All Episodes
Feb. 3, 2024 - Clif High
40:29
Anon Authors...
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Hello humans!
Hello humans!
Around noon, heading outbound now.
Nice day.
We haven't had serious rain for a couple of days, so that's alright.
Anyway, I wanted to talk about Vaimanai and other forms of UFOs.
We're getting information now about the requirements for the Vaimani pilots and stuff out of Russian.
Russian is interesting.
Phonetically, it's basically Sanskrit.
If you were to take Hindi and to a certain extent, say maybe 40% of all the words in Hindi, phonetically, if you just said them to a Russian and sort of like had a Russian accent with it, they would understand.
So Russian and Sanskrit share a common derivation chain or thread.
Anyway, so we're getting information about what the requirements were for flying these machines.
Wow.
In the past, right, some of this stuff is 3,000,000, 4, and 5,000 years old.
Once it gets much beyond, say, 2,200 years or so, unless you've got a really good provenance chain of evidence as to how it came to be, then a lot of this stuff is really open to interpretation as to, you know, who wrote it, and a lot of it is just laid at the feet of certain people by subsequent generations, and it not really warranted.
So a lot of these books are said that, you know, it's written by thus-and-so guru or sage or something, right?
And it's not.
It's just it's author unknown and was about that time.
And you'll find that a lot of the books in Sanskrit, okay, so a lot of these ancient volumes, they were written by people that were not living in the same kind of environment as us in the sense that there was not a sense of, there was no incentive, no economic incentive for writing these books.
They were not being mass produced and sold, and there was no ego incentive for having attribution.
So a lot of these books are just written by anonymous authors.
Some books will have sections within them describing how they came to be.
There's a whole lot of our literature, really I should say documentation, okay?
Technical and what we now classify as spiritual, which may not be spiritual.
It might actually just be a misinterpretation of some technical literature.
But there's a lot of it that's written without attribution.
So we have, for instance, Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, but Patanjali is, Patan is an area of India, the Pathon, and Jali is a word meaning sage or enlightened person, J-A-L-I.
So Patanjali is just, you know, enlightened person from the Pathan region of India, northern India, wrote this book.
It was not necessarily a guy's name.
It's more of a title or a description.
We have a lot of those things where the books are just ascribed to particular individuals and they, you know, we don't really know who wrote them.
Some really cool books though, they say, you know, it says basically, I am a scribe thus-and-so, and this great person with all this money instructed me or paid me to put this volume together.
And it was done so for this following purpose, right?
And so those books are just great because built within the text is the validation of the subject matter and who wrote it, circumstances, and in some cases we get a general estimate of when as well because we end up with reference points relative to astronomy.
So, you know, some of these books that we've got in Russian that are having Vaimana instructions are saying, hey, we wrote this thing in this year under these astronomical conditions.
And there were four of us that put it together and we were instructed to put it together by so-and-so, the great pubah of this particular region of India, Russia, whatever, right?
We've got a lot of these that are that way in Chinese.
We've got a lot of them that are actually, I think, probably Tartarian.
But in any event, though, so those forms of books are turning up and we're getting more and more, now that we've got AI working and more and more resources available that way, a lot of these repositories where they've got, you know, 10,000 scrolls, that kind of thing, are starting to open up and be translated.
And, you know, it's a meticulous process.
You've got to handle these books carefully and then put them back.
But once they're digitized, boy, there we go.
We're off and running.
And there's a lot more showing up now in Russian than we are getting in Sanskrit or Pali or Avistan or Chinese for that matter.
The Russians are putting some level of effort into translating a lot of these old books for their own purposes.
So I think, and this is a speculation, I am speculating that I'm seeing things in the movements in Russia that seem to suggest that the Russians are very, very, very much focused on these ancient flying machines and the space aliens that brought them to us.
And that they're focused on it for their own purposes, which I think may be technological.
Well, they are technological to some degree.
These guys want the technology.
The Russians want to know these things.
And the Russians are really into supersonic, right?
And they've got some supersonic stuff that I think derives from some of this information in ancient texts.
We saw, okay, so maybe six months back, I'm trying to think here.
Probably more than that, probably eight months.
So at the beginning of last summer, just as I was getting into this big flush of data that suggested that, you know, all kinds of shit was going to unfold, which had happened.
You know, we've got the Lahaina, we've got the Gaza genocide by the Jews, all of this kind of thing, all rolling out as expected off of those data sets from past summer.
But back then, I had, before I got into the data, which got me distracted from it all, we'd come across, myself and these old fart guys, we'd come across some stuff in Russian about, it was ancient literature too.
I mean, they were citing things, astronomical things that happened in 550 current era, right?
So 1,500 years back.
And the description of it was, if you really looked at it, so it's all text.
We didn't have any drawings or anything, right?
So you have to take the text.
This was a meticulous, meticulous text.
I mean, these guys were intending that you would understand this from their description, and they kept putting in words until they were quite sure that they had described every aspect of it.
But what this thing was describing, one aspect of it, was a skin surface for flying projectiles that eliminated or that seriously reduced friction from movement through the air and also seriously reduced cavitation and seriously reduced drag from the air,
like friction pulling it back, as opposed to the other aspects of the friction through the air, which would cause it to become unstable relative to its angle of flight and so on.
Anyway, this was a really interesting book, and it basically was saying, if you read it, if we were reading it correctly, and we think we were, you know, we had human and AI translation, and it all seemed to jive, and it was just very, very tedious to read it because they were quite intent on describing this skin surface for flying machines,
and they even had the mathematics that provided certain curve functions for energy use.
It was like, wow, look at what we're looking at here.
And so I'm pretty certain that probably the Russians are working that aspect of things, the ancient descriptions of technology for the supersonic and the other areas that they're very much interested in.
This one basically said it described a rough surface, deliberately roughened surface that had relative to the direction of flight, this surface had backward focusing ripples all along it.
But what was the cool part of these ripples was that they were hollowed out at the edge like you might hollow out a cresting wave.
You know how a wave in the ocean comes up and it crests and there's a sort of a look for a moment.
There's that little hook in that underage, right?
There's a little bit of air that's trapped under the edge of the wave as it crests and then breaks and crashes.
And this was kind of trying to describe cresting waves that had been put on a metal surface in order that this thing might go faster than sound.
And they were saying seven times faster than sound.
And what made it, they were saying that if you just put the ripples on, just put these ridges, very much like little tiny ridges you might see on like on a potato chip or something, right?
And if you put these onto the metal and just had the metal lumpy that way with all these ridges and stuff, that you might get one or two times faster than the speed of sound.
But that if you did it with these cresting wave things with these like little hooks in there for creating this null spot, this void area underneath the edge of the cresting wave, so to speak, underneath the edge of the hook on the ripple on the metal, that that particular void in this particular shape that it describes, because it wasn't, I mean it was really fucking meticulous.
It was ovoid in section.
But that this would get you seven times faster than the speed of sound.
So, and you know, and this is like fucking ancient.
This was taken from some other language, and we don't know if it was Chinese or Sanskrit, and then it was put into Russian, and it was put into Russian that, according to my Russian expert, was probably close to 1,000 to 2,000 years back.
I mean, way ancient Russian in both grammar, syntax, form, and context.
So, so way ancient, right?
Anyway, so we came across that.
One of our guys is looking at it.
He's going to do some experimentation.
And if he's successful, he's going to, you know, run it up for a new patent and see if he can't put it out there, right?
As a method for making these things happen.
Anyway, though, so then we got distracted with all the data.
And I'd left that aspect of things and was just getting back into it with this new article I did on the 32 secrets for being a Vaimana pilot.
And actually, it's a combat pilot for these little airplanes that go with the Vaimana.
So it gets real complicated, right?
The Vaimana are these bikes, like basically big pyramid-shaped things that could even be made out of stone that would fly.
Multiple stories, there were a bunch of different methods by which they were levitated, but essentially it was Mercury spinning in a closed container causing levitation effects in magnets that were electromagnets that were situated around the spinning Mercury in its vessel.
But anyway, so big giant things.
And then these little tiny combat airplane, really, could land on the Vaimana up in the air and take off out of the Vaimana up in the air.
We're talking Vaimana were multiple stories, you know.
Maybe they were three or four stories tall.
They had landing bays.
Some of them were quite large.
There's one description of one that had a complement of 1,200 humans that it could carry.
That was its cargo capacity.
It was basically like a C-130.
It was a big combat ship.
And it would take these guys to wars.
It could take 1,200 people.
That's not the crew.
That's just the carrying capacity.
So that's a lot of fucking people.
You know, you're talking a big ass pyramid there flying through the sky.
Anyway, so very interesting stuff coming out of the old text.
I will, you know, I certainly will not live long enough to see all of the texts that are hidden in Nepal and Tibet and northern India and, you know, western China and southern Russia and stuff translated because in Egypt,
because just in known repositories, there's an estimated 55,000 volumes to be translated.
And if we were to just look at existent literature, they're saying that basically, so I know some guys that are in the translation from Sanskrit to other languages business, right?
So they translated things into English and other languages.
Now they're starting to work with AI, so they're much more productive.
But again, you can't trust that AI.
I'll tell you about that in a second.
But anyway, so, but these guys are saying that basically only about 4% of all the books that are existent in Sanskrit have ever been translated.
And modern, our modern social order, they're saying that, you know, likely that less than that same 4% have ever even been read.
That there's hundreds of thousands of these books, historical, etc., that are lying around waiting to be translated.
Many of them had been translated into Sanskrit from some other language.
They make note of this in the book itself, but of those that have been translated in ancient times from some other language into Sanskrit, many of them have been translated and rewritten in the form of hymns, you know, hymns to these Elohim gods, right?
Just like the Jews with all of their hymns singing about, oh, you know, this guy did a giant genocide on these people and so on and so on, right?
And a lot of those hymns, a lot of the Jewish psalms and songs, ritual songs, are all about death, destruction, killing, warfare, etc.
Because Yahweh was a mean motherfucker war god.
Anyway, so I won't live long enough to see all of these things translated out, but as they are, this will be quite exciting because there's all kinds of technology that's written about in there that it can be recaptured and, you know, reimagined, reinvented, and repurposed and remanifest.
Now, getting into the AI for a second.
So I get documents from people, digital and paper and stuff, our old fart group, we mail shit back and forth.
But anyway, so I get this document, a digital form, that is, we know that it's Turkish and we know it's Armenian.
Okay, it looks to be really old, old Turkish, and we think it's old Armenian, but we just don't know.
So we're going to use AI.
We're going to suss it out.
We're going to do some of our metadata analysis on it.
And so I get this document.
I'm going to do some of the chores and work here.
And so I go and I ask ChatGPT, and it's a straightforward question because I just did not know.
I said, if I were to upload a document that had language on it, could it extract the language out of a JPEG?
And further, could it then translate this stuff for me?
Tell me the languages involved, and then translate this stuff for me.
And I told it that I suspected that one of the languages was Turkish, and I suspected one of the languages was Armenian.
And so it said, yeah, no problem.
Chat says, sure, upload a file, and off we'll go.
And so this is how it is with chat.
You know, it's always positive.
It's always ready to go for you on this shit.
and it says, okay, you know, give me that, we're good.
So I give it the file, and then it grinds away for a few seconds, probably 30 seconds or so.
So it was a tough answer to come up with.
Anyway, and so it grinds away for 30 seconds, and it comes back and it tells me, basically, it's like, oops, you know, I don't have a facility to do OCR and a facility to do translation off of this document or even recognize the language in this particular arrangement with my software.
So basically, what it's saying initially was, sure, no problem, I can do all that, which it can, but it doesn't have any of the supporting software tools arranged the way that it needed to.
And so it was fundamentally what I ended up having to do was to go off and do the OCR and extract the information in a textual form and then divide the information up into both or into the two separate languages because it's not capable of dealing with both Turkish and Armenian simultaneously where it would read like the way this document was written We weren't sure what the fuck we were looking at.
I thought that it was a particular document here or format and I'll get into that in a second but anyway it was like two three two or two lines of one language two or three lines of another language then back to the first language for a couple of lines and then back to the second language for a couple of lines for many pages.
I had like nine pages of documents this way, and it was a fairly small type, so, you know, quite a few words, etc.
And I just wanted to be able to hand it off to the AI and have it do the OCR and then have it do the translation, identify the languages, and then provide me with some metadata stuff and then do translation.
And it wasn't able to do any of that.
I ended up having to do the OCR stuff on my own and then having to separate out each of the different languages and then present it to it.
And sure enough, it agreed that once I was able to do that, it was just a straightforward translation issue.
And it said, yeah, this is way old Turkish, and this is way old something something, which we later identified as being a precursor to Armenia.
Then it started getting a little flaky from there.
But in any event, though, it turned out that this was from an old Bible.
Okay, so it was an old Bible that was being translated out of Turkish and into Armenian.
All right, so it was sort of like what we would think of as an interlinear.
It wasn't word by word.
It was phrase by phrase or, you know, section by section, chapter by chapter, however you want to think about it.
But it was in that same way.
It would show it in one language and then show it in another because it was translating into this old form of Armenian from an old form of Turkish in total as a whole book.
It was interesting.
So, you know, it was a scrap, a fragment.
One of the guys here who's a Bible scholar has identified that it's sort of a bridge piece.
Okay, and so it contains some small number of references to the Old Testament, but it's primarily was a translation of the book of Luke, right?
Mark, Luke, and Matthew are the synoptic Gospels.
Mark is thought to be the oldest.
Luke and Matthew are thought to be contemporaries.
They have stuff in there that Mark does not, but they never disagree with Mark, so that's their base.
But they must, but these two are thought to operate off of what's known as the Q document, which was this common bridge between Luke and Mark, and then it was just differently translated for each of those.
Anyway, though, so but the point of this was that AI is really fucking stupid, right?
It has certain capabilities and it thinks it has those capabilities, and you ask it to do it, and then it can't do it, and it tells you why at that point.
Mainly, it can't do a lot of shit.
So, AI is not anything to be afraid of.
AI is really cool stuff.
If you know how to work it, it's really cool stuff.
You can become very, very, very productive.
I was able to get the Turkish, which is what we were really after, was the oldest of the languages.
And we weren't interested so much in the actual material in these pages here.
In the first six pages or so, there was a section that was not like the others.
And it was, as we thought, the bona fides for the document itself.
And that was the cool part we were after, really, because it pointed to a particular family in Turkey and what had happened to this family and why these books were being produced.
Now, we're doing something unusual in that we're contacting this family directly because they still exist in Turkey, and we're going to offer them these documents because it is basically their family Bible, right?
Now, it's tricky because this family is now Muslim, but they were at that time very early Christians.
And so, we'll see what if they want the books or not.
And then we're going to ask permission to talk about some of the stuff with attribution.
If we start getting into any attribution, then we basically expose this family and we don't want to cause them any problems, right?
We don't know their circumstances or so on.
So, we're just being responsible humans and saying, basically, you know, we've got these books, we can publish them as we choose, but we're going to be nice and ask if there's reasons that you guys would, you know, think yourselves at risk if we do publish them.
And it's not that we're going to publish them, we're going to just write some articles about what we've discovered here.
So, anyway, though, so basically, what I'm saying is that, you know, AI thinks it has all kinds of capabilities and will brag about it, what it can do, and it can't do any of this shit.
No real reason to be afraid of the crap.
Unlike, you know, Carrie Cassidy and Gene Decode, who are like apparently scared shitless of AI coming and eating their lunch or attaching to their spine or some damn thing.
But I think of AI as pretty cool.
I know a lot of programmers and coders that are using it now, and they're all very much more productive.
They're all making a lot of more code because you can use AI to do all your boilerplate and then just go back and tune it, extract the design patterns, tighten it all up, and there you go.
And you can use AI to suss out kinds of things, but you've got to be careful because initially it'll say, yes, you do it this and this way, but it never really provides you with details.
It comes in and gives you some vague description.
So, like, if you were to say, you know, how do you turn the navigation GPS on in such and so car?
It'll say, oh, sure, no problem.
And it finds this information, and then it presents you with something that is like sort of close to what you wanted, but it's not really the exact step by step by step.
It is an aggregation of the step by step by step that it found in the indices, not the actual documents themselves.
And so it gets tricky when you start thinking about AI and how it works and what you're going to end up with and so on.
I have to stop and get some fuel here.
Got to buy some diesel.
But so our work with the Mind-to-machine interface, all the space aliens, all of that kind of stuff.
It's proceeding along, and we are actually gaining a real understanding now of a lot more of the beautiful fence there, of the books that are good sources, etc., etc.
We're building up a corpus, a library of source material that provides us an interesting view of all of this stuff.
There are hints in some of these documents that, you know, so-and-so ruler in such and such a age that, you know, is identified as this particular astronomy, these particular alignments, you know, in the year when this planet is in that nakshatra and this, this, and the sun's over here, and that kind of thing.
So you can identify the years.
We do find that there are descriptions of actual manufacturing directions for these Vaimana.
Not just the use of them, not just the capabilities, not just what you have to do to pilot them and what you have to put yourself through, but actually how to build the fuckers.
There are a lot, and I'm saying a lot.
I don't know, we've probably come across 40, maybe more than that, documents that go to, that describe the care of the humans that are involved in flying your Vaimana, what they have to go through.
And the ones that operate the mind-to-machine interface and their health and how long they live and all of that is fairly detailed in some of these guys.
And there's pointers to other documents that are much more detailed.
So one of the books that we've got actually says this is an extract from a medical text about these guys, about what is to be encountered in your Vaimana pilot and how to deal with the problems they're going to have.
Apparently it's not.
We were thinking maybe it was like radiation, but apparently, you know, and it makes sense if you're in a big stone spaceship, you're not going to get a lot of radiation coming through the stone.
And some of these things are described as having basically a wall that was two or three meters thick.
So, you know, nine foot thick stone outer wall in your Vaimana.
These, they didn't have to be airtight.
When you fire up the engines on these things, they create a self-sealing, closed environment within these kind of bubbles, right?
And so the oxygen and stuff is trapped by the electromagnetic fields around these guys.
So you don't have to worry so much about those kind of problems relative to your spaceship.
It'll be self-sealing just due to being out there with this energy around it.
We also see that these guys are described as going from world to world.
And there's one really nice set of passages.
Maybe it's 50, 50 of these little sayings, little phrases that describe using these vessels to fly to other suns and also how to navigate.
And then we found another set of passages in which there is a reference to a specific book about navigation of these and how to navigate based on what they call the dark spectrum.
Okay, so that's a whole nother thing there.
So okay, so there's basically two color schemes.
Mostly you guys are all familiar because that's all they ever teach you is the primary color scheme, you know, red, blue, green, yellow, you know, white, black, all of that, right?
There's this other color scheme that in our modern age is Gota's, Gota's color wheel.
He was a philosopher and so on, and he had a different understanding of color.
And he said, look, you people with your color wheels are really stupid.
You're leaving out, you know, the true browns, the magentas, the purples, the lavenders, and so on.
And here's this whole other color wheel aspect.
Well, it turns out that in these navigational texts, they reference using the dark color spectrum to navigate.
And if you really read this, it took us a long time to understand what they were talking about because necessarily a lot of the language had been translated and working it back to its original state in order to get real original meaning was a serious bit of work on this one document.
I mean, it must have taken us, there were four of us doing it.
We used AI, but even so, it's just tedious as fuck because you can't trust the AI to get it accurate at the detail level.
So you got to go over every word on your own.
It's just that it does the translation and then you're able to get in there and look at the individual words and tweak it, so to speak, right?
But anyway, so it took us like months on that, maybe a whole year to go through the one document.
But fundamentally, it would appear that you can use, with the Vaimana, they had the ability to identify suns by an aggregate number that reflected or that was representational of the frequencies that these suns emitted in the dark color spectrum, which was observable by these devices within the Vaimana.
So you could, and they describe these as vapors.
That's the closest in this particular book.
That was the closest we could come to it, but they were saying you would have, you would look into these vapors, and it's not like scrying or, you know, looking into water, that kind of thing.
But they would say you would look into these vapors and you would see in these vapors the plethora of suns in your local region and you could dial into another region.
And it actually had a rotating dial described that would flip from like screen to screen to screen kind of a thing, right?
And on each screen would be a number of these registration signatures of the dark spectrum from these suns.
So they were not talking about those aspects of visible light, of sunlight that we take now, but they were talking about the magenta, the lavender, the purple, brown, and other dark spectrum colors that went into forming this registration number for the suns.
And you'd get this, they called it a word.
It was actually numerics, but you'd get this word that described your particular sun, and then you would go to another device within the Vaimana, and you would instruct the Vaimana that that was the goal.
Okay, so they didn't say destination, they would say goal.
Or the point to become accomplished.
And it also could be the point at which we will access.
And I think that that's really more of a descriptor of accessing the local space, right?
So you're going to pop out of your hyperspace into local space, and you would access that local space.
And there you go.
And you would do so based on this dark color spectrum that would be coming off of these suns that could be picked up by this device.
Now, it doesn't mean you could see it.
There were some discussions about actually being able to see visibly lavender and purple suns.
And I don't think they're actually purple to our eyes.
It's just that they emit more of the dark spectrum than they do of the light spectrum.
There's a bunch of stuff about the dark spectrum and energy frequencies and how to call forth the energies and how to deal with these energies that derive from this dark spectrum or able to be accessed through this dark spectrum.
So it's an interesting thing.
You know, we had not obviously had not anticipated running across it.
And it took us, like I say, about a year just to figure out what the hell we were looking at here and what the thing was actually talking about.
But once we did so, it started making sense.
And then we found other references to it in other ancient documents that also supported the idea that this dark spectrum was used for multiple different purposes by these machines, one of which is the navigation.
And then we also have these spectrums be useful for like warfare kind of stuff, right?
They apparently, I get into that at some other point, but they apparently are able to be viewed and they could show you like points of fragility within the local environment that could be accessed and changed energetically by something in your Vaimana.
So you could actually cause your enemies problems.
And a lot of these things are all about your fucking enemies.
Anyway, I'm going to stop and get fuel here.
I'll pick up on this later.
But anyway, so we're making progress.
It's slow.
I'm really bummed out by all this stuff that's going on around here with us.
And I've got to do local stuff.
So it'll be a while, but maybe in a year, maybe a year and a half, we're thinking about releasing a compendium, you know, organized approach to everything we've learned here.
Export Selection