There's uh hail and ice storms these past few days.
It's gorgeous at the moment.
Actually, it'd been very nice this morning because usually when it's cold around here, it's because we've had a clear night.
And uh, but it was it's exceptionally cold for the time of year.
Um we have cold springs, but um we don't usually have stuff this cold.
And we had hail the other day that was quite sizable, scary size, you know.
Uh I don't think, I mean, we got really tough windows, but um size of a I don't know, like uh small, smaller than a probably about the size of like a malted milk ball or something.
Uh, you know, big enough that it was a small rock kind of a noise when it hit the house.
Anyway, so uh obviously yet more signs of um strange weather and all of that we're gonna have to go through all of this shit.
You know, poor humans.
Uh especially all of us poor old guys, you know.
We just wanted to kick back on a beach and and uh uh retire and not have to mess with all this crap.
Anyway, so but anyway, here we are, we're in the thick of it, so we gotta get on with it.
Uh so today we're gonna talk about the Wu Mag crew.
We're gonna get there, we've got to go through some stuff first.
Um not housekeeping, but um in a general sense of universe sort of housekeeping.
I wanted to point out that uh Beyond Mystic 2 and Bix Weir and Joe, these are my go-to woo guys.
Whoa, on YouTube.
Uh and so Beyond Mystic is uh Jean-Claude.
He does all these shows, he's got a wide spread of woo.
Uh he's been bringing on people like Bix Weir and Joe and so on to talk about cryptos and precious metals and stuff, as these are so pertinent to our times.
Um so his range of woo is you know based in uh material woo all the way up through uh you know the top woo-woo.
So anyway, uh poor normies stumbling across this stuff and wondering what the fuck.
Anyway, uh so but I just wanted to point out that this is the the go-to woo crew on um on YouTube.
Uh and now we're gonna get into some of this stuff here about uh the woo-nomics of it all, right?
And where we're at.
Now bear in mind woo is everything that is denied by the mainstream, denied by academia, but is in fact uh found as a fact, found in reality.
Okay, so uh the virus exists.
The virus is a bioweapon.
It escaped or was released from the lab.
Uh so that kind of woo, right?
And um discussions about these kind of things can be difficult on uh the tubes, but uh we can get into the surrounding issues with the woo in such a way that we don't skirt into the censorship part into the part that the mainstream media is still trying to uh dampen down and snuff out, right?
That's their whole point.
Uh so we have for instance 150 plus years as documented by Bix of silver suppression and gold, silver and gold price suppression uh by what we call the banksters in Woo world.
And uh so the banksters have been doing this, but now they've got they've co-opted the uh media.
And so the media is also uh an integral part of it all and and uh intimately connected in continuing the suppression.
And anytime they can, they would suppress it naturally because they've been doing it for so long for their buddies the bankers.
And at some point, the level of corruption and criminality bleeds across all of these interest areas, these vertical interest areas like banking, media, finance, etc.
You know, finance is separate from banking.
Banking used to be uh holding wealth and keeping it secure.
Now it's a little bit looser in definition.
Anyway, so here we are at this stage of the collapse of Civilization 1-0.
Our current iteration of Civilization 1-0.
We don't know where civilization was before the last ice age.
We're the remnants of that species, that civilization.
We're facing our first real big crisis here.
We've had the collapse of individual empires, we've had the collapse of whole regions.
Go read about the collapse of the Bronze Age.
Really a strange situation.
Multiple small burgeoning empires all collapsing at the same time based on a resource deprivation relative to creating bronze, which was the superior metal of the time.
So here we are again in a metals crisis.
If we go back and we look, we see that there's been a tin crisis that prompted the invasion of Britain by the Romans.
There have been metals crises throughout history that have prompted vast movements of the of the population, including such things as the um it'd be too tedious to go into, but but whole empires have risen and fallen relative to metals.
In Greece, for instance, all of their empires were based on silver.
And the Athenians ultimately struck a big hoard of it, had uh had cornered the market in physical silver for a while, built a great empire and then lost it because of lack of silver, because they spent unwisely.
The Roman Empire collapsed in part due to metals crises induced by tin, lead, and And uh copper.
Okay.
Actually, they poisoned themselves greatly because they liked the idea of sweet wines.
And so they would cure out sweet wines in pewter flasks and drink it out of pewter cups.
And their pewter leached lead so bad that they all got lead poisoning, and within like two generations, the IQ had just plummeted.
Um, you know, metals, uh metals are a key issue here.
Uh there's been other empires, the the there were uh Celtic empires, if you want to call it that.
They weren't really, they didn't go out and conquer other territories, but they were Celtic fiefdoms that were overtaken because they had tin and the Romans didn't.
That kind of a thing, right?
So metals do move the masses of humanity quite frequently.
Uh there was the opium wars that led to the silver wars between Britain and China that ultimately involved India, and so get this.
Uh China, India, and Britain formed an empire that uh it they all had empires, and they the combined mass of them was basically uh seven-eighths of all of humanity and three-quarters of the actual physical planet uh at the time that they were all going at it.
And Britain used India to undermine China as part of its war effort to retrieve its silver from China that they spent for the tea that they used to power their industrialized uh industrial revolution because the sleepy farmers weren't used to getting up and reporting to work on time, so they got them all jazzed up on tea, the first of the stimulants.
You notice industrial revolutions require stimulants more and more, so you have tea that was imported at great cost from the Chinese, and that cost was only paid for in silver.
You know, the Emperor of China said you cannot sell tea outside of the tea to the British except for silver.
The British paid vast quantities of silver very rapidly and got really um freaked out about it, and then uh came up with a scheme to get the the Chinese hooked on opium and make the emperor pay back all of the silver, which led to the opium wars.
And so we're still fighting all of these kinds of things over and over and over again.
But you notice that we went from tea to coffee to energy drinks in order to power our industrial revolution.
And energy drinks aren't doing it.
They're just not making it for the for the man.
It doesn't promote a um, it's not healthy for you, but it doesn't promote a um uh congenial mindset, it makes people go postal uh and be very jangly all the time.
Uh so uh it's not very good for the work ethic.
Uh and it's as we see, as we see with the subsequent uh energy drink generations.
Anyway, this is the stuff we're gonna talk about here real quick before getting on to magnets.
Um at this point we're looking at a at a collapse, and the collapse is of the Civilization 10.
This is our collapse line.
Now, the collapse line is actually very broad, and it's made up of all of these various different little subcategories of collapse, all moving along at their own same rate.
So it's not like ubiquitous.
Uh so we're seeing, you know, a gradual collapse of the hyperinflation of food prices.
And so maybe that's this line right here.
So maybe the hyperinflation of food prices is accelerating.
But hell, the hyperinflation of Bitcoin is way the hell out there already.
So on our collapse timeline, BTC as an indicator is just flashing red and going, you know, with that honky noise, right?
And food prices are just starting to creep up.
But now we're also seeing, you know, so this is food.
We're also seeing like timber, timber demand, because we're building out all these houses as part of a collapse.
As part of any structural collapse, you have people, uh, you have a diaspora of people spreading of reshuffling of where they want to live and what they're they're going to do and so on.
This is a natural part of it.
It's not just not just the COVID, it's the whole impetus.
It was already uh beginning by the time that we ran into virus, right?
And uh, and now we've got it just full blown.
So we've got timber prices way up, food starting to go on up, all different kinds of things are happening, all of these things along this line are are indicators of collapse.
And so it's not going to happen boom, all in a day.
Everybody wakes up on you know next Thursday at eight in the morning and wherever they are and says, Oh, okay, collapsed yesterday, you know, it's all gone.
It doesn't work that way.
Uh but it will it will affect your life based on how you connected you are to each of these various elements of the collapse as we go forward.
Now we're at this point in the collapse of Civilization 10 that we're now starting to have to figure out we've come to our base level, our what is the primary um purchasing element, and at the moment it appears to be silver because that's where the shortage is.
Uh and it seems always to come down to metals, right?
In our Western civilization, in um uh the islands, the Yap Islands came down to money stones.
They just didn't have any more giant stones to make money out of.
So their collapse of their little civilization and their money came really quick, and they used up that resource relatively rapidly.
Now bear in mind, all money, all currency and everything is based on resources that we commoditize, so to speak, in our minds.
So uh resources will always equate to money at some level, and that's what this chart is.
Um to give you an idea, real soon, if you have an ounce of silver, you're gonna have to decide what value these things here offer in relation to that ounce of silver and how much of these things here you're gonna expect to get when you surrender that ounce of silver.
So you might expect right now to get a small fraction of an ounce of gold, but in a short while, uh, as there's just like no silver delivered, and I'm short while that might be two months.
Okay, so maybe it happens that in March we get this giant spike of um uh Comex delivery guys, that's the only exchange around here.
Go and listen to Jean-Claude and Bix Weir talk about silver and Jean-Claude's interview with him today, And he talks about the exchanges, maybe that collapses in March.
And then how long is it before we have issues because there is this big demand that's continually pulling silver, okay?
And that's this demand is all the stuff we use silver for.
And it's always sucking down that silver and using it, and we're using it up.
And so there's a there's a need for silver independent of it of it as a money, but we also have it as a money, so we're in this weird mine space.
It's not like it's lead, right?
Or iron even.
The demand here is on something that we consider to be monetary.
And that's where the crux of our crisis is coming from at the moment.
Now, bear in mind, as I say, because it's a metal, because we dig it out of the earth, because we have to go through the labor of uh separating it from the surrounding ore and then smelting it and purifying it and stamping it and making it pretty, all of that stuff uh basically goes to the resource,
the actual uh place on the planet, the hole that we have to put into the planet, the removal that we have to do, the structure we have to build to do that removal, this the things we have to have to support our doing the other stuff after we've got the ore out of the ground, that part of the infrastructure, and the electricity to do it all with, etc.
etc.
etc.
Huge amounts of infrastructure for this this little ounce of silver that you hold in your hand.
But and now we're at that point because we've used up all the the silver uh the supplies, above ground silver supplies, and because the banksters, the powers that be have um uh corrupted the currencies to the point uh where they demand control over the currency price of silver and gold in order to maintain their fiat currency's uh notional value, it has no nominal nor real value anymore.
It's less than three cents worth of purchasing power in the US dollar against it when it originally came out in 1913.
Uh so anyway, so um because these things are resources, because gold and silver are resources, we do run into shortages.
This is the rule of the earth of this universe: scarcity matters, all right?
And so um now we have we're in this situation where we have to decide as we go forward, those of us that have an ounce of silver, what we're going to trade it for in the future.
And it will be necessary that this silver be traded out because we still will have this industrial demand, and it'll come to the point where they'll start melting down coins in order to make stuff, in order to use the silver to make stuff.
Now imagine what that's going to do.
Imagine how impacting that's going to be on the the currency price of that ounce of silver, because here we are melting down money to make a cell phone.
It makes the cell phone work worth that much more instantly.
It makes all those cell phones that that that silver ounce uh supplies the silver for that worth that much more because we're almost monetizing them as we're actually destroying that money ounce in order to produce an industrial good from it.
So here we're having a conceptual change that I have not been able to find an analog for in our current modern human history going back over a thousand years.
There I just haven't found there's some close, but nothing nothing that really fits.
So this may be a unique experience for us as we go from converting something that is monetary into something that is industrial, willingly, but you will you will imagine its effect on that representation of that ounce of silver in currencies.
And so I don't know what the ounce of silver is worth according to the officialdom today.
Maybe it's $26.
I don't know.
Might be 23.
Uh, but I do know that you can't get the stuff, and you can't get the stuff on eBay unless you're ponying up 50 and 60 dollars.
And last week, or the week before when I checked, it was you'd have to come up between 30 and 40 dollars to get it mailed to you.
Now it's or between 40 and 50 dollars to get it mailed to you.
Now it's between 50 and 60.
So we're getting into some real uh demand crunch at a um retail in an auction level.
Uh So that's that's where the where the metal uh meets the road, so to speak, and where we see real value being discussed.
Auctions are always a great thing for that.
Now at some point, you're going to expect to get parity.
You're going to expect to get at least one ounce of gold for your ounce of silver.
That'll probably be the point where we have the U.S. government and all the other other governments doing things through the media to try and encourage you to dehorde, to dishoard your metal, because we're going to be getting into a real industrial demand.
Now they're going to run into some problems, okay, some severe problems that are going to affect this whole process.
A, you're going to have people that are very, very, very reluctant to give up their silver for industrial demand in exchange for one ounce for only one ounce of gold, right?
And the problem here is going to be political, because in the USA and parts of the West in general, that silver will be sold to the CCP.
It'll be sold to China in order to make the stuff we buy from that uses that silver.
But there's going to be this taint.
USA selling silver to China.
Hmm, we don't like that.
This will ultimately come down to affect places like Mexico and so on.
It hasn't gotten that bad yet for Mexico.
Mexico is going to be extremely rich and powerful, as is Peru and some of these other South American countries, just because of the rebalancing of the planet around an ounce of silver.
Now this period of time where they're going to start trading silver for gold one for one will be brief because that's going to spur a great deal of activity.
I don't know how brief.
Maybe it'll be months, maybe it'll be a year, maybe it'll be two years.
I just don't know.
Because it takes a long time to get new mines online, new production facilities because of all that stuff I was describing earlier.
Even getting new electric plants in order to supply the electricity to the distant mine.
These kind of issues.
And now with environmental concerns as well as batshit crazy humans who think it's their job to save the planet and blow up your new factory, it's a real issue bringing these things online.
So I don't know how long that parity period will last.
And we may get greater than parity.
it may get so severe that it gets greater than parity.
If that happens, okay, so let's let's throw a little uh temporal marker in here.
And we don't know when it'll occur.
And the temporal marker is uh silver, an ounce of silver being greater than many ounces of gold.
Okay, so when we get to if we had a situation where we actually could trade physical silver and gold, and the government and everybody else wants you to trade out the silver just to get it into the marketplace to get it over to China so they can make stuff out of it so they can keep on their power structure.
See, that's the whole thing is they're doing all this to maintain their power, not for your good, right?
Uh and that's what's gonna lead to other people saying, no, I won't sell to I won't sell now.
I know that the price is rising, I won't sell unless I'm absolutely desperate because it'll go end up going to the CCP.
So they'll do it at a political level.
Uh but if this happens, if we get to the point where there's one ounce of silver is greater than many ounces of gold, and I'm saying, you know, one for ten or something, right?
It'll be that bad that they'll try and get a single ounce of silver out of you by giving you ten ounces of gold.
If it got that bad, we're on the absolute uh certainty of a collapse so deep that the ice age will threaten us.
Okay, so that's the that's the extreme negative path.
Uh because, and that's a good temporal marker for it.
If we get up to the point here where we get parity, so we get uh one silver to one gold, and it maintains, and then starts dropping down, and we start getting back to it, okay.
So it could develop in a couple of different ways.
There is the it is possible that we could have a one, we could have an officialdom kind of a thing come in, right?
Um so there's many possible scenarios on the good side of this uh collapse timeline leading and the good side leads us to civilization 2.0.
Um there are many possible scenarios where we will have a multiple gold to silver ratio.
But those are going to be dependent upon a major change and collapse early in the process.
So this is a dependency, a contingency temporal marker.
This here.
This temporal marker assumes that the mainstream media does not disappear.
Right?
Mainstream media is still existent, and it's still suppressing information at the time that we get a one for ten ratio and so on.
If they're still trying to maintain and still being effective at maintaining normal land, uh, you know, like Biden matters or you know, um, that kind of shit, um, if they're still trying to maintain their uh narrative against fact at that stage, we're in deep shit.
If on the other hand, the mainstream media up here has failed, so mainstream media eats it up here on this part of the timeline, ahead of the parity and ahead of the transition to multiple gold to one ounce of silver, that can still be a very good temporal marker, okay, because then we'll be discussing real facts.
Then we'll be discussing uh gold fines in the Grand Canyon, then we'll be discussing gold fines in Mount Shasta in Alaska and other places, and and the USA population actively becoming involved and getting the gold.
It will show that there's vast quantities of gold, but gold will then take over the the inferior part of a bimetallic uh currency system or bimetallic um financial system or money system, let's just say money, okay?
Because at that point, then we'll still have the shortage of silver, but we'll have enough um gold that we'll be able to have a circulating functioning economy based around a precious metal.
Yes, there's shitloads of it, uh, but not so much that uh we're gonna be throwing it at each other as rocks.
We're gonna be trading it with each other.
And so gold will take over that uh that part of the monetary system and will build out from these from the uh infrastructure that we'll build out to retrieve all of the gold.
But we've got to face reality, we've got to get rid of the MSM narrative, and all that shit has to crack in order for us to be on the good side towards civilization 2.0.
Now, this is this is a comic book level presentation of it, because it's like this.
There's millions of these little threads continually going.
Well, there's millions of threads for each of us, and there's millions of us, so there's trillions of these little threads going towards the collapse.
And the elements of uh our actions will affect the mass of the population as we go along here.
So it's not really clear-cut and and cut and dried this way, but in a general sense, these temporal markers, if if we see the mainstream media take a serious dive, uh, we're seeing it it die off.
There's no question about it.
Social media is dying off, the um uh the left stream media is dying off, you know, they can't pay people, they're laying them all off, it's collapsing, it's not economically viable to try and pump shit into people's ears and eyes constantly, and so they're not viable and they're failing.
That's going on now, but we have to take a big hit where we lose like the real mainstream, the core, the CNN, Fox, uh, MSNBC, and uh and CNBC, those kind of things.
When they go, when they uh literally have no presence uh relative to the rest of the of stuff we're paying attention to in the in the attention market, then we can be pretty sure that we'll start seeing, and one of the keys for that is we'll start seeing real history,
real truth come on out, real statements being unchallenged, social media will start changing because it won't have the props to push um the rest of the other part of the social order around.
And so things will be really changing at that point, and you'll hear things that and see things written that that had not been allowed to.
So that'll be the temporal marker for the MS for mainstream media and their narrative, eating it, right?
Is that you know they'll start talking about real human history in Antarctica.
They'll start talking about this, we'll start discussing uh climate change in relation to the ice age, uh, you know, the Greta Thunberg people will start um looking east and pointing fingers at China.
That's a real good temporal marker because she's a controlled agent, right?
She's a controlled um uh little minion of the uh uh climate extremist um movement, and when she starts looking to reality for her issues, um, then we can see that the overall narrative structure is breaking down.
And it's gonna break down as we go through this.
These are all on a slant because this is what's happening.
We're gonna lose this.
We're gonna lose the abstractions, we're gonna lose the currencies.
And then we're gonna come into a period of time when this is all we've got, and people are trading stuff, boats, cars, trucks, houses, and stuff in cryptos, and that's how we'll be existing.
And that may be as far down as we go.
All right, that may be as far down as the general population goes.
It may that be that it goes down even further, and we end up trading and existing on resources and stuff.
We know from Bill Gates' recent purchases of farmland that that's where he thinks it'll it'll stop.
Um but a lot of these guys think it it are gonna, you know, they're into the bunker mentality, and I don't think that's the case.
I don't think we're gonna get that low.
I think Civilization 2.0 is gonna reboot somewhere around in here.
Um, but I think it's gonna take acts of desperation, the the destruction of the mainstream media, and the release of um hidden technologies.
But by that I don't mean functioning medbeds and functioning UFOs or um uh you know uh gateways to Mars or any of this other David Wilcock or Charlie Wood, Charlie Ward or the blue chicken shit, right?
None of that blue chicken shit is is there.
It's all uh it's all fantasy.
Yes, there is uh crashed space alien stuff, and we've been um tinkering with it because we've had because of the nature of the secrecy and because of the nature of our social order, they've only allowed um very few outside the box thinkers at this stuff.
And so they haven't been very successful in in decoding what they're actually seeing.
And uh that's the real problem with our approach, in my opinion.
That's why we haven't gotten very far.
I know organizational mindset, you know.
I was I was born into the US military and and I lived for 17 years surrounded by one of the largest organizations on the planet.
And so uh I understand how they this mindset works at an intimate level.
It's inculcated into my very cells.
And so I know that the type of people that we need to examine this stuff have never been asked to go and do so, have never been asked to participate.
And I think that's gonna end as the mainstream media eats it and all this stuff starts reshuffling relative to the value of an ounce of silver.
And one of the things we'll see, and we're seeing it now, is the reshuffling of the uh value of a dollar relative to uh an ounce of silver, and that'll get much higher.
And we're seeing the hyperinflation in the cryptos already.
And I'm I'm here to tell you that it's not gonna stop.
And as forecast, we'll have hundred thousand dollar Bitcoin parties.
It'll probably be earlier than December, though.
The way it way it's looking now, Bitcoin is gonna reach about ninety thousand, it'll dip back down, and it's gonna go through sixty-five thousand.
And it had to have gone through sixty-five thousand to hit the ninety thousand, and that was once.
As it dips back down, it's gonna hit 65,000, it'll go below 65,000, that'll be two, and then it'll come back up through 65,000, and that'll be three.
And that'll be the the end of that.
It'll never see 65,000 again.
Uh and that'll be on its way to 120,000.
Or 130,000, about in there.
Uh, so uh, but that's not a measure of the value of the Bitcoin, although Bitcoin is very valuable, especially now that we're gonna be losing the bankers' uh influence.
It's already waning.
Lots of us just don't care anymore.
We've also had the we've had reached peak bankster dumb, peak officialdum, and uh peak political dumb.
And that's DUM on the politics.
Because we just don't care about them anymore, right?
What is official matter to you anymore?
It doesn't.
The laws and the so forth are just fading away the amount of influence or juice that the uh feds have over the states is dropping, the amount of juice that the individual states have over their individual population is dropping because we've now seen the the big con through the um all of the COVID shit.
Yes, it's a good it's it's real, and yes, the uh solution to it is deadly.
Um but it's not as you think.
Now your conspiracies are not as wacky as my conspiracies, and I've got some evidence to prove my conspiracies about it.
But anyway, though, so we're gonna come down to this level here.
I think we're gonna we're probably pretty close to it now.
One of the key indicators that we're right here, though, is not the $90,000 Bitcoin, but we'll be you'll see some indications of that uh when you see some level of activity, either silver to Bitcoin or or silver to boats, or silver to houses, cars or trucks or something, right?
And so you'll see an iconic picture will emerge that will be iconic in the same way that there was an iconic picture in the last Great Depression of this guy with the Rolls-Royce and the stack of silver that he bought the Rolls-Royce for, and a year later the brand new Rolls-Royce had cost $25,000 in real money back in the 1930s, right?
And so uh he bought it for a stack of silver coins.
Well, you're gonna see something like that as an iconic photo.
When you see that, you'll know that we're at this level here.
Now, this is a wide level, it'll take us and may take us a number of years to navigate this.
I just don't know.
They blend, right?
It's not going to be a hard and fast kind of a thing.
I mean, I've already invested in some resources, other people are investing in resources because we know that in order to support the stuff, we're going to need resources, whether we have currency or not.
And that's another thing.
As we have political changes, as we get this uh USA in the West versus the CCP ramping on up even more, it will become very necessary that we have resources here on this continent that don't go overseas, that are not in any way tainted by being at uh touched by the CCP that we start rebuilding here.
And so it's a wise idea if you've got extra currency at the moment to put it in resources because this will support the stuff as we rebuild our way back out.
Um that's that's where we are in woo-woo world right now, right?
In the collapse of Civilization 1.0.
Or rather, we can think about it another way.
The way I think about it, it's I know I actually don't think about the collapse.
That started years ago.
That started before my birth.
And so I was born into this period of the collapse.
Uh the but I think of it as I'm born into the into the transition.
And so we're we're moving from Civilization 10 to Civilization 2.0.
Now I termed uh Civilization 2.0 as sci-fi world.
That equals Civilization 2.0.
Um, and we're there now.
We've got all kinds of indicators that were emerging into the sci-fi world.
We've got, you know, the um uh the industrial capacity looking at different kinds of physics that hadn't been allowed to be looked at, and they're producing devices around that kind of physics.
And I won't go into any of the other stuff because it gets me diverted.
Uh and I want to get on to magnets because I gotta go in out and work on my tractor and move a bunch of logs so I get these logs hauled off.
And and it's a good day, and tractor work is good for you.
Uh anyway, though, so um we're in a transition period.
We're we're not really, we're seeing the the collapse of civilization is baked in civilization 1.0 is baked in the cake.
It's happening now, it's just a question of where we are in terms of analyzing where we are on the on the trail.
And but we're actually emerging into Civilization 2.0.
I do not put much credence into the idea that humanity is going to fail this ice age.
Okay, this is not going to be a particularly bad ice age.
It's not going to be like the last mega monster ice age that left only about 2,000 breeding pairs of humans on the planet.
Alright, so we're not going that deep.
This is probably going to be maybe as bad as the Mondor minimum, maybe a bit more, based on where we are in space.
Okay, but I don't think we're going to be at risk of not surviving.
So this really is not in my thoughts at all.
I just pointed out that you know it's an obvious thing you have to think about, and then you can discard when you're you're concentrating on your scenario planning.
So we're here and we're rising in towards Civilization 2.0.
And uh and I see us going through this rebalancing effort here relative to our metal of the moment or our crisis metal of the moment, which is silver.
If, for instance, we had had um, well, other civilizations have had crises, and so there was a crises for tin, easily gotten at tin evaporated from the planet relatively quick in the progress of Civilization 1-0, and it created a crises for those people at that time, but they found other alternatives, some of which were silver.
You know, you can you can tin with silver as well.
And so there were there were other things.
They use silver and um with tin to stretch the tin and all different kinds of of other adaptions.
We won't be able to do that because it is the nature of silver for the electronics that is driving our current demand, right?
We're not out there making silver nipple rings with it.
We don't have such a fetish that we're willing to risk civilization for that.
We're able to we're willing to risk civilization for technology, and technology is dependent upon silver.
And so this is the little situation that we find ourselves in.
It's interesting.
I mean, we got to do something.
We have dumbass politicians, we have you know, thieving lying, political system, corruption everywhere, so we've got to do something.
So everybody get a good look, because we gotta make this go away, because I get to talk about magnets, and then go start my tractor with one.
Anyway, so uh so we're actually on our way to building out Civilization 2.0, and I think I'm one of the I'm one of the people that thinks that Civilization 2.0 is gonna have a lot of magnetic drive stuff in it.
We're gonna start using magnets in a different way.
And I think this because I'm an etherist, right?
And so I'll tell you something about uh about the ether.
Uh it's very difficult to conceptualize, much more so than the easy parts of trying to conceptualize quantum mechanics, the you know, various aspects of quantum tunneling, quantum interference, and other things.
Those are easily conceptualized once you set about it.
The ether is very broad, it's very difficult.
Uh quantum geometries.
Simple, multidimensional geometries, simple.
I can stack those in my head.
Just not an issue.
Uh, but the the ether is very difficult difficult to conceptualize, very difficult to describe.
There are working analogies, because the ether turns out turns out to be relatively simple to make electricity.
Spin magnets or spin copper in the presence of each other, and you get you get electricity.
Uh magnetism is okay.
So the ether exists within the ether is a field.
Everything within the materium where matter exists, where flesh exists, where we exist, you know, and all the walls and all of this, the ocean, all of that shit, planets, all of this kind of stuff, all of that exists within the field, which exists within the ether.
So uh mainstream science, mainstream paradigm cannot describe adequately a field, and it can't describe magnetism, and it can't, and or it cannot explain, okay, cannot explain the field, cannot explain magnetism, can't even explain electricity.
It can describe it, and it can do so mathematically and so on, and we're gonna divert for a second here, but uh, but it cannot explain it, and a description is not an explanation.
And so when we're working with magnets, and this is about the woo-mag crew, and I'm not alone.
There's a lot of people reading Boscovich, there's a lot of people out here screwing around with these damn magnets, they're reasonably cheap at the moment.
I've got stacks of the things, I'm playing with them constantly.
Be careful, guys.
By the way, if you handle them too much, I limit myself at my age, 67.
I limit myself to no more than an hour a day handling them because it'll disrupt my sleep.
These are that strong.
Anyway, though, um magnetism descriptions for mainstream science fail repeatedly.
Magnetism is nothing more than a modality being expressed within the field of the ether.
And so I've manipulated that modality on my own in order to create a couple of patents out of the ability to make magnets take unusual shapes and form new new self-sustaining shapes in spite of the fact that it's that it's theoretically impossible that they should do so.
Um magnetism is but a modality of the field expressing itself within the material.
Alright, so the other modalities are light.
We have we have light here, we have light, we have primary light, we have reflected light.
Reflected light is also a modality in the ether, but it's not like the primary light from the sun or from an LED.
Not gonna go into that, not gonna go into that now.
Okay, so because we have inadequate scientific explanations, other than in places like Boskowitz and ancient etheric writings about the etheric uh about the ether in the field.
We we have a we have a failed understanding.
And so our current modern civilization, as cool as it is, is not able to make a UFO like the Tic-Tac UFO.
We're not able to sail from planet to planet the way they do.
And that's because we're working not with a bad physics, but with a misunderstanding of reality that we've inculcated and encapsulated in such a way that we can't that mainstream can't break out of it.
Now, I'm not in there because I'm an etherist.
I understand the ether exists and this sort of thing.
But I don't have a whole lot of support in the sense that we've had let me think.
Let's just say 500 years.
Let's just say we've had 500 years of college support on a failed understanding of uh a failed grasp of physics that was actually hijacked by the Einsteinians uh crew as a result of the failed or as a result of the Mitchis Mitchels and Moray experiment in 18, I think it was 1888, something like that, where they proved the ether didn't exist and from then on we've been failing.
We had Tesla, he showed the ether exist, he showed how you can manipulate it.
But because we don't have a huge infrastructure of support around it, we don't have, as etherists, we don't have vast quantities of books and stuff to help direct us in our messing about with magnets.
And so this is why we are in that part of Wu, where Wu is that area that's denied by the mainstream media, by the mainstream paradigm, mainstream narrative, and yet is reality.
And so Wu powers our reality because Tesla was an etherist and invented all of the devices that we now use in their fundamental forms as a result of his understanding of ether, and we never would have invented any of this shit with any kind of an understanding that relied on general relativity or quantum mechanics.
Alright, so all of that stuff said, in examining magnets, there's some things.
Now we're gonna talk about magnets and the Wu Mag crew relative to my current focus of the moment, which is not the magnetic drives, but rather the magnetic gen sets, okay?
The ability to make electricity on a far-off place without having any wires, no copper strung through the sky or run underground to bring me that electricity and no fuel.
I don't want to have to haul diesel, I don't want to have to lug in wood to burn to heat water to make steam, or I don't want to have to mess with nuclears To make steam or any of that stuff just to make electricity.
I want something easier, more permanent, less polluting and all of that.
And by the way, okay, so every person that ever bitches to you that is a climate activist First thing you do is slap them in the face to get their attention.
And then ask them, where are you on the conversion to the ether narrative?
Because ether is green.
Alright, the mag drives and stuff we're doing is ultimate green.
No pollution, one time initial costs, in order to create the magnets, self-supporting, self-generating electricity, and no pollution, no harmful after effects, right?
So much better than nuclear power, so much better than anything that the standard paradigm offers.
It is a shock that the climate activists are not crawling all through the ether world and are not a pain in the ass to all of us, but they're not at the moment.
They're ignoring us.
But in any event, so here we are, back discussing the magnets.
So I've gotten a couple of uh a few patents on these magnets and the folded blended magnetic field.
And I'm starting to mess about with magnetic fields in ways that I don't find others doing.
And I'm discovering some stuff here because in Woo, it's all discovery, and discoveries last as long as they last.
But in our particular Woo world, I know some things at the moment that are pretty solid.
That there are no magnetic gen sets out there now being commercially produced.
The ones that you see online don't send me those links anymore.
Those guys are are doing pre-orders, which means they're not there, they don't have patents, you can't find out that they've patented anything, and they're not in production.
It's a scam or a hype or a backup for a scam or a hype or something along those lines.
But it's not real, they're not delivering.
Now, I do know that's feasible because we can make magnets so much more powerful now than the ones in the 1800s and in the 1800s, they had basically perpetual motor uh motion machines that would sit there and crank out electricity.
And like the homopolar motor of um wasn't LeClerc, maybe it's heavyside.
Somebody, some uh I can find out uh there's a patent on it.
A homopolar motor that will extract electricity at a huge level of amperage, just minute voltage, and it wears out quick.
Uh, but they actually have working models of it, and that you can see why it wears out quick because the friction and you you can't have a continuous contact, and they've got to go to great lengths, like running these things through vats of mercury just in order to get the contacts and stuff, but but nonetheless, the principle does work.
That once there's an initial start, uh, they're self-maintaining thereafter.
So it's not free energy.
It's not free energy in the sense you got to build the device, you've got to smelt the metal to create it, create the plastic 3D printer, all of that kind of stuff.
Whatever.
Anyway, so there's not free energy in that sense, right?
But it is um uh easily transportable and very cheap energy in a reliable source thereafter, and that's what we're after, are these magnetic gin sets.
Now, the problem with the magnetic gin sets, they're the clamshells that you've seen, where they start really rotating as you put the clamshell around it and you snap it there, and it's just rotating up a storm.
So far, I've seen that none of those have torque to be able to drive the other half of this, which is the electrical gen set, right?
That takes the electricity back out of the system.
Now we've got several big problems.
Uh, one of our big problems is that the genset part, the alternator that gets you the electricity, the power.
These things are are really crude.
I found some really good ones.
I found a couple of very good ones that are really superior in design and so on.
Uh, but we can do better because we went so far with the technology, and then we jumped to other areas and we've left it behind because we started getting our electricity generated on moss and delivered to us by wires, and so we're not paying for electricity, by the way.
Your monthly electric bill Doesn't do squat for the actual cost of producing the electricity.
All of that money that you pay 400 a month, 1200 a month, whatever it is, all of that money goes to support the distribution system between you and the power plant.
It goes to support the pension plans, the financing for that power plant, all of this.
It does not really actually go to support the fuel that produces the electricity that comes across those wires.
So in essence, you're paying for an amateurized life portion for your lifetime of the generalized infrastructure when you pay your power bill, or to a certain extent, your your water bill and that kind of thing, right?
When any of this stuff is delivered to you.
And so my way of thinking is that I want to have this non-centralized.
I want to go distributed, and that's where I'm headed.
I bought myself some resource land, I got I got a chunk of property, it's way the fuck off.
It's going to have to be off-grid.
I want to do things there, so I'm going to have to provide electricity there.
And so I'm going to want one of these little you know magnetic gens sets to just take there and set up and leave.
And you know, then you can drive on up with your truck and you know, and plug in electric frying pan and cook your lunch, whatever, right?
And so, anyway, so the alternators here, these are still crude, and they have huge levels of resistance.
Resistance is an interesting phenomenon itself, and you really need to look into Steinmetz and the Lorentz effects because the resistance we need to get back to, because that's really the twisting of the ether.
And this costs us in the process of making electricity.
But now, on the other side, we've got over here the magnetic motor itself, right?
And it's going to turn, it's going to be coupled to this device, and it's going to make electricity out of the genset.
It'd be nice if we just had this right here and could do away the with the electrical genset.
It would be nice if we just had a solid-state device that had no moving parts.
And I've seen a really interesting one that I'm going to try and craft.
I'll get a patent number, I'll post it on Twitter.
You can go and look at it yourself.
It involves a bunch of iron rods or or high purity on all this material is the key for this thing.
Iron rods that are wrapped in a particular way with a thousand feet of copper wire and in a couple of fashions that's insulated, connected to an identical device over here, cross-connected in such a way that you can take a load off of it.
And uh, and it had a patent and the way low number in patents too, way back there.
Um, and the patent um structure said there was a working model.
They had actually been able to, you know, to take a continuous spark load off of this non-moving part solid-state device, made up of relatively crude material.
Uh, but it was the quality of the copper, the quality of the iron and everything that was said to make the difference in these devices.
And like I say, I'll get that patent number and I'll post it.
It was on a document that I'd received and I was reading through.
Anyway, our mag motors here are where we're at now.
This is what we're attempting to build right now in order to drive these electrical gen sets.
And I'm going to describe something that affects both parts of these.
It always affects our gen sets, and we're doing it continuously all the time now, everywhere.
Uh we're twisting or or torturing the ether.
Okay.
And so one way to think about this, and it's only a very, very crude conceptualization, is that the magnetic fields that come the fields that come off of the magnetics, the magnetic lines of force, which aren't really fields per se, the magnetic lines of force that comes off come off of a magnet, can be likened to uh a fabric.
They can be likened to an expression uh of fibers.
Uh so maybe like very dense hairbrush, like a hairbrush with lots and lots and lots and lots of fibers would be the effect of a magnet uh of the force lines of a magnet.
And within the electrical gen set and within the mag motor, even more so within the mag motor, and this is why they're failing, we have this interesting issue, okay?
And this issue relates to resistance and the Lorentz effect within the movement of electricity through wire causing a resistance and a spinning of uh ancillary material within the ether.
And what's happening in these mag motors and to it to a certain extent within electrical gen sets, but we don't care in electrical gens.
We've got a crude diesel-powered motor here burning crude fuel that has torque like you wouldn't believe, and it'll turn it regardless of the resistance that builds up.
Okay.
But what's happening is these magnetic force lines and all the magnets that are used in the gen set and the many more magnets that are used in the magnetic motor over a relatively short period of time, these these force lines, because they're interacting like this and they're spinning and moving,
we're we're basically twisting and torturing the ether and continuing to do it in the same direction over and over and over and over again at vast speeds, and it's not like the magnetic force lines can break.
Okay, it's not like they're fiber, real fiber, like they were brushes.
So if you took two hairbrushes or took a bunch of hairbrushes and mounted them in a in a um a machine so that you had the all the bristles here and then had another one over here with all the bristles that way, and these things were constantly interacting with each other, you would expect in a relatively short period of rotation of these at high speed that most of the bristles that offered the resistance under those conditions would break off.
And they will.
If you set up such a machine like that, it doesn't matter what those bristles are made out of, just the sheer friction and bashing of them in in high speed would break them all off.
Doesn't happen with magnetic force lines.
They cannot break out of the magnet.
But you can cause a condition that where that magnetic force is degraded, and it'll actually go back to pollute the dielectric in the middle of the magnet from which the force lines protrude.
And it like muddies, these are crude words to use, and there's another thing.
We don't have language yet to describe these things in excruciating detail.
There are some, uh so we'll divert to a thing called spintronics.
Okay, spintronics is all about spinning stuff in order to create electronic bubbles in order to store information on it.
And so spintronics is the is the heart of uh a CD, it's the heart of um even a magnetic tape, it's the heart of the little um storage cards and the micro storage cards, all of that, right?
The hard disk, all this stuff rely on spintronics.
That's this this um uh subset of magnetism research.
And spintronics is very much a uh concerned with what are known as eddy currents.
They actually name them after things in the ocean, right?
Eddie currents.
Because an eddy current and a micro, you can see on a CD or in one of these little micro storage cards, if you had an eddy current, if you had a little stray magnetism floating around there, it can become as one or a zero when read by the device and uh and pollute your data.
So they really care about such things as eddy currents and these uh and the issues with the Lorentz effect and it's uh more um microscopic levels, because it really matters when you there's no space between them and all of this kind of stuff, and you're dealing with these micro voltages, right, in amperages.
So, anyway, though, so so they're doing a lot of work on the same kind of thing that we're running into here with is the resistance.
And the resistance is that basically the magnetic fields become so entrained that we have uh that we're actually distorting and blending the magnetic fields without intending it.
And we're doing it in such a manner that it's not stable, that's not self-supporting here, but that it's very much a chaotic situation, uh continually being forced into the same shape over and over and over again through our attempts to just make the bugger spin in order to make this other bugger spin in order to get electricity.
And so we um uh so that's why, in my opinion, that's that's really where a lot of us are bogging down.
Is you can get the magnetic motors, uh, the best there's like three major types of magnetic motors, closed system, open system, and uh asymmetric.
The asymmetric appear to have the most torque.
Those develop really big amounts of torque, but they're just a bitch to tune.
They they doesn't look like you could mass produce them without some serious reconceptualization Because it you almost have to tune each and every magnet if you get one magnet to break and you put in a new one, you've got to tune all of the ones on either side of them, and it just becomes really a pain to do that.
But you can get serious torque.
The closed and open system run into this, and because it's asymmetric, the magnet magnets that you're dealing with are arranged in a big spiral.
And so, and then you have a central pivot point and this thing that runs around the spiral in a circle that actually generates it all.
But the the individual magnets are set up in in this kind of a fashion, such that it's an asymmetric, and when it jumps off of this one, there's no instant resistance here, and so it picks up on attraction there and spins again.
Sort of like slingshotting around the sun, like a muamua.
The you know, space probe from far distant galaxy um, you know, SWI9, whatever it was.
Uh anyway, though, so asymmetric appears to generate the most torque, and that and so that would tend to go towards the idea of you know being our diesel motor of magnet motors, and might be better to uh power the gen set here.
The other, the closed and the open set, uh the clamshell and the other considerations on these can generate vast quantities of speed, but very little torque, very little power in there because it'll jam instantly as soon as you put any kind of torque on it between two magnets, basically, trapped between the the pull of the next one and the anti pull of the you know, dropping off on the on the other.
There's also some we've had some improvement, it's very tricky with Hasselback arrays.
Hasselback arrays are a way of making a magnetic structure where you do strong, weak side, strong, weak side, strong, weak side, and so on, alternating the poles as you go along.
And so it's this tumbling effect.
And hassle back arrays mean that you can actually create um within a closed system within a sphere or circle.
You can still have a wavy magnetic influence that gets you over the humps of the um running into the resistance of one and the attraction of the other, repulsion of one and the attraction of the other, balancing and equally.
You don't you can't have that, or it stops your motor.
In order to keep it going, it's got to always, when it leaves that one, it's got to be attracted to the next.
But the attraction force is the weaker force.
So you've got to do things with the repulsion force to give it a push off.
And basically that's that's kind of where we're at at the moment.
Um, this is a long one.
Sorry that it's been so long in going through this.
I had to join these.
My issue is, uh, and I'm gonna shut all this down now.
I gotta go do my tractor stuff, but my issue is I've got to get all of these videos done, and I have to apologize to Jean-Claude because he's working his ass off on producing quality content, three and four videos a day kind of thing.
I'm becoming a real YouTube dude.
Um, and I'm intruding with these uh these things I'm doing, intruding on his live streams.
But anyway, so I'm doing these because I'm gonna be involved in this project.
So I'm basically going to be going off grid myself for some period of time as we get through this relatively get into this relatively crucial period.
Um, and I just am not in a position to be able to do interviews.
My schedule is erratic at best.
All right.
I don't know when I get up what the schedule for that day is.
I had no clue I was going to be doing able to do a video today of any length or would be doing tractor work.
It just you get up every morning and there's just different stuff.
So anyway, so that's where it's at.
Um I guess there's nothing else.
I had a bunch of stuff on here.
Uh the magnet qualities really are an issue too, by the way.
You've got to get good stuff.
This is that book, uh, Mathematics for the million.
Uh, this here should be purchased for every one of your kids.
It describes why.
Okay, so mathematics is uh interesting because mathematics is the language we use to describe the relative size of things.
That's really all it is.
Um mathematics only deals with quantities.
Uh how big is it, you know, dimensional things, right?
Descriptors.
Uh the people that are good with math have a tendency to be uh exclusionary.
They have a tendency to be people that want to uh dive into math.
Mathematicians are exclusively gatekeepers.
Mathematicians are the kind of people that want to remove the the cluttered woo world and replace it with the pristine, clear abstractions of their mathematics.
So they they're gatekeepers and they're harsh and negative.
And they've created this perfectly interesting language.
This language that is perfectly suited to them keeping all the rest of us out of their thoughts, and that is the language of symbols of mathematics.
And that's all it is, though, is language, all right?
It's like street slang and you know the gang gang talk.
You just don't know the talk of the math gang.
That's all it is.
You don't have to be intimidated by these fuckers.
They're trying their best to intimidate you, but they're weak.
They don't really understand the woo world.
They have couldn't navigate it if you tried.
If they tried.
These guys are, you know, mathematicians, by and large, you know, they fit those stereotypes.
So anyway, this book is really good because you can master the language of numbers.
It's cheap.
You find it on Amazon.
It was written in like the 1940s, I think.
Um the guy who writes the the tagline, one of the taglines here is H. G. Wells.
That'll give you an idea of how old the book is.
But but basically, this guy was saying, don't be intimidated by these fuckers.
Learn, read this book, learn the stories in this book, and you can you can blow all the mathematicians right out of the water.
Um, because all they're trying to do is gatekeep and make themselves seem superior.
So uh for all the woo-world people, you know, get this book, give it to your kids, teach your kids right.
Uh, and they'll never be intimidated by that crap.
Then something else to get into is Antarctic marine geology.
I've been pursuing this because of the expando earth and stuff, and I I had for a long time come to certain conclusions relative to the climate, and I found some stuff in there that validates the two of the central tests that the mainstream media have been using, and or mainstream academia have been using to uh project climate are bogus.
Uh they truly have two different interpretations, and there's no way to know which one is right except for maybe a thousand years from now.
And so I'll go into that at some other point, but it's uh quite fascinating that there is this um uh fulcrum, and we're balancing on that fulcrum now.
Do the academics have a correct understanding of this oxygen uh um isotope that they're seeing in the water, or do they not?
Because if they don't, it's ice age for sure.
Um they've been in denial thinking that it would was climate warming.