| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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Aliens and Blood Samples
00:04:29
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| Alright, file this under the category of holy crap, what the heck bizarreness department. | |
| There are women in the United States who claim that they have children that have been fathered by extraterrestrials. | |
| Yep, they claim to have hybrid children that live on giant spaceships With their fathers. | |
| I'm not even kidding. | |
| This is this is in the Daily Mail and one of the names of one of these women is Bridget Nielsen from Arizona and Another woman named a Luna verse a Luna verse you can bet that's probably not her birth name from California just Gee, if you could have possibly predicted that. | |
| A luniverse? | |
| Is that what? | |
| Looney Tunes? | |
| No. | |
| A luniverse. | |
| That's her name. | |
| Alright, so these two women are members of the so-called hybrid baby community who believe their children live on giant alien spaceships. | |
| And one of them, Nielsen, who's 27 years old, said that the sex with the alien was, quote, the best ever. | |
| And that thousands of women around the world are missing out on such experiences because they don't realize they've had hybrid children. | |
| Okay? | |
| Are you tracking all this? | |
| She says that extraterrestrials only take women who on some level, quote, want to be taken. | |
| What do you do? | |
| You put a sign on your door? | |
| Okay. | |
| Let me back up from this for a moment and say... | |
| Okay, I don't know for sure I wasn't there. | |
| Maybe this happened to them, but probably not. | |
| I'm not one to say that everybody's making everything up about aliens. | |
| I mean, we live in a pretty darn large universe. | |
| And the possibility of intelligent extraterrestrial life in our universe is very, very high. | |
| You'd have to be actually mathematically ignorant to think that we are alone in our cosmos. | |
| So there probably is intelligent life out there. | |
| But that doesn't mean that they're landing little spaceships to have sex with California babes. | |
| That's a stretch. | |
| Probably more likely to be engaged in taking blood from cattle or something. | |
| The cattle mutilation theory actually, believe it or not, makes more sense than this alien hybrid sex children thing that we're reading. | |
| I mean, think about it. | |
| If you were a scientist... | |
| In an advanced civilization, you had a spaceship like on Star Trek. | |
| What was their mission? | |
| To go and explore new worlds, to go where no one has gone before, and to expand the knowledge base of mankind, or these days, transgender kind. | |
| So they're going all over the universe, and what are they going to do? | |
| They're going to take blood samples from the animals, right? | |
| Any scientist would probably want to do that. | |
| Let's look at their DNA. Let's look at their blood. | |
| So... | |
| The idea that aliens are coming to the Earth and taking blood samples from animals is not at all far-fetched. | |
| It's actually basic science, if you think about it. | |
| But this idea of targeting yoga pants babes in California for alien hybrid sex, that's really pushing it. | |
| Nevertheless, I should mention to you that Steve Quayle, At stevequail.com, he has several books on the subject of what he calls extraterrestrial crossbreeding with humans throughout human history. | |
| And I'm not an expert on that subject, so I'm not going to render an opinion on it. | |
| I'm just aware that that subject has been looked into by people like Steve Quail. | |
| And that it may be that really all humans have been... | |
| Altered, genetically altered or bred or naturally selected in some way by an intelligent extraterrestrial civilization that has some experiment in mind or they're trying things out or they're, I don't know, having fun in the sandbox of planet Earth. | |
|
People Believe Crazy Things
00:08:05
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|
| Who knows? | |
| I mean, we can't say we know everything that's going on out there, right? | |
| And even if you look at the fossil record, There's this big crazy gap, you know, between primates and then homo sapiens, right? | |
| And even the paleontologists can't necessarily figure out how do you cross that gap? | |
| Like, what happened? | |
| You know, they claim, well, evolution made this great leap, but there's really no record of this great leap. | |
| So, you know, there are question marks, legitimate questions. | |
| Is it possible that some intelligent civilization came to the planet and started running GMO experiments on early primates to turn them into us? | |
| Is that possible? | |
| Sure. | |
| I mean, you can't say it's impossible. | |
| You've got to say it's at least in the realm of possibility. | |
| You might say it's a very small possibility, but you can't say that's zero. | |
| And I'm not saying that I believe all of these things or any one of them. | |
| I haven't researched it. | |
| It's not my focus. | |
| But when I see women claiming that they've had sex with aliens, you know, That's definitely worth commenting on. | |
| So these two women have plans where all the hybrid mothers can live together in the same home to act as a safe place for their children to visit. | |
| Okay, can you imagine this? | |
| Hey, roomies, let's all share rent money so that we can afford it when the mothership lands in the backyard and our little hybrid children come out. | |
| I mean, this is what they're thinking. | |
| One of the women says, quote, it will be somewhere away from the city, somewhere where the children can visit, run free, and express themselves. | |
| You got that? | |
| Because obviously they're going to be transgender alien hybrid babies because, you know, they're free expression. | |
| So they got to be free to express themselves. | |
| This is the most important thing. | |
| They're not thinking... | |
| Hey, this is a milestone for human history. | |
| We've made contact with aliens. | |
| Maybe we should talk to some scientists. | |
| No, they're like, we just want to have playground in the backyard. | |
| Let the little kitties, you know, express themselves. | |
| That's high on their list. | |
| It's not like, let's get video of the mothership. | |
| No. | |
| All right. | |
| She goes on, quote, people say we're crazy, but we are not. | |
| This is really happening to us. | |
| Okay. | |
| I mean, maybe it is. | |
| Again, who am I to say? | |
| I wasn't there. | |
| Maybe this is the biggest event in human history and it's happening to these women. | |
| Okay, I acknowledge that's a possibility, but I doubt it. | |
| You know, call me a skeptic, right? | |
| I'm pretty skeptical about everything. | |
| You know, government promises, politicians. | |
| I'm skeptical of the label claims on dietary supplements. | |
| I'm skeptical of pharmaceuticals. | |
| I'm skeptical of anything I see on the TV news. | |
| And I'm pretty skeptical about these women saying they have extraterrestrial loved children that look like... | |
| What do they look like? | |
| Cartoon angels or something here. | |
| They've got sketches. | |
| All right. | |
| So... | |
| Would I hire one of these women? | |
| You know, you gotta say, there are people who believe crazier things. | |
| I mean, there are people who believe that... | |
| What would be a crazy thing that a lot of people believe? | |
| People who believe that the government's trying to help them. | |
| You know, people who believe that the cancer industry is looking for cures... | |
| That's crazy. | |
| That's crazier than thinking that aliens have had sex with, you know, yoga pants babes from California. | |
| You know, there are people who believe that green paper money is worth something, and always will be. | |
| That's crazy. | |
| It's just a piece of paper based on pure faith and psychology. | |
| That's totally crazy. | |
| You know, there are people who believe all kinds of crazy things. | |
| There are people who believe that there's no such thing as human consciousness. | |
| How about that? | |
| And that's a prominent belief across the scientific industry. | |
| I mean, most scientists believe that there's no soul, there's no consciousness, there's no spirit, there's no free will, nothing. | |
| That's pretty crazy. | |
| Especially since consciousness is self-evident, you know that you're conscious, you're aware of yourself having your own thoughts and making your own decisions to decide what to say or write or do. | |
| So it's self-evident, but yet these people don't believe in it. | |
| They think that they are suffering under the illusion that they have free will. | |
| That's crazy! | |
| That's crazier than aliens having sex with you. | |
| As far as I'm concerned. | |
| So my conclusion to these women in California and Arizona is, hey, you know what? | |
| Guess what? | |
| It's a free world. | |
| It's a free cosmos. | |
| You're welcome to believe whatever you want to believe. | |
| And maybe it's kind of fun to imagine that you've got kids up in the mothership. | |
| So I'm not going to criticize. | |
| I'm just saying I don't buy it. | |
| I don't buy it. | |
| I've seen a lot of people from sort of the airy fairy communities who can be hypnotized into believing anything. | |
| And some of them do. | |
| I'm not saying that's what's happening to these two gals, but I've seen some crazy stuff. | |
| So... | |
| Remember that I covered that detox supplement a couple years ago? | |
| I exposed it. | |
| People, Looney Tunes, people thought that if they drink high levels of aluminum and sulfuric acid in a liquid, that they could remove heavy metals from their bodies. | |
| Yep, yep. | |
| And some of them had black stuff coming out of their ears and black stuff coming out of their fingernails, and they thought that was a detox. | |
| Well, they're drinking lead and iron and aluminum. | |
| And the aluminum was 1200 parts per million, and the iron was really high too. | |
| It was like, if I recall, something like 400 parts per million or something in that range. | |
| And so they had iron coming out of their bodies, and they're like, yeah, we're detoxing. | |
| So, you know, people are capable of believing any crazy thing that is supported by their group. | |
| That's the thing. | |
| Maybe there's a group of women who all tell each other they're moms of alien hybrid children. | |
| And so it becomes kind of a cultural truth among the group. | |
| Hey, there's a group of people out there who think vaccines work all the time. | |
| There's a group, they're called doctors and pharmacists, and they don't even know that most of the vaccines are based on total scientific fraud. | |
| So they're crazy too. | |
| I mean, they're not saying that they have children on alien spaceships, but they're crazy in their own way. | |
| So, you know, sanity is really, the real definition is just conforming to the social norms of the time, and the social norms are always changing. | |
| You know, a hundred years from now, they'll look back and think that our society today was totally freaking nuts. | |
| To poison patients with chemotherapy, for example. | |
|
Retract Or Stand By
00:00:49
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|
| So, you know, sanity is not an objective foundation. | |
| It's a moving target all the time. | |
| So, something that you think is insane, I might think is totally sane and vice versa. | |
| So, anyway, my conclusion is I don't believe these women had sex with aliens. | |
| But if they do, eh, that's okay with me if they want to believe that. | |
| Yeah, it's kind of fun to think about it, but if they actually do get a condo in California and a mothership comes and lands in their yard, I will retract this entire recording. | |
| How about that? | |
| Yeah, I'll say I'm sorry. | |
| Okay, all right. | |
| Have a good time with all this. | |