Seven or eight, seven something in the evening here on uh 7-7 on July 7th.
Uh coming back from the emergency room.
We've had a hellacious uh eight days here.
Uh we've got a plan, we're sort of on the mend.
Uh so this is good.
I've got my own physical issues, we've got relatives that have um problems and issues, so I've got to do a lot of stuff.
Uh very unexpected series of days this week.
And um we're through we're making it through, we're coping, but very, very, very difficult.
Anyway, though, um, so we don't want to dwell on that.
I've got a few minutes here before I um uh arrive back home where I then have to take care of uh you know all the stuff that's been neglected for the past couple of days, and uh you know, get everybody food and that kind of thing, right?
So um uh what the hell is that?
Something in the road.
Uh geez.
Anyway, um, so I wanted to talk about yeah, so I wanted to talk about um uh what at the moment is being called uh the other physics.
Okay, so you'll hear this on some of the uh whistleblowers going to Congress about all of the UFO shit and all of the the reverse-engineered uh you know space alien craft, etc.
And they'll use the term the other physics.
And what they're basically saying is the other physics that has no dependency whatsoever on uh Einstein, the um Elohim worship cult and all of their quote scientists, um, it has no dependency on any of that, right?
It doesn't exist off of that.
So the other other physics does not acknowledge the grit.
So we live in a world here where they're spending bazillions of dollars, right, on CERN on the large handron collider.
And the um Elohim worship cult is uh involved in all of that shit.
Uh, you know, it's all uh controlled by rabbis, it's all satanic, there's Pharisees all over.
And this is kind of like the interesting part of this.
These guys are gritologists, they they think grit exists whether consciousness does or not.
And they think that if you get enough grit of the appropriate types together, you will get consciousness.
Now, both of these things are false, right?
Consciousness exists, grit does not.
Um, since we're all consciousness being shoved into uh meat suits here, uh this this other physics takes an entirely different approach.
And and um uh so we can acknowledge that the large hadron collider can stay uh operational for a thousand years and keep finding smaller and smaller and smaller and smaller and smaller particles,
and it will never never ever ever find the smallest particle because we are all consciousness, the the particles only exist as a um uh momentary frame of reference within our physical consciousness being expressed in our bodies,
and uh larger consciousness that is everything, including ourselves, is quite happy to let us drill down and drill down and drill down and find smaller and smaller and smaller bits that it will create just ahead of our looking for them.
So they don't exist independent of our consciousness, and this is something that the uh gritology people, right?
The the grit first, grit only, and grit always uh group that we see like Eric Weinstein and you know uh Brian Keating and all of these kind of people, right?
It's the grit-only uh model of reality is dominated by Jews.
Uh those Jews are under the control of the Pharisees, the rabbinical councils.
They are fed certain things, they come to certain conclusions based on what they're fed.
And they uh start with the premises that are um deeply deeply inculcated into the Talmud.
So our science is basically a subset of the Talmud, which is all this satanic shit.
And so again, here is the irony of it.
They are uh conscious, uh the Elohim worship cult, the people at CERN, uh, you know, they're their consciousness, they don't recognize their own consciousness existent independent of the grit, and so they're gonna keep looking for grit here,
yet they are Satanist and they are attempting to contact with all of those weird rituals and shit, uh, the consciousness that they think exists as their Satan, independent of anybody else's consciousness.
And so uh I actually find consciousness science approach to reality ever so much easier, right?
Because you figure things out relative.
So I've got a lot of patents.
I've let them all lapse.
Uh every single one of the patents I've had has the idea has come to me uh by virtue of the starting with a consciousness first and then drilling down from that point on.
So the premise is that we're little meat sacks uh shoved with with consciousness shoved in us.
And we can do things.
We can say, okay, if that premise is accurate, if the other physics based on an ontological model works as us being uh encapsulated, uh you know, isolated and encapsulated bits of um consciousness, then we can say what does XYZ, what purpose in that model would XYZ serve?
And so you could say, you know, what purpose does light serve, uh, you know, what purpose does gravity serve, how does that come about, et cetera, et cetera.
Bearing in mind, these are all what we think of as the material reality simply does not exist.
It is only a uh incredibly uh speedy flash of information in our consciousness that convinces us that this world is is uh factually material.
When the science gets into it and they look at an atom, it's all empty space.
In fact, they can never really find the electron, proton, or or et cetera.
When they go to look at them, they are not there, so they do all of these these tricks to say that they are there.
We know the mass is there and so on, uh, but it only exists at that time that we are in fact measuring it.
And this comes back to the 22 trillion times a second pulse that creates all of our materium and um uh creates all matter and all the material effects, all forms of energy, gravity, you know, light, sound, all of that kind of stuff, radiation, all that comes from the pulse.
And if you have this ontological view that consciousness exists, we know this, uh, actually, and it's stupid of the gritologists to uh take their approach because they're denying their own consciousness.
And and you should be able to say, hmm, uh, you know, cogito ergo sum, uh, I think therefore I am.
And you can also repeat that, right?
And or uh reverse it, and you can say that I am, and this allows me to think.
And that's probably a better statement of it, right?
Because thought and cognition and stuff are artifacts of the consciousness.
Anyway, so it's a different kind of science.
It's an other physics, right?
Because the physics is based on discovering what consciousness gets, what what benefit consciousness has uh receives from the things it creates that we we call physics, the physical reality and the physical um interaction of that physical reality with itself and the energies and so on, right?
And so if you figure out, oh, you know, uh, I mean, it's really gets long and involved in it and it's um these very nice thought experiments uh to go down, and you can learn a lot of different things.
So I determined uh the nature of magnetism uh thinking about this, and then I came up with uh, and then I so I said, okay, so if magnetism exists as it does, and what benefits does consciousness get out of it,
pursued that for a while, and then I started uh on the ancillary part of it is uh, and that is what uh benefit does my consciousness, can my consciousness um derive from this information from this understanding about how magnetism interacts with uh the rest Of the uh materium and why it exists within the material.
And so magnetism is a component of the electromagnetism, right?
And so magnetism is electricity.
Electricity is our materium, but electricity doesn't exist without magnetism, and actually magnetism won't exist without electricity.
So you get into all these different kinds of things, but you can think them down.
But my point being was that I had nine uh patents that I'd applied for.
This was back a few years.
Um I was doing these things with uh um physical permanent magnets, okay, and I had achieved some really spectacular effects.
So almost all of the uh magnetic magic in your world uh exist from electromagnetism.
So there's electromagnetism in this recorder, there's the uh electromagnet, there's the little bit of electricity that causes the magnetism to write a little tiny magnetic bubble onto the media here that is actually storing my voice as um as I do this,
and so there's magnetism uh flowing throughout all of this in various different slightly um affected forms, and so as I say, magnetism is like one of the key things, but you can explore all of these.
I explored them and I came up with some interesting ways of doing things with magnets that are permanent magnets that needed did not need to have um electricity input to it in order to create complex uh what I call twisted or folded magnetic fields,
so I was able to um collapse or concentrate or twist or fold uh magnetic fields from permanent magnets in ways that are theoretically, especially under the old physics, um, not possible.
And yet I was able to do it because I started from an ontological approach and worked my way down to determining what benefit these things offer to um the materium to consciousness and so on, and then also to see if I can use some of those benefits for myself at a personal level.
Um anyway, though, I I abandoned the patents.
I I'd applied for the patents with preliminaries, and then had done some more research.
I'd done been doing research on the patent office for years because I suspected something was wonky there, and it is wonky, and I've determined some statistics to back up my um understanding of the wonkiness, right?
And here's the thing individual private uh persons applying for patents, uh, will find themselves in patent disputes if they have a valid um new uh process or procedure.
Uh they'll find themselves suddenly involved in uh counterclaims to that uh process.
Uh lots of people do not, so there's lots and lots and lots of patents that are filed that have no real commercial value, uh, this kind of thing, they may be unique, etc.
etc.
But they're uh a lot of them are filed and they're filed badly, and so they're not granted.
But there's a lot of patents that are granted that are basically useless, right?
That there's it's just one small change to something that already exists, and that small change has no economic value uh and probably will never be implemented by any kind of industry.
All right, so it's not going to be an economic gain for that that individual.
Let's back up and say most patents.
Uh I think it's over 70% of all the patents that are granted are from corporations.
So most of the things applying for uh patents or corporations.
Now, here's where the here's where the rubber meets the road, though.
Uh if we if we said 70% of all patents were uh filed by corporations, they're doing so for you know um commercial uh exploitation reasons, right?
They want to commercialize these things.
So um they uh they that would leave 30% of the patents uh to be filed by individuals.
Uh The individuals filing the patents aren't necessarily savvy into the commercial operation or use of it.
They may want to exploit it, etc., but they they're usually not as sophisticated as any of the people in the corporations.
Now, of that 30%, it uh it really falls into it, it divides fairly evenly in a two-thirds one-third.
So about two-thirds of the patents that will be granted to those individuals are not sought for or not sought after by corporations.
And so the individuals that were would get these patents would have to go and flog them to the corporations.
They'd have to introduce the idea of the corporation and say, I have a patent and you need to pay me if you want to use this.
Okay.
Well, here's the here's where the the whole thing rocks and uh gets a little uh on the wonky side.
And it turns out that uh the 10% of people that are filing patents as individuals whose patents are uh basically instantly commercial uh, you know, in terms of their uh applicability, someone wants this, it solves a problem in a corporation or so on.
That 10% of all the patent uh filers is egregiously raped.
So that 10% of all the patent filers, so they're individuals, they're filing patents, those those patents have um uh known commercial value as soon as they are granted, uh, in the sense that you don't have to, you know, go sell someone on the idea of uh you know creating um multicolored spaghetti uh wigs that you can eat in case you're gonna starve, you know, some some weird ass shit, right?
So, in other words, these are are solid um uh uh and corporations will want them.
All right, so that 10%, 84% of those guys have their patents taken from them.
Have their they run into a wall.
So 84% of them run into a wall that is a corporation making a claim on what they think is their patent, their art, okay, and all of a sudden, so you submit a patent, you've got a um uh uh you got a new new machine that you hold in your hand.
Uh it's like a um uh propeller on a stick, and you can take this propeller on a stick with its little electric motor, and you can go and stand on any skateboard, hold the thing out from under from you, and the propeller will whirl away and it will uh pull you uh on your on your skateboard.
Doesn't push you, it pulls you because when it does that, then you get the benefit of the air flowing over you uh that you wouldn't in the if it was pushing you.
And so there's the there's the uniqueness of the invention is that it's gonna pull you instead of pushing you, right?
Because other people have invented giant fans to push people on skateboards.
Anyway, and so you apply for this uh and it's got a commercial value, and just as soon as your application hits, like within two or three days, and this is still in the uh immediate process of being evaluated, within two or three days,
there's a claim against it, and it'll be by a corporation that probably already in this business, and you know, making the blades for the the propellers or the the engines or the little electric motor or some damn thing, and so they think they can use this patent to become uh you know more profitable, right?
And you'll find yourself as that uh submitter of the um uh self-cooling um uh skateboard fan, um, you know, or skateboard power fan, however you want to describe it, uh you'll find yourself uh getting a notice from the patent office saying, hey, uh we've run up against something here, your patent has enough features that it's in conflict with corporation XYZ patent, right?
And corporation XYZ at that stage has not even filed a uh a uh preliminary.
That's that's what I've discovered is that there are places there are times when that occurs.
There's other times when what they do is they someone in the patent office uh you know talks to their APAC uh handler to their Elohim worship cult uh rabbi and says, Hey, here's an interesting patent that you know fits so and so's needs.
And then they go over to that corporation and they say, Hey, so-and-so, pay us some money and we'll we'll get this preliminary patent of yours filed.
And they've all already written it up, changed some of the words, and there you go.
And so they pay uh they file, and because of the nature of the filing process, during that period of time, uh there it's there's a squishy period of time, right?
You can get exact down to the minute as to when you file, uh, but that's only held at the patent office.
There's not a um independent agency anywhere that that records that you filed this on that particular day.
Uh, but even if they did, you would still have the following issue, and that is that the corporations show up having filed with papers saying they filed six hours ahead or two days ahead, that kind of thing.
And then you can fight them, uh, which some people do, and so 84% of the single patent holders that have a commercially viable product end up getting into a claim situation.
Well, lo and behold, all of those claims, because you sign your rights away when you file a patent, all of those claims are adjudicated in the patent court.
And of course, the patent court decides 99% of the time in favor of the corporation.
And so this is why this is why I've let all my patents lapped, have withdrawn all the preliminaries, and won't be filing patents because the patent office is corrupt and is uh basically a funnel uh to insiders in the uh corporate world.
And this is a um this is just exactly the same level of corruption as um uh that fucker Falky uh getting um uh royalties on the MRNA vaccine.
So he makes millions of dollars, he's the highest paid civil servant, and then he makes millions of dollars in royalties on this shit that he's forcing people to take.
You know, so tell me that isn't corrupt, right?
And yeah, he did force them, you know.
He they engineered the whole thing to construct that.
So anyway, I you know, I just don't buy into all of that.
Uh, or I don't accept people alibis and and snap back to them and just I get fierce.
Uh, even in the hospital settings here when they come on in and try and say something about my relatives and stuff about we're gonna do this, and it's like, no, no, no, no.
You're gonna establish who the fuck you are and what authority you have and what knowledge you have before you do anything, right?
Just because I don't trust any of you guys.
Uh, you know, you fuckers were pushing and still are pushing COVID.
Anyway, uh, so the other physics is gonna be really in our face as we get into the space aliens.
It may be part of this thing for July 15th.
Now, there's a lot of indicators by the way.
Uh, so July 15th is a Monday.
I have had lots and lots and lots of um data sets that keep coming back to a to a very odd situation, uh a strange juxtaposition of words, and that strange juxtaposition is um black Tuesday and summer.
We just don't have stock market crashes in summer, and we we do have them on Tuesday, and usually it's a black Monday or a black Friday, not usually a black Tuesday, right?
Uh, but Tuesdays are uh a particular weighty day for these kind of things.
So it could be that on July 16th, we have a stock market crash, uh, and that the building tension is somehow part of that, right?
Sir circumstances start on Monday, everybody's wondering, oh my god, I gotta get out of this stock or whatever the hell, and uh, and then um so there's massive building tension, then there's the release of the tension on on the Tuesday when everybody does get out of the stocks at whatever level of loss or whatever, and then they're you know they're bitching and moaning and wailing and uh you know crying and shit.
Uh, but that's all release language, and it's a done deal that way, and it could be yet uh financial.
Now the reason I bring this up is because of another computer program, which is uh Martin Armstrong's um sorry, I can't think of the moment what he calls that software, but he has he has some software that does uh projections.
He doesn't use a large language model as far as I know, uh, but he's he's consistent, very good, and has gone to jail for his software uh uh irritating the government.
So, you know, there's some solid solid work there.
Uh, you know, proof is in the in the incarceration.
Um, so uh he's got something pegged for the 15th.
He's got a disaster cycle or something.
I had to be honest, I have not been to his site for maybe this whole year.
It's been that busy here, and I've got so much other stuff going.
And when I'm running data, I don't like to get free front loaded anyway.
Uh, but but I just have not looked at it for a long damn time.
So this was just sent to me by um somebody in email, and I'm just pointing it out that we still have yet to deal with the economic aspects that are that are gonna crash our society here fairly quick.
Anyway, though, so the other physics, the ontological model, uh, there is a methodology that I'm working on with some other people that allows us to um explore this in a way that so with the grit world, basically what they do is they go and find out all of the elements and then they figure out how how all the elements glom together in this particular stuff, whatever stuff they're looking at, you know, sand or or whatever, right?
And in our model, we start off with the consciousness and see how consciousness um forms all of this stuff that we're looking at.
Uh and it's a it's a different kind of a methodology because we're not being reductionists.
So basically, we're not reducing uh consciousness in the process of analyzing it.
Uh fundamentally, what we're doing is a complexity analysis.
Now, complexity analysis does not function by um uh reductionist methods, okay.
It's an entirely different process.
I'm too close to where I need to be, and I'm getting too tired.
So it's 7 30 now, and I got on the road this morning uh uh at the first trip.
Because I I don't know, I'd have to count.
I think six or seven trips today.
Um about uh so shit, 415 miles today.
Um in these, you know, 70 and 80 mile trip kind of things a little short runs.
Uh but in any event, so where was I?
Anyway, I'm here.
So uh right, so uh I've got all kinds of stuff going on.
I've got uh a month of hell, a month and four days of hell ahead of me, and I'm gonna have to probably put off some large projects and stuff, and all of these fuckers are chopping our roads up and doing all this kind of stuff, so I'm not in a particularly a good mood, and I and I probably will not have either the uh I won't have the inclination necessarily uh nor the energy uh nor the time uh to get at any more of these audios in any um uh short order.
Alright.
So uh this will probably gonna be the last uh little flurry.
I've got one I did this morning, and I'll do this one and we'll see where we're at.
Um good luck, guys.
You know, the world's uh gonna get really shitty here for a period of time and we just all have to cope.
We've just all got to uh uh pull together and do what we have to to get through it.
It will ease up and it'll be far better on the other side, but uh uh it's gonna be really brutal for everybody.
The kind of brutality stuff that uh you know I'm facing here at this point.
Anyway, everybody take care.
It's uh rough and dangerous times, and you want to be very, very, very aware of where you're you are and what the fuck you're doing.
And who else is there too?
So anyway, we'll we'll talk about space aliens and the other physics.
Uh, I'm fascinated by that, and I won't be able to shut up about it.
So if I do get a chance, I'll I'll pop off another one of these.