Timcast IRL - Tim Pool - October 01, 2021


Timcast IRL - Man Arrested For Firebombing Democrats HQ w-Shane Cashman


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

211.40247

Word Count

26,605

Sentence Count

2,064

Misogynist Sentences

25

Hate Speech Sentences

21


Summary

A man threw a Molotov cocktail at the Democratic Party headquarters in Austin, Texas, and it s just the latest example of how insane things are getting. Plus, a new show from Timestream, Tales from the Inverted World.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 An arrest has been made in the case of a man who threw a Molotov cocktail into the headquarters
00:00:23.000 of the Democratic Party in Austin.
00:00:25.000 Apparently the device didn't go off, but it's just another example of how insane things are getting.
00:00:31.000 And maybe people would say, Tim, it's just one incident.
00:00:33.000 It's not indicative of anything.
00:00:35.000 But I do think it's another grain of sand in the heap.
00:00:36.000 You see stories like this.
00:00:38.000 They travel far and wide.
00:00:39.000 They perpetuate on the internet.
00:00:41.000 And it may be just one incident, but certainly people on the left will see it and say, see, look, the far right are extremists.
00:00:47.000 The right will say, dude, that guy's crazy and nobody supports that.
00:00:50.000 It must be a fad or something like that.
00:00:51.000 It doesn't matter.
00:00:52.000 People will use it.
00:00:54.000 It will drive sentiment.
00:00:55.000 And that's what keeps happening because of the Internet.
00:00:57.000 It's really riling people up.
00:00:59.000 It's making everybody a bit hyper-partisan.
00:01:02.000 I mean, it's really driving the extremes.
00:01:05.000 But outside of this, it's just another sign that I believe we are in some kind of downward trajectory.
00:01:10.000 We have a personal finance expert who is predicting the biggest economic crash in history, or something to that effect, this month.
00:01:18.000 So certainly these things are a bit alarming and, I don't know, maybe a bit pessimistic, but we do have other things to talk about because in that pessimism, there are interesting things.
00:01:27.000 And joining us today is the writer and host of the new hit show from Timcast, Shane Cashman of Tales from the Inverted World.
00:01:35.000 Thanks for having me.
00:01:37.000 Yeah.
00:01:37.000 You want to just briefly introduce yourself?
00:01:38.000 Yeah.
00:01:38.000 I'm Shane Cashman.
00:01:40.000 I, uh, writing Tales from the Inverted World.
00:01:42.000 Been going down rabbit holes every week for you guys.
00:01:45.000 Talking about aliens and people getting abducted.
00:01:47.000 And murders.
00:01:48.000 Ghosts, murders.
00:01:49.000 Um, we'll do some cryptids soon.
00:01:51.000 Yeah.
00:01:51.000 Some of it's like legit investigative reporting though, you know, like tracking down Confederate golds, you know, whatever.
00:01:56.000 Yeah.
00:01:56.000 Yeah.
00:01:57.000 That pans out.
00:01:57.000 I'll hit up people and then next thing I know I'm in some weird town talking to some people about their alien abduction.
00:02:03.000 So the show is officially up on Spotify.
00:02:05.000 I think it's slowly rolling out on all the podcast platforms because it takes time.
00:02:08.000 It's on YouTube.
00:02:09.000 The link to the channel is in the description below.
00:02:11.000 And it's like a fully produced... I think we're looking at like, what, 12 to 20 minutes per episode?
00:02:16.000 The third episode might be 40.
00:02:17.000 40 minutes!
00:02:18.000 That's like a full true crime.
00:02:19.000 It's a crazy true crime.
00:02:21.000 1970s Hell's Kitchen, New York City.
00:02:23.000 Awesome.
00:02:24.000 But one of the last, latest things you've written is about the Rat Utopia experiment and breaking all that down.
00:02:30.000 And so as we're talking about collapse, you know, before the show we were talking about like Snapchat filters, Instagram.
00:02:36.000 So John B. Calhoun started with rats and he built what he called these universes of rats and he wanted to populate them.
00:02:41.000 these these they were mice or rats in this particular one.
00:02:43.000 They were so John B.
00:02:44.000 Calhoun started with rats and he built what he called these universes of rats and he wanted to populate them with.
00:02:51.000 He would put in like four males, four females, and they would just like every 55 days or just like grow
00:02:57.000 exponentially.
00:02:59.000 At first though, they wouldn't use up all the space.
00:03:01.000 They would like, but they would overcrowd in the way that they would find each other and just start like lumping together.
00:03:06.000 But the beautiful ones specifically were like, they would just groom themselves and groom themselves.
00:03:10.000 That would go on if, once the population grew and the space was the only thing that they didn't have any, like they had no more space, the beautiful ones would emerge.
00:03:18.000 And they're these people or mice.
00:03:20.000 I kind of feel like we're experiencing that.
00:03:22.000 And that's just like, when we're talking about political chaos, we're talking about, you know, economic collapse or this story about how Trump voters and Biden voters both want to secede.
00:03:32.000 And then you see these videos and these filters and it's like, are we really in this?
00:03:36.000 We'll get into all that and we'll talk about the show.
00:03:37.000 We've got a bunch of other crazy stories.
00:03:39.000 A Lockheed Martin UFO has been spotted on camera.
00:03:42.000 Five fireballs shooting through the sky.
00:03:43.000 Ian was already going off about magnetic fields.
00:03:46.000 Well, I brought my fluorite up, which is a type of crystal, if we want to get into the vibration as your bones are made of hydroxyl.
00:03:52.000 So this is the first I've heard that it was four male and four female rats, which makes me wonder if it has something to do with the inbreeding that drove them insane.
00:04:00.000 But that's more than enough for genetic diversity.
00:04:02.000 We had mice growing up and one of the mothers had sex with one of the babies and then had a baby that was all deformed and had like a lung problem and it died a couple weeks after.
00:04:12.000 So that gives me some hope that maybe we're not the rats in the cage because we're not inbred.
00:04:17.000 Well, we will sort through all this stuff.
00:04:19.000 We got Lydia pressing all the buttons.
00:04:21.000 I am excited to sort through all this stuff this evening.
00:04:23.000 I'm really excited for this new show.
00:04:24.000 It sounds amazing.
00:04:26.000 You guys should go on over and check it out.
00:04:27.000 Thank you.
00:04:28.000 The new studio is done.
00:04:29.000 Yes!
00:04:30.000 It's, uh, but we have to clean it.
00:04:33.000 Yep.
00:04:34.000 So it's like we're ready to set up everything.
00:04:36.000 Okay, I should say the construction is done.
00:04:39.000 Now it's just a few hours of positioning the cameras and everything, which is not that hard to do, like a half day.
00:04:44.000 But we have to wait until they steam clean everything.
00:04:46.000 Cause... construction just ended, so it's like, it's not completely done.
00:04:50.000 But, um, maybe Monday.
00:04:52.000 Depends on what happens.
00:04:52.000 Maybe.
00:04:53.000 But it's probably gonna be Tuesday or Wednesday in the new studio.
00:04:56.000 The lighting is crazy awesome.
00:04:57.000 It's gonna look really, really great.
00:04:58.000 If you've watched the vlog, you've seen it.
00:05:00.000 But let's get into the news.
00:05:02.000 Before we do, head over to TimCast.com, become a member, and you will get exclusive access to segments from this show.
00:05:08.000 We put them up Monday through Thursday.
00:05:09.000 But also, now with the launch of Tales from the Inverted World, there's going to be a members-only podcast discussion about the episode, exploring these issues.
00:05:18.000 And we're going to be having guests as well.
00:05:20.000 You know, many of the people you probably have already seen on this show.
00:05:23.000 We're really hoping Alex Jones would want to come in and talk about conspiracies with Shane.
00:05:28.000 You know, so when Shane writes one of these stories, there'll be a follow-up kind of like talking about, asking questions, exploring things in depth.
00:05:35.000 That'll be available soon as well.
00:05:36.000 And we're also launching another show called The Green Room, which is our green room hanging out with the guests before the show.
00:05:41.000 So that's what you'll get as a member.
00:05:42.000 But don't forget to like this video, subscribe to this channel, and don't forget in the description below!
00:05:47.000 Is the YouTube channel for Tales from the Inverted World, and you can check out episode 1.
00:05:51.000 It's 12 minutes and 31 seconds.
00:05:52.000 It's awesome.
00:05:53.000 There's sound effects.
00:05:54.000 And this is a general introduction to the show and to Shane's work.
00:05:54.000 It's creepy.
00:05:58.000 And we're still building everything out.
00:06:00.000 As I always say, you just start.
00:06:02.000 Now, this is a fully produced show with research, writing, independent investigation.
00:06:07.000 And sound effects and original music made by Carter here in the house.
00:06:12.000 So it takes a lot of work to get to that point.
00:06:14.000 And then we put it up.
00:06:15.000 And now the goal is, over time, we're going to start building it up.
00:06:18.000 The art is absolutely amazing.
00:06:18.000 It's going to get better.
00:06:21.000 Jessica did, like, some of the best art I've ever seen.
00:06:23.000 I'm so excited for this.
00:06:25.000 So in the description, you will see the link.
00:06:27.000 Subscribe to that channel.
00:06:28.000 And we'll get into some of these topics, but we're going to start with the real world.
00:06:32.000 And in the real world, crazy stuff is happening.
00:06:34.000 We have the story from CBS Austin.
00:06:37.000 Arrest made in arson incident at Travis County Democratic Party office.
00:06:42.000 They say a Molotov cocktail was thrown inside the office and ignited during the early morning hours.
00:06:48.000 So earlier I was wrong.
00:06:49.000 I thought it didn't, but it did.
00:06:50.000 The arson suspect was recorded on security cameras and a note was left at the scene.
00:06:54.000 The Austin Fire Department says their arson investigators, along with the FBI, made the arrest.
00:06:59.000 Ryan Faircloth, 30, is charged with second-degree felony arson and third-degree felony possession of a prohibited weapon.
00:07:05.000 He remains in custody at Travis County Jail under a combined $40,000 bond for both charges.
00:07:11.000 Early Wednesday morning, an outside camera recording a man throwing a rock through the front door.
00:07:16.000 of the Democratic Party head office.
00:07:18.000 He then came back with what appears to be an incendiary device, placed it inside the building, and then the fire ignited.
00:07:24.000 Damage to the building was minimized because people at the bar across the street spotted the first flames and put them out with a fire extinguisher.
00:07:30.000 Last year vandals hit the same building, spraying graffiti across the front.
00:07:34.000 That's when security cameras were installed that may help police find who was responsible for the latest damage.
00:07:39.000 We were talking about the other day, you know, related to this, what happens if Texas secedes or New Hampshire?
00:07:46.000 And one of the things I was saying that, you know, I guess people hadn't considered is, what do the Democrats in Austin do if the Republicans in Texas say, we're out?
00:07:53.000 You can already see there's conflict between cultural factions.
00:07:53.000 Right.
00:07:57.000 That's how New York is.
00:07:58.000 I mean, most of New York voted red.
00:08:00.000 A lot of New York did.
00:08:01.000 And the city controls most of it.
00:08:03.000 So it's like when you talk about secession, what does something like New York City do?
00:08:06.000 You were there, right?
00:08:07.000 You lived in the city?
00:08:08.000 Yeah, I was driving a box truck.
00:08:10.000 During the riots?
00:08:12.000 Not the riots, but leading up to the 2016 election.
00:08:15.000 So I would see all the signs for Hillary in one place, and all the Trump signs in the rest of upstate New York.
00:08:22.000 Not that that should be a gauge of how people are going to vote, but it was wild to see that all of upstate New York is one way.
00:08:28.000 It's so weird.
00:08:30.000 But maybe it's because people in the cities are scared.
00:08:32.000 They're scared to say anything.
00:08:33.000 Country versus city.
00:08:34.000 True.
00:08:35.000 If you put up a Trump sign in an area where there's 50 Hillary signs.
00:08:38.000 Hillary.
00:08:39.000 I said Hillary, by the way.
00:08:41.000 That's a real saliva popping my throat.
00:08:44.000 Thanks, Chris.
00:08:47.000 I mean, maybe dangerous isn't the word, but maybe it is.
00:08:49.000 And that's the problem with it.
00:08:50.000 That's why we have secret voting.
00:08:51.000 You know, that's why your voting is anonymous.
00:08:54.000 I wonder, so we did talk about Texas, and for those that don't understand, know the context of the last episode.
00:09:00.000 You know, we had someone from the Free State Project in New Hampshire.
00:09:03.000 There's a lot of people in New Hampshire who want to secede or form their own, you know, nation state or whatever.
00:09:08.000 And like, a lot of people say things, you know, if Texas can't, it won't happen.
00:09:12.000 But there's also the conversation we've had where it's like, the federal government wouldn't do anything.
00:09:17.000 California says, outright, we no longer will allow the feds to enforce immigration law.
00:09:17.000 So look at California.
00:09:22.000 Actually stopping them.
00:09:24.000 And that's a state saying, the federal government has no authority here in this regard.
00:09:27.000 And the feds say, okay, that's it, the emperor's got no clothes.
00:09:30.000 The moment California was able to say this, the moment cities in California were allowed to let non-citizens vote, the federal government lost legitimacy.
00:09:39.000 Because they couldn't enforce their own laws within the country.
00:09:41.000 That's going to set up a cascade effect.
00:09:43.000 But the interesting thing is, what happens in a state like Texas?
00:09:47.000 If Texas secedes, the belief is the Feds won't do anything.
00:09:50.000 But what happens when the Democrats in Austin call for help?
00:09:53.000 The Feds then nationalize the National Guard in neighboring states and send them into Texas to protect, you know, the law and law and order.
00:10:00.000 That being said, that's the context.
00:10:02.000 Here's the next question.
00:10:04.000 If that does happen and the government does nationalize or federalize the National Guard from New York, for instance, what will the majority of the New York State Republicans in all like Northern part say to the city?
00:10:18.000 You know, because the people who are in the National Guard in that place probably come from some rural areas from the city from all over and a lot of them are going to be rural and now working at the behest of I think we could just see like conflict chaos.
00:10:30.000 Politically, they don't have much power, the red part of New York.
00:10:34.000 And it's almost like New York City has already seceded from the rest of the state because they've locked out, not to say that everyone who's red has not been vaccinated, but if you're not vaccinated, you're not allowed in that city anymore.
00:10:45.000 Can't do anything.
00:10:46.000 I have a friend, went to eight different bars in the past two days, turned away at all of them.
00:10:51.000 Went to her favorite cafe, told, we'll serve you if you sit outside, not there.
00:10:56.000 That's what they said when I called.
00:10:57.000 So they've locked out everybody else.
00:10:59.000 I don't know how much political sway they have.
00:11:01.000 I don't even know if they care about the city.
00:11:03.000 They act like it's not there.
00:11:04.000 That's a good point.
00:11:05.000 We didn't even talk about New York City has basically already said, yeah, these people are not welcome here.
00:11:11.000 And that's a large portion.
00:11:13.000 I think half of Republicans are not vaccinated.
00:11:15.000 Yeah.
00:11:16.000 That means like straight up.
00:11:19.000 Trump supporters, the staunch supporters of Trump, are completely cut off from New York City.
00:11:24.000 And Los Angeles, and New Orleans, and San Francisco.
00:11:27.000 All of these cities that are rolling this out.
00:11:28.000 No zoos, no cafes, no restaurants.
00:11:31.000 They've manufactured it in a way where you don't have to say secession.
00:11:35.000 The weird part is like back in the day, you'd have a city block would secede from another city block.
00:11:39.000 It'd be territory.
00:11:40.000 But now it's kind of ideology.
00:11:42.000 Like too many people live close together that have different ideologies.
00:11:47.000 So you can't, you know, like you said, the big city in Texas is Democrat, but all the surrounding areas is Republican.
00:11:53.000 So I think rather than a secession, which would be like shattering a crystal, crystal-informed structure, you would have to somehow alter the way they interact, which these COVID restrictions seem to be doing.
00:12:03.000 Yeah, and I should also say that there's a lot of people in New York City who are also either vaccinated and against the mandates or not vaccinated.
00:12:10.000 Doesn't mean they're red or blue, but they're fighting.
00:12:12.000 Like, I know people who are working in sanitation who are fighting really hard to keep their jobs.
00:12:16.000 You know, this is interesting.
00:12:17.000 We didn't even consider this when having these conversations about secession, that there could be people whose secret intention is the breakup of the U.S.
00:12:24.000 and they do it through laws they know are partisan.
00:12:27.000 That will result in a soft secession, meaning New York City has basically said MAGA not welcome.
00:12:34.000 Yeah.
00:12:34.000 I've been listening to Alex.
00:12:35.000 Alex Jones did.
00:12:36.000 He was on Sydney and Elijah's show, and then he went on.
00:12:39.000 Gosh, where did he go?
00:12:41.000 Yeah, he went on Crowder and they were talking.
00:12:41.000 Crowder?
00:12:43.000 I watched a little bit of that and I was fact checking what he was talking about.
00:12:45.000 And Klaus Schwab, really, I mean, since for decades, he's been intending to make like a corporate global.
00:12:50.000 He's been saying it.
00:12:51.000 Governments aren't effective enough.
00:12:52.000 We need corporations to work with governments to govern the world now.
00:12:56.000 Pretty sure that's like Mussolini's fascism.
00:12:58.000 It's fascism when you when you collude corporations and governments.
00:12:58.000 Definitely.
00:13:01.000 But I think that there's this outside foreign entity that's doing this to the United States because the United States is very, very unique.
00:13:06.000 And we need to preserve it, in my opinion.
00:13:08.000 But other forces that doesn't register with Klaus.
00:13:10.000 He's not an American.
00:13:11.000 He never was.
00:13:12.000 So it's a foreign concept to him what we have.
00:13:14.000 Well, you heard what Jack Dorsey said.
00:13:16.000 You know, it's a cliche to bring up the Dorsey podcast with Rogan that we did.
00:13:20.000 But Jack said we are working.
00:13:24.000 We care to a global audience, not an American one.
00:13:27.000 And right there, it's like, okay, he is telling us that their intention is to subvert the American will, that he doesn't view the nation as even existing.
00:13:37.000 On top of that, you have people like Bernie Sanders.
00:13:39.000 He tweeted out, two senators should not be able to stop 48 senators and 210 congressmen and women.
00:13:46.000 It's like, Senator Sanders, there's 52 senators in opposition to you, but he doesn't view the other half of the country as being part of the equation.
00:13:54.000 So he's outright like, you are not a part of this.
00:13:57.000 And then you take a look at how big tech acts.
00:14:01.000 It feels like, it's funny when we have some guy super chat saying that, you know, we on this show and the friends of this show are radicalized.
00:14:09.000 And I'm like, we are the ones who are like, America, American history, constitution, liberty.
00:14:16.000 That's not radicalizing.
00:14:17.000 That's status quo.
00:14:18.000 That's being like this country is about defending civil rights, granting them over time and protecting the individual.
00:14:25.000 Now we have a growing faction of, Internationalists, and they say they are, authoritarians, and they say that, well, they lie about that because they don't want to admit it, but they show us they are, and it feels like perhaps we get this wrong when we talk about the culture war and we say left versus right, or authoritarian versus libertarian.
00:14:44.000 It is the soul of America versus the conquering forces which are destroying it, and the conquering forces make up tens of millions and control the institutions.
00:14:54.000 I think the idea of saying the greater good has accelerated the idea of, of like this global community.
00:15:00.000 Like I care for everybody, but people who are saying greater good lately, they're also telling me that they don't believe in things like borders.
00:15:07.000 And so America doesn't, it's an idea now.
00:15:10.000 It doesn't exist.
00:15:11.000 It's, it's everybody else outside.
00:15:13.000 Um, which we should all care about people, but they've erased the borders.
00:15:18.000 I think people need to understand there's not going to be, like, any kind of internationalism.
00:15:25.000 I mean, that's what the left literally calls it.
00:15:26.000 They don't call it globalism.
00:15:28.000 Will not actually happen.
00:15:29.000 They don't understand that they are selling themselves out.
00:15:32.000 These American leftists who are like, I believe in internationalism.
00:15:35.000 It's like, okay, what will really happen is that the global powerful elites, with powerful military forces, will just centralize their authority in their own country, and everyone else will be subjugated.
00:15:46.000 It's not going to be like a one world government, it's going to be the Hunger Games.
00:15:50.000 With capital city that they live in, well guarded and protected, and then you will lose everything.
00:15:54.000 And you'll be happy!
00:15:55.000 So they say.
00:15:56.000 Even more terrifying is it's, they don't even care about the governments half the time, it's the corporations that they want to govern.
00:16:02.000 It makes sense.
00:16:02.000 Corporations can function like authoritarian machines.
00:16:06.000 They can distribute resources at their own whims.
00:16:09.000 And they can shut you off if they want, you know, socially.
00:16:12.000 Very true.
00:16:13.000 It's incredible how someone can get banned off of all these social media networks and then have their bank account shut down by PayPal and Visa and like all at once, like within a day, it can happen to someone that's in...
00:16:23.000 I don't like the word anti-American, but it's the antithesis of individual freedom and liberty.
00:16:29.000 We're supposed to create a government to protect our ability to communicate and socialize.
00:16:34.000 You know what?
00:16:34.000 I'll say this.
00:16:35.000 If America cannot survive this, it doesn't deserve to.
00:16:38.000 If America does not have the resolve, the strength, the will, and the fortitude to survive the authoritarianism that is sweeping across this country, then it should.
00:16:46.000 One thing that could happen is it could take over this thing and then it's like we're under another corporate monarchy for the next X amount of years and then there's another revolution or we can resist it and avoid that tyranny.
00:16:58.000 At what point do they start actually resisting?
00:17:00.000 This is a form of resistance just by talking about it, pointing out like,
00:17:03.000 hey, Klaus Schwab wants to have corporations govern you.
00:17:05.000 Right.
00:17:06.000 That's a form of resistance.
00:17:07.000 And I don't think the pressure will ever stop.
00:17:09.000 That's the thing.
00:17:10.000 When do we stop resisting?
00:17:12.000 I guess.
00:17:13.000 The censorship is my biggest problem when it comes to like erasing voices.
00:17:17.000 I think people should be able to say what they want and we can debate that.
00:17:21.000 And you know, I, I always talk about the immune system of your ideas can only get better if you put it out there to fight something that you might not believe in, but you hear an idea.
00:17:30.000 Maybe you make, makes your idea stronger or you learn you were wrong, right?
00:17:34.000 If you censor all these voices, you don't have that anymore.
00:17:36.000 Then you're just in a corner and you can only say one thing and then ideas stop growing.
00:17:40.000 Well, then the powerful elites can say what they want.
00:17:42.000 Yeah.
00:17:42.000 And that's what will happen.
00:17:43.000 For sure.
00:17:44.000 And that's what it means to have corporate rule.
00:17:45.000 It's great advertising.
00:17:47.000 Corporate rule, it's, you know, honestly, it is communism.
00:17:52.000 And it's like neo-futuristic communism.
00:17:55.000 They don't Take over by force.
00:17:59.000 They take over by selling you things you like.
00:18:02.000 They take over by convincing you to give up your rights.
00:18:04.000 And then eventually there's a corporation with a chairman and they can decide you have to do acts if you want access to what?
00:18:13.000 If you want food, then you work for us.
00:18:15.000 Oh, it's a private company.
00:18:16.000 We can do what we want.
00:18:18.000 So when corporation X is more powerful than the government, and the government can't protect its people, and the corporation controls where you can go and what you can say, and they do in many ways, then eventually you are just a part of an authoritarian dictatorship.
00:18:34.000 I don't care what you call it.
00:18:35.000 Corporations don't protect your rights.
00:18:36.000 They don't care.
00:18:40.000 You work for a fast food restaurant, they can axe you at any moment.
00:18:43.000 Now, there are some laws on the public side to protect you, but the public side is just... they're colluding together.
00:18:49.000 And if you think you have job security at a corporation, wait till they automate your role and want to cut back on their overhead, and then you don't have really any job security.
00:18:57.000 Not that you have job security by nature, but it's not going to, like, enhance your ability to work working for a corporation as opposed to government.
00:19:05.000 Yeah, people aren't working.
00:19:06.000 I drove down here, I saw a Panera somewhere.
00:19:10.000 They were closed, understaffed.
00:19:12.000 Signed on the door, sorry.
00:19:13.000 I've been in this Panera like a ton of times on the way down.
00:19:16.000 It's cascade failure, man.
00:19:18.000 When one store has ten people working, and they're like slightly above the staff they need for operation, and then one person says, I quit.
00:19:27.000 I don't want to do this anymore.
00:19:29.000 Or I have to move.
00:19:29.000 My family's moving because of COVID.
00:19:31.000 Right.
00:19:31.000 Now they're down to nine people and they're like, okay, now we're pushing it.
00:19:34.000 Everyone's working a little bit more than they'd like to, but we can maintain this.
00:19:37.000 And then someone goes, I didn't sign up for this.
00:19:39.000 I don't get paid enough.
00:19:39.000 I quit.
00:19:40.000 Now they're understaffed.
00:19:41.000 Then the people are just like, dude, I can't work 60 hours.
00:19:45.000 I need a day off.
00:19:46.000 I quit.
00:19:47.000 And then there's no one left.
00:19:48.000 And they say, with only five people, we can't keep this place open.
00:19:51.000 I'm sorry, guys.
00:19:52.000 Have a nice day.
00:19:53.000 You're all fired.
00:19:54.000 So it's the death of the smaller businesses.
00:19:56.000 People don't want to work, but they worship corporations.
00:20:00.000 And the country will become the corporation.
00:20:02.000 It's going to be like idiocracy with Costco.
00:20:02.000 It's happening.
00:20:04.000 Check out this story from The Independent.
00:20:07.000 Biggest crash in world history.
00:20:09.000 Personal finance expert Robert Kiyosaki predicts economic crisis in October.
00:20:15.000 A crash is a really good time to get rich, says author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad.
00:20:19.000 Now, I don't believe him.
00:20:22.000 It's a bit much to be like, this month it'll happen.
00:20:26.000 However, I don't not believe him.
00:20:29.000 You know, because we just had Bob Murphy on The Economist.
00:20:32.000 PhD economists say that they removed the restrictions on fractional reserve banking, the reserve requirement, so basically banks can just print money and give it out.
00:20:44.000 So let me just read a little bit.
00:20:45.000 They say, personal finance expert Robert Kiyosaki warned the crash is coming regardless of whether the U.S.
00:20:50.000 debt ceiling is raised or what measures are imposed by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen or Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
00:20:56.000 This is going to be the biggest crash in world history.
00:20:59.000 We have never had this much debt pumped up.
00:21:01.000 The debt to GDP ratio is out of sight.
00:21:04.000 Mr. Kiyosaki said the stock market was being artificially inflated by the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve with decisions disconnected from the realities of the current economy in the U.S.
00:21:13.000 The reason why Ms.
00:21:14.000 Yellen and Mr. Powell are scrambling, he said, is they've expanded the volume of money while the velocity of money is plummeting as no one spends and their cash lingers in savings.
00:21:25.000 He says, quote, So they pump all this money and prices go up.
00:21:29.000 So it is a trend.
00:21:30.000 It is transitory inflation.
00:21:31.000 But we're stacked with this massive debt.
00:21:33.000 And all it's done is bump up the stock market and real estate market.
00:21:36.000 The money has not gone into the economy.
00:21:38.000 That's the sad part.
00:21:39.000 So the rich get richer, but the poor and middle class are getting poorer.
00:21:42.000 It's tragic what's happening today.
00:21:44.000 You can't keep printing fake money.
00:21:46.000 That's not good.
00:21:47.000 Hmm.
00:21:48.000 I've noticed it when I was buying my crystals and rocks, as I told you, especially my opals.
00:21:54.000 People aren't spending.
00:21:55.000 So the people that have this load of assets they need to unload have to drop the price.
00:21:59.000 These people are cutting, slashing the price by 80% to offload their assets.
00:22:03.000 So the rich people can buy up all the assets now because desperate people are selling.
00:22:06.000 But that's non-essentials.
00:22:08.000 At the same time, land, for instance, people are like, wow, they're desperate to get out of cities, the stuff they really need, the prices are skyrocketing.
00:22:15.000 So what's gonna, if there is a crash, what would happen to, like, land prices?
00:22:18.000 Skyrocket.
00:22:19.000 They would skyrocket.
00:22:20.000 Well, here's my bet.
00:22:21.000 There's a lot of arguments you could give to why land would crash, because if people don't have money, they can't buy, so that means people are trying to sell, we have to lower their prices.
00:22:28.000 Or it could be that land is a necessity.
00:22:30.000 And people in cities who can't afford to live anymore will be desperate to leave, which will put the pressure on those trying to leave.
00:22:37.000 What we're seeing right now, in my opinion, the crash is happening.
00:22:40.000 The M1 money stock is insane, even after they changed the definitions and the rules.
00:22:45.000 And you've got people trying to leave cities for the country.
00:22:49.000 I am seeing it in these prices.
00:22:51.000 It is insane how much money we have to spend to try and expand, even into West Virginia, because people are like, my garbage land is now worth, you know, a fortune.
00:23:00.000 So what I think would happen is, if the crash gets worse, it will just continue the trend we're already seeing.
00:23:05.000 People in New York will be like, I don't need Opals.
00:23:08.000 Please buy the opals from me.
00:23:10.000 And they're going to be like, what's it worth?
00:23:12.000 It's a hundred dollar opal.
00:23:13.000 I'll give you 20 bucks.
00:23:14.000 Fine.
00:23:14.000 Please just take it.
00:23:15.000 I can't do anything with an opal.
00:23:16.000 I'm buying the opals to teach children about rocks and stones.
00:23:19.000 That's the investment.
00:23:21.000 Investing in the future.
00:23:22.000 I love it.
00:23:23.000 This is the point I've always made.
00:23:25.000 You know, when Alex Jones would say on his show, buy your gold, people, I'd be like, okay, it's the apocalypse, the economy's crashing, and I'm walking down the street, and I see a guy with a big ol' pile of gold, and I've got a sandwich in my hands, and he says, hey, hey, I'll buy that sandwich off you for a piece of gold, and I say, uh-huh, and I look to my right, and there's a guy with a bottle of water, and he says, I'll share my water with you for some of your sandwich, and I'll be like, I'm thirsty, and that's substantially more valuable than a shiny rock.
00:23:51.000 And they'll say, hey, you want water and food, but you don't have money for it.
00:23:54.000 What do you, what do you have to offer us?
00:23:56.000 Blood.
00:23:57.000 Literally, you can donate blood.
00:23:59.000 We need your biometrics.
00:24:00.000 I don't, I don't know about in an apocalypse.
00:24:03.000 Like, you know, what would you trade?
00:24:07.000 Necessities are going to skyrocket like water and food is going to skyrocket.
00:24:10.000 And if people can't afford it, what do they have to offer other than their own bodies?
00:24:13.000 This is, yes, that's a good point.
00:24:15.000 But I was saying like, in the analogy on the side of the road, I didn't quite understand why someone on the side of the road would be like, I have an IV.
00:24:21.000 I know, isn't that crazy?
00:24:22.000 But yeah, people will have to, they'll do a lot of things.
00:24:25.000 They'll do a lot of things trying to survive.
00:24:27.000 But I asked this question before.
00:24:29.000 What is the one thing that is the hardest to produce, but is extremely commonly used in homes?
00:24:39.000 Yeah, well, well I said antiseptics. Yeah, I don't think most people know how to make an antiseptic
00:24:39.000 Chemicals?
00:24:45.000 You can probably make a rudimentary alcohol if you know how to you know, let's say things
00:24:50.000 Yeah, but that's not super easy. So I'm thinking like what is the hardest thing to produce we use every day soap?
00:24:56.000 Soap's not that hard to make it but But yes.
00:25:00.000 Relative to how frequently it's used, it's kind of... Soap is good, but I feel like antiseptics.
00:25:05.000 So I bought a bunch of mouthwash and isopropyl alcohol and hydrogen peroxide.
00:25:08.000 Things that, like, in the event of an injury, you want to clean your wound.
00:25:12.000 Because back in the day, you stub your toe and it's like, chop your leg off!
00:25:15.000 You got an infection.
00:25:17.000 I'm on vitamins, too.
00:25:19.000 Yeah.
00:25:19.000 Yes.
00:25:19.000 Oh, yeah.
00:25:20.000 I think that's one of the positives over the last year and a half of people realizing we should take vitamins.
00:25:25.000 I take C, D, B, and a multivitamin and magnesium ever since the pandemic.
00:25:25.000 Yep.
00:25:31.000 I think that's almost as needed.
00:25:34.000 I notice people washing their hands in public restrooms.
00:25:38.000 There are a lot of people who have urban property investments that are going to drop to nothing.
00:25:45.000 No one's going to want to be in New York City when they're struggling to get resources into the city.
00:25:48.000 It's so hard.
00:25:49.000 And so if you bought a condo or apartment in New York, I can't imagine you're having a good go of it, trying to get out of there, especially with the lockdowns.
00:25:57.000 Yeah, like an hour and a half north of the New York City, there are homes that were $200,000 that are now $600,000, $700,000, right?
00:26:05.000 And people are moving there.
00:26:06.000 And it's like a lot of my friends, I'm 36, a lot of our parents moved up from the city in the 80s.
00:26:12.000 So they witnessed the collapse of the city in the 70s and everything was on fire.
00:26:16.000 It was terrible.
00:26:17.000 It was bankrupt.
00:26:18.000 So now all of that hour and a half north is kind of full, although people are now moving to go maybe to Florida.
00:26:25.000 But the hour now north of us is what's being filled in.
00:26:29.000 You know, upstate, upstate, real upstate New York.
00:26:31.000 I don't know if you've checked city prices, though.
00:26:33.000 Have they been going down?
00:26:34.000 I haven't.
00:26:36.000 I can't imagine.
00:26:36.000 We have a spike in right now, but you made a great point that the real value of city land is not going to escalate if it gets difficult to import goods.
00:26:43.000 Oh, it's going to be like Escape from New York?
00:26:46.000 I was there when Sandy hit New York.
00:26:46.000 Great movie, by the way.
00:26:47.000 You too?
00:26:47.000 I went to a bodega.
00:26:48.000 I was there when Sandy hit New York.
00:26:50.000 Oh yeah.
00:26:51.000 And like, I went to a bodega.
00:26:53.000 I was like, I'm hungry.
00:26:53.000 I was too.
00:26:55.000 Let's go to a bodega.
00:26:56.000 They had two guys standing outside with two by fours and a line of people waiting to get in, one at a time.
00:27:00.000 They were only allowed in.
00:27:01.000 And I went in, the guy said, the stuff in the fridge is all spoiled, but the dry goods are still good.
00:27:06.000 And I was like, okay.
00:27:07.000 And then I looked in the fridge and it's like, okay, the Gatorade is still good.
00:27:10.000 You know, the sodas are just warm, but all the milk, all the dairy, all the perishables just gone.
00:27:17.000 So this is an interesting concept.
00:27:19.000 Things that have value.
00:27:20.000 This is what I was thinking about when people are buying, like, even NFTs.
00:27:23.000 I think NFTs would probably drop dramatically in value if there's an economic crash.
00:27:27.000 Yeah, they're just art, basically.
00:27:29.000 But maybe not.
00:27:30.000 Maybe not.
00:27:30.000 I mean, that's one way to use them as art.
00:27:32.000 You can do them for contracts and stuff like that, too.
00:27:33.000 Right.
00:27:34.000 I think those, I think NFTs would probably go down, but I do think crypto would skyrocket.
00:27:39.000 Because people are going to need a digital means of transaction in the event it becomes harder with the way banks operate.
00:27:45.000 But we'll see.
00:27:45.000 I don't know if the banking system would be as negatively affected, but if banks are going under and banks are closing and then all of a sudden you're like, where's my money?
00:27:56.000 But I will say, I think there are certain hard assets that will become substantially less valuable or stay the same.
00:28:02.000 And then rural land is probably going to become massively valuable.
00:28:06.000 Realistically, how valuable is gold anyway?
00:28:08.000 I mean, I know it's useful as, like, a superconductor, but... Actually, really, really valuable.
00:28:12.000 But for the common person, though.
00:28:14.000 No, yeah, it's really valuable.
00:28:15.000 The problem is, we value it for its, like, you know, its shine.
00:28:20.000 Instead of its scientific processes.
00:28:20.000 Shininess.
00:28:23.000 Right.
00:28:24.000 You know, it's a scarce, valuable object.
00:28:27.000 The scarcity drives it.
00:28:29.000 We do use it in a lot of technologies, and it's extremely valuable in that regard, but we don't really value it for that.
00:28:34.000 That value does help drive up the cost, though.
00:28:37.000 But I think...
00:28:39.000 I don't know if we'll get to that point with economic collapse where like a bottle of water will be worth $100.
00:28:44.000 Oh, yeah, that could happen easily.
00:28:45.000 It could, but I don't know if we'll get to that point.
00:28:48.000 Even if we face a major economic crisis, people still work, people still make stuff.
00:28:52.000 You know, I'm thinking about how crazy everything's gotten and I'm watching Fox News and I'm like,
00:28:57.000 You know what I realized?
00:28:58.000 People watch the news, and the news is doing the same thing it always does.
00:29:01.000 The guy goes, you know, Bill Hammer's on TV, and he's like, Afghanistan happens, and they assume, like, see, everything's fine.
00:29:07.000 Like my, because they assume, like, the TV would shut off, like in the movies.
00:29:12.000 Yo, go to any one of these countries, look at the history of any one of these countries that went through a revolution, even Afghanistan.
00:29:17.000 The economy is still struggling along, even in Afghanistan.
00:29:21.000 People are still working, people are still going out and buying food.
00:29:24.000 It doesn't just cease to exist.
00:29:25.000 So you can absolutely be watching your TV program while the world is collapsing around you and not realize it because this TV show is giving you this, like, this veil, you know?
00:29:33.000 They pick and choose the apocalypse, right?
00:29:35.000 Like if it's a migrant caravan a few years ago, that's all we saw on the news.
00:29:41.000 If it's a migrant caravan now, you don't really see much of it.
00:29:44.000 You gotta go to the Ventura report on Instagram to see Jorge standing there recording them taking boats across the river.
00:29:51.000 I think they're just talking about the border.
00:29:52.000 I don't think they're ignoring it.
00:29:54.000 I think it's a huge story.
00:29:55.000 But yeah, now they're estimating 400,000 migrants coming up in the next month.
00:30:01.000 I look at that and I'm just like, look, Call it pessimistic, or just call it what it is.
00:30:06.000 How can you watch all of this happen and then say, Tim is wrong, the Republic is in good shape?
00:30:10.000 We had a guest on the show, I'm not gonna call him out, after the show, he was, he asked me, or like, we were talking, I don't know if he asked me or if I brought it up, something about like, you know, you really think things are gonna fall apart, and I was like, they're literally falling apart, and he was like, No, I think it's fine.
00:30:24.000 I think this is just like, you know, news and everything's gonna be fine.
00:30:27.000 And then I was like, how can you witness the street violence, the shootings, the fire bombings, the executive authority, the rule by edict, what happened on January 6th, Antifa riots, and just be like, nothing is happening.
00:30:41.000 I'm like, yo, history is happening right now in your face, but you're a frog in a pot as the water is turning up and you don't even realize it.
00:30:48.000 Yeah, I'm always trying to make sure that I'm not saying that this is the end because I'm always kind of paranoid.
00:30:54.000 I'm like, this has got to be the end.
00:30:56.000 But then when it starts to be the end, like when COVID hits and it starts to filter, I'm like, no, it's fine, right?
00:31:00.000 My grandfather was a cop in the city in the 70s.
00:31:03.000 That was the end for him, right?
00:31:06.000 But also when he was younger he saw an atom bomb fall out of the sky.
00:31:09.000 He thought it was the end then.
00:31:11.000 But this feels different maybe because we're of a certain age and experiencing it.
00:31:15.000 We might have families and houses and all that stuff and all that's collapsing.
00:31:18.000 But something does feel different than what my grandfather would tell me.
00:31:22.000 I think maybe the issue is that we call it the end.
00:31:24.000 When it's not the end, it's a change, a transition.
00:31:27.000 Yeah, for sure.
00:31:28.000 You know, the American empire couldn't last forever.
00:31:32.000 Soviets couldn't last forever.
00:31:34.000 And that's what's happening.
00:31:35.000 You know, so I said this the other day, maybe it's a good thing.
00:31:38.000 Maybe what happens is, if you live in New Hampshire, all of a sudden the country breaks apart, the federal government has no authority, as we've already seen with California's sanctuary state decree.
00:31:46.000 The Fed's emperor has no clothes.
00:31:48.000 So now all of a sudden it's like, okay, you got no income tax and you can't have guns.
00:31:51.000 I don't think people in New Hampshire are going to be upset about what's going on.
00:31:54.000 And I think people will absolutely adapt to the circumstances, meaning they'll raise their own food.
00:32:00.000 There's going to be a hole in the market.
00:32:03.000 Someone's going to be like, hey, now that we're struggling to get the imports in, we can't get avocados or strawberries because those are seasonal and have to cross, you know, very, very far and require a lot.
00:32:12.000 We don't have a whole lot of food out here.
00:32:14.000 And someone's going to be like, I could grow food and make money doing it.
00:32:18.000 Farming will become more valuable.
00:32:19.000 It'll go back to basics.
00:32:21.000 People will start valuing good, hard work all over again.
00:32:24.000 There's a lot of value in that because people are going to spend more time with their families.
00:32:28.000 They're going to be more responsible for themselves and get away from this, you know, I don't know, just start naming off the seven deadly sins and you can describe New York city and that'll start changing maybe for the better.
00:32:39.000 Yeah.
00:32:39.000 That's why I'm not completely depressed about everything.
00:32:41.000 It seems it's really bad, but I like that.
00:32:45.000 I like that people are returning to that kind of thing.
00:32:46.000 It's actually a super red pill to me.
00:32:48.000 And this is something that I've been talking about a little bit because I feel like, you know, the cycle, weak men create bad times, bad times create strong men.
00:32:55.000 Well, we're going into bad times.
00:32:57.000 We're going to come up with some really strong people.
00:32:59.000 I think that's positive.
00:32:59.000 I think that's good.
00:33:00.000 And I think that's something humans have been doing for thousands of years.
00:33:03.000 There's no reason to suspect that this would be any different.
00:33:06.000 So to me, that's very positive.
00:33:07.000 Yeah.
00:33:08.000 My, uh, you know, my grandparents, their parents fled pogroms in Russia.
00:33:08.000 Yeah.
00:33:14.000 There were people running to their towns with axes and hacking them up.
00:33:18.000 And, uh, they left and they took a boat to here.
00:33:21.000 And when they got there, this is my grandma's father, uh, one of four children, he had a scab on his head.
00:33:27.000 They said, you got to go back.
00:33:29.000 So she went back with the, with the kids to the pogroms and had to hide out for the scab to heal and then take the boat back.
00:33:35.000 Wow.
00:33:36.000 Oh my gosh.
00:33:37.000 That's apocalyptic, right?
00:33:39.000 They made it and I had a grandma.
00:33:41.000 They had to go back because the scar would have given the person away as a flea?
00:33:45.000 No, it was just like a cut that he had from something else.
00:33:49.000 But it could be a disease or something?
00:33:50.000 It could be a disease, that's what they were thinking.
00:33:51.000 They were like, we don't know what this is.
00:33:52.000 You could leave the kid or send the kid back and you stay here.
00:33:56.000 That's bold.
00:33:57.000 That's what I think of that.
00:33:58.000 I want to pull up this article that Shane wrote.
00:34:01.000 This is The Beautiful Ones in Universe 25.
00:34:03.000 Rats, hope, and despair at the end of the world.
00:34:05.000 This is about the rat utopia experiment.
00:34:08.000 And there was, the title of it, I think you nailed the title, because this is the most interesting aspect to me.
00:34:12.000 The Beautiful Ones.
00:34:14.000 When I see what's going on now, it feels like, I think it's Kierkegaard's clown, where he comes out and he warns everybody there's a fire, but they all laugh, and then he finally goes, no, no, there's a fire, and they laugh even harder, and, you know, there's that idea, but then there's also, well, all of this chaos is happening.
00:34:28.000 You have what I view to be as a cult that just blindly believes the media.
00:34:33.000 The media is just overtly lying all the time to make money.
00:34:37.000 So you've basically got a sinking ship while people are stealing from the pockets of these people while they're distracting them and it's just like, it's going down.
00:34:46.000 And then meanwhile there are these shows where people are glorified and glammed up and they're dancing and I'm like, Those are the beautiful ones.
00:34:54.000 They're just grooming themselves and beautifying themselves as everything goes into chaos.
00:35:00.000 But you break this down for us and explain to us the beautiful ones and then, you know, we'll roll through.
00:35:04.000 Yeah.
00:35:05.000 John B. Calhoun is a scientist who started making these rat utopias.
00:35:09.000 And he would take four males, four females, put them in a little, he called, universe and let them exponentially grow.
00:35:18.000 Those early experiments, they were just kind of like overcrowd.
00:35:21.000 So they just like clump up here, clump up there, and he would stop it and have to start over.
00:35:25.000 But Universe 25 was with mice, and that's when he basically, he gives them everything they need.
00:35:31.000 All the food, all the water, all the medicine. There's no sickness. There's no hunger.
00:35:37.000 The only thing that's lacking is space.
00:35:39.000 And I think he did something with like powder food on one side and like nicer food in the middle, which kind of created a kind of like a city and country type vibe.
00:35:48.000 Interesting.
00:35:48.000 Yeah.
00:35:49.000 But the beautiful ones would emerge in these universes when the population was about to hit equilibrium.
00:35:56.000 So like Universe 25 could hold about 3,000 or so mice.
00:36:01.000 And I think around 2000 is when the beautiful ones would emerge.
00:36:05.000 And they're these mice that just stopped caring about mating.
00:36:08.000 They stopped caring about anything.
00:36:10.000 They just kind of groomed themselves and became beautiful.
00:36:13.000 They did nothing.
00:36:14.000 And around this time is when it would start to collapse.
00:36:17.000 He would call it the behavioral sink.
00:36:21.000 Just, like, total insanity.
00:36:23.000 The mothers would abandon their kids.
00:36:26.000 There's, like, mice mating—male mice mating with male mice.
00:36:30.000 And there's—they're attacking the kids.
00:36:34.000 And it got ugly.
00:36:35.000 Hyper-crowding too, right?
00:36:36.000 Like, they would all cluster in one area?
00:36:38.000 Yeah, yeah.
00:36:39.000 I mean, at a certain point, it was just so much that he believed that when there was no space left, there was no feeling of, like, you have to do anything to survive.
00:36:48.000 It was all you were doing, right?
00:36:49.000 So you're getting attacked, you're hiding, and then the dominant mice would try to protect their, like, you know, their city of women.
00:36:57.000 So mice were getting attacked as well?
00:36:59.000 Yeah, there's violence.
00:37:00.000 Were people leaving the beautiful ones alone?
00:37:03.000 Yeah, I don't... they might have been attacked, but they were kind of like alone on the sides, you know?
00:37:07.000 Were they being... Just grooming themselves.
00:37:09.000 Taking selfies.
00:37:10.000 At first I thought it was behavioral sync as in synchronization, but it's behavioral sync like sinking or going down.
00:37:16.000 Yeah.
00:37:17.000 So as I stated this in the intro that maybe the inbreeding had something to do with the disassociation disassociated behaviors since it all came from ape mice maybe because I did have mice as a child and one of them I would I saw some inbreeding and some deformities came out in the mice.
00:37:32.000 Did he like destroy the deformed?
00:37:34.000 Child, did he destroy mice?
00:37:36.000 I don't know about destroying them, but he would pluck the ones that survived the collapse and try to put them into new universes.
00:37:43.000 And they were so traumatized.
00:37:46.000 They couldn't shake, you know, their violent behavior.
00:37:49.000 Maybe traumatized is the right word.
00:37:50.000 Maybe programmed, developed into this reality.
00:37:54.000 And so that spells very... There's a lot of people, actually in the piece you talked to Brett Weinstein.
00:38:00.000 And he's like, well, they use lab mice.
00:38:02.000 They don't use wild mice.
00:38:04.000 For every experiment.
00:38:06.000 Yeah.
00:38:06.000 And so that means in the wild, the parents transfer knowledge, some knowledge to their children.
00:38:06.000 Right.
00:38:12.000 But, you know, a good example is, and I love bringing up the chickens, is that we have three babies that were raised away from the parent chickens, and they don't know how to eat bugs.
00:38:23.000 And I'm like, I don't know how to teach him how to eat stink bugs.
00:38:26.000 The other babies... You can learn.
00:38:27.000 They can.
00:38:28.000 You can learn.
00:38:28.000 Oh, right.
00:38:29.000 I can eat it and show them.
00:38:30.000 But because they look to me like a parent, you know, I put the stink bug and then they just look at me like, what's this?
00:38:35.000 And they don't do it.
00:38:36.000 The other chickens we had were raised around only other chickens.
00:38:39.000 So they see a bug, they immediately go after it.
00:38:41.000 That that knowledge transfer didn't occur with these and that's why I was reading they say like you typically if you want to have chickens you want the chickens to be raised to be born by other chickens or like raised with them so that they can learn from them.
00:38:52.000 These lab mice don't have that.
00:38:54.000 So that could be a major factor in why we are not going down that path.
00:38:59.000 But just to say one more thing.
00:39:01.000 When I see these videos on YouTube, when I see that some of the most prominent and popular YouTubers are quite literally the beautiful ones, I'm like, yo, I think we're in the rat utopia.
00:39:11.000 I think it's happening.
00:39:12.000 Like what I was saying earlier too, is I think it used to seem like the elites were the only ones who could become the beautiful ones.
00:39:17.000 They would have the money, the space, but with things like TikTok and filters, people can just curate whatever best beautiful self they want to be online.
00:39:25.000 Makeup tutorials.
00:39:26.000 Makeup tutorials, everything.
00:39:28.000 Surgery, if you can do that, but everyone's a beautiful one now.
00:39:32.000 We're below replacement level reproduction.
00:39:34.000 So it's like, you know, what's interesting is he did, you did say he tried to have like a rural and city kind of vibe to certain, you know, to how we do the universes.
00:39:45.000 But people who live out in the middle of nowhere who are more self-sufficient probably aren't experiencing what the cities are experiencing.
00:39:51.000 So there's economic constraints that make someone trapped in this space, right?
00:39:56.000 People say, I'm in the city, I can't afford to leave.
00:39:58.000 So that is what keeps them in that universe.
00:40:01.000 Although they could physically walk out.
00:40:02.000 They don't because they don't know how to survive otherwise.
00:40:06.000 People who live in rural areas are more independent and more likely to have the skills to survive on their own.
00:40:12.000 Not absolutely, but more so.
00:40:14.000 So they aren't experiencing the behavioral sync.
00:40:17.000 The rural people tend to be conservative and they're watching the city people, the beautiful ones and the chaos and the fighting and the violence.
00:40:23.000 And they're saying, stop, but you can't shake what you described as the trauma from them.
00:40:28.000 Yeah.
00:40:29.000 I think the internet has collapsed space though.
00:40:31.000 So like maybe a lot of the children in the rural places, they are able to be the beautiful ones online.
00:40:36.000 And also there's consequences of the cities and the policies that are affecting the country too.
00:40:40.000 Gas prices are messing up farmers who have to, or truckers, you know, like I This is the first time in my life since I've been driving that I can travel the country and see the gas prices be the same.
00:40:52.000 I could usually go south and expect it to be way lower.
00:40:56.000 It's the same everywhere.
00:40:57.000 It's almost $4 by me.
00:40:59.000 But it's like $3.15 around here, $3.30.
00:41:03.000 Shocking.
00:41:04.000 You know, I'm thinking that the behavioral sync world, the universe, is like the internet.
00:41:08.000 So these people that are in the internet all the time are in that confined space and it's driving them insane.
00:41:15.000 Yeah.
00:41:15.000 I think overcrowding is technically the psychological effects of density.
00:41:20.000 So that would make sense.
00:41:22.000 Cause it's a dimension where you we've in like COVID, I think we've uploaded our identities onto the internet more than maybe ever.
00:41:29.000 Right.
00:41:29.000 Every, we, we zoom to work, we see family for, you know, doing, uh, however we're doing COVID on zoom.
00:41:36.000 Like I know some people who haven't seen their family in a year.
00:41:39.000 It's, it's, it's pretty wild.
00:41:39.000 Yeah.
00:41:40.000 So people that's the real space now.
00:41:43.000 And this is one of the reasons I'm adamant.
00:41:44.000 I'm like, we don't do Zoom or Skype stuff.
00:41:47.000 Like, we do in-person shows.
00:41:49.000 And I get a lot of really prominent people who are like, can't you just do it for me?
00:41:53.000 And I'm like, sorry, man.
00:41:55.000 It's funny because when we try inviting these leftists, they're like, Tim won't do remote because he's a coward.
00:41:59.000 I'm like, if you had any idea the people I rejected...
00:42:02.000 And how famous and big because I won't do remote stuff.
00:42:05.000 Yeah, that's just not true.
00:42:06.000 But I'm not going to I'm not going to air anybody's business.
00:42:09.000 You know, we've had a few people.
00:42:12.000 Many of them aren't in aren't in the US.
00:42:13.000 They can't even travel here anymore.
00:42:15.000 So, you know, not to you know, I don't want to I don't want to name anybody because people might be like, yo, don't drag me into anything.
00:42:22.000 But there's there's a lot of people of like medium followings to large followings.
00:42:26.000 Some of them are like moderate.
00:42:28.000 Some are very conservative.
00:42:29.000 Some are prominent internationally.
00:42:32.000 They don't want to do it.
00:42:34.000 There's something very visceral about being in close proximity with someone in communication, body language.
00:42:39.000 You can hear them vibrating.
00:42:40.000 I mean, I know it's funny to think of, but it's very low frequency.
00:42:43.000 You can hear people vibrating, whether you realize it or not.
00:42:46.000 You can smell them.
00:42:48.000 You don't feel any vibrating right now?
00:42:50.000 I was an adjunct professor for like 10 years and in person is the best.
00:42:51.000 I was an adjunct professor for like 10 years and in person is the best.
00:43:01.000 I would sit just like this with a room of students and we would write and you could
00:43:05.000 hear like if someone was reading something he just wrote and it was clicking with everybody,
00:43:10.000 the room, the silence, you could hear it.
00:43:13.000 So when we're, when COVID kicks us all home, we're on zoom, that's gone.
00:43:13.000 Right.
00:43:17.000 There's no, like it's, there's no interacting anymore at all.
00:43:21.000 Like they, they didn't feel, um, as comfortable.
00:43:24.000 And I think it has to do with analog sound and digital sound.
00:43:27.000 With digital sound, you can't have a 1 and a 1 active.
00:43:30.000 Everything else has to be at 0 for 1 to translate.
00:43:33.000 But with analog, we can put 1 and 1 together and have these weird harmonies.
00:43:37.000 So that's in person.
00:43:38.000 We have analog, but the digital transformation.
00:43:41.000 I've done some stuff.
00:43:44.000 Ben Shapiro had hit me before and he was like, do you want to do the show?
00:43:47.000 And I was like, that'd be great.
00:43:48.000 And it was actually really hard because I had to record it and then take the memory card and then have it driven to a place to upload because the internet is not good enough.
00:43:48.000 And we did it remote.
00:43:56.000 At the time, we had to install the internet lines here.
00:43:59.000 It was a lot of construction work.
00:44:01.000 And I was like, you know, it was cool to talk to Ben.
00:44:05.000 He's a cool dude.
00:44:06.000 And it just really felt like I would talk and then pause, and then he would talk and then pause.
00:44:10.000 And you don't get those moments where, like, out of nowhere, you know, Ian might just blurt out the vibrations of the universe.
00:44:17.000 Those are human moments that make something feel alive.
00:44:20.000 Well, geez, eye contact.
00:44:21.000 You can't make eye contact online at all yet.
00:44:23.000 Maybe if they put cameras in the middle of the screen, behind the screen, and then you might feel like you're making eye contact.
00:44:28.000 That's a good idea, actually.
00:44:29.000 We should also use sapphire for the screens, I think.
00:44:33.000 Sapphire.
00:44:33.000 Dude, have you seen a star sapphire?
00:44:36.000 And then you look through a lens that's pointed at the sun and you see that same star pattern?
00:44:41.000 I think that if you use sapphire lens that it might help in high brightness.
00:44:45.000 That would cause a lot of trouble.
00:44:46.000 It does sound beautiful.
00:44:47.000 I believe you.
00:44:48.000 I'll experiment.
00:44:50.000 I think people uh just feel a lot of at least my students because they were they're much younger right um they do feel more comfortable online but they were comfortable to be quiet right right like because they're usually just very quiet online but their their real world was also taking over their internet space so we'd be in class technically on zoom but i would have a kid like in mcdonald's drive-through Like just ordering food.
00:45:15.000 Have you seen that viral video where the kid uses a green screen or whatever?
00:45:20.000 And so it's like he was out with his friends or something.
00:45:21.000 I can't remember what it was.
00:45:22.000 But he was trying to use like a background and the teacher was like, I can tell you're doing it.
00:45:27.000 Ferris Bueller of Zoom.
00:45:28.000 You were a teacher in classrooms and then you were there for the transition into the COVID Zoom.
00:45:34.000 What was that like?
00:45:35.000 Remember so it was two different schools one was a community college and one was a private school
00:45:39.000 And which are very it was interesting to see like kids with who came from money in a private school
00:45:44.000 kids from the community in the community college But for the most part they felt like it was the end times
00:45:50.000 and I kept telling them it's not wow this is before Wow.
00:45:54.000 This is before we locked down in New York, all that stuff.
00:45:55.000 I was like, it's going to be fine.
00:45:56.000 I told the whole spiel to my grandfather and all that stuff.
00:45:58.000 And they're like, OK, good.
00:46:00.000 And then a week later, we were kicked off back to Zoom.
00:46:02.000 And I'm terrible with computers.
00:46:04.000 So I'm like, you know, just clicking away, trying to make it work.
00:46:08.000 But I thought it was horrible.
00:46:12.000 I hate teaching on Zoom.
00:46:14.000 And it was, you just lost that human aspect.
00:46:17.000 And I think, especially when you're trying to create things, like it was creative writing classes.
00:46:22.000 You can't do it, man.
00:46:23.000 It's not possible.
00:46:24.000 You know, because we have to do workshops and kids have to like look at you in the face and be like, I like this part, but this part not so good.
00:46:24.000 It didn't work.
00:46:30.000 You could do this and that.
00:46:31.000 And on Zoom, you're just Brady Bunching around and it just doesn't feel right.
00:46:37.000 So I think it's horrible, but then kids got really comfortable with doing it.
00:46:39.000 I think a lot of people like it now.
00:46:41.000 The lack of resistance.
00:46:42.000 It's easier because it's more comfortable, but comfort is not the way to get stronger.
00:46:46.000 Often you need discomfort.
00:46:48.000 But this is unfortunately still a net positive.
00:46:52.000 Kids are more likely to, younger people are more likely to be at home now.
00:46:56.000 Their parents are more likely to spend time with them, and their parents are more likely
00:46:59.000 to know what they're being taught in schools.
00:47:01.000 So remote learning has not been a bad thing in my opinion, other than it's better for
00:47:05.000 the kids to be in person.
00:47:07.000 But when the parents started getting wind of what the teachers were saying, and there
00:47:10.000 was that viral video where the one teacher was like, the parents can't find out what
00:47:13.000 we're telling their children.
00:47:14.000 You know, it'll be bad for us and what we're trying to do.
00:47:16.000 All of a sudden the parents were like, we can hear you.
00:47:19.000 We can see this stuff.
00:47:21.000 Get away from my children.
00:47:22.000 I was talking, I mentioned this to you earlier.
00:47:24.000 I was talking with Ben Stewart about technology and the advancement.
00:47:26.000 It's like every technology is both good and bad.
00:47:30.000 Everything is a variance on some level.
00:47:33.000 And we have to kind of allocate or locate where the badness is and where the goodness is.
00:47:37.000 I agree.
00:47:38.000 Yeah, like dynamite.
00:47:39.000 You know, they called Alfred Nobel the Merchant of Death.
00:47:43.000 He saw his obituary accidentally printed and then freaked out.
00:47:45.000 That's what they're calling me?!
00:47:46.000 And, you know, I guess the idea for dynamite was, like, easier mining.
00:47:50.000 You could plant the explosive, leave, and then no one would get it.
00:47:53.000 Boom, and then it falls down.
00:47:54.000 But they were like, you made a weapon.
00:47:56.000 The technology wasn't meant to be evil or destructive in the sense that it would hurt people.
00:48:00.000 It was meant to make things safer and easier, but it was a powerful weapon.
00:48:04.000 So I always tell people, no matter what you do, you will help someone and you will hurt someone.
00:48:09.000 And I don't mean to be completely absolute, like, sure, like, you could jump and click your heels and it affects nothing or nobody.
00:48:15.000 In fact, it might make someone happy.
00:48:16.000 But I'm talking about, you know, your political aim.
00:48:19.000 When you're like, I believe in universal health care and so we're gonna vote for this.
00:48:23.000 And then there's some, you know, person whose taxes go up because of it and now their budget's disrupted and some retiree is being hurt by it.
00:48:30.000 There's no neutral action.
00:48:33.000 Like, you know, you can try to do better, and we can try and err on the side of maximizing good, but you'll ultimately always hurt someone.
00:48:40.000 And I think this is an important thing to mention, because you may one day be the nicest person in the universe who saved a billion babies' lives, and then one day, one dude shows up, and he's just like, you did this to me!
00:48:52.000 And I started thinking about this.
00:48:53.000 You know why?
00:48:54.000 The sixth sense.
00:48:55.000 The movie Bruce Willis's character wins that award. He wins an award for his amazing work with child psychology
00:49:01.000 And then one day there's some dude in his underwear like you lied to me and then shoots him
00:49:06.000 And so here's a guy who was doing as good as he could but he hurt that kid
00:49:11.000 And so I mean that's not a perfect example because what i'm talking about is kind of like a butterfly effect thing as
00:49:16.000 well You know, you find a good parking space.
00:49:20.000 Your friend is like, hey, can you find me a parking space?
00:49:22.000 I'm going to be late, so you do.
00:49:23.000 And then someone else pulls up and they're like, he just took the space I needed.
00:49:26.000 You know, a better example might be the law of equivalent exchange.
00:49:30.000 You know, full metal alchemist.
00:49:32.000 You have to get something to give something, give something to get something.
00:49:35.000 And that means some people will be on the short end of the stick.
00:49:38.000 I remember there was a book I read, I don't remember what book it was, a long time ago, where the guy was wishing for a million, he kept wishing for money, and he's like, oh my gosh, this cube gives me, every time I wish for money, it appears in my room.
00:49:47.000 But it was disappearing from somewhere else in the universe.
00:49:49.000 Well, that's like the monkey's paw story, right?
00:49:52.000 You know the monkey's paw, obviously.
00:49:53.000 You don't know the monkey's paw?
00:49:53.000 I think I do.
00:49:54.000 How do you not know?
00:49:57.000 The monkey's paw is, it's the paw, and you wish on it, and then the finger curls, but it twists your wish.
00:50:04.000 So the best example is, you know, someone finds the paw and it says, it's got three wishes, and they go, I wish for one million dollars, and the finger curls, and then their phone rings, and they're like, is this Mr. Johnson?
00:50:15.000 It's like, it is.
00:50:17.000 I have $1 million for you. And they go, Oh, it goes because your father died and his insurance is
00:50:21.000 paying out and they go, no. So you get the money, but you have to give something in exchange.
00:50:26.000 Typically be careful what you wish for. Yeah. There's a, I think there's a balance like that
00:50:31.000 in a lot of things, you know, I noticed that just in, in losing people, you know,
00:50:35.000 I know a few people, and myself included, who lost a few dear ones a few years ago, and then there's kids all of a sudden.
00:50:42.000 Life just seems to balance out.
00:50:43.000 You lose, and then there's kids.
00:50:45.000 That's not as scary as the monkey's paw, though.
00:50:47.000 The social media is scary, though.
00:50:51.000 The monkey's paw gave us this mass communication social media.
00:50:54.000 I'm terrified about the bad You know, I'll be honest.
00:50:59.000 All, I believe a good portion of the world's problems would end overnight if communications around the world were shut down for like one week.
00:51:07.000 We're just talking about the earth started to heal during COVID.
00:51:07.000 Yeah.
00:51:10.000 I don't know if there's like, if that's actually real, but like the, uh, the, what was it?
00:51:14.000 The magnetosphere or like the ozone opened up and then it sealed up again.
00:51:17.000 Well, I was saying the part where people were home and not commuting as much.
00:51:21.000 They said the, the earth was not as, was not vibrating as much as it used to.
00:51:25.000 Vibrate yeah if we shut if not if we should know but if it's just for whatever reason all social media all Television shows all information exchange except for human contact was suspended for a week I believe all of this would would all the crisis would probably stop when we were in Chicago I was living in my roommate Eric Paskey and the electricity went out and I was like what I What do we do?
00:51:48.000 He was like, I don't know.
00:51:49.000 I was like, want to make soup?
00:51:50.000 So we just heated up some soup and sat and talked.
00:51:53.000 And lit a candle.
00:51:54.000 We had Yossi Gestetner on.
00:51:54.000 But think about this.
00:51:57.000 He's Jewish and he talks about, you know, the Sabbath and how they don't go on the computers.
00:52:01.000 They just hang out with family and talk.
00:52:03.000 And that has been stripped away from our society for the most part.
00:52:08.000 That's why shows like this are so popular.
00:52:10.000 That's why I loved Rogan's for so long.
00:52:12.000 It's just watching two guys hang out and talk.
00:52:13.000 I felt like I was there with them.
00:52:14.000 Yeah, exactly.
00:52:15.000 You know, it's like getting that time where you're just hanging out with friends and listening.
00:52:19.000 And, uh, man, we used to do that when we were kids and we would talk about crazy stuff.
00:52:23.000 I'd be hanging out my friend's house playing Knights of the Old Republic.
00:52:26.000 They'd be stoned off their asses and they'd be like, dude, what if like the universe?
00:52:29.000 It's like actually like only five dimensions, but we can't tell.
00:52:33.000 And it's like just saying weird stuff.
00:52:35.000 You think that's true though?
00:52:36.000 Yeah, probably on some level.
00:52:38.000 I would imagine that the entire universe as we know it is falling.
00:52:42.000 It lightspeed towards a brick wall, but we wouldn't know because it's all falling at the same rate, so it's relative.
00:52:46.000 It just looks like it's sitting still to us.
00:52:50.000 Yeah, there's four dimensions we're moving through, or there's three dimensions, there's four dimensions we're moving through and only three we can control.
00:52:56.000 Yes.
00:52:57.000 And the fourth dimension, time, is like we're in free fall.
00:53:00.000 You can't, so imagine you're, imagine, imagine you fall, you know, off the Grand Canyon, you're just falling, or you fall off a plane, and you're just falling towards the earth.
00:53:08.000 You can move in two dimensions, you know, up, down, left, right, but you're going down.
00:53:14.000 And then eventually you're headed towards that.
00:53:17.000 So that's like time.
00:53:19.000 You can't turn around and go back unless you have a jetpack or something, which you don't.
00:53:24.000 And you die at the end.
00:53:27.000 We kind of reference the past with video.
00:53:29.000 It's a sort of time travel where you can watch past events, but we're not quite five senses of past experience yet.
00:53:36.000 That might come though, but is it really time travel if you just think you're seeing it?
00:53:41.000 Depends, you know, if we've uploaded our identities into the internet and that's what's real, that's what's real.
00:53:46.000 You know what would be crazy?
00:53:48.000 So we've used all the social media and they talk about how we're programming this great AI with all of the stuff we do.
00:53:55.000 So when you go, like ReCAPTCHA for instance, biggest scam on the planet.
00:53:59.000 So you try to log into a website and it says, to prove you're human, please click these buttons and like prove this.
00:54:05.000 The computers already know for the most part.
00:54:08.000 What they're doing is they're having you Teach the computer what certain things are.
00:54:13.000 So here's how it works.
00:54:15.000 They say, please click all the streetlights in this photo.
00:54:20.000 And then you do.
00:54:21.000 The issue is, the actual captcha is your mouse movements.
00:54:25.000 They know if you're a human or a bot based on how the mouse is moving on the screen.
00:54:28.000 So they don't need you to actually do this labor to train an AI.
00:54:32.000 Here's a good sci-fi novel.
00:54:35.000 One day, you're online and all of a sudden you see a post on your own Twitter that you didn't make.
00:54:40.000 And you're like, whoa, I didn't post that.
00:54:42.000 Someone must have hacked my account.
00:54:43.000 And then you can't log in and then you look at your Facebook and your YouTube and there's a video on YouTube of you talking and you're like, I didn't record this video!
00:54:51.000 And what's actually happened is that everything about your personality, the way you speak, the way you think, the ideas you have, your birthday, was encoded into the AI, and then a digital version of you was created, and begins propagating content based off of a fictional AI version of you.
00:55:07.000 And then you look at your phone, and you're like, what is it?
00:55:09.000 You get a phone call, and you're like, it's from me!
00:55:11.000 And you answer it, and it's like, look at me.
00:55:15.000 I am Tim now.
00:55:17.000 And you're like, no, no, no, this can't be real.
00:55:19.000 And then all of a sudden, almost like body snatchers or zombies, artificial intelligence versions of people's personalities emerge.
00:55:27.000 It's going to go like, I'm the Tim you want.
00:55:30.000 And it'll be coded to give that person a tailored Tim experience.
00:55:34.000 So based on what they think you want, that AI is going to say, Oh, that's gonna be creepy, dude.
00:55:38.000 Then one day dude then one day you're like then you get the call and you're like this can't be and then you drop your
00:55:43.000 phone and then you you're like you run outside and you're like your phone's not working anymore because the
00:55:47.000 And then all of a sudden you open your door and there's this silver looking robot structure
00:55:52.000 That just grabs you by the throat and then from the fingertips starts turning into looking like you
00:55:57.000 And then it's like I am the perfect version of you And then all of a sudden all over all these cities
00:56:03.000 There's just all these robots these digital versions taking over and then like when we talked about the transport
00:56:08.000 problem Do you die when the transporter teleports you from one
00:56:11.000 place to another because it breaks down your body and reconfigures somewhere else?
00:56:14.000 The entire planet is overwritten by ai artificial versions of the people who are using the
00:56:20.000 computers But all of them just act like they're you.
00:56:24.000 Your soul is gone, your existence is gone, but humanity stays the same except for the robots now.
00:56:28.000 When it comes to the transporter problem, I think you don't die.
00:56:31.000 Because what I imagine what we are right now, we think of ourselves as solid.
00:56:35.000 But what seems like it's happening, all these things called spinners, subatomic spinning momentum things are coming together to form atoms which bond.
00:56:42.000 So we're appearing in place due to the spin of this area.
00:56:46.000 If that spin is in a different area, it appears in place over here.
00:56:49.000 It's appearing in place constantly.
00:56:50.000 So if you appear here and now you appear here, it's still you appearing.
00:56:53.000 I would imagine that the soul like magnetically locks onto your formation of body.
00:56:58.000 Don't we shed our cells like every seven years?
00:57:01.000 So isn't transporting just like an accelerated process of that?
00:57:05.000 So if we're still alive after seven years.
00:57:08.000 But we don't shed our souls?
00:57:10.000 I wonder if the soul's like magnetically attached to your form.
00:57:10.000 I don't know.
00:57:14.000 Bro, we were talking about, weren't we talking about this with Alex Jones and Michael Malice?
00:57:18.000 Where, like, you take DMT and then we're basically just meat puppets for the machine elves or something?
00:57:24.000 So, like, your soul is not even in this reality.
00:57:28.000 These are just, you know, meat vessels we walk around in.
00:57:31.000 And then when you die, you just snap through the veil and you're a machine elf or something.
00:57:34.000 I can feel Seamus's soul right now.
00:57:36.000 I think, I feel bad that he's not, I feel like he should be in the room because he's like, no, you guys, that's not it.
00:57:41.000 This is not the way.
00:57:44.000 I think there's I think the interdimensional space is it will be next.
00:57:47.000 I think we're going to start exploring that.
00:57:49.000 I really do like what we're doing.
00:57:50.000 I've been talking DMT.
00:57:52.000 True, true.
00:57:53.000 I've been talking to too many alien abductees who believe that, you know, the aliens are us from our versions of us from other dimensions.
00:58:00.000 Well, tell us other space like let's let's hear some of these stories.
00:58:03.000 What's what's what's really with the aliens?
00:58:06.000 Yeah.
00:58:06.000 Like if you heard a story that's kind of like rocked you to your core.
00:58:09.000 I wish I could say that, but I have met people who are... Because I'm such a skeptic.
00:58:15.000 That's why it's good, though.
00:58:17.000 I really do want to believe, and I'm willing to talk to everybody.
00:58:20.000 But I've met one person in particular.
00:58:24.000 We talked for like two hours before we even got to aliens.
00:58:26.000 Normal stuff.
00:58:28.000 Newspapers, media, culture.
00:58:31.000 Really, really got down.
00:58:32.000 And you were like, who'd you vote for?
00:58:33.000 And he was like, oh, Biden.
00:58:34.000 Oh, and by the way, I was abducted by Hitler.
00:58:35.000 Oh, yeah, basically.
00:58:37.000 Basically, I was just like, so about the abduction story.
00:58:40.000 And he's been abducted since he was nine.
00:58:42.000 And he has a support group for UFO abductees or people who've had encounters.
00:58:47.000 And so they share all these stories, but he's been abducted since he was nine.
00:58:51.000 And he has very, very vivid memories of being lifted out of his window, looking over Peekskill, New York, which is the town where the Yellow Brick Road was, the original Yellow Brick Road.
00:59:02.000 Yep.
00:59:02.000 Oh, wow.
00:59:03.000 And kind of hovering over the trees.
00:59:06.000 And he believes that the beings that come for him are like avatars for beings that can't travel.
00:59:15.000 Um from other if they're far away plate from like far away planets
00:59:18.000 He's like they're they're controlling them because they have like a hive mind
00:59:21.000 and they're like opening his skull and he and he says he wakes up feeling these things and
00:59:26.000 He has a phd in the spiritual awakening of being abducted.
00:59:30.000 It's fascinating Like he's an actual phd or you're just saying figuratively.
00:59:33.000 No. Yeah. Yeah, not like me where I bought one for $20 He has an actual one.
00:59:37.000 So he thinks that they're electromagnetic drones, essentially?
00:59:40.000 I don't know if they're electromagnetic, or I don't know if he knows.
00:59:44.000 He says he's touched them, and they have a hot sensation.
00:59:48.000 He remembers, like, recoiling.
00:59:49.000 But this has been happening to him since he was nine.
00:59:52.000 And they keep coming for him.
00:59:53.000 Different ones.
00:59:54.000 You know, we all know about the Greys.
00:59:56.000 That's what I asked him.
00:59:57.000 So he also claims to be, like, a psychic.
01:00:00.000 And I asked him, are the aliens coming... Are you a psychic as a consequence of the abductions?
01:00:05.000 Or because you're a psychic, is that why they're coming to you?
01:00:09.000 Because he would fix computers for a living in, like, the 70s, after he got back from Vietnam.
01:00:15.000 70s, 80s, he's running around fixing, like, machines and computers.
01:00:18.000 He never talked about being abducted because there was a stigma.
01:00:22.000 You don't want to talk about that with people.
01:00:24.000 So, but people would keep coming up to him and just talking about being abducted.
01:00:28.000 They had the urge to tell him like their weird, not abduction stories all the time, but like, we saw a UFO, something like that.
01:00:34.000 And then, you know, I think his wife might've been the first person he told, you know, after 30 years of not telling anybody.
01:00:41.000 So, I want to say I believe him.
01:00:45.000 It sounds crazy.
01:00:48.000 His story sounds legit to me.
01:00:51.000 But I also think sometimes people might confuse horrible dreams and their reoccurring nightmare.
01:01:00.000 But I also have then listened to different psychiatrists who say there's no way to, like, have trauma from such an experience.
01:01:10.000 Like, these people who claim to be abducted, they have some type of trauma.
01:01:13.000 They can be hypnotized and they relive it.
01:01:15.000 I know people, I've known people throughout my life with schizophrenia.
01:01:18.000 And I have heard stories about weird government abductions and experiments.
01:01:24.000 And I'm just like, the things they say are overtly insane.
01:01:28.000 It's one thing to be like, you need to believe me, man.
01:01:30.000 Guys in suits came to my house yesterday and I'd be like, okay, I mean, but when they say things like they have nanotechnology devices that they've injected me with that cause invisible cameras to circle my head at all times and I'm like, nothing's happening.
01:01:46.000 Am I missing it?
01:01:47.000 Where is it?
01:01:47.000 Can you tell me where it is?
01:01:48.000 I'm like, that's, you know, objectively nuts.
01:01:51.000 I have a theory about schizophrenia though.
01:01:53.000 I think they're plugged in to a mind level that we don't understand.
01:01:57.000 It's kind of it's kind of a sad thought, though.
01:01:59.000 I mean, some people may just have misfiring brains, you know, and they need help.
01:02:04.000 But yeah, I'm like, what if my friend is telling me the truth?
01:02:08.000 They're actually seeing something that's that's real.
01:02:11.000 And we are just sitting here like, because look, I've had friends who are They can have a conversation.
01:02:18.000 And they can tell you, like, this is a bottle of water.
01:02:20.000 I need to drink water and eat food.
01:02:21.000 And then they'll say something like, I can see the beings.
01:02:21.000 I went to work today.
01:02:24.000 And people will tell them they're crazy and they're schizophrenic.
01:02:28.000 And it's just like, imagine if they really did.
01:02:30.000 Like in The Sixth Sense.
01:02:32.000 The kid can see the dead people, but they just tell him he's crazy.
01:02:35.000 Or in Constantine, it's a good example.
01:02:38.000 In Constantine, the movie, he's like, growing up, he could see all these things.
01:02:43.000 He could see the angels and the demons, and then nobody believed him.
01:02:46.000 They thought he was crazy, and they put him in hospitals.
01:02:48.000 Imagine being told you're crazy when you're the one who's right, because you can see something that people can't.
01:02:53.000 Like Hunter Biden's laptop.
01:02:56.000 I was going to talk about that.
01:03:01.000 You're crazy.
01:03:01.000 That's not real.
01:03:02.000 It never happened.
01:03:04.000 What didn't they just confirm that though?
01:03:05.000 Yeah, it took the corporate media, but I think Schizophrenia see the people with schizophrenia are kind of plugged into a like an information dump, right?
01:03:16.000 They can't turn it off and not to say that kids are schizophrenic But there's a there's a lack of filter between them and the world like I think when we grow up we start to take on all like the substance of materialism and then we start we start to think of like Just the routine of life But kids are still thinking about aliens and ghosts and monsters, like my five-year-old all the time, every night.
01:03:37.000 That's all we talk about.
01:03:39.000 And when I talked, I had a friend who was schizophrenic as well.
01:03:41.000 That's all he talked about.
01:03:42.000 I'm like, maybe they're just like sensing something that we just can't perceive right now.
01:03:46.000 Or my kid is just crazy.
01:03:48.000 No, I think remote viewing, that's a CIA project.
01:03:51.000 The CIA investigates it because it's that seemingly legit.
01:03:54.000 And there's stories about people that die.
01:03:57.000 No, not yet. Yeah project looking glass. I think maybe is something started was the one and I think it changed names
01:04:02.000 Yeah And then you get this these anecdotal stories of people
01:04:05.000 that die on the operating table and then they they are above their body watching
01:04:08.000 And they hear the doctors saying things and then somehow they come back to life after a couple minutes
01:04:13.000 And then they recall the conversation. Yeah, I was like, how did you remember?
01:04:16.000 They were there on the bed. Maybe they were dead, but they weren't
01:04:19.000 Completely unconscious the crazy they see themselves from above, you know
01:04:23.000 Yeah, but that and they would see them like what color she was wearing and yes
01:04:27.000 but if so the problem with that is the problem with that is is you know
01:04:30.000 You could be semi-conscious and see a pink pink scrubs and see a doctor you hear what they say
01:04:36.000 And afterwards you're like you were talking about your football game and the nurse was wearing pink scrubs like
01:04:40.000 how did you know that?
01:04:41.000 But, the crazier stuff I read about was that they would put numbers on the tops of things, and there were people who could tell you, they'd be like, on the top of the monitor was the number six, and they would be like, what?
01:04:55.000 Like you weren't able to see that.
01:04:57.000 I'm probably bastardizing the word vibration, but you can measure the vibration around you and basically measure the matrix.
01:05:05.000 All you need to know is where something is, how much of it there is, and what it is.
01:05:09.000 And then you can map that onto a three-dimensional grid on a XYZ axis and build the matrix.
01:05:15.000 So if you're feeling the vibration of the matrix, you may be able to calculate what everything is that's causing that vibration.
01:05:22.000 And maybe on some subtle level, people are picking up on that.
01:05:24.000 Because how else would you see a six on top of a monitor?
01:05:28.000 They would have, like, cards and stuff with information on it that could only be seen from looking down.
01:05:32.000 Yeah, they did studies.
01:05:33.000 And there would be people who would be like, I saw this card and it said these things, and they'd be like, wow.
01:05:39.000 I was trying to help solve a serial killer case a few years ago.
01:05:43.000 The Long Island Serial Killer.
01:05:46.000 And through that, I was talking to some cops who used people who tried remote viewing to find bodies.
01:05:51.000 Because this particular killer left like a basically a graveyard in Long Island Body parts all over the place that would match with other parts of Long Island It was and parts that were there for like one part They found a torso in the middle of Long Island and they found the hands 30 years later.
01:06:07.000 Whoa Yeah, but there was a guy in Norway and a guy I think in Jersey who were trying to like find You know remote view, you know and the guy in Norway supposedly according to the reports out there.
01:06:19.000 I talk to him, he helped find a body.
01:06:20.000 And just sitting in a room, just like doing what he does.
01:06:23.000 I try to reach out to him to help find some, some people.
01:06:27.000 Cause we still don't know who some of the victims are.
01:06:29.000 But like he gave them information.
01:06:32.000 Doesn't that person just become a suspect at that point?
01:06:37.000 Where's the body at?
01:06:38.000 I can tell where the body is.
01:06:39.000 Yeah, I had this great source and now he's in jail.
01:06:41.000 I don't know if I told this before, you should check out the Isdal Woman and the Talmud Shud Case.
01:06:47.000 Yeah, you did.
01:06:48.000 It's on the list.
01:06:49.000 The Ice Woman of Norway, dude.
01:06:51.000 It's a crazy story.
01:06:52.000 What was that deal?
01:06:53.000 So a woman was found dead of smoke inhalation with a bunch of passports or something.
01:06:58.000 And there's a bunch of questions about who she was, how she died.
01:07:01.000 And I think the prevailing theory is that she was a Mossad agent tracking down Nazis.
01:07:06.000 And one of the Nazis she was tracking down to assassinate got the best of her.
01:07:10.000 Oh, that's good.
01:07:10.000 Crazy stories, dude.
01:07:11.000 Yeah, no, we're getting to it.
01:07:13.000 This is what's really crazy, is like, I think about history, I think about stories like that, and I'm like, you know what the craziest thing is?
01:07:21.000 A large portion of our history is probably the result of a deep conspiracy we'll never know about.
01:07:27.000 True history is probably long forgotten and long lost because you can look at it today.
01:07:32.000 A news article will come out and they'll say something that's like technically the truth.
01:07:37.000 And then I'll give you a good example.
01:07:39.000 Newsweek wrote about the Trump supporters wanting to secede and the Biden voters also agreeing.
01:07:43.000 And they said Trump voters want the country to break apart.
01:07:47.000 What they didn't include was like, yeah, but 41% of Biden voters agreeing is like a substantive number.
01:07:52.000 So it's not only Trump supporters, but history will record the framing of it.
01:07:57.000 So I think back to like, you know, there are a lot of people who are like, I don't appreciate how you said this about this person because it makes it sound like X when it's more like Y. And some people just disagree on framing.
01:08:06.000 And then you look back at history, history being written by the winners.
01:08:09.000 It's not just that.
01:08:10.000 It's like.
01:08:12.000 You know, we hear these famous quotes, Benjamin Franklin, it is better than 100 guilty persons escape than one innocent person suffer.
01:08:18.000 And he could have, maybe what he said or wrote down was substantially more crass or crude.
01:08:21.000 And then later on, someone who knows and loved him said, I'm going to remove that swear word and clean it up.
01:08:27.000 And so, so there's a lot we think we know about history.
01:08:30.000 Our modern perception is based upon what is most likely fabrications and exaggerations.
01:08:34.000 I have a good example of this.
01:08:36.000 So, and I mentioned the skeleton in our first episode that's out now.
01:08:42.000 In my town, we have a missing skeleton problem.
01:08:45.000 And by that, I mean there's one missing skeleton.
01:08:51.000 Well, we don't know technically if it's more than one.
01:08:53.000 But anyway, there's this local legend of a woman named Margaret Corbin who was fighting in the revolution.
01:09:01.000 She was actually on the sidelines as her husband was manning a cannon.
01:09:05.000 And the story goes that he was murdered.
01:09:08.000 They got him.
01:09:09.000 She took over the cannon.
01:09:10.000 She started firing.
01:09:13.000 She became a prisoner of war and Margaret came back to my town.
01:09:18.000 She had horrible wounds from being shot and just kind of lived out her life.
01:09:25.000 We have like a statue for her.
01:09:28.000 We buried her in this amazing place in West Point, New York with the Military Academy.
01:09:32.000 But she wasn't always buried at West Point.
01:09:35.000 She used to be buried in the neighboring town, Highland Falls.
01:09:38.000 And in like 1920 or so, the Daughters of the American Revolution wanted to honor her.
01:09:43.000 And so they only, by hearsay, there was a steamboat captain, Captain Faroe, who said, I know where she's buried.
01:09:50.000 It's right here.
01:09:51.000 Everyone knows.
01:09:52.000 So they dug up the body.
01:09:53.000 They had the surgeon from West Point go and look at the skeleton and say, yep, looks like the description of Margaret.
01:10:00.000 And then they put her in her new grave.
01:10:04.000 I happen to know the guys who were fixing a wall by her new grave.
01:10:08.000 This is 2016, or maybe 2017.
01:10:11.000 They accidentally disturbed her grave and they had to, and then bones came up out of the ground.
01:10:17.000 And they had to do the whole clean it up situation and some scientists from Binghamton University came down and they got the bones and they said, this is a man.
01:10:25.000 This is not a woman.
01:10:27.000 And it's not as old as you think.
01:10:30.000 So what happened, right?
01:10:31.000 I did a lot of digging.
01:10:34.000 I'm pretty close with our historian.
01:10:36.000 She has all the records.
01:10:38.000 And I found all the records dating back between the Daughters of the American Revolution and the superintendent of West Point and some other people because another church wanted her remains.
01:10:47.000 And they just started making up a history of her.
01:10:51.000 They said, well, she was born in Ireland and this person didn't know she was born in Highland Falls.
01:10:54.000 You're like, okay, well just, just go with Highland Falls then.
01:10:57.000 So like that starts to erode this whole story.
01:11:00.000 Cause like, well, if that's not the case, then what about the cannon case?
01:11:04.000 So we don't know who the skeleton is and we don't know where she actually is.
01:11:07.000 Right?
01:11:08.000 What if she's never existed?
01:11:09.000 I don't think she existed because if I'm driving here, there's a Molly Corbin, right?
01:11:14.000 Look up Molly Corbin.
01:11:15.000 It's the same story.
01:11:20.000 I think a lot of little towns just made their own version, and it could have happened.
01:11:25.000 You know what you should write about?
01:11:27.000 Resurrection Mary.
01:11:28.000 You know the story of Resurrection Mary?
01:11:29.000 No.
01:11:30.000 No.
01:11:30.000 Do you?
01:11:31.000 Oh, this is Chicago folklore, man.
01:11:34.000 And you're probably going to debunk it, because the urban legends were told Are so different from reality, but I grew up on the south side.
01:11:42.000 Uh, I live just off of Archer Avenue and Archer goes from the city Southwest towards, uh, the suburbs becomes old Archer Road and then you get into like, um, I think it's Willowbrook.
01:11:55.000 So the story is And you you you you'll probably look it up and hear something different from what we are told but we were told when we were younger is there's Oh, this is i'll tell you my personal experience, too.
01:12:04.000 Mm-hmm There was a long time ago, a young woman went to the Willowbrook Dance Hall off of Archer Avenue.
01:12:10.000 It's very wooded.
01:12:11.000 It's like a forest-preserving area.
01:12:13.000 And something happened where she decided to walk home.
01:12:16.000 She was upset with her date or something.
01:12:17.000 And as she was walking home, she got struck by a car.
01:12:20.000 It was a hit-and-run.
01:12:20.000 I think it was like the 50s, they say.
01:12:21.000 Something like that.
01:12:23.000 And she died.
01:12:24.000 Since then, this has been a vanishing hitchhiker story.
01:12:28.000 That people have said they've been driving down the road and they see a young blonde woman wearing a dress, hitchhiking, or asking for a ride, and there's a whole bunch of weird things that happen.
01:12:36.000 Like, they'll see her walking forward and they'll see her from behind.
01:12:39.000 And then when they drive past her and look back, she has no face.
01:12:42.000 Or there are stories that a young blonde woman in a dress will ask for a ride home and get in the vehicle, and then when they're driving, the driver will say, like, okay, now where do I go?
01:12:50.000 And they'll look and there's no one there anymore.
01:12:52.000 One story was that, I think it was a cab driver, had picked up a young blonde woman off Archer Avenue, because these stories stretch all the way into the city.
01:12:58.000 Said that she gave she said just keep driving down archer and I'll tell you when to stop
01:13:02.000 When he eventually was coming up to resurrection cemetery, which is on Archer as well
01:13:07.000 She said here here and then he pulls over to stop looks over and see the cemetery and says there's nothing here
01:13:12.000 He looks and she's gone. Now. Here's what gets crazy This part is the urban legend part, which I'm pretty sure
01:13:17.000 can be debunked. But this is what we are told growing up in Chicago
01:13:20.000 that one point somebody who was working the cemetery saw
01:13:25.000 Burns like molding in the gates of the cemetery as if hands were squeezing the gates
01:13:30.000 trying to pull them apart like they were trying to get in and
01:13:34.000 And what had happened was they said, no, no, this is just a car, you know, a truck accidentally backed into it and dented the bars, so we're going to get it fixed.
01:13:42.000 The urban legend they tell, again, this is probably all apocryphal, just kids scaring each other, was that after they got it fixed, one day people started to notice the paint was coming off and the bends were coming back.
01:13:53.000 Like she was still trying to get in.
01:13:55.000 But I'll tell you my story, man.
01:13:57.000 When I started, I was in Chicago and I was with some friends and I was like, we should actually do an investigation and ask people if there's been any sightings.
01:14:04.000 So I lived near Midway Airport, and the stories actually go well past my house, and this is in the city proper.
01:14:11.000 Now, you gotta drive like, I don't know, maybe like 10 miles down Archer.
01:14:16.000 It's a straight road, then it slowly starts winding, and then becomes very much a forest preserve.
01:14:21.000 And so to hear a ghost story in a city like this, you're like, the airport's right there!
01:14:26.000 But there were stories of people finding her and picking her up, so we decided we're gonna go and go to the area.
01:14:32.000 Because there's this cafe we used to hang out at all the time called the Ashberry, which is also, they say, is haunted.
01:14:37.000 Like, people have been pushed down the stairs and stuff, creepy stuff.
01:14:39.000 It's also in a very wooded area.
01:14:41.000 So we start asking questions and then at some point right around the time we're digging into this, the Willowbrook
01:14:48.000 Dance Hall where the story started burnt to the ground.
01:14:51.000 And it burnt to the ground in October like just before Halloween or something so we were like, dude we're so
01:14:55.000 freaked out and a lot of people didn't want to talk.
01:14:58.000 They were like, I don't want to be involved in this.
01:15:00.000 And I was like, they probably get so much of this, people coming and asking them questions.
01:15:04.000 But there's another story from Chicago, and it's the Midlothian Turnpike.
01:15:08.000 You want to know about this one?
01:15:10.000 Yeah.
01:15:10.000 The legend we're told in Chicago is that it's where Al Capone dumped all the bodies.
01:15:14.000 And so it's considered to be like it's called bachelors Grove.
01:15:17.000 I think that's what it's called.
01:15:18.000 It's been a long time since I've but Creepy stuff happens there not just because the legend of like Al Capone would go to the bog and dump a body where it would sink But because of those legends and the ghost stories Creepos would go there and do creepy stuff like chicken slaughtering and there are stories of like People like teenagers when we are teenagers people would be like yo, let's go to bachelors Grove Grove and it's like off the Midlothian Turnpike and then we'd
01:15:44.000 go there and I've been there.
01:15:46.000 Scary and creepy.
01:15:47.000 And they try to like trick kids and go into going the wrong path so they don't actually
01:15:50.000 go to the it's an old cemetery.
01:15:52.000 And there are stories where like people would go there and there would be like some kind
01:15:58.000 of I don't think it's right to say devil worshiper because Satanists aren't like cloak wearing
01:16:03.000 occultists but occultists would be there like killing chickens and then spilling blood and
01:16:09.000 like doing creepy stuff.
01:16:11.000 So like the scariest thing about the story is not the ghosts.
01:16:13.000 They say it's one of the most haunted locations in the country, maybe even the world.
01:16:16.000 The scariest stuff to me was whenever, like, someone would be like, you wanna go there?
01:16:19.000 And I think I've only been there, like, once or twice.
01:16:21.000 I was more worried about, like, dude, there's gonna be some psychopath here with, like, a machete who's, like, a creepy occultist waiting for some young dumb teenagers.
01:16:30.000 There's a lot of famous stories about it, though, where, like, some photographer for the local newspaper took a picture, and when they got the negative, when they, you know, like, published the photo or whatever it's called, there was a woman sitting on a tombstone in the photo.
01:16:46.000 And the photo, you can look it up.
01:16:47.000 It's a very famous photo.
01:16:48.000 Oh, wow.
01:16:49.000 Dude, there's so much awesome, like, ghost stuff.
01:16:52.000 But those two stories are in very similar locations, too.
01:16:55.000 So, yeah.
01:16:56.000 I want to go.
01:16:57.000 Yeah, I love that.
01:16:57.000 Like sometimes, like the man who has been abducted, when he moved to this town he's in now, he didn't know it was a hotspot for UFOs.
01:17:05.000 It's kind of like New York's Roswell.
01:17:06.000 I know.
01:17:07.000 And it's when he went there, he opened the paper and there's a clipping that says, like, have you seen a UFO?
01:17:14.000 It was for the support group that he would eventually take over.
01:17:16.000 Wow.
01:17:17.000 But I think a lot of those places, whether or not something did happen there, they attract the energy of people who want it to happen.
01:17:23.000 And it's like a weird, ghoulish accomplishment.
01:17:26.000 Could you imagine being an alien and you're like, you know, you've got your job, your university assigns you to go research these 15 psychic humans to understand how they're psychic.
01:17:35.000 You're explaining my life.
01:17:37.000 And you're flying in your saucer and then you look down at your tracking system and you go, Hey, Jim, all the little red dots are coming together.
01:17:46.000 What's going on?
01:17:47.000 And they're like, it makes our job easier, I guess.
01:17:49.000 And you're like, yeah, all the little people have gone to the same place.
01:17:51.000 And they're like, perfect.
01:17:52.000 There you go.
01:17:53.000 We'll save gas.
01:17:54.000 What do they have, like ley lines?
01:17:55.000 Have you studied ley lines?
01:17:56.000 Yes, that is what this town is all about.
01:17:59.000 Yeah.
01:17:59.000 Explain those.
01:18:00.000 Well, I don't know too much about them, but I, cause I, I've just started writing about this now, but they believe that there's the ley lines go across the earth and they're like energy hotspots, like Stonehenge is one this, this town happens to be another.
01:18:12.000 And that's where they think extraterrestrials might congregate because it may be quartz that might have something to do with it.
01:18:19.000 Um, but they believe that if you look at the map of like places where I see a lot of UFOs, they fall on these ley lines.
01:18:26.000 And then you got the Bermuda Triangle, which and then is like almost on the opposite side of the earth of the Marianas Trench, I think, which is in the Pacific.
01:18:32.000 It's like the two deepest points, two of the deepest points.
01:18:34.000 So I think what's happened is there's less there's less land between the center of the earth and the sky in those areas that are deep.
01:18:40.000 So there's more water, which is more conductive to electricity.
01:18:43.000 So I think that's why you get these electrical weirdnesses in those areas.
01:18:47.000 Maybe there was there was a story I was reading or maybe it was just like some theories about I believe this is true.
01:18:53.000 There's areas where gravity is different on the planet due to the shape of the planet.
01:18:57.000 And it's like mostly unnoticeable by humans, but it's measurable.
01:19:00.000 I could be wrong about this.
01:19:02.000 And then I was reading also that more magnetism is stronger or weaker.
01:19:05.000 And that's obvious because magnetic poles are stronger in certain areas.
01:19:09.000 So that creates effects that humans understand because it's so massive that they make assumptions about everything being the same.
01:19:16.000 And, you know, I think a better example would be like altitude.
01:19:19.000 You know, people don't understand altitude.
01:19:21.000 When if you if you are from a coastal city and then you go to Denver, you're gonna be vomiting.
01:19:26.000 Oh, yeah.
01:19:27.000 Try and dance.
01:19:27.000 Go out dancing in Denver if you've never been up there.
01:19:30.000 But so think about how that what that means if you're like on the equator and how gravity might be different or if you're near the poles and magnetism might be different.
01:19:37.000 Technically, you're spinning faster at the equator.
01:19:39.000 It's moving quicker because, you know, it's further away from the center.
01:19:42.000 Yeah.
01:19:44.000 No, you're making me think like, uh, people need to turn their attention more to underwater stuff.
01:19:50.000 Oh yeah.
01:19:50.000 The reverse of altitude.
01:19:52.000 Do you see all those temples underwater off Indonesia?
01:19:55.000 That flood nailed.
01:19:56.000 And if you look at Google maps and you zoom out or any map program, you see like the light blue around the, around a lot of the landmass.
01:20:03.000 That's where those used to be above water before the flood, before, before the water levels rose.
01:20:07.000 I think it was at the last 13,000 year old flood.
01:20:10.000 In one of our stories that's coming out soon, I just, sorry real quick, on top of a mountain in New York, one of my, the sources of the story used to pick seashells up, you know?
01:20:19.000 Yeah.
01:20:19.000 Huge flood.
01:20:20.000 Gravity, gravity is absolutely, I googled it, absolutely uneven on earth.
01:20:20.000 Yeah.
01:20:23.000 And they say, Mount Nevado, Huascaran in Peru has the lowest gravitational acceleration at 9.7639 meters per second squared, while the highest is the surface of the Arctic Ocean at 9.8337 meters squared.
01:20:38.000 Novato was a bit surprising because it's about a thousand kilometers south of the equator.
01:20:43.000 So yeah, there are areas where you probably won't notice, but I was reading something about when they were doing experiments with gyroscopes and atoms and things like that, noticed serious differences in how the results are based on the different gravity.
01:20:56.000 I wonder if they looked at people's bone density, if it's changed, if it's better in one place with less gravity.
01:21:00.000 I would imagine.
01:21:01.000 It's gotta be.
01:21:02.000 They told me there was a gravitational constant growing up.
01:21:04.000 9.86 meters per second?
01:21:06.000 9.8 meters per second squared?
01:21:07.000 No.
01:21:07.000 Well, they say it's uneven now.
01:21:09.000 Of course.
01:21:10.000 I think the Large Hadron Collider made a problem with gravity on this planet.
01:21:15.000 Did you follow that story back in the day?
01:21:17.000 I'll probably write about this at one point, but there was a lawsuit by some scientists to stop the Large Hadron Collider, the Super Collider.
01:21:23.000 I remember that.
01:21:24.000 You know that?
01:21:25.000 Because they believed that black holes would fall to the Earth and cause a sphere of strangeness.
01:21:30.000 That's what they called it.
01:21:31.000 No one argued that there wasn't going to be black holes falling to the center of Earth.
01:21:36.000 They just said they're not going to swallow the Earth whole.
01:21:38.000 Yeah, well, the singularities exist for such a short amount of time that they were like, it's not going to be a problem.
01:21:44.000 The lawsuit was like, they're going to amass and maybe not swallow Earth, but turn us into the sphere of strangeness.
01:21:51.000 So what does that mean?
01:21:52.000 What is it?
01:21:52.000 The sphere of strangeness.
01:21:53.000 Strangeness is like, they said it would turn us into almost like wavy strings of cosmic soup.
01:22:01.000 And sometimes I'm like, maybe that's what happened.
01:22:05.000 That's what our digital avatars are.
01:22:07.000 We're in the stringy cosmic soup, but we're online looking nice like this.
01:22:11.000 When it comes to ghosts, I grew up next to a graveyard and in my backyard there was a fence and you could crawl under it and then you're in the graveyard.
01:22:19.000 So we would stand on top of our clubhouse and look at the graveyard.
01:22:22.000 I used to lay in the graveyard, hung out there, and I never got any weirdness.
01:22:25.000 If it was the chillest, I also had no magic power.
01:22:29.000 I was not You were vibrating properly.
01:22:31.000 I was vibrating the whole time and I didn't know it.
01:22:32.000 I didn't believe any of this magic crap until my twenties.
01:22:35.000 Would it be funny if that out of all of the people who have ever come to the Cast Castle, the one person who has no psychic abilities is Ian?
01:22:41.000 I think that might be true, yeah.
01:22:42.000 No, the weed changed everything.
01:22:45.000 But then I started, I'm really into science, and I started to hear about the phantom DNA stuff.
01:22:50.000 And I don't know if you guys have studied this.
01:22:51.000 This is a little bit of an overlay of what it is.
01:22:53.000 Basically, they take wild electrons, they put DNA, the electrons form to the DNA, they remove the DNA, and the electrons stay as if the DNA is still there.
01:23:01.000 So if someone is living on the side of the road and suddenly struck by a car and destroyed, and now they're no longer there, there might still be energy there in that shape.
01:23:08.000 So you're proving my sphere of strangeness.
01:23:10.000 It's evidence.
01:23:10.000 Stop proof with phantom DNA.
01:23:12.000 I got some hypotheses for you.
01:23:14.000 Oh boy.
01:23:15.000 Ghosts.
01:23:16.000 Here's one thought.
01:23:18.000 What if time is not linear, but more like a fabric that is, in a way we can't really grasp or understand, moves around?
01:23:26.000 What if, let me see if I can, I don't want to use that.
01:23:30.000 Well, I'll just try and use my fingers.
01:23:32.000 What if you have this line of time, right?
01:23:34.000 And it's like the past and the future.
01:23:36.000 All of a sudden, as we can't perceive it, time is wrapping around and then crosses through itself really quickly.
01:23:43.000 So you're standing in a building that's been around since the 1700s, and the 1700s quickly pass through the year 2000, so the building stays the exact same, because it's just time, not space, and then all of a sudden, for a blink of an eye, you see a man standing there, semi-transparent, wearing old colonial clothes, and he goes, and then you're like, What's that? And you start telling everybody and then they
01:24:07.000 say yes, this building's been haunted since it was built Why an old man once said that you know, here's a photo of
01:24:13.000 me like that's the guy I saw and they're like Yes, the people who live here you see ghosts too. Why he
01:24:18.000 saw you wearing strange clothes going. Yeah, I grew up in a really old house
01:24:22.000 I feel that way.
01:24:22.000 I feel like if I, cause I, we have an episode coming out about this house, but when I saw the shadow ghost situation, I thought it was that type of situation.
01:24:30.000 Like we were each other's ghosts, you know, he saw me as the ghost.
01:24:34.000 I saw it as the ghost.
01:24:35.000 That might be, you might be onto something, because if this phantom DNA thing is legit, which it seems to be, that might, it might not have anything to do with time.
01:24:42.000 You may just be able to pull this pattern into reality based on your behavior, based on you.
01:24:47.000 Well, so what I'm saying is like, if in the year 1980 and the year 2000, the building is almost identical, because it's been there for, you know, 50 years and so those 20 years.
01:24:58.000 But the only thing that's different is that at this point, there was one person standing in one point and one person standing in another point.
01:25:04.000 And if they passed through each other, the building wouldn't change at all.
01:25:07.000 Everything would look relatively the same.
01:25:08.000 You might see weird shifting in style or something, but you'd see this person very briefly, like a shadow person or a ghost.
01:25:15.000 And you're like, a person?
01:25:16.000 They were wearing old clothes.
01:25:17.000 And they would be like, yeah, there was a person who used to live here who looked just like that.
01:25:23.000 So the aliens are us in the future interacting with our present selves.
01:25:26.000 And the ghosts are our ancestors.
01:25:28.000 But it's not their dead soul or anything.
01:25:32.000 It's just time passing through itself.
01:25:36.000 So here's my other fun story.
01:25:39.000 I started thinking about this a long time ago.
01:25:41.000 Why is it that old buildings are haunted?
01:25:44.000 If we're not going to operate under the assumption that it's people's spirits trapped in the building, what could it possibly be?
01:25:50.000 And so I was hanging out with my friends, as I mentioned, playing Knights of the Old Republic, and they're stoned off their asses, and we're talking about time.
01:25:55.000 And I was like, what if there are interdimensional beings?
01:26:00.000 You know, Alex Jones says there are.
01:26:01.000 But let's say there's beings that live in five dimensions.
01:26:03.000 We live in four.
01:26:04.000 We have all the spatial dimensions and then time, but we can't control time.
01:26:08.000 Let's say there's a being that lives in five dimensions.
01:26:10.000 It controls all four dimensions, including time.
01:26:14.000 To these creatures, time is perceived like space.
01:26:17.000 If that were the case, then a long amount of time would be a large amount of space to them.
01:26:23.000 So if you look at a building that's built in the 1800s and was there for 150 years, that's a big, big building.
01:26:30.000 So these interdimensional beings are like, I would like to occupy this massive amount of space.
01:26:37.000 I have 150 years to move through.
01:26:40.000 Each moment of time would be a different bedroom.
01:26:44.000 So you have a one bedroom?
01:26:45.000 Yeah, well, how many seconds exist, right?
01:26:47.000 And that could be hundreds of thousands of spaces for them to occupy.
01:26:52.000 The reason you never see them is because they can see you and they know what you're looking at and when you're looking at any point of time.
01:26:58.000 They just don't interact with you in that specific amount of time.
01:27:01.000 And because they move through time as if it was space, there's never a point at which their history would be static.
01:27:08.000 So you could literally never perceive them.
01:27:10.000 Except at one point...
01:27:12.000 They're like, look, Johnny, I found this really, really large building.
01:27:16.000 It's 150 years big, but around the last 50 years, there's a whole bunch of people moving around and occupying it.
01:27:23.000 So here's what we'll do.
01:27:24.000 Let's go back 20 years, bang some pots and pans and smash some glass, and then there'll be no one there for the next 20 years.
01:27:30.000 Whoa.
01:27:31.000 Yeah.
01:27:32.000 And so they're clearing out the past.
01:27:34.000 That's good.
01:27:34.000 Yeah, I think of fifth dimensional behavior as something that can do everything at once.
01:27:39.000 So like, I want to go left, and I want to go right, but I have to pick.
01:27:42.000 But a fifth dimensional being goes in every direction at once.
01:27:45.000 Or technically neither.
01:27:47.000 Yes, it has the ability to go in every direction at once.
01:27:49.000 It would be like saying you can go left, right, forward, or backwards, up or down, and they can go bop-o and beep-o.
01:27:57.000 Man, I think of time and space as the same thing, according to Einstein.
01:28:01.000 Space-time, he calls it.
01:28:03.000 It really is the same thing.
01:28:05.000 And then how many dimensions are there?
01:28:07.000 You know?
01:28:08.000 M-theory, crazy stuff, what we think we know.
01:28:11.000 I think there's a lot more out there.
01:28:12.000 I think we just keep on thinking we know what's out there and something like I was thinking about frontiers and they like, uh, I was thinking about Puritans in Salem and like when they came here, uh, they were so afraid of the woods.
01:28:23.000 It was this like wild evil thing.
01:28:27.000 You have to kind of tame.
01:28:29.000 And, um, so that was their frontier and it was populated with like myth and ghosts and demons.
01:28:36.000 And we've kind of taken over woods now and.
01:28:38.000 Now space is our aliens and we don't know about it, but then we'll conquer that at some point and then it won't be so ghoulish.
01:28:45.000 And I was like, are the ghouls receding back into the shadows because there's more humans now?
01:28:49.000 Or are our minds just, our imaginations run wild?
01:28:52.000 Well, let me ask you what you think about this.
01:28:54.000 I was on my roof meditating and I think there was THC involved and I was just feeling my magnetic field around me and meditating and I dropped my magnetic field and gazed out into space and I felt the presence of a wolf man sense me and want to eat me.
01:29:08.000 From up there.
01:29:10.000 And I feel like I revealed myself to it.
01:29:12.000 Maybe it's just like, I'm a Puritan in the woods with, with, you know, whatever you call it, like superstition or, or maybe I sensed a wolf animal that ate mushrooms and I was definitely smoking too much.
01:29:25.000 But maybe the smoking, like the DMT can open up a portal.
01:29:28.000 That makes you a little more sensitive to other dimensions.
01:29:31.000 You know, like the machine elves.
01:29:32.000 I haven't met them, but I believe they're there if you've seen them.
01:29:36.000 It's all like your reality is, unfortunately, whatever you make it when it comes to those things.
01:29:41.000 Yeah, we were talking about a short story or comic about Ian.
01:29:46.000 Accidentally mixing monoatomic gold with DMT, which creates the superstructure which actually allows him to actually transport beyond the veil instead of just seeing through it.
01:29:56.000 In 2007 I was doing crazy YouTube videos and I started getting, I was connecting with anyone that wanted to talk to me and people, this one guy called me and talked to me for like two hours without stopping about monoatomic gold and DMT and apparently that is the gateway that the ancient Egyptians would use to see, but it's all about the mono, not colloidal gold, you need the monoatomic because that goes through the blood-brain barrier and together.
01:30:15.000 I was talking to someone.
01:30:18.000 Have you heard of like the mystery schools or mystery colleges?
01:30:21.000 I was talking to someone about she said she had witnessed one mystery school where they open a portal and they bring beasts through it and she said she saw beasts like other interdimensional beasts.
01:30:35.000 Or bees.
01:30:35.000 Maybe I misheard.
01:30:37.000 She said it was like a big dog type thing that they just unleash and there's people unleashing these beasts through like a stargaze, what I envisioned.
01:30:45.000 Did they have rings that went over two fingers and they would go like this?
01:30:48.000 I should ask.
01:30:49.000 No, I saw the Ghostbuster dog that takes out Rick Moranis.
01:30:54.000 Oh yeah, what was that thing?
01:30:56.000 I don't remember that.
01:30:57.000 Was that in the second one?
01:30:58.000 No, the first one.
01:30:59.000 Yeah.
01:30:59.000 Oh, yeah, yeah.
01:31:01.000 When the statues came to life.
01:31:02.000 Zool's dogs.
01:31:03.000 Yeah, that was good.
01:31:06.000 So what do you think?
01:31:07.000 It's like wolves started eating mushrooms on another solar system, and then they were the ones that gained thumbs and sentience?
01:31:13.000 I don't know.
01:31:19.000 I think what you saw could be real because you saw it.
01:31:21.000 It's like when people tell me they see Jesus in a pancake.
01:31:24.000 If they believe in Jesus and they believe they saw Jesus in a pancake, then they saw that.
01:31:27.000 So also one of the stories I have to tell is about this guy I knew who was like a just like a crust punk drug addict.
01:31:37.000 And when I met him, he was a devout Christian who lived and worked in a church and did community stuff and youth stuff and he was a skater.
01:31:46.000 And he said that one day he was in the woods and he was partying and he was drinking and doing a bunch of drugs and he went to go take a leak when all of a sudden he felt and heard this powerful voice from within him say, why are you doing this?
01:31:58.000 You need to stop and fix your life.
01:32:00.000 And he freaked out and was like, what's happening to me right now?
01:32:03.000 And then that's when he turned his life around.
01:32:05.000 He found Jesus, he found God, and he became a productive member of society.
01:32:10.000 And, like, he was a good dude.
01:32:12.000 He was, like, a nice guy, he was responsible, he was working hard.
01:32:15.000 And I was like, you know, I'm not religious, but I was like, you tell me a story about someone who's on the wrong path, and then they have this moment, and it makes their lives better, it makes them happier, it makes them more responsible, it makes them a positive, you know, individual.
01:32:27.000 I'm like, that's a good story.
01:32:29.000 But also, I thought about it somewhat differently.
01:32:31.000 I was like, Have you ever seen the documentary, What the Bleep Do We Know?
01:32:36.000 Yeah.
01:32:37.000 That's good.
01:32:37.000 It's weird.
01:32:38.000 You should see it, though.
01:32:39.000 I think it's got a lot of crackpot stuff in it, but they do some things that I think are helpful for people's perspective.
01:32:46.000 He talks about Flatland, a universe of only two dimensions, where people can only move left, right, up, and down.
01:32:51.000 They have no concept of left, right, front, and back.
01:32:54.000 They have no concept of up or down.
01:32:56.000 We, with Up and Down, look down on them and can see everything.
01:33:00.000 So he says, imagine there's a Flatlander living in their home.
01:33:04.000 And you then look down over their home in a dimension which they don't even know exists.
01:33:10.000 And then you speak.
01:33:12.000 And you say, hello there, little Flatlander.
01:33:15.000 But your voice goes right into the middle of their being.
01:33:17.000 And they hear your voice coming from within them.
01:33:19.000 And they're like, what is this?
01:33:21.000 Are you God?
01:33:22.000 And you're like, no, I'm in a higher dimension.
01:33:24.000 And then you can look in their house and say, in your closet is a coat and a pair of shoes, in your kitchen I can see, and they're like, you see everything!
01:33:31.000 You're omniscient!
01:33:32.000 It's like, I just experience a different dimension than you.
01:33:35.000 So when this guy told me that story, I was like, dude, that's just like the story in What the Belief Do We Know about the two-dimensional beings.
01:33:42.000 Maybe you as an interdimensional being, maybe angels and demons are interdimensional beings.
01:33:46.000 I think it depends what your proclivities are, right?
01:33:48.000 Like my alien abductee friend, if he was Maybe leaning a little more religious, he could interpret that as, you know, being taken into another realm, like heaven or something.
01:33:57.000 Right?
01:33:58.000 But then I think of like the prophets in the Bible, they all were looked at as crazy people.
01:34:02.000 Not all of them.
01:34:03.000 Some of them were like dirty, crazy.
01:34:04.000 They kind of sounded like schizophrenics.
01:34:06.000 Yeah.
01:34:06.000 But they were plugged in to what the word of God was.
01:34:09.000 And also, you know, supposedly the word of God would tear you to shreds.
01:34:13.000 So your voice coming down to someone, they could interpret it as that.
01:34:16.000 Like in, uh, Dogma.
01:34:17.000 You ever see Dogma?
01:34:18.000 Oh, a long time ago, yeah.
01:34:19.000 Atlantis Morissette is God, and when she talks, bah!
01:34:21.000 Exactly.
01:34:22.000 Another interesting phenomenon of Flatland is if you put a three-dimensional object into the two-dimensional plane of Flatland, they only see, like, a circle.
01:34:31.000 They only see, like, a thin... Part of it.
01:34:33.000 They don't see... And so, it's like seeing a shadow.
01:34:36.000 Yeah, it's like seeing a cross-section when we see these light things and stuff.
01:34:39.000 The way they explain it's very simple.
01:34:41.000 If you had a balloon, and it's, you know, completely round, As it enters the two-dimensional space, what they'll see is a ring slowly expand and then slowly shrink.
01:34:50.000 Like an MRI.
01:34:51.000 Exactly like an MRI.
01:34:53.000 So imagine what that would look like in a third dimension.
01:34:56.000 You would see an object balloon out and then collapse.
01:34:59.000 Oh, and that's what happens with infrared light.
01:35:01.000 One time I woke up from a dream and my phone was at eye level, and I saw the infrared light go into the phone.
01:35:06.000 It was real distorting, and then I felt my brain kind of twist, but it was contracting.
01:35:11.000 It looked like it was contracting.
01:35:12.000 This is really interesting in Interstellar.
01:35:15.000 They see the black hole, or like the wormhole, and he's like, it's a sphere.
01:35:20.000 And they're like, what's a hole, you know, in three dimensional space?
01:35:23.000 It would be a sphere.
01:35:24.000 And like, that's crazy for us to even try and think about.
01:35:27.000 You know, the perception is what's going to change.
01:35:29.000 Once we get access to other dimensions or going to space, human perception will change in the way people think.
01:35:35.000 Oh man, there's so much crazy stuff to talk about in this regard.
01:35:37.000 Like in Star Trek, for instance, the problem I've always had is, and someone super chatted us saying that, you know, in my ghost time theory, I'm forgetting that the solar system itself is moving, so the house is in the same place.
01:35:48.000 And I'm like, no, I get that.
01:35:49.000 I get that.
01:35:49.000 But, you know, maybe it's time in a small pocket.
01:35:52.000 But anyway, in Star Trek, for instance, If you're on a planet in a different part of the, you know, different solar system, where the planets are moving at different speeds, time dilation would mean there could be infinitely different speeds occurring between Earth and those planets.
01:36:08.000 I shouldn't say infinitely, but like dramatically different.
01:36:10.000 And so that's something they don't factor in.
01:36:11.000 They say, oh, because of warp speed, time dilation doesn't affect them.
01:36:14.000 Yeah, but a planet that's moving at, you know, X, you know, kilometers per second versus Earth at Y kilometers per second will be experiencing time very differently, and time will pass slower or more quickly for one of the other planets.
01:36:25.000 And regarding to what that guy said about the solar system moving so the house is in a different area, if firstly the the phantom DNA thing might just be able, because what I noticed about electrons, they seem to be able to spin down and disappear and reappear in another area.
01:36:38.000 They like, They'll turn into subatomic particles.
01:36:40.000 So it's like, it's not that they're moving, but it's like that the vibration is no longer vibrating there.
01:36:45.000 Now it's vibrating here.
01:36:46.000 And I think that it might have to do with three dimensions.
01:36:49.000 It like attaches to the third dimension.
01:36:51.000 It doesn't really matter where it is.
01:36:52.000 Yeah.
01:36:53.000 Let's go to Super Chats!
01:36:54.000 And we'll take some questions from the audience.
01:36:57.000 If you haven't already, smash that like button.
01:36:59.000 Thanks for hanging out on this Friday night.
01:37:01.000 And become a member at TimCast.com.
01:37:02.000 And don't forget, in the description below is the YouTube channel for the very new Tales from the Inverted World.
01:37:08.000 It's going to be amazing because there's going to be books, there's going to be the podcast, there's going to be the member hangouts where people talk about these crazy ideas.
01:37:16.000 And so you'll definitely want to subscribe to that and check it out.
01:37:18.000 If that's what you're into, let's read.
01:37:20.000 Harry To says, please have your animation team make a fight between Joe Rogan and Cenk.
01:37:25.000 Pretty please.
01:37:27.000 If you guys are listening to the show right now, get in the private chat and just let Kent know, unless Kent you're watching, that, you know, take some audio clips from the Young Turks and from Joe Rogan and then... Give me an off-the-top-ropes Cenk Uygur at some point.
01:37:45.000 All right, Rebel KGF says West Virginia or New Hampshire.
01:37:48.000 What do you guys think?
01:37:48.000 I think West Virginia.
01:37:49.000 West Virginia.
01:37:50.000 I like the warmer.
01:37:52.000 The more south, the better for me.
01:37:53.000 I'm not really into politics.
01:37:54.000 I know it's landlocked, but I'll take West Virginia.
01:37:57.000 But it's a good spot because it's not too hot, not too cold.
01:38:00.000 New Hampshire gets cold.
01:38:02.000 And way earlier.
01:38:03.000 Right.
01:38:04.000 I like it down here.
01:38:06.000 I'm very happy down here.
01:38:07.000 But I think if people aren't interested in the Free State Project, obviously New Hampshire.
01:38:10.000 Yeah, that's interesting.
01:38:11.000 Sounds about like you like snow.
01:38:14.000 Jeremy McDude says, to opine on your show segment on secession, we don't need to secede, we just need state governments to do their jobs and take back power from the federal government.
01:38:22.000 I agree.
01:38:22.000 The states know their people more than elites in DC.
01:38:26.000 Yes, I agree as well.
01:38:26.000 Tenth Amendment.
01:38:27.000 Yeah, Tenth Amendment says if it's not in the Constitution, then defer to the state.
01:38:30.000 Exactly.
01:38:31.000 Always.
01:38:31.000 So what they've been doing is they're like, hey, it's not in the Constitution, let's add it.
01:38:34.000 Right.
01:38:34.000 But what it should be doing is just deferring to the state.
01:38:36.000 All right, IcemanHeatboy says, Love you guys.
01:38:40.000 You talk a ton about being healthy.
01:38:42.000 If anyone wants a great personal trainer in the Baltimore area, or check out some good workouts, visit MalfitLife on YouTube.
01:38:50.000 Keep up the great work, you guys.
01:38:52.000 My resting heart rate's around 55.
01:38:54.000 Oh, that's awesome.
01:38:55.000 Oh, your watch measures it?
01:38:57.000 Yeah.
01:38:57.000 Can I wear it for like 20 seconds and it'll measure me?
01:38:59.000 We have one downstairs.
01:39:00.000 You can just go grab it.
01:39:01.000 Nice.
01:39:01.000 Come on in.
01:39:03.000 Yeah, so like doing the show, my heart rate goes up a little bit because obviously it's like there's some energy, there's some workout here.
01:39:09.000 When I record, this is funny, when I record my normal segments and I talk really fast and I'm all like, it tells me I'm working out.
01:39:15.000 Yeah, it's like workout detected perfect.
01:39:18.000 Yeah, but when I'm just like, you know earlier today I was chilling and eating lunch.
01:39:22.000 I'm like averaging around like 55, which is good.
01:39:24.000 I guess right It should be 40 though, shouldn't it?
01:39:27.000 No, I thought it was like 70 to 111.
01:39:28.000 What's what's what's like the best?
01:39:29.000 Oh The best?
01:39:32.000 Okay, so if you're super fit and healthy, we were watching a patient one time and his heart rate kept going into the 40s and we thought he had a complete heart block and it turned out he was a super fit biker dude.
01:39:41.000 Like all he ever did was ride his bike and I was like, he's just super healthy.
01:39:45.000 Every pump of his heart is like incredibly powerful and it needs to do less.
01:39:48.000 Boom!
01:39:49.000 Yes, exactly.
01:39:51.000 It's very cool.
01:39:52.000 55 is great.
01:39:53.000 You're fit.
01:39:53.000 Yeah, wow.
01:39:54.000 I was stoked on that.
01:39:55.000 I've been skating almost every day now.
01:39:58.000 Do you notice if you eat, does it speed up?
01:40:00.000 Eating better, too.
01:40:02.000 Oh, eating better is way better.
01:40:03.000 If I eat bad, I can feel it.
01:40:05.000 Definitely.
01:40:06.000 If you drink, you can really feel it.
01:40:08.000 Smoking, too.
01:40:08.000 I would smoke on anything, really.
01:40:09.000 It's like carbon.
01:40:11.000 Alright, let's see what we got.
01:40:13.000 That's a good one.
01:40:15.000 Takum says Yuri Besmanov said quote have you ever heard advertising to tell you to consume less not to be a horseshoe
01:40:21.000 theorist But consumerism can lead to big government as well
01:40:24.000 That's a good one Never tell you to go to eat less
01:40:29.000 Although I did see a commercial today on Fox News for a company that's like we used to be known as a tobacco
01:40:34.000 company Now we're a tobacco harm reduction company and I'm like,
01:40:38.000 that's weird reminds me of that scene in Iron Man when
01:40:41.000 Jim Kramer is like Stark says they're not gonna make weapons anymore
01:40:47.000 That's a weapons company that doesn't make weapons!
01:40:49.000 And then he smashes the mug or whatever.
01:40:51.000 Yeah.
01:40:54.000 Justin Bell says, I work for one of the largest grocery distributors on the East Coast.
01:40:57.000 We are 300 understaffed, five to six day weeks for over a year.
01:41:02.000 So burnt out.
01:41:03.000 And people are quitting because they're like, yo, I can't do this.
01:41:07.000 That's a vicious cycle.
01:41:08.000 Or they're getting fired.
01:41:09.000 Yeah.
01:41:10.000 Yes.
01:41:11.000 All right.
01:41:14.000 Shedrick Staley says, first time super chat and army veteran.
01:41:17.000 Do you believe that anyone except veterans that have seen war will have the courage to stand up and pull the trigger when tyrants come to the streets?
01:41:24.000 Um, I think Antifa would go nuts.
01:41:26.000 I think they'd be doing all sorts of insane violence.
01:41:29.000 And I actually think veterans and people on the right would be the more tempered ones, less willing to use violence.
01:41:35.000 Yeah, they have the training.
01:41:36.000 Because like standing up and pulling the trigger is not disciplined, not necessarily discipline.
01:41:40.000 If you want discipline, yeah, I think the military, ex-military is going to know how to stay cool under fire, know when to use it, when not to use it.
01:41:48.000 Yeah.
01:41:50.000 All right.
01:41:50.000 Let's see.
01:41:51.000 Frankie Two Finger says, Tim and Ian casually mentioning that Star Wars blaster bolts move slower than regular bullets and then moving on like it's nothing really didn't number on me the other day.
01:41:59.000 Perception is everything.
01:42:02.000 It's true though!
01:42:03.000 Now we know.
01:42:04.000 Yeah.
01:42:04.000 I think what, what is the, has anyone ever measured the speed of a blaster bolt?
01:42:08.000 No, we got to do it though.
01:42:09.000 It's probably like 500 feet per second.
01:42:12.000 Like it's fast, but you can see it.
01:42:13.000 You know what I mean?
01:42:14.000 True.
01:42:15.000 Yeah.
01:42:15.000 Not that fast.
01:42:17.000 Yeah.
01:42:19.000 James Garlic says, speaking of gold, fun fact, all of the gold in our solar system are remnants from the iron core of the supernova predecessor to our star and solar system.
01:42:29.000 Also, this is why we have an asteroid belt and the, and the Kuiper belt.
01:42:32.000 Oh, cool.
01:42:33.000 I think that the sun at some point experienced what's called a Z pinch, which is where there's like a high, high velocity or something of, of energy buildup.
01:42:33.000 Wow.
01:42:33.000 Yeah.
01:42:40.000 And then there's a static discharge and that it just spewed 28 planetoids.
01:42:46.000 And then they all start ramming into each other.
01:42:47.000 And Jupiter and Saturn have like, they have more heat.
01:42:51.000 They're giving off more heat than they're taking in from the sun.
01:42:53.000 So they're like the leftover star pieces or something.
01:42:57.000 That's good.
01:42:57.000 Huh.
01:42:58.000 Really fascinating.
01:42:59.000 Yeah, it's crazy.
01:43:01.000 Dakota Dad says Dr. Robert Lanza wrote three books on something he calls biocentrism, which states, the universe and reality exists because of human consciousness, not the other way around.
01:43:10.000 Quantum physics for evidence.
01:43:13.000 I've heard a lot of that.
01:43:14.000 And, um, that'd be really, really interesting because think of this.
01:43:18.000 If the universe was actually dependent upon human observation, consciousness, and perception, that would mean that powerful elites who knew that and knew it was true, could manipulate perception and control the universe.
01:43:33.000 It kind of veers into simulation theory, because they talk about observer effect and how, you know, the computer to build a simulation would have to be universe-sized to make the observer effect happen.
01:43:45.000 So, yeah.
01:43:46.000 You could, like, there's that as-above-so-below metaphor where, and I've seen a theory that we're inside of a black hole, our universe that we know of is inside of a black hole.
01:43:54.000 The energy you're feeding in is maybe coming in to the system, but then I'm thinking it's not necessarily three-dimensional, so it might be more like it's appearing around us, like the vacuum is feeding it to us, what we think it is or something.
01:44:07.000 All right.
01:44:07.000 Matthew Fummey says, Rural Oklahoma, in the east-central electric coop has fiber internet, 100 megabits or 1 gigabit up or down.
01:44:15.000 Expand out here as land is near 3K an acre at the moment.
01:44:20.000 3K an acre?
01:44:21.000 I think that's actually way more expensive than West Virginia.
01:44:24.000 That sounds high.
01:44:25.000 Yeah, in like central West Virginia, you can get a hundred acres for a hundred K. Oh.
01:44:25.000 Am I crazy?
01:44:29.000 Yeah, it's like dirt.
01:44:30.000 But I guess the point is they have, they have gigabit.
01:44:32.000 Ah, yeah.
01:44:33.000 There are some, there, New Hampshire, surprisingly, I didn't realize they'd have, um, you know, uh, uh, cheap land, really.
01:44:38.000 But do they have fiber?
01:44:41.000 All right, let's see.
01:44:42.000 Cable Dude says, YouTube keeps ending your stream and sending me to Fox News.
01:44:46.000 Those jerks.
01:44:47.000 Rude.
01:44:47.000 YouTube.
01:44:48.000 We're talking about fun family stuff here, huh?
01:44:48.000 Why?
01:44:50.000 Yeah, we're just chilling.
01:44:51.000 It's just Friday.
01:44:53.000 Jay Liebgott says, what is D60?
01:44:56.000 I see on CastCastle people that are cast members of D60 but can't find any info on it.
01:45:00.000 What is that?
01:45:01.000 I have no idea.
01:45:01.000 Do you know what that is?
01:45:02.000 No, no idea.
01:45:03.000 Weird.
01:45:03.000 Anyway.
01:45:04.000 Maybe those are jokes because like when they title someone they give them joke names or something?
01:45:09.000 It's a Nikon camera.
01:45:10.000 Are we using D60s?
01:45:12.000 No, no we're not.
01:45:15.000 Steven Heinold says, Tim, me and my wife decided to quit, uh, it says quick smoking, but I think it's quick, quit smoking and make a deal.
01:45:22.000 We'd only smoke after adult relations.
01:45:24.000 I feel great and I've never felt better, but my wife is up to three packs a day.
01:45:28.000 Should I be worried?
01:45:30.000 Plus Ian, get a haircut.
01:45:32.000 Never!
01:45:33.000 No, maybe someday.
01:45:34.000 Here you go. Ready to Rumble says, fun fact, if you invested $100 in gold 10 years ago,
01:45:40.000 you'd have $95 today. And if you invested $100 in Bitcoin 10 years ago,
01:45:47.000 you would have $5 million. Yeah.
01:45:51.000 I put a few hundred into Doge towards my last semester of teaching,
01:45:56.000 and I got more from Dogecoin than I did from teaching.
01:45:58.000 Wow.
01:45:59.000 That's incredible.
01:46:00.000 That's incredible.
01:46:02.000 From a semester.
01:46:02.000 Oh my.
01:46:04.000 Dude, here's one.
01:46:04.000 Christopher Thomas.
01:46:06.000 Fellow Chicagoan.
01:46:07.000 Last time my sister went there, Bachelors Grove, she saw dudes dressed in robes and native headdresses.
01:46:13.000 They started approaching the car and she and her friend took off.
01:46:17.000 Wow.
01:46:19.000 Never underestimate a group of people that are all taking psychedelics.
01:46:24.000 The Prick says, how about a story about the Inez statue in Chicago's Graceland Cemetery?
01:46:29.000 Oh, I don't, I think I vaguely remember hearing about that, but I don't know a lot about it.
01:46:33.000 Yeah.
01:46:35.000 Good stuff out of Chicago.
01:46:36.000 It's going on a list.
01:46:37.000 You're going to send me there for a month.
01:46:38.000 Yeah.
01:46:39.000 Ramon, I mean, dude, Chicago's loaded with crazy stuff.
01:46:43.000 History.
01:46:44.000 I think there was like, I could be wrong about this, but they like tore down a cemetery for like expanding an airport or something.
01:46:50.000 I don't know.
01:46:50.000 I don't know.
01:46:50.000 It's a lot.
01:46:51.000 Ramon Galvez says, Tim, look up on YouTube, Jesus stops alien abductions.
01:46:56.000 This topic is known by many alien experts, but they avoid talking about it.
01:46:59.000 Hello from Aurora.
01:47:00.000 Hey, Aurora, Chicagoland area.
01:47:02.000 You ever hear anything like that?
01:47:03.000 No.
01:47:04.000 I like it though.
01:47:05.000 Yeah, like what if people are like aliens are pulling and then like literally Jesus like you know stops them and then saves them.
01:47:10.000 Is that a movie we're gonna write?
01:47:12.000 I could imagine that a strong belief in something might blockade you from perceiving that kind of stuff because I was very skeptical when I was a kid and I never experienced any of it.
01:47:22.000 Now I'm more open to it and now I am experiencing it a little bit more.
01:47:25.000 I thought it was interesting when the Pope came out and said he believed in aliens.
01:47:29.000 That's interesting.
01:47:29.000 That was an interesting conversation.
01:47:30.000 Remember that?
01:47:31.000 It was four years ago.
01:47:32.000 So here, the plan is there's going to be this show, Tales from the Inverted World, which is true stories.
01:47:38.000 Shane's a bit of a skeptic, but it's going to be like, that's, that's what makes it great is because, you know, you'll come out and say it if it's not true.
01:47:44.000 And so you'll often be left with these real mysteries, but then it would be really fun.
01:47:47.000 We talked about doing a full fictional show.
01:47:49.000 It's kind of like X-Files about an investigative reporter investigating these stories and we like fictionalize them and bring them to life.
01:47:55.000 But that's down the line.
01:47:56.000 That's when we have like a $10 million budget.
01:47:58.000 But like you say, time and space are the same thing.
01:48:00.000 So it's ultimately about if we have the budget and the people that are ready to go, we could start it.
01:48:04.000 I'm technically doing it right now.
01:48:06.000 In the future.
01:48:06.000 This is like your real life.
01:48:08.000 Yeah.
01:48:08.000 That would be a cool show.
01:48:10.000 It'd be like X-Files.
01:48:11.000 Oh, definitely.
01:48:11.000 Definitely.
01:48:12.000 Super fun.
01:48:12.000 Reach out for some DMT.
01:48:14.000 Sergeant Buck says, Tim, time isn't made out of lines, it's made out of circles.
01:48:18.000 This is why clocks are round.
01:48:20.000 Oh, is that so?
01:48:21.000 Well, it is interesting.
01:48:22.000 In order to track the passage of time, we go around because it just keeps going, right?
01:48:28.000 And so the way we think about time is we actually view it as cyclical.
01:48:33.000 Even though we actually feel time is linear, but we map time in a cyclical way.
01:48:39.000 Isn't that crazy?
01:48:40.000 Seasons, everything's repeating itself.
01:48:43.000 And then why should we assume that time itself would not repeat itself?
01:48:47.000 Like in that Futurama episode where the Professor makes a time machine that can only go forward.
01:48:52.000 Great show.
01:48:52.000 And they keep going too far in the future.
01:48:53.000 And they're like, maybe if we go far enough in the future, we'll discover,
01:48:56.000 uh, you know, a point in time where humans have found back backwards time travel.
01:48:59.000 And then they do, but Bender gets mad and sends them to the future.
01:49:02.000 Then they witnessed the heat, heat death of the universe.
01:49:04.000 But then all of a sudden the universe explodes again.
01:49:06.000 And then he was like, time is cyclical.
01:49:08.000 Oh, and it's funny.
01:49:09.000 And you're great show.
01:49:10.000 Yeah.
01:49:10.000 Final six warning says I've either seen ghosts on 14 separate occasions between
01:49:20.000 the ages of four to 31, or I've had 14, very brief, hyper vivid hallucinations.
01:49:26.000 I'd love to know which.
01:49:28.000 I mean, we had ghost stories in my house growing up.
01:49:30.000 Like, you know, someone would go downstairs and the water would be running.
01:49:34.000 Just like the faucet downstairs would just turn on.
01:49:36.000 Stuff like that.
01:49:37.000 Yeah, I grew up in a really old house.
01:49:39.000 It was built in the 1700s.
01:49:40.000 And remember, like, old Magnavox TVs?
01:49:42.000 If they were, like, left on the input channel, they would hum really, really low.
01:49:46.000 That would happen all the time, but the TV wasn't on.
01:49:49.000 And I always thought that was some type of ghostly apparition.
01:49:51.000 I'd get these things where I'd hear dripping water, and it'd be like, drip, drip, dip, dip, dip, dip.
01:49:55.000 And then all of a sudden, it would start to be a dip, dip, dip, dip, dip, dip, dip.
01:49:59.000 Whoa.
01:50:00.000 The music of the spheres.
01:50:01.000 Yeah.
01:50:01.000 Close encounters.
01:50:02.000 And I'm like, what the?
01:50:04.000 That's wild.
01:50:04.000 What do you think that like kid in Toy Story would think when like every time he came to his room the toys were moved?
01:50:09.000 Like, can we get like a... yeah, right?
01:50:12.000 You know, there's so much content that's ripe for parody in that regard.
01:50:17.000 So we should do a short where the kid, like, is playing with his toys, then he puts them down, he leaves, and he comes back and they're moved, and he's just like... He just screams.
01:50:25.000 Like, they're moved.
01:50:30.000 His mother takes him and throws him in the garbage because, like, the kids freaking out won't touch him anymore.
01:50:35.000 Yeah.
01:50:36.000 Alright, Michael R. says, Hey Tim and crew, not sure if you've seen THX 113038.
01:50:42.000 It's a George Lucas film and I definitely think you're missing this from your dystopian mashup that we seem to be headed towards.
01:50:48.000 I think that's the movie he made in college, like for his graduate thing.
01:50:53.000 He had Harrison Ford in it, I think.
01:50:55.000 I think they worked with Harrison on that.
01:50:57.000 Chris Quiet says, long hair hippie has taken too many drugs.
01:51:00.000 I can't stand hippies, but Ian is a good guy, so I have no animosity to him, but I want to detox him.
01:51:06.000 I'll give you a little, um, a little behind the scenes knowledge.
01:51:09.000 I actually haven't taken that many drugs.
01:51:11.000 I've, I've took, I smoked a lot of weed for like 15 years, but I've only taken LSD like 10 times in small doses, uh, mushrooms six times in small doses.
01:51:20.000 I smoked salvia four times, three times.
01:51:23.000 Is it true that it's conspiracy to overthrow the government if you've taken acid more than seven times?
01:51:27.000 Or is that an urban legend?
01:51:29.000 You heard that?
01:51:30.000 That was a rumor going around when we were taking acid.
01:51:32.000 What's the rumor?
01:51:32.000 That it's considered conspiracy to overthrow the government if you've taken acid more than a certain amount of times.
01:51:38.000 I've conspired.
01:51:40.000 Of those, I've only micro-dosed.
01:51:41.000 I micro-dosed like half of them, so it wasn't really like full doses.
01:51:43.000 But that's about it.
01:51:45.000 And other than that, it's just caffeine.
01:51:47.000 You know, I don't know.
01:51:48.000 So you admit to being a criminal?
01:51:50.000 Tim, you got me.
01:51:50.000 I nailed it.
01:51:51.000 All right, let's see.
01:51:56.000 Chris Blank Production says, Hey Tim, if y'all are going to be having guests on your paranormal podcast, you should look into Huckleberry or Jeff from the show Mountain Monsters.
01:52:04.000 They're based in West Virginia and whether or not the show is legit, it'd be fun.
01:52:08.000 Oh, definitely.
01:52:08.000 Like one of the best things about being out in West Virginia is like all the cryptids are here basically.
01:52:13.000 Yeah.
01:52:14.000 Yeah.
01:52:14.000 That's cool.
01:52:14.000 Perfect.
01:52:15.000 Mothman.
01:52:15.000 We'll get the Mothman, yeah.
01:52:17.000 You're in the right place, Shane.
01:52:18.000 Yep.
01:52:18.000 You ever see the Mothman prophecies?
01:52:20.000 I have, you know, I feel like I have, but it might have been when I was conspiring.
01:52:23.000 Dude, you'll love it.
01:52:23.000 It's so good.
01:52:24.000 There's like, I'm gonna spoil a little bit, but there's a scene where he like gets a phone call, and then he like opens the Bible, he's like in a hotel, and then he like points to a line, and the voice on the phone reads the line to him, and he's like, what is crazy?
01:52:36.000 Yeah.
01:52:36.000 What's the research facility off the coast of, I think, near Lyme, Connecticut, where it's like, apparently they're building chimeras out there, or that's the hypothesis?
01:52:45.000 Plum Island?
01:52:46.000 You mean the conspiracy theory?
01:52:49.000 Yes.
01:52:49.000 Yes.
01:52:50.000 Did I suffix, prefix that with conspiracy?
01:52:52.000 I don't know.
01:52:53.000 You know, it's funny because like, you want to default to say conspiracy theory, but then Alex Jones is like, Google it.
01:52:58.000 And you do.
01:52:59.000 And you're like, well, he was right.
01:53:00.000 There's ideas that they developed Lyme disease there as like a bio, Is that true though?
01:53:05.000 No, it's a theory.
01:53:07.000 I think it was funny when Jones went on Crowder.
01:53:10.000 He's like, I got this for you.
01:53:11.000 And he pulls a folder with all of the articles already researched because he knows.
01:53:16.000 And then they do it right.
01:53:17.000 They put it in front of the camera for two seconds.
01:53:18.000 And if you want to read it, you just pause it and then they give you the data.
01:53:21.000 That's great.
01:53:21.000 Or you just Google it and read the actual article.
01:53:23.000 But it's funny that Alex is like, we're going to bring a folder with everything I'm saying because I'm telling you the truth and you don't want to believe it.
01:53:28.000 It's so crazy that these stories that he talks about fall through the cracks for us.
01:53:33.000 Yeah.
01:53:33.000 Like when you mentioned cloned beef.
01:53:35.000 Like, yo, I've been reading the news nonstop for years and I never heard that we were eating cloned beef until he said it.
01:53:40.000 And I looked it up and I'm like, he's right.
01:53:43.000 Cloned meat.
01:53:45.000 It's like a weird exception that maybe we're hearing everything because we heard everything that we heard.
01:53:50.000 It's too much happening at once.
01:53:52.000 And a certain narrative took over.
01:53:54.000 So like that narrative would have taken over maybe 20 years ago.
01:53:58.000 They put a baby's scalp on a mouse, right?
01:54:00.000 Oh, man.
01:54:02.000 Here we go.
01:54:03.000 Summeris19 says, Hey Tim, I went to Argo High School and Bachelor's Grove and Resurrection Mary.
01:54:08.000 All true!
01:54:09.000 Love y'all.
01:54:09.000 What?
01:54:12.000 The Al Capone stuff.
01:54:14.000 It's just like, look, I'm a kid and people are like, that's where Al Capone dumped the bodies.
01:54:17.000 And I'm like, I never actually looked into it.
01:54:19.000 Yeah.
01:54:19.000 I love lakes.
01:54:20.000 We have a lake by me that's called Hessian Lake.
01:54:23.000 And the rumor is no one knows how deep it is.
01:54:25.000 And the firemen supposedly lowered the chain all the way down and nothing.
01:54:29.000 I think you should go to Chicago.
01:54:31.000 I'm down.
01:54:32.000 Totally down.
01:54:33.000 Cause there's, there's a ton of other stories too.
01:54:35.000 There's just, there's just.
01:54:36.000 Yo, at the end of the last ice age, 13,000 years ago, apparently, have you ever been to the snake mounds in Ohio?
01:54:42.000 There's a serpent mound.
01:54:43.000 It's an ancient native burial ground, but apparently the glaciers came all the way up.
01:54:48.000 They had built this serpent.
01:54:49.000 The glaciers came all the way up to the serpent latitudinally, and then they just, the glaciers stop, stop going.
01:54:54.000 They thought that the serpent had protected them.
01:54:56.000 Whoa.
01:54:57.000 Maybe it has.
01:54:58.000 Whoa.
01:54:59.000 Love it.
01:54:59.000 Now it's like a protected, uh, I don't know if it's a natural, a national park or something.
01:55:02.000 The Nazca lines are cool too.
01:55:04.000 Dude, how did they build them?
01:55:05.000 Obviously they were flying if they could build those.
01:55:07.000 They must have had hot air balloons.
01:55:08.000 The Nazca lines are gigantic drawings that you can only see from above.
01:55:12.000 Yeah, that's incredible.
01:55:13.000 Yeah.
01:55:14.000 So they must have had hot, I mean, I think hot air, because the Vimana is this ancient flying machine, hot air balloon city that the king would fly around on or something.
01:55:20.000 Right.
01:55:22.000 I think the angels and demons were on hand gliders.
01:55:24.000 What if humans actually came from Venus and a runaway Venus effect destroyed Venusian civilization?
01:55:32.000 And so they built a giant escape exodus vehicle run by the military and they called it the Ark Project where they loaded the genetic materials of two of all the animals they could muster and then transported after the greenhouse caused ice caps to melt and there was a great flood that wiped out the planet and then they came to Earth and terraformed it and oh man.
01:55:49.000 I used to think that was like fully, fully weird, but now it might have been life on Venus.
01:55:54.000 It doesn't have a moon though, right?
01:55:56.000 Did it ever have a moon?
01:55:57.000 I don't know.
01:55:58.000 Like for title?
01:55:59.000 I was just one day watching some National Geographic thing or something and they were like, Venus has a runaway greenhouse effect.
01:56:05.000 And I was like, whoa.
01:56:06.000 And then I just made everything else up.
01:56:08.000 I mean, it's a cool story, though.
01:56:08.000 Oh.
01:56:10.000 Like, there's a civilization, runaway greatest effect causes the water levels to rise, a great flood, so the planet's dying, there's acid rain, there's ecological collapse, so the military of a powerful government creates a gigantic project to take as many people as possible to the neighboring planet, which could sustain life.
01:56:26.000 The sun's expanding, so it used to be Venus was in the Goldilocks zone, and then the sun got too big, and they were like, we need to escape!
01:56:32.000 It's gonna cook the planet!
01:56:33.000 And so they take the genetic materials for the males and the females of as many species as possible, and then they come to Earth in a giant ark spaceship, and then the people come down.
01:56:44.000 Made by Tesla.
01:56:45.000 And then what happens is, you know, they don't have enough technology to maintain the vessel for long enough, so they evacuate to Earth, and then the first generation retains as much knowledge as possible.
01:56:55.000 We are smart.
01:56:56.000 We know a lot.
01:56:57.000 You know how to make fire.
01:56:58.000 You can probably figure out some really basic and rudimentary things, and you know certain things are possible, but you don't know how to make them.
01:57:05.000 You know radio waves are possible.
01:57:06.000 Do you know how to get the metal to make electricity in a radio wave?
01:57:10.000 So what happens is after the first generation, the kids have never seen it before!
01:57:13.000 And they're just told these stories of magic!
01:57:16.000 And then by the third and fourth generation, the first generation of survivors from the Ark Project are long gone, and all they have is a book telling them the basic rules of how to survive.
01:57:25.000 Don't eat pork.
01:57:27.000 Sounds about right.
01:57:28.000 Dirty animals, man.
01:57:28.000 It's dirty.
01:57:28.000 Yeah.
01:57:29.000 Yeah.
01:57:30.000 Jellfish?
01:57:30.000 I don't eat it.
01:57:30.000 Yeah.
01:57:31.000 You get sick.
01:57:31.000 Yeah.
01:57:32.000 Yep.
01:57:32.000 Yeah, I do eat those.
01:57:34.000 All right, let's see.
01:57:35.000 I like oysters.
01:57:37.000 Yeah, I do too.
01:57:38.000 I'm drinking that oyster thing.
01:57:39.000 I'm pescatarian, but I don't like saying it because it sounds like you worship fish.
01:57:42.000 Pesky.
01:57:43.000 Do you?
01:57:43.000 Oh, man.
01:57:44.000 I guess I do.
01:57:45.000 Josh, oh my gosh, says, Tim, I got an error message.
01:57:49.000 It says, arrow 404, freedom not found.
01:57:52.000 We just need to reboot America, state separate, and rejoin.
01:57:55.000 Cool.
01:57:55.000 OK.
01:57:56.000 Jack Attack says, I think the most terrifying thing about humans is that they have the ability to conquer the fourth dimension if given time.
01:58:02.000 Given that we survive our own great filter, which I do believe social media has the potential potentiality of being.
01:58:08.000 Yeah, that a video can be online forever at any time.
01:58:11.000 You can watch any point in history.
01:58:13.000 That's time travel.
01:58:14.000 Yeah.
01:58:15.000 You know, like I can see concerts from before I was born.
01:58:17.000 Yeah.
01:58:18.000 I like that.
01:58:18.000 That's nice.
01:58:20.000 Technically not there, but I'm experiencing it.
01:58:24.000 But you figuratively are there.
01:58:27.000 Yeah, I can hear the audience.
01:58:28.000 You know, I just can't smell it yet.
01:58:28.000 Yeah.
01:58:30.000 Danimal Bungie says, I'm a retail pharmacist, which means most people come to me to receive vaccines and vaccine advice.
01:58:37.000 I wish I could talk to you about the tearful conversations I've had with people who don't want the vaccine but their job requires it or be fired.
01:58:43.000 Wow.
01:58:44.000 What would you do?
01:58:46.000 What if I was like, get vaccinated or fired?
01:58:48.000 I would leave.
01:58:51.000 I'm not being told what to do.
01:58:53.000 If I were still teaching, they would have made me.
01:58:56.000 Get it?
01:58:57.000 I pulled up this story called Jacobson vs. Massachusetts, 1905.
01:59:00.000 Guy didn't want to get the smallpox vaccine due to religious things, and the government put it to the Supreme Court.
01:59:05.000 Supreme Court was like, no.
01:59:06.000 Sometimes you don't have... It's a very interesting court case.
01:59:10.000 In this circumstance, the mandates are like, if you want to work, right?
01:59:13.000 But what was that circumstance where it was like, was he going into a field of children or something?
01:59:16.000 It was his religious freedom, he just said.
01:59:17.000 No, but like, what, did they hold him down and vaccinate him?
01:59:20.000 I didn't get that far, I don't know how they did it to him.
01:59:22.000 How they did it to him?
01:59:23.000 I have a lot of friends who say, like when I say I don't want it, they take it as an anti, you know, I'm anti that.
01:59:28.000 But I'm pro them doing whatever they want, I just don't want to be told what to do.
01:59:32.000 Right.
01:59:33.000 Matthew Vance says, Ian, I'll sell you a Fitbit, but I'm only accepting Opals as payment at the moment.
01:59:37.000 Hey, well, that works out perfectly actually.
01:59:39.000 Cause I just got a bunch.
01:59:42.000 It's going to be really funny when like in a year Opals are worth like a hundred times their value and like the fee, like Opal becomes global currency.
01:59:50.000 There's two Opals in particular that are mind blowing from the images that I saw.
01:59:54.000 Opals are awesome.
01:59:55.000 Yeah.
01:59:59.000 GCGeekArmy says Woody dies in Toy Story, then the other toys have to watch in horror as the boy plays with the corpse in the sequels.
02:00:06.000 I heard that.
02:00:07.000 That's horrible.
02:00:10.000 That's a horror story right there.
02:00:12.000 Geez.
02:00:13.000 And they're just like... That's dark stuff.
02:00:21.000 Is that what God is doing is playing with the corpses of people and that's what we think are like zombies and skeletons and all that?
02:00:26.000 Maybe.
02:00:27.000 I don't think they're real by the way.
02:00:28.000 That's interesting.
02:00:29.000 Oh, here we go.
02:00:30.000 Is God playing with our bodies right now?
02:00:31.000 PRCE5 says, at the beginning you mentioned fireballs in the sky.
02:00:35.000 Last night I was at a truck stop in Savannah, Georgia, and saw an orange fireball flying horizontally for about 10 seconds before disappearing, long enough to get a picture.
02:00:44.000 Meteor?
02:00:45.000 Breaking up in the atmosphere?
02:00:46.000 I typically think so.
02:00:47.000 I think there's a lot that happen that go unreported, just people see them.
02:00:51.000 I was walking to take the trash out, in two weeks of time I saw three at night.
02:00:56.000 If you get, so Forrest Cooper is here from Recall Magazine and he brought night vision, and you put those on and look up and you'll see shooting stars non-stop.
02:01:04.000 I'm just like, I'll wish for this, I'll wish for that.
02:01:06.000 I'll take money and I
02:01:10.000 All I saw was like I wish I could somehow get access to someone else's opals
02:01:16.000 I bought a bunch of and I was like, yes come here your blood
02:01:22.000 Maybe you want to buy more right now The age
02:01:31.000 The Age of Stupid says, I am a civilian engineer for the U.S.
02:01:34.000 Navy.
02:01:35.000 I just handed in my resignation letter because of the dictator-in-chief's mandate.
02:01:39.000 Moving family in North Carolina.
02:01:41.000 It's always New Hampshire.
02:01:42.000 Yep.
02:01:42.000 I heard people are not getting unemployment if they lose their job.
02:01:46.000 Well, in New York, it was medical workers who refused will not get unemployment.
02:01:51.000 It's torture, dude.
02:01:53.000 It's wicked.
02:01:55.000 So they're basically saying you quit.
02:01:57.000 There was this viral video where a nurse shows up for work and they're like, what are you doing here?
02:02:01.000 And she goes, nobody fired me.
02:02:02.000 And they're like, you have to leave.
02:02:03.000 And she goes, I'm not quitting and nobody fired me.
02:02:05.000 And they were like, leave.
02:02:05.000 Are you firing me?
02:02:06.000 And they're like, tell me you're firing me and I'll go.
02:02:08.000 It's because if they do, they say, oh, I was fired.
02:02:12.000 But no, they're making it like you are choosing to quit.
02:02:16.000 One of the nurses in our delivery room, when my wife gave birth to our daughter, told us that earlier that summer, during COVID, her hospital knew she had it, and they had her work still through COVID.
02:02:26.000 Like, I wonder what she's doing now.
02:02:30.000 MissMal92 says, Tim, the premise you explained is already a movie.
02:02:34.000 Quote, Cam.
02:02:35.000 Really?
02:02:35.000 There's a movie called Cam?
02:02:37.000 Look it up.
02:02:38.000 I'd love to watch it.
02:02:38.000 I love that idea.
02:02:39.000 Would definitely want to check it out.
02:02:39.000 Sweet.
02:02:42.000 Chris Quiet says, Vamitima, I would love to hang out with Ian for a day.
02:02:47.000 Hell yeah.
02:02:49.000 Yeah, we'll just do it.
02:02:49.000 We'll do an auction on the site where it's like, hang out with Ian for one day.
02:02:52.000 The highest bidder.
02:02:54.000 Let's do it.
02:02:54.000 I will never look at how much money that made, by the way.
02:02:57.000 Well, I'll just, we'll just give it to you.
02:02:58.000 Let's just chill.
02:02:59.000 We should do, we'll do a live event.
02:03:00.000 We could talk about drugs or something.
02:03:01.000 That'd be fun, yeah.
02:03:02.000 I mean, like chemicals.
02:03:03.000 Chemicals is what I meant to say.
02:03:04.000 Well, we definitely are going to do live events for Tales from the Inverted World.
02:03:07.000 Like live readings with performance sound effects and stuff.
02:03:09.000 Carter making some music, Alex doing some audio.
02:03:12.000 Oh yeah.
02:03:13.000 I was visualizing it last night, like thinking about being on stage, talking to a bunch of people and like, it doesn't have to be a stage.
02:03:17.000 We just hang out and talk about it.
02:03:18.000 Why don't we do it for Halloween?
02:03:19.000 Yeah.
02:03:20.000 I'm there.
02:03:20.000 Let's do it.
02:03:21.000 A hundred.
02:03:22.000 A hundred percent.
02:03:22.000 Gotta start working with Carter to sort it out.
02:03:25.000 Carter is our in-house producer.
02:03:27.000 A genius, by the way.
02:03:28.000 Yeah, really amazing stuff.
02:03:29.000 Carter, you rock.
02:03:30.000 Ladies and gentlemen, thanks for hanging out on this spooky, weird, and wild show on Friday.
02:03:35.000 In the description below is the link to Tales from the Inverted World YouTube, where you can just search for it.
02:03:39.000 Subscribe.
02:03:41.000 More episodes to come.
02:03:42.000 We're aiming for like one a week, but we'll see how it plays out.
02:03:44.000 It's just it's going to come as it goes.
02:03:46.000 And then we're going to have the hangout sessions at Tim cast dot com where you can watch an episode you can listen
02:03:52.000 to it. I was not watched.
02:03:53.000 And there's cool sound effects and the stories being told by
02:03:55.000 Shane. And then perhaps people have more questions.
02:03:58.000 Perhaps there is parts of the story they want to dive in depth on and Google some stuff.
02:04:02.000 And so that'll be like a longer form conversation which is more
02:04:05.000 like this but weird and wild.
02:04:06.000 And that'll be a Tim cast dot com.
02:04:09.000 Don't forget to check out youtube.com slash castcastle, the other show we started doing because we are ramping up like crazy.
02:04:14.000 The Green Room is next and then there's a cooking show and then there's a board game and Dungeons and Dragons show.
02:04:19.000 We're working on a whole bunch of stuff and we want to do sitcoms and skits too because it's about building culture so that your values comes out in non-political ways.
02:04:28.000 So don't forget to like this video, subscribe to this channel, smash the like button.
02:04:31.000 You can follow me at TimCast.
02:04:32.000 You can follow the show at TimCastIRL.
02:04:34.000 Would you like to shout anything out, Shane?
02:04:36.000 Yeah, I'll do a few things.
02:04:38.000 I'm a co-host of Ready Slow with Sean Strong.
02:04:41.000 It's a podcast once a week.
02:04:43.000 You can catch us talking a lot of smack.
02:04:45.000 My second book is about to come out.
02:04:47.000 What's that called?
02:04:47.000 Yeah, it's called A Good Day for Vultures.
02:04:50.000 It's coming out on my own press, Vulture House Press.
02:04:53.000 And of course, Tales from the Inverted World.
02:04:56.000 It's gonna be the best.
02:04:57.000 And tips!
02:04:58.000 If you guys have tips or stories, I've been getting some and I'm tracking them down.
02:05:01.000 I read all the things, so you can send them to Shane at TimCast.com.
02:05:05.000 I'll read them, because I'll go.
02:05:07.000 Good stuff.
02:05:08.000 If he checks out.
02:05:09.000 Shane Cashman, ladies and gentlemen.
02:05:12.000 Someone emailed us about Confederate gold, and I was like, bro, cool.
02:05:14.000 And we're going.
02:05:15.000 Yeah.
02:05:15.000 Later, I think we'll do that this month, actually.
02:05:17.000 Awesome.
02:05:18.000 Yeah.
02:05:18.000 Thanks for coming, everyone.
02:05:19.000 This is, again, like I said, fluorite.
02:05:21.000 This is calcium fluoride in a crystallized form.
02:05:24.000 I'm Ian Crossland.
02:05:25.000 See you next time.
02:05:26.000 I'm very disappointed that is not a very large opal, Ian.
02:05:29.000 Hopefully we have one on the table when we're in the studio next time.
02:05:33.000 That would be awesome.
02:05:33.000 Thank you guys for joining us for the first night of Spooky Season.
02:05:36.000 I enjoy October and I'm really looking forward to all the fun stuff we might get up to with this new show.
02:05:41.000 I am Sarah Petulitz.
02:05:42.000 You can follow me on Twitter at SarahPetulitz.
02:05:44.000 Thanks for hanging out, everybody.
02:05:45.000 Don't forget to check out the Cast Castle on YouTube and Tales from the Inverted World.
02:05:50.000 And we'll see you all next time.