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Jan. 19, 2024 - The Culture War - Tim Pool
02:10:16
The Culture War #47 - Climate Change, The Great Disaster Cycle, Atlantis & More

Host: Tim Pool Guests: Jimmy Corsetti @BrightInsight6 (X) Ben Davidson @Suspicious0bservers (YouTube) Ian Crossland @IanCrossland (X) Shane Cashman @ShaneCashman (X) Producers:  Lisa Elizabeth @LisaElizabeth (X) Kellen Leeson @KellenPDL (X) Connect with TENET Media: https://www.tenetmedia.com/ https://twitter.com/watchTENETnow https://www.facebook.com/watchTENET https://rumble.com/c/c-5080150 https://www.instagram.com/watchtenet/ https://www.tiktok.com/@watchtenet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdmJ9EcVd6wuFU_DHklYZFw Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Participants
Main voices
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jimmy corsetti
25:40
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shane cashman
11:49
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tim pool
39:00
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Speaker Time Text
tim pool
Man-made climate change!
As I sit here right now, looking out the window of the studio, we're in a blizzard.
It's not really a blizzard.
It's snow.
It's just regular snow, I gotta be honest.
But they've declared a state of emergency in West Virginia, because when you live up in the mountains, it's hard to plow dirt roads.
So people are gonna be slipping, sliding down those mountains.
But this is the end of a snow drought.
We haven't had snow.
We had a little bit of snow this year, but this is the first time in like two years.
Last year, we had none whatsoever.
And of course, whenever there's an anomaly in the weather, people say things like, this proves climate change.
Be it, it's too hot out, it's too cold out.
Whatever it is, that justifies their claims.
Which reminds me of that joke from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
I don't know if you guys watch this.
Where, it's a great show by the way, but if you don't know, two of the characters are taking supplements, a ton of supplements, and then one guy's like, I keep going to the bathroom.
And he goes, yeah, well that's because your body's flushing the toxins.
Me?
I'm not going to the bathroom at all, because my body's working at peak efficiency.
My point being, for those that are just like, what the hell is he talking about?
Whenever anything happens, for some reason it proves what they're saying about climate change.
Well, we're going to talk about this.
We're going to talk about a lot of other things because there's interesting stuff to talk about as it pertains to the ancient world and evidence of the shifting water bodies where the Sahara, for instance, once may have been underwater or portions of it.
We'll talk about that.
We'll talk about Egypt.
I've heard that perhaps the Sphinx may have been underwater at some point.
So we got a couple of guys hanging out with us.
Who wants to go first?
unidentified
Sure.
I'll go first.
Who are you?
tim pool
What do you do?
unidentified
I am Ben Davidson.
I run the Suspicious Observers YouTube channel.
I am at Sunweatherman on X, formerly Twitter.
I am an expert in solar cycles, geophysics, and most importantly, probably for what we're going to be talking about today, Earth's magnetic pole shift and the great disaster cycle of our planet.
tim pool
So is the pole shift happening now?
unidentified
Yeah.
Oh boy.
tim pool
That's going to be exciting.
All right.
And next up.
jimmy corsetti
I'm Jimmy Corsetti.
I have a YouTube and Rumble channel called Bright Insight.
I discuss the various mysteries of lost ancient civilizations, cycles of catastrophe on earth and various conspiracies.
And I'm thrilled to be here again with you all.
unidentified
Yeah, we did a show on your channel a couple weeks ago.
A week ago, I guess, at this point.
jimmy corsetti
You sure did.
People were loving it.
unidentified
That was wild, man.
jimmy corsetti
We dived deep into some pretty wild stuff.
unidentified
Yeah, and it was remote, so it's nice to be in person.
Ben, great to meet you, dude.
Oh, Jesus.
So these solar cycles, well, we got Kellen over here up moving around right now, so he's not going to introduce himself yet.
How long do they take?
How long does a pole shift take?
Well, you know, in terms of when they first start moving, it can...
You know be a process of a hundred two hundred years but once they really start going you're talking about a couple of decades and it really started going in.
It's hard to tell exactly but somewhere between the nineteen nineties in the first decade of this millennium and so based on the math it's looking like either late twenty thirties or twenty forties.
Presuming any of us are still here after the stupidity that the people in charge of this planet seem to be pulling on us.
It's gonna get very, very rough.
tim pool
You wanna pull the mic up and keep it closed?
Yeah, sure.
So let's, let's, we'll start from the beginning.
The obvious doorway into all of this, because they don't shut up about it, is climate change.
unidentified
Correct.
tim pool
There's, you actually have, Greta Thunberg has advocated for shutting down all fossil fuels Not in 2030, but now!
Uh, of course that would mean we all die.
unidentified
Yes.
Uh, okay, you know, to be honest, I think I'd be okay.
tim pool
I would not be comfortable, but I wouldn't die.
And I'm not gonna sit here and pretend that I'm Survivorman who's gonna be able to build a mud hut and, you know, create a furnace and learn any of that stuff.
But, uh, I'll live.
And rather uncomfortably, but mostly because I have chickens.
Now, kidding aside, the average person living in a city, if fossil fuels were cut off today, you're going to starve, they're going to die of dehydration, they're going to start murdering each other, eating each other.
People don't understand.
That we have built this world off of the explosion of energy from fossil fuels.
And if you look at a city like New York, it's so difficult to bring food into a place like this because of how dense it is with people, that if we were to cut off fuels, people will freeze to death.
The obvious one we have to bring up?
Diabetics will die because you have to refrigerate insulin.
People will die of the heat in the summer.
You will see, I think the estimate is around 60 million people die within three to seven days if you were to cut off fossil fuels instantly.
Around the world, right?
So a lot of people rely on this energy for transporting food, for, I mean, we need electricity to run our water pumps in cities and things like this.
But that's what they want to do.
They say, because of climate change, we got to shut down all fossil fuels.
What is your view on climate change and what's causing it?
unidentified
I would have to say the number one thing that is causing what's happening right now is the fact that Earth's magnetic field is changing.
We have a magnetic shield around our entire planet that protects us from dangerous energy from the Sun, from supernova, from cosmic rays, and it has been weakening more and more and more.
We're probably 20 to 25 percent down in the magnetic field strength that this planet had enjoyed.
And basically what that means is more energy from space is coming into the earth.
And there's simply no getting around that.
And what's interesting is, you know, those mainstream folks who talk about climate change, they will throw all kinds of papers at you here, there.
I made a challenge to several professors, several people at NASA and to the internet as a whole a couple of years ago.
Find me the scientific study.
That blames humans for modern climate change, but also takes into account things like solar flares, things like geomagnetic storms, you know, the aurora, you've got a beautiful picture of them over there, or the weakening of Earth's magnetic field, and nobody can do it, nobody's done it, and I made the challenge kind of...
Inappropriately, because I knew nobody was going to be able to do it, because such a study has never been done.
They don't fund those kind of things.
You can't get a grant to study Earth's magnetic field and how it's weakening and the effect this has on the climate.
tim pool
So I pulled up this year a diagram of how the Aurora Borealis in Australia... was it Australis?
What is it?
Aurora Australis?
How they work.
I actually was just in Fairbanks.
And we're really excited because Fairbanks is basically the direct path of the Aurora.
It's like right in the middle.
And so we were hoping we're going to see it.
We're walking out of the airport.
It's minus 28.
And as we're trying to open the car, which is frozen, I'm like, oh, hey, look, there's Aurora Borealis right above us.
It was massive, very bright.
It was super cool to see.
But this is basically how it works.
We have a magnetic shield.
You have the auroral oval right there.
That's where it all comes in.
Can we pull that up?
And basically, as solar wind is blasting the planet, all of this, these particles, radiation, etc., are being deflected by the magnetic shield, but certain parts can't penetrate through, hitting the poles, and then you end up with the auroras.
unidentified
Correct.
tim pool
So what will happen if the magnetic shield of this planet is gone?
That's not possible, right?
unidentified
It doesn't disappear entirely, but it goes down to such a weak level that even around an area that is normally well protected, like the tropics, you still have an enormous amount of solar and cosmic radiation that is penetrating, and some of that energy gets absorbed in the atmosphere.
Some of it penetrates the crust and goes down into the mantle where it excites silica-rich magma.
There's evidence of major volcanic upticks during every one of these geomagnetic pole shifts and things like that and as well as the climate changes and some of the best papers and best geophysicists in the world are really starting to tie major extinction events to these geomagnetic pole shifts and a lot of the reason is because This energy takes out the ozone.
This energy really changes the jet streams.
It screws with the monsoon.
It creates extreme temperature shifts, extreme tropical storms, not to mention the fact that it's extra radiation bombarding us and whether you're You're a mouse or a human that matters.
Yeah.
jimmy corsetti
And one thing that people need to understand is that this is mainstream science.
There have been several hundred known geomagnetic pole shifts in the last few million years that we're aware of.
And it's measurable and it's accelerating.
For example, in the 1980s, the North Pole was shifting at something like seven miles per year.
Just up to 10 years ago, it was 30 miles.
And now it's at like 38 miles a year.
Correct me if these numbers are off, but it is accelerating.
And that's what the data shows is that it starts slowly.
The mainstream science will say it's over, you know, Several, you know, tens of thousands of years is the process, but when it finally does do its actual flip, it's quite quick.
And what's interesting is that when we're talking about cycles of extinction level events, there's, I could show you a mainstream scientific paper that's published by the Journal of Science, and it's even republished on, get this, The NIH.gov website that talks about the excursion of 41,000 years ago, tying into a mass extinction level event.
tim pool
So if you, I just Googled this, howstuffworks.com, Earth's magnetic north pole has rapidly shifted in the past 40 years.
I mean, this is actually, I would call it commonly accepted that the shifts, the poles shift and all that.
Do you think that, so what I've been told in the past is, Once the poles start to move, it's just a flip.
Is that true?
unidentified
Like... It will hit that tipping point, but it does sort of tip slowly and then accelerate, accelerate, and then a snap.
Whether that snap, you know, exactly when that's going to be, that is a difficult thing to peg down.
All we can do is know that...
These things happen on a fairly regular cycle.
Every 12,000 years there's a major one of these that they like to call a geomagnetic excursion.
And then on the half cycles of that every 6,000 years there's a mini excursion.
The last mini excursion was 6,000 years ago.
The last major one was called the Gothenburg event 12,000 years ago.
The one 24,000 years ago was called Lake Mungo.
Mono Lake before that.
LaChamp before that.
Vostok before that.
Toba before that.
And so we are not only directly on time for the next one to be occurring.
Whether you look at the last mini cycle, which was 6,000 years ago, or the last full cycle, 12,000 years ago.
Not only are we right on time, but the magnetic poles are shifting and the magnetic field is weakening exactly as one would expect during this time.
tim pool
So does this mean we are facing an extinction level event?
And if so, what product can I sell to get rich off of it?
unidentified
I don't know about the second one, but one of the things I do is I put together all the scientific articles on exactly how dangerous these things are There have been a couple good ones in the last couple of years, but the one that is controlling by far, it's by two geophysicists named Channel and Vigliotti, and it was published in Reviews of Geophysics, which is widely accepted to be the number one geophysics journal in the world.
And it basically tracked not only how well major extinctions are tied to these geomagnetic excursions, but they show where on the Earth.
is getting hit the hardest.
tim pool
But what does that mean for a regular person right now?
If we get a mini excursion or whatever?
unidentified
It basically means that what anybody has perceived as climate change is chump change compared to what's going to happen.
tim pool
Like day-after-tomorrow level stuff?
jimmy corsetti
You're going to freeze to death.
unidentified
Day-after-tomorrow type stuff.
And believe it or not, there is a very good chance that the earth is going to do a 90 degree tilt.
tim pool
Nope.
So that means, like, Antarctica could melt?
unidentified
No.
Look, there's still glaciers in the tropics today.
In Africa, in Indonesia.
Really?
If you Google tropical glaciers, you're going to find a bunch of them.
jimmy corsetti
This blew my mind this morning when we were talking about this over breakfast.
unidentified
Wow!
No joke!
And so what you have to realize is the last 12,000 years has been very warm.
It's been what's called an interglacial cycle as opposed to a glacial cycle.
So it's been warmer the last 12,000 years.
Look at this!
If after 12,000 years of a warm interglacial cycle we still have glaciers in the tropics, Back previous cycles, and in a glacial cycle, you could throw Antarctica to the equator and leave it there for 12,000 years.
It's not going to melt away.
Wow.
jimmy corsetti
So listen to this.
tim pool
But there's got to be a little bit of melting.
jimmy corsetti
I mean.
unidentified
A little bit, of course, yes.
But also, I mean, have you ever seen an iceberg calving?
Yeah.
Or something like that?
tim pool
Those are cool.
unidentified
And how much fog and stuff comes out.
Antarctica would be shrouded in fog, which would, I don't know if you guys know the concept of albedo, how clouds, ice, things like that, they bounce sunlight off and actually don't let it come in and penetrate.
Yeah, there'll be a little bit of melting, but it'll also be shrouded in fog, which will protect it for however long.
tim pool
So, actually, this is really interesting.
The other day, we got snow earlier this week, and the next day, there are dark patches all over the snow, where tufts of grass were.
It's actually fairly obvious what happened.
Snow reflects light, doesn't absorb the heat.
The grass that was breaching the tip was absorbing some and creating small pockets just warm enough to melt the snow.
And so it created these little melted spots all over the place.
I'm assuming that's what it is.
That makes the most sense.
unidentified
That makes sense.
tim pool
And I think this could be what you're referring to.
I'm not a scientist or anything with this, but I was reading about how in an ice age, all of the ice and snow reflects the heat back off the planet.
So it actually slows the process of warming.
unidentified
Yes, definitely.
jimmy corsetti
Something that's wild that people need to understand is that we are in the middle of an ice age right now.
It's been ongoing for 3 million years, and as Ben was just saying, that we've been warming for the last 12,000 years.
And the data shows, and I'm citing mainstream sources, Utah Geological Survey is one of the most prestigious.
It shows up at the top of Google.
So like when I say mainstream accepted science, That it shows that the earth is cold more often than it's hot.
This is part of its natural cycle and that the cycles of cooling last seven to nine times longer than the warming.
In other words, the periods of warming that we're in right now are said to last just several thousand years.
And yet we're 12,000 years into it.
And the cycles of warming can last up to a hundred thousand or excuse me, of cooling can last up to 70 to 90,000 years.
This has been ongoing.
So we've had, let me just give you some more mainstream data.
In just the last 450,000 years, we've had 5 interglacial periods.
Again, interglacial periods are periods of warming.
And again, just to reiterate this, the periods of cooling last 7-9 times longer.
In other words, if you look at the graphs on this data that they have, and again, this is from ice cores that they've taken from Antarctica as well as Greenland.
It shows that, if anything, we're due for cooling.
So when I'm looking at these cycles of geomagnetic pole shifts, and actually, let me just quickly say while I'm on a tangent, you know that we're over the target that this is true when publications, or not even a publication, a media outlet called Media Matters, which was originally funded by George Soros, came after me hard.
They did a hit piece on me.
I discussed this- Wait, what?
Did you know about this?
tim pool
Media Matters did a hit piece on you?
Are you like voting for Trump or something?
jimmy corsetti
So, last January, I was on the Joe Rogan podcast, and I discussed what's called the Adam and Eve story, talking about catastrophe cycles involving the Earth's magnetic pole shifts, involving this Adam and Eve story.
And they did a hit piece on me, saying that I was contradicting mainstream science on climate change.
Because they quoted me saying that, oh, you incorrectly said that the Earth is, I think that the data shows that the Earth is cold more often than it's hot.
That contradicts mainstream scientific data.
I sent them, I responded to them and said, excuse me, actually look at the data right here.
It shows that what I'm talking about here has to do with the cycles of cooling and has to do with like the Earth's precession and other things involving poles.
And they came after me hard.
I'm like, that right there, if George Soros' soldiers are coming after me, I'm over the target.
unidentified
Did they say that you were saying something wrong?
jimmy corsetti
Yes.
I said that, besides that, they said the data does not show that it's cold more often than it's hot.
Guys, anyone can look at the Utah Geological Survey as well as others.
NASA has published this.
Again, this was published on NIH website.
And it shows that, no, literally, interglacial periods, which is what we're in right now, periods of warming, shows that the Earth is naturally cold significantly more often than it's hot.
And they also said that- This one?
unidentified
That's it, right there.
jimmy corsetti
Yes, thank you.
unidentified
That's the Utah data right there.
jimmy corsetti
Yep.
Five interglacial, we'll say four, but that looks like five to me, interglacial periods over the last four and fifty thousand years.
And again, just to reiterate this so everyone understands what I'm saying here, those cycles where it says interglacial is what we're in right now, it's warming, interglacial means the period where the glaciers are receding and there's far fewer of them.
tim pool
This is from, I pulled this from the Utah Geological Survey.
jimmy corsetti
Yep, shows up at the top of Google.
tim pool
Utah.gov.
This is the government website.
And you can plainly see that the warm periods are peaks and the glacial periods are valleys, which are longer.
unidentified
And the warm periods come on fast.
What causes that?
Is that a- Shane jumped in.
Shane Cashman, ladies and gentlemen.
shane cashman
Yo, what's good?
I'm out there collecting samples of the fake snow from this fake blizzard.
I had a bone to pick with Tim.
I heard he said it was a regular snowstorm.
I don't know.
Seems a little weird, but, uh, happy to be here, brave my life for this.
unidentified
We're in an interglacial period, so things should be warming.
shane cashman
Yeah, I had some questions, actually, because of, uh, you're talking about the magnetic pole shifting.
I'm gonna get some coffee while we do that.
tim pool
There's one thing I want to say real quick, because I think this very much matters.
I was totally ignorant to this.
Here is an image from theguardian.com of tropical glaciers.
That's, like, it is a glacier in a warm place.
A large, a photograph of a large chunk of ice in a tropical area.
Important to know.
I had a conversation a long time ago.
There was a teacher.
And we were talking about, I can't remember what we were talking about.
Oh, it was politics.
And this is 15, 20 years ago.
And I said, they're like, oh, George W. Bush is all bad and all that stuff.
And I was like, I totally agree.
And I was like, I can give him credit, though, for preserving a lot of the Alaskan rainforest, I think.
I haven't tracked this stuff in a long time.
But I said something like, At the very least, creating national parks around the Alaskan rainforest, I think is a good thing.
And she goes, you mean Amazon rainforest?
And I was like, no, no, the Alaskan rainforest.
It's American territory.
She goes, there's no rainforest in Alaska.
And I was like, yes, there is.
What are you talking about?
And we were in Seattle.
I was like, where do you think you live?
Like, this is a rainforest.
Because the average person hears rainforest, they think jungle.
They don't realize it just means lots of rain in a forest.
And so when I heard, you know, you mentioned a tropical glacier, I was like, it sounds paradoxical.
It's real, it's there.
So yeah, Shane, getting up to speed.
shane cashman
You may have- I missed the last few minutes, but I was right where I was driving up the hill.
I was hearing you guys talk about the magnetic pole shifting, magnetic shield.
Reminded me of a story I wrote a few years ago for Timcast about birds flying out of the sky.
Yeah.
And I was curious if cryptochromes in the bird's eyes, like migratory birds, that has anything to do with the pole shift?
unidentified
You're exactly on point.
You're exactly on point.
shane cashman
So what do you think is going on there?
unidentified
So whether you're looking at strange things happening with birds, strange things happening with whales, sharks, sea turtles, there's even reports of deer going off course, whether you're looking at the elephant, What is this?
- In China who just went.
You remember that little excursion the elephants went on?
jimmy corsetti
I haven't heard this.
shane cashman
- Actually, no, no, no, in China.
unidentified
- What is this? - In China, a couple of years ago, a bunch of elephants broke out of where they were supposed to be and then just started walking.
shane cashman
- Dude, I saw a moose do this in Beacon, New York once.
And they were like, yeah, moose are just walking in one direction and we don't know what's going on.
jimmy corsetti
People need to understand that a lot of animals on Earth, all the animals you just mentioned, salmon, various insects, they are the, look, humpback whales can travel 10,000 years and return to virtually the same location year round.
Salmon return to almost the same spot to spawn from where they had spawned themselves.
And it's believed that it's related to their, you know, geomagnetic compass.
So if the Earth's shields, if the magnetic poles are changing, then it's going to influence life on Earth.
And if you really want to get into a wild, deep rabbit hole, is it just me or is humanity losing their minds?
And I'm starting to wonder if us, if we are being affected by the geomagnetic poles.
Cause what, you know, you got all these, last time I was on here, I was reading various Bible scriptures that were talking about the end times and how people are going to be losing their minds.
It just, I'm starting to get a vibe that that's happening.
shane cashman
I literally wrote that down before you said it.
That's so funny.
tim pool
You guys, have you ever seen, Shane, nice to meet you.
Have you seen the research where they put a massive magnet on someone's head and it makes them feel the presence of God?
unidentified
Yeah.
shane cashman
I've heard about it.
I've seen the videos.
jimmy corsetti
We need to do that.
unidentified
So not only, not only is that legitimate, but when they, so since we're talking about losing the magnetic field, it's sort of the opposite of putting a magnet on your head.
They've done these studies for the purpose of seeing what was going to happen to astronauts.
Basically they put them in low magnetic field areas.
They bombard them with slightly higher levels of proton radiation.
Two interesting things happen.
First thing that happens is the hippocampus starts to get degraded and their cognition goes down, which is a fancy way of saying getting dumber.
Then the locus coeruleus gets activated, which increases your vulnerability to panic, terror, anxiety, and so basically increased emotional instability Fear-based reactions and getting dumber is exactly what you'd expect.
Is that not the world today right now?
tim pool
Take a look at this headline from The Independent.
Disabling parts of the brain with magnets can weaken faith in God and change attitudes to immigrants, study finds.
jimmy corsetti
Oh, that's interesting.
tim pool
Yeah.
unidentified
So when you bring us up, I'm like, wait a minute, not to be a Bible thumper.
jimmy corsetti
I did this last time, but since there'll be a bunch of people listening, so I just, this will only take a second to read off.
So this is, and I'm not a Bible thumper, but I find it very interesting when, when, when people wrote things, cause a lot of people listening won't be, and I'm a believer and, um, But when people wrote things down thousands of years ago and went to great extent to preserve it, I'm curious about what they are talking about.
So here's Isaiah 5 20.
It says, What sorrow for those who say that evil is good and good is evil, that dark is light and light is dark, and that bitter is sweet and sweet is bitter.
Is that not the backwards upside down world that we're living in?
Like nothing makes sense.
Like, you know, crime is being celebrated and injustice.
shane cashman
The Bible is a structure to chaos.
Whether you like it or not.
tim pool
Ian was just right about everything with the vibrations of the universe and... Well, some things to it.
shane cashman
I mean, also talking about the poles, it reminds me of a story I heard from a friend.
She's a very successful lady in her 70s, goes to like some really crazy expensive doctor up in New York City.
And he's been telling her for years that he believes the poles are shifting and that it's affecting pilots and that because of that, they're getting more radiation.
And that they're getting like crazier and cancer at a higher level.
And, you know, she's she's so she's I totally believe it, you know, because like she hears it all the time from this guy.
She's been going to him for about, I want to say, a decade now.
jimmy corsetti
What's so wild about that is that if you look at they are updating and have been for 10 years now, runway numbers all across the world, which are, of course, aligned to the compass.
Like if you land on Runway 36R, it's, you know, three states dead north.
So they've been updating them around the world for the last decade.
You can find numerous articles about that.
So it's actively changing, it's measurable.
shane cashman
So it's changing everything.
Like, so with the birds I was talking about at the beginning, when I got here, they were just, hundreds were falling out of the sky.
Migratory birds, and no one knew why.
This is right before COVID.
tim pool
Yo, look at this, look at this!
unidentified
I thought it was COVID.
tim pool
No, that's crazy.
shane cashman
I had no idea about this.
tim pool
This is from the National Centers for Environmental Information.
This is NOAA.gov.
Airport runway names shift with magnetic field.
That's crazy!
unidentified
And so, here's the thing.
Because there are so many pilots, they can't just hide something like this.
But they don't have to put it on CNN.
You know?
Because there are so many scientists who work with radiation, they can't hide studies about what to expect when the magnetic field goes down.
They just don't have to put it on CNN.
You can find All of this information.
tim pool
Don't turn those on.
shane cashman
This is how I feel about... We'll find a time if we do.
unidentified
I think society... Ian just brought like large strange objects.
jimmy corsetti
I thought you brought in a bomb.
It looked like a bomb when I first saw it.
shane cashman
Are we going to plug in?
Are we plugging in somehow?
tim pool
I could.
jimmy corsetti
Let me get a hit on that.
Let me get a hit.
unidentified
It's something you've got to acquiesce to.
tim pool
I don't want the computer to break.
unidentified
So basically what happens, it won't affect your mechanics as far as I can tell.
I have it set up next to my machine for hours at a time and it's everything's fine.
But like, uh, what happens is these, this is based on royal rice technology.
The scientists of the 1920s, it would heal people with frequency purportedly.
And you turn these things on, you plug them into a transistor and then through your phone and you run different frequencies through it.
tim pool
And this is electromagnetism?
unidentified
It produces magnetic fields, yeah, but it's just vibrating copper, basically.
tim pool
But I wonder, because we're talking about the pole shifts, how this may be breaking people's brains, how scientists have actually disabled people's faith in God with magnets.
unidentified
That's what made me think to go get these.
tim pool
And I'm wondering if perhaps the reason you've got people saying this stuff can heal you is that it restores the magnetic balance or something like this.
I'm not gonna sit here and pretend, right now there's a scientist putting his face, you know, his hand in his face like, these guys are so dumb.
But if we're talking about this magnetic pole shift, if we're talking about the strange things happening around the world to human psyche, civilization, politics, and perhaps because the data shows there's a correlation between magnetism and people's faith and prejudice and things like this, I'm wondering if there's a reason why people believe a device like this might have an impact.
jimmy corsetti
You want to hear another one?
I read this last time I was on, but if I may, because I think that this applies with what you just said.
So this right here, 2 Timothy 3, which is the title or the chapter is Evil in the Last Days.
But understand this, in the last days, terrible times will come for men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, Brutal.
Without the love of good.
Traitorous.
Reckless.
Conceited.
Lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God.
Having a form of godliness but denying its power.
Turn away from such as these." I'm like, is this not the world we're living in?
unidentified
It is.
shane cashman
It's like, it's like, reading that or hearing it is like, it reminds me that human nature is cyclical as well as like the apocalyptic nature you guys are talking about.
unidentified
Right.
shane cashman
Like we go through these large cycles and when they were writing that they, I think, gathered a lot of experience of human nature.
unidentified
It also sounds like that's what kids are like.
It's like people will be bitches at their parents.
Kids are going to scream.
Yeah, to a degree.
shane cashman
But that's like to a violent degree.
jimmy corsetti
It's amplified because of it.
We've always been like, this is human nature, no doubt.
It's a human condition.
But it's like, are things becoming magnified?
And are some people more vulnerable to it than others?
unidentified
Do you guys think that it's like...
Like, it's like destiny?
Like, we built this electromagnetic technology that's gotta be interfering with our consciousness in some way, all these machines and electricity.
Did we just happen to invent electricity at this part of the cycle on purpose?
tim pool
Before you guys answer, I would just say, based on what you're describing with magnetic pole shift, climate change, glacial cycles, etc., it seems like you're talking about a drop of water in the ocean.
Yeah, maybe, but the way electricity works too, like one spark can cause an entire chain of react, chain of command, like it can... Yeah, but starting a fire is different from having like a flamethrower pointed at someone, right?
So we have all of these electronic devices emitting these, you know, EMFs and things like that, but then you look at the Earth's magnetic field and it is just, you're talking about a drop of water in the ocean, you know?
unidentified
Yeah, I mean, it's one thing, you know, if you've got your cell phone up to your head all day long and doing stuff like that, okay, it absolutely could have an effect.
I don't know if it's going to be anywhere near the effect that losing the magnetic field and having the extra cosmic radiation coming through the atmosphere is going to have.
That's my question.
What is causing the magnetic field to warp right now?
Well, so that's a little bit of a subject of discussion.
You've got a lot of geophysicists working at, you know, very prestigious universities who like to think that it's something happening at Earth's core.
There's a lot of evidence that the Sun and even the galactic magnetic field have something to do with it.
Now that gets a little more complex.
We don't have to get into all of that.
But what we do know is This happens so regularly.
On a cycle.
And that cycle is up, and we're seeing exactly what we'd be expecting to see.
Oh, up there, you've got a... So this was an article that NASA posted directly at me.
Believe it or not, NASA actually posted this article directly to me, and it was the start of my second battle with NASA.
tim pool
It says, why variations in Earth's magnetic field aren't causing today's climate change.
And it's got this cool little graphic of the magnetic field acting as a force field protecting Earth.
unidentified
Yeah, so I went through paragraph by paragraph and obliterated this in a video a couple years ago.
The other thing to know is that, you know, a lot of the stuff that they're talking about here doesn't actually have anything to do with the topic of conversation.
If you guys, if you find anything in this article that you're curious about, I've still got it all in the forefront of my memory.
I'm happy to go over it again.
shane cashman
Why did they post this?
So what were you saying and what did they retaliate with?
unidentified
Essentially, I was saying that the Sun's interaction with Earth as it is being changed and enhanced by Earth losing the magnetic field is the main cause of climate change nowadays.
And so many people started talking about it after I posted the video.
NASA decided that they were going to try to respond and it didn't go very well.
shane cashman
What are your thoughts on NASA?
unidentified
There are people at NASA who have their heads screwed on straight.
There are a lot of people at NASA who I talk to regularly who say it's so frustrating that I can't get my papers published.
I can't get a grant to study certain things.
I can't even go throughout the rest of the department and talk about what I think.
I basically have to go rogue.
And there's a lot of professors like that as well.
By and large, you know, NASA's full of a lot of disconnected units who don't have the full picture.
Everybody's just working on their own little thing.
shane cashman
Sounds like the government at large.
unidentified
The people in charge of the departments, the Goddard Space Flight Center, JPL, definitely Earth's climate team at NASA.
They are very, they're as much politicians as they are scientists.
shane cashman
That's what's scary is that they could be ideologically captured as well.
unidentified
Oh, it's just as easy financially, you know, just as easy to buy a politician as it is by a scientist as it is a politician science TM.
jimmy corsetti
I've been calling it trademark science DM, you know, it's like we're follow the money.
It's like, you know, a lot of scientists that spend, you know, quarter million dollars in an education and they can't get a job afterwards.
So, of course, they're going to go where the real funding's at because they're trying to live.
unidentified
My guess about what's happening with the magnetic field is the Earth, the Sun, our solar system is in the galactic arm, which is going like this, and every time it goes up, the Earth's magnetic field swaps down, and then every time the galactic arm waves down again, the Earth's poles are like... That's very close.
That's very close to what it is.
Very, very close.
The galactic magnetic field.
For it wraps around the whole galaxy but the part where the north and the south magnetic fields are separated are not a straight flat line through the equator of the galaxy.
It ripples outward like a ballerina skirt and so it literally looks like a wave coming like this and It's moving throughout the galaxy as well, and as this wave crest passes by our solar system, our entire solar system goes from the North to the South to the North to the South magnetic fields.
It's basically a galactic magnetic reversal.
They have spotted this electric current sheet separating the North and South.
They have detailed it very well.
In fact, in the Milky Way, they know that- Who is they, though?
I mean, mainstream astronomers.
And so, what is actually mainstream science is we know that this wave is tens of light years thick.
It is anywhere from 60 to 170 parsecs tall, which is, you know, parsec is, you know, a little more than two light years.
And they've also started discovering these same forms At stars, they know about the sun's version of it.
They've discovered it in other galaxies as well.
And so this is also mainstream science, but only amongst galactic astrophysics.
You try to bring that same science into, okay, well, what's this doing to the sun?
What's this doing to the earth?
And they don't want to hear it.
But at the same time, it's so blatantly obvious that, okay, according to galactic astrophysics, you've got a galactic magnetic reversal that should be repeatedly, over and over and over again, hitting our entire solar system.
And when you look, it's not just the Earth that's changing right now.
The Sun's magnetic fields are changing.
Venus is changing.
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, even Pluto, they're all changing even more than the Earth is.
Earth's lucky enough to have One of the strongest magnetic fields in the solar system, especially relative to its size.
Technically, Jupiter's is stronger, but if you were to shrink Jupiter down to the size of Earth and shrink its magnetic field, you know, along with it, Earth's would be stronger.
Earth is an incredibly powerful magnetic field, which is why it's actually the least changing sphere in our entire solar system right now.
And in addition to that, you'd say, OK, well, what else would you expect to see if we're going through a galactic magnetic reversal?
OK, well, this electric field, what's it going to do in space?
It's going to act like an electric Swiffer duster.
There's a lot of dust, gases, other things like that.
Over the last 10 years, I could show you the papers.
Tons of extra dust that they're noticing in the solar system near the top of the sun's atmosphere.
Earth's atmosphere has about 55% more dust in its upper layers than it did about a century ago.
They're noticing more ions, more neutral gases.
The Voyager probes out past Pluto, they're detecting magnetic pressure fronts and magnetic shock waves and other things of that nature.
And Pluto lost a fifth of its atmosphere in one year.
On Neptune, the superstorms have reversed direction.
I mean, imagine if all of a sudden hurricanes started forming off the coast of Florida and then just shot eastward across the Atlantic towards Africa.
We would say, well, that's not how Earth works.
That can't happen.
Okay, same thing with Neptune, except it just did happen.
There's record storms on Uranus, record aurora on Uranus, on Saturn.
There's a superstorm that comes around every 30 years.
It just appears every 30 years and astronomers realize, wait a minute, okay, so Saturn doesn't have a perfectly circular orbit.
There's this one point in Saturn's 30-year orbit where it's slightly closer to the Sun.
That's the exact moment where For decades and decades, they've been noticing, when it's at its closest point to the sun, enough energy gets into the Saturnian atmosphere to form the superstorm.
It just formed a decade early.
How does that happen?
It's losing its magnetic field.
More of that solar energy is coming in.
It tricked the planet into thinking it was at its closest point to the sun.
tim pool
So, you were mentioning before, I asked about Day After Tomorrow.
unidentified
Yeah.
tim pool
I think everybody's seen that movie, right?
unidentified
Yeah.
tim pool
In that movie, there's a super storm that pulls in, what do they say?
unidentified
It pulls in cold air from the troposphere or whatever?
Yeah, from the troposphere and the lower stratosphere.
tim pool
And then it drops the temperatures to like minus 400 or something, and then everything instantly freezes.
That won't happen, will it?
unidentified
Probably not, but at the same time... Just probably not, right?
shane cashman
I wasn't very confident.
unidentified
No, I mean, the kind of super storms are, they're gonna be bad.
But what we do know is this does happen every 6,000 years and then on a greater level every 12,000 years.
And at no point has it ever killed the whole planet.
jimmy corsetti
I think that this might be a good segue into differentiating the difference between geomagnetic pole shifts and actual flips.
So to anyone listening, a geomagnetic pole shift means that our compasses will flip.
Like, North will now be South and vice versa.
And that has happened, you know, within tens of thousands of years, 6,000 years.
But one thing, the last time we had an actual flip where the Earth physically flips was Was approximately 780,000 years ago, and we're something like 200,000 years overdue.
So, Ben, is that what you see is happening next?
Are we in the middle of a geomagnetic pulse shift, or are we in the mix of a flip, a physical flip?
unidentified
I see the Earth doing that 90 degree tilt every 12,000 years on the geomagnetic excursions.
tim pool
90 degree tilt?
Is that going to put the North and South Pole at the equator?
unidentified
Essentially, picture you've got a globe and you're looking at Greenland.
Okay?
Tilt the globe towards you until Greenland is at the equator.
tim pool
But this means if you live in like, what?
If you live in Miami, for instance.
unidentified
It's going to be cold.
tim pool
It's going to be Arctic Circle.
jimmy corsetti
Ask yourself why there's crocodile fossils in Alaska.
unidentified
Antarctic Circle, but yeah.
tim pool
Right, right, right.
But what I mean is like, right, basically you're going to be in this, you're going to have winter all night, summer all day.
unidentified
Unless that's the axis that it tilts on.
So would it be like the North Pole would tilt 90 degrees and then it would keep rotating the same direction?
Or would it be that the North Pole would turn 90 degrees and then it would start rotating?
Right now, Earth is just rotating around one axis, right?
We're just doing this.
It's going to be doing this and then as it's going to be turning on another axis.
The math shows pretty well, and they actually did this math in the 1940s and the 1950s.
Einstein did the math, the Rand Corporation did the math, which we're going to talk... we kind of have to talk about in a little bit.
But basically, it's all about where there is too much ice weight.
Too much weight of ice.
Because this is basic physics.
When you've got an object that's spinning, the heaviest part of the object that's spinning wants to spin at the point of greatest centrifugal force.
That's the equator.
Because obviously it's taking the same amount of time to do one rotation as the poles, but at the poles it's just a slow turn.
You know, at the equator you're going what we know is a thousand miles an hour.
tim pool
Take a look at this.
unidentified
Yeah.
tim pool
So this is a really cool thing I saw.
unidentified
Oh wow, I love this.
Yeah, this is the Genabekov effect, the tennis racket theorem, the second axis theorem.
This is really cool.
I don't know if this is exactly how it's going to work on Earth, but something like this is going to happen.
And it's, you know, with this, it's actually 180 degrees.
tim pool
But then again, for those that are listening, it is a T-shaped tool, like a handle.
It's a guy in the space station.
He spins it and it's spinning around every few rotations.
It flips and then flips back and then flips back and then flips back.
Kind of weird.
You wonder why that is?
Yeah.
unidentified
So it's hard to know whether or not this is exactly the mechanism when it comes to Earth.
tim pool
I don't want to suggest it's the same mechanism.
I just wanted to show that there are these phenomena.
unidentified
Oh yeah, certainly.
tim pool
What doesn't seem to make sense, it will just flip.
You'd think That an object in the T-shape, if you were to spin it on Earth on a table, it's going to spin like a top.
unidentified
Right.
tim pool
If you were to put it in the air and spin it, you'd think it would flip wildly in random directions.
In fact, it stabilizes and flips back and forth near perfectly.
unidentified
That's what the Rand Corporation determined actually happens to the planet.
Now, before we get to that, there's three important things to think about because when we're talking about The magnetic pole shift and the earth turning over.
The idea of the earth doing a 90 degree tilt is the hardest one for people to get their heads around.
Not only is this in a lot of different historical catastrophist accounts, it's in a lot of religions.
The book of Enoch chapter 65 says, "...and Noah saw the world turned over and knew that its destruction was near." But there's... So there's this entire category of the history of catastrophism.
You know, whether it's Earth swaying like a drunkard.
There's two things that are really important to know here.
One of them...
The second one, you guys might have to fact-check and do a little bit of looking, but I'll describe it very well.
This other one, you can just do this in your heads.
So you all know the story of the mammoths that were flash-frozen, food undigested in their mouths and stomachs.
tim pool
Yeah.
unidentified
What you need to realize is these mammoths were consuming hundreds if not thousands of pounds of vegetation every day.
Where they found these mammoths There is not enough vegetation to support them today in an interglacial warm cycle.
These things were frozen during the glacial cycle.
There was no food where they found those mammoths today at that latitude.
Which means that when they were there, when they were eating, when they were frozen, they were not at that latitude.
They were at a lower latitude, in a warmer, temperate, high vegetation area.
and were then thrust to the polar region this is something you can do just think about i mean they had to dig them out of the ice there is nowhere around the world at that latitude where those mammoths could have survived today let alone during a glacial cycle wait if if the planet tilted to a 90 degree at it's so it's spinning like this Is that what you're saying?
The spin will right itself so that it's always going, you know, kind of like we know now, but it'll kind of be like a wonky swaying back and forth, which is where the swaying like a drunkard from the Bible probably comes from.
tim pool
It's going to be tilting like this, and then the tilt will kind of... But that means, at least for some period as this is happening, people will experience, like what, month-long days or longer?
unidentified
This whole thing's gonna take place in just about a, just about, well, definitely less than a week, but probably a day or two, is how long the tilt takes.
tim pool
Oh, okay.
The ship's gonna happen in a day.
unidentified
A day.
tim pool
But this means- Like a thief in the night, is that- But that, that means overnight, you know, if you're, if you're living in Florida, where it's like sun up, sun down at what, like 7pm or whatever, every, every day, the closer you get to the equator, the more the sunset, you know, is stabilized.
If you live the further north, you get, obviously, if you're in the Arctic Circle, you get permanent sunlight in the summer and permanent dark in the winter.
It's not perfect.
Actually, it's really interesting because I was just up in Barrow.
You can see twilight on the horizon.
Oh, yeah.
But if that shift were to happen, that means you'd be like, all right, sunset's around 8 p.m.
or whatever.
You go to bed and you wake up and it's just sun doesn't go down anymore.
jimmy corsetti
You want to hear something nuts from me?
tim pool
Or does it come back up?
jimmy corsetti
So we were just talking about scripture.
So this is from the Quran.
He who seeks repentance from the Lord before the rising of the sun from the west, rising the sun from the west before the day of resurrection, Allah turns to him with mercy.
And here's one from the Bible, Joshua 10, 13.
So the sun stood still and the moon stopped.
The nation avenged itself from its enemies, as is written in the book of Jashar.
The sun stopped in the middle of the sky and delayed going down about a full day.
What?
Are they talking about?
shane cashman
When you say thrust, how violent is this for people and animals?
unidentified
So basically, it's not like you're standing there and then the world's gonna jerk to the side and you're gonna be thrown into the wall.
It's an acceleration of about 17 miles per hour per minute.
Now, if you've ever stopped at a stop sign in a car, you know that's... 17 miles per hour per minute is nothing, but when that lasts...
60 minutes, 120 minutes, when it lasts a thousand minutes.
Right.
By the peak of this, the planet's moving hundreds of miles an hour in that direction.
Now, it's come on so gradually that you don't necessarily notice it other than looking in the sky.
And noticing that the clouds look weird and the animals are going crazy.
shane cashman
So if it's happening at night, the stars are shifting.
unidentified
Oh yeah, a third of the stars that you could once see would no longer be visible to you.
shane cashman
So you get a new view.
unidentified
Yeah, a new view.
But you know, it's easy to read scripture like that, and there's a lot of good ones in Isaiah as well about that.
And it's pretty easy to wrap your head around the idea of like, okay, wait a minute, how were these mammoths eating that much food if they were literally in the Arctic.
There isn't that much food there now, certainly wasn't in a glacial cycle.
And so you can say, okay, well, were they closer to the equator at that time?
The single most important discovery about this was kept, to this day it's kept secret by the government, but it was secretly kept out of classified files by Major Maynard E. White.
He led Project Nanuk to the Arctic in the 1940s.
Now, it is absolutely true what they say about the mainstream, what the mainstream says about Project Nanuk.
They went up to northern Canada and their goal was to learn how to navigate around the magnetic pole and set up defenses just in case Russia came over the top.
But, At that time, they had to first discover where the magnetic pole was, they figured out it was moving, and they decided to dig down.
Now, this isn't... this, to this day, has not been acknowledged by the government, by mainstream, but Major White kept the documents from the journey.
He kept the documents from the Pentagon, and he kept the documents from the Rand Corporation who did the math.
He gave them to his son, Ken White, to publish in a book called World in Peril.
It is a very hard book to find.
I got a copy of it several years ago, but essentially what these documents and it's very clear when you're looking at these that they weren't faked.
And you know, this guy had no reason to fake them.
He kept them, gave them to his son so that the world would know.
when they started digging down around the magnetic pole in the arctic circle the first several feet was polar fossils the next layer was tropical fossils polar fossils tropical fossils polar fossils tropical fossils if they're keeping this a secret how do you know about it because major white kept all the information gave it to his son to publish in the book world in peril and Is this like Operation High Jump?
shane cashman
Is that the same thing?
Didn't they go up there for... and the theories are they experienced some type of... That's a different operation.
Right.
But they would stay in the same place, right?
unidentified
That's it, Tim.
That's the book.
jimmy corsetti
And they'll just, they'll call this pseudoscience.
So if you want to make it secret, they just say, oh, well, it's BS.
It's not true.
That's it.
unidentified
And so essentially what they're saying is that the mainstream position would be that Major White lied, that he fabricated all these documents from the Pentagon, from the Rand Corporation, from Project Nanook up to the Arctic.
I don't believe that is the case.
Everything looks genuine.
He had no reason to do this.
This wasn't published by him.
It was published by his son several decades later.
Because if he published it himself, he would be subject to very serious criminal penalties.
tim pool
Well, he would be, even if his son had it.
unidentified
In theory, yes.
But he was... When the book was published, he had actually started working... He was one of the people who oversaw spies.
And he had been retired at this point, and there's a very good chance... I mean, he died.
tim pool
What about the other possibility, I mean, if we're gonna get conspiratorial, that this is a pseudo-conspiracy released by the government intentionally to confuse or distract?
unidentified
I think about a hundred people knew about this book before I found it.
Like, nobody knew... I mean, unless their plan was to literally Somehow guide me to this book and and have me talk about it.
tim pool
You know, who's that guy who claimed he saw aliens in the 90s?
I always forget his name.
shane cashman
Uh, the one who was abducted?
tim pool
No, no, he worked for the government.
shane cashman
Lazar?
tim pool
Lazar, yeah.
unidentified
Bob Lazar.
tim pool
He said that he saw a little green man or whatever, but then later on says, oh, must have been a puppet or something.
And one of the theories as to the claims he made is they brought him in specifically to trick him Hoping he would then go to the press and say a bunch of crazy nonsense.
There's a really simple reason you would do something like this.
You want your enemies to think you have powerful weapons they can't describe or understand.
To scare them, to deter them.
shane cashman
I think of Annie Jacobson, if you want to believe her or not.
I'm not sure how I feel, but she wrote a book where she said she had a high level source from Area 51 who claimed that we brought in disabled children and mutilated them to make them look like extraterrestrials.
She said it on a Rogan like four or five years ago.
It's in her book.
I forgot the name of the book.
tim pool
It's just more believable than aliens.
Depraved government actors mutilating children.
unidentified
As a person who likes to keep an open mind and think about things, I can't sit here and definitively say that what Tim just described isn't what happened.
I've never believed I've been that kind of special.
I do know this.
Whether it's the Bible, the Quran, the Vedic stories, the stories from India which also talk about this, the Zoroastrian texts which talk about the earth turning over.
It's in every ancient story.
I think about the mammoths and how they literally could not have been in the Arctic when they, like, living there.
There wasn't enough food.
Okay, like, it really makes me think, okay, between the mammoths and the religious stories, there has to be something where the earth turns.
This is the perfect explanation for it and It just so happens, you know, they found, I mean, their geologist said these layers are separated by about 10 to 12 thousand years, which is the perfect geomagnetic cycle, the perfect cycle on which the Earth goes back and forth on this tilt.
Literally, either that is absolutely true, And the world tilts 90 degrees as these geomagnetic pole shifts occur, as is about to happen in the next 20 years.
Or, the government has literally targeted me, like they did Bob Lazar, as an instrument to release this information, and then at the same time, completely censored my YouTube channel.
shane cashman
They haven't banned me from YouTube yet, but I gotta be very very careful what I say.
unidentified
- Maybe, maybe.
- They banned you from YouTube? - They haven't banned me from YouTube yet, but I gotta be very, very careful what I say.
jimmy corsetti
- You know, and I just need to iterate this. - I'm throttled like crazy.
- Which is that this is mainstream science that the earth flips.
So what's, you know, and going back to that hit piece by Media Matters, it was me discussing the Adam and Eve story, which was discussed in a CIA meeting that I learned from Ben a number of years ago, that you were the first to discuss it.
That's where I learned of this.
And that's what they originally attacked me for, was discussing the Adam and Eve story, which talks about a catastrophic pole flip that happens every 6,500 years and is the missing link to lost ancient human civilizations.
It says that this is the story that's been told and passed down by religions across the continents.
And that's what they hit me for.
So of all things, and I was so, let me give a shout out to Tucker Carlson.
He talked about this.
He indirectly mentioned me.
I don't know, I don't think he knows who I am, but he had mentioned this when he gave a speech in Las Vegas approximately a month ago, where he said, I just came across that Media Matters had came after a guy that discussed, you know, this document discussing the, you know, catastrophic events that reset human civilization.
But if all things on earth that Media Matters, funded by George Soros, would go after, why are they concerned about some YouTuber talking about some conspiratorial pulse shift?
And that's, you know what I mean?
Like, if all things they go after, why do they focus on that?
unidentified
So you're not talking about the Adam and Eve story from the Bible.
You're talking about the history of cataclysms by Chan Thomas.
jimmy corsetti
Correct.
Then you should talk about that.
unidentified
Yeah, what is that?
So he wrote three versions of that.
The latest one in the 90s, right before he died, is the best one.
Because he actually figured, it took him three versions and several decades to figure out The sun blasts the bejesus out of our planet when this occurs.
Because the sun's undergoing the galactic magnetic reversal too.
And he also mentioned the galactic magnetic field.
So at the end of the day, he finally got the whole story.
Everything from the mega floods, to the earth turning over, to the extra radiation, to the way humans will treat each other in the end times, to the impact of the sun, the effect of the galaxy on our entire solar system.
The 1990s version of the Adam and Eve story by Chan Thomas is literally the full story of what's happening right now.
shane cashman
What do you mean full story?
Like he rewrote Adam and Eve or the genesis?
unidentified
So I mean essentially I mean do you remember ever having those textbooks in school and it was like Algebra something like seventh edition.
Yeah, you know, they just keep updating it with new information, right?
He was able to make three editions of this story and you know back in the 60s when he wrote the first one he had a lot but they didn't know anything about the Sun or the galactic magnetic fields back then.
By the time the 90s rolled around he literally could complete The entire story.
jimmy corsetti
And not only that, he talked.
So there's something called the Younger Dryas climate catastrophe that happened 11,600 years ago, or the precipice of it was 12,800 years ago.
He talks and describes these events decades before it was published.
So it's like, how did he understand this information decades before?
unidentified
Is this possible that when the earth flips 90 degrees, this is why the the Sphinx has water erosion on it, because it was actually in a different part of the earth where it was definitely underwater.
It was definitely underwater.
tim pool
I don't know.
Egyptologists, geologists and others have rejected water erosion hypothesis.
unidentified
Of course they have.
jimmy corsetti
I tell you what, everyone has the ability for discernment.
And if you look at the water or the Sphinx enclosure, anyone, you do not have to be a geologist to understand the difference between wind erosion and water erosion.
And you can see the two examples of both on the Giza Plateau.
I've been out there a few times.
You can see like You can just go to Google Images and look at examples of limestone with water erosion and limestone with wind erosion.
tim pool
Look at these lines.
jimmy corsetti
Up top, wind.
The enclosure, so down to the lower right, that's the enclosure.
That was once buried and consumed.
Up top on the Sphinx, that's wind erosion.
And what's significant about this is that the Sphinx is allegedly 4,200 years old.
And yet the last time the Nile Delta region had significant rainfall was 9,000 years ago, nearly double the age of the Sphinx.
So it throws a wrench into the age that some have suggested that this is tens of thousands of years old.
And Dr. Robert Shawk from Boston University is the one that brought this to light.
And he was at a conference with a few hundred other geologists.
He didn't show them the Sphinx.
He just showed them the pictures.
Is this wind or is this water erosion?
Everyone said water.
tim pool
I was watching something interesting where they talk about the size of the Sphinx head to the body and that the theory is it was originally like an Anubis head and a pharaoh destroyed it and sculpted a smaller head of himself.
unidentified
Carved his father's head.
jimmy corsetti
Some say Anubis, some say lion, whatever it was.
This picture doesn't do justice for how awkwardly small it actually is.
And on top of it, look how pristine it is in comparison to the lower half.
It's feasible.
It's very reasonable to suggest that it was recarved by some loser pharaoh who wanted, you know, some egomaniac.
It's like, yeah, look at me.
unidentified
Smash his nose off out of because he was so pissed off they defaced the lion.
Yeah, that was probably a cat.
I imagine it was a cat.
jimmy corsetti
By the way, while we're on the topic, because the Sphinx is in Africa, if you were to go to Google Earth and zoom out over the Sahara Desert, there is textbook water striations that blast across the entire continent that is inexplicable to modern science.
I don't know how this happened, but to me it sounds like Related to a geomagnetic, or excuse me, a pole reversal, an actual flip.
Because what would cause, and going back to that Adam and Eve story, it talks about continental size waves two miles high with thousand mile an hour winds that blew and essentially just destroyed the Earth.
And if you look at the Sahara Desert from space, you can see these textbooks durations that you teach of water erosion.
And it's on a level that's Unfathomably larger than anything we've ever seen.
unidentified
I imagine it's from the cometary impact in North America 12,800 years ago that melted the glaciers.
But then Jimmy and I were talking, and he mentioned that you thought maybe it was related to the pole shifts as well, that maybe the reason why comets struck North America and North Asia was because our magnetic field was down.
It wasn't comets.
What caused the great melt 12,800 years ago from your side?
So, these impactors, they don't just show up 12,000 years ago, but 24, 36, 48, 60, 72.
They're on a cycle as well.
And so, one impactor can't hit over and over again.
And something big enough where we're just going through its debris, we'd see it.
We'd see it out there.
I mean, we can spot comets That are on much longer time scales out in the Oort Cloud.
This is where you have to bring in biblical stuff, stellar chemistry, and astrophysics.
The Sun does go dark.
A shell of dust builds around it.
It will go dark for about three days.
And it is because of the galactic magnetic reversal.
At the same time that Earth is triggered by the Galactic Magnetic Reversal Point, the Sun will be triggered, and the Sun is going to blast off this shell of dust.
It's gonna instantly turn it into plasma and blast it everywhere.
It's what I call the Solar Micronova.
That is the impactors.
they get blasted through the entire solar system.
It's pieces of the sun that are actually blasting away.
It's, I mean, technically, is it really all that different from getting hit by a comet or asteroid?
jimmy corsetti
No, but it's an important distinction. - And one thing to touch on that is that if the North American ice shelf got hit by cosmic impacts has been widely suggested, the issue I have for it is then why didn't it just refreeze?
Like, maybe it melted it and it caused some havoc on Earth, but then over time it would refreeze?
This is why I'm more inclined to align with the pole shift theory, which is that it flipped and then it just stayed thawed.
Maybe.
unidentified
Tim brought up some of these African striations that you were talking about, Jimmy.
These left to right lines.
jimmy corsetti
Scroll out even further.
unidentified
Yeah.
jimmy corsetti
All right, right there.
unidentified
These lines drawn across west to east or whatever direction.
These are called striations.
Yeah.
It's made by mass erosion.
jimmy corsetti
This is water erosion.
This is not wind erosion, because if you zoom in, you can see the sand dunes within them.
And I'd scroll out.
Go up and to the left.
Scroll in now, right?
I wish I could show you.
tim pool
Give me one of the names.
jimmy corsetti
Well, this is just anyone listening this over the Rishat structure, commonly referred to as the Eye of the Sahara in the country of Mauritania.
So if you were to scroll, let me step away from the mic.
unidentified
Yeah, this looks like the capital of Atlantis for my view.
jimmy corsetti
It matches more than a dozen similarities to what Plato had described.
unidentified
Look at that ocean sand.
jimmy corsetti
And all those white blemishes is salt, by the way.
Which makes me think that the ocean had blasted over it.
tim pool
There's a really interesting map that talks about how ancient coastlines affected modern voting patterns.
Have you seen it?
jimmy corsetti
Say that again?
tim pool
Ancient coastlines affect modern voting patterns in the United States.
Tell us more.
I don't know exactly what combination of chemicals, but They show a map where the coastline used to be in the south, in like Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Georgia.
In the middle of the states is this band that used to be coastline, which leaves a bunch of sediment and minerals.
Later on, as the coastline retreats, you then have very fertile soil.
You then have plantation owners coming to bring farms, bringing slaves.
The slaves densely populate this band of fertile soil, and now you have this chunk of voting block that's predominantly Democrat voters.
unidentified
Interesting.
jimmy corsetti
That's wild.
tim pool
Because of where the coastline used to be, and then how humans reacted to the fertile soil that was there.
You get the point.
jimmy corsetti
That's wild, and since we're talking about the South, you should look at the 10,000-year-old forest underneath the Gulf of Mexico, just south of Louisiana.
Check it out.
Give that a Google.
tim pool
Let's, let's, let's, let's, let's wrap up the Raishat structure real quick, and then I'll Google the 10,000-year-old forest underwater.
unidentified
So, uh...
tim pool
Why don't we just, I don't know, go to the Rishat structure and then excavate?
jimmy corsetti
So it is forbidden.
The Mauritanian government is protecting their gold.
So there are vast gold deposits in Mauritania.
And what's interesting about this, so I've talked about this in depth, that this, I consider the Rishat structure the most likely location for the lost ancient city of Atlantis as described by Plato.
That story is not a Disney movie.
It originates from the Egyptians that said there were colonists who started over new from a destroyed civilization.
And Atlantis was said to have an abundance of gold.
Well, what's interesting is that prior to the discovery of gold in North America, and this is by the way, I'm citing the ancient resources of what's the title of where it's from 1852.
This is an actual document of ancient resources out of Mauritania.
And up until that point, the vast majority of gold that was sent to Europe came right out of Mauritania.
So I had some buddies that went to Mauritania, Josh Sigurdsson, world attorney of media, give him a shout out.
And as well as Graham, forgive me, Archaic Lens on Twitter, I gotta give him a shout out.
He went there with ground penetrating radar, and he threatened them with imprisonment if they were to use it.
So, like, there's gold there, and so that's the number one reason.
tim pool
What is the official explanation for the creation of the Rishat structure?
jimmy corsetti
Rishat.
Rishat.
It's pronounced many different ways.
tim pool
What is the mainstream explanation for how this... Look, can we pull this up real quick?
You take a look at this and... Zoom out and then zoom back in.
unidentified
This is mind-blowing.
tim pool
It's the Eye of the Sahara.
It is this gigantic circle with concentric circles going into it.
What is the official explanation to what would have created something like this?
jimmy corsetti
They say that the consensus, it is still mysterious, scientifically mysterious.
It is like no other site anywhere else on earth, but it's considered to be a collapsed Volcanic Dome.
And what's interesting about this is that it has concentric circles and Atlantis was described to having concentric circles, specifically three of water, two of land, which matches the Rishat.
It also was said to have an opening to the sea at the south, which if you look, if you scan, if you pan out just a smidgen, look to the south, you can clearly see runoff.
And all of those white blemishes inside the Rishat is salt.
shane cashman
How long have they put the ban on excavating there?
Like, when did that start?
jimmy corsetti
There's no ban.
You're not allowed to.
I don't know when it started, and I can't tell you how long that will go for.
The Mauritanian government, like, I hate to say it, but it's as third world as it gets.
It's the middle of nowhere.
It's abject poverty if there ever was such a thing.
It's right there.
There's no such thing as a McDonald's in Mauritania.
shane cashman
Are there records of people going there before the Mauritanian government?
jimmy corsetti
Sure, people have gone there and looked around.
It's been studied to see if it was the result of a cosmic impact.
tim pool
There's no McDonald's in Mauritania?
I don't believe that.
jimmy corsetti
You could double check, I could be wrong on that.
unidentified
I think it's an underwater geyser.
He's gonna look up McDonald's.
An underground water geyser that tried to erupt and couldn't, and then hit the surface and caused ripples.
Isn't there one of these on Mars?
jimmy corsetti
Yes, bring that up.
tim pool
Wait, no, there is no McDonald's.
unidentified
We gotta find the Martian... Wait, wait, there's MacDo.
This is what I'm talking about.
jimmy corsetti
Like to travel out there.
Like, so it is, you have to have resources.
It's 250 miles inland off the Atlantic coast.
And there's not even real, not, there's not even real roads out there.
It is inhospitable.
There's no water.
It's desolate.
Um, and you know, it's just, it's one of those places that's hard to get funding to get out there.
tim pool
You think it's actually gold or high, but was, was, was, was Atlantis more advanced than we are now?
unidentified
Or is that just much more advanced?
tim pool
Much more advanced.
jimmy corsetti
This is all conspiracy, but I think that there was a lost civilization on Earth that created feats that we are incapable, I shouldn't say incapable of.
Things that create, let me give you an example.
So people listening can understand the accomplishments of the ancients.
There is a statue in Egypt in Luxor called the Ramessium statue.
It is a thousand tons that was carved out of one solid piece of granite stone that was moved approximately 150 miles.
1,000 tons.
1,000 tons.
There's a few 720 ton stones that removed 500 miles, or let's say 400, excuse me.
In 2000, was it 15 or 12?
Doesn't matter.
The Los Angeles County museum of art moved a 340 ton stone just over 106 miles.
It took a year of planning.
They had to custom build a 260 foot long trailer truck around the stone had 198 wheels, 44 axles.
This, this was an unbelievable undertaking for us to move a 340 ton stone.
And somehow the Egyptians moved something that was three times as heavy with primitive methods.
It is a complete mystery.
tim pool
No, it's super easy.
They had big horns.
You see this one?
And they would all stand next to it and blow the horns.
unidentified
That's why I brought this.
tim pool
Making it vibrate.
shane cashman
It's kind of like the Walt's Jericho story.
tim pool
So actually, I built, this is on my YouTube channel, I built a remote control can of green tea by taking a can of green tea and then I put a block on top with two motors and I put the bottom of a can of green tea on one of the motors so when it spun it created a wobble.
And this would cause the can to vibrate, and the weight would pull it forward, and you could actually make it... So the way you'd turn it... I have the video on my YouTube.
The way it would turn is you'd reduce the speed of the motor, and it would cause the can to spin in circles, and then if you increase the speed, it would drag in the direction of the motor.
So it was just literally a can of green tea that would float across the table through vibration.
unidentified
My theory of these big blocks is that they attach them to hot air balloons.
They had this thing called the Vimana in the Indian Hindu texts, and it was a giant floating city on hot air balloons.
So I think they attached these blocks to a thousand hot air balloons, and then they would, with ropes, just guide the blocks along for a hundred miles and walk it to its destination.
tim pool
This is how they did it?
It's very obvious.
unidentified
Something like resonant frequency.
I mean, I've been watching Jimmy's expose on these for a while.
You've been doing a great job with that on X, formerly Twitter.
The only thing I can think of is, initially there were two ideas that came to my head.
One, okay, are these cast somehow?
Were they literally cast in place?
That one's hard.
I can't say it's impossible, but that one's hard to wrap your head around and hard to believe that's the answer.
If they had a way to, through resonant frequencies, vibrate these stones, that's the only other thing I've ever been able to think of.
tim pool
You guys ever, uh, you guys should watch Dr. Stone.
Have you ever heard of Dr. Stone?
unidentified
No.
tim pool
It's a manga anime about, for some reason, at some point, everyone, every human turns to stone.
unidentified
Okay.
tim pool
And then several thousand years later, this super smart high school prodigy awakens from stone.
It's like Magic School Bus for Japanese kids, but it's a lot of fun because it explores this idea of what would happen if, so after everyone turns to stone, the people on the International Space Station, still alive, not stone.
They land back on earth.
They have all this modern knowledge.
And our scientists, what can they do?
They can't make iron.
They can do almost nothing.
They make concrete.
They can do really basic things.
And so the only way, what they decide to do is create a hundred stories to pass down generation after generation to try and give them a general understanding of things they once knew.
But of course, after several generations, it's all mythological mumbo jumbo.
unidentified
Right.
tim pool
So it's a great show.
And it's mostly like, hey, we're gonna make nitric acid, and they explain the chemical composition, how to find iron, how to find magnets.
It's fun stuff.
But the interesting concept is, if there was an ancient civilization, maybe humans, who for some reason came to Earth and tried to colonize, maybe following some disaster.
I'll put it this way.
Let me tell you a story.
Venus, we believe, suffered a runaway greenhouse effect.
Have you ever read about that?
Yeah, I don't know if it was ever anything like Earth, but... Well, so there are theories that Venus was once Earth-like, and that it's suffering a runaway greenhouse effect due to carbon dioxide water vapor.
unidentified
Also, the sun expanding.
tim pool
Perhaps, perhaps.
And so, for whatever reason, it is...
It is a sulfuric planet.
We tried landing a drone on it.
It just destroyed instantly.
Very dense chemical gases and things like this.
So imagine, Venus is once Earth-like.
Earth is Mars-like or, you know, just underdeveloped.
And a runaway greenhouse effect due to massive expansion of a civilization is destroying the planet.
So they decide to create the Ark Project.
A military project where they take the DNA, male and female, of as many animals as possible, load it onto a ship, and then try to terraform Earth in the event of a disaster which wipes out Venus.
It eventually does.
The people who are able to escape in time on this single ship come and establish a city on Earth, but of course, A bunch of, you know, scientists aren't going to have the capability.
You know, a guy who knows how to, you know, work, let's say minerals is not going to have the same knowledge as somebody who knows how to work computers.
And so eventually the system starts to break down.
They don't actually have the civic... Elon Musk talks about how we need more people.
unidentified
Right.
tim pool
The more people you have, the more specialists you have.
But a dude who is re- like a guy who's a master of building computers from parts can't actually make those parts.
He knows how to put the computer together.
The guy who knows how to make the silicon chips in the factory doesn't know how to actually build the computer.
And so there's actually a book, I think, I forgot who wrote the book.
Was it actually St.
Clair or it's a, what's it called?
Like no one makes a pizza or takes a village or whatever.
I don't know.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
tim pool
The general idea being To make a pizza, you need a farmer, you need someone who makes tomatoes, you need someone to make tomato sauce, you need someone who does the cheese, you need the baker, someone who can make the oven.
None of these individuals knows how to do it.
So, if there was, outside of this, you know, sci-fi theory, a civilization that was fleeing, advanced, came here, they would be able to establish something great, but after a few generations, it would completely collapse.
unidentified
This is why I don't think the ancient civilizations were more advanced than us, because I've never seen evidence of ancient steel.
Like there's no... It'd be gone!
jimmy corsetti
Very quickly, even steam the steel.
unidentified
It'd be gone.
There's no evidence of any technology that they have that we've found archaeologically that's more advanced.
I disagree.
Maybe differently advanced?
I would say differently advanced there's a temple that was they had to excavate it completely in northern India and it's got these huge granite columns and not only is the is the construction of this thing so long ago incredible and the burying of it so incredible it But they found that when you knocked on these giant columns, they each resounded with a different frequency.
And the frequencies they resounded on were, like, in a pattern.
And, like, we don't know how to make granite do that now.
We have no idea how to make granite do that.
tim pool
Metals would oxidize.
unidentified
They would.
tim pool
They're going to effectively evaporate stone.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
tim pool
Not so much.
jimmy corsetti
And that's the thing.
So like like when it comes to the granite.
So they say that Egyptians were a bronze age culture, which means their advanced form of tooling was copper based.
And and when you look like people have done modern tests to try to cut and carve granite with bronze tooling, and it feels so miserably.
So like talking about like whether granite could have been geopolymer, it's like the quarries are there in Egypt and they've done What is it?
Geofingerprinting?
Something fingerprinting of the stone and it matches.
And the thing about granite that's so unique is it has quartzite in it.
It's formed with a massive amount of pressure, it's volcanic in nature, heat, and we're not able to replicate that.
And so I'd say that the only thing that is left is the stone, and the stone can last millions and millions of years.
unidentified
You think they made granite?
jimmy corsetti
No, I disagree.
I say they do not.
A lot of people are suggesting that.
And I'm not saying I disagree entirely with the concept of geopolymer.
But when it comes to granite, no.
I see absolutely no evidence.
tim pool
What if the ancient civilization was humans that came to Earth and terraformed it?
Have you guys seen Moonfall, that movie?
No, not yet.
Spoiler alert.
The moon is a space station.
An ancient civilization of super advanced humans created a bunch of space stations and AI started destroying and wiping out their colonies.
So they launched these space stations to go and create and terraform planets to create havens, safe havens, and that's what they did.
And then the AI is coming to kill them or something like that.
unidentified
Shannon A1 in the chat, in the chat, I said that really weird, echoed what I was thinking.
Is that water?
Did they use water to drill?
They got water drills.
tim pool
So the point I was actually just about to make was, if there was some kind of advanced civilization, why the assumption that they no longer exist?
When I'm watching these videos of a guy exploring abandoned houses, I mean, look, you watch a video of a guy exploring an abandoned laboratory, you don't assume humans have been wiped out.
Perhaps the reason why they say no one can go to the Rishat Structure is because it's an abandoned warehouse of super-advanced civilization that still exists!
And so...
You know, we have laboratories.
I watch this video, it's crazy.
A guy says there's an underground laboratory in Chicago you can get to through tunnels and there's like specimens, there's blood, it's creepy as hell.
You don't look at that and say, humans no longer exist.
You go, he will be arrested if he's found in there because it's dangerous and they don't want you going in there.
So perhaps this ancient civilization that terraforms or creates all of these things They're still around.
We're just shuffling through their refuse.
And some they don't care about.
There's humans everywhere.
And some they do care about because like, if they go there, they're going to find our cell phones.
unidentified
Yeah.
It's possible that we got underground Civ, but the way that Atlantis met its end so abruptly makes me think that they didn't have a chance to escape.
jimmy corsetti
Yeah, in the Bible, not to be a Bible thumper, but it says that the event comes like a thief in the night, that it catches everyone off guard.
A thief in the night, just unexpected.
And real quick to answer in the chat about the cutting stone with water, you can cut diamond with water.
The issue is that we have to use pumps that are runoff engines, motors, to do that.
So it's like if you were to use water as a force to cut stone, How do you get it at such a PSI level to be able to do so without modern machinery and equipment and hydraulics and other things?
tim pool
This is why Dr. Stone is based AF, because you watch the process, or it's a show, it's smart though, how do you actually melt metals to smelt?
And they show pumping oxygen and the challenge of humans trying to pump oxygen into a furnace to get it hot enough.
And then creating a water wheel, which automates the process and using gears to increase the speed at which you can pump oxygen.
It's fun stuff.
jimmy corsetti
That's cool.
By the way, if you're talking about like space stations and other things, have you guys researched the moon and all the anomalies about it that are just scientific mysteries?
tim pool
Well, it's now mainstream accepted that the moon is a space station.
It's hollow.
No, I'm kidding.
jimmy corsetti
Well, here's the thing, though.
It has been suggested to be a hollowed-out planetoid.
What's interesting about it is that back in the 60s and 70s, when they threw the Saturn V rocket into it, it vibrated.
unidentified
Yeah, it rang like a bell.
jimmy corsetti
It was described as ringing like a bell.
So the astronauts went there six times, and they set up—or was it five?
Six?
They went there, failed one time.
But anyways, they put down seismographs.
And what happened was, when it's been hit by meteorites, as well as the Saturn V launch vehicle that they threw into it, it reverberated between the seismographs for like eight hours.
And so the scientists that examined the data on it said it appears to be hollow, because it reverberated like a bell.
It doesn't mean it sounded like a bell.
There's no sound in space.
shane cashman
I think the moon is a mausoleum, and we've been burying people there.
Do you know about this?
There's those spaceships, there's missions going up there to bury Arthur C. Clarke and other people from Star Trek.
jimmy corsetti
That one surprised me.
I have no evidence for it, but there's something so weird.
shane cashman
Tell me more about that.
I think Celestis is the company, and you buy plots.
I think the mission failed last week for whatever reason, but they're going to go again next month.
Next month, but they have two ships that they're going to send out there.
One of them has all these like plots of people like Arthur C. Clarke and his wife, I believe, and Star Trek cast members.
And the other one has DNA from George Washington, JFK, and that one's going to be sent into deep space.
So I've been reliably told that the moon is a graveyard already and that we just keep populating it.
tim pool
That makes a lot of sense.
shane cashman
Oh yeah.
tim pool
I mean, they fired 100S Thompson out of a cannon, you know, like rich, crazy people do rich, crazy things.
And Elon Musk is going to be like, bury me on Mars.
And there's going to be that guy on Mars.
So Popular Mechanics says, it's a famous quote, the moon does ring like a bell.
Seismic events last longer on Earth.
However, they say that doesn't mean it's hollow.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
But there's something about its density that the scientific equations, it doesn't make sense that it's so far less dense based on its mass, or it has less mass than what its size is.
And one of the things that's been suggested in that it being a hollowed out planetoid is that it was the ark, it was brought over here, and that the reason why it's so, you know, it glows so much with the reflection of the sun is that that's metallic dust.
unidentified
It's definitely metallic dust.
tim pool
The movie Moonfall basically is that the moon is a giant space station arc to reignite humanity.
shane cashman
So maybe Moonfall is predictive programming.
unidentified
I just talked about this in my show this morning.
Really?
They've known that the dust on the moon is wildly electrostatic, but they're now discovering it likely has magnetic anomalies.
And you're talking about metal.
Oh, maybe it's when the sun ejaculates all that metal dust.
I'm sorry, what?
Ejects.
Ejects is the right word.
When it just blasts out all that beam across every 12,000 years when it has these solar, what do you call them, minor ejections or something?
Micronova.
Micronovas.
The dust is being magnetically sucked onto the moon because the moon is magnetic.
tim pool
Coronal mass ejaculation.
unidentified
Yeah, mass ejaculation.
And I think the inside, the inners of the moon is a web of matter that it's not hollow, like empty.
It's just like web cavern.
Because what happened probably is that it was when another planet, Theia, theoretically hit Earth and then came out the other side, you know, four billion years ago.
And there was this floating ball of magma cooled down into our moon.
jimmy corsetti
So the physics of that have been disputed and you should look at real quick.
I don't mean to cut you off.
Just to put this out, bring up pictures of the craters on the moon on how wide they are in comparison to how their depth.
It's something weird.
There are like hundreds of miles wide and only a few miles deep.
tim pool
You take a look at the Earth's magnetic field and people talk about sci-fi movies and spaceships and we always imagine that a colony ship headed from Earth to like Alpha Centauri is this like oblong device and it's got like a rotating thing on it.
Why wouldn't we just build a sphere?
shane cashman
We should, if we were gonna do it.
tim pool
And then, if you had a sphere, and you wanted to create a shield, so, in movies, how about, um, in whatchacallit, in, uh, Passengers, have you guys seen that one?
unidentified
Yeah, that's a decent one.
tim pool
A space debris hits the ship and causes all these problems.
Okay, well why not create a magnetic force field, a strong magnetic field that would deflect particles as you travel through space?
shane cashman
Right.
tim pool
In which case your spaceship would be a sphere with a magnetic core spinning to generate a force field.
unidentified
And you could also have another sphere around you rotating that's sucking the debris onto it, like the moon is sucking the debris onto it apparently.
It's kind of a deflector.
Yeah.
shane cashman
That just reminded me I saw an article the other day about a black glass ball floating near California airfield seconds before suddenly disappearing.
You guys see that?
unidentified
I didn't see that.
tim pool
How based would it be if like the moon was this space station arc that ancient advanced humans came to earth and terraformed it?
And we're seeding life, pre-cambrian explosion, all that stuff.
But due to some kind of political conflict or catastrophe, humans lost the means to ferry themselves back to the spaceship.
And they were like, we need to get back up there and get our gear back!
shane cashman
Isn't that Scientology?
jimmy corsetti
The ancient Democrats destroyed it like they do everything.
unidentified
I gotta go back to what we were just talking about, about these block, these ton, these thousand ton blocks.
tim pool
You get locked out of your car and you're sitting there staying at, how about this?
Tesla's a great example.
There's a funny story, and there's a lot of these, where a guy's phone died.
Can't get in his car.
And he's like, I could charge my phone in my car if I could just get inside, but my phone is dead.
I don't have my key on me.
So he's sitting there like, what do I do?
You gotta go charge your phone.
So you get a bunch of these ancient advanced humans.
They are coming down for a mission to earth.
There's very few of them.
Something happens shutting down the space station.
The humans left on Earth are like, our ship is disabled.
We can't get back to the station.
What do we do?
And then sure enough, the stories are long lost.
Humans eventually make their way back to the moon.
And then once they land, they're like, holy crap.
Now imagine this.
If, and this is wild conspiracy sci-fi nonsense, imagine the United States, no one knows this.
The stories are long lost to history.
They land on the moon and they're like, uh, boss, this is a massively advanced space station to accommodate human biology.
We can't understand any of the language, but uh, yo, this is a spaceship.
They would be like, it's ours.
The US government would be like, it's ours, it belongs to us.
shane cashman
Unless they made a pact.
Isn't there a theory that Eisenhower made the pact with the aliens?
jimmy corsetti
That's what people say.
tim pool
I'm saying there's no aliens.
It's us.
jimmy corsetti
We are the aliens.
tim pool
Humans colonize Earth.
They have this big space station.
Imagine there's thousands.
How cool would this be?
The Galactic Federation's just humans.
There's thousands of planets that have been terraformed and colonized by humans.
This one we're on, we got locked out of our car.
jimmy corsetti
Yep.
tim pool
Thousands upon thousands of generations later, we've just totally lost access to this technology.
Finally, we civilizationally rebuilt to the point to where we can get to the moon.
Americans land there, and then they're like, Guys, holy crap.
jimmy corsetti
What's wild about this is that, you know, God cast the devil out of heaven, you know, like we put us, maybe we're the devil, um, and, and then, you know, we, the Nephilim, uh, bred with the women of, they came onto the women of earth and had children, the great kings of own, uh, of renown, the great kings of old.
I put that backwards, but it does kind of describe this.
If you look at, say, multiple religions around the world discuss beings coming here and breeding with the women, and what's wild is that the aborigines in Australia, as well as, I don't know if it's the Hopi Indians, but one of the Native American tribes described beings coming from within the earth.
tim pool
So here's my story.
Life is on Venus.
The civilization on Venus is destroying the planet through pollution and just bad politics.
They create a space station to come to Earth and begin terraforming it.
They do.
Eventually, human civilization is advanced, is wiped out, and there's very few, maybe only a thousand people left on the space station trying to rebuild a civilization on Earth.
After a few generations, and with advanced technology, these people live a lot longer.
They're in a space station, you know.
After a few generations, one of the higher ranking guys, it's military of course, because if there were to be a catastrophe on this planet, and it was going to wipe out all the major cities, the power structure would be authoritarian and militaristic.
The military is going to be more likely to survive.
If you want to survive with us, you do as you're told.
He's the boss, he's the general.
So you've got this space station in total military command.
It is the decimation of humanity.
There are very few left, and you must do as you're told or we'll all die.
Like, have you ever seen Battlestar Galactica?
jimmy corsetti
Long time ago.
tim pool
So, there's a shi- Battlestar Galactica, there are 12 colony planets, they invent AI, AI kills everybody and blows everything up.
All that's left of humanity is a fleet of ships.
One of the ships produces fuel, and so the people who are there must work 24-7, with no breaks and no freedom.
And when they revolt, they're beaten and imprisoned, and the guy running the show is like, if they stop working, we die.
You have no choice.
It's militaristic rule.
So anyway, you have this ARC project, terraforming Earth, when eventually, after a certain amount of time, one of the high-ranking guys says, we need to establish civilian government.
Military government will no longer function.
People who are working down on Earth are starting to get angry.
We up here have access to this great technology.
They're down there living in squalor.
We have to change this.
Fight breaks out.
The people on Earth are looking up in the sky, seeing battleships shooting at each other, a great battle in heaven between one of the higher ranking officers and the military leader.
This conflict ends up separating, causing enough collateral damage that those who are operating the ship lose control or contact of the people here on Earth, who tell a bunch of stories.
Generations separate.
unidentified
Honestly, something like that is...
As believable as any other story.
The only part of it I would say might not fit is Venus.
I don't know if you know how long a day is on Venus.
No, how long?
Longer than its year.
It spins so slowly that... Oh, that's easily explainable.
tim pool
Because the ancient civilization, what caused the crisis was their large... their quadruple hadron collider caused... Insert sci-fi reason why the planet stopped spinning.
unidentified
Does it have no magnetic field because it's not spinning?
It has an induced magnetic field, but not an intrinsic one.
tim pool
Induced?
So basically... You mean a person put it there?
No, I'm kidding.
unidentified
I mean, so the solar wind blasting the top of the atmosphere induces a weak magnetic field and ionosphere around the planet Venus.
But it doesn't have one that's generated by the planet or the planet's interaction with the solar electric field like Earth does.
Is that because it's spinning?
Um, well, you know...
It's a good question.
Mars spins just fine and it doesn't have much of an intrinsic field either.
Is it like the core of the Earth is made of plasma?
This is a new theory I've heard.
So, I do think there's iron in the outer core of the planet, but the inside...
I wouldn't be surprised if it's plasma or water and then sonoluminescent plasma at the center.
Have you guys ever seen the star in the jar thing where using just sound frequencies you can literally create a star plasma glowing inside of a jar of water?
It's sonoluminescence.
It's the most outrageous thing.
Collapsing bubbles have hot plasma core.
This is from nature.com.
This is mainstream science I'm talking about right here.
This isn't like woo-woo or anything even remotely clear.
tim pool
Not from Bob's website.
Yeah, no, there's that shrimp that punches water so hard it creates a shock, a flash.
unidentified
Yeah, this is from nature.com.
They call it a star in a jar when sound waves crush bubbles of gas in a liquid.
Energy is released in a dramatic burst of heat.
It's literally like a plasma star inside of water.
tim pool
So it's basically like a Hadouken.
unidentified
Yeah.
tim pool
Like the shrimp, the shrimp moves so fast underwater, it creates like a vacuum which snaps and then creates a flash of light.
unidentified
That's crazy.
Whoa, so the pressure sound is inducing into water is causing plasma?
Just the pressure?
No, I mean, it's the specific vibration.
So like, if you go off of the specific frequency, it's not going to work and it's different based on how much water you have and Whether there's impurities in the water, something like that, so... I honestly think that the vacuum itself is being vibrated at a certain frequency that's causing light to appear, like plasma, like we... It's causing the vacuum to cool down into light.
It's so, you know, it vibrates, it's just that... Well, so, the single greatest scientific failure that we know of, it's called the vacuum catastrophe.
You can Google this, this one's interesting.
But there's a difference between how much energy how much free zero-point energy should be in the vacuum based on what we can detect and what mathematics says should be there and There it's off by like an order of magnitude like Billions and billions of orders of magnitude.
Like, it is the greatest mistake, the largest error in all of known science.
It says there's more energy?
We're supposed to be able to get more energy out of the vacuum?
There's supposedly trillions and trillions and trillions of times more energy in every little infinitesimal speck of a vacuum than we know is there but they just don't have the right frequent they haven't figured out the right frequency to unlock it or something we have figured out nothing we're ants so you think ancient civilizations figured out the frequency to unlock that power maybe maybe i really so the answer is i don't know What I think is that they did things that exceed our capabilities today to some extent, or they may have found a different way of doing things that we do.
jimmy corsetti
I don't think there's anything that they did that we can't do.
It's just that there's some evidence that suggests that they knew things and were capable of things that they should not have been capable of based on what we were taught in school.
And that's basically, if I had a thesis, that's it.
tim pool
It is a fact that ancient civilizations had technology we still do not have today or are only just rediscovering.
One example it's really obvious that I often bring up is we could not build greater than eight stories because of the accumulation of heat at the top of our buildings.
Because our architects and engineers were like here's how you build a structure you stack blocks on blocks.
But in Africa They were tribes that would build huts that could be very tall and would pull heat or pull cool air from underground up and funnel the heat out just through a system of like pipes, basically.
And so they theorized that they learned how to do this from anthills.
Anthills are built, there's certain anthills where it's really hot that as the hot air rises, it creates a current and pulls cooler air from lower, from closer to the ground or underground.
And so, We invented air conditioning.
We were like, if we build these engines that compress and decompress, you know, Freon or whatever, we can pull heat and remove it from the building.
Haha, now we can build greater than eight stories.
And then some dude was like, if you build a channel through the building, the hot air will just rise up and leave the building.
And they went, oh, so now we have, now we have non-mechanical means to pull cold air from underground up to the top of the building because heat rises and it pulls it up.
You know, to a certain degree, you'll need, I don't know exactly how it works or whatever, but I was watching, it was like a science history channel thing or whatever, on modern structures, and now it's basically just considered cost-cutting measures.
If you're gonna build a skyscraper, you wanna make sure that it's naturally pulling cooler air to avoid the heat getting trapped up top, because it saves energy.
unidentified
It saves money.
Those solar updraft towers use that phenomenon to actually pull cold air in through the base and turn generators and then go up out through the tip.
But this is so Randall Carlson has in the last six months been talking about our civilization is based on explosion technology, but these ancients were based on implosion technology.
And then he didn't really back it up.
He said it on Rogan's podcast.
Then he went on to unveil this thunderstorm generator, Malcolm, Malcolm, Malcolm somebody.
Has developed this thunderstorm generator where apparently they're imploding bubbles inside of a tank to produce plasmoids.
Have you guys heard of this?
And is it debunked?
Is it real?
What is it?
shane cashman
If you don't know... There was a guy when they were trying to invent air conditioning actually, speaking of that, that they thought they could cool the atmosphere by explosions in the air.
I think he had a patent for it before they got that, but I don't know about this, the thunderstorm one.
unidentified
They can't get any more energy out of it than what they put in.
But then you're saying that there's energy in the vacuum that's untapped.
So are they?
Can they?
They're not tapping into that.
That's not what they're tapping into.
They're literally just working with the physical matter that we know about that's there.
shane cashman
How do we feel about particle smashers affecting what you guys are talking about?
jimmy corsetti
Like the Hadron?
shane cashman
All of them, but that one in particular.
jimmy corsetti
Dude, I think they're going to blow us up.
They're going to do... I don't know.
shane cashman
Do you believe in like the black hole theory that they were trying to... Remember they were sued to shut it down in 2007 or 8?
jimmy corsetti
I don't know what to think.
To be completely honest, I just don't know how all that works.
I think that they're messing with things that they don't even understand and they're trying to figure out the secrets of the universe.
Good on them for having that inquisitive mindset, but I don't know.
I have a bad feeling about what they're up to.
I have a terrible feeling.
And not to mention, what's that, they have that, um, that Veda stuff.
unidentified
What's that stuff they have in the front of, uh... It is a completely satanic operation.
shane cashman
Yeah, I mean, you see, this is a satanic operation.
jimmy corsetti
Look at their ceremonies.
It's, it's literal satanic.
unidentified
What?
shane cashman
Oh, dude, it's on YouTube.
You could look it up.
unidentified
You're talking about the Hadron?
Yes.
So they're like cultists?
jimmy corsetti
Yes, they are.
unidentified
So the reaction you're giving here, wasn't that your reaction the first time you heard like, US government people, Hollywood people, or Satanists, like, but now you hear that and you're like, yeah.
shane cashman
Yeah, NASA was founded with Nazis.
unidentified
Like, with Project Paperclip.
shane cashman
Yeah, Paperclip.
jimmy corsetti
Wernher von Braun invented the Saturn V launch vehicle.
He was straight up Nazi.
There's pictures of him next to Hitler.
A lot of people who are listening, I'm sure a lot of people know about this, but like those who don't, there were thousands of scientists.
So at the collapse of Nazi Germany, there was thousands of top-level scientists who, you know, the Russian government and the United States government, they siphoned them.
Like, hey, we're not going to execute these people.
We're going to make them work for us.
And they did.
And we went to the moon, allegedly, because of Wernher von Braun.
unidentified
With the Hadron Collider being occultists, is that because they're into sacred geometry?
They honestly think they can open a portal for demons.
I realize how that sounds, but I mean, this is the same guy who's been riffing off stuff that you guys have been pulling up.
Over and over again.
they literally are trying to create something like a spiritual portal. - It's like a giant mystery college, right?
shane cashman
The mystery schools where people talk about portals, bringing beasts in through portals.
I've talked to women, this one woman in particular for the first Inverter World book that claims she saw a beast come through a portal at a mystery school, they called it.
And the Collider, the CERN in particular is super dark.
I wonder, I mean, they've been looking for the God particle.
Maybe looking for the God particle.
Yeah.
unidentified
In the presence of the collisions, people are experiencing visions and they just don't want to tell anyone about it.
But they're doubling down.
jimmy corsetti
I think they think that they're getting information from interdimensional beings while they're high on dimethyltryptamine.
And I think that they think they're getting the secrets of the universe.
Or adrenochrome.
unidentified
Or they actually are getting the secrets.
jimmy corsetti
You do a hit on the adrenochrome and then you do some DMT and you go stand in front of the CERN.
shane cashman
You're so hopped up.
jimmy corsetti
It's the good stuff.
But honestly, this is the conspiracy.
I mean, I actually learned this from Alex Jones, who's been right about just about everything.
And even if people listening don't believe in this stuff, it doesn't matter, because that's what these lunatics do believe in.
unidentified
Yeah, exactly.
shane cashman
CERN was sued in 2007 or 2008, before they flipped it on for the first time, because there were physicists who believed it would create a black hole that would suck the earth into it.
Because everyone agreed on both sides of the lawsuit, we create tiny black holes, microscopic black holes, by smashing particles together near the speed of light.
But obviously CERN won the judge in their favor because they said the microscopic black holes will fall to the gravity of Earth and then disappear, not be a threat.
But then the other people were like, but they're going to amass and then turn us into a sphere of strangeness, was the terminology they used, or like actually suck us into a black hole.
And they were talking about the polls actually during that lawsuit because they were saying it could turn into like a, I think a one.
unidentified
Pole?
shane cashman
A unipolar?
unidentified
Oh, a monopole?
A magnetic monopole?
shane cashman
I forgot what the word was, but that wasn't a law system.
jimmy corsetti
I gotta look at that.
Bring up their ceremony that they did in front of CERN.
You know what I'm talking about?
This is satanic.
Watch it.
Why on earth?
Who planned that?
unidentified
Wait, is this the ritual hoax?
It's found footage video that depicts a supposed occult ritual, but apparently it's a hoax.
jimmy corsetti
What article are you citing?
unidentified
Wikipedia.
jimmy corsetti
Oh yeah, see that dude?
unidentified
Don't look at that.
tim pool
That proves it.
unidentified
It's called the CERN Ritual Hoax.
Fake Human Sacrifice.
Wikipedia.
jimmy corsetti
No, no.
Don't look at Wikipedia.
Just look up the video.
unidentified
This is from The Guardian.
Fake Human.
jimmy corsetti
Look up the video and we can all think for ourselves on what they did in front of CERN.
Yeah, this is real.
unidentified
Wall Street Journal.
tim pool
No, no, no.
The Guardian.
Mock Human Sacrifice at CERN.
We talked about this a while ago.
Yeah.
When was this?
unidentified
2016?
So it wasn't a hoax.
It was obviously not real.
jimmy corsetti
Don't put any sound on.
I don't want them putting us under a spell.
unidentified
I want to hear it, dude.
shane cashman
Don't look directly at the video either.
tim pool
It says a fake ritual killing in the courtyard at CERN.
unidentified
That is weird.
shane cashman
It's like a Moloch situation.
This is some Canaanite stuff.
unidentified
What are you wearing?
Oh my God.
shane cashman
The same people who designed this, I thought, also did Joe Biden's Christmas video.
tim pool
A spokeswoman suggested that their humor had gone too far.
unidentified
Yeah, I'll say.
jimmy corsetti
Yeah, we're just being funny.
unidentified
Haha.
jimmy corsetti
Hey, just put on some black robes later and do a ritual sacrifice outside.
unidentified
Hey, you guys want to prank Ian?
jimmy corsetti
What are you doing tonight?
tim pool
You guys want to prank Ian while the mock ritual sacrifice in front of his bedroom?
shane cashman
I am not taking part in mock ritual sacrifice.
tim pool
To be fair, like...
To a certain degree like them doing this is a massive troll if it was a troll or they're just evil like it display itself Yeah, and I think these people in I don't know these aren't Swiss CERN's in France.
unidentified
Is that right?
shane cashman
No, it's at the border between Germany I thought right no No, it's between the border of Swiss and the Swiss have a global bank the Bank for International Settlements.
unidentified
They've got Davos like I think They are on another psychedelic level where they're like transcended the three dimensions We're all talking about God and spirit realm and it's real and like they're in it.
They're constantly in it.
They have all the money They have they've already beat the game.
So they're like doing all this weird extra Parapsychic shit.
shane cashman
Yeah, I don't think we should be playing God like that I appreciate the research aspect and looking into like, you know things like like that But I think we need to stop at a certain point You do?
unidentified
Because I think we are God, and we should interface with it.
shane cashman
We're not God.
You're human.
unidentified
Well, it flows through us.
We are one with it.
shane cashman
God is with us, hopefully, if you're lucky, you know?
But I don't believe we are God, and we shouldn't be playing God like this.
Like, they're literally saying we're trying to find the God particle, you know?
That's an ego trip that I don't want to have any part with, and I also think it's evil.
unidentified
The Higgs boson.
shane cashman
The Higgs boson, yeah.
We're trying to figure out, like, find the particle that makes the whole world make sense.
Come on now.
I think we've got to stop at a certain point.
unidentified
Yeah, I don't think there's ever going to be a silver bullet, like we found it kind of moment.
tim pool
But like, I do believe God is part of what we are and like to understand it and to interact with it is... I think the most important thing that we can do as humans is create larger and larger colliders until we can shatter the veil with high energy bursts, destroying the barrier between the afterlife and the living world.
unidentified
Maybe that's what DMT does.
It turns your brain into a collider.
And then you start...
At the start of your sentences, I don't know if you're messing with us or you're being completely serious.
It's like, I have to wait until you stop talking to figure it out.
shane cashman
I'm just like, yeah, no, that sounds about right.
tim pool
But you gotta admit, if they actually did that, I know it would be bad, but you know, kind of exciting, right?
unidentified
It would definitely be exciting.
I would tune in to watch.
tim pool
You see like a hand, like there's like a hole in space-time and a hand grips the side and pulls itself through and you're like, I have never seen such a creature in my life.
unidentified
If they do it, I hope they live stream it.
We're talking about the formation of plasma with just vibration and water.
So the, I mean, that is basic technology.
If you can vibrate.
So we're now we're talking about collisions and the creation of particles.
Like I don't see why like you're not, that's not happening in your body too.
shane cashman
Are we not vibrating the saltwater in our brain and causing, I mean, there's probably natural occurrences like that with us.
And I don't want to also say that I think science is bad.
I think science is a way of trying to understand our life and that's beautiful and connecting with God and this crazy majestic kingdom we're in.
But.
That, in particular, with CERN, just seems wrong.
jimmy corsetti
And who are these people that are doing it?
unidentified
You know what I mean?
If they're gonna do it, shouldn't we then feel like we have to do it?
No.
In order to do it better and do it right.
That's like an arms race.
shane cashman
That's just like an arms race.
And that's bad too.
unidentified
But if you don't play in the arms race, you lose.
shane cashman
Yeah, I guess.
But then we're pissing off the Atom Bomb is fake people now, so I don't know.
You know about that?
unidentified
No.
shane cashman
Oh, there's a lot of people who think the atom bombs are fake.
jimmy corsetti
Wait, did you see the video?
shane cashman
Yes, dude.
jimmy corsetti
So what are your thoughts on that?
unidentified
It's weird.
jimmy corsetti
You need to bring this up because it's like, you know those famous videos from the 40s when they're testing out the atom bomb and then they have it in that mock neighborhood that they had created?
shane cashman
We've watched it before.
We've seen it.
You've seen it.
The bomb testing where they show you the footage of the building blowing up and there's a car all of a sudden behind it and it looks weird.
jimmy corsetti
But in the camera survives, you need to bring the video up.
People need to see this.
unidentified
It's not like the camera was just sitting out there.
The camera was in a special housing.
shane cashman
I personally think we do have atom bombs, because I was going to say earlier, I think using atom bombs is one of the reasons maybe the magnetic shield is messed up, you know, like just keep blasting all the time.
unidentified
That's why I wonder if we're part of this, if it's like a coincidence, not coincidence, but like.
shane cashman
If we're part of the shift, like, right, like by the things we're doing.
jimmy corsetti
So you think the camera didn't even wobble?
unidentified
You think they doctored some of that footage?
tim pool
Yeah, but the camera didn't wobble because it could also be very, very far away.
jimmy corsetti
No, look at this.
Hold on.
Can you just show that again?
unidentified
Some of the cameras were encased in concrete and then with mounds of dirt built.
So it was basically like...
Dozens of feet of a ramp up that the shockwave literally just passed over.
jimmy corsetti
Is that how they did it?
unidentified
Some of them, yes.
And other ones, they had super cameras like several miles away.
tim pool
Oh, is this what they're?
jimmy corsetti
I mean, this is what, 1944?
tim pool
The idea that I was like, what is the argument?
A directed shockwave blast that doesn't affect the camera?
jimmy corsetti
And did the radiation not scramble that tape?
tim pool
I mean, the tape doesn't have to be there.
They could run cables, you know.
jimmy corsetti
I don't.
shane cashman
They also say there are people there that got radiation because they would line men up to watch it.
unidentified
I feel like when they landed on the moon, they faked a lot of the footage.
Maybe not a lot is kind of a vague term, but that they did in Hollywood build some fake footage in order to propagandize people, but that they also landed on the moon.
jimmy corsetti
I think that we went.
shane cashman
According to Alex Jones, he told me that the moon is a graveyard and because we've had astronauts and cosmonauts dying on there and that NASA knew how to get to the moon, but they couldn't film it.
And we did go to the moon, but we couldn't film it because of all the, this is according to Alex, but he's talked to crazy people up at NASA.
Well, bodies everywhere.
tim pool
Do you know the conspiracy?
so who's you guys know the first guy in space first guy in space the Russian guy Gagarin right Gagarin yeah so the the conspiracy theory is that he's not the first man in space The first man in space drifted off into space and we've never heard from him again.
There are theories that when the Soviets were like, we're going to get to space, lots of people were sent and never came back until they finally succeeded with Yuri.
jimmy corsetti
I believe this now because it would make sense.
I'm not going to share that because it just looks awful.
tim pool
The idea that we went to space the first time, I got it right!
shane cashman
Yeah.
tim pool
You know, we had the dogs and stuff, too.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
tim pool
We'll press the buttons.
But imagine the moon landing.
Yeah, I do think we went to the moon because I don't think it's actually that complicated to put someone in a rocket and blast them off.
We do satellites every day.
But what does make sense is what Alex Jones is saying.
The first time we landed, we were like, hey, that plan for coming back ain't working.
shane cashman
Yeah, we're like, Stanley Kubrick, how much do you charge for a quick movie?
tim pool
We send someone to the moon because what ends up happening is there are people who are like, I saw the moon landing on TV.
No, that's a CBS reenactment.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
tim pool
And then the footage of the... That's after the fact.
shane cashman
Yeah.
tim pool
And so the theory would be, and it makes sense, We have a plan.
We're gonna put you in this big tube with a bunch of explosives under it, blast you off, we did the math, you're gonna land, there's a vehicle, because the moon has weaker gravity, we can blast you off with less fuel, you'll come back to Earth, they go, you got it.
First thing that happens is, uh, Houston, It's not working.
We're not getting enough lift.
Well, it's going to take us another seven, eight months to get a ship or, you know, another two or three years where we can build anything.
You're dead.
Say your prayers.
Then the next people land and they go, okay, we're getting ready for liftoff and oh no, we're going the wrong way!
So the idea that there are dead people on the moon, I think that makes a lot of sense.
shane cashman
And we're now burying more people there now because it's a mausoleum that orbits Earth.
But when you talk about the CBS thing, it always makes you think of the Buzz Aldrin interview on Conan O'Brien when Conan tells Buzz, I was, I remember watching the moon landing and Buzz gets mad.
He's like, no, you didn't, you didn't watch it.
That was not, you didn't see me landing.
unidentified
Oh really?
shane cashman
He said that?
Yes.
Buzz doesn't mean he didn't land on the moon.
Buzz means that you watched a CBS simulation.
It literally says CBS simulation on the bottom of the footage.
tim pool
Yeah, this is not the moon landing.
shane cashman
Because no one's on the surface of the moon.
tim pool
But yo, it's wild.
I've had people say, we never landed on the moon.
And then we'll argue and they'll go, how did they film it?
And I'm like, film what?
The moon landing.
You can see the video of the thing landing.
I'm like, it says CBS reenactment on the video.
shane cashman
I think it says simulation actually.
tim pool
Simulation, you're right.
Oh, it's one of my favorite screenshots.
jimmy corsetti
Look at that.
shane cashman
Look at it.
Beautiful.
jimmy corsetti
They filmed this at the museum in Chicago, I saw it.
unidentified
The only thing you need to know to know that we did go to the moon is that there's that mirror in the Sea of Tranquility and you can bounce a laser off that mirror.
Oh, cool.
Oh, they left it there?
Yeah, they left a mirror there specifically so that we could bounce lasers off of it.
tim pool
The other thing too is people like, I think it was Alex Stein, I don't know who said this, they were like, there's aluminum foil on it.
You think they actually use foil?
And I'm like, I think it's gold foil.
And yes.
shane cashman
But that's fake.
tim pool
No, well, right, right, for sure, but there is gold foil that is used.
unidentified
Gold foil is fantastic in space.
tim pool
Yeah, so I used to work for American Eagle Airlines, and people would see one of the engineers taking a strip of metallic tape and putting it over the plane, and they'd freak out like, oh no, this is normal, it is a normal thing we do, it is fine, calm down.
Like people see like there's aluminum foil on it.
It's like, nah.
jimmy corsetti
One of the things about the moon is that if you look, like they have satellite imagery of all those tracks from when he had went around on the rovers.
And I'm like, I tell people, I think that we went.
I don't think the conspiracy is that we didn't go.
I think the conspiracy is when were we last there?
Like what's China doing over on the so-called dark side of the moon?
The far side is the more appropriate word.
tim pool
They're collaborating with Nazis.
jimmy corsetti
Yeah, well, that's what I'm saying.
unidentified
That is another theory.
This ties into the granite statue I've been trying to tell you about.
That's what I'm wondering.
How did they cut the statues?
How did they make these hundred ton or thousand ton carvings?
tim pool
You know, it'd be really funny if like the first time we went to the moon and we actually saw with our own eyes the dark side, the back of it is a gigantic engine and like structures and there's people working and it's a spaceship.
shane cashman
Yep.
I wouldn't be surprised.
tim pool
And they're like, we're going to release fake images of the dark side of the moon so that no one realizes there's a giant spaceship over Earth.
jimmy corsetti
Did you hear they just pushed back the date to SpaceX 2026 now for moon landing, getting a person on there.
They keep kicking it back year after year after year.
shane cashman
And I just I'm starting to be like, no, because they were like, we got to roll out more predictive programming to prepare the people's brains.
jimmy corsetti
Right.
shane cashman
When they collapse in on themselves, when they see what that, yeah, it's a spaceship or who knows what.
unidentified
These are some really interesting ideas and questions.
Something tells me the sun's going to blast this planet and the poles are going to shift long before we ever get any results.
shane cashman
Do you think that when that happens, how does the Earth's relationship with the moon change?
unidentified
That's a good question.
That one's tough.
The closest thing I've ever heard to somebody speaking on it is from Ed Leeds Skounen.
If you don't know who that is, he's the guy who built Coral Castle in Florida.
shane cashman
I don't know what that is.
unidentified
This is wild, you gotta- Coral Castle is like a whole other- like you could do an entire show on Coral Castle.
But apparently he said that, you know, based on his understanding of the magnetism, when Earth's magnetic poles flip, and the Earth flips, that the moon will come down to about half its orbit and then go back out and stabilize.
jimmy corsetti
Well, that would cause havoc with our tidal forces.
Oh my God.
unidentified
Oh, that would cause a flood.
jimmy corsetti
The tides are influenced by the moon.
And without the moon, it would be continental.
unidentified
Now I'm starting to understand this global flood catastrophe a little bit better.
If the moon came close to the earth and then pulled away, you might see thousand foot high tidal waves.
I don't think that Chan Thomas' Adam and Eve story got everything right.
We're not going to have a thousand mile an hour wind and there's not going to be two mile high waves because nothing would be here.
Nothing would be left.
And also, you know, he says he thinks the waves come the same direction every time.
Well, he also correctly states the new pole positions in that book, but to get the new pole positions, the way you have to move the earth, the wave goes the opposite direction.
So Chan Thomas talks about the Pacific coming over the Rocky Mountains.
That's what happened 12,000 years ago.
Waves are going the opposite direction this time.
And so, um...
He got a couple of things wrong like that, but yet between the moon and the actual tilting over of the earth It's very easy to see how you could have a tsunami go from one side of a continent to another very easy how do you feel about everyone like the media a lot of corporate press outlets keep running stories on the So-called like solar flares causing an internet apocalypse as a square with what you guys are talking about.
I mean, it's it's very possible I've been talking about it for over a decade and The way they talk about it, it's something between Hollywood and a juvenile presentation of the science, but I mean...
It's weird.
I can, with pretty good certainty, explain not only what's going to happen, but give us a timeline of late 2030s to 2040s.
It's not hard to do the math.
The sun, it could blast out a solar flare tomorrow that sends us back to the Stone Age.
There's no predicting a major solar flare.
There's no way to predict that.
tim pool
Should we be building large underground vaults?
unidentified
Something like that, yeah.
They probably are.
I wouldn't be surprised.
jimmy corsetti
They replaced the Cheyenne military complex underneath.
unidentified
Think about what the elites are doing.
Alright, so you guys may have heard, like, billionaires building bunkers.
Zuckerberg was in the news for it not long ago, but what you don't know is Jeff Bezos You know, much less famous than SpaceX, he's got the Blue Origin launch company.
Across the street from his Blue Origin launch facility, he's hollowing out that mountain in the Sierra Diablos.
Elon Musk has SpaceX, but he also owns The Boring Company.
He's got a breakaway civilization.
All of these super rich elites, they're finding a way to go underground.
I was looking at Coral Castle that you mentioned earlier.
This is, and it's good to go deep.
This guy, it's this giant place with all these huge rocks and stones that were moved and people are like, how the hell did you move these things?
And apparently he used, according to him, I think sound vibration to see, is that what he says his story is, or is that?
He never really gives away a lot of his secrets.
jimmy corsetti
He died with the secrets.
This is one reason why I don't give him much time a day is because I'm like, you just kept the secret.
Because a lot of people say that he secretly just used modern equipment and faked it.
So that's one of the things I'm like, well, I don't know.
If he had shared something at the end, left something in his will or something to explain it, I'd be far more drawn in.
unidentified
Nobody knows where his black box went.
That's the one thing.
What black box?
So the only thing like he allowed us a few pictures to be taken of this giant apparatus where he would apparently be able to lift the blocks and there was this What looked like a black metal toolbox up at the top of it.
And they looked and they looked after he died and they never found this black box.
But in every single important photo he allowed to be taken you can see that black box in the background.
It's in every single photo.
And a lot of the people think that the government came and took the box.
What was in it?
Nobody knows.
And he didn't tell anybody.
shane cashman
Interesting.
Yeah, it's like the government went and took Tesla's stuff.
It was actually Trump's uncle, which is why I say Trump's a time traveler.
unidentified
That's also a fact.
jimmy corsetti
It's science.
People listening, so when Nikola Tesla died, he had something like 47 trunkloads of documents.
And there's two things that happened there.
One, a day later is when Trump's uncle, who is a prestigious professor, said that there was nothing of consequence in there.
It's like, okay, well, it's physically impossible to go through 47 trunkloads of paperwork in a day.
And on top of it, the FBI had long said that they had no, um, they did not have Tesla's files.
And in 2015, it was declassified that they had taken what was called microfilm.
It was like a primitive form of video.
You have taken a video where essentially it's picture, picture, picture, picture of all the documents.
Um, and so they denied ever having any of his documents, but they lied through omission and that they had photographed all the documents.
They took pictures of them like we don't have the documents.
Okay, true.
I just have pictures of the documents.
They lied and this was proven and they had lied about this for 70 years before it was declassified in 2015 that they indeed did.
shane cashman
I feel like Martin bought those and they're building stuff in secret using Tesla's technology.
tim pool
What if the moon's a space station?
What if the U.S.
government found it?
What if the group that found it formed a breakaway group and has now separated themselves entirely from everyone else and is using what they've discovered against us?
jimmy corsetti
It's like the Truman Show.
tim pool
Well, more than that, I mean, it's like humans discover this ancient technology that humans had created that had long been lost, become demigods relative to other humans, and now are asserting full authority over everyone like slaves.
shane cashman
I think we would experience like an existential renaissance, right?
If we won.
If we want, but even just experiencing that, that being the truth, I think it was Emile Durkheim who talked about anomie, you know, about that theory where like, if you're presented with proof that there evidence that this proves you're God, people can either double down on that belief or accept it and move on with the new information.
So we'll see that happen.
You know, people will double down and be like, and lie, even though the truth is right before their very eyes, or they'll accept it and move on.
And I think we're going to experience some type of existential break.
tim pool
There's a episode of Star Trek The Next Generation where... Well, there's a lot of episodes of Star Trek The Next Generation, actually.
I don't even need to cite any single one of them.
But imagine there's, like... I mentioned this a moment ago.
Imagine humans are an intergalactic civilization with trillions of people living on various planets with different time dilation.
It's just all crazy.
And we are but a failed colony.
A colony ship sailed ashore, crashed, sank, and the humans got off and said, we're trapped.
Imagine, you know, we're like, we're stuck on this desolate island.
With no technology, we have to start rebuilding.
And, you know, eventually, the, the, the, the civilis- like, imagine!
A group of people sailed off of the shores of England in the 1700s, crash-landed on an island, had no way of communicating, no one knew where they were, they got lost in a storm, and here they are sitting there on this island like, we'll just have to make do.
Actually, there's a good example I can give.
There's a, uh, in China, there are people who have Roman DNA, their mixed race, and it's believed that a Roman legion that had traveled and eventually Lost the ability to return for whatever reason, settled down, married locals, and now this patch of DNA is there.
So they're a lost, you know, civilization.
It would be fun to think, to imagine.
jimmy corsetti
Well, you know, sorry, go ahead.
shane cashman
I'll just say a thought I have quite often is if civilization is completely wiped out, and then someone or something comes and finds us way later, they're gonna find...
That we were smashing particles underground.
That'll be left over.
The skeleton of CERN will be there.
They're gonna see that we turned this blue rock into a graveyard.
And then they're gonna be like, but they did shoot into deep space their dead president's DNA.
And this Voyager golden records, which are really good if you want to listen to them.
tim pool
The Horizon video game series, have you guys played it?
Zero Dawn and Forbidden West.
Basically, Long story short, humans create AI, the AI military tools self-replicate, wipe out the planet, destroy all biomass.
So there's two factions.
One faction creates underground re-terraforming systems after the AI shuts down.
Long story short.
The terraforming machines begin repopulating the Earth, cloning humans, releasing the clones.
The clones are taught by AI.
System failure for a variety of reasons.
The education system of Apollo is purged because a wealthy zealot thinks that humans should be reborn, but not with the knowledge of their ancestors because humans screwed the planet up.
The other faction builds the Zenith Project, goes off into outer space, retaining all the knowledge and technology of humanity and its advancements, and advancing even further in the new game.
The Zenith Project or colony or whatever comes back to Earth and they know everything about everything.
They're biologically immortal.
They have force fields.
They can levitate.
But all the people on Earth who are reborn are completely ignorant, believe in sun gods and are tribal and have spears and shields.
jimmy corsetti
You know, it's so weird, Tim, to go along with that in your prior point about us being like a shipwreck civilization that's galactic and there's trillions of humans.
Human beings do not assimilate on this planet at all.
If you look at all the other animals, it's seamless.
Death and rebirth.
And yet, if you look at our cities from, like, a satellite picture, it looks like a cancer spot.
We need tennis shoes.
I can't stand in the sun for 30 minutes without getting torched.
Like, it's weird.
tim pool
Not just that, we're talking about how, with the pole shift, birds are being affected, elephants are going on migrations, and humans are like, what's happening?
As if we are not a part of the same cycle as the rest of animals.
jimmy corsetti
I can't find my way anywhere!
shane cashman
I don't think we can, we're not defining this yet.
What you're talking about is in mainstream sources and people I think understand on a gut level, a lot of people do at least, that we've lost our minds as a civilization and individually.
And it's just hard for people to come to terms with it.
unidentified
That's why you gotta vibrate yourself.
You're either gonna be vibrated or you're gonna vibrate yourself, man.
I'm telling you, you vibrate at 432 hertz, it is resettling.
It is like you are gaining All right, so... Stability, psychologically.
So Ian's vote is we bust out our personal vibrators while the sun ejaculates on us.
Hold the line.
I really like this idea of we're this lost colony or this failed colony.
shane cashman
Yeah, it feels that way.
unidentified
Shipwreck.
jimmy corsetti
I like it.
unidentified
I don't.
jimmy corsetti
It sounds...
unidentified
I don't buy it.
No, I think it's more likely that we've evolved over time by eating mushrooms and inbreeding as a species.
shane cashman
Could it be both though?
jimmy corsetti
Could it be both?
unidentified
I mean, maybe, but I've seen no evidence that humans were able to develop rocketry before a hundred years ago.
jimmy corsetti
Unless they flew away with it and they dropped us off.
tim pool
Here's a crazy one for you.
So out of Africa theory, right?
That humans evolved out of Africa and then moved around.
But now that's being disproven.
It is now being disbelieved because they're finding human remnants in other parts of the planet.
Human colony ship comes from the Galactic Federation, comes to Earth, and what do they do?
They say, okay, we're gonna dispatch 12 teams.
We need a team here in this region for the oil.
We need the region this year for the, you know, uranium.
We're gonna send this team down here for gold.
Go, go, go!
These pockets of humans are trapped on the planet.
Colony ship blows up.
I'm keeping it super simple.
And then all those humans are separated with no vehicles, no communications.
And they're like, what just happened?
Our ship blew up.
And then they start building little cities.
And then you get humans all appearing at the same time in different parts of the world.
unidentified
If we weren't so genetically similar to bananas, I might agree.
But like, we're so, our genetics on earth are all so tied that I feel like we're all just part of this organism.
shane cashman
What if it was all spores that were dropped here?
unidentified
I believe that it all comes from panspermia, the spores just being ejected, we'll say, across the galaxy.
Because the way spores work is they'll orient towards light, they'll turn, and then they'll start to spin, create this gyration, and then momentum, and they'll just move through deep space.
They can exist in deep space, spores can.
jimmy corsetti
So we could be hybrids, my friend.
They could be all the above.
When I again, going back to the religious text saying that beings came here and bred with women, maybe we're just, it's all the above.
unidentified
I feel like animal is like spores that ate other spores.
Whereas spores that ate plant life became fungus.
shane cashman
Right.
Can I ask you guys, like.
I believe something we don't understand our timeline.
Like, you know, you guys are sharing a different timeline of human history, right?
And in the future.
And, but we're seeing it in mainstream sources.
Do you think that there's like a overall conspiracy against keeping that knowledge secret or people trying to, uh, like manufacture that to keep control over us?
Like, what do you, what do you think about that?
jimmy corsetti
If it's happening, it's happening at a very high level.
I don't think for a second that various college professors are in on it.
I don't think that mainstream archaeology is lying and hiding some conspiracy.
It is possible that something has been found decades ago and has been classified by the intelligence agencies of improved, some sort of sophisticated lost ancient civilization technology, and we're just not aware of it.
What I know is that what we were taught in school absolutely does not make sense, and it's debunkable.
It's been debunked, and the mystery is real.
shane cashman
And it's like that about everything.
Like even down to the civil war, you know, and like the complexities of the civil war and stuff like that, like stuff that's really not that long ago.
And we see them lie to us day to day.
So why, what makes you think they can get away with thousands of years ago, hundreds of years ago yesterday, you know?
So yeah, I agree.
I just, it's curious.
unidentified
Ben, what is your like main resources that you, when you study and learn about solar weather, what are your top like go-tos?
For research.
Every single satellite, the top 250 scientific journals in the world.
Satellite?
You like look at satellite data?
Satellite data, some ground-based telemetry stuff, but I would say real-time data and then you'd be amazed at how many journals I read.
I'm very happy that I took That I learned how to speed read many years ago, and I have a mild form of hyperthymesia.
What's that?
So the severe form of hyperthymesia is when someone's like, oh, 27 years ago, I was in second grade and it was a Tuesday.
It was February 17th.
I was reading this book and on page 17, the fifth word in the sixth paragraph was this.
Like they literally can remember everything.
That's severe hyperthymesia.
shane cashman
It's like photographic memory.
unidentified
I have the minor version of that, which means if I'm focused on something or something makes an impression on me, it is like a photographic memory that's instantly recallable.
shane cashman
Do you trust those journals?
What's your trust like with those types of scientific journals?
unidentified
I'm also pretty darn good at math.
The ones that I pick out as being important, I'll do my best to peer review them.
I also know, at this point, which professors, which departments at which universities I trust more.
shane cashman
How do you earn their, how do they earn your trust?
unidentified
Um, you know, I, I go through and I do it and I, I take a look at what grants they're getting.
shane cashman
Yeah.
unidentified
Um, uh, most importantly, however, I don't always go with the conclusions of a paper.
I go with the observations and the data, and then I ignore whatever their hypothesis is about.
shane cashman
That's interesting.
tim pool
What could we fund that is needed in this area of research?
unidentified
There's really not much you could do except prepare for what's coming.
tim pool
So we have, what do you think, a couple of years, you're saying, 2030s?
unidentified
Well, so, I mean, that's the rough part.
I don't know when the humans in charge of this planet are going to really screw things up for us.
tim pool
Well, in China, they just created a new coronavirus with 100% curated mice.
unidentified
I saw that.
Beautiful.
tim pool
They've had those studies with COVID-19 as well, though, so, you know, we'll see.
unidentified
But the stuff that we've been talking about, we probably have at least a decade, but I mean, At least.
tim pool
All right.
I'm going to spend the next 10 years at the casino.
Thanks for hanging out.
shane cashman
Let's start digging a hole.
unidentified
I want to get underground bunker.
You can fire a ring of water around the earth orbital ring and then fire electrical current through it and create a paramagnetic field that could deflect solar dust.
shane cashman
Meanwhile, there's Bill Gates trying to put solar dust or dust in the sky to dim the Sun.
unidentified
This may need to happen.
It may be a necessary part of this planet, our biology, our development.
For all we know, this planet's a nursery.
tim pool
In what way?
unidentified
What do you mean?
For all we know, we have to prove ourselves.
We have to We have to be able to survive, we have to prove our intelligence, and then within the time span of one of these cycles, we have to get off the planet and get somewhere else.
Like, that's our test, and we're basically stuck here.
We're not gonna be completely wiped out, haven't been wiped out yet, but we're going to be reset.
tim pool
This is a component of the Star Trek storyline, that there have been instances in the story- Prime- you guys know the Prime Directive?
Are you familiar with Star Trek?
shane cashman
Yeah, to a degree.
tim pool
There's a lot of things, but you don't interfere with the society's natural development.
First contact only occurs if the planet develops warp technology, and the only reason for that is because once they develop faster-than-light travel, you are now going to start interacting with them in the galactic scale.
So there are instances, and this is the premise of the beginning of one of the Star Trek Kelvin timeline movies, the recent ones, these are the new ones, where there is an intelligent species, but they're primitive, and their planet is about to be destroyed, and so the Enterprise decides to intervene, stopping the destruction of the planet.
And the Federation is like, no!
Let them die!
And that's a crazy concept that there is a humanoid species of intelligent lifeforms, but they have not yet developed the technology, but their planet's going to be destroyed, and so it should be.
It's kind of crazy that there could be aliens watching everything happening on Earth, saying, if they die, they deserve it.
unidentified
Yeah, we do need to proliferate off the planet.
I did see that bird try to come in here.
shane cashman
It's a drone.
unidentified
It made me wonder if birds are not real.
Yeah!
tim pool
So there's a little bird that tries to live in this room because the windows open and it's snowing and he's like, then he sees us like, oh, I'm out.
shane cashman
He just put on a pair of headphones.
Enjoying the talk.
tim pool
But yeah, I think, I think if aliens do exist.
I think it's very likely their mentality is, if you can survive this, you deserve to.
And if you can't, you don't.
Because we don't want to induct a species of morons that would burn themselves to oblivion.
We don't want those people joining our ranks.
shane cashman
In a way, it's kind of Old Testament God level, looking at like, you know, Babylon or Canaan, you know, saying these people, I'm going to destroy them because they can't survive.
unidentified
Yeah, that's that's an interesting philosophy to think that if we're still going to fight, then we deserve to be wiped out as a species because we don't want to proliferate fighting.
tim pool
It's not even fighting.
It's if we're going to set ourselves on fire.
unidentified
Right?
tim pool
So if, you know, downstairs in the skate park, we have a six foot half pipe.
unidentified
I saw it.
tim pool
And I call the top of it the VIP section.
You're a VIP if you can get up there.
shane cashman
Right.
tim pool
That's it.
The only qualification.
And it's mostly a joke.
It's very easy to get up because there's actually a halfway point.
But the general idea is, do you want to invite someone in your house who's playing with matches?
No.
No, you don't.
So, you know, if you're building a big city and you want only the best of the best of the best, you want barriers to keep out the people who would be destructive.
Funny thing now is the Biden administration's got an open border on the southern border, but that's a whole other story.
The Galactic Federation's basically like, we'd love to, they, you know, an emissary from Earth goes and meets with them and they say, look, we really want to be a part of this federation.
The technology can make everyone's lives better.
And they say, oh, we'd love to invite you in.
If you can survive this period of tumult and don't blow yourselves up.
But if you can't do it, you don't deserve to be here.
shane cashman
There are stories of people at like, at certain battles and or at missile launches.
And they say, they claim they saw UFOs appear.
And that could fit in with your theory a little bit, being like, we're going to come up, you know, they're going to come observe these people like just destroy themselves, you know?
And that goes back into ancient times.
There's old paintings of UFOs over battles and stuff that people talk about.
tim pool
Turns out the aliens are all just like very laissez-faire libertarian capitalists.
Voyeurs.
If you can't figure it out, you don't deserve to be here.
One hope.
unidentified
We'd have to colonize Mars, and then, because Martian magnetic field is not as attuned, it won't get as affected by the solar, by the geomagnetic flips, so then maybe that would be a more stable platform during these polar shifts.
Well, we would have to completely terraform that planet first, and somehow stop it from losing its atmosphere again.
Yeah, I hear that the outer layer of the core is made of nickel, and if we could somehow thin that out, that it would have more access to its magnetic core.
It's possible.
These are all guesses.
And I mean, there's no way to really know unless you go in there.
If we heat it up really fast and melt all that ice, would it cause enough steam to produce a... No, because most of the ice there is CO2.
It's frozen CO2.
tim pool
So, we're about past time, we're gonna start wrapping things up.
I don't know if there's any final thoughts you wanted to add on this?
unidentified
No, I had a lot of fun.
I think that we covered some of the most important things.
All the stuff that people are worried about, talking about...
Mostly on the internet, it's all real and we need to pay attention to it, but they just need to realize that if it seems like the powers that be are acting recklessly, it's because they know there will be no reckoning.
If it seems like they are quickly now undercutting and not hiding in the shadows, spending like there's no tomorrow, it's because they know on a certain timeline there isn't one.
tim pool
And they're building underground.
Yeah, this has been going on for a long time.
There's mountain bunkers built into mountains where they can land.
They can land planes.
unidentified
Yeah.
shane cashman
And we have that vault in Switzerland, maybe, where they have all the seeds.
jimmy corsetti
Svalbard Seed Vault.
shane cashman
Yeah.
Yeah.
tim pool
Svalbard Seed Vault.
shane cashman
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
tim pool
You want to shout anything out?
Final thoughts?
jimmy corsetti
Follow me on... I'm on Rumble.
I'm on YouTube.
Channel's called Bright Insight.
My name's Jimmy Corsetti.
Follow me on X. I'm growing a presence there.
You can follow me on Instagram.
That place is lame.
Zuckerberg is a complete tyrant.
But that's it.
It's been a great pleasure.
I think we hit a lot of interesting things.
And thanks for having me.
tim pool
Yeah, did you want to shout anything out?
unidentified
I mean, my YouTube channel, Suspicious Observers.
I'm on Twitter as well, but I prefer everybody watch the YouTube channel.
Really, thank you guys.
This has been a lot of fun.
tim pool
Thanks for coming.
Shane, of course, has been hanging out.
shane cashman
Yeah, so glad to be here and talk to you guys.
You can find my stories at Scanner.com, SCNR.com, and we're launching pretty soon the Inverted World Live show, and you guys should be on that, and we can get into some more of this stuff.
I would love that.
This is so much fun.
unidentified
Dude, we went for two hours.
In an hour and 45, I was like, man, we just got started.
I've got like 20 tabs open.
We could have went for five hours.
shane cashman
I know.
jimmy corsetti
We should do it again.
unidentified
Yeah, we should.
tim pool
Definitely.
Well, definitely with the Inverted World Show.
shane cashman
Yeah.
Yeah.
unidentified
It was a great combo.
Good to see you guys.
Eddie and Crossland, hit me up anywhere and we'll reconnect.
tim pool
This has been a blast.
unidentified
I also got Kellen who hasn't said much.
shane cashman
Shout out Kellen.
unidentified
Just pressing the buttons.
It feels like I'm watching the History or Science Channel over here.
shane cashman
But yeah, this was awesome.
Thanks for coming, guys.
tim pool
It's been a blast, guys.
Make sure to subscribe to the Tenet Media channel.
We're back next week, of course.
We're back tonight with TimCast IRL over at YouTube.com slash TimCastIRL.
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