Rambling 214: The Missing Link

When did life start? Who made the first tools? Who spoke the first word? The duo unpack the origin of humanity to better understand when and how the structures on the old equator were built. The conclusion goes down a familiar road that the duo could not have predicted would play out how it does!

+Episode Details

  • Ancient Advanced Civilizations
  • Mount Athos
  • First life
  • Oldowan
  • Homo sapiens
  • Atlantis is first mentioned in Greece
  • Unicorn Dust
  • Unicorn Horn
  • Old Equator
  • Prehistoric Era
  • Oldest Structures

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+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. I am your host, Jack.

Cristina: I am your host, Christina.

Jack: And today I have some interesting things to talk about. Particularly interesting things. So let me begin by reminding everybody that we recently just took a deep dive into unicorns and found out that there's an actual location where it seems that people consistently spot unicorns on top of a hill, a mountain. It's Mount Ethos in Greece. Well, trying. We found this because we had to. As you know, we did an episode on unicorns. You wanted to know how they were actually magical. I went on that trip to find out how they're actually magical and found a bunch of things. But looking through that, in the original thing, we found the merchant. Then we traced the merchant through the. The second episode where we came back to find out how they're actually magical. And in between that, we also talked about the. The really, really old equator.

Cristina: Yes, the one that changed.

Jack: Yes, the equator's always moving. But where it was 450 million years ago was magical. I don't think it was magical. Why was it magical?

Cristina: I don't know. Because everything was on that line or whatever.

Jack: Oh, yeah, A bunch of things land on the line. But I don't know how that would make it magical. I know that things land on the line. It's just a weird situation that's going on that we might actually have to unpack for a bunch of different reasons. So first, I was very curious as to. Now, keep in mind, everything I just mentioned is connected. And I will also say we had an episode like three years ago about ancient advanced civilizations. And funny enough, when we were talking about the old equator, we mentioned Atlantis as well, I believe.

Cristina: Yes. Somewhere in the Gulf. The gulf, yes. I think.

Jack: Yeah. So we have a couple of things that are all quite possibly connected.

Cristina: Atlantis is somehow connected.

Jack: Well, Atlantis is connected to ancient civilizations, okay. Particularly ancient advanced civilizations. And the old equator, okay. So it touches a lot.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah.

Jack: So here's my problem with the old equator. The old equator was 450 million years ago.

Cristina: That's a lot of years ago.

Jack: That's a lot of years ago. The oldest man made structure is only 12,000 years ago. Okay, that is a ridiculous discrepancy.

Cristina: Mm. It is.

Jack: That is.

Cristina: That's ridiculous.

Jack: It makes you wonder why they put it there when the place didn't exist. And Also, how do you know about it?

Cristina: How do you know about what?

Jack: About the old equator. Okay, so in order to answer some of these questions and explain how all of this connects, we have to go way back, which I'll do. This goes all the way back to 3.7 billion years ago.

Cristina: What's happening back then? Dinosaurs? No.

Jack: Well, first let me talk about how time works. I was listening to a clip, and the guy explained how a million seconds is 11 days, but a billion seconds is 31 years. You got to think about the fact that we have no idea what a billion is. We have no clue how monumentous of a distance A billion is.450 million years is half a billion. That's hardcore for, like, we can't fathom that many years. And he still built a line of structures across a thing that didn't exist anymore. What? That's already weird. But let's go all the way back. 13. I mean, 3.7 billion years ago is the original earliest life. That's how far back I'm going. The first life to leave any trace. We have not found anything older than this, the oldest, anything. So at some point, boom, life happened. Well, this happened 3.7 billion years ago. We don't know why, but something triggered it. Then we enter about 450 million years ago where the old equator was. Okay, this is about seven, eight times away. Like, if you have to. You'd have to multiply this a couple of times to make it backwards to where life began. Okay, so you already have a pretty substantial gap. Everything got complicated. We still don't have a brutally advanced life. It's dinosaurs and s*** roaming the Earth. There's no humans. There's no. No advanced intellect happening yet.

Cristina: But there's dinosaurs.

Jack: There's dinosaurs. Yeah. Okay, 2.5 million years ago. Now we enter what we call the prehistoric era. The prehistoric era is particularly important because what it really means is the era in which there are humans, but we are not recording history yet.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: We have not started recording humans have happened now, but we have not recorded any history. And this is gonna happen for a while. And keep in mind, we're talking prehistoric humans. Yes, Cave people.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: Nothing we would call a H*** sapien yet.

Cristina: How long does that take?

Jack: A while. Okay, but so we entered this era 2.5 million years ago. We come across the prehistoric era, and then in this, we come across the original tools. Now, this is very important. This is why I chose this exact era, because obviously exactly 2.5 million years ago isn't where it started. The prehistoric era. It started a couple of years and not millions of years in. And maybe not too many. Might have been five, six years into the 2.5 million years ago, obviously. But what's important about this is these are the first tools ever made. They were not made by H*** sapiens, though.

Cristina: What do you mean?

Jack: They were made by ancient primitive cave people, most of which actually went extinct. These are tools from bloodlines that don't connect to us.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Oh, fascinating.

Cristina: Weird. Okay.

Jack: Yes. They are called the Old Duvai.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Well, the. The technique is called Olduan, and it is in Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. So this was all found there. And it's a series of different shaped rocks collected. So they were like. This is a natural that they were just all together like this. A bunch of pointy rocks. It would look like if you were make an arrowhead.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: They were used to pierce things. A bunch of blunt flat ones were used to squash things. A bunch of perfectly round ones were used to crack things. So they weren't shaping these stones yet. They were picking these stones up.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Oh, my bad. They. They were actually making these stones. These are the. What is it? These are the. The first tools made that weren't picked up in the wild. That was.

Cristina: I was trying to kick it up in the wild.

Jack: Yeah, because the original tools that were picked up were just picked up. It was just. You're walking around, you picked up a stick and you swung it.

Cristina: Okay. Yeah.

Jack: Well, you had a rock and you threw it. But these rocks were shaped. They made these rocks. Now, it's still primitive, but it worked. Interestingly enough, it's compound. So complicated. I'll come back to that. I'll give you a little more background, and then we'll circle back. About 315,000 years ago is where H*** sapiens came to be. That is such a far stretch from 2.5 million years ago.

Cristina: The 2.5 is the tools.

Jack: Yeah. 2.5 million years ago is where the tools are made by primitive civilizations. Not even civilizations yet. We haven't gotten there. But 315,000 years ago, we come to be H*** sapiens. Who we are.

Cristina: What's the gap?

Jack: That gap is about 2,200,000 years.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Pretty hefty number.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then we enter the hundred thousand years ago mark. Now, important details to also establish the first long form discussions ever occurred. 100,000 years ago, conversations were not had by anyone other than H*** sapiens. Okay, this is a problem.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: How did you communicate creating tools? How do you have an advanced tool crafting system. And so many of them. If you don't even have language yet, how did you arrive at tools before language.

Cristina: Sign language?

Jack: I had the same conclusion. So in studying what was happening, incorrect. Because h*** sapiens used side language that they learned from apes and merged it with sounds they heard from birds to then create a scenario where I can give you tone so you know what I mean and pitch, so you kind of get my, you can understand my, my, my motives and my tone. And like, I don't mean you harm or I do me new harm or I'm angry based on the sounds I'm making in their tone. And I can be very specific by pointing at things and like doing very ph goldest plays. Okay, that was primitive conversation, but the first long form conversation was that. So that was not 2.5 million years ago. That was just 100,000 years ago that we did that. We're immediately coming across problems just following history.

Cristina: So then what were they doing?

Jack: We'll figure that out. We got quite a ways to go and we're already hitting knowledge issues. How do you have tools? You don't have communication? Okay. This was experimented on, this was tested. There was an archaeologic experiment done. A bunch of students were taken, college students, and they were broken down half. You know, split them into two groups and you're gonna teach them the methods that these people use to make the stones. We can teach them two different ways. First one, you're gonna tell them how to do it, but you're not gonna show them. The second one, you're gonna show them how to do it, but you're not gonna tell them. The people who were shown how to do it performed four times faster, better, and with more proficiency without language than the people who were told how to do it.

Cristina: Whoa. We're better at communicating without actually communicating.

Jack: That's not. Without communicating. That's still communicating. We're just not using language.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah. That's crazy.

Jack: Yeah. We're better communicating without language.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Well, you gotta understand, we were already creatures 2.5 million years ago when we went that entire time for 2 million years of existence without ever talking to then just having started that a hundred thousand years ago. We don't know how the f*** to do that. We don't know how to communicate, but.

Cristina: It makes sense that they would be able to make those tools.

Jack: Yes. We don't know how to talk. We figuring that out, but we could probably, hands on, show each other how to do things easily. This experiment proved it. So it immediately raises the problem of how do you have mass production of tools? We'll just show the guy how to do it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And he shows the next guy, and he shows the next guy, and before long, everybody saw how to do it, and everybody can make it.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Still don't have language, but it works.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now, when you apply this to some of these structures that we have in the world, where we're like, how do we build it if we don't have the. If we didn't have the tools or the technology at the time? It's like, okay, there is a gap in knowledge that we have that would make this real easy, like the language barrier. How did you make tools when you couldn't communicate them? Okay. How do you make pyramids when you couldn't feasibly craft the stone and then carry it? It's the same question, just applying it differently.

Cristina: So they just had another way.

Jack: There was just another way, and we just don't know what that way is. But the structures there. There had to be another way.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it's simple. It's nothing extraterrestrial couldn't be. It's just another way. We don't know.

Cristina: That makes sense. Yes.

Jack: This experiment proved that, again, people thought that these stones were shown to them by aliens and that they kept providing them simple things to not advance them. Technologies like theories and s*** that, you know, they kept providing them and collecting them and giving it to them so they wouldn't have to, like. So they wouldn't push their advancement too far, too quickly. You know, prime directive kind of thing. You don't want to screw up their development. But it's like, no, we can prove that wrong. We can easily prove that wrong. People who were shown how to do it are way more efficient than people who were told how to do it. You don't need language. It's actually easier without it.

Cristina: That's crazy.

Jack: Language is convoluting things and messes it up.

Cristina: Yeah. What?

Jack: Enter 5,50,000 years ago. 50,000 years ago, we finally got to the place where these bird songs and lexical sign language things come in. And we establish what we would now call language, the primitive versions of them. But this is language that we can actually sustain conversation with. Before we had small, it was the first long form conversation. But language didn't happen yet.

Cristina: Long form conversation happened 100,000 years ago.

Jack: Long form conversation happened, but it wasn't language.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It was figuring out how to make language. You could sustain a conversation, but it was a lot of hands and Stuff. And it was like a bunch of other crap. Yes, By. It only took 50,000 years for this to get so complicated. We completely dropped off hand gestures and words had such vast complexity. I could send images from my head into yours, by the way. Language is weird.

Cristina: Yes. Yes, it is.

Jack: It's a form of psychic telepathy or something. I can throw an image into your head. I can say spider, and you can picture spider. Yeah, I sent that image from my head to your head. I can say, there's nothing purple in here, but I sent a purple image to your head. This weird thing we could do that's telepathic. And we're like, well, it's so weird that a dolphin can send a sonar signal and then another dolphin and gets an exact image in his head. Don't get me wrong, that's way more precise. Yes, but it's the same idea. Yeah, it's just.

Cristina: It's very similar. It's.

Jack: Yes, the same concept. They just mastered the h*** out of it. Okay, so we. We know that language gets complicated, but we also know that we don't need the language for these tools. Problem erased. Great. Fantastic. Let's move on. The first form of record happened about 45,000 years ago, and it was a cave drawing.

Cristina: It doesn't feel so long compared to everything else.

Jack: No, we solved the problem, and then we immediately came across a different one, which is quite problematic because if people have been around for 2.5 billion million years, why didn't anybody draw anything out of curiosity? Just handprints on a wall or something.

Cristina: But that's what cave drawings are.

Jack: Yeah, essentially. But okay, that's 2.5 million years ago. And we're talking that the first one, we've. The oldest one, is 45,000 years ago. There's a quite substantial gap going on. There's a problem there.

Cristina: Is that a problem? This is weird.

Jack: Nobody has touched any. Anything that would leave any form of a trace.

Jack: Are you kidding me? You didn't kill an animal. Go hide in your cave. And your hand just happened to have blood. And you're just, oh, let me take a break and lean against the wall. And I got a handprint. No, we don't have any of that. None of that has ever happened. 45 thou. Now, the ongoing discussion with this is because we're talking cave drawings and we hadn't invented erecting structures yet that it's possible we just haven't found the caves. They have the drawings, but then we haven't found the caves that have the drawings. That are older.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: You think we found every cave?

Cristina: No, of course not.

Jack: Yeah. There has to be so many caves. But then that creates another problem again, where the h*** would these people. It would have to be people we didn't know existed. We'd have to find even more civilizations that didn't exist to then find caves that we didn't. That we didn't follow the people we already know about to. We got to follow people we don't know about the caves that we didn't think people would be in.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. How do you even do something like that?

Jack: Exactly. And why haven't we stumbled upon these civilizations before that would then lead us to these caves?

Cristina: It sounds complicated. Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Weird gap in knowledge there. Now, another interesting detail there is. We're still in the prehistoric era. Nothing has been recorded. And the closest thing to a record is cave paintings.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: We don't have proof of life of anything other than fossils and stuff.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: That's it. Like, there's no record of anything. And so we assume because fossils that there wasn't intervention and that people made things themselves. And that checks out pretty hard. And again, we can prove it through these experiments and know that we don't need the language interventions. Like aliens in aliens advanced older civilizations that we don't know about anything of any of that nature. Just something way more advanced.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Like, it doesn't seem necessary until we get to this problem of where are all the people who would have drawn in the caves?

Cristina: What do you mean? There's no bones of people or something.

Jack: They would have led us to the caves.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: It's an easy statement I am making. There are caves with the oldest drawings we've seen. 45,000 years ago, humans existed. Not humans, but, you know, creatures that can make things and think on a higher level. Since 2.5 million years ago, if there were other people who ever left a cave to go catch their food and a single one of their bones were left behind, we then have the trail picked up and it would have led us to the cave. Hasn't happened. The old. There's too many of us all over the place looking. We haven't found any of it. And the oldest we can go is 45,000 years ago. We have a 2.5 million year gap from the knowledge that there are intelligent beings to the full first record by accident.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: You don't see an issue with that? You don't see how weird that is?

Cristina: Why would it. I don't know. Like, were they all living in Caves. Why is caves important?

Jack: Because it's shelter. Yes. They were all living in caves. Shelter. Yes. A cave stops the sun from hitting you consistently.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: It stops rain from making you sick and die. Actually, it stops the sun from killing you. It stops rain from killing you. It stops the wind from killing you. Kind of. If you made it, you lived in a cave. Until we invented structures, okay? That's the rule. You had to. Where else would you be? Oh, that's why we called them cavemen.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Because you had to. It was the only solid thing. Like if a hurricane came by. Okay, you're all dead then. Well, no, because the cave saved you.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: Nature's f*****.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And without shelter, you're not making it.

Cristina: So it was only caves.

Jack: It was only caves.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: But that's a problem, because in the caves, we don't find anything as old as the people are.

Cristina: Nothing as old as the people. That's strange.

Jack: Not even my accent. No drawings, Weirdly enough, you have access to blood because you hunt, because you eat. Why don't we have drawings in blood? Why? If you have higher intellect, if you have language, if you have tools, and by this point, you have advanced tools, we're talking about entering a complex. It's 2.5 million years later. You've made s*** by now.

Cristina: But not homes yet.

Jack: You've not made homes. You got tools, simple things.

Cristina: Okay?

Jack: And deal. You didn't make the one thing simpler than your tools. A drawing. Weird. Extremely weird. Extremely strange.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It would take 1% of the effort that it would to make a stone tool.

Cristina: If you're living like. Like you're surviving your life is survival. What's the point of doing a drawing? I don't.

Jack: Then what was the point of making the tools in the first place if they weren't all for hunting? And that was 2.5 million years ago. Where's your logic that, what, 2.5 million years ago, they had the tools. They didn't need the tools other than something to pierce skin. Why do you need the blunt one to make other things with? Why do you need anything other than what you're going to pierce the creature with? But you had many tools. For what? If it's just survival, like you're saying. Yes, way before 45,000 years ago, 2.5 million years ago. If it's just survival, why are you wasting valuable hunting time making tools? Go fish. It's way easier than making tools.

Cristina: But the tools aren't for fishing. The tools aren't.

Jack: There were many different kinds of tools.

Cristina: Yes, but you don't know what these tools are for.

Jack: There's theories of what the tools are for making cloth, making things, cups and crap like that. But it's also like, you could hold your hands or whatever. Some stones are meant. Meant to break. Other stones they would make. And they would make like it was. It's hard to explain because it's a bunch of anomalous things. But the point being, how do we not have our. I feel like this is not landing on you. Like, you're not seeing why this is troubling. The fact that we just have a gap where everything complexifies in intellect and somehow the first thing that even a child does did not happen to the most advanced fans of people at the time. Our children now are still dumber than they were at their peak. That is how it works. And still our children now draw, even if we would never show them. Children just start f****** with walls and doing things. It's natural.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Where is this? It would have naturally. You had kids. You had kids in those caves. Curiosity and things would have happened.

Cristina: But why would those things stay in the caves? Like, why wouldn't it just.

Jack: Because what's going. Why, what's going to bring it down if it' protected from the elements, Even from water. What water if it's in a cave? The point of the cave was that it was protecting you from the water. All right, I'll move on, since that one's not landing. 5,500 years ago, we end the prehistoric era because the first record is made, the first word is written. It appears in Mesopotamia, which is, I believe, Iraq, now Iran, something like that. Anyways. So, yeah, that's the first word ever written. And it shows up in, you know, written document.

Cristina: Just a word, like words.

Jack: I'm sure there was like a sentence.

Cristina: A sentence or something.

Jack: I'm sure something more than just like, hey, it was like a text message. It was probably something important. And yeah, that was about 5500 years ago. The first mention of Atlantis happens. 2,300 years ago, it's going to be. Okay, that's about 2300 years ago. Now, year five, we end ancient history and come into the next, which is, you know, a little more modern or whatever. And then when we get way farther, 1700 years later, 1730, we have the first documented unicorn information.

Cristina: 1730.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And then. Well, maybe not the first documented, but specifically the merchants first encounter.

Cristina: Okay, okay.

Jack: And then in 1817, I mean, 1811 is when we get two different mentions of unicorn horns from two different Greek record keepers that both say it came from Mount Athos. That happens to be the same place that it seems the guy John, who gave it to our merchant in the first place got it from. So we had three different accounts of it coming from a mountain in Greece, Mount Athos.

Cristina: This is a very strange timeline.

Jack: Yeah. And it all holds together. It's all vastly connected.

Cristina: Okay, okay.

Jack: So I went down and I hunted down all the oldest structures in history. What are all the oldest things and where do they land? And what we find is that the oldest man made structure ever is 12,000 years ago. So way after language, but problematic because even farther from the equator, even farther, like where?

Cristina: Do you know?

Jack: Not location wise.

Cristina: Time wise.

Jack: Okay, this is entirely a discussion about time.

Cristina: Yes, yes.

Jack: 450 million years ago. Meanwhile, the oldest structure happened just 12,000 years ago.

Cristina: Okay, but is it on the old equator?

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Okay, yeah, okay.

Jack: No, no, that's actually wrong. So the oldest structure on Earth is not on the equator.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But the surprising amount of the structures that we have are. Which is fascinating. But yeah. The oldest structure is called Gobleki. Gobekli. Gobekli. And it is 12,000 years old and some weird anomalous object. So we still have a problem that we don't know how these people found the equator. And we still haven't begun recording history for them to like. No archaeologists exist yet because nobody's written anything down 12,000 years ago. We just found out that they started writing 5,500 years ago. So there's no proof of where anything would land. There's nothing. So then we start thinking, okay, 5,500 years ago, this structure isn't on the equator. What about the ones that do land on the equator? Several of them are 400 or 4,500 years old. And if the basic words began 5,500 years ago, we only give it a thousand years. We still don't have any kind of way to track how an old equator. And even if we had somebody who did the science and figured it out, how did he get the document to you? So that then you could make your structure across the world on the length. But you did.

Cristina: Yes, because a lot of places did.

Jack: Many places did. A ridiculous upwards of 20 different magnificent.

Cristina: Structures all land on that before, handwriting.

Jack: Or no, a bunch of these structures were made after records began, but with no ability. Like archeology hadn't happened, science hadn't begun. There's no way to get it across before. Like the person who wrote it dies of old age because of how far it is.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: And the fact that it crosses the entire globe when everybody still thought it was flat, you know, these kinds of things. If you still. But actually, this is another weird thing. Apparently that is not true.

Cristina: That. What's not true?

Jack: The ancients actually had.

Cristina: They believe it was round.

Jack: They believed it's round. And they had some pretty solid science not dating as back as 5,500, but, you know, it was out there. There's some ancient believers in this going as far back as, like, about a thousand bc.

Cristina: Did their science make sense of why they believed it was round?

Jack: Or maybe it was a real complicated science, but, like, science is the wrong word. But they had their calculations and they figured their things out, and, yeah, they checked out. Like, it wasn't wrong. But again, it's after the fact that.

Cristina: After what fact?

Jack: After. After the fact that these structures were made.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Okay.

Jack: That that happened after the fact that the structures were made is still younger than all the structures that land on the equator.

Cristina: Mm. It seems so random, though.

Jack: Okay, well, it seems random.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Until I scroll right back to the top, the document I'm using to communicate with you, and we start again, but this time with the knowledge we got by the time we got to the bottom. So let's begin about 3.7 billion years ago, the first sign of life.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: 450 million years ago. The old equator. 2.5 million years ago. Random sounds and rocks.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That we would call tools. You're using it as tools. And prehistory begins because we are now officially calling these people the Rela. Not relatives, but parallel to the cave people that would later become us. Those aren't them.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But, you know, they're living amongst. There's like, six or seven different equal things, by the way, I don't know if you knew that. That the cave people were like many and they were about equal, but they murdered each other off until our people made it.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: But actually, for a long time, there was a second group that was surviving, which is why a lot of people have, like, a lot of that DNA in there.

Cristina: But there's, like, three. There's more. There's like, seven.

Jack: There's a lot. There's a lot. They just kept murdering each other over time, and there's probably some still hanging out in some forest somewhere that hasn't been discovered now. So we go. We see humans 315,000 years ago, they start doing words that start to make sense 100,000 years ago. 50,000 years ago, we got full language. But we're still not recording anything. Very important information. We get to 5,500 again, the prehistoric era ends, and we have writing. That's why the prehistoric era ended. Now, around this time, we're also starting to construct the first writing is actually related to Greek mythology. Not literally the first writing.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But as writing started to begin, the people who most quickly took advantage of it were the Greek. They made small notes. It was nothing complicated. Although later they had some of the. As we found out a couple of episodes ago, they had ridiculous notes on irrelevant thing. They recorded everything at some point.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But here's where this gets really important. Prehistory ends in 5500. But Greek mythology predates that because the stories were being told before we could record them.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We immediately come across a problem. Why we don't know where the stories began because history began being recorded here.

Cristina: Isn't that like in everywhere, everyone had stories before we wrote the stories?

Jack: Right.

Cristina: So I don't understand. There's a problem.

Jack: No, I'm saying that that's like we don't. We just don't know when the stories were made is what I'm telling you.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: I don't understand what you were trying to tell me.

Cristina: No, I was just confused. Like, if that was a big deal or not.

Jack: It could be the fact that we don't know where the stories came from, then they got written. I'll explain why it's relevant in a second.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So the proto Indo Europeans, which, by the way, we also had an episode about when we're talking about how their stories became all the stories, and then all the religions and all the mythologies came from this one place. They told the original stories that later became everything. Now, that happened about 10,000 years ago. So before the records happened, the stories that would later become Greek mythology were told about 5,000 years before they started being written down. Okay, fantastic. Okay. Glad we got that out of the way. Because there's a story that is of unknown origin in Greek mythology that seems to actually have Russian roots, which is weird until you remember the Indo Europeans split in equal mass in every direction when their little volcano. Wow. And so they spread everywhere. And so the same people who became the Greek leader, or the same people who became, like, at the same time they became the Russians, and they left with the same narrative before writing happened. Then the stories went and evolved as, you know, telephone happened, and people kept changing the story as they told it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The one very important thing that shows up in both Russian and Greek lore written two different ways and vastly like the context seems to be entirely cultural, but it's the same exact story happens to be about a unicorn. A unicorn on Mount Athos. Okay, that's completely fascinating considering that the first recorded anything about that happened thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of years later. There's a story that is 5,000 years old, about a. Actually 7,000 years old, if we're talking 5,000 BC. But a unicorn on them on Mount Athos, long, long, long, long before our merchant comes across a Russian named John. Okay, who got it from Mount Athos.

Cristina: Do you have these stories though, or you have no idea?

Jack: It was very brief. It's literally just mentioned as a beast called Indrik. That happens to be a unit. I'm telling you, it's a bare minimum.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: It's just mentions of things. I would have told you the story if it was more complicated. Oh, this is bit like there are people who've expanded on it, but that's not the original stuff people have added to it. That's very different. Okay, but fascinating that we have again, mentions of a unicorn from exactly this. So actually it's four different mentions of a unicorn. One is the same story, but in two different places. Now, people did not know of Greece from Russia 10,000 years ago. I mean, in Indo Europe, you know, they didn't. Didn't know. Didn't know about Mount Athos or any of that. So why is it that when this story does happen way, way, way later, it so specifically references Mount Athos? Somebody went to Mount Athos and saw what they would also describe as a unicorn and then wrote that down in Russia. Yes. And they said it was in that mountain that I saw it.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: This happens to be just maybe like 200, 300 years before it's mentioned in the Greek folklore. So somebody from over there that came over here side before you reported it over here. Very interesting.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Four different sightings of the same thing in the same place.

Cristina: Mm, definitely.

Jack: Something weird is happening.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now we have a giant, giant, giant issue here. We know that the recordings came later and eventually mentioned the unicorn that existed in stories before that. So 10,000 years ago, first Indo European stories. Nice, nice sum. Considering that language complexifies so much so quickly because it only took 50,000 years to get to real complicated conversation.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: We started a hundred thousand years ago, and then we made it to 50,000 years ago. We're like, what's up, dude? You know, like, okay, whoa. So, yeah, you do for 40,000 more years and you're At a place where you could be like, well, yeah, there was a thing in a place and stuff happened. And then the volcano blows up. You all run away in every direction and you left with the. Yeah, the thing. But you wouldn't know about the place these other people went to. There's one consistent thing that we cannot fix about this narrative. I'm telling you right now, there is no way any of this information could travel. There's no way. We haven't made any methods for this information to go from one place to another in such short times.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And information that is consistent. So there is a story that is in both Russia and Greece is right on the verge of when things started to be written. How do you get it from one place to another? There is many, many, many, many structures along an equator line that doesn't even exist. And there wasn't science in order to track it in the first place, but the information still got out. Do you see the pattern? We have a lot of information that's moving quickly in speeds that are impossible for the time that the people existed. This leads to one single thing. There had to be higher advanced technologies that existed around this time that we have no knowledge of for them to.

Cristina: Get the story from one place here.

Jack: Yes. And we're talking the further back we go, the harder it gets. So the equator is the hard one. That's the real hard one. Because how did you get the structures? It's easier to move the word than it is to move the rock. You know, how do you get the information all the way up there and then they build it? Problematic. And we're talking some of these structures are right there at the edge of when writing began. There's no way this was so complicated that you could send the coordinates. So we got a problem. Definitely. There had to be some ancient advanced civilization. But there's no trace. Funny enough, there's also no trace.

Cristina: What's the fastest way to, like, send the message, though? Like when they were saying horseback. Okay. I was gonna say birds, but that's. Horseback is faster.

Jack: I mean, a bird would be faster, but you'd need to know where you're sending the bird to in the first place. But with a horse, you are the explorer.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: You would have already needed to get to where you're going, show the bird how to get there. And now you have a messenger bird.

Cristina: Ah, okay. Okay.

Jack: You need to show the bird where to go.

Cristina: That's difficult. Okay, I see.

Jack: You already have to travel there.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah.

Jack: So there's a problem. So we have no evidence of past advanced civilizations, but we simultaneously don't have any accidental cave drawings or markings left behind anywhere. Now, why is this relevant? Because we know of a past advanced civilization that might have existed, and it might be Atlantis. Okay, now, interesting part about that. It also falls on the equator, the ancient one. And, okay, we know mentions of Atlantis are abundant in records all over the place. They really believe those people existed. But also, there's no trace of those people. But also, they claim those people were highly advanced. Yeah, but also, the structures that are lining the equator are way more advanced than the people who built them were. So let me explain. There was an advanced civilization on the equator who did have the capacity to create the science and then pass that on and probably had the ability to transport it where it need needed to go and existed roughly around the same time that we needed for that to be the case for the information to get where it needed to. So then the structures got built afterwards. It completely solves every problem that this timeline has to just say Atlantis that is actually on the equator existed. And if that's the case, then, yes, they had the science. They could do the math and find out where this line goes.

Cristina: You think they have the caves?

Jack: We'll get there.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: He's got to stay on topic, man. We get there. You know, you going over there when I'm over here trying to explain to you what's going on. Atlantis had the science, and if they have the science and they're as advanced as claiming, then they are the first advanced civilization.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But we're talking technology to our scale or greater. Yes, factually. Now, the other thing that's interesting here is we're thinking of people like the Egyptians that built the pyramids, and we're like, oh, how complicated? But actually, we forget that these people were about as advanced as we are. We just think back. We're like, oh, they had to be ancient, but no, they had to be about at our level. Which is complicated because, yes, everything you built would suggest that unless somebody helped you, but then they. They sort of violated the prime directive and moved you quicker. But it's fine, because they're just like you. They're people like you. They're human, too. So. Because here's why that's important information. How did we so fast get to the Egyptians Popped up, and suddenly they're just the way we are. How did these civilizations so quickly get from point A to point B so long ago that they were where we are? Unless this information is wrong and they started further back.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But they didn't. Because we can prove that there's no trace of that. We can date these people to where they began. So the fact that they were at our stage does not make sense. But we know they were. Which is weird. So again, we came across a problem. Unless we insert Atlantis into the equation. Again.

Cristina: And how does that help?

Jack: Because you have people who are already sharing the knowledge. That's how you got the coordinates. That's how you traveled across the world. You have the people gonna see you.

Cristina: Okay. These are the special people who are helping everyone else advance.

Jack: Yes. They are so advanced themselves that they're helping everyone else. Two things conflict. One. Where are they? There are things that suggest underwater. There are pillars. There are structures. Quite advanced structures. Complicated rock designs and decorations leading into the water.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: They could have sunk. But then we go in the water and we find nothing but these structures. Highly advanced people wouldn't just die out.

Cristina: You're gonna say they went into space.

Jack: They went into space.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Interesting things that are gonna follow. Now we know that not only did Atlantis kind of plop off the face of the Earth with everything they had, but we know that there are two different groups of people on other parts of Earth that just also suddenly disappeared. And we believe some of them went down. But we also believe some of them went down. Up. Now we have no proof that anybody went down. That's just you guys seem to be quite introverted as a civilization and not going outward at all. So we assume based on the fact that there's catacombs and tunnels that we can't unclog and follow, that you're probably underneath all your structures. Buried.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Or plugged into some matrixy crap. Because it happened. Like, how did everybody do it?

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Weird. How did everybody just. Overnight. Everybody's gone. That's the weirdest part about the mayans. It under 50 years every. Unless some crazy plague got ripped. But then where all the remains.

Cristina: Like if they were underground and dead.

Jack: That's possible. But we would see something. We would have seen some groups of people or something. The fact that there's almost no trace of these people other than, like all their stuff is there. But where the bodies. That's why they have to be underground until you remember that. We also don't have the cave drawings and no link in those directions. Like where this should be older. The idea would be maybe there are cave drawings but there aren't remains. Because somebody took those people. And the people who took those people might have been the same People who are sharing the knowledge. Because you need to take people of every walk of life if you're gonna go explore. So Atlantis people not only advanced Earth by giving everybody information that would allow them to advance way beyond. We're talking that the Egypt, in a 1500 time period, managed to become as sophisticated as we are. Are you kidding me? And then afterwards, it took us longer to get to the same point.

Cristina: So they help everyone and they took some of everyone.

Jack: Yeah, but think about the logic of what I just said. In about 1500 years, they came to exist and got to where we are technologically, and we are still getting to where we are technologically. And it's been like 10,000 years. Do you see the problem? Huge discrepancies in what's happening. Either we are nowhere near as sophisticated as the Egyptians were and as the Mayans were, or they weren't as sophisticated as they were.

Cristina: They got help.

Jack: They got help, and then a bunch of them disappeared with literal no trace. And we're talking from advanced civilizations to primitive people.

Cristina: Are you saying the Egyptians disappeared?

Jack: No, the Egyptians didn't disappear. The structures are complex. Mines. As a beard.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And there are. I don't remember the other one that we talked about that they had the thing that opens, and then they could, like, in theory, have a rocket, which the Egyptians also had, but the Egyptians didn't actually use it. And it's more likely that theirs is.

Cristina: A laser or battery. Yeah.

Jack: While there was a different pyramid that had the ability to open at the tip. We know that only one of the pyramids in of the ancient Egypt pyramids does because they actually capped with a metallic or gold tip.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So a bunch of them couldn't open. I don't remember where this other one was, but it's in the Ancient Advanced Civilizations episode, if you guys want to listen to that. Okay, so we need to connect the Atlanteans to the last bit of information we have here in order to complete our informational circle.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The first written mention Atlantis just so happened to come from Greece. And the first mention of Atlantis in the Greek documents happens to talk about how they have bestiaries globally. And one of the most interesting parts about Atlantis and their bestiary is that according to. Because we don't have them, according to the Greeks, their creatures were of magic. What? And the Greeks only describe one other creature, but they say that creature is not magic. So weird. But in both cases, we seem to be talking about a very similar creature, because the Atlanteans had what would, in theory, now just be considered a Pegasus.

Cristina: Wait, what?

Jack: Yeah, Atlanteans had Pegasus, which then goes ahead and explains how you're locally traveling. And then you probably have advanced technologies that are also getting you across the world. So we have travel established very monstrously here.

Cristina: If they have flying horses. Yes. Okay. What?

Jack: Weirdly enough, how are you saying these people have flying horses but you have a unicorn? That doesn't happen. It's real. It's real. But it is magic. Yeah, but it's real. As opposed to. But they also believe that the Atlanteans had real Pegasus.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Okay. Actually, they believe all of this is real. They do believe that there's mythology, but unicorns don't show up in Greek mythology. They show up in Greek documents.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: These same documents. And go ahead and mention the Pegasus.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And the fact that the Atlanteans had bestiaries with creatures that they'd never seen before.

Cristina: Not just like the Pegasus.

Jack: Not just the Pegasus. There's a plethora. But that's the important one right now.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Because the fact that they can ride a Pegasus, that is magic. They can travel and that there is a horse that is also magic and happens to be in Greece. We're getting close now. We're getting to similarities. Both have magical horses. The one important thing about this document from Greece is the weirdest part about this.

Cristina: What?

Jack: The people from Atlantis would visit and they would fly their horse to one location.

Cristina: Mountain.

Jack: A mountain. And they would unmount there and then come out. Where was it? It was Mount f****** Athos.

Cristina: Is that why they had those horses there? Like did the. The unicorns.

Jack: No, no, I didn't meet them. Did not meet them. I know that there were unicorns and they were landing up there with Pegasus.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That mountain, for whatever reason, is sacred for horses.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And the mention of this mountain relative to unicorns. And the mention of this mountain then relative to Pegasus. Weird.

Cristina: That is very strange.

Jack: Not the strangest part.

Cristina: What?

Jack: The strangest part is that they apparently, without having to be virgins, can easily interact with unicorns. That's the weirdest part about these documents. That the Atlanteans can. That they're what?

Cristina: How do you know that are inversions.

Jack: How did they multiply science. Then they're not human and they're aliens by default. Okay, Immediately broke the argument.

Cristina: They're aliens to begin with.

Jack: So anyways, these aliens that came from outer space and are totally not human helped everybody out and that's the end of the story. Then obviously they had to reproduce. But we Have Atlanteans that have Pegasus land on a mountain that's claimed to have a bunch of unicorns. They seem to tame the unicorns. People have actually come with parts of unicorns from up there to prove that there are unicorns. These people had advanced technologies long before advanced technologies from people who are still here left. They seem to have dipped out because there's no trace of any of their stuff. But a bunch of other people also dipped out. And we know that these people didn't just leave, but they were also communicating with everybody everywhere. So they would have come across these more primitive people, presumably the Atlanteans, to be this far advanced and way above our heads by miles and would have been around much, much, much, much, much longer than even the Indo. The proto Indo Europeans, in fact, so far ago that they were beating maybe. Perhaps language. Maybe they were at the inception of language, which is also around the time that we started seeing the first cave signs. If they predate that and they're helping people consistently, then maybe they're consistently plucking people from different walks of life to bring them and incorporate their knowledge. Oh, you start developing a different way. Let's incorporate you so that we can move up quicker with you.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Oh, you guys are also. Okay, we're gonna. And then as we get knowledge, we're also gonna share it. We're also gonna share it everywhere. Share it everywhere. Where'd you get the idea to start cutting these rocks in the first place? Somebody gave it to you.

Cristina: Mm. You didn't just idea.

Jack: Yeah. You didn't just stumble, but somebody gave it to you. But it wasn't aliens. That doesn't make any sense.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But somebody did gave it to you. And yeah, language got complex really quickly, and words started pretty basic off, but you would have started drawing at that time. Unless when you started coming up with language, somebody took note and they're like, oh, these guys are smart enough to start coming up with language. Let's start scooping some up and see how it goes.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: So you took the people who would leave the least amount of trays but you would keep safe. And then we never find their bodies, which means they never lead us to the caves in the first place. And boom, we answered that question too. On top of the fact that then with all their science, they go ahead and share with everybody, because apparently they have flying horses and extremely advanced technologies that then allow them to give other groups of people. Hey, if you put it right here, you align perfectly, and then that would explain everything. That's happening in Egypt with extremely detailed information. Something about that spot is particularly sacred to the people of Atlantis. Which would be because it is itself an area of advanced technology With a really complicated laser. That's probably not even a laser. But rather a transportation which we've established has a literal chamber inside.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That you would connect straight to the beam. That has the battery design and happens to be in Egypt. Which is the most advanced of all. And it's also the most mathematically complicated position wise. And we know people disappeared. There is something that could matter you out of here without a trace.

Cristina: And only the Atlantic people knew. How?

Jack: I don't know because I didn't talk to those people. But according to what we're talking about, the people of Atlantis disappeared. And there is a transport device on the equator. And how did they even get that level of technology themselves? Because we know that's not possible. But they did have it. So you had things you shouldn't have. There are people missing. And you have a transport device that happens to be on the line that those people who did have the tech also happen to be on.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And they could travel to you even if you can't travel to them.

Cristina: And they're all just gone.

Jack: Yeah. So the idea here is all these structures aren't just normal structures. These are structures that were plotted by the people of Atlantis for different purposes. Including our transport device. But there's also giant clocks. There's space measurement devices. There's constellation measurement devices. Timekeeping. Just really highly advanced stone structures that wouldn't savagely disrupt a civilization. But would give them enough advantage over the people around them. And all happened around exactly the same time. I'll show you how weird this is. I'm just gonna give you the years of when a lot of these structures happen to line together. We have one, two, three different structures that happened about 4,500 years ago. And they are all on the equator. And they are about equal distance from each other circling the earth.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: How did you all manage to get exactly the same information, Put your structures in exactly the same place and not have any means of transportation to cross Earth?

Cristina: How many of them? Four. You said three. Three. Okay, three.

Jack: That's not even the biggest problem. Considering that there's another three that also happen to be around the same time. And again the same issue arises. You guys are too spread out across the Earth. How? These are 6,500 years apart. The other one is 4,500 years apart. And in both cases three structures separated by a planet all landed on the equator at the same time. At the same time.

Cristina: Crazy. Okay.

Jack: And this happened 2,000 years later again.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Three different structures around the world. Too far apart.

Cristina: Okay, that is very strange.

Jack: Somebody's telling them.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And they're not doing it because how. How are you getting all the way from India all the way to Australia? Not getting lost. Dropping something in Australia, Dropping something in India. Dropping something in Europe. Like what?

Cristina: Okay, what?

Jack: So the solution would be that the people that there were highly advanced people helping that would solve the problem. The people that were. They were literally on the equator, and we know their structures on the equator. The people went missing because they probably just dipped out with a bunch of other people that they got information from as they started seeing intelligence happen elsewhere. Yeah, it's. It's quite possible.

Cristina: Do you think they're related to the unicorns that are on that hill, though, because of the Pegasus that they have, or you think those are unrelated?

Jack: I don't think the unicorns belong to them. It's just the fact that there are highly advanced people that are both gone and claim to have been real by the same people also claim to have a flying horse and fly that horse to where there's already allegedly unicorns and say that these people can interact and tame the creature. You can't even come across. So it's just a bunch of random crap that somehow happened altogether interesting. And so as of now, with the mention of unicorns even existing outside of Greece, I thought Greece was the only people who thought it was real. But no, Russia believes so too many.

Cristina: Think it's in Greece, and they think.

Jack: It'S in Greece and they mention the mountain by name.

Cristina: Okay, okay.

Jack: Not only that, John was Russian and he handed our merchant the powder.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Or it was the horn. Yeah, it was a horn. Yeah, he gave the whole horn to.

Cristina: The guy and it pretty much became powder at the end of the story. Okay.

Jack: He's given it by a Russian.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Who said it came from Mount Athos. There happens to be a story in Russia about Mount Athos and unicorns. And the only other people who believe that there are unicorns in Mount Athos and there aren't just mythology, but rather real, are the Greek who own Mount Athos and also said the Atlanteans are the weirdest people because they just go there and the horses don't run away.

Cristina: How many stories? Like, is Atlantis mentioned in a lot of places around the world?

Jack: Yes, it is an absurd amount.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's like. But the problem is Atlantis spun into mythology real quick.

Cristina: Oh, yeah.

Jack: The idea is, why did that happen? Why did it so. Because the main reason is you can't find them. So it so easily became mythology. It's the same thing as the Mayans, but for some reason we're like, oh, they were people. Yes, but the Atlantis.

Cristina: No.

Jack: It would be crazy if. But us. Our narcissism is in there too. Like, they couldn't have been more than us. We're the people peak at the moment.

Cristina: Of course. Yeah.

Jack: We're always the peak, bro. We always think that before when we were in the stones, we're like, we're the peak. And there were like, people better than us. Whatever. Yeah. So that's basically the idea here. Definitely. Unicorns seem to have been at least tamed in the slightest way by the same Russians who did believe that they. Not the same Russians. The Atlanteans, in the place that both the Russians and the Greek believe that they would be.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And the same people mentioning the unicorns, the Atlanteans and the Pegasus that happened to also have a bunch of records of other encounters with unicorns. Mention the high advanced nature of the Atlanteans. And then the Atlanteans land on the equator that was old. That then happens to be where all the other structures are that the only people who could access that would be the Atlanteans.

Cristina: Because they could just fly to each location.

Jack: Bare minimum. If we don't know that they have the technology.

Cristina: The.

Jack: That was the point of mentioning the Pegasus.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Bare minimum. You have a horse that doesn't have to slow down. You have flight. You beat everybody. You have flight, bare minimum. You got no tech, you have flight.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Bare minimum. But if that's the case, you also have magic because they still mention the fact that you're taming horses that literally disappear in front of people's eyes and you have a horse that freaking flies.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So if you don't have technology, you are literally messing around with magic. In either instance, you are way above everybody else.

Cristina: Yes. Yes.

Jack: The only answer to every problem we have come across is that the Atlanteans must exist. Is that.

Cristina: And they must be like a super advanced civilization, at least compared to everyone else at the time. Yes, they were.

Jack: They were so far advanced even back then that they are more advanced than us by like a thousand years. That's how crazy that is. Okay. So, yeah, basically I'd say I want to. There's. There's way more we didn't get to. There's like half of this, though, to go And I didn't get to it because there's a lot. And it's just. Just trying to conclude that all of this is possible. If we insert Atlantis, but it all falls apart, and we don't know how anything functions. If we extract them, but we believe reality that's accurate is the one with them extracted, which is like. You guys realize the solution is literally right there. If you insert that, everything works out. Which is funny because scientists jokingly have joke papers suggesting the same thing, but none of it is official. And it's all in joke. And it's like. But. But you saw what. Yeah, you saw what the rest of us concluded. Sort of. But they don't believe it's real.

Cristina: That is lame.

Jack: And they do not connect the. The. The unicorn that had. That was complicated research to tie all that back in a circle that led back to the unicorn.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Because that's actually where I started. That was the hardest part, figuring that out. And then everything else just kind of fell out of that.

Cristina: That's so crazy. And there's still more.

Jack: Still more. Because it was weird. I chased the unicorn, just digging deeper, and then the very Pegasus. Well, I was like. I was just trying to expand on it. I didn't find a Pegasus. That happened to happen after Atlantis connected to everything.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: But looking for it, I found the story that the Russians had. And then going through that, I'm like, okay, so this is pretty hefty mention. And it's about the same mountain. What else happens in this mountain? What is. What are all the things that happen in this mountain? Atlantis. Why is Atlantis touching this mountain? That's sketchy.

Cristina: That is. Is there more? Did you look at a bunch more?

Jack: No, there wasn't a lot. It's pretty bare minimum that's happening on that mountain. It just happens to be like, Atlantis, the Pegasus. There is a fight that happened between a giant, and it's either his burial site or the giant through a rock. That is the mountain. One of those two. But that's mythology. That's Greek mythology.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: When it comes to actual records that they believe are real and wrote in honesty, believing this were like, these were events. They truly believe the Atlanteans would park a Pegasus on top of the mountain, hang out with some unicorns, and then come out and trade.

Cristina: Interesting.

Jack: Well, so anytime Atlanteans showed up, you would expect them to come from Mount Athos. Even if they were not living on Mount Athos.

Cristina: Didn't they have any idea where Atlantis was?

Jack: The Gulf.

Cristina: That's what they knew that too, yeah.

Jack: Everybody believes it was in the prison.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So, yeah. Fascinating couple of details there. See, also, wouldn't that suggest that Atlantis. They were Middle Eastern?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Right.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The most advanced people in the world were Middle Eastern. Yeah, that checks out. It would have been some of the earliest people. In fact, the Middle east is directly above Africa, where we believe everything began.

Cristina: So that makes sense too.

Jack: Checks out that. Yeah, I didn't even think about that before, but, yeah, that totally fits. Even more.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: The narrative just got tighter by remembering that. Oh, yeah, the first people are the north of Africa, the south of the Middle east, which would essentially just surround the Persian Gulf. If you wait long enough, they could migrate there, established civilization at the beginning of time, quickly move forward, and boom, we have what we now know. The one detail I'll add, we're way over time, so we're gonna close this right here. Is that if that's the case. And yes, they're the Middle Eastern people, and they are in this very specific region. In order for them to get to that level of advance, they also needed to go through trials and tribulations like all the other creatures that then became advanced. This would mean that they probably weren't from our time. They're not H*** sapiens. They might have been one of the other groups.

Cristina: Okay, okay. One of the other.

Jack: One of the other human.

Cristina: Humans. Yeah.

Jack: Okay, interesting. That makes sense, because they would have outdated us, moved faster forward, because we know that the ones that were ancient humans, not ANC humans, but those other cave people, were roughly at the same level we were. If you just say there were some that happened much earlier, which we know, 2.5 million years ago.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: One of those groups could have wandered off, landed here, isolated, become just between each other. Yes, we're working on it. Working on it. Working on an isolation until they're so advanced. By the time we start getting to where we should be seeing things that we're not seeing, they were already too advanced.

Cristina: They were interesting. Okay, so they're not even human, or. They are.

Jack: They are humanoid. They're not alien.

Cristina: Yeah. Yes.

Jack: Yeah. They're different caveman. That is not our lineage likely. So, yeah. Anyways, just food for thought. So, yeah. Many episodes you guys can look at relative to all this information to catch up. If you are not caught up there. We got unicorn episode. We got an episode with the Merchant. We have an episode talking about the old, old equator. We have a couple of episodes about the ancient advanced civilizations. We have episodes about Atlantis. We have, you know, Quite a lot going on. Aliens intervening. We got the Mayans disappearing. We got all of the Egyptians. The Egyptians and how we used it as well. There's a lot. There's a lot. You guys can find all that stuff on all our feeds and you can get in contact with us and let us know if you like any of it or if you have ideas. Look, if you got input to this, like, something that could fall in here, message us and let us know. You can hit us up on just convopod at TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, wherever.

Cristina: And remember to subscribe, rate and review the show.

Jack: Yes. And tell people, tell everybody. And this is actually a really interesting, weird thing that isn't normally talked about, but there's a lot of, like, documents that could connect you easily to all this information. You could research this and land at real science. Research that has been done by real scientists, real professionals looking into this and being like, well, that's a weird coincidence. And it's like, maybe stop calling it a coincidence, bro.

Cristina: What if it's not?

Jack: If it solves all your problems, you call that a theory, and then you hypothesize and try to experiment. Simple.

Cristina: Yeah. This has been the rhyming podcast. Thanks for listening. Bye. So let's put kind of that. That's great. Then they could talk about it. The point is to discuss.

Jack: Well, they're gonna be fascinated by watching. They're gonna be so excited watching and being like, what could they possibly be talking about? Oh, my God, I wish I could know. They're not gonna be worried about the fact that they're tied up or anything. Being held, horrified. No, they're like, what could they possibly be talking about in that episode?

Cristina: And then the person hearing it is not going to want to talk about it.

Jack: No, they're just. They're probably not even really paying attention. They're just truly horrified. They're super scared because that other person doesn't even seem to want to help. They just seem to want to be in on it.

Cristina: Yes. 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 0lupo and logo by Seth McAllister 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 132: Pyramid of Giza Technology

Giza, Pyramid, Pyramid of Giza Technology, Egypt, Ancient Advanced Civilization, Rocket Science, Teleporter, Transporter, Laser Technology

Why does the Great Pyramid of Giza have internal technology? What could the power coils and wiring be used for? What did the ancient advanced civilizations need such a large piece of machinery for? The duo speculates the true purpose of the Pyramids and come to a conclusion no one could have ever imagined!

Why does the the Great Pyramid of Giza have internal technology? What could the power coils and wiring be used for? What did the ancient advanced civilizations need such a large piece of machinery for? The duo speculates the true purpose of the Pyramids and come to a conclusion no one could have ever imagined!

Topics Discussed:

  • Pyramid Void
  • Pyramid Power Coil
  • Laser Technology
  • Interplanetary War
  • Planet Destroying Weapon
  • Missing Planet
  • Transporter Technology
  • Teleporter Technology
  • Interstellar Travel
  • Intergalactic Travel
  • Entanglement
  • Instant Travel
  • Black Hole Gun
  • Dyson Sphere
  • The Great Void

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 am your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I am 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 is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes, because the topics we discuss are so vastly important, monumentally, they change the world. Our job is to alter how things work and function. To inform you and get you woked by the level of education we bring you.

Cristina: Yes, we have degrees and things. And stuff.

Jack: And things. And stuff. Exactly. We have all the degrees and things and stuff. And we're here to inform you on all those things we have degrees on. Pick one. That one. Yeah, that. Exactly. Whatever you're thinking of, we got that degree. Doesn't matter which one you think it is. We have it factually.

Cristina: Even the made up ones. Even like degree. In watermelons.

Jack: Yes. Come on. We have the best of green watermelons. Nobody is a watermelon expert the way we are. We. We have all the degrees under the sun and under other stars as well. Not just the sun. We have all the degrees under all the stars. We're intergalactic. We have the. The. The what the f***? It is called the. The sub humans. And with the subhumans on our fancy rockets, we go and we learn from everyone in the Federation. Like Star Trek. But the real one, not the fake one that's on tv. You guys don't know about the real one?

Cristina: Well, the real one is a lot like the one on tv.

Jack: It's almost identical.

Cristina: Like Picard really exists in this reality.

Jack: He has a different name. Picard is based on a real guy who's a true hero among the real Federation that explores all that there is. Except we really haven't explored a bunch either. Because we're kind of trapped in our little. Well, we'll get there eventually. Yes, interesting enough, I do believe we might get there soon.

Cristina: Like next year.

Jack: I don't know under what time. Our lifetimes.

Cristina: Our lifetime. Okay.

Jack: I think within our lifetimes we can travel the entire expanse of the universe. At least the observable universe. But correction. And further and further and further.

Cristina: Okay, and why do you think that?

Jack: Well, because I have stumbled upon the possibility that. Well, let's rewinding. You know, that's a Rewind sound.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Previously on Just Conversation. We were talking about the pyramids. Oh, wait. We're supposed to make, like, a fake every time we have, like, a memory. They're supposed to be scenes that didn't even happen.

Cristina: Oh, crap.

Jack: Previously. Right. So it's gonna be, like, a little rewind sound. I'm sure our engineers have that somewhere and they're gonna splice that into the audio. Okay, so assuming that does happen. And I'm gonna say random. Totally wrong. Yeah, we're both gonna say totally random things. So insert audio here. I'll do my own so that we know the cue. Previously on Just Conversation. The pyramids.

Cristina: Aliens.

Jack: Teleportation. Question mark. Mayans vanishing.

Cristina: Other pyramids.

Jack: Rocket ship.

Cristina: Is it us?

Jack: Present day. Or I guess we put that. Now there's a forward sound, right?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Is that we rewind.

Cristina: We.

Jack: I guess the opposite of a rewound sound or what a. Anyways, so, yeah, we're talking about the. In several different occasions we've discussed.

Cristina: Yeah, there's gotta be like, two or three episodes.

Jack: Yeah, there's a couple. And they all got different information. In one of them. We brush over how weird the pyramid is. Just talking about other s***. I think we're talking about wonders or some s***.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And then in another episode, we broke apart the fact that there is what seems to be technology inside the pyramid.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Specifically the pyramid of Giza. I think that's closest one. And then I believe the first one was discussing different types of pyramids in which we also landed in the Mayans. Totally vanishing. And the fact that they had what look like to be platforms to move people parts of the pyramid around, which suggest rocket ships could be hidden in there. Opens and then boom, shoots out.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Which is weird that that would be there. Anyways. But going to the pyramid of Giza, Right?

Cristina: That's in Egypt. Yeah. Okay.

Jack: There were this. A while ago, scientists found something very interesting.

Cristina: What?

Jack: It was a gap. They were using echolocation or sonar or some to dig through without digging through. And they found that there was, like, a gap in there. Just a hole, an empty space. There could be stuff in there, but it's not solid like the rest of it.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And they were like, oh, interesting. Curious, curious fact here. And they start sending more signals straight through.

Cristina: More interesting how big it was or something.

Jack: Yeah. But the thing is, they found a bigger gap that's not connected to the previous one.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: There's two holes there inside of this thing that already seems like it has some form of technology going On.

Cristina: But they found more than two, or was that the end of it? They found exactly two giant gaps.

Jack: They found two giant gaps. A tiny one towards the base and a larger one higher up. It's somewhere around a piece of the pyramid called the king's chamber. That is also what is expected to be one of the power coils. What interesting detail that there would be a gap close to what is the power coil.

Cristina: The power coil is a very strange idea in itself, even if nothing was next to it. Why is there a power coil?

Jack: Why is there what's potentially wiring and conduction tubes in a pyramid that's ancient as f***. And then we just find a gap.

Cristina: So where are you going with this?

Jack: Well, I cracked open some books and decided to dive into what could be done with part A and part B. Because the scientists are too slow. I'm getting bored of waiting for them to do it. I know I can solve it.

Cristina: Are those the different gaps or that's something else.

Jack: The gaps and the technology.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: The combination of the two pieces. We know. Putting those two together, you're gonna solve.

Cristina: The mystery of the gaps.

Jack: The mystery of the gaps and what the electrical components within the pyramid is and why it's there.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: But I think I actually did solve the problem.

Cristina: You did first.

Jack: Scientists are idiot. I know better. I know better than people who have studied and worked on this hands on their entire lives in my weekend of research.

Cristina: What?

Jack: So if they want to get some tips on how to do it right, on how to in one weekend, figure out what they're still scratching their heads about. Stupid scientists. Stupid scientists. Took them so long.

Cristina: But what books are you looking at to figure it out? Was it books written by sciences?

Jack: Maybe.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And maybe a lot of them were picture books. Maybe it was all picture books.

Cristina: You were just looking at picture books and you solved it.

Jack: Might have been coloring books. I might have been looking at coloring books that kind of sort of show the pyramids in a way, simplistic kind of way.

Cristina: And it made sense to you and it clicked.

Jack: I solved it. Do you know that meme of the lady and the numbers flying in front of her face?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That happened in real life. In fact, I saw that lady in the middle of a hallucination that told me all the answers.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: I might have also done drugs.

Cristina: So you're looking at coloring books.

Jack: On drugs.

Cristina: Okay. On drugs.

Jack: And then I had a hallucination about that meme and then the numbers in there clicked in the meme.

Cristina: The numbers in the meme the numbers equal the solution to the solution to.

Jack: The problem that the scientists couldn't figure out their whole lives. They should have just done some hard drugs and then they would have found the answer.

Cristina: What? Of course, that was the answer.

Jack: Of course. Right, of course. The answer is always on the other side.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Anyways, so the idea here is pretty clear. The big pyramid is some sort of piece of technology that does something that requires electricity because we have electrical components. And somehow this hole we found works into it.

Cristina: The hole does. For sure.

Jack: For sure. Now both the holes maybe.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Depends. I'm not entirely sure on the logistics of here, but I'll float my ideas by.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So first, I think the three small pyramids are batteries. They hold the energy that gets sent in and is received through the machine.

Cristina: That we see found in those little pyramids.

Jack: Yes. Not as intricate and complicated as the bigger pyramid.

Cristina: Okay. But enough to think that they're batteries.

Jack: Enough to believe that there might be parts of it we haven't found that could be batteries.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: And the size of these pyramids alone tells us that the amount of energy that they could hold is quite big.

Cristina: How big?

Jack: A lot.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: I don't know if I said 10 googleplex kilowatts. Does that number mean anything?

Cristina: Nah.

Jack: So big.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Big is enough. Now that means the bigger pyramid is the machine itself.

Cristina: A machine?

Jack: Yeah. Whatever is being powered by the three smaller battery pyramids is the big pyramid.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: It needs that. It probably has solar energy that it's also using, but it probably stores the energy in these other ones. So it could use one, the solar energy that's using actively and have backup energy. It's because whatever is doing probably needs a lot of energy. It probably can't even be used frequently.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It could take maybe months, years, hundreds of years to charge. I'm not sure. Could could just be months or weeks.

Cristina: So do you have many ideas of what this big pyramid is? I got one.

Jack: They're based on the same principles, which means this is probably what it was for to begin with.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So it's something along these lines. Right. So we establish that it is some sort of energy based machine. Energy based technology.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: It uses energy. And now my theories go as follow. I believe that. So the small pyramids power the big pyramid. We have power coil. We have energy bouncing around. We have a tip that seems to be a big focal point. That tip should be pointing at something.

Cristina: Mm. Now, okay. Yes. What?

Jack: One of two things. First, I initially believed this could have been some sort of laser.

Cristina: A Laser. Just a laser.

Jack: A laser. But it's a kind of laser that requires ginormous energy sources like they were.

Cristina: In a battle with aliens and then made that to fight them off.

Jack: It would be way more complicated than that.

Cristina: What?

Jack: The idea here would be that the amount of energy you're pumping into this one thing. And again, we don't know how far these pyramids go into the like, what's the size of the battery and what's all the technology we don't see beneath the pyramid itself.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We can't dig. We can't look. It just is what it is. We see what we see and we're left to deal with that. But assuming that there's quite a bit. We're just seeing the proverbial tip of the iceberg.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And there's a giant cannon like structure digging into the ground. Who knows how far. Being powered by these three pyramids that also dig into the ground. Who knows how far?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Massive amounts of energy could be stored in those. And then this tip of a laser beam that we're seeing isn't just to fight aliens, but rather to destroy entire planets to this.

Cristina: What kind of.

Jack: What you could aim it at a planet. Boom. Gone. But why battle to conquer.

Cristina: So battle. Okay.

Jack: To establish dominance.

Cristina: That is so crazy.

Jack: So maybe this was ground zero. If we go back to the most recent episode where we discussed this. I don't even remember the name of the episode. But we can't. We brushed over this kind of stuff where we were talking about the possibilities that we took off the planet in different waves.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That means we had the ability to explore and maybe we found things. And maybe this was one of the ground bait. Maybe we have many of these on different planets and it allows us to aim and destroy things in the middle of a war. We can get rid of an entire race if we destroy a planet. Just extinct some whole s***.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now it's because of the type of weapon that it would be. The range would be quite limited.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It would still be bare max. Like maximum possibility nearby stars. Minimum possibility within our own star system.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Now if we look at old hieroglyphs and we look at just records, the ancient form of records of people keeping things. Those people who somehow knew that the Earth. Earth was round originally. That there were a bunch of planets or whatever. There are often two additional planets that we do not have. And it does not include Pluto.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now those two.

Cristina: Pluto.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Oh, wait.

Jack: So those two planets aren't there anymore?

Cristina: Yes. Ah.

Jack: That's to say that they didn't get their calculations wrong. We see that they had everything right. They destroyed those planets. Why don't we have the planets they predicted? It's because the planets are gone. They blew the planets up. We had that technology.

Cristina: Ashes still be out there. Like would they be part of the rings or something?

Jack: They might be the meteor belt.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Oh, might not be that. They're in the meteor belt. They might be the meteor belt.

Cristina: There's two meteor belts. Two planets. Ah.

Jack: Yep. I guess they're asteroid. But those asteroid belts.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So the two different asteroid belts could have been two different planets that were fully destroyed. Now this is assuming we have a civilization with the capacity to fix the gravitational force of the system after you've destroyed such heavy things. So that's the assumption we're making. These are particularly advanced civilizations. They have some sort of laser weapon they can do quite a lot with.

Cristina: Yes. Like if that's what they have, they probably have other technologies too. Yes. Like.

Jack: Yes, they need to have. Like it can't just be a crazy weapon. And then everything else is primitive.

Cristina: Everything is normal.

Jack: Yeah. We're assuming they have quite a bit of technology and maybe those are some people who left. Now the amount of energy it would require again should be theoretically massive.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: But we don't know how sophisticated it is. The technology should be massive by our current standards. And we're assuming we're technologically primitive to those people of that time. Like we're nowhere near building a planet destroying laser that is so far out of our reach. But they got there. Which means they've efficientized energy storage and laser technology.

Cristina: Yes. They have to have a computer in there too, right?

Jack: Yeah. So it has to be so sophisticated that it's outside of our understanding. Thus destroying a planet and having just three generators that could be indeterminate size. Fascinating. Great. Total possibility it might be less energy than we think it would need to destroy a planet because they made it so efficient. But assuming that it's vastly more efficient than we have the ability to conceive. It could be used to detonate a star.

Cristina: What?

Jack: You trigger a star into blowing up.

Cristina: Why would someone want to do that?

Jack: A different system with different life forms that you are at war with.

Cristina: Whoa. That is too crazy.

Jack: So you could just aim, fire, clear it out. Which oddly enough there are two images. One that depicts some sort of light or beam or something shooting out of a pyramid. I don't know what the h*** it is. But interesting image. Also a hieroglyph. And the other is a I wouldn't say a star, but it looks like the sky itself is exploding.

Cristina: These are both hieroglyphs.

Jack: Hieroglyphs. Yes. That the sky itself is exploding.

Cristina: Mmm.

Jack: Which both tell us the possibility that. Yeah.

Cristina: That that's what happened.

Jack: That's what happened. So we've probably cleared out some of our own planets in the primitive stages of that same technology and over who knows how long made it sophisticated enough to take out a star and take out the whole system with it.

Cristina: That is so crazy. That is too much.

Jack: And we wouldn't even know that there's an entire star system missing.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It would just not be there.

Cristina: Except that they, they left a little picture for us.

Jack: They left picture, for whatever reason, pictures of laser looking pyramids and skies blowing up.

Cristina: That's amazing and weird, right? Yes, it's crazy interesting, right? Yes.

Jack: Now that is the low energy version of what we're talking about. With the amount of energy it needs, that's still the low energy cost option. And that wasn't even my first idea. I solved this problem. I came up with this conclusion trying to fix the original idea that then return got refined even more because it included a couple of different stages. The second option is that this pyramid is some sort of teleporter or transporter.

Cristina: What, and what are those giant rooms though? How do they relate to all this?

Jack: In the case of a transporter or teleporter, that room is where you're leaving and arriving from.

Cristina: Oh, oh, what you need a safe.

Jack: Empty spot that you can pop in and out of without phasing into a wall.

Cristina: Yes. And that would be it.

Jack: And that would be it.

Cristina: Okay, well how do you. Okay, how does this become a teleporter?

Jack: Alright, so first this would require quite a vast amounts of energy. Quite vast amounts of energy. But in the two options here we have a higher energy and a lower energy as well. So assuming it is some sort of transporter. Right now I'm assuming there's three different options here. Two different energy consumption methods. So transporter, low energy. We get turned in the void, the large room, into matter. That is raw material, but it's our entire structure. Yeah, the machine that is inside of the pyramid jumbles us up, sends us through tubes, aligns us and shoots us out the tip of the pyramid. That being said, the moving of matter through space at speeds as fast or faster than light would require a clusterfuck of energy.

Cristina: Is that safe though? So I mean we would like go through things if we were just matter going through space.

Jack: You Know, we're assuming that the energy would tear through all that.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And, like, leave us where we need to be. But it would take too much energy to move us, let's say, to the next star. All right, so we're talking about just local travel within our system. It would be. You go to the pyramid. You can land on Mars in a couple of seconds.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Versus having to take a flight that takes you forever.

Cristina: Mm. That's awesome.

Jack: And that allows a colonized Mars to have been the previous location. And maybe there was a pyramid there too, and that could shoot us back to Earth, easily sending us from one to the other.

Cristina: Any planet, not just Mars. Like, it could be the farthest planet from here.

Jack: Yes. It would take a little longer, but it would be so incremental, because although you have massive amounts of energy, the distances are pretty short. It would take too much, seemingly impossible amounts of energy to send us outside of the star system because of the size of those distances.

Cristina: Yeah, but to Mars. What?

Jack: Yes. If we wanted to go farther, we do have a different option, which would be teleportation. In this instant, we could get farther, quicker, not too far, because we still have to send the message that has to move through space.

Cristina: The teleporter is what, exactly? We're not materials anymore.

Jack: You're getting destroyed. All of that is being scanned. The message of the information that was scanned is sent to the destination where you are reconstructed out of raw materials. It wouldn't be you, but it would, to everyone else, be indistinguishably you.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So your lights go out, but you kind of keep going in the universe. Really?

Cristina: Yeah. That is so crazy. That's so crazy.

Jack: Yeah. I f****** hate teleporters. I don't like teleporters. I want to be. I don't want the lights to go out.

Cristina: But you won't know. But you do know. If you know the science. But if you don't know the science, it's perfectly fine because it just. You. You're asleep, you wake up like it's normal.

Jack: Yeah. Well, you don't wake up, but you.

Cristina: Think, like, if you don't tell them that that's what's happening. If you don't explain it and they just see it happen.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: They're like, okay, that's fine.

Jack: You see somebody teleport from one side of the room to the other. You're like, oh, yeah, he's over there. And then you jump in, you died. But another. You popped out. Somebody's like, oh, yeah, he's Fine.

Cristina: Yeah. You really trick people if they don't know.

Jack: But also, in some future version of this, you can't just eat it. It's just like it is what it is doing. Well, my life, who cares? It's still me moving around.

Cristina: It's so crazy. I guess. I don't know. I don't want to do it. I don't want to do it.

Jack: Yeah, it's weird. The. The infinite darkness casually chosen.

Cristina: But there's another me out there. I don't know. I don't know.

Jack: It's insignificant anyways, right? Because you go far enough into space, s*** just repeats.

Cristina: Yeah, but how far can this take us? You said it will go much farther.

Jack: It would definitely be able to travel at the speed of light. Because it would just travel the information. You're not moving the matter itself. You don't have to force the matter to travel at the speed of light. You could just send the message. Which travels at the speed of light.

Cristina: Amazing.

Jack: And so you get farther, faster with less energy. So theoretically, you can send you out way farther.

Cristina: Like anywhere.

Jack: Yeah. It would just take absurd amounts of time to get there. Oh, but you'd get there at the speed of light.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like you could send you to Alpha Centauri. You just take however long light takes to get.

Cristina: You don't age through this process.

Jack: No. Because it saves you exactly as you were. And it's going to reconstruct the exact information recorded of you.

Cristina: Oh, okay. When it comes to the other one, is it the same thing?

Jack: Yeah. You're just broken down to your individual particles and then constructed it elsewhere. But that's literally your same particles.

Cristina: Yeah, but those particles don't age.

Jack: No, because they're not cells at the moment.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Cells are constructed of atoms. These atoms are individual.

Cristina: All right. It's so complicated.

Jack: Broken down to particles. You might even be atom splitting and containing the dest information.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: This is two different options.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Where we have a vastly, thoroughly complex transporter that'll break you down and send you locally. Or a teleporter is going to destroy you, scan you, and send the information to reconstruct you elsewhere in the transporter. You are locally trapped. It would be so vastly complicated to send you to a different star.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it would still have a moment's lag before you got to the planet you're heading to within our system. While with the teleporter. Speed of light. Without a doubt.

Cristina: Speed of light. And you have the science for this?

Jack: Yeah. Information travels at the speed of Light.

Cristina: No, not that. For how you came up with these.

Jack: Two conclusions, using laser technology is exactly how both of them would occur. I thought you would excite the atoms in their individual state. Electrons would then create the source of energy, and then you would fling that outwards the way a laser works.

Cristina: And they would both use these rooms the same way. For those two options.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: And for the just regular laser to destroy planets or.

Jack: They don't use rooms.

Cristina: They don't use rooms.

Jack: Maybe that's like the control room, if anything.

Cristina: That's interesting. Okay.

Jack: But using the basic science that scientists use for lasers is how I came to these conclusions in the first place. That these are different alternatives for what could be done with these things. And picture books and crayons.

Cristina: And drugs.

Jack: And drugs. A lot of drugs.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Now. Now we have teleportation technology. We have the two options established. They don't allow for much. It's kind of complex. We're still trapped within the local system, even if. Whether local stars or local planets. Either way, and in the case of transportation, you have got to have so much energy to send you farther. In the case of teleportation, you could send you farther and it would take less time or I guess less energy would really be the argument here. It would just be less energy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Transportation would take such f***. Tons of energy because you got to send matter at the speed of light.

Cristina: So it'd be easier just to do teleportation.

Jack: Teleportation, because it already travels at the speed of light. You could just send the information out, broadcast it in the direction you needed to go, and reaches its destination at the speed of light without needing to get it to the speed of light.

Cristina: Yeah. You could just hop from one Earth to another.

Jack: Yes. Well, that brings up the next solution to the problem. Now, I kind of dove down the rabbit hole of what these rooms could be, how they could be used. Assuming they are where you begin. Okay, maybe. And this is where the second room comes in. Before we have the small room, we have the bigger room. And the big room has, in these other two scenarios, a location for you to be. Show up and disappear from safely.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Assuming you get sent to a different pyramid, that is the reception point that has the same structures inside. You get sent from here, you pop in the void of a different pyramid on a different planet. Easy. So what does the other room do?

Cristina: What does it do?

Jack: If we were to say that it is in fact transportation and not teleportation, there's an option that allows us to get anywhere Easily. But we have to know where we're sending you. Kind of like Nightcrawler from X Men. That he has to kind of know where he's going so that he doesn't pop up in a wall.

Cristina: Yes. Oh, so horrifying.

Jack: So if we had a room that could isolate a single particle. We'll call that the bigger void. It has the technology and the structure to isolate a single individual particle. And then the person that's going to be flung through that particle. And those words are selected very carefully through the particle that person would be in the small room. You would then get turned into the same matter that our previous example of transportation had. Then you would get moved through the mechanisms inside of the pyramid, then into that particle. And using entanglement theory, we would find another particle anywhere in the observable universe aimed at specifically by the pyramid. It would pick and isolate presumably another pyramid somewhere in the vast distance of space. Anywhere in space. You would just choose exact coordinates. And the planet would align the pyramid so precisely. And you would send the person through the particle. They would show up at the other particle anywhere in the universe instantaneously without a gap.

Cristina: Anywhere.

Jack: Anywhere instantaneously. No time goes between one moment to the other. Because you're using spooky action at a distance. It's just one particle is gonna react. You can understand how to send information through it to make it pop up elsewhere. And you can use that same thing to communicate. It's not just a transporter for matter. You could definitely send a person. You can also communicate at any distance using that same thing.

Cristina: What do you mean?

Jack: Any other system that might have any other life form anywhere in the universe that has a receiving terminal like this pyramid could get information.

Cristina: Oh, you just use this, What? Super duper computer?

Jack: Yes. It is a super mega ultra exaggerated computer.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Oh, and you can just talk with anyone anywhere in the universe using the.

Cristina: You could also send things through.

Jack: You could send things through people through matter technology. Anything you'd like could go through this. Starting at the small room getting just turned to raw matter flung through the entire system. That then calculates and puts you through the particle which sends you through the particle to the exact point being chosen by the tip of the pyramid flings you in that direction. You instantaneously pop out on the other side without any lag between the two points. You pop out on the other pyramid in the smaller void after you were shot out of the bigger void. And the same process works in reverse. Sending you through the systems. It still has a power Coil that's making sure the systems stay functioning as you move through and get recomposed in the smaller room.

Cristina: What is that even a thing? Like not is that, is that even a thing? But like is that a thing scientists are planning on doing in the future? Is that even, Is that a sci fi thing?

Jack: Well, we know transportation is factually possible. We call that cars. Put the matter in the thing, move the matter from one place to the other.

Cristina: That's a great example.

Jack: We can also do that by having a bunch of atoms in a thing which we move from one place to the other. We also know entanglement factually works.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And we know if we can understand how to use it, that it would factually be able to send information.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And we also theorize that the creation of a wormhole would function the same way. This would be that this would be a wormhole inside of a pyramid that we control. That we control. We open and close at will. And it's seemingly microscopic. And we send something straight through. It's subatomic actually. And we send whatever through the particle.

Cristina: Itself that we like trunk shrunken.

Jack: We turned everything into pure particles that we could fit through.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And then it pops out on the other end.

Cristina: That sounds crazy.

Jack: And it gets recomposed instantaneously. The entire process would take two to three seconds from turn on to arrival.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: It would just be like a flash of light boomed around the other side.

Cristina: That's awesome. That's very cool.

Jack: Yes. Which would be possible assuming they have the technology that we already assumed they had to begin with. Which is crazy. Giant laser technology and so complicated structures that aliens built it.

Cristina: If they were doing this with it, could they still be doing the whole laser killing planet thing as well?

Jack: Yes, but that would be so primitive by comparison.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: We could hit the other side of the universe with a laser. With a laser.

Cristina: Huh? Wait, we can do that too.

Jack: I mean, not with a laser. We could send them.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We could send any matter, person or thing message to the other side of the universe.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Shooting a laser into space is like the bare minimum to fire enemies. Nothing. Our enemies would be crushed. So minimalistically, we can choose a particle and destroy the atom on that side, creating a subatomic explosion that would collapse into a black hole anywhere.

Cristina: We decided, oh, okay, that's way cooler.

Jack: Yeah. Like f*** a laser. Yeah, f***, f*** a laser. F*** with anything anywhere. We could just send an infinite amount of dense matter to one spot. We. They don't need. We don't even need a particle to Choose. We can just manufacture a black hole on command. And anywhere that is awesome, just be like, we have the particle here. We'll send whatever there to the other side that it's in such large amount that it just collapses into a back hole and sucks whatever the f*** is around it.

Cristina: But, but the laser thing, you said there are pictures for that. Is there any pictures or hieroglyphs of anything like this? Anything about teleportation or transportation or any hints?

Jack: But we're assuming that beam could be the same thing. And anyone that doesn't have it wouldn't show us anything because it's happening inside.

Cristina: The pyramid to begin with that they wouldn't show us.

Jack: We wouldn't see what's inside the pyramid. Oh, because it's inside the pyramid. And also, how would we depict somebody turning into matter? Like, it could be any of the images we're looking at that looks like gibberish. Like, what does matter look like entering a particle?

Cristina: No idea. I don't know. But there has to be some. I don't know, I don't know. How would you draw something?

Jack: Yeah, like maybe we've seen it. I don't know. How would we know what we're looking at at that point?

Cristina: Okay, that's a good point. I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, we're looking at particles going in the particles. So here's this particle. Okay, can you describe the particles? So I can get. Like I'm blind. I need like a visual, a help.

Cristina: Well, I don't know.

Jack: Yeah, exactly. Like, who knows? Maybe. Maybe there's a maybe that's the only thing that's out there. Billion images of that. But we're like, it's gibberish.

Cristina: It's gibberish.

Jack: It's just gibberish going on. Okay, but yeah, this type of technology would allow us to do that. Definitely. We could just. A laser would be so irrelevant when we could just remove you. Yes, easily. Easily just remove you. Just. Here's a black hole. Enjoy.

Cristina: But even if we were able to use that technology, we would need to know where the end part of that goes, though. Like, we really can't go anywhere unless we had a place in Mars already. Then we can do we go there, but we can't go actually anywhere else.

Jack: Well, that's actually wrong. We can calculate the distance to any individual particle, set those coordinates, pop up over there. And also through that same particle that we're using to pop up on the other side, send crap tons of matter and tools and technology to immediately start building on the other side, in fact, we could send robots so that we don't need to destroy living organic creatures. So we fling robots through it.

Cristina: Yeah, I just thought of, like, we could look for other. We're already looking for places, planets that are like Earth. We could just go there.

Jack: That's primitive. We're looking for planets like Earth. They would have no need for that.

Cristina: No, I'm talking about us. If we. We're using the technology.

Jack: Yeah, definitely. But also at that point, if we learn how to use that technology, we don't need to look for planets like Earth. We could just make it. Because we learned how to use the technology. We'd be messing with individual particles. We could do whatever the h*** we want at that point.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: But they would in theory. Let's say they found the other side of the observable universe. They pick random coordinates. They're like the furthest point we can see. Let's send something there so we can later use the same coordinates. And so they send all the machinery needed to self terraform and create more pyramids, a habitable environment, and all the necessities so that when life goes through, it just has somewhere to go and somewhere to show up. There could just be a pyramid built by machines. And then the court, they just get a message to the same thing after it's built. Oh, it's working now. Because I got a message saying it's working now. I know the other pyramids. Good. Now we'll send somebody through to confirm. They get to the other side and they send a message. Oh, yeah, it worked. I'm over here.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now you can send whatever over here.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Assuming that's the case, it didn't begin here. And this goes back to our previous argument from a previous episode that we probably started somewhere else and just began jumping from place to place, dropping people off. And then they would learn and then leave the planet themselves. And we would repeat that throughout the day.

Cristina: And they're not related to anything from the past. It just happens that we all end up doing the same thing. Yes, that's what.

Jack: Now, if that were the case, there's one obvious destination that it all began, and it isn't here.

Cristina: But where. But you know where this place is.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It began so far away, but they landed here. And chances are that from over there, they aimed many different locations, sent things many different locations, established many different colonies throughout the entire observable universe. And also way more. And it would be the Great Void.

Cristina: Oh, of course. Okay.

Jack: Because they already had technology to create Dyson spheres that would trap entire stars so they can have seemingly infinite energy and power. Any kind of technology that they could have, they wouldn't be stuck over there. That's just their movement with space traversing technology rather than instantaneous motion.

Cristina: How far are they from us? That's ridiculous, right?

Jack: That's crazy Distances away.

Cristina: That's so ridiculous. Whoa. But yeah, we could be in there. Not us, but where we came from.

Jack: Yep, yep, yep, yep. That is probably the beginning point of the most ancient, most advanced civilization that exists in all of the universe. And somehow if we manage to get over there, we'll just see more of ourselves.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And it'll just be like, you're really close to human, dude, what the f***? And they'll be like, yeah, we're kind of you guys. We were here for us.

Cristina: Yeah. And then I guess we would just continue doing what they were doing.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Like what else is there?

Jack: Chances are they had pyramids first. And that's why we don't find anything in our star in our solar system. We don't find crap around our star because insignificant they sent. They came from super far. Colonize a whole star for what? We can take over all the stars, any star we want. Just spread them out as f****** much as you can.

Cristina: Because they'll end up spreading themselves out in that solar system anyway. Okay.

Jack: And just. First you start Great Void. Then you aim in every possible direction, evenly spaced out everywhere. And you send some here, some there, some here, some there, some here, some there, this. And then from those places, eventually they're going to age to the same point. And from that very same spot, send each other everywhere, the same distance.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Everywhere possible. And so repeating that over and over and over. Eventually, rather than spreading out from a center point to take over the universe, you sort of take over all of it at the same time. There's not a sphere spreading out. Of course. That's the energy sector. You could say. Yeah, the Great void is the energy sector. Millions of stars trapped inside maybe entire galaxies actually.

Cristina: But would our goal be to go to the Great Void or.

Jack: We have no particular goal. Nobody has a goal.

Cristina: No one has a goal.

Jack: Just explore more and see if there's something weirder out there.

Cristina: Yeah, see, we find the Egyptians out there.

Jack: Now the idea would be that if we have this kind of technology, we do have access to not just the observable universe. It would be, however infinitely large. The whole universe is within no time. We could colonize the observable universe by doing the Method. I just said you start in the middle, spread them all out anywhere altogether. Machines built a thing. Then you send the humans and repeat. Rinse, repeat, rinse, repeat, rinse, repeat. But if we had a pyramid at the very edge of the observable universe and we send somebody through our pyramid to that one.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Now, that pyramid is the new center of the observable universe. If you aim that pyramid away from.

Cristina: Our previous pyramid, we'd have a whole new space.

Jack: Aim in that direction at the next farthest point.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And you send it. Now, this new location that you build a new pyramid at is outside of the observable universe of the previous pyramid.

Cristina: That's pretty crazy.

Jack: And all you would need is the coordinates for this new pyramid.

Cristina: And then you can send people that.

Jack: And you can send people there without it even being inside of your observable universe. Not only that, the information would bounce instantaneously. So you'd like. I need the coordinates for this group of people that went to do this. Somewhere this far from our observable universe, from pyramid to pyramid. It would go instantaneously.

Cristina: So you don't even have to leave. You don't need. You just need the location. You don't have to see it.

Jack: You don't have to see it.

Cristina: As long as you have the location.

Jack: You just type the numbers show up. Done. You can send it anywhere in the universe, no matter what the distance might be.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And this could be repeated over and over and over and over.

Cristina: That'd be cool.

Jack: Now, if that's the case and we are just some of the many, that means it's totally possible that we are not even part of the original group of people that went out.

Cristina: No.

Jack: There are some stars that have weird things going on around them. And we're like, what the f***?

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Maybe life did happen once. Just once. And everything else that we see is somehow related to that same original instance of life.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And maybe that whatever that is could have started in the grave void and sent things out. But we're not team two. We could be team three or four or five or six. And one of those other things that's surrounded by one of those weird. One of those stars that has, like, weird behavior is just a more advanced civilization using the technology. And one of them could have then tried to repeat the process and sent us here.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Or they just in some different stage, sent somewhere else and got more. And then those are the ones who sent. So we don't know how far down the tree we are.

Cristina: No.

Jack: To go from colonizing entire galaxy clusters to our s***** stage.

Cristina: Yeah. And we're not even the first here, because we have. We have. This would be proof that there was some other one here. Yeah. They just abandoned us here, so.

Jack: Yes. So you have a couple of things happening, and that's actually a really good point. There's clearly evidence that we were here before we were here.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So, bare minimum, we're third wave.

Cristina: Yeah. Oh, that's pretty cool.

Jack: Minimum.

Cristina: Minimum.

Jack: Assuming that's. Just assuming first wave is at the great void, maybe there's a greater void way the h*** outside of our observable universe.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And that's where it started.

Cristina: Yeah. That's possible.

Jack: But we can't see that far.

Cristina: Best guess for what we have is the best guess.

Jack: This is limited.

Cristina: What we can see.

Jack: Yes. This is limited entirely to our current point of view of the universe.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We have no other perspective, no other angle to look at this from. And this would actually take the least amount of energy.

Cristina: The least.

Jack: The least amount of energy from all those other options. From all those other options.

Cristina: Wow.

Jack: It would just be a matter of understanding how to use the particle.

Cristina: What? That's crazy science, man.

Jack: Yes, the science is way advanced, which is why it would use the least amount of energy, because we're doing something crazy.

Cristina: But you'll still need all that space and stuff for that.

Jack: Everything else would still come into play because you need to isolate the particle, control it. You need to be able to send the thing through the particle, and without the particle collapsing or some variable changing and destroying whatever's going through it. A bunch of calculations that happen instantaneously. That's what the computer part is for.

Cristina: Okay. Okay.

Jack: And at this point, we can just say that the pyramid is the ultimate quantum computer.

Cristina: The ultimate. Because is that the goal for a quantum computer, though, or. That's not really.

Jack: I mean, anything that it could possibly do, it would do.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: It could. It's. It has Internet. You could just talk to your friend. Outside of the observable. Hey, man, how's that other side of the universe where physics works? Kind of weird. Oh, yeah, man. It's kind of cool. Things float out there.

Cristina: You could just go over there.

Jack: You could visit people anywhere at any given moment. Anywhere that there's people and a place to show up.

Cristina: Yes. Okay.

Jack: And I'm sure the government would have restrictions on where you could go. No, there's no. Nothing out there. We can't send you out there. That's dangerous. You're just gonna pop up and die.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Only Go to colonized space.

Cristina: So be like traveling here, but in space. Okay. Yeah.

Jack: It brings a very no Man's sky esque portal scenario into reality where it's like if you have the coordinates, you can go f****** anywhere. Doesn't matter where in the universe it is.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: You can just pop up anywhere you want. That is actually usable technology.

Cristina: Yes, but you have to remember the first you died. That's still the same technology, right?

Jack: No, that would be a. That's not you being destroyed. Information being sent.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: That's probably entanglement at play, which is.

Cristina: Still you for sure.

Jack: It's you for sure. In no man's sky, it's you for sure.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's a portal.

Cristina: Yes. All right then Good. We don't have to worry about that.

Jack: Yeah. It's in fact, when you go through in no Man's sky, one of those portals you. It's a wormhole. It's a legit wormhole. You get flung through. You even see the inside of the wormhole and you pop up on the other side.

Cristina: No man's sky. That's okay. Whoa. We're gonna be living in no man's sky.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Or I guess we are living in it. We just don't know how to use it.

Jack: Yeah. We're not advanced enough.

Cristina: We're not advanced enough. But someone's living it right now.

Jack: Yes. Maybe millions and billions. That would be such small numbers.

Cristina: Even.

Jack: It would be more than billions. It would be beyond trillions. Whatever civilization has the capacity to take over the great void and have that many stars taken down is beyond. We're currently at billions.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: That's really nothing like trillions is still talking small numbers.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It would be such advanced, long lasting civilization that got that far alone. It's numbers that we can't comprehend.

Cristina: Yeah. The number. Man. That's gotta be crazy. It's gotta be crazy. What? They could just go wherever they want.

Jack: Yes. Fascinating.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's what I believe the pyramids are.

Cristina: That is cool. The laser's still cool. Even if it's not as cool. It's still. It's still pretty cool in like.

Jack: I needed the information of the laser to fully understand the rest of this.

Cristina: Yeah, but it. What? The goal wasn't for the laser.

Jack: The goal wasn't for the laser. It was just something I had to prove conceptually.

Cristina: Oh, okay. But still a really cool idea if it was lasers. But not as cool. But still. What?

Jack: It's possible that that was the original stage. It is possible that it began as A laser.

Cristina: And then they learned to use it for something.

Jack: It just the technology inside it kept getting tweaked and turned and tweaked and turned until we have something so complicated that a laser stopped existing. And we could just. Like we're at war with something. Oh, poor them. Here's a black hole, b****.

Cristina: Yes. Ah, crazy.

Jack: You just f*** with a particle, create some like, not even like you got a atom split at their location. But you can do it because you just have the technology and you just do that over there and boom. Over. You destroyed an entire. And it just blinks out of existence.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: With that level of technology, presumably the more advanced. If we just keep turning it to the max. How could this. This is the limit of what we're thinking right now.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Right. Fling anywhere, anytime, do kind of almost anything. You have access to the whole observable universe. More, in fact.

Cristina: More.

Jack: You can take over entire galaxies with Dyson spheres that make the whole s*** go dark and preserve a hundred percent of a hundred light. Nothing gets out. Great Void is just super advanced civilization battery. How much more advanced could it be? Is we don't need the Great Void amount of energy. Realistically speaking.

Cristina: What's that for?

Jack: We would need way less energy to power f****** anything. Whole galaxy is just like Dark Patch. Are you f****** kidding me? What's going on there? Turn it to the highest possibility. The Great Void itself is battery power for universe manipulation technology. Probably using the most advanced version of the quantum computer, which would still just be the pyramid allowing you to put. I want to create a galaxy at this destination.

Cristina: Oh my gosh.

Jack: And you have the energy of whole other galaxies.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Millions of galaxies. To just make one. It would be so easy with the energy of a million galaxies to make one galaxy.

Cristina: Whoa. You just make your own galaxy. Is that what happens in the end of no Man's Sky? Maybe.

Jack: I mean, you just pop up in a different galaxy.

Cristina: Oh, you'll make it. That'd be cool.

Jack: But like beyond the point of being able to reach anywhere, we probably have more advanced technology. In no Man's sky, you have the ability to reach anywhere.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But they're kind of still almost bound to the first galaxy until they get the past to a new galaxy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: While in reality, if this technology works the way I believe, you could just aim at any galaxy at any moment and be like, I won't be there.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And just be there.

Cristina: Yes. Except for outside of our. What we could see.

Jack: Well, that would also be possible. We would just need relay stations which would Be more. It would just be the same thing built elsewhere. And you would bounce from one to the other. And then after you actually have the coordinates, you could. You don't even need to bounce. You just go there.

Cristina: Yes. This is crazy technology.

Jack: This is the most advanced class of society.

Cristina: So the most advanced though is you can just make your own uni galaxy.

Jack: Presumably universe at some point.

Cristina: Oh my gosh.

Jack: Maybe pocket universes would be easy. Not with the energy of a bunch of galaxies, but assuming that the Great Void isn't the first place, and whatever the first place is, is way outside of our observable universe, you could maybe create pocket universes inside of the infinitely large Universe. Which could suggest that our own universe is one of those pocket universes that was made by a civilization that captured enough galaxies. Yeah, that equals more than all the galaxies inside of our own universe.

Cristina: That's awesome.

Jack: So yeah, the Great Pyramid of Giza. The truth behind it. There you go.

Cristina: Well, what about the other pyramids? Or we haven't found anything like that in any of the other ones.

Jack: No, those would be bad resources in any case. They would just be the energy that makes sure that nothing fails.

Cristina: Okay. Not the three little ones. The ones around the world that are in the same line.

Jack: Oh, we're assuming that they're doing different things. Okay, that is f****** weird.

Cristina: Alright. Yes.

Jack: It could just be. That could be the same s***. It could be the same s***.

Cristina: It could be batteries. It could be another computer.

Jack: It could just be more quantum computers. The earth does rotate.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And like we. What the f*** are gonna do?

Cristina: Wait, yeah, so it's just to do it faster. Okay.

Jack: Yeah, we can be like locally. We can send you easily without aiming at anything.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So I'm just send you to that other one that's gonna be aiming over there in 20 minutes.

Cristina: Yeah, I was think they get to each place, but yes, you just. Can you just use the pyramid to take you to the other pyramid?

Jack: Get to the closest pyramid and from that when you teleport to whichever one is going to aim where you need.

Cristina: Yep.

Jack: And then that will just send you instantaneously to your destination, no problem.

Cristina: That's pretty awesome. What?

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: That could be it.

Jack: That could be it.

Cristina: Who knows.

Jack: Totally possible. So all the pyramids might be. We might have a crap ton of quantum computers and just don't know how to use them because it's too advanced and we're idiots.

Cristina: But it's fine because we'll make our own.

Jack: Yes, in theory that should happen no matter what.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Because that's just a natural course of things.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Anyway, so yeah, that's what I think is going on. So a couple of rabbit holes I collapsed down and then had to invent entire technology using some coloring books and a couple of crayons.

Cristina: That's amazing.

Jack: A lot of drugs.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But for the scientists, if you want my help, I'm here.

Cristina: What are you gonna do for them?

Jack: I'm gonna teach them how to get the answers. That's just one of many. They want to learn how to get the answers, they better bring me all the coloring books, some brand new crayons cuz I ran out. And some like dmt. Let's do it. Let's do it. I'm a teach you. Yeah. All of it.

Cristina: All of it.

Jack: All of it.

Cristina: Whoa.

Jack: We're gonna do all the drugs and solve all the problems.

Cristina: Alright.

Jack: So yeah, scientists, if you want to find that stuff, you know you can find more of my amazing woke ideas. And you find episodes pretty much on anything actually all the things all the time.

Cristina: And more episodes like this episode?

Jack: Yeah, actually talking about the pyramids a couple of times. Two or three. You find that stuff on the official website greatthoughts.info or on Apple podcasts, Spotify or anywhere you get your podcast.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. UsConvopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to subscribe, rate and if you feel so inclined, review the show. And we might send that review to the other side of the universe so.

Cristina: Somebody could see it and let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes, it is very important that you ask kindly because if they tell you, hey, I have access to the quantum computer from the episode that you showed me. You would never know if you didn't show somebody. And if you were an a****** about it, why would they want to tell you? They would just be like that douchebag.

Cristina: Told me about this. If they tell you that, you tell us that. Yeah, that'd be cool.

Jack: That means you found one of the time travelers or one of the humans that can use this technology. Whether they came from the past, the future or the present.

Cristina: It might be the version of you that had a teleporter and to kill the cat people before we even knew they existed.

Jack: Somehow that's gonna tie back to this at some point. It feels like anytime we mention anything, eventually it comes back around the haunt us. So somehow that's gonna come back into play.

Cristina: Yes. This is has been the Just Conversation podcast. Take nothing personal and thanks for Listening.

Jack: Bye. Yes, you should probably not. The lesson here is the moral of the story is, don't listen to the podcast on giant concert sized speakers because you're gonna make whoever you're listening to it with deaf. And you might go deaf too.

Cristina: Unless you hid in that building.

Jack: Unless you hid in that building, in which case just who you're showing the show to will go deaf. They will enjoy it and will be like, thanks, but they can never hear another episode. And that's bad for us.

Cristina: Yes, that's so bad.

Jack: That's a lose, lose situation. I mean, lose win, I guess, because they heard an episode and you got them to hear an episode, but you can't really have a conversation with them about it now because they're deaf and they can't read your lips because they weren't expecting to be deaf and they don't know sign language. So you can talk about it either. If you do know sign language, by the way, and you listen to this, make sure you bring somebody and you sign the whole podcast.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yeah. Or. Or go out of your way and transcribe the podcast and then get them to read it.

Cristina: Help us help them. Like if they can subscribe and send it to us so we can put it on our podcast.

Jack: Yeah. If you're out there transcribing podcasts, transcribe the mess we talk about so that you could show somebody in text. I would want to read how chaotic this looks. Yes, it's probably really incoherent.

Cristina: Gotta do that.

Jack: Yeah, it'll be fascinating. Man, transcribing must suck.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. 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 McAllister 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.