And the film footage is of the town that we were at.
Actually, the name was escaping me.
But this is that town, and this is...
We wandered around, and we ended up going to have lunch in a very famous old marketplace that must have been the same way for centuries, where people actually create their wares and we were fortunate to be able to have a lovely meal there among all the men who were playing games in the late afternoon.
We tried to go to Gobekli Tepe.
It was very hot, so we went in the late afternoon when the sun was about to actually go down, even though it's still quite high in the sky.
And so we ate lunch before we went in this amazing town.
And this is a temple.
And this is a temple.
So I'm going to stop here and see if the film will catch up with itself.
Because again, you guys have such a delay.
I have no idea why the delay on Google Hangouts is so bad.
I'm hoping this film will progress.
Yeah, it's starting to.
And these fish...
these fish just are in this water and they're considered sacred so if I remember correctly they don't eat them and there's some special significance on a religious level here
thank you So again, I'm going to pause it at my end so that you can catch up on your end.
And the people, we were so strange that they stared at us as like we came from another planet.
They were very polite.
But at one point, Neil and I were stopped and a mother and her son...
Neil was wearing a cowboy hat type of thing just because we bought it in the street because it was so boiling hot that he'd never wear his hat.
But he just had to have a hat because the sun was actually kind of almost dangerously hot.
So he was wearing a cowboy hat and they wanted to take pictures of us.
I don't know what they thought we were.
Like American cowboys or something.
I don't really know.
Or cowgirls or Cowboy and girl or whatever you want to say.
So it was really funny.
Do amazing metal works, rocks, all kinds of stuff.
And now we're actually on the way to the Go-Beckley-Tephi site.
So I'm going to pause the tape again here so you guys can catch up.
Okay.
So now we're actually on the way to the site.
Science Factor.
you And we got into this van when we got up to the top of the mountains.
And they're not high mountains, but it feels like they are because everywhere else is a low river valley.
So this whole area has...
Remains of volcanism.
There was a major volcanic eruption in that area and distributed this volcanic material everywhere.
And nobody talks about that, which I find really interesting because they must have known that the volcanism was going to happen and then they buried Gobekli Tepe to protect it from, you know, the explosions and stuff.
So they were...
You know, in other words, they were precogs.
They knew the future.
And so that's pretty interesting.
So we're on our way up to here.
I'm bouncing up and down.
It's also bouncing.
It's very, very hot here.
It looks very stark in what you can see.
I'm going to pause it one more time.
It does look kind of stark when you're looking out over it in these shots, but there are lots of olive trees and vegetation down a little lower and also up when you get to the Gobekli Tepe, actually the site itself.
They planted tons of olive trees in that area.
And I think they're olive or almond trees, both.
I think almond.
Not sure.
Anyway, and they did that on purpose so that they couldn't...
It looks like they didn't want the scientists to excavate all around the actual...
Finish excavating all the pillars because if they do that, they will activate this amazing vortex...
Which is a Stargate.
It's a, like I said, a system of Stargates.
And that comes from Mark Richards, by the way.
And Joanne Richards was on my TV network, so to speak, last night.
She did a fabulous show.
So if you haven't seen the show with Joanne, it's going up to the main site today.
It should be there this evening.
I hope it's there now, I would hope.
And it is...
It's excellent and you get to really meet Joanne if you haven't already seen her speak at a conference and she is Mark Richards' wife and what a lovely lady she is just a real jewel of a person and she's I'm going to be seeing going back to visit them in probably November and get another interview with Mark all things being equals as they say So
this is, I've stopped the tape here at a sign that's up at the Gobekli Tepe site, sort of showing the layout of the excavated areas.
They've done, you know, it's a nice site.
It's very well laid out in terms of, you know, the sort of accoutrements that they put up there, very sort of sparse and non-commercial, I guess you would say.
It's out in the middle of really this amazing valley that is part of the Tyrus Euphrates River Valleys as far as I understand it.
But it's up high above it.
So they would have had to hike up here out of their area in order to get to join in with the Stargates and to commune with the people or the beings that came out of them.
Yeah!
Well, if you don't mind being in the video, we can record what you have to say.
Not yet.
And I had a wonderful guide.
He was great.
I don't know if I recorded anything here.
We don't want to do it yet.
Well, we decide later what to use and what not to use, okay?
Thank you.
So...
I'll talk...
I'll start talking.
Okay.
- Okay, so this is, I guess we're at the top of the site.
And we're going to go higher?
Yeah, we'll go higher.
Okay.
And here is the whole eastern region of Anatolia, of Turkey.
Here is a map you see.
Gebeketepe is the highest point of area.
And here you see the 900 kilometer land with Turkey.
And has nine cities in this region.
Yerbaqar, Adyaman, Gaziantep, Shanlufa, Mardin.
Now we are here.
And here the blue colored is the Ufaitis River.
It burns from the Fatou East near Arzurum and Tunjela, comes down and passed through the Adyaman and the Bozovah, From here goes to Syria.
The other important river is Tigris.
It comes from the same point, then to Iraq.
Okay, so it goes this way?
Yeah, both of the rivers.
And then meet in the Basakoff.
So you mean that the water actually starts here?
Yes, in the Basakoff.
And goes to Iraq?
Iraq and Suria.
And both rivers and Basra go.
Okay.
Making the go trip, where we can see the Midrash Castle and houses.
So he was a really marvelous guide and he is like an archaeologist himself.
He's studied this his whole life.
He's dedicated to these sites.
And I will definitely want to use him again if I'm able to take a group here, which I'm hoping to be able to do.
So maybe this video will also encourage people to come forward who want to take the trip.
And I hope that we don't launch into war any worse than it already is south of that area.
I guess we have to wait and see what's going to happen.
There's too much craziness going on right now.
But I have to say that, again, the site is like a World Heritage site.
It needs to come to the notice of people.
And it is, in essence, a in essence a disclosure site because the combination of et races and the carvings um and the and then the pillars and the and the vortex and the stargate aspect of it um are is is stunning really just absolutely stunning and uh and shouldn't remain hidden Any longer.
So it's important that we get this information out there.
Beautiful white animals.
It's a nice place.
And the ebuses.
Bad ebuses.
Ufa and Buraj is one of the important places where we can only see here in Turkey.
They are under protection.
Okay.
So now we are going to see the beginning of Kyobak the Tapa, the first temple of Sarish Pitsen.
My conversation is not so good, I don't know why.
Oh, okay.
Now I'm going to wait.
I'll just watch the video a bit here.
Okay.
So what's happening now is we're on the way up to the actual excavated site, and alongside it, it has this area where there's sort of this, I guess, domed area that's all sort of granite.
like volcanic rock, and it's all pitted with these holes, which is really strange.
And it is so reminiscent of a very similar site on the island of Malta that both Neil and I were very struck by that.
There's a very similar site just like that.
It's dug into the rock.
There are holes and then these scooped out areas.
And I don't know what they used it for at all.
But it's not like the rest of the Gobekli Tepe site at all.
There's no resemblance.
So it's sort of an anomaly, what they were doing there and what it was used for.
So I just wanted to pause and show you that.
So what are these?
This is the base of the platform of Yabek and Yabba.
Here you see the base is rock.
Not many holes, as you see.
Because maybe they are used for storage.
You know, and I love these people, but they have no idea what the real purpose of some of these places and things are.
He was a very open-minded guide.
He knows the party line, but I kept telling him, you know, like I would tell him what I thought when I was getting intuitive information coming at me, and he was very patient and very giving, very gracious individual, and very smart as well.
There is no opportunity to say what's that.
There are many purposes for being.
What is this right here?
The white horse.
The horse.
Some say they put some food or clothes or to take a look of the stone from the rock.
They have your screens and cut.
Okay, so I'm going to pause it again.
Not so.
I'm going to pause it again.
So now you're seeing the actual Gobekli Tepe site with the pillars, and we're starting to get into it.
We've hiked up this sort of ridge, and then you kind of go in.
It's covered now with a covering, I guess, to protect it while they excavate it.
They're doing it in kind of a strange way, and they've got all these Wooden posts that they put in between the pillars and they're digging out, I guess, the gravel and everything around them.
It's, I guess, a terribly painstaking process.
But the trouble was is that there was no one there and all the archaeologists were gone.
Now, we were there at the end of August and granted that is one of the hottest months And it can get way over 100 degrees, like 140 degrees or something crazy.
But it hadn't been that hot this year, at least at that time.
And I'm told that they should be back there now.
Now that we're in September, they were supposed to return.
However, they were going to concentrate on excavating a smaller site.
Strangely, which I don't know if I have it on this film, but it's right next to this site.
It's actually part of it, but they have smaller pillars.
And why they would start concentrating on a smaller site when they still had this amazing site with these amazing finds to excavate, I don't know.
And there's also some question because I believe it's under the control of the Germans and, I guess, the Turkish government.
And...
There was some, I was asking our guide about why they can't just get tons of archaeologists.
I mean, this is like the find of the, I don't know, century or whatever, millennium, whatever.
And you would think that they would want to get it excavated quickly, but that does not appear to be the case.
So in the middle, there are two main pillars, and around the wall, you have 12 smaller pillars.
Around shape.
But New Era temples, they have formed a few years ago.
Except here, we are going to explore.
Square plant and smaller.
Okay, but this pillar, we can't even see the top of it.
It's broken.
Why?
Why?
Because before, his grandfather was farming on the top of this.
It was all...
There was one guard.
Talk about heavily guarded.
This place had one guard, I think, if I recall.
And he might have a machine gun.
I'm not sure if I recall.
But...
That's what they usually have is machine guns.
And it was kind of funny because he was going...
His grandfather did this and his grandfather did that.
And I'm like, whose grandfather is he talking about?
And it turns out it was the guard.
So the guard is standing there and he's referring to the guy's grandfather as the one whose land this belonged to.
So what they did is they gave the family a deal or something.
They made...
You know, they took the land over and then the family got to guard, gets to guard the archaeological site.
So it's kind of a strange set up.
Like a natural hill.
So when they plow, somehow it's broken.
Because his grandfather was owner of this land and the family.
I'm not so sure it can break that easily.
What is this?
Yeah, I told you, there are many hosts, we don't know what for their use, but on the most of pillars, you see animal motifs.
Yes.
Scorpions, snakes, we're going to see some of them.
folks, grain, voucher, grapes, vankys.
It's really sort of aggravating that you can't go down close to it.
As close as you'd like, actually.
Although you can certainly feel the energy.
They have found a canal under the camera.
We don't know what they have used.
But maybe it can be why it is base, the base is rock.
In their ceremonies, they have used blood.
So you're saying they found a canal under the site which is interesting because it also harks back to the Pyramid of Giza where you would have that it really was surrounded by water at one point and had water in some of the chambers As well.
And so this, you know, water is conductive.
And so whenever you're going to have a vortex and you're going to do any kind of energy work and activating the stones and the pillars.
And it's really interesting because I did this whole analysis of what was the logic Behind creating a pillar that looks top-heavy the way the pillars, when you look at them, you can see they're actually, they're almost like piano keys or, you know, they're top-heavy.
And the bottom of them, they could fall over in an instant.
So you wonder what was holding them upright.
Like right now, you'll see that the dirt is being removed and they are...
having some structures around them and so on and so forth but initially they would have not been architecturally logical because they're more narrow at the bottom and heavy at the top and so in theory they would fall right over so something amazing was keeping them structurally you know intact and uh And I believe it has to do with the way they were able to move stones,
the same the way they were able to move the stones in place to build the pyramids, which is using the ankh, water, and a sound.
So this obviously needs to be more thoroughly investigated, but I could actually see this happening, and I could see that What the pillars would do is they would actually start to levitate off the bases.
Each pillar is set on a base.
But again, it's quite precarious the way it's constructed.
But I think they levitated the stones when they got to a certain vibration and that the whole place would...
Create this sort of humming sound when it was activated and became a system of gates.
This is what I see at any rate.
Because the Tepe is a religious site.
Not for living, not for a council.
I understand.
It's a council.
Worship area.
See, now, I don't believe it's a temple, so he'll see me laughing and saying, you know.
Later on, I talk to him, you know, more and stuff.
It's just interesting.
Okay.
You're trying to put it in the museum.
So when we were there, a family came with little kids, locals that came to visit, or at least locals in the sense that I believe they were Turkish or even Kurdish, and they had children with them.
And it was just us and them in the entire site, in the middle of nowhere, literally.
Remember the main site?
Along the edge.
Along the edge.
The one there, going up.
So we're looking at a snake going up the side of the pillar here, I believe.
If you come here, you see many snakes, each other, going down and up.
On the side of that pillar, this pillar.
And the fox, can you see?
And you can see the lighting is Neil was able to capture with his camera because when I go to these sites I'm very much sort of a sensei.
I'm always sensing the energies and the story that I'm getting and it's really wonderful to have someone else who can film.
So that I can do this.
But I'm always fascinated by the light.
And it's so beautiful in this place.
It was late afternoon, but you can tell that there's a certain energy there.
And the light kind of reflects that energy.
So you can almost get a sense of what it might have been like when it was really totally excavated and intact.
Come here, James.
Yes, I do.
But at the top of that pillar, there's little holes.
You don't know.
You don't know.
Maybe fire.
Maybe fire during their religious youth fields.
Yes?
Hmm.
What do you think?
Well, again, I'm not sure you can see when you get to this.
I'm going to let you catch up here.
but you'll see the very top of the some of the pillars is riddled with again little holes which is quite strange and he's suggesting they lit a fire in those holes or something like that and Seems strange.
I don't know.
It could have had something on.
It could have had a covering of some kind.
The acoustic properties of putting the holes is a possibility, I guess.
I will put it in my video to invite all the archaeologists in the world to join us.
Yes, we need more excavation here so we can learn more.
It's amazing.
That's what I did.
I think you're right.
That's what I did.
Thank you.
So now you see that the Tigris-Euphrates Valley beneath in the distance here.
And you see me wearing this outfit.
I was actually wearing a local kind of garb, I guess you'd call it, because I knew I was going to this ancient city where there were all these local people, and I wanted to sort of not offend them.
By wearing any kind of overt Western kind of clothes.
But I look ridiculous.
You can see that it's very fertile down there.
It's still got green, even though we're up on a hill that's very, very dry.
And it looks like that's the end.
So, we have a lot more footage, and I will show people, if we get a chance, we'll cut it all together and put it into this documentary, hopefully, and then maybe in the near future be able to bring a group here.
So, I hope everyone enjoyed that.
If you have any questions for me before I close this down, feel free to ask.
It's really a fascinating site, as I said.
Going to Istanbul was also fabulous and fascinating, and I have all kinds of pictures from there.
But I think I've been going for long enough, so I don't want to stay on much longer here.
This was sort of an off-the-cuff broadcast.
I had some scheduling updates.
Confusions going on and some people changed their schedule.
So anyway, that's what's going on.
I won't be broadcasting tomorrow night, but I'll be back in a few days, I'm sure, one way or the other.
I want everyone to be aware of just the Project Camelot TV network and we are going to start crowdfunding.
It's been an incredible challenge to do this network using no money whatsoever.
And we have a couple producers behind the scenes helping us with getting the videos into shape and then put onto the main Camelot YouTube channel where I have a very large subscribing audience, about 115,000 of you out there.
So...
That's very valuable.
It's a great way to bring some amazing hosts and their shows to you.
Like I said, we had Joanne Richards, Mark Richards, Captain Mark Richards' wife on yesterday, and that show will be shortly uploaded to the YouTube channel.
We've had great shows all last week.
Scott Bennett, a whistleblower who is somebody I interviewed about ISIS and the funding for ISIS going through CIA and Swiss banks.
He has a show on the network.
On one of my videos, actually, that I'm talking about the network, I do list all the different hosts.
I want to say that Brian Forrester, we're hoping very soon to I'm going to do an interview with him and then at some point he's going to be able to have a show on the network.
Susan Lindauer is another wonderful whistleblower, a 9-11 whistleblower.
She's going to have a show.
I mean, this is an opportunity for me to just widen the game a bit beyond myself and Camelot and to bring in all the potential hosts and whistleblowers and researchers and To really give them a platform to use video to be sort of front and center talking to you and to have guests and so on and so forth.
So we're looking to go a step beyond radio, I guess you could call it.
And calling it a TV network, it's really, I guess, a bit adventurous in that sense.
I'm hoping at some point to...
Raise enough money to...
We're building a website.
The website's actually being built live.
So it's called ProjectCamlotTVNetwork.com.
That's the new website.
And...
We've already uploaded videos on there from the shows, and we've got some older Camelot videos there as well.
Soon, each host will have their own section of the site, and their shows will be there, they're archived there, and so on.
So we have big plans.
We're going to do crowdfunding.
We hope that you'll join us.
We hope that you'll contribute to making this a reality.
We want to pay the hosts to broadcast, and most...
People in radio never got paid a dime on the internet.
We want to change that, make it possible to pay people.
So we will eventually have like-minded advertising at the top and the bottom of the hour once we get our own player and are able to put this on our own servers.
So there's a lot going on with building this channel and it's been an incredible challenge for me.
To try to expand Camelot in this way and to take that brand that people know is going to push the envelope and bring along a bunch of other people that are going to do the same thing and try to work together to get the word out and to get the truth out.
So that's what it's all about.
Thank you for listening to me and I hope the people that are out there and paying attention will come back and try to support us and watch.