a spot that is an anomaly, but rather that the little bit of higher frequency of activity that does happen there. Because if you were to really take into account the entire ocean, yes, it's slightly higher, people missing and ships sinking and planes falling, but not in an uncommon way. Because wherever there are tremendously large storms.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It tends to be more of that.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So where we have typhoons, we have the same pattern that forms here where we have hurricanes.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: Hurricanes tend to be tropical storms that around this region of warm water become hurricanes. And that's where a bunch of s*** goes down because you'll be normal weather. Suddenly hurricane happens and then you're too deep in and you get sunk or flung out of the sky.

Cristina: Then we blame it on something supernatural.

Jack: Yeah, we totally blame it on something supernatural. What is astoundingly supernatural is almost all hurricanes become hurricanes going through here.

Cristina: That's weird.

Jack: Typhoons have an ability to become typhoons in any range of areas, always in the same kind of oceany side. But the fact that we have a specific pocket that is always the culprit.

Cristina: Interesting for hurricanes.

Jack: Hurricanes. Hurricanes tend to happen here quite often. Tropical storms come through, exit a hurricane. What?

Cristina: But there's not other spots like that. This is the only one.

Jack: This is the only spot.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Yeah. Things go through here and become hurricanes and then they veer in a certain direction this way or that way. But this is. Now there's a hurricane can become a hurricane anywhere. But this is like a tremendously active spot where as soon as they go through, they come out of hurricane.

Cristina: Awesome. So there's something interesting happening here.

Jack: Well, we know what's happening in there. There's a bunch of clouds chilling, doing s***. And clouds have crazy abilities to make weird things happen, including power up storms, creating tornado. Tornadoes hail, create the day, themselves become fog. There's a multitude of things, strong winds and like, you know, you remember we were talking about all this stuff.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The theory that we came up with is that the clouds that are weird and culty here are just evolving. All the storms that come through into vicious monsters. And because they're not going over the land to do anything, but the storm is, they're essentially attacking us indirectly just cuz. F*** them.

Jack: See, they just make something way powerful and it comes and slams into the coast.

Cristina: We heard weird, weird. If that's true.

Jack: For no reason.

Cristina: Yeah. Are they trying to scare us? Like, what's the point of attacking us?

Jack: I don't know. I don't know. And it makes sense that the other clouds aren't like, they don't like that. That makes absolute sense. They're not down with it because, again, the ability, the chance that this could cause a war is pretty, like, prominent now. We know it's not them. We know it's not the other clouds. These are weird group of f****** clouds doing weird s*** for who knows what reason. Yeah. And we couldn't really. We couldn't really zone in on why they're doing what they're doing. What they're doing. There's particularly. Other than just hanging out. Again, it's a very culty. We honestly couldn't get anything. And because we don't have that much on clouds.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: There's not really hard. Yeah, it's really hard. We don't have s*** on clouds. And it's kind of weird. But we can attribute a lot of the planes going down and a lot of the ships sinking. The higher. The slightly higher frequency than the rest of the ocean to the storms forming here, catching people in there. It could be that maybe they're just protecting their own area, the clouds, and they're making these storms happen here, thus sinking and crashing planes and stuff.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And that as they're always doing this, they're always cultivating this. So even if there's nobody there, they're just creating storms or whatever so that by the time a tropical storm comes through, emerges with what they're already doing. And maybe it's not even intentional. Maybe the storm comes through, picks up what they're doing, and keeps moving stronger.

Cristina: Interesting.

Jack: So maybe they're not attacking anybody.

Cristina: No. But they're just. What exactly are they doing?

Jack: Ritualizing storm making.

Cristina: Storm making. Okay.

Jack: Yep. Which is kind of weird.

Cristina: That is weird.

Jack: Now that's one huge explanation for a lot of the things happening. Second, the shape that these clouds have chosen to take allows them to do something that other clouds cannot.

Cristina: What's that?

Jack: Other clouds create winds that either go left to right or in slants.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: These clouds can shoot winds. Gust winds at hundred miles per hour straight down.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: Imagine you're playing flying through, and you get hit by a giant gust the size of a small island. You get just knocked out of the sky. If it's going 100 miles, you got hit by a brick wall, essentially.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just knocked out of sky. If your boat at the bottom, you're Caught between. What happens when you smack water with all your speed solid? What happens if wind were going at a hundred miles per hour, slamming into the water that now becomes solid when that wind hits? And you are a ship caught between the water and the wind?

Cristina: Man, it does sound like they were trying to protect something, but I don't know what that thing could be.

Jack: Well, it's interesting, right?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now, these powerful winds and these storms that seems to be happening there. At first, when it's just the storms, it feels ritual. Ritualizing, chanting, Making rain, making winds, making whatever. Then you add the winds. Well, what. Why are you shooting winds straight down? That's only the hit s***. You don't want people coming through. Why don't you want people coming through? It's my clouds. We're not gonna interfere with your s***. You're just up there. We're down here. Why? What are you protecting? Then we come across an interesting theory that somebody once had and then got perpetuated and moved around. And there's whispers here and there through time that there is technological interference. There's technological equipment somewhere in there. But it's like, we know clouds don't use technological equipment.

Cristina: No, I mean, yeah, we know that they don't. Yeah.

Jack: It doesn't make any sense for them to.

Cristina: That's very strange.

Jack: Why is their patch of the ocean giving technological interference? And then I remember something that I heard a really long time ago, that when. Again, back to that round cloud. When people saw this round cloud, there was electrical disturbance in the equipment, in a plane. The plane was going through. They went through the round cloud. Their. Their compass spun out of control. The ship started, the plane started blinking on and off. Lights and flickering and emergency lights going off and crap.

Cristina: Is it in the cloud?

Jack: They were in the cloud?

Cristina: No, the technology.

Jack: I don't know. Oh, I'm just telling you what I remember from a long time ago, that they were going through that and there was a lot of technological equipment going haywire. So after finding that people were talking about interference, technological interference, and then remembering that story about the cloud, I was like, oh, s***. Yeah, Yeah, I remember that story. One of them, at least. Now, a lot of theories people had about this round cloud is. Is that the Bermuda Triangle is a harvesting spot for aliens. That's why people go missing, because they're getting abducted. This would be a weird one because it would mean that the clouds are working with the aliens.

Cristina: Yeah. What? I was actually thinking the cat people. But which are aliens?

Jack: They're not aliens.

Cristina: Well, they're Alien to us, aren't they?

Jack: No, they're just Earthlings.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Cat people are the first advanced civilization from Earth.

Cristina: But they're so separate from us. It's like. It's weird to say that they're just humans or something.

Jack: They're not humans, but they're not alien. They're Earthling.

Cristina: Earthlings. But they're not honored.

Jack: Different race of Earth. Yes, they are. The cat gods are.

Cristina: Oh, yes, yes, yes. Well, what if it's like. Yeah. Like what they were doing in the lakes?

Jack: I thought I had the same idea. Yeah. What they were doing in Lake Loch Ness.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they had a creature. They had a creature defending it and everything. Yes. So there's a lot of similarities. Except now we're in the sky. Why would you. Now, if you went underwater to be hidden from us, why would you go somewhere? We could just see you. We can see through satellites what's happening with those clouds. We see the hexagonal clouds. Somewhere in there, there's a hidden round cloud, but we see what's happening. You can't do a lot without it being obvious.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So wouldn't make sense. It doesn't check out. The underwater solution makes sense. They're in the last place you'd look for a cat.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: In the water.

Cristina: That makes sense.

Jack: Makes sense. Checks out. And so we follow this lead of advanced technology and start looking at the races of humans that had advanced technologies that aren't the Egyptians. And we go to the basic ones. We know that the Mayans went underground and connected to a matrix style mainframe in order to avoid whatever was happening. And that some of them took off from into space. Into space? They took off into space. So we know that there's literal humans out there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And the other are the Aztecs, who also had a very similar story. The interesting thing about both of these two civilizations is you and I have never questioned how they got so advanced. We just know that they were highly advanced. But in following the lead of advanced technologies, we go look at the people who had advanced technologies and we in researching and digging through their things. You know, the Freemasons library has all the information we need. And we start digging and digging and digging and we come across an interesting theory.

Cristina: What's that?

Jack: A theory that both the Aztecs and the Mayans are preceded by one civilization that was technologically advanced. Very interesting. They share an ancestor that had high advanced technology.

Cristina: Their ancestor?

Jack: Yes. Both the Aztec and the Mayans share an ancestor that had high advanced technology. So the Mayans and the Aztec Are not the original in their timeline, in their. In their lineage.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: There's something predating them. Fascinating. Okay.

Cristina: Do you know this place?

Jack: Well, we start looking through it. We start looking through it and following trails so we. A million different trails happen. We're like, okay, now we gotta follow their origin stories.

Cristina: And this is unrelated to Egypt.

Jack: This is unrelated to Egypt.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: This is an entirely different. Different group of technologically advanced individuals that happened more or less at the same time.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. It happened a little later, but not by. Compared to us, the Mayans or the people before the people before the Mayans.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Didn't happen as far back as the cat people. But as compared to us, they are pretty much just next to them. It's kind of like when you see that how. When were the dinosaurs? And it's like we're like a tiny blip. But all the dinosaurs are kind of like just together somewhere.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah.

Jack: So it's. It follows that logic that the cat gods and cat people are ancient as f***, but so is this other civilization now next to each other. They're really far apart.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But if we're comparing us in that line as well, our line is way the f*** over here. And they're like, just right next to each other.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And so. Interesting. Interesting. And this search leads us to an island called Bimini.

Cristina: That's where the original came from.

Jack: No. Bimini has a lot. A lot of lore. A lot of books about their ancient hieroglyphs and a lot of books about their structures. Talking and interpreting what's on all their hieroglyphs and structures. And they mentioned consistently what seems to be a bunch of advanced technology referenced over and over. And technology that's on water. What Ship technology.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Submarine technology. And we're talking high advanced technology. And so following all their lore, it leads us to their coast. And on their coast, there is a structure. It looks like a wall right there at the beginning of the water.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Statues and rocks. Unique rock formation and statues underwater. Interesting. Okay. So then we start following and it's. It keeps going deeper and deeper. The pattern now the statues and stuff are right at the beginning. That doesn't keep going deeper and deeper.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But there is a formation in the rocks. You could follow essentially an underwater trail. Now it's too deep. We didn't. We weren't ready. We didn't. Didn't know what we were gonna find. We're just doing basic s***. So we have to go regroup. Doing. So we just keep looking at information, you know, while we get the technology that we need to go there in the first place, and we start looking at different sets of lore for the area, for the region. And one of the things that Bimini. The lore in Bimini of their hieroglyphs and of their structures mentions is the Garden of Eden. It's interesting. Okay. Biblical s*** is over here.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Jehovah's Reach is over here.

Cristina: That's weird. Where is this place? Do you know where the island is?

Jack: It's close to the Bermuda Triangle.

Cristina: Oh. Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah, it's in the Bahama Islands.

Cristina: Oh. What?

Jack: It's right there in the area. And the trail does lead towards the Bermuda Triangle. We can't go that deep because that's deep, deep. But we know the trail is headed in that direction.

Cristina: So no one's actually followed that trail. They just know that it's there.

Jack: We follow that trail.

Cristina: We do. Okay.

Jack: But in the course of getting all this information, we read of the Garden of Eden and we're like, but how do you guys have information about the Garden of Eden when Jehovah's way the f*** over there? But we forget there's two different Jehovah's. One Jehovah goes everywhere, One Jehovah stays in his own spot. The problem is, when you look at the fact that we're talking about water. Older, secluded, isolated. My spot, nobody else's spot. And I don't go anywhere. Jehovah is the water God. He's the one about water. He's the one about rain. He's the one about floods. Newer Testament Jehovah, he's the fire God. If this ever happens again, it's happening by fire. Okay, so we can already write off New Testament Jehovah, the Jehovah of Light, but the Jehovah of dark, we thought didn't go anywhere.

Cristina: Yeah, right.

Jack: So why are we talking about the garden? Did he begin somewhere else entirely? And we think he was over there?

Cristina: Well, he moved the garden, I'm guessing. So, like, if it's still here, would they know?

Jack: I don't know. Because when we keep reading those texts, it says that that garden was sunk.

Cristina: Oh, near them.

Jack: Near them, the garden was drowned.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So then we're looking at this trail, and the first thought I have is, holy s***, does this trail go to the f****** Garden of Eden? What? That's f****** nuts.

Cristina: That is nuts.

Jack: That's the. That's all. It's collaborating right there. Right. The garden sank. Jehovah made the garden. We know he created a flood. And what the F***. Are the clouds protecting?

Jack: Are the clouds working for God? Specifically Jehovah?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Well, demigod Jehovah.

Cristina: Yeah, that makes sense.

Jack: Interesting. All checks out. It does, right? And so I'm blowing the f*** away at this point. I'm like, holy s***. Oh, we just found something crazy. If we can get in the Garden of Eden. F****** not. The fruit of not, dude. We're overpowered. If we manage to get that, if it turns out to be what it is. You know what they say it is?

Cristina: Did they say it is? We're just gonna get more knowledge. I mean, infinite knowledge. Okay. Because I thought, like, once they ate it, we all had the infinite knowledge that they had.

Jack: I'm sure they had infinite knowledge. And then we have less and less as time goes by. But if we were to eat it, we'd have all of it unlocked. And they didn't even eat the whole fruit.

Cristina: Bit the fruit. Yeah.

Jack: What happens if we eat the fruit? Not only that, the Tree of Life is there too.

Cristina: Mm. So we can live forever.

Jack: So we can live forever.

Cristina: Know everything.

Jack: I know everything. Solutions.

Cristina: And, like, does that turn us to a demigod? Like, what are we missing?

Jack: Yeah. Now, here's the thing. It would. It wouldn't make us a demigod the way that Jehovah is, but we would be kind of overpowered. We'd have a lot of time. We can't become ethereal the way he is and the way he's trying to create something else, which I believe the newer Jehovah is trying to do. Old Jehovah doesn't seem to give a s***. But the newer Jehovah is the one who's trying to recreate another one, as we've established. You know, trying to make another God so he could just retire. Although it's not even that God. It's a bigger, greater, more overpowered God. And all the gods we're familiar with are just on the road to whatever that bigger, more exaggerated God wants so that he can retire and promote one of these other gods, I guess.

Cristina: Yeah. So it's not even second Jehovah. It's the God God.

Jack: Yeah. It's the bigger God of some tier that we can't even comprehend.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But, yeah, I found that fascinating. And then we. It was. It was just weird.

Cristina: That is weird.

Jack: Fascinating. That, like, gotta get under there. Yeah. So it's the Garden of Eden, just in the Bermuda Triangle. That's my thought. Like, whoa. Weird. And how big is the island? How big is this garden? You know?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Is it A jungle? Is it a f****** continent? What are we talking about here?

Cristina: How big is that triangle?

Jack: The triangle is pretty big. It could be a small. It could be like, you could. You could probably throw an Australian there, maybe maybe a little smaller than an Australian. So I don't know, like, depends on what you want to call it. A huge island. You could throw a huge island in there.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And so, yeah, we're doing the homework. We're doing our work, whatever. Looking at van civilizations. That's. That's the weird part because we still have the advanced civilizations problem. We have the Garden of Eden happening.

Cristina: Oh, so we don't know anything about this first civilization? The first civilization that the other two came from?

Jack: Well, we. We know that it's mentioned in the same hieroglyphs that their books are talking about. And we know that the garden is mentioned in the same hieroglyphs that their books are talking about. And we're like, okay, this is confusing. It looks like they're. The clouds are protecting an island or the Garden of Eden or some s*** that's there somewhere. We don't see it because maybe it's been sunken. It's underwater, but advanced civilization ground underwater. Advanced civilization. Was the advanced civilization is Adam and Eve in the f****** garden. And they just kept evolving and s***.

Cristina: Maybe they're work like they have to be controlling or talking with the clouds. If they are.

Jack: Something interesting like that is going on. Right? It makes perfect sense. And then it clicked in my head and I'm like, it probably is, but we gotta reconvene, we gotta huddle up and really have a deep conversation now. So the sub humans and all of us get together. It's like, okay, what have you guys found? What does everybody have? I need to confirm the theory right now. And they come, they get together, and we're all sharing the information. Everybody dug up something different. Fascinating. Okay, okay, okay. What do we know? Clouds, pressure, things being knocked down. Clearly a protective measure. It's no longer ritual as soon as you leave, just it being storms. Because now you're actively doing things outside of storms. Sinking ships, sinking planes, making sure it's hard for people to traverse the area.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You don't want anybody to do anything. Technology. We get techno technological signatures. Actively. Whatever civilization is technologically advanced is still there. That's the one conclusion we came with. Whatever is happening is still there because there is technological interference.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But it's underwater.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I didn't put it together. Somebody yelled it out.

Cristina: What?

Jack: They just said Atlantis.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And I Was like, oh, s***.

Cristina: That's where Adam and Eve live, in Atlantis.

Jack: Maybe Atlantis is just the current day name of the garden.

Cristina: Of the garden. Yeah.

Jack: And the garden isn't just a tiny little area, but rather an entire landmass.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And in Jehovah's infinite jealousy, anger, fury, his emotional f****** instability, he sank it.

Cristina: That sounds like a thing he would do. Yeah. Okay.

Jack: We get submarines and follow the trail and we go deep and deep and deep. And it keeps going and keeps going. And the trail just keeps going and keeps going. And it feels like forever. It feels like forever. We're looking at our maps, we're looking at radars. We have to be here already. We have to be here. It doesn't look like there's anything down here. What is happening? And then again, this is why we have subhumans. They're f****** genius. One of them just remembered Avengers.

Cristina: What does avengers have to do with it?

Jack: And they're like, well, what about Wakanda? And I'm like, oh, y', all, you guys are just on fire. The same idiots that destroyed everything lately and just it all up and just had to kill Phil and had to get Steve and Train. See? Same idiots so on their fire. And it's like Wakanda. And I'm like, yes, we're probably. It's hidden in plain sight.

Cristina: Like. Yeah, that makes sense. That's part of the story, right?

Jack: Yes. It was already hidden while it was on the surface, but then it got sunk.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And so turn on all the different equipment. Start innovating. Okay. How do we. Radars. How do we create some kind of echo feedback? We need to anything to detect anything, anything. And we send a radio wave that bounces back. What the f*** did you bounce back off of? Oh, we tried everything. Nothing was working. You know that work. Echolocation, this and that and one. Somehow light, light through light bounce back. I'm like, okay, there's something right there.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Go there. Keep sending it. It gets shorter to the distance that it bounces back. Shorter and shorter and shorter and shorter until it doesn't bounce back. And our radar is going crazy. We see things. It's a f****** crazy advanced city, dude.

Cristina: You see the city?

Jack: The city, just as soon as we cross the threshold is just there in front of us. Plain as f****** day.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Immediately looks like rupture for f****** bioshock.

Cristina: Oh, yeah.

Jack: Yep. Minus the need for tunnels. Why? Because as soon as we're getting close, what we see blows our f****** minds.

Cristina: Merman.

Jack: Yes, all of them. Mermaids and Mermen, all of them just freely moving from building to building. Just 3D motion in water.

Cristina: Are they fish looking people or people looking fish?

Jack: They're half. The bottom half is fish.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. And some f****** weirdest thing we've ever seen. But it was fascinating because this is the technological signatures happening on top. And the clouds, they have to be in cahoots with the clouds at this point.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Right. So we go in and we're trying to communicate. We don't speak the same f****** language. It's hard. So we need our auto. Our universal translators.

Cristina: We have to make those or anything. No, they're trying to figure it out.

Jack: They know we're advanced enough to get there in the first place. They just welcomed us with open arms.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They also have translators, but they don't need them because they don't leave. So we just needed to get to the point that we established we need to communicate one another. Boom. Okay. Now we go sit. We go into. They have areas where there is no water.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because this city existed above water before.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: And there are areas that just. So they can handle being outside water and inside of water.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay. Like from the stories we've talked about of mermaids.

Jack: Yeah. We can't. So they just took us to a chamber in which there's just air pockets.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And it leads into a room and there's like a conference hall. An old ancient looking conference hall packed with tech and like, made of stone simultaneously. It's a weird now and then kind of feel going on. And so we sit down and I had all the freaking questions ever, but.

Cristina: It'S that there's technology is made out of stone.

Jack: No, they have stone structures laced with technology.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: Yeah. So first, why does everything reference the Garden of Eden? It's because the ancient people would refer to Atlantis as the Garden of Eden. It was the sacred place. It was the holy place. It's not the actual Garden of Eden.

Cristina: It's not.

Jack: It was just referred to as the Garden of Eden. Now part two to this problem. It's not the Garden of Eden, but they were called the Garden of Eden. Whatever. That city was. Jehovah's first city.

Cristina: What?

Jack: And when the flood happened, that was the primary goal. To sink that. Because they were becoming stronger.

Cristina: Okay, that makes sense.

Jack: The jealous, angry God got scared too. Sink it. Move elsewhere.

Cristina: Mm. What? But. So the Garden of Eden, you. Eden is somewhere out there.

Jack: The Garden of Eden is somewhere out there.

Cristina: All right.

Jack: They don't know where it is. I've asked them as well. Interesting enough. I'm sure the cat people also want to know where that is.

Cristina: Why do you think that?

Jack: Because they never left fully. Why'd they leave anybody behind?

Cristina: Yeah, we still haven't figured that out.

Jack: There has to be some connection as to what? What do you need that you haven't figured out? You know, there's. There's a key there somewhere.

Cristina: So are these fish people trapped there or are they just keeping other people away?

Jack: They're keeping other people away there. They can leave if they want to. Which is interesting, because some of them do. They're just not allowed to come back after they do. If you leave, you leave.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: Interesting. Right? Now, things we didn't know about the people in Atlantis through stories and crap. Because there's stories and crap of Atlantis. Yes, we. We heard that they had abilities, we didn't know. What kind of abilities. One of the abilities. Telepathy. They can telepathically just send you a message. It can communicate straight to your mind. They can communicate to each other that way. Okay, interesting. So you're highly technological and you have these other abilities that naturally evolved. Okay, part two. You were on land. How are you what you are?

Cristina: Yes. How?

Jack: After the sinking, a dome was erected during the process as the whole landmass fell to the bottom. Great. Fantastic. The explanation is Jehovah not only flooded this region entirely, but he also, using his absurd power, removed the bottom of the landmass, creating a giant crater and it sunk. So they immediately, using their high advanced technology, created a dome.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The dome is using their energy. The energy is gonna run out. Because they were solar powered society, you're now underwater. You're running on reserve energy. And until you come up with new energy supplies, you're f*****. You're eventually gonna run out of energy. You're all gonna drown. Solution Genetically engineer each other to be capable of surviving underwater. Advanced technology.

Cristina: That's way advanced.

Jack: Way advanced. Mastery over genetics. Here you go. People who could just live underwater. It's not an act of nature, it's an act of science. Now this happens before most of the things happen on Earth.

Cristina: Because this is a long time ago.

Jack: Very long time ago.

Cristina: Are we still at it as advanced.

Jack: Or even more way more. I proceed to ask, how do you guys, this far down the line, know the story? So clearly there is a book that tells their stories. They have everything in a digital format. But we can't read any of that s*** because it's technology outside of our reach. Nothing we have is compatible. And we don't know how to work with it. That being said, we have people who are highly advanced technologically and aren't the clouds with advanced technology. That's two different groups of overpowered. That could help us against the cat people. But they would have no reason. It would be more about, hey, let's be friends, and then help your friends.

Cristina: Well, they might have. Well, depending on if we find out what the cat people want, like, you might involve them too. We don't know.

Jack: But we don't know. We don't know as of yet. So they give us the book. They don't need it. It's an outdated thing. It was basically just in a museum that they had. It's called the Sacred Doctrine, and it's essentially the Bible of these people.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But they have. They've gone beyond materialism, and this is just an artifact at some point.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And, like, other creatures found us finally. Yeah. Give it to them. S***. They can know our entire history or whatever. And so, yes, we have a book of how they got to where they are. And so we start going, you know, we leave. We start skimming through it. Now we have contact with them. We got to figure out how to create a actual connection so we can communicate with them outside of their home.

Cristina: And the sacred doctrine is a real book.

Jack: Sacred Doctrine is a real book? Yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And we're talking. We're going through the sacred doctrine, and it suggests that the. This gets weird. It suggests it's used. As if it's not weird enough already. But it suggests that the people of Atlantis weren't the first people.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yes. So there is people before the people of Atlantis.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: While the people of Atlantis are technologically advanced, there's one word that just stuck out about the ancestors. They were ethereal.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Which is like. Hold up. I don't understand. Now, this one was a hard one for me to wrap my head around.

Cristina: I thought they were gonna be related to Adam and Eve somehow, or.

Jack: Adam and Eve ethereal or.

Cristina: Yes, I guess.

Jack: Oh, this is weird situation. Right. Adam and Eve, the possibility that they're ethereal. We'll shelf that for a second.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The ancestors are ethereal.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That says it in the book. Before technology, we were metaphysical. We didn't even really solidly exist in physical reality. We were here, but we weren't here. And that one is one I'm familiar with. Then all the piece again. Grounding humanity's most absurd, baffling ideas. Everything pieced together instantaneously. When I read Ethereal was confused for a split Second. And I'm like, wait, we know of a place where there's a bunch of s*** that's kind of here and kind of isn't here. And also, that's exactly where angels and demons are f****** from. Yes, the shadow realm.

Cristina: But now it really makes me wonder, did God make us or did he take us out of that other realm?

Jack: Hold on. Then the confusion lifts and the fog goes away. There are two gods named Jehovah, and we literally refer to one as the Jehovah of Light and the other as the Jehovah of Dark. Jehovah of Dark can only move slowly through this world of ours while the other one can go anywhere he wants. He must just be from here. While the old one happened to not.

Cristina: And came from the shadow realm.

Jack: He's from the shadow Realm.

Cristina: He's the reason we're here.

Jack: Not necessarily.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Jehovah didn't make us. He tried to convince us. He made us. That's two very different things. He's a manipulator, a liar, jealous, angry, pathological. I'm the strongest. This. I'm the. No, you're not.

Cristina: So he might not have made us. What?

Jack: What event led Jehovah of Dark to come from the shadow realm? Is a question. Because we know things in the shadow realm need fear. Mm, interesting. Another interesting detail is fear was his main goal. While wars and things happened after. What, Christianity. All the wars weren't for the sh. He needed fear. That's all he needed to come through. He didn't need adrenochrome. That's for the f****** Jehovah of Light. We've been confusing who these individuals are entirely.

Cristina: Cuz it's so similar.

Jack: They're similar, but they're different.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We have Jehovah of Dark working off of Fear alone and Jehovah of Light working off of adrenochrome.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Two vastly different individuals who perform vastly differently. Interesting. It's just. I'm telling you, this gets so much weirder and weirder and weirder.

Cristina: How does that relate to us though? What is the timeline here then?

Jack: I don't know.

Cristina: Are we shadow people somehow? But then we come from the cats. We know that. But there was other people on Earth that were.

Jack: We don't come from the cat people.

Cristina: I thought you said we did.

Jack: No, the cat people predate there way long ago. But we didn't come from the cat people. They enslaved the people that we do come from.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: We were worshiping them. We were their b******.

Cristina: Oh, man. What's the timeline? Of who are you worshiping?

Jack: Yes. It's crazy. But one. We got more questions. Where the h*** did Jehovah One come from? Shadow Realm. Okay. Why? Why? How? What the f*** Event allowed you to manifest, and then how do you solidify that s***?

Cristina: Where's the real Garden of you Eden?

Jack: Garden of Eden is in the shadow realm.

Cristina: It's in the shadow.

Jack: It has to be, because the shadow realm is where the angels and demons are from.

Cristina: Oh, yes.

Jack: That's why we can't find it. He's not hiding it. It was never here.

Cristina: It was never here.

Jack: It was just. It's just a place over there.

Cristina: But then that's even more confusing about Adam and Eve.

Jack: That's assuming Adam and Eve are the first people, which there's many arguments that they're not. Again, this is more stories by this pathological, lying demigod. This is bullshit. He spews just.

Cristina: He could have kidnapped people to put them in the garden.

Jack: That is another possibility he manifests over here. He's like, what the f*** is this place? And then just snatches up people, takes them to the shadow realm, and then puts them in this place they can't escape. The Garden of Eden.

Cristina: Yes. Okay, that makes more sense. Yeah.

Jack: Is he the creator of everything in the Shadow realm? And Adam and Eve were humans that then became Djinn. Because we know humans become Djinn. We're the first two people. Not really the first two people, but the first two. Djinn was there just a solitary God over there, sad and lone and lonely. And he stole things from the populated side. And then that cultivated millions of years ago. It slowly made Jinn and any other kind of creature that happened on that side.

Jack: I don't know what he did. Theories. Just theories.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just spitballing over here.

Cristina: He's just stealing things from here and moving them over there.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: That's where you get.

Jack: But specifically, what it said in that book, the sacred doctrine was ethereal celestial entity.

Cristina: But angels and demons, they're also just ethereal, right?

Jack: Yes, yes, yes, yes.

Cristina: Like, he didn't kidnap anything to turn to make those. I think. I don't know.

Jack: Who knows? The idea here is maybe Adam and Eve were taken into the shadow realm, and then they evolved into a thing that can manifest on this end and that somehow figured out a way to stay over here the same way Jehovah did. And those people became the people of Atlantis. It began over here, went over there, evolved over there, came back over here, and then evolved again. And then we get the people of Atlantis okay, interesting.

Cristina: But then, what is our history? What?

Jack: What? What is. Yes. What is our history? Interesting, though.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So we start looking through all this, find all this information, get back in contact with the people of Atlantis. We actually have to go there every time we want to talk to them. There's no other way to communicate. We have to go there.

Cristina: Lame.

Jack: But okay, so we go there. This is all, by the way, all this happened in a f****** week.

Cristina: What a busy week.

Jack: Busy week. I mean, we had nothing else to do. We already have all our plans set and we're just kind of waiting on that. So we're just falling down the rabbit holes, I suppose. And so we start talking to the people of Atlantis. And we're like, talk to us? Talk to us. What's happening? They know. As much as somehow we're formally related to humans, there's some connection that isn't in their book. And they don't know the lineage of that for whatever reason. Where they're high advanced technology. That part isn't recorded.

Cristina: Sketchy, but does make sense because they're just the first city, they said. Of God City.

Jack: Yes. So it's possible that all of us came from them. Yeah, but then we know that the Cat people predate the s*** out of them. And they were humans there already. This is the first technologically advanced city.

Jack: The Cat people had high technology. Not to this degree. Because they got the f*** out.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then evolved their technology elsewhere.

Cristina: Which one? Wait, what happened first?

Jack: Cat people.

Cristina: The cat people haven't.

Jack: First Cat people became godlike? Technologically, yes.

Cristina: While these people were around.

Jack: Yeah. These people came after. Okay, not too long after, but they came after. They could have been happening at the same time, but they weren't technologically advanced yet. Maybe they were still in their ethereal forms.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: No way to know. The timelines get iffy when you go too far back. Yeah, because we in our crappy human bodies can't really piece it together.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But they know that they're somehow related.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Now, again, they genetically engineered themselves to survive underwater.

Cristina: Yeah. They were just like us, though, before.

Jack: Just like us.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But they come from ethereal beings. That's weird. How do you end up just like us if you were from the Shadow Realm? More questions. We Questions. This is just questions flying out and few answers anywhere.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But we get the breakdown of how these people really are. Mermaids and mermen by default. Just. That's what they are. That's the name. That's a. The End Simple.

Cristina: That's what we call Them. Or that's what they call themselves.

Jack: Yeah, it's the same s***. It's. It's just the same word in a different language.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: The translator just translated to mermaid and merman.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: For plural. Of all people, merman. Now we had some misconceptions because sirens and tridents are not bad. Those are soldiers.

Cristina: Okay, I guess that makes sense. But aren't they the ones trying just attacking randoms?

Jack: No, those are the succubus and the incubus that we kept confusing for the sirens and the tridents. Those are essentially the rogue clouds. That's what the f*** they are. Those are the ones that leave and start manipulating people and attracting people and sucking their. Because it's essentially. What are you trying to get? Adrenochrome.

Cristina: Oh, okay. What? Yeah, okay.

Jack: So ethereal beings taking adrenochrome. Fear made you land here. You became physical. Now you are just good. Somehow that happened. Then you genetically engineer yourself after the sinking to survive the potential collapse of your energy sources so that you don't need that energy and you could. You have time to rebuild and figure it out.

Cristina: Yeah, great.

Jack: Then you create not militias, but militaries to survive. Police each other, make sure that people aren't committing crimes or whatever. So the sirens. Okay, and the tridents, literally the names of a staff. And what we hear when the cops come. Sirens just given in the name. We're idiots. And then think about it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's just in the name to begin with. That's their police force, their military. Those are tridents and sirens. Great. Fantastic. Makes sense. All advanced civilizations have policing mechanisms.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then the succubus and the incubus are criminals. They commit the high crimes, they commit the murders, the rapes. They go out and f*** with humans when they're not supposed to go out, so they're not allowed back in. You turn into whatever the f*** you can turn into out there, but they're not gonna. They're not gonna follow you back in.

Cristina: But they're so different because we confuse them with ghosts.

Jack: Yes. They. Well, we know what happens when you have adrenochrome. You physically morph, you change.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah, that's true. Yes. Oh yeah. It doesn't even have to look anything like it.

Jack: Nope.

Cristina: Like sometimes they do, but they don't.

Jack: Yes. And food sources that they technologically create to sustain themselves doesn't exist outside of that area because they make everything. It's self sustained. It doesn't exist outside of there. So they have to improvise. Thus Having to attack people and eat people and eat, drink blood and all this bullshit. Everything comes back to f****** adrenochrome. Everything comes back. There's no escaping adrenochrome. But it seems like lately we can also connect to the opposite. The shadow Realm. To everything f****** everything connects back to the shadow realm or adrenochrome. It's one or the other.

Cristina: Yes, Both.

Jack: And, yeah, a lot of time it's both. Because our only way to get there as humans is adrenochrome.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: Very interesting. Especially if we somehow are related to it. If we somehow come from it. Like, what does that even mean?

Jack: Why? Why do we have a way in? Yeah. Okay. So we use dream and chrome to get there. Right? Right. Why does anything on Earth have a way into the Shadow Realm if it's a whole different realm? We shouldn't be able to physically exist at all.

Cristina: No.

Jack: We do something, we don't really question. So our bodies are at least meant to survive somewhere that doesn't seem like they should. Weird. And how do we do it? Well, with something that already exists inside of the body. What, so we're not using magic or some s***? No, we're using some. It's all biological.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: To then enter an ethereal state.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Fascinating.

Cristina: That's weird.

Jack: Yeah, it's pretty weird. And so. Yeah, they don't really understand that either. It gets fuzzy when we start talking about that.

Cristina: Okay. They don't know.

Jack: They know everything about them on this side.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They don't know s*** about them on that side. They do know Jehovah was on this side. Jehovah of Dark. But everything tells us Jehovah of Dark is literally Jehovah of Dark. The shadow realm type dark.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But that's our theory is they haven't told us this.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Right.

Cristina: That makes sense. What?

Jack: And. Yeah. So that's all we got. That's all the information we got. We found f****** Atlantis. That's f****** great. We saw a bunch of people way more advanced than we are.

Cristina: The first city.

Jack: The first magic advanced city.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And the last thing they did was we were curious about, like, what is life like in your weird contained bubble? So they told us about other things. Like the Kraken is a real creature. Kraken is a creature that circles somehow. We didn't come across it, but it circles the outside of their dome.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: It would have just f***** us up.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And when ships fall, the Kraken's the one just pulling them down. That has zero to do with the clouds. The clouds are taking out the planes.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And yes, the clouds are on their side. It's all like. We take care of each other.

Cristina: Did they say that there was a main cloud? Like that circle cloud?

Jack: They've never heard of that.

Cristina: What?

Jack: That. Working with the clouds. But they've never heard of that. Which means those clouds have never heard of that. There's something weird going on with that that we have not figured out. There's something stranger. Yeah. Because we would see it. We haven't. And everything says, oh, yeah, we saw it, but the clouds haven't seen it. The clouds can't see it, but we can. Weird.

Cristina: We thought those clouds were protecting it.

Jack: We thought they were. We were trying to piece together what was happening based on our own rationale.

Cristina: They're protecting the things in the water.

Jack: They're protecting it because Atlantis is allowing them to have the purest air.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The rest of the world is toxified by us.

Cristina: What is that one cloud doing?

Jack: They've never heard of that cloud. And the clouds themselves have never heard of that cloud. And they also have a method to communicate with the clouds, by the way.

Cristina: That's how you know. Yeah.

Jack: They can communicate with the clouds technologically. Not even using powers or anything, just technologically.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: No adrenochrome, no nothing.

Jack: They just have the tech to do it.

Cristina: So what is that cloud?

Jack: Don't know. But yeah. So the Kraken giant octopus circles the outside of the dome, usually pulling s*** into the water that's lingering too long. Defense. They're not trying to be bad. They're not trying to be hostile. They're trying to stay safe. They were literally drowned by a God. They would like to stay away from.

Cristina: That radar and from other gods.

Jack: From other gods.

Cristina: Like, there's a bunch of others.

Jack: Yeah. It would be difficult for God. Apparently, gods do struggle with going underwater in general because of their abilities. They up is where they go, not down.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So down allowed them to stay safe from any other God that might fear their power.

Cristina: What about the gods that are of water?

Jack: That doesn't seem to be a real thing.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah. Stories and s***. Probably them. Stories.

Cristina: It could be. Sorry. Of them.

Jack: So, yeah, stories of them. There's also an eel dragon. This is a common animal that they have that doesn't exist outside of their dome. It looks like a Chinese dragon.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Like a giant snake dragon. But it's just a normal creature. There's many of them.

Cristina: And they live inside the dome?

Jack: Yeah, they just live inside the dome. The Kraken is genetically engineered an octopus. They put that outside. That's kind of like the Loch Ness Monster.

Cristina: They made these eel dragons.

Jack: No, that's just normal. That was there. That was there just as part. It evolved while they were down there.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Top of that there is a lot of the creatures are kind of like snake like. Like the Leviathan is a real creature. Now here's what's weird. The Leviathan also exists in the Shadow Realm.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And the Leviathan is a serpentine creature that exists here too.

Cristina: What is happening?

Jack: Don't know. They don't understand that either. A part of the goal of the tridents and the sirens is to protect against the Leviathan that are incredibly hostile creatures.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So they push them to the outskirts of the inside of the dome because somehow they can get through the dome. The dome doesn't stop them.

Cristina: Okay. Because there's some. There's something else.

Jack: There's something else somehow. And they don't exist anywhere else in our oceans. They're attracted specifically to this one group of people that seems to be the Orig. Their origin seems to be the Shadow Realm somehow. And these snakes from the Shadow Realm are attracted to them.

Cristina: I'm guessing it has something to do with the guy that wanted them dead.

Jack: Interesting. So you think Dark Jehovah sends that out because he himself can't go there.

Cristina: Yeah. So he's got those fish hunting them.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: He probably isn't watching them or anything. He just let them out and then now they're doing their thing, always tracking.

Jack: Them down for all of infinity.

Cristina: Interesting.

Jack: And yeah, so that's pretty much some of the things. There's a bunch of other creatures, but they're just variants of our creatures that evolved in weird kind of ways.

Cristina: What? Like what though?

Jack: Just water things.

Cristina: Fish and crap.

Jack: There's nothing like exciting like a shark. They'll just be a shark.

Cristina: A giant shark.

Jack: I guess it could be giant or super tiny shark. It's just shark at the end of the day.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Shark with an extra fin or, you know, who cares? It's just other normal s***. They were just telling us the exotic things.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: But yeah, so that's what I've been up to this week.

Cristina: That sounds like fun.

Jack: Got a bunch of s*** done.

Cristina: Except you didn't get to get that apple.

Jack: No, I was excited about that. That's somewhere else. Probably in the Shadow Realm, which makes it way harder because navigating the Shadow Room is a f****** nightmare.

Cristina: We should get a clone of ourselves.

Jack: And just fling them in there.

Cristina: Yes. Well, maybe some adrenal chrome or whatever.

Jack: As we talk to the people of Atlantis and figure out their tech, and maybe they share some of it with us and we can just communicate, maybe give them a pass so they can go use some of their tech. Maybe we can create a small quote federation of some sort and they can join us, send some of their advanced scientists to Mars so that they can then check out the things we have over there. And with their advanced knowledge and they can bring some other events. Like if they don't want us to touch it, that's fine. You guys can just do it and run experiments, run studies, do whatever you got to do. We have a bunch of s*** from the shadow Realm up there. We have a bunch of s*** from Earth up there. We just got a bunch of s*** up there. You guys can run experiments, help us figure s*** out. And in this way, perhaps you can figure out how to allow us to sustain a form in the shadow Realm effectively. Navigate it effectively. And then we can figure out how to map that mess out.

Cristina: And if you can do it without adrena, grow adrenochrome, that would be great.

Jack: Yep. That would be completely phenomenal. If we could do that without adrenochrome.

Cristina: It'S gotta be possible. Maybe. Probably not.

Jack: But I mean, we've sent things in. It's just hard to sustain anything because we can't really exist there unless we find out how. And now we have the people of Atlantis. They probably aren't realistically. Probably not gonna want. They like their privacy. Yeah, probably gonna disagree to everything I've just said. But it doesn't hurt to ask.

Cristina: Wait, the Bigfoots, they can travel through there, right?

Jack: Yes, but so can fairies. Bigfoots are some sort of fairy.

Cristina: Okay, because we have your child, they grow up super fast. He'll be like in his 30s next week. And then we can just be like, hey, we got an important job for you, or something.

Jack: Yeah, but he's like, partially human. Can it still work?

Cristina: Huh? I don't know. I was assuming that all Bigfoots work like that.

Jack: But no, this Bigfoot is partially human, so I don't know how that works. Not only human, but human would clone DNA. It's not even like perfect DNA.

Cristina: That's true.

Jack: It's copy DNA.

Cristina: Oh, yes.

Jack: There's probably. There's probably a lot of problems happening there.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jack: Anyways, that's pretty much what we have going on. That's all we did. We got all that solved, all that discovered and million f****** questions. But on the bright side, we did find out that Jehovah of dark is of shadow and Jehovah of light is of physical.

Cristina: Mm. We figured out a lot. I think we figured out a lot.

Jack: Yeah, we did. We answered a bunch of questions, but we definitely ended up with way more questions, of course, because that's how at.

Cristina: Least some questions were answered. Yeah, maybe like two or three, but that's something.

Jack: It's better than nothing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Anyways, if you guys like this discussion want to be informed on some of the other details we have, like the Shadow Realms. There's a whole episode that it is a Shadow Realms and preceding that episode, just a couple of episodes about things from the shadow realm. Although we're always talking about things from the shadow realm. And you can also find out about gods and blah blah, blah. Every single topic has been discussed in some other manner, shape or form. Except Atlantis. This is a first.

Cristina: We might have mentioned something somewhere.

Jack: Creatures from Atlantis. Thinking they weren't. That never crossed our minds at all. We were just basically stereotyping and being racist, it seems.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah, you can find all that stuff at the official website greatthoughts.info or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or anywhere you get your podcasts.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok at justcombopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to. To subscribe and rate and review the show and then leave us emojis of water and mermaids. Mermaids, yeah.

Cristina: Yes. Let someone who may like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes. Word of mouth. If you want somebody to find out about all the things talking about Atlantis that exists in the world and if they are already believers of Atlantis, well, this is going to be exciting to them.

Cristina: And if you know anything about that round cloud, tell us.

Jack: Yes, somebody tell us about this f****** round cloud. Because we now we have to go figure this out. That's a whole other problem.

Cristina: We got the whole thing solved. Except for that. That's like the missing piece of the Bermuda Triangle.

Jack: Yeah, that's the part we thought that the whole point was. Yeah, that's why we thought Cult.

Cristina: Yep.

Jack: But it wasn't a cult at all.

Cristina: It was just some random cloud hanging out.

Jack: Yeah, that's the problem. That's the problem. I put like giving non humans human characteristics. We thought like, okay, they're in the middle of nowhere. It's like a compound. They're walled in. And then they got like a one different. And then all of them are one pattern uniformity or whatever. Cult. No, we were wrong. It had nothing to do with any of that. We're just f****** over here. Personifying clouds.

Cristina: Yep. Crazy wrong. Yeah. This has been the Rambling Podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening.

Jack: Bye. That was the narrative of that.

Cristina: Yeah, like he's the guy that was there in 911 handing out 8 candy or something.

Jack: That doesn't even make sense. 911 happened in 2001 and AIDS candy happened in the 80s.

Cristina: I don't know how those things are related.

Jack: No, then he wasn't. Maybe he was in both, but not at the same time.

Cristina: Okay, okay. Maybe he's in one of them. Yeah, see, I remember that I was born after 911 and he was telling me the story about 9 11.

Jack: Oh, right, because you didn't know crap about 9 11. You only recently learned about 9 11. Which begs a question of which clone I really am and where along the line. Because I'm a clone of a ghost. Yes, a ghost robot. Because when, presumably when the show started, that was a ghost robot.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by greatthoughts.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 130: Human Aliens

What if all the UFOs we’ve seen through the years weren’t being flown by alien lifeforms, but by ancient human astronauts that left Earth long ago? What if every ancient collapsed civilization was technologically advanced in ways we don’t understand? And what if each one managed to get a select group of people off the surface of Earth? The duo unpacks the theory of ancient human astronauts.

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed:

  • Forgetfulness
  • Pyramids of Giza
  • Mayans
  • Ancient Humans
  • Generational Ships
  • Humans From Mars
  • Are 51
  • Stonehenge
  • The Great Void

Art by IG @Zero_Lupo

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Just Conversation Podcast, the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childish ways. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe subscribe button to get notified the second new episodes are released.

Cristina: And also, this show is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes, it is very important that you find somebody to listen to this show with you. Can you imagine?

Cristina: There's no way you could keep doing that.

Jack: That would be great, though. Everything I say just happens. I. This. It sounds familiar, though.

Cristina: What the.

Jack: What kind of a. There's a show or something that did that. Everything he says sounds like this. Almost like you're somewhere between heavily restrained and extreme.

Cristina: Is it, like, from a cartoon or something?

Jack: Man, I don't know. I feel like it's a children's show. Maybe some crap like the reading Rainbow, but LeVar Burton never spoke like that, so it has to be some equivalent. It's not Mr. Rogers. He just spoke like a white guy.

Cristina: Are you positive it wasn't him?

Jack: No, it sounds more like this sounds more like a pedo who's just totally trying not to rape all the children that he's around them by.

Cristina: Doesn't sound familiar. Is it a hippie?

Jack: Is it a hippie? I don't know. It. It doesn't sound familiar to you? It totally sounds familiar to me. Like it's based on something. What children's show?

Cristina: Was it a movie?

Jack: No, I'm pretty sure it was a show.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: I'm like, pretty sure it was a show, but I don't know what show was. Yeah, but, yeah, tell people about the show.

Cristina: Tell everybody.

Jack: Let them know they should be listening to the show. It's very important.

Cristina: It sounds familiar. I just don't.

Jack: Yeah, I don't know what the f*** it is either.

Cristina: I don't know what that is.

Jack: It's weird. Well, here's the thing. People have an ability to remember without remembering.

Cristina: I don't know what does have to do with anything.

Jack: A good example is when you are about to try to talk and somebody's like, hey, what's the name of that thing? Yeah, and you're like, oh, f***, I know the name. I know the name. It's like it doesn't come out. You remember, like, you know what you're Trying to think of. But for whatever reason, you can't think of it.

Cristina: Mm. I forgot what that was called. We were talking about that in deja vu. For some reason, that was one of the things. Random.

Jack: Yeah, you're totally right. I remember that.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Interesting, man. I wonder, like, what the real engraved, like, psychology behind that is. Like, we know it's a phenomenon. My question is, like, what's causing that to happen in the first place?

Cristina: Death. I don't know. That's. That is a weird. That's a weird thing we do.

Jack: Yeah, it happens a lot, too. It's like, whatever you're trying to remember.

Cristina: The most, it's there. But some, like, you can't find it. I don't know. Your brain is a library, and you.

Jack: Can'T find the book.

Cristina: You can't find. Exactly.

Jack: Exactly. Like, it's there. And in fact, you know where the book is that you're looking or where should be. You know where the book should be, but it's misplaced.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Same thing happens. There's weird instances like that when you have your key or whatever, and you're, like, looking for your key while holding your keys. Like, wait a minute.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Or talking on your phone, telling somebody, I don't know where the f*** my phone is.

Cristina: What is that?

Jack: It's a weird lapse of, like, thought happening right there. It's a really weird thing that happens, but it goes to show the total stupidity of humanity.

Cristina: How is this.

Jack: Because it's like we're forgetting things we're actively remembering.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's where we are. We're literally forgetting the thing we remember. We can't just remember it. We're so dumb. We're forgetting the thing we remember, man. It makes you wonder how we get.

Cristina: Anywhere because of that.

Jack: Yeah. Like, okay, how do we. How do we. How do we do anything, really? Right.

Cristina: Our memory isn't that crap. It's just really randomly that it's that crap.

Jack: Dude. We are part of the most. Or I guess the only. But relative to the rest of the world, we're one of the most technologically advanced locations in the face of the planet. Right. Obviously. Let's not count Singapore. Let's ignore Hong Kong, and let's ignore Japan for a moment. And South Korea. Basically. The Asians got it down. Specific Asians, but the Asians. Technology and advancement and just being advanced societies. Right?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We have such a technologically advanced giant masterpiece of civilization going on, and we did that despite being f****** stupid. That's kind of impressive because, again, we'll forget our keys while holding them.

Cristina: Yet somehow cities, the magic of writing it down. We got it all down somewhere. Meh, meh.

Jack: Like, how do we remember to write it down? How does anything work?

Cristina: How does anything work?

Jack: How does anything work?

Cristina: My memory's not that. Correct.

Jack: Look, we can't even figure out not killing each other.

Cristina: Most of us can. And some. I don't know that's true.

Jack: The same people who have the power to kill one another and do are the ones in charge of making the buildings. How do we get from point A to point B? Like, you're over here. Okay, yeah, some of us do. Yeah. None of those people have power. Everybody with self control, zero power.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So who gives a s***? Who gives a f*** how much control they have?

Cristina: Well, not everyone with power wants to murder everyone.

Jack: No. But everyone with power is kind of psychotic, kind of one way or another. So how the f*** do we get from point A to point B? We're the peak. Right now is the most advanced moment in all of history where all the technology is at its most advanced. All. Or whatever.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Like it has to be the f******. Like, man. We don't have the capacity. Right.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Like, let's. Let's think about this. If the pyramids were built by us, we had that level of intellect back then.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And we're better than we were then.

Cristina: Yes. Now that's what we assuming. Yes. Yeah.

Jack: That's why we just come to the conclusion that it was f****** aliens. Right.

Cristina: Because we can't figure that out.

Jack: Because we can't figure that out.

Cristina: We figured out before. We could totally figure it out.

Jack: The question is, here's a. Here's the real question. Here's your question. All jokes aside. Did we. Was it aliens?

Cristina: Was it aliens?

Jack: Was it aliens?

Cristina: Why would they want to do that?

Jack: I don't know.

Cristina: That's a waste of time for them.

Jack: What do you mean?

Cristina: Like, they came here and did what exactly?

Jack: I don't know why they came here, but one of the reasons. One of the things they left behind were something like the pyramids. Like, I'm 100% sure if aliens made the pyramids, it wasn't like, go down to Earth, make the pyramids. Aight. We out. Like, I'm definitely sure that's not how it went.

Cristina: So what would.

Jack: It's beyond our understanding, I guess.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But like, that's just one of the things that happened.

Cristina: Mm. You know, aliens came.

Jack: But. But the argument would be, what if there were aliens at all? What if we really did do it? Then how do we. How do we argue that point? Because we. Let's say. So, no aliens, right? We've never seen proof of aliens or anything. In fact, we find proof that people made these things more. We don't know how the f*** they did it. And that's why we're like, aliens did it. But it's like, okay, we have no evidence of aliens. Zero. In fact, we can prove people built it. We just don't know how they did it.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So, okay, then we go further into the argument, right? And it's like, okay, well, aliens gave them the instructions, and where the f*** are the instructions? That means it's f****** possible. It's possible to be built by f****** humans. And if machines were used, where the f*** are those?

Cristina: I don't think so. I mean, wouldn't they have drawn the machines or something because they were drawing in there? Or that wasn't the people who made it?

Jack: Well, I don't know. Let's think about this real quick. We've seen. There have been episodes where we have looked into these. Like the Great Pyramid of Giza looked inside and see.

Cristina: Yes, there has been some weird.

Jack: There are drawings, and there's literally, like, power coils inside and s***. And it's like, okay, this is ancient. How do you have electrical mechanisms?

Cristina: All right, that could be something else. We're misunderstanding.

Jack: In fact, that's how we concluded that the Mayans did have electricity and thus went to the center of the Earth and connected to the matrix.

Cristina: Yes, that is true. So, but did they have the aliens help, or were they just that smart?

Jack: This. Look, here's my argument. Here's my argument about this, right? If we're perfectly reasonable and really, really think about this, I'm thinking that there are two groups of people. And when we talk about ancient advanced civilizations, we literally mean people that were there, that did not become us, that went extinct or left the planet, or like the Mayans connected to the f****** matrix at the center of the Earth or underground or whatever the f***.

Cristina: Or they flew away.

Jack: Or they flew away. Okay, but the argument would be that there was extremely advanced technology in civilizations that existed here ahead of time. That would be the real argument. And then that would explain things like Stonehenge and things like Machu Picchu and the Great Pyramid of. The great Pyramids of Giza and all that crap. This one called Puma, Puma Kamaku or some s*** like that.

Cristina: Oh, what?

Jack: All these weird ancient sites are just odd marvels of engineering that doesn't even make f****** sense.

Cristina: What does the Puma thing look like?

Jack: It's some sort of temple built in parts.

Cristina: Whaaat?

Jack: Basically, Puma Punku is one of the weirdest structures that exists on the planet because it has the layout of what would be different pieces of a temple.

Cristina: But they're not together.

Jack: They're not together as if you could in theory project a temple onto the layout. But the concept of a projector should only make sense if you have electricity and if you already know that you can turn that electricity into projected light. So like way further than we are now in technology.

Cristina: Are you sure? It looks like they just. It just looks like they just started building it and then like it doesn't look like anything really. It doesn't look like a complete.

Jack: No, no. The layouts that they have. So there, there's some blueprints where scientists and archaeologists, a bunch of people together, sort of crafted what this would look like all put together. And it looks like it's a complete structure. There was. There's some sort of temple that's built downward, but in an open area. Like they cut out a hole or some s*** in the ground into the ground. And the temple is also not complete, or it is complete, but it looks incomplete.

Cristina: Like that place.

Jack: No, not necessarily. It's in a area where there weren't any houses or anything. And they were thinking this was the house originally, but then they really looked at it and they called it the First Temple because there didn't seem to be any way to like live in this structure. Just like the walls were carved in a certain way and it was downward and you walk into like this worshipping area, I guess.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it had a very similar structure to what's going on here, except this was built outside, not downward, but just upward in structure.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it just brings up the question of, are the concepts that are taking place here the same between whatever the f*** the first temple was and Pama Punku? Because they have a very similar sort of aesthetic going.

Cristina: Were they in different parts of the world too? Like a lot of these things?

Jack: I have no idea. I just know the argument there was that they had this sort of similar structure. Difference is that one was completed, minus the like fact that it didn't have a ceiling or any protection from elements. While this place, very similar in structure, is missing the walls, is missing the ceiling, some of it has corroded away as well. Like there are parts that were there that with time worn off, but there are parts that were never there.

Cristina: It just looks like blocks to me. It just looks like it's a Lego toy or something. Like they could just move it around and make different places, like how big to move around.

Jack: And it was. It's buried into the ground. Yeah, yeah, it's very weird. This is a unique. So the idea here is, okay, so these complicated structures, we have them, they're this proof that weird things were made and we don't have the understanding of the purpose of these things. They just kind of exist. And the question is, then did we. Did we do and we have the intellect to do that and.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Are. Are those people the same people as we are? If they were real? Right.

Cristina: Okay, so where.

Jack: They're like Mayans left over the equal us, or are we like, not related?

Cristina: Like, okay, so like the humans, they're humans, but they're not us, they're other humans.

Jack: I don't know, I'm not entirely sure. Like, okay, so we got Neanderthal, and Neanderthal turns into humans or whatever. Okay, right, so were the Mayans Neanderthal? Did they come from the same thing? Did we go somewhere else and just evolve slower and the Mayans just evolved quicker and got the f*** off and we're over here still primitive? Yes, that's another way that could have played out.

Cristina: Okay, yes.

Jack: And if we stick to the idea that we're the only people that came from, like the. Humanity is the only source of life, Earth, then any phenomenon we experience came from here one way or another.

Cristina: I mean, maybe there's more than one human. Is that what we're talking about?

Jack: I guess the argument would be that there are different groups of humans if even if we all came from the same ancestor, when we spread out and settled wherever the f*** we settled, and then civilizations came to happen like Egypt or the Mayans or whatever. F*** all these different groups of people, they. We evolved at so drastic, such drastically different paces that some just had a lot of intellectual movement forward. The leaders were very open minded and promoting of advancements and things. And science happened quicker than we even have record of now.

Cristina: So long from what we have now.

Jack: Yes, so long ago that now any of the crap left is ancient garbage to us and we just don't understand it. But they weren't aliens. They were just humans. They were ancient humans, advanced civilizations. They weren't like Atlantis, Fish people? No, just humans. Yes, just humans. But we all came from the same place.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then we spread out till there was enough tribes kind of wandering here and wandering there. Tribes are conflicting. There's too f****** many people. Tribes are Conflicting break off into pieces. Well, we think leadership should be like this. We go over here and. Well, we think leadership should be like that. We'll go over there.

Cristina: So it's not possible that we just murdered all these people.

Jack: Why would we have the capacity to. How would we murder somebody so much more technologically advanced? If we went with our guns right now to one of these untouched Brazilian tribes, how easy would it be for us to just extinct them? Effortless. A gun. One gun. One person with one gun?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Whole f****** civilization.

Cristina: I don't know what kind of weapons they had. These people?

Jack: These. No, we're assuming these people are advanced technologically. They definitely have ways of defending themselves from invaders. That's how they got so far.

Cristina: Mmm. Maybe. I guess.

Jack: Otherwise, any stride they made, they'd immediately become a target for anybody who wants that that couldn't figure it out themselves.

Cristina: Yeah, but they're not all, like, missing. They don't all have the same story. Like, the Mayans or something, Right?

Jack: Well.

Cristina: Or do they?

Jack: No, no, they don't necessarily all have. Like, the Mayans are a particularly weird case where just people f****** vanished.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That's a weird one. Like, they're particularly odd. My argument would be that as we built things and people came to power, we would kick people out of areas, or particularly intelligence subgroups that led certain movements would then move out of their own region to go somewhere else outside of the reign of some kind of tyrannical moron.

Cristina: So they did have to, huh? What's the difference? They were probably murdered by.

Jack: I don't think they were murdered.

Cristina: I don't know why. Murdered is the solution of where they were.

Jack: Yes. In order for us to continue to advance and get to the points that we made structures that we don't even understand. They could not be dead no matter what. Death could not have been the solution.

Cristina: But they had to abandon everything they had and not take any of that with them. Like, the knowledge that they had.

Jack: Why would they abandon the knowledge?

Cristina: Like, where did it go?

Jack: Not anywhere we're looking.

Cristina: So you think it's out there somewhere?

Jack: Yeah. If we were to suddenly die and disappear, would the knowledge disappear with. Like, we'd take it with us. Even if we left every single book we have, if we left with all the people, the knowledge is within the people. We still have it. Like, we don't need the books. The people who know the things are still there. So, like, leaving all these things behind doesn't mean anything. On the flip side, we do still have proof of all these Things when we look at like the hieroglyphs showing us planes. And this shouldn't actually. Okay. Weird that we had these predictions ahead of time.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Like particularly complicated. You showed some before. Like f****** helicopters and hieroglyphs and spaceships and modern day planes.

Cristina: Those are ghost ships.

Jack: It's really weird. It could totally be ghost ships. But then there are so many complicated things. Like hieroglyphs of electrical components.

Cristina: What is that?

Jack: Current day electrical components.

Cristina: How can you tell?

Jack: Because they are identical to current day electrical components everywhere from like magnets use to induction coils. Copper wiring.

Cristina: They look the same. But they're not used the same way. Are they?

Jack: They would work exactly the same way. Especially in the fashion that these hieroglyphs depict. They are identical to how we would use them. Side by side with the image of these same things. We would perfectly be able to use that technology. Like if we had what they had in hieroglyphs.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We could just plug it into one of our systems. Take a little adapting. But the system would function with the thing. Like it's not like they also had the exact same port.

Cristina: That'd be crazy. What if they. Those are computers? The. The pyramids are computers or something.

Jack: It's. Look. It's totally possible there was something like that. I never considered that. Because our first computers were ginormous.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They were building sized. And that's like us with electricity everywhere all the time.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: To still not have figured it out. So it's totally possible that these. Because we know the pyramids were rigged with electrical components. For what purpose? We don't know.

Cristina: For lighting maybe. That kind of makes sense.

Jack: That could totally make sense. Could have been for lighting. But I guess then not for computers if that's the case.

Cristina: But it'd be way cooler if it's for computers.

Jack: Yeah. I don't know why you defeat your own argument.

Cristina: No. I'm just saying that that's maybe a little more realistic. I don't know.

Jack: Yeah. It would. It makes sense if it was for a computer. Because of the size of a pyramid.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But then we're arguing that in seeing this we're looking at an iceberg scenario.

Jack: Where we're seeing only the top half of something. Because where is it plugged into? It has to be underground. Right. So if that's just a part of the computer. How big is where the computer is connected to it must be ginormous.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: There must be the possibility that there's an entire underground civilization just to operate this computer.

Cristina: So it might Be like what we thought about the mines, that they might be plugged in under the pyramids.

Jack: Totally. Could be. What did we establish whether or not the Mayans had electrical components?

Cristina: I don't think so.

Jack: We know the Egyptians did.

Cristina: Yes. Oh, man. You don't know though.

Jack: I don't know. But we know they were ridiculously advanced. That's why they're probably plugged in down there. But then the question here becomes, are all ancient advanced civilizations plugging in? Is that the logical conclusion? Because look, this is what we got to think about. We had recently a conversation, I think it was, when we were talking about the comparison of AI to human capacity. Right. Is it. It's. It's impractical to travel the universe as a human meat bag.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The necessities are ridiculous. It's impossible. And you need generational ships because the s***** lifespan of a human. It makes more sense to be a robot.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Or to simulate the universe and travel it that way.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That then makes way more sense than being a f****** meatbag. Yes. And time works differently at those scopes too. You could blink across infinitely large distances.

Cristina: And you think that's what they're doing.

Jack: It would make more sense to do that than explore the universe. And you could divide into two groups of people in this underground civilization, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There are the people who are plugged in, already exploring, maybe in these explorations, coming across interesting technological advancements that they could then bring out of the system that they're making them in. And then the people who don't connect who are outside consistently making more strides away from the reign of whoever is a leader on top, doing dumb s*** regularly and causing wars and bullshit. Right?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So that then underground, safe from stupidity and just science underground, you have, between these two groups of people making giant strides technologically, the capacity to maybe move your mind either into some robotic, like body thing or augment throughout that entire process gradually. Since you already have people connected, you could continue to work on their body, little by little, turning it more and more and more mechanical, until you find the last component after their whole body's there and you put their mind into that little last piece, and then over time, you made them fully mechanical. And then those people could be the ones who leave the planet.

Cristina: For real?

Jack: For real. To then explore the reality that is.

Cristina: And you think every human just ends up there because what if we're going there? What if that's happening right now?

Jack: I think we'll eventually come to the conclusion that we cannot explore the universe realistically and that It's a waste of time and energy to try to colonize everything. And my theory is that maybe we figured this out before did the whole space exploration thing. That's why we find weird things on the moon. That's why we find weird things on Mars. But we were on Mars when it was green. And maybe what we're doing to Earth we did to Mars. And now it's crazy dry.

Jack: The way.

Cristina: So we ruined Mars and then we came here and then we ruined Earth. Oh no, well no, no, okay.

Jack: No, we did not come from Mars. We went to Mars.

Cristina: We just went to Mars.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: On the flip side, how interesting that you would say that because I didn't think about that at all. I just figured we went to Mars and did the same thing that we did here because Mars was. But I guess it would make sense that Earth wasn't in habitable inhabitable while Mars was. So we were originally living on Mars and this is the second planet.

Cristina: Yeah, why not?

Jack: And now we're doing the same s***.

Cristina: Because isn't that how they think Earth and the moon were involved with Mars? Was it Mars?

Jack: No, it was just Earth and the moon.

Cristina: Oh, it was two different planets.

Jack: Crash and created.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Oh, okay, okay, that's tricking. So okay, well yeah. What if we were in Mars first? Who knows?

Jack: Yeah. We could have dried that planet out, then come to Earth. And in being on Earth, slowly over the millennia centuries turned into the shithole that it is now.

Cristina: That it'll eventually become Mars again.

Jack: That it will eventually become another Mars. And we're just kind of, I guess we're moving closer to the sun, but we can't move any closer. So I guess the next one would be Europa where we do the whole f****** leap again. We're already looking in that direction.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So what, what's the stretch to say we go over there now the question is. Right, right, right. So we have this whole scenario.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We have advanced civilizations forming in pockets all over the world. It seems that the consistency as they go underground, they start making advanced technologies. Well they first make civilization. Civilizations need leaders. You take the brainiest people, they go into hiding as they sort of run the world from secrecy. We have a lot of that going on right now.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: All we know we already have crazy advance. We think there's hidden technologies and everything. Maybe we do have those scenarios already.

Cristina: Ex.

Jack: What if we do and they're underground doing the things they have to do, slowly converting people so that we can then truly explore.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And we got Examples of that on Earth. We could have come from a different planet as well. Panspermia is one of the main things we believe is the reason that there is life here at all. And Mars was once an Earth like place. We come to Earth, we're slowly drying it out. Now we're looking at Europa in our lifetimes, in our, you know, giant gap of whatever the f*** time that there is. We're looking at the next place that we're going to go. We have technologies being formed. Everything is happening as would make sense in the scenario that we're discussing.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So then this is played out multiple times.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We're living a cycle, even if at a grander scale.

Cristina: Interesting. Yeah.

Jack: And we keep bouncing around the same system. Maybe Mars wasn't the first one.

Cristina: What if.

Jack: Yeah, it could just been one of the many. We don't know where it began, but it doesn't have to have been Mars. It's just the easiest one to trace because of the giant time span between two points.

Cristina: Yeah. Wonder if it's possible.

Jack: I get like, we barely have ability to tell the things that are on Earth from how old Earth is and how long ago those civilizations were.

Cristina: Yes. But do you think we'll ever have the technology to explore those things that we can't explore now?

Jack: Like what?

Cristina: Like what's under the Earth or whatever. All of it, all the mysteries we have. Do you think we'll ever figure it out? Do you think we'll ever figure out the. The pyramids and whatever?

Jack: I don't know.

Cristina: That's lost.

Jack: Like, I don't think it's lost. I think somebody has it. I don't think we do.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: I think we are continuously leaving the planet.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Small groups figure it out and they take off.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: A great example is the space race or our current moment where every country's trying to get to space or whatever. I think sometimes civilizations just figure it out and they just take off.

Cristina: They just abandon everyone else.

Jack: Yes. Assuming that there is only one instance of life, it is the same group of life that's doing everything. The question is, how far back in time are we talking? If Earth wasn't the first, although humans were always the first, then the humans that happened on Earth are just the ancestors or are just sort of the next stage of whatever came. The ancestors that arrived.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That could have come from Mars. And if Mars isn't the first, what planet did they come from? Assuming they were on some planet. It was like Mercury or some s***. I don't f****** know. Some other Planet in our system that was, for whatever reason, inhabitable at that point. If we keep rewinding, how far back.

Cristina: Does it go from? Yeah.

Jack: Not just how. Like how long. If we keep going back, who cares what planet? We won't be able to pin it down. There's too much crap on this. In the solar system, how far back would we go? And if at all times, every couple million years, somebody jumps out to explore because they made it. They got. They beat all the hurdles to become technologically prepared to truly explore. They're like robots. They're the Borg now. They could survive any scenario. They just keep flying off and this happens over and over and over and over. So then how far back in time?

Cristina: Huh? We could have been doing this forever.

Jack: We could have been doing this forever.

Cristina: Huh?

Jack: Which then tells us that there's two different versions of things happening. One is where everybody plugs in trying to get there. The other one is where they've made it and they do actually go. Usually those have to be the same civilizations because it doesn't seem efficient to just keep going out, losing people and technology, trying to figure out how to go outward. We know balance needs to be established in nature. You need to know one to know the other. But us at this moment are just trying to go out, not figuring that part out. I think the only time we're really gonna figure out leaving this planet truly is when we figure out simulating the universe virtually.

Cristina: And we are working on that, too.

Jack: We got a million things like that. That's what the space engine is. We have accurate depictions of s***. Like there are things out there.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But we don't have the ability to plug in as if it's the universe and explore accurately.

Cristina: Huh? What if we had VR goggles into that?

Jack: Not really. It's not real enough. We gotta be able to, like, plug in Matrix style.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So that it's a universe. And in that universe, we then discover the technologies at a faster pace, bring them out of the program, and apply them in our actual base reality to then use that to navigate the stars.

Cristina: I feel like we probably have that. That seems like that place that everyone talks about aliens, but what if it's not aliens? What if it's us?

Jack: Area 51.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Holy s***. I didn't think about that. Holy s***. You think Area 51 is just people plugged in, exploring the universe? Yeah, that makes sense.

Cristina: That's where all this strange technology that is supposedly alien like. But what if it's not?

Jack: What if it's not? What if there are no f****** aliens. What if it's just us really doing crazy s*** and bring like, we need these people to not go anywhere and they need to have volunteered for it. So they're just dedicating their lives to science. They connect into this matrix, discover things in a fictional world that is identical to our real world, bring it out, apply it, and then we use it to advance our technologies rapidly.

Cristina: Yeah, I feel like whoever's in that machine might go crazy. Like that guy that thinks that there was aliens and he was hanging out, maybe his brain got a little messed up by using that machine too long.

Jack: Could totally be.

Cristina: Because I feel like that's way too much information though, for a human brain. Our brains are limited.

Jack: I don't think it's too much information for the brain. I think it's the exact same amount of information you'd normally get. You're just getting it in a simulated fashion.

Cristina: In a simulated fashion. That is so crazy. That's cool.

Jack: But then we can go out now. That makes it possible. We go in to go out. And if Area 51 just has a bunch of people plugged in exploring things, mm, well, f***, that's cool. Because at some point that technology is going to help us really get the h*** out of here. We have the Elon Musk's thinking they're going to do it. NASA over here thinking they're going to do it. None of that s*** makes sense. Area 51 though, always crazy. Advanced technology.

Cristina: Yes. What about those alien spaceships though that we are seeing? I guess UFOs. It's not aliens.

Jack: UFOs figuring out how to move faster. Yeah, that's all it really is. But then the question still stands. How far back do we go?

Cristina: How far back?

Jack: Yes. Because if at all points on every planet that we're on, little patches of people, after they complete the merger to mechanical and robotic AI type of human, they can travel space and use solar energy to stay alive and just explore, right?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Can we go far back enough to say that we have examples in space of humans that made it really, really, really far?

Cristina: Do we have examples?

Jack: Yes. Particularly if we look far back enough into space. We see a star that blinks consistently. And people have said the possibility that it's a Dyson sphere is pretty high. We can't say for sure because we have no proof of anything and we'd never be able to prove that.

Cristina: But if we were able to prove.

Jack: It, would that be a Dyson sphere.

Cristina: And would that be humans in it?

Jack: A Dyson sphere doesn't have humans in it? Not humans, but no, it doesn't have anything in it.

Cristina: On it.

Jack: It has a star inside a Dyson sphere to trap energy.

Cristina: Well, don't people live on it or something? No.

Jack: You want to get scorched like that?

Cristina: No. Okay. I thought that's what that was. I don't know.

Jack: No. Dyson spheres to harness the power of the sun.

Cristina: And they live somewhere else.

Jack: You trap the star in a bubble.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then gather all the energy and you use that energy for other stuff. You. Yeah. You teleport that energy wherever you need it. You move it.

Cristina: Teleport it. Okay.

Jack: I mean, not teleport literally, but you, like, take batteries and charge them and go.

Cristina: Okay, so the space station.

Jack: Don't even need space stations. You could just have a planet nearby.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And you have infinite energy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Simple.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's way easier than you're trying to make it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Super simple, but okay. That's far back enough. How long has that been there? How long would it take to make a Dyson sphere? That gives us a good estimate of how long we've been around.

Jack: If that's humans, like, we're assuming we started on the star. But if we go far back enough. Are humans predating the sun?

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: If we are, because we're right now just thinking planet to planet. Okay. If we rewind far back enough, how far back do we go before it doesn't make sense to even talk about the sun.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So we have to be somewhere else.

Cristina: What proof is there?

Jack: There is no proof. But again, if we assume.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The same set of rules apply. We can rewind this far back. We just have to prove whatever we're looking at as human to say that. There's no f****** way we started on the star. If Dyson sphere. Human, then no way. The sun is where we began. That's too far back. They needed time. The distance alone would be impossible for us. Impossible for something millions of years ahead of us.

Cristina: Man, that could be us. I don't know. That's crazy.

Jack: But then there's a crazier example.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Which is the great void.

Cristina: That. Oh, yes. What would that be?

Jack: It's many, many, many, many, many Dyson spheres.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Surrounding many stars. And I believe it's actually so ridiculous. There might be galaxies in there, but that.

Cristina: We can't see any of that.

Jack: We can't see anything in that direction.

Cristina: But it could be just Dyson feet.

Jack: Just Dyson spheres blocking out all the light coming from that direction.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There's definitely something. If it's not human, then there's f****** aliens out there just colonizing that whole f****** patch of space.

Cristina: If it's just us colonizing it, it.

Jack: Could just be us colonizing it. Maybe we are the only instance of life. Maybe there's one origin point and it works like this. We began somewhere. I don't know where humans began somewhere or life began in one place. Life, Life began in one place and only one place. And those people went somewhere and they kept repeatedly, anytime they would reach a peak, leave, and then anybody left has to restart and try to build their way out again.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Then they go and then smart people left. Okay, we gotta start over.

Cristina: Didn't Star Trek talk about sort of kind of hinted to this in one of their episodes?

Jack: I think, I think so. Did Alien.

Cristina: An alien? Yeah. Tried. I'm not sure if any of them.

Jack: Did a great job. I don't think it's intentional.

Cristina: No.

Jack: In any manner, shape or form. While in both Star Trek and Alien it was.

Cristina: Yeah. It's just, it's somehow in our nature to want to do this over and over again. It has nothing to do with it like programmed into us.

Jack: No, no, no. What I mean is that in Star Trek and Alien they chose planets and they went and dropped the seeds in water.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah.

Jack: They chose oceans. And they're like, humans will happen. Yes, we're not humans, but you know, intelligent life will come from those. In the scenario I'm talking about that was never the f****** planet. It's just the byproduct of the behavior. We go somewhere, abandon those who aren't good enough. They, without the hyper intelligent ones that left, have only these relics to deal with. They gotta figure it out themselves. They don't figure it out. They start over going a new direction. These people then land as far as they can possibly get and try to figure out again a new process. So this, we spread out a little, everybody's forced to restart. Then from that they spread out a little again, everybody's forced to reset. That keeps repeating, repeating, repeating, repeating.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So that something that looks nothing like us a billion trillion miles away is.

Cristina: Us somehow related to us.

Jack: We're somehow related.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And we're coming from the same places.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We just don't know where that point of origin is. Especially because we're probably consistently forgetting.

Cristina: Mm. But isn't it interesting if we did all have the same goal to go.

Jack: Out, that would be the most fascinating part. Why do we keep repeating the same behavior without some sort of Rules that.

Cristina: Left behind put that in us. Or is that just nature?

Jack: I doubt they programmed anything into anybody. I think it's just for whatever reason. Driven.

Cristina: Yeah, driven. Have the same driving force.

Jack: Yes, exactly. Some instinctual thing that. And the craziest part is it would just get reinforced.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Because those who left survived.

Cristina: Yes. They'll do the same thing over there.

Jack: You can do the same thing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So we have to be the ancestors of some travelers, which means moving is the reason they stayed alive. And we could be a multi planetary, maybe even multi star system, multi galactic civilization. We don't know. But we have the drive to keep going and to move forward and to go to the next place. Why?

Cristina: That's all. It's strange because it's not just us. It's anything anywhere else that they accidentally left something like us there. They'd also want to go to space and.

Jack: Yeah. It would be like if all the smartest people in the world became robotic, left Earth, and then the rest of us are left behind. I couldn't tell you how to build a computer.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Not off the top of my head. I can't tell you how to build a power plant. I can't. No. We're gonna take the parts of what we have. We're gonna ignore anything we cannot comprehend, and we're gonna use the parts we can figure out. We're gonna take the parts we can understand. We're gonna grab all the people who can understand them as much as we can, and anything that doesn't work will just get lost. Anything we can't figure out without the.

Cristina: Smartest people in the world have something.

Jack: New or have something new.

Cristina: It'll be similar but different.

Jack: Yes. We're gonna have a very. This is going to be missing the parts we couldn't figure out.

Cristina: Yes. That could be the pyramids too, because they're all similar but different.

Jack: Like, we can tell you how a lot of it was made, what requirements are, and not explain how they did it, how they did the thing we think would be required to do that. We could build those easily right now. We don't know how they build those. We just know that they're built and we know how to build it now. And we know back then they couldn't have done it based on what we understand of them. Yes, but we just simply don't understand. That's all that there is.

Cristina: We just not understanding because they're smartest people went away.

Jack: Because the smartest people went away, that information got lost.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: They took it with them. But we don't have access to it. And the little people there don't know how the f***.

Cristina: Yeah, I mean, it's possible that they went away, but they left it for those people. But they didn't understand. Yeah, like, if scientists went away, they wouldn't take all their info with them. They.

Jack: No, I also don't believe they'd be like, it's for you.

Cristina: Like, even if they did, though, we wouldn't understand it.

Jack: Yeah, 100%. But I doubt they're just like. I'm sure they're leaving in secrecy half the time.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Yeah. I guess it would be more secret, like. Yeah.

Jack: We're gonna send these people out. They're gonna go explore. Like, how many times right now in our own lifetime have we probably sent people out if what we're seeing from Area 51 and these UFO are just really things to explore space. And this Bob Lazar guy really saw things that he thought were aliens. Maybe those are just modified humans. What if those are modified humans who can last in space, vast distances, vehicles that could move crazy distances in short amounts of time. How many people have we sent? All in secrecy because we're not ready for it.

Cristina: No.

Jack: And then eventually we shut down programs. We already got enough people out there. They're gonna report back whenever they do. And then eventually we lose communication because it went too far, and they go somewhere else and they begin all over.

Cristina: Yes, that's. That's definitely how it is.

Jack: And then we sort of keep spreading and keep multiplying and lose awareness of who and what and where.

Cristina: You wouldn't even notice that they're gone.

Jack: No.

Cristina: We would never know something's wrong.

Jack: We wouldn't. We wouldn't even know people left.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We have no idea this is even happening.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Meanwhile, they're out there colonizing planets, starting small civilizations. A small ship with 30 people went somewhere, and now they start this new thing, and that's gonna turn into the next big thing.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And this happens over and over. Once they start, they bail. They're like, okay, maybe there isn't. Maybe there is intentional as well. It's combination. It's like, okay, we are the troop who are gonna go. We're gonna create life. We're gonna have babies here.

Cristina: What?

Jack: We've a bunch of babies, and then we're gonna bail and keep going. We're not gonna let them know that we have the technology to leave. We're just gonna have a bunch of babies, move somewhere else on the planet where our technology doesn't get the F*** off the planet. And they're gonna keep having babies and they're gonna populate a planet and.

Cristina: Yeah, I don't know, that's. I guess that's a possibility too.

Jack: And then that happens over and over and over, over and over and over and over. And different starting points, different technological starting.

Cristina: Points because they gotta leave something behind to keep those people alive. Yeah.

Jack: They're not just abandoning. They had to be there long enough to have shelter to start families for them to get old enough to survive. Like they're gonna be there a while.

Cristina: Because they're, they're pro. The person that's there, though, is probably not the person that's gonna leave anyway.

Jack: Assuming they've already developed the technology to travel crazy large distances. They're not necessarily alive. Fully human. Yeah.

Cristina: They're not humans. Yes. Okay.

Jack: They're just creating humans who then, to survive, because it's instinct, are going to get to that same point where they're going to try to get out.

Cristina: Yes. These people are kind of like they're the aliens. But that's us.

Jack: That's us. It's just they're so different. And so the argument would be if we saw anyone anywhere in space, it's us.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: In one manner, shape or form, it's us.

Cristina: Why not? I think so. It's. We'd have to take a DNA test.

Jack: Yeah. And it goes back to the idea that we do have the possibility that there were really absurdly advanced civilizations here. From giant, giant leaps back in time. Huge, huge jumps. Different periods of time unrelated to one another. Whole advanced civilizations, giant things. Mayans, Egyptians, the Roman Empire, the Aztecs. Just a whole bunch of different crazy advanced, mega large civilizations.

Cristina: The Aztecs, Is that near the Mayans? Are those two different things?

Jack: I think so.

Cristina: I don't know. There are a lot.

Jack: There are a lot of instances of crazy.

Cristina: Like that giant square thing that you just showed me. Puma Punka. That's a place. That's an interesting looking place.

Jack: Yeah, it's an interesting look. But all these places are really weird. Like all these interesting structures that we have no recollection of what or why or how. We just know that.

Cristina: What's proof of giants? What if they're just giants who are making dollhouses? Those are children's toys to them.

Jack: You know how big? It's impossible. No, we can prove that wrong. There would be nothing that could sustain itself being the size necessary because of our atmosphere, the size of our planet, our gravitational pull, our bodies are optimal for where we live.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: All Those things have to be considered.

Cristina: Giants couldn't survive.

Jack: It could not exist. They would never evolve.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The biggest of things that were here are believe insects long ago. And they were maybe the size of like giraffes.

Cristina: Okay, then why does everyone have a story about giants? Where does that come from?

Jack: F****** idiots. I don't know.

Cristina: Religion, I get. Yes, religions have that. But a lot of folklore.

Jack: Folklore is usually based on religion. In fact, religions are composed of folklore.

Cristina: Yes, it works both ways, I guess. But. Okay. And those giant drawings? Giants drew those drawings with a stick.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: What place is. What place is that one?

Jack: The Smachu Picchu.

Cristina: Is it like a maze? Is that buildings?

Jack: Yeah, there's tiny little structures. It's kind of like a maze. It's so odd place. We don't. Another place that we don't know what the f*** or why or why.

Cristina: It's built in a very nice looking location.

Jack: Yep. The weirdest thing about this place is how the f*** did it get up there? Oh, it's the tip. Tip of a f****** mountain. The stone that's up there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Not easy.

Cristina: Not easy. Not easy.

Jack: Not easy. That took the craziest amount of slave work or something. Up a mountain. You're in the desert. You're in the desert. Flat. You're in a f****** desert. Machu Picchu. Up the side of a g****** mountain.

Cristina: What. What do they. What do they need to make these stones though? Do they need water? Is there water underneath the mountain or something? Or near the mountain?

Jack: What do you mean? To pull giant slabs of stones up a mountain?

Cristina: Yes. No, to make them. To make the stone. Like they at least made it near the area.

Jack: No, I don't think the stones were made in the area. I think they were moved there similar to Stonehenge. Like those rocks are not from there.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Like travel quite the distance again. We can make every single stone in Stonehenge.

Cristina: But how did they get there?

Jack: We could shape them the same way we could. But we have. We. That rock doesn't exist there. We have to go far, make the f****** rock out of the right material. Then get it there from quite the distance right now would take days with cars. And we have wheels to put it on top of.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And engines that will speed the process up. And it would take us f****** days.

Jack: Without wheels and going 60 miles per hour on highways. How the f***.

Cristina: I don't know. Especially I don't know what's happening there. I don't know.

Jack: It's crazy.

Cristina: Crazy.

Jack: But we've lost all this Information.

Cristina: But what is underground? People check underground. Right? Like under the pyramid. What if there's.

Jack: Here's the problem. You're not allowed to. Because there's. There are these types of very important structures. You're not allowed to destroy these amazing structures.

Cristina: Yes. Okay, I see.

Jack: So there's only so much you can do.

Cristina: Yeah. You don't wanna.

Jack: You could explore openings.

Cristina: Yeah. But making a new opening problematic. Okay.

Jack: You don't want to just be the a****** who dug a hole and broke something.

Cristina: Yeah. Like something accidentally just makes the whole pyramid.

Jack: But that's the weirdest part because that's a rule that's f****** us up. Maybe there is something to understand. But we have this thing about preserving history more than we have a need to investigate it.

Cristina: That does suck, man. But I don't want them to destroy. I don't know what's more interesting. To see if there is something underneath or to keep what's there.

Jack: So we keep the structure and then we never discover the technology that's underneath it. Or we discover there was never any technology underneath it.

Cristina: That's what I was gonna say. Like what if you destroy it and then there's nothing to find?

Jack: There's nothing.

Cristina: Then is it worth it? I don't know. We'll have robots to do that for us to be able to go and not break anything.

Jack: How would a robot know?

Cristina: How would a robot know? I don't know.

Jack: It's guesswork. It's guesswork. There's nothing. There's no right or wrong here.

Cristina: Yeah. Mmm.

Jack: I do believe it's possible we did came. Come from another planet though. Again, we're driven. We're driven. We have the drive to get the f*** off of Earth.

Cristina: So maybe we've done it.

Jack: Maybe we've done it multiple times. And again there. There's quite a couple of origin stories for Earth. Did we come from South America? Did we come from China? Did we come from Australia? Did we come from Mars? Mars? Did we come from. Well, I'm not actually even talking about a different planet at the moment. I'm saying just on Earth. We have a bunch of different locations.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: How the f*** did that happen? Unless arrival from outside of Earth happened and they settled in different locations.

Cristina: Oh, I didn't even think of that. That's interesting.

Jack: Yeah. There were just different groups arriving. Some landed in China. Some landed in Africa and Egypt.

Cristina: South America.

Jack: South America just landing on Earth.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Civilizations starting from those people in different parts. They bail after there's enough people to continue these civilizations Moving forward.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And we get where we are today, where we don't even know the origin. We're like, no, we started the Earth. No, we started the Earth. And it's like, no, everybody did because they were different people at different times.

Cristina: What if. Whoa, man. And eventually we'll do that.

Jack: And eventually we'll do that. And maybe we send a ship with 30 people out and as we're traveling, because now we have the capacity. We're not gonna die. Or at least we're gonna live way longer.

Cristina: We're gonna have robot bodies, and we could.

Jack: Two of us are gonna land on this planet with all the technology, and then the ship is gonna keep going.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Two, you're gonna land over there. Ship is gonna keep going. Maybe it was Mars and Earth, but.

Cristina: Mars dried up because they found.

Jack: So they bailed on Mars and came to Earth.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And thus many different timelines of beginning.

Cristina: Because not everyone could do this anyway. I'm guessing, like, there's a lot of us out there, and some of us had to have died by now.

Jack: Yep. So, yeah, you land, you get as far as you can. Then things go wrong.

Cristina: Yes. We're just lucky to be where.

Jack: No, the planet's drying up too. But we're also trying to get off of it.

Cristina: Yeah, that's true. We're not really succeeding, but we don't know. And when someone has succeeded, if they did leave. So, yeah, there's probably a few succeed.

Jack: Like maybe just getting off equals succeeding.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We're not. And not all of us are gonna make it. But that any failure happened.

Cristina: No.

Jack: You just need to keep moving and keep making more. Maybe we are the sacrifice for the advancement of the collective.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: If it did happen before, if it did happen, then we've already escaped a single star blowing up, killing us.

Cristina: Mm. And it probably happened more than once here on this planet.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: It might have happened.

Jack: It might have happened in Egypt. It might have happened in with the Mayans. It might have happened with the Aztecs. It could have happened several times over different civilizations that had technologies we don't comprehend and did things that we think we could figure out or can't figure, that we know all the parts except one thing, and we lost that knowledge somehow.

Cristina: Yeah. If we are doing it now, we would have no idea.

Jack: And we have no idea because they're not telling us. Because it would be problematic.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And in those situations, I think would be the same case. It would be problematic to tell everybody that some people are gonna leave. Oh. And Earth is gonna die.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Maybe they thought the same thing. But it's like, we don't know when it's gonna die. Maybe right now we're like, oh, it's gonna happen now.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And the humans they left behind figured out how to solve the global warming problem.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But then they forget. After millions of years of it not being a problem.

Cristina: That's true.

Jack: And then it starts building up as a problem again.

Cristina: So we can solve that problem. But we probably also had people leave just in case.

Jack: Just in case we don't solve it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Well, and then that thing is always happening, and eventually it will collapse and eventually the planet will dry up and it will die. But enough of them left, and they took enough of what happened on this planet.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So, you know, we look back at the great void that could have been some of the earliest success stories.

Cristina: That's so cool. But when it comes to, say, they are connecting to something, the thing that they're connected to wouldn't be connected to anyone else. It's just their little bubble.

Jack: Yes. It would be that they invented something that they're connecting to, like a mainframe or computer or something. Like, if you don't connect your computer to the Internet, nothing's getting in.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And you're connecting to that computer. So if they made their own computer and they all connected to that, they're perfectly fine. There's no outside influence. They're not getting to any outside.

Cristina: But if we figured out how that worked, like, if we really found out that it was a computer, would we be able to go into their computer?

Jack: If we found their computer.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then we understood how they did it.

Cristina: We still have to understand that. Yes. Yes. For sure. But it would be possible that maybe. I don't know. This is a crazy idea. If they have a computer. If it's a computer, that's crazy.

Jack: But it goes to answer the question of fermius paradox. Where are they?

Cristina: They're here.

Jack: Well, they're here. We are they.

Cristina: We are they. We are them.

Jack: We are they. Where are they? We are they.

Cristina: We are they. And we are everywhere.

Jack: Yep. And we're just the primitive ones.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they're not coming in our direction because they already passed this f****** spot.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It's our job to get the h*** out of it.

Cristina: Well, not us specifically. We are the failures in the story.

Jack: Oh, why?

Cristina: Because we're not the scientists that are getting off.

Jack: Why does that make us the failures?

Cristina: Because we're just gonna be here. I mean, if that's succeeding, I guess. I don't know what?

Jack: I don't know. What's the, the obsession with the failure mentality? What is the failure here? Some people go and make other stuff and then some people save the planet.

Cristina: Well, if we don't get to that part, I guess would be a failure. If we don't save the planet.

Jack: No, because people still moved out to make sure that our branch of humanity remains.

Cristina: I guess.

Jack: Where is the failure?

Jack: They're not winning. They're just doing something else.

Cristina: Yeah. It just feels like they're winning.

Jack: Why? Because space exploration.

Cristina: Yes. That's so cool.

Jack: What about the Matrix? It's better than space. Get further, faster, in less time, do more, I guess.

Cristina: Okay, they're winning. Okay, no one's winning.

Jack: No one's winning. It's just doing different things.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Some people are connected to a matrix coming up with technologies that they give to the people who are going to go out into space, colonize new planets and then us, ignorant of all the details, try to keep our.

Cristina: Yeah, I guess. It's its own balance. Yeah. Going on.

Jack: It works. All the parts work. Everything has a purpose, everything has its place.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But it comes from the possibility that all these ancient civilizations were, in fact, not aliens, that none of this was built by aliens, but rather humans developing the technology to do it. And again, no. None of these civilizations landed here and built the thing. No, they landed here, became a civilization, the civilizations built the thing, then they leave. Information gets lost. We take what we can remember, move forward with it, knowledge disappears, and then we have a whole new thing. And this happens over and over and we recycle it over and over and over and over.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And what we lose, we lose.

Cristina: What we lose, we lose. Yeah. Yes.

Jack: We're gonna land there again. Somehow, Egyptians and Mayans both did it. They were not related.

Cristina: Yeah. So we could do it.

Jack: Yeah, we're gonna get there again.

Cristina: It's hard to say if we are there.

Jack: It's hard. We could totally be there. Because there's no reason we should know.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: So in the case, particularly of the Mayans, it is possible they connected. They did what they had to do. We know that their pyramids had weird trapdoors and s***. Not sure why our assumption was rocket ships because they were huge f****** holes and that they could take off now. Where the f*** are any of the mines? We know the Egyptians kept moving forward, that led to a bunch of people. Where the f*** did the Mayans go?

Cristina: They're asleep in their computer chamber.

Jack: Either that or they took off. Maybe both.

Cristina: Both.

Jack: And the Ones that were left, some kind of event happened that got rid of all of them.

Cristina: Yeah, probably. Like what happened in Plymouth, where it just a huge, unpredictable winter storm.

Jack: 100%.

Cristina: It could just happen. The weather.

Jack: Yeah. And those who prepared in other ways survived.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Leave the planet or go underground and connect. If they were the ones who went underground in an event like that, they died too.

Cristina: If they didn't go underground.

Jack: If they did go underground, those people died.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: But the ones that went out into space didn't have to deal with the planet's climate.

Cristina: Yeah. And the ones that were there just. Yeah, that could be it.

Jack: We know many civilizations could have accomplished these same things. And we see the technology in written in things of the past. Biblical texts say it. Hieroglyphs depict technologies that we don't f****** like. How the f*** did you guys know? Even if we don't go crazy, far back before we had things, we're talking about Leonardo da Vinci having incredibly detailed drawings of things that we figured out in our lifetime. And he had the blueprint for how these things would work. And they did now.

Cristina: Yes. So then is it just in our DNA then? If he could do it without the science of now, you could just write it all out. Like, where did that come from?

Jack: Smarts, piecing things together.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Assuming if this and that. Anyways, we are definitely running out of time right now.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But I do think that's a fascinating idea to play with. Possibility that humans came from elsewhere in a repetitive cycle of dropping people everywhere to kind of keep expanding the human race. With enough time, you know, it's gonna keep multiplying, keep multiplying, keep multiplying. You could do faster and faster and faster and faster. Every time you just drop a couple of people here, a couple of people there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Over years, come back a millennia later, boom. Planet filled with people.

Cristina: But would they come back, do you think?

Jack: They don't really come back. They're just flying through the area or whatever.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah. That's pretty cool. But do they? Like what? I don't know. It's just so many questions, but there's no way anyone could answer. So it doesn't matter.

Jack: We just know there are advanced civilizations. Whether they were too technologically advanced in the ways we can picture, probably not. We don't know. They have depictions of electrical components. They have things rigged with electrical devices. Like the pyramids.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So why, like, is that the case? We don't know.

Cristina: No.

Jack: But we know that it happened many times across the world at different times, with unrelated People who should not have been able to contact each other because they were too far apart too long ago. And if that's the case, then it's possible that they were different landings, which is possible. We came from different locations. Maybe some from Mars, maybe some landed on Earth, Maybe some people were elsewhere in the solar system and Earth was the only destination. Everything was drying up everywhere, freezing over, and it was like, earth is in the right spot. Let's go there.

Cristina: Earth is in the Goldilocks zone.

Jack: Goldilocks zone. So we get some people who came from Mars, some people from here, some people from over there, some people. And then different times they land on Earth and then they start. So we got different origin stories. Anyways, if you guys want to actually look at the episode of the. With the Mayans that we were just talking about, we've. We've dissected the Mayans in their weird technology. There is the Advanced civilization episode.

Cristina: Okay, yes.

Jack: That you guys can look at. Take a look at that stuff. We've also discussed technology many different times and space exploration. So, yeah, definitely look at that. See how aliens maybe detecting life, maybe that's an important way. Maybe we're on the right track by just looking for our kind of life, because that's the only kind of life that really exists. And then the rubric for whether something is alive or Galvan is useless as f***, because everything is alive. If that's the case, sure, whatever. Go look at those episodes. You can find all so many sciencey episodes on the official website greatthoughts.info or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and anywhere else you get your podcast.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. UsConvopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to subscribe and rate the show and review it if you feel so inclined.

Cristina: And let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes, word of mouth. Tell everybody. Let them know that you know about a show that's gonna tell them about how we are aliens and that other kinds of aliens don't exist. And we proved that. We. We.

Cristina: So we're not aliens.

Jack: We're the aliens.

Cristina: Oh, we are the aliens. Yes, we are the aliens.

Jack: We are the aliens. We are not from Earth.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: I mean, we literally are from Earth, but we were just born on Earth versus the origin of humanity being Earth.

Cristina: This has been the Just Conversation podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for listening. Bye. Saint Isidor. He was the saint of the Internet. Not officially, though. Officially, he's the saint of students. And then unofficially Internet computer users, computer technicians and programmers.

Jack: So we're just basically talking about a saint that does. The saint of the Internet.

Cristina: Yes, of the Internet. It became. It was students and I guess over time it somehow ended up Internet.

Jack: So their powers aren't centric for anything. They're not focused on anything.

Cristina: Not really. He was a bad student. He prayed and then he became a really good, really smart man.

Jack: Like, could he take your fear of breastfeeding away if you wanted to?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: And thus he's just a saint. But like, he's known for school related things.

Cristina: So you pray him for school related things? Yeah, I don't know.

Jack: So thus he's a saint of. Yes, school related things.

Cristina: That's why St. Nick has a bunch of random crap. Good morning. Good morning, whoever. The Just Conversation podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by Great Thoughts.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McCallister with social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 55: Kardashev Scale

Kardeshev Scale, Aspace, Astronomy, The Just Conversation Podcast, Science, Research, Exploration

The Kardashev Scale is discussed. A scale which breaks down the development stages of civilizations from planetary to galactic and all the way up to universal based entirely on energy consumption capabilities.

Story:
In light of the recent discovery that there is life at Alpha Centuri, the clone duo head back to NASA headquarters to learn whether it’s possible to establish a mission there with a team of subhumans. While waiting for their scheduled meeting the duo sets up their equipment and begin to break down the Kardashev Scale in which civilizations are listed according to their power consumption and capacity with hopes of identifying where the aliens at Alpha Centuri fall.

If on Tumblr Listen HERE!

Remember to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or anywhere you listen to podcasts to help us get noticed.We’ll read our favorites Apple Podcast reviews on the show! Tell friends, family or anyone you know who’ll like the show about it.

+ Episode Details

Topics Discussed

  • The Kardashev Scale
  • Life on Alpha Centuri
  • Colonizing Neighbor Planets
  • Terraforming
  • Mayans in Space
  • Space Exploration
  • Creating Planets
  • Galactic Exploration
  • Consuming Galaxies
  • StarTrek Borg
  • Catching Black Holes
  • Living Galaxies
  • Dyson Spheres
  • The Universe
  • The Multiverse
  • Universal Consciousness
  • Reality

Be sure to checkout the 10ish Podcast on Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/10ish-podcast/id1434572769

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopo

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Rambling 44: Ancient Advanced Civilizations

Ancient Advanced Civilizations, Reptilian, Conspiracy Theory, Modern Technology, Future Technology, Advanced Technology, Wakanda, Ancient City, Science, Theory, Ancestors

Ancient civilizations with advanced technologies and the mysterious disappearance of the Mayan civilization are explored.

Story:
Exploring the ruins of the fallen Mayan civilization the duo uncovers a trail of clues that reveals a dark truth. The Mayan’s, as previously revealed in their calander, predicted a tragedy likely to strike Earth and lead to mass extinction sometime in the 2000s. Investigating the clues the duo realized every so often a mass alien invasion takes place. Humans harvested as discussed in episode 2.12. The proof is staggering. Seeking the knowledge on how the Mayan’s planned and escaped this impending Earthling doom the duo ventures into the Mayan pyramids to uncover all sorts of advanced technologies and a plan orchestrated by the Mayans crazy enough that is might have just worked! Find out how on this episode!!

+ Episode Details

Topics Discussed

  • Buried Ancient Technology
  • Natures Creations
  • Ancient Nuclear Reactor
  • The First Intelligent Life
  • Intelligent Life Before Humans
  • Flat Earth
  • Hollow Earth
  • The Mayan Civilization
  • Advanced Technology in Ancient Pyramids
  • Alien Invasions
  • Mass Extinctions Events
  • The Matrix Survival Plan
  • Messages Left Behind by Advanced Intelligence

Making A Scene 3: Time Travel & Cat People

Cat people, The Just Conversation Podcast, Story, Comedy, Joke, Funny, Fun

The thinkers go on a road trip and encounter a merchant selling tickets to the future. Too scared its a hoax that’ll take their lives, the duo sets out to investigate the merchants “time machine” only to discover its part of a plan to save the future humans from being doomed and enslaved by cat people.

+ Episode Details

  • Time Travel to the Future
  • Time Travel to the Past
  • Altering Timelines
  • Zombie Apocalypse
  • Cat People
  • Humans from the Past
  • The Butterfly Effect
  • Advanced Technology
  • Playing God