Hello Chromies!
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit clifhigh.substack.com
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit clifhigh.substack.com
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Hello humans! | |
| Hello humans! | |
| 958 in the morning on December 3rd. | |
| Actually, I should say, hello chromies, hello chromies, because the language having to change, right? | |
| So now we're into contact and humanity is experiencing blatant, in the open kind of space alien demonstrations and contact and stuff, right? | |
| Now, some of this shit may be the breakaway civilization fucking around, but some of it is not. | |
| When this occurs in terms of when it conceptually enters in the framework of the normies, by that point, we will have changed our language to accommodate this. | |
| And some of the things we'll do is we'll say, we'll alter our language to reflect these differences. | |
| And so if there's human looking, mostly, space aliens wandering around, to differentiate, you won't just say, hey, bro, when you know you're talking to another human, you'll say, hey, Chromie, you know, because they share chromosomes. | |
| We all have the same basic chromosome structure, right? | |
| Unlike the space aliens. | |
| So homie will be replaced with chromi, in my opinion, right? | |
| It actually is showing up in the data. | |
| A lot of different kinds of new forms of slang, okay? | |
| Slang leads language. | |
| Usually slang originates in children between the age of say five and nine. | |
| And if it survives, you know, if it doesn't become old and stale to them, their peers and their the next step up, you know, the teenagers will adopt it. | |
| And then if it survives, the teenagers, and usually slang dies a very predictable fashion in like mere, well, it's like less than 90 days mostly. | |
| But when it does survive and enters into the mainstream, it's already, you know, when the parents start picking it up and seeing the kids talking and saying, you know, saying, well, why are you calling Bob a chromie? | |
| What's that all about, right? | |
| Then they'll start picking it up and because it'll be hip and new and they'll start using it and it'll spread into the larger social order and you'll start hearing it, right? | |
| We'll start writing about it and so on. | |
| So all of us chromies are going to have to accommodate visitors, okay? | |
| There ain't shit we can do to stop them from coming down here and setting up shop, right? | |
| And nor would we want to because we're going to be doing that same thing once we've got the same level of gear. | |
| You know, I personally want to go check out a lot of the planets here in this solar system. | |
| See what the fuck, you know? | |
| And look, you'll have, you know, there'll be people that won't want to do this and there'll be vast quantities of normies that just want to be normies and, you know, don't want to put their lives at risk, you know, getting into strange electromechanical devices and whizzing off into who the fuck knows where that they may not be able to find their way back. | |
| And so the normies will be here and will stay here, but there will be a percentage of the population that will be thrilled about all of this and they will figure out ways to make it pay for them, right? | |
| I actually think we're getting, okay, so money is going to basically disappear as we get into the UFO world, right? | |
| Sci-fi world. | |
| When you've got a UFO and you can go to Mars and you can find an ancient civilization and you can pick up a little who's he was it and bring it back here and sell it to some rich dude for millions of dollars, hey, you know, you're covered, right? | |
| You don't have to get out and work and shit. | |
| But also our social order is going to change because we'll be able to like get gold, go down to the bottom of the ocean and just pick the shit up, you know, that kind of thing. | |
| Money is going to be less of a driving force. | |
| And so the new form of money in it is actually showing up in the data. | |
| It's not described the way I'm going to describe it, but it's nonetheless accommodating this idea. | |
| And this is again something very akin to when Bitcoin first appeared. | |
| Okay, so when I did that first run in 1997, it said we were going to have a new form of money. | |
| And I thought, ah, this bunch of shit, you know. | |
| And actually, I was focused on money kind of things because I wanted to predict stock market moves. | |
| Because, you know, I had things I wanted to do. | |
| I didn't want to waste my time laboring for people if I didn't have to. | |
| I enjoyed programming and stuff, but I wanted to do things on my own. | |
| So, you know, I decided, okay, I'll make a bunch of money on the stock market and then I can just do what I want to do. | |
| And, you know, all this predictive linguistics stuff is pretty fascinating anyway. | |
| So money is going to alter, in my opinion, to the point that the only real money on the planet is going to be like social status, okay, social currency, so to speak, right? | |
| If you are current in the moment, if you're like a happening guy, a treasured chromey, right? | |
| Trechrome, if you're Trey Chrome, you will have like social credits, okay? | |
| And so you'll be able to go places and people will give you things because of your social credit. | |
| It'd be kind of like saying, you know, I don't know, who's a famous person? | |
| There's that famous tranny, Taylor Swift. | |
| So it'd be like, you know, being able to say, hey, the famous tranny Taylor Swift, you know, wears my dick-tucking underwear, right? | |
| So you could sell your dick-tucking underwear better because the tranny Taylor Smith uses it, right? | |
| So it's that social cachet that allows you to sell a few more pairs of your underwear. | |
| And it was a real thrill for you, you know, selling tranny dick-tucking underwear to have Taylor Swift come in and buy some, right? | |
| Okay, so that's the kind of money we're going to have. | |
| I don't know how we will like monetize it because it's going to be a social, it's going to be a feeling. | |
| It's actually going to be turning emotions into currency in a sense. | |
| You know, I'm laughing about it because we don't have really a description of how this occurs. | |
| There is stuff in the data that says, you know, something really strange is going to go on over these next couple of years. | |
| Relative to currency, financial, fiscal, yada, yada, yada. | |
| Anyway, so you'll see a lot of different language being popped up, being proffered. | |
| Probably about at least half of it won't make it. | |
| Half of it will drop as being, you know, cool and all of that kind of stuff, but just doesn't quite cover it the way this other word does. | |
| And so you'll, you know, you'll move on to the other word. | |
| And so our language is going to morph over time so that humans will be able to talk to each other and to space aliens and will be able to differentiate easily the nuances and the pertinent details of conversations and stuff that they're relaying. | |
| So we'll need language to suggest that this human I'm talking about is not a native human. | |
| He's not native to Earth. | |
| And so we'll have some language to say that, oh, you know, I was talking to, you know, Joe Blow, the space alien over there, right? | |
| Only you won't use the term space alien. | |
| It'll just be too cumbersome. | |
| And so we'll have some other encapsulating phrase that will be able to be used in polite conversation, right? | |
| There will also be curse words. | |
| So we'll have, you know, various different kinds of curse words defaming these humans because they're not natives, because they're not chromies, because they don't share chromosome structures with you. | |
| Oh, you know, whatever the fuck kind of bastard words about them, all reflecting our emotion and our frustration and so on. | |
| So we're in for like 80 years of this shit, right? | |
| It'll only take us a few decades to get the zero-point technology spread around the planet enough that lots and lots and lots of attentions in humanity go away and a lot more people are living a lot more effective lives. | |
| But it'll take us 80 years to accommodate the structure changes of the technology into our social order. | |
| So as an instance, as an example, we had automobiles in the late 1890s, like selling all over the place. | |
| All that was the big rage. | |
| Everybody's getting into Stanley steamers and all these others. | |
| In fact, there were even several electric cars in the 1890s. | |
| One of them was quite famous. | |
| It was an all-aluminum vehicle and it ran on batteries. | |
| And it did a test. | |
| I remember reading about this in a Journal of Engineering that was produced in 1899. | |
| And they talked about this all-aluminum electric vehicle that had three batteries wired in series. | |
| These are 12-volt regular DC batteries, three batteries wired in series. | |
| And the car was, you know, it was basically a little like Model A kind of a shape. | |
| Anyway, and it went over 100 miles and returned. | |
| So it went over 200 miles in a round trip without charging. | |
| And it was a big deal, right? | |
| So anyway, so at that time, in the late 1800s, it was going to be another 50 years. | |
| before we put in the infrastructure for the interstate system. | |
| Okay, so even though cars, automobiles, trucks, automated fuel powered, whether it was electricity or diesel or whatever, or gasoline, but engines, motive engines moving people around other than horses, it took us that entire time. | |
| So it took, let's just say it was, I mean, it was until 69 before the interstate was effectively completed. | |
| But just at the start in the 50s when it was conceptualized and they started putting the money into it, you know, you're looking at 50 years just to accommodate the automobile. | |
| So imagine what it's going to be like trying to accommodate, you know, no road transportation, flying vehicles, right? | |
| We won't need all these roads, but we're not going to rip them up because there will be a point for ground traffic. | |
| You know, it's not going to be particularly cost-effective for UPS to use these UFOs to get stuff delivered. | |
| And we will still need UPS. | |
| We'll still need people working. | |
| We'll still need manufacturing and, you know, that kind of thing. | |
| And all that will go on for like 50 years or 80 years to be integrated to the point where there's no, basically it'll take us eight decades to get to the point where we don't have to make social or infrastructure changes in order to accommodate the new technology. | |
| And a lot of those changes, by the way, will simply be removing shit. | |
| So once we've got ZPT spread around the country enough, we can just get rid of all of the power lines, right? | |
| All the high energy leaking power lines. | |
| So the power lines that are over our heads that bring power to your house deliver less than one one thousandth of the power that starts out. | |
| It's a goofy system. | |
| Mostly it leaks up into the air. | |
| Mostly we don't use all the energy we produce. | |
| And so we'll do this. | |
| We'll go along and we'll peel off all of those copper, all those power lines and stuff and take down all the power poles and this sort of thing. | |
| There may be a period of time where we still have to rely on cable, okay, like internet cable and telephone cable. | |
| And there is a big point to that, to keeping those at a security level, right? | |
| Because it's not like Wi-Fi where anybody can pick it up, that sort of thing. | |
| We do have for sure certain knowledge that there's no longer any encryption that's effective on the planet and there's no longer any secrets that can be effectively kept on the planet because more and more people are now being able to access this technology wherein I'll describe it this way, localized or space is localized. | |
| So like the space in your room in your house or whatever is identified and localized. | |
| That's the term that they use for it. | |
| And you can pick up conversations that occurred in that space in the past. | |
| You can even pick up such things as facial movements and nuance in the voice. | |
| We'll go into this kind of technology in the future here. | |
| I'll tell you about it. | |
| mean you know at some point so um uh so there's no uh there's a dog there Oh, well, they're going to work it out. | |
| Okay, so you just see weird shit out here on these county roads. | |
| Anyway, so over these 80 years, even though we may get, you know, ZPT, zero-point technology, spread around in like the first 15 or so, being on all the continents and, you know, taking or putting into an innovation boom and all of this kind of thing, | |
| even though we may see that occur, it'll still take us 80 years to get our infrastructure and everything sorted out to the point where it's like integrated, you know, where it's part of the social order and our social order is like wrapped around it. | |
| And during that period of time, we will alter the language ahead of these other alterations in the social order and the our environment right language precedes movement because language pops right up after thought thought is what is required before everything so okay chromies so uh so you can expect this to occur now that we're into the contact period | |
| I don't know how long it's going to take us for that. | |
| It might be years, you know. | |
| There's no hurry other than us doing weird shit with nuclear weapons. | |
| There's no countdown deadline, timer action, or any of that sort of thing going on, right? | |
| I am expecting that we are at the point now, or we will be there very, very, very shortly, like days, weeks, certainly not a month, in which the fucktard group in the military will have ceased shooting at the UFOs with their radar weapons with the intent of bringing them down, okay? | |
| We may still yet be shooting at them. | |
| It may flare up, and we may go into these actual battles and shit, especially as I think that the alien reproduction vehicle crowd is going to try and engineer something like that, a false flag, right? | |
| But it's not going to hold. | |
| It's not going to be persistent. | |
| And our contention with the space aliens is going to evolve into other kinds of interaction. | |
| So this contact period where they're just sitting up there hovering around, letting themselves be seen, you know, showing how cool their spaceships are, this kind of thing. | |
| It might go on for a few months. | |
| At some point, we're going to have the contact introduction. | |
| Now, you can have non-governmental contact in a meaningful way that will be socially altering in any number of circumstances. | |
| So I am of the opinion that this contact is not likely to be space aliens coming down and talking to individuals. | |
| The space aliens know we've got, you know, that we deal in fantasy. | |
| They know that there's a bunch of fuckers out there claiming to have been contacted by, you know, blue avians. | |
| You know, Gaia gets beamed out into space. | |
| They saw all that Cory Goodhor shit, and they were rolling around on the floor laughing. | |
| But they're aware of that sort of thing, right? | |
| And so individual contact does not really serve their needs at this particular point, except in a very narrow niche. | |
| And those people that they would contact that way are not going to be going out blabbing about it, right? | |
| So anybody that's going to tell you, oh, oh, the space aliens have come and talked to me, that's horseshit, okay? | |
| There may be people that will tell you that further on down the road here, further in time, as other things have occurred. | |
| But they'll be doing it in a different context. | |
| They're not going to be trying to get attention and so on and so on, right? | |
| But we may well get to the point where we have blatant contact, non-governmental. | |
| And so, you know, space aliens may just decide they're going to intrude, stop by, show themselves, land, and announce themselves, say hiya all, and then take off. | |
| And they may do it in places like football game, right? | |
| Outdoor arena, that kind of thing, where the spaceship comes on over, and then settles on the ground. | |
| And then a guy gets out and says, howdy, y'all. | |
| You know, and he's got an amplified voice. | |
| And he says, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. | |
| I'm from blah, blah, blah, and I'm here doing this kind of shit. | |
| You know, just saying hi. | |
| Y'all go back to your game now. | |
| And that's sort of a deal, right? | |
| If they did that repeatedly, the social order will be changed. | |
| Well, from the very first time that occurs, the social order has changed, right? | |
| Nothing is ever the same thereafter. | |
| And government is out of the loop at that level. | |
| And government can stand up and say they're in charge and all this kind of shit, but none of us are going to listen to them because we know that's blatantly false. | |
| That they're so far behind the curve that they don't even employ woo people. | |
| They don't even have a woo cadre, right? | |
| They don't have the woo core to think about this shit for them. | |
| They're that, that behind the curve. | |
| So, anyway, so. | |
| so okay, so all us cromies out on the edge, you know, interacting with the space aliens, we're just going to get shit moving and government's going to be playing catch-up. | |
| So you can expect that there'll be a lot of contention in the future with government tards as they attempt to try and rein this in and regain control and so forth. | |
| It is a losing proposition now even, right? | |
| And it's being shown that now. | |
| All of the, I mean, they've got the fucking FBI out investigating drones over military bases and air ports in New Jersey and New York. | |
| So, you know, so already there's the official contention and already they're behind the curve because you got to say to yourself, you know, you got a realistic look at it. | |
| What the fuck do the FBI know? | |
| How could they possibly come to any meaningful conclusion? | |
| And how could they even decide what aspect of that they're going to investigate? | |
| You know, what are they going to do? | |
| Look for space alien footprints or paw prints or fingerprints? | |
| You know, I mean, their FBI and their tools for analysis and thinking are extremely limited. | |
| You know, they got cash patel. | |
| Okay, all right, so they got cash patel. | |
| You know, and that's pretty good. | |
| But if you're sending out a bunch of guys in the swampland area around an airport in New Jersey, they don't have their cash patel with them. | |
| And those guys are basically retarded. | |
| Okay, so they live in a grit world. | |
| They come from a grit world. | |
| They can only see grit. | |
| And they're going to approach everything from a grit perspective. | |
| And so their results will be grit and not meaningful. | |
| And this is basically where our situation is at the moment. | |
| No one knows what's going on. | |
| There's no signs of resolution to any of these people. | |
| Language is shifting, telling us that the events are headed here into this current ever-present now, and that the social order is going to change. | |
| How it's going to change and so forth, we can predict to some extent, but we don't really know. | |
| And we'll never know the extent of it until it's actually arrived, until we've been through it. | |
| You know, so all that shit is seen in hindsight. | |
| But we also know that this is a point of time where government's breaking down. | |
| You know, we want to get rid of 90% of government anyway. | |
| They're useless, you know, gritologists and basically they don't think, right? | |
| They're automatons. | |
| They can go off and do something else. | |
| Anyway, so that's where we are. | |
| I'm getting out here. | |
| I've got to stop in a few minutes and get my last little bit of stuff done and then head in or head back home. | |
| I think that's about it. | |
| So anyway, so I'm going to be talking with JC tomorrow and Jordan Sether. | |
| And so maybe we can get in for a few minutes, get into the language shifting here. | |
| But we're seeing, I'm seeing it in this last of the data set. | |
| There's all kinds of hints as to new words that are forming that are going to be appropriate to our new environment, that will be better describing the environment which we'll be living over these next 80 years. | |
| And as I say, a lot of them are going to go to the idea of being able to separate out by genetics just who the fuck you're talking to, right? | |
| Are you talking to an earther? | |
| Are you talking to an off-worlder, right? | |
| Are you talking to a cromie or are you talking to whatever the hell that word's going to be? | |
| Anyway, so y'all think about whatever the hell that word's going to be and get back to me on that. |