All Episodes
Sept. 7, 2025 - Clif High
51:28
Resurrection 2027

| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Hello humans, hello humans.
September 7, 2025.
We're here to talk about something two years out.
Resurrection 2027.
This is a confluence of events.
We're in a period of time where, okay, so let me uh preface this.
I'm going to uh not provide sources.
I will provide you with key words.
You can go look up the material I'm telling you.
I'm going to present material in which a mesh is created, where things blend together.
And you will have to connect, you'll have to go and look at the interface between these things in order to see that I'm correct about these things meshing, okay, across time, across technology, across um uh human interactions, etc.
So this is a this is probably number one of a maybe even a six or seven-part series.
It's about um what's gonna happen to humanity two years out.
Obviously, we've got to get through 2026.
Uh the material I'm talking about for 2027 will present itself in 2026, and if you're astute enough, you'll be able to see the uh the lay of the land as it is rising up into our reality, and you'll see that I'm mostly correct about this.
But of course, there's gonna be so many subtle variations that are caused by each person's individual understanding of language.
Even though we're using a common language, but common words, the connotations are different, so there will be a wide spread of understanding of what I'm going to tell you.
So many people will say, no, it didn't work out that way, and so on, but we'll see two years from now, okay.
Uh okay, so uh this is gonna be number one in a series of of videos, as I say, maybe seven, okay.
Uh the subject is complex, but not particularly complicated.
Uh so you just have to see all of the individual parts as they are, and then realize it's like a 12-sided dice and you're uh dye and you're looking at the individual side of it, right?
And so you're not seeing the whole thing until you hold it way back after having looked at all of the sides.
And that's what we're gonna start here today.
Uh a bit of history.
Um during the COVID period, I uh reported uh in videos uh on my uh on this group I belong to, right?
The old farts group.
And we did translations of weird ass old languages, basically because we're all retired and and we're in circumstances that left us bored, and we all had a penchant for language.
And they um and our liking for language brought us all together across time.
What was curious to me at the time was that so many of these guys within this group, nine out of twelve, uh were trying to get to be citizens in Russia.
Uh they were all expats from Britain, US, etc.
They all had individual reasons, but they all ended up going there, they all shared certain common experiences.
We communicated over the internet late at night, my time.
And uh and we had some serious progress in what we were doing.
In those studies, uh, we went through a whole lot of languages.
I went through all of the common uh Hindu languages now, all the way through Pali and all the way through all these other languages, using AI on a whole lot of source material that had come our way.
Um I was sort of the director of this in terms of you know, setting certain paces or certain uh paths, and these were simply on my own interest.
I was actually just looking for offshoots of information about vaimani, which are the ancient Hindu text uh descriptions of these flying castles that did battle.
Uh you would um you'd read about them in like the uh a various large uh Text about battles in ancient India, right?
And so I was interested in these basic human, I thought human-made UFOs.
Okay.
It turns out that if you dive into it, it's my understanding that they were not human-made, they were, or they may have been human-made, but not human-invented, okay, that this technology of these flying castles was brought here.
The technology is interesting.
I'll get into it in further vids videos about this.
It's interesting at a fundamental level, but what really grabbed my attention was this constant reference to these devices that I termed the mind-to-machine interface.
And because there was all a lot of ancillary material in old hymns, you have to understand people didn't write uh paperbacks, they didn't write declarative books back in these days.
This was all encapsulated in common sayings and hymns in that kind of interaction.
And these hymns describe a world that we don't think about in a realistic way.
And in so doing, they kept coming back to these devices that they would put humans into.
They being people that we could identify as the Anunnaki or the Elohim.
They had various words for them that always meant gods, but basically we're talking space aliens.
Beings from not from our species, beings from some other place, right.
We let aside all of the wares and all of that at the moment.
Okay, so we come across this old parts group, we sit around, uh, we discuss this, we go off do research, we come back, we collect, and we come across some interesting aspects of this.
Some levels of uh the mechanistic stuff that was described, we think in these hymns.
It's a matter in some cases of interpretation of in connotation of very specific words in an ancient language that we don't know how the author was intending that word to be perceived.
So there's ambiguity all the fucking gone.
Anyway, but we did make a lot of progress.
And this is pertinent because resurrection 2027 is all about the mind-to-machine interface.
And so this is going to be a wireless, but contact uh mind-to-machine interface.
So Elon Musk's uh chip in your head is going to be leapfrogged.
Okay, the technology is already in development now.
I'm not getting into how I know these things.
I'm gonna get visits from people anyway about this.
Um, and uh, and I don't want to discuss this with officialdom, but but nonetheless, this is the case.
This technology is already in development now, it is based on an analog system, it's based around this thing called Amphere's Law.
Amphir was this guy who did uh incredible, uh incredibly delicate, refined thinking about electricity in the early 1800s.
And I'll probably get this wrong, but I think he came up with his primary discovery here that was named Ampere's Law in 1825, but that early, right?
I mean, way before Maxwell, Maxwell thought the guy was a genius.
Leclerc Maxwell thought the guy was a genius.
Heaviside hated both Maxwell and Amphere for being there, and heaviside, in my opinion, was one of the guys that shelved Amphiar out of the way, because we don't take any of his work into account these days, but it's so fucking incredible that you can't imagine.
Okay, so at the core of Ampere's law is this idea about magnetism.
This is a key component.
Ampere's law is the manner in which the human interfaces with the mind-to-machine interface.
If you understand the electricity involved, it is at an extremely delicate level and at a level of refined control that we cannot even imagine even how the circuits might work, right?
But it does, and it is an analog system.
That's why all of the digital people are off doing things like putting the fucking chip in your head when you don't have to, right?
And it's going to be far better on contact.
And this is also how all the UFOs work when you put your hands on these two plates, and your mind connects to the UFO and you go zipping off.
This was also described within the um the hymns and the in Sanskrit uh saskrita and Avastat.
These are way old languages that predate the concept of Persia.
Okay.
They go way the fuck back.
Or, you know, so it where Iran is now.
Uh these languages Described the situation of these people, the humans, dealing with the uh Elohim, the uh gods of the Bible and these horrid beings and how they killed all the humans, and they would go through whole villages looking for specific DNA.
And they had some device that told them about, or not DNA, but capability of the mind.
Because I don't think a DNA is obviously involved, and we but we need not get diverted.
Okay, it was actually the individual mind presenting itself in that human that they were after.
And they would uh get these humans, they'd use them as the pilots, but also to a certain extent, like the engine control.
Okay, so it's not like you're just maneuvering, it's actually draining your physical life form in the process of doing this.
So these the humans didn't last more than 18 months, they many of them didn't last more than a did not last a year.
They might be really good and you'd burn them out in nine months, right?
And so you got to constantly hunt for these guys.
Um we came across my my old farce group came across an intriguing old hymn talking about uh a slaughter in a village in which specific individuals were selected and then the rest of the village was killed.
Uh as though the village was an asset in the other Elohim, and they didn't want the other Elohim to have any remnants of that asset within there.
And so they wiped out the DNA.
This set us on this this trail, which led me to a certain level of thinking, which now is being produced and meshed with what's actually emerging.
Okay, so I have reason to uh think uh that certain breakthroughs have already been achieved, and that Amphir's law is being used uh to uh form the first um tentative mind to machine connections uh with human, with modern humans in this day and age.
I think that these breakthroughs occurred uh very early this year or late last year, and they'll manifest for us across 2026 in various different places and come together in a confluence in 2027 in the actual device itself, right?
There'll be prototypes, there'll be working ones, they won't be frying people's brains and so on.
Okay, so now let me give you quickly Amphir's law that is pertinent.
He has lots of corollaries.
This is a very subtle corollary to it because we're dealing with bioelectricity, right?
Amphir never understood, he never, I doubt he even conceived of humans as running on electric current within our brains.
But this guy had a subtle level of understanding of electric current that is that is great.
If you take two magnets and you put the similar poles together, they try and push themselves apart.
Okay, this is a solid law.
I've got magnets all the helling on, I'm not going to bother demonstrating it.
You've seen it in your life.
If you haven't, you've got to go out and check it out.
Anyway, so the thought was because coils of wire that are electrified that spark off, become what we call an electromagnet.
The thinking was that if you did this exact same thing with two sets of coils and um uh and put similar um poles together that they would repel.
That's not true, it does not happen.
Okay.
The subtlety gets really intense because you have to understand the nature of the current of the slow natural flow of the electricity through the copper coils.
Okay, and we're not gonna we're gonna bypass tons of subtlety here and state a quick conclusion to get us move moving on.
The conclusion is that Amphir discovered that currents moving through wires.
Uh, well, just look at this as one current and this is another current, right?
And uh, this is the north, that's the north, south, and south.
Um, if you have the currents moving through the wire cause an entrainment, okay.
This entrainment uh overcomes the repulsive factor.
It does not eliminate it.
So it's not as though the repulsion goes away in the electromagnet.
It is there.
We just don't think about it because we can't easily see any outward effects in our reality.
The poles of the two electromagnets that are similar poles do not repel, they glom together.
It's like, huh?
You know, that doesn't work on regular magnets, you can't do that.
You put two south poles together, it's gonna push apart.
You put two north poles together, it's gonna push apart.
Okay, why does an electromagnet that in all other ways is a magnet work this way?
Well, what Amphere discovered was that all as all of these electrons and stuff are moving, that if you have two currents going in the same direction, then what happens is the repulsive force goes out to the side.
So it is though is as though, and I'm doing this as a crude, crude, crude illustration just to get the concept to you, right?
That the flow of the current causes the repulsive force to be redirected at a 90-degree angle.
And that varies.
So let's not get hung up on numbers at this stage.
But the effect is that the repulsive force is seen to disappear as the entrainment force from the two currents flowing in the same direction, cause each current to want to join the other current.
Okay, so you have, as long as they're flowing in the same direction, you have a have a tendency for these two currents to join, and then the repulsive force, if they were to allow to join, the repulsive force from the totality of it is also then shunted off at a at a tangential angle.
Okay.
Hopefully that's reasonably clear.
You can go look up Ampere and his laws, get into all of his cool experiments and all of this kind of stuff, and educate yourself on how this shit works.
Because this is going to be at the core of the mind-to-machine interface.
Alright, so uh the ancient text talked about the burnout, the destruction of humans in this process.
It presented three formulas for gold-based uh products that were given to your human to make them last longer, sort of like engine tune-up kind of stuff.
Um, you know, and your humans would last a little longer, but you'd still burn them out relatively quickly.
It turns out that the issue there is exactly that entrainment, okay, and the inability of the humans to get their mind out of the alien technology, right?
To disconnect, so to speak.
That the entrainment was uh persistent even when the human was not in the uh driver's seat.
There was a chair, there were connections.
Unlike the Elohim, who the Elohim hated working these things, okay.
The Anunnaki, the Devas, the gods in the in the Hindu texts, they hated getting into the machines themselves, but they were capable of doing it.
Maybe they also had terrible effects.
There's no description of why.
We don't know why they hated doing it, and that's why they stuck humans in there.
Uh but the humans would be connected to these machines after using them for some time, even when the human was not in the chair, and there's two specific hymns that I'm that we that I went through with my old group uh farts group, in which it discusses,
if you read it the right way, how the Elohim popped off the humans after a crash of a vimani, because the human had failed, he malfunctioned, and but they couldn't put a new human in until the old human's connection to the machine was severed, so they had to kill him.
Uh and there's two instances of this.
Um there is this there's this aspect of it, right?
Anyway, and so we will also face that now as humanity develops these mind-to-machine interface connections.
There's all kinds of stuff we got to worry about on this ship.
But the um unfolding of our, I have to be somewhat cognizant here of time because I'm gonna have to put this on pause and go deal with my bread, making bread and pie today.
Okay, so the movement of the brain electricity is what um uh allows the interconnection through Ampere's uh law of uh, and I'm gonna add his corollary of delicacy.
So you've got to really read deep to discover that.
Okay.
Um, but so I think that there's reason to suppose that the um the receiving pad for the connection where the humans put their hands or whatever, you know, however we decide to do this in a physical level will be crystalline in nature.
All right, that was repeatedly um discussed in these uh ancient texts, how the guys would have to go and get this particular crystal and refine it and that kind of shit.
Anyway, um basically the idea is we'll get crystals that will be subject to extreme vibration, like the crystals in uh uh little watches, right?
In little um digital watches and stuff.
Um and like the crystalline chips, right?
All computer chips are crystalline in nature.
And we'll get some that will vibrate so fast and be so sensitive that they can entrain to the very extreme subtle, delicate in Amphire's words, uh, vibration of the um of the electricity in the human brain.
And this will be what will make the connection to this amplified electrical current flowing through these pads that will then connect to the electrical current via the the circulating melanin.
Okay, so you so the the stuff in your pineal glands circulates through your body in a very sluggish way, right?
Um I won't go into that.
Anyway, so um so amphere did not probably uh probably we don't have any evidence that he suspected um, I haven't come across it anyway, uh, that the human brain was electric, right?
I'm not I don't think he knew anything about the Weimana or any of this kind of stuff.
He was just fascinated with this, and he had a particular kind of um engineering mind that was just very well suited for it.
Of course, universe provides and guides.
None of this shit is by accident, okay?
Or or the it is exactly the universe trying to create fortuitous accidents that that in that cause complexity to increase and novelty to emerge.
All right, so Amphere's law uh has to do with the flow of the current, the flow causing the entrainment at a at a um molecular level with the little magnets that are the electrons, right?
Uh this is going to uh has already been investigated into some extent um disciplined somewhere around, and these people are working on probably in a deep hole in the ground somewhere, working on these mind and machine interfaces along this idea using uh native human-crafted analog systems, can't be digital, um, for a lot of reasons.
Because digital blocks subtlety for one, it's only ones and zeros, right?
Nothing in between.
That's what you need to grab is the minute delta in between at a at a you know a pulse level.
Anyway, so this is what we're gonna be dealing with over uh 2027.
Now, there are some profound consequences to this.
First, Elon Musk's brain chip thing is gonna go away, or it's gonna fade because it won't be necessary.
You won't have to do surgeries and shit to get the uh connection between the brain and the and the software that you're after.
So that's one effect.
It will alter our um manufacturing um pathways that are already in place.
It will also provide new manufacturing pathways for us, okay?
So here's the deal.
Uh we're gonna have all these digital robots.
Well, digital robots are going to need some form of um uh coordination to work well.
You can put that coordination into the software in the individual robot, and then you're gonna run into all of the problems with the software collisions in our real world where the software thinks it takes this robot 19 milliseconds to walk across this particular pathway, but because of the slipperiness of the floor, it took him 21 milliseconds, and he got hit by the the forklift that was zipping through.
That kind of thing.
That's that kind of shit's gonna happen all the time because of the uh inability for humans to be precise about uh activities within the our real uh common shared reality, and uh the digital um understanding of them, because the digital understanding of them does not allow for the the slop that you know the the um the inexactitude of matter in our physical reality.
Okay, so so um it may be that that humans will build mind-to-machine interfaces and have one human sit there and manage hundreds of robots, right, by being able to think them through these things and give them instructions through a a machine pad, right, that would be controlled by his mind.
He'd be able to actually shunt it over to a particular robot.
You know, to tell him hurry up, you're gonna get smashed or whatever the hell, right?
I'm just making this shit up to give you an idea of the potential here, right?
So this is going to, so in 2027, humans get a big boost, right?
Because the mind to machine interface uh uh comes online even as a prototype.
It's not going to be that complex in terms of there will be proprietary aspects to it, I'm quite certain, and those will also be overcome really quick.
I'm also quite certain simply because of the economic value of pursuing this.
It also eliminates the issue of AI, right?
AI won't be involved as we understand it.
You don't need AI when you can actually go right to the human brain and augment it through connection.
And so there is going to be other kinds of connections, right?
You'll be able to augment it by having the human mind connect to databases.
So you won't have to search through a computer this way.
You can do it at a mental level through putting your hand on these pads that then control some form of visual display for you for retrieving the results.
Very, very, very, very, very fast because it's moving at the speed of thought, far faster than the speed of typing.
Far, far faster, and also much more diverse.
So this is in our future.
So we have resurrection 2027 for the human species in a way that we had not anticipated.
This is a new thing, actually, in my opinion.
This is a novelty that had been forecast in a in a wild-ass kind of a way in my data sets way the fuck back in the early 2000s, but not at this level, right?
And um, and this is is is one of these things that's gonna hop in out of left field, and it's gonna disrupt a lot of industry, it's gonna disrupt a lot of our social order uh for the positive.
Well, there'll be negatives as well.
I'll get into some of those in a second.
But at a very positive level, because it's gonna revalue human brains in a way we'd never anticipated.
And so you may find that that there's people that have real talent at this.
Um, not college educated, anything like that, just smart individuals that have talent for this, that will be uh propelled up the social um socioeconomic ladder because of these talents.
And then we'll get skills, and then we'll have you know competitions and games and all different kinds of things to revine refine the skills and so on.
And it'll spread out in all kinds of industries.
And so industries of all form will want new um uh participants in their designs, okay, in their schemes.
You won't be a worker per se.
I mean, it'll be work, you'll be compensated, but um, you know, it's gonna be sort of a different understanding and structure for our reality here.
Uh so I'm gonna pause here and I'm gonna come back and discuss bugs, okay?
And um, and then that'll end this one.
I've got a hot foot it over to the other building and uh put my bread in the loaf pan to finish raising.
Okay, there we go.
I think it's working, yep.
All right, so um the bug.
Okay, so we're in um uh uh 2027 when this rolls out, okay.
Uh January and February, we should get the hints of it, and we should be dealing with the stuff by June.
Uh however they're gonna name it, however they're gonna call it, it doesn't matter.
Okay, it's a mind to machine interface.
Um this will be uh altering our species at a huge level.
This uh alteration will take us uh 50 years to absorb the the first little chunk of it because you can see how if you had a mind-to-machine interface, you could directly interact with computers, computer programming becomes an entirely different operation.
Uh you can interact with AI, AI becomes your servant, all different kinds of stuff in here based on the ability of the human mind to directly interact with these digital systems through an analog to digital interface that reads the electrical currents via Ampere's law through highly sensitive crystalline structures to which human skin has an affinity.
So it gets really complex, right?
The material you're gonna put your hands on it has to be specially engineered for this.
So I don't know how long that kind of stuff is all gonna take before it becomes smooth and effective.
But in 2027, in the initial stages of rolling this out, that that initial the initial stages participate in further development, so it becomes very exponential, very uh combinorically rapid thereafter because of the uh increase in efficiency that we're all getting that that the people that are involved in this are getting from the mind to machine interface, right?
Um anyway, so it affects things like learning, jobs, uh skill sets, all different kinds of stuff.
Um there'll be games from it at all these weird different levels, uh, everything from you know mind controller, robots fighting it out, all different kinds of stuff, but also direct mind contention games through these devices, across the internet, all sorts of things.
There'll be social ramifications that you just don't instantly think of.
Uh the human mind will become such a strategic resource that countries will go to war over fentanyl production being introduced into their country, right?
Because that's a destruction of the mind capacity that the country is counting on for the future survival, blah, blah, blah.
All right, so there's all kinds of social ramifications.
Um even like spying, right?
Once you can reach in with your mind to the computers itself, uh, your mind is so much more rapid.
That's what AI is going to basically do, is it'll be on the other side of this, controlling the uh subsets, the subroutines, if you will, that your mind will access through these devices.
Uh, because it can respond more rapidly than straightforward digital circuitry in which you would have to guide the digital circuit in order to trigger the particular function.
Here you won't have to, the functions will be pooled.
I'm speaking of the word function in the computer sense and the Lisp sense and the uh assembly language sense, right?
And these these functions will be pre-compiled and pooled.
Your mind will just be able to sort and select, put them all together, and and boom, your program is done, right?
Literally in milliseconds if it's um trivial, and maybe even some rather strong programs that would be easily done in just milliseconds, sorting through the routines in your mind and saying how you want the flow to go.
But it'll affect all different kinds of things throughout our society.
But it's not gonna be easy, okay?
So it's gonna be a 50 years, 50 plus years, uh in an absorption phase, right?
Uh to integrate the tech into humanity.
And the first, and there's gonna be a rough 50 years, okay?
So I'm not I'm not bullshitting you, it's not gonna be smooth sailing, Pollyanna, you know, uh uh I'll have pie, but but anyway, it's not gonna be a smooth sailing kind of a period.
Uh and the first five years are gonna be the roughest, okay?
So those first five years uh are gonna be very, very, very uh difficult for us as we go through and uh begin the concepts of what's going on, integrating into our understanding the concepts alone that a human mind can interact with a machine directly, and here's why.
It's gonna destroy lots of religions and all the different other kinds of stuff and have huge impacts on us.
Okay, now there's an aspect of this that's not at all apparent unless you've done uh hyperspace journeys via psychedelics, as I have.
In hyperspace, you learn that everything is transactional and there's all these other species, other minds, because you don't know what fucking species they are because of the representation in hyperspaces that you're a gray sphere.
And then you can make yourself appear as your mind would allow.
Uh and so thereafter, everything's a little bit wonky.
Are they really presenting themselves the way that they appear on their planet, or is this, you know, uh a mind op against you?
Um my tendency is to not feel that there were a lot of mind ops because it's so difficult to do interactions in hyperspace under psychedelics and maintain control and stuff.
But see, this brings up the mind-to-machine interface.
In getting into that, uh, in especially in the early five years, we're gonna have the human test Subjects and even the users of it, once it becomes slightly stable, they'll be anxious to roll it out in the more uh into society as rapidly as they can because of all the huge promise of benefits, all right.
And so we'll we'll rush, all right.
We won't won't take adequate precautions and we're going to encounter difficulties.
These difficulties are going to be of a couple of different natures, but that are a key around one thing.
And that's this concept of hyperspace, right?
Uh hyper space is also known in ancient literature as the bardo, okay, which was delineated.
The bardo was delineated as a time, not an actual space.
In this case, time is immaterial.
It does not exist in our concept because hyperspace is an actual space.
It's an actual separating space between uh life and death.
Okay, those two states of consciousness.
So hyperspace exists in consciousness.
These mind to machine interface devices are going to interact with consciousness at a level that some people are going to encounter hyperspace.
A lot of the early versions of these devices, and maybe even later ones, no, specifically later ones will be tuned to allow this.
And this is probably what those people that have already journeyed in hyperspace on psychedelics have observed, because not all of the denizens, not all of the beings you meet there are of an equal nature.
There are these others that appear to be there by mechanical means, not just natural means.
And so they're sullen, they're different, they're they're they're easily seen, but they're they're different from all the other things you will meet in there, right?
They're not the machine elves, none of that kind of stuff.
They're they're actual visitors like us.
And so maybe we will discover that those are that that kind of stuff will be us as well.
Maybe we'll get uh use this to get there and uh and interact with it at that level where we're not really participating, our minds are not participating, they're not entrained in the space, they're just like poking into it a little bit, right?
And so they're just poking into it a little bit because of this machine.
Um this first five years, and in the first year is gonna be worse than the fifth year, and and uh these five years will be worse than the 50 years, etc.
etc.
Right?
It's gonna be a rapid uh accelerated integration of this into the human social order.
Maybe it'll take you know 10 years to manufacture millions of these devices.
I just don't know.
Anyway, but they'll soon be ubiquitous everywhere.
Um they require contact to work, so it won't be able to be beamed at you, right?
Anyway, uh, but it's gonna radicalize everything.
And it's going to destroy governments, it's going to collapse economic systems, rise new ones, all different kinds of things within an extremely short period of time, causing vast amounts of chaos in the process of producing uh uh a further levels of complexity than we can imagine now.
We cannot imagine now the ramifications of the mind-to-machine interface on the human nature and the human society, etc.
Uh now within this five-year period and within the first year, which is 2027, even though that we see the promise of the resurrection and can see its fulfillment being enacted in this technology coming out.
The resurrection in this case is the elevation of humanity over the machines again, right?
Um because the human mind is ever so much more flexible, fast, and cheap, etc.
Uh anyway, and that's just the crude level, okay.
But in 2027, the initial um users of this mind to machine interface will have great success, and then there will be a puzzling aspect of it where there's crash and burns.
Okay, people just can't understand the crash and burns.
And so we'll have to set up this um uh self-um monitoring sort of um thing that goes to hunt up not errors, but but an understanding.
So we'll understand that our that our concept is slightly flawed of what we're doing, in spite of all of the physical success that we're having, and and we're gonna see that the um the failures that crash and burn are not aberrant, They're an integral part of this, and it's based on our understanding at a very subtle level that's going to cause this kind of thing, right?
So we will, in the use of these devices, be interacting with a layer of the hyperspace way down here in life.
This is an analogy, okay, a very crude analogy of what's going to be going on at an energetic level.
Okay, and so we'll be vibrating down here on the life side of the hyperspace.
There will be times that because of the nature of the machinery and some other factors that affect it, some of those people will be bumped into hyperspace in a way they had not anticipated, that they were unaware of, right?
They're not psychonauts, they've never taken psychedelic drugs, they just don't know this kind of thing can happen.
They'll go into hyperspace and they will meet the bug.
Okay.
And that's my characteristic for it.
It's an entity, it exists.
It's uh reported by lots of people that take uh psilocybin and mescaline.
And uh we have lots of sketches of it, it's scary and all these different kinds of things.
Uh I didn't find I didn't find it so scary as it was annoying.
It's dominating in my, I've interacted with it, it threw me out of its space, it's very powerful, but it could not keep me out of its space once it irritated me.
I got very, very determined to enter its space.
It was using mind power.
And it got quite irritated that I was able to puncture repeatedly.
Every time you throw me out, I'd come back.
I didn't know what the fuck I was doing, I was stone on mesquine, right?
And um, and I'd been doing a lot of heavy-duty zen meditation uh for a couple of years before this experience.
Anyway, so and thereafter a lot more.
Anyway, so um uh the bug is irritating, it's um authoritarian, it doesn't have emotions the way we understand it, uh, and it's uh annoyed at us and is annoying to us, and humans will encounter the bug.
The bug wants to own everything, it's uh uh imperial in that sense, it it fucks with humans all the time, uh, apparently, um, and um at a mental level.
Uh you could think of it as like a sort of a chunky praying mantis if you that's sort of the image it projects out.
Um and it's projects out large.
But you can make yourself as large as you want in hyperspace, right?
Alice in Wonderland, you know, shrink you and all of that kind of thing.
Um so anyway, though, um, so I don't take a lot of what it said to be, you know, a lot of its presentation to be actual or factual.
I'm I'm paranoid that way.
Anyway, though, so humans are going to encounter the bug uh by these accidental intrusions into hyperspace, and that's going to divert a whole lot of the development of this uh technology into this very intriguing area, but nonetheless not necessarily so productive for employment, that sort of thing, right?
Or at least not at a at an open level.
We'll be employing people to investigate it, it'll become like a new arms race.
Uh you know, that sort of thing, right?
Theoretically, as far as I know, all life is like registered in hyperspace, right?
We all participate in hyperspace.
And that theoretically, you could find any living beings uh uh imprint or soul uh in hyperspace that is existent now if you knew how to search and look for it.
Now, bear in mind this is hype, this is hyperspace around the whole fucking universe, so it's it's jam-packed.
It's fucking noisy as shit in there, right?
Uh and it doesn't make any fucking sense to you at all because they're not all humans.
And so um so it gets really, really, really complex, but it's a very rich area to mine uh for actual physical capabilities within this universe, within the material world, the materium that as I call it.
Anyway, so uh this is like part one.
I think there's gonna be, I don't know, maybe there'll be uh uh six or so that'll be related to this.
There's a lot of material around it.
Um we're gonna get into 2026 and we'll start seeing the um the factual little instances popping up in science uh that are all going to combine into these devices.
And maybe even and and then maybe we'll see some of the hints about how rapid uh it will pop up.
It's analog, okay?
So that's a lot different than the digital.
Digital has a certain speed of development.
Analog has a speed of development that is based upon concepts and understanding.
And once you run into a developmental wall, uh, as soon as you can overcome that uh understanding hurdle, you get another big leap.
Unlike digital, where you've got to go and like plod through and write all the code and yada yada yada.
So this will this will emerge in in leaps as we go forward.
And then it'll start combining as people get their hands on the gear and apply it to different areas that interest them.
So I'm quite encouraged, right?
This is going to be the resurrection, in my opinion.
This is the 2027 is the beginning of the resurrection of humanity, humanity's social order.
We're going to reimagine ourselves, re-inter uh reinvent ourselves as a fucking species here.
Now, also understand that this means our planet will be in mass chaos.
So you can understand that we're not the simple world that the Bible believers, that people that are Bible thumpers that believe in the book of the Bible.
We don't live in that world.
I don't think ever anybody ever lived in that world.
I think it was all a fiction, but as of now, you can clearly see we do not live in the in the world that is described by the Bible, right?
In in so many ways, we're so much more complex that the Bible has just been dropped.
All of these religious texts are about to fall away as we get into more aspects of this as well.
Once you've been to hyperspace, it's awful hard to believe in the um in anything that comes out of any of these religious books.
Uh because you've seen for yourself the reality is not as they describe.
Anyway, though, so uh our world is so much more complex, and complexity is a goal of universe.
It can't discover novelty, and in that's the goal, in our opinion, a lot of my people, myself included.
Uh it can't discover if novelty can't exist without increasing complexity.
And so we're all in the midst of that increasing complexity that is now about to become commonoric where complexity increases complexity in huge expansive uh fashion because of the interaction of all of these things.
Digital technology on one side, mind and machine interface on the other side, the wonkiness of human minds, etc.
etc.
And then lastly, before I get back to my bread and start making the pie for the for the early part of this week, um the other aspect of this is that now humans are gonna have to reinvent themselves, right?
And you'll have to reinvent yourself mentally in order to use these devices.
You'll have to have emotional control, not control of your thoughts, but control of the uh emotional link to your thoughts because it is the emotional control that affects the melanin that is gonna interact with these um devices.
So you can't be um, you know, uh uh uh smoking meth or popping speed or something and getting all jazzed up and running these devices.
It's not gonna aid you for one thing.
You're it's actually gonna slow your mind and mental responses, but that emotional tearing, that destruction of the emotional control by those drugs, basically any drug, uh, or rather most drugs, there will be substances, so like some uh uh you know, choline-containing substances, some uh substances like GABA and a few of these others that have uh you know uh impacts on your uh pineal and amine and amino acid balance, etc.
etc.
Uh will be affected.
They'll they'll be used, right?
But they're not really active mind drugs.
Anyway, though, so uh, but we'll have to do things like have to redo our school system.
Uh so in order if you wanted to get a job working with these machines, you will have to uh understand how you'll have to train your mind to work this way.
And it will be the untrained minds, uh the undisciplined minds, I might say, that will uh bump out of the area into the machinery uh of hyperspace and end up meeting the bug.
And it's gonna freak them out.
Okay, let's let's be quite serious about this.
There will be once it start breaking out the whole social order, there'll be arguments across the internet about it, the concept, what's going on, etc., etc.
And uh, you know, are we being invaded?
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Because everybody will be coming from a gritology view, not an ontology view, there's gonna be confusion during this first five years as we go through all of these initial stages of this, right?
And so, you know, you have the automated robotaxis.
Um, that'll be useless soon, right?
You'll just be able to have your interface, whatever the fuck it is, it'll probably be portable like your phone.
Maybe you just put it on your uh wear it on a medallion and put it on your chest, it'll just require skin contact, right?
And then you'll just summon uh uh, you know, a robotaxi and drive it to you based on mental um uh instructions, interacting with um a much uh uh less robust AI because the AI won't have to uh I won't go into it.
Um that's for coders.
Anyway, though, so um this is our future, right?
Resurrection 2027.
There's gonna be huge amounts of variance over what you understand now and how it actually will emerge.
Okay.
It's not possible for us to get an accurate description of the process of what we're going to be going through in these next 50 years in our species.
Uh it will affect politics, it'll affect every damn thing in weird ways we can't imagine, right?
Maybe they'll put a uh uh device in um presidential debates, and you've got to put your hand on it, and you've got to respond with your mind, because if you can't do that, your mind is too slow to be president.
You know, that's a weird ass example, but you see my point, right?
Uh, it's gonna impact every damn thing.
Uh there's I've got another uh maybe 20 pages of notes on this.
Uh this is like three quarters of one page.
Uh so this will take a while to get through.
Uh, because I'm going to discuss the actual underlying technology as well.
Um, so we'll leave this for now, and we'll um uh and I'll do another one of these maybe in a week or two uh when it's convenient.
I got all kinds of shit going on here, and I've got I'm in the midst of I think I uh last time I looked, there were 45 strong Wi-Fi networks around me because of my location here.
So it's not possible for me to in-train Wi-Fi to my main residence.
I have to to do these and transport on you know, um uh devices in order to upload.
So I'm working on that, and there's all other kinds of uh chores in the new residence getting things set for winter, which is now threatening to descend upon us at any day here.
Anyway, guys, um uh take care and uh watch for signs all next year of the coming resurrection in 2027.
And you'll hear a lot of people talking about their own impressions of what's coming 2027, 3i Atlas, all of this kind of shit, right?
What you do need to understand though is that many of all of these guys will have some level of accuracy, right?
Not a great deal, etc., because they're still linear thinkers and they don't understand that we're dealing in a burgeoning splitting uh interacting complexity.
Uh so there's all kinds of stuff that's gonna keep bubbling up.
I don't really have a the way I deal with it is to just, oh, I don't care about that, you know.
Heidi does that too.
She doesn't care about the UFO stuff, and she cares more about espionage and crime.
And so we're complimentary, right?
Uh, you know, if there's any UFO stuff that impinges on her world, I'll tell her, well, she has to keep me from not telling her this stuff.
But in any event, though, um, uh, so that's what we'll have to do.
We'll have to cordon our minds off for those things that we care about, and we'll have to study mental skills.
I doubt I would be a good candidate for one of those things.
Uh it's gonna require a different mindset, I think.
There's gonna be nuances, maybe you know, DNA matters at some level, all of these kind of things.
Uh so uh there's no I don't have anywhere close to anything other than a narrow margin of understanding as to how these things function and where they're going to go.
Um but like I say, I don't think I'll be a candidate for them, but a lot of you guys will.
And it will be a great boon to your life, right?
And also your physical life.
There's gonna be all kinds of interactions with these devices that will allow you to like tune uh your physical body once we get past this level of understanding, past these first five years, because there's gonna be a uh like a breakthrough threshold.
So in the early 1800s, it took from Ben Franklin in the late 1700s to uh the middle 1800s before we get into Leclerc Maxwell and the understanding that took electricity that next leap to where it became very practical.
Maxwell and Heaviside.
Heaviside was a nasty guy in my opinion, but but leaving that aside, that was the progression.
So there was this gap from the late 1700s, say 1792, up until about 1825, when we get Ampere's thinking, but Ampere is sidelined for whatever reason, and we get uh Leclerc Maxwell, who appreciated Ampere, built off of his work, and then everybody piled onto Maxwell.
Because he because of the way that he developed the formulas, in my opinion, right?
Uh Ampere was elegant that way as well.
Anyway, though, so uh that kind of time frame will be compressed into the first five years of this um mind and machine interface coming out.
So there'll be m big leaps in the first five years, uh that some of which will be sidelined, etc.
And then after we get through the fifth year, which would be like the equivalent of the middle of the 1800s, we'll get something that's very practical, and then we'll start to roll out.
Bear in mind we will have the ability to have AI factories that are mind-controlled, and so they'll be able to spit these devices and stuff out just like uh, you know, an incredibly rapid uh uh manufacturing and industrial process.
It'll it'll override anything that the the students are studying about in terms of industrial processes now.
Um it's gonna upend society.
It's gonna resurrect the human species from this shithole that uh our current understanding of AI and all of this kind of klutzy shit um has us headed into.
So I'm I'm quite, you know, like I say in my little my little uh image there, those who know were always smiling, because it's just bad.
Anyway, see you guys in uh in video two, right?
Uh, whenever I can get um get around to doing that one.
Export Selection