Rambling 261: Relic Technology

What precision technology did the ancient Greek use to locate Hyperborea? Is this the only piece of ancient technology left? Is there older ancient technology than this? The duo unpack the most impactful ancient technology that modern science has ever uncovered opening new avenues of investigation that might have been overlooked before.

Rambling 261: The Ancient Tech

+Episode Details

Topics discussed:

  • The Antikythera Mechanism
  • The Baghdad Battery
  • Seismoscope
  • Baigong Pipes
  • Damascus Steel
  • Astrolabe
  • Nimrud Lens

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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. I am your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I am your host, Christina.

Jack: And this is the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas. For real.

Cristina: For real, for real.

Jack: So last week we were trying to find out more about this place called Hyperborea, you know, where the Nephilim most likely were after we've established what the fact of all the information we've been uncovering truly seems to be, at least now in this new 2024 reframing. I guess every couple of years the narrative shifts into some new thing. Before it was mysticism, then it was science as, like, you know, astronomy and stuff, realms and junk. And now it's like. No, that was all just computer program. It's a simulation.

Cristina: It's crazy.

Jack: This is weird. But as you guys, anybody who was listening and you, Christina, as you guys all know, last week there was way more to talk about, but I couldn't get to any of it because there was absolutely too much to talk about. So instead what I've done is created an entire different set of information. Well, then I cut out that information and added to it to then be able to give what I was omitting originally because I thought it wouldn't make it, but none of it made it. So now all of what I was originally not gonna.

Cristina: It's all related to Nephilims?

Jack: No. Well, sort of.

Cristina: What's the bait? What's everything about at the end of the day? Or not really anything specific.

Jack: It's literally about everything we've been talking about. All of it. Yes.

Cristina: Not just enough.

Jack: Not just enough. It's about everything we've been talking about.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. And so my intention was to get to that, but that seemed to be a little bit of a problem because we had quite a bit of a content to get through. And hopefully that's not a problem today because we're going to try to actually get through all of those things. Things. So I'll begin by mentioning the fact that Hyperborea was a huge focal point for the Greek. They talked about it quite a bit.

Cristina: That's the name of the island that they're supposed to be coming from. The Nephilims, maybe.

Jack: I don't. I don't know if it was an island. I know it was.

Cristina: Or whatever. Like. Yes, the area far away.

Jack: Yes, yes.

Cristina: In the north.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's supposed to Be that. And so in originally, following this train of thought about the Nephilim, I came across something really interesting and weird. So what I'm gonna do is show you what it is first and then we're gonna talk about what it is real quick. So I'll have you now look at what do the people say? Example A or whatever. No, what do they say? Like, object, whatever. You know, when they're doing a presentation, like, look A or whatever.

Cristina: Yes. I don't know what it is, but.

Jack: You know what I mean.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Okay, so let us begin.

Cristina: Evidence. Let's just say evidence one and two or something.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Examples. Here are some examples. What would you say looking at this? We are looking at wheels. It looks like a wheel, right? Oh, now you're zoning in. What kind of a machine? What are we looking at?

Cristina: Clock lock box. Okay.

Jack: It looks like a safe. I can see.

Cristina: Yeah, A very fancy door.

Jack: Mm. Mm. That would be a really fancy door. And so this is the recreation of it. These are the recreation of this.

Cristina: What we have those rusty parts?

Jack: Yes. This is what it looks like as we have it. And working back from it, this is what we have.

Cristina: Is it very thin, though?

Jack: It's filled with many components. That part isn't necessarily thin.

Cristina: Yeah, but the box. That's the whole box. The one in the bottom. This one.

Jack: Both of these would be what the whole thing looks like.

Cristina: Yeah, but like, it's that length. Like, it looks like a book, maybe, or a safe where you can hide a book.

Jack: Maybe a safe where you can hide a book.

Cristina: Maybe. I don't know, because it looks like you can open it, but it looks very thin, like you're gonna put something in there. I don't know.

Jack: Well, I'll tell you exactly what this is so that you can comprehend the nature of the situation. This is called the Antikythera mechanism, and it is. Be ready for this.

Cristina: A.

Jack: From roughly the year about 2000 BC. This is an analog computer that can run computations of extremely high degree. And it most likely resulted in being able to navigate large distances accurately using the longitude and longitude of places in order to find and locate anything.

Cristina: It's a kind of computer.

Jack: It's a computer. It's a giant calculator of some sort. But not just calculator numerically, but it would, like, literally give you locations based on the numbers and the equations that you put into it.

Cristina: What exactly was the tech? I don't know. Like, what's it made out of? It just looked like a bunch of wheels.

Jack: Yeah, these are many different plates that work together. Kind of like if you had a clock. Think of a watch on your arm that's an analog watch that's still running metronome, essentially of exactness, trying to calculate time. An analog computer would essentially work the same way, but it would have. It's kind of like how people build it in Minecraft that you can have. Like, you're not really building a computer, but really they're having. If this thing moves this way, then that thing should move that way. And so that's what's happening here. And so that thing should move that way as a result of many of these other things moved this way will give you an exact that way, which would be the answer. It's a. It's a computer. It's an analog computer that you run all of it and will provide you with information that you didn't previously provide. So it could work like a gps, it could work like a calculator, it could work like a clock. It runs numbers and works in all facets of number running.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yes. And so it is quite possible that this is what they use to track many, many things, and that this is why they were a problem to the Aletians to begin with, because they.

Cristina: Wait, that's from the Greeks.

Jack: It's from the Greek.

Cristina: Because I don't think you said where that came from.

Jack: Oh, yeah, this is from the Greek.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yep, it's from the Greek.

Cristina: And they made it how long ago it.

Jack: The earliest possible date is about 2000 years BC, which most likely is incorrect. That's just the earliest likely. But in order to achieve this level of computation power, you must have been working at it for quite some time, which means it's most likely significantly older than that.

Cristina: Or they could have borrowed it from somebody.

Jack: It doesn't exist anywhere else. I'm talking about just the only things we found. We can't say we were because we have only found it there. No speculation needs to be had here, because they're the only ones. And we've seen more technological places that didn't have it. So there must have been better systems that we aren't aware of. This is just their system.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And we can. Like. There's. It's nowhere else. It's never been found anywhere else. Nothing similar to it has been found anywhere else. It's just Greek.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: They did not borrow this. They invented this. But they most likely used this to find the Nephilim. This is probably how they got there and back consistently.

Cristina: Is there More than one of these there, though?

Jack: There are several, yes.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah, it seems to be a high society piece of technology which you can obviously just attribute to the Greek gods research group.

Cristina: You think they were searching for the Nephilims?

Jack: I don't think they were searching for anything specifically. I think science and science related things had them going places and investigating weird things. I don't think they were necessarily looking for anything. It was science. I mean, maybe, but again, we don't know.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That would be highly speculative. Without any additional information, we don't know what this was being used for. We just know what it could have been used for. And until we get like something that tells us it names it directly and said, oh, this is how they found the thing, like, this is just technology we know of.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: So in doing that I realized we've done all of this and like, I don't know how this never came up, but I also guess we never really directly tried to interact with their technology, anybody's technology from that time. We just read about it and I'm like, wait, why don't we look at.

Cristina: Some of this more different Greek technology, More technology, okay.

Jack: And it began with like, oh, the Greek. Because why would we focus on the Greek if there's way better people out there? Right?

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Like this is primitive next to some of the things we're gonna come up with right now. Yeah, this is. No, this is the bottom of the barrel. Oh, they were obviously like, that's what I'm telling you. This is definitely not borrowed. This is primitive next to some of the s*** we're about to come through, which is older than this. This is primitive next to crap that's older than it.

Cristina: So we're going back in time?

Jack: Yeah, we're essentially going back in time to look at some really interesting things. And the location to a lot of these things is very telling. So let us begin with a concept that we call the Baghdad Battery. So the Baghdad Battery is essentially a portable drone battery. Not even a battery. It's an energy generator which uses magnets, it uses copper coils, and it uses water to create a magnetic field in order to then generate enough electricity to then light bulbs and light electronics. It is a very interesting.

Cristina: It's very strange, like, but it's a battery. Like it was being used as a type of battery.

Jack: It's a portable generator. Portable generator, yeah, like it stores energy but also generates energy. And it works in such a manner where it has the copper coils, you fill the bottom with water, it has the Rotating iron rod.

Cristina: But then what did they do with these batteries?

Jack: Power things.

Cristina: Like what stuff? You have no idea.

Jack: Presumably things that required electricity. Again, I am telling you what I do know. We're discussing the objects. I don't if I know what it was used for. You're gonna get that information, okay? I assure you that much. But I know this much. It's a battery. And when we recreate it, it's actually so sophisticated that we needed to find it in order to recreate it. Because before finding it, this basic concept of how to generate electricity seemingly with nothing, mm. Would have been something we thought impossible. Super basic. Looking extremely efficient and generates enough of a power source that you can power small objects with it, allowing you to carry this to the middle of the desert, for example, and power something inside of a cave.

Cristina: What can that possibly be, though, that they're powering?

Jack: It's portable. Anything, anywhere. You can take it anywhere. It's not stationary. So it's not for a thing. It's for many things.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Is for whatever requires electricity that needs a small supply. So whatever they had that required electricity, assume that was powering it if it was small enough. This was found in Iran.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Iran is Persia, specifically the part of Persia where the Elysians come from. There are many of these. This is abundant as f***. Look at how many different variations are found all over the place. And more densely the closer to the neck of the Persian Gulf oasis you get.

Cristina: But like they're all different shapes and sizes too.

Jack: Yeah. Ultimately the same. Not two different size. Like we're talking that they aren't necessarily too, too, too big. They're the size of a jar. We call them a jar. So the size of like a vase or something like that, you know, very simple, basic idea. But it works. And we didn't come up with it ourselves, we had to find it. So great. Battery source suggests a lot of electronics existed in small, like small energy required requirement electronics. And there are many, many, many, many, many. This assumes that perhaps the Iranian people of that time, which was Persia, because this is dating far back from B.C. we're talking thousands of years in. It assumes that they had a lot of portable things, maybe phones, maybe light bulbs. Again, you go into a cave, you want to mine it or something. You strap some lights, you connect it to this thing. Now you got light in there. Maybe it could generate like fire or heat. Maybe you're trying to stay warm when it's cold in the desert.

Cristina: Imagine that.

Jack: Yeah. It could be any number of things. This could power which in return the Persians have portable batteries. And that obviously took me to the next logical conclusion, which is, well, where were you getting the electricity that you're storing in here to begin with? This could generate, but you could also store massive amounts of electricity in here. Which then takes us to the obvious. The pyramids of Giza, which are the bigot generator. Right. Without talking about any of the teleportation technology, which is only inscribed upon the walls, we don't know which of these chambers work in such a way to use the teleportation, although it's suspected that it's the centerpiece. Right. Especially because it has many quantum annotations on the walls.

Cristina: What?

Jack: But the rest of it, again it's a, it's fascinating that this pyramid serves as two examples.

Cristina: How far is the pyramid to those jars?

Jack: The pyramid is way before that. We're talking like 5,000, 6,000 years BC which is roughly a thousand or 2,000 years before these jars.

Cristina: But like what the locations though are they how far?

Jack: Oh, oh, they're near each other. Iran, in Egypt or close. Close.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And all of that was considered per Persia. That was all one empire.

Cristina: Well, it's pretty big empire. And what was happening with the pyramid was in the sensor.

Jack: They think the two things that this has are many quantum equations in the center chamber and then the rest of it is built of quartz and is built of electrical magnetic equipment, can store and generate energy in mass and presumably can receive energy from this chamber, which makes no sense because it's a closed off chamber. It receives energy from the outside and it receives mass energy from this chamber, which seems to be the main spot that it would receive it from. Which makes no sense because the chamber is completely closed off and has nothing in there other than quantum annotations, which suggests some hefty, hefty, hefty unknown tech happening.

Cristina: That is awesome.

Jack: Yes, yes. And there's actually a couple of explanations on how these things work. So it generates its own magnetic field which can then generate electricity accordingly.

Cristina: That has to do with the outside of it.

Jack: Yes, well it's structure inside and outside are both highly important.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yes, very, very efficient. So diving specifically into the pyramids, I'm going to read you some details about how they function. Now, the electrical magnetic concentration. The pyramid can focus electrical magnetic energy in its internal chambers under its base, which essentially hints at its capability of generating and manipulating a huge magnetic field and then in return creating the energy necessary so it can generate the energy, not just the magnetic field, but the.

Cristina: Energy itself generates it stores it?

Jack: Yes. Then it doesn't store it. It generates it and has all. All the facilities to move it. Now, this is where it gets interesting. Because it was unknown most of this, how it would work, until we come across Nikolai Tesla. And Nikolai Tesla had a particular obsession with these because he wanted to be the other. He wanted to make his own power sources. We know his power sources are the most efficient, which is why they're not used. Because we don't need efficient. We can't profit off of that. So we buried him so that we can profit off of electricity.

Cristina: So was he inspired by it?

Jack: He was inspired by it. And his work ultimately highlighted how exaggerated this was. So going into the materials that they're made out of, there's an abundance of quartz crystals, two for limestones, which are all capable of conducting and generating electricity and can insulate electricity from escaping. So it's essentially a trap that can generate a bunch of magnetic field, draws electricity in, and then it cannot escape. On top of the fact that it seems to be able to receive electricity from where, who knows? But that's not how it. This is three different ways of acquiring electricity.

Cristina: Whatever this electricity.

Jack: Okay, whatever this random chamber is that's getting electricity from where, then the. The magnetism that's pulling electrical magnetic energy from the outside in. And now let's quickly dive into Nikolai Tesla. Now, he managed to replicate the distribution of the energy wirelessly through obelisks. These are tall tower things, and these towers send electrical currents from the top. Kind of like if you made a really tall metal rod and that would get hit by lightning bolts and stuff.

Cristina: They were metal towers.

Jack: He managed to create metal towers and send electricity that's stored in the metal tower, not stored in the metal tower. But if you connect the metal tower to, like a battery or something, he managed to send electricity to power things wirelessly from the metal tower. So one metal tower to the other can share electricity. Now they have equaled out electricity. So if obelisk 1 has the electricity energy, it's. It's the one with the electrical power. Obelisk 2 has 0. You then power obelisk 1 and allow it to send the current, and you power obelisk 2 to receive it. Now, although they'll lose in the exchange because you need to send it, that's energy being used. Instead of one obelisk having 100% of the energy, both obelisks have 80% of the energy, divided in half. So 40 and 40. You manage to get the energy across with no wires, with no Infrastructure with nothing. You just sent it directly.

Cristina: When was he doing this?

Jack: Nikolai Tesla was doing this. He did. He discovered this and created it in 1884 when he established this discovery.

Cristina: Okay. And you think he's based it on.

Jack: He did. He claimed this in his own notes. He was clearly visibly. And his patent used a lot of this information. He was visibly obsessed with the pyramids. Yeah. He was not. It's not. I think. No. He himself consisted. He would go there and study them all the time. Yeah. He was just trying to figure it out. Which worked because he managed to create a electrical system that required no infrastructure other than obelisks in order to distribute energy. And you got to understand that losing 20% of the energy when you're generating it essentially from thin air doesn't matter like where is it coming from that you're losing it to begin with. Right. And so on top of these systems, he also theorized he can take solar energy in mass as opposed to the theorized waster of it. Like Washington believed that the capturing the sun would be one of the least efficient ways because we couldn't wrap the world up. Nikolai Tesla believed that that's a stupid idea because you don't need to wrap the world up. You just need enough solar power to power the thing you're trying to power. Which makes sense.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just however much energy you need. Just make it a little bigger than that so you have a little extra.

Cristina: That's why we need an infinite amount of energy.

Jack: Well, it depends on what these people were trying to accomplish. As opposed. But his system was highly efficient and based entirely off of the things on the pyramid. So Tesla's work on his electrical magnetic pyramid and Tesla's towers were inspired by the structures of the pyramids of Giza. And he was aiming to harness additional energy from the Earth directly, not just the magnetic field and whatever teleportation system was occurring here. Enter the resonance energy transmission. The third function the pyramid discovered by Nikola Tesla as well.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Upon trying to figure out where the extra surplus would be coming from. So the Great Pyramid of Giza has an acoustic device designed to harmonize with the Earth's natural vibration and convert this into microwave energy.

Cristina: That sounds a little. A little insane. I don't know. That's so weird.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And so some of the chambers and passageways were precisely positioned to maximize acoustic properties, which Nikolai was actually easily able to replicate once he needed. Once he knew there was something missing to getting more energy in, he realized that if you take all the elements into account. He's pulling some out of the air and then he's using some essentially put with fire, you could say by pulling it out of.

Cristina: He really did this. He really. And it's really based on the Ferret. That's so crazy.

Jack: Yeah. And Washington then bought all his specs and buried. Buried all of it. He bought the patent off of Nikolai Tesla and then totally disregarded because he wanted to make a profit. So this information wasn't even buried by the Elysians or the Egyptians. Modern day man suppressed this technology in order to make a buck. Yes. We have an energy crisis because we built the planet off of greed.

Cristina: That makes sense. That feels right.

Jack: Yep, yep, yep. Now we know that in Persia specifically, the Egyptians were an elite group within Persia to the point that we refer to the Egyptians as their own group. We don't even relate them to the fact that, yes, they were technically within Persia, but they weren't the Elysians. They are a different group from within Persia who worked exclusively on forms of energy. Catching energy, storing energy, moving energy. And the closer we get to the Elysians, the closer we get to this technology, like the batteries. But then when we go towards Egypt, the closer we get towards Egypt, the closer we get to generators, not batteries. Okay, interesting. So the energy was being created in Egypt and moved to Elysium.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: You see how the image is starting to build?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The closer we get to one, it plays out one way, the closer we get to the other. Mm, it plays out another way. So we can basically pinpoint who's making it and who's receiving it. Because the obelisks seem to be what's missing around the pyramids. But there's all the positions for them to exist, including the big pyramid itself being the most obvious obelisk. It's the tallest point around and also most likely where it's all coming from. So they don't need the batteries in their region if they're directly getting the electrical currents wirelessly. Yeah, but you can't teleport that across huge countries. You need to be able to deliver it. So maybe trucks packed with these batteries can then take them. Or this technology allows them to then, without having to build huge infrastructure, deliver the technology to generate small amounts. But you just keep sent because again, there's so many. The closest.

Cristina: But they have teleportation.

Jack: Presumably all of this is taking place prior to that, obviously. Otherwise why would they need any of this if they could just send it there? Yeah, obviously this would have to. Obviously the batteries must predate the. The teleporter. Because how are you even gonna power a teleporter to begin with? That's a huge amount of energy required. You gotta bend space. Assume they had the energy to do that first and that it wasn't literal magic. So, yeah, they must have shared the energy locally, but then given them the tools to continue to have energy again. You could. With the batteries, you could generate electricity. Not a lot of electricity, but if you had a f*** ton of it. Which, again, the closer you get to the neck of the Persian Gulf oasis, the more we find. Which kind of fits the. Oh, over there, they don't need them. Over here they do. And in the middle, you'd see an average amount.

Cristina: Yes. Yeah.

Jack: Kind of works.

Cristina: Yes, it does.

Jack: That's beautiful. Except them working on these things was a small part of it. That's what takes us to the ancient staffs these people had. What all of them work. They're made with copper. They've got copper wiring and they can generate electricity themselves.

Cristina: They're holding these staffs.

Jack: Yes. You can use these to create electrical currents and to move electricity. These are the tools of people who work with electricity. Which, weirdly enough, happens to fit the very visuals that commoners painted of the Sun Gods, which was that the Sun Gods, particularly all had staffs reminiscent of these objects, which are coil. Coil induction systems.

Cristina: They look like wizards. I don't understand.

Jack: Yeah, it looks like wizards. And basically wizards is what you need to look like to work with electricity.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And to a normal.

Cristina: Electric powers.

Jack: Yeah. And to a normal person. So you have a hat to protect yourself, a really complicated hat that's diced, diverting anything from hitting you. Then you have a staff meant to generate and wield electricity. Then you and your elite group of people are working in this place where every night they can see the electricity that they can't see during the day. And it looks like a thunderstorm is continuously, always happening. It's like, oh, no, the wizards hang out over there. Those are the gods. Obviously, a normal human is going to look at this and be like, those are gods. They have to be. You have to be. There's something else. You're not gonna f*** with them. Those are gods.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But no, as you start painting, this picture starts to kind of reel it way in.

Cristina: And it's like, crazy thing, though.

Jack: It looks crazy, but when you ground it in, the fact that it's just a coil staff that allows direction and production of small amounts of energy. It's essentially an inverted version of the battery it allows them to. While the battery stores it. This doesn't store it. You could generate it and use it in a moment. You can't use a lot, but again, it powers things instantaneously. Perhaps if you're working inside pyramid and you got to repair something. This is an easy way to send electrical currents, test things out, go to people's houses, do something that allows them to cook their meal or something. I don't know. I don't know what this could possibly have been used for. But again, diving into Nikolai Tesla's awesomeness, he managed to completely understand the mechanical systems of each one of these details.

Cristina: He made his own.

Jack: Yes, well, he does. How he invented the coils that he used for a lot of these. Yeah, the copper coiling systems were invented by him and then used by George Washington. But yeah, so these are called dyad pillars, and the dyad pillars themselves are capacitors.

Cristina: But those are Egyptian's version or his versions.

Jack: These are Egyptians versions. And him explaining the systems and how they work. Because we got to see his versions as just normal coil systems.

Cristina: Oh, okay. The coils are what's based on these?

Jack: Yes. Everything we use to conduct and capture and transfer electricity at this moment to this day is identical to what you're looking at here.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Okay. So you can see right here how coils are essentially used in order to wrap electrical currents. This has a negative and a positive. And then you can see when we go to the same system, coiling, he can explain the detailing of how there's a negative and a positive system. There's an out and there's an in, equal to how our current systems have an out and an in. And then that negative positive charge allows with a two system to power and charge a battery, although it itself doesn't store, can create, generate and distribute it. And so this is essentially the same designs that they had, that you can send out electricity even if you can't store it within the device. So this, this staff must have predated the Baghdad battery. It was the first portable way to have electricity. And then the battery became the first way to not have to use the electricity when it's portable instantaneously, but rather deliver unused electricity.

Cristina: It's prob.

Jack: Like, yes, you could house way more. Yeah, yeah, yeah. In the battery. You could power a house. With the Baghdad battery, you can power a small house, an apartment. If you have a two, three bedroom apartment, that Baghdad battery can power that place for a day with one fill of water, so you can the next day fill it again. And have another day worth of electricity.

Cristina: And you think the staffs are just used around the pyramid.

Jack: The staffs are. It's unknown what they're used for, but the staffs are at least, bare minimum, a portable version that cannot store electricity. You can generate electricity on the spot, no matter where you are, but not a strong current. So it works for like if, let's say you attach a light bulb to the top of one of these, you can go. And now you have. Instead of needing a fire or a lantern that could. In a cave, this just fumes that you're inhaling. You just walk in with a staff that's essentially a flashlight. Okay, so now you've created a nice. You can go and have a stove outside that's electric and you just put this next to it and you could like have a barbecue if you want.

Cristina: that's interesting.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Presumably if you had cars, you could attach this to a car and allows you to power the car without having to store energy. And it would just be indefinite energy happening within the car. It would be consistent. And the moment you deactivate this, the car doesn't have any electricity. So it's just a really over. But you can't store it. But you can generate it on the spot, like the battery, except the battery can also store it. Now the battery creates very little electricity. You can't do a city, but you could do an apartment. You could power things with it.

Cristina: We still have the jars, though. But we don't have the staffs anymore.

Jack: We have all of the above. What do you mean?

Cristina: Oh, we do? Okay. I thought he was just basing the staffs on the pyramids or something.

Jack: No, he looked at the staffs and understood what their purposes were. Okay, yeah, all of the. Think I like, test like once they're personal. And he figured all of it out. Oh, all of this is just in places for us, you know. Now that's just batteries. Like I said. This is gonna get weird as we keep going. It's gonna get really complicated. So I'm gonna show you the next piece, and then I'm gonna tell you where it came from. That's more important than even what it is. So I want you to tell me what you think this nifty little object is. This is. Keep in mind, everything here is technology.

Cristina: That is technology. See, it looks like. Are you storing something in it?

Jack: Maybe? So to describe it to the. To the listeners, this basically looks like another jar. Really fancy, elegantly designed. It has dragon head sticking off of one side and what looks like frogs.

Cristina: Frogs, yeah.

Jack: Capturing whatever's falling.

Cristina: Water. No, it's not water.

Jack: It uses water to a degree, but itself isn't reliant on, like. It's not water about. It's not about water. Okay, so I'll get to it. Explaining the mechanical nature of it. This is a free hanging little wire. It's heavy. It's very, very heavy. It could barely be moved unless you're applying quite a lot of force. This jar goes on to a very stable surface, something that isn't gonna move.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And when there is a tiny, tiny, tiny. Because of the weight, when there's the tiniest, tiniest of vibrations, it shifts away from the vibration, which then forces in the direction of the vibration as the bars inside. At the top angle, you can see there's bars connected here at the top. When it moves one way, it releases a hinge on the mouth. All the mouths of the dragons have little pelts, pellets that are in there. And when the bar moves, the weight distribution. Opening the mouth, it falls. Now, it's almost imperceptibly tiny. Imperceptibly tiny that you standing in front of it can watch one fall and never have felt what it felt. It is an earthquake detection system. It is a seismic size. A seismoscope. And the seismoscope, it's very fancy. It's not just very fancy. It might be among one of the most accurate to have ever existed. And its original creation came to be in, like, well, recorded. Again, it's not so impressive. What it is. It's how it came to be. To allow me to tell you, Zhang Heng's seismoscope was created in 132 after the death of Jesus. Right. Very interesting. Very important information. Specifically with the fact that it was found and developed. Well, it was not found. It was created in China by this philosopher, Ching Heng. And so it's essentially the first earthquake detection system and quite sophisticated. Like today, we use electronics to recreate what this is doing with not a single bit of electricity, not one ounce of it. None of this matters until I frame the next sentence.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: In his manuscript with the details, kind of like if you read Stephen King on writing. The first half of it is just as an explanation of his life, and then the second half is his instructions on what he believes. Good writing constitutes his manuscript explaining the construction of this device, which could be replicated right now. But we use electricity to be a little more efficient and get a little farther, by the way. It's super precise. It'll tell you exactly where something happened. Anyways, he claimed. This is so specific. He claims the original concept that he later perfected was brought to his. To the attention of his grandfather by a Persian man on his way to Japan. A Persian man on his way to Japan was already working on this concept. A traveler coming through. And his. He interacted with his grandfather at some point, and it seems that maybe for a year, two years, or whatever the case might be.

Cristina: He said this is after Jesus.

Jack: Yeah, He. The creation of this was created after Jesus. Yes.

Cristina: How many years?

Jack: 132 after death. This is 132 years later. Okay, follow the sentence again. It was brought to his grandfather's attention by a traveling Persian man on his way to Japan.

Cristina: Mm, sounds like Jesus.

Jack: Sounds like Jesus. Very specifically, sounds like Jesus. But the man hadn't figured this out. The man and his grandfather. Again, he perfected it. The technology was. It came to exist by this man, by Zheng Heng, not his grandfather or the guy. They just came with the ideas that he ultimately perfected when he really looked into it and studied it.

Cristina: Yeah. This architecture or whatever was just interested in that for some reason. I don't know why, but interesting.

Jack: Really advanced tech just happened to cruise on by. Interesting, Interesting. Very specifically. Sounds like Jesus.

Cristina: Yes. You said, like, the place was going to be important. I didn't understand.

Jack: Yeah, no, none of this matters. This is a useless piece of device. Because again, it's just really clever design, but we can understand how it works. It's not astounding. It's the fact that you kind of figured this out way long ago, but he wrote it all down. It's like, oh, wow, you were impressively ahead of your time. But no, he wasn't. Somebody else apparently was just so happens.

Cristina: To be in this area where everything is happening. Okay.

Jack: Yes, yes. Now this gets a little more interesting.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Because I'm gonna show you just something very fancy. Very fancy. What do you see here?

Cristina: Drains.

Jack: Looks like drains, right?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Some sort of a pipe system.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Nifty. You can see it's layered. There are multiple lining up. Why would there be more than one? Who knows? But there's more than one.

Cristina: There's a lot of them. Yes.

Jack: This is another instance of, obviously we know what it is, and it's not surprising what it is.

Cristina: It's where it is.

Jack: No, no. I guess, time wise, it's when it.

Cristina: Is what it is. Okay.

Jack: This is the most important win of all the wins by miles. We're not gonna come across A more important when than this when? Because right now we're talking about something that we shouldn't have access to.

Cristina: Melons. No, not too crazy.

Jack: The. The earliest possible date for the Baigong pipes is estimated to be about 150,000 years ago.

Cristina: That's hard to imagine the picture.

Jack: 100,000, 150,000 years ago.

Cristina: Where's that location now?

Jack: These metal pipes were in China. Some contain copper cylinders inside. Others are hollow and move water. Designs nearly identical to the ones found around the palace of Alcaraz at the Persian Gulf Oasis that have been dated to more recent times, about 5,000 to 6,000 BC. These pipes in China are about the earliest 150,000 BC. We are talking such a colossal difference. It is possible. It is absolute. We don't know where Eloi was when he was contacted. We don't know where his civilization was. It is absolutely possible. We just found out the origin location of the Elysians. And the Elysians, at least if we trace it to Eloi. Take us to China. Ooh. We've been looking in wrong places because we were looking at the only places we could see anything. But if we want to find things about Eloi. Might be in China, it might be in China. The Elysians are descendants of some crap that came from China. According to this, which is structures exclusively found at the Persian Gulf oasis, these pipe systems are only found in China and in the Persian Gulf Oasis in this particular design.

Cristina: Okay, and these are older.

Jack: These are significantly older. These are about 140,000 years older. What? This points us where to look. Yes, that is useful.

Cristina: What is happening there? What was happening there?

Jack: I think we just got our first, after maybe a year, maybe longer, our first look into where we can start to actually try to find LOI accounts, not passive mentions that pop out of a scripture. And then we have to bounce off of a single drawing and like sort of kind of loosely connect. No structures that maybe he most likely was around or directly responsible for creating. Interesting, huh?

Cristina: Yes. Is there more really ancient things like that?

Jack: No, that is, like I said, that is the most important.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: As the oldest, that is the only thing that old we have ever found that completely throws into question any narrative about when society began. But again, we know humans began about a hundred and thousand years ago. And then about 150,000 years ago we had like truly advanced stuff. Not advanced, like scientific, but like things that say, oh, these creatures are gonna be something.

Cristina: Those pipes are ridiculous.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. This totally defies anything would have understood this was not possible for humans. It could not because we were not. We didn't exist yet.

Cristina: Yes, we couldn't have.

Jack: We couldn't exist yet. Interesting. Right. So this next one doesn't even have an image because it's more of a style of metal. But it's fascinating exactly what it is. It's called the Damascus steel, which is a medieval Middle Eastern type of steel which had exceptional strength and the production secrets of which have been lost. So it's. It cannot be replicated. We have the metals and we cannot replicate how this was made. We. It must have gone through so many different. And it's exceptionally strong.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Some really exaggerated thing. We've gotten close and imitated it in other ways. But Damascus steel is something we cannot replicate perfectly. We just get close and we make our own variant.

Cristina: And how old are these?

Jack: Unknown. Oh, it's unknown because the way of the methods and the data for it doesn't exist.

Cristina: We just have the location then.

Jack: Well, this takes us back to the same place. This was in Iran, back in the Persian Gulf. That's the same s*** over and over. So it's unknown how to replicate the steel. And it's assumed it one it has. It contains many different metals and it must have gone through several cooling and heating processes over and over and over in order to create the level of strength that it is. On top of mixing these in the right amount in order to create some almost indestructible level of metal, it was primarily used. And this is very interesting. It shows up in swords a lot. And as the metal seems to be the strongest variant of any metal. When you see movies about a sword breaking another sword, that's what they're referring to. This unbreakable steel that cannot be unsharpened. It stays equally sharp forever. You throw a feather up in the air and you can slice it clean. That kind of crap.

Cristina: Cool.

Jack: And this is that. Now the earliest signs of this metal show up in Iran. The most recent signs of this metal show up in India. This is valuable information for specifically one reason. The Indian versions of these seem to have different rune designs on the blades, while the original Iranian versions just had text written on them. This suggests that a lot of the forgers of the magic weapons came from India and that when we're talking about the Excalibur, a man had to travel to where it was improved, which was India, which was given to extra something. And now considering what a rune might really be on this exceptionally hard piece of metal, if we remember our narrative has Shifted. A rune is some sort of data. It's a symbol with data. And this is an exceptionally hard piece of metal. You've mixed a unique sort of reality bending series of information, and you've brought the exceptionally invincible version of the code, and then you put them together. You can't destroy it, but you can rip through anything that you shouldn't.

Cristina: Like fairies, though.

Jack: Like fairies. A rune, presumably, is a code. And just like Yalda managed to use things, codes, the philosopher's son must be some kind of compressed information that allows you to interact with things you shouldn't. This seems to be right up that alley.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: With the people making it being the Indians. The same people who used to take a crazy trip to Mount Cough. Why did they need Mount Kaf? Why did they know about mine Cough? Maybe some individuals were actually in cahoots and somehow buried it. Because again, we looked at the wrong thing. When we were looking at the Indians, we were wondering if they had rituals for blood. And then we stopped looking, and then they just kind of came up a couple of times with Shiva and things like that. But again, we didn't. It didn't dawn on us that way. You're coming up more than once, and now they come up again, specifically with what's probably the Fragrach's origin, the Excalibur's origin, Kildania's bows origin, every fairy killing weapon. It seems like fairy killing weapons were probably not even made by fairies, but by people who understand the code well enough.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: This one isn't about how long ago it was. This one is about where and how it was.

Jack: Two locations we've sort of ignored now prominently important.

Cristina: India and China.

Jack: Mm.

Cristina: I want to know more about China, but if we can find anything else on India, that's pretty cool.

Jack: Yeah. There is a piece of glass that is older than 3,000 years old. It has three inscribed lines on it, and it seems to be a part of a telescope.

Cristina: How old is this glass?

Jack: I just said over 3000 years old. That's where I began.

Cristina: Oh, 3000.

Jack: It's over 3000 years old and it's part of a. It seems to be part of a telescope. And based on the inscriptions that it's lines dividing it, it seems to have been designed with the intent of, again, lining up with other glass. The magnification of this one is times three. And if you were to add different, presumably different levels of magnification to it, you would have quite a long distance to look.

Cristina: And that is what they found.

Jack: This is. Yes, it Is exceptionally old.

Cristina: We're looking in the sky.

Jack: Far, far in the sky.

Cristina: So long ago.

Jack: Yeah. This one basic. But deducing what the inscriptions on it mean, the angle of the lines and where you'd want. Essentially the idea would be that all three gaps here are to line up with different. Because again, they're different widths. So you could adjust this lens according. And presumably the other lenses were also divided in such ways that they each had more and more magnification. All three of these sides have different magnification starting at 3, 6 and 9.

Cristina: How do you do that?

Jack: It's just different widths and how you warp the glass. It's kind of like if you have a bottle of water and you fill it up and then it warps kind of the image. Or if you're looking at somebody half in water, half out, and their body's all shaped weird, it's because they're either being magn to be wider or being magnified to be really skinny based on the shape of the glass. That's how magnification works. You bend glass. So this presumably is part of a bigger structure with a lot of other pieces of glass. Bare minimum three, that must also have similar inscriptions on them to create crazy magnification. That could in theory see quite far with no electricity. Probably significantly farther than we can see now.

Cristina: That's amazing. I wish you can see what it actually looked like.

Jack: Yes, that would be quite useful. And then that takes us into the very next thing. The astroloop. An intricate device used by ancient astronomers to navigate. Now, what's complicated about this tool is it doesn't just suggest navigating oceans. And that's the big weird. Like. Like. Did we find the thing?

Cristina: What?

Jack: Yeah. It's very elaborate. It kind of looks like a clock for the listeners. Kind of looks like a really intricate watch. Has many different layers.

Cristina: Very fancy orange watch. Or not watch. What's that thing called that you use to travel?

Jack: What, a map? A compass.

Cristina: A compass, yeah.

Jack: So. So what's complicated about this is that all the layers separately create a 3D navigation system. You can angle this and look in any direction and it will create three dimensional lines that you can travel. Why would you need to. How would you travel three dimensional lines of gravity? This was created by the Egyptians.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Why would you need to travel in three dimensional space? How?

Cristina: How?

Jack: Gravity pulls us down. So we're always walking on a flat plane. Even if you got an airplane, you wouldn't need this because you'd still be watching the world from A flat angle. As you're flying, you just need to know what's ahead or to your sides. You don't need to know what's up or down because there's nothing up with you.

Cristina: So this is to be used in space.

Jack: This is to be used in space. Which then brings into question the piece of glass we just saw, which was located in Iran, where the neck of the Persian Gulf oasis is.

Cristina: They were probably watching the things in the sky that were traveling. Well, the Egyptians, not even things.

Jack: It was people, they were watching people. This is a giant, really comprehensive. Once you get into the tech we have, a lot of this s*** just becomes obvious. And if you see how the lines overlap, you get a really comprehensive three dimensional layout. It's the same image over and over so that you can twist different caps, thus creating different angles that are only existent in three dimensions.

Cristina: What they were space traveling. They had to be.

Jack: They had to be. Had to be too advanced. Absolutely too advanced. And then this takes us to the last bit, which, which is. This is so complicated. I don't understand how the f*** any of this happens. As you know, we had those pipes and those pipes were very, very old.

Cristina: That's itself is pretty complicated, but okay.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So the system with the pipes, as ancient as it was, later led to something a little more useful. Right. Directly following those systems, enter the Casabet Kanat, which is the oldest and largest Kanat, which is essentially a water system. And it's engineered to sustain life, to provide water and cooling systems without ever using an ounce of electricity.

Cristina: What is this?

Jack: A water system?

Cristina: Water system. Okay.

Jack: The thing about this is it's scattered specifically around Persia, like everything else. And the most recent possible date is about 800 BC. And the oldest possible of these is being 5 to about 5000 years of age. And they were extremely developed, which suggests that they are part of a comprehensive system that has been worked on for a very long time. As you get farther away from the Persian Gulf oasis, you come across these systems, but all in Persia, which means, well, we already established our own and they work efficiently, but as we keep going, we've gotten better and better. Every time we do it, it's better and more efficient. Every time we do it, it's better and more efficient.

Cristina: So what are these for, though?

Jack: Water.

Cristina: Just to have water to drink water?

Jack: Yes. It would move water into homes and you wouldn't need electricity.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: You would have working faucets, you would have working showers. You would have.

Cristina: That is too complicated.

Jack: Yeah. And it Requires nothing but gravity. Gravity is making all this happen. They're using the down current, then forcing it into an up current. Not only that, this eventually got exploited into something even more complicated than then allows for the same system with nothing but air in order to create cooling systems inside the house and be able to send hot air into the house during the cool season.

Cristina: What?

Jack: No electricity required?

Cristina: And that's as old?

Jack: This is about as old. It seems that these two systems were created in tandem. Highly advanced, super sophisticated, and doesn't require any, Any, Any electricity to power. This proves everything right now is a scam just so that people can charge you for s***.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: These systems exist and can be made efficiently. More efficiently than a power grid.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: This is cheaper to make than a power grid for a single house. Your house could be designed in this format. Have nothing, no electricity. And this means literally, Literally, literally. You would have nobody sending you electricity, nobody sending you water. And simply with some nice angular things, you would have the pressure necessary to have water anywhere in your house. And you would have a central cooling and heating system that is just the opposite of what it is outside at any given moment.

Cristina: That's way more perfect than what we're doing now.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: We have to pay somebody.

Jack: Yeah, 100%. This requires nothing.

Cristina: It just happened.

Jack: Self powered. The universe does it for you.

Cristina: Why don't we live in that?

Jack: Because we got to charge people for stuff in order for people to make money.

Cristina: It's crazy.

Jack: Yeah. This is way more efficient. Every house with this would essentially destroy the need for AC and the need for heaters.

Cristina: Trash.

Jack: Yep. And these are. We can find these in existing structures, but we don't continue to build them because it's inefficient. We can't make money from it.

Cristina: Oh yeah. Okay.

Jack: No, it's definitely more efficient. We just can't make money from. We can't charge somebody if we can't calculate it. And we're looking for ways to charge people.

Cristina: That is sad. But that is. That's real. That's real.

Jack: Yes. All of these.

Cristina: A lot of it looks like sci fi.

Jack: Yes. But all of it is real. All of it exists somewhere. We can go look at it in person. We could just touch it. It's there. Weird.

Cristina: Yes. The past was living in a sci fi world that we don't even. We're like trying to figure out right now.

Jack: And we are like, no, it was aliens, because they couldn't have been smarter than us. And it's like, shut up, man. Like, be quiet.

Cristina: You have no Idea.

Jack: You don't know crap. You just want to be the pinnacle. And you're not. And that s*** makes you feel weird. I don't know why.

Cristina: It was getting close.

Jack: Tesla got there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Then Washington bought his pan and was like, f*** that. I can't make money off of this. The white man. I know it was one white man with another white man. Whatever, Was a good white man. And then the greedy dollar wanting white man, whatever the case may be. Anyways. Anyways. So this is essentially what I wanted to discuss before. I was gonna focus on the more important of these, which were obviously the pipe systems, the heating systems, and the weapon systems. Gonna focus on China and gonna focus on India. But because I couldn't fit that. Now we had an entire episode of all the tech I found.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Of which all of it is impressive. It wouldn't have fit into the one episode. Maybe eventually I would have addressed it again, but here we are. That episode was too big. And this is now a whole episode based on this. So the ancient technologies, relics, and structures that are way more advanced, and we can go prove by just walking there and looking at it. It.

Cristina: That's crazy. And they're also. They're ancients.

Jack: Nothing on that list is younger than starting at a thousand years ago. Nothing. And the oldest being. Yeah, no, it's weird that Jesus just casually cruised through somewhere and gave somebody a way to detect earthquakes. What the. But, yeah. Marked with some dude's granddad. So, yeah, that's where we are. If you guys just go. Go look at all this stuff, bro. Type in the names. I don't mention all the names. Just find it as you go along. You figure it out. It's all there. All of it. You can find us to talk to us about these things, tell us your ideas and whatnot on all the socials. That's just Convopod on TikTok, on X, on Instagram, on Facebook.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate, and review the show.

Jack: Yes. And word of mouth is the most overpowered, exaggerated thing that has ever existed under the sun. You can tell people, hey, look, you're paying way electricity than you should if your electricity bill is exceptionally high, especially when the winter comes because you're either powering a little electric heater or because your gas system is going a little harder because you're trying to warm your house up. And you, for whatever reason, don't live in Korea, where they figured it out and put the heating pipes underneath the floors, which is obviously the way to go. But Americans are stupid, so they didn't do that.

Cristina: But it's too much anyway. Like, even if it was a dollar, that's too much.

Jack: Yeah. Any money when free is the comparison.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: You can lower your bill to zero if you just install this actually significantly cheaper system that would only require you to cut some holes out here and there. That's it. You would just need, at best, a tool to make a wide enough hole. And the hole doesn't even really have to be that wide because the consistency of air would do it. They rely on the fact that air exists at all times and not just when you hit a button. So it would just because we can't charge people. So, yeah, you're paying too much for heat and you're paying too much for electricity. And like, at the end of the day, even if the Koreans learned how to warm their house properly by putting the heating directly underneath, they're paying. Like, that's too much, bro. You're paying. That's more than you should.

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

Jack: It foreign.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by great dots.info art by 0lupo 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!

Rambling 132: Pyramid of Giza Technology

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.