| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Perspective Distorts Reality
00:14:51
|
|
| I'll give it a try. | |
| Sure. | |
| Yep. | |
| It's David Wardlow Scott. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So David Wardlaw Scott, he was a very outspoken geocentrist. | |
| He was a godly man. | |
| He loved the Lord. | |
| He saw the danger in this. | |
| All right. | |
| So just so, when God has so expressly told us in his own word that the sun moves around the world and our own senses corroborate the fact, Satan, by his delusive teaching, daringly asserts that this fact is not true, but that our eyes deceive us and that the world moves around the sun. | |
| Thus again, he seeks to make us believe that God is a liar. | |
| And many, alas, trust the lie of Satan before the truth of God. | |
| This one, this is one of the chief causes of the abunding infidelity in the skeptical age. | |
| Say not, dear Christian reader, that it matters little to you whether the sun goes around the world or the world goes around the sun, because the principle is involved, whether God or Satan is to be believed. | |
| And I say, let God be true and every man a liar. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yep. | |
| And I wanted to, yeah, go ahead and go over to the second slide. | |
| And I believe this one is Thomas Winship. | |
| And Thomas Winship also. | |
| So David Wardlaw Scott wrote a book called Terra Firma, and it is a classic geocentrist flat earth cosmology book. | |
| Again, these fellows that I'll be talking mostly about this evening, David Wardlos Scott, Thomas Winship, and William Benjamin Carpenter, all three of these were godly men. | |
| They were scientists. | |
| They loved the Lord. | |
| And they all went out and wrote books on how you can prove to yourself, you know, just using objective science with empirical evidence judged in the light of experience and common sense. | |
| All right. | |
| So this is from Thomas Winship. | |
| And he says, I am no conjurer, but it is easy to determine what will be from what has already taken place. | |
| It has been the fate of all kingdoms, nations, and people from the beginning of time upon their rejecting and perverting the revelation of God to fall into anarchy, confusion, and infidelity. | |
| Anybody see any of that going on? | |
| The Bible is, as it deserves, to be the great charter of our liberty. | |
| The loss of the scriptures or swerving from or perverting the doctrines or history contained in them has invariably been attended with discomfiture and ruin and always will. | |
| And if their successors continue their resistance as they have done hitherto, it cannot fail to deluge the kingdom in atheism, cannot fall or cannot fail to deluge the kingdom in atheism, destroying all social virtue and turning it into a field of blood. | |
| What do you think, Dan? | |
| I mean, those are pretty strong words from both of those fellas. | |
| They really saw the danger in this. | |
| And this was, you know, as I was saying earlier, nobody really believed this. | |
| It was all theories. | |
| You know, the heliocentricism thing were just kind of ideas. | |
| They were pushing it hard. | |
| And it was really not until, you know, later in the 18th century when the works of, I believe it was H.G. Wells, I may have the wrong Wells there, War of the Worlds, Jules Verne, these guys came in and started writing science fiction and started dazzling the minds of people. | |
| And then after the turn of the 20th century, then Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, and Isaac Asimov came in and picked up where those fellas left off. | |
| And about the time those guys were writing, Einstein was coming in with his theory of relativity. | |
| And, you know, there was a big war about this going on. | |
| And really, there was right up until NASA started their chicanery with the moon landing hoax and whatnot. | |
| And I think that when they did that, that was kind of an initiation for the masses who didn't really understand and know what was going on. | |
| They had been primed for it. | |
| I believe that the powers of darkness and the architects of reality, so to say, use methods like predictive programming. | |
| They get us primed first. | |
| They get us used to the ideas. | |
| And then they just, you know, just keep moving forward with it. | |
| Doesn't matter how much you expose their theories to be wrong. | |
| The Royal Societies upset the narrative for the universities and the schools of the education system. | |
| And it's an evolutionary narrative. | |
| And people who go against that narrative are usually outcasted. | |
| You're isolated, you're ridiculed, isolated, mocked, and they'll just ruin you if you, you know, or in whatever field of study coming out of university or whatever it is you may be. | |
| If you're not in step with the narrative, there's no place for you. | |
| Exactly. | |
| And it's just interesting. | |
| Oh, go ahead. | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| Yeah, no, you go right ahead, Dan. | |
| You go right ahead. | |
| I was just trying to say it's just interesting altogether. | |
| And it's just, the more you look into it, you might think it's silly at first, like I did, or dumb. | |
| And then you start looking into it and you're like, oh, all right, it's got some points here, and more points come to more points. | |
| Then all of a sudden, wow, yeah, that mental block goes away. | |
| And I'm like, wow, all right. | |
| And then here's the thing, too. | |
| Anybody could agree with this that has any common sense, regardless of if you believe in the Bible or not, you should all know that the education system lies to you. | |
| I mean, that's just a given. | |
| You should know this by now. | |
| The education system lies to you. | |
| So what makes you think they're going to tell you the truth about creation or anything cosmology? | |
| And the thing is, only a handful of people have been to space. | |
| Well, we call space, probably just the atmosphere, whatever the case. | |
| But even then, these people, Freemasons, that do this. | |
| And they take oaths and everything else. | |
| We can get to that later on. | |
| But I mean, it's just like they're liars, plain and simple. | |
| NASA in Hebrew means liar, deceiver. | |
| And it's a split tongue for a logo, and you can't get any blatant amount. | |
| And also, it's from the Nazi rat line, Operation Paperclip. | |
| Remember Ron Braun, the father of NASA, and all these people, Nazi scientists, is what created NASA today for the United States of America. | |
| So that alone should make you scratch your head, you know. | |
| Yeah, and they're, you know, they're also affiliated with Hollywood, NASA, and Disney. | |
| They're kind of like an axis of evil or something. | |
| You know, there's really, I tried to figure out what the difference was between all of them, and there's not a lot. | |
| It's the same players. | |
| It's the same players at the top that are running those three institutions. | |
| And that should make you question. | |
| And then a lot of them came from paperclip or they were supported by Americans here. | |
| Walt Disney was 33rd degree Freemason. | |
| When after, I forgot the fellow's name, but after this whole moon landing thing went down, the guy was, you know, he was made head of NASA after they pulled this stunt off and whatnot. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| It's amazing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| A lot of deception out there. | |
| You really got to test every spirit, you know, question everything. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Okay. | |
| Then you got that side with the Michigan thing we already talked about. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So to talk a little bit about perspective, about how our eyesight works, how we see things as they're moving away from us. | |
| A lot of people think that when things disappear into the horizon, that they're actually going over some curvature. | |
| And that's just not the case. | |
| So the ramp, the sky ramps down and the ground ramps up to where they converge into a vanishing point. | |
| The human eye has a 1.2 degree angular resolution. | |
| So objects, when they hit a certain distance, they appear as if they're starting to disappear from the bottom up as they move away from us. | |
| But with high-powered zoom lenses or a telescope, we can bring them right back into focus and show that they're actually not disappearing. | |
| They're just vanishing into the horizon. | |
| Same thing with ships at sea. | |
| I think a lot of us grew up seeing Bill Nye, the science guy, on there and showing the boat going over, the model of the boat going over the curved sea and how the ship disappears. | |
| And science, he says science. | |
| But you can go yourself and you can stand on any beachhead on an ocean. | |
| You can watch a ship disappear completely out of view with the Nikon P900 camera, 83 times zoom lens or a telescope. | |
| You can bring it right back into focus from the hole up. | |
| You can see every detail on it through your viewing device. | |
| You can literally watch it disappear again and bring it right back into focus. | |
| And I mean, some of these, 10 miles or more, much more. | |
| I mean, at 10 miles, if you do the math, it's already 66.6 feet of curvature that it would be obfuscated, and it's just not there. | |
| Same with the sun. | |
| You can watch the sun, but you can observe the sun. | |
| And when it gets like it's sunk halfway into the sea, you can zoom in and it brings it right back up into the sky, proving that it actually is not disappearing over some objective horizon. | |
| It's just, you know, it's just the limitations of our view. | |
| And speaking of Bill Nye, a quote by him, you can go fact check this. | |
| He says, one thing I really want you, your generation, to embrace is that the Earth is a closed system. | |
| We cannot leave Earth. | |
| That's from Bill Nye. | |
| I mean, to me, this guy's an actor, but the thing is, these people do come out and tell you the truth and they'll go on TV lie about everything. | |
| But yeah, and these people end up just like, let me see if I get that. | |
| This is Reno Von Braun, the father of NASA. | |
| He quotes Psalms 19.1 on his tombstone. | |
| Let me get to that in a second here. | |
| And it says, Psalms 19.1, it says, plain and simple. | |
| Yeah, there you go. | |
| The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shows his handiwork. | |
| So God, you know, if you go to Genesis 1, it says that the earth was created first, then the firmament that separated the waters from the waters. | |
| Then on day four, that's when the sun, moon, and stars came. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| So is that them just say, hey, listen, we were wrong and this is the Bible is right. | |
| Plain and simple. | |
| I think Mr. Von Braun was trying to leave us a little clue there, Dan. | |
| What do you say? | |
| Yep. | |
| I mean, you can't be in a space program like that and then go out on your tombstone putting something about God's creation, which the firmament, it literally means the dome, the vault of the sky, a hard, hammered-out expanse is what it means. | |
| And if we have time later, we'll read the whole chapter. | |
| It's only 14 verses. | |
| But yeah, it talks about rain in there. | |
| And, you know, it's clear as day. | |
| Yeah, it's amazing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, that's one of my favorite songs, too. | |
| Yeah, I love that. | |
| All right, Dan, well, how about, can we go to number 10? | |
| And just kind of, I'm not sure, you know, I'm kind of technologically handicapped here at the moment. | |
| And so I'm just kind of just taking screenshots and trying to make slides. | |
| So I'm not sure how well a lot of these are going to turn out. | |
| Yep, it's up on screen now. | |
| Okay. | |
| Yeah, I've got a little bit of a delay here, so bear with me. | |
| So up in the upper left-hand corner, we're showing the sun as it's throwing its light as it's circuiting around the level plane Earth. | |
| But due to our perspective, and so if you look over here on the bottom left, just underneath that, you can see it looks like the clouds and the chemtrails are, you know, that they're just sinking into the horizon. | |
| But we know that those clouds and those chemtrails are all about the same height. | |
| They just appear to dip down due to our perspective. | |
| And up in the upper right corner, it shows you that the rising, peaking, and setting of the sun is just due to perspective. | |
| And it shows you where the L on top there, it says this is where the actual path of the sun is. | |
| So as the sun is pulling in from the east, it appears as if it's rising, but it's really not. | |
| It's just coming across. | |
| And you can watch planes doing the same thing. | |
| Clouds, same thing. | |
| When they approach the zenith directly above you and then move away from you, things start to dip down and ramp down like they're going down into the horizon, but they're really not. | |
| It's just due to perspective. | |
| Yeah, it's amazing to look at it. | |
| Yeah, it's the same thing. | |
| Yeah, it's just an optical effect. | |
| Yeah. | |
| If you start really paying attention yourself, you'll start to see that, yes, indeed. | |
| I mean, look, I'll say this. | |
| This is a hard thing to overcome. | |
| I think, you know, it took me quite a while. | |
| I mean, I had to go up and down this thing. | |
| But what happened was, is the pile of evidence was so high for the geocentric, non-rotating, non-rotating Earth with no curvature. | |
| That evidence was so profound. | |
| And I couldn't find any objective, any empirical evidence based upon objective science for the spinning ball earth. | |
| And I have yet to. | |
| It's just pseudoscience and theories and stuff to just, you know, confuse you. | |
| It's really, it's just to confuse you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so, yeah, let's go to, let's just go to number 11. | |
| Yeah. | |
|
Water's Horizontal Plane
00:09:45
|
|
| And so water, we'll talk about water and the fundamentals of water. | |
| And I'm going to read, this is a statement from W.T. Lin in his First Principles of Natural Philosophy. | |
| And he says, the upper surface of a fluid at rest is a horizontal plane. | |
| Because if a part of the surface were higher than the rest, those parts of the fluid, which were under it, would exert a greater pressure upon the surrounding parts than they received from them. | |
| So that motion would take place amongst the particles and continue until there were none at a higher level than the rest. | |
| That is until the upper surface of the whole mass of fluid became the horizontal plane again. | |
| So what he's saying there is water, standing water, undisturbed, is level water. | |
| And that is a law of physics. | |
| That is not a theory. | |
| That is something that we can go out and test for ourselves. | |
| Dr. Samuel Robotham, he was also a godly man, 19th century. | |
| And he went out and did a series of tests called the Bedford Canal Experiment. | |
| And up in the upper right corner, that is the Bedford Canal where he did his experiments. | |
| And he used the, I believe it was the three-mile distance where he put a flag, he put a series of flags from where he was standing until his target point was three miles away. | |
| And he proved that there's no curvature. | |
| They were all in line. | |
| There was nothing hidden behind a 70, it's a six foot arch of water there. | |
| So yeah, standing water. | |
| Oh, rivers. | |
| I mean, think about rivers. | |
| There's a part of the Nile River that runs for a thousand miles, okay, with only one foot of variance in sea level. | |
| Now think about that. | |
| That should be so over a thousand miles, there should be 6,666 feet of curvature. | |
| That's over a mile of curvature drop. | |
| And so if that curvature is a parabola, if it's an arch, how is water running? | |
| Which way is it running? | |
| How would water run in an arc? | |
| You know what I'm saying? | |
| It doesn't make any sense. | |
| The Mississippi River, over a 3,000-mile destination that it runs, it would have to ascend 11 miles before reaching its destination in the Gulf of Mexico. | |
| I mean, these are what their theories that they're telling us necessitate. | |
| It's what they mandate. | |
| And it's just ridiculous when you really stop them and put it to the test. | |
| Think about it. | |
| And Dan, you can, we'll just kind of just kind of go through these. | |
| I'll probably go through these, this part of it, you know, pretty, pretty quickly. | |
| So number 12 up. | |
| Yeah, number 12. | |
| Yep, water. | |
| Oh, I think that is that the one with the vials, with the flask of water? | |
| Yeah. | |
| But just different colors. | |
| Yeah, if you, yeah, but as you see, that the containers that the flask are slanted downward, but yet the water still remains level. | |
| It's still completely level, no matter how it's contained. | |
| It's level. | |
| All right. | |
| And then just hit the next one, Dan. | |
| I think it's Earth. | |
| So if water is level, which it is, and the Earth is 70% water, the known, our known world anyway, is 70% water. | |
| You know, what are you going to? | |
| Yeah, it's. | |
| Yep, the next one. | |
| Yep. | |
| 92,000 miles away of the sun. | |
| Yeah, 90, yeah, was it 93 million miles? | |
| Yep. | |
| They tell us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so we can use triangulation, Pythagorean theorem to show to try to, that we can triangulate it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| How is that possible that it's almost 93 million miles away? | |
| If you use, and we're going to talk a little bit about that some more here. | |
| Yeah, just go ahead and go to the next one, Dan. | |
| Is it the triangulation, the sun? | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| I want to read something too on sextants on America. | |
| Oh, actually, yeah. | |
| So, on the one with the triangulation, so this is something that I want to challenge too. | |
| So, whenever we have an equilateral triangle, which we're looking at here, where you have all angles the same at 60 degrees, okay? | |
| Whenever you have an equilateral triangle when all angles are the same, that means that all of its sides are going to be the same as well. | |
| And so, you know, you can measure this and see that it's not possible. | |
| I mean, we know that that bottom line is not going to be that far. | |
| And this is just a simple, crude example, but I want to read a statement about mariner sextants, which were used by mariners for just simple triangulation for them to keep their ships on course. | |
| Yeah, just go ahead and go to that next one, Dan, on sextants. | |
| And I'll see. | |
| Now, I suppose that's seeing the Mirage, too, right? | |
| Exactly. | |
| Exactly. | |
| That's crazy. | |
| It's pretty interesting to know how they navigated like that all those years ago without GPS or anything. | |
| Today's world, we've got the GPS on the phone now, and to use the stars, the sun, and everything else for navigation and precision go across the ocean, you know, to the from across the Atlantic, whatever the case. | |
| And that's it's amazing. | |
| Yeah, I mean, you had to be proficient in astronomy as a navigator. | |
| Yep. | |
| And, you know, because it's dangerous out there. | |
| They didn't have GPS. | |
| Like I said, they didn't have that stuff to help you out. | |
| All right. | |
| So the distance of the sun can be measured with much precision, the same way as a tree or a house, a church steeple is measured by plain triangulation. | |
| It is the principle on which a house is built, a table made, or a man of war constructed. | |
| The sun is always somewhere between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, the distance admitted to be less than 3,000 miles. | |
| How then can the sun, if it be so many thousand miles in diameter, squeeze itself into a space of about only 3,000 miles only? | |
| But look at the distance, say the professors. | |
| We've already done that. | |
| And not one of these wise men have so often challenged, has ever attempted, or one let me start that over again. | |
| We have already done that. | |
| And not one of the wise men we have so often challenged has ever attempted to refute the principle on which we measure the sun's distance. | |
| If a navigator neglects to apply the sun's semi-diameter to his observation at sea, he is 16 nautical miles out in calculating the position his ship is in. | |
| A minute of arc on the sextant represents a nautical mile. | |
| And if the semi-diameter be 16 miles, the diameter is, of course, 32 miles. | |
| And as measured by the sextant, the sun's diameter is 32 minutes of arc. | |
| That is 32 nautical miles of diameter. | |
| And then he goes on to say, let him disprove this who can. | |
| If ever this proof is attempted, it will be a literary curiosity well worth framing. | |
| I'm guessing that literary curiosity will be mirage or something of the sort. | |
| And so he goes on to say that measuring with sextants and calculating with plain trigonometry, both the sun and moon figure to be only about 32 miles in diameter and approximately 3,000 miles away. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, it's like great what the Bible says, and the book of Enoch, too, guys. | |
| If um, well, and I say this all the time: the book of Enoch has more science in it than real science than NASA. | |
| It gives you like explicit details about the portals, um, you know, the sun going by, the moon going by, and all that. | |
| That's why it's called sunset and sunrise because it's the sun that sets and the sun that rises, not the other way around. | |
| You know, I mean, and um, the book of Enoch here, it's amazing, and it gets into the cosmology. | |
| Like, in and I know people are like, oh, it's not a canine, it doesn't matter if it's canine description or not, it's not the point, but it's a verbatim for Genesis X with the creation and everything. | |
| But real vivid details, scientific details of exactly to the each phase of the moon, the sun, and everything it does, you know, I mean, down to the science. | |
| It's amazing. | |
|
Pilot's Perspective: Gyroscope Basics
00:15:25
|
|
| Yeah, I've got mine with me tonight, too. | |
| And hopefully, we're going to have time where I can get to some of the some of the things that Enoch talks about for sure. | |
| Well, Dan, I think we're going to talk about gyroscopes and planes here. | |
| Something that I know that you can attest to. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| So, this here, this gyroscoping, it's that instrument there. | |
| This is like the most let me pull up one second here. | |
| Um, instruments piano. | |
| So, you got a series of instrument pianos on plane. | |
| This is a uh, let me get the picture. | |
| Hang on a second. | |
| So, I'll show you this because this is like really nails at home. | |
| I really believe this. | |
| This here just nails the stuff home. | |
| So, this is a cockpit with a regular Cessna, whatever the case. | |
| And so, I get a private pilot's license and all that. | |
| So, you got a series of instruments here. | |
| You got an altimeter. | |
| This is a turning. | |
| Let me see where my mouse is. | |
| A turning bank indicator right here. | |
| And this is your compass heading. | |
| And this is your vertical speed, you know, the climbing speed and all that. | |
| This is the airspeed here, how fast you're going. | |
| This is, I think, there's oil pressure here. | |
| And these are VOR VHS omini radios. | |
| This way, you have to fly without visual. | |
| You know, the radio will literally lead you right to the airport. | |
| And there's the communications comms and all that. | |
| This is the throttle and the mixture right here. | |
| And these are flap settings over here. | |
| It varies a little bit different on different airplanes, whatever the case depends on the equipment of the aircraft. | |
| And so, this one here, this one in particular that Joe's got in the slides here, this one in particular, whoops over here, it's called artificial horizon. | |
| It's a turning bank indicator, artificial horizon. | |
| But out of all the instruments, especially if you go into it, it's called VFR. | |
| So, in the aircraft, you got IFR and VFR. | |
| VFR is visual flight rules, which this is acquired when you get your private pilots. | |
| When you get your commercial and all that, you do have to learn IFR. | |
| It's called instrument flight rules. | |
| In other words, you've got to fly the plane with no visibility at all. | |
| Because VFR visual flight rules, you're looking at a map. | |
| It's a topical map, and it's very detailed. | |
| And this is called a sectional chart. | |
| And it's very detailed, elevation things. | |
| You can see land masses. | |
| Like, all right, here I am. | |
| You can say, all right, I'm by the Empire State Building. | |
| No, it's right there. | |
| So I know where I am now. | |
| There's this Statue of Liberty, whatever the case you want to put, right? | |
| So, yeah, and these are very important instruments. | |
| But in the fog, this will tell you because it's called spatial disorientation. | |
| If you can't see out the window, your plane could be like this, and you think you're upside down. | |
| It's special disorientation that goes on your head because you've got a built-in gyroscope in your head. | |
| Sometimes people don't have a good sense of it. | |
| And if you don't have a good sense of it, you got to think you're upside down. | |
| It's what causes dizziness and disorientation. | |
| And people crash the plane because they don't pay attention to the most important instrument there is on that plane. | |
| It's an artificial horizon. | |
| So, this literally tells you what your attitude is. | |
| It's an attitude indicator and artificial horizon. | |
| So, the artificial horizon is a horizon, plain and simple. | |
| What you see out that window is exactly this right here. | |
| You don't see anything else. | |
| And you could ask any honest pilot, they'll tell you it doesn't matter how high you bend, you'll never see a curvature ever, ever, ever. | |
| Never see a curvature. | |
| Let me see. | |
| Put this here: cockpit view of sky. | |
| So, you put this here, and you'll see it. | |
| When you look at the cockpit, right, you'll never see a curvature except for you turn like that. | |
| But that's what it generally looks like. | |
| Flat, that's why it's called an airplane because you're riding on the plane on a plane surface, you know. | |
| And of course, over here, they got the um they'll have the GoPro cameras here with the fisheye view, so you can get the whole uh view of the cockpit. | |
| But look at the regular views here, completely flat. | |
| And every pilot will tell you, there's another one here, they use the GoPros, but yeah, look at the flat horizon right there. | |
| And every time I fly, guys, you go on the airlines too. | |
| Um, I went on, you know, one plane we went up to 37,000 feet because we were the plane had to climb to avoid a storm. | |
| There's a storm at a low uh uh uh overcast. | |
| So, 37,000 feet, you can look out the window, flat as a pancake across the sky, the horizon. | |
| So, this instrument is very critical to that stuff. | |
| And especially if you can't see it out the window, this is your life and death, literally, instrument right there. | |
| And it's controlled by a gyroscope. | |
| So, no matter which way you, the gyroscope always stays straight up. | |
| So, no matter which way you turn the plane or upside down, whatever case. | |
| So, that being said, if the earth was curvature, don't you think this artificial horizon would be curved too? | |
| And don't you think you would have to dip the nose every time, every mile, you have to dip the nose eight inches, eight inches? | |
| No, you can, um, you went on the flight train. | |
| We have um uh uh cruising mode, right? | |
| You uh use the trim tabs, whatever, and put the plane on autopilot, whatever, or just hold it there. | |
| You don't have to put on autopilot. | |
| Uh, you set the trap right to stay straight and level altitude, right? | |
| And the plane just goes like this, like that. | |
| And you would think, okay, the plane's going like uh you travel about small plane, almost 200 um knots, right? | |
| So, you think you're going through miles quick, right? | |
| So, you would think, especially a jet now, you're going about three, sometimes 400 knots in the jet. | |
| So, you think you're going through miles real quick, right? | |
| And every two seconds, you got to start tilting that nose, tilting that nose to keep up with the curvature of the earth, right? | |
| There ain't no such thing, and yeah, the plane would just go that's it, you know, right across the flat plane. | |
| That's why it's called an airplane, you know, I mean, people don't get that. | |
| And uh, you know, you talk to pilots, guys. | |
| Uh, go next time you fly an airline, go ask the airline pilots. | |
| It's like which of you on the earth you think it's flat next to you. | |
| They're gonna tell you, yeah, it's flat as a pancake. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| And it's right there, and then I know Joe had some information on this altitude indicator right here built with the gyroscope to keep the aircraft level with the horizon during flights. | |
| The earth was a ball. | |
| If the earth was a ball, the pilot would need to constantly dip the nose downwards to maintain consistent altitude. | |
| And I've flown cross-country for my flight instruction and all that, and we never had to do anything like that. | |
| There was no adjustment for the curvature of the earth. | |
| It's always calorial adjustments, it depends on the magnetic earth because you've got magnetic north and true north. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| So, you have to make the adjustments to that. | |
| But there were no adjustments to a curvature at all. | |
| And you do your flight planning and all that stuff, and you get it all down to a science. | |
| And there's nothing at all to say you have to adjust the curvature of the earth. | |
| Nothing at all. | |
| And I met the slide here, which is aircraft pitch, the flight path over the curved earth. | |
| Yeah, no, you're good, Dan. | |
| Yeah, that's perfect. | |
| Yeah, and I just wanted to touch too, when we were talking about being up there in that flat horizon, the horizon, no matter how high you ascend, the horizon will always rise to eye level. | |
| That could not happen. | |
| And at first, when I heard, when I was studying this, I didn't think much about it. | |
| But it is actually, it's a very, very compelling point because if you really think about it, if the Earth were a sphere, if it were globular, no matter how big it was, it would remain fixed as you ascended because every point as you're looking down is actually falling away from you. | |
| But it doesn't do that. | |
| It rises to high level. | |
| You don't have to ever look down to look over at, you know, try to look down to the horizon. | |
| It always rises to eye level, 360 degrees, no matter how high you go. | |
| Because the further that you are ascending, the further out on that plane it's touching the sky that you're seeing that convergence from further and further out. | |
| And there's a great documentary and presentation out there. | |
| I believe it's called 28 Pilots Confirm Flat Earth. | |
| And there's a fighter pilot in there. | |
| And he said that when he was in flight school, that he was taught that if he had an adversary or some other craft that he was looking at, if that craft was above the horizon, it meant that it's above you. | |
| It means it's above you. | |
| If it's below the horizon, it's mean that it's below you. | |
| And that is a truth. | |
| It is a fact. | |
| And if the Earth were globular and fixed, it wouldn't do that. | |
| You wouldn't have that. | |
| Everything would just be obscure. | |
| And, you know, gyroscopes don't lie. | |
| They don't lie. | |
| It is impossible for a plane to go around a curve without the gyroscope indicating that it is. | |
| You know, if you think if you're flying from, let's say, you know, Alaska, you know, and you're flying down to Australia and you're going to turn completely, you know, almost upside down and you don't notice or experience any of it. | |
| You know, it's just ridiculous. | |
| And that's in any direction that you're flying around. | |
| You're technically going around the curve. | |
| And then, you know, if you really stop and just do some practical thought experiments, it's like, okay, so technically the plane is flying like this around, you know, a globular earth, but you don't notice that you're tilted or anything, that, you know, this supposed force of gravity keeps you right side up and has you feeling oriented, you know. | |
| And then you look at a helium balloon and say, you know, flying up through the air and be like, how can it be? | |
| How can there be this force that's holding me, you know, keeping me from leaning side to side? | |
| Because you're really not. | |
| What they're telling you is that there's no such thing as up or down when we know that's not, you know, we know that that's not true. | |
| There isn't up and down. | |
| And here's a good example, too. | |
| So if you notice when researchers like NASA or universities launch balloons, right, weather balloons that go way up, that you got to see a little curvature, right? | |
| And the reason why, again, because the fisheye lens, they always use the GoPro fisheye lens to get a wider view. | |
| And if you're, I mean, you play in sports too, and you have to go pros for the sports, you got to use these lenses because you get a wider view, you get to see more. | |
| But when you have private people who just use a regular camera, not a fisheye camera, that launch the balloon up like this guy here, there's tons of videos. | |
| Complete flat. | |
| And then it turns and everything. | |
| And it's crazy, man. | |
| It's completely flat. | |
| And it looks like the sun's right there. | |
| Yeah, and the sun's not like 92 million miles away. | |
| But yeah, you can see the difference between, yeah, universities and all that using fish island lens cameras versus amateurs that just launch a balloon up with a regular camera. | |
| And yeah, and it's completely flat. | |
| Yeah, there's some, I've seen some footage of some high-altitude balloons. | |
| I think it was 120,000 feet. | |
| Because that rider is, yeah, 120,000 feet and perfectly flat, 360 degrees around. | |
| Not a trace of curvature anywhere. | |
| And so if you can't see it and you can't measure it, I mean, you know, ask yourself, is it there? | |
| You know, people, we get caught up in this, you know, well, where's the edge of space and, you know, all of this type of stuff? | |
| Or where is the edge of the earth? | |
| You know, where's the edge? | |
| You know, where's the edge of space? | |
| I mean, you've got to have faith. | |
| And I would say you have to have a whole lot more faith in the heliocentric model because you have to abandon your senses. | |
| You have to abandon your senses, your everyday, your common senses. | |
| It's almost like it's just self-deception. | |
| It just kind of, you put, I feel like it kind of puts you in a state of hypnosis, you know, to where you can't trust your own senses. | |
| And observation and experience are two major constituents of, you know, proper, of the proper scientific method. | |
| You don't want to just, you know, abandon your senses to that. | |
| Yeah, it's just fascinating. | |
| Then you get the spinning earth here, though. | |
| Yeah, and so they're telling us, yeah, they're telling us that, and I think this was, this one's in kilometers, but they're telling us that the Earth is spinning roughly at the equator, about 1,030 miles per hour. | |
| At the mid-latitudes, they're going to be spinning around 600 miles per hour. | |
| And then at the poles, zero miles per hour. | |
| Now think about that. | |
| I mean, think about, you know, when a pilot sets his, makes his flight plan, does he ever have to adjust for the speed of the Earth rotation? | |
| I mean, your flight times are going to be the same. | |
| If you're flying from Los Angeles to New York and then from New York to Los Angeles, your flight times are going to be almost the same. | |
| Now, you'll run into a little bit of variance due to wind currents and whatnot. | |
| But technically, if you are flying from New York to Los Angeles, you're going against or against the curve. | |
| You should get there much, much quicker than if you were flying in the direction that the Earth spin. | |
| In fact, you should never be able to get off the ground and reach your destination if the Earth is spinning that fast. | |
| Jerry Liz, he recommended me a video. | |
| I forgot about this here. | |
| Neil Tyson. | |
| Where is the center? | |
| Oh, Neil deGrasse Tyson. | |
| I don't like that. | |
| I'm not answering a question about some cool school kids or whatever. | |
| And it's right there. | |
| Here's a question that you know not to ask. | |
| Where is the center of Earth's surface? | |
| Unless you're a flat earther and think we have a disk. | |
| So it turns out the universe has no center because everything in this universe was at the same place at the same time. | |
| we call that the big bang so it kind of had a center but it's not accessible to you i guess he uh was a video him telling kids uh that school children he was making fun of a guy who went up in a balloon to see the curvature So I guess, yeah, I got the wrong video. | |
| But he's over here promoting the Big Bang stupidity by George Lamate. | |
| George Lamate was a Jesuit, by the way, who promoted that stupidity. | |
| I'll try to find out a video later. | |
| It's funny how these people split-tongued like the NASA logo. | |
| They'll go over here and tell you, you know, the official narrative. | |
| Then over here, they're telling you, oh, no, it's not real. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, Neil deGrasse Tyson also said that the Earth was shaped like a pear as well. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I don't know if you ever heard that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's a little chubby and you know, like a pear, and people just eat it up. | |
| You know, it's it just blows my mind. | |
|
Why Objects Appear Different
00:13:15
|
|
| Then you have slide 21, which is a great point. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, yes. | |
| So, okay. | |
| So Tycho Brahe was a Danish astronomer, and he posited that, you know, if the Earth is, you know, traveling all these millions of miles around the Sun and its circuit and its annual circuit around the Sun, that we should see some type of parallax. | |
| And parallax is just a phenomenon. | |
| Think of goal. | |
| Think if you look at a football field and you see the goalpost. | |
| As you approach the goalpost, they seem to get bigger. | |
| And as you walk away from them, they're going to seem to shrink and get smaller. | |
| It's just the way that objects appear as we're moving towards or moving away. | |
| But if you look at this model here at the solstices, okay, now look at the night sky. | |
| So if you're looking at the at nighttime, you're going to be looking at a completely different skyline, or not skyline, excuse me, a completely different view of the stars and the constellations from where you would six months later. | |
| The night sky would be completely different. | |
| But that's not what we see. | |
| It doesn't matter what time of the year it is. | |
| We see the stars always rising and setting in their relative positions in a 24-hour cycle. | |
| And they do this night after night. | |
| And they've been doing it for centuries and eons. | |
| The only variance we have in that is the precession of the equinox. | |
| The precession of the equinoxes, just think about the entire zodiac that you can view if you're looking at the night sky. | |
| The entire zodiac takes a one-degree counterclockwise tick. | |
| So we're talking about your view of 360 degrees around the zodiac. | |
| Well, when that 72-year cycle runs through 30 times, that's 30 times or 30 times 72 is 2,160 years. | |
| That's an age. | |
| We're coming out of Pisces into the age of Aquarius. | |
| And that is where the Sun will be rising and setting in a different constellation. | |
| It takes 2,160 years for that to happen. | |
| Other than that, the stars are always going to rise and set. | |
| And I think I've got a slide up here too down the road of star trails where using time-lapse for photography at the sky, we can see that they're moving and that the stars are traveling in concentric circles all around Polaris, the North Star. | |
| If the Earth were spinning east to west, we shouldn't experience that. | |
| What we should see is the star trails should be making an arc from horizon to horizon, east to the west. | |
| And that's not what we see. | |
| We see them, you know, everything, every luminary in the sky, the sun, the moon, the stars, and the wandering stars, which have been taught to us as planets, the sun, the moon, they all make perfect sort of concentric circles around Polaris. | |
| Yeah, in a 24-hour period. | |
| The moon is, the moon is roughly about 25 hours. | |
| It's a little bit, you know, slower than the sun in its journey. | |
| But yeah, every night, you say the only thing that doesn't orbit Polaris is Polaris and Earth. | |
| So, yeah, and anybody can go out and watch me. | |
| Anybody can do this. | |
| This has been happening since the beginning of time and it will continue to happen because it's the firm that's turning above us. | |
| It's the course of the stars, the circuit of the stars. | |
| Yeah, that's a good point you brought up because I was saying the same thing earlier. | |
| Yeah, why would they spin? | |
| You know, it makes no sense to look at it for this orientation. | |
| If we were spinning, whatever the case, right? | |
| You would see a linear basically or arc, like you said, about the stars moving and all that. | |
| But, and the thing is, why is it the same stars? | |
| Yeah, it's like you could go back to 6,000 years where the Egyptians actually made star charts. | |
| You go back to the ancient cultures, they all had star charts identical to today. | |
| So you take 6,000 years of human history on this world here, right? | |
| You would have some variation, something different, nothing at all. | |
| And Polaris doesn't move at all. | |
| So it makes no sense to a globe earth. | |
| It wouldn't move because he has the things that even if we are under it spinning, it still makes no sense because if we go flowing through an endless universe, because now what they want you to believe, not only is the earth spinning, but the sun, you're rotating around the sun, and that whole solar system itself is spinning around the Milky Way galaxy, which is retarded. | |
| And sorry for the language, but and then that galaxy is endlessly going through space. | |
| So you have all these things going around in circles and all that, but yet, how would we get this perfect circle of the stars perfectly? | |
| Polaris never moves. | |
| You go back 6,000 years, the star charts identical to today. | |
| So it makes no sense at all. | |
| And the Bible talks about this, about the stars being used for signs and seasons and everything to come. | |
| Not, you know, telling the future, no, but signs and seasons and things to come. | |
| And how in Revelation with the Queen of Heaven, we've seen that in 2017. | |
| That whole thing with, you know, Pluto, I mean, it was Saturn going into the womb of Polaris, I mean, Virgo, I'm sorry, and staying there for nine months and it came out. | |
| It's amazing. | |
| And so you can't explain that with the official narrative. | |
| Because by all means, if we're flowing, everything's randomly flown through space, it makes no sense. | |
| And the whole Big Bang stupidity, circular motion, relative motion, I'm sorry, would debunk that. | |
| Because if you get regards to the size or whatever the case, if you get something, like they demonstrated this a million times. | |
| Like remember when the CDs first came out? | |
| They had a problem of breaking and they shatter all over the place. | |
| So they had to make the DVDs and CDs tougher. | |
| So basically when something spins, like the Big Bang diary, right? | |
| And that little dot supposedly, right, spun and broke. | |
| All this matter came out. | |
| So if that was true, you would have an even scattering of these things. | |
| Everything would be spinning in the same direction at the same speed, regardless of the size of it. | |
| But no, you got things in voids of nothingness, clusters of things. | |
| Everything's got its own direction, own speed, and everything else, supposedly, whatever the case. | |
| But yeah, and they contradict themselves. | |
| And when I was, before I even knew any of this stuff here, the biblical version, I was questioning all the things. | |
| I had this makes no sense at all at all. | |
| And it's like you guys are contradicting yourself. | |
| How could that, you know, I was always against the Big Bang stupidity and not even knowing the biblical stuff about it, you know? | |
| And so scientifically, the Big Bang is stupid. | |
| Scientifically, that evolution is stupid. | |
| Plain and simple. | |
| And yeah, that's my choice of word because I like to say something else. | |
| But being a little politically correct tonight, the R word, because pure is in our word, the R word, whatever the case, if you want to put it that way, to believe that. | |
| On the scientific point of view, it's dumb. | |
| Dumb as it comes. | |
| And then when you get to the Bible, it's like, wow, all right. | |
| That makes sense now. | |
| And because all these holes and gaps and questions that you have on a scientific point of view, a lot of people avoid them because they don't want to go against the norm. | |
| That's where the problem is. | |
| But when you go to the Bible, it's like it answers every one of the other questions and it makes sense now. | |
| Like, wow, okay, that's why it does this. | |
| That's why this is the way it is. | |
| And yeah, again, the stars would change. | |
| Every hundreds of years, whatever, the speed was supposedly going on, it would change randomly. | |
| And if it was endless universe, we wouldn't see the same stars all the time. | |
| You know, it's like, why is it the same stars all the time? | |
| Same patterns, nothing changed. | |
| You know, it's just like you ask these questions and it's right there. | |
| It explains itself. | |
| Yeah, you've got all of these crazy speeds that everything's spinning and flying around at breakneck speed and gravity's pulling everything together and making things stick and blowing things apart. | |
| I mean, it's just like to be daddy. | |
| So the Earth is spinning and it's going around the Sun at 66,000, you know, 600 miles per hour and the whole Milky Way is flying through 500,000 miles per hour. | |
| And it's just crazy. | |
| And then Polaris and the other stars, the other fixed stars, they just keep up with it all. | |
| I mean, it doesn't make any sense. | |
| It's just ridiculous. | |
| Yeah, and it's just like a lunacy. | |
| And the other people, and they got some good questions too when they say, well, well, if the Earth is flat, why are all the objects we look up in the sky around? | |
| Well, they appear to be around. | |
| And the thing is, and if you, I know it's going to sound far-fetched, people, but these things up in the air that are controlled by Dominion angels. | |
| Everything, every pattern, every orbit, whatever the case, it's controlled by an angel called a Dominion. | |
| It's a certain angel. | |
| The angel's job is to control the luminaries. | |
| And the luminaries are not balls of gas. | |
| They're not what you think. | |
| And I know it's going to sound far-fetched if you don't believe it. | |
| Yeah, that's on you. | |
| But these things are heavenly luminaries. | |
| The angels, the different beings that God's put up there to make land on the earth. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| And so everything you look at, you think it's planets that you can live on? | |
| No, nothing like that at all. | |
| And if you actually see through a telescope with your own eyes, they don't look anything like the pictures from NASA. | |
| And even with a superpowered telescope, these things look like they're in the water. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| It's crazy. | |
| Yeah, they're completely different with the CGI pictures that they show us. | |
| And they are CGI. | |
| They're computer generated images. | |
| They do not, even compared to when you go out with amateur telescopes and cameras, complete two. | |
| You're looking at two completely different things. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's what they give us. | |
| They give us cartoons for the millions of dollars that they're taking from us every day. | |
| Yeah, and they'll keep the funding coming in by scaring us. | |
| Oh, we got an asteroid that's coming near Earth, you know, and it never happens. | |
| Here's another one that you got slide number 22. | |
| It's see the difference with the smoke. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| So if the Earth is spinning, you know, at such great speeds, you know, what are we looking at here on this, you know, the this volcano plume or whatever? | |
| It's just moving along, keeping up with that, you know, rotation. | |
| And keep in mind, too, the higher up on the further away that you ascend away from the earth, the faster that that smoke has to be moving to keep up with the speed of the earth. | |
| And it's just all keeping in mind there. | |
| Just nice and perfect. | |
| I've never seen this one before. | |
| That's a good point here. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, Dan, we can just kind of go through these. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Next one, we got the military guy with the sniper. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| So the Coriolis effect. | |
| So, you know, if the Earth is spinning, then why can't, you know, altitude balloons just, or helicopters just, you know, ascend and just wait for their destination to catch up to them. | |
| I mean, and so, Dan, I know that you like firearms, and I know you're a big Second Amendment advocate. | |
| Are you familiar with the Coriolis effect? | |
| Are you familiar with the? | |
| So it's my understanding that the Coriolis effect will they say that it will affect bullets as they're flying due to the motion of the earth and that that has to be compensated for. | |
| Um, when you're taking into account, when you're um, you know, trying to the only thing we learned wind, that's it. | |
| Yeah, just the wind. | |
| So um, the coriolis effect it's. | |
| You know, a lot of people, a lot of people think that you know, you have to somehow account for the coriolis effect of the bullet. | |
| Um well, it's just saying look, if it doesn't affect you know, if you can't see it underneath the balloons, then it's probably not moving. | |
| Yeah, how can it affect? | |
| How can? | |
| How can you not see it here? | |
| But it's, you can factor it into this to your, to the sniper, yeah, so our rifles, we have wind gauges not uh uh, coriolis effect gauges. | |
| I mean so yeah, wind dials on the scopes and everything and uh, you know, so I don't see anything to curvature or anything like that. | |
| Yeah, and uh, the coriolis effect too is something I think that pilots will think that is taken into account, which is the oh, the motion of the earth when they're making their, you know, flight plans or whatnot. | |
| But um, in that documentary that I mentioned earlier, the 28 pilots confirmed flat earth. | |
| They there was a couple fellows that said that they went into went back to their, to their uh, learning materials from when they were in flight school, and there's nothing in there at all about any coriolis effect. | |
| It's, you know, they just assume that it is, but it's, it's not all right. | |
|
Martin Luther Floats Earth
00:15:26
|
|
| So so um, one of the things that uh, you know that this, this gravity, was really something I think that kind of had to be. | |
| You know, they had to come up with something. | |
| So I I, did you get a chance to look at that documentary called Heliosorcery dan, did you have an opportunity to do that? | |
| No, i've been smoking all week. | |
| Yeah, that's okay. | |
| Well, um it, I lost my train of thought here. | |
| Sorry guys, it's been a long day for me. | |
| So um, I kind of lost my uh, uh train of thought there. | |
| Well, this presentation that Brother Chris Sparks over at Earthen Vessels put out is he laid out the groundwork and the framework of how this heliocentric theory was really contrived out of obscurity by the Vatican and then deployed upon the unthinking masses by the Jesuits. | |
| And so they had their model from Copernicus based his model off of... | |
| the mystical writings of Hermes um, i'm not sure if the cabbal as we know it today was um, you know, had been uh pinned, pinned down or not, but basically showing that this is, you know, comes from ancient pagan philosophy, sun-centered pagan worship, and that this was really just contrived to fit their pagan religion and philosophy. | |
| And so they had the model. | |
| Okay, but what they needed to do was come up with the science. | |
| And so they basically just, you know, through through Copernicus Kepler Galileo Newton Einstein, that they systematically came up with the, with the theoretical physics to support this thing. | |
| And they did it, you know, in a very um, progressive and systematic uh, fashion. | |
| And so when Copernicus came up with his revolving worlds. | |
| They just needed to figure out a force to make it all go around. | |
| And that's where a Freemason, a luminist, an alchemist, Isaac Newton came in. | |
| And so he, it really just seemed like that he just kind of invented it. | |
| I mean, out of out of obscurity, as well as Albert Einstein with this theory of relativity. | |
| So probably won't spend a whole lot of time on gravity. | |
| I do have a good quote on it, but things can be explained in our universe. | |
| Everything that we experience can be explained through electrostatics, which include electromagnetism, aether physics, plasma physics, frequencies, and I don't claim to be an expert on any of those. | |
| And density and buoyancy, every phenomenon that we experience. | |
| And so I guess what I'm trying to say is: so airdrops fall through the air because the drops are heavier than the median that occupies them. | |
| Air bubbles rise, air bubbles rise in water because they're lighter, right? | |
| Newton's apple, if it would have dropped into a bucket of water, you know, then what? | |
| It's just density and buoyancy. | |
| I had some other stuff, other slides on this, but I don't think that they made it onto the drive, Dan. | |
| So these probably won't need to. | |
| I think that there was one on there, like a density flask or something, where somebody went in with different fluids and just layered them up. | |
| Yep. | |
| And just showing the other just, yeah, just different densities. | |
| And, you know, things can be explained simply through that. | |
| You know, you jump off of a cliff, you know, you're going through the air, you're denser than the air. | |
| You hit the water, you float. | |
| Well, hopefully, if you know how to float, but you're, yeah. | |
| Yeah, and that's right there is another definite science because like you're demonstrating something and observing it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And these are, these are just simple little experiments and observations that we can do to challenge. | |
| You know, is there really such thing as Newtonian gravity? | |
| I mean, we used to just say gravity just meant like weight. | |
| It was just, you know, your natural weight. | |
| But, you know, it's a helium balloon rises because it's lighter than the air. | |
| It's not a hard thing to. | |
| And a couple of while you're on this here, a couple of little things here. | |
| So this right here, it's famous, right? | |
| It's called the Gravitron. | |
| This is what I went to amusement park, and this is what really sold me. | |
| Like this really confirmed. | |
| So I'm on this, right? | |
| So basically you go in this, it looks like a spaceship, right? | |
| And there's no seatbelts or whatever. | |
| You lean against the wall, the outer side of the wall. | |
| Starts spinning all of a sudden. | |
| You stick to the wall, right? | |
| So centrifugal force, right? | |
| So I mean, I'm looking at the center. | |
| It's like, oh, hold on one second. | |
| Then I remember in the playground, you know, remember the old steel marigold rounds that you flew off into rocks and I think going up in Generation X? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So anyway, this spins, right? | |
| And you get flung off if you let go. | |
| So in the Earth spinning dairy, by that dairy, right, you should be sticking to the middle, right? | |
| You should be, instead of being stuck into the walls, you should be stuck to the middle, right? | |
| So if something's spinning, like, why is that like everything in the world you could demonstrate? | |
| Everything, right? | |
| You take your, if you've got a globe at home, spin it fast as you can, pour raw water on it. | |
| You know, if this dairy is real, the water would stick to it, right? | |
| Gravitational pull, but it throws it off every single time. | |
| Anything that spins, you throw it off. | |
| Now, you take a bucket of water, right? | |
| A bucket with the handle on it. | |
| Now, if you spin it, you know, upside down, whatever, it's going to fall out. | |
| But if you take the bucket, right, and it's spinning in a white circle, not one drop of water is going to come out of that bucket. | |
| Even though when it goes up here, upside down, it's not going to come out because it's being repelled away. | |
| So, by theory of the spinning, pulling you into the center of the earth, that water, me by spinning it like that, should gravitate toward my fist, the center, right? | |
| And it doesn't. | |
| It's the opposite. | |
| You know, same thing with the merry-go-round, same thing with these amusement park rides. | |
| You get flung off from the center. | |
| You don't go to the center, you get flung off. | |
| But why is it everything you could do? | |
| This, but yet, the earth of everything, we get stuck into the middle. | |
| And the other thing, one more thing, going into astronomy, and this never made sense to me, even when I was younger. | |
| So, they said the sun, right? | |
| If you could take the sun, if it was small enough, you could literally float it on the earth's ocean. | |
| It's not dense at all, right? | |
| So, how does something less dense that could float on the ocean pull us in with gravitational pull? | |
| There's no mass to it. | |
| Like EMP equals EMC squared, equals the energy equivalent, M equals the mass of body, and C equals the speed of light times itself. | |
| So, there's that theory alone would destroy this whole thing because something like the Sun, even though it's bigger, there's no mass to it if it's a ball of gas. | |
| So, how in the heck is that pulling us toward the Sun? | |
| Keeping it within the gravitational pull of the Sun. | |
| It makes no sense, it's stupid. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| So, when you take all this stuff, even their own theories contradict themselves constantly. | |
| Then you go to the scriptures, like, oh, well, that makes sense now. | |
| The Bible makes sense. | |
| You know, the book of Enoch makes sense. | |
| The ancient cultures make sense. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| And so, again, you could do this for yourself, guys. | |
| Experiment with yourself, and you'll see this. | |
| Yeah, Dan, I want to read an article here. | |
| Oh, I'm sorry. | |
| Yeah, go ahead. | |
| No, no, did I cut you off? | |
| No, I thought I cut you off. | |
| I apologize if I did. | |
| Oh, no, not at all. | |
| No, so this is from Thomas Winship in his book, Zetetic Cosmogeny. | |
| Mr. Brother Winship says this: The law of gravitation is said by the advocates of the Newtonian system of astronomy to be the greatest discovery of science and the foundation of the whole of modern astronomy. | |
| If therefore it can be shown that gravitation is a pure assumption and an imagination of the mind only, that it has no existence outside of the brains of its expounders and advocates, the whole of the hypothesis of this modern so-called science falls to the ground as flat as the surface of the ocean. | |
| And this most exact of all sciences, this wonderful feat of the intellect, becomes at once the most ridiculous superstition and the most gigantic imposture to which ignorance and credulity could ever be exposed. | |
| And I agree wholeheartedly. | |
| Yeah, same. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And do you want to go on your other slides too? | |
| Jumping off. | |
| Sure, we have. | |
| Yeah, yeah, I think I already kind of commented on that. | |
| Oh, that's right. | |
| You did. | |
| Class dismissed. | |
| Yeah, class dismissed. | |
| Yeah, you. | |
| The Freemason logo gravity. | |
| Holding all the lies together. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you got Albert Einstein sticking his tongue. | |
| Oh, Albert Einstein sticking out his tongue. | |
| And you had a quote by Martin Luther. | |
| Yeah, I probably won't be able to read that one just because of the size of the lettering that I'm seeing on my screen. | |
| I can read it for you if you want. | |
| Yeah, please do, Dan. | |
| I appreciate that. | |
| Okay, this is Martin Luther, one of the, you know, I call them revolutionaries coming out of the Catholic Church and all that, and pushing the Bible English. | |
| But anyway, he says, there's a talk of a new astrologer who wants to prove that the earth moves and goes around instead of the sky, the sun and the moon. | |
| And just as somebody were moving in the carriage to ship might hold that he was still sitting still and to rest well, the earth and the trees walked and moved. | |
| But this is how things are nowadays. | |
| When a man wishes to be clever, he must invent something special. | |
| And the way he does, it must need the best. | |
| So the fool wants to turn the whole art of astronomy upside down. | |
| However, the Holy Scripture tells us, so did Joshua bid that the sun to stand still, not in the earth. | |
| So remember when Joshua asked God to, you know, prolong the, because they had to stop battling at night, they wanted to win this battle. | |
| So God made the sun stop in the middle of the sky until the battle was over to give him daylight for the battle. | |
| The mirror didn't stop, it was the sun that stopped. | |
| And so Martin Luther, I guess they were having this problem back then. | |
| You know, this was the 1500s, I believe. | |
| But yeah, it's crazy right there. | |
| And they were going through this stuff at the time. | |
| And that, you know, these people, like you had so-called scientists, whatever the case, trying to reinvent the wheel to make it opposite, you know what I'm saying? | |
| And to turn everything upside down, astronomy upside down, like Martin Luther said. | |
| And they all believed that the earth was exactly the way the Bible says. | |
| Yeah, and this was Martin Luther was commenting on Copernicus. | |
| And Copernicus was somewhat commissioned by the Vatican to pursue this theory of the plurality of worlds of his. | |
| And so I guess when Martin Luther got caught wind of this, he was talking about where this all was going. | |
| Copernicus hadn't really come out with this, you know, completely, the model hadn't been, you know, set in stone, so to say. | |
| But I really think that Martin Luther was kind of looking into the future and prophesying a little bit about what was to come of all of this plurality of spinning worlds and whatnot. | |
| And I say that because I've got some reading here from Gerard Hickson on a presentation that he saw Professor Einstein do at Princeton University. | |
| But first, I just want to take note of the letter written to Timothy. | |
| Lost my page here. | |
| Oh, Timothy 6.20, 1 Timothy? | |
| Yeah, thank you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I brought this up a lot. | |
| Oh, Timothy, keep which is committed to thy trust, avoiding profane and vain babylins and the oppositions of so-called, yeah, science, falsely so-called. | |
| So so-called scientists. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Profane babylin, vain babylins and all that, just lie about stuff and to twist everything, the order of what we call the universe. | |
| Yeah, and when they were, you know, when Paul was doing his ministry and, you know, they were dealing with pagan cultures. | |
| And that's where this stuff comes from. | |
| It comes from Hermeticism. | |
| It comes from, you know, Hermes Trismegistus. | |
| He was fighting this stuff too. | |
| And he knew that these, you know, because this went back to Pythagoras and Pythagoras mystery schools. | |
| And it's said that Pythagoras is hailed as the first Freemason. | |
| You know, they kind of, you know, pay homage, I think, the Freemasons to Pythagoras. | |
| Plato and Aristotle were students of Pythagoras. | |
| And so these ideas were out there already. | |
| And taking hold. | |
| So, yeah, science, and you know, Paul's right. | |
| This is scientism, science falsely so-called. | |
| And this is exactly what we're talking about here. | |
| And also, the scripture says those who profess to be wise are fools. | |
| And that's yeah, absolutely. | |
| Yeah, it's, you know, my ways are higher than your ways. | |
| My ways are as high as the heaven are above the earth, you know, says the Lord. | |
| Then you have a book by John Calvin. | |
| Oh, John Calvin, yeah. | |
| I probably won't be able to read that one either. | |
| Sorry, Dan. | |
| That's all right. | |
| I can read them for you if you want. | |
| Yeah, please do. | |
| And yeah, Dan and I aren't Lutherans or Calvinists either, but these were men of God that were, you know, standing strong against this nonsense. | |
| And David Caracall quotes these guys a lot too. | |
| And John Calvin, in one of his sermons, he talked on 1 Corinthians 10, 19 through 24, but he says, we will see some who are so deranged, not only in religion, but all who and all the things reveal their monstrous nature, that they will say that the sun does not move and the earth, which shifts and turns, | |
| when we see such minds must be indeed confessed that the devil possesses them and that God sets them before us as mirrors in order to keep us in the fear. | |
|
Wagon Motion and Relativity
00:02:38
|
|
| So basically saying, like, the world's going to teach us mirror images of God. | |
| God says, you know, plain and simple, he's trying to say, God says the earth doesn't move, those things do. | |
| They're trying to say the mirror image, no, the earth moves, not them. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| It makes no sense. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so I want to, so this is from Gerard Hickson's Kings Dethroned. | |
| And in this book, he just goes in and just shows how the whole of modern astronomy is predicated upon errors and blunders. | |
| He had the opportunity to see Professor Einstein speak at Princeton University. | |
| And we're going to let Professor Einstein himself tell us about what relativity is. | |
| And so he tells us what we mean by relativity, what we mean by relative motion in a general sense is perfectly plain to everyone. | |
| If we think of a wagon moving along a street, we know that it is possible to speak of the wagon at rest and the street in motion just as well as it is to speak of the wagon in motion and the street at rest. | |
| That, however, is a very special part of the ideas involved in the principle of relativity. | |
| And so Gerard Hickson says, well, that would be amusing if we read it in a comic paper or if Mutt and Jeff had said it. | |
| But when Professor Einstein says it in a lecture at Princeton University, we're expected not to laugh. | |
| That's the only difference. | |
| It is silly, but I may not dismiss the matter with that remark. | |
| And so I will answer quite seriously that it is only possible for me to speak of the street moving while the wagon remains still and to believe it when I cast away all the experience of a lifetime and am no longer able to understand the evidence of my senses, which is insanity. | |
| Such self-deception as this is not reasoning. | |
| It is the negation of reason, which is the faculty of forming correct conclusions from things observed, judged by the light of experience. | |
| It is unworthy of our intelligence and a waste of our greatest gift. | |
| But that introduction serves very well to illustrate the kind of illusion that lies at the root of relativity. | |
| And when he suggested that the street might be moving while the wagon with its wheels revolving was standing still, he was asking us to imagine that in a similar manner, the earth we stand upon might be moving while the stars that pass in the night stand still. | |
| It is a case of appeal where Einstein appeals in the name of convicted Copernican astronomy against the judgment of Nicholson, Morley, Nordemeyer, physics, fact, experience, observation, and reason. | |
|
Gods, Jesuits, and Perverted Truth
00:07:41
|
|
| We, on the other hand, are counsel for the prosecution, judge, and jury. | |
| So, yeah, there was a lot of great people who were really putting all of this stuff to the test. | |
| They were, you know, fighting it tooth and nail. | |
| But, you know, it's one of the if you guys, if you guys don't know about you know, the secret societies, the royal societies, um, you're you're really going to have a hard time understanding um history, how history works and what's really going on, and science as well. | |
| Because the royal, the, the royal societies they set up the narratives for the university, and you know, they're polytheistic, um, meaning that they believe that there's more uh than one way of salvation, they they believe in multiple gods. | |
| We, as uh, followers of Jesus, followers of the true God, Jehovah, the most high God, we are monotheistic, right? | |
| Um, and so what polytheists will do is they will, there's these underlying tenets that they have with their um sciences and philosophies, uh, which we would probably call the seven liberal arts, and they pervert them. | |
| And what they do is they um they they mock God, they discredit God, they lead people away from God, and then they lead people um to their pantheon of gods. | |
| And you can see this in just so much of just so much of our culture and society, what's taught to us is science and history. | |
| Um, this stuff is always going to have the same tenets, and that's to discredit God and to lead us away towards their um pantheon of gods. | |
| Yeah, exactly, and uh, it's it's uh man, it's uh sickening when you think about every bit of education. | |
| Um, and you know, Gary Wayne, I think you call the bastardized version of the seven sacred sciences, which is uh, you know, the twisted mirror because everything in the occult, everything in uh, these world elite, they want to take everything of God, flip it upside down, and mirror it. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| So, like the rainbow, for example, we know what the rainbow is supposed to be, God's covenant, but we know what they use it for today-complete opposite of what that stands for. | |
| And same thing with the cross, upside-down cross-you get the uh gift here, but um, that's what they're doing. | |
| Everything in life, I mean, like they corrupted all the schools, and that's not coincidence funded by the Rockefeller Foundation or the modern-day educators. | |
| Yeah, why would the Rockefeller Foundation fund the educational system because it's corrupt and it trickles right into the churches too? | |
| That's why if you go into a church, right, mainstream Sunday church, right, this Sunday, tomorrow, uh, two days from now, whatever, go into a church, and they'll tell you, oh, yeah, we uh, God made this great universe, and um, they go with the big bang dairy, we're rotating around the sun, and because they don't know the spiritual warfare, because they and within their own college systems of them, you know, seminaries and all that, they've been corrupted as well. | |
| So, of course, they've got to teach the mainstream stuff, but again, if we go back to the basics of the Bible, when Jesus says that the world hated him, so if the world hates him, and all these people, these big time people on TV that are being praised all over the national TV, worldwide TV, they're not people of God because real people of God are hated by the world, not loved. | |
| So, if you've got these people out there, the worldview of what the universe is supposed to be, right? | |
| That's got to tell you one thing because the Bible says different. | |
| It's the Bible says complete opposite. | |
| So, you gotta, you know, really put this in perspective, going back to the beginning, that plain and simple, God knows better. | |
| God knows better than Galileo. | |
| God knows better than Neil Tyson. | |
| God knows better than me, knows better than Joe here, knows better than all of us. | |
| So why can't we just understand? | |
| All right, God made the universe, or the firmament, I should say, and he created all this the way exactly the Bible says. | |
| And if we just understood that, there wouldn't be no problems. | |
| But again, you got these evil people out there as these quotes we read that they pointed out there's evil people out there that try to corrupt the word of God. | |
| And again, like Joe was saying earlier, too, it just hides the creator. | |
| Evolution, the Big Bang Dairy, astronomy with their version astronomy and everything else, everything. | |
| And now what they teach in the schools with the sex and everything, with the kids, the genders, it's all complete opposite. | |
| And there's a communist movement, too, by the way. | |
| I could get to that one other time that the communists infiltrated here in the 1900s to pervert the churches and the educational system with all this garbage going on. | |
| So the communists are, of course, the backbone of communism is the Illuminati and all that. | |
| And that's a whole new show altogether. | |
| But they have really, and the Catholic Church didn't help any better because when they came here with the Jesuits, they completely destroyed everything that was of God. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| And this country was a night and day different from now about 200 years ago. | |
| For hundreds of years in this country, it was a complete different country. | |
| And they actually went by the word of God. | |
| They believed everything the Bible said before the Jesuits corrupted our churches. | |
| Yeah, you know, so you notice how the Jesuits always got their hands and everything? | |
| The Big Bang Dairy Evolution and all this stuff? | |
| Oh, everything. | |
| Yeah, they're all of those guys that we just mentioned, Kepler, Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, they all had ties. | |
| I mean, some of the, I think Copernicus was a Jesuit priest. | |
| They all have ties to the Vatican. | |
| And, you know, and the whole heliocentric model, it just really captures the essence of, you know, the Jesuits. | |
| And they, like you said, they have their hands in everything. | |
| And the entire education system from the public education system or private education, universities, it's all predicated upon the Radio Studiorum, which was a document that the Jesuits put out in 1599 that was going to outline their standard operating procedure for the education for the indoctrination system, I should say. | |
| And if you think those fellows are going to do anything to lead anybody to God, you don't know the Jesuits. | |
| That's all I can say. | |
| Yeah, you don't. | |
| I mean, these Dan, you're in The Secret History of the Jesuits, aren't you? | |
| Are you looking at that by Edward Paris? | |
| Yeah, these guys are something out. | |
| That one and Rumors of Darkness by Tupper Saucy. | |
| And look, I grew up, I was reared Catholic. | |
| I was accepted to and attended very briefly a Jesuit university. | |
| I had my mom's dad was in the shrine. | |
| He was a 32nd degree Freemason. | |
| So, you know, we're not speaking, you know, here to try to offend anybody or anything like that, but the facts are the facts. | |
| And you can, and many people have given their lives to get this type of information out. | |
| And for us not to speak to it would be doing them a huge disservice because we can prove that these aren't conspiracy. | |
| You can prove them to be true. | |
| I mean, if anyone out there hasn't read The Secret, The Extreme Oath of the Jesuits, well, I invite you to do that as soon as you can because let them tell you what they're all about. | |
| I don't have to say anything. | |
| I'll let them do the speaking themselves. | |
| Yeah, they just hope they come out plain and simple what they believe and do. | |
| They're an elite order of assassins first and foremost and parading themselves as holy men. | |
| Wolves and sheep clothing, wolves and sheep's clothing. | |
| And you know, I'm not saying that every single Jesuit is evil or whatever, but you know what? | |
| If you run with them, you're one of them. | |
|
Electromagnetic Plasma Field Speculations
00:15:47
|
|
| That's all I can say. | |
| And I have an uncle. | |
| My uncle has been with the Jesuits since 1980. | |
| He is an extremely brilliant man. | |
| I used to think he was the smartest guy in the world, and he is. | |
| He's super intelligent. | |
| I love him deeply and I care about him. | |
| But now I know that he may be intelligent, but he's not very wise. | |
| But anyway, that's you know, so you know, so no offense, it's not easy. | |
| I mean, it's hard for me to speak to family and friends about it because people get so offended. | |
| It's like they would rather continue living comfortable lives than face inconvenient truths. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| And do you want to run over any more of your slides? | |
| How are we doing on time, Dan? | |
| I don't have a time limit. | |
| So whatever you want to give me, brother, it's a blessing. | |
| Okay. | |
| Well, I mean, I'm good to go. | |
| I can keep going. | |
| I had some stuff that I thought I'd maybe go over on the firmament, but I don't know if you are short on time. | |
| I don't know if we want to. | |
| I mean, I don't know how long it'll take me. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| So I want to kind of talk about the firmament, the dome. | |
| And I think Tesla sums it up well. | |
| And there's some chatter out there and some contention that it wasn't Tesla that actually said this or quoted this. | |
| Well, whoever said this or quoted this, I believe it's exactly spot on how he describes the realm that we inhabit. | |
| And so, yeah, we'll see if we can get the. | |
| I'm kind of waiting on that lag to come up here. | |
| Oh, my bad. | |
| No, no, you're good. | |
| Yeah, I just popped it up the Tesla quote. | |
| If you can't read it, let me know. | |
| Well, I'm not seeing it. | |
| Oh, there we go. | |
| Yeah, Dan, can you help me with that one too? | |
| Sure. | |
| My tender eyes of 55 years old are just not what they used to be. | |
| My eyes are getting bad too, being on these computers all day. | |
| Oh, it was like when I turned 48 or 49, it was just like overnight. | |
| My vision was gone. | |
| So Tesla quotes, let me get closer here so I don't butcher this. | |
| Earth is a realm. | |
| It's not a planet. | |
| It's not an object. | |
| Therefore, it has no edge. | |
| Earth would be more easily defined as a system environment. | |
| Earth is also a machine. | |
| It is a Tesla coil. | |
| The sun and moon are powered wirelessly with an electromagnetic field, the ether. | |
| This field also suspends the celestial spheres with electromagnetic levitation. | |
| Electromagnetic levitation disproves gravity because the only force you need is a counter the electromagnetic force, not gravity. | |
| The stars are attached to the firmament. | |
| And that proves what we were just saying earlier, too. | |
| And also, if you understand too, well, the Egyptians and all the ancients, they moved ancient fallen angel technology. | |
| They used levitation and these forces to move large stones. | |
| So it explains a lot. | |
| And this was a very brilliant man. | |
| Of course, Thomas Edison stole half of his stuff and commercialized about Nikolai Tesla. | |
| He wanted free and renewed edge, so we wouldn't have to pay for electric bill. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| He wanted free and renewable energy. | |
| And of course, Edison's indoor signs. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so when we talk about a Tesla coil, I've got one right in front of me here. | |
| And this is kind of a very crude and simple version, I believe, of what's going on up in the firmament. | |
| And Dan, just as you were saying about free energy, so what we have in here is the Tesla coil applies an electromagnetic charge to the inert gas in here. | |
| It's probably neon or some type of noble gas. | |
| This is what we would call plasma physics. | |
| And I'm not an expert on any of this or whatever, but we can just kind of see by what we're looking at here that this is a similar phenomenon that's going on in the ionosphere. | |
| And so as Dan was saying, the free energy, and I don't know if you can see the bulb illuminating here. | |
| And it's, you know, just not putting anything. | |
| But yeah, it's igniting because it's putting off a magnetic field, an electromagnetic field around it. | |
| And I believe that the firmament is doing the same thing. | |
| And, you know, in this Tartarian construction and architecture that's all over the face of the earth, it looks like that this architecture was set up to be to harness the energy, the free energy from the firmament. | |
| I mean, these things are shaped like capacitors. | |
| The word cathedral comes from catheter. | |
| I mean, you've got all of this crazy stuff that's all set up just like an electrical grid. | |
| And I believe that they were harnessing the energy from the firmament. | |
| And so, but I believe that what's going on is in the firmament, the dome, you have an electromagnetic plasma field with the top of the firmament being a parabolic crystal dome or crystalline dome. | |
| And that is holding in the inert gases that are pushing up against it. | |
| So the bottom is going to be flat, just like, okay, so water is just gas. | |
| It's hydrogen, you know, it's a hydrogen and oxygen molecule. | |
| And it's fluid when it comes together as an H2O. | |
| It becomes water as we know it. | |
| Well, we've got a similar thing going on with the luminiferous ether. | |
| You have, Dan, I've got a slide on there too with the gases layered in the ionosphere. | |
| I think it's the next one. | |
| And so that firmament is acting as a container. | |
| And these gases are pushing up because they're lighter than the atmosphere that's below them. | |
| Okay, so if we ascend from where we're at on the earth somewhere between 70 and 80 miles, you're going to hit the bottom of the dome, the plasma field. | |
| And this plasma field, it behaves like water when it's disturbed. | |
| You can see that it makes like a wake. | |
| It makes waves when they're slamming rockets into it. | |
| But it illuminates when it's disturbed as well. | |
| And so we've got the noble gases here layered by their molecular weight. | |
| And so the moon, it appears to be, is forming, is manifesting in a layer of krypton gas. | |
| And then the sun in the layer of helium and neon with a little bit of hydrogen. | |
| And so I believe what we've got going on up here is that the sun and moon are a battery. | |
| Okay. | |
| And I believe that the North Pole, the magnetic north, Black Rock, or Rupus Nigris, right, which means Black Rock or Mount Maru, it's been fabled. | |
| I think it was George McCater. | |
| Wrote John Dee, I believe in the 1500s. | |
| He went up there, Mercator did, the map maker, Gerardou, or Eridou, Mercator, goes up and discovers this Mount Maru, and he described it as a 30, that this thing was 33 French miles in diameter, this magnetic black rock right at the North Pole, Polaris sitting directly above it. | |
| And I believe that this area is emitting electromagnetic radiation to the top of the firmament. | |
| And this magnetic north is working as a tether for the sun and moon that are traveling around it, with the sun being the positive charge and emitting positive cosmic radiation and cosmic energy, and then the moon being the negative dielectric to the sun. | |
| And so if you watch it, and you can go, you can watch this, is that the sun and the moon, they're always in the same path. | |
| We just had a, we're just coming out of a new moon. | |
| And so, you know, the moon's going to, it's just right behind the sun as they are both circling around the north pole, the north pole. | |
| I don't even like calling it the north pole anymore. | |
| It's the only pole. | |
| It was always referred to as the axis Mundi or the world axis, as we just did with the pole star Polaris right above it. | |
| As we said, everything's turning around Polaris and Black Rock. | |
| And so as the Sun is making its circuit and the Moon, I believe that you're getting this electromagnetic pull, this magnetic flux. | |
| And I think that this electromagnetic pull between them is what is responsible for our tides. | |
| I believe it kind of causes a drag over the tides of the oceans. | |
| And this is just speculation on my part. | |
| I'm just trying to, I'm going to try to lay out some concepts here and precepts and see if we can't try to kind of connect some dots and see if we can kind of get an understanding of what might be going on up there. | |
| But yeah, I believe that the positive charge of the sun and the negative charge of the moon and then the amount of separation between them is the sun, as the moon consistently is just falling behind the sun in its monthly cycle. | |
| And we know that salt is a conductor of electricity, right? | |
| If saline water, salt water is going to be much more conductive than fresh water. | |
| And, you know, if it were the moon's gravitation that was causing the tides to, you know, move, to move in these mass bodies of water, why doesn't it have any effect on freshwater bodies or rivers, lakes, streams, that type of thing? | |
| Whereas it would make sense if it was electromagnetism that was causing that, that would, you know, the saltwater would be more, it would be more easily stimulated by that magnetic pull. | |
| So here I want to show, so at the axis Mundi, that this cosmic radiation is coming from the north pole, the axis Mundi. | |
| And this electromagnetic radiation would probably be putting off X-rays because that's how extreme it would be. | |
| That's how strong the magnetic and the electromagnetic radiation is. | |
| And X-rays are extremely difficult to reflect. | |
| And it was Lawrence Bragg who discovered that crystals, the crystalline structures, were very, very effective at reflecting and refracting x-rays. | |
| And Mr. Bragg, he was the one who invented the monochromator. | |
| And a monochrometer is used to move monochromatic light around with crystal convex and concave mirrors. | |
| And I think on that next slide, it might kind of show you a little picture of the monochrometer. | |
| Okay, so yeah, light beams reflect easily. | |
| It's Bragg's law. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And X-rays don't. | |
| That's why they're used in x-rays. | |
| And so... | |
| The Bragg's Law Reflection x-ray. | |
| Right. | |
| Bragg's law of refraction, yeah. | |
| And so I guess I didn't get my slide of krypton, the krypton-noble gas. | |
| So krypton, when krypton-noble gas is when an electromagnetic charge is applied to krypton, it illuminates as a soft white or silver light. | |
| It looks exactly like the like moonlight. | |
| And I believe what's going on is these x-rays are being hitting the crystalline dome of the firmament. | |
| And then because of the parabolic curve of the firmament, that they are being brought down into a focal point into a manifestation of krypton. | |
| And, you know, Illuminati and pop culture always like to communicate with this, right? | |
| And so here, from probably one of the most famous and popular rock albums of all time, or it was, you know, not that long ago, The Dark Side of the Moon. | |
| So just, you know, just a thought, could these X-rays be being focused from the parabolic curve and being focused down to a focal point? | |
| And I believe that they are giving us an X-ray image of the land masses and the water masses on the face of our Earth. | |
| I don't think it's a mirrored image. | |
| I think it's an X-ray image. | |
| And so that's why I put that slide up there where the images of the moon. | |
| Like I said, it's just speculation. | |
| But krypton gas is used in MRIs. | |
| It's used in X-rays. | |
| It's used in high-speed photography. | |
| You know, it's then the lasers and all kinds of, you know, cutting edge science. | |
| Yeah, I think we might need to go in the other direction, Dan. | |
| Oh, 41. | |
| Yeah, let me see here. | |
| I kind of lost my spot. | |
| Yeah, so, okay, so in the bottom left, you've got the three pictures of the moon together. | |
| Oh, three pictures. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The world, the INS fair one? | |
| Let me see here. | |
| 41. | |
| Yeah, you were right, Dan. | |
| 41. | |
| I'm going to add. | |
| Yeah, 41. | |
| Yep, it's on screen now. | |
| Take a second. | |
| Okay, so in the bottom left, you're going to see the gray area of the moon. | |
| And then above that, it's the same image, but it's been converted to where we're kind of looking at the green as being possibly land mass and then the blue being water. | |
| Okay. | |
| Now, over to the right on the big thing, that is a map. | |
| If you look over on the right side there on the right corner, that is a flat earth map on there. | |
| And this has been completely, it's been mapped out to scale with precision. | |
|
Explorers Unveil New Lands
00:05:46
|
|
| You can go over to Vibes of Cosmos and see this. | |
| I mean, you have to see it for yourself, but there's too much there there for this to just be a coincidence. | |
| And so people are saying, well, what about all this other land? | |
| You know, what's all these other land masses out there? | |
| And, you know, I think Enoch will maybe help us out with that. | |
| So this is uh first book of Enoch Rh Charles that's the one that we like here with f-o-j-c and f-o-j-c affiliate affiliates can't speak and so Enoch is describing what he's seeing um, when he's looking down at the, at the earth, and he's talking about the earth being in quarters, in four quarters, and he says in the first. | |
| And the first quarter is called the east because it is first and second i'm sorry it is the first and the second the south, because the most high will descend there yay there, in a quite there, in quite a special sense, will he who is blessed forever descend. | |
| And the west quarter is named the diminished because they're all the luminaries of the heaven wane and go down. | |
| And the fourth quarter, named the north, is divided into three parts. | |
| The first of them is for the dwelling of men, and the second contains seas of water and the Abysses and forests and rivers and darkness and clouds, and the third part contains the Garden Of Righteousness. | |
| And so Enoch does tell us that there are other parts of the earth that we're not familiar with. | |
| He specifically says that he went to the part, the north, where men live. | |
| Glad you brought that up because um, I have a collection of maps here uh, Brian sent me a while ago. | |
| It's called David Rumsey's uh map collection. | |
| So he's got uh, hundreds of maps by old explorers. | |
| Now, this is crazy, right. | |
| So this map in particular, right here, to back everything uh, Joe was saying up, this was uh created in 1587, and this by a combination of many explorers. | |
| Now, if you notice right, let me get to the map here. | |
| Hold on a second, take a second to lewd all, right. | |
| So now um, i'll put the link in the chat room if you guys want. | |
| So, if you notice right, this is the North Pole right here right and, and the bible talks about Eden too. | |
| I think we're this way Eden could have been, but the mountain of god, Mount Meru, is right there, dead in the middle and, it's not coincidence, right above that. | |
| It's polarised, and this is also where the northern lights come from right, and the god describes his throne, the radiance of his throne, as jasmine and all that. | |
| That's the northern lights you're looking at. | |
| There's uh, god's radiance from his throne, his in the. | |
| The earth is his footstool. | |
| So god's throne is directly, straight up, right over the North pole, straight up and uh, this is what the earth looks like. | |
| And uh, Joe has mentioned other lands right now. | |
| Take a good look at this, your other lands. | |
| These are charted by famous explorers. | |
| Look at the creatures, the details of the land uh, topography On here, the creatures, and there's a bunch of these things written in different languages. | |
| It clears up in a second, but in full detail of what the creatures and animals that were on each of these lands. | |
| And these lands are bigger than our continents. | |
| Look at all that mass, all these lands everywhere. | |
| And this is our known earth today. | |
| That's it. | |
| And if you go to Google Earth right now, you will not find anything like this under the North Pole. | |
| Nothing. | |
| A couple sheets of ice about it, whatever the case, but nothing like this. | |
| And but this is not just one of this map. | |
| There's tons of these ancient explorers that've been there. | |
| They've been to these lands and seen these things for themselves and charted with great detail of, you know, again, a combination of different explorers with different languages, seeing the creatures they had seen down there and how the land is. | |
| And this is awesome. | |
| We could do a whole show on this alone. | |
| But yeah, just to back up everything Enoch said that Joe quoted, this is, you know, you can't make the stuff up. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, there's so many maps that support that as well too, Dan. | |
| Oh, and before I forget, I wanted to show my theory on the sun and moon being a battery. | |
| I want to read from Enoch chapter 41 under Astronomical Secrets. | |
| And he says, and I'm going down towards the bottom of the verse. | |
| And I saw the chambers. | |
| See, I saw the chambers of the sun and moon, whence they proceed and whither they come again, and their glorious return, and how one is superior to the other, and their stately orbit, and how they do not leave their orbit. | |
| And they add nothing to their orbit and they take nothing from it. | |
| And they keep faith with each other in accordance with the oath by which they are bound together. | |
| And first the sun goes forth and traverses his path according to the commandment of the Lord of spirits. | |
| And mighty is his name forever. | |
| And after that, I saw the hidden invisible path of the moon. | |
| And she accomplishes the course of her path in that place by day and by night, the one holding a position opposite to the other before the Lord of spirits. | |
| I don't know. | |
| It sounds to me like they're bound together. | |
| Sounds to me like they're a system. | |
| Yeah, and I believe they are. | |
| Yeah, I probably haven't done a very good job unpacking that, but you know, I'm out of practice here. | |
| So, well, the thing is, there's just so much information that it's hard to compile it together to make sense. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| If that makes any sense. | |
|
Entities Riding Lightning
00:05:00
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|
| Oh, it does. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We've, we've, yeah, there's so much to all of this. | |
| We could spend days because there's just, you know, it's just so far-reaching, you know, of how everything is, it just changes everything. | |
| If what we're saying is true, it just changes everything. | |
| We basically have to unlearn everything that we've learned and relearn it, you know, and it takes a while to do that. | |
| And, you know, I've been doing this for a while. | |
| Well, not actually, I haven't. | |
| It's just been a few years, but, you know, I think I get better at it as I go. | |
| It's just, you know, a little different. | |
| There's just so much to it. | |
| It's hard to stay focused on this particular topic as well. | |
| For me, it is. | |
| And when these people say, oh, you guys got no proof, we got days of proof. | |
| Days of I always hear that, well, they're the ones that don't have any proof. | |
| They've got pictures and theories, pictures and theories. | |
| And also, chapter 44, also another phenomenon I saw in regard to the lightnings, how some of the stars arise and become lightnings and cannot part with their new form. | |
| And I find that very interesting. | |
| It almost sounds to me like these entities are, you know, riding the lightning. | |
| And again, you know, on that, It sounds to me almost like these entities, these stars or these sentient beings are somewhat imprisoned, you know, within electricity. | |
| And that's another thing, too, that Hollywood shows us. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Did you ever see that? | |
| I think it was, I think the movie was called Fallen, but I think it had John Goodman and maybe Denzel Washington. | |
| And it was about the so the movie, I believe, starts off with this fellow that was being executed for crimes that he had done. | |
| And they put him in an electric chair too, for capital punishment. | |
| And as they're electrocuting him, as they're putting him to death, it doesn't kill him. | |
| And then this entity named Azazel comes into him from this experience that he has in the electric chair. | |
| That one comes to mind. | |
| Another one that comes to mind is The War of the Worlds with Tom Cruise and Dakota Fanning, where at the beginning, you know, they have this storm and they see these plasma discharge lightning coming down from the sky. | |
| And I think Tom Cruise is like watching it, maybe on the news. | |
| It's been a while since I've seen these movies, but he's slowing down the video that he's sending these lightning coming down. | |
| And he realizes that there's entities that are literally riding the lightning down. | |
| So I just find that interesting that these concepts are, you know, put right out in front of us. | |
| Well, I can confirm that. | |
| Me and my brother, we were ghost hunters for over 20 years. | |
| We had a legit nonprofit organization and everything. | |
| And we always noticed that the phenomenons that happened, occurred, it was always in the air, especially near power lines and transformers and all that. | |
| Very, very explosive with paranormal activity, you know, which were demons. | |
| I mean, and so like, yeah, they feed off the electric. | |
| Yeah, it's they, yeah, you like you were just saying that, yeah, yeah, I mean, it makes so much sense. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Okay, where are we at, Dan? | |
| Um, oh, um, I'm not sure which slide we're on. | |
| 43 with the sun in the sky with the circle on it. | |
| Okay. | |
| Oh, yeah, that's what I was saying. | |
| Um, yeah, basically, the sun being the positive charge, the moon being the negative charge. | |
| And then I think I've got another one up there talking about how cold plasma being formed with krypton, maybe argon, neon, and helium. | |
| So everybody knows that if we, you know, go outside during daylight, you can take a thermometer and place it in sunlight, take another thermometer, place it in the shade. | |
| Of course, the one in the sunlight is going to register warmer than the one in the shade. | |
| Well, moonlight is the exact opposite. | |
| And anybody can do this. | |
| I wouldn't recommend doing it in the colder months, but in the summer months on the full moon, you can go out and you can put a thermometer in direct moonlight and then put one in the shade. | |
| And the one in direct moonlight will get colder. | |
| This is something that anybody can do and measure it yourself. | |
| And sometimes I've heard some temperatures reported to be six degrees or more difference just in moonlight. | |
| And so this combination is just showing in the scientific that using krypton, which is a noble gas that looks exactly like the color of light that puts off a white, silverish light. | |
| And when it's mixed with helium, neon, and argon, that it generates cold plasma. | |
| Well, then I actually got the slide I was just talking about earlier about the northern lights. | |
|
Everything Ramping Up
00:02:22
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|
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I think that, yeah, Sister Sherry Campbell sent that to me. | |
| And I thought, man, I got to get this in here. | |
| That's just gorgeous. | |
| Yeah, that's, yeah. | |
| Yeah, Revelation 4:3. | |
| And he said that was looked upon with Jasper in Sardinstone, and there was a rainbow around about the throne, and the sight was onto it like an emerald. | |
| So, yeah, the northern lights. | |
| And if you notice, too, right? | |
| The northern lights, I have never in history known that you can literally see them in Florida. | |
| They've been like being shown here in New England here and parts of Florida. | |
| Like, I know, you know, the Northern Lights are like, to me, they're expanding. | |
| It's like we're coming to that time that God's eminence is starting to come more on the earth here. | |
| And I really believe this is truly believe 100 million percent that those lights has nothing to do with what they tell you on TV. | |
| Those lights are coming from the throne of God. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And we know that everything's ramping up. | |
| I mean, the spiritual, the spiritual realm is just going wild right now. | |
| I mean, every day, more and more craziness comes about. | |
| And the earthquakes, I kind of keep an eye on the earthquakes. | |
| And I mean, sometimes there'll be as many as 100, almost 200 a day, depending on, you know, if a big one pops off, you'll have all of these, you know, reverberations and whatnot. | |
| But and a lot of these, they're, you know, four, five, six on the Richter scales, but they seem to be intensifying as the days go by. | |
| Yeah, I just typed it in Google now. | |
| They don't report them no more. | |
| That's so common now. | |
| It's up to six, seven off the Richter scale. | |
| Tons of earthquakes going on. | |
| And you go to the latest earthquakes. | |
| Yeah, look at all these earthquakes. | |
| Yeah, that Pacific rim of fire is just, it's a shaking and a quaking. | |
| And, you know, I didn't know that like the Caribbean, I mean, the Caribbean, down in the Virgin Islands and Cuba and all of that stuff, it's, I mean, everywhere. | |
| It's everything is ramping up. | |
| Yeah, it's crazy. | |
| Within the next last 24 hours. | |
| Yeah. | |
| 42 earthquakes in less than 24 hours. | |
| Yeah. | |
|
A Star in the Jar
00:08:31
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|
| Yeah, and you're right. | |
| They don't really report on it. | |
| I got to look for myself to keep up with it. | |
| I remember when I was in school, man, they had an earthquake. | |
| It was the talk of the town for a week or two. | |
| Now it's like you don't even hear about them no more. | |
| Well, Dan, I want to kind of touch on what we're talking about, the firmament, to also touch on sonar luminescence and take a look at the stars and see if maybe we can see any similarities by some observations that we can produce here in our realm on our planet. | |
| What was it? | |
| Tesla quote again? | |
| Another one? | |
| Yeah, Tesla, yeah. | |
| Yes, if you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration. | |
| And by the way, he's not talking about the New Age version because I know the New Ages take this stuff way out in space somewhere, you know. | |
| But yeah, this is like talk about scientific terms. | |
| Yeah, well, we're doing is just trying to look at things through a nuts and bolts type of thing. | |
| We're not trying to pay homage to any type of astrotheology or anything, anything of the sort. | |
| We're whole Bible-believing Christians. | |
| Amen. | |
| Yeah, we believe that the word of God is our compass, and that's what we go by. | |
| Yeah, for sure. | |
| Dan, do you think we're able to play that video of the Sonar Luminescence? | |
| Is that something that we can put up? | |
| The star in the jar when that was sent to you? | |
| I just think I exit out of it by accident. | |
| I do got the one with this SpaceX hitting the dome. | |
| Okay. | |
| Play that one, yeah. | |
| And so, here we've got a time-lapse of a SpaceX rocket that's ascending, and you see it gets around 75 miles an hour, it's going to hit the bottom of the firmament. | |
| It excites the gases, the noble gases, and you can see as this projectile is traveling through it, it's making a wake, it's pushing through a fluid-like substance. | |
| So, if you believe that that's a rocket up there going into outer space and launching off and stuff, I mean, that's not what it looks like to me. | |
| That's not outer space anyway, it's too close. | |
| And Operation Fishbowl, Fishbowl, and Dominic, yeah, that's right. | |
| They purposely try to blow up the firmament. | |
| Yeah, I think Hillary Clinton made a quote about that, too, right? | |
| Oh, yeah, the glass ceiling more than once, yeah. | |
| And uh, you know, Dominic means of our Lord, and that was part of Fishbowl, Fishbowl of our Lord. | |
| What a coincidence! | |
| And if you ever notice the space shuttle launch, right, they go, it's not straight up, they start going up, then it starts curving, curving, curving. | |
| So, basically, it becomes an airplane and it goes off into the ocean out of camera view. | |
| Yeah, so if anybody, if anyone is not familiar with the term sonoluminescence, um, this this professor, and I can't remember which university he was at, he discovered that by focusing sound waves into a flask of water, that he could get a little star ignited into it. | |
| This phenomenon happens where you have this implosion of gases due to the energy of the frequencies, and this little star just manifests, and they measure it and says it's thousands of degrees. | |
| That I've got a picture of it on one of those slides, Dan. | |
| I think it's um 48 slide 48. | |
| Oh, 47, you mean what are the stars that look like all? | |
| Yeah, that's that's that's you can you can show the stars, those are those are stars. | |
| That's what stars look like when we capture them through a telescope or through a camera, or you know, yeah, that's what we see. | |
| It's okay, there's the star in the jar, yeah. | |
| Yeah, there is a star in the jar, yeah. | |
| So, this is this is sonoluminescence, and uh, this was uh captured. | |
| I mean, this is just a flask of water with uh energy waves focused into it, and yeah, if you haven't seen this, please go just go onto YouTube and just type in sonoluminescence and um watch a short clip on it, it'll blow your mind. | |
| It blew my mind. | |
| I mean, it set my hair on fire. | |
| Is that the short video you sent me? | |
| Yeah, it says, uh, let me, yeah, I could probably play it. | |
| Clip is just a few seconds, uh, the three-minute clip, yeah, okay. | |
| We'll play that here, awesome, yeah, because you know, some of these things here, I talk to people coming out of university and ask them, you know, do you know anything about sunluminescence? | |
| A lot of these concepts that you know you would think they'd try to teach us about in school. | |
| I never learned anything about plasma balls or plasma physics or anything like that, you know, noble gases. | |
| But I think that there's a reason why they don't want us thinking too much about this kind of stuff. | |
| So, yeah, it's uh secret ritual.com and credit channel, uh, solar minus yeah, I can't pronounce it, solo luminance, uh, just solar luminescence. | |
| Yeah, here we go, right now. | |
| It's a process called sonoluminescence. | |
| The first time I saw sonoluminescence was in a darkened room. | |
| I was transfixed to look at this spherical flask of fluid. | |
| And you look into the center and in the center see a glowing blue-purple light, which could be seen with the unaided eye. | |
| It looked like a star in the heavens. | |
| Seth Putterman called it the star in a jar. | |
| A tiny spot of bright light contained in a flask of liquid. | |
| This star in a jar is made when a sound wave is passed through a small bubble inside a flask of liquid. | |
| And this sound wave makes the bubble do something remarkable. | |
| First, it expands, then it collapses. | |
| And this collapse happens so violently that vapor molecules trapped inside the bubble slam together and heat up so much that the bubble gives off an incredible burst of heat and light several thousand times a second, Giving the appearance of a star. | |
| Phenomenon so exciting. | |
| No, go ahead. | |
| I'll let it. | |
| Was the temperature of this star in a jar? | |
| On its surface alone, the light burns at tens of thousands of degrees. | |
| And Seth Putterman now contemplated a tantalizing possibility. | |
| Could the core of the collapsing bubble be even hotter? | |
| Hot enough for fusion. | |
| One of the mysteries of sonal luminescence is to determine exactly how hot the interior of the bubble gets. | |
| In the sun, the interior can be millions of degrees hot enough to cause fusion. | |
| And the thought crossed my mind that perhaps inside the collapsing bubble, the interior of the bubble might also get hot enough to cause fusion. | |
|
Amazing NASA Simulations
00:03:55
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|
| Yeah, this would be something truly amazing. | |
| I said, there's your brain on NASA, that fake sun that they show us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Actually, it looked like a NASA video for a minute watching it. | |
| I'm sure it was. | |
| I wonder how they get so close to it if it is what they say it is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So yeah, you got to gesture it now. | |
| That's amazing how they did that in a class shop. | |
| Have you ever seen anything like that in your life? | |
| I haven't either. | |
| Yeah, it's pretty amazing. | |
| But I mean, so if there is this fluid-like luminiferous ether that's in the firmament, I mean, is that not something that we could, you know, put in the realm of possibilities. | |
| I mean, something. | |
| And we know that what stars are from a Bible, but we don't understand exactly what they are. | |
| But, you know, we know that electrostatics play a huge role and they play a role in everything. | |
| You know, just like Enoch said, the stars turning Literally creating lightnings in their course. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And your next slide is William Carpenter quote. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I don't know if I'll be able to read that because this is real personal for me because this quote really just kind of captures the, I guess, the whole gist of it all. | |
| This is exactly, I mean, he sums it up perfectly. | |
| And unfortunately, I can't see it. | |
| Let me see if, well, I don't want to pull away. | |
| I can read it all for you if you want. | |
| Let me see what I can do here, Dan. | |
| I think I might be able to get it. | |
| I could zoom up on it too. | |
| Yeah, see if he can. | |
| If not, well. | |
| all right let's see oh i'll try this um And what then? | |
| What then? | |
| No intelligent man will ask the question. | |
| And he who may be called an intellectual man will know that the demonstration of the fact that the earth is not a globe is the grandest snapping of the chains of slavery that ever took place in the world of literature or science. | |
| The floodgates of human knowledge are opened afresh, and an impetus is given to investigation and discovery where all was stagnation. | |
| And that's all I can see. | |
| Bewilderment and dreams. | |
| It is nothing to know that infidelity cannot stand against the mighty rush of the living water of truth that must flow on in until the world shall look up once more. | |
| And to him that stretches out the earth above the waters, to him that made the great lights, the sun to rule the day and the moon and the stars to rule the night. | |
| It is nothing to know and feel, to feel that the heavenly bodies were made for man and that the monstrous dogma of infinite worlds is overthrown forever. | |
| And William Carpenter. | |
| Yeah, amen. | |
| Yeah, and that's exactly what it was. | |
| It was just like the chains of, you know, this, I call it, I mean, for, I can't think of a better word to say than just spellbound. | |
| I mean, be bewitched from this, you know, for buying into this whole heliocentric thing. | |
| And not that I was buying into it. | |
|
Gospel vs. Heliocentric Lies
00:03:54
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|
| I mean, you've really, you're just brainwashed. | |
| I mean, you're, we're all born into this, you know, system of this matrix of lies and deception and, you know, have to navigate through it. | |
| And that's what's really frustrating about this is you, you, you know, I have compassion for people, but it's frustrating, you know, you know, to purposely brainwash somebody from the time that they're able to watch and understand a cartoon. | |
| I mean, I think that this kind of fits the definition of satanic ritual abuse. | |
| I mean, maybe not in the forms that we think of, you know, the extreme stuff, but this is when you teach people lies and you brainwash them so you can control them to keep them in fear and ignorance. | |
| That's what it is. | |
| And to keep them away from God, because there was always something in me that felt that God was real. | |
| I mean, I read the New Testament. | |
| When I say read the New Testament, I mean, I just blew through it and a lot of it didn't make sense to me. | |
| But there was part of it also that did speak to me. | |
| It's this, this, I put up in air quotes. | |
| My scientific mind, which now I know was a scientism mind, just wouldn't allow me to really accept it to be truth. | |
| It just casted a lot of doubt on it. | |
| And I think that's exactly what it's meant to do. | |
| I had a question for you. | |
| So, I know with all the time in the world, but we'll get two and a half hours. | |
| I got a ton of slides and you got a lot more. | |
| Do you want to do a part two of this? | |
| Absolutely. | |
| Yeah, we can. | |
| Because as much as I could go all night, I don't want to overload people. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Yeah, yeah, it's a lot. | |
| I know we threw a lot out, and I was all over the place. | |
| No, you did great, man. | |
| Yeah, I'll try to refine my presentations a little bit. | |
| If you're not, are you busy tomorrow? | |
| Late tomorrow night, 11. | |
| Oh, well, I've got a work Sunday early, so that probably wouldn't work for me. | |
| So that would be 10 p.m. my time. | |
| You know, it might be better if we did another time, Dan. | |
| All right, yeah, that's cool. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| I'm not sure. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, for sure. | |
| Absolutely, for sure, Dan. | |
| I really appreciate you, you know, letting me come on here and speak to you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| This way, we go, we'll do a quick run over everything we talked about and then continue with the rest of both of our slides because I didn't even touch mine and you got a dozen more or whatever. | |
| So, plus, we don't want to overload you guys. | |
| I mean, it's two and a half hours, a lot to absorb. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| Yeah, there's so much to all this. | |
| I mean, there's just so many avenues we can go down. | |
| And we could spend days on this. | |
| Yeah, absolutely. | |
| So, yes, we'll take phone calls tomorrow night, guys, because I'm like exhausted. | |
| There was a memorial today that was a nightclub fire that took place 23 years ago. | |
| It killed 100 people. | |
| And right in my, well, not where I live now, but I mean, not too far. | |
| But they didn't even shovel the place out for the memorial. | |
| So me and a bunch of guys got together, shoved the entire place out, uncovered all the memorial markers and everything. | |
| So I'm burnt out right now. | |
| That's why I couldn't read the things right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And Dan, just to close out before we leave, I'd like to say this: you know, if you love the Lord, if you love Jesus and you're born again and you don't, you know, you don't accept this, I mean, you're, you're, this is what the Bible calls unbelief. | |
| And there's a lot of things that are said. | |
| There's a plethora of scriptures that talks about, you know, unbelief and disobedience and they're likened to witchcraft and sorcery. | |
|
God Let There Be Light
00:09:03
|
|
| And, you know, you know, Jesus was adamant about, you know, repent and believe the gospel. | |
| And the gospel is the whole word of God. | |
| You know, the New Testament hadn't been written when he was, you know, teaching his ministry. | |
| Jesus didn't believe in the heliocentric model. | |
| So I challenge you to examine your faith. | |
| And if this is something that you're struggling with, you know, just dig into it because the spiritual blessings that you have from overcoming this and coming to this geocentric truth and reality. | |
| I mean, reality is important. | |
| And, you know, it may hurt when you hear this, but you're living in a false reality. | |
| And it was a reality created by evil and wicked men to destroy you. | |
| That's what it's what it's meant to do. | |
| And too. | |
| So just, you know, examine yourselves. | |
| Examine your faith. | |
| And actually, let me read just a few verses here out of Genesis, just solify everything you just said here. | |
| Yeah, I'm tired, but I don't care. | |
| This is more important than me being tired. | |
| Genesis 1. | |
| So basically, I'm just going to read the first four days of creation set. | |
| And this is what solified my belief in this biblical cosmology because in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. | |
| And the earth was out form and void. | |
| And the darkness was on the face of the deep. | |
| This is talking about oceans, waters, right? | |
| The spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. | |
| And God said, let there be light. | |
| So automatically, all of us think, oh, that's the sun. | |
| No, not even close, right? | |
| And there was light. | |
| And God saw the light and it was good. | |
| And God divided the light from the darkness. | |
| And God called the light day, and then he called the darkness night. | |
| And the evening and morning were the first day. | |
| So day one, no sun, no moon, no stars. | |
| And God said, let the firmament, this day two now, let the firmament of the mist in the midst of the waters, let it divide the waters from above and waters from below. | |
| You can see in this illustration there, I should have put the thing up. | |
| Yeah, it's kind of bright. | |
| So this firmant, this glass bowl, whatever to call it, divide the waters from above and below. | |
| And he's let the divide the water from above. | |
| Yeah, whatever. | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| Verse 7. | |
| And God made the firmament and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament. | |
| And it was so. | |
| And God called the firmament heaven. | |
| And this was the evening and morning with a second day. | |
| So day two now, no sun, moon, or stars. | |
| And God said, let the waters under the heaven be gathered together to one place and let the dry land appear. | |
| And it was so. | |
| And God called the dry land earth and gathering together the waters he called seas. | |
| And God saw there was good. | |
| And God said, let the earth bring fruit. | |
| And this is all the vegetation, basically. | |
| Long story short, all the vegetation, the seeds, and all that. | |
| And the earth brought forth grass and all the trees and vegetations. | |
| And God said, it was good. | |
| So the evening and morning were the third day. | |
| So day three, people say, well, how could these plants survive without the sun? | |
| Well, you're doubting God. | |
| This is the God tractor we talk about, right? | |
| The God tractor, you don't have to have the norms. | |
| The God tractor, his holy, with the spirit, there's the light. | |
| You know, I mean, Jesus Christ is the light. | |
| You don't need that because if you look at the heaven, where heavens are going to be described at the kingdom of God, there's going to be no more sun, moon, or stars. | |
| And you could be in the middle of the basement in a closet with no lights in there. | |
| Everything glows. | |
| This is the eminence of God. | |
| You don't need the sun, moon, and light. | |
| Well, at this point, there was no sun, moon, light. | |
| Now, day four, after the firm was created, right? | |
| So just imagine, go get a good, when you, you guys get a chance, right? | |
| If you've got a glass bowl at your house, do this. | |
| Like, it's amazing. | |
| Put a plate down, right? | |
| And you put the glass bowl over the plate. | |
| Make sure to make believe that glass bowl, the plate is the earth. | |
| That glass bowl is the firmament. | |
| Hold that thing down. | |
| Fill that tub up with water. | |
| And within that glass bowl, it's going to be all air. | |
| You got to show a little water lake in it a little bit. | |
| And that has the oceans and all that. | |
| But that glass bowl is going to hold the air in it. | |
| And that's a space that God's talking about. | |
| And here he says, in the firmament. | |
| And God said, let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night. | |
| And let them be for signs and seasons for days and years. | |
| We use these for navigation, use these to tell the time and everything, and seasons and everything else. | |
| And let them be for the lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth. | |
| And it was so. | |
| And God made the two great lights, the greater light to rule the day, which we call the sun today, and a lesser light to rule the night. | |
| This is the moon. | |
| He also made the stars also. | |
| And God set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the earth. | |
| To rule over the day and over the night. | |
| And God saw it was good. | |
| God, you thought it was good in the evening morning with the fourth day. | |
| And when you go into Psalms 19, it talks about that everything is God's handiwork. | |
| And we talked about the Dominions control and all that stuff. | |
| So it's all in closed system. | |
| It's a giant enclosed systems, you know, system that has all the stuff in there. | |
| And it's amazing. | |
| And the sun, moon, and stars did not come. | |
| Like the Big Bang, notice how the Big Bang teaches the exact opposite. | |
| Big Bang, the universe, the solar system, the galaxy, I mean, then the solar system, then the earth. | |
| You notice how it's complete opposite. | |
| When God says it's the earth first, then the rest came after. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| So go by the Bible. | |
| I don't care what your priest tells you or your seminary tells you or your theology tells you or whatever you want to call it, anyologies, whatever. | |
| The Bible knows better. | |
| God knows better. | |
| And we didn't even show you guys anything like the ancient cultures. | |
| Both of us have slides on that. | |
| The other books, the ancient books, and everything else. | |
| It's like, it's amazing. | |
| It really is. | |
| And we're going to get to that with part two. | |
| So, Joe, I want to thank you for your time, brother. | |
| And it's been a great broadcast. | |
| Thank you, Dan. | |
| I appreciate you having it. | |
| God bless you. | |
| You too. | |
| And before it goes, guys, so actually, let me do the poll. | |
| It's like so much to do. | |
| So we did a poll a little while ago. | |
| Do you believe the earth is A flat like the Bible says? | |
| B, globe like NASA says, or C, the shape of Brian's milk truck. | |
| And D, not sure. | |
| So 11% said not sure. | |
| Which you're not sure. | |
| It's good, being honest. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, and this is something that you really can't convince somebody of. | |
| You've got to grab the bull by the horns and just do the study. | |
| And you can't. | |
| I'm telling you, I know I couldn't overcome this overnight, but if you stick with it and just don't give up on it, just keep an open mind, open heart. | |
| Sorry, Dan. | |
| That's all right. | |
| No problem, man. | |
| And 12% the shape of Brian's milk truck. | |
| Sorry, Brian. | |
| 2% said globe like NASA says. | |
| And 76% said flat, like the Bible says. | |
| And there was 94 votes. | |
| So that's pretty good. | |
| Thank you guys so much. | |
| And guys, if you want to help contribute to this ministry, we do accept donations and all that from the ministry here to pay the bills and everything else here. | |
| So we're going to link in the chat room and also in the description. | |
| And again, if you're watching later on tonight, we're going to upload this on my other channels. | |
| So this is a damn, I mean, the truth radio show to save the confusion. | |
| This is a truth radio show channel. | |
| This will live now. | |
| But if you're watching it on a Dan Bedandi show, YouTube channel, or the Rumble channel, this is not live. | |
| So just to save the confusion for you guys. | |
| And if you need to get a hold of me, go to truthradioshow at outlook.com. | |
| It's my email and my slides are not moving. | |
| My snail mail here. | |
| If you want to mail me a letter or whatever the case, yeah, Dan Bedondi, 65 Manchester Street, Sweet 10, West Warwick, Red Island, 02893. | |
| And if you want to send any, some people like to send shirts or whatever gifts, that's cool. | |
| And don't forget, Thursdays is our Biblical Warfare, 7 p.m. Eastern. | |
| And the last outpost, I didn't put the link up yet, but that's coming up tomorrow night, 11 p.m. Eastern, where the midnight ride usually was. | |
| But we'll be broadcasting tomorrow night. | |
| And also, yeah, thank you guys so much. | |
| And don't forget, Brother David shows and brother Brian's and all that. | |
| And yeah, that's about it. | |
| So thank you guys in the chat room. | |
| And thank you, Sister Joanne and Brother Bill for taking all day time, moderating my show, David's shows and Brian's. | |
| And thank you guys so much. | |
| And where's my outro? | |
| Thank you, everybody. | |
| Thank you, Dan. | |
| Yeah, absolutely, brother. | |
| I can't wait for part two. | |
| It's going to be great. | |
| Yeah, looking forward to it. | |
| All right, guys. | |
| So, yeah, love you. | |
| God bless Shalom. | |
| And we'll see you tomorrow night live, live, live. | |
| Take your phone calls. | |