Nephilim Death Squad - December 11, 2025


Generational Trauma & Nephilim Genetics w⧸ Broadcasting Seeds


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 19 minutes

Words per Minute

167.20326

Word Count

13,295

Sentence Count

1,145

Misogynist Sentences

16

Hate Speech Sentences

24


Summary

On this episode of NED Squad, returning guest Bennett of Broadcasting Seeds joins us to talk about the Ingersoll-Lockwood conspiracy theory, and whether or not Donald Trump is the Antichrist. Plus, we get into the latest episode of Top Lobster and the Graves Disease.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 We're going to start the top laps of the productions.
00:00:30.000 Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
00:00:42.480 I am 90s heartthrob David Lee Corvo, a.k.a. the raven that is Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
00:00:49.600 Before we get into today's guest, we want to tell you guys where you can support the show,
00:00:52.980 and that would be patreon.com forward slash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:00:55.800 Sign up over there.
00:00:56.760 You can engage in the live chat when the episodes go live.
00:00:59.420 Let's see the latest episode.
00:01:00.900 This was a banger.
00:01:02.020 In the Graves disease.
00:01:03.760 It's going to upset.
00:01:05.920 I'm sure there's going to be a few people out there that are like, that episode wasn't nice.
00:01:09.700 Yeah, they're like, I thought you guys were straight Bible.
00:01:11.460 We're like, no.
00:01:12.200 We like to have fun still.
00:01:13.840 Matt.
00:01:14.460 Matt.
00:01:15.440 With three Ts.
00:01:16.440 Anyway, patreon.com forward slash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:01:19.180 You can also gain early access to episodes, discount codes off of merchandise from toplobster.com.
00:01:24.520 Yes, that's right.
00:01:25.320 And tickets to Bohemian Grove.
00:01:27.140 Look at this.
00:01:27.800 Wow.
00:01:28.120 Blap, blap, blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.040 Blap, blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.100 Blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.320 Blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.380 Blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.400 Blap, blap.
00:01:29.420 Blap, blap, blap.
00:01:29.680 Blap, blap.
00:01:30.380 I'm not doing this.
00:01:30.440 I'm not brewing this.
00:01:31.060 We have some more.
00:01:31.640 I have some more cool shirts coming, more ideas.
00:01:33.960 I saw the shirt that, well, you showed me one of them, your design.
00:01:37.220 Yeah.
00:01:37.520 Because we have me, we have Matt, and yours is coming soon.
00:01:39.960 And yours is actually really cool.
00:01:41.100 And I do enjoy it.
00:01:42.120 So good job.
00:01:42.720 We have a great guest today.
00:01:43.720 Returning guest.
00:01:44.540 Wow.
00:01:44.860 Returning guest, Bennett of Broadcasting Seeds.
00:01:47.500 Bennett, before we get into the conversation, let's let everybody know where they can find you
00:01:51.840 and what it is you do.
00:01:59.100 Basically, try to plant seeds in people's minds and get them thinking outside the box,
00:02:05.000 thinking, you know, about stuff like you guys cover.
00:02:10.260 And the best place to go, find me, is probably BroadcastingSeeds.com.
00:02:16.440 That's kind of the gateway to all this jackassery.
00:02:19.900 Thank you.
00:02:20.200 I'm sorry.
00:02:21.000 Mason is interrupting your introduction.
00:02:22.840 Mason, get out of the room.
00:02:24.100 She's very adamant.
00:02:24.620 We do our show in a live coffee shop.
00:02:26.540 It's amazing.
00:02:27.020 Sometimes it's like dealing with children.
00:02:29.160 Sometimes it is.
00:02:30.000 It's like dealing with children.
00:02:30.880 I'm pretty sure she's a child.
00:02:32.360 You know, man, when was the last time we had Bennett on?
00:02:34.960 It's been...
00:02:35.740 It's been...
00:02:36.460 Has it been a year?
00:02:37.620 It's been about a year.
00:02:38.180 Almost a year.
00:02:38.800 I think about a year.
00:02:39.780 And the last time I came on, I talked about the Ingersoll Lockwood books.
00:02:44.760 Ah, that's right.
00:02:45.660 That's right.
00:02:46.640 Which, I mean, go ahead.
00:02:50.480 It's just, you know, it's one of those things.
00:02:53.060 It was just such a...
00:02:54.640 And people still get crazy about it on the internet.
00:02:59.200 But it is what it is, you know?
00:03:03.160 Well, the Ingersoll Lockwood books are one of those things where when you first hear about it, you go, what?
00:03:08.240 You go, no way.
00:03:09.040 Because it just, it seems so outlandish.
00:03:13.140 And so, you know, you did a great job of presenting that.
00:03:16.640 We had to kind of address it because it comes up constantly in the Donald Trump discussion, which, you know, any conspiracy theorist worth their salt has to speculate, at least lightly, as to whether or not Trump is the Antichrist.
00:03:30.360 I actually, I think that that book itself and the idea behind it has convinced, like, so I just did Christmas baking cookies with my family.
00:03:40.540 Nice.
00:03:41.020 And, yeah.
00:03:41.700 And now they're all coming to me and they're like, the Illuminati, right?
00:03:44.920 And they're saying, like, yeah, I don't know about the moon landing.
00:03:47.780 That's conspiracy light.
00:03:49.340 Yeah, that's conspiracy light.
00:03:50.400 But I had told them about, you know, that book.
00:03:53.240 And they were all kind of, like, off kilter about it because, like, there's no denying it.
00:03:57.940 I have copies of it.
00:03:58.820 I'm here.
00:03:59.080 Just, like, take a look at it.
00:04:00.240 Go ahead and read through it.
00:04:01.300 And they see that.
00:04:01.800 It's a hard read.
00:04:02.000 I don't know.
00:04:03.140 It's a hard read.
00:04:04.060 But they don't know what initially to make of it.
00:04:06.140 And now they don't believe anything, which is great.
00:04:08.320 And now I'm trying to get them to get vaccinated.
00:04:13.560 Yeah.
00:04:14.380 Well, we're here to talk about something a little bit different today.
00:04:17.420 And you piqued our interest before the show started.
00:04:20.380 You mentioned this idea of dark DNA is how you phrased it.
00:04:25.860 And when we prodded a little bit, it started to seem like we were talking about generational trauma, generational iniquity.
00:04:34.740 And that rolls into a whole plethora of things.
00:04:37.680 You and I were talking off air.
00:04:39.260 It does.
00:04:40.260 Demonic possession, disassociative identity disorders.
00:04:44.060 You know, that's kind of our wheelhouse.
00:04:45.280 Where do you want to start the conversation on this?
00:04:46.860 So I just want to give people a little background.
00:04:50.380 That basically this, for me, this whole journey started in a completely, I say completely normal place.
00:05:00.060 But I wasn't hunting for giants or trying to decode, you know, bloodlines or anything like that.
00:05:06.760 But I think this stuff has a little legs when it comes to that type of stuff.
00:05:10.980 So I was just researching generational trauma.
00:05:16.160 One of my daughters is in college and she had a paper where she had to talk about some stuff with that.
00:05:23.400 So I was just kind of give her background on our family.
00:05:25.680 But I don't know a lot about the background.
00:05:28.840 I do now.
00:05:29.640 But the idea that, you know, pain our parents, our ancestors live through can physically imprint itself on us, on our DNA.
00:05:44.180 And this science is real.
00:05:48.780 I mean, there's some, you know, Holocaust survivor families show inherited PTSD markers.
00:05:55.860 I know that's going to open up a whole can of worms.
00:05:59.080 Well, no, I mean, I do want to say on that topic, it's interesting because if you look at the Jews in general, they are like a people who have been traumatized.
00:06:07.180 Yeah, and they all have that.
00:06:10.000 So regardless of what it's for or what it's from, there's markers in their DNA.
00:06:14.900 Also, a big set of the population is combat veterans.
00:06:20.500 And their children can carry stress signatures from wars that they never fought in.
00:06:26.420 Right.
00:06:26.820 It's crazy.
00:06:28.040 Even famine.
00:06:30.120 Like the one of the things I got into is the Dutch hunger winter.
00:06:34.500 Um, and that left epigenetic scars on the grandchildren, even decades later of some of these folks.
00:06:43.940 Right.
00:06:44.860 So that blew the door open on this for me, uh, because of trauma can echo through the blood.
00:06:53.460 What else can, can, right.
00:06:56.100 Whether faith, fear, your heritage.
00:07:00.640 Um, I mean, science calls it epigenetics, chemical tags that can switch genes on and off without changing the DNA itself.
00:07:10.680 Right.
00:07:11.920 And when I realized that science for the most part until recently was realized, they were considering 98% of our genome.
00:07:23.040 That doesn't code for proteins.
00:07:26.640 They considered it junk DNA science, literal scientists, literally not, not shockingly, literally called it junk DNA because they didn't understand it.
00:07:37.640 So what if that 98% isn't junk at all?
00:07:42.740 They found out that a lot of it's not, but what if it's like a lock box holding the memories?
00:07:48.400 I mean, instincts, where does all this stuff come from?
00:07:52.080 Maybe the forbidden traits of our ancestors.
00:07:55.780 So that's when the Bible started to make a whole lot more sense to me a little bit with maybe like the Nephilim, the gibbereen, the raphae, and how maybe hybrid beings pre-flood and post-flood, they didn't need to survive physically necessarily.
00:08:15.160 It's parts of their code survived into us.
00:08:19.980 I like the idea of like scientists in general, just dudes.
00:08:24.960 Yeah.
00:08:25.200 But people don't really want to admit that.
00:08:26.500 But like you get the Ikea box and we put together the table, there's a bunch of screws left and you're like junk.
00:08:31.300 Junk screws.
00:08:32.220 Junk screws.
00:08:33.520 And now this thing is all wobbly.
00:08:34.940 And we can't figure out why.
00:08:36.460 Like we didn't need that.
00:08:37.680 It's like you get that whole packet of like reserve screws in case something, whatever.
00:08:44.960 But, you know, like the crappy Chinese one that you buy off of Amazon, it's got spare screws, which is probably us being morons, right?
00:08:55.560 I put together.
00:08:56.620 So I got that laser.
00:08:57.580 I got this riser base for it, right?
00:08:59.140 And it allows you to engrave much taller things.
00:09:02.900 And I put together the riser base quite extensive.
00:09:05.600 Yeah.
00:09:06.140 And I was left over with five types of one type of screw.
00:09:09.920 That's way more than what they usually give you one to two.
00:09:13.060 And one type of another type of screw.
00:09:14.820 And I was like, I got it.
00:09:17.240 You call this junk DNA, baby.
00:09:18.980 We don't need that.
00:09:20.060 I mean, look, all this resonates with me because I know that we're – there you go.
00:09:25.560 Enjoy your blender, bottom of the blender.
00:09:27.840 We're coming to this place now where they're realizing, yeah, trauma is generational.
00:09:34.620 But before that, we were really comfortable with the idea of certain disease being hereditary and even certain talent groups being passed on.
00:09:43.780 If you were good at basketball, your kid was going to be good at basketball.
00:09:46.320 How about hairlines?
00:09:47.160 Hair lines is one that gets passed on.
00:09:50.000 Was that a stab at it?
00:09:50.660 Did you just hurt me?
00:09:51.680 What was that, man?
00:09:52.380 No, no.
00:09:52.920 There we go.
00:09:53.620 There we go.
00:09:55.360 Ouch.
00:09:56.040 Ouch.
00:09:56.680 What I don't – sometimes what vexes me about the scientific community is there will be an intimate knowledge of a thing by generations past,
00:10:08.680 and we'll call that superstition or we'll call that religious belief or we'll call that mythology or what have you.
00:10:17.160 And then science comes along and goes, well, actually, there might be something to that.
00:10:21.280 But the same scientific community that ridiculed that sort of an idea for the longest time, and then all of a sudden it comes –
00:10:27.940 So what I'm getting at is what you're talking about sounds very much like generational iniquity to me.
00:10:34.800 And I think it's like trauma in our research is the door that allows demonic influence to happen at a greater degree.
00:10:47.000 And then that demonic influence can gain rights over you for X amount of generations based off of what sin you're willing to commit when that influence comes rolling in.
00:11:00.000 And so – and now science is like, oh, yeah, well, it looks like you can actually pass on trauma.
00:11:05.600 So I was – as I was talking to my family about conspiracies, one of the older guys, he's like 70, he started asking me about Christianity because he's like, oh, you do a Christian podcast?
00:11:15.520 I'm like going to quiz you because he's – you know, he went through the whole Catholic church and all this stuff.
00:11:20.920 Oh, he went to cemetery school?
00:11:21.960 Well, no, no, just like I guess as like a student, like Catholic school.
00:11:27.780 So he has like a bad taste in his mouth with Christianity, and he was talking about the idea of basically believing or worshiping God or paying – like basically paying for it.
00:11:41.180 And he's like, it feels like I'm being forced.
00:11:42.440 It feels like it's a threat.
00:11:43.500 And I was like, it's not necessarily a threat.
00:11:45.900 It's more of like you have to aim your worship at one thing or another.
00:11:49.660 You're going to worship this.
00:11:50.520 You're going to worship that.
00:11:51.280 And we got into the idea of the blood sacrifice and how prevalent blood sacrifices are.
00:11:57.680 I was like, you saw the Super Bowl.
00:11:58.700 They're doing like mock blood sacrifices.
00:12:00.220 This is like common.
00:12:01.380 We know that this happens.
00:12:03.360 Jesus did that.
00:12:04.720 This was a blood ritual, but it was God that came as man.
00:12:08.560 So it was a very powerful blood ritual, and that's why it happens.
00:12:11.080 And I was like, that's why you don't need to go through the pope or a priest to forgive your sins.
00:12:15.200 Like you just go right to the guy.
00:12:16.960 This was a very powerful thing.
00:12:18.140 So we were talking about blood itself and the significance of blood.
00:12:22.300 And I think it's funny that you're here today because that's like if you want to talk about dark DNA, you're talking about the I guess the malevolent side of whatever the blood is.
00:12:33.820 The blood is a conduit to this or to that, but blood is very powerful and it can transmute reality itself.
00:12:40.120 I don't really know what it is.
00:12:41.720 So I'm interested to see like what you've gotten as you've uncovered this subject a little bit deeper.
00:12:48.380 So what the junk DNA or calling it dark DNA, I think the fact that science is called the junk DNA is a great mixture of arrogance and ignorance.
00:12:59.940 Right.
00:13:00.600 And that's shocking, shocking.
00:13:03.440 Right.
00:13:03.740 But as we talk about like the malevolent type stuff, I mean, it really comes down to the evidence that trauma, right, leaves that these markings.
00:13:21.580 And it's just kind of like if trauma can etch itself into the regulatory layer of our genome, what else might be hiding there?
00:13:32.580 What what about thousands of years of bloodline warfare?
00:13:37.560 Right.
00:13:37.920 Yeah, that's a great question.
00:13:38.800 Where does it stop?
00:13:39.900 Right.
00:13:40.060 Is it genocide or your grandparents?
00:13:41.760 Ritual and even what about covenant breaking?
00:13:46.520 What about stuff like that?
00:13:47.940 Like we're talking about stuff that that, you know, they talk about repenting stuff for for, you know, generational inequity with whether it's your great great grandfather was a Mason or whatever, you know, add the add the thing.
00:14:05.740 Like, where does that stuff, I understand that maybe heaven has a better way to mark you with this stuff, but what better way than to mark your chromosome, mark your genes and your DNA and have the like they literally talk about in the science side of this, like it looks like little lock boxes in your genome.
00:14:30.260 Right.
00:14:30.860 And, and, and we have now scary ass freaking tools like CRISPR that can possibly unlock these things.
00:14:42.760 And when that's just in its infancy, right?
00:14:45.400 Um, that this stuff, I mean, goes back to, you know, Genesis, like what happened when Adam and Eve, you know, fell and what was switched on or switched off.
00:15:00.580 And then like, how was that done?
00:15:02.400 What's the mechanism?
00:15:03.460 I'm just saying that this could be a look behind the curtain at a mechanism that we haven't really thought of, but it's yet it's glaring right in our face.
00:15:14.480 Well, yeah, something was certainly switched on.
00:15:16.000 Even at the tower of Babel, something was switched off this understanding years, right?
00:15:20.580 The, our, our way that we age.
00:15:22.800 And we know that that stuff can be manipulated.
00:15:25.080 Well, theoretically it can be manipulated with the switches, the epigenetic switches, right?
00:15:32.560 Well, something that makes me really put my money in that corner of things that they can be switched on and off is that, um, foreign language syndrome.
00:15:41.320 So somebody was just talking about it.
00:15:43.960 Yeah.
00:15:44.320 My, my wife was just talking about it.
00:15:47.200 My wife, uh, on, uh, yesterday I, she came across a Tik TOK and, uh, and, uh, and so.
00:15:55.100 It's all good things start on Tik TOK.
00:15:56.700 Exactly.
00:15:57.280 Yeah.
00:15:57.480 So more or less what it was with somebody experienced severe head trauma and then was able to speak another language.
00:16:03.860 And then when you look at the British lady, I'm not really sure.
00:16:06.380 Uh, but I know that in the comment section, it just begat a plethora of other people saying, you know, I went through this and, you know, suddenly understood, uh, you know, complex, uh, music theory and all kinds of different things.
00:16:21.840 And so that speaks to the idea that in my opinion, all this information, and this might deviate a little bit, but all this information is out there.
00:16:31.580 It's alive.
00:16:32.080 It's, it's in the ether.
00:16:33.240 It exists.
00:16:33.940 And what we're switching on and off is our ability to channel that information at any given time.
00:16:40.040 It happens on Sunday.
00:16:41.040 Uh, the ability for these, some certain people to translate.
00:16:44.600 I called it again.
00:16:45.300 I, I, I leaned over to my wife and I said, I said, they're going to do it.
00:16:49.780 And she went, I could see that guy over there.
00:16:52.120 He's getting a little jittery speaking, but, uh, translating and translating in tongues, which is certainly a gift.
00:16:57.620 Yeah.
00:16:58.080 Although does it happen every time?
00:16:59.620 Well, I mean, I don't, you know, it's nice.
00:17:02.240 So guys, an unbeliever, uh, no, I don't, I'm not saying I don't believe it.
00:17:05.500 I'm just saying, you know, it's taken some time to acclimate to, and I don't, I can't place the good or the bad in it, in its contribution, but to get back on topic, what you were just talking about, Bennett.
00:17:16.300 Um, it's an interesting, there's an interesting story that I always remember.
00:17:20.860 Um, I think it's Dr. Laura Baker who will be on tomorrow.
00:17:24.340 I can't wait.
00:17:25.040 I love Dr. Laura.
00:17:26.260 We got to get her to Brohemian Grove, by the way.
00:17:28.440 Yeah, that would be a, that'd be a trip.
00:17:30.080 But, uh, yeah, she, uh, I think it was her own story where she was, um, sleeping, but praying for deliverance.
00:17:38.660 And, uh, in this, like, state of either, like, fasting or something like that, she's discovering herself inside of herself, walking down a maze.
00:17:48.420 Right.
00:17:48.860 And she turns a corner of this, like, maze, this, like, whole, like, room of many hallways and many doors that you can go through.
00:17:56.040 And within one of these hallways, when she turns, there's, like, an entity, I think some sort of a demonic entity.
00:18:01.560 And he's sitting and he, he has an altar.
00:18:04.200 He's built an altar as, like, a stopping point at this hallway.
00:18:08.640 And I guess there's stuff behind him.
00:18:09.800 You can go left, right, or go past them.
00:18:12.420 And that was this.
00:18:13.700 You're talking about Laura Sanger?
00:18:15.120 No, Laura Baker.
00:18:16.340 Dr. Laura Baker.
00:18:17.280 We've had Laura Sanger on.
00:18:18.340 She crushes too, but this is a.
00:18:19.520 She crushes too, but this is awesome.
00:18:21.440 This is a different Laura.
00:18:22.780 Never heard of her.
00:18:23.940 Another Dr. Laura.
00:18:25.000 By the way, as renowned as Dr. Laura Sanger is, Laura Baker is one of these, like.
00:18:31.300 Yeah, she's the best.
00:18:31.900 People that we've discovered, and she, I think she's going to blow up.
00:18:35.960 She's going to be huge, and we're going to be, like, we were friends with her before she blew up.
00:18:40.040 I have her books, but she's actually coming on to talk about her next book.
00:18:44.340 Yeah.
00:18:44.920 Tomorrow, so I'm real excited.
00:18:46.520 She's fantastic.
00:18:47.280 Didn't mean to interrupt.
00:18:48.220 No, that's all right.
00:18:48.720 No, it's all right.
00:18:49.280 We're going to interrupt you all day.
00:18:50.660 But, yeah, the idea is that there was this stronghold within this maze, which you can, like, imagine if you're looking at this room top down.
00:19:00.220 What does that look like?
00:19:01.240 Does that look like a computer chip?
00:19:02.680 What is she traversing through?
00:19:04.080 That's interesting.
00:19:04.440 Right?
00:19:04.700 Because it's just a labyrinth.
00:19:06.960 And within it, there are strongholds that are set up by these entities who have built literal altars, and she had to, like, get him out of there.
00:19:16.020 She had to cast him out and then tear down that altar, and then you can pass through.
00:19:19.480 Is that generational iniquities?
00:19:21.040 Is that what it looks like in the spirit realm?
00:19:22.780 In the spirit realm, yeah.
00:19:23.440 It's crazy.
00:19:24.140 I think about that, like, you know, people, like, think about the Roman Empire.
00:19:26.980 It's like, no, I think about Dr. Laura Baker's story.
00:19:28.780 Yeah.
00:19:29.380 What were you doing?
00:19:30.600 What the hell were you doing?
00:19:31.700 Yeah, that's interesting.
00:19:32.480 I like the connection, too, to computer chips.
00:19:34.860 They look like that, you know?
00:19:36.340 Yeah.
00:19:36.960 And I think they talk about, in my research, and I'm looking to verify, that there's some of these genes that literally, like, look like computer chips.
00:19:52.460 Yeah.
00:19:52.780 Like, on the gene, right?
00:19:55.840 It wouldn't shock anybody, I'm sure.
00:19:58.440 But I think that's absolutely true.
00:20:01.160 It's interesting, too, because the sigils, the lesser keys of Solomon look a lot.
00:20:06.340 And those were supposedly used to entrap demons in one way or another.
00:20:11.800 And, oh, there's a doctor, Laura Baker.
00:20:13.720 I mean, Laura Baker's not a doctor.
00:20:15.040 Laura Baker's books.
00:20:15.980 I keep calling her a doctor.
00:20:17.120 I'm going to call her a doctor.
00:20:17.860 Whatever.
00:20:18.220 We'll call her a doctor.
00:20:18.620 She'll be healing.
00:20:19.060 So, yeah, those lesser keys of Solomon, they look like computer chips.
00:20:26.660 Absolutely.
00:20:27.080 So, that comes up a lot.
00:20:28.440 It's kind of freaky how much stuff actually does look like, I mean, even ruins, right, throughout the world, look like computer chips.
00:20:37.820 Like, if you look at aerial views of Angkor Wat and places like that, you're like, man, this is a freaking semiconductor, right?
00:20:46.020 Yeah.
00:20:46.200 Well, I think what we're experiencing when we see that is the fractal nature of reality, and it's that spiritual principle is as above, so below.
00:20:55.400 What happens in the spiritual realm, it is mirrored in the physical realm over time.
00:20:59.920 And much of the systems that we have here in the physical realm, we may not realize it, are actually emulations of something that exists in the spiritual realm.
00:21:07.640 Dude, I'm telling you, I love that I do this show and that I'm privy to this conversation because I'm having this black belt level conversation after two Long Island iced teas.
00:21:17.680 And I'm explaining it to, like, my aunt and another, like, older man.
00:21:22.640 Yeah.
00:21:22.920 And I was like, you got to understand the fractal nature of, like, what, as above, so below, of reality, yeah.
00:21:27.680 But as I'm laying it out for them, they're going, like, they called me crazy for a long time, but now they're like, damn.
00:21:34.760 Yeah.
00:21:35.140 Yeah.
00:21:35.660 Yep.
00:21:36.340 Maybe.
00:21:36.980 Honestly, I just want to take a quick moment to say how blessed we are that that's the thing that we get to look at on a regular basis every single day, and we get to take people along on the journey.
00:21:48.720 And it's like, and then you talk to somebody who's living life regular style, and they're like, whoa, dude, what?
00:21:55.600 So, yeah, yeah.
00:21:56.400 I can't handle it.
00:21:57.520 It comes up a lot, man.
00:21:58.760 But that whole thing of, you know, the sigils, a city grid will look like that.
00:22:04.580 Ancient ruins look like that.
00:22:06.100 Yeah.
00:22:06.800 And then, I guess, even DNA, which is unshocking.
00:22:10.100 Well, which to bring up with the Dr. Baker's or Laura Baker's dream or vision or whatever she's having, I mean, it makes sense because we're talking about, I mean, I'm not saying scientists have found giant DNA, right?
00:22:29.840 But what I am saying is that there are enormous regions of our genome that they have no biological function, but they show repeated patterns like, and this is what it is, like locked doors.
00:22:46.440 And, like, they were tampered with something that didn't follow normal evolution, period.
00:22:54.180 Like, there's markers that show that stuff has been tampered with.
00:23:00.340 So, the hypothesis that mainstream science won't entertain yet is that what if this non-coding DNA is just not, it's just left behind by evolution, but as a safety vault built to contain ancient genetic memories, abilities, or even identity?
00:23:23.580 I went down the rabbit hole with, like, Nimrod and some of these guys that became Gibbereen, right?
00:23:34.320 That Gibbereen weren't necessarily born giants, they became giants or mighty men, right?
00:23:42.620 And what does that mean translation-wise?
00:23:44.960 But I've talked to Gary Wayne extensively about Nimrod, and it seems like he became, well, and even our friend Doc Brown, who you guys know.
00:23:55.800 Yes, yeah.
00:23:56.440 Talks about the book of, I want to say it's Jasher, where Enoch and Nimrod go, get into a, you know, a battle, and Enoch kills Nimrod.
00:24:11.540 But he was a giant in that, right?
00:24:13.960 Esau, Esau, Esau.
00:24:15.000 Esau, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:24:17.120 What did I say?
00:24:17.980 Either way.
00:24:18.920 The epic of Esau.
00:24:20.060 Enoch, yeah.
00:24:21.180 Esau kills Nimrod, and Nimrod was described as a giant.
00:24:26.640 Yeah.
00:24:26.880 But he was also, he's also a son of Noah, like, not a son of Noah, but he's in the lineage of Noah through Ham.
00:24:38.420 So, he wasn't born all, you know what I'm saying.
00:24:44.520 Yeah, that, well, so, once again, I'm thinking about a skill set.
00:24:48.940 There's a lot there, though.
00:24:49.900 So, like, let's say, you know, because before when I said information is kind of moving about that way, is it that you're conducting this frequency and within this frequency the information exists?
00:25:02.100 Or is it you have access to a select few, like, if another individual experienced head trauma, would they be able to speak a language that their ancestors spoke?
00:25:12.120 Or, you know, is that the way that we're accessing these traits?
00:25:17.020 Because, I don't know, I mean, I wonder, like, if you can learn piano after a head injury, is it because your ancestor was fluent in piano?
00:25:29.200 And then that kind of opens up the door for what people think are past lives?
00:25:32.780 Because I don't think that that's so accurate, this idea of reincarnation and that you are having a past life regression session and you're having access to all of this stuff that happened and you're like, oh, that was my whole life.
00:25:45.020 It's like, was it or are you just tapping into somebody that was in your lineage?
00:25:49.120 I think they're, like, strong imprints.
00:25:50.920 Yeah.
00:25:51.160 Like, my uncle, my grandfather had left that guitar for me or he left the guitar for my uncle, didn't want anything to do with him.
00:25:58.960 And my mother happened to have him when I saw it, it, like, called out to me.
00:26:02.280 And I was like, I don't know how, I don't know anything about this, but I got to, like, learn this thing.
00:26:06.700 And then, like, you know, 15, 20 years later, I've, like, been playing it ever since.
00:26:10.820 But what you're talking about, I don't know if you came across this study.
00:26:16.060 This is directly from Sean from Kingdom in Context, who we should reach back out on.
00:26:21.000 So the book of Enoch, chapter 7, and the first verse, it says,
00:26:25.140 And all the others together with them took unto themselves wives and each chose for himself one.
00:26:32.780 And they began to go in unto them and defile themselves with them.
00:26:36.600 And they taught them charms and enchantments.
00:26:38.720 And this is the big part.
00:26:40.040 And the cutting of roots and made them acquainted with plants.
00:26:43.260 Whatever that means.
00:26:44.200 Why they said that, I don't know.
00:26:45.360 But when we're talking about gibbereme became gibbereme, that's, like, an effect afterwards.
00:26:51.460 So, like, regular human being became.
00:26:54.720 Sean tells us about gibberellin.
00:26:57.400 Yes.
00:26:58.040 It's a crucial group of plant hormones that regulate many aspects of growth and development,
00:27:02.760 primarily by stimulating cell elongation and division, leading to taller stems, seed germination, flowering, and larger fruits.
00:27:09.500 This is the main component that's in Miracle-Gro.
00:27:12.860 This is what makes shit grow big.
00:27:14.440 Yeah.
00:27:15.180 This is what turns on and off.
00:27:17.260 I mean, it's literally called gibberellin.
00:27:20.020 Yeah.
00:27:20.620 And it makes shit big.
00:27:22.380 It makes shit big.
00:27:23.420 And then, again, in Enoch, they're talking about them, like, oh, they just took the woman.
00:27:26.600 And then after they raped them, they were like, by the way, here's how you cut roots.
00:27:31.220 Whatever that is.
00:27:31.760 In the same sentence.
00:27:32.920 Like, it doesn't even.
00:27:33.760 And acquainted with plants.
00:27:35.040 We're like, all right, what's that mean?
00:27:36.840 I mean, my grandfather was a botanist.
00:27:38.680 And one of his things was he worked for a company that basically created the seedless orange.
00:27:46.760 And that's how they did that, right?
00:27:48.060 They were cutting roots and taking grafts from one tree to another.
00:27:52.140 But what's any different than doing that in your DNA with CRISPR or some other, you know, who knows?
00:28:01.040 Gilgamesh's freaking resurrection chamber.
00:28:03.680 I don't know.
00:28:04.280 I'm just saying.
00:28:05.340 There's, you know.
00:28:06.780 That's what they're describing.
00:28:08.060 This is a CRISPR of antiquity.
00:28:10.940 Exactly.
00:28:11.260 And this is why when we hear about, like, going in and killing an entire city and their livestock and also destroying all their plant life, it's like, oh, because everything was a genetic manipulation.
00:28:23.620 Everything was being genetically modified.
00:28:25.440 I brought this up to Matt, and he was like, just made the face when I was like, when Solomon wasn't allowed to trade horses with Egypt.
00:28:31.680 And I was like, do you think that there was, like, some kind of weird nephilimized horse?
00:28:37.480 And he just made a face.
00:28:38.640 But I was like, no, I think there was.
00:28:39.860 Like, that was one of his things was like, yo, don't even don't bother with these people.
00:28:43.520 Yeah.
00:28:43.700 Do your own thing.
00:28:44.700 Yeah.
00:28:45.140 I mean, it's kind of like you.
00:28:46.620 And then I went, you know, I dove into this last night.
00:28:50.700 And then I had weird dreams because, you know, how that shit goes.
00:28:54.140 And literally it was about, like, sorry, literally about them, like, you know, creating the fallen and whoever creating minotaurs and centaurs and, you know, all these damn creatures.
00:29:12.380 And this is essentially, in my opinion, how they did it.
00:29:16.540 Like, it's the same type of thing.
00:29:18.780 I don't think that there's any difference between now and then because, you know, in antiquity you had all these centaurs and minotaurs and, you know, horrifying chimeric creations.
00:29:31.040 And then today we have them still, but we just they're called cryptids.
00:29:36.500 And, you know, you see some giant half man, half dog.
00:29:41.220 It's seven feet tall and it's running alongside your tractor trailer.
00:29:44.840 And then there's the scratches down the side of the cab to prove it.
00:29:48.020 Like, I hear these stories all the time.
00:29:49.860 Shout out to Tony Merkel, who's just become a, you know, sort of a chronicle of all of these.
00:29:56.200 And you don't know, it's hard to place them because it's like you hear them enough and you go, these creatures seem to exist.
00:30:03.020 Because by this point, there's hundreds of people who have experienced this one, hundreds of people who have experienced that one.
00:30:09.900 And then you start to look into the proximity between their appearances and military bases.
00:30:17.480 And it's not hard to draw this line of correlation.
00:30:21.040 Like, are they creating them?
00:30:23.500 Are they experimenting?
00:30:25.200 I mean, why wouldn't they be experimenting?
00:30:27.100 People have always.
00:30:27.800 I mean, I'm digging right now for an episode that's talking about it's basically a black program, right?
00:30:38.000 Military program that is about splicing, creating a super soldier, but using werewolf DNA and mixing it with human.
00:30:47.000 So that's getting deep.
00:30:49.120 And it's actually kind of scary is not the right word because nothing at this point shocks me.
00:30:55.200 It's just, you know, I'm, I'm here because of a Bigfoot experience that I had as a kid.
00:31:01.480 Like this, these things, something's out there, something happened or the something, you know, I came across something as a kid.
00:31:10.500 And that's what started me down this path in this podcast zone.
00:31:16.780 And then it just turned into all of this madness.
00:31:21.420 So, um.
00:31:22.180 Do you think, do you think your encounter with this Bigfoot, uh, left some sort of generational trauma on you?
00:31:28.720 Is that what you're saying?
00:31:29.380 Like an imprint?
00:31:30.080 Oh, I have no idea.
00:31:31.080 But why wouldn't it?
00:31:31.980 Uh, if, if, if my, if my, you know, post-traumatic stress from military service can, why wouldn't that trauma as a kid or like generational trauma from, uh, abuse and all these other things?
00:31:47.500 I mean, that's what we're saying is that this can imprint continuously.
00:31:51.320 And, you know, it's wild.
00:31:56.840 I think that, um, I, cause I have a very similar thing where I experienced a bunch of supernatural crap growing up and it just permanently flavors your interest.
00:32:06.140 And I think that is to say, when you see something, no matter how young you are, that just defies everything that you've come to understand.
00:32:15.600 And then for the rest of your life, you spend your time trying to place it in the realm of shit that exists and it just doesn't fit.
00:32:24.940 I don't know if, if, cause I don't think that trauma is, uh, it's a blanket terminology.
00:32:31.480 And I think that there should be some subcategories of trauma, trauma being some event that leaves its imprint on you for the rest of your life.
00:32:41.580 This, this trauma is more of a fascination.
00:32:46.300 It's more of a, of an inability to move on from something that doesn't fit the paradigm that is.
00:32:53.220 And that's a form of trauma.
00:32:54.440 That's a thing that never leaves you.
00:32:55.680 It imprints on you forever.
00:32:56.680 So you seeing a big foot or me seeing, you know, having whatever these experiences, like you will spend the rest of your life.
00:33:05.060 And then I guess the really sad thing is like all trauma, it leads to a dark place.
00:33:10.620 And that dark place is podcasting.
00:33:12.820 That's where it takes you.
00:33:13.940 I mean, have you guys ever heard of the concept of the uncanny Valley?
00:33:18.000 Uh, this is where you have like a machine or something like that, that just like, right.
00:33:22.960 But it doesn't have to be a machine.
00:33:24.680 It could be anything.
00:33:25.860 It could be like a vampire.
00:33:28.140 It could be, we have this innate fear of stuff that's humanoid, but off, right.
00:33:36.540 Something about it's off.
00:33:37.760 And you're just like, what?
00:33:38.880 Cause where does that come from then?
00:33:40.820 This is what we're talking about.
00:33:42.220 Right.
00:33:42.860 It's that type of uncanny Valley.
00:33:44.960 I mean, if to get a little sciencey about it, um, the study that I talked about that the children of genocide survivors, um, and,
00:33:54.680 they show altered, what's called DNA methylation, right.
00:34:00.740 On a stress response gene, because the junk DNA now they've done, uh, about, they know about what 10% of it.
00:34:10.860 And that's a conservative view.
00:34:13.660 I mean, somewhere between 10 and 20%, they know what these things are doing right now because they've started studying it.
00:34:23.340 But, and of course, you know, they also know what vaccines do, but anyway.
00:34:27.900 They also know that even though there's all this junk DNA, they know that like the closest relative we have are chimpanzees.
00:34:34.900 Yeah.
00:34:35.480 I know that from the DNA that I know nothing about.
00:34:37.720 Or that we, uh, you know, we all have, uh, what are they called?
00:34:45.820 Cavemen.
00:34:46.700 They're not cavemen.
00:34:48.180 Neanderthal.
00:34:48.780 Neanderthal and or Desnovan DNA imprinted.
00:34:51.320 Like we have like, like my DNA test says I have 2.49% of Neanderthal.
00:34:58.160 I don't know what that is, but.
00:34:59.880 They could tell from the bones.
00:35:01.280 From the bones.
00:35:02.260 So, but the altered DNA methylation and stress genes, like, so they've actually named some of these things.
00:35:08.240 So it's like FKBP5 and the same pattern seen in their parents, right.
00:35:16.460 So the survived, the, the parents passed that methylation from that DNA on that gene to their children.
00:35:27.020 And then they've recorded some of it to the grandchildren as well.
00:35:31.900 So, yeah, that's just the science part of it that they've actually got, you know, but it's, do we take science as word?
00:35:42.260 I don't know, but it's just one of those things, right?
00:35:45.140 So in the Bible, it talks about four to seven generations is how much like the sins of the fathers can pass on to their sons.
00:35:52.780 And I wonder if that's an actual technical timeframe, given that there's a dilution from each generation downward.
00:36:01.260 Like if the grandparents pass it on to the parents and then it's seen, but it's lesser in the, in the, in the children of the parents.
00:36:07.520 And so, so on and so forth, if you continue that, does it take for really, maybe let's say the highest level of trauma to finally be out of your genome?
00:36:17.760 It takes seven generations.
00:36:19.300 So they've shown, so it's funny that you bring that up, but they were showing that there was one group in the study where they went, they were able to go all the way to great, great grandchildren.
00:36:34.440 So that would be four generations, right?
00:36:37.260 That's interesting.
00:36:38.360 And that the fourth generation, about 50% of them had it and 50% of them didn't.
00:36:46.120 And so I wonder then if you went an extended generation, if you went to the fifth, it would still be there, but maybe 25%.
00:36:56.340 Right.
00:36:57.060 That's kind of crazy because once again, science just going, well, yeah, I guess that was true.
00:37:02.240 Yeah, I guess that part of the Bible is totally true.
00:37:06.620 So, I mean, that's fascinating.
00:37:09.040 I mean, it's just kind of cool.
00:37:11.780 I, I don't know.
00:37:13.000 It just gets my brain working.
00:37:14.600 It's how I work and, but it doesn't also necessarily have to be all bad, right?
00:37:20.820 Could it be that, that we, that we remember things that our bloodline survived, whether it's, you know, the victories and the horrors, not, not, you know, the blessings and the curses, because what is a covenant then?
00:37:36.360 Right.
00:37:37.140 That's kind of this whole idea that we take along with us and prayers and the screams and what, what are we actually holding onto and what's linking itself to us?
00:37:49.580 Well, that's interesting because, so, okay, Exodus 25 through 6, God is blessing up to the third and fourth generations.
00:38:03.220 It does seem like, so here, you shall not bow down to them or serve them for I, the Lord, your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me,
00:38:20.000 but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.
00:38:25.760 I'm trying to see if there is a, a precedent for blessing for a similar, so I keep my promise for thousands of generations and forgive evil sin.
00:38:37.320 And then, huh, I would imagine that it wouldn't be, you wouldn't be surprised to find that there's a mirrored side of that the same way a curse or trauma can be passed down.
00:38:49.600 You would have something positive passed.
00:38:52.300 And of course, right, because we see that passed down within skill sets and things like that.
00:38:55.860 We just highlighted that, you know, somebody who has a great deal of athleticism in whatever sport, you know, oftentimes their children would have that.
00:39:05.560 So there does seem to be a positive.
00:39:07.560 I wonder how, how positive that, that could get.
00:39:10.480 Yeah.
00:39:10.800 I mean, transcend sports.
00:39:12.920 And of course, I think it doesn't necessarily broadcast evenly across the population, right?
00:39:23.100 I mean, you're going to have variation with all of these things, right?
00:39:26.680 Because I think that's just the way it works.
00:39:30.120 The thing that kind of creeps me out, though, is like all the stuff that we're doing with CRISPR now and like, bottom line is, and I say this continuously in my podcast, bottom line is we don't know shit about anything.
00:39:45.760 I mean, like we have theories and we have this, and as soon as you think you've got it figured out, you get punched in the face.
00:39:52.520 No, you don't.
00:39:53.120 And so one of the things that, especially with the, you know, the recent, what do we want to call it, pandemic, and all the crap coming out of that, I mean, that's gene manipulation to an extent with the mRNA, right?
00:40:11.240 And so when you take it to another level with CRISPR, where you're actually splicing and cutting into the root, right, like you brought up earlier, and then replacing it either with something or taking a piece from here and moving it over here, that's terrifying.
00:40:34.880 Because what are you doing?
00:40:35.880 Because what are you doing?
00:40:36.780 What are you unlocking?
00:40:37.920 What are the two and three down the road effects of that?
00:40:45.140 I would imagine, I'm sorry, I was going to say, I would imagine that the public is getting a version of CRISPR that has already been utilized by the military industrial complex and the intelligence communities for some time.
00:40:58.040 You know, they're obviously, I don't know if it's supposed to be unethical, and we wouldn't do this, right, but there are obviously stories of cloning facilities and labs where they're, you know, they're raising children from test tube and upward.
00:41:15.000 And they would, I would imagine, try to use that in a military capacity first and foremost, you know, this child that doesn't have parents and they're switching things on like, you know, growth inhibitors and, you know, if there's a ceiling on strength and fast switch muscle fiber, I'm sure that they're blowing through that.
00:41:34.740 And whatever version of CRISPR that the public has gained access to almost certainly has a governor on it, but they've, they've, of course, they've used this to create all sorts of, and you'll hear these stories where people will have a bizarre encounter and they bump into, you know, an area they're not supposed to be in.
00:41:58.220 And there's a military presence, but like five of the 20 soldiers are really big, oddly big, and they look the same, and they look the same.
00:42:07.960 They have the same face.
00:42:08.900 I've heard that.
00:42:09.620 I've heard that.
00:42:10.440 Yeah, cloning.
00:42:10.840 I have to.
00:42:11.860 Yeah, man.
00:42:12.400 I spent 10 years in the military, and there's just places on some of these bases where it's just, you know, I don't care what your clearance is, you're not going in.
00:42:23.460 Yeah.
00:42:23.640 And it's just like, what?
00:42:24.580 What is there?
00:42:25.800 Mm-hmm.
00:42:26.400 Anyway.
00:42:26.800 And that's the same thing where, like I said, where you'll hear these chimeric creatures in and around military bases to the extent where some people have begun to speculate that they're actually like a form of guard dog.
00:42:43.720 Yeah.
00:42:44.640 I mean, why wouldn't it be?
00:42:46.420 Especially when you've got all the places that a lot of these stories come from.
00:42:54.140 I mean, you brought up Tony Merkel earlier.
00:42:56.300 There was a guy, so there's a base down in Louisiana called Fort Polk, and that's where the Joint Readiness Training Center is.
00:43:05.460 And there was a gentleman that was on that podcast that talked about an encounter that he had with Dogman.
00:43:14.580 And it was, but this dogman was like, it was like intelligent.
00:43:18.960 It wasn't, it wasn't like trying to eat him or anything like that.
00:43:24.660 It was like they were doing some stuff in an area that might not have been part of the, you know, where they play the war games.
00:43:33.000 And that he had kind of maybe ventured into a spot and that this thing acted like a sentinel.
00:43:40.400 And I've heard this story multiple times from many places.
00:43:46.920 And I mean, all you have to do is look at mythology too, right?
00:43:49.800 That these guys, the Anubis type folks and the, so many of them are sentinels, right?
00:43:59.520 I mean, what better, dude, put a giant minotaur at the freaking gate of something I'm not going through, right?
00:44:07.800 I mean, come on.
00:44:09.400 I'm just saying.
00:44:10.620 It makes you, it makes me wonder as well.
00:44:12.660 Like, we know that the issue with the Nephilim is that when they die, they don't go, they don't ascend or descend.
00:44:19.760 They're just kind of stuck because their soul is like neither here nor there.
00:44:23.660 So when we're talking about tampering with these genetic markers, these DNA markers, if they are a result of tampering, does that like a short wire your soul?
00:44:36.720 Like, did they have one?
00:44:38.380 And then because of the tampering, that's been like.
00:44:41.420 You can make a husk is what you're asking?
00:44:43.080 Yeah.
00:44:43.440 I mean, you know, you mess around with electricity enough, you'll like, you'll touch a wire here and then something in the next room won't work.
00:44:49.940 And you're like, I don't know what I did here, but these lights work now.
00:44:53.640 That one's off.
00:44:54.700 And that's one of the fears of CRISPR, actually, because what if we start turning or they've figured out how to turn them off.
00:45:01.360 And now they've basically just created shells that can be reanimated, right?
00:45:10.440 Yeah.
00:45:10.800 By the Nephilim spirits.
00:45:13.000 Yeah, and throughout our research, you find over and over again that there is a bloodline component to the ease with which you can be possessed.
00:45:23.140 So some royal bloodlines have much more of a strong connection to a particular principality or a particular power in the spirit realm.
00:45:32.580 So what if you have this perfectly engineered thing that has that genetic component that allows it to be easily inhabited by that spirit and it also doesn't have a spirit of its own?
00:45:45.180 So now it is just this inhabitable automaton.
00:45:48.840 Yeah, that's a problem.
00:45:50.900 I mean, you take another step, right?
00:45:52.980 Go ahead.
00:45:54.040 Sorry.
00:45:54.520 There are some races that are, like, more susceptible to schizophrenia, naturally susceptible to schizophrenia.
00:45:59.900 Oh, yeah.
00:46:00.760 Ashkenazi.
00:46:01.640 Yeah.
00:46:02.120 Not through intervention.
00:46:03.480 That's some straight Jerry Marzinski shit there.
00:46:06.160 Yeah.
00:46:06.380 Yeah.
00:46:06.840 Yeah.
00:46:07.420 Yeah.
00:46:07.700 So you know where that leads.
00:46:08.880 And that's just that's kind of interesting because that's a generational pathway as well.
00:46:12.520 Probably trauma.
00:46:13.820 So kind of funny that you bring that up.
00:46:16.800 I worked and see this is because my brain just goes down these roads.
00:46:21.800 And I I worked as a I wasn't I was a mental health professional.
00:46:28.480 I wasn't a counselor or whatever for the VA for years.
00:46:33.060 And I worked with some of the I guess you'll call them sickest folks, but folks that had schizophrenia, type two, bipolar, just the sickest of a lot of these folks.
00:46:47.220 Right.
00:46:47.600 And I had it's just kind of funny that I had these two guys.
00:46:51.720 Both were diagnosed schizophrenics.
00:46:54.240 Both of them.
00:46:55.700 One was either way.
00:46:57.820 It doesn't matter what they what kind of veteran they were, but they were both Jewish.
00:47:03.660 And they were both schizophrenic.
00:47:05.840 And neither of them would even because I I'm a Christian.
00:47:10.000 I have been for ever.
00:47:13.220 And I have things in my office that signify that these folks would not come into my office.
00:47:21.480 They would not.
00:47:22.500 They would not come in and talk.
00:47:23.800 They wanted to talk to me.
00:47:25.740 They they I'd have to talk to them out in the common area.
00:47:28.780 I'm just saying it's just there's breadcrumbs left all over the place for for my personal experience.
00:47:34.680 And this is some of them.
00:47:36.140 And it's just wild.
00:47:37.860 That makes me think about when the Pharisees said, put this curse on our children.
00:47:41.320 Yeah.
00:47:42.140 And then you look at that's a blood curse.
00:47:44.000 That's a blood curse.
00:47:45.440 That's what they absolutely.
00:47:46.880 And then you look at this prevalence of schizophrenia within the Jewish community or at least Ashkenazi.
00:47:51.560 And Ashkenazi, right.
00:47:52.700 Is that what God was like?
00:47:54.120 OK, cool.
00:47:54.860 Here you go.
00:47:55.580 Here you go.
00:47:56.160 Have this play.
00:47:57.420 Have fun with that.
00:47:58.780 Um, another place that this goes to is if you start thinking about the mark of the beast.
00:48:05.120 Hmm.
00:48:06.860 Um, I mean, could the mark of the beast we've talked about?
00:48:10.680 I know it's been talked about on your show and many others about the mark of the beast being genetic modification.
00:48:18.140 Right.
00:48:19.060 Um, or the image of the beast, like biotech identity.
00:48:22.740 Right.
00:48:23.140 So you're talking about things that are imprinted that you can't see.
00:48:27.300 Uh, but they're imprinted in your DNA.
00:48:31.000 I mean, what better place?
00:48:32.460 You know, even six, six, six man's numbers, like engineered perfection.
00:48:36.920 Right.
00:48:37.740 Uh, and then we get into AI and DNA convergence.
00:48:40.780 Like, it all, it's just a giant rabbit hole, man.
00:48:46.340 Yeah.
00:48:46.800 Yeah.
00:48:47.140 I mean, I think that genetic manipulation is going to be a part of it just based off of what we saw during COVID.
00:48:56.240 The, the MRN, MRNA vaccine.
00:48:59.820 Yeah.
00:49:00.060 You know, it has this genetic component.
00:49:01.620 It's turning off and on genes.
00:49:04.100 It's a gene therapy, um, is, is how they coined the terminology.
00:49:09.080 And that's how, you know, it's safe for you because they tossed the word therapy in there.
00:49:12.820 Um, and the rapist, I mean, there's all kinds of areas though, that like you could call them quarantined regions of your DNA.
00:49:24.480 Right.
00:49:25.760 Yeah.
00:49:26.460 Yeah.
00:49:26.860 That's a, that's a very interesting thing.
00:49:29.580 Every time you mentioned that, I mean, just this idea of, of areas that are closed off or locked for whatever reason.
00:49:37.520 I mean, you brought up the tower of Babel earlier and you think about that foreign language syndrome.
00:49:42.440 And when, when it says that God confused the languages, it's like, did he just turn off that little switch so that we couldn't speak the same way?
00:49:54.620 Maybe he, he turned off that switch that allowed for telepathic communication because that is one of them.
00:50:00.800 You can open that door.
00:50:02.560 You just have to cause a disassociative state in an individual.
00:50:06.040 So it's like, we do have that hard wiring that is in our DNA.
00:50:09.680 You could, you could argue and that's, you could see that in the telepathy tapes.
00:50:13.360 That's what I'm saying.
00:50:13.740 When I was arguing with Matt about angels, not being shit.
00:50:16.280 I was like, humans are really cool, dude.
00:50:18.780 Like humans have all this stuff.
00:50:21.160 Programmability.
00:50:21.760 We, we, you know, modify us in this way or that way.
00:50:25.520 But I look at that and I go, yeah, there's, there's clearly some function of the human, uh, you know, disposition that allows for telepathy.
00:50:34.620 I don't know what that function looks like scientifically or biologically, but does it look like?
00:50:39.680 A closed segment of our DNA and can all these doors be opened, whether it's by CRISPR or is trauma the key to opening them in some way, shape or form?
00:50:50.240 And I think that that one is, is, uh, I think it's just different ways to, to the same goal.
00:50:54.960 Yeah.
00:50:55.600 Yeah.
00:50:56.280 I mean, you could totally even think about it in the fact of like, um, them being able, and I say them, the proverbial them, they, uh, could erase spiritual straight, spiritual traits like discernment.
00:51:10.180 I mean, that could be part of the mark or whatever.
00:51:14.060 I'm just saying discernment, empathy, uh, even your soul.
00:51:19.800 What's that?
00:51:21.020 We, uh, I, you know, I, I guess it's one of those things I'm, I'm sorry to bring so much theory to all of this, but obviously that's kind of what it is.
00:51:33.680 And it's just to get, this is what I do.
00:51:36.100 It's broadcasting seeds, right?
00:51:38.400 Yeah.
00:51:39.020 Seeds in people's minds and getting them thinking, whether they agree with it or not, it doesn't matter.
00:51:44.300 It's, it's that if you can think of it, it can freaking happen.
00:51:48.460 And I think we've learned that throughout time.
00:51:51.220 Um, that's, that's a question I was asking recently though.
00:51:54.720 Like, uh, so we know that we're three parts, we're body, we're spirit and we're soul, but the difference between the spirit and the soul, I don't know exactly.
00:52:06.600 Yeah.
00:52:06.800 That's a little bit what, what is that?
00:52:09.040 What is that?
00:52:10.180 Right.
00:52:11.220 Yeah.
00:52:11.660 I mean, there's, there's delineation drawn there.
00:52:14.720 Um, and I don't know what the hell it is.
00:52:17.280 I mean, I know that we were, we have a spirit, but we also have a void in us that could be filled with another spirit.
00:52:23.880 Yeah.
00:52:24.740 And you know, that gets tricky.
00:52:26.960 So you have to accept Jesus Christ and, and ask, you know, to be baptized in the Holy spirit.
00:52:32.620 So maybe it's part of, you know, spirit is that part you get from God.
00:52:38.500 Right.
00:52:38.960 I mean, you get it all from God, but it's like a part that I don't know.
00:52:43.680 Um, no, but I, I do, I do agree with what you're saying about the, you know, the mark of the beast.
00:52:49.020 And there's this idea that men will, uh, wish for death, but you know, they won't be able to die.
00:52:55.840 Yeah.
00:52:56.600 And I'm wondering like what you could do to our DNA that would, what's that?
00:53:02.820 Oh, no, I'm going to look through this book.
00:53:05.100 Cause there is like, uh, this is, this book is he came to set the captives free, which I don't really even recommend people buy.
00:53:11.100 Like here's a part here.
00:53:13.120 Um, there's like a diagram.
00:53:15.640 Damn.
00:53:16.020 You found that fast.
00:53:16.960 Yeah.
00:53:17.200 I mean, that was crazy.
00:53:18.140 This isn't my book, but, uh, it's a diagram right here of, I'll go widescreen on me.
00:53:23.360 So you can kind of see it demonstrating what the body and the spirit and the soul is.
00:53:28.120 So you can see at the very bottom there, like the link between the two, there was no link when they were in Eden.
00:53:34.320 But then after the fall, there was a link.
00:53:38.000 It's very, it's very strange how they, how she explains this.
00:53:42.080 And I've read through this a bunch of times and I still don't quite, I guess I probably have to finish reading that book because my wife, my wife, she, um, I, I saw in her notes, he, he came, uh, to free the captives.
00:53:58.560 And then I was like, you mean he came to set the captives free?
00:54:01.200 And she's like, what do you mean?
00:54:01.980 And I was like, there's a, something written down in your notes.
00:54:04.980 It looks like a book.
00:54:05.800 And she's like, oh yeah, I came across it on Tik TOK.
00:54:08.940 And, uh, and I thought that it would be up your alley.
00:54:12.140 So I wanted to write it down so I could tell you about it.
00:54:13.980 I was like, oh, I actually have that.
00:54:15.440 And I got like maybe a third of the way through it.
00:54:19.220 Um, and then I, I didn't finish it.
00:54:21.220 This is a heavy book.
00:54:22.260 And then, but that only happened like yesterday and now it's come up again.
00:54:26.340 So I guess I have to read it.
00:54:29.260 That's how I feel whenever I get like, uh, like rituals, you guys brought up Solomon, right?
00:54:35.400 Um, and how rituals can activate code and like repentance can silence it.
00:54:43.860 That's interesting.
00:54:44.680 I've been doing, I've been going through this repentance, uh, I don't know what process where
00:54:54.020 it's like one thing to repent for like a sin.
00:54:57.860 If you transgress or you're disobedient, there's something that you did and you, and you want
00:55:01.720 to hone in on that.
00:55:02.740 But I've been trying to go through the Rolodex lately.
00:55:05.980 So I'll be like driving and I'll just be talking to God and, and trying to like really remember
00:55:11.420 these things and, and, and ask to be forgiven for them specifically.
00:55:16.140 And I, and I try to like really think about it so that I, I know it's like, you ever have
00:55:21.780 somebody apologize and, and you go like, you didn't mean that shit.
00:55:25.400 You're just saying, I'm sorry.
00:55:26.420 And then there's something that was like, I apologize.
00:55:27.780 You're just checking a block.
00:55:28.940 Yeah.
00:55:29.340 And it's like, I know what I did and I know why this was wrong.
00:55:32.860 And I, and this is why it sucks.
00:55:34.440 And I'm sorry for that.
00:55:35.160 Like, it's a different kind of apology.
00:55:36.440 And so I'm just trying to go through that, um, that whole Rolodex of all the ways in which
00:55:43.480 I sucked, uh, since, you know, forever.
00:55:46.920 I, um, but yeah, I've done the same thing concept.
00:55:50.220 Um, I literally, when I started down this road of, I guess you would call it repentance,
00:55:55.480 right?
00:55:55.700 Like hardcore repentance.
00:55:57.580 Um, and really looking into like, you know, stuff from that may be my great grandfather.
00:56:05.580 Yeah.
00:56:06.900 Right.
00:56:07.300 So it's like, um, you think through like with yourself, your mind and where, where am I most
00:56:15.240 mentally attacked and like, take like anxiety, intrusive thoughts, hopelessness, stuff like
00:56:21.440 that, and like make a mental, you know, a note of it, like a journal entry.
00:56:25.780 Then I would go through my heart and, uh, um, that wound that will just won't close that
00:56:32.820 keeps reopening.
00:56:33.720 Like whether it's rejection or abandoned for me, it was really like abandonment and, and
00:56:39.640 guilt and shame stuff.
00:56:42.180 Um, and then you move on to like territory and like what part of your life feels consistently
00:56:49.520 and constantly contested, whether it's relationships or finances, uh, issues with your home.
00:56:58.680 And maybe, uh, maybe it's a region you even live in right.
00:57:03.240 Um, under each section, right.
00:57:05.780 One specific example that you're facing and then address those.
00:57:10.080 Right.
00:57:10.980 Yeah.
00:57:11.320 Um, and pray aloud, whatever.
00:57:13.220 I'm just saying this is like a lesson in spiritual warfare, I guess, to an extent, but,
00:57:18.040 uh, you know, who are you really fighting?
00:57:21.900 Um, so I think that's what God likes, uh, accountability, you know what I mean?
00:57:28.840 And, uh, I don't know.
00:57:31.000 I, I think that some people, I think repentance is, is probably a process.
00:57:36.440 It's not just like a thing that you can do in one go.
00:57:39.920 It's like, there are things that are going to come to your mind.
00:57:42.380 It's like the blanket one, like you can do it, but you're not going to deal with everything.
00:57:47.260 Um, yeah, yeah.
00:57:48.900 And, and so, you know, I think it's, you know, you hone in on a thing and you, you know,
00:57:56.340 you talk about it and you ask God to forgive you.
00:57:59.000 And then you, you trust in the Lord that this is going to be taken care of and that, you
00:58:04.720 know, this was all plate, uh, paid for on the cross.
00:58:07.920 And, you know, you just kind of keep fishing and you keep going through these things and
00:58:11.460 looking for different things that you've, you know, you've engaged in.
00:58:14.220 But, uh, I was going back and I was thinking about that whole, you know, what's passed on
00:58:20.520 from your, your ancestors.
00:58:23.220 And, you know, my grandmother, the audience knows she was big into, uh, I don't, I wouldn't
00:58:31.280 say exactly witchcraft, but there was like this clairvoyance thing and she did have her
00:58:37.640 crystals and she had like a crystal ball, et cetera, et cetera.
00:58:41.640 And, and, and then if you look into her paperwork, which she, she wrote a lot and she left a lot
00:58:47.580 behind, she's writing extensively on the process of remote viewing and she's a alien abductee
00:58:57.200 victim, which, you know, uh, I don't think she knew exactly what she was dealing with.
00:59:01.940 And, and so she interpreted that through the wrong lens, I would, I would guess, but is
00:59:07.980 it, is it just the strange things that happened to me as a kid that pushed me down this path?
00:59:15.480 Or is it like some, you know, cause it's not a skillset.
00:59:21.120 It's particularly an interest that seems to have been passed down to me.
00:59:26.640 And so, um, even though grandma was of the school of thought that she was abducted, I think I've
00:59:35.620 managed to process it through the correct lens, but yeah, it just, it just is this question that
00:59:40.640 I have, or it's just like, is this because of, you know, seeing strange shit and hearing strange
00:59:46.180 shit, or is it because she was like tenaciously about this and this was some sort of like
00:59:51.380 generational imprint that gets passed down?
00:59:53.160 I love the cope of, I got no skills, but I got a lot of trauma, got no skills, but I
00:59:57.400 got a lot of trauma.
00:59:58.180 Yeah.
00:59:58.560 Yeah.
00:59:59.000 I can relate to that too.
01:00:00.780 Oh yeah.
01:00:03.220 So yeah, I just, um, so yeah, man, I just wanted to share something that just, just kind
01:00:09.740 of hit me the last few weeks and, uh, thought you guys would enjoy it.
01:00:16.660 Yeah.
01:00:17.100 I mean, it's an interesting one and it, and it does open up a lot of rabbit holes.
01:00:20.780 I'm, I'm sure that given enough time, uh, these are things that would be confirmed one
01:00:27.300 way or another by the scientific community or call it something else though.
01:00:31.620 They'll call it something else.
01:00:32.620 Of course.
01:00:33.380 Right.
01:00:33.720 Or something.
01:00:34.440 It'll be, you know, it'll be like some kind of, you know, something RNA or like some weird,
01:00:40.800 you know?
01:00:41.600 Yeah.
01:00:42.260 And then they'll tell you, by the way, they'll, they'll come up with it.
01:00:44.820 You know, that's really the threat.
01:00:46.840 That's really the threat.
01:00:48.020 Oh man, that just dawned on me.
01:00:49.980 The real threat is when they come along and they say, and we have the solution.
01:00:55.060 So where our solution would be repentance and asking for forgiveness and, and working
01:00:59.600 through this and laying it at God's feet and, and wanting to do what God wants you to do.
01:01:04.240 You know, his plan, not your plan.
01:01:06.180 That's the solution.
01:01:07.460 They're going to go, no, no, no, dude.
01:01:08.840 We could just turn that off.
01:01:09.800 Yeah.
01:01:10.400 I mean, I was thinking about it with like, um, when we talk about, uh, you know, bringing
01:01:17.120 this into warfare to an extent is that we, we see that they actually have nanobots, right.
01:01:23.960 And that they can inject them into, you know, whether it's for medical use or whatever.
01:01:28.400 Well, what says that they don't have bots that can go in and manipulate your DNA.
01:01:35.300 Right.
01:01:35.720 And it's kind of like, I just get that scene of the matrix when the black ooze is coming
01:01:41.180 over him and then it hits him and goes down his mouth.
01:01:43.880 And it's like, I'm just, you're just getting seized up and encoded by this.
01:01:49.980 Yeah, man, I don't know.
01:01:52.340 I, I, yeah, I think that's, you know, the black goo overlap with the, with the black
01:01:57.260 nanobot, you know, kind of, I think that's, you know, we're manifesting the technological
01:02:02.900 version of a spiritual thing or something.
01:02:05.900 Well, that's talked about in, uh, in stranger things are showed, right?
01:02:08.880 Yeah.
01:02:09.060 Yeah.
01:02:09.420 Same idea.
01:02:10.380 Well, that there's that huge overlap between what we see in film and then like why demonic,
01:02:15.300 uh, possession seems to have some sort of, uh, kinship or partnership with parasites and
01:02:21.780 mold, parasites and mold, black mold, parasites, black mold, parasites, black worms and, and
01:02:28.020 paras and, and, and black mold, these things like work in tandem.
01:02:31.360 And then I have seen these very strange videos where they'll have some, you know, which doctor
01:02:36.480 voodoo practitioner, and he's extracting some spirit from an individual, but what are they,
01:02:41.180 what comes out of them?
01:02:42.200 What they throw up is like a bundle of black hair almost.
01:02:45.660 And then of course we had, um, uh, V on the show and she has this, uh, parasite, you know,
01:02:53.380 infestation kind of a thing going on, but it's demonic.
01:02:56.320 And she brings a sample and shows us and inside this vial is something that like, if you looked
01:03:02.000 at it real fast, would look like a black hair.
01:03:03.780 You look at it up close and you're like, no, this is a, um, a little creature.
01:03:08.760 It's some sort of a, it's got, uh, segments to it and it's got, you know, anatomy and it's,
01:03:15.260 it's more than a hair.
01:03:16.440 There's something here.
01:03:17.480 And this came out of her, her body.
01:03:19.780 Um, it was like fibrous, white fibrous, uh,
01:03:23.480 yeah, crap attached to coming out of the different segments of it.
01:03:27.840 But then you look at, at Hollywood and Hollywood depicts that constantly.
01:03:31.400 Yeah.
01:03:32.020 Well, did you guys see this?
01:03:33.380 Uh, I mean, this, this is a little different, but it's showing where they took human flesh,
01:03:39.820 probably grown in a lab and they were able to animate it, uh, with like, like turn it like a
01:03:47.280 connect a, so it's kind of like the transhumanist or it's more like the, what would you call that?
01:03:53.900 Where they mix, uh, um, human flesh with like robotic stuff.
01:04:01.840 Okay.
01:04:02.320 Have you guys seen this video?
01:04:03.940 No, I don't think so.
01:04:04.900 What is it?
01:04:05.340 So it's a, it's flesh animated by.
01:04:07.100 So it's, it's God, I wish I had saved it, but they've, they've got this thing and it literally,
01:04:14.540 they connect pieces of it together with Matt, with a magnet.
01:04:18.760 And then all of a sudden this thing, once they get it together, it starts to crawl.
01:04:23.940 Oh, and this has done it like an actual university.
01:04:27.140 It's, it's really skirting the edge of genetic testing stuff.
01:04:33.040 God, I'm looking at things here and it's like one of them that just came up is they gave
01:04:38.040 a robot, a face of, of living skin.
01:04:42.040 So they create skin, you know, whatever tissue in, in some sort of a lab scenario.
01:04:48.060 And then they lay it over a, a robot.
01:04:51.400 And then this allows the robot to smile, which is why not?
01:04:55.120 That's cute.
01:04:56.000 I like that.
01:04:56.520 That's good.
01:04:57.460 All right.
01:04:58.300 Twitter does not make the best search engine, dude.
01:05:00.620 You just get a lot of horrifying things that I'm going to stop scrolling now on, on Twitter,
01:05:04.780 looking for that.
01:05:05.680 Yeah.
01:05:06.520 And, you know, so people will speculate often, people will speculate often about the nature
01:05:12.920 of the antichrist and whether or not this will be like some sort of artificial intelligence
01:05:16.120 made flesh, you know, like if it has a body, you know, I used to joke around with the idea
01:05:22.880 that one of these days, Elon Musk was going to, to die and that his personality is already
01:05:28.540 backed up on several different Twitter accounts.
01:05:30.780 Adrian Dittman is one of them.
01:05:32.520 And, you know, you could just bank that this guy has his entire personality backed up in
01:05:37.680 AI because he is modeled after Iron Man or Iron Man's modeled after him.
01:05:43.600 What the hell ever.
01:05:44.820 And, um, and that was how Iron Man made his artificial intelligence was just some aspect
01:05:49.180 of his own personality backed up.
01:05:50.700 And so I imagine that because he almost certainly has Neuralink, he would expire one way or another
01:05:58.880 and his corpse would be reanimated via Neuralink because you can send electrical synapses to
01:06:03.680 the brain to keep everything functioning properly, right?
01:06:05.840 If the brain is sending signals to the rest of the body to do X, Y, and Z, then you could
01:06:10.260 feasibly animate it.
01:06:11.360 And then all you do is just, uh, upload, uh, onto Neuralink, one of the many backups of
01:06:17.520 Elon Musk's personality.
01:06:18.760 And then you would have an antichrist, right?
01:06:20.800 This thing that was not really him, but it looked like him and sounded like him and behave
01:06:25.680 like him.
01:06:26.160 Cause for all intents and purposes, it was his own personality.
01:06:29.160 Um, they joke around, well, not joke around, but, uh, Joe Rogan has said this a bunch as
01:06:33.760 well.
01:06:34.340 He's like with the amount of information that he's put out with his podcast, you know, three
01:06:38.800 hours at a pop and a couple thousand episodes.
01:06:41.200 Yeah.
01:06:41.680 Yeah.
01:06:42.000 Yeah.
01:06:42.160 There's enough information out there to recreate Joe Rogan, his personality, at least what we're
01:06:46.580 privy to.
01:06:47.420 And I'm like, huh, you've been talking about that for quite a while.
01:06:51.940 Yeah.
01:06:52.440 I wonder if that's in the works.
01:06:53.720 We are, we're, we are to that point, undoubtedly.
01:06:57.340 I mean, if we're exposed to technology where they're animating human flesh and we know that
01:07:04.080 they're growing ears on mice and this and that, then there's a plethora of things
01:07:08.760 that they're doing behind closed doors where you could imagine that, uh, some sufficiently
01:07:16.360 passable bio mech.
01:07:18.780 Absolutely.
01:07:19.600 Right.
01:07:19.740 Think about the greys.
01:07:21.080 Yeah.
01:07:21.360 And if the greys are really a machination of human beings, which I sometimes wonder about,
01:07:25.960 who knows, um, the small greys, at least, uh, if we were commissioned to build them and
01:07:31.380 they are some sort of biomechanical entity that just houses a spirit temporarily and they
01:07:36.520 go around and they do automaton shit and then they're discarded in a pile to smell like
01:07:40.700 ass, like, uh, Karen Wilkinson.
01:07:42.220 Right.
01:07:42.480 Yeah, exactly.
01:07:43.880 Yeah.
01:07:44.100 Her stories are great about that.
01:07:45.480 It's crazy.
01:07:45.980 Yes.
01:07:46.320 Uh, and, and they're, I think a huge factor in this alien disclosure that needs to be
01:07:51.000 highlighted, but even if we didn't build it as above, so below, it looks to be that
01:07:56.980 that thing could be emulated.
01:07:58.680 You could have a biomechanical flesh suit.
01:08:01.200 Well, they're okay.
01:08:02.100 They're calling it Oscar.
01:08:03.620 So if you want to look it up that way, Oscar, the flesh based AI robot that has, yeah.
01:08:11.160 Oscar, the flesh beast.
01:08:12.580 I don't like the base.
01:08:13.960 I don't like any of that.
01:08:15.400 Oscar, the based flesh robot.
01:08:17.280 Oh, dude.
01:08:18.480 I don't know what that is.
01:08:19.860 I don't like it.
01:08:20.160 It looks like a walking chicken wing or some weird thing.
01:08:22.720 Like it's crazy.
01:08:23.620 Did you find it yet top?
01:08:24.740 Cause I have it.
01:08:25.400 And I don't, it's really gross.
01:08:26.980 It is gross.
01:08:28.140 Ew, dude.
01:08:29.160 It does look like a chicken wing.
01:08:30.840 Okay.
01:08:31.800 Oh, wait.
01:08:32.620 I think I have it here.
01:08:33.920 Man-made horrors beyond your comprehension.
01:08:37.060 What the?
01:08:38.140 Isn't that crazy?
01:08:38.900 No, no, no.
01:08:39.280 Not that one.
01:08:39.860 Go, go back and then look at the one right beneath it.
01:08:42.600 Oh, but that's it right there.
01:08:43.720 That is it.
01:08:44.440 Okay.
01:08:44.800 Okay.
01:08:45.020 Okay.
01:08:45.240 Okay.
01:08:45.420 Because so when they say human modular prototype, that makes it even creepier.
01:08:50.060 It's like plug and plug pieces.
01:08:52.240 So they're like magnetic and they like clip together.
01:08:55.780 You just watch.
01:08:56.580 It's horrible.
01:08:56.960 If you back out and go to the one right beneath it by Dakshana Morthy.
01:09:01.580 That's a cat.
01:09:02.780 Actually, you know what?
01:09:03.460 Don't go scrolling.
01:09:04.140 Cause you know how this shit goes.
01:09:05.340 Yeah.
01:09:05.560 Yeah.
01:09:05.580 Let's nevermind.
01:09:06.160 Let's see.
01:09:06.500 Before we show some crazy, I got it.
01:09:08.860 Okay.
01:09:10.540 Man.
01:09:10.980 Cause this one is really good.
01:09:12.120 It looks just like a crawling chicken wing.
01:09:14.620 It does.
01:09:15.100 Just like you described segments.
01:09:17.460 Oscar, the robot share.
01:09:18.900 And, uh, okay.
01:09:20.860 Do we have this right here?
01:09:22.040 We want to bring this one.
01:09:23.880 Okay.
01:09:24.240 Here we go.
01:09:25.200 This is, I'm sure it's fine.
01:09:26.680 I've hurt your eyes.
01:09:28.060 Oh God, guys.
01:09:29.240 Wait, is this it?
01:09:30.060 It's the same one.
01:09:30.880 No, this is not the one I've.
01:09:32.100 Oh, come on.
01:09:33.060 I'm sorry.
01:09:33.680 Hold on a second.
01:09:34.280 Let's look through all your stuff.
01:09:34.860 I don't want to do that.
01:09:35.800 Cause you don't ever know what kind of crazy thing.
01:09:38.080 All right.
01:09:38.340 Here we go.
01:09:38.800 Crazy things I've been searching.
01:09:40.100 No, not for me.
01:09:40.900 I mean, I don't search anything, but you search like the most innocuous thing here.
01:09:44.200 Oh yeah.
01:09:44.580 And it just turns into.
01:09:45.760 Guys, don't search taco Tuesday.
01:09:47.280 Oh, no, don't do that on the thing.
01:09:50.260 No.
01:09:50.500 Okay.
01:09:50.680 We got it.
01:09:51.060 A huge mistake.
01:09:51.620 We got it.
01:09:52.560 Here it is.
01:09:54.140 Share.
01:09:54.820 Okay.
01:09:55.880 This is great.
01:09:56.900 I love this one.
01:09:58.100 Oh boy.
01:09:58.800 What the hell is that?
01:10:02.520 Ew.
01:10:03.160 Imagine this thing coming for you.
01:10:03.660 We're looking at Oscar, the first human modular prototype that is able to live in various setups.
01:10:09.600 How it's going to happen is that I'm going to connect the brain to the heart module to activate the blood circulation.
01:10:17.860 Made of soil and cream.
01:10:20.600 Now, the lung is going to start breathing.
01:10:23.560 It reminds me of the things from Half-Life.
01:10:25.220 You can see both organs are now collaborating.
01:10:27.000 I can add a kidney module.
01:10:34.720 A kidney module.
01:10:35.720 Now it can piss.
01:10:37.900 And if I add a limb module.
01:10:39.120 At liberty, it can get drunk.
01:10:40.480 I love it.
01:10:41.400 The limb module.
01:10:42.400 It starts actuating the organism to move.
01:10:45.280 Now it's looking for the optimal temperature, which is 37 degrees.
01:10:49.200 If I add another limb, Oscar will recognize it and beneficiate from new possibilities.
01:10:58.020 I hate Oscar.
01:10:59.680 It looks like a chicken wing.
01:11:00.720 Oscar is terrifying.
01:11:01.680 It's so gross, dude.
01:11:02.800 I'm never eating chicken wings again.
01:11:04.600 I live in New York, too, man.
01:11:06.360 They're everywhere.
01:11:07.400 That is rough.
01:11:09.300 I don't like the way that thing looked.
01:11:11.240 I don't like the way it was looking at me.
01:11:12.960 That was crazy, man.
01:11:14.600 What's your job?
01:11:15.420 He's like, I make biomechanical flesh.
01:11:19.160 Yes.
01:11:19.700 Kill that guy.
01:11:20.160 Kill that guy.
01:11:20.740 And the most creepy German accent you've ever heard in your entire life.
01:11:23.980 That guy's like straight from operating for some paperclip.
01:11:28.440 That's like the dude's great grandfam.
01:11:28.880 Dude, I mean, but I wonder how old that was.
01:11:32.460 That's some genetic freaking lineage going down that's teaching him to do crazy stuff.
01:11:37.580 Because his great grandfather is probably a, you know what I'm saying.
01:11:43.200 Yeah, well, that's 100% things in the spiritual realm.
01:11:47.700 Whispering, make it look like a chicken wing.
01:11:49.820 Yeah.
01:11:50.220 Yeah.
01:11:50.520 Yeah.
01:11:50.640 Wow.
01:11:51.180 Yeah.
01:11:51.540 Let me look just like a chicken.
01:11:53.080 That'll do it.
01:11:53.580 Yeah.
01:11:53.960 Just brutal.
01:11:55.600 I don't know where we're going, man.
01:11:57.380 Sorry to scar your eyes with that, man.
01:12:01.100 I mean, I'm glad.
01:12:01.920 I saw it the other day and I showed my daughter and she was like, what the hell?
01:12:05.480 Just more generational trauma for your daughter.
01:12:07.820 Yeah, exactly.
01:12:08.600 Just my grandkids.
01:12:10.300 How long ago did Oscar the flesh, because I bet you this is a little bit older than
01:12:20.320 you'd imagine.
01:12:21.160 Oh, I'm sure.
01:12:21.920 Yeah.
01:12:22.940 And I bet you by now they've really, really refined it.
01:12:26.040 And if they have Oscar the flesh robot that looks like a fist with chicken wings attached
01:12:30.340 to it, they at least have a whole arm with, you know, wings and legs attached to it now
01:12:35.220 come into being.
01:12:38.420 What did I say?
01:12:39.460 How long ago did that come into being?
01:12:41.720 I'm going to get this demon to tell me really quick, chat GPT.
01:12:45.900 Cause I, I, I think that, you know, they, they, uh, you know, it's a fit Oscar, the grouch.
01:12:52.620 No, you idiot.
01:12:53.700 Oh my God.
01:12:54.600 The flesh robot.
01:12:56.020 Oscar the flesh robot.
01:12:58.040 So that's, um, wow.
01:13:01.440 Okay.
01:13:02.560 15 years old.
01:13:04.220 Hmm.
01:13:05.540 That's terrifying.
01:13:06.700 That means they have full functioning, uh, cyborgs now that.
01:13:10.760 Yeah, absolutely.
01:13:14.200 I think we've probably got a couple of them on the world stage.
01:13:16.760 Yes.
01:13:17.160 They're probably, some of them are probably, there's probably a couple of actors.
01:13:21.640 Maybe they replaced, uh, I'm not going to say.
01:13:25.760 What's, uh, um, uh, uh, what's her name?
01:13:29.760 Ocasio Cortez.
01:13:31.600 Yeah.
01:13:32.040 What's her first name?
01:13:32.880 Ashley, uh, Alexandria.
01:13:34.920 Alexandria.
01:13:35.320 Yeah.
01:13:35.600 Yeah.
01:13:35.880 She's one.
01:13:37.340 I was thinking myself, uh, what's the, what's the, what's the
01:13:40.740 girl that was in wicked that's in wicked.
01:13:43.680 Oh, uh, which one?
01:13:45.320 The two, you've seen those both of them, maybe both of them.
01:13:48.680 I don't know.
01:13:49.380 Right now.
01:13:50.080 They're a disaster.
01:13:51.420 So black ball chick that played Jesus and, uh, and, uh, Ariana Grande.
01:13:57.800 Yeah.
01:13:58.200 And they both look like they're on death's door.
01:14:01.080 Just a hundred percent flesh automatons.
01:14:04.740 I can't, I don't like that thing.
01:14:06.360 That was nasty.
01:14:07.300 It's creepy.
01:14:07.900 It's going to be in your nightmares tonight.
01:14:09.720 So,
01:14:09.940 Oh, well, uh, Bennett, this is a fascinating conversation, man.
01:14:14.980 I, I, and I, I don't know.
01:14:16.960 I mean, it's, it's interesting because I know you said it was just a thought, um, but it
01:14:22.540 does seem to connect to so many things.
01:14:24.220 And I have a feeling that it's going to come up in, in, in future conversations.
01:14:27.900 Agreed.
01:14:28.340 Uh, I, I think it's one of those things where, you know, and this is how a lot of our, our
01:14:32.800 theories start where you have just a feeling about a thing, you know, and you start, well,
01:14:37.660 we, we, half the time we don't even really start digging the pieces just kind of fall
01:14:40.960 into our lap.
01:14:42.000 The segments, the segments, that's how it kind of just fell into my lap too.
01:14:47.980 Is I literally started cause my, my daughter's like asking for help with a project and I'm
01:14:54.540 like, okay, well then I start digging and you start scratching into it.
01:14:58.060 And the next thing you know, the bottom caves out and you're like, Oh my God, what did I
01:15:02.620 just fall into?
01:15:03.640 And then on top of that, if you have an active imagination, you just can't shut it off.
01:15:10.460 So yeah, the bottom falls out and you fall into a pit of flesh segments of flesh sec, literally
01:15:18.180 Oscars crawling all over your body.
01:15:20.900 You know what I really don't like to do is like, why do they have to make them slimy?
01:15:24.140 And could you make them like, why do you have to, why does it have to have that sheen?
01:15:28.240 Which, you know, it's just like, Ooh, they keep them.
01:15:32.860 They were saying that you have to keep it at 37 degrees or something like that.
01:15:37.120 I think what you need to do is toss them in some flour.
01:15:39.420 Isn't that cold?
01:15:40.340 30, I mean, it's cold, right?
01:15:43.700 That is pretty cold.
01:15:44.460 I don't know.
01:15:44.720 Yeah.
01:15:44.920 Toss them in some flour and I wonder how they taste.
01:15:50.800 Cornstarch never heard it.
01:15:52.480 Disgusting.
01:15:53.240 Bennett, thank you for joining us, brother.
01:15:55.020 Before we get out of here, let's one more time.
01:15:57.020 Tell everybody where they can find you.
01:15:58.680 Best place.
01:16:00.040 You can find me wherever podcasts are at.
01:16:02.700 I also do YouTube and some rumble, but it is what it is.
01:16:08.320 It's just another thing.
01:16:10.820 Anyway.
01:16:12.380 Oh, you're doing the book of Job?
01:16:14.660 Yeah.
01:16:15.360 That was, so I've been doing, well, that's actually, I can blame you guys for that because
01:16:19.880 you introduced me to Ed Mabry, who is just a wizard.
01:16:26.240 He's the best.
01:16:27.420 We got to get back on.
01:16:28.320 So he, I went through his, I've been going every, what is it, once a month right through
01:16:34.060 the Supernatural Bible.
01:16:37.320 Yeah.
01:16:38.000 I was like, I need to do a segment on this just so I can learn it better myself.
01:16:42.400 Um, and so I've been doing that.
01:16:45.400 I'll take a book every Sunday and do it and, uh, do the same kind of thing and then publish
01:16:51.140 it.
01:16:51.380 So I just published the book of Job and it'll make your head explode.
01:16:56.260 It's a wild one.
01:16:57.360 I'm only halfway through it.
01:16:58.280 So don't, no, no, no, no spoilers.
01:17:00.540 Actually, I'm a little bit more than halfway through it.
01:17:01.820 This whole family dies.
01:17:02.680 Yeah.
01:17:03.040 So, but the broadcasting seeds by house, literally broadcasting seeds.com is probably the best
01:17:08.980 place because that's got everything.
01:17:11.400 So awesome.
01:17:12.620 I really appreciate you guys having me on again.
01:17:15.780 Yeah, of course, man.
01:17:16.620 It's always a pleasure getting to talk.
01:17:17.760 I love your new studio guys.
01:17:19.500 I mean, you guys are killing it and I love it.
01:17:22.400 I love to see you guys killing it.
01:17:24.620 Well, if we're not killing it, we're at least, uh, casting strong illusions that we are.
01:17:28.560 You know what I'm trying to kill?
01:17:29.980 Oscar.
01:17:30.660 Oscar.
01:17:31.380 I would love to stomp that thing.
01:17:33.660 That's one of those ones that you hit with a, a flamethrower, man.
01:17:38.160 Yeah.
01:17:38.840 You know, I guess I don't want to have a, it's not guns.
01:17:41.860 I just need to have the last line of defense, be a flamethrower.
01:17:45.500 You know what that is?
01:17:46.400 Straight up for things like Oscar.
01:17:48.060 That's where God tells you to like, go into this lab, kill everybody, kill everything.
01:17:53.760 Even the plant life, even the animals, take it all out.
01:17:56.780 And then future generations are like, why was God so mean?
01:17:59.560 You just weren't around to see Oscar.
01:18:01.780 You just weren't around to see that little thing.
01:18:05.100 You didn't know that we were fighting spiritual wars against chicken wings.
01:18:08.260 Yeah.
01:18:08.440 You literally need to recreate those, uh, flamethrowers that they had an alien.
01:18:14.300 Yeah.
01:18:15.360 Oh, you know, just amazing.
01:18:18.200 I don't like Oscar.
01:18:19.120 Shout out to Oscar.
01:18:19.840 I'm sure he's doing well.
01:18:21.420 Um, all right, man.
01:18:22.640 Take us out of here.
01:18:23.960 Yeah.
01:18:24.120 Thank you again, Bennett guys.
01:18:25.560 Uh, great episode.
01:18:26.560 And we will see you back soon.
01:18:28.560 Don't forget to obey, submit and comply.
01:18:31.720 Peace.
01:18:41.200 Bye.
01:18:41.840 Bye.
01:18:42.360 Bye.
01:18:43.280 Bye.
01:18:44.380 Bye.
01:18:44.480 Bye.
01:18:47.040 Bye.
01:18:48.160 Bye.
01:18:48.280 Bye.
01:18:50.860 Bye.
01:18:51.080 Bye.
01:18:51.460 Bye.
01:18:51.820 Bye.
01:18:52.160 Bye.
01:18:52.460 Bye.
01:18:52.560 Bye.
01:18:53.700 Bye.
01:18:53.900 Bye.
01:18:54.460 Bye.
01:18:54.980 Bye.
01:18:55.380 Bye.
01:18:56.660 Bye.
01:18:57.420 Bye.
01:18:58.600 Bye.
01:18:59.440 Bye.
01:18:59.940 Bye.
01:19:00.860 Thank you.