121: The Second Sun w⧸ Crrow777
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 59 minutes
Words per Minute
176.10818
Summary
On this episode of the show, we have a special guest, Crow777. Crow is a writer, podcaster, and podcaster who has been on the show for a long time. He's been on Tinfoil Hat Trick and has been a regular guest on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. After listening to his recent appearance on Todays Unfiltered, we knew we had to bring him on to the show.
Transcript
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00:01:10.860
Welcome to TopLobster.com, the ultimate middle finger to people who hate you anyway.
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Do you want to turn their mild annoyance into a full-blown meltdown?
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I'm talking about offensive, off-the-page comments that scream,
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I'd apologize, but I don't think you'd believe me.
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And we live in that sweet spot where your style and your words hit like a sledgehammer on the head of your favorite politician.
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So why play it safe when you can blow it up entirely?
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If you're too retarded to stop, and you're too real to worry about being liked by everybody,
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Go to TopLobster.com, grab a shirt, grab a hoodie, grab a sweater.
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Because if they hate you already, you might as well give them something spectacular to complain about.
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We are in a country and in a world that is being run by unbelievably sick people.
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The chasm between what we're told is going on and what is really going on is absolutely evil.
00:02:56.660
We know we're saying shit what happened to the home of the brave.
00:03:01.840
We know we're talking about how they learn and start to be slaves.
00:03:07.060
Not in the clouds, we want to wake up to a dead in the grave.
00:03:16.200
Only some are aware that the government really...
00:03:18.580
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:26.660
That is Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
00:03:29.960
Before we get into today's guests, I would like to remind all of our live viewers that this is a 30-minute preview only.
00:03:36.160
Sometime around the 30-minute mark, we'll be going live exclusively to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:41.200
If you'd like to continue watching along, enjoying an ad-free experience, you can do so by signing up.
00:03:46.760
And you don't even have to pay any money because now our free members also gain access to our content.
00:03:53.300
So head on over to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:58.800
And, guys, today's guest is one that I've been interested in having on the show for quite a long time.
00:04:06.560
And I'm glad that we were finally able to get it done.
00:04:09.780
After listening to his recent appearance on Tinfoil Hat, I said, we need to get this ball rolling.
00:04:15.060
We got to get this guy in and we have to have this conversation.
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I'm very excited to welcome to the show Crow777.
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Crow, for the audience who might not be familiar with your work, where can they find you and what is it that you focus on?
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Due to censorship, my main hub for everything is Crow777radio.com on a private server.
00:04:40.020
And that includes exclusive access to all my current solar telescope work, which we'll be picking up very shortly as the snows leave us.
00:04:49.960
Most people became aware of me back in 2013, again, due to my telescope work.
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That older telescope work is housed right there on the website.
00:05:02.220
That's a two-hour film that now has 10 awards out in the world that covers all my older telescope work.
00:05:12.040
It has all the lunar waves I shot, a couple from a guy named Randy from Houston.
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It has, interestingly enough, I almost didn't include it, but the first filming of the so-called Second Son was included at the end of that movie.
00:05:26.580
And there's a litany of so-called weird UFO things as well.
00:05:39.080
Yeah, I just got to say again, I love to compliment people on the website.
00:05:43.780
I love how this community, the more I'm in it, like, they're just like, you guys are so unimpressed and not pleased by things.
00:05:53.980
It's slightly embarrassing, but they have, like, a payment system that just is easy for us to work.
00:05:57.520
But, like, the length that you guys go through to create websites like this, to host your material, and to get people into it is just incredible.
00:06:16.580
Way back in the day before censorship became the fact, which was on the cover of Wired Magazine in 2017, admitting that that was the new way of things out in the open.
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They'd been shadow banning and deleting behind the scenes.
00:06:33.660
But we covered, as I was rolling into episode 77, we covered the Mandalay Bay false flag, and that was the bridge too far.
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They deleted my channel on YouTube with no warning.
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I had roughly 100,000-plus people at the time, and they put it back three weeks later with about 30,000 or 20,000 less subs, and they had put an algorithm.
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Before they deleted my channel, if you did a search for Crow777, you would get between 16 and 20 million returns, page after page after page.
00:07:13.060
The day they put it back, you got about 1,500, and the truth is it wasn't even that because after the first page, it just started duplicating returns.
00:07:22.480
So this is why if you're going to be talking about things that matter, you must have your own website on a private server.
00:07:30.280
Even though our president just said, oh, free speech is back.
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He did that as they took over TikTok and censored the living crap out of it.
00:07:51.460
Yeah, that promise of free speech, I mean, that's what we're seeing on Twitter right now, too, with Elon Musk, who's, like, ultra-based and, you know, a hero among people, a champion of free speech.
00:08:02.900
And then, you know, there's still – you're always going to find it.
00:08:06.200
The moment Elon Musk – I'm patient zero for Twitter or X being – I stress-tested the shit out of X right away because I guess I'm an inflammatory character on there.
00:08:18.120
So, like, the moment he bought it, he hired that woman, Linda Yaccarino, and I made some choice jokes, very funny stuff, in my opinion, pat myself on the back, saying, like, we should launch her to the moon.
00:08:31.100
It was, like, something to do with his fake rockets and space.
00:08:38.240
And I was lucky enough to have people in the community, like, someone for TimCast wrote an article about me.
00:08:42.740
And it got big enough that Vivek Ramaswamy spoke about it, which – fuck that guy, too.
00:08:50.400
But it was very interesting because right off the bat, they came with this narrative of, you know, this is free speech.
00:08:59.520
Like, I wasn't even smacked like that with the previous administration, which was horrible.
00:09:05.520
And then shortly after, you heard the freedom of speech, not freedom of reach, that kind of rhetoric going around.
00:09:15.900
I mean, like, I was seeing what was what, and I found out pretty quickly.
00:09:23.840
It's like you use these platforms to the extent that you can use these platforms.
00:09:27.300
But if you can centralize your content and your information in something that is, you know, private in that way that you've done, that's – it's the only way to do it.
00:09:37.520
Because for me, it feels like an inevitability.
00:09:40.740
It's only a matter of time until – we had it on YouTube as well.
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We had to get rid of our entire catalog in order to not lose the channel.
00:09:48.100
So, you know, if you really care about your information getting out to people, if you care about the community that you've built, and if you care about the hard work that you've put into all these hours of content, well, you'd better do something about it and put it someplace where it's going to be safe.
00:10:02.780
Because don't – just don't get into this habit of trusting whoever the next freedom of speech champion is, you know, as they show up on the world stage.
00:10:13.880
And this has been going on longer than we're aware of.
00:10:25.320
And the reason for that is because I'm not going to knowingly train AI.
00:10:33.320
I'm not giving my image freely to AI so that it can continue to rape the known intellectual property of human beings in this world.
00:10:43.160
And so on these platforms, we've gotten to a point, and very few are aware of it, where on average there's more bots than human beings that you're communicating with.
00:10:53.720
And what's worse is the way the AI is shaking out is every person is going to have an AI agent assigned to them.
00:11:00.820
This is going to become open and known as people sucker in for the latest iPhone or whatever it is.
00:11:08.460
But these agents that are basically assigned to you are going to have the most extreme dossier on you that's ever been done.
00:11:16.760
And the power that AI can do with this is just ridiculous.
00:11:20.720
And that sets aside that they've basically raped the intellectual property of human beings on this world so that they can train their tools.
00:11:30.940
And this is why, like, I have all these things that I've actually bought to go out and automatically tell people, don't take my information, don't sell it.
00:11:40.180
You know what I'm talking about, privacy hawk and other things.
00:11:42.880
But when I called places, I never had a person on the other side of the phone say, screw you, get out of here.
00:11:52.720
Because they know they're stealing your information.
00:12:05.900
They don't know a time when everything is done online.
00:12:08.620
And this has created a real problem because the hidden hand is very clever.
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And they know that those people will never be able to be shown that you shouldn't just give away everything online.
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If people knew what Facebook Messenger did, their jaw would hit the floor.
00:13:15.780
Not only does it track everything on your phone, it goes to every network you're connected to,
00:13:22.880
every contact you're connected to, and it does the same thing.
00:13:33.720
Yeah, almost to the point where if someone wants to come to my home, I will ask them,
00:13:40.340
Because if you are, you need to not come in here.
00:13:43.140
And you're certainly not getting on my network.
00:13:48.040
I have one Wi-Fi hotspot if I need it, and I keep it off.
00:13:53.860
We need to get with the program here of what's going on,
00:13:57.640
and we need to value our data much more readily than we have up to this point.
00:14:03.660
Crow, I can understand for the individual that sort of a thing,
00:14:06.700
but do you get the feeling that it's too little too late for the vast majority of people?
00:14:11.220
I mean, we're so interconnected in such a way that, you know,
00:14:15.200
it's the first thing that people do when they wake up.
00:14:17.080
It's the last thing people do when they go to sleep.
00:14:19.340
And you agree feverishly to terms and conditions that you don't read.
00:14:26.080
I mean, certainly, you know, individuals like yourself who are, you know,
00:14:35.240
these are people that are going through that sort of mundanity, right,
00:14:39.840
They're not necessarily sleuthing and digging for information
00:14:42.800
or, you know, doing something like yourself where you're recording the sun.
00:14:50.620
I'm sure they'd be interested in getting access to the various systems that you've set up,
00:14:56.920
and you've done a good thing in closing yourself off there.
00:15:00.080
But for the vast majority of people, I mean, how many times have –
00:15:04.820
And, you know, I tend to scrutinize those things a little bit more than maybe other people do.
00:15:10.640
Case in point, that's why it's so important to do it now.
00:15:13.720
If you don't tell the universe you're not down with a thing,
00:15:19.820
and someone else will make that decision for you.
00:15:34.200
When I type something, that is my intellectual property.
00:15:40.120
like a good example was why I quit posting content to YouTube,
00:15:46.900
I was only posting the first hour of podcasts at that point,
00:15:50.320
no more scope video because I got a notice way, way back,
00:15:54.200
2015 maybe, that basically notified me that they had partial ownership of all the content
00:16:01.440
I had uploaded to their platform, and that included the first lunar wave.
00:16:07.260
And so if we don't stand up and start demanding better,
00:16:15.780
How do you end up getting into this situation, Crow,
00:16:20.060
where, I mean, you're taking a real hard look at our skies?
00:16:26.020
I just find it almost unique in this day and age because it's laughable.
00:16:34.640
Even when we walk around, we're looking at our phones.
00:16:37.260
Light pollution has removed our attachment to the night sky,
00:16:40.800
something that the ancients were obsessed with.
00:16:43.600
I mean, it was the number one you could see megalithic structures are created
00:16:47.260
in many instances to mirror the night sky in one way or another
00:16:50.420
when it comes to, you know, astrological formations.
00:16:54.020
And so this is something that was hugely important to humanity for the longest time.
00:16:59.480
And then all of a sudden, with the advent of these giant, you know, gigantic cities
00:17:04.680
and we're pouring all this light pollution into the sky, we can no longer see it.
00:17:08.260
And then we are actually just constantly looking down, looking down.
00:17:12.620
I drive now and I see, I was talking about it the other day,
00:17:16.780
I was going to pick up my son and the high school gets out before my son.
00:17:20.740
And every single, it's just a parade of children looking down at their phones.
00:17:24.940
You know, so I do find it unique when somebody's job or their passion
00:17:36.140
I had always been drawn to telescopes, but I grew up in a family of teachers.
00:17:45.560
We didn't even have a color TV till the mid 80s.
00:17:48.240
And part of that was because my father wasn't into that materialism and stuff like that.
00:17:59.160
When powers that be decide to try to control large numbers of people,
00:18:04.920
one of the first tactics is almost always separation from nature.
00:18:10.060
And the reason that is done is because all truth resides in nature.
00:18:23.120
But nature shows us and proves and provides what is true to include how we should be living our lives,
00:18:30.900
which this technology has really sidetracked us, which is why we have a lot of problems.
00:18:36.560
But to make the point, you said all the children are looking down at their phones.
00:18:44.460
And all these older cultures that aligned massive stone monuments and everything else
00:18:50.320
shows you how critically important the most basic things, the equinoxes and the solstices are.
00:18:58.160
And the reason for that is because we reside within cycles.
00:19:05.220
And even our Bible has a version of it when it refers to the acceptable year of the Lord.
00:19:11.240
I actually just did a podcast with Dylan Secotio about the Reverend Robert Taylor's work and about this very thing.
00:19:20.240
And there are plenty of examples that back up what I'm saying.
00:19:23.060
As an example, when the word pagan came to be a derisive insult launched at people,
00:19:29.480
the word pagan basically means people who lived in the country.
00:19:36.740
Because everybody knows that the first of the year is not in January.
00:19:42.460
It's at the spring equinox when everything renews and turns green and the babies will come.
00:19:48.220
And so what happened supposedly in the Roman times was the people who refused to let go to the appropriate placement of the new year
00:19:55.940
were still celebrating the new year at April 1.
00:19:59.180
And so they came up with a derisive term to shame them, calling them April Fool's.
00:20:05.820
And so this tactic of separation from nature can be discovered and you can become aware of it.
00:20:15.480
For me, if I learn something in nature, I can, it's a bad term, take it to the bank.
00:20:23.360
I know I have been either demonstrated or fortunate enough to have been taught something that is absolutely true.
00:20:31.300
And this is the problem with technology because we live our lives accepting things that are not only not true,
00:20:37.840
we get to a point where we don't care whether they're true or not.
00:20:42.120
Yeah, that's why they call me the father of disinformation.
00:20:46.800
I've, uh, it's, I guess it's a bit, uh, counterintuitive, but I'll go on Twitter and, uh, for lack of a better word, shitpost,
00:20:54.500
but tell like these lies that should be blatantly obvious.
00:20:58.120
And I've gone viral, I don't know, hundreds of times doing it.
00:21:05.500
Shame on you for writing articles as if this is real.
00:21:07.620
Like just a cursory, uh, a cursory knowledge of history or even, uh, like a simple Google search debunks this stuff.
00:21:16.360
But people want to believe whatever crap is presented to them on their plate.
00:21:20.760
So, you know what, um, I feel like it's my job to continue to do it until people get smarter and you don't need me anymore.
00:21:26.940
Well, something interesting that, that Crowe just said there too, was this idea that the terminology April fool was invented to shame people that were holding on to what is essentially the truth.
00:21:39.680
And that's a really effective mechanism that we still see at play today.
00:21:43.140
I mean, we just went through this entire lockdown, pandemic and everything.
00:21:47.460
Conspiracy theorists or, or, or just to dismiss people who are deviating from the official narrative as being, uh, you know, uh, non-credible or, or, or, you know, an idiot or.
00:21:59.920
And good example of the shaming of your fellow human beings that have been put in a position where they will do the policing for the powers that be.
00:22:08.520
They will be shaming you or not allowing you in whatever the case, maybe it's a good example.
00:22:14.360
It's one of those things we, we realize these systems or these machinations, they kind of play on repeat, um, and they're effective.
00:22:22.560
And that's why history repeats itself or at least rhymes.
00:22:28.420
But we were talking about these ancient civilizations and how, you know, they dedicated everything to understanding these cycles that we're talking about and, and, and these, uh, you know, astrological formations and such.
00:22:41.660
Um, I believe it's the ancient Sumerians and I know I'm going to probably get some of this wrong.
00:22:47.760
This is mixed up with like things I've learned a bit of like Zachariah Sitchin and such.
00:22:52.500
But when it comes to the Sumerians, uh, this idea of the Anunnaki, I believe they had depicted, uh, on some of their ancient carvings, what we would recognize as the solar system.
00:23:05.760
Uh, and if I'm not mistaken, I remember learning a long time ago that they had a celestial body that we hadn't accounted for.
00:23:13.700
And I think, uh, Sitchin started to talk about this celestial body being Nibiru, uh, being the home of these, um, ancient deities that created us one way or another.
00:23:24.420
And this is something that is still alive and well today.
00:23:28.340
Um, you know, people like Billy Carson, uh, espouse this sort of thing to much success.
00:23:33.340
It's a very compelling theory, but you know, the, the entities and deities aside, this idea that there was an extra celestial body within our own solar system has existed in one way or another through a lot of different cultures and mythos.
00:23:49.440
And I've heard ideas that, you know, maybe we exist in a binary star system and that that's not really very uncommon for a system to have a binary sun.
00:24:06.600
And this is just like regurgitating things that I've peripherally learned over the years.
00:24:09.740
It's on an elliptical orbit, whereas the planets will orbit around the sun in essentially a circle.
00:24:16.060
This one celestial body orbits through our solar system on, on what is an oval more or less.
00:24:22.200
And so for a long period of time, it's allegedly on the outskirts of our solar system and it returns so many thousands of years.
00:24:36.800
But when I hear a guy like you, who is doing the legwork and recording instances of what appears to be a second sun, and I've heard you describe it at length, it's very compelling.
00:24:49.880
Um, where do you place this idea, if at all, uh, in conjunction with these previous mentioned theories of, of elliptical orbits, binary star systems, brown dwarfs, Nibiru?
00:25:02.040
Okay, um, you put a lot on the table right there.
00:25:07.240
So I've got to back up a little bit and, um, I'll, I'll be straightforward.
00:25:13.640
I spent some portion of my life reading 12 of Sitchin's books before I came to my senses.
00:25:19.520
Um, and just for the record, I don't accept any of it.
00:25:24.200
Um, but to get back to the point, you're right.
00:25:27.640
Uh, there's been Vulcan, there's been Planet X, there's been Nibiru.
00:25:30.960
There's been so many, there's another body here.
00:25:34.300
But to me, that's a far cry from pointing a telescope up, hitting record and saying, here it is.
00:25:41.820
And as we get forward, I'll show you proofs, which actually involve an observatory admitting what I have found and actually calling it by name.
00:25:56.840
And while you do that, Crow, I just want to say, when I was younger, when I was in the public school system, in middle school and early high school, we were regularly getting school magazines about Planet X.
00:26:12.400
We didn't call it, you know, they didn't call it Nibiru or anything like that when I was a kid.
00:26:16.880
But we were subjected to this idea in middle school that there was this additional celestial body, Planet X.
00:26:24.620
And then I don't know whatever happened to that.
00:26:27.120
And it certainly didn't stay a constant throughout my school experience.
00:26:34.480
Well, I just I couldn't drop an image into the StreamYard studio.
00:26:39.980
So what I did is I replied to the email where you guys sent me the link.
00:26:43.320
It says Lobster Raven is the handle on the email.
00:26:47.220
If you want to put that up, I'll show you what I think is closest to correct about our solar system.
00:26:56.420
And I'll back it up with a little bit of of evidence.
00:27:04.220
And I tried to do a search for a better version.
00:27:06.480
Let me do one more search with my other browser.
00:27:41.480
Francesco, Kurti, Fronte, Fronte's piece, mythological figures.
00:27:57.280
So what you're looking at here is an image that a Jesuit made in 1651.
00:28:03.820
And what you what what you should know is the Jesuits know things.
00:28:08.580
I have read whether or not it's true that back in the day when they were looking for people to become Jesuits, they looked for the smartest, brightest of the bright, like IQ over 200.
00:28:25.020
You're aware of the stories where they show up in some part of the world, meet a culture they never met.
00:28:30.760
And a year or two later, there's a Bible in that language.
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These people were smart, and they're at the center, or part of the center, for the false historical narrative we got.
00:30:09.560
So what this is, is an image that has all kinds of mythology encoding into it.
00:30:15.060
And the reason is, the common people who hadn't been educated probably would never realize that the guy on the left, with all the eyeballs on him, is the hundred or the thousand-eyed Argos from Greek myth.
00:30:29.480
So to know a little bit about myth helps you further understand.
00:30:38.980
You can see that one side of the scale is heavier than the other, and everybody knows what that means.
00:30:48.300
Now, on the right side of the scale is a model of our solar system, or so-called solar system, by a man named Tycho Brahe, who I think gave us the best information.
00:31:02.340
On the left, the one that's not as heavy, the one that's not as good, that's the one we got from Kepler and Copernicus.
00:31:11.780
Now, Tycho Brahe hired Kepler to do math, we are told.
00:31:16.480
Now, whether or not Kepler had something to do with Brahe's death, I'm not sure.
00:31:25.700
Tycho Brahe was an aristocrat who shouldn't even have been working at any level, because aristocrats don't do that.
00:31:32.340
He spent his life doing observations and locating to the minutia, where 777 stars were, ironically, that I'm covering him.
00:31:44.560
But he did it right before the telescope was invented.
00:31:49.000
The basis of what he did launched into the basis of all modern astronomy.
00:31:54.080
Now, Kepler and Copernicus never did any observation.
00:31:59.540
So they took Brahe's data and they made up the nonsense on the left, which is the solar system model we have.
00:32:06.480
Now, all the way down at the bottom, there's another model.
00:32:09.820
That's Ptolemy's model, getting stepped on by the feet, because it is error-ridden and the worst out of all of them.
00:32:19.760
This is coming from a Jesuit, and I accept, as much as I can, as the best information we have available, the work that Tycho Brahe did.
00:32:32.920
But one of the things Tycho Brahe did was he showed us that we matter.
00:32:43.660
And we are not insignificant, little spinning on a marble in the spin cycle in a million gazillion light year vacuum.
00:33:06.240
And another thing is I would state that I think that Venus and Mercury would be better described as moons of the sun than planets.
00:33:18.060
And another thing that I think is important is why do we automatically assume when I look through a telescope and I look at, say, Jupiter?
00:33:31.680
There are four very easily visible so-called moons.
00:33:35.760
I can watch them go across the face of Jupiter.
00:33:41.160
I can do the same thing with any number of so-called planets.
00:33:44.360
Why do we assume that we are anything like those things?
00:33:48.720
Why do we assume that because Jupiter is there, we are like Jupiter in shape and motion?
00:33:57.240
And by the way, when we look at our sun, why do we assume that every one of those little dots in the skies is like our sun?
00:34:09.340
Some years ago in my lifetime, binary so-called stars were not an oddity, but they were, you know, interesting, novel, let's say.
00:34:22.500
Now it's probably every star is likely to have a binary.
00:34:28.100
And what I'm saying doesn't exactly back up what I just said, that why would anyone assume that our sun is like all those stars?
00:34:35.120
But I have located what I believe is our binary for our sun.
00:34:40.520
Now, okay, this is a huge thing that we're getting into.
00:34:47.760
And when I was younger and I was going through that kind of Zachariah Sitchin phase and things like that, and I'm sure we'll get into it.
00:34:57.380
So forgive me if I'm getting ahead of us, but the idea that we would have a binary star system and that this thing would at some point return, I mean, that seems like it would cause – I don't know.
00:35:13.740
So given the information from NASA and things like this, this is really only my foundation, my understanding about space.
00:35:20.580
But it just seems to me that the introduction of a large celestial body into our system would change something.
00:35:28.140
I would hope that it wouldn't wreak havoc, but that was a lot of the ideas that I was coming from.
00:35:32.580
Because you expect the gravity theory, I'm guessing, is what you're pointing at.
00:35:36.560
I don't necessarily – I mean, I guess so, yeah, right, because you have this gigantic –
00:35:39.940
If you have an understanding of the theory of gravity as they propose it, then the implications of something that large entering our system would wreak havoc, right?
00:35:50.720
I mean, I couldn't even begin to imagine a lot of people would attribute like polar shifts to an event like that.
00:35:58.820
And then you have that coupled with the idea that like, oh, there seems to be some evidence one way or another that our planet has gone through polar shifts.
00:36:07.580
Yes. And people draw the correlation that that would be because of this celestial body having been here before.
00:36:13.080
Let me ask that question. Yeah. So is this second sun – is this reappearing or is it always there and we just have not been perceiving it for whatever reason?
00:36:21.580
I wish I could give a lot more information than I can, but what I can tell you is I've always been impressed with the Vedic astrologers who go way back in India.
00:36:31.000
And they put forward that our sun has a binary and when it gets further away from us, our consciousness goes dark.
00:36:44.320
And when it comes back, our consciousness lifts, kind of like what we're seeing now, where even we can watch bulldogs grab a skateboard and ride it like a skateboard is supposed to be used.
00:36:55.000
If they did that in the 70s, that would be the most famous bulldog you ever saw in your life.
00:36:58.680
Now it's commonplace. Everything is boosting in consciousness.
00:37:08.880
Does that correlate, Crow, with the idea of the Kali Yuga?
00:37:12.640
Sure. You know, the idea is that we are now coming out of the lowest point on the cyclical wheel called the Kali Yuga or the Dark Age or the Iron Age that we're turning the corner now.
00:37:29.480
We see a lot of confusion, but AI is here purposely to do that.
00:37:33.720
One of the reasons that they are implementing AI is to confuse us so that we'll accept anything, nearly anything.
00:37:44.240
But it is my point of view that this will become undeniable.
00:37:49.900
Way back in 2015 or 16, whenever I shot the first one, I don't have the original file stamp because of, you know, hard drives failing and such.
00:37:59.160
But way back then when I announced it, I did it very low key because I did not want to go through the hell that occurred when I put the lunar wave out.
00:38:11.940
Some years later, another guy named Chris Van Maitre replicated what I did.
00:38:18.160
And it was in a different position when he did it.
00:38:20.800
Then a lady joined him named Cammie Nodell, and she brought with her a polarizing filter.
00:38:27.280
Chris Van Maitre put the telescope on the so-called second sun.
00:38:32.000
She put a polarizing filter and proved that it's not a reflection or a glint or a glare and that it's a body.
00:38:39.320
For those who don't know what a polarizing filter is, it's like your sunglasses.
00:38:43.420
When you put on sunglasses that are polarized and it removes glare and glint like that.
00:38:54.980
The SLU Observatory was live streaming the sun for young people to show the transit of the so-called planet Mercury going across the face of the sun.
00:39:06.680
The problem was that the so-called second sun was right next to the sun, almost kissing it.
00:39:13.240
And about 30 minutes into that video, he says, I guess you're all wondering what that other thing is.
00:39:18.980
And to paraphrase, he said, that is our second sun.
00:39:27.460
How are you supposed to interpret that any other way besides, you know, he's telling the truth?
00:39:33.140
Well, what you're going to see, I've already noticed some people and some bot channels are going out where that's been reposted and saying he's clearly being facetious.
00:39:50.880
But if he was to, you know, if he's being a little snarky there, certainly there's got to be a conventional explanation then, because in order to have a sense of humor in that moment, that lends itself to suggesting, like, we all know what it is, but I'm going to say something obtuse like it's a second sun.
00:40:10.420
Yeah, you can try to erase what the man said by clever little impositions like that, but you can't erase what's in the video frame.
00:40:19.040
These scientists are always very serious people until they're, oh, I was being sarcastic, like we were making the sacrifice to Shiva, the god of destruction at CERN.
00:40:28.060
Yeah, no, no, that was a joke, but the rest of them are very serious.
00:40:31.400
I meant to address the gravity idea, because I think it's an important thing.
00:40:36.600
From my point of view, all of the space agencies are in a club, and we're always led to believe, oh, that can't be true, because we don't get along with that country, and I'm here to tell you, poppycock, it's above all that.
00:40:51.340
The space agencies exist to try to ensure you know nothing about where it is you exist, and one of the outcomes of that is if you don't know where you are, you have no way of knowing where you can go, but there's more.
00:41:04.680
However, this gravity thing is about to get chucked out the window.
00:41:11.120
It's not a law, and you can search all over the internet, and you'll even find people claiming it is a law.
00:41:16.760
It's a damn theory, and I even made a law to talk about things like this, a law for myself to help me think properly.
00:41:24.840
And what it basically says is the longer a theory exists without being proven, the less value it is, and if it sticks around long enough, it tends to get used for scientism.
00:41:47.200
That's not commonly accepted by a lot of people.
00:41:49.560
If you should even highlight that to somebody in casual conversation, like, did you know it's actually the theory of gravity?
00:41:58.860
I've even known some very smart people that have yelled at me.
00:42:05.920
It's my view that that other body will come into view, and it won't be deniable anymore.
00:42:12.380
It's already, you can see it with your naked eye if the conditions are right.
00:42:15.640
So when I film, I shoot in the hydrogen alpha wavelength with my solar telescope.
00:42:29.600
If you look up the spectrum of frequencies, it is such a narrow sliver that we can call visible, that we can see and detect.
00:42:40.000
But at the edge of that, on the red side, is where I'm shooting.
00:42:43.500
And what my telescope does is it knocks out all the other wavelengths and all the surface brightness, knocks it down, and zeros in, excuse me, on hydrogen alpha, which is why I can show you the amazing things I show you.
00:42:58.660
But I predicted way back in the day that I suspected at sunrise and sunset, under the right conditions, you would be able to see the other body with your naked eye.
00:43:11.760
I don't know how well you can search on search engine anymore, but there are plenty of people who have shot the other sun.
00:43:18.900
Even during the Canadian fires, there was so much smoke, it served as a filter.
00:43:24.240
And at high noon, people filmed the other body.
00:43:27.340
Also, one day I was looking at the MasterCard logo and a bell went off in my head because that's what it looks like.
00:43:37.500
And then I thought about Luke from Star Wars on Tatooine.
00:43:51.680
Yeah, if I was going to ask you, what's the most important psychological tool film that is geared towards space?
00:44:00.560
And you guys might be a little young, but I'll just ask to see what you say.
00:44:04.780
So the biggest deal film that has to do with the moon and space?
00:44:10.280
Oh, I would say, I was going to say Star Wars, but now I'm not too sure.
00:44:23.500
But so much effort was put into that to get that look.
00:44:28.740
And what it was put out for was to get our minds ready to accept that they were going to put a man on the moon.
00:44:35.180
The reason for that film is social engineering.
00:44:39.340
They're going to start prepping the human mind to show you the skit that Neil Armstrong is walking on a moon he didn't walk on.
00:44:46.860
So there's a sequel to that movie most people aren't aware of.
00:44:51.280
The year we make contact at the very end of that sequel to the very important film 2001.
00:44:57.840
The main character played by Roy Scheider, the actor, gives a speech.
00:45:03.060
And in that speech closing the movie, he says, we are in a new era where my children will wake up in a world where there are two sons.
00:45:17.500
And so we're going to transition now to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad for the remainder of the show.
00:45:24.640
So we've made it so that for a temporary amount of time, you'll be able to sign up at the free tier and continue watching along.
00:45:32.200
I don't know if that's going to be forever, but we're going to do it for now.
00:45:34.700
So if you guys head on over to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad, sign up at the free tier.
00:45:38.820
You will be able to continue watching this episode and also enjoying an ad-free viewing experience.
00:45:43.540
But otherwise, we are now going to cut the stream to YouTube and elsewhere.
00:45:57.820
I'll share some images with you guys on the other side.
00:46:01.460
Hi, I'm Darren Marlar, host of the Weird Darkness podcast.
00:46:04.500
I want to talk about the most important tool in my podcast belt.
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Spreaker is the all-in-one platform that makes it easy to record, host, and distribute your show everywhere.
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But the real game changer for me was Spreaker's monetization.
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And with Spreaker's programmatic ads, they'll bring the ads to you, and you get paid for every download.
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So if you're ready to podcast like a pro and get paid while doing it,
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We're going to take a quick two-minute break, guys.
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00:49:29.140
I want to get into some of these images and videos and such,
00:49:48.120
We could talk about the Nephilim or something like that.
00:50:00.960
I mean, they're spraying the skies pretty readily
00:50:09.780
So the next time I saw her a couple weeks later,
00:50:58.620
Well, that started because people found patents
00:51:09.800
And, well, I'll show you images here in a little bit.
01:11:16.740
man or not the whole thing is Fugazi the reason
01:11:20.380
he the reason he was important was because so he he
01:11:26.440
pentatonic scale but it's like a there's like one
01:11:29.320
half step in there that is a blue note the devil's
01:11:36.660
different modalities and different scales you'll see
01:11:39.160
you'll obviously there's like you know the Phrygian scale which
01:11:42.060
will sound more Spanish but the blues one has a unique
01:11:44.520
has a unique flavor to it that translates into rock and
01:11:49.300
roll and then what we get like heavy metal from and even
01:11:51.300
not like hip-hop and but it just never made sense to me so
01:11:54.240
it's like some guy missing fingers that's the reason he
01:11:56.340
played this and then it became a prominent it's like no it
01:11:58.840
was it's always about the sequence of it's a sequence of these
01:12:02.540
notes and what they do to us when they're played in succession or
01:12:07.260
within this scale only wow this is which is why which is why they
01:12:11.660
changed the orchestral tuning for middle a they made three or four runs
01:12:16.500
at it we've covered this as well and they finally got 432 or and actually in
01:12:21.940
other places in the world there were many so-called green tunings that were
01:12:25.380
beneficial frequencies and they got it changed to 440 and that is not a
01:12:29.640
beneficial frequency and that has been what the majority of music was it's
01:12:33.720
it's all been used as social engineering all of it but what's worse is if you
01:12:39.600
look if you go back to the 40s and you look at the complexity of music there
01:12:45.760
were so many men and women in this country making a good living off being
01:12:51.800
skilled at their interest instrument and playing in big bands and other things
01:12:56.240
all over this country and you had to be good to get that gig when rock and roll
01:13:02.260
came the quality the intricacy the music theory all of it started headed for the
01:13:09.580
basement and by the way when it hit the basement they got out a jackhammer
01:13:14.340
because rap was coming and they jackhammered a hole in the basement so they
01:13:19.440
could lower your mind on steroids with music that isn't even really half of it
01:13:24.940
for music to be music you have to have melody and harmony and things much of it
01:13:29.580
doesn't even have that and it was so bad at the beginning they would sample or
01:13:34.280
another word for that is steal the work of other musicians so that they could try
01:13:39.640
to get traction and then when you see the tragedy of the Super Bowl thing that
01:13:45.340
just happened oh yeah unbelievable the kind of gutter sniping low-minded
01:13:52.720
embarrassment that it has all become and i'm i'm responsible my generation is responsible we went
01:14:00.740
hook line and sinker for rock and roll and drugs mm-hmm it's funny because right now if you push
01:14:06.940
back against the Super Bowl performance you just you know you're alleged to be racist and it's like
01:14:10.740
well i thought it was markedly bad it wasn't it wasn't good it didn't sound good it didn't look
01:14:14.940
good it wasn't a good performance but these i'll say david that so what you just said there about
01:14:19.780
being markedly racist i want to it perhaps is something you can add to your episode of uh
01:14:24.260
the the bankers of when uh like like proving proving how they've manipulated our algorithm
01:14:29.980
um right around wall street that uh the wall occupy wall street movement there's a i mean there's specific
01:14:36.840
data that you can look at of news outlets who now we know are being funded by the government
01:14:41.800
in most cases but there's a spike in the term like racism and these like these buzzwords it's almost
01:14:48.060
zero and then right around wall street when they did the occupy wall street it spikes and it just
01:14:53.980
stays there until pretty much today it's coming down today but it was because these people have
01:14:59.520
targeted the banking system accurately and they pointed at the people who are oppressing them and
01:15:03.780
they're like yo we need some we need some distractions and out of that we get tim pool and
01:15:08.760
we get you know uh the race card always pays dividends without fail in this country at least
01:15:14.620
until now and by the way to be perfectly clear like you've seen the movie idiocracy you've seen
01:15:20.220
the president in that movie that's a documentary actually well it is and it's coming true but the
01:15:25.760
reason he's the president is because the hidden hand truly feels like those people are less that these
01:15:32.280
races are less and one of the reasons is because in their view historically there's no great cities and
01:15:39.320
all these things they think are important but the truth is you go to africa as an example those people
01:15:45.340
could have lived till the end of time because they weren't leaving a footprint in nature they were
01:15:50.400
living in harmony with their environment and yet the highest reaches view that as less than somehow
01:15:57.380
meanwhile where all the cities and the ships and everything is built it's limited it does so much
01:16:04.020
destruction it can't go on forever and in the movie godfather i think it was they tell you the truth
01:16:10.580
about how they feel when all the godfathers from the different families get together in a meeting
01:16:16.020
and they talk about drug use in that community and i won't even repeat what they've said because it's
01:16:22.660
terrible yeah well now they're terrible they're using you know the people that they think are lesser as
01:16:29.780
as a cudgel to to sort of kneecap the culture at large it was a time when you look at kind of the
01:16:36.720
laurel canyon situation and creating uh jim morrison and the doors and hijacking these you know movements
01:16:44.120
we say on this show that there's no such thing as a a promising grassroots cultural movement that's
01:16:51.080
not co-opted by intelligence agencies and then steered hi i'm darren marler host of the weird darkness
01:16:57.340
podcast i want to talk about the most important tool in my podcast belt spreaker is the all-in-one
01:17:02.700
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01:17:07.820
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insertion that means you can automatically insert ads into your episodes no editing required and with
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spreaker's programmatic ads they'll bring the ads to you and you get paid for every download this
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spreaker.com that's s-p-r-e-a-k-e-r.com to the detriment of uh of you know certainly the west
01:17:57.940
not if it matters right not if it matters right and and so but back in the day those those were at
01:18:03.100
least talented musicians to some degree now it seems like the industry has dumbed us down to the extent
01:18:09.860
where they could push out somebody onto the world stage who's completely talentless and then still
01:18:14.680
you know sell millions and millions of records that's what they do on purpose now yeah well the
01:18:18.820
reason i i suspect they do it on purpose not only to to you know degrade us but also if you don't
01:18:26.460
have any talent on your own and all of your success is because you're backed by this industry and the
01:18:32.000
industry wants to push you out well that means you live or die by that industry's decision you can't
01:18:36.700
break away and then go and do your own thing and find success because you're a talented musician
01:18:41.280
everything that made you came out of decisions that they made right so you know they've got you
01:18:47.420
hook line and sinker yeah the other thing like the super bowl is a good example when you take a small
01:18:53.280
percentage of some group that makes up a whole society and then you foist out what's important
01:18:59.280
to the small group to 100 that too causes tensions um it's working on so many levels and the people that
01:19:07.240
they get now um not that everyone in the rock there were plenty of people that were not that talented
01:19:12.380
in the rock and rolls i look at bob dylan can you imagine bob dylan singing acapella and yet when you
01:19:19.760
listen to those songs you've heard them so many songs they're they're iconic you've accepted them as such
01:19:25.420
but if you took his voice back to the 30s or the 40s he'd have been laughed out of the room yeah
01:19:30.940
couldn't have happened um and these people now anyone damn near anyone could do yeah what they
01:19:38.000
are doing and that creates a situation where they are literally expendable they can get thrown away
01:19:44.160
at the blink of an eye and that's it's a terrible terrible thing but the lowering of the human minds
01:19:51.840
has you know in the 90s they all of a sudden quit funding rock and roll there was a super group called
01:19:59.820
the damn yankees that had ted nugent the guys from sticks or a guy from sticks and another guy from
01:20:07.100
i think night range anyhow it was a super group and it had done really well on its first album they
01:20:12.960
literally got paid something like a million dollars to go away because the directive had come out we're
01:20:19.600
going to rap now yeah and by the time that had happened if you go back i mean i can't imagine some of
01:20:27.880
these rappers that were back in the day did they let their children listen to that no some of the
01:20:33.140
women or sex objects were killing people shooting police you know all the things they did it is
01:20:40.220
it's it's offensive it is low-minded gutter sniping trash and that is what launched the genre and that
01:20:49.060
doesn't even get into some of the tools like my co-host jason is a audio engineer and i think it's
01:20:56.760
called one of the machines they use for rap it's either an 808 or a 606 i forget what it's called
01:21:01.900
but the very bass frequency and that is meant to be bad for you and on and on we go yeah yeah 808s uh
01:21:10.860
that's called 808s and heartbreak that's actually a kanye west song or album yeah well you know that
01:21:16.160
dude's very interesting right like we we were looking at his uh i mean we're off the subject here but
01:21:21.200
we were looking at his album um jesus is king and each one of those songs has a different uh
01:21:27.580
frequency it's not none of them are recorded in 440 they're all recorded in a very odd specific
01:21:33.700
frequency i can't remember one was recorded in 440 right and that was um a song that see it was uh
01:21:40.020
no that was 444 oh it was 444 my mistake yeah none none in standard though which i'm like it's interesting
01:21:46.360
because like you i i want to believe that rap is kind of like low tier because it is but this guy
01:21:52.060
seems to know and he seems to be doing things like manipulating on a level that i don't think he's
01:21:56.640
supposed to be yeah i i don't know what to tell you i mean if someone truly becomes a problem
01:22:04.420
it's dealt with in one way or another yes yes at this point um i don't think it matters i think it's
01:22:10.900
more important to comprehend that there is a whole genre which has become front and center which is
01:22:17.360
unhelpful on every level and what it has done to the complexity of what human beings can create
01:22:24.380
is it's put it in the gutter yeah there was if you thought that the impact rock and roll had
01:22:31.000
then the negative impact that rock and roll had on on western culture was significant
01:22:35.040
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15% off of your entire purchase at purgestore.com hindsight if you compare and contrast what hip-hop has done
01:23:34.580
it was like man they they got in the door with rock and roll and then what hip-hop did was just
01:23:39.460
levels beyond because rock and roll was you know sex drugs and rock and roll and then uh hip-hop was
01:23:44.580
murder it just went to glorifying murder without harmony without harmony and melody a lot of it
01:23:51.940
it's insane it's insane and put you in frequencies which are obtrusive to your um to the systems of
01:23:59.760
your body yeah it makes you want as somebody who grew up you know in the 90s in the early 2000s it
01:24:06.600
makes you want to commit violence and that's a full stop there's nothing like there's no nuance to add
01:24:11.740
there that there's something about it that makes you want to commit it makes you want to fight um and so
01:24:18.020
yeah it's it's uh i remember even the impression or the feeling that i would have walking around town
01:24:24.200
with my cd player uh my headphones on and listening to these songs it's like a very aggressive kind of
01:24:29.680
uh vibe that you've got walking down the street you kind of wish somebody would show up and and give you
01:24:34.380
a hard time and i and you know that was what it was there was a movie in the 80s that was in the 80s
01:24:42.540
there were a ton of movies that were aimed at the young people and the impact they had is almost
01:24:48.220
undeniable um you know you got your breakfast club fast times at ridgemont high there's whole slews of
01:24:54.740
movies that were particularly aimed at that generation x young generation there's one called footloose
01:25:01.140
the original version with kevin bacon and in it they portrayed the father who is the pastor for the
01:25:08.960
town who runs the town and he has outlawed rock and roll music and dancing and he's made to just
01:25:15.480
look like the most unreasonable villain but here's the sad part um and you hate them by the end of the
01:25:21.800
movie you are rooting for those kids to get their sex drugs and rock and roll on and they ain't hurting
01:25:26.520
nobody but at one point in the movie he pulls his daughter aside and says basically i love you
01:25:32.040
i'm not trying to harm you but you don't understand what damage this music is doing and you don't
01:25:39.820
understand what value and benefits come with like classical music and he tells the truth and the whole
01:25:47.180
movie so cleverly geared to throw the truth under the bus and make you root for the villain yes and
01:25:54.880
look not to we've been going hard on hip-hop and and rock and roll that is not to let emo music
01:26:02.020
off the hook i think there was a a sub sect of the population the youth that they couldn't quite
01:26:08.520
get to with hip-hop and they got them to rebel against their parents kind of you know the old
01:26:14.140
school that's what what rock and roll did but in a different way where it was like depression and
01:26:18.880
sadness and if you look at us now as a people right we're more inundated with ssris than we ever
01:26:25.500
have been everybody's got so everybody's self-diagnosing i'm i'm bipolar i'm i'm manic depressed
01:26:31.380
whatever whatever the thing is everybody's on pills for something we literally had a music
01:26:36.440
genre that like glorified that it was it was cool to be sad they made being sad cool they made hating
01:26:43.460
your parents cool i mean that had already been happening for a while but whatever emo music did
01:26:48.080
with with with making sad cool was unbelievable but um i'd like to get back at the uh onto the subject
01:26:57.440
uh at hand when it comes to these these images and i'd be very interested in seeing the sun yes
01:27:02.500
all right i'll uh i'll offer you one more thing and we'll shift over to the sun this is how bad it is
01:27:08.920
and it doesn't matter what the genre of music is if it came from a record company or that system
01:27:14.340
it's the same thing but when i was young a new genre called punk rock came out and i thought for it i got
01:27:22.100
in a punk rock band and what it basically did was said that the rock and roll is too high-minded and
01:27:30.080
intricate we're going to just go to bar chords and you're going to play three of them and that'll be
01:27:35.220
good but the seminal album that the powers that be launched to launch put the punk was a band called
01:27:43.020
the sex pistols the name of the album was never mind now fast forward to the 90s where the best tricks
01:27:49.760
are the old tricks they did the same thing again with a band called nirvana and its seminal album
01:27:56.020
was named and they spelled it slightly different never mind that's how bad it is they do the same
01:28:02.860
thing that's what we talked about they're going to do it again are they going to do it like do it as
01:28:06.780
many times as they get away with it ain't broke don't fix it that's what we're talking about these
01:28:11.180
systems they play on repeat let's get to the sun let's get to the second sun we are drifting
01:28:17.900
the chat's losing its mind they said uh emo music i'll tell you what i'm going to start
01:28:23.320
cutting myself if you guys don't dude that was what was crazy while he's pulling that up i just
01:28:27.720
want to say like it literally emo music is a genre of music that um created an epidemic of children
01:28:33.520
cutting themselves it's an insane thing if you think that emo music didn't do that you're totally
01:28:38.440
wrong i was there i saw it all i was friends with these people guys we got a problem because i can't
01:28:43.800
drop the images in this comment section to get them to you that's strange um how do we let me
01:28:49.880
let me try again and see if it'll it says copy but then it just doesn't do it well i have your
01:28:56.120
youtube clip here hi i'm darren marler host of the weird darkness podcast i want to talk about the most
01:29:02.200
important tool in my podcast belt spreaker is the all-in-one platform that makes it easy to record
01:29:07.560
host and distribute your show everywhere from apple podcasts to spotify but the real game changer for me
01:29:13.300
was spreaker's monetization spreaker offers dynamic ad insertion that means you can automatically insert
01:29:18.860
ads into your episodes no editing required and with spreaker's programmatic ads they'll bring
01:29:24.020
the ads to you and you get paid for every download this turned my podcasting hobby into a full-time
01:29:29.320
career spreaker also has a premium subscription model where your most dedicated listeners can pay
01:29:34.360
for bonus content or early access adding another revenue stream to what you're already doing and the
01:29:39.540
best part spreaker grows with you whether you're just starting out or running a full-blown podcast
01:29:44.480
network spreaker's powerful tools scale effortlessly as your show grows so if you're ready to podcast
01:29:50.480
like a pro and get paid while doing it check out spreaker.com that's s-p-r-e-a-k-e-r.com
01:29:57.980
yeah were you did you want to pull up this youtube clip
01:30:01.620
um what is the clip uh we see uh the sun we see and the one we don't sure okay cool you can kill the
01:30:13.140
audio okay let's pull this up hold on we got an ad but that's okay boom here we go
01:30:28.220
uh-oh hope your buddy's not stranded on the side of the road
01:30:32.840
i'm assuming to let's fast forward where this hump is here
01:30:39.140
okay so back up a little back up a little and i'll i'll okay right there
01:30:55.000
keep going keep going keep going stop right there okay
01:31:02.080
no you're a little you need to go back just to another here cursor was top there you go
01:31:07.620
right there all right so what you're looking at here is the sun we see with our eyes
01:31:12.580
and this is through a hydrogen alpha solar scope that's lens flare as i'm what i'm doing is i'm
01:31:19.060
using the hand control to move the scope around now watch the top of the frame
01:31:26.740
keep watching it went by you didn't notice it but i'm gonna do it again see a little thing go by
01:31:31.380
okay i'm i'm going what what the heck okay there's the sun we see again i'm thinking what was that
01:31:37.620
right i'm gonna keep moving it around because i'm looking for a bright there it is oh my god
01:31:42.580
so that goes by i'm all what the heck and i pull it in and there is the so-called second sun
01:31:49.060
this isn't an actual video of your first time seeing this is it
01:31:52.980
yes this is oh man you must have been what the hell actually actually let me temper that answer i'm
01:31:59.220
reasonably sure that it is i lost hard drives and time stamps but i'm pretty sure put it this way if
01:32:06.180
it's not it's like right within those days when you were looking for this um or were you looking for
01:32:13.140
this is it or is this something you stumbled upon so i had been shooting at night with a full spec
01:32:18.660
camera on the full moon and i kept finding a bright spot in the sky about a third of the sky away from the
01:32:24.740
moon and i just got the idea to start looking around because you can't it's very hard to see
01:32:30.980
anything through a hydrogen alpha scope if there's not something bright like the sun but i decided to
01:32:36.020
move it around and see if i could see anything and i did wow now what are your thoughts yeah the second
01:32:42.500
sun is it like behind the sun like yes right now it spends most of its time as far as i know behind our
01:32:48.740
sun but there are plenty of times when it pokes out and um i know this is limited information right
01:32:57.780
because this is something that that on official record doesn't really exist um is this thing
01:33:03.060
comparable to the size of our sun it's probably hard to know right it looks a little bit smaller but we
01:33:09.620
don't know what the distances are right so right if it was further away it would look a little bit smaller
01:33:15.300
but go over to my website i think we might be able to look at the imagery that i posted for folks to
01:33:22.020
grab um if you hit the sun image link once you get there maybe we can man yeah okay i see it uh
01:33:33.380
and that i mean that was such a concrete image as far as if you compare it to the
01:33:38.340
the image of the sun i mean that you can't attribute that right so go back up do you see do you see the
01:33:44.180
crazy click on the moon one this one here yep this this is what started it what this is is i've got a
01:33:51.700
full spectrum camera looking at the moon so the part of the moon that's lit that you see is blown out
01:33:58.340
and the dark part that you normally can't see is lit enough for you to see it this is okay a full
01:34:04.180
spectrum sees such low light rose is going to send you guys a video clip to run okay so that's the camera
01:34:10.580
i was using when i kept finding the bright spot anything from me that looks pinkish i was shooting
01:34:16.740
with that full spectrum canon camera all right so go back and i'll tell you which solar image to throw up
01:34:27.540
okay sorry it's like looking at the picture okay go down
01:34:32.580
um stop the one all the way to the right um okay so what is this this is the sun right this is the sun
01:34:45.620
shot in hydrogen alpha now let me be perfectly clear there's nothing fake in this image except
01:34:53.700
the color i shoot in black and white so that i can get the most data and information in the image and
01:35:01.780
i'm shooting an image just like you shoot an image i'm literally shooting an image um actually
01:35:07.540
i think the other view is better that pop-up doesn't look as good yeah that seems to be a
01:35:12.100
little bit bigger but anyhow um what you're seeing when you look in hydrogen alpha is you can see all the
01:35:18.340
surface details and on the edge those things that look like flames are called prominences but i left
01:35:26.820
evidence of the second sun in here hi i'm darren marler host of the weird darkness podcast i want
01:35:32.500
to talk about the most important tool in my podcast belt spreaker is the all-in-one platform
01:35:37.460
that makes it easy to record host and distribute your show everywhere from apple podcasts to spotify
01:35:42.900
but the real game changer for me was spreaker's monetization spreaker offers dynamic ad insertion
01:35:48.580
that means you can automatically insert ads into your episodes no editing required and with
01:35:53.300
spreaker's programmatic ads they'll bring the ads to you and you get paid for every download this
01:35:58.260
turned my podcasting hobby into a full-time career spreaker also has a premium subscription model where
01:36:03.780
your most dedicated listeners can pay for bonus content or early access adding another revenue
01:36:08.820
stream to what you're already doing and the best part spreaker grows with you whether you're just
01:36:13.620
starting out or running a full-blown podcast network spreaker's powerful tools scale effortlessly
01:36:19.300
as your show grows so if you're ready to podcast like a pro and get paid while doing it check out
01:36:24.660
spreaker.com that's s-p-r-e-a-k-e-r.com and i'm gonna show you look at the upper left do you see that
01:36:33.700
glow peeking out from behind the sun on the upper left yeah yeah now go down to the lower right
01:36:40.740
where is it not there right it's like a slight overlap that's the glow from the second sun which is
01:36:47.220
currently when i shot this hiding behind now go go grab a different solar image
01:37:04.020
go up one oh is there more down at the bottom uh no oh yeah there's a second i didn't think so yeah go
01:37:10.980
ahead go to the second page yeah okay all right so get the black and white one
01:37:22.420
this is what it looks like when i shoot it except this image has been inverted that's why those white
01:37:28.020
dots the white dots are sunspots which are actually black i invert it so that you can see the 3d nature
01:37:35.140
and this is a common practice um for people who film the sun so i'll show another image where it's
01:37:41.620
not inverted but this is what it looks like out of the camera grab the one next to it this is the same
01:37:48.180
image that i have added color to because it helps your eye to appreciate the detail when you get a color
01:37:54.500
you expect to associate but now let's grab one where the sunspots are black where i have not done the
01:38:00.820
inversion there you go yep okay so notice how it doesn't look as three-dimensional it's because
01:38:07.780
i haven't inverted it so when i invert it i've changed nothing other than to try to demonstrate
01:38:13.460
the 3d nature but look for the glow behind this image
01:38:20.100
not so easy because that other object is moving around right right right these are great pictures by
01:38:28.340
the way i mean just i see you're you're you're selling these as as prints this is an awesome
01:38:32.980
picture yeah super cheap too because any any given image you see takes probably i don't even know how
01:38:39.940
many hours hours and hours and hours to collect the data and then process it into this and get it ready
01:38:47.460
but anyhow right in your estimation how does it work what is the is the sun behind this sun rotating or
01:38:55.860
check your email stuck it's electromagnetic in my view um and i share the point of view that eric
01:39:02.100
dollard has put out check your email and if rose has sent you that animation um i can show you the
01:39:08.420
electromagnetic look and feel yeah this one uh double looping prominence so i shot this this is three hours
01:39:16.900
of data that is then speeded up so you can see the motion the only fake thing in this is the speed it is
01:39:23.620
playing back and the color nothing has been added so go ahead and play it you can see
01:39:30.660
how the magnetic arcs you know electromagnetic arcs and loops right yeah so that's not even fire you're
01:39:40.980
saying that's no that's what i was gonna say it it honestly doesn't look or or behave like fire i mean
01:39:46.820
it has some semblance of a flame kind of like an attribute but it looks i don't know it not not
01:39:53.860
what i expected alchemists that i expect a respect from back in the day said the sun's not hot and the
01:39:59.620
proof of it is that if the sun was hot every mountain would not have snow on it because the
01:40:04.660
top of the mountain is closer to the sun you know what's ridiculous is that was a thought i had as a
01:40:09.540
child and then because of indoctrination i just came to the conclusion well that was short-sighted
01:40:14.820
and silly because i was a child and sure it works yes it's beyond my sense yes they they squeeze the
01:40:20.980
common sense out of you man so then what well what is it in your yeah what the heck it doesn't look at
01:40:27.300
all it looks like i don't know grass or um it doesn't look like flames um plasmas we need to know a lot
01:40:37.060
more and i'm not smart enough to go into that in detail i think you should listen to someone like
01:40:44.180
eric dollard who's a thousand times smarter than i will ever be and he his points of view almost all of
01:40:52.100
them um match what i accept is probably correct but basically we're in a world where we've not been
01:40:59.300
told the truth and there's probably a second son which means we have a lot to rediscover it is
01:41:05.860
incredible that we can get this sort of footage though i mean to be able to see these things
01:41:10.260
audulating on the surface of the sun uh this clearly i wasn't aware that uh let me just a private
01:41:17.300
individual could get this kind of uh footage this is the hardest filming that i have ever done in my
01:41:23.140
life there is no harder way to try to capture video than this so but this wouldn't even be moving
01:41:29.700
this quickly this would be like you said over 30 hours this is speeded up about 800 times it probably
01:41:36.180
more than 800 times so that you can see the motion so that means that this is moving extremely slow
01:41:43.460
this material whatever it is compared to this yes that's incredible that makes no sense at all
01:41:51.220
there it is there it is without the color added and you can see how much more detail you can detect
01:41:57.860
when the color is not there yeah yeah that is wild i like i said i wasn't aware that a private
01:42:05.460
individual could get x i would have imagined you needed i don't know well i'm told by the telescope
01:42:10.820
manufacturer that only three scopes uh of the size i saved up 10 years to get have been sold in north america
01:42:18.820
uh crow how does how do you get to what the heck did you do before that you saved up 10 you went i
01:42:27.700
want to save up for a meaningful telescope so that i can get this sort of imagery 10 years is a long time
01:42:34.660
to squirrel away money to look at the sun well go look at shoot the moon um you know i i when i was a
01:42:43.380
kid i wanted a telescope so badly and my father who wasn't rich he actually got me a microscope when
01:42:50.820
i was 12 or something and i waited and waited and waited and finally i got out of the marine corps
01:42:58.500
and by chance this is by chance and i really wanted a telescope i even was getting the magazines that
01:43:04.660
showed them i went to a shopping mall with my wife and some old couple in their upper 70s the wife had
01:43:12.580
bought the husband a full on full robotic this is like 94 a full robotic eight inch mead made in
01:43:20.500
america good to go case everything telescope and when she gave it to him he said this is too much take
01:43:27.380
it back so by chance i walked in and it was sitting up there and i was asking questions about the scope
01:43:34.660
and the guy said look this scope is about a thousand dollars off because it was returned and it's never
01:43:42.260
been used and at that point i think i went into debt for more than i ever i'm not a guy who carries
01:43:49.380
debt the only debt i'd ever had was for a car and i went twenty six hundred dollars in debt in the early
01:43:55.700
90s on a freaking credit card to top it off which i never do because i wanted a telescope so badly
01:44:03.540
and that was what started all this and now look at what you now now you're being uh de-platformed
01:44:09.940
from everywhere for talking about your discoveries with this thing i mean those images are absolutely
01:44:14.980
incredible like i said i didn't think that you were going to get that sort of a thing outside of a
01:44:18.660
professional environment uh not certainly not in a private collection um those are really really uh
01:44:24.660
tremendous images what's crazy is i spent from last early march until the snow came or the cold
01:44:34.340
weather came because the solar scopes don't want to be in freezing you can damage the edelon which is the
01:44:39.940
filtration system but from that time i can't tell you how many thousands of hours i put in to learning
01:44:48.100
how to process the images with just making them look better without adding or changing them and one
01:44:54.980
of my biggest beefs is in uh astronomy photographing which is a big hobby now they go out at night they
01:45:04.580
shoot a nebula and they do stuff like remove every star from the image and then put some of them back in
01:45:10.020
because it looks better and it drives me freaking bonkers they change stuff which means in a hundred years
01:45:16.980
that image is worthless you can't compare what's happened to that damn image and so when i set out
01:45:23.060
to do this it was holy uh nothing gets changed what i put the date on every image and this can be
01:45:31.060
compared in a hundred years or whatever the only thing that i am adding is color and by the way i have
01:45:36.660
the original black and whites backed up but it helps the human eye to consider it i think if you put some
01:45:42.740
orange in there when so when you see nasa providing all these various images of like let's say earth
01:45:51.220
from from space and we find that it's all composites and like 3d renderings and things like that is do you
01:45:57.540
find them valid in other words is that the only way that they can possibly do it or do you find that
01:46:02.340
suspicious this is what happened in the 90s i got that new telescope and i started to go to town and i what
01:46:10.020
i wanted to do was be able to create the images i was being shown from the hubble that was like my
01:46:16.100
dream gig that's what i wanted i wanted to shoot the horse head nebula and the orion nebula and what
01:46:21.860
i learned and i was using film back then by the way it was much more difficult you didn't just click
01:46:27.540
off images you had a piece of film and you had to get it right so i'm doing this and i'm beginning to
01:46:33.380
realize the shape looks like the shape of what they're showing me but that's where it ends
01:46:38.580
and that's when i began to realize well to this day if you go out into the astro astrophotography
01:46:46.820
communities like astro bin you'll be blown away by the images with all the digital tools they have
01:46:53.540
that they can get it is mind-blowing but you will regularly see this was made with the hubble palette
01:47:00.020
which means the colors are all fake and so while i'm being a little hypocritical because i just told you
01:47:05.780
i put a fake color on the sun to me that's a little bit different and plus i have the black and white
01:47:11.940
but it just helps you view it i think when you get a nebula and there's 20 colors in there and they're
01:47:17.220
all made up i think that's a little disingenuous yeah yeah yeah i would i would say so hi i'm darren
01:47:23.620
marler host of the weird darkness podcast i want to talk about the most important tool in my podcast
01:47:28.660
belt spreaker is the all-in-one platform that makes it easy to record host and distribute your show
01:47:34.020
everywhere from apple podcasts to spotify but the real game changer for me was spreaker's monetization
01:47:39.860
spreaker offers dynamic ad insertion that means you can automatically insert ads into your episodes
01:47:45.140
no editing required and with spreaker's programmatic ads they'll bring the ads to you and you get paid
01:47:50.580
for every download this turned my podcasting hobby into a full-time career spreaker also has a premium
01:47:56.180
subscription model where your most dedicated listeners can pay for bonus content or early access
01:48:01.300
adding another revenue stream to what you're already doing and the best part spreaker grows
01:48:06.020
with you whether you're just starting out or running a full-blown podcast network spreaker's
01:48:10.580
powerful tools scale effortlessly as your show grows so if you're ready to podcast like a pro and get
01:48:16.660
paid while doing it check out spreaker.com that's s-p-r-e-a-k-e-r.com have you through watching
01:48:25.700
this thing for as long as you have determined a path because it seems to me that if you can observe
01:48:33.300
some of its movement over a long period of time then you can sort of expand on that and and maybe
01:48:38.900
assume where it's going to go i don't even think we understand comprehend correctly how it moves which
01:48:48.420
was part of jaron's problem um i think what they expected to see was not what they saw and i think
01:48:55.540
that we need to actually come to a point where we know certainly how it's moving the sun and the moon
01:49:02.340
because in my view this place is not moving i accept what taiko brahi laid down um there's people
01:49:08.820
who made models that are just ingenious real-time models of brahi's work um but he has the earth moving
01:49:17.460
at a kilometer an hour and by the way he doesn't have to fake any of the math like the model we have
01:49:23.380
all kinds of magical math has to go on but in my point of view i think the bible told you the truth
01:49:27.940
we're stationary and we are not only stationary we're the center of it all there's a there's an
01:49:33.060
interesting theory from one of our favorite guests this guy ed mabry um where he talks about the speed
01:49:37.780
of light and how uh well science says that it's slowed down uh in the progression of time i'm not sure
01:49:43.940
where you stand on it i don't even really know what i think on it i just you know took as
01:49:47.300
word for it but uh he's saying that uh as time goes on the speed of light slows down because the
01:49:54.100
sun is drawing further from us so the constitution of what we're made of and uh the ability for
01:50:02.180
us to interact with other things that might not be or other things that aren't as physical as us to
01:50:08.660
their ability to interact with us in this physical realm has diminished in some sort of ways so
01:50:13.780
that's why we have some like you know the phenomena that we have now with like uh i don't know
01:50:18.340
entities and things like that i can blow your mind with kind of related story in the 90s when i got that
01:50:24.820
scope and i was learning everything from astronomy magazine and everything mainstream could teach me
01:50:30.580
before i realized that i was being played um i was taught that if you take your thumb at arm's length
01:50:38.180
you cover up the moon and that's a degree of sky you know what we're taught now we're taught to take
01:50:44.980
our pinky at arm's length to cover up a full moon and that's a half a degree of sky and i kept trying
01:50:51.460
to tell people that it had changed and everyone said you're misremembering you're wrong and then i saw
01:50:56.420
the movie apollo 13 where tom hanks twice puts his thumb up to cover the moon uh so if that if if the way i
01:51:06.020
remember it is correct which i think it is and what he does in that movie is correct it went from
01:51:11.940
covering half a degree to half a degree that would probably mean it's getting further away from us
01:51:18.100
right wow yeah and that would uh that would then make uh i think the the theory that ed uses that
01:51:24.660
you know we're we're made up of these atoms and they're kind of floating they're they're floating
01:51:29.140
around in a circle around i'm gonna explain it poorly whatever the the further away we are from the
01:51:34.020
light the source the less constitution that we're made up the less constitution this desk is made up
01:51:39.700
of because it's all just kind of vibrating yeah it was like his idea was that the ways in which atoms
01:51:46.180
communicate with one another is um basically through electricity you know for dummies like me and um and
01:51:55.060
that if if the speed of light is slowing down then that suggests that there was a time where
01:52:02.020
communication between atoms and molecules was happening a lot faster which then could be
01:52:06.900
attributed to the idea that human beings used to live a lot longer right when you go to the bible
01:52:12.180
and so-and-so lived for 300 400 years and it's like we take that as metaphor or or a language that we
01:52:21.060
don't understand some you know something that escapes us but it could have been literal that we were
01:52:26.420
hardier and also i think it's true i think we've been limited and this has been going on this control
01:52:31.620
of human beings and the reason is is because we are very special the reason is because things like
01:52:37.540
the bible say you want to find the kingdom of god look inside they're not lying to you we have the
01:52:43.460
divine spark of life that has been granted us and apparently there are others who are taking a
01:52:48.660
real interest in this and others here that want to control this very thing um
01:52:57.060
i was gonna tell you uh shoot slipped my mind well one of the other things that he said that you may
01:53:04.260
find interesting crow is like he's attributing that to the idea that adam and eve used to be able to walk
01:53:09.220
with god in the garden and he thinks that there are these incursions that happen throughout the bible
01:53:14.420
where man falters and falls away from god distances um ourselves from god and that eventually this
01:53:24.260
changes to the extent where moses can only see god in a burning bush or that's very different in
01:53:31.220
contrast to walking with god in the garden right um and this is taking the premise that god is light
01:53:38.260
and so maybe it's not necessarily cultures have thought i mean yeah that many cultures look at the
01:53:44.260
sun as this almost uh as this create well not a creator but like this source it feels connected in
01:53:50.660
some way oh i i remember i wanted to answer you asked me what the sun is my current point of view
01:53:59.380
is that what you're looking at and my images is probably like a hollow shell it's not in my view a
01:54:06.660
nuclear furnace it's not nuclear it's electromagnetic and that begs where's all the energy
01:54:14.100
coming from and it is currently coming from somewhere else maybe the second sun plays a role in that
01:54:24.580
but eric dollard put it best i was calling it a transformer he called it a converter and he said
01:54:31.140
maybe that energy is coming from counter space and i think that that's currently what i accept as the best
01:54:38.740
workable idea what is counter space space that isn't here hmm that doesn't help it's like when
01:54:49.620
it's like when you hear people maybe you know you say dimensions people talk about or like the astral
01:54:56.020
plane you hear versions of the idea all over the place yes so you're saying he's saying that this is a
01:55:02.260
transformer for the i said it was a transformer he called it a converter for the upside down wow that
01:55:08.900
is that's actually fascinating because the sun does show up in a lot of these testimonies of
01:55:14.740
people that uh astral project or oh yeah they're taking to another realm yeah some people even even
01:55:20.500
say that it's almost inside like uh there'll be inside of this huge marble room the sky is marble but
01:55:26.100
there will be a sun of some type yeah like some type they might describe it as a golden clock or
01:55:31.060
even just a traditional sun that we see uh it's there but i wonder then crow what do you make of
01:55:39.460
the moon because that is a strange uh we should i mean they we should be out soon as well because i
01:55:45.460
don't want to i want to respect this time and i feel like we're just like no yeah yeah i don't want
01:55:48.740
you to don't you don't have to go into a whole diatribe but i do i i'm curious you've been looking
01:55:52.660
i i don't i think the moon's better described as a luminary maybe it's plasma or something like that
01:55:58.500
but i think calling it a luminary is better my point of view you can't put a boot on it um that's
01:56:04.500
my point of view my point of view is it's not reflecting light from the sun um yeah it seems to
01:56:12.500
be projecting its own is is what i hear people say well maybe that's a a topic that's best saved for
01:56:18.740
another time um i want to thank you uh for as i said this was something that i i intended to do
01:56:25.700
is to reach out to you for some time and uh oh i think we just lost him he's like i gotta go dude
01:56:33.620
top are you there i'm here yep oh it looks like you had to go go ahead yeah yeah yeah i think we
01:56:38.020
lost him oh there he is he's back all right blinked me up strange i don't know what happened there uh but
01:56:44.580
we're we're about to bring it in for a landing i just wanted to thank you for your time and and as
01:56:48.740
i said this is something that uh i wanted to get done for a while and and hearing you on on tinfoil
01:56:53.700
hat really uh sparked that so uh thank you for responding and and thank you for making some time
01:56:58.660
to speak with us and and share this with our audience um cool guys thank you so much for having
01:57:03.460
me on i appreciate it uh and i want to wish you guys all the best in the new era certainly this is going
01:57:10.180
to be a year of change and change and change one more time crow for the audience where can everybody
01:57:17.540
find you all of my work is centralized on a private server you can go to crow triple seven radio.com
01:57:24.660
that is c-r-r-o-w seven seven seven radio.com members get access to all the forums threads comments
01:57:31.380
they can create all the top levels of those things they can stream the two-hour film called shoot the
01:57:36.420
moon they also i have currently 11 videos uh that cover my solar work which is exclusive to members
01:57:44.740
and they also get access to all the sun images that we were looking at earlier among other things um
01:57:51.300
and on the sponsored link i find mostly health related products that are finder valuable and if i can
01:57:58.500
i try to get a discount for people but some of the stuff i use every single day and won't go without it
01:58:05.140
but uh memberships eight bucks after all these years so there it is man okay i see you have like
01:58:11.460
a sort of right right machine right the spooky is definitely uh something similar that's one of
01:58:16.180
they just sent me a new device i haven't used it yet awesome great stuff here yeah guys again i suggest
01:58:22.180
go to the website that's uh crow with two r's seven seven seven radio.com and uh crow thank you again for
01:58:29.140
joining us this has been a pleasure and i mean whenever somebody of your caliber comes and talks with us
01:58:34.580
where it's it's a blessing and we i just i thank you for dropping this knowledge on us and it was a
01:58:39.300
great conversation man hey man thank you guys so much and and have a wonderful wonderful day
01:58:44.180
bye-bye yeah all right guys until next time don't forget to obey submit and comply see you later
01:58:50.900
the greatest hypnotist on planet earth is a oblong box in the corner of the room it is constantly
01:58:57.540
telling us what to believe is real if you can persuade them that what they see with their eyes is what
01:59:04.100
there is to see because they'll laugh in the face of an explanation that portrays the bigger picture of