Solstice Stream
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 37 minutes
Words per Minute
159.17198
Summary
The sun was at its highest point at 4:51pm ET today, making it the longest day of the year so far! What does that have to do with the Summer Solstice? And what does it mean for the rest of the solar year?
Transcript
00:06:31.660
So I don't know if you guys know this, but the solstice, the sun was peaking at its highest
00:06:45.380
I don't know if you guys feel any energy, Henrik?
00:06:47.760
I was busy with just pulling all this together.
00:06:54.540
It wasn't last minute, but some of the things I had to do was kind of last minute.
00:06:58.180
So if I get a moment later, I was going to say, yeah, there's a moment of clarity, there's a lot going on, there's a lot going on, there's a lot going on, there's a lot going on, there's a lot going on for sure.
00:07:16.300
Anyway, so yeah, we're going to, just a laid back stream here for you guys.
00:07:19.440
We're going to take tomorrow off because we're going to celebrate midsummer, which of course is tomorrow.
00:07:23.600
So, hence, I thought, obviously, the summer solstice must be on the 21st this year, but apparently not, and I'm trying to figure.
00:07:34.760
Yeah, it's full moon, and it's midsummer, but it's not the summer solstice.
00:07:39.380
I thought they were all happening at the same day here.
00:07:42.440
Longest of the year is here, and this year, it's historic, is always the weather headline.
00:07:50.340
I'm not sure if they give, do they give us an actual good answer for this?
00:07:53.280
Maybe the 20th, the 21st, or the 22nd of solstice.
00:07:57.520
It says here, yeah, obviously, it's the highest peak.
00:08:01.460
You guys know this now, northernmost point in the sky with the suns, its longest year, least shadows, blah, blah, blah.
00:08:07.400
While the solstice does not take place at the same time each year,
00:08:11.120
it typically falls any time between June 20th to 22nd.
00:08:15.840
Is that because of some, is that the leap year thing?
00:08:19.320
It does indicate that that, you know, the, you know, how people used to see the creator, right, as a clockmaker, right,
00:08:26.800
Cronus or Saturn, right, it's perfect timing and everything.
00:08:33.560
It could point to, obviously, yes, our calendar is off, hence we have that stuff, right?
00:08:37.860
It used to be 13 months because it's 13 moons, full or new moons in a year.
00:08:46.340
I'm not sure if you guys are familiar with that, but obviously, what is it?
00:08:49.600
Was it February that was inserted and it was two that was taken away or something?
00:09:00.860
Anyway, once we get to September, then I know sept, right, that's 7th, but it's the 8th month.
00:09:09.740
And then DECA, right, DESE, 12th, December, supposed to be the 10th then, right?
00:09:16.880
So it's, sorry, I forgot October, obviously, that October for age.
00:09:31.280
You're very good at knowing the origin of words.
00:09:42.180
Our solstices are caused by the slight tilt in the Earth's axis in relation to the plane of its orbit.
00:09:51.100
A blog from the Aldern Planetarium said the tilt is about 23.5 degrees.
00:09:56.220
That's an interesting number because it is repetitive in a lot of things, too, by the way.
00:10:00.460
As a result, when the Earth, yes, we know that, the precession and all that stuff is a consequence of that.
00:10:04.880
But, yeah, why is this year's solstice so early?
00:10:08.340
According to Jacqueline, this year's solstice will be the earliest in 228 years, with the last time the solstice taking place this early being on June 20th, 1796.
00:10:22.480
The exact date and time of the solstice varies slightly year to year.
00:10:25.860
It says our calendar still remains slightly out of sync with the solar year.
00:10:38.620
Well, Sol is obviously Sol, Sun, and then Sister, to stand still.
00:10:48.400
The longest, lightest day of the year, of course, a time when the northern hemisphere is at peak fertility.
00:10:55.320
This is why it has been celebrated and honored.
00:10:57.960
There have always been holidays and mythology centered around solstices symbolizing our unbreakable, powerful connection to nature and the stars when the sun is at its peak in astrology, which I'm a fan of astrology.
00:11:11.760
It's a time of aligning with higher energy to illuminate those dark parts of ourselves to transform an alchemical thing, right?
00:11:20.940
It's a high energy point that gives us that extra kind of oomph to reach the next level of our soul's journey as above, so below, right?
00:11:28.760
That's, I think we, that's undeniable at this point.
00:11:32.700
Well, just because, like, cringe occultist elites use it doesn't mean it's wrong.
00:11:42.740
I mean, there's a reason why humans have always honored the solstices and the equinoxes and we're tied to the seasons and the clock and our moods are tied to it.
00:11:54.500
I think even our soul and our spiritual journey, you know, these transits and alignments and the stars bring out different energies and things that you can work with during that period, during that season, right?
00:12:08.120
I know we'll get into our friends down in Australia, different situation, but it's also a time to show gratitude, to be still, and we're coming out of a busy season.
00:12:16.900
I don't know if you guys felt that, but it's been, like, doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo, like, crazy, crazy period lately for so many of us.
00:12:23.480
So it's a good time to be still and be thankful for what we've accomplished and have and what we've done so far this year.
00:12:29.660
And it's when you're in that calm state that you can put out clear intentions of what we desire to manifest next.
00:12:36.380
And as they say with the laws of attraction is that you won't attract more.
00:12:40.860
You won't attract abundance unless you're thankful for what you have, that you're putting out that energy.
00:12:51.560
Can we put out the intention of mass deportation now?
00:12:56.940
Those things need to decrease for our abundance.
00:13:00.460
And so, you know, we're putting out that intention for abundance as we see in nature right now.
00:13:08.340
And I believe that they change internally as well, obviously, right?
00:13:12.660
Dark night of the soul or the illuminated time of the soul.
00:13:16.680
The sun also entered the sign of cancer today, which is your sign, Henrik.
00:13:25.360
And the focus is on family, the home, you know, a little hermit crab.
00:13:41.520
It's a time to deal with also healing childhood trauma, any family drama that may be going on.
00:13:48.020
It's an emotional time because cancer is a water sign ruled by the moon, so very moody.
00:13:53.340
But also, shout out, because it's a winter solstice to our friends down under, which is happening.
00:13:58.960
It's June 21st there, the shortest, darkest day of the year.
00:14:02.320
So you're reaching your darkest point in just a few hours.
00:14:05.320
So you'll be feeling all the opposite energies of all the solar energies that we're feeling here.
00:14:12.160
Light and dark, the duality in nature that keeps us evolving and moving into the next phase.
00:14:17.520
Now, Christians have taken this ancient practice of solstice celebration and turned it into the Christian Feast of St. John the Baptist, which is celebrated on June 24th.
00:14:29.240
And, of course, the anti-white newcomer Juneteenth is trying to hijack this time.
00:14:42.900
I had watched that, too, and I was like, wow, I haven't seen England this white in decades.
00:14:47.500
Yeah, there's a couple weirdos, but there's a lot of normal people, too.
00:14:50.220
You know, get some of the annoying LARPer, you know, Druid LARPers or whatever.
00:15:02.900
It's named after the berries that appear in the north around this time, which happens around every 20 years, they say.
00:15:08.400
And it coincides with the summer solstice and tomorrow, midsummer.
00:15:22.540
This is the one holiday counting midsummer that has a full moon coinciding with it.
00:15:29.720
It's the only one this year that has a full moon, right?
00:15:32.440
Now, many religions, of course, celebrate important days according to a lunar fixed moon calendar.
00:15:38.400
As our pre-Christian ancestors did, it's an emotional time.
00:15:42.600
So this will be tomorrow, hence all the full moon lores, right?
00:15:49.760
Maybe it's something to do with the effects of lunar gravity.
00:15:53.660
It's also a time to be internal, to dig deep, to root things out, come to new realizations,
00:16:02.620
So it's going to be a very full weekend for everybody.
00:16:07.140
So I have a little bit of the, you mentioned that duality there.
00:16:10.340
A little bit later, I'm going to get into that because kind of interesting with maybe like,
00:16:16.100
I mean, if you guys are members at least, you know we cover some of this quite often of like these interesting stone monuments,
00:16:25.720
But what there's like, I should have pulled in a map, but there's like just scattered all throughout,
00:16:30.500
specifically west, north, western, but all the way down in southern Europe as well.
00:16:38.140
All these, you know, stone circles and stone ships or shipyards, I think you actually learned to call them in English.
00:16:45.460
And many of them, if not most of them, and not all of them, are basically, you know, based on,
00:16:53.980
It's basically trying to figure out what, you know, what date is it?
00:16:58.420
And you do that in relation to figure out where the sun and the moon is, right?
00:17:02.060
Because that was tied to our, the planting season and knowing when winter is coming and all those kinds of things.
00:17:07.160
But there might be, I think it's interesting, there might be a time before that actually even happened, right?
00:17:11.360
It was before the duality, before the 23.5 degree axis tilt that happened.
00:17:16.900
And I have a little segment on that later, so we'll talk more about that then.
00:17:19.640
So I'll wait, we'll wait a little bit for that.
00:17:23.920
There's a couple of chats there if you want to take those, by the way, before we dive into some stuff there.
00:17:37.460
Wanted to send a little extra support for the holiday.
00:17:51.140
And also we have over on Odyssey, Der Terusker says,
00:17:57.380
A time to think about positive things and inspiration for the further struggle.
00:18:14.620
If you want to send a dono, if you want to support the show or have a comment or whatever,
00:18:21.460
If you're a member over there, you can leave a tip.
00:18:22.900
But to avoid Rumble for now, we got, we got, they sent us one check at least, I heard,
00:18:38.380
Anyone who's watching over there, good to see you over there as well.
00:18:40.380
Well, okay, so why don't we do this, because we have Stonehenge on screen.
00:18:51.140
Yeah, there are these environmentalists, environmentalists, and it was an invader and a trader who vandalized
00:18:57.560
Stonehenge with orange paint in the name of a stopping oil.
00:19:06.080
Stonehenge, which usually looks like this, now looks like this.
00:19:12.500
Just Stop oil activists sprayed the popular landmark with orange powdery paint.
00:19:20.040
Although several people stepped in to try to stop them, they were still successful.
00:19:31.240
I've heard it's actually very, like, it's very hard to get in there.
00:19:34.920
And there's a fence now around it, is that correct?
00:19:37.180
Well, when I just saw, I mean, many, many years ago, I've been there a couple times, and
00:19:41.340
It was a long time ago since I was there, but you were there more recently than me.
00:19:43.200
I could just walk in, but then the second time when I went there, later on, no, there
00:19:53.880
But then I saw just for the solstice celebration, or the solstice viewing, they didn't have anything
00:20:01.080
That's kind of understandable, because then they kind of open it up, right?
00:20:03.660
Then it becomes more of a ceremony, or, you know, a ritual, I guess, for some, right?
00:20:10.740
And it's like this little tranny, traitor-looking weirdo thing, and this brown guy.
00:20:18.080
...on X, writing, two people took action the day before summer solstice, demanding the
00:20:23.880
incoming government sign up to a legally binding treaty to phase out fossil fuels by 2030.
00:20:30.900
They also shared that the paint used would wash away in the rain.
00:20:35.200
Stonehenge shared several pics and video of the vandalization.
00:20:42.420
...tested by the Ancient Monuments Act, and it is a criminal...
00:20:44.840
Yeah, you can actually put them in jail, but you know they're not going to go to jail.
00:20:48.540
The British Prime Minister also tweeted, just stop oil, our disgrace.
00:20:59.980
All right, we don't have to have a history lesson here.
00:21:05.380
So, okay, so some comments were, now these days there are people kind of guarding there.
00:21:12.680
How did they get in there with those big canisters?
00:21:16.180
Hence, people are like, is this astroturfed in some kind of way?
00:21:25.240
It's further back to getting to where they are there.
00:21:34.200
No, I mean, before they just had it kind of roped off around so you couldn't go into the rocks.
00:21:41.460
I'm not sure if that's recent or something, but okay.
00:21:43.920
Remember that with the parking lot, too, by the way?
00:21:45.320
They had to build a parking lot where there was like an old remnant of another type of structure or whatever.
00:21:51.920
I think this was just like the inner core of it, too, by the way.
00:21:55.640
And then you have Avebury, other places in England and stuff like that, which is fascinating.
00:21:59.220
But anyway, speaking of the vandals here, yeah, someone said it was an invader and a trader.
00:22:04.960
I think the older, the bigger guy there was some kind of, I don't know, some mystery meat, I think.
00:22:10.180
But anyway, they said it was AstroTurf to actually make just stop oil look bad, but then make the environmental movement look bad in order to basically make sure that they no longer have the kind of leeway that they once used to have.
00:22:25.720
There's all these kinds of interesting theories about what has happened.
00:22:29.340
There's just a lot of idiot wannabe environmentalists.
00:22:34.440
But I'm saying that, like, they dropped the guard to let it happen, basically.
00:22:45.900
Again, notice they're going for cultural significant, you know, objects or monuments or stuff like that.
00:22:53.320
They would never do this in some brown or black country.
00:22:59.680
Yeah, and the ones in the art gallery, that just irritates me.
00:23:02.900
I know everyone watching now would, like, punch those people in the face and take them out.
00:23:09.240
And it was just a bunch of wussies in the art gallery.
00:23:12.180
Remember they just put up a fence so people couldn't see them doing it?
00:23:19.280
But then they get, yeah, but I'm saying that that's why it looks like the whole thing is astroturfed.
00:23:23.700
Anyway, this is not the point of the, you know, the streamer to that.
00:23:27.760
So, Fetion, I think it is, if I pronounce that correctly on Odyssey here, says,
00:23:33.460
The original Roman calendar with the 10 months started in March, Mars, which aligned with the spring equinox.
00:23:39.460
The beginning of the year was just an unassigned period.
00:23:45.560
Later, January was based on Giannis, the Roman god of doorways and transitions.
00:23:54.780
I mean, I know they had a, many ancient, you know, people will be that in Europe and other parts of the world, too.
00:24:02.740
Many of them recognized a 13 moon calendar, right?
00:24:08.780
And I think you still get, like, one day over or something like that from it, right?
00:24:13.960
I have a clip later on, you know, the Roman gods or the Greco-Roman gods.
00:24:18.860
You can apply this, of course, to maybe Norse gods and stuff like that as well.
00:24:22.980
But, like, why the planets were considered to be gods?
00:24:37.880
I wonder how they came to that conclusion or why they did away with it.
00:24:41.320
Because I think it would be other tribes, maybe, in that area around that time that would have very similar to,
00:24:46.380
at least what I'm familiar with, like, some of the Germanic calendar systems and stuff like that.
00:25:00.120
While we're on the environmental thing, let me just mention this real quick.
00:25:09.440
Somehow, they know it's going to be, like, a heat dome that's going to pop up over this area on this day.
00:25:19.300
Well, people are talking about weather modification now more than ever.
00:25:26.600
And this is how, speaking of, like, you know, natural cycles and all that kind of stuff like that,
00:25:36.200
We don't have to play it now, but, you know, it was one I didn't cover yet.
00:25:39.900
But, yeah, there's a whole, it was a CNBC piece, I think, out somewhat recently,
00:25:43.920
where they just kind of, you know, casually throw out what they now have dubbed geosolar engineering,
00:25:50.080
which is basically blotting out the sun, right, with different particles and things like that,
00:25:54.120
and how many millions are being poured into doing those kinds of experiments and stuff.
00:26:00.740
Like, who's approving you at doing this kind of shit?
00:26:05.060
How come they can just do whatever they want in our sky?
00:26:11.980
In this area, I've had, like, very interesting, like, hail storms, like, a couple of times.
00:26:19.360
Well, before that, and, like, all my friends around here were noticing, like,
00:26:23.040
oh, my God, look at all these trails in the sky.
00:26:26.260
Way more plain, you know, plain trails than usual.
00:26:29.500
And then it was this, boom, like, cloudy weather, bad, weird weather for days.
00:26:38.280
And, again, I'm not sure if that's, like, if they are, look, if they are meddling on,
00:26:42.300
Like, I don't know, at this point, the evidence of that, right?
00:26:44.880
Like, if they're supercharging the atmosphere or, like, they've found different ways of basically
00:26:48.960
kind of, you know, like, creating artificial weather systems or making sure that energy
00:26:54.980
flows into a certain area, which, of course, will then, you know, make sure that it pushes
00:27:00.120
But if that's what they do, you would obviously have wide cascading effects from this, right?
00:27:04.580
It's the same thing with cloud seeding, technically.
00:27:06.820
Oh, we'll shoot up these, you know, particles in the air, and then we take,
00:27:10.700
we basically, you take the rain from someone else, right?
00:27:14.420
So even, like, desert areas now, like in Saudi Arabia, they're experimenting with these kinds
00:27:17.540
of things, like, oh, we're just going to cloud seed now.
00:27:20.000
Well, that moisture, although it might not have precipitated over your area, will obviously
00:27:24.040
keep on moving to this country or to this region, and then it rains there.
00:27:33.540
It's just interesting, like, how do you, where do you draw the line?
00:27:36.920
Like, at what point does the country begin to complain, like, hey, like, okay, you might
00:27:40.460
be able to do this over your sky illegally or whatever, but, like, it's going to, it's
00:27:43.320
affecting us now, too, and, like, now we have droughts and shit.
00:27:46.620
Like, don't mess with this shit, you know what I mean?
00:27:48.400
But anyway, they said here there's going to be some massive heat dome over the East Coast,
00:27:56.980
Well, they claim they worship the Earth, and they, well, they claim if we don't do what
00:28:01.840
they want us to do, we're all going to die, so we, therefore, we have to hand over power
00:28:05.400
and any control that they want to them, essentially.
00:28:09.880
But anyways, I'm not sure if that started yet on the East Coast.
00:28:13.100
Maybe some, yeah, stop stealing our rain, that's right.
00:28:15.800
Maybe someone on the East Coast confirmed we've had colder temperatures.
00:28:21.160
It's like in the 80s now, and usually it's, you know, Idaho, the summers are really hot.
00:28:29.020
I was wearing a sweater two days ago, like, do I want to go outside?
00:28:34.900
And we really want the summer up here because of the long winter.
00:28:42.540
Although, we're not as cold as the Dakotas and Montana.
00:28:45.120
So keep that in mind if you want to move there, or Wyoming.
00:28:47.100
They've had warmer weather over there, it looks like.
00:28:54.780
It's funny how it's always says, the most special event ever in the sky.
00:29:01.220
And it's like, isn't this happening every other day, every week?
00:29:16.780
Soon, astronomers will be treated to an explosion in space that is so bright, it looks like a new star.
00:29:34.100
And astronomers are determined to get a glimpse of the once-in-a-lifetime event.
00:29:36.800
The star is an explosion, also known as a nova event.
00:29:43.380
It will be so bright that it can be seen with the naked eye, said NASA.
00:29:50.940
We'll create a lot of new astronomers out there.
00:29:54.400
Two stars, a red giant star, and a white dwarf orbit each other.
00:29:58.900
The giant will move behind the dwarf and cause an explosion of material, which will bring a, quote, new star to the night sky.
00:30:17.100
It's only from, okay, so, okay, it's always, okay, I figured it out as I'm talking here, right?
00:30:25.520
It's just the fact that it now lines up with us.
00:30:34.740
No, I'm saying specifically because there's two tugging on each other, right?
00:30:37.760
But I'm saying when it lines up with us, here's like these two stars when they line up, and the Earth is like here.
00:30:42.520
Then we can see it because those particles is directed our way.
00:30:45.400
I'm just saying, why is it only happening every 80 years, but it's happening all the time?
00:30:49.300
It's just that we see it every, it's just the framing.
00:30:50.920
It's still going to be faint, though, they say.
00:30:54.260
Yeah, I mean, it's not going to be an incredible thing or whatever.
00:30:56.380
It's going to be like, oh, what is, I don't, you know, what is that?
00:31:13.400
Stars behave similar in the way, blah, blah, blah.
00:31:15.940
If the pattern continues, some researchers say the NOVA event could occur by September
00:31:34.900
And then I guess we could dive into the little segment here.
00:31:37.260
Because it's, you know, yeah, it talks about the duality and stuff like that.
00:31:39.980
So, I'm going to go old school red eyes here, right?
00:31:45.600
Well, you know, there's some clips we could play here because it's kind of interesting.
00:31:51.240
And as I said, like, why did they, you know, why did they build these things?
00:31:57.020
Why did they do them in the way that they did them, right?
00:31:59.580
This is some drone footage here of all the standartists in southern Sweden.
00:32:19.760
He mapped the different, you know, equinoxes, the solstices, winter, summer solstices,
00:32:27.500
And, like, basically came up with this whole calendrical system that, like, yeah,
00:32:31.140
that's most likely this is the reason why they placed the stones where they placed them
00:32:40.560
But you could always pause and zoom in if you're interested in this.
00:32:42.380
I've shown and talked about this in multiple Western Warrior shows as well, by the way,
00:32:48.740
But it's kind of interesting how it aligns, right?
00:32:51.520
And so you have that kind of theory, right, of, like, something happened,
00:32:55.800
something dramatic happened where, basically, ancient man had to try to figure out where
00:33:01.860
the hell they were in relation to these new cosmic, essentially, circumstances.
00:33:08.600
Now, the Egyptians, right, they have this term.
00:33:20.000
And it's basically, like, there are some descriptions of it in, like, in terms of,
00:33:26.280
like, I mean, they talk about it at a time when, like, the gods walk the earth and whatever.
00:33:31.920
They have Zep-Tepi and some of these earliest, you know, buildings and constructions and stuff
00:33:39.380
A hill, a mound, or, like, a, what did the Electric Universe guys call it?
00:33:44.440
They call it the Cosmic Mountain or something like that.
00:33:47.920
I think they call it the Cosmic Mountain, but this was, like, recurring kind of mythological
00:33:52.620
themes in most early petroglyphs and stuff like that.
00:33:56.440
Like, they have done, I'll play a clip with them later because it's fascinating.
00:34:02.240
But anyway, just some B-roll footage here to show.
00:34:04.760
But anyway, they talk about Zep-Tepi, the first time, which was like a kind of a, you
00:34:10.300
You didn't have the variability of seasons the way that we have it now.
00:34:31.500
Can you imagine how few people there were back on the earth at that point?
00:34:34.620
I mean, you've seen the charts, right, of the growth spurts of, like, mankind, right?
00:34:40.380
It's just, like, millions and, I mean, billions and billions of people now.
00:34:44.880
Like, back then, I'm not sure if we fully know exactly how many people there were at
00:34:51.580
But they still do incredible shit, like building these, you know, pyramids.
00:35:03.480
Because everywhere I go and look, I'm like, damn, it's crowded everywhere.
00:35:08.120
So, I mean, you have, you know, all kinds of theories about this, right?
00:35:13.080
I've heard theories about how the pyramids were basically like a, what do you call it?
00:35:21.720
And I guess this doesn't make sense until I play a Lloyd Pye clip, right?
00:35:25.620
Because he talks about this planetary collision.
00:35:32.660
I have been on the pyramids of Giza, by the way, and inside.
00:35:38.760
Back then, you could just pay people off and go down into all the, like, chambers and
00:35:44.180
I even rode a camel, Henrik, and it took off on me.
00:35:55.440
The kids were just, yeah, they were just laughing.
00:36:00.980
Yeah, so anyway, many of them are, you know, yeah, calendrical systems.
00:36:03.840
It's obviously, you know, for farming purposes and that.
00:36:11.060
If those circumstances always would have been by the time we discovered farming or whenever
00:36:16.560
it was introduced, whatever your theories are about that, that would kind of be just kind
00:36:24.780
But what it seems to suggest is that there was a point of where this Zep Tepe, the first
00:36:30.240
of time, the golden age, when things were perpetually nice, right?
00:36:35.340
You didn't have the equinox wobble, the 23.5 degree axis tilt and all that kind of stuff.
00:36:41.640
Now, they claim this took place, you know, billions and billions of years ago.
00:36:51.100
Because they always have these, like, you know, gargantuous numbers they put on everything
00:36:55.680
Millions and billions of years this happened or whatever.
00:36:57.960
But then you, like, go into the mythological record.
00:36:59.940
And unless it's some, like, kind of almost genetic memory or it's a, again, maybe like an
00:37:08.000
instinctual thing that actually had been passed on or it was so traumatic and so catastrophic
00:37:12.320
that we today feel like it was, this just happened, you know, kind of thing.
00:37:20.240
But what if there are the possibilities that it actually did happen closer to when we still
00:37:24.640
Maybe we had somewhat of a different mindset then.
00:37:28.420
Another thing we covered, which is in the archives.
00:37:33.680
Which is kind of goes back to the Egyptian thing.
00:37:35.220
Like, how do they manage to build some of these things?
00:37:39.780
And the analogy you can make, essentially, is that as, you know, time has gone on, we've
00:37:45.200
developed more and more of an, like, an individualistic type of self-awareness and consciousness.
00:37:49.900
But if you go further back into the fog of, you know, pre-history of mankind, we had,
00:37:58.020
Like, it was just like a, more like an ant, an ant colony or something.
00:38:04.420
Like, individual, you're helping out and you're still there as an individual.
00:38:07.360
But there's just like a higher collective, you know, unconscious or subconscious that's
00:38:14.280
You still might have a king, like in Egypt, right?
00:38:16.880
Same way they have a queen or whatever in an ant form, but that gives the directives
00:38:21.240
But in order to, like, how they pulled it off, like, you can't pick out an ant and just
00:38:25.900
like, kind of try to pick it apart and figure out how does it know how to build these things.
00:38:31.020
Like, I'm not saying, I'm not saying we're not capable of doing those things, but it
00:38:37.400
I think somewhere deep down it's there because then you come into even more modern time and
00:38:43.080
it's like the age of discovery and invention and exploration and some of the amazing things
00:38:57.640
But anyway, so there was a story there on New York Times, as I showed you, which is
00:39:03.580
Because they kind of, there's been more and more recognized.
00:39:06.120
I mean, in the past, it was crazy people like, you know, Velikovsky or, yeah, even the Electric
00:39:13.800
They talked about, you know, worlds in collision.
00:39:17.640
There is this, I know there's a contentious point, especially with, like, Zachariah Sitchin
00:39:22.320
and the Sumerian Nibiru kind of records and, like...
00:39:26.920
And I think he, didn't he work in, like, Rockefeller Plaza or something like that?
00:39:31.220
Like, he was hired by the Rockefeller, he had offices there or something.
00:39:37.100
And I also grant that there's, like, this kind of a desire to kind of create a new mythology,
00:39:47.840
There's enough correlation in other cultures, which is just outside of the Mesopotamian, Sumerian
00:39:54.600
Yeah, but I'm saying, like, you have parallels of those kinds of things in Asia, you have
00:39:59.720
it in Northern Europe, you have it in parts of Mesoamerica, you know, kind of very similar
00:40:04.580
And if you look at, again, going back to that, the petroglyphs, the symbols, essentially,
00:40:08.800
that early man created, they seem to have, there's a concurrent, right?
00:40:12.060
There's like a sign that they all saw or experienced the same thing, right?
00:40:19.200
Unless, of course, again, diffusion, you know, I'm not going to break down the theory here
00:40:23.360
right away, but I'm saying there's different answers for these kinds of things, right?
00:40:26.860
But what it looks like is that, in some cases, these things seem to kind of have popped up
00:40:34.400
Which is kind of, how the hell did that happen?
00:40:36.520
But anyway, so this is about the planetary collision, right?
00:40:39.940
So New York Times just had this, and this is why I wanted to cover some of this, too,
00:40:44.140
A big whack that made the moon, yeah, that made the moon may have also created continents
00:40:50.960
Computer simulations suggest that a collision with another planetary object early in Earth's
00:40:56.320
history may have provided the heat to set off plate tectonics.
00:41:00.400
And again, this is like, you know, 4.5 billion years ago, whatever.
00:41:04.780
But again, there's like these recent records of like some cultures, they call it the Tiamat,
00:41:10.240
Here they call it Theia, which is kind of similar or close enough in a way to Tiamat,
00:41:21.360
Of course, the Sitchin stuff then, whatever your thoughts on that is, it's, you know, Nibiru,
00:41:30.480
Planetary, you know, an incoming body, essentially, that collided with ours, or a moon that collided
00:41:38.800
And if you look at, you know, kind of the composition of, basically, we're one of the
00:41:42.620
only planets, as far as we know, that have a moon that's the size that it is, right?
00:41:47.680
Comparatively, most moons on other planetary systems that we found are much, much smaller.
00:41:53.480
And then like, come on, like, what is the odds of this aspect that like, if the moon goes
00:41:59.160
right between us and the sun, it perfectly lines out, you know, so that it cancels it?
00:42:13.720
It's a very interesting book, but I forget the author's name now, where they cover some
00:42:19.820
You know, the measurements, the mathematics of this, the geometry, and it's like, this is,
00:42:26.120
But it's interesting then, with that body, that something seemed to have come in, which
00:42:31.760
I think even in the, in one of the mythological records, there's talk about the fact that Tiamat
00:42:38.380
Also kind of indicative of this thing, of the Septepi, the first time, where basically it
00:42:52.260
Here we go with that kind of mythology weaved into this as well.
00:42:54.540
It was a perfect paradise, and then catastrophe, right?
00:43:01.720
And I'm not saying it's what they point to here, but what if an event like this is much
00:43:06.720
more recent in human, you know, memory than what they say, as opposed to 4.5 billion years?
00:43:16.380
Yeah, I mean, they point to basically the 13,000-year cycle, essentially, right?
00:43:21.780
There seems to be an event then, therefore, on 10,500, 11,000 BC, something like that,
00:43:28.000
So I think there's like, you know, 4.5 billion years, 200 million years ago.
00:43:35.180
I can't prove that, but could there have been several?
00:43:41.760
The collision with the Theia might have done more than that.
00:43:45.580
According to a study published last month in the journal Geophysics Research Letters,
00:43:49.540
the impact may have given rise to something else, plate tectonics, the engine that drives
00:43:53.220
the motion of Earth's giant continental and oceanic plates and causes earthquakes, volcanic
00:43:58.520
eruptions, and eventually remaking our planet's surface about 200 million years ago.
00:44:07.400
But, you know, just as an introduction to this, it's like, okay, they're starting to
00:44:11.040
recognize that like planetary collision is a thing.
00:44:14.180
Where do these, where do these bodies come from then?
00:44:20.320
Let's play that Lloyd Pye clip in a few minutes.
00:44:44.320
So again, he's a, you know, he's a Sitchin guy or whatever, but it's still interesting.
00:44:47.900
We'll give him a, we'll give him a few minutes here and listen to that.
00:44:51.880
Because what I'm saying, it's, it's always interesting when like, again, these crazy, crazy
00:44:57.720
alternative researchers dig into shit and they look at maybe mythology and maybe they go
00:45:02.940
to records by Arkadians, Assyrians, Babylonians, maybe they go to other records.
00:45:07.800
No, I know, but I'm saying, you know, because they're like, oh, well, we don't have any
00:45:11.520
archaeological evidence for this, blah, blah, blah.
00:45:13.800
And then later, of course, they're all, oh, look at that.
00:45:15.580
Oh, we might have had a huge planetary collision, which created our moon and stuff.
00:45:21.040
Well, we had people allegedly around at that time that say that, yeah, that did, that did
00:45:26.200
Anyway, let's listen a little bit to this here.
00:45:30.840
You produce water by being a cooling planet with lava spewing up the steam and stuff like
00:45:47.180
It's literally like remnants of, like, a broken up, destroyed planet, right?
00:45:52.340
Even the spatial, like, in relation to their size, right?
00:45:58.900
There's like a distribution of the planets that kind of, maybe not makes sense, but they're
00:46:07.780
But like where the asteroid belt is, it's clear, like, here's a void.
00:46:11.260
It's something missing here, you know, kind of thing, clearly.
00:46:14.700
Now, this explains it, I think, plausibly well.
00:46:17.820
Nothing that they will throw at you to explain comets will do it.
00:46:21.120
All right, number two, the other great mystery, the asteroid belt.
00:46:25.300
What they say is that the inner viscous magma inside Tiamat in collision was strung out the
00:46:32.340
Again, Tiamat is that other planet we talked about, right?
00:46:34.400
The planet, the guts were ripped out and strung out and broke into little pieces.
00:46:43.940
And that's a fairly plausible explanation for it.
00:46:46.460
Again, this doesn't make sense because, as you heard, the exploded planet theory,
00:46:50.760
the problem is when a planet explodes, it ought to just go, boom, everywhere.
00:47:05.280
Pluto is a problem because it's, as you've all been hearing lately, they're trying to downgrade it.
00:47:20.860
What they say is that Nibiru, as it swung around, it pulled Pluto away from Saturn, its original home,
00:47:30.760
Now, all astronomers know Pluto is not a natural planet.
00:47:33.920
It got, it started life as a moon of an inner planet.
00:47:38.740
But they have no idea how it could have gotten moved out to where it is.
00:47:50.000
Well, first of all, let's establish that Earth is a remnant of this.
00:47:53.100
What happens is Nibiru's moon bangs into the remnant of Tiamat and, like pool balls hitting,
00:47:59.000
knocks it inside the orbit of Mars and it reestablishes there and becomes the Earth, the remnant of Tiamat.
00:48:10.080
Life appears, despite what you're told about the lightning bolt into the primordial soup and all that.
00:48:17.720
This is a fascinating part, actually, by Loid's work, right, of, like, anamorphic bacteria.
00:48:22.380
Like, you need something that does not require oxygen to kickstart a process which releases carbon dioxide,
00:48:31.240
which is what plants can feed on, which then goes on to produce the oxygen that you need to create an atmosphere and all.
00:48:38.600
Like, the chances that this has just happened by, all these things happened by accident, it's complete bullshit.
00:48:45.800
But I want to just squeeze this in there, too, that, again, the significance, then, not only, of course, of the summer solstice,
00:48:53.320
but any date, any recognizable shift in the planetary bodies is important because if you just have had a catastrophic period,
00:49:06.920
for one, you are terrified it will happen again, right?
00:49:12.740
The second, of course, is that this now almost becomes, like, your, I'm not going to say religion.
00:49:17.400
It's not that you worship these things, but it's a veneration, a respect for it, right?
00:49:24.420
There's all these interesting kind of mythological, you know, deities and stuff like that,
00:49:29.840
which is, like, you know, a terrifying, you know, monster or, like, you know, dragons in the sky.
00:49:36.060
Like, there's all these things, right, that, like, kind of suggest that, like, you had a catastrophe so vast and so monumental
00:49:42.260
that it created, like, such a huge impact on our psyche, maybe even collectively then.
00:49:47.420
And so now they're mapping and they're tracking and they're trying to figure it out.
00:49:50.440
And the secondary objective or whatever is, of course, it's, yes, if you want to plant stuff, if you're a farmer,
00:49:56.260
you've got to figure out when to do those things, right?
00:50:00.500
Yeah, but you're just trying to kind of, again, it's like you're, it's a navigation thing.
00:50:05.160
We are on the Earth, like, what's the, what do they call it, Starship Earth?
00:50:09.280
But, you know, regardless, that's kind of what it is, right?
00:50:11.880
We're here, we're like, we're navigating of sorts.
00:50:14.300
We're trying to figure out where we are in relation to the planets, the sun, the moon, you know,
00:50:20.260
the moon pools on the tides and all that kind of stuff.
00:50:23.080
So all these new circumstances potentially showed up after this collision,
00:50:27.120
which is deep in our, you know, kind of collective unconscious.
00:50:29.740
And so we have to figure out the new rules of the game, essentially,
00:50:35.380
and figure out where we are in relation to things.
00:50:37.280
So for me, anyway, I think that kind of, it made sense that these became,
00:50:41.740
because otherwise it's like, well, why is this so important?
00:50:44.760
Like, why did these become such important ceremonies and rituals?
00:50:48.760
And again, the foundation for, you know, native European spirituality, for example,
00:50:58.740
It's kind of like that idea, what the summer solstice wouldn't be that important if it
00:51:06.460
It becomes important because we go through long, hard winters, you know, and then we're
00:51:10.900
And again, you could argue then the further up north you go, the more important it becomes.
00:51:14.860
So that's why many of those traditions of like, you know, Yule and midsummer, winter solstice,
00:51:22.580
It's not that other cultures didn't recognize this or figure this out.
00:51:29.100
Anyway, we can do a few more minutes of pie here.
00:51:30.940
And then I'm going to play that Electric Universe clip too, because it's fascinating.
00:51:39.040
Because again, I think about some of the earliest, and they go through that in the Electric Universe,
00:51:42.340
those guys, the Thunderbolts guys, of like, you know, the solar cross, the swastika, these
00:51:49.680
kind of like explosive star patterns, the concentric circles, like all those earliest, earliest
00:51:54.800
petroglyphs that we can find is reminiscent of, again, a cosmic event, essentially.
00:52:02.200
Like, we didn't maybe innately have these symbolism baked in, but it was something that became
00:52:06.780
part of a consciousness because ancient man actually witnessed these things in the sky,
00:52:19.080
People that don't want to know the truth and to tell kids in school.
00:52:23.400
We know very well that the first forms of life to appear on Earth appear suddenly.
00:52:28.640
They're very sophisticated bacteria, prokaryotic bacteria, and there's not one, there's two
00:52:34.920
kinds, and they appear at around four billion years ago.
00:52:38.360
Suddenly, overnight, straddle without, straddle with, two kinds of sophisticated bacteria relative
00:52:43.800
to what that first living form would have been.
00:52:46.200
If I had done the first part of my show, you would see all that, okay?
00:52:49.640
You can get the tape or let, get one tape and put it in a room and let anybody see it if
00:52:54.740
But anyway, the point is, life is a great mystery.
00:52:58.340
How it would suddenly appear four billion years ago, here you go.
00:53:01.920
It says in the tablets, in the collision between Nibiru and Tiamat, in the mingling of their
00:53:18.220
Perfect explanation for the sudden appearance of two sophisticated life forms on the remnant.
00:53:23.200
Now, the remnant now is over here with its moon, Kingu, and has gone over, and now we're
00:53:28.580
looking at two major differences in Earth and all other astral bodies out there.
00:53:34.800
Earth is missing a huge portion of its crust, and it has plate tectonics.
00:53:40.140
I remember that they did a, what was it, a true, let me see if I can find that real quick,
00:53:53.960
I know that they did a, like a scan, find a good image of this.
00:54:01.120
Let me show, let me show this one here real quick.
00:54:07.460
There's like, again, like what almost looks like a, kind of a, if you will, a chunk, right?
00:54:14.960
Like it's not, you know, perfectly round kind of thing, which then people, or some researchers,
00:54:22.860
Either that became our moon, or something else took that away, or whatever.
00:54:35.260
Because in the vacuum, any liquid in a vacuum, what does it do?
00:54:41.740
It makes the smallest, tightest ball it can make.
00:54:50.040
Now, that is what all the other astral bodies have done.
00:55:02.100
In the collision, the backside of Tiamat is cracked.
00:55:06.300
So he's confirming now what they're talking about here, right?
00:55:10.600
Again, perfect time, no volcanoes, no earthquakes, no catastrophe, no big problems, essentially.
00:55:16.920
Perfect paradise, and then all of a sudden whack, you know, or whatever.
00:55:23.700
You can only have it being, you know, for a time it was good, right?
00:55:27.800
You can only have that for such a long period, and then eventually it kind of becomes boring.
00:55:35.640
You introduce drama, you know, catastrophe, right?
00:55:38.900
Because that's what takes the character forward, right?
00:55:42.460
I'm not saying we're living in a Hollywood movie.
00:55:45.240
I'm just saying that those movies are based off of real mythological progresses of both how we live our lives individually, but also how maybe the larger systems we're part of also evolves forward.
00:55:58.160
Or like, I mean, again, because that doesn't mean, oh, that's therefore this is evil and that was good.
00:56:03.480
And it's not about that either, obviously, kind of thing of like breaking it up like that.
00:56:06.280
It's just saying now we have completely new circumstances.
00:56:11.940
I love those new circumstances, even if they were around before or if they were newly created because of something like this.
00:56:18.260
Because, you know, winter has probably evolved us in a way that perpetual summer never would have done, for example, right?
00:56:25.760
That the pressures, the challenges are necessary for us to keep moving forward and evolving.
00:56:37.580
Yeah, and that's really the whole premise of astrology as well, why they're keeping track of all of that too and how we relate to it.
00:56:44.440
Can you imagine, like, we have winter, spring, you know, summer, fall.
00:56:52.540
I know it's so deeply, it's like imagine a new color or a new taste or, you know, something like a new smell.
00:57:05.160
It probably does probably exist, those new things or whatever.
00:57:15.140
And then here's to making Europe European again and a great re-migration.
00:57:19.340
Thank you guys so much for all your support on entropy.
00:57:28.280
There's definitely something positive and monumental in the air for our people.
00:57:48.380
What do you guys think about Scorpio and Aries and summer solstice and the year in general?
00:57:52.360
I don't, I'm not familiar with Scorpio and Aries and summer solstice.
00:57:57.900
Just put it in the regular chat and we can read it there if you have more or send a link
00:58:04.440
No, not right now because we're entering into this season of Cancer and there's a full moon
00:58:15.420
The original Roman calendar with 10 months started in March, Mars, was aligned with the
00:58:41.180
Kitty Roka Chill Hop says, duality is a pyramid scam and the victims are every living creature.
00:58:55.500
Because then they don't show up on the back end.
00:59:07.140
If you guys want to find this out or check more of this.
00:59:12.160
I think this one is in Everything You Know Is Wrong, which is Lloyd Pye's wonderful
00:59:22.120
But if you just want to watch the rest of this part, this was still on YouTube.
00:59:25.920
I'm not sure if all of them are up there or not.
00:59:27.440
Tiamat Dies, Earth is Born is a title for that if you want to check that out.
00:59:33.000
And there's, yes, there's plenty of, you know, contention and controversy regarding translations.
00:59:44.220
You look and you argue and you try to correlate info or whatever.
01:00:00.120
And then, of course, oh my gosh, what's the main guy?
01:00:11.600
And that was when we started going down the JQ race rabbit holes and we showed up at this conference.
01:00:19.540
People like, oh my God, so awesome you're getting into this.
01:00:21.940
And other people like, just disgusted that Henrik Palmgren is talking about these things now.
01:00:35.720
Again, you know, some of them were more, you know, kind of shitly be on stuff or whatever.
01:00:40.920
And some of them were like, I've heard, had people like from these kinds of circles or whatever, even like UFO topics and stuff.
01:00:49.820
Or like, you know, you're right for talking about this.
01:00:54.940
But they're staying quiet, you know, which is fine.
01:00:56.800
You stay in your wheelhouse or whatever, you know what I mean?
01:00:58.760
I just, we did a pivot away from topics like this and like more urgent stuff.
01:01:06.380
It's not going to be discussed that much more, okay?
01:01:08.880
Anyway, yeah, so let me play this here, a few minutes of this.
01:01:14.880
They have a ton of good, really good, full-length, like, documentaries on their YouTube channel.
01:01:21.260
And it's a great kind of a, you know, just take yourself away a little bit, you know, when you're like tired of like hearing about like, you know, white replacement or something.
01:01:32.560
And again, it's necessary to talk about all those things.
01:01:36.840
But it's also good to just, you know, take breaks and think about something else.
01:01:54.140
So regular and predictable, one might think they've moved like this forever.
01:01:58.600
What a contrast to things claimed by the first astronomers of ancient Mesopotamia and numerous cultures that followed.
01:02:19.740
They watched planetary motions with a compulsive fear.
01:02:25.800
Why would diligent astronomers insist that the planets were the towering gods of a prior time?
01:02:33.940
Planets ruled the destiny of kings and kingdoms, and they were the agents of doomsday, the end of the world.
01:02:44.920
Planets ruled the destiny of kings and kingdoms, and they were the agents of doomsday, the end of the world.
01:02:48.880
What was it about planets that inspired such reverence and fear?
01:03:00.460
The Babylonian priest astronomer, Barossus, said that planets moving on different courses than today produced world catastrophe.
01:03:09.960
In Greek, Roman, and Gnostic thought, this was ekparosis, a catastrophic meeting of the planets.
01:03:21.320
But the memory of planetary disorder is echoed by numerous ancient sources.
01:03:30.100
Plato expressed it, and so did Zoroastrian texts.
01:03:34.500
The Hindu Mahabharata, the Hindu Mahabharata, Taoist teachings, and the Chinese bamboo books.
01:03:48.500
Far from the spotlight today, researchers are exploring these questions of planetary history.
01:03:55.900
They bring wide-ranging backgrounds from comparative mythology to planetary science and plasma physics.
01:04:04.500
All are asking if the solar system may have been unstable in the past.
01:04:20.020
Allow this question to be asked, and the doors open to a new understanding of the past.
01:04:59.500
When we hear the word civilization, most of us think of new technology,
01:05:11.520
economic advances, rapid communication, and expansive metropolitan vistas.
01:05:18.520
But earlier civilizations are much different, and they pose a mystery yet to be resolved.
01:05:26.500
Early civilizations were obsessed with the past.
01:05:30.520
All looked back to extraordinary events, to an age of gods and wonders.
01:05:36.520
All insisted that powerful gods ruled for a time, then went away.
01:05:48.520
Monumental cultures arose, and the monuments themselves meant much more than a display of technical skill.
01:05:55.500
A monument commemorates something collectively remembered.
01:06:00.520
It was obsessive acts of remembering that shaped the early civilizations,
01:06:05.520
from the cities of Egypt stretched along the Nile,
01:06:08.520
to those of the fertile crescent of Mesopotamia,
01:06:16.500
And no less so in the Americas, from the early predecessors of the Aztecs and the Maya,
01:06:27.500
All reveal a desperate urge to recover something lost.
01:06:42.520
Egyptian priests called this lost epoch the Age of the Primeval Gods.
01:06:47.500
It began with the rule of an earlier sun god, Atum, who later departed.
01:06:57.500
Cuneiform texts speak of the god An, who ruled with terrifying splendor, then fled the scene.
01:07:11.520
but he too was replaced by another power, the towering Zeus.
01:07:17.500
Sages of India likewise remembered the rule of Brahma,
01:07:21.520
though the god progressively faded into the background.
01:08:15.460
as the cultures remembered the lives of the gods.
01:08:40.460
The celebrants reenacted critical turns in the lives of the gods themselves.
01:09:00.460
there would be no cultural content left in the early civilizations.
01:09:16.460
And why did the early astronomers declare that the most powerful gods were planets?
01:09:24.460
The mythic accounts are punctuated by terror and cosmic violence.
01:09:31.460
Urgent prayers and hymns reenacted the deaths or ordeals of great gods,
01:09:36.460
recounting how one world-age passed violently into another.
01:10:15.460
At least some of the artistic and mythological themes will be familiar to you.
01:10:21.480
The myth of paradise, or the golden age, for example.
01:10:25.980
A perfect time before a descent into cosmic disaster.
01:10:36.960
An exemplary sun, revered as the king of the world, ruling before the present sun.
01:10:45.460
A mother goddess, a symbol of beauty and of life.
01:10:52.460
A great warrior or hero, born from the womb of that very goddess, to rescue the world from monsters that are also unexplained.
01:11:14.200
It's more likely to arise, as they say, from catastrophe versus, what, everyday normal, stable living.
01:11:20.420
You don't have as much of a need to try and explain, like, what is happening and what has gone wrong and where do we go from here?
01:11:27.280
And as he says, too, the gods could have been symbolic of one age passing on to another.
01:11:33.240
And then the monsters as being the unexplained, the unconscious.
01:11:36.960
It gets into more Carl Jung kind of territory as well.
01:11:40.960
Yeah, but here's some of their stuff on petroglyphs.
01:11:46.820
Some of the early ones, like, why did they depict them the same?
01:11:50.680
And then they have the plasma theory that tie into it.
01:11:54.140
I've always been fascinated with it and their particular theories of, like, replication, because plasma is scalable, right?
01:12:01.120
So you can have it, no matter how big it was seen in the sky, you can replicate that as literally in, like, a vacuum tube, you know, kind of.
01:12:09.160
And you would see the same patterns and shapes, which is related to those, you know, the primordial man, the early, you know, these stick figures on petroglyphs and stuff like that.
01:12:19.360
And again, this deeper about the symbols themselves, right, the concentric rings, the circles, the sun cross, even the swastika is very, very early, especially in Europe.
01:12:33.960
Did they see the same thing, like the wheel in the sky, like all these things?
01:12:39.640
Yeah, it's the idea, too, that they say that changes in the sky have been happening.
01:12:44.020
It's not been the same sky even the last 5,000 years, I think he says, right?
01:12:51.720
I mean, anything, it could change at any point.
01:12:58.900
You could do magnetic flips, right, pole reversals.
01:13:04.200
Or yes, another planetary body or comet or whatever comes in and waxes again and it's all over.
01:13:11.200
Or some new type of life will, you know, we don't know.
01:13:16.200
But looking at the records, this seems to have been more commonplace than we thought.
01:13:20.460
And again, personally, I think it took place much, much, much, you know, not as far back as we think, basically.
01:13:37.460
But if you go to videos and just do popular, you get some of their documentaries right at the top.
01:13:40.980
Symbols of an Alien Sky, that's the one we started watching now.
01:13:43.940
Thunderbolts of the Gods, that one is really good.
01:13:46.480
You have Symbols of an Alien Sky, Episode 2, follow up to that, right?
01:13:50.900
Remembering the End of the World, that's another one they got.
01:13:59.700
Very, like, all-encompassing, taking a lot of different sciences into account and stuff like that.
01:14:05.200
Science and mythology, that's what I really appreciate about it.
01:14:07.460
Yeah, collective unconscious, mythology, symbolism.
01:14:11.240
But then at the same time, trying to explain certain phenomena, which obviously, I mean,
01:14:14.780
I think that the idea of, like, you know, why people are, like, you know, looking to fly at Earth and things like this is still,
01:14:20.840
is based on that drive that, like, well, there are certain things that kind of doesn't make sense here.
01:14:27.280
Well, Electric Universe is another one to throw into that mix, right?
01:14:32.760
This would explain, you know, at least if you ask me, a lot more of the things that they now just claim is, like,
01:14:38.960
well, that's a, you know, that's a strong force and weak force.
01:14:45.280
Like, you know, all these, you know, fundamental questions that have yet not to be answered.
01:14:50.900
Or, like, you know, well, that's just dark matter.
01:14:53.840
Or, you know, whatever the hell they throw out.
01:15:06.360
For happy solstice and a prosperity into the future.
01:15:28.980
Now, it's framed on Daily Mail, of course, that it's like an airport project, you know,
01:15:35.220
But again, that's an interesting point because sometimes they literally just pave over old
01:15:43.360
I think there was, following these revelations, there was some protests, but this is on Crete,
01:15:50.200
Mysterious 4,000-year-old runestone building on Crete Hilltop threatens to disrupt the island's
01:15:57.120
Again, it's framed like, what about my airport?
01:16:01.580
So they can bring in some more invaders, you know, and just ship them in right on top of
01:16:08.980
And, you know, again, there's that symbol again, right?
01:16:16.480
It looks like there's cutoff points in there, to be honest.
01:16:23.380
A mysterious 4,000-year-old hilltop structure on the Greek island of Crete has threatened
01:16:28.400
to disrupt plans for a major new airport project on the island, resembling a huge car wheel
01:16:33.940
The ruins of the labyrinthine 19,000-square-foot building came to light during a recent dig by
01:16:45.620
Experts believe the unique and extremely interesting find was built by Crete's ancient Minoan civilization,
01:16:51.020
famous for his sumptuous palaces, flamboyant art, and enigmatic writing system.
01:17:02.980
Is it Linear B that they've managed to decode, but not Linear A?
01:17:05.840
Which is, like, with all they know, it's absolutely fascinating.
01:17:09.460
And you think that there'd be enough cross kind of communication at that point during the
01:17:14.740
Bronze Age, where there would be, like, a kind of a Rosetta Stone for Linear A.
01:17:19.200
Again, if I'm correct, if it's A or B, that they would be able to decipher it, but yet
01:17:27.720
Decider is earmarked for radar station to serve a new airport under construction near the town
01:17:34.500
I mean, that's where the whole myth of Europa comes from, right?
01:17:53.180
Set to open in 2027, it's projected to replace Greece's second biggest airport at Heraklion.
01:17:59.520
Designed to handle up to 18 million travelers annually.
01:18:02.500
It's the other thing with the tourism, just racket now and stuff.
01:18:12.300
But anyway, so there were some protests about that, which is good.
01:18:17.040
They've pledged that the find would be preserved while a different location would be sought
01:18:24.020
We all understand the value and importance of cultural heritage, as well as the growth
01:18:29.000
It's that it's possible to go ahead with the airport while granting the antiquities to
01:18:32.060
protect, they protection, the protection, sorry, they merit.
01:18:36.460
Ringed by eight steeped stone walls more than five feet high, the inner structure was split
01:18:41.340
into smaller interconnecting spaces and may have allowed a shallow conical, conical, sorry, roof.
01:18:48.720
The ministry statement said it did not appear to have been a dwelling, so it's probably
01:18:55.240
And the finds from the inside, it included a large quantity of animal bones.
01:19:00.200
It may have been periodically used for possible ritual ceremonies involving consumption of food,
01:19:05.920
wine, and perhaps offerings, the statement said.
01:19:09.040
Anyway, you can go and read more about that yourself.
01:19:11.340
But I want to show that map because I mentioned it earlier.
01:19:17.720
Here's the some of these basically megaliths, right?
01:19:22.040
Scattered all throughout the European continent.
01:19:26.360
Dolmen in red, extended dolmen as a what is a blue diamond, a green pyramid is passage graves,
01:19:39.980
But as you can see, scattered all throughout, and again, it's a long, for the most part,
01:19:47.300
And we're talking thousands and thousands of years ago.
01:19:51.140
But is this related to, are these calendrical systems an indication of a cataclysm and then
01:20:01.560
And yes, then we go into the myths of Atlantis and stuff like that, right?
01:20:06.420
Basically, you have a diffusion of something, a remnant coming from the West and settling on the most Western parts all over Europe,
01:20:17.940
And one of the first things they seem to do is to build all these calendar systems and, you know, raising stones and stuff like that.
01:20:50.180
But, again, I've talked about, you know, because I know that familiar and I've visited those places, those in Sweden.
01:20:55.120
But, like, there's passage graves there and they are estimated to be, you know, four.
01:21:07.860
They're, like, equivalent of pyramid structures and stuff.
01:21:10.280
So you have all these, at that point, presumably, cultures, peoples that are separated, but they're doing vast monumental stone structures and stuff.
01:21:19.620
And, again, one of the reasons, maybe under these new circumstances that we talked about, about winter and, you know, again, you can type ice ages and stuff like that.
01:21:28.980
They tell, oh, this is thousands and thousands and thousands of years ago.
01:21:35.600
What if the, you know, Norse saga is about a Fimbul winter is actually the ice age as we know it, right?
01:21:42.580
You actually had a, you know, severe winter, essentially.
01:21:44.880
But, anyway, you have them popping up roughly around the same time.
01:21:50.620
But in many of these other parts, the more south you go, again, you're not, then you're not plagued, if you will, or challenged by spending most of your summer preparing for winter, right?
01:22:02.120
So that's why you see more elaborate, usually, you know, stone constructions in more southern portions and stuff like that.
01:22:08.340
And it's first when some of those tribes actually migrate further south.
01:22:21.220
They'll just sit around and pick a coconut, you know, every now and then.
01:22:32.220
It's a beautiful, sunny, 78-degree day here in Bainbridge Island.
01:22:43.560
So looking forward to our little get-together tomorrow.
01:22:45.940
Went for the lakes to heat up a little bit, right?
01:22:51.120
Yeah, I dipped in the river a little bit yesterday.
01:22:56.320
I mean, it's always going to be cold, even, you know, deep into summer.
01:22:59.580
But, Veritas 6464, happy winter solstice to you, if you missed that earlier.
01:23:21.760
We have some other new stuff, but let's not ruin it with, like.
01:23:28.820
The Fitness to Fascism Pipeline actually had that in the notes there.
01:23:33.900
Anyway, so no Flashback Friday tomorrow, then, because we're going to take the day off.
01:23:37.900
But, obviously, we'll be back with a Western warrior.
01:23:40.960
And, again, in case, of course, you missed it, I did put it up.
01:23:43.860
Man, editing sometimes do take long, but that's what it is, because I want you guys to have the very best stuff.
01:23:48.720
Okay, so I hope you enjoy the latest member show.
01:23:51.100
We talk quite a bit about, yeah, the Calurgia was really the theme, but the new term, and check it out, cloaca gentium.
01:24:01.140
If you're unfamiliar with it, some of you might know it already, of course, but that was kind of the main theme of the latest Western warrior.
01:24:06.660
So, anyway, that just went up on radicemembers.com, so if you want to check that out, please head on over there, radicemembers.com.
01:24:10.800
We can set up using the DonorBox widget, and it does take us manual activation to get your account going over there.
01:24:18.660
If you have signed up, and if it's not yet activated, and if you've slipped through the cracks, just send us an email.
01:24:23.500
Remind us again, radice.proctomail.com, and we'll get that activated as soon as possible for you.
01:24:28.600
But, yeah, we do have the plug-in should be done here soon, and so hopefully we can get a new payment processor there.
01:24:34.400
Have it activated automatically, like it should be, so we don't have to do all the manual, god damn.
01:24:41.040
Yeah, labor to just, I mean, there's, you know, time goes just doing those kinds of things, you know.
01:24:46.380
And that's why they ban you and censor and block and stuff, and there's, like, more for us to do.
01:24:50.340
But, anyway, we appreciate you guys very much for your support.
01:24:53.280
If you do want to have instant access, by the way, do check out Odyssey, subscribe, or Locals.
01:25:01.680
Again, if you want to check out some of the interviews on the topics, you know, again, I mentioned we talked about at least four or five of the different people that came up we've had on the show, you know.
01:25:12.580
So they're in the archives, archives at redhysmembers.com.
01:25:15.160
It's a great search engine over there, too, as well, so you should be able to find it.
01:25:18.080
But you can always write if there's something you're looking for and you can't find it.
01:25:21.460
We'll be happy to provide you with a link or point you in the right direction, as it were.
01:25:27.860
And then, of course, we do have our executive producers.
01:25:30.980
I'd like to do a shout-out to you guys here today before we wrap up.
01:25:38.540
Good luck, Lap Jake, Red Pill Rundown, French 47, Mark Smith, Noah Jeeves, President Obunga, Mongoose, William Fox, Angry White Sockemom, The Second Wanderer, Operation Werewolf.
01:25:51.940
We also have The Ride Never Ends, Dilbob, Last Place Simp, Joseph Hart, Purple Haze, Rex Ballington, Commie Combo Deal, The Dearborn Toxic Event, Brendan Anthony, Penelope 7 USA, Bertrand Comparit, Dixie Drone Force, Arctic Wolf.
01:26:17.440
And again, do send us an email, Werebear, because we're not sure where you want to go.
01:26:23.100
Producers, we have Mr. Walker 696, Single Action Army, Johansson, Lord HP, Lovecraft, Leroy Dumond, Trevor, Snorkpup, Der Schwabe, Eyes Open, Sonata for Violin, Mr. Lemry, ExposeFlyers.com, Yuri New, Whitewater Rafting Fan.
01:26:36.320
We have Obadiah Hexwell, Jetfire, Perfect Brute, and Shane B.
01:26:40.760
Again, if we have a name on those wrong, or if you recently signed up, but if you're not yet in the rotation for one of those shoutouts, let us know and we'll get you in there ASAP.
01:26:49.380
So you can get one of those at RedAssMembers.com, Odyssey, or Subscribestar.
01:27:03.520
It's kind of both Teutonic and Berserker style, but anyway.
01:27:11.540
There's one more from Veritas there for you, Lana.
01:27:17.620
There were no blacks in South Africa until Whitey set up shop.
01:27:20.620
Because there was no low-hanging fruit or easy pickings.
01:27:23.440
The entire black population of South Africa are immigrants from the north.
01:27:27.980
Perhaps the gods migrated work teams around to do their laboring.
01:27:44.520
Perpetual summer is not always the right thing, right?
01:27:49.200
The moral of the story here, since we covered it, right?
01:27:51.100
It's basically like, yeah, you need challenges and upheavals,
01:27:59.140
You know, we've become too lazy, too comfortable overall,
01:28:07.300
and it's up to us to step up to that challenge.
01:28:20.640
We have an elite as well on top that we've got to deal and take care of.
01:28:30.000
They always, as I say, they're watching down upon us.
01:28:43.420
Some of them, they take over the cultural heritage ministry in certain countries,
01:28:56.800
And, of course, enjoy Midsommar if you do celebrate tomorrow.
01:29:12.840
Or if you're joining us later on in the archives, we appreciate you.
01:29:15.500
I've got to find my outro here, too, because all of us will be lost in space.
01:29:56.280
Don't miss our latest shows, interviews, and other videos only for subscribers.
01:30:01.120
You can also become a member by signing up at Subscribestar.com forward slash Red Ice.