To get to that place of dialogue where there is an exchange of information that was not present with Jim Morrison but was with the shaman.
That place where there's a dialogue, that's an altered state.
And I remember when I turned it on, the whole campus went down.
I had this huge generator and one professor thought I was going to blow up the campus.
I posted on my website that science yesterday has a picture of normal particles And dark matter.
And what they do is you can move the screen across to show which one's the white matter and which one's the dark matter.
What you see is the reflection.
That's what dark matter is.
It's the other side of matter.
And now, you have out of 10 children that are on antipsychotics, two of them are going to slightly overreact.
And when you have a shooting, in every single incident, the first reports talk about a second shooter, that's the handler, that taps them with scopolamine.
I did those studies.
Now they're genetic...
DNA specific, and they can tap individuals inside your home, not this person, but that one.
And if you opt out, so what?
You have a smart meter, and he's also on antipsychotics.
And so you no longer need law enforcement.
What you've got is a controlled in-house There's an army of psychotic episodes that are waiting to be released by the law.
Listen, the whole thing has been an endgame with Rothschilds, right down to Bilderbergers, and they're losing.
What they want to do now is be the last man standing.
When the end comes, they want to be the ones that pick up the ashes and rebuild.
And the thing is, when all this happens, what it actually means is we have an opportunity here.
This is Burl.
This is manzanita or madrone.
Madrone and the burl is used for dashboards on automobiles.
It's because what has happened is this is an old tree that got chopped down and then it grew into several trees and we'll show you more of those where the burl then forms up.
Just like in the lake we used to do.
Walking around and I just show you the garden.
That's right.
And look at all these.
Look what's happening here.
It's all dry.
We have a lot of psychedelic mushrooms here.
You do?
Oh, yeah.
Psilocybin.
Really?
Probably seven or eight different varieties that will come up in the late fall, early winter.
That's cool.
Well, we have psychedelic, we have gourmet, you know, for foods like, you know, we would have matsutake and...
No, I don't know.
Chanterelle, morels.
What do you do with those ones?
You make them in foods, the suits.
Oh, right.
And then, this is old man's beard.
These are several different kinds of lichens.
This one right here is Icelandic moss.
This is Usnia that they talk about.
And you can sell that to the floral trade as mossy stick.
You know, for making birdhouses or whatever.
Right.
We have Enchanted Forest, another place I could take you where everything is hanging moss.
And the ants then are burrowing in there and there will probably be 10,000 ants here.
Big hives down in the complex.
There's not very many right here.
We'll find some where we can actually show you.
Reishi Miyataki.
What is that?
Those are mushrooms.
Are those edible ones?
No, those are pharmaceutical.
They're the ones that have the polysaccharides and are used for cancer.
Oh really?
Animals are the ones that are breaking these things down for the ants and the other foods that they get.
And they're doing some horse logging right here.
They'll pull those out with horses.
And they do that Not today because of the forest fires, but the fires of bait, they'll bring horses down here and people can come in and watch some horse log.
This is how I built my log home as I horse logged up in the Okanagan.
My cousins run the small farm journal out of Eugene on horse logging, working with horses.
I see.
Why do they do that?
Well, better than getting a tractor in the woods.
See, this is exposed work here.
Okay.
That's probably a possum, a skunk, a raccoon.
Why would they do that?
Looking for food.
Oh, looking for ants or something?
Yeah, or other kinds of insects.
So those kind of animals eat insects.
They do anything they can at this time of year.
It's pretty much good luck finding food.
You know, and they're really strong.
Now you see here, I'm going to step in.
I'm fine.
You see, these things right here are lichens and different kinds of lichens.
And they're different kinds.
They all tell me what's going on and they're foods that I can use.
Yes, I'm careful.
I won't touch my feet or my shoes.
That's why I leave them at the door.
Wherever there's a toxin in the woods, you'll find its antidote growing right next to it.
Poison oak, rock and fern.
The fern has a juice in it that's like baking soda and apple cider vinegar.
Its juices will neutralize.
And what that is, is formic acid.
It's formic acid.
Rub the leaves on it?
Yeah, you don't rub the leaf, you rub the juice from the sap.
But that's it as a last resort.
I would rather do apple cider vinegar and baking soda.
What I use is green clay.
Green clays and pyrolytics are all, they'll help, but that's not going to stop the histamines.
That's what your problem is, is your body's response to it.
It isn't the poison oak that bothers you, it's your histamine release and your body's over-response to the allergens.
Now it doesn't bother me because when I was in a forest fire, it built up antibodies in my body.
Yeah, that's what happened to me.
I had it so bad that I guess I did do that, but I still get it.
See, this is like an animal doing that.
And there's where you can see the ants and other kinds of insects were inside the bark.
And whoever peeled us apart went in and got those.
All right.
Well, remember that business you used to have where you gathered the pine pine?
So, did you stop doing that because it wasn't profitable, or what happened?
I got to set up somewhere.
I got a price ready to ship the truck.
I changed the price on there, and I had to refund the guy's money.
But you can see all the deadfall in the trees here?
That's what the forest fires clean up.
The debris.
Right.
Over a period of time, the debris will still pick up these leaves.
It'll just scorch it.
Yeah.
Wherever you have, they dropped a tree down at one time, and three trees came back up out of it.
Oh.
Years ago.
Now, I wasn't head of SRI. I had...
SRI was one of my laboratories that I ran.
That was run by Andrea Pujaric.
Not Puthoff.
Puthoff wasn't there until 81.
Right.
I was there in 74.
Uh-huh.
The early years.
All right.
Fair enough.
Did you know Ingo Swann?
I did.
I didn't know him very well.
He was from Texas.
Uh...
Well, you lived in New York, but I don't know where he was from.
Yeah, but Swan was with several others that were doing the remote viewing thing.
We were still working with Monroe at that time.
Oh yeah?
So you knew Robert Monroe then?
Oh yeah, I was in his lab at Berkeley.
So what did you think of him?
Monroe was a breakthrough man.
He actually had a lot of really interesting ideas.
Right.
His foundation, when it moved to North Carolina, changed.
I see.
It was all Berkeley.
I was with...
Well, you know, it was basically a CIA... They would send their officers there.
Yeah.
So...
Were you working with Monroe?
Yeah, we did studies with Monroe.
I see.
That was when he was at Berkeley.
What kind of studies did you do?
Sleep studies, dream studies, dream philosophy.
That was my question.
Good job.
Yeah, like what Stan Kripner, my mentor, working at Maimonides Dream Labs.
By the way, this is where all the transients hang out and live.
It's right down here in the thicket.
I know, and Rick says it, it's like, well, so what?
Not so what, but what are we going to do with that information?
Well, what is that, yeah, what is the significance of that in your mind?
Yeah, what are you saying by telling us that?
Are you talking about the homeless?
Yes, and Grant's house.
What I'm trying to do is bring you into the moment rather than the past.
The inside scoop?
Yeah.
Are you sure you're not trying to distract me from asking you some delicate questions?
I don't think like that.
I'm more circular anyway.
I'm all over like a little kid.
I'm pretty circular myself, but I have a method to my madness.
You know, that kind of thing.
Unlike you have a method to my madness.
Yeah.
Now, last year, all of this whole hill was on fire.
Julie, if you get in the picture, we'll take you out.
Oh, I'd love to have her in the picture.
Stop it.
Yeah.
Okay.
You're fun, too.
So, uh, okay.
Get her striking me, just for the...
So, uh, we were talking about, uh, you knowing, uh...
Terence McKenna, right?
Well...
And then you brought up the guy who started the rave scene.
Whose name is...?
Genesis D. Orange.
Okay.
He runs New York City now.
Really?
Yeah.
He's like Andy Warhol.
He runs New York City.
Genesis.
Gen.
Psychic TV. I see.
So he runs it from the point of view of an artist.
Yes, he's an artist.
He's not in the government.
I did him, no.
I interviewed him at Lauren's ISIS Oasis.
In Geyserville.
It's a pagan bed and breakfast where all the different little things were based on the tarot cards.
The tower, the house that's leaning slightly.
Where is that at?
Geyserville.
Geyserville.
I see.
Genesis is still alive.
Okay, wait a minute.
Why did he start the rave scene?
I don't know anything about it.
That's England.
I interviewed him for Rolling Stone and then had a second interview I was going to do with Terrence McKenna.
And we went to, Iona and I, when we were in Petaluma, went to his home to interview him, and he wouldn't come to the door.
Really?
Yeah.
He was afraid of me.
Oh.
Why?
Because of my physics background.
Oh.
I had questions on his zero-point energy.
I was interested in interviewing him.
Right.
And so then what happened was, we got a girlfriend who was on the Amazon with him.
He used to have a girlfriend that he went on the Amazon.
And I brought her to the house.
He still wouldn't come to the door.
He talked through the door, but he wouldn't open the door.
I think he was looted.
I think he was really...
He didn't want you to see his eyes?
I don't know.
I don't know what really happened.
I spoke with his brother later.
You know, it was no big deal.
But it was just one of those incidents.
What year was that?
Yeah, that was in 78, I think.
77 or 78.
1977, 1978.
What did he have to hide?
Maybe it was 80.
Right on.
Really?
Might have been 83.
79, 83.
I was no longer with the military.
I was riding.
Right.
And I was a stringer for a long time.
I didn't know you were.
Did a bunch of interviews, yeah.
Long time ago, far away university.
By the way, this is Carrie Cassidy.
Oh, don't start with that.
I don't even know who that is.
I'm sorry.
I have a well-known website.
It's no big deal.
I'll have to check it out.
I'm so worried.
So, you're so important.
Am I? Yeah.
Can I get spanked?
Spank me, Mama.
Please.
Okay, he doesn't miss a beat.
So, alright.
It'll be one of the editors.
Probably not.
It'll just be for color.
I want to know why the man was hiding.
What was his...
I don't...
At the time...
Do you know?
No, I don't know.
Well, what was his area of expertise?
Well, at that point he was talking about Zero Point Energy.
Alright.
And I had some questions about that.
Why did he know?
I mean, that seems like a sort of incongruous.
You have a guy who started a rave scene who's part of...
Genesis is not...
You're talking about Genesis or...
The guy you went to the door.
That wasn't the rave scene?
No, that was Terrence McKenna.
McKenna wouldn't come to the door?
Yeah.
Are you kidding me?
No!
Oh, that's wild.
Yeah, and...
Why was he afraid?
Just because it's your point energy, what was he afraid of?
I was just solid military, right in for Rolling Stone.
Right.
And I wanted to talk to him about zero point energy.
And you were a physicist.
Yeah.
Alright, so still nothing, still not clear why he wouldn't talk to you.
No, probably he was either one.
Was he good friends with Leary?
I didn't know him.
I knew Tim.
I knew Leary real well.
Right.
So you didn't know if Terence McKenna and Leary were good friends?
No.
Leary was all over at that time.
Remember, he was hiding from the wall.
Oh yeah, that's a long time ago.
Right.
It was Tana Wilson and I that got the rift of ebius corpus that got Leary released from Vacaville.
He was supposed to be in Vacaville and he was actually in Chicago, and that's against the law.
And when Leary came out, Anything else?
He was different.
He wasn't as I knew him when he was at Harvard.
Oh really?
He was different.
Do you think they mind controlled him?
I don't know.
They did something to him on drugs.
He wasn't the same.
Richard Albert was on doing tours at that time.
Yeah, Rick.
And you knew them well.
I knew all of them.
Yeah.
I was part of that study in 64.
They harbored it for, you know, geniuses and wanted to know what would happen.
That was a study.
It wasn't until 1965 when Angela Wheeler got out.
That little toad got out and, you know, busted the whole studies on LSD. That's about the same time...
Well, what do you mean he busted?
There was something about the skin of the...
something oozes out of the skin of the toad?
What was that?
Well, that's bufotine.
That's different.
It is?
Yeah, bufotine is toad licking.
It's different.
Toad licking is moving.
That's your zombie drug.
That's different.
Is it?
Yeah.
Now, LSD is...
Okay.
When you take LSD, it's a toxin.
Is it?
Because it's very similar to a neurotransmitter that you release in your brain called a surgic acid.
I know, but why is it a toxin if it's something you release naturally?
It's like a chemistry that goes into your body that's similar to...
To your brain chemistry.
Right.
What happens is your brain homeopathy produces a whole bunch of that chemistry to break down the look-alike.
Really?
Yeah.
And the 20 hours of hallucinations is from your own brain chemistry.
Ah, right.
And what that did is it jump-started in my brain.
Yeah.
So then you'd be really smart.
I don't know if that's true or not.
Or something much worse.
Or something much worse.
Like maybe at that moment I died and this is all a hallucination.
Much more dangerous, yeah.
Jacob's Ladder.
Absolutely.
Yeah, there you go.
Ding, ding.
Something's frung here.
Oh, now we're going to have to talk about, you know, we don't have to do it now, but you told me that Jim Morrison's still alive.
Are you going to say that on camera?
Sure, we can talk about that study.
That will be in a book called Spook Central.
Tom Lytle wrote about it originally in Secret and Suppressed.
Well, that makes me very happy.
I love that idea.
Because that always made sense to me.
With the father that he had, he had no reason to, you know, commit suicide.
Except to get out of the game he was in and to get into a different game.
What happened...
There are...
Life forms on Earth that are different kinds of humans.
Pierce Brosnan did one called Nomads.
There's others where they're not quite human.
They're different shapeshifters.
The American Indian has legends on all of these, like Wendigo.
So you think that he was this Indian god, this, what was his name?
He was Grandfather Joseph.
Right.
So you think he died and went into Jim's body?
He died on the crossroads at the very moment Jim Morrison was 10 years old.
His parents were driving.
I know, but you're saying, are you saying that he just sort of went in and periodically occupied his body along with Jim, or are you saying that Jim stepped out, went elsewhere, and that the person that actually...
That's the part I went to study and don't understand.
Did you ever figure it out?
No.
I have theories.
What's your theory?
There's a cohabitation of consciousness.
Yes.
Emergence.
I see.
Well, that makes some sense.
With a cognizant of self, but had an added thing about pressing over to the other side.
Well, it's like channeling.
It doesn't see.
What it does is it...
It puts itself in the next, whatever, lifeforms nearby.
Temporarily.
Well, for a lifeform.
It doesn't die.
It doesn't leave.
That consciousness remains as a shaman, a grandfather chosen.
Well, that would be a kind of possession.
It's okay.
And that is another movie where they were after this demon that kept leaping around to different people.
Who was the actor?
The black actor?
That's right.
I know that movie.
That's Denzel Washington.
Denzel Washington.
That concept...
That's a very eerie movie.
It's quite close to the truth.
That concept exists metaphorically throughout history.
And the government...
Who's always interested, like the Germans and the Nazis, of trying to ascertain that, what was real and what was not real.
Okay, now, Stanley Krippner, who was your teacher...
Well, mentor, yeah.
Mentor, whatever.
Okay, went to Yelm, apparently, to test Rontha, Jay-Z Knight.
This was recently?
No, this is a while ago, apparently.
Quite a while ago.
And Jay-Z Knight...
Had a different DNA than when she was Ramtha.
They took DNA samples both, you know, when she was herself and when she was Ramtha.
And the story is that there was a difference.
You can change then that consciousness.
Oh, yeah.
Well, then it's hard to isolate which variable.
But, you know, you're not going to change it five minutes and change it back five minutes later.
No, but...
You do that with universes with altered states of consciousness.
In a moment of passion, a woman can rip a car door off to save her daughter without even thinking about it.
And yet, from a physics point of view, that's impossible.
The bone in her body is merely as strong as steel.
How can she do that?
Well, being for that brief moment in an altered state creates a different set of laws.
And same thing with DNA. And DNA is a hologram.
It's a three-dimensional hologram.
A four-space is who you were, who you are, who you will be.
It's a three-dimensional structure, a four-space.
And it creates like a projection.
And today, I'm suggesting your brain It's an amorphous semiconductor.
It's a four-dimensional hologram, five-space, which means that, that's true, going to different places in your brain allows you different universes or laws.
And that's where the next evolution in man's consciousness will be the study of altered states, of consciousness as tools in the toolbox where in this state you can guess better than anywhere else.
In this state you can have the strength of ten people.
In this state you can da da da da da.
And what I'm doing now is trying to map an intelligence of these different mystical states and where one set of laws start and another begin.
But, okay, I appreciate that.
But, to get back to this, I want to say that Ramtha, you see, basically Jay-Z Knight becomes Ramtha.
I should probably put my logo on her so that everybody remembers me in my little logo.
So, Jay-Z Knight becomes Ramtha for a period of time.
Some people said that, you know, several years ago, she's older now and maybe he can't do it for as long, but he could occupy her for, you know...
A week or more.
The whole time.
And then step away.
Now in Jim Morrison's case, what you're tending to say...
It's a different concept.
No, I don't think so.
That's what I'm saying.
I'm saying it's very possible that this man, this entity you're calling Chief Joseph could go into Jim, you know, when Jim allowed him in, which would be when he got into a trance state, when he's on stage in various altered states.
Then he would let him in.
But he wasn't there all the time, you see?
That's where you get the two people.
Your mom, for example, is with you all the time.
It's just...
Your states of consciousness don't allow as much access to mother.
No, that's simply that we're a part of all, you know.
We're a whole.
And so we can communicate at any point.
You don't have to...
She's not...
She's with me, I'm with...
You're with me all the time.
You're with me.
I mean, we're all with each other all the time.
I am you.
And you are me.
And I am the wall.
And you are the wall.
Absolutely.
There's no doubt about who you are.
But, to get to that place of dialogue, where there is an exchange of information that was not present with Jim Morrison, but was with the shaman, that place, where there's a dialogue, that's an altered state.
And that's how he does access to that.
I want to know where you got this idea.
Did he tell you?
No, I don't know that it's true.
Right, I understand.
But I'm just curious, where did it come from?
Where did it come from?
Was it the military that asked you to check that out?
Yes, yes.
I was working out of the Pentagon with the MRU. That was one of the things they wanted us to check.
Just like when Jack Schwartz could take these needles and stick them through his arms.
Pull them out and stop the bleeding.
You don't think the military wouldn't know how that works.
I mean, that was like an essential.
And Keith Milton Reinhardt, another one we did from the Aquarian Foundation, would do the same thing with channeling, like Brompton.
Right.
To be able to do a billet reading.
I had a course at the UW that I was teaching.
I had 102 students, and everyone was...
He would write a question to me, stick it in my pocket.
Then, Reinhardt would pull the name out.
Terry Cossett, okay, your mother says to you, the one he did for me?
Yeah.
He said, oh, you want evidence that I'm not reading your mind, okay?
Go to your mother's hope chest at the front of her bed, and at the very bottom you'll find an envelope that was written before you were born.
Da-da-da-da-da.
Really?
He did that to me.
That's Keith Nolan.
And he did that out of 102 students I had at that moment.
Nick, 100 of them.
That's the Aquarian Foundation out of Seattle, that led to Rafa and all the rest of them.
That's all where they started, was the Aquarian Foundation.
Well, what do you mean that's where they started?
Well, these religious churches, like Unity Church, that are into metaphysics, constantly.
Ooh, here we go.
Now, this whole area right in here is all bunkered.
It's all a bunker?
Yes.
It must be huge.
Massive bunker.
Wow.
For thousands of people.
Kidding.
No.
So, is that true of other places?
You know, did they have a special heads up?
They exist everywhere, yes.
They exist everywhere.
Now, this is Starlight Drive, which is the garbaging part.
But, some of these houses will have halls and elevators that drop them down into.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We're going to take you to some front doors in a minute.
Alright.
But this whole section in here, that's all bunker.
I think it's D Street is the street that we're looking for.
Yeah, it is.
You're correct.
But I wanted her to see this part of it first.
See where the...
And the bunkers are for what?
Being not on the surface, but protected.
Okay, because what's going to happen?
Is this for an asteroid hitting?
Is this for an earthquake?
What is it for?
Well, originally, in the 50s, they put in nuclear bunkers.
They put in observation for dew line.
Then they have thawed them into preppers.
This is why this is prepper universe over there.
Wherever you see opening things, that's where the truckers come in.
They bring in large volumes of supplies and other things like that.
The whole thing is caverned on different levels.
But is this something open to the public, or just invitations?
There's different levels of private, paramilitary, and then going down into military, and government.
And when I say government, it might be the city of Grenzbass has all of their records kept in a bunker.
Not city-owned.
So, you're not saying that these bunkers are for the public to go to?
No, they're not.
They're closed, mostly.
But there are some that are private, that are owned.
And all of this has got underground facilities.
Every single one of them.
That's interesting.
This whole area, the whole valley, it's just porous with caverns.
There is...
In the center, from this place north, there is 400 feet down.
It's a huge camera.
That means from Savage Street north, the entire city is going to fall 400 feet.
Fall?
What do you mean fall?
It's going to collapse.
Down?
Yeah.
Into the caves that are open.
Why is it going to go down?
Well, because the caves will collapse when we have the earthquake.
And 8.4 is what FEMA says will be the big one.
It'll be off Crescent City and it will drop the entire Pacific Plate.
I see.
And do you believe them?
That is going to happen, even if Gergesi predicts it.
When?
I don't know.
I think we're over a deal.
It should have happened previous.
Okay, is this part of what we call the San Andreas, or is this a different...
Well, the San Andreas is all part of that specific...
It's the same kind of...
Now we'll go where you know.
Well, my understanding is that if I had to have it right, the San Andreas goes out to sea somewhere in Northern California, north of, actually around Humboldt or something.
Yeah, that's where the bedrock part stops.
So you're saying does it come back in?
Yeah, Free State of Jefferson.
If you go to Google and you Google...
Future map of America, comma, Chet Snow.
That's the Navy.
That's the one the military uses.
Does that have a...
Oh, you believe...
So they believe, though, that California is going to be a set of islands.
Oh, yeah.
No, that basically all of Northern...
All of California is gone.
I don't believe that part.
I know.
I've actually had dreams of the future.
California will not be gone.
Well, there'll be portions of it.
What it'll do is it'll be just like in the movies where it goes up, slides out.
Do we have to look anymore or do we just go back?
No, I wanted to take them on that dead end street where I show them the front door.
Now when you're doing your prepper, you know, your talks, sort of prepper talks, I forget what you call them.
Yeah, living off the grid.
Yeah.
Are you telling people like a timeline?
No, I try, no.
So you're not supposed to be alerting them.
Yeah, it's time that you start prepping yourself with things like water.
Most people don't have water together.
That will be what kills 50% of everybody.
They didn't have their water together.
Not about food.
Not about radiation.
It's not about drugs.
It'll be about water.
Now, this tree here, these pods are worth a lot.
So tell me where to turn.
Well, I will.
This is my bitch with Amazon, is that I wrote, in 1985, I wrote The Potential of Herbs as a Cash Crop with Chuck Walters of Acres USA. We did it.
Today, Amazon has two mass-market producers of that title without my permission.
They're printing 2,000 copies plus.
Wow.
At Iran, and there are more than 60 people currently selling that title cheaper than I am.
How does that work?
And do you think I can get anyone from Amazon to respond to me?
Zero.
Okay, so while I was teaching this class, that's Amazon.
While I was teaching this class, I decided I was going to try to give the class, which was 102 students, 200, was it 205 students, something like that?
I think it was 205 students that were interested in learning how to farm.
I was going to write a grant to show them how a grant was written from a practical point of view.
There are these regional grants that you get, you know, there are five grand.
USDA was fifty thousand dollars and so I wrote one for a central processing facility.
All these guys And they were starting to produce product.
We had product coming out.
We made national news on the AP. Remember Sid Jack got a picture of him.
Your boy was on that one wagon.
I've got pictures of all the different things that we were doing.
And Oregon Magazine came out and said we were the fastest growing business in Oregon at that time.
And that's the Chamber of Commerce.
All of it.
It's winning.
So, USDA funded it.
Now I have this grant.
I have all these students.
What do I do?
We formed a co-op.
I gave the grant to the students.
And every single person had to be general manager for one week.
And everybody did.
Everybody else's job learning how to do it from knowing and sifting.
Some people were better at sifting.
I've got pictures of all these different kids working different positions in the thing.
And that's why I gave you this.
Because those are the recommendations.
You can put those up and post those.
Because I'd like to make note that Rogue Community College doesn't even want me to do any agriculture here.
Why not?
I have no idea.
We'll leave that for a later discussion.
In any case, for the next two years, every single person had to do so many dollars into the co-op.
I think it was like $2,000.
It was called a bonding fund.
Something like that.
They would do $2,000 worth of wildcrafting that would be invested into the co-op, each one, and they owned everything.
And so that's how the co-op was formed and started the herb farming that's all around here in the valley now.
Now, that made Grants Pass in an all-American city, and 205 or 207, I forget how many it was, members of the co-op each had ownership in this big thing that was growing like crazy.
And what happened next was...
Henry Barth didn't want me to write books, and so he made me an offer I refused.
That was to move to Yakima, quadruple my salary, and not write.
And I chose to write.
Who is Henry Barth and why?
Fifth richest man in the world.
He's the one from Nuremberg that flew all the way over here, hired me when I left the military, and gave me 28 farms in four states with deep pockets to learn how to write an encyclopedia of alternative agriculture.
Which you did, right?
Yeah, I did.
And what I did with the kids is teach one of them how to grow these herbs and so on.
We had 300 acres out here at Rogue, and we had 300 acres and 28 other farms that used the dryers, you know, the big hop dryers, and then this processing plant that was down here at the end.
And when Barth When I wouldn't do that, what Barth did is he made an offer to all the co-op where every single member in the co-op ended up being given a bunch of money Take the machinery, which is now used to do all the garlic, onion, and peppermint revenues for the state of Oregon, which is the three primary cups, and it's over.
And first it was Barry Meltzer, they sold it to Barry, and now Mugenberg, Drogenhose, out of Hamburg, owns it.
And that was the old processing plant that I put together as a grant, where for two years, my students learned how to We're a processing plant taking raw material, breaking it down into manufacture so that it can interface with cottage industries or whatever else we might want to do.
And we did All kinds of things.
And that's going to be another story for another time.
But what I want to do now is the same thing with Netflix.
Netflix wants me to do a science fiction workup on the domes of Mars.
And what I want to do is teach a screenwriting course on how to do a workup.
And stories with the students, with your idea on how the Mars thing would go, and your idea on how the Mars, and your idea, and we'll conglomerate it, make a presentation to Fox as a class, like I did The Potential of Erbs.
Now, The Potential of Erbs has been ripped off by Amazon.
So, what can I do about that?
Well, you can get the book from May, and you can boycott Amazon, and at some point, maybe the Justice Department is going to take them down.
What they're doing is illegal.
They know it.
Who cares?
You know, I need a copyright lawyer.
Anybody out there want to make some money?
I've got physical evidence.
We can prove everything.
So, with that said, now we're aside.
And what I want to do now is teach again, only using my experience of how I did with Fox to do the X-Files.
What I want to do is the domes of Mars.
And we're going to use the poop from the Martian to use a 3D printer with cannabis leftovers.
And that's going to be the structural component rather than concrete for the domes of Mars.
And then we're going to do the ghosts that come in and talk.
You know, we're going to have some fun with the series.
Okay, wait.
Well, let's back up a little bit.
Let's take a look.
Yeah, I want to do one thing for you first.
Okay, what did you do for X-Files?
What did you do for X-Files?
I just said the early, the workup, which they rejected, by the way.
The workup was, had too many people in it.
I can show you the workup.
It had eight individuals and they only had a budget for two.
And that stuck.
I later was their advisor primary up in that.
But I did the first eight episodes.
I wrote the screenplay part, you know, using Molnar and what's her face.
But...
I... Dana...
What mine was called Siops.
That was what it was called.
I had Ben-Gurion.
I had some characters I developed that would make an exceptional screenplay.
Were you working with Chris Carter on this?
No, Carter was brought in later.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
So the first X-Files, he wasn't brought in?
The early ones, no.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Now...
So what are you showing us?
Well, I'm going to show you...
Pacific dance This is Pacific Domes down in Ashland, Oregon.
And I wanted to...
Asha was going to come today, but she's in Portland, so she can't.
This is Pacific Domes in Ashland, and they make different domes.
And what we're going to do is print these with 3D printers out of Cambridge Island using non-porous concrete that we've developed.
These things will last in...
400, 600 mile an hour winds.
This is what we set up for soup kitchens and hospitals around.
How much does a dome cost?
They vary in price from little tiny ones on up.
What kind would you like to look for?
They have all different, we got vent domes, we got dwell domes, playground domes.
Okay, well people might want to know dwell domes.
Well then they can go read more on her thing.
Alright, so what is the name of the website?
Pacificdomes.com.
And these are typical systems that people live in.
There's different kinds and the way you lay them out.
But what I'm going to do is one called the Domes of Mars.
And so if I go, for example, over here to Documents.
Wait a minute.
Go to Books.
That's okay.
Wait a minute.
You can watch me come in here.
I want you to see...
These are all the different books, like theirs, the SEAL reports, and here's the domes of Mars.
I've started doing that with...
They had a contest.
NASA did, just recently, on who could...
will be in the 2031, and you'll notice they have the geodesic domes on that popular...
But if you go to...
I want to show you why I want to do this.
Martian Ghost Stones, Martian Ghost Stones, Marine Restoration, NASA names top five.
These are the top five CD printing that just came 9 phases of 3D printing Mars Habitat in competition.
And they show the different kinds.
And what I want to do is write a screenplay around the development of this first Habitats on Mars with a bunch of screenwriting people and then go sci-fi on it in terms of what we do with The Martian and how we live on different things.
These, some of these are all movies.
These are all movies.
So are you talking about how long this class, a month?
Oh, it'd probably be eight weeks.
Eight weeks?
Yeah.
An eight-week screenwriting class.
How to do a basic workup.
And let's take a look at some workups.
Uh, we'll drop that down.
Let's see if I have any workups going here.
I don't know what this is.
I've started, but I'm planning to do the screenwriting.
I want to start teaching again online.
And, uh, can't find anybody interested.
Uh...
Well, I'm sure people would be interested.
Oh, yeah.
How could they not?
It's me teaching it.
Floating Villages.
This is another program we're doing in the oceans, where they float.
It applies an interaction between human groups, infrastructure, agriculture, shelter, and so on.
This is a project that she's doing with...
High-end storms and things like that where we could be at sea.
And that's just one PowerPoint that's happening of a number in the screenwriting class that I would use to how to do workups and so on.
More ghost dunes may have evidence of aliens.
Ghost dunes, preserving ancient lay into the out of...
I have...
That's going to be the picture of the concept of using cavitation processes with the domes of Mars and how we get there using surrogates.
And, you know, we have that all set up as a screenwriting ploy.
And then, I don't know if I put them in there, but I thought I did.
Because I'm just starting to develop this wind power could be harvested, ghost dunes, Here are the finalists.
Mars, here's that Calling Destiny.
This one's very cool.
Trying to get students interested in how to write.
You know, their ideas.
Screenwriting.
Let me give you some examples of screenwriting.
Oh yeah, I've done a bunch of these.
What have you done?
Would we know the names?
No, nothing.
I haven't had time.
I mostly am writing books.
Screenwriting is what I want to do next, and I want to do some manga, comics on structured water.
Alright, that's cool.
Yeah.
Well, this is going to take too long, so I'm not even going to bother with it.
Alright, don't worry about it then.
I'm going to just give you an example.
Screenplays.
Now, these are...
Like, these are the classes that I would be doing on screenwriting course.
This would, class one, would be books for the course that you're going to need, an assignment for the course, and I've got it all laid out in the exercise.
Write several pitches for the next class period.
What is a pitch?
Well, a pitch is the concept or idea that you're going to do, the way you're going to do the class.
And so, how about...
Here we go.
Psyops, this was the one that was Fox-like, but it had too many characters in it.
Okay, now.
Who's here?
So, back in 93...
I was going to do the energy garden.
The energy is discovered on earth, more evolved and more dimensional than man, and is dying.
So then, Alan, Belt, and I answer your outline.
How does Zion meet E.J.? Does the enlightenment come on?
This is bringing in the vast consciousness.
See, I'm laying out how I did it when I took the screenplay.
And I have...
Class 5, here it is, for example.
So if I tried the screenpad and had a bunch of students that wanted to take it, like you and you, and we all worked together on a sci-fi thing, you know, so I formed up the workup, and I did a presentation Netflix.
Right.
And I got it.
What would that do for you, writing sci-fi for TV? Well, actually, I've been writing sci-fi.
Well, I know you have, but I'm at...
I've written five screenplays.
So I'm happy to write more.
Wouldn't it be kind of a fun thing to do together with someone like me trying to be the...
You know, let's go a little further, kids.
Okay, so, now let me show you what my workups look like.
It would be good if you send me something so I can take a look.
Wait a minute.
Hold on.
I'm going to save that.
Yes.
I just did that.
Okay.
Well, I'm going to send you a bunch of stuff once we can get the class going.
But here's what I want to do.
I want to...
Hold on a second.
Invasion synopsis.
Yeah.
I need to get the core of this.
Invasion Synopsis and General Info.
This is another one I was planning to do that for Invasion.
So I'm going to show you how I did it with Fox, which was...
Screenplays...
goes back...
To Sex Magic.
That's a different book I'm writing.
Let's go back.
Oh Doc, screenplays should be...
Oh, the original one I did was called The Magical Child in 1982.
Where's Terry?
This is a cult science fiction novel about the last days of man.
And there's the Anidate character as being Temple of Ishtar, 2250 Vitae, Time Jump Secured, Agape Lodge, North Hollywood, Sex Magic.
They create an Anidate.
It's called A Magical Child.
It's Homo Lumen.
It's based on Dr.
Charlotte Bach's doctoral thesis at the Warburg.
Homo Mutant, Homo Lumen, Lightbody.
Needs a Golem.
In other words, No.
That's no good.
The entity is discovered on Earth, Ion, and then there's a table of contents.
The ritual from Women's Mysteries, concept is the light body, the birth, the androgyny, Ion, the early years, training, electro-magic, initiation, the three rituals.
You know, I did...
Okay, that's a book I haven't written yet.
But I've, well, wait, I've got it going.
Look at here.
How does Ion meet EJ, da da da da da da.
I don't know if we want to really put this out.
This is like copyrighted material, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So you kind of don't want to...
Well, but you can give people a seal by...
Visually, stay as it's flowing by that I've done the homework.
Okay, okay, now.
I just want to protect you.
Close, current, tab, close, solve, tabs.
Then, there's PsyOxine.
This is the original one.
Carla!
Hi, Rick.
Hi.
Carrie Cassidy, Anil.
Hello.
You look hot.
That looks like you should, sweaty and you should take it off.
Oh, God.
It's so impossible.
Alright, so, this was 92 now.
And this is basic idea, the background.
And this is how I'm going to teach the class.
We're going to have a cast, like there's Blake Martell, the industrialist.
There's Karen.
This is my team that I had when I did MRU. I had Ironclaw, who was my pilot.
I had Stan Carter, head of security.
And I had Svechan Miskin, Russian biophysicist.
I had Chet Billings, a tinkerer.
I had Moshe Ben-Gurin, cult scholar.
I had Fernanda Castile.
Okay, now the Have you ever taken it to class in writing a school?
Yeah, yeah.
You know who taught me?
No.
My literary agent that was editor of Mad Magazine.
What's their name?
Bernard Shercliffe.
I studied with Bernard.
I don't know who that is.
Oh, he's a very famous...
Before my time.
Oh, sorry.
Eat me.
Anyway, he did Mad Magazine, you know.
Exactly.
Okay, thank you.
What?
Me worry?
Okay, so I took my screenwriting from him.
Okay, I want to ask you a question.
Because, you know, I worked in Hollywood for 20 years.
So, I hope you know that.
I can do this.
Imagine me teaching it.
Like I did with the herbs.
Like I did with the herbs.
I would like to do it where I use the creativity of the class as a group consciousness to create something while they're learning.
Because that's where the...
I think it sounds lovely.
But I want to ask you a question.
Alright?
You know the rule in Hollywood is the first ten pages.
If you can't grab them in the first ten pages, it's over.
Okay, so the workup is the basic idea.
That's what you do.
And then you have a background.
This is one page right there.
This is a synopsis.
This is not a screenplay.
Basically, it's a wealthy industrialist who has a change of heart about the impact of development on the world.
I want to protect you.
You don't understand.
If people are going to watch this, they'll steal your ideas.
So what?
I'm not going to give it away.
Lots more than I came from.
I know that.
Amazon's already done me with J.Y.J. I know, but still, I'm still protecting you.
Okay.
Thank you.
May I have another?
Would you like to see my whip collection?
I have a wonderful whip collection.
Oh, you'll never believe it.
He's not joking, okay?
I'm not joking.
No, wait.
We didn't get the call.
We didn't even get the bear thing.
What time?
Okay, so you use whips to keep bears away.
Is that right?
When you go out walking in the woods?
No.
Grizzly bears.
Yeah.
You couldn't carry a weapon big enough to drop a grizzly if it wanted to get you.
I mean, you know, they're like...
And you've had this in real life, right?
Yeah.
If I go up into Canada, I'll carry a pack pistol.
I will carry a bullwhip.
Neither of which will kill anything.
Right.
Excuse me, Dad.
The pistol makes a lot of noise.
That's what a pistol is good for.
And the bullwhip will spook a grizzly bear because it can't figure out how you can reach that far and pop it in front of them.
15-50.
Okay.
Now you tell me that story that you just told us earlier.
I guess it was last night.
You had a grizzly running for you?
Oh, that was a long time ago.
Dad was a bounty hunter, you know, for the Okanogans.
If animals came in from Canada like they get old, and grizzly bear is too old to hunt anymore, it'll come down into Washington and hunt, you know, livestock.
Which is, you know, domesticated.
It's not, you know, they don't know how to protect themselves.
And my dad would hire up to go in and take out these old bears.
Right.
Old Moe had like 27 other attempts on him.
There were 27 other bullet shots in his body when we knocked him down of previous attempts to take him out.
Right.
He had been around a long time.
So you had a bear coming at you?
Yeah!
Grizzly bears are different than bears.
At some age, something happens where a hormone is released and they become insane.
And, like, a bear will never run downhill because their arms are shorter than their back, right?
This one did.
And because it did, I used to think I was this all-American shooter, and I could kill anything, because I was a very good shot, and I'd just shoot him in the heart and just take care of it, yeah?
Except that he was running downhill, which means I didn't have a heart shot.
Now what do I do?
Unexpected.
You make presumptions.
That's what gets you in trouble.
And so, grizzlies have a big hump on the back of their neck, and that's their spinal column.
If you hit that, it's about a six-inch bullseye.
You've got a six-inch target.
It's moving, but you can nail it.
You can lock them up, and then you can go up and kill them.
Lock them up, but you can't move.
And then you can kill them.
The thirty-on-six isn't going to do anything.
That's what I had.
And when I squeezed off the trigger to hit the spine, he caught the stand of my dad and lifted his head slightly and the bullet hit him right between the eyes.
And I heard the bullet ricocheting.
Thirty-on-six, blang!
What do I do now?
I'm going to be shoving another round into my rifle and doing one of these bombs like that.
My dad hit him when he was about 30 feet away.
He hit him with what they call a.400 Thompson.
It's an elephant rifle.
It has a big slug.
Wow.
Yeah, a big slug.
And Dad put a.22-long rifle down in the slug so that when it hit the bear, it exploded.
And so it took a 3,000-pound grizzly and tore him in half.
Wow.
But Dad wasn't interested in trophy.
You know, he wasn't like, you know, look what I did.
You know, he was like taking him out.
But you did that to save your life, presumably.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And after that, I no longer hunted for pleasure.
Only for survival.
It was too harrowing an experience to realize the only time I'm gonna be out there is when I have to be out there.
I didn't want to just...
You know, look at what I can do.
Look at what I can do.
You know, what's that from Fridays?
Grizzly bear, then the Kodiak, and then the polar bear, they're all part of that same family, and that bear is different than a brown bear.
Brown bears can get pretty good size, like bear or brown bear, but The grizzly bear and Kodiak, the big ones on Kodiak Island, we'd go up into Alaska.
Those are, they have a bigger brain tissue.
And it's their territory.
And they look at you like you're a piece of meat.
And, uh, are smart.
But now what are you going to do?
Yeah, well, I've seen the grizzly bears in Yellowstone.
Of course, they're notorious for climbing in car windows and nobody can stop them and all that stuff.
No, you don't.
Up in Fruto Bay, uh, they put the garbage out over there on purpose because that's where the grizzly bear hunt.
And they, you just let them go.
Want to take a break and serve your food to your guests?
Oh.
Yeah, we can, yeah.
I think you should interview some of these other weird people that are here.
That's where the real interview is, not me.
Wait till you see what made me, my friends around me.
Okay, here, I want to show you something.
This is the background.
That's the workup.
That's one page.
Then you go, if they want, then you let them know who the cats are and you give them a thumbnail on each one on terms of character.
Character development...
It is essential.
And you always, when you have a primary plot, and I'm going to show you what a primary plot is, these are the, okay, once you have that, then you have your stories, and you have a series of different kinds of stories.
And this was called the Metaphysical Protection Agency, MRU. This is like, based on MRU, my work there.
In episode 1, the Manhattan Conspiracy.
In the basic storyline, the high-ranking member of Secret Lodge is induced into an inner circle, finds out he cannot accept some of the past actions of the Order.
Among other things, he finds out about the theft of the Manhattan of Manhattan.
From the Indians.
And he decides to bail out and take the deed, among other things, for insurance.
The lodge puts heat on him, da-da-da-da-da, and it's in three acts, two subplots, and act one, the setup.
Alright, stop right there again.
We're not going to get your thing on.
But this is a group of scientists, each one with different skills that are redundancy.
Kind of like, and I've been watching this thing called Sense8.
It's a really interesting concept where you meld together as a team so that you use each other's skills as your own.
That is where we're going.
And wait till you see what I have for the films of Mars.
Yeah.
All right, let's take a break.
All right.
All right. All right. All right. All right.
A stir fry?
Orange pork stir fry.
Nice.
With asparagus and fruit.
That sounds nice.
Yup.
This is how I worked my way through college.
Working as a three-quarter half chef at the Sweat Dwing Inn with flaming fish at about four in the morning.
So was that in China or where?
That was in Seattle.
I started at the UW and then went to Washington State University.
Where in four years I graduated with three degrees and a thesis, which was the first plasma jet that had ever been built before Giannini used it to make space tiles.
I made the first one.
And I remember when I turned it on, the whole campus went down.
I had this huge generator.
One professor thought I was going to blow up the campus.
I created a flame.
It was 60 times hotter than the surface of the Sun, and then it was about a big plasma, about that long, and I took magnetic fields, and I adjusted them, and I moved the plasma and tied it into a knot.
Every way it was.
The plasma wouldn't mix with itself.
That became the first concepts of going from string theory That's not Terry Kaufman's work.
And I did that in 1965.
65!
Not 75!
Not 85!
Not 95!
Yeah, that's why Cripner always used me.
I was always head of the world.
This is going to be, if I do it right, it'll have a nice presentation.
Are you going to put some nice spices in there?
I don't need spices.
You'll see how I do.
You don't need spices?
Yes, I will have spices.
Not like you.
Yes.
I don't use India.
I use Chinese and other concepts.
I learned how to cook when I was I learned a lot of things when I was four years old.
How to play chess.
How to defend myself.
Get that car game.
You're a rare chef.
What?
You're a rare chef that cleans as he goes, right?
Well, watch this.
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah.
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah.
Only true music is what makes us tick.
Ow!
So you're expecting a big crowd today, Rick?
This is for you to shake off.
Just kidding.
No, no, no.
Look at how many people.
There's a whole table set.
Green beans with bacon.
That looks nice.
That's done.
All right.
This is done.
Newell's.
Do you need the colander thing?
Yeah, I'm looking for my colander.
Where's the colander?
Right here.
Oh, well, you need the bowl to put that in.
Watch this.
Musical attraction, I... I
hope all these people are going to come.
Well, this is what I write about in the non-local mind.
It's a cavitation process like Nibiru.
We have a sun.
We have Nibiru as a balance.
We have our brain.
We have, you know, the galaxy which is...
Black hole opening to...
What?
What's dark matter?
I posted on my website...
I wanted to say something, Lenny.
I posted on my website that science yesterday has a picture of normal particles and dark matter.
Okay.
And what they do is you can move the screen across...
To show which one's the white matter and which one's the dark matter?
What you see is the reflection.
That's what dark matter is.
It's the other side of matter.
And all the businesses know that, but they won't say it.
It's like, when you have a white hole and a black hole, you're going to have a positron.
Okay.
So, what we have is a closed system.
That means it's unique for each of us.
None of us are the same.
We're a closed system.
And that's why we have two brains.
And if you realize, look at the Bible that was written on previous epochs.
It's their form of science.
The separatism of the book of formation relating sound to words as a way to talk to God.
How do you talk to God?
You know, Enoch.
And understanding his keys.
And how Raziel came down and spoke to Enoch.
And why most of the Bibles remove that as a lost book of the Bible.
Whereas Christ...
Emmanuel studied that in India.
That's what his whole thing was about.
To be in a scene of Gospels had to do with the way you were with yourself.
And it's all a closed system.
It's an hourglass with what we have.
It's the moment.
Your past time travel is when you take your brain And you recreate, approximately, as best you can, that hologram, that moment when you captured it, that sign pebble.
And when God lays out a bunch of things in front of us, and this is really important, synchronicity.
That's how the future timeline talks to the moment.
And if you can integrate this into your moment...
What happens next, you change your past, and it's a different cavitation bubble.
And now, you're moving through the multiverse by divine right.
Okay, now, do you understand how certain events may be agreed upon by the whole here on planet Earth, such that you would say, say in six months Yellowstone might blow.
That's an agreed upon reality?
Nobody knows.
You know, you can have a pendulum...
You can Kutumi.
You can physics like the alignment of Mars and Saturn.
That's cosmobiology.
That's Czech physics, which by the way, Czechoslovakia was 20 years ahead of America in physics in the 70s when they did the so-called psychic discoveries behind the Iron Curtain.
That's why the military used me.
If you don't think the military didn't want to know how Jack Schwartz could stick a needle through his arm, pull it out, and stop the bleeding.
What's that for a military?
I mean, how does that work, son?
I don't know.
So we set up the Manager Foundation to try to figure it out.
We never did, but something else happened in that I learned Did you go to Romania?
Have you been under the Sphinx in Romania?
No, I haven't.
Have you analyzed it for the military?
No, I haven't been to those countries.
I mostly did American shit on the West Coast.
My prever was Stanford Research Institute, China Lake.
Navy installations where I had toys.
When I got up as far as the territories in Canada...
Okay, so then you know about the TR-3B, its old technology.
Have you seen the new technology?
The what?
TR3B is old technology.
What is CR3B? TR. What is CR? It's a triangle.
A triangle craft.
China Lake is famous for craft.
That's what they do.
China Lake has got a lot of things going on.
All right.
Elaborate at your will.
I'm here.
I'm listening.
I had two graduate students at the University of Washington under Nedemeier, who did the nuclear energy trigger.
Nedemeier.
Do Flanagan's works.
And we discovered that if you constructed a pyramid of Oregon.
Organic, inorganic, organic, inorganic, food and rot.
We discovered that.
The grain migration that Flanagan talked about, that was a grain migration having to do...
Do you know the Russians were on to that?
The Russians were on to that.
Yeah, you get them sharpened by putting them in a pyramid.
Pyramid power.
That's kind of old news.
I love actual hands on teaching.
I miss that.
I know.
It's the only way.
Did you read these?
The stuff I gave you?
No, you gave it to me last night and it was dark and everything.
Do me a favor.
For one minute, stop.
Just briefly skip through it and get a sense of what he actually says.
Just trust me.
All right, right now.
Well, it's going to make a spin.
And I sense the spin is important because when you realize how I'm being discriminated here, it's unbelievable.
I know, but I'm not going to learn.
Okay, I'll do it, but it's going to be everything I already know.
All right, that's fine.
It's like a junior college or a community college.
I mean, that's crazy.
There's something else going on.
And I only needed to do it because I need the money.
You know, I'm just up to each other.
I don't have any good deal.
I'd be happy to.
I don't want to work at Bi-Mart.
Right.
I'd like to teach a course on screenwriting and write-ups.
Well, I think that's a great idea.
You know, you can teach everything you do online.
I need somebody to set that up where I just show up and do my thing and I'll flip the gate.
They're charms.
Yeah, like you put them on your meter to drop your power.
Well, nothing's free.
That's including Mark Knopfler.
So nothing's free anymore, especially the chicks.
And worse, especially the chicks.
You don't like them?
I don't know.
They feel like each of them is really different.
Rick just handed them to me and said, I keep them in a walk jar.
I've got them sent by Voodoo.
Yeah, he's Santa Maria.
Big, big, big, big.
They're definitely charged.
They're definitely charged and they totally feel like different charges to me.
I have this, and I'm Dr.
Strange.
I don't know what I'm touching when I get handed something.
Who knows where I came from?
Cooties?
Oh sure, like the cat that purrs up next to your mouth, and now you have T. Gondai.
Bacteria in your body.
What do they call that?
The little brain?
I love my little kitty, though.
I bet you do.
Just the more it purrs, the more you love it, huh?
He's a very good kitty.
Just like the rocks.
He's a very good kitty.
Okay, so you've got this in here to settle it down.
Yeah, I understand that.
That's the way they do it downtown with Dumballa.
Yeah, totally.
But it's got one encased with one.
It's got one of the charms on it.
But it feels neutral.
So, I have to go into a Faraday cage equivalent in Magic Land when I open these things.
Because, you know, who knows what's going to come out.
Jack in the Box.
Unless you experience it.
But why didn't you accept it?
It came in the mail.
Yes.
You know, kind of like the virus.
Lockdown.
I am a very...
Look at her!
Look at the way she did that!
Jesus!
Carrie!
Really, man?
Oh, the dark side of Carrie.
Look at that look.
I'm not having something mess with him.
I don't think it's...
It's not...
Let's not figure the little mojo that goes on top of it.
No, that's not a good idea.
I also have stuff that...
I don't know.
So, did you like my little yogurt?
Look at this man.
Wait a minute.
I've got to put my hat on.
I've got to put my hat on like this.
Yogurt.
I'll touch the pendants, but I won't.
Now, I'd like to do a Yoda quote.
Here we go.
You ready?
Yeah.
My gun you may have.
After I give you my bullets, I will.
Oh, hey, there.
Oh, hey, Kalisni.
Yeah, we're all...
And worse, and worse...
Just since it's Kansas City, Maritoto.
I love it.
What the hell is that?
Dang!
I want to get back to this.
Is it a junior college?
That's a community college that I did the exercise where I took all these students and I made a business with them.
They won't touch me with a ten foot pole.
I don't know why.
Julie?
Would you tell her why Rogue, what they did for me at Rogue?
I read the letters, great letters of introduction and so on, but for some reason they don't want to touch him.
Now, do you know why?
I don't know why, it just seems like they were enthused about Rick to begin with and they invited him in for an hour.
I was with Rick, and there were four people there all together, and they seemed to be good listeners.
When his hour was done, it was done.
Time went by, and we didn't hear anything at all.
In fact, we followed it up.
There was no letter of appreciation or thank you for your time.
You know how you do old school stuff.
There was a secretary involved, and we never got any follow-up like, thank you for your time.
Right.
Fascinating.
And then Rick called and they said to just brief the hotel or later in the next semester possibly.
And we actually went in and followed up and in a way the secretary was a little bit abrupt, a little rude, and said, you know, we've been through this before.
And then they took his books that he left with them to read over his agriculture books and called them and said, would you like to come pick up your books or we'll donate them to the library.
We hardly had but a couple of days to respond.
I went to go pick up the books and they had already turned it into the library.
There's just everything to nickel and dime me down without really helping me, which is really all I want to do is teach.
I know.
Well, was it possible that they were gotten to?
They received the phone call about you?
There is a good old boy network here that has dogged certain individuals like May for the 35 years I've been here.
I'm like a thorn.
I live and let live.
I don't mess with anybody around me.
I'm a good neighbor.
Everybody likes me.
If someone's doing it, I let them be.
What they do, I don't care.
It's not my business.
And I'm a pretty live and let live kind of person.
But now...
My father told me that if I was ever forced to fight, and I was fortunate enough to get them on the ground, that you always put your boot to their face and scar them so they don't do it again.
And one of the things I do have is possibly one of the best memories.
I don't forget any of it.
It's a shame because I'm basically a sweet old man.
I want to do the right thing.
That's not...
Can you start your own school?
Are you allowed to?
I can do anything I want to.
I don't have time.
What I want to do is write.
I don't want to do this and I don't want to do that.
What I want to do is write.
I'm a great writer.
That's what I do for the team.
I don't want to run off this way and run off that way.
Well, I want to write.
I can teach.
I can show up to make the money for somebody.
But I don't want to put it together.
I've done my tour.
I've done it.
Enough times.
I had 102 employees when I ran Spice Island.
And I was, you know, Spice Valley, Country Spice Tea, Market Spice Tea, Pike Street Market.
I did all of that.
My herb shop, one of my retail stores is still the center of the Pike Street Market today.
Kind of, where's the other one?
The delis that I had.
You know, I've done my tour and now what I want to do is write.
And I have, like with cavitation and the physics, I have a breakthrough on what I'm doing with my own body studying how to release neurotransmitters like I did 45 years ago with biofeedback.
I'm on the verge of changing.
The new advanced forms of physics will be the study of altered states.
You know, you look at books like this one right here.
This is a typical book in terms of where we're going.
This is a friend of mine.
He's editor of Omni Magazine.
He does a poetry science.
But we're using psychedelics now for our healing because healing isn't just physical.
Now there's a spiritual aspect to the whole embodiment of what medicine.
And medicine, as we understand it, one size does not fit all.
The AMA is trying to make May on meds Because, at my age, the doctor does four times a year with his little laptop that comes in for ten minutes on per hour,
you know, he's got six of them per hour, and ka-ching, ka-ching, ka-ching, and he doesn't come to dinner, he doesn't even know my middle name, and he's a Seventh-day Adventist that's supposed to be slow on scripts.
How does that work?
Now, they are threatening to fire me at 74 years old.
Who's threatening to fire you?
My doctor.
Because I will not take heart medicine because I've got a high blood pressure.
I don't have high blood pressure.
I'm an excitable person.
People piss me off.
Yeah, a little Pee Wee Herman didn't hurt right back.
But the thing is, there's something else going on here, and medicine doesn't give a shit about healing.
In fact, in China, they don't pay your doctor if you're sick.
Yeah, it's the opposite way.
It's called health and healing.
You're either in health or there's something wrong with you.
And in American culture, they can find something wrong.
Oh!
You've got to!
Ew!
Dramatified!
Look at that mold under your...
You smell your armpits and candida and whatever.
It's just...
It isn't about health and healing.
It's about money.
And that's why opiates became the drug of choice.
And now they're beta testing.
I'm going to give you something here.
They beta tested the antipsychotics in the prisons.
And now all the prisons are no longer on opiates.
The prisons are rampant now with these, excuse me, these...
Antipsychotics.
And why they did that?
Because they were beta testing to give them to children.
And now, you have out of 10 children that are on antipsychotics, two of them are going to slightly overreact.
And when you have a shooting, in every single incident, the first reports talk about a second shooter, that's the handler that taps them with scopolamine.
I did those studies.
And that's a beta test.
All these shootings are a beta test.
For 5G towers, because once they put a smart meter on your box, now they're genetic, DNA specific, and they can tap individuals inside their home, not this person, but that one.
And if you opt out, so what?
Your neighbor's got a smart meter, and he's also on antipsychotics.
And so you no longer need law enforcement.
What you've got is a controlled in-house Are you recording on the middle recorder with that?
Did you get all of that?
Yes.
Because you understand that it's an end game weapon.
And I helped develop it.
I know how it works.
And the kids, they're beta testing our children.
And they're taking them too.
They're taking our kids too.
So I've had enough.
And what I want to do is what we call maritime law.
Are you familiar with what Robert David was doing?
By the way, that Posse Comitatus is what I was talking about.
I'm going to put your thing down here because you forgot this.
This was Perry Comitatus.
Because he was then to passe comitatis.
Do you know what passe comitatis means?
I forget.
Passe comitatis is maritime law where you're captain and commander of your own ship.
Nobody rules above you.
Well, that was originally the distinction between being a democratic republic and a democracy.
There was the difference between the two.
And nobody can tell the difference anymore.
Co-mingling?
Listen, the whole thing has been an endgame with Rothschilds, you know, you just write down the Bilderbergers, and they're losing.
But what they want to do now is be the last man standing.
When the end comes, they want to be the ones that pick up the ashes and rebuild.
And the thing is...
When all this happens, what it actually means is we have an opportunity here.
And that's what my SEAL team is about.
We're going to, you know, give your rights back to you.
And this place is broken.
73% graduation.
And that's Josephine County.
You're not filming, are you?
Oops.
I don't think some of the stuff I'm talking about should be played.
No?
No.
I'm warning you that if you do, it'll get you hurt.
I'm giving you plenty of warning on that.
Let me give you...
I'm not worried about me being hurt.
I'm worried about you.
Well, I'm already done for.
So am I. No, I meant, you know, I'm...
There's so much...
What happens is YouTube won't allow me to monetize it.
That's what'll happen.
That's how they shoot me down.
Well, good luck doing that.
That means I don't make any money.
See what you can do.
That's what we're doing.
They won't stop us.
You know, the thing that's really interesting is who they are.
Because when I worked in military, I watched certain floors in the Pentagon exchange ordinance.
Right.
So, what you're dealing with is individual cells within, like Amazon.
Amazon is this big monster, and there's probably some cells that are for hire.
That's what I'm guessing is what's happening to me.
One of the cells was approached, and it's not about money, because the way that works, right now, the amount that they're spending to hack me is more than I'm losing.
So they're losing money by doing this to me.
And what I'm going to try to do is make it expensive because if they had simply come to me and made me an offer I couldn't refuse, I would have much rather been on payroll working as a Quaker up on top of a mountain doing a very simple farm life.
I've done that before.
I would have been happy to do that.
And now...
They fucked with you, and now you're here.
Well, it isn't that they fucked with me.
I don't have any options.
I have to defend myself.
See you in a week, baby.
Thank you for coming by.
Nice to see you.
I'm very blessed with all the kinds of friends I have.