Nephilim Death Squad - August 26, 2025


201: Domes, Resonance, and the War on Geometry w⧸ Topher Gardner of BioCharisma Pod


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

183.80103

Word Count

23,143

Sentence Count

1,707

Misogynist Sentences

17

Hate Speech Sentences

39


Summary

In this episode of the End of Day You Burp Podcast, we have a special guest on the show, Chris Gardner. Chris is a writer, entrepreneur, podcaster, and podcaster. He is also a member of the Florida Illuminati and a founder of Biochar, a biochar company that makes biochar.


Transcript

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00:00:41.020 Stand up my wrist.
00:00:44.220 Top Lobson Productions.
00:00:46.180 We are being hypnotized by people like this.
00:00:55.160 Newsreaders, politicians, teachers, lecturers.
00:00:59.380 We are in a country and in a world that is being run by unbelievably sick people.
00:01:08.280 The chasm between what we're told is going on and what is really going on is absolutely
00:01:13.400 important.
00:01:14.400 Oh, yeah, dude.
00:01:15.800 They sing that one.
00:01:16.600 It's like we all know what's going down, but no one's saying shit what happened to the home
00:01:21.100 of the grave.
00:01:22.380 These muck-t-c***s they controlling us now, but no one's talking about how they made a spot
00:01:26.260 of these slaves.
00:01:27.520 And everybody's just walking around, heading to clouds, and won't awaken to a dead in the
00:01:31.780 grave.
00:01:32.740 But any too late, we need to be ready to raise up.
00:01:35.540 Welcome to the end of day.
00:01:37.220 You burp.
00:01:43.940 Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
00:01:47.400 I am David Lee Corbo, a.k.a. The Raven.
00:01:50.500 Sleepy Lee Corbo.
00:01:51.700 That is Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
00:01:54.960 Hello.
00:01:55.380 It is a little bit early, and I know no matter how much I wake up, I'll shower, several cups
00:02:01.440 of coffee, a lot of hydration, still can't shake it off my face.
00:02:05.400 You can tell by looking at me.
00:02:06.480 Well, maybe our guest has some answers, but let's run.
00:02:09.540 We have to plug.
00:02:10.320 We have to plug away.
00:02:11.420 It's very important that we plug.
00:02:12.920 For money or something.
00:02:14.100 Patreon.com backslash, forward slash, I'm very sorry.
00:02:17.040 One of the slashes.
00:02:17.920 To the sensitive people out there about the slashes.
00:02:20.160 Nephilim Death Squad is where you're going to want to be at the half an hour mark when
00:02:22.560 we go live exclusively to our pay.
00:02:25.940 Treon members.
00:02:26.780 Key word there, pay.
00:02:28.940 That's the functioning word.
00:02:30.320 We get away from the poor sometime around the half an hour mark.
00:02:32.320 If you want to prove to us that you're not poor and you want to continue enjoying this
00:02:35.060 conversation, engaging in the live chat.
00:02:36.480 Gaining access to episodes before the general public and also getting first dibs on Brohemian
00:02:41.220 Grove for tickets when they are released, then patreon.com forward slash Nephilim Death
00:02:46.680 Squad is where you going to want to be.
00:02:48.760 And don't forget to go there for your discounts on toplobsa.com.
00:02:51.820 Go buy some stuff.
00:02:53.360 We have some more merch, some more designs coming out pretty soon.
00:02:56.900 Florida Illuminati, also a banger.
00:02:58.400 Florida Illuminati.
00:02:59.260 A lot of fun.
00:03:00.440 Go check that stuff out.
00:03:01.980 Let's get into the guest because we have made him late.
00:03:04.960 Yes.
00:03:05.340 And he looks very busy.
00:03:06.200 He's actually kind of angry at the bottom there.
00:03:07.460 He does look like a busy guy and he's been waiting on us and our tech issues for quite
00:03:10.600 some time.
00:03:11.100 Joining us today is Christopher Gardner.
00:03:13.740 Chris, for the audience who may not be familiar with your work, who are you?
00:03:17.040 What do you do?
00:03:18.320 Well, nice to meet you guys.
00:03:21.860 I've been listening to your podcast for a few months and you guys rock.
00:03:24.600 I really love your banter.
00:03:26.400 Thank you.
00:03:26.920 Thank you.
00:03:27.500 I am a builder of domes in the Ozarks and I also own a company that makes biochar, which
00:03:34.100 I know our friend Brad Lael wanted, like introduced us that way about talking about the hypercube
00:03:41.340 of carbon, the 666 of it all.
00:03:43.500 And yeah, so I'm originally a South Floridian, so I feel simpatico to you guys.
00:03:51.200 I grew up around Latinos.
00:03:55.540 Well, first off, I didn't want to correct you before the show, but David's not Spanish.
00:04:00.300 David's just a mutt.
00:04:01.560 Well, yeah, yeah.
00:04:02.520 I'm what is affectionately, and you can call me this if you'd like, a Jewish bioweapon
00:04:07.640 is how I like to be addressed.
00:04:09.820 Yeah.
00:04:10.240 I'm a multitude of things.
00:04:11.560 Well, that's the thing about the Jews.
00:04:13.600 They can morph into whatever they want to.
00:04:15.800 So like you being around Latinos by osmosis, you just kind of like morph into that.
00:04:20.720 God, he does not know how correct he is.
00:04:23.320 I will code switch.
00:04:25.600 If I'm around black people, I'll code switch.
00:04:27.560 If I'm around Spanish people, I'll code switch.
00:04:30.080 And I'm never enough for any of them.
00:04:32.440 But please go on.
00:04:33.780 Yeah, yeah.
00:04:34.320 So basically, I grew up in South Florida.
00:04:39.040 Do you guys want the whole bio, like real quick?
00:04:41.440 And then we'll go.
00:04:41.840 Yeah, tell us and give us the bio.
00:04:43.680 How do you get into what you're doing?
00:04:46.160 Because it's odd.
00:04:47.680 Well, I grew up in Florida where there was some pretty bad hurricanes when I was a kid.
00:04:51.820 Like Hurricane Andrew ripped through.
00:04:54.060 It was about 20 miles south of me.
00:04:56.660 And it pretty much devastated an area where my dad was building.
00:04:59.740 My dad was a commercial contractor.
00:05:01.740 And so I got to see the devastation of Andrew in 91.
00:05:05.960 And my dad kind of turned me on to domes.
00:05:09.000 Like in not saying like build domes.
00:05:11.660 He was just like, oh, if you're going to build, you should build this way.
00:05:14.960 And that just was kind of stuck in the back of my head.
00:05:18.120 But I was an athlete.
00:05:19.460 I got a scholarship to go to school at Michigan State.
00:05:22.960 And I kicked for them for four years.
00:05:24.840 And so all that was like, I never, ever thought I was going to be a builder or anything like that.
00:05:29.960 I was just focused on girls and football.
00:05:33.200 And, you know, played a little bit in the Arena Football League after that.
00:05:37.440 And then my body was pretty banged up.
00:05:39.660 And so I got into yoga to fix everything.
00:05:43.900 And that led me into an ashram that led me to India and kind of put me in the new age world.
00:05:50.460 And what was weird about that in the late 90s, early 2000s was that it was like I was surrounded by a bunch of professional athletes that were all trying to find the zone.
00:06:03.440 Like pretty much like deep meditation is like the zone when you're an athlete.
00:06:07.440 Which one of you is the pitcher?
00:06:08.700 Which one of you can?
00:06:09.540 I pitch, he catches.
00:06:11.940 That's very rude.
00:06:14.780 Also very fast.
00:06:15.860 Good job.
00:06:16.740 Yeah, yeah.
00:06:17.460 No, I was a pitcher.
00:06:19.400 Yeah, so Owen was telling me your exploits.
00:06:24.300 Yeah, so, you know, when you're in the zone as an athlete, it's like one of those elusive areas that when you're not an athlete, when you're not in high-stakes situations, it's sort of like hard to find.
00:06:35.300 And so I found as I was fixing my body through all the asana and pranayama, I was also exploring like how to actually make that frame of reference, the zone, be like a common day occurrence without like, you know, killing myself.
00:06:55.020 So, and that kind of led me to Costa Rica and I ended up living in Costa Rica for 15 years and in Costa Rica, I saw because of all the earthquakes and the storms that they were having, it kind of hearkened me back to what my dad told me when I was a kid.
00:07:14.520 It was like, hey, you know, domes are the way to build.
00:07:17.300 And because I didn't have that much money and I saw a bunch of my friends lose all their investment into these homes that got ravaged by earthquakes, I decided just to go ahead and build domes for myself.
00:07:32.860 And I had a client of mine that he was a massage client, actually, and he saw some of the draft, the draftings that I had done for my own home.
00:07:43.840 And he's like, that's exactly what I want.
00:07:46.620 And I was like, well, if you send me to school to learn how to do this, I'll build you one.
00:07:50.840 And he did.
00:07:51.480 So he ended up sending me to Caller University in Hesperia, California, and I took their dome building workshop and they thought I was crazy because I told them, I'm like, look, I'm going back and I'm going to build this thing.
00:08:05.700 And I showed them my plans and everything like that.
00:08:08.440 And they thought I was nuts because it was pretty ambitious.
00:08:12.700 And I did.
00:08:13.660 I went back in 2008, built the whole thing.
00:08:18.020 And from then on, like, I've never really wanted for work.
00:08:22.520 And I kept evolving my practice, like their type of dome construction was just dealing with rammed earth.
00:08:30.140 And it was really heavy.
00:08:31.120 And so even though the shapes of the domes were really nice, the actual weight was not actually appropriate for how soft the land was.
00:08:43.700 What is rammed earth?
00:08:45.820 Yeah, great question.
00:08:47.840 You've never heard of rammed earth?
00:08:49.520 Rammed earth is like, so imagine you have a form.
00:08:52.020 Say you have a box and then you put earth in it and then you knock all the air out of it.
00:08:57.200 You're essentially making a brick out of that earth without firing it.
00:09:01.760 So I learned a system called flexible form rammed earth construction where you take these long tubes, you know, like the sacks that they, like, will put, like, grains in.
00:09:12.780 Well, before they cut those sacks, before they cut the sacks, you end up having this, this huge tube.
00:09:19.600 And you can cut that to any size you want.
00:09:22.900 And what we do is that's what we do.
00:09:25.200 We'll cut those sacks into the sizes that we want.
00:09:27.880 And then we backfill them and then we tamp them into place.
00:09:31.640 And so here in the Ozarks this last year, we've built five buildings and we've laid, I think, something close to 100 tons of earth and shaped it.
00:09:42.380 So it's like sculpting.
00:09:43.740 It's a very rudimentary way of sculpting.
00:09:46.560 But the whole notion was biogeometry, like what my dad was telling me when I was a kid and what I saw in Costa Rica was that essentially when you build boxes, when you build, you know, essentially a cube.
00:10:00.500 Mother nature doesn't like cubes.
00:10:03.200 You know, cubes get blown away.
00:10:06.780 And, you know, I don't know how long you guys have been down in Florida.
00:10:09.740 I think you're in central Florida, but at least in south Florida, for a time there, we were getting hit by a lot of hurricanes.
00:10:17.080 And no matter how well the houses were built, you'd have these problems with the roofs getting popped off and all the rest of it.
00:10:26.140 And it's just because it's not natural to have, you know, these, I guess you would call them post and beam structures because of low pressure that occurs when, you know, air moves very fast over the roof, all the rest of it.
00:10:39.740 So I just started building domes and modifying my system so that they could handle earthquakes.
00:10:46.140 They could handle the amount of rain.
00:10:47.960 And ever since then, people have kind of really taken to it because I've hybridized the system of using rammed earth with these steel structures that are, they're originally called a Japanese star dome.
00:11:01.700 But he actually got the mathematician that figured that out.
00:11:06.280 He figured out the math from mandalas.
00:11:10.580 Oh, that's interesting.
00:11:12.880 Are these your constructions, Chris?
00:11:15.080 Yeah.
00:11:15.700 Yeah.
00:11:16.100 These are fantastic, man.
00:11:18.300 You're using, yeah, like mandala golden ratio type of construction.
00:11:23.620 Interesting.
00:11:24.220 Interesting.
00:11:25.340 Yeah.
00:11:25.620 So like the coral domes right there, that, that company, I, I, that's a offshoot of my original company in Costa Rica, Tico dome, which that dome that you see right there with that roof, with that reciprocal roof, that's a Tico dome.
00:11:39.540 That was my original invention, where you have this massive free cast concrete, nylon cement roof over a dome.
00:11:49.300 And then that way you could have rooms offshooting the center of, of the building.
00:11:54.300 And the, you'd have essentially the dome as the great room.
00:11:57.600 And those, those were about eight meters wide.
00:12:00.420 So the, the great room was about 500 square feet.
00:12:03.200 And then all the bedrooms and bathrooms and everything like that would offshoot off, off, off the center dome.
00:12:10.520 How, how large can you build one dome?
00:12:13.600 This, this one here looks fairly large, but like, what's the biggest you can build it without, uh, you know, uh, I guess, uh, considering, considering the structure without sacrificing some of the integrity of it.
00:12:25.320 Well, we just, we just completed our largest one, which is a 42 foot diameter, which is 1600 feet, just under the dome itself.
00:12:34.480 So I really like, I like modular don't, I like modular buildings.
00:12:39.280 Um, I'm sort of like a Mediterranean type of, like if you were to take like a Frank Lloyd Wright, mix them with like a dome builder and then throw them in the Mediterranean.
00:12:50.020 And that's what I am.
00:12:51.200 So I like courtyards.
00:12:52.820 I like, I like structures that are hyper resilient to like the sheer forces of what, whether it's wind or earthquakes here, where we live in the Ozarks, we get a lot of tornadoes like this last year, just the tornado alley that we're in.
00:13:08.160 We had seven tornadoes pass through here.
00:13:10.700 And so, yeah, I just had to get Starlink because all of our towers are gone.
00:13:15.220 Like I, I used to get full bars here.
00:13:17.340 Now I get one bar.
00:13:18.740 So I had to Starlink it up, but, uh, me, me too out here.
00:13:23.040 Same thing.
00:13:23.600 It's not, not because of, uh, weather.
00:13:25.700 It's just because I'm in the middle of nowhere.
00:13:27.780 Yeah.
00:13:28.760 Yeah.
00:13:29.160 Well, I'm in the middle of nowhere and we've been getting all these like tornadoes.
00:13:33.200 So what I'm seeing as like the market inefficiency right now is tornado structures.
00:13:39.360 Cause most tornado structures that they build are boxes.
00:13:42.620 They're kind of ugly.
00:13:43.640 They're usually like some sort of steel box and then they're not good to be in.
00:13:48.560 Like if you're in them for any period of time, you feel like you're in a prison cell.
00:13:52.220 So pretty much I could see in the very near future, instead of people doing storm shelters
00:13:57.340 where they have these like gross, you know, concrete and metal boxes to be in, they'll have
00:14:03.760 just like a little dome that then they can rent out to people or whatever.
00:14:08.800 Cause you, you can make, uh, there's so much more resilient than, than a cube.
00:14:14.260 And, um, just because there's nothing for the wind to catch on to.
00:14:19.040 Right.
00:14:19.580 Well, yeah, it's interesting.
00:14:20.620 Cause the market right now is moving in a slightly different direction with the popularity
00:14:24.560 of shipping container homes, which is fascinating because they're just like big steel traps.
00:14:29.980 No, I'm telling you right now, like that was a fad that down in Costa Rica was really big
00:14:37.100 deal.
00:14:37.380 Cause Costa Rica has ports on either side of the country.
00:14:40.100 I mean, it's the rich coast.
00:14:41.380 So you would have all these containers that were available by the time you treated the
00:14:47.000 metal, by the time you cut the metal, by the time you made it so that the metal didn't
00:14:51.560 sweat because the AC and all the rest of it, it was so much cheaper just to build a regular
00:14:57.120 building like, like the, the, the shipping, the shipping container thing is really good.
00:15:04.300 If you have, if you need like an extra bodega or storage space, yes, sorry for my terminology.
00:15:12.360 If you need extra storage space that, that you don't need the temperature control, but
00:15:19.320 whenever you heat or cool metal, it's going to attract water.
00:15:23.260 So unless you're, unless you're willing to really like seal these things up or get a
00:15:29.000 refrigerated one that has the insulation and has stainless steel, they're not worth
00:15:33.680 their time.
00:15:34.780 And honestly, like I saw, um, somebody has like this, uh, uh, storage unit house where
00:15:41.980 they built and it's like, it's very like oddly geometric.
00:15:45.040 It's strange.
00:15:45.800 It looks like modern art.
00:15:46.820 There's one right around the corner from you.
00:15:48.080 Have you noticed it?
00:15:48.860 They're building one.
00:15:49.600 Yeah.
00:15:49.620 They just dragged two shipping containers onto their property.
00:15:51.900 It looks like a damn nightmare.
00:15:53.320 It does.
00:15:53.540 It looks like a big prison.
00:15:54.760 I wonder.
00:15:55.320 Yeah.
00:15:55.620 I don't, I don't like the aesthetic of it.
00:15:57.380 The stuff that you're showing me here with the domes looks like, it looks like something
00:16:00.420 you'd see in Tartaria.
00:16:01.760 Yeah.
00:16:01.960 Yeah.
00:16:02.180 Yeah.
00:16:03.240 Yeah.
00:16:03.620 The other stuff, it looks like, you know, that's in the, these modern museums with, uh,
00:16:07.860 we're supposed to consider it art.
00:16:09.200 What I'm wondering is what happened?
00:16:10.780 Like, I understand the, the, you know, the benefit of the structural integrity of like right angles
00:16:15.220 and things like that.
00:16:16.040 But as far as wind resistance, you know, just having this gigantic flat surface made of
00:16:21.180 right angles is not going to do you any favors when a big wind comes through.
00:16:24.400 And yet that has become the norm and the standard in, in, in certainly in the West here for,
00:16:29.860 you know, hundreds and hundreds of years.
00:16:31.680 And it seems pretty, uh, intuitive to say if you're in an area, like, let's say you're
00:16:37.800 in an area that is prone to earthquakes.
00:16:39.640 As soon as that right angle fails, the structural integrity fails and the whole thing comes crumbling
00:16:44.340 down.
00:16:44.860 You don't really have that issue when it comes to domes.
00:16:47.360 You also don't have that issue when it comes to wind resistance and domes.
00:16:50.920 You also don't have that issue when it comes to rain and water when it comes to a dome.
00:16:54.960 So it seems so intuitive.
00:16:57.960 And yet here in the West, everything is predicated off of right angles and, and flat surfaces.
00:17:02.720 What, what, what happened?
00:17:04.260 I mean, it seems like common sense.
00:17:05.520 Well, my dad, you know, he was an architect and when he was in college in the sixties,
00:17:11.260 they had this huge shift in the architectural language.
00:17:15.560 They went away from like classic, I guess you would consider it Northern European roots
00:17:22.180 of, of having big bay windows and nice curve.
00:17:26.360 Like if you go into any old town, a Germanic town in the United States, like in Wisconsin
00:17:32.800 or Illinois or any of these, these, these places that were essentially 150 years ago,
00:17:38.880 we're bustling, right?
00:17:40.440 You have all the houses have character.
00:17:42.420 And what you'll see in all the houses is that even when you do have flat surfaces, those flat
00:17:48.000 surfaces are always broken up by different levels.
00:17:51.540 And he was telling me, he was really upset in the sixties because in the sixties, they brought
00:17:57.500 in the ball house method, which when you look into social engineering, social in social engineering,
00:18:03.560 they figured out in, in Russia, essentially the USSR, when you put people in boxes, they lose
00:18:12.720 all hope.
00:18:13.280 And so what they did was they essentially created this, this design language to quote unquote,
00:18:21.400 standardized construction.
00:18:23.340 And the standardized construction method was to make it so that people became material
00:18:29.400 dependent and not geometry dependent.
00:18:32.660 So in the past, in the past, you know, everything was geometry dependent.
00:18:38.140 Like when you look at a dome, whether it's a beehive dome or a hemispherical dome or whatever,
00:18:43.840 that's all geometry dependent.
00:18:45.920 Like I build tensegrity structures.
00:18:48.240 So people are losing their mind when I'm building these things.
00:18:51.760 They're like, it's never going to work.
00:18:53.820 Like everything looks floppy.
00:18:55.720 And then once it's put into position, it gets tense and then it's perfect forever.
00:19:00.820 And nobody can understand it.
00:19:02.540 It's the exact opposite of post and beam construction where you put up a post and then you put your beam
00:19:07.920 across and you level it and you plumb it and all the rest of it.
00:19:11.380 And there is a time and place for all that, which is appropriate.
00:19:15.460 But for dwellings that are going to last a very, very long time, you need to depend on
00:19:20.600 geometry.
00:19:21.420 You don't need to depend on materials.
00:19:25.220 And where I was in South Florida, there were all these homes that were being built on the
00:19:30.620 intercoastal and it became very, very apparent that the ballhouse method became the norm.
00:19:36.240 And you just, you just see it.
00:19:38.360 It's a contractor's wet dream because they can just charge more for materials.
00:19:45.260 It's just like, Oh, I need this beam to run 60 feet.
00:19:48.900 And it's a, it's a, it's a two foot by four foot concrete beam.
00:19:54.180 That's running 60 feet.
00:19:55.800 Well, that's a hundred thousand dollar beam with the steel.
00:19:58.520 And when it's poured and all the rest of it, and the contractor is just making 20% on
00:20:03.020 it and it's just like, woohoo.
00:20:05.880 So the geometry of things has been lost to a big part.
00:20:10.800 Like, uh, I have people that work for that are friends of mine that work for some of the
00:20:15.500 largest construction companies in the world, like Halliburton and, and Turner Construction.
00:20:22.020 And as architects, they're kind of caught in hell because all they do is do litigation.
00:20:29.800 All their whole thing as an architect is just limiting liability and looking at precedents.
00:20:36.660 They're not designing anything.
00:20:39.120 And I'm on the other side of the scale being like, none of that means anything to me.
00:20:44.360 I'm not building a commercial buildings.
00:20:46.960 I'm building actual domiciles for people to live and thrive in that feel good.
00:20:52.960 And I got it.
00:20:54.180 And I got into that because I was working in these incredibly high level spas, um, all
00:21:02.180 over the world because my first, my first, uh, and longest occupation was deep tissue myofascial
00:21:07.760 release.
00:21:08.780 And when you work in these really high end spas, you'll notice in like some of these, uh, spas,
00:21:14.780 the rooms are not cubical, the way they'll do the rooms, they, they have very soft edges.
00:21:20.820 And I always noticed it was like, I always could like work like all day in some of these
00:21:26.040 rooms that were like, just really beautifully curved and manicured.
00:21:32.360 And they had like the water going on in the background and they had like the, the good,
00:21:37.280 uh, aromatherapy working.
00:21:39.200 And I was like, geez, my body stays vital the entire day where if I worked in like somebody's
00:21:45.240 dining room, that was like this gross cube, you know, I'd lose my mojo really, really quick.
00:21:51.800 Right.
00:21:52.520 So there was, I just became kind of sensitive to like the space overall, you know, all of
00:21:59.080 us have women in our life.
00:22:00.680 That's kind of like what the women do is they're always kind of like, you know, taking care of
00:22:04.760 the set and setting, like you guys have done a nice job with your new set and setting that
00:22:08.720 you got set and setting, set and setting kind of like really makes things.
00:22:16.040 Well, that is, there was an entire school of, I don't know if it's actually called this.
00:22:20.460 Is it feng shui?
00:22:21.400 Feng shui.
00:22:21.940 Yeah.
00:22:22.100 And it's kind of ridiculed because, um, I don't know, I guess like white women, white women
00:22:26.420 with dreadlocks.
00:22:26.960 But it's the same, the same thing with, uh, uh, like this new age movement.
00:22:30.420 It's like white women have kind of co-opted.
00:22:32.460 It made it look foolish.
00:22:34.180 There's a lot of truth in it.
00:22:35.640 Yeah.
00:22:35.860 Well, what he's talking about is being, you know, being trapped in this kind of, everything
00:22:39.760 is 90 degrees and you're in this cube and it, and it disrupts the flow of energy.
00:22:44.040 There's a whole, the feng shui is based off of this idea of the way that energy flows through
00:22:49.140 a room.
00:22:49.720 They even have, uh, so many, you know, stipulations as to like not keep a mirror in a certain location.
00:22:56.020 You, you, you want the mirror, I think to be facing, um, an opening so that there's, there's
00:23:01.840 some sort of reciprocation of energy and it has to leave.
00:23:04.200 I don't know.
00:23:04.640 Let me ask Chris, but put a pin in that, in that thought, but on the inside of your, uh,
00:23:09.380 your dome is aisles, how are you, are you, uh, sheet rocking this?
00:23:13.580 Because I know this, like this sheet rock stuff is garbage.
00:23:16.460 Like as far as like the, the resonation of this, of the sheet rock, it's not vibrating
00:23:20.840 on a human level at all and neither is most of our wood now.
00:23:24.380 Like I, I actually did construction in my old house in Brooklyn.
00:23:27.600 Oh yeah.
00:23:28.280 We took out a wall and opened it up and I, you know, I made a beam to hold it up.
00:23:32.540 It's all of right angles, of course, because that's all I know how to do.
00:23:35.600 And, uh, the old stuff that we took out, the house was built in 1912, something like
00:23:40.020 that.
00:23:40.220 And you can look at the grains of wood and it, first off, it's, it's colored like this,
00:23:44.520 like, like our couches.
00:23:45.740 And there's so many grains within the wood that I was like, is something wrong with this
00:23:49.780 wood?
00:23:50.120 No, because it's, why are there so many lines in this?
00:23:52.580 Why is there so much lines in my wood?
00:23:54.900 Yeah.
00:23:56.020 But yeah, now that, now the stuff you see, you can count the lines.
00:23:58.540 There's like 15 of them.
00:23:59.540 It's crazy.
00:24:00.000 It's so degraded and it's basically dead material.
00:24:02.760 I mean, I know that speaks to the age of a tree.
00:24:04.620 When you harvest it, the more rings, the older the tree.
00:24:06.920 And I guess it's because we've taken down all the old ones and we're planting trees and
00:24:10.600 then we're harvesting the beforehand.
00:24:11.820 This is what Chris is saying, right?
00:24:13.120 It's just like, because we're so dependent on the materials that we're probably just sapping this
00:24:17.080 stuff out.
00:24:17.800 So what, yeah, what are you using on the inside of your domes?
00:24:20.960 Uh, I'm a Mason, like a, I'm a Faro cement Mason.
00:24:25.440 So I deal with mainly all cement and what level, what level of Mason are you?
00:24:31.560 33rd degree Faro cement Mason.
00:24:34.080 Yeah.
00:24:34.600 I just say that just to be, to be kind of a jerk.
00:24:37.640 Um, I deal, I deal with masonry mainly just because it's so much, it's so much more vial
00:24:45.480 than the wood that you can get now.
00:24:47.420 Like when I, when I, when I get yellow pine or even white pine right now, like the, when
00:24:53.060 you, when you touch it, it's like paper mache, you know, it's like, Hey Madeline, that's cool
00:24:58.840 that she, I didn't know Madeline watches your show.
00:25:01.000 Um, the, yeah, I got exposed to very, very high end, high quality materials, like in carpentry.
00:25:12.160 You can't find any of that wood unless you're a multi, multi, multi millionaire.
00:25:17.960 Wow.
00:25:18.460 That's how bad it's gotten.
00:25:20.260 Oh yeah.
00:25:20.580 Yeah.
00:25:21.500 Yeah.
00:25:21.720 Like for, for a, for a real windfall mahogany tree before it's caught up is a hundred grand.
00:25:27.120 Wow.
00:25:28.640 Yeah.
00:25:29.840 Wow.
00:25:30.540 That's incredible.
00:25:31.500 I mean, that seems a little bit, uh, untenable.
00:25:34.060 It is untenable.
00:25:35.380 So what, what they're giving, so what they're giving the quote unquote working class is they're
00:25:41.060 giving them sticks.
00:25:42.300 They're literally giving them pine sticks and what used to like the, the, and I know this
00:25:47.960 cause my family owned lots of, of, uh, property in Northern Florida back in the day.
00:25:54.200 What the, the way they used to do the, the yellow pine in North Florida was you'd have
00:25:58.860 a 30 year track of land and every 30 years that would be harvested and then they would
00:26:04.100 rotate it.
00:26:05.180 And that was like back in the forties and fifties and sixties.
00:26:08.360 Well, they've since rotated.
00:26:09.960 It's now a 15 year rotation.
00:26:11.500 And then they have these white pine trees that grow very, very fast, but they never get as
00:26:17.180 dense.
00:26:17.960 And pretty much all your two by fours, like if you look at like the, the sizes of two
00:26:23.140 by fours now, they're not too, they're not a two or a four.
00:26:26.900 They're in a one and a half by three and a quarter.
00:26:29.240 Like it's, they're lying.
00:26:30.920 So not only is the wood smaller, it's so much softer.
00:26:35.340 And so when I was looking at all this and now they're saying, okay, you need this amount
00:26:40.400 of soft wood to create this.
00:26:42.300 And then the shape that you're actually creating in and of itself is less resilient.
00:26:48.480 And when I was looking at the science of it, it was like, okay, if you have a flat plane
00:26:52.780 like this, you put a six degree arc in it.
00:26:55.900 It's now six times as strong.
00:26:58.900 You put a double arc in it.
00:27:01.080 It's 13 times as strong.
00:27:03.080 So why would I be building structures that have flat walls with inferior product just
00:27:14.580 to have it go away?
00:27:15.760 And that's the whole thing that goes back into the, so in ball house thing of like, this
00:27:21.760 whole thing is engineered to fail.
00:27:24.200 They measure, they measure economies by how much trash you produce.
00:27:28.760 The more trash you produce, that means the better commerce is, the more commerce there
00:27:33.420 is.
00:27:33.780 And I saw this in Florida when I was growing up, like all the contractors were like rubbing
00:27:39.280 their hands.
00:27:40.060 The second a hurricane came through, it's disaster capitalism.
00:27:43.820 Like it's disgusting the way, the way the contractor culture is here.
00:27:47.960 Cause I, I did construction in New York.
00:27:50.300 So I'm familiar with how these guys operate, but over here, man, they're like sharks.
00:27:55.700 It's horrible.
00:27:57.180 Like my parents built a property that built a house on my property, right, right across
00:28:01.720 the way.
00:28:02.400 And dealing with these people was like, it was, it was predators.
00:28:07.260 They're like predators.
00:28:07.980 It was litigious rather than like, I mean, no one's really out there trying to do good
00:28:11.200 work.
00:28:11.440 They're just trying to like, you know, get, get, uh, um, what was that called?
00:28:16.960 Get, uh, like clearance from the, the county to do whatever.
00:28:20.880 It's just charging more money.
00:28:22.500 I'm just like, you know what it is also, I realized like people back in the day, like,
00:28:27.000 you know, karate board breakers, much more impressive, not as impressive.
00:28:31.040 Now when they bust the board, not very impressive.
00:28:33.360 I was talking to our, uh, one of my buddies, he's actually in the chat, uh, Scott.
00:28:38.040 And, you know, I have this, uh, this Hyundai, this 2013 Hyundai, and I used to own an old
00:28:44.380 Jeep Cherokee and I was talking about how wonderful it was because the Jeep Cherokee does all this
00:28:48.080 room to work in there.
00:28:49.600 It's very simple.
00:28:50.380 You want to swap a part out.
00:28:51.280 It's no big deal.
00:28:52.040 You can, you have space for your arms.
00:28:53.560 All the new cars are just covered in so much plastic and everything is so computer dependent.
00:28:58.520 And he said to me that the reason they do it like that is because they don't want you to
00:29:05.200 maintain your vehicle.
00:29:06.680 They want you to trade it in.
00:29:07.940 They just want this constant system of, of trading it in.
00:29:10.440 So, so now when they're producing these cars, it's not just about the economy of it now,
00:29:15.040 but it's about the, the potential financial benefit of it in the future in regards to new
00:29:20.680 models that they're going to release.
00:29:21.940 And it's like, but that's the model with everything.
00:29:23.780 It's so annoying though, dude, because you can't maintain, is it just, it kind of feels
00:29:28.180 the same.
00:29:28.640 It's like if you build a house like that, you're going to have to do home repairs in
00:29:32.500 a much shorter span than you would.
00:29:34.640 So now it's benefiting that market again in 30 years.
00:29:37.240 Isn't this the conspiracy of the light bulb, like way back in the day, the filament in
00:29:40.660 the light bulb that would last for like, you know, years and years.
00:29:43.460 And now like we have to like really dial that down because how are we supposed to sell
00:29:46.980 this?
00:29:47.340 Yeah.
00:29:47.820 I do understand it though, because if you want to have a business, like everything is like that.
00:29:52.580 Dr. Pilkenstein, is that his name?
00:29:55.860 I don't know who the hell you're talking about.
00:29:57.220 I'm like the new Tesla, but I'm black.
00:30:00.440 That guy, and he crushes.
00:30:02.080 I love that guy.
00:30:02.920 Come on.
00:30:03.140 That's a really good impression.
00:30:04.060 That's a good impression.
00:30:05.000 I know who you're talking about now.
00:30:06.300 I know exactly who I'm talking about.
00:30:07.780 He, uh, he has this wonderful old, uh, uh, stove that he's, he's, you know, refurbished
00:30:14.660 and it's now his, his main stove that he uses.
00:30:17.640 I came across one the other day.
00:30:18.940 I was walking past some old antique store.
00:30:20.500 I said, look at that.
00:30:21.080 And that's that stove that Dr. Pilkenstein or, you know, whatever his name is, he has
00:30:25.260 that.
00:30:25.720 And it's amazing because it's still there.
00:30:27.580 And I'm willing to bet if you took that thing from that antique store and you just took care
00:30:32.120 of it and updated it a little bit or refurbished it, it'll still work.
00:30:36.060 It'll still work.
00:30:36.960 And we don't build anything like that anymore.
00:30:39.240 No.
00:30:39.540 Nope.
00:30:40.460 No.
00:30:40.660 They've over-complicated things for the planned obsolescence and they've over-complicated
00:30:46.300 things from a materials perspective.
00:30:49.140 And so I've gotten back to like doing things very, very simply.
00:30:53.880 And, and G the geometry is geometry.
00:30:57.680 Like anybody can do it once you know it.
00:31:00.800 And it's very simple.
00:31:02.200 And where I was in Costa Rica, it was pretty rural.
00:31:04.820 Like I was down in the Southern Pacific zone and we were in an area that was wet, wet.
00:31:10.120 And so we had to get, it wasn't like I could have like concrete trucks, like, you know,
00:31:14.180 come in or anything like that.
00:31:15.880 Like there was no big trucks that could get to our site.
00:31:19.300 So I had to learn these ways of kind of leaning on manpower and being efficient with materials
00:31:27.100 just because materials were hard to come by.
00:31:30.000 And that, that actually makes geometry all that much more important.
00:31:34.440 Yeah.
00:31:34.560 This is a stardom.
00:31:35.680 This is the mandala I was telling you about.
00:31:37.460 So this is scalable.
00:31:40.400 Like this particular dome right here, this is the size.
00:31:44.420 This is the scale of the majority of the Tico domes that I built in Costa Rica.
00:31:51.280 That door, that dome that you see with the red door right there, that was actually a sound
00:31:55.140 studio that I built for my friend Drew.
00:31:58.180 And you can get really cool acoustics.
00:32:01.420 Like when you start to, you know, when you start to play with these shapes and everything
00:32:06.220 like that, it's just like whenever you've seen these theaters or these opera houses and things
00:32:12.820 like that, there was a reason why they used, you know, essentially the conch shell formations
00:32:18.840 and these big, beautiful vaults because they, they amplify, they're a, they're a literal amphitheater
00:32:27.260 because of what they're doing to the concrescence of the, of the vibrations.
00:32:31.940 It's so wild that we wouldn't emulate nature.
00:32:34.600 I mean, people that are really into sacred geometry are determining or are determining
00:32:38.920 that, you know, I like that word.
00:32:40.760 Determinating.
00:32:41.200 I should have kept it.
00:32:41.940 I know.
00:32:42.380 They're determining that, uh, that this geometry is, you know, it's, it's a fundamental building
00:32:47.580 blocks of the realm that we inhabit.
00:32:49.340 You can see it, you know, you're talking about the Fibonacci sequence.
00:32:51.400 You can see that in a, in a pine cone and all these different things.
00:32:54.300 Uh, nature is rich with geometry.
00:32:57.200 Well, what was the church?
00:32:57.980 Just not the nature of geometry that we emulate.
00:32:59.940 Remember that, that church that we were looking into like a year ago, um, I forget exactly
00:33:04.860 what it was, but somehow they emulated the, um, I forgot what church it was, but it was
00:33:09.520 a cathedral.
00:33:10.040 And, and when they took the organ that was playing and they recorded it from, from inside
00:33:15.240 the cathedral and they plugged it into a, a cymatics plate or is that what it's called?
00:33:19.580 The cymatics plate?
00:33:20.180 Yeah.
00:33:20.540 And they have all this.
00:33:21.380 I've actually, I've interviewed the woman that did that whole experimentation.
00:33:24.660 Oh, really?
00:33:25.160 Perfect.
00:33:25.500 So tell us, cause we were going to butcher it.
00:33:26.940 Wait, wait, wait, wait.
00:33:27.100 No, no, no, no.
00:33:27.440 We have to boot out the poor people before we, he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:33:31.200 He's just screwing it up.
00:33:32.480 Uh, uh, guys, if you want to hear about the woman and the plate and, uh, and the organ,
00:33:36.280 you're going to have to go to patreon.com backslash, uh, forward slash, damn it, uh, Nephilim
00:33:40.200 death squad.
00:33:40.840 Otherwise we're getting out of here and the episode will drop in its entirety in about a week.
00:33:44.480 We're really crushing actually on the turnaround time, guys.
00:33:47.160 We've gotten a lot better.
00:33:48.140 We're working hard.
00:33:48.900 Uh, see you guys later, poor people.
00:33:50.520 All right.
00:33:50.800 So, so, uh, please tell you, you spoke to the lady.
00:33:53.660 Don't let us talk about it.
00:33:55.120 Um, yeah, so the, the woman that did the experiment, uh, her name is Tanya Harris.
00:34:01.380 I've had her on my podcast a couple of times and she's from Ireland.
00:34:06.600 She was going to, I believe some really prestigious art school in London and she got really into
00:34:15.480 cymatics and the, the art that cymatics were making.
00:34:19.180 And she had this idea that, you know, she, I forget the gentleman's work who she was leaning
00:34:25.660 on, but she had, she had essentially, um, read this gentleman that said that every cathedral
00:34:33.280 has a base resonant frequency.
00:34:35.540 And so she took his method, which is a really cool method.
00:34:39.140 You guys would probably appreciate this.
00:34:41.300 You go into the cavity of the structure and what you do is you record seven different times
00:34:50.160 the silence of the structure, but each successive time that you record the silence, you're playing
00:35:00.020 the first recording of the silence back.
00:35:02.940 Whoa.
00:35:03.580 Why seven, why seven times?
00:35:05.700 There's something, there's some harmonic with seven.
00:35:08.420 It has something to do.
00:35:09.920 I don't, I don't know exactly.
00:35:12.240 It's interesting.
00:35:12.800 The guitar here at the seventh fret.
00:35:14.740 So do you play an instrument or, okay, the guitar has natural harmonics on it.
00:35:21.180 So at the 12th fret, which is the center point from the nut and, uh, and yeah, so the nut
00:35:27.000 and the, uh, the very bottom, I forgot what it's called.
00:35:30.540 It's exactly half, but at the seventh fret right here, if you, you could hear the harmonics
00:35:38.020 just by slapping it there.
00:35:39.160 There are natural harmonics that occur at the seventh, 12th, um, 15th.
00:35:44.480 And then you could even get them if you're, if you're very good at like pinch harmonics
00:35:48.020 or, uh, harp harmonics.
00:35:49.380 So it's, it's interesting right at the seventh fret, which is not necessarily in the middle
00:35:53.700 or even like three quarters of the way.
00:35:56.000 It's just that's that seventh fret.
00:35:58.920 I would love for you to measure that and tell me, because there's this, there's this, there
00:36:03.640 was this, have you guys ever heard of the name Victor Schauberger?
00:36:07.040 No.
00:36:08.640 Okay.
00:36:09.040 So part of the reason why I build domes and all these biogeometry buildings is because
00:36:13.680 of this Austrian inventor named Victor Schauberger.
00:36:16.760 He was like on the, he was on the level of Tesla, John Whirl, Keely, like he was one of
00:36:22.920 these really brilliant people.
00:36:24.740 And he, he created this term called dynamic disequilibrium.
00:36:29.480 And so we're all told that we're supposed to be an equilibrium, which is utter BS.
00:36:33.780 If we're in equilibrium, like from a tonal perspective, that's a flat line.
00:36:39.300 So what he was saying just slightly off center skewing, like closer to like 66, 33 or 70, 30,
00:36:48.280 you have this dynamic disequilibrium and this creates flow in life.
00:36:54.140 And a lot of people look at this as like the, the flow dynamic between men and women, like
00:36:59.360 the male takes the leadership role, like, you know, 70% at a time.
00:37:03.420 And then there's that 30%.
00:37:05.200 And like, if both are trying to be equal all the time, it doesn't work.
00:37:09.280 You get stagnation.
00:37:10.320 Right.
00:37:11.260 And so the energetics with what you're talking about and what Tanya was talking about is
00:37:16.480 Tanya was able to show that by the time you played the seventh, you did the seventh recording
00:37:24.820 of the silence with the silence being played back, the whole structure would resonate.
00:37:31.520 And when the structure would resonate, they would put it on, on these, on these e-meters
00:37:36.900 and you would see that there was a constructive interference.
00:37:39.840 There was more energy in the system.
00:37:42.220 Well, they took that constructive interference.
00:37:45.340 They actually ran it through a, a, um, a signal processor.
00:37:51.540 I think that's the right way of saying it to create a sub auditory sound.
00:37:56.720 And then they were playing that through, I think it was either a 12 or 15 inch woofer
00:38:01.640 with a plate on it for the cymatics.
00:38:03.800 And what was amazing was, is when they did the cymatics, guess what?
00:38:08.080 The actual, um, form that the cymatic would make of the resonance of the building matched
00:38:15.860 the rose window.
00:38:17.540 Right.
00:38:18.120 That's it.
00:38:18.560 Yeah.
00:38:18.880 That, but that's so much cooler than the way we've been lying about it.
00:38:21.860 Uh, let me ask you this then, Chris.
00:38:24.260 We were close.
00:38:25.340 We were, no, I said there was an organ involved and that's so much better than there being
00:38:28.900 an organ involved.
00:38:29.520 It's just the natural cymatics of the room is incredible.
00:38:32.540 What I'm wondering is, um, which came first?
00:38:36.160 Were the windows designed with some sort of, you know, uh, foreknowledge?
00:38:40.740 No, you have to, I mean, you have to build the structure.
00:38:43.080 Then you put the windows.
00:38:43.960 No, I mean, I mean like the design of the windows, you know, was that done with some
00:38:49.380 sort of foreknowledge of, you know, resonance and frequency or is that cymatics design that,
00:38:56.100 that emerges on the plate of an actual, um, uh, what's the word product of the structure
00:39:04.040 of the windows?
00:39:04.860 You know what I'm saying?
00:39:05.760 I think, I think it was, I think they actually had the vibration pattern first and then design
00:39:13.600 and design the building around it.
00:39:15.420 Because with Tanya, I actually had a project.
00:39:17.860 We, we created, uh, uh, a proposal for the world economic forum, um, the world economic
00:39:27.600 forum, they have this whole great grandiose idea to put everybody under these, like, you
00:39:32.900 know, uh, I guess you would say it like the smaller, uh, vestiges of the firmament and
00:39:40.920 in these like domed areas where everybody's going to be living in the future, they want
00:39:45.400 to have these parks.
00:39:47.420 And part of these parks are, is that they want to measure the, the, the, um, I guess you
00:39:54.200 would say the biomarkers of humans relative to plants.
00:39:57.900 So we were, we were given all these parameters and she wanted me to actually create a resonant
00:40:07.120 structure where the plants would be, and the humans would be together where like all like
00:40:13.300 the heart, the heart math, uh, diagnostic, uh, sensors would be there to both measure the
00:40:20.060 plants and, and the humans.
00:40:22.620 So we did the, the proposal wasn't, I never heard whether, uh, obviously didn't go through
00:40:28.720 or anything like that, but it was going to be an art installation of something that looked
00:40:33.080 very similar to a beehive dome.
00:40:35.380 It was just truncated on the top and it was an actual resonant structure.
00:40:40.900 So you have like people who make drums that resonate people that make, you know, stretch,
00:40:45.720 you know, the violins, all these musical instruments that you were bringing up before, you know, they
00:40:51.240 will actually know the, the pitch that they want to hear.
00:40:56.260 They'll know like what, what the tone of the actual instrument should be.
00:41:02.960 And they kind of like back engineer it.
00:41:05.440 They kind of do like trial and error until they get it right.
00:41:08.380 And I think our forefathers, um, actually had a much, much, much more substantial knowledge
00:41:14.560 of how to like, okay, we want to produce this resonant tone.
00:41:20.120 This resonant tone is this specific architecture with these materials, because, you know, architecture
00:41:27.280 has been said to just be frozen music.
00:41:29.680 And I really believe that.
00:41:31.900 That's interesting.
00:41:32.840 Especially when you're looking at like the Tartarian type buildings, but, um, it reminds
00:41:38.640 me this right here, you know, we have the, the Matt Rife coil for a Rife technology and
00:41:44.360 his theory is obviously that there are, uh, tones and frequencies that you can play to break
00:41:50.480 down cellular structures of different organisms, whether it be, I'm not even going to say, because
00:41:55.920 you know, obviously they're going to be like, that's medical misinformation, but you know
00:41:58.960 what I'm talking about.
00:42:00.320 So back in the day, these people knew about this stuff.
00:42:04.480 Yes.
00:42:04.740 Um, does this, would this lean into the idea of, uh, bells, like the bells that were in
00:42:11.520 our society and are now buried?
00:42:14.120 Yes, absolutely.
00:42:15.720 I think the bells were a technology because even in the, in the forties and fifties, there
00:42:21.580 were people making, they were able to boil water with bells with like next to, with no energy.
00:42:28.300 They would just get the bell to resonate in water and the bell shape itself would cause
00:42:33.960 the water to boil.
00:42:35.060 So you could create steam like so efficiently because you're not like trying to heat it with
00:42:41.360 something that's exploding or with fire or whatever.
00:42:45.300 And so these bells are shown that they would create this micro cavitation.
00:42:49.900 Well, the air that we live in, like we all breathe air, but most people don't know that air is a
00:42:55.220 fluid. And so if the bells could create cavitation in a thicker fluid medium, like water, what do you
00:43:02.540 think it was doing to the air around us? And cavitation is that, that aspect of nature that
00:43:09.100 they totally took out of the science books. Like the, the gentleman, Victor Shawberger that I was
00:43:14.060 talking about earlier, he was the one that was spreading to the world. Hey, cavitation at its very
00:43:20.500 most minimal way of looking at it is at least 400 times more efficient than explosion. So you guys,
00:43:30.160 like you lived up in, in, in New York, right? Yeah. When you, in some of the old buildings,
00:43:36.740 did you ever experience like when you would have water running and then you turn the water off and
00:43:41.720 then the, the, the pipe shake, did you ever go through that? Yeah, all the time. That's cavit,
00:43:47.020 that's cavitation. And what they were finding with these massive water mains in all these cities is
00:43:52.460 that they would blow and they would have like no idea, like how, how is it, this pipe is rated
00:43:57.120 at like a thousand PSI. How can, how can that water actually crack that pipe? Is it a faulty pipe
00:44:04.880 or whatever? And they figured out it's cavitation. And what cavitation is, is in nature, when you have
00:44:11.400 a flow of something moving and then you truncate the flow, there's a collapse because nature abhors
00:44:19.140 a vacuum. And I'm sure you guys have heard that term before. And so you get like these oil tankers,
00:44:26.420 like, you know, collapsing on themselves and things like that, right? Like you'll have like a,
00:44:30.420 anything that's supposed to be a pressurized tank. Uh, I think it's like a temperature
00:44:34.180 variation. If it's drastic enough can cause that pressurized tank, despite the walls being made
00:44:39.260 of like, however thick steel. I love those videos. Yeah, dude, it's, it's, it's terrifying.
00:44:43.900 Like the vacuum machine videos and they'll put things in it and then they'll just vacuum. And
00:44:49.640 sometimes the thing will just be like, yeah. Cause, because of the, I guess the caveat, what do you
00:44:54.320 say? Cavitation. But that's, that's not cavitation. That's not, that's depressurization or
00:45:00.860 pressurization. Cavitation is even stronger than that. But if you ever get, if you ever get a chance
00:45:07.380 to look up the, the bullet fish, uh, there's this documentary, you know, it has like some British guy
00:45:12.720 talking in his British accent and talking about the bullet fish cavitation is actually how our heart
00:45:17.940 works. You know, we were lied to telling us that our heart is a pump and it's not a pump. It's a,
00:45:23.460 it's like a vortex, right? Well, it's a vortex because of cavitation at the very center of
00:45:30.240 every vortex you have cavitation. It's electrical cavitation. So the one thing that the, my mother
00:45:36.600 was in cardiology. And so I was always being browbeaten about, you know, the heart and it's
00:45:41.940 a pump and all this stuff. And when learning the anatomy of it, it was like, oh, we have something
00:45:46.580 called the aortic arch. Why is it when the heart is completely under pressure? Does that aortic arch drop?
00:45:53.460 That makes no sense. Cause when something's under pressure, it expands.
00:45:57.820 So how could you have it collapsing when it's under pressure? Right. And it's because it's not
00:46:02.220 under pressure, it's under cavitation. And so cavitation, the way you could think of it,
00:46:06.860 it's like women. Right. Um, and I don't mean to be crass, but like all of us, I think all of us have
00:46:13.660 kids, right? Well, how did, how did the kid happen? We made love to our woman. We, we gave energy to
00:46:21.860 essentially an empty cavern, that empty cavern collapsed. And then life was, and now that kid
00:46:30.020 is like an infinite energy being that will continue to produce and produce and produce.
00:46:35.260 Have you ever seen the videos of that? Um, of like IVF?
00:46:40.040 Yeah, exactly. It's fantastic. It's a brilliant light when, right when the, uh, the sperm enters
00:46:45.860 the egg, it's just like a flash. Yeah. Yeah. That's cavitation. That is cavitation. That's
00:46:51.580 incredible, dude. Dang. Dang.
00:46:54.160 Yeah. So cavitation is how mother nature gets all this work done with so little input energy.
00:46:59.900 You know, you have the, the bullshit NASA scientists that say, oh, well, the sun has,
00:47:05.100 you know, distributed X amount of joules of energy. But yet, if you were to calculate all
00:47:10.300 the biological things that occur here on, on the planet, you know, it's like a billion X,
00:47:17.780 the amount of energy needed from what the sun is given. So where even in their BS way of looking
00:47:23.740 at things, where's all this energy coming from? It's because God created the system to be
00:47:28.320 self-sufficient. God created the system to work through these cavitation principles in which
00:47:35.020 thing collapses to a center. And then boom, from that center, there's extra energy.
00:47:41.240 Chris, have we like, did we used to have a better grasp on this sort of thing? And like,
00:47:44.300 we've moved away from it? Absolutely.
00:47:47.240 And I'm assuming that that was by design.
00:47:50.440 Yeah. I think at the turn of the 20th century, so the 19th, you know, like early 1900s,
00:47:56.060 I think the robber barons pretty much were following the, the great reset protocol of
00:48:01.800 taking everything that was pretty much all the best buildings wherever that in architecturally,
00:48:09.620 like when we look at, we say, oh, this is a work of art. This is an absolute masterpiece that
00:48:15.500 can't be created. To the one of them, we're told that all of those were created during the dark ages
00:48:21.940 or, or during a time where people were just, you know, going around with, you know, horses and
00:48:29.500 carriages, fighting two front wars, you know, all these, all these narratives were told. I am here to
00:48:37.780 tell everybody that to build a cathedral as beautiful as the Notre Dame Cathedral or a St. Paul's
00:48:45.940 Cathedral. They are inspired. These are inspired pieces of work. I've told now, now my crew believes
00:48:55.900 me, like my new crew here in the Ozarks, I told them you come build domes and your IQ will go up.
00:49:03.080 It's going to be very, very hard on you, but it's one of these things when you're always arching your
00:49:07.440 back and you're always looking, you never have a right angle to deal with. It changes your
00:49:12.040 consciousness. So in that, in being a professional dome builder for 18 years now, I can say
00:49:18.660 people don't understand. You, you don't have wage slaves building the cathedrals. You don't have
00:49:28.420 wage slaves. You don't have like, you have, you have these people that take credit for other people's
00:49:33.660 work. And you, you guys know this being in media, you guys will have a banger come out. And then like a
00:49:39.440 week later, you'll hear somebody else saying the same shit that you said, and they'll take credit.
00:49:43.220 Shout out, Ian Carroll.
00:49:44.260 Shout out to my mom. She said, she's consistently sending, he's like, watch this TikTok. I'm like,
00:49:49.160 I made that, I just made this video.
00:49:51.340 Unbelievable. Yeah. Yeah. It happens all the time.
00:49:53.820 So we know this to be the norm. We know that there are the creatives and then the people that
00:50:00.140 steal from the creatives. And the creative people are very inspired and they usually have a trunk line
00:50:06.660 to their creator. They're usually in total jurisdiction with their creator and they, they just
00:50:12.260 get inspired and they do because of the love of it. And then you have the people that steal it and
00:50:17.560 then profit from it. And I think you have all these masonry guilds that are out there that are just
00:50:24.060 taking, they found other people's art. They found other people's installations. They took credit for
00:50:31.240 it. You know, they, they put their stamp of approval on it. And cause like almost every great artist I've
00:50:38.240 ever met, they they're onto the next thing by the time they finish what they've just done. Yeah.
00:50:44.520 They want some credit, but their mind is already onto the next thing of like what they're going to do
00:50:49.420 next. It's the exact opposite ethos of the masonry. Oh, we're putting our stamp on this for
00:50:57.500 posterity and eternity. And this is our thing. It's because they found it. They literally found
00:51:04.480 these things. And these cathedrals, I'm telling you, these were not built by people that were
00:51:10.860 working in nine to five. I was in, I was in Scotland and I went to go, I went to the Rose,
00:51:17.580 the Rose Cathedral and Roslyn Chapel. And it's a small, it's a small cathedral. Like it's,
00:51:24.040 it's really teeny. And they were telling us these BS stories. They're like, this one pillar
00:51:30.560 was crafted by a master mason for 40 years. And I'm like, humans don't do that. That's not true.
00:51:39.900 That, that I do not buy that as somebody that manages men and manages men that have families
00:51:47.320 and like out there in the field. Sorry guys. No, that, that, that's, and, and we're told that
00:51:55.280 they're paid a pittance for it, that there were essentially indentured servants that were doing
00:51:59.480 this. Well, that's how you know that it's, it's true because it sounds so untrue.
00:52:04.840 It sounds so fake.
00:52:05.960 That's exactly how you know that it's true. Well, that's the thing, right? That's the trick is like,
00:52:09.920 if you tell somebody a thing that is so untrue that it strikes you as profound, well, then there's,
00:52:14.820 it's kind of this gotcha moment where you go like, wow.
00:52:17.980 Well, that's it. Yeah. I mean, you could, you could soy face or you could, uh, like we were
00:52:22.240 talking with Matt yesterday about why I I've always felt, um, I don't know, just like a deep
00:52:28.380 misconnection to what I'm learning in school because I'm like, this shit just doesn't seem
00:52:34.160 real to me. I don't have any factual basis. Like, you know, I'm a kid, I'm 16 years old,
00:52:38.560 but I'm just like, I'm not going to pay attention.
00:52:40.860 I did the same thing with history class. I said, no, this feels,
00:52:44.080 incredibly false. Yeah. I can't tell you what it is, but it's not right.
00:52:48.380 You know, talking about all this though, um, you know, from the flow of energy, uh, to the
00:52:53.740 resilience of these structures and all sorts of things. And the beauty of what was supposedly
00:52:58.100 created in the dark ages, it seems like what Chris is saying is true. There was a, a much deeper
00:53:04.820 grasp of something more profound when it came to not only building structures, but the flow of energy.
00:53:09.980 And that makes this whole little season thing.
00:53:14.400 No, no, no, no, no, no. The transition into this like minimalist architecture that that's been
00:53:21.100 plaguing everything. It's like, you could walk through this. Yeah. Very nefarious. Right. Like
00:53:24.740 you could walk through the city and you'll see, you know, that what they're holding up as, um,
00:53:30.680 they're trying to come into, this is a profound piece of art. And you go, dog, that's a cube.
00:53:35.060 Um, that's not a profound piece of art or, or even, even in the art world where instead
00:53:41.280 of having all of this, um, intricate geometry that emulates nature. Right. I, I, I, I used
00:53:48.440 to say in my, my, my grand wisdom, I don't know if you know that about this is how we
00:53:52.200 got Hitler. Hitler was doing like really good art and people, I guess the fad at the time
00:53:57.540 were like, we want like, you know, impressionist, we want, uh, abstract stuff. And he was like, I'm
00:54:02.620 going to draw this building. This thing is beautiful. And he's like, you know what we're
00:54:06.120 going to, well, that's like, so making camps. I think that anybody can, can see this. It's
00:54:10.960 like the greatest works of art or what we regard as the greatest works of art historically seems
00:54:15.840 to be man inspired by God's creation and, and doing his best to emulate it, to mirror it
00:54:24.720 back in some way, shape or form. And we've gotten so far from that in architecture and in
00:54:29.240 art where now we're, we're putting, you know, there's like that, you know, famous trope of the
00:54:34.920 banana and the wall at the art museum in like LA or something like that. And it's, it's a duct tape
00:54:40.940 banana and people are stopping by and they're gasping and they're taking photos. How profound,
00:54:46.180 right? And it's like, this required no skill, no discipline, no time, no sacrifice, no effort.
00:54:51.000 And, and this is, we're now like all, I don't know, lying, lying to ourselves, lying to each other.
00:54:56.940 Let me ask Chris. So the guys that, cause I, I see what, uh, you're, you're responsible
00:55:01.640 for the domes at Barteria, right? Okay. So you're just like taking dudes though, that
00:55:09.200 come to Barteria. They're not necessarily, uh, domes, dome builders. And you're like training
00:55:16.100 them how to do this thing. I re I recruit people. I'm always, ever since my football days,
00:55:21.380 I'm a recruiter. So I have, I have, I have quite a few people that reach out to me through my podcast
00:55:28.080 that like want mentorship or they want a direction in life. And depending on who they are and how I
00:55:36.260 interact with them, like how good our, you know, flow is and things like that. I will like invite
00:55:43.360 them into the fold or not, you know, it's, it's just, it's a resonance thing. And I know what I'm
00:55:49.160 looking for. Like I'm a very, um, I have very, very high standards. Like I'm not an easy person
00:55:56.180 to deal with on a, on a professional level. If, if you're working for me, because I'm going to push
00:56:03.920 you to be better and you're not going to work for me if you're just a wage slave. Like I hate wage
00:56:12.240 slaves, like people, people, and I, and I'm, I'm, I'm okay with this about myself. I've never been a
00:56:19.300 wage slave. Uh, I was like given very, very high corporate opportunities at age 17 and 19, you know,
00:56:28.320 and I saw the folly of that world. I was actually given like insider baseball at age 17 when I was a
00:56:36.160 senior in high school about how the whole corporate thing works, like from, from the horse's mouth. So
00:56:42.860 I was like, Oh, okay. I'm not ever going to be that. I cannot deal with people that just work for
00:56:48.840 money. Like I, they're not my friends. They're not going to work for me. Now that doesn't say I don't
00:56:54.280 pay my guys, but you, like if when I'm recruiting people, they have to show a propensity to want to
00:57:03.460 know more. They want to know, they want to know the, they, they want to get the juice. They want
00:57:10.000 the gravy. Like they, they have to have it as like a part of their like, Oh my God. Like, cause like,
00:57:16.620 you know, in the movie fight club, when the guys just start showing up on the, on, on the porch
00:57:22.560 and Tyler Durden's like, get out of here. Like you're, you're worthless. Like, why are you even
00:57:29.480 here? And the guys that would stay where the guys, those are the guys, because they're not
00:57:36.200 there to be pat on the back. They're not there because of, Oh, they're going to receive some
00:57:42.200 reward. They're there because of the ethos. And I'm kind of like that. I don't want, I don't want
00:57:51.220 people that just are there for the check. I think that's how I got here, man. It's like,
00:57:57.180 I used to work for the MTA and, uh, you start off. I mean, well, this is everything that I've
00:58:03.220 worked for, like construction after hurricane Sandy. I was just a dude that was like, I was
00:58:07.840 on my stomach cleaning out the crawl spaces of the crap that in the house. And then eventually
00:58:12.060 you see the carpenter and he's building a staircase. So I like sit next to him. I'll chat him up a little
00:58:17.000 bit. I'll learn his shit. And then I'm learning, you know, eventually learn how to build the whole
00:58:21.000 house. And in the MTA, the same thing. It's like, I'm building the tracks, but how long am I going to
00:58:25.740 swing a hammer, a sledgehammer for these dudes will be there. I mean, it's, it's crazy. It was like,
00:58:30.800 it got me to the point of, uh, I was becoming insane because I was surrounded by these people
00:58:36.660 where I'm like, so you're just gonna do this. I'm like, but there's a specialist right here and
00:58:42.420 they'll, they're, they're mad at the specialist cause they make more money, but it was not about the
00:58:46.440 money. I'm like, this guy's operating machinery where we're putting in like, um, it's called CWR.
00:58:51.400 So it's, uh, geez, how long was that? 390 feet of continuously welded rail. And he's, and he's
00:58:58.080 operating this machine where you're picking it up and you're sliding it into place and all that.
00:59:01.820 I'm like, or you could be the guy who's clipping up behind him, you know? So I'm like, I'm following
00:59:06.500 this dude. I'm like, what are you doing with this? And then I get that position. And then eventually
00:59:10.080 I'm like, you know what? I want to learn how to drive the tractor trail of the guy who's bringing
00:59:13.000 us the material. So then I did that. And I'm like, fuck that. This is, this is boring. Like
00:59:18.040 you realize that there is a cap also at this limit of, uh, it was like, well, this is how much you
00:59:23.060 can make. And if you want to do more, and it's not about money either, but it's like, if you want
00:59:27.040 to do more, then you've got to give us more time. And I'm like, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah. It's like,
00:59:30.260 cause now that's my time. And now I can't do anything else with this. I can't build.
00:59:33.640 Right. I had to do more in order to not like die. Like I actually had a big, not a falling
00:59:39.780 out, but my uncle was a bit of a mentor to me before he passed away. And I I've had more
00:59:44.900 jobs. Also, sorry for cursing. This is a Christian.
00:59:50.600 Don't do it anymore. All right. Don't do it anymore. We won't do that. This is a Christian
00:59:55.040 show. This show is built on a, all right, put it away. Okay. All right. We're not going to
00:59:58.760 do it anymore. We're done. My uncle, God rest his soul. He, uh, he, he got me into welding.
01:00:05.820 I've had more jobs than pretty much anybody I I've, I've ever known because, um, I would,
01:00:10.680 I would eventually get to this point where I'm like, what am I doing? What is this? This
01:00:13.140 is killing my soul. Now my uncle got me into welding and I was reluctant to do it, but he
01:00:18.780 got me out of a pinch. I was in a bad spot and he offered me a job and I was a fool not to
01:00:22.140 take it. So I took it. And, um, and I started podcasting around the same time and he heard
01:00:26.920 an episode of mine. He wanted to support me. Um, my uncle helped a bunch of fabrication
01:00:31.420 shops get started in New Jersey. He heard me say that what I was doing was soul crushing.
01:00:36.940 It was, it was, I felt like it was killing my soul. And, uh, and he, you know, I have
01:00:41.620 a lot of respect for him. And, and, and like I said, it was a mentor relationship there and
01:00:45.420 he was pretty hurt by me saying that. And, um, and I, I, I just couldn't express to him.
01:00:52.840 He didn't, he didn't understand. It was like, you had your hands on the, on the machinations
01:00:57.180 that built all this. I am, uh, rinsing and repeating in a little cubicle by myself for
01:01:03.920 nine hours a day and I'm getting paid, you know, minimum wage to do it. And it, and it,
01:01:08.960 and it sucks. And then I found that I didn't hate welding. I got into a shop one day where
01:01:15.420 they were new. This wasn't a corporate shop. They let me do everything. So I learned the plasma
01:01:20.480 cutting table. I learned the brake press. I learned the lathe. I learned the, the drill
01:01:23.560 press. I learned, uh, you know, TIG and MIG, and I was able to get my hands on every single
01:01:29.040 piece. Uh, and I, I became hugely adept at that. And I, and I actually loved it. I mean,
01:01:34.940 it still wasn't what I felt like I was meant to be doing, but there's some people that are
01:01:40.720 okay with that. You can put them in a little cubicle. I don't know if they're actually okay
01:01:45.760 with it. It's, it's a, it's a, it's something I think about all the time because like my
01:01:50.200 dad, one of the best people I know, but like he was, uh, he worked in the post office real
01:01:54.820 happy doing that until he retired. He's a happy dude, but I'm just kind of like, for
01:01:59.940 me, I'm like, there's like, I, I, I can't, it's like an itching dude. I've had 20, I think
01:02:05.480 like 25, 25 jobs. Who's going to deliver them? No, he's right. Owen would lose his shit if
01:02:09.880 no one's delivering the mail. I mean, yeah, I get it. He's right. We need, we need people
01:02:13.940 like that, but then there's some people are just geared differently. I've walked
01:02:17.520 out of over 20 jobs. I've just, I've gotten to the point where I've gone, what am I doing
01:02:22.600 here? What is this place? And I'm, and I'll just leave. I'll just walk out into the sun
01:02:26.900 and, and, you know, enjoy the weather. Uh, it's crazy. I like it though, but it's, it's
01:02:30.800 like, you know, some people, and we need those people. I'm not saying that you suck if you're
01:02:35.660 not, you know, it's like, I understand the whole wage leaving thing, but who is going to
01:02:39.500 deliver the mail? Somebody's got to do it. You know what I mean? But it's not me, dude.
01:02:46.100 There's something else. It drives me insane. Yeah. Well, it's kind of cool. This kind of
01:02:51.540 runs into like another love of my life is I, I know you guys are, are primarily Christian
01:02:58.820 and all that as am I. It's a Christian show. Yes. And so, um, but there's something like
01:03:05.820 in scouting, you go into profiling and when you profile different personality types and
01:03:12.260 all the different things, there are very specific patterns that emerge. Like you will have people
01:03:18.240 that want no responsibility and those types of people that want no responsibility. Those
01:03:24.320 are the types of people that just want the monotonous thing because they know, they know that
01:03:31.120 they can do it and there's not much variance. They actually find safety in the variance.
01:03:37.900 And then, then you have other personality types that are much more, I guess you would say like
01:03:44.360 the athletes that we were talking about earlier, like people that have been put in high stakes
01:03:48.440 situations. When you, like I, at one point in my career, I had eight CEOs as like my, in my book
01:03:56.560 of clients. And the one thing that all these CEOs shared, and some of them were women, some of them
01:04:02.620 were men. The one thing that they all shared was they all were procrastinators. And the main reason
01:04:11.300 why they procrastinated was because they needed stress as a motivator. I feel like that's me.
01:04:17.140 That's not good. That's what I do on purpose. Not good. Dude, honestly, like Chris, what you don't
01:04:22.200 understand is remember today we started a little bit late because of like a tech issue. Yeah, it was
01:04:26.860 a genuine issue. But even if it's not top, we'll find a thing to do until right before right up until
01:04:34.280 the line. Yeah, right before my chickens, like I let the chicken coop get dirty, because I'm like,
01:04:38.400 I could clean it right now. But I'm like, I'm gonna I want it. I need it. Right. No, no, it's the
01:04:43.440 stress because you don't understand we have all these, our endocrine system. Because think about it,
01:04:49.880 if you were pitching at a high level, and you're there on the mound, your subconscious is picking
01:04:56.460 up all these cues. Right? And that's fight or flight, right? And this causes some people can
01:05:02.880 hyper focus. And what you find is the high performers need stress to hyper fork, to hyper focus.
01:05:10.140 So you'll find that they'll get bored, like a lot of kids that, you know, in my day, I'm 49.
01:05:18.420 I would have been diagnosed as ADD or ADHD, because what would occur is I would just lose
01:05:24.120 my attention because things were so boring in school. But I was an I was an excellent athlete.
01:05:30.980 And I was like, I had, you know, a decently high IQ. But they couldn't keep my attention. So I was bored
01:05:38.980 as F. And so I just like, whatever. Those types are usually what become your CEOs, because they're,
01:05:48.360 they're, they're the ones that push boundaries. They're the ones that like are looking at the horizon
01:05:53.160 and seeing if like the Mongols are coming. They're the ones, they're the ones that are at the tip of the
01:05:58.620 speeder because they're okay. They actually invite stress. And that is like, maybe 15% of the male
01:06:10.800 population.
01:06:11.980 That's really interesting, because so I pursued mixed martial arts for a really long time. And every
01:06:19.180 single time, it was anxiety driving to the gym to go fight other dudes was anxiety every time. And I
01:06:25.580 remember really early in my experiences there, I had to like, speak out loud to myself in the car
01:06:32.440 about like, you know, let's go, you're gonna keep you're gonna even though it's all the alarms are
01:06:36.780 going off. And I and I, on some level don't want to do this thing. I need to do this.
01:06:41.040 You want to know how psychotic it is with me? Because now that you're saying that,
01:06:44.100 I'm just even thinking about my pitching career as a young kid, I wasn't even aware of this. But like,
01:06:48.480 in college, it's not that I would intentionally go behind on account. But I'd be like,
01:06:52.860 my dad's like, you're two and oh on everybody. Like, why do you start start off with strike one?
01:06:57.780 And I'm just like, it can't simply can't. Like, I threw very hard was wild, but like operated
01:07:03.940 better under that, like, you know, two and oh, now you're, your margin of error is is obviously
01:07:11.320 much less. So you're gonna have to really, like, really dial it in. And I'm like, he's like,
01:07:15.820 you're two and oh on everybody, you're wasting your pitch count. And I'm just like,
01:07:18.640 it is what it is, man. This is the worst job that I had in welding was one where like,
01:07:25.060 when I came in, they were like, guess what? There's a grinding room, you're not even gonna
01:07:28.660 have to grind your your your product and clean it up like somebody else is gonna do that for you.
01:07:32.940 And initially, I walked in and I was like, Oh, that sounds cool. There's just a bunch of dudes
01:07:36.480 with like face masks in a room just grinding covered in grinding dust all day. I just weld I
01:07:41.240 send my shit off to them. Worst thing ever. Worst thing ever, because there was no variation.
01:07:45.360 There was nothing I didn't even put another tool in my hand. But the welding torch and the wire like
01:07:49.380 that was it. It's like, you need the more I found for me, the more stimuli, the better.
01:07:55.940 Yes, which is why we do these things. We do Bohemian Grove. And it's like on paper,
01:07:59.740 it's a nightmare. On paper, it's a it's a it's why would you ever put yourself through that thing.
01:08:05.100 And when you get there, there are 100 moving parts. You're in a room that's loud, that's chaotic,
01:08:11.680 chaotic. And you are responsible for all of it. There's a bunch of different performers coming
01:08:16.660 on. There's audience members, there's drinks being served. There's this, there's that you got
01:08:19.720 to get to the next thing. They've got to get on stage at this time. And but we just keep doing it.
01:08:23.660 I kind of like it. Yeah, yeah, I feel like I'm not dying. Yeah, I feel like I'm so so you guys know
01:08:30.100 this. And also, the best athletes are multi sport athletes. And it's because there's something called
01:08:36.260 indirect learning. And it's the most effective way of learning. So what I noticed with all these CEOs
01:08:42.380 that that I had in my book, and then also like now that I know lots of entrepreneurs that have their
01:08:50.240 own companies, they're all what you would call Renaissance people. They all have multi multifaceted
01:08:57.880 things. And I can count, like, I mean, it's, it's, I can never say 100% of the time, the people that
01:09:08.800 don't want responsibility and want, say, the state or want everything to be provided for them.
01:09:16.700 There are also the people that don't have multiple interests. Like the torture of being an entrepreneur
01:09:23.740 is almost like the torture of being a multi sport athlete. You're exposed to so much different
01:09:29.000 stimuli all the time that it can't help but seep into making you a better person because you're
01:09:36.460 multi dimensional. Yeah. Can I ask you a question? It's not not personal, but more like a business
01:09:42.940 question. You have multiple businesses, and you are an entrepreneur who it seems that you have
01:09:49.340 obviously been on the same path that I'm on and gotten past it and been success,
01:09:54.600 successful at it. But is, is delegation an issue with you? Is was that something that you struggled
01:10:01.260 with initially? Or were you able to do that? Because with my stuff, it's hard for me to let go,
01:10:08.680 let go and have other people do the things when I'm like, it's got to be done to a certain way.
01:10:14.060 You know what I mean?
01:10:14.540 I think that's a function of maturity. I think, how old are you? 33, something like that?
01:10:20.780 30, 36, I think. 36. Yeah. I'm new to this, the entrepreneurial thing.
01:10:28.700 So right, right around your age, I was exposed to this, this profiling system that showed me that
01:10:34.800 I need to, I need to give orders, like I need to delegate. In fact, that's the way I'm most,
01:10:41.820 the most effective, because I'm actually an idea person. I have so many ideas, and I can see the
01:10:48.260 whole picture. I have a holotropic mind that I can like, okay, this is what it is. And I know what I
01:10:53.760 want. Now, I'm not never going to be the great accountant. I'm never going to be the great bookkeeper.
01:11:00.100 I'm never going to be like the perfect draft artist. I'm never going to be this, that, or the other.
01:11:04.400 And in fact, I don't even have the desire to do that. But the overall vision, which is what the
01:11:10.720 CEO is, which is what the entrepreneur really is, they're not really supposed to be the grunt.
01:11:18.040 They're not supposed to be what I call the heavy for that long. You're the heavy initially to get
01:11:23.560 the momentum going. And then once you get the momentum going, then you delegate. And it's up to
01:11:30.360 you to constantly be communicating with your underlings and communicating with the people
01:11:36.420 that are looking to you for leadership. You have to give them leadership. That's the number one thing.
01:11:43.240 The number one thing that people want other than, you know, out in their extrinsic life,
01:11:48.700 like their non-personal life, is they want to be told what to do.
01:11:52.700 Hmm. They really do.
01:11:56.880 I think I have that problem of like, there's like an insecurity of like,
01:12:01.480 I'm going to fucking tell this guy what to do. Oh, this is a Christian show, but I'm going to,
01:12:04.500 don't, don't do it two times. Hey, it's been 10 minutes. It's been 10 minutes. I understand
01:12:11.160 you're passionate. I don't like, yeah, I don't like telling people what to put it away, what to do,
01:12:16.160 just regular what to do, put it away. Now you put that away, but you know, that's the first rule
01:12:22.640 in marketing, right? You tell people what they want. You guys are actually brilliant. Like I've
01:12:29.660 actually come to really like what you do because you have great banter and you actually, I love
01:12:35.660 your whole like deriding the poor people. That's brilliant. That's good. But like the whole thing
01:12:43.920 is, is like you tell people what they want. You got to understand if you are passionate, if you're
01:12:50.400 authentic, you know, balls to bones, what it is that you want. There's a million people out there
01:12:57.780 that need to hear your passion because they don't have an internal passion. They don't.
01:13:06.180 They're looking for somebody to tell them what to be passionate about.
01:13:09.880 I think that's the struggle with, uh, what, like what we were just talking about before where I'm like
01:13:15.060 these people that are the, the nine to five section of people, like, I don't know. I go through a lot
01:13:22.520 of my life. They're the majority, right? He said 15%. Yeah. They've, they've got to be, but like you
01:13:27.080 go through life and then you see them. And a lot of them are your friends, your family, great people.
01:13:31.400 You love them. And like, I've spent a lot of my time trying to talk to them and like, this is why you
01:13:36.420 should try. And, and they're just like, huh? Like they don't get it. And then after a while,
01:13:43.040 I'm like, wait a second. But, but it's, I feel like it's a little bit, uh, I don't know. It's,
01:13:47.680 it's kind of like messed up to think like these people are just not in it, but I guess they're
01:13:51.520 just not, I don't know. Yeah. Well, they're just here for a different purpose. Like there's
01:13:55.680 certain people like, like I was telling you about the way I was profiled psychologically is like,
01:14:01.460 you're here because you have very strong feelings and you're here to share them. Right. And like you
01:14:07.080 have enough ability to show innovation and then that will carry on and that will inspire. So that's
01:14:13.320 my role. There's other people are here that are just here to be a good mom or a good, a person that's
01:14:18.800 here to be a good grandpa or to be a provider in, in the most like minimalistic sense. We all have
01:14:25.880 different purposes. You can never, you know, paint everybody with this, with one swath, you
01:14:31.400 know, it's like all of us have these different functions. Just the second that you become
01:14:36.420 authentic, like when you truly know what it is that it, that you're trying to share and
01:14:41.240 what you're trying to do, you got to understand there's a million people out there at least
01:14:46.840 that want to know what that is because that gives them direction because they internally don't
01:14:53.660 have a direction, man. You know, that idea of the person that needs to have their hands on all these
01:15:02.420 different levers and everything of a situation and, and, uh, uh, you know, needs that amount of
01:15:07.840 stimuli, right. That stress factor. Um, I'm just talking about my uncle before. Um, he, he was a guy
01:15:16.920 that he built all these businesses. He was really, um, much more than just a worker. Right. And then
01:15:23.320 even in his own hobby life, he was, um, a, uh, like a competitive bass fisher. So, uh, he, he had all
01:15:31.160 these trophies for, for, for bass fishing that he had won. Um, he was a competitive shooter as well.
01:15:36.860 So he's, this is a guy that needs a lot of stimuli. Uh, something happened in his older age. Uh, he
01:15:42.460 suffered in such a way that the, the doctor was like, Hey, you just can't do these things anymore.
01:15:47.620 Like you got to just stop. So he sold his, his boat, um, and he stopped shooting competitively
01:15:53.360 and, and, you know, he retired and, and so it was only acting as a consultant. He would show up and
01:15:58.140 he would, uh, give them some advice. And for, for him, it was funny too, because they would say that
01:16:02.700 they're suffering, you know, these businesses that he helped develop, they would call them in and they
01:16:06.840 go, Hey, we're suffering in this way and that way. And, and from just from wherever he sat in his
01:16:10.840 understanding of a thing, which was rather intimate because he helped build it, he would
01:16:14.460 always have the simplest solution. He's like, you're not seeing what the problem is here.
01:16:18.960 All you've got to do is tighten this up and tighten that up. But when, when he was in that
01:16:23.980 capacity, just showing up occasionally consulting, no longer pursuing those things. He didn't last
01:16:29.840 very long, dude. It was a pretty short order that he passed away after that, you know, just
01:16:34.620 illnesses just compounded and, and domino affected. And before I knew it, he was, he was not
01:16:39.500 doing what he's supposed to do. It's not doing what he's supposed to do. And it would, and
01:16:43.040 you know, who knows how much validity was in what the doctor prescribed, but it's just
01:16:49.320 interesting because what the doctor is telling him in order to preserve himself ends up being
01:16:53.120 the thing that, that causes his early demise. I just think maybe, uh, that's why, that's
01:16:59.820 why I keep my dad at work on the property. Yeah. Like you gotta, he whips him. I've seen
01:17:04.960 him whip him before. I whip him. Uh, but he seems to like it, you know, it keeps him spry.
01:17:08.940 It keeps him moving fast. Um, Topher, I want to get back onto, um, we, so we were talking
01:17:13.660 about some, uh, entrepreneurial stuff, but I want to get back onto like the actual
01:17:16.760 geometrics of the, the things, the, the domes that you're building. Uh, this also this cube
01:17:23.400 stuff was kind of interesting if we even get to it, but can you explain to me why, why does
01:17:28.140 this star pattern work? Why does the Mandela pattern work when on a, on a dome?
01:17:34.320 Um, and this is my, this is my favorite jam. Can you guys hear that? There's like some
01:17:40.840 alarm coming through my speakers. Is it coming through on your side? No, no, we don't hear
01:17:46.380 anything. Huh? That's very odd. Let me see something real quick. I got a, ah, that's where
01:17:53.560 it's coming from. Sorry about that. No, it's a, we, we didn't even hear it. You could have
01:17:57.460 just lied to us and kept it going. It's probably driving them crazy over there.
01:18:00.380 Yeah. There it goes. Okay. Now, now we're free of that. So, okay. This particular, this
01:18:07.260 is like one of my favorite subjects because, uh, unfortunately people, whenever they see
01:18:12.900 a Pentagon or a pentagram, they associate Satanism. And it's not that the, what, what occurred
01:18:19.780 is the Satanists figured out just like the ancient, like all the ancient people that built
01:18:26.500 with sacred geometry, they figured out this thing called the incommensurate geometry. And
01:18:33.140 the incommensurate geometry is like, so you guys have seen the, the pyramid of Giza, right?
01:18:38.300 The great pyramid of Giza. Yes. If you, if you were to turn the pyramid of Giza and see
01:18:43.620 one third of it, one side and two thirds of it, the other side, the, the triangle that that
01:18:49.780 makes is it's the one Oh eight angle at the top 36, 36. So it's not like when you're looking
01:18:56.500 at the pyramid dead on, it's 52 degrees. When you turn it to its side and you see one third,
01:19:01.860 one side and two thirds, the other side, this is the, this is this incommensurate geometry.
01:19:08.180 And what that means is it's a fractal. You can cut it on any one of those lines and it just,
01:19:13.460 it keeps repeating itself. Well, the reason why this was glorified in ancient cultures was because
01:19:21.140 it's the ratio of, or it's the, it's the geometry of hydrogen to oxygen. And the geometry of hydrogen
01:19:29.380 oxygen is just another way of saying water. And we're told water is memory, right? So we're told
01:19:35.860 that water has memory in it and all the rest of it. You get super dehydrated. I see you drinking that
01:19:40.660 coffee. F that water. No, like, so if I don't know if you've ever gotten like super dehydrated
01:19:48.900 and you can't think, you know, it's because our bodies, you know, our gray matter doesn't really
01:19:54.740 do much other than be an antenna. And when that antenna has a lot of water in it, it can like pick
01:20:00.740 up, you know, all the information in the new sphere. Like the new sphere is essentially the
01:20:05.060 informational field. And so you'll, you'll see, like I do deep tissue myofascial release. So like
01:20:11.220 when I get in there into the muscles, there's a layer of the fascia. The fascia is like the
01:20:17.460 sheathing that goes over everything. Well, they now know that the fascia, there's a water layer of
01:20:23.300 structured water that goes underneath that, that is actually our nervous system. This is all the stuff
01:20:30.020 that they told us about, you know, dendrons and dendrites and neurons and synapses. And it's utter
01:20:37.300 BS. Those things are there, but they do, they're not doing things like they say they do. It's not like
01:20:43.700 a billiard ball that one knocks, the other knocks, the other, because we show that we do a lot of things
01:20:50.180 instantaneously. Like when you were pitching a baseball, half the guys that actually got a hit on
01:20:55.860 you started their swing before the ball even left your hand. Yeah. Now, now, how is that possible
01:21:04.420 if it's only a nervous system thing? And the, the, the truth of the matter is we're moved. We're not
01:21:10.740 the mover and water is the medium that I should say structured water is the medium by which we're
01:21:19.540 receiving signals from our environment. And then we're then have our locomotion to do whatever work we
01:21:25.460 need to do. It's also like, you know, the best data storage thing ever. Like when you look at the
01:21:32.420 future of data storage, it's all based on, we'll get into the biochar and the hypercube and all that,
01:21:38.580 but it's all based essentially on this incommensurate geometry and hypercubes. So either way you have this
01:21:46.820 beautiful geometry that nature uses to kind of distribute information. And in the past they used this and they
01:21:54.900 encoded it in almost every structure, every Roman Colosseum building that you see where there's like
01:22:00.900 six or eight pillars, there'll be this triangular arch form that like connects them all. That's the
01:22:07.460 108 36 36. And so when you look at a pentagram, all that is, is three of those triangles that are turned 72
01:22:16.580 degrees from each other. Hmm. So that's what makes a pentagram is just, is three of those, you know,
01:22:24.180 I guess you would call it profile pictures of a pyramid just turned on each other. And the Pentagon
01:22:31.300 is the same thing, but if you were to just flip the triangles out, that gives you the five sided
01:22:37.460 Pentagon. And for, for a long time, the Pentagon, the actual building that they built in the United
01:22:43.860 States as the Pentagon was the largest building in the world. And they, they use that shape for a very
01:22:50.420 specific purpose. It was satanic purpose, you know, it still is satanic, but what these satanists are
01:22:58.500 doing, they're kind of co-opting just a power that's inherent in nature. And that power is water. I
01:23:07.380 shouldn't just say water. Like, I don't want to sound like, uh, like too much of a naturalist about
01:23:12.980 this. It's that in this, we're purposely not taught that we live in a fluid. Like we're taught that we
01:23:20.740 breathe air. This is the idea of like ether. Well, it's not just that ether is actually more subtle than
01:23:27.940 the actual gases that we live in. We, when we're breathing, we're breathing mostly nitrogen,
01:23:33.700 a little bit of oxygen and a little bit of carbon dioxide. Like that's what we're breathing.
01:23:38.500 But it's in a medium that's a fluid. Well, that fluid has a ton of water vapor in it.
01:23:44.980 That water vapor is, is the intelligence field. So when people use these, these shapes in a negative
01:23:53.540 way, what they're trying to do is they're trying to amplify, they're using it like an amplifier.
01:23:58.820 And when, when I first saw the star dome from this Japanese mathematician,
01:24:04.660 I knew immediately one, just the, the physics of how it was a tensed metal structure. So unlike
01:24:11.540 geodesic domes, where they're just a bunch of triangles that you just stick together like Lincoln
01:24:15.780 logs, that's not a tense structure. That's just, everything has a pre tension, each bit of it,
01:24:21.940 it, and you fit it together like Legos. And those joints fail. And so when I saw this structure,
01:24:29.140 I was like, I immediately was like, that's like a bridge, because you pop it up like a tent. And
01:24:34.660 then the tension in all in all the metal, like you've done metal fabrication, when you bend the
01:24:40.580 metal, and then you freeze that in concrete. Now that's how all these bridges around the world are
01:24:46.740 so so resilient is because I forget what the equation is, is but when you freeze the tension
01:24:53.060 and metal, like a lot of the, the, the metal rope that they put as tensioning agents in bridges,
01:25:01.780 when they anchor them to either shore of the river or whatever, they put them under so much tension,
01:25:08.420 and then they pour the concrete around them to lock that tension in. And that distributes the tension
01:25:15.460 through the bridge, the entire life of the bridge, and it makes it so much stronger. So pretense
01:25:21.940 structures are to me, like the future where you take a shape that's obviously very resilient,
01:25:28.180 like a bubble, a hemisphere is very resilient. And then you freeze it in cement. And when you freeze
01:25:34.100 it in cement, under tension, now the entire life of the building, have you ever heard the the term
01:25:41.540 tensegrity? I've not. So tensegrity is think of tension and integrity. Okay, so it's exactly the
01:25:50.820 way our body works, right? So like when you're running, when your left arm goes forward, your right foot
01:25:57.060 goes back. Right? And you said you were a martial artist, right? When you're doing martial arts,
01:26:02.340 it's all about working levers. So if somebody overextends, you leverage that overextension to
01:26:08.660 plant them, right? So that's tensegrity. Tensegrity is working on a counter lever principle. Like
01:26:15.540 whenever something is under extension or under load, you're counter levering it. Okay? Well, if you
01:26:22.500 counter lever that in a perfect geometry, which the star dome gives you because it's literally all of these
01:26:30.580 in commensurate geometry triangles, that's all it is. This would be the same thing that's at play that
01:26:36.340 allows something as simple as like an egg balance, a center block, given the right angle, like as long
01:26:43.380 as it's done the right way, the egg can actually sustain the center block, despite exactly being
01:26:47.620 pretty fragile in any other angle. Yeah, can you guys pull up Instagram because I have tons of like
01:26:53.540 my bio charisma on Instagram. I have like real, I have real, I, my, my website's a dinosaur,
01:27:00.900 but I'll give me a sec. Yeah. On Instagram, I have like, we just built this 42 foot dome
01:27:07.620 and our struts, you'll, you'll laugh as a welder. Our struts were one inch or excuse me, four inch flat
01:27:15.300 bar by quarter by quarter inch flat bar that went 66 feet, man. Wow. And then we did our overlaps and
01:27:24.420 we had this huge crane lift the whole thing up. It looked like a jellyfish. And then we mounted it to the
01:27:30.900 sides of this 131 foot long ring and the whole thing gained tension. I think the last video I put
01:27:39.060 up there was of the actual, so pulling it upward created that tensile strength. Well, we like, cause,
01:27:46.020 cause everything starts to arch downward. Exactly. Let me ask you a question to this guy. This sounds
01:27:51.380 kind of stupid, but, uh, I was reading the Bible yesterday and, uh, it says that Noah lived in it.
01:27:57.540 I'm Noah. Uh, Abraham was like a nomadic dude living in a tent. Do you think that the word tent,
01:28:02.580 because what you're describing when, when we say tent, like, you know, you pop this, like you're
01:28:07.380 describing a tent that's like popped up, but it's like very strong. And I, I don't know if this,
01:28:12.500 do you think this, these dudes were like doing something like this and with like dome type tents,
01:28:17.460 or what do you, what do you think? I had these cats last year at the Bear Fest 2024. They came to me
01:28:22.900 and they were convinced that the tabernacle was, was a, a dome tent. That's interesting. Yeah.
01:28:30.980 Yeah. It was really kind of cool. We actually get that. I forgot who we were talking to. He's
01:28:33.860 talking about the tabernacle being this emulation of, uh, the actual supposed dome that goes over our
01:28:40.500 flat earth, the firmament that the tabernacle was a, a miniature, but to scale, uh, reproduction of,
01:28:48.100 of that very same thing. And I was like, I don't know. It's pretty interesting. I don't know. Okay.
01:28:52.420 So here we go. We have your, uh, your, your Instagram pulled up. Wow. Look at this thing.
01:28:56.740 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So go to that wire, the wiggle wire. You'll, you guys will enjoy the, uh,
01:29:02.260 this one here in the center. You could do, yeah. The 42 foot diameter, pure steel, green dome.
01:29:08.260 That's a tensegrity structure.
01:29:11.220 Attaching our T braces right now.
01:29:12.980 So that circle you see is 42 feet or 140, 131 feet by four feet tall. And each one of those metal
01:29:26.820 struts, those green metal struts that you see, each one of those was 66 feet long.
01:29:32.020 Wow.
01:29:32.500 That, that ladder is going up 25 feet right there.
01:29:37.300 So this is like, you can see, you could see my welder was up there when we got that.
01:29:41.860 You would never though, like if you were trying to build, you know,
01:29:44.820 let's say any kind of traditional, uh, uh, building and it's made up of your, your common angles,
01:29:50.180 you would never, uh, uh, elect to use such a, a thin material to do that. I mean, that would be so,
01:29:56.420 but it has this flexibility.
01:29:57.700 No, but I mean, looking at this, you can tell this shit isn't going anywhere.
01:30:00.740 No, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:30:02.020 So the, the, the concrete ring at the bottom there, that's like holding it in place and that stays there
01:30:06.980 forever. Right. And, uh,
01:30:08.340 yeah, that, that, that's super Adobe. So that's rammed earth construction.
01:30:12.100 We started off like the very first dome building thing. I learned was flexible form rammed earth
01:30:18.100 construction or super Adobe. So that was nine rings of earth bags that we tamped. And then we capped it
01:30:24.820 with concrete that acts as our tension ring. And then that tension ring has 10 mounting points
01:30:30.900 where the steel. Yeah, exactly. And we use number eight hardened steel, five eighths bolts,
01:30:38.500 where we go ahead and bolt and put all the tension down. We have all the overlaps,
01:30:43.940 all of our geometry pickup points are pre-drilled. So when the crane lifted the whole thing into place,
01:30:50.820 I'm editing right now, the time-lapse photography. So I'm going to put a time-lapse on Instagram of all
01:30:56.260 this, like the time-lapse, you see the crane going up and it not being under tension. Like
01:31:01.060 go to the wiggle wire one at the top. Hit the, you'll appreciate it.
01:31:05.140 This looks like it doesn't need a pretty, like a substantial foundation. One that goes deep into
01:31:09.540 the, how, how deep are you going? Honestly, this looks quite inexpensive.
01:31:11.860 Well, it looks inexpensive, but I'm wondering about like, you know, property taxes are,
01:31:15.300 are often based off of like, what sort of a foundation you have. That's why people are really
01:31:19.380 pumped about these, um, uh, what would you call them shipping container homes? Because oftentimes you can
01:31:23.780 do it without a smaller footprint. Yeah. And, and, and so you're, you're, you don't run into
01:31:28.420 as much of a property tax issue. Is this something that you need to go like, you're not putting a,
01:31:33.620 do you put basements in these? I'll be honest, dude, this thing is huge.
01:31:36.180 It is pretty big. Yeah. Yeah. That, that on the first story is 1600 square feet. So
01:31:41.620 man, look at it comparison to him. Oh my God. Yeah. Look at him.
01:31:44.100 Yeah. Yeah. But now you're going to see the video is going to pan over to a geodesic dome.
01:31:49.300 That geodesic dome is 32 feet in diameter. It's, it's teeny. And you can just see the difference
01:31:57.620 in like, one's a very male energy, like with all the, like, you know, hard, sharp energy. Yeah.
01:32:04.100 And that's the geodesic that the, the joints are already failing on that one. That one's like three,
01:32:10.660 three years old. Now I like geodesics. I think there, there's a time and place for them,
01:32:16.100 but my company is built more on the stardom ethos of like, okay, we're going to put up these
01:32:22.020 where they're perfectly round. Yeah. Where we get a perfect spherical or hemispherical shape.
01:32:29.300 Like this is just a greenhouse, right? But I sold it to my customer by saying like, look, if you ever
01:32:36.260 want to convert this into a home, it will be no problem. Like there, there's zero problem
01:32:42.180 with taking the plastic off and then us putting ferro cement up because ferro cement is usually
01:32:48.580 the shell that I use. And ferro cement just means thin, thin shell concrete. Okay.
01:32:53.220 It, it's very much similar to what you were talking about with the old homes with stucco and lath.
01:32:58.260 Uh, we just use a, a very specific form of stucco and we, and we smoosh that through multiple layers
01:33:05.780 of wire mesh that create this very thin shell that's mechanically extremely strong. And then
01:33:12.740 what we're doing at Barataria this year is we took it even one step further, which is like my,
01:33:19.060 my, my brainchild and that's with nylon cement. So nylon cement. Yeah. Where we actually took a
01:33:27.460 landscaping fabric. It's also known as geo textile. We saturate that in a cement slurry and then we
01:33:34.180 drape it over that wire frame that you just saw. It's like paper mache. And then you let it dry like
01:33:39.780 that. Yeah. In every layer that you put on top of it, you gain two X, the compression strength.
01:33:49.780 Oh wow. Because, because the chassis of it has perfect geometry. It's just like that egg that
01:33:56.500 you're talking about that can hold the cinder block. It, it, it, the sheer forces, the compression
01:34:02.660 forces evenly distribute. So you've gotten these to the point, I imagine they're so dialed in that as
01:34:08.820 far as like cost efficacy, you're, you're, you're doing pretty well. I mean, it seems like you, um,
01:34:14.900 how do I say this? Well, let's ask you this. How long does it take to erect? Let's say something
01:34:19.380 of the size of the one that we just watched. That took 23 days, 23 days. Crazy.
01:34:26.740 And, uh, like price, uh, how, how is this comparable to a house? Because, uh, I don't know,
01:34:31.380 what did my parents just build, uh, like 2,200 square feet and it costs like 150.
01:34:38.420 Yeah. And then you, when you, when you build a house, by the way, you watch, like the team
01:34:42.420 is immense and like, oftentimes like it's not, um, I mean, there's also like, you know,
01:34:47.860 they're doing like full kitchens inside. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So as far as like labor and then,
01:34:54.100 um, uh, materials, uh, and, and time, I mean, time you're obviously crushing on.
01:34:59.380 Well, my, my, my model will be, is I'm going to license this because this is sort of my brainchild.
01:35:05.060 Uh, like the combination of the, the super Adobe with the, with the geotextile, with the
01:35:13.780 Japanese stardome, it's one big hybrid structure. As far as I know, nobody else is doing it. Like
01:35:19.700 I'm doing it. Like you have other dome builders, but a lot of them, they use different mediums,
01:35:24.820 which I really like, but their domes are really small. Uh, my, my private homes, if you look on the
01:35:30.820 Instagram thing, like there's a, there's some really great Viking arch forms and other things
01:35:37.060 on there that we've done that are very pretty. I can't say I like the aesthetic of big domes
01:35:43.300 unless like the green dome is like, uh, is one thing. Right. But, um, like, yeah, like that dome
01:35:50.420 that you see with the foam on it, like we're actually covering that, uh, in two weeks.
01:35:56.660 So, so this particular dome, it, there's so many crazy hidden geometries that are in it.
01:36:05.140 And on the front side of it has this massive Viking entryway, like, and, uh, yeah, it's,
01:36:13.300 we do the vaulted entryways. We do the, the nice, uh, buttresses. We do the eyebrows, the vaulted.
01:36:20.980 This is going to sound probably like a stupid question, but, uh, give me some time and I'll
01:36:25.060 ask you a few more. Yeah. Uh, so, so given the energetic implications of the design and the way
01:36:31.780 that it, it potentially allows it to flow, uh, more effectively than these other, you know,
01:36:36.340 where it's crashing into flat surfaces and everything, given the feng shui of it all,
01:36:41.300 I wonder if people who, it would seem you would have an overlap in, in, um, buyers who are also
01:36:48.340 spiritually aware. And given that overlap, I'm wondering if you've gotten any feedback
01:36:54.020 from these individuals about anything worth mentioning, the spiritual implications or the
01:37:00.180 energetic implications, um, about, you know, living in the home and practicing whatever it
01:37:05.140 is that they're practicing. So, you know, I have to say when you're a dome builder, your clients turn
01:37:11.940 out to be really cool. That's, that's what, that's one reason why I could never be like a normal
01:37:18.420 contractor because you have to deal with a lot of BS. Normies. Yeah. And so I'm not dealing with
01:37:25.780 normal people at all. These are abnormal people. So that, that, that one dome that you were just
01:37:31.540 looking at that had the yellow spray foam on it. Um, my client, she was taking these pictures
01:37:38.500 because we just poured this big porch for her and she was taking pictures at night and she noticed
01:37:44.580 that, that there was this purple line. Look at that archway. Dude, that's beautiful. Right. That's
01:37:49.460 insane. So she was like right there, she was taking a picture of that and there was this glowing purple
01:37:55.220 light. And so we live in tornado alley here and we had, I don't know, in three weeks we had four
01:38:05.700 severe tornado warnings. Like we were in the track to get hit and we never, we, it never came to us.
01:38:13.380 And there's, have you guys ever heard of the term orgone or orgone accumulators?
01:38:18.820 Uh, yeah, yeah, I have. Yeah. Yeah. So like if, if you're, you know, this entryway kind of like
01:38:25.140 resembles a vagina, but did you make it look like a vagina? Well, a vesica Pisces looks like a vagina.
01:38:31.780 That's all it is. It's a vesica Pisces. It has like the entrance to like the,
01:38:36.740 and then it even has like the lips to it. It's something beautiful. Tell me the truth.
01:38:39.620 How many, how, how, what percentage of your clientele is white women?
01:38:43.700 A hundred.
01:38:48.420 Well, I come through my Yoni entryway. Sorry, please continue.
01:38:51.060 I mean, energetically a hemisphere is feminine where a beehive is masculine. Okay. And so every,
01:38:59.860 every beehive dome I built has been for male clients and 80% of the, the hemispherical domes
01:39:09.460 I've built are for women. And the remaining 20% was just the husbands.
01:39:14.100 Other men. Okay. No, no, no, no. It's just, I'm not saying it's only for men or only for women.
01:39:20.740 I'm just saying that like, there's a resonant pattern. Like we've been talking about resonant
01:39:24.180 patterns. And do you think that that just, these are people that are knowledgeable about that or
01:39:27.860 does this thing resonate with them? Oh, damn. So this lady has like a bunch of domes. Like
01:39:32.260 those are her rooms, huh? Like she'll just go out to another, that's cool.
01:39:34.980 Like I'm Mediterranean. Like this, this complex, there's a tridome complex. And so each one of the
01:39:42.580 dome, well, the two smaller domes are bedrooms with bathrooms. And then the big dome that we
01:39:46.980 were just in, that's, that's going to be the living room office and kitchen.
01:39:52.740 I like that. That's so much cooler than like, here's a big box. Everything is in the big box.
01:39:56.660 Right. And then that gives her a courtyard because another thing I build our rocket mass heaters.
01:40:02.580 And so I'm building her an outdoor hot tub area that's powered by wood fire because we live in
01:40:08.740 the woods. And it's a, have you guys ever heard the term thermosiphon?
01:40:13.380 I've not.
01:40:14.100 No. You've said a lot of things that I don't know what they are.
01:40:16.900 Oh, I've just been nodding. Yeah. I'm doing a lot of nodding. Like, yeah, dude, crushing.
01:40:19.940 We totally know.
01:40:22.500 Yeah. Thermosiphons are a really cool technology where you can like freely distribute heat.
01:40:27.540 Yeah. Yeah. So like this whole dome in and of itself is like, you know, it's mainly masonry.
01:40:34.900 We put the foam on to insulate the top of it, but we have a rocket mass heater in it. That's going
01:40:40.900 to heat and cool. Like with the rocket mass heater, we get thermal differential where we can
01:40:46.180 generate electricity. Um, but this, this is like a showcase, you know, spot. Like this is going to be
01:40:54.180 a triplex. That's her private home, her and her husband's private home. And yeah, like,
01:41:00.500 we're going to, it's crazy. I've got a, I've got a, my, well, I have a major in fire protection
01:41:07.860 and management. I'm looking at this thing. I'm like, I don't think this thing sets on fire.
01:41:11.060 No, I don't think this thing is very flammable. It doesn't even, it doesn't look flammable.
01:41:16.100 No, in the future, I'm going to actually, instead of using a closed cell foam, I'm going to use
01:41:21.540 aircrete and I'm going to impregnate the aircrete with biochar. That's my other company I have.
01:41:28.180 And the biochar essentially fire proofs it and it EMF proofs it. It makes it so no EMFs can, can get,
01:41:35.860 get to you inside. Chris, you ever wonder like, uh, who you're going to make mad doing this?
01:41:40.340 It seems like a lot of like, you know, a lot of the industry would be like, Hey,
01:41:45.140 you don't like shit that lasts a long time, doesn't set on fire, doesn't allow EMF waves
01:41:50.500 to give you ass cancer, like all sorts of things like that. I'm not in trouble. I'm not in trouble
01:41:55.380 because there's only like three people in the world that want them. Oh, all right. Now I gotta,
01:42:00.420 I gotta ask you this then, you know, given your, your, your, uh, your Christian bent, you know,
01:42:05.540 you're, you're, you're leaning towards Christianity. Uh, and there's obviously a real spiritual
01:42:11.860 clientele that's going to be interested in this sort of thing. Have you, I'm not asking you to
01:42:15.620 out your, your clientele, Chris, but is there anybody that's got, you got like, who am I building
01:42:20.260 a dome for? What is this person? What is this person about? You should probably, you should,
01:42:24.820 I mean, I'll be, I'll be curious to see what would happen if you built these type of geometric
01:42:28.740 type domes on like a space wolf ranch, right? Oh, Oh, like a high strangeness, the veil area.
01:42:36.740 That seems, uh, well, speaking of which that dome was built very close to a portal, like an actual,
01:42:43.700 like geomance portal. Like, I think, I, I think the portal like brought, brought that dome structure to
01:42:51.860 it. Yeah. Like I'm not one of these people that believes that like, uh, what is it called?
01:42:58.580 Uh, dousing is evil. I don't think dousing is evil. Oh, that's where you're, uh, searching for
01:43:04.900 water. Oh, that's interesting. As a, as, as a builder, I need to know where the groundwater is.
01:43:10.980 I learned, I learned how to douse just because I build and I can't have a, a flowing water go
01:43:19.780 underneath a structure. You just don't do that. So I, well, how deep can that flowing water be?
01:43:26.740 Well, like you're in Florida, like you, you pretty much have water underneath everything,
01:43:32.500 but underneath everything. Yeah. There's, there's a reason why Florida has this transience to it.
01:43:38.420 And the reason, one of the reasons why is the geology there is essentially you're just on a
01:43:43.940 floating piece of coral. That that's the geology of Florida. And so it attracts transience. It doesn't
01:43:52.180 attract permanence. There is a lot of trans in this area, honestly, which is really weird.
01:43:57.540 Tell them about that. Yeah. We have to tell you, I know Matthew's in the chat and he's very upset if
01:44:00.980 we don't tell you, but, uh, we're working on a documentary right now is a gentleman by the name
01:44:04.340 of Joe Gilberti, who unfortunately was just sentenced to 15 years in prison. Uh, that's a little bit of an
01:44:09.300 update for you guys who have been following along. Um, but to make a long story short, he discovered what
01:44:15.060 seems to be like primary waters, um, about 1500 feet beneath a property that he has a parcel of
01:44:22.340 here in Florida. And, um, and it's, uh, alkaline, uh, well, I don't know if I'm allowed to say that
01:44:28.020 because we'll be allowed to say, we just can't say that it, it does anything. All right. Yeah. So
01:44:31.940 it's alkaline water and, um, it's high in minerals and all sorts of different crazy things. And it's,
01:44:38.340 and it's potentially enough to service at the minimum, all of South Florida. They did a survey,
01:44:43.060 they dropped a camera down there and the language that the guy used was, this is an ocean. Uh, he
01:44:48.180 tried to get it to the people's attention. He tried to say, we should be using this. Now,
01:44:51.380 apparently there's a company called mosaic agriculture who has access to this water, uh,
01:44:56.180 not too far from where this well was. I think, uh, you know, Nestle probably isn't pumped about it
01:45:01.860 because they have, you know, their contracts over the wells. I mean, the springs that exist.
01:45:06.740 And so, um, the more this guy tried to ring the bell about it, the more they said, Hey,
01:45:10.980 you know, why don't we throw him in a cage? Let's put him in a cage. Let's strip him naked.
01:45:16.020 Let's spray him with water. Uh, he's been there for, I think, uh, about two years now. And
01:45:20.420 unfortunately he was just sentenced, um, about a week ago, uh, to, to 15 years. So we're working
01:45:26.740 on this documentary. Uh, the, the individual who found it many generations ago, uh, was a Freemason,
01:45:32.900 interestingly enough, or at least was alleged to be, uh, by the people who we spoke to when we were
01:45:36.980 recording. We had asked his son, um, when we went there, we said, why that spot? Cause it's like,
01:45:43.060 it's a 15 minute drive on his own property and it's not convenient to where his house is. So I was
01:45:47.780 like, why would your dad build a well here if the house was always quite far away? And he said his
01:45:52.740 dad was using dousing rods. Yeah. Walked to, uh, one of the higher, the higher parts of the property.
01:45:58.660 They drilled down 600 feet, 600. Yep. Which is twice as, as deep as you need to go for a general
01:46:04.500 well in Florida, hit bedrock, continued to, he told him like limestone, whatever it is. Yeah.
01:46:09.140 Limestone. Yeah. He's like, keep drilling down. They went down 1500 and eight feet or something
01:46:13.860 like that. Yeah. And this is where they find this well, but the guy is using dowsing rods to locate
01:46:18.980 this specific area to tap into this, this well that apparently extends to like, I don't know,
01:46:24.180 Alabama. That's the, the, it's the idea is that it's like part of the aqueducts that flow from like
01:46:29.300 Alabama, Georgia aquifers. Yeah. What the hell is an aqueduct? Uh, aquifers. Yeah. That come from,
01:46:34.740 uh, that far up North and you know, we are in, in, in central Florida here. So I don't know,
01:46:39.620 it's a weird thing that we've, we've stepped in and I'm, I'll tell you the truth. I am, uh,
01:46:45.460 it's quite unfortunate that this is such a dire situation and it's such an important topic and
01:46:50.900 there's an individual and his family who are suffering a great deal because of the implications
01:46:55.540 of this water and who they have is a couple of retards in old leather chairs to talk about it.
01:47:00.820 Um, we're trying to do what we can to, you know, to bring attention to it. Uh, we're trying to do
01:47:06.260 a documentary. We've, we've never done a documentary before. Uh, but right now we're the loudest people
01:47:13.700 that these folks have really, this needs to get out to, to somebody who's bigger than us,
01:47:17.380 but we're doing what we can right now. But yeah, it's just interesting because dowsing rods are
01:47:21.700 also called divination rods, uh, in a changeable, uh, terminology there. So it sounds, uh, sounds
01:47:27.780 spooky, but, uh, maybe not. Maybe it's just how you find water. No, it can be used for extremely
01:47:32.900 practical purposes and it's not demons telling you anything. It's literally very simple science.
01:47:39.140 I like that the demons would be like, here's the water. No, because that's the divination part of it.
01:47:43.940 That's what I'm saying. Things get overlapped and people using, it's like what I was talking
01:47:48.180 about with the pentagram. People will look at the pentagram and say, oh, that's satanic. I'm like,
01:47:53.220 no, it's powerful and it's used by Satanists. Divination rods aren't just divination rods.
01:48:00.580 Divination rods are also dowsing rods. They will tell you where water is. They will tell you where
01:48:05.620 electricity is. They will tell you where fault lines are. They will tell you where dragon paths are.
01:48:12.100 They will tell you all. Wait a second. How dare you? What's a dragon path? A dragon path is when you
01:48:18.980 have a line of water that crosses over a fault line. It creates this spiral. And usually in those
01:48:27.380 spirals, it's like a nexus zone where you get like, you know, Yeti sightings, you get ball lightning,
01:48:35.540 you get all these weird phenomenon. And it's essentially where you have geomantic stress.
01:48:41.940 You have an area that's more liminal. And you have just energy that can flow from like,
01:48:48.900 let's just say to make it simple, the lower realms to the upper realms more easy. It's like the veil is
01:48:55.460 in there. Yeah, that's interesting. That's why we often have that discussion where it's like people
01:49:00.500 will describe a very strange situation, maybe passing through what they perceive as a portal.
01:49:04.900 And it's usually accompanied with, um, yeah, I had crossed over a stream. So it's like this flow of
01:49:11.940 energy and water as a conductor, uh, and, and, and how these things interplay will amplify, uh, whatever,
01:49:20.260 whatever high strangeness already exists in an area. And you really, you really make me like Owen Benjamin
01:49:26.020 even more because it's like, he found this guy and not only did he find you, but then he's like,
01:49:29.460 we're going to, we're going to start building these domes. We need to build a damn dome.
01:49:33.140 We need to build a dome. Yeah. Well, I've been looking at plots of land and I'm like,
01:49:36.500 what if I just bought a plot of land? And then like, there's nothing on it, but I'm like,
01:49:40.340 maybe we could do something cool on it. Maybe we could build, but you know, you booked last night
01:49:45.060 and it, and, and it was like, oh, 930 in the morning, we're going to do something. So there wasn't
01:49:48.260 a lot of prep time. Like, I wonder what we're going to talk about. Oh, cool. He makes like domes and
01:49:51.220 everything. That's fascinating. This is one of my favorite conversations like in the past month.
01:49:56.580 Yeah. Yeah. This is awesome. Thank you, dude. Yeah. You're welcome. If you guys ever
01:50:01.380 want me to talk a little bit about primary water, that's like something I'm very, very versed in.
01:50:07.300 Where I lived in Costa Rica, they have like one of the seven primary water spots in the entire world.
01:50:14.260 And I actually got to meet the, the gentleman that coined the term primary water
01:50:20.180 when he surveyed the Diamante waterfall in the valley that I lived in. So I have, I have extensive
01:50:27.380 knowledge, hydrology knowledge of that stuff. And being a South Floridian and understanding the
01:50:33.300 aquifer system and things like that, that's something that I could actually inform you on,
01:50:40.180 on a very high level. That would be a conversation certainly worth having.
01:50:44.580 I think honestly, wherever, wherever you're at, when we're, uh, finalizing or getting,
01:50:49.540 getting this documentary tied up, I'd love to like go out to you and do an interview about
01:50:54.100 this stuff because yeah, we'd obviously need some expertise. We're just out there. We had some,
01:50:58.820 uh, testing. Well, someone else had some testing done on the water when we were out there. So
01:51:03.060 we figured out that the deuterium levels weren't, uh, as low as we, uh, that the guy was looking for.
01:51:08.660 Yeah. There was this idea that it may be deuterium depleted water, which, which apparently has some
01:51:13.140 significance when it comes to medicinal purposes. I'm not making that claim. Uh, YouTube, but, um,
01:51:17.860 but that's not the case, but still it's just the idea that it would be able to, you know, uh,
01:51:22.420 conservatively service, uh, South Florida. And, and then, you know,
01:51:27.300 it's also high in minerals. It's also alkaline. So it's like, you know, this water is still
01:51:31.460 special in its own way, but I don't really know much about water. I don't know anything about
01:51:34.820 water. It's not a thing. I drink it sometimes. Are you guys friendly with, uh, Dr. Narcolongo?
01:51:42.420 Yeah. Yeah, we are. Uh, we had him on the show before and, and he's had some very fascinating
01:51:46.500 things to say about Florida and, and how it, it could even potentially have been the garden of Eden.
01:51:51.540 Uh, and you know, then you have this whole water session situation down here and it's like
01:51:56.100 Florida just continues. It's the, it's the state that keeps on giving, uh, when it comes to
01:52:00.420 strange strangeness. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It is a very liminal space. Um,
01:52:08.580 cause there's so much quartz sand and coral and all the rest of it. But the one thing that he brings
01:52:14.660 up a lot is how many fresh water springs are in central and North Florida. And he's very good at
01:52:22.180 documenting like just like the, like there's more natural freshwater springs in North Florida than
01:52:29.460 anywhere else in the world. Yeah. Yeah. That's why the, the, the water situation is very strange.
01:52:35.780 Um, I came previously from the Tampa Bay area and, uh, not too far from, from, uh, Narcolongo was kind
01:52:41.780 of like, well, he was up there doing research at a restaurant, interestingly enough, like right down
01:52:46.100 the street from me, there was an ancient stone that, uh, that was like an anchor. He thought,
01:52:51.780 well, it wasn't just an anchor that the stone anchors, I saw them personally. Like I was able
01:52:56.020 to visit the places that he was showing off on his, on his, uh, channel, but this stone was one where
01:53:00.420 it seemed like they may have been, uh, doing ritual sacrifices on and it, and it like, it was so old.
01:53:07.060 They pulled it from the water and then this restaurant kind of like unwittingly just put it on their
01:53:11.380 lawn. Uh, and so it's like right there in the parking lot. And, uh, and you could see there's
01:53:16.500 a face carved into it. And he was talking about like the, the dating on the stone, like totally
01:53:21.380 changes when we thought people were supposed to have inhabited the Americas, uh, you know,
01:53:27.620 in one way or the other, far beyond my, my grasp intellectually, I just went, Ooh, that's a pretty
01:53:31.940 cool stone. Um, uh, but the water situation in, in, in at least my area back in, in Port Ritchie,
01:53:40.020 which is, you know, Tampa adjacent, uh, is terrible. The water itself, like from the tap
01:53:44.500 was terrible. Yeah. And I just kind of assumed that moving to a place that had more natural
01:53:49.940 springs than anywhere in the world, you would have a pretty good water situation going on.
01:53:54.900 Not the case, not at least what, what the, what the public is getting access to.
01:53:58.100 Well, you, the big problem when you have such a porous mantle, which is what you have in Florida
01:54:04.020 is, and you have a lot of people is you have a lot of poop you have to deal with.
01:54:08.020 Yeah. And when I, when I lived in South Florida, I bet you is very similar to where you were in your
01:54:13.460 Tampa is in South Florida. I left South Florida in 2006. I had a home in Boynton beach, Florida,
01:54:20.340 and they were the, the county was actively bragging that they were pumping sewage into the aquifer
01:54:28.900 because there was drought for so long that they had this brilliant idea that, okay,
01:54:34.900 we're going to offset the volume of water that's been dropping in our aquifer by just pumping poop
01:54:40.660 into it. If we do that, don't worry about it. The poop is heavy. It will sink. Don't even worry about it.
01:54:47.380 Don't even worry about it. Sometimes it floats. We, we have enough chlorine to take care of it. Like
01:54:52.340 they were literally like, like, this is how we're going to solve our drought condition.
01:54:56.020 That this is how we're going to destroy one of the most remarkable natural resources on the planet.
01:55:02.580 We're going to do it. There is an active, active, I mean, since the early 1900s, maybe even before
01:55:10.020 there has been an active strategy to destroy the world's water. Yeah. Fresh water, sweet water to
01:55:18.020 destroy it. Well, that's the idea. That's the implications here with the water situation that
01:55:22.580 you know, we're making this documentary about is like, uh, they want to destroy it. Uh,
01:55:26.980 if they can control the water, then they can subject us to quite a lot. And if you're a
01:55:31.460 conspiracy theorist, who's worth his salt, I'm sure you can speculate pretty heavily on how they might
01:55:34.820 do that. Um, but also, you know, creating scarcity and things of that nature, and then having just a,
01:55:42.100 sort of a stranglehold on its sources like Nestle, uh, would with the contracts over the natural springs.
01:55:47.300 Um, there is a lot of people who might not want you to talk about this sort of thing, which could
01:55:54.340 explain why Joe Gilberti is now facing 15 years in prison. And, uh, they keep spraying him with a
01:55:59.780 hose. Uh, you should probably stop spraying Joe. Well, listen, um, we're at the two, two hour mark,
01:56:06.660 Chris. And, uh, what, what, what, what's not lost on us is that, uh, you know quite a bit about a lot
01:56:14.020 of fun stuff. I, I, I hope that we made a decent impression because I'd like to ask if you'd like
01:56:18.820 to come back in the future. Definitely. Definitely. I really enjoy your guys' content.
01:56:23.460 There's very few new podcasts that like switch me on. And I have to say, like I was telling you
01:56:28.980 earlier, you guys are funny as all get out and you actually have really good insights.
01:56:35.220 And so I've really been enjoying, you know, coming, you know, coming in contact with your,
01:56:39.620 with your work. Well, that's very surprising. And I would recommend going in to the nearest doctor
01:56:45.540 and getting that checked out. Uh, I apologize for not reaching out sooner. Cause Owen did message me.
01:56:50.340 He was like, here's Topher's information. And I was like, thanks. And then he said a bunch of other
01:56:54.900 stuff and then I forgot. And then I forgot again. And then it was like, it's also just like, we're,
01:56:58.660 we're doing a lot of things. Uh, we have our hands in, in probably too many, too many pots,
01:57:05.220 uh, at the moment. Well, I mean, it'll all work out. We have our hands in just enough pots, man.
01:57:08.880 I'm so many pots. I'm glad, I'm glad that we got this done, man. I'm glad that, uh,
01:57:12.400 Brad texted us yesterday and like, yeah, a little reminder, a little nudge there. We'd love to have
01:57:16.560 you back. Um, next time, you know, you pick the, the, maybe we'll, we'll talk about primary waters.
01:57:22.400 Uh, certainly, uh, given our, our, our dabbling in it, more than dabbling, we're making the
01:57:27.200 documentary. We, we stand to learn some, uh, so we could use some information and, and, and, uh,
01:57:31.440 I think the best way to do this so much more, but I feel, I felt like we distracted you with so much,
01:57:36.240 but like with just the dome structure. I'm just watching. Yeah. Off to the side here,
01:57:39.520 your Instagram is just on loop. It's crazy. This thing is crazy. Look at this thing.
01:57:43.760 I love it. I love it. I love it. Yeah. That, that, that's going to be a showcase item. That's
01:57:50.080 really, it's, it's pretty significant what we were able to accomplish. We gotta,
01:57:54.640 we gotta make it out to, uh, Bertaria. I want to see some of it. I mean, obviously I want to see
01:57:58.960 what Owen's got going out. I'd love to see some of these things in person. I want to step inside one
01:58:02.720 and, uh, and, uh, and, and, and play, uh, the, the lute. I wonder, yeah, the, the acoustics must
01:58:09.360 be tremendous. Oh, Owen gave me the, uh, he gave me the, the signal about a month ago saying,
01:58:15.920 Hey, I want to be able to record a piano session in, in the dome at Bertaria. And I was like, okay,
01:58:23.680 well, let me go ahead and set up a workshop. So we have a workshop starting next Tuesday on the,
01:58:28.640 I think that's the 26th. I forget. Let me look real quick. I think so. Yeah. Seven days from now
01:58:34.000 is the, is the next Tuesday, the 26th, we have a two day nylon cement workshop and we're going to be
01:58:40.480 putting up, uh, the, the, the, the second, I should, how should I say this? The finished scratch
01:58:48.400 coat on the outside of the Bertaria dome. And we're going to also be putting in a temporary floor.
01:58:54.320 So Owen can record his, his, uh, his, uh, piano recording in there. We'll, we'll throw an AC unit
01:59:01.680 in one side and make sure it's nice and cool. We'll call it the Bertaria igloo. So the big bear doesn't
01:59:08.160 melt. And, uh, yeah, then after the festival, we'll probably, you know, do all the finished work,
01:59:13.920 paint it up and like, make it all pretty and stuff. I can't wait to hear how baby boomerville sounds.
01:59:19.120 Yeah. That was, that was funny. Yeah. Cause after, after he went out to you guys,
01:59:26.000 he actually came up here and we filmed a bunch of those. Uh, did you see the skits?
01:59:29.760 I did. Yeah. That's, that's by you. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Cause when I had booked this flight and he's
01:59:35.840 like, I'm not going back to Idaho. So like, I, I was like, where are you going? And he's going to
01:59:40.000 the Ozarks. So I was like, all right. So I was like, I guess you're going to go. He said he was
01:59:43.040 building bathrooms. So I'm like, I'm not going to ask any more questions. You do whatever weird
01:59:47.840 stuff you're doing out there. No. So yeah, his campgrounds are like 45 minutes away from where
01:59:53.280 I live. So it's all good. It's good stuff. Very cool. Awesome. Yeah. Well, we had to arrange
01:59:59.040 something. Um, we'll probably have you back before we end up doing that. But, uh, I want to see some
02:00:03.600 domes, dude. We're going to go out and go see some domes. Oh yeah, dude. I mean, this is like
02:00:07.440 last question. Are you working with Kanye West or were you working with him as well? Cause I know
02:00:13.040 he's doing stuff like this. I got, I got some like, so his, how should I say this? He had an IT,
02:00:23.920 whatever you call it, like internet, like whoever does like all the film and recording stuff.
02:00:31.280 He was actually a slave of mine for a year. I was like, wait, wait. Okay. All right. Go on. Yeah.
02:00:37.840 And when he was a builder buddy, he was a builder buddy, but he's a, he was a slave. Brian will
02:00:43.840 always be a slave. And so as my slave, he was kind of upset cause he was living here cause he
02:00:51.280 wanted the gravy. He wanted to build and do all this stuff. And I would still have my company in
02:00:55.680 Costa Rica and I was still going back and forth to Costa Rica. And every time I'd be home, I was like,
02:01:01.840 I don't want to do anything. Like I'm shot. And so he didn't, the second he moves off the property,
02:01:08.400 I start building here and doing all this stuff. But during that time he was working for Kanye
02:01:14.080 in a limited capacity. And he's like, Kanye is really into the domes. And I'm like, cool. Like
02:01:19.680 let's I'm, I'm down to talk with Kanye. You know, I've never listened to his music. I don't know him
02:01:25.280 from a hole in the head other than he's, he's into the Kardashians stuff. And, uh, yeah, I would,
02:01:31.840 it never materialized. I think Owen talked, I think Owen talked to him about the domes a bunch
02:01:37.680 and he talked to Brian. He's like, yeah, I'm really into the dome. Like, you know,
02:01:42.560 and Kanye speak, but I don't know how well I would mesh with him.
02:01:48.560 I think you'd, but you, you probably end up loving him. You'd find him, uh, overwhelming
02:01:52.320 for sure. But I imagine that he probably would love domes. He's just got so many other
02:01:56.520 things on his mind, like running a porn website and all that other stuff.
02:01:59.880 Well now, yeah, I don't know how you'd mesh with them.
02:02:01.520 Yeah. You wouldn't mesh with them now. Uh, he'd probably show you his, his wife's tits and then,
02:02:05.200 uh, you'd go, all right, well, those, those are, talk about domes. All right, let's say,
02:02:10.240 please. I don't have any more one-liners. That was bad. That was, that's when, you know,
02:02:13.360 it's starting to degree when I, well, that was bad. Uh, Topher, can you tell the, tell the people
02:02:17.600 again where they could find you, your podcast, all your, all your stuff? Yeah. My podcast is the
02:02:22.080 bio charisma podcast and that's on all the players. Um, usually people go through Apple or Spotify for
02:02:29.040 that. Um, I have, I'm also pretty much, I think bitch you gets populated with
02:02:35.040 everything and saying moniker, uh, the bio charisma podcast. Um, I have a YouTube page,
02:02:41.680 but I've been kicked off there so many times. I'm kind of reluctant to actually populate it with
02:02:47.200 anything. Um, cause I, I say the word cure and health too much and they really, oh yeah,
02:02:53.040 that's a huge problem. They don't like that. Yeah. They've literally like, there's been so many live
02:02:58.800 streams. The second the word cure is said from a guest, I'm off. Yeah. Um, we, we like edit our
02:03:07.520 shows heavily afterward. Cause it's just, it's like, we didn't even say anything crazy as far
02:03:12.160 as offensive on the show, but I'm like, I already know what words I'm going to have to go back.
02:03:15.360 You probably will have to, I mean, I know we didn't claim that it's got health benefits,
02:03:19.040 but just saying these people are ridiculous, but it is what it is, man. Yeah.
02:03:23.200 Yeah. Well, uh, listen, Oh no, please go ahead, Chris. Sorry. Yeah. And Instagram,
02:03:29.120 like people really tend to like the Instagram because I'm always putting when I'm out in the
02:03:33.360 field, I just do like little quick snippets of what's the name of the Instagram bio charisma,
02:03:40.080 same same bio charisma. Okay. There it is right there. Uh, yeah, it's bio char isma. And we,
02:03:47.680 we didn't even get to talk about the bio char aspect. No, we have to leave some meat. I'm glad there's
02:03:52.400 so much more to talk about. Yeah. There's so much more to talk about. We're going to bring you back
02:03:56.080 on. What a fascinating person. You know, I almost thank goodness for, uh, for Keisha bear, uh, for
02:04:02.080 reminding me, uh, we have to ask you one last question before we totally, uh, uh, uh, end the
02:04:06.960 stream. Um, Chris, are you, and I think I know the answer to this one. Uh, are you having fun?
02:04:12.880 Oh God. Yeah. Yeah, definitely. I mean, I, I've literally geared my life to just do what I want.
02:04:23.040 That's beautiful. That's beautiful. That's what we love to hear. Yeah. We, we haven't had one
02:04:26.880 person come on and say, I think that's the white pillow. Like no matter what we talk about, sometimes
02:04:30.880 the episodes get dark, you get into like a lot of SRA stuff or whatever. Um, but every guest we
02:04:36.000 have on, we're like, are you having fun? And without hesitation? Yes. Yeah. You know why?
02:04:39.760 Because I don't think that you get into this sort of thing unless you're pursuing what you actually
02:04:43.840 want to pursue. And I think it's really that simple. Like what's going to bring you down is doing
02:04:48.960 things that you're not called to, right? So it was however many jobs I had or whatever you were
02:04:53.120 doing in the subways and everything. It's like, if you're not called to do this, if this isn't what's
02:04:56.960 constantly tugging at you, then yeah. I bet you if I went down into the tunnels beneath New York
02:05:01.280 city and said, Hey, uh, are you having fun, dude? You'd have been like, who are you? Get away from
02:05:05.440 me. I hate you. Um, but yeah, I mean, no matter what it is, if you're pursuing it, uh, I think,
02:05:11.040 yeah, you're having fun. Excellent, man. Chris, thank you again. Um, let's bring this in for a landing.
02:05:17.840 Guys, uh, it's been another great episode of Nephilim death squad. And until next time,
02:05:23.600 don't forget to obey, submit, and complain.
02:05:27.360 The greatest hypnotist on planet earth is a oblong box in the corner of the room. It is
02:05:33.760 constantly telling us what to believe is real. You can persuade us that what they see with their
02:05:41.200 eyes is what there is to see. Because they'll laugh in the face of an explanation that portrays the
02:05:49.040 bigger picture of what they see with them. And they have.