The Culture War - Tim Pool - October 31, 2025


Jamaica Hurricane Predicts POLE SHIFT, The END Is Nigh w⧸ Ian Crossland & Seamus Coughlin


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 7 minutes

Words per Minute

214.5167

Word Count

14,528

Sentence Count

1,233

Misogynist Sentences

9

Hate Speech Sentences

25


Summary

A Category 5 hurricane just passed over Jamaica and Haiti, and many are speculating that this could be a sign of a major pole shift in the solar system. We talk about it with Ian Crossan and Seamus Coughlin.


Transcript

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00:00:30.000 A Category 5 hurricane just slammed into Jamaica and Haiti.
00:00:42.380 It's left a trail of devastation.
00:00:44.600 And this is the third most powerful Atlantic hurricane by pressure.
00:00:49.340 It's tied for third place.
00:00:50.540 With many people suggesting that this could be indicative of a pole shift.
00:00:57.340 Many of these people are not the biggest accounts.
00:00:59.820 And it's a small community.
00:01:00.700 But it's fun to talk about anyway.
00:01:03.520 There's also reports of a potential solar micro nova, which will wipe out all of humanity.
00:01:08.560 And I know it has nothing to do with politics or what's actually going on the ground.
00:01:12.080 But every once in a while, it's fun to, I don't know, doom prophesize.
00:01:17.520 But there are some interesting, I guess, circumstances around these major hurricanes and the trends that we've been seeing with many accounts growing in popularity suggesting that we may be facing a major pole shift.
00:01:29.080 If that means the northern hemisphere may move, you might end up with Florida in a winterized, in a colder climate.
00:01:40.460 I mean, I have no idea how crazy it's going to get.
00:01:42.480 We've had these conversations quite a bit.
00:01:43.980 Unfortunately, our guest, while exploring the hurricane to prove the pole shift was happening, was captured in wind currents and ripped to shreds.
00:01:54.840 And out of respect for them, we'll only describe their death in minor graphic detail.
00:01:58.260 I'm kidding.
00:01:58.640 We don't have a guest.
00:01:59.160 But that's okay, because we are hanging out with these jimokes over here.
00:02:03.200 I was just wondering if the whole solar system is experiencing polar shifts right now, if we could test other planets.
00:02:08.800 And if it's just like, because if everything flips at once, we wouldn't know that anything flipped.
00:02:13.940 That's true, yeah, from our perspective.
00:02:15.180 That's true, because we'd see the other poles.
00:02:16.420 We'd be like, well, our north is where their north is.
00:02:17.620 Also, if everything in the universe was falling at the same speed, we wouldn't know it.
00:02:21.160 We wouldn't know.
00:02:21.820 Just introduce yourself.
00:02:23.060 Oh, yeah.
00:02:23.660 I'm Richie Jackson.
00:02:25.160 No, I'm sorry.
00:02:25.840 I'm Ian Crossan wearing Richie Jackson's jacket.
00:02:28.160 Ian Crossan in the house.
00:02:29.480 Happy to be here.
00:02:30.320 I've been thinking a lot about the world economic order and graphene.
00:02:34.020 How about you, Seamus?
00:02:34.820 My name's Seamus Coughlin.
00:02:35.900 I'm the creator of Freedom Tunes.
00:02:37.480 Today, we have the most incredible infrastructure for storytelling that has ever existed with film, television, and streaming.
00:02:44.360 And that infrastructure is completely dominated by our enemies, which is a nightmare because the number one way people learn about the world is through story.
00:02:51.620 That's why myself and my team have spent over 11 years creating over 600 animated videos, reaching over a million subscribers.
00:02:58.160 And gaining over 290 million views with zero dollars spent on marketing.
00:03:02.260 And now we're taking the next step to fight the culture war by making culture.
00:03:05.920 I've created the first episode of an animated anthology series that's called Twisted Plots, which delivers a good right-wing message and a Christian message, not through ham-fisted moralizing or preaching, but through story and jokes, good humor, and interesting premises.
00:03:22.240 We need to win the culture war.
00:03:23.640 We can't do it without making culture.
00:03:26.040 So I need you guys to go over to TwistedPlots.com.
00:03:28.320 Support us at the $25 level.
00:03:30.200 You will be helping us create the future of entertainment.
00:03:32.680 It is grassroots.
00:03:33.840 It is right-wing.
00:03:34.780 And it needs to be run by people who care about producing this stuff, who are passionate about producing this stuff, and not the same people who are pushing woke nonsense trying to step into the quote-unquote anti-woke sphere.
00:03:45.480 And we need to do this before it's too late because civilization depends on having good stories.
00:03:50.180 So go over to TwistedPlots.com.
00:03:51.580 Support us.
00:03:52.200 You'll get access to our pilot, and you'll be helping us create the future of entertainment.
00:03:55.380 I always thought that comedy does best through meritocracy, obviously, because the funniest people just are the funniest people.
00:04:01.660 Yeah, it's hard to lie about someone being funny, and it's hard to lie about a movie or a TV show being funny.
00:04:05.800 And they try to all the time, right?
00:04:07.440 They'll put these comedians out there, and they'll do a laugh track, but watching at home, you're like, that wasn't funny.
00:04:12.120 I love when they remove the laugh track.
00:04:13.960 You ever see those?
00:04:14.480 Yes.
00:04:14.900 From Big Bang Theory, and then you're like, there's no jokes.
00:04:17.860 Yeah.
00:04:18.280 I don't get it.
00:04:18.560 The guy will walk in and go, what are you doing?
00:04:20.460 And she'll be like, exercising.
00:04:21.800 I was watching Seinfeld last night, and I was thinking, it's going to get to the point of idiocracy-type style where some people will just turn on TV where all it is is just laughing.
00:04:29.740 Just people laughing.
00:04:30.700 And they'll just laugh along because it's like—
00:04:32.480 Oh, this is Democrat political news.
00:04:37.220 I put on a Bulwark podcast where I can't remember the subject they were talking about.
00:04:41.920 And instead of talking about news, they were all just laughing.
00:04:43.700 And I was like, what is going on?
00:04:45.620 It was like, so Donald Trump, he said this, and they all start laughing.
00:04:50.640 And then I'm like, oh, hey.
00:04:52.380 It really is like brainwashing.
00:04:53.680 It's wild how you can just start laughing along.
00:04:55.360 Oh, yes.
00:04:55.700 I call it retardation.
00:04:57.380 Gut wrench.
00:04:58.040 Like when you see three people in the room going, and you're like, well, then I'm laughing at it.
00:05:01.780 Like if you're laughing at a joke that's not funny together, but it's like funny is in the—like who thinks it's funny?
00:05:07.200 It's in the eye of the beholder, you know?
00:05:09.000 Well, and laughing—
00:05:10.200 I thought that was funny.
00:05:12.140 Laughing is also a social mechanism, too.
00:05:13.960 You're right.
00:05:14.320 There's something contagious about it.
00:05:15.680 And when you watch a comedy with your friends as opposed to watching it by yourself, it's less funny.
00:05:19.480 There are movies also that you can watch with one group of people, and it's really funny.
00:05:23.740 And then you watch with another group of people, and you're like, oh, boy, this is intensely awkward.
00:05:27.180 This movie's not funny at all.
00:05:28.460 Well, let's get into the real subject matter at hand.
00:05:31.660 Sure, sure.
00:05:32.020 Yeah, the hurricane.
00:05:32.520 So we've got Whackaloon Ian and devout, faithful Seamus both going to be debating why or when the world may end from different perspectives.
00:05:43.680 Well, if you scroll down—
00:05:44.640 So hold on.
00:05:45.240 Let me read this.
00:05:46.660 Let me read this.
00:05:47.740 So this is actually an interesting post.
00:05:49.180 Jessica sent us this one.
00:05:50.460 This is from Open-Minded Approach, and it's from a year ago.
00:05:53.480 Check this out.
00:05:54.780 It's from Hurricane Milton.
00:05:55.780 Look at this beast.
00:05:57.560 They write,
00:05:57.940 As Hurricane Milton has developed into a Category 5 hurricane that could cause horrific damage to Florida,
00:06:02.640 the two narratives of military control over the weather and human-driven climate change will intensify.
00:06:07.120 The reality is that next year, these hurricanes and weather patterns will be even worse.
00:06:11.500 As the geomagnetic excursion progresses, the endgame will be a geophysical event, and then everything will start from the beginning.
00:06:18.600 That's why they want you to focus on these two narratives, because the truth is that we need to walk the walk.
00:06:23.200 There is no escaping this reality, but it brings the evolution to the soul.
00:06:25.920 There are legitimate studies on the topic, and you will see them in my upcoming video.
00:06:29.580 Now, here's why it's interesting.
00:06:31.340 We just had Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica, which is the third lowest pressure hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic.
00:06:38.480 And a year ago, with Milton, this guy said, it's going to get worse next year.
00:06:44.160 Now, that may not mean that much.
00:06:46.280 Sure, he got lucky.
00:06:47.720 A worse hurricane hit Jamaica.
00:06:49.660 It's the strongest hurricane ever hit Jamaica.
00:06:51.640 But there are many people who have been looking at this, and what's fascinating is when it comes to, like, Ben Davidson, for instance, the dude is not a crackpot conspiracy theorist.
00:07:01.080 He's not some dude saying, this proves interdimensional aliens are coming.
00:07:04.260 No, he's literally saying, I've got a—this readout is showing solar activity.
00:07:09.360 I think the solar activity may result in this phenomenon happening.
00:07:11.800 And then what happens?
00:07:12.600 The cell phones all go out across Spain and parts of France.
00:07:15.320 So that's when you're like, OK, this guy doesn't sound crazy.
00:07:18.480 He sounds like he's—I don't know.
00:07:19.800 Look, the solar activity is there.
00:07:21.120 You can corroborate this with other reports tracking solar activity.
00:07:25.660 And then it seems to be that the solar activity is having an effect or the ozone may be weakening.
00:07:30.860 The prediction is it is going to get worse.
00:07:34.400 The poles are going to shift.
00:07:36.640 This is—the reason why—so we don't have our principal guest, unfortunately.
00:07:41.120 But we do have, as I mentioned, Whackaloon, Ian, and devout faithful Seamus because people are referring to this—I believe it's called the Adam and Eve theory.
00:07:48.480 Have you guys heard of this?
00:07:49.480 CIA thing?
00:07:49.980 I've heard of it.
00:07:50.760 I mean, if I'm understanding—I've never heard this phrasing, but I assume it's like the world ends, you have two people again, and then the world sort of restarts and nobody knows what happened before.
00:07:59.540 So the theory, the hypothesis, better way to describe it, is that the poles shift every 6,500 years.
00:08:06.240 The axis will tilt along with it, and that will move Antarctica to the equator, which is now all of a sudden in a very warm position, and it's going to cause a lot of the ice to melt but still leave high-elevation glaciers, which we see in Indonesia.
00:08:20.960 That wipes out human civilization for the most part and leaves behind only small groups of people who then—what do they do?
00:08:28.560 Desperately trying to maintain their culture, write down a book of all of their rules, thoughts, and laws, and then share it, and then 2,000 years later, everyone's like, God wrote it.
00:08:37.520 What, 6,000 years ago? Is that about when Judaism is purported to have begun, when God spoke to Adam and Eve 6,000 years ago?
00:08:43.880 Well, Judaism's purported to have begun when God spoke to Abraham and made his covenant with him.
00:08:49.020 There are some Christians who say that the earth was created 6,000 years ago.
00:08:53.200 Some 8,000, some say 10,000, though.
00:08:55.160 And then so 12,000—
00:08:56.520 There's no, like, set limit, and there's no set date that, like, the Catholic Church has said, this is when the world was made.
00:09:01.620 But Christians—
00:09:02.520 6,000 BZ.
00:09:03.400 And I also want to be clear, some Christians are also theistic evolutionists who will argue that the earth is, you know, millions and millions and millions of years old.
00:09:11.740 So there isn't just one perspective here.
00:09:13.960 I reject that.
00:09:14.360 My hypothesis is that 6,500 years ago there was a polar shift that wiped out again, and then Adam and Eve were like humans crawling out of the dirt again.
00:09:21.900 And before that, 6,500 years before that, you had the cataclysmic flood that destroyed Atlantis 12,800 years ago.
00:09:27.640 65, almost exactly.
00:09:28.920 Everyone knows Atlantis still exists, Ian.
00:09:31.080 It's just beyond the ice wall.
00:09:32.120 That's right.
00:09:32.440 That's why they won't let you pass it.
00:09:33.580 Go pass the ice wall.
00:09:34.380 Did you see my video of Jake Paul and me in Atlantis?
00:09:37.280 Anyway, check out my Instagram.
00:09:38.580 Yeah, yeah.
00:09:39.000 Sora's the hottest shit on the planet right now.
00:09:40.640 What if—
00:09:41.080 What if it's true?
00:09:42.520 What?
00:09:43.100 What if there is an ice wall?
00:09:45.200 It was literally built intentionally to keep us out.
00:09:48.580 And when—
00:09:49.080 There is.
00:09:49.440 It's not flat.
00:09:49.780 It's round.
00:09:50.300 There is.
00:09:50.580 They share it on the news.
00:09:51.460 So here's the globe, right?
00:09:53.820 Here's the Earth.
00:09:55.280 And the continents as we know it are only this big on the planet's surface.
00:09:58.740 And there's an ice wall around it.
00:10:00.440 And if you fly outside of the ice wall, there's a bunch of other continents like Tartaria and Atlantis.
00:10:05.260 And the reason why we're isolated here, somebody's got to mine the cobalt.
00:10:08.880 Well, there is, and they showed it on the news accidentally.
00:10:11.320 It was a news blooper.
00:10:12.400 So you can see the news blooper where they're showing Antarctica.
00:10:14.380 And then they go, oh, oh, we're above the ice wall.
00:10:16.100 And everyone's like, oh, you weren't supposed to show that, you silly goose.
00:10:18.500 And humans are really advanced over there.
00:10:20.200 They're flying around, and they're immortal.
00:10:21.900 Pull up the video from the Twitter you had up of the hurricane itself, because I want to show how this probably is connected to solar activity.
00:10:27.500 Look, see how on the left you have the hurricane.
00:10:29.560 Then on the right, watch another spinning gyration forms.
00:10:32.800 That's not wind.
00:10:33.840 That's magnetism making that appear on the right.
00:10:35.820 It's like two spinning objects, like a dual black hole rotating.
00:10:39.840 I have no idea why you're claiming it was magnetism.
00:10:42.800 It's probably just low pressure and high pressure.
00:10:45.340 It might not be magnet.
00:10:46.300 You're right.
00:10:46.660 It might be other forces, but it's not wind.
00:10:48.740 It's not just wind that's causing this to appear.
00:10:51.700 It just appears, you know?
00:10:52.620 We only, as humans, recently discovered the electromagnetic spectrum, and we try—
00:10:59.940 And the gender spectrum.
00:11:00.680 That was a recent development.
00:11:01.420 That's true.
00:11:01.920 Yeah.
00:11:02.160 So for a while, we didn't know any of these things were on spectrums.
00:11:05.120 Yeah.
00:11:05.400 But I'm just saying, like, to Ian's point, imagine ducks trying to figure out, like, why the water is flowing in the river.
00:11:12.240 I kind of—that's how I feel.
00:11:13.280 There's like—there's going to be some entities, angels, demons, god, or whatever it is.
00:11:17.800 Something's looking down on us being like, how cute.
00:11:19.800 Well, and this is what's fascinating to me, right?
00:11:22.080 To me, this is the more interesting exploration is the way humans interact with weather.
00:11:27.860 When all of humanity seems to have had a specific perspective throughout all of history, it's not to say that that perspective is correct,
00:11:35.160 but it is to say there is something in our humanness that leans in the direction of believing that,
00:11:40.260 and even if it's a misdirected instinct, we should probably know what it is.
00:11:43.680 Because people, for all of history, have linked weather and weather patterns to the behavior of human beings and whether or not we're behaving morally.
00:11:54.140 So in ancient times, people would sacrifice their children on altars so that the sun would come up the next day and so that they would get good crop yields.
00:12:02.840 And, you know, the left would even mock Christians for saying the reason certain tragedies happen is because God's upset because we're slaughtering infants.
00:12:11.360 And then they would turn around and go, and that's silly because the obvious reason those tragedies happen is because you're driving an SUV, and that's very immoral.
00:12:18.900 So everyone, like everyone seems to have this belief that climate and weather are affected by human moral behavior, which is fascinating.
00:12:26.840 And what is it in us that wants to believe that?
00:12:30.020 What if the only true religion is there's some just like up in heaven or in the clouds?
00:12:35.000 I don't know how you describe it.
00:12:35.760 There's some Mesopotamian dude with like leaves covering his junk, and he's got a little clicker, and every time there's an abortion, he clicks it.
00:12:44.040 And then he goes, let's see, what are we at?
00:12:45.700 3,943,000?
00:12:47.260 Ooh, just shy of 4 million.
00:12:49.320 Hurricane!
00:12:49.920 I don't know.
00:12:50.820 The left thinks it's the opposite.
00:12:52.280 He's like, didn't have enough abortions.
00:12:53.380 We have to flood the world with climate change.
00:12:55.000 We have to—
00:12:55.840 That's what I'm saying.
00:12:56.520 He's like, just shy of 4 million.
00:12:58.340 You didn't make it until he gets a hurricane.
00:12:59.700 I asked God.
00:13:00.740 I was like praying.
00:13:01.360 I was like, will I be judged for my sins?
00:13:03.980 And he was like, you will all be judged for factory farming.
00:13:07.960 And it was real, like, damn, bro.
00:13:10.420 Like, if you want to talk about it, we're paying the price for what we're doing to the species on—so eat, you know.
00:13:15.840 I don't believe it.
00:13:16.500 I don't believe it.
00:13:16.700 I don't know if it was fake in my own imagination or what, but that was the answer I got.
00:13:19.900 I was like, duh, that hit me deep.
00:13:22.500 I think that there is something to human sacrifice.
00:13:25.120 I know it's a funny thing to say.
00:13:26.200 That's why I stuttered.
00:13:26.980 But there is something to blood sacrifice because blood has iron in it that's magnetic, and the sun is magnetic.
00:13:32.720 That is called a spurious correlation.
00:13:34.420 Yeah.
00:13:34.660 Well, this is what I want to talk about.
00:13:35.640 You're like, why do people think they're connected to the weather?
00:13:37.580 I think it's the iron, the magnetic materials in your body.
00:13:39.940 The amount of iron in your blood is not going to change weather.
00:13:42.200 The Aztecs thought it did.
00:13:43.620 Because they were nuts and they sacrificed babies.
00:13:45.380 I know, but they had a whole culture around it.
00:13:47.080 Like, they really believed it.
00:13:48.600 Yeah, because they're stupid.
00:13:49.820 Well, I also—
00:13:50.380 And the conquistadors showed up and they were like, good God, what are these people doing?
00:13:54.280 My theory, so—
00:13:55.240 And the left are like, the indigenous culture was right.
00:13:57.360 But I think it might have worked just at what cost.
00:13:59.700 Like, it did something, but at what cost?
00:14:01.580 Like, a cost that we won't pay.
00:14:03.000 No, I don't think it did anything.
00:14:04.160 I think they were nuts.
00:14:05.000 It caused clouds—
00:14:05.420 What happened was the blood sacrifices worked and it made the weather so good that weather
00:14:08.560 was good enough for the Europeans to build ships to go over there and stop them.
00:14:11.980 So it backfired.
00:14:12.920 It actually, like, completely backfired.
00:14:15.320 Yeah, yeah.
00:14:15.920 Actually, that'd be a funny bit.
00:14:17.380 That would be a very funny bit.
00:14:17.980 It's like there's constant storms and they're like, we have to sacrifice our children to
00:14:21.740 stop the storms.
00:14:22.500 And then they do.
00:14:22.980 And they're like, we did it.
00:14:23.620 We have to stop the sacrifices.
00:14:24.360 And then the ships pull up.
00:14:25.040 And then Columbus pulls up.
00:14:26.520 Well, dude, this is one of those things where—I mean, listen, I'm sure this is going
00:14:30.200 to be real controversial.
00:14:31.060 It is offensive to some, but I believe ultimately that these pagan religions are worshiping demons
00:14:36.540 and the surest way to know whether a demon is being worshipped is whether innocent human
00:14:40.780 life is being destroyed.
00:14:41.960 And that's what they were doing.
00:14:42.560 They were slaughtering children.
00:14:43.740 What about, like, slaughtering a calf or a pig or something?
00:14:47.200 Yeah, so because Christ fulfilled the old covenant, because Christ fulfilled the law,
00:14:51.380 we don't believe that, like, animal sacrifice is necessary.
00:14:54.760 But it isn't—that's also interesting because you see that in a lot of cultures historically.
00:14:58.960 There's something that humans recognize about sacrifice and the necessity of it.
00:15:04.840 And I don't exactly know why that is either.
00:15:08.700 We went to a fall festival, Allison and I, and we were looking at, like, antiques and
00:15:15.960 stuff.
00:15:16.560 One of the, like, barns or whatever we went in that had stuff had this nice little tray
00:15:21.860 of, like, little golden animals.
00:15:23.940 And I was like, oh, I should get the golden calf for Seamus.
00:15:28.520 And then I was like, actually, I don't know if that would be offensive.
00:15:32.480 That's a funny question.
00:15:33.440 And yeah, I mean, but it's an interesting question.
00:15:36.540 So no, I don't believe that, like, killing animals can forgive your sins or anything like
00:15:39.920 that.
00:15:40.160 But I do think it's interesting that so many cultures have engaged in some kind of sacrifice.
00:15:45.480 And again, I think it's because there's a human instinct to seek truth that's being
00:15:50.140 misappropriated.
00:15:50.920 We know some sacrifice is necessary.
00:15:53.440 It can point us towards the sacrifice of Christ on the cross.
00:15:56.780 But, you know, killing a chicken or goat or cow is not going to do anything for your soul.
00:16:02.880 It's not going to save you.
00:16:03.600 It's not going to ruin your sins.
00:16:04.820 What if the issue is that we haven't sacrificed enough chickens?
00:16:07.540 I think they've thought that many times throughout history.
00:16:09.840 Well, that's the problem, Sam, is there's never enough chickens, right?
00:16:12.360 No, no, but, like, the factory farming is we need to get to 10 billion chicken sacrifices.
00:16:15.720 And finally, God will listen.
00:16:17.600 Keep going!
00:16:18.060 Oh, geez, I don't even, sorry.
00:16:19.640 We're on it.
00:16:21.860 I understand the idea of sacrifice because personal sacrifice, I won't eat the sugary
00:16:25.800 thing because tomorrow I'll feel better and stronger.
00:16:28.180 That sacrifice then can permeate into the macroscopic metaphor of, like, now if I ruin
00:16:33.420 other things.
00:16:34.160 But, like, when you kill a chicken, you're not losing anything.
00:16:36.900 The chicken's the one losing it.
00:16:38.460 Well, but if that's your only wealth.
00:16:40.180 I guess if it's your livestock.
00:16:42.100 It's because you have to kill the chicken and then eat its heart to gain its courage.
00:16:45.420 But it was always healing.
00:16:47.160 It wasn't like I burned down my house as my sacrifice.
00:16:49.340 It was always killing something.
00:16:50.600 Well, I know that always, but it's often.
00:16:51.800 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:16:51.840 No, no, you're right.
00:16:53.060 There's something interesting about that.
00:16:54.320 If I had to guess, and this is just me spitballing right now, but I think it's because as human
00:16:59.780 beings, we know we've betrayed our creator in grievous enough ways that something has to die.
00:17:06.100 I actually think that that's the case.
00:17:07.980 We know that we have done wrong in such ways that specific actions, sacrificing or doing
00:17:15.780 some small penance, we know that something about that isn't enough.
00:17:19.900 And again, that's, you know, Christ willingly offered himself up on the cross for our sins.
00:17:25.140 So there was a death, and then there was a resurrection.
00:17:28.540 But if I had to guess why so many cultures throughout history sacrificed animals, it's
00:17:32.620 because we know we have done so wrong that something needs to die.
00:17:35.200 It's not just enough to make some kind of financial restitution.
00:17:37.620 So they're proxying, killing something else instead of themselves as the sacrifice.
00:17:41.320 They're like, look, God's going to kill something, and let's just decide for God what it's going
00:17:45.220 to be.
00:17:45.600 I don't even know if it's that.
00:17:46.580 I think it's like just trying to make sense of it.
00:17:48.340 It's like, man, I know I've done really bad things.
00:17:49.940 I don't know.
00:17:50.500 Like, I don't know how to make up for this.
00:17:52.900 And then, but something has to die.
00:17:54.440 And maybe, maybe you're right.
00:17:55.540 That part of it is like, well, I don't want to die.
00:17:57.580 Maybe part of it is, well, there's like good God can use me for if I don't die.
00:18:01.620 But yeah, I do think it's something in that category.
00:18:04.060 I think it's something in that category of, I've messed up.
00:18:07.000 And it's not enough to just say sorry.
00:18:09.840 Humans began sacrificing animals around 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.
00:18:12.940 Practice emerged as part of the Neolithic Revolution when people domesticated animals
00:18:17.140 and plants.
00:18:18.200 Archaeological evidence from sites like Gobekli Tepe show ritual feasting with wild animal
00:18:24.100 bones evolving into deliberate sacrifices of domesticated sheep, goats, and cattle by 8,000
00:18:28.840 B.C.
00:18:29.240 That's pretty much the dawn of recorded human history after that giant global flood 12,000
00:18:34.000 years ago that decimated Atlantis.
00:18:35.720 And they all fled, came to Gobekli Tepe.
00:18:38.200 And that's where they brought like the remaining knowledge is like this temple.
00:18:40.800 I want to just stress how offensive the term B.C.E. and C.E. are to me.
00:18:44.380 I agree.
00:18:44.940 I totally agree.
00:18:45.480 Because – and I'll tell you what, because it's basically putting like plastic wrap
00:18:51.320 over what we actually – like the fact that there is a B.C. and A.D. and then just
00:18:58.480 saying we're going to continue that, but we're going to call it B.C. and C.E.
00:19:02.280 And it's like –
00:19:03.080 Oh, yes.
00:19:03.320 The common era.
00:19:04.300 But hold on.
00:19:05.280 The era that was common.
00:19:05.800 What made this era common?
00:19:07.220 Exactly.
00:19:07.520 What changed?
00:19:08.140 Christ's death, essentially.
00:19:08.900 Exactly.
00:19:09.460 Roman suppression.
00:19:10.380 Well, it's so – well, so C.E. means Christ's execution.
00:19:15.280 And B.C.E. was before Christ's execution.
00:19:19.480 This is what's actually hilarious to me about – I probably shouldn't laugh at that.
00:19:22.680 But here's what's hilarious to me about B.C.E. and A.D. – or I'm sorry.
00:19:28.140 They say C.E. and B.C.E.
00:19:30.280 Part of what's so hilarious to me about that is that a lot of these same people will go,
00:19:37.720 you know, Christians just stole festivals from pagan religions and then called them
00:19:41.660 by Christian names.
00:19:42.480 You can't just do that.
00:19:43.300 You can't just steal someone else's dates on a calendar and then rename them.
00:19:46.320 By the way, it's not B.C. and A.D. anymore.
00:19:48.000 It's C.E. and B.C.E.
00:19:49.760 It's like you just did that with the entire timeline, and you're accusing us of doing it
00:19:53.120 with specific holidays.
00:19:54.380 But the reason – it's also really funny because a lot of the claims that Christians
00:19:58.000 just stole holidays from pagan religions is really silly because they'll go like,
00:20:01.840 well, Christmas is in December, and other cultures had holidays in December.
00:20:06.120 It's like, yes, other cultures also celebrated the holidays in the winter.
00:20:10.960 That doesn't mean – like, that doesn't mean we stole the idea.
00:20:14.380 That's not like something you can patent there.
00:20:16.460 Is Halloween – since I guess today is Halloween.
00:20:18.900 Happy Halloween.
00:20:19.680 Is it a pagan thing?
00:20:20.700 Jack Posobiec tweeted out it's not a pagan thing.
00:20:23.040 It's not.
00:20:23.260 All Hallows' Eve.
00:20:24.760 So All Hallows' Eve, basically, November 1st is All Souls' Day.
00:20:31.140 Or I think All Saints' Day, sorry.
00:20:32.500 But we as Catholics have taken this time historically, the 31st of October and the 1st of November
00:20:41.080 to pray for the dead.
00:20:42.740 And what kids used to do the night before on All Hallows' Eve is in some places there was
00:20:48.740 a tradition where they would like dress up as saints or they would dress up as souls
00:20:51.540 in purgatory and ask for soul cakes from people.
00:20:53.980 And then they would consume those.
00:20:55.820 And that is actually the root of kids dressing up and trick-or-treating.
00:20:59.360 I've been thinking about how to save souls from purgatory if heaven is in the sun, which
00:21:05.180 maybe it's like – it's the white light.
00:21:06.900 It sounds like hell, though, on the sun, right?
00:21:07.820 Well, it's just like beauty.
00:21:09.060 It's – no, the rejection of it is hell.
00:21:11.160 Interesting.
00:21:11.280 The deep darkness of nothingness, of emptiness of light, the deep space.
00:21:15.100 So some souls, when they pass on, reject love because they're so unfamiliar with it.
00:21:19.260 They push and they get cast off into the darkness of space.
00:21:21.440 So if you become a –
00:21:51.420 Beacon of light and shine outward, then they can find you and come back.
00:21:58.720 Interesting.
00:21:59.000 Like, so that's – Christ's sacrifice is like some people can be like, look, I'm
00:22:02.160 going to forever look out.
00:22:04.080 That's just – you can find me, you know?
00:22:06.820 Interesting.
00:22:08.220 So my question for you, I guess, is if you – if that's your theory, like do you believe
00:22:12.900 in a resurrection of the dead?
00:22:14.060 Do you believe that the dead will ever return?
00:22:15.980 Or do you think that at the point of death, people just sort of float off their body as
00:22:19.660 souls?
00:22:19.960 Or do you believe – I'm curious, like what do you believe about the afterlife?
00:22:21.920 I think there's a difference between life and sentience and that people sometimes will
00:22:26.200 conflate the terms.
00:22:26.980 But that when the body dies, life stops and – but sentience continues in the soul and
00:22:31.700 your soul still has the ability to maybe even think.
00:22:34.720 I'm not 100% sure think is the right word, but calculate.
00:22:37.920 And it's like what – you see plasma dancing around.
00:22:40.040 But there's something that it's like to be the soul is what you're saying.
00:22:43.120 Like there is like a qualitative experience to it even if you wouldn't call it thinking.
00:22:46.800 I think so.
00:22:47.320 Okay.
00:22:47.520 Yeah.
00:22:47.840 And I would imagine time seems to slow down.
00:22:51.100 Like the earth just seems to – everything seems to stand still.
00:22:53.360 You can see – I don't know, man.
00:22:54.720 I'm kind of – it's weird to think in terms of what it would be like at that high frequency
00:22:58.420 – because what I think happens is like it's just a higher frequency – not just a higher
00:23:02.060 frequency, but there are many frequencies embodying you, you know, one of – and the
00:23:05.780 super dense frequencies become solid matter and that they cool down so much so that this
00:23:11.700 higher frequency also agitates.
00:23:13.920 And it's that agitation that's kind of like thinking.
00:23:15.980 So what I'm curious about like why frequencies – because I know sometimes when we talk about
00:23:19.620 this stuff, you'll talk about like vibrations and frequencies, and I'm just curious what
00:23:22.900 role that plays or why that – like is that just for lack of a better term or what role
00:23:28.940 do frequencies and vibrations play in this stuff in your mind?
00:23:31.800 The states of matter are heat – like so you have solid, liquid, gas, plasma, and basically
00:23:36.980 as you're going down towards solid, it's slowing down.
00:23:40.320 Things are – or they're cooling down.
00:23:41.800 It's the same thing.
00:23:42.640 It's either getting colder or slower.
00:23:44.620 So that means that something is changing in the speed, which then could be related to
00:23:51.880 the frequency that is producing that speed.
00:23:55.980 Like why are things in motion?
00:23:57.740 Because it's a subatomic level, things are changing.
00:24:00.860 So like you might – it might look like I'm moving through space, but I'm appearing in
00:24:05.860 space in a different position over and over and over and over and over.
00:24:08.120 At the speed of light, I'm constantly reappearing in a new position because the subatomic material
00:24:12.320 is rapidly changing position due to the frequency, I believe, that the universe is like – it's
00:24:19.460 like cymatics.
00:24:20.300 It's a branch of science.
00:24:20.920 Define frequency.
00:24:21.920 Yeah.
00:24:22.100 How fast of an impulse is it?
00:24:25.000 How fast is – something's getting pulsed.
00:24:26.920 When you say being pulsed, you mean like vanishing and then reappearing?
00:24:29.520 Space time is getting bubbled like real fast or real slow.
00:24:32.740 What does that mean, bubbled?
00:24:33.600 It's like an in and out of what we see as this space.
00:24:39.620 It's going in and out of this really fast.
00:24:42.100 Do you mean like appearing and disappearing?
00:24:44.040 Yeah.
00:24:44.280 It would look like it's appearing – yeah.
00:24:45.620 It would look like it's disappearing and reappearing.
00:24:46.440 So it's like going between dimensions?
00:24:49.020 Yeah, kind of, yeah.
00:24:50.280 Dimension is kind of a vague term.
00:24:52.180 Isn't it just the frequency of vibration?
00:24:55.640 In and out, yeah.
00:24:56.440 It's like the movement in and out.
00:24:58.560 Up and down, left and right?
00:24:59.740 Well, I was told it was in and out by the spirit.
00:25:02.260 I'm like – they were like, come here.
00:25:03.840 And I was like, where are you?
00:25:04.540 They were like, in.
00:25:05.800 Yeah, one spirit when I was vaping the DMT.
00:25:08.220 I was like, where are you?
00:25:08.960 She went, in.
00:25:09.760 And I'm like, whoa.
00:25:10.600 Okay, they're in.
00:25:11.420 What does that mean?
00:25:12.020 And I just think about like the proton and the black hole at the center of the proton.
00:25:14.860 Is it possible, perhaps, that you were just on drugs?
00:25:16.960 Yeah, it was possible I was hallucinating as I'm a psychopath, too.
00:25:20.260 But I do think that subatomic space – because no one knows for sure why subatomic spin is happening.
00:25:25.600 They're like, why are these positions changing at the subatomic level?
00:25:28.760 I think it's cymatics, that the universe has a frequency that is changing, ever-changing,
00:25:34.420 and that when it changes, the position moves to a new position because the frequency decides what position things will be in.
00:25:40.360 And so it rapidly changes frequency.
00:25:43.000 I got an idea.
00:25:43.940 Yeah, hit me.
00:25:44.860 Ian should launch a shampoo and soap company that's all natural and write all of this down on the sides of the label.
00:25:51.000 Candace Owens told me to do that, too.
00:25:52.360 It's about to make me include it.
00:25:53.720 No, no, just all of Ian's ideas should be written on the side of his shampoo bottles.
00:25:58.420 All right, will you guys buy my shampoo?
00:26:00.260 Because if you like the idea, put a one in the chat.
00:26:01.920 You know what's really funny is there's this meme where it's like someone said,
00:26:06.060 what if the only true religion is the incoherent scribblings on the side of the Dr. Bronner's shampoo bottle?
00:26:10.440 And then, but liberals had that, and the response was, that's Christian scripture.
00:26:15.380 What is it?
00:26:16.260 What is it?
00:26:17.040 Oh, that's hilarious.
00:26:17.980 They put like a Bible verse there and they called it?
00:26:19.580 Oh, it's just loaded with like Bible verses.
00:26:21.300 This is my problem with religion is I feel like...
00:26:23.180 Like the liberals were like, what if this is the only religion?
00:26:25.760 And people are like, uh-huh.
00:26:27.040 Yeah, the one that got written down.
00:26:28.380 But Tim, what if the words of the prophets were written on the subway walls, tenement halls,
00:26:32.620 and they echoed in the sound of silence?
00:26:34.560 Have you considered a possibility?
00:26:36.140 Well, I think Judaism and Christianity...
00:26:37.020 Yes, but I'd be concerned about people bowing and praying to the neon god that they've made instead.
00:26:41.500 I mean, the sign would flash out its warning, so they knew what they were getting into.
00:26:45.920 I mean, I don't know what's happening.
00:26:48.400 I know what's happening.
00:26:49.020 Hey, um...
00:26:50.620 We're singing.
00:26:51.280 I think that...
00:26:51.720 Yeah, you guys are doing a beautiful work, too.
00:26:53.820 The reason I think Christianity and Judaism got famous is because that's when writing appeared.
00:26:59.000 It's whoever has...
00:27:00.140 There were a lot of religions at the time, though.
00:27:02.100 Yeah, and they all faded away, except for the ones that got written down.
00:27:04.740 I think the others got written down, right?
00:27:06.620 Because we're able to study ancient Egyptian ruins and see what some of them are.
00:27:09.960 Yeah, but also, like, we've written down a bunch of dumb ones, too.
00:27:12.680 Like, the fact that there's people who believe there's an ice wall beyond it is Tartaria.
00:27:17.180 Yeah, but that's true.
00:27:18.080 They should not have written that down.
00:27:19.480 It's a fun movie.
00:27:20.540 It is a fun movie.
00:27:21.260 Right now, the people in Tartaria are watching this and laughing.
00:27:24.820 We're in their reality show.
00:27:26.020 All the religions have got to be right.
00:27:28.060 All the religions are pointing towards something that's true.
00:27:30.320 So, I think that there's this old idea that in every heresy is a kernel of truth.
00:27:36.900 Even when an idea is very wrong, there's some truth in it that keeps people in.
00:27:42.680 Right, like when we argued this on the...
00:27:45.160 Sorry to interrupt, but the Orthodox versus Catholic debate, where...
00:27:48.760 I can't remember who said it, but they said something about Hindus are people who are striving towards the truth, but in the wrong direction.
00:27:56.280 Yeah, improperly, basically.
00:27:57.400 So, like, something about what they're saying is correct, but they're in the wrong direction?
00:27:59.980 Even though they're, like, worshipping demons, they don't realize that, and there's some goodness that's being sold.
00:28:07.940 Because the devil appears as an angel of light to try to fool people.
00:28:12.000 And so, again, this is not me promoting indifferentism and saying all religions are equal.
00:28:17.520 Far from it.
00:28:18.100 But it is saying that I do think there's a kernel of truth in these false religions.
00:28:22.740 I believe Catholicism as the fullness, the fullness of the truth.
00:28:25.760 Sorry, my voice is wrong.
00:28:26.380 You're right.
00:28:26.940 I think that spirits will pretend to be God.
00:28:29.140 Because I asked the spirit, are you God?
00:28:30.920 And he went, no.
00:28:32.580 And I could tell he was like, we get asked that a lot.
00:28:34.720 And people pray, and spirits, some tricky ones will respond, and they'll be like, are you God?
00:28:39.380 And they'll be like, yes, I am.
00:28:40.360 And it's like, some will be righteous, but some, there's playful energy fields out there.
00:28:45.540 I'm going to put a tag in that real quick, guys, because we've got to shout out a sponsor.
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00:30:03.380 Mandela effect.
00:30:04.120 That's Bearskin.
00:30:04.720 I remember it as Bearskane, which is Bearskane.
00:30:07.780 That's very strange.
00:30:08.660 So it's a Mandela effect.
00:30:10.240 So the Mandela effect is a bunch of people who don't remember things properly, and then someone tells them something is true, and they go, oh, yeah, that makes sense.
00:30:18.160 And then all of a sudden starts saying something is true in the future.
00:30:21.380 Well, this is a real thing.
00:30:22.500 Or also, like, I mean, listen, I've been doing Freedom Tunes for 11 years, and people very often spell it T-U-N-E-S, even though it's T-O-O-N-S.
00:30:31.020 So when people talk about the Mandela effect, they're like, dude, if I talked to someone or someone was like, you know, Freedom Tunes is T-O-O-N-S, some number of people would be like, I swear it's T-U-N-E-S, and then the Mandela effect is it.
00:30:41.580 It's because of Looney Tunes.
00:30:42.520 Exactly.
00:30:43.140 And there are people who believe that Looney Tunes used to be T-O-O-N-S.
00:30:47.360 Oh, it comes full circle.
00:30:49.080 In the future, they're going to—
00:30:50.360 Because T-O-O-N-S makes more sense because they're cartoons.
00:30:52.700 And so there are people who, from the Mandela effect, there's an offshoot conspiracy group called Reality Shifting, where basically what happens is people are like, the Mandela effect is real.
00:31:03.680 Like, we've jumped timelines somehow.
00:31:05.840 And then people start saying things like, hey, bro, when I was a kid, it was Berenstain.
00:31:11.200 And they're like, what?
00:31:12.500 They just believe it.
00:31:13.260 And the person goes, it's because I jumped timelines.
00:31:15.580 No way.
00:31:15.900 So then people, they start doing—there are these people that will, like, go in their closet, and they believe that if you can attain pure sensory deprivation from the outside world, then the whole universe goes into flux.
00:31:28.340 Well, I hope those people come out of the closet.
00:31:29.960 You can jump to a new reality.
00:31:31.800 So the way it works is a combination of things happen.
00:31:34.360 They believe that they've jumped timelines before, and that's why Berenstain is now Berenstain.
00:31:38.600 But how did they do it?
00:31:39.400 It must have been an accident.
00:31:40.080 So if the double-slit experiment is real and the act of observation can change superpositions into singular points, they believe that if you can attain true sensory deprivation, inside the sensory deprivation tank, everything is at a singular point.
00:31:57.740 It's solidified from a superposition to a single point.
00:32:00.140 But outside, the universe is in flux.
00:32:02.740 But that means—
00:32:04.620 So solipsistic, though.
00:32:05.740 You cannot go into the sensory deprivation and then come out into a world of dinosaurs because the sensory deprivation tank would not exist in a world of dinosaurs without humans.
00:32:15.480 So you can only jump to a universe that is almost entirely the same as the universe you are in.
00:32:20.900 Yeah, it's like you can only walk into the next room.
00:32:22.880 And so you can't change your body because your body is—you are there experiencing your body, and it is not in a superposition, but everything else is.
00:32:30.460 So if you go into sensory deprivation and then you hyper-concentrate on the universe you want to go to, you'll come out.
00:32:37.240 Berenstain will be Berenstain again.
00:32:38.360 The difference is when it's in superposition, when it re-collapses, it's all of human consciousness is deciding what it's going to be.
00:32:45.480 So all those people that are familiar with what they think it is will overpower you unless you're super powerful.
00:32:50.360 You misunderstand.
00:32:50.960 That's the point of sensory deprivation.
00:32:53.420 Your singular universe has isolated itself, and everything outside is Schrodinger's cat.
00:32:58.480 It will for sure change you in drastic ways.
00:33:01.320 The Egyptians, that's what they think the sarcophagi were, were sensory deprivation tanks.
00:33:05.000 They would get in, cover themselves, put salt water in there, and then they would just vibrate, and they would have light coming.
00:33:10.560 They would vibrate.
00:33:11.140 Yeah, well, they would hum into those shafts and stuff to create tone that would send you into the fucking stratosphere, rocket your consciousness.
00:33:18.140 And they would shine light down those chutes you see, and they would reflect down.
00:33:22.820 So you'd get—at certain times of day, you'd get crazy light patterns in the room.
00:33:26.880 So they were tripping.
00:33:27.680 Do you guys know about quantum immortality?
00:33:30.480 Not yet.
00:33:30.680 Is this the idea that when you die, you jump to another universe, something like that?
00:33:34.240 It's that your universe you can't die in.
00:33:38.860 That's quantum immortality.
00:33:40.580 The theory is basically that—
00:33:42.520 Yeah.
00:33:43.900 The idea would be that if you were to try and take your own life, no matter what you did in your universe, it would never happen.
00:33:51.960 It wouldn't work.
00:33:52.520 The gun would keep jamming, and you'd be confused, and you might be like, wow, like, I can't die.
00:33:57.800 But you're creating billions of universes where you're just dead.
00:34:01.120 Oh, interesting.
00:34:01.900 So you always are alive.
00:34:03.860 If you kill your—
00:34:04.660 No one should try this.
00:34:06.740 Yeah, no.
00:34:07.340 But if someone were to die, they—but from their perspective, they just are living in another position now.
00:34:12.200 They're like, uh—
00:34:12.820 The theory is like, imagine if you had a—
00:34:15.340 Don't do this.
00:34:15.980 —a nuclear weapon, and you were like, I'm going to prove my theory, and you press the button to detonate, it wouldn't go off.
00:34:23.260 That aligns with, like—
00:34:24.200 The universe you started in—
00:34:25.920 Everyone outside—
00:34:26.640 No, no, no, hold on.
00:34:27.720 In the universe where—
00:34:29.560 So here's the theory.
00:34:31.360 Everybody in the blast radius of the nuke would be in the same universe as you where the nuke never went off because they can't die.
00:34:37.100 But everyone outside of, let's say, whatever city you were in would just be in a universe now where that city is vaporized.
00:34:43.140 Wow.
00:34:44.780 I think that kind of tracks with the way I think of spirits.
00:34:47.620 Like, you're kind of waking up as your spirit when your body dies.
00:34:50.480 You never really die.
00:34:51.660 You're just like, oh, you see it from another.
00:34:53.720 But I like the idea that when you die in that reality, you're still alive in this reality.
00:34:57.060 I call this the Mario Brothers theory.
00:35:00.680 And look, all the Marios that died, they're gone.
00:35:04.680 But the Mario who made it to the princess, he has no memory of ever dying.
00:35:08.300 He did everything perfectly.
00:35:09.640 It's true.
00:35:10.760 Yeah.
00:35:11.020 That's true.
00:35:12.080 Okay, I like that.
00:35:14.580 That's good.
00:35:15.620 I think it's wishful thinking from people who believe they're the main character of their story.
00:35:19.700 Well, and also, the thing is, we live in a time of great abundance, so people don't recognize the scarcity of their own life.
00:35:29.040 We don't spend any time contending with it.
00:35:30.860 Do you think that's part of—
00:35:31.400 Whenever we want, whenever we want, for the most part, things are accessible to us that were never accessible to our ancestors and in a great quantity.
00:35:40.040 So I actually think that's rerouted our thinking in a way.
00:35:42.640 Kind of, but I think modern Western man, and I mean women too, I just mean humans in general, are entirely self-centered and value their lives much more than they value anything outside of themselves.
00:35:54.180 Yeah, I think they play into each other.
00:35:56.340 I think that's part of the abundance, and I also think that when it comes to a lot of these beliefs about reincarnation or going into another universe, sociologists have studied this.
00:36:08.760 Reincarnation is more popular when you're living in a very affluent society.
00:36:14.340 It's like, yeah, I could keep doing—I could keep existing in this world over and over and over again.
00:36:19.340 Oh, because I want to.
00:36:20.300 Exactly, but people who have harsher lives are like, I am not doing this again.
00:36:25.200 Like, I am not coming back.
00:36:26.860 What happens is, when you die, that's the completion of life.
00:36:31.240 You enter the second quest, where you have a little sword next to your name every time you wake up.
00:36:36.140 Dude, in the spirit realm—so what do you do?
00:36:37.320 You go to the spirit realm.
00:36:38.480 Well, you're already in the spirit realm, but you start seeing it from the spirit realm, and then you're like, I'm bored.
00:36:42.400 Like, do you just get bored?
00:36:43.340 You're like, what—everything's love all the time.
00:36:45.940 Everything is amazing.
00:36:47.040 I want some chaos in my life again.
00:36:48.740 What if when you died, you just all of a sudden woke up on a couch, and you're next to, like, some dude smoking a bong?
00:36:56.920 It'd be sad because—
00:36:57.560 And they were like, bro, you got 7,000 points on that run of Ian Crossland.
00:37:01.040 It'd be okay, but I'd be like, I'd be sad about my friends that I—in my dream that would slowly, I'd forget them all.
00:37:05.820 Like, within a—you know?
00:37:06.760 It'd be gone in, like, a minute.
00:37:07.820 But, like, have you ever—some people say when they take ayahuasca, you live a life over a day-long period where you—
00:37:13.440 My buddy was like, I had a wife, I have children that I know—
00:37:17.200 Those are demons.
00:37:17.620 In that realm.
00:37:18.740 They mess with his head, dude.
00:37:19.580 They mess with his head.
00:37:20.480 Can't do that stuff, man.
00:37:21.560 Like, he had an actual—
00:37:22.620 Okay, okay.
00:37:23.000 Haven't you ever seen these horror movies where, like, the little kid would be like, mother, I'm your child.
00:37:27.640 And they're like, oh, God, it's a demon.
00:37:28.800 That's what it is.
00:37:29.480 Yes.
00:37:29.800 The dude goes on ayahuasca, goes into the demon realm.
00:37:32.120 The demons are like, I'm your wife.
00:37:33.640 And he's like, okay.
00:37:34.580 Wouldn't that mean that we're demons?
00:37:35.880 And that when we were in the spirit realm, they're like, dude, Seamus Coughlin was not a real thing.
00:37:39.140 That was a demon.
00:37:40.480 There's no such thing.
00:37:41.480 Don't worry.
00:37:42.080 You are all spirit-like.
00:37:43.520 There is no Seamus.
00:37:44.200 I can't hurt you.
00:37:44.360 Like, it's—the whole idea of different people is it's demonic.
00:37:49.240 We're all one entity.
00:37:50.700 It's okay.
00:37:51.700 Well, you guys should go to Twisted Plots and support my show, twistedplots.com.
00:37:56.160 Anyway, as we were saying—
00:37:57.560 Seamus has a whole episode about Ian not being real.
00:37:59.540 Well, we do have an episode about aliens, actually, which sort of plays it.
00:38:02.980 Our pilot episode, 25 minutes long, it touches on the ET phenomena.
00:38:06.880 You can go see that at twistedplots.com if you support the campaign.
00:38:09.380 But part of what I want to mention here is, I mean, again, we all sort of want an out.
00:38:15.620 We want it to be the case that we can sort of do whatever we want, and when we die, we'll just be reborn into a different universe.
00:38:23.940 It's wishful thinking.
00:38:25.200 I mean, you got one shot here, and when you die, you die.
00:38:29.420 So you got to prepare for your judgment.
00:38:31.180 Why now?
00:38:31.760 I asked you this before the show.
00:38:32.860 Oh, yes.
00:38:33.280 Why are we here at this fluctuation in history, 12,800 years after the flood, getting ready for another magnetic pole shift,
00:38:38.940 with the internet, all of a sudden?
00:38:40.840 Yeah, what's up with that?
00:38:41.800 The internet.
00:38:42.320 Like, one guy can change the world overnight.
00:38:44.880 No, it's a great question, because people wrestle with this.
00:38:47.480 I heard a very funny theory.
00:38:48.920 This was like philosophers and astrophysicists who were talking about this.
00:38:55.000 They were going, well, we—I think they were arguing we exist very early in the—we exist very early in what they think is the full life cycle of the universe.
00:39:04.860 And they're like, how is it probable that we could evolve and exist so early?
00:39:08.480 And I'm not kidding you.
00:39:09.380 The conclusion they came to is, oh, there's a mass extinction event in the universe, and everything else dies, so this is the only time we could have existed.
00:39:15.300 I'm like, that is insane.
00:39:16.640 That's ridiculous, right?
00:39:18.160 Just admit that you can't make sense of it, right?
00:39:20.120 And they didn't want to, so they have these silly theories.
00:39:23.920 But I think we had to exist at some point in time, right?
00:39:27.860 If you are going to exist, you have to exist at some point in time.
00:39:31.000 You can believe it's totally random, or you can believe that God chose to place you here for a very specific reason, which is what I think.
00:39:37.200 I don't think any of us exist on accident.
00:39:39.260 We have this idea of the atomized individual, and you can grab us from any setting or point in history and drop us anywhere else, and we'll still be us.
00:39:48.560 But a part of who you are, a massive part of who you are, is the time that you live in.
00:39:52.700 So why do you exist today?
00:39:53.760 It's like, well, you couldn't possibly have existed at any other point in history.
00:39:56.640 Because even if a being that had your genetics or something like that existed a thousand years ago, they probably would not be very much like you, right?
00:40:08.080 No, well, I don't know.
00:40:09.480 I get tripped up on my name.
00:40:11.100 They call it Cross.
00:40:12.100 They're like, you're Crossland.
00:40:13.740 And I'm like, oh, Jesus is in this reality now, and I've got to learn about Jesus on the cross, and my name is Cross, and I have the power to change the world with internet.
00:40:20.120 I'm like, dude, there's—
00:40:22.540 Ian's the most important human being on the planet.
00:40:24.140 It can't be.
00:40:24.820 Ian's the main character.
00:40:25.740 We're all pretty good.
00:40:27.440 But it can't—well, it can be coincidence.
00:40:29.800 It can be.
00:40:31.100 Nah, Ian's the main character, but it's like 20 years past the epilogue of the main game.
00:40:35.380 20 years ago was when I fucked up.
00:40:37.060 It was when I was on YouTube becoming super well-loved and famous and followed, and I got afraid.
00:40:41.360 I was like, they're going to kill me.
00:40:42.360 I had to stop making YouTube videos for like a decade.
00:40:44.640 I was like, I'm afraid.
00:40:46.060 I was afraid.
00:40:46.540 People don't know this.
00:40:47.060 And the fear—
00:40:48.060 Ian was actually, at this point, about to launch a political group called Turning Position, where he was going to lead people.
00:40:55.780 I was like, no political parties?
00:40:56.820 I was like, we don't even need political parties anymore.
00:40:58.300 We have internet video.
00:40:59.200 You can raise all your money.
00:41:00.300 You don't need a party.
00:41:00.920 I think what actually happened is that Ian did a bunch of drugs.
00:41:04.020 I did.
00:41:04.700 That was my big problem, was I'd smoke too much pot.
00:41:06.540 I got in my hole, and I became afraid of other people, and I was overstimulated.
00:41:10.460 Well, and this is one of the reasons—
00:41:12.200 Stay away from drugs, kiddies.
00:41:13.580 Yeah, stay away from drugs.
00:41:14.680 This is why I warn people, because when you're talking about these people who go on ayahuasca,
00:41:18.200 and they think that they met their alternate dimension family, all that stuff does is it makes it harder for you to live in reality as reality actually exists.
00:41:27.400 Yeah, in a sober state.
00:41:28.820 Food does that, too.
00:41:29.580 I think—
00:41:29.900 Food can pull you out of sober reality.
00:41:31.080 I think the internet, video games, movies have turned American—Western, largely, but a lot of Americans—into functional retards.
00:41:40.400 Because it used to be, when you were a little kid, you were like, one day when I grow up, I'm going to be the best blacksmith ever.
00:41:46.680 I'm going to make horseshoes.
00:41:47.720 And you aspired to be a horseshoe maker, and you felt great pride and accomplishment in making horseshoes.
00:41:54.200 Now, these people are like, this chick, Kat Abu Ghazala, she got arrested and criminally charged.
00:42:02.720 She's running for office because she wants people to acknowledge her.
00:42:06.460 That's the only reason she's doing it.
00:42:07.760 She doesn't know anything about politics.
00:42:08.820 She's not motivated by fixing problems.
00:42:10.780 She is a product of the main character generation.
00:42:13.520 Yes.
00:42:13.820 Where she wants—like, she goes up to this vehicle, and she's like, with a group of people that are banging on it and screaming, and now she's facing a felony charge.
00:42:21.340 That's the fucker I'm going to find out.
00:42:22.340 The main character generation is the fucking—that's the problem.
00:42:24.380 That's you—
00:42:24.860 Yes.
00:42:25.080 What'll happen is God will show you signs and make you think you're the main character.
00:42:29.040 Gave me the name Crossland on purpose to make me think I'm special when I'm not.
00:42:32.620 I'm just another guy, and you have to keep doing diligent, do the work to help and lift other people up and not fall into this thing that, like, oh, I'm the one.
00:42:42.480 I actually—I come from the dimension where it was Ian Crossman, and—
00:42:46.380 I tried to make that my first email address was Crossman, because my buddy's Strassman, and someone, Don Crossman, took it from Virginia.
00:42:52.640 Ian Crossman.
00:42:54.300 Yeah.
00:42:54.540 But reality changed overnight, and now here he is, Crossland.
00:42:57.220 In fact, in my reality, Ian was an academic, a very smart guy.
00:43:00.140 Oh, I also was studying math and science up until I started getting into acting.
00:43:03.860 The dimension I came from, it was literally IanCast IRL, and Tim would talk about other dimensions and stuff.
00:43:08.800 Tim literally—if I came in with a billion, I had this flowing—
00:43:12.560 Tim had Ian's hair, and Ian wore a beanie all the time.
00:43:14.700 There's so many—I think about—
00:43:15.700 It was the exact same in every other way.
00:43:16.760 Do you guys think about the possible realities that you could be in right now if you'd made different choices in your past?
00:43:22.020 Oh, that's so interesting.
00:43:23.540 Yeah, like, what would your life be like if any of your choices were a little bit different?
00:43:26.760 I try not to think about that too much, because I think there's a mystery, right?
00:43:31.300 Because I believe we have free will.
00:43:33.200 I also believe in divine providence and predestination, and it can be difficult to understand the interplay between those things.
00:43:38.980 But I am just grateful for everything in God's plan and where I am right now.
00:43:42.620 You know, with free will and destination, I feel like the destination is the river, and then the free will is your ability to paddle.
00:43:47.840 That's interesting.
00:43:48.760 Yeah, that's an interesting thought.
00:43:50.460 That's an interesting—because even what—like, what free will means is also something that's debated.
00:43:55.540 What if it turns out like—
00:43:57.300 Like, what do you mean by free will?
00:43:59.860 Like, the ability—like, what is the interplay between that and grace?
00:44:03.980 It's actually a really complicated conversation.
00:44:05.960 We tend to use freedom as a political term.
00:44:09.540 Like, oh, when your government allows you the choice between multiple things.
00:44:13.380 But, like, freedom on an internal level.
00:44:15.840 Freedom at the human level.
00:44:17.160 Like, what kind of people are—like, which kinds of people are free to make which specific choices and what is that based on?
00:44:23.660 Right.
00:44:23.760 We know the more virtue you build up, the more free you are.
00:44:27.380 Because, like, a person with a lot of vice, a person who, like, has a drinking problem or something, or they're an alcoholic, like, they don't have the freedom to just stop.
00:44:35.040 Do you know what I mean?
00:44:35.620 Yeah.
00:44:35.880 So freedom means something very different on an internal level, and it's kind of complicated.
00:44:39.720 What if the spirits actually are trying to distill cosmic knowledge through Ian, but Ian lacks—humans lack the ability to convey that information?
00:44:49.680 And I'm not saying it's a joke.
00:44:50.640 I'm saying if someone really were to be a prophet with some kind of divine knowledge, how would anyone know to believe them as to what they were saying was true?
00:44:58.280 I was—
00:44:58.700 They would just come off like Ian.
00:44:59.940 I don't necessarily—I mean, I think that when you look at the prophets in the Old Testament and you look at prophets—like, the idea of a prophet is—we see it as a prophet, someone who's communicating this esoteric knowledge or telling us what the future is going to be.
00:45:15.240 But you've got to remember that a prophet is somebody who they can, I suppose, do that and, you know, say things that were revealed to them by God.
00:45:25.480 But it's largely, like, somebody who's living a really good life and trying to keep their society on track by telling it the things that it forgot, but it should already know.
00:45:32.200 Like, no, you're not supposed to be worshiping idols.
00:45:33.900 Or, no, you're not supposed to be sacrificing children, whatever it is.
00:45:38.780 I got—when I started being—trying to be more virtuous, I decided I'm going to confess my sins to the internet.
00:45:43.460 So that was part of my early YouTube journey was telling—making videos talking about my secrets, my past, my humiliating things.
00:45:49.640 And then it stopped interrupting my—I stopped getting interrupted.
00:45:52.200 Like, I was no longer a slave.
00:45:53.260 I was free.
00:45:53.880 I was no longer a slave to my thoughts.
00:45:55.760 And then in that silence is when I realize stuff.
00:45:59.640 And maybe it's divine wisdom.
00:46:01.160 That's when you start to realize divine wisdom is when you just clear the channel and you're not interrupted by your thoughts or whatever you want to call these interruptions.
00:46:08.780 And then you can channel divine will because it's like—it must be a two-way radio between you and the spirit realm.
00:46:15.080 I know that they seem to be able to read everything we're doing in real time, but we can't necessarily read what they're doing.
00:46:20.340 You have to, like, open up to catch the frequency.
00:46:21.980 Have you heard the DMT theory where the general idea is that all humans—you can look at it like this.
00:46:30.100 If you couldn't see the hand and you could only see the fingertips, you would see five individual beings arguing with each other.
00:46:36.580 Oh, yeah, yeah.
00:46:37.440 And the theory is that beyond the veil, when you take DMT, you can see the threads that connect it all to the greater, and we are all just tendrils of the same being.
00:46:44.320 And they'll show you.
00:46:45.480 So this is why—and this is why I like to point out, I think in every heresy there's a kernel of truth.
00:46:50.580 We are—we do exist as individuals in the sense that God loves each of us and he created us and we're all unique.
00:46:56.480 Like, one thing that our society's forgotten as we've moved in the direction of atomized individualism is that you exist along this historic continuum, right?
00:47:07.160 You aren't—your life is not really just yours to do what you want with.
00:47:10.280 I was thinking about this the other day.
00:47:11.340 I saw some very rich celebrities said, I'm not going to leave any of my wealth to my children.
00:47:15.160 And my first thought was, all right, when I think about everything my ancestors went through to come to America, how my great-grandparents got here.
00:47:23.200 They got on a boat, not a plane.
00:47:24.520 It was too far in the past for them to have access to the travel that we have access to today.
00:47:28.620 And they came here for a better life.
00:47:30.940 And, like, if I were to become unfathomably wealthy, it would be spitting on the graves of my ancestors who did everything they could to come here for me to go, like, I'm not going to keep it in the family and I'm not going to give it to my descendants, right?
00:47:42.960 Because I don't just exist for me, like, I exist as a part of my family.
00:47:47.440 I exist as a member of the church.
00:47:49.780 I exist—like, I exist as an American.
00:47:52.360 You don't—and so we try to remove ourselves from the structures that actually very much give our lives meaning.
00:47:58.720 So in that—I think that's the truth in that heresy.
00:48:01.420 But I don't think that we're all, you know, the same being.
00:48:04.860 I certainly don't think that's the case.
00:48:06.040 Probably more connected through something unseen than the same.
00:48:09.840 But, like, the thing about generational wealth, giving all the wealth to the one child is, like, if all of your magnesium was in your middle finger and your other finger wasn't—didn't get any, you'd be like, I'm dying.
00:48:21.040 I'm going to lose my finger that's not getting the wealth.
00:48:23.260 But you've got to think about it that way.
00:48:24.420 Whatever, you know, organic mechanism that exists in your body that's supposed to give magnesium to that finger, it just gives magnesium to that finger instead of the other one.
00:48:32.320 And as a father, it is your social role to provide for your children and not necessarily everyone else's children.
00:48:37.220 So actually, the best way for you to ensure health across society is to do the specific role that you have instead of trying to take on other people's roles.
00:48:45.240 And it's not to say that you can't or shouldn't help the poor or other people's children when you can.
00:48:49.440 It's just that you've got to keep your primary duty in mind.
00:48:52.020 Let's grab this—let's talk about this right here.
00:48:54.100 The next Carrington-level solar superstorm could wipe out all our satellites' new simulations reveal.
00:49:01.560 So I just think it's interesting.
00:49:04.360 We had this big solar storm in the 1800s that, like, fried everything, but we didn't have the computers that we have today.
00:49:11.980 Dude, can you imagine?
00:49:12.580 It's crazy that that happened, too, because I forget about that.
00:49:15.480 Right.
00:49:15.780 So what if this Adam and Eve theory isn't necessarily even about the poles shifting, but a solar storm blasting and wiping out all tech?
00:49:22.620 And then, you know, we're just with a bunch of rocks.
00:49:26.820 Yeah, we need tech that can handle a solar flare, for sure, and lightning strikes.
00:49:30.940 We need, like, graphene, batteries, supercharger, capacitors that can handle literally a lightning strike and charge up.
00:49:37.240 Because otherwise, man, we are teetering on the edge of everything getting knocked out by, like, what we know is real.
00:49:43.160 You know what kind of funny, though?
00:49:43.700 What if we didn't do anything to protect ourselves from solar flares?
00:49:46.620 Because we're still, like, 50-50 on whether this stuff is good for us.
00:49:49.760 Like, we have this technology, but, like, honestly, if a solar flare comes, it was God's will.
00:49:54.940 Like, we'll just start off.
00:49:56.880 Are you guys familiar with mud flood theory?
00:49:58.920 No.
00:49:59.200 Yeah, a little bit.
00:50:00.220 That at some point, a giant flood swept across the earth, and it buried a great civilization in mud.
00:50:06.600 And there are people that believe that we're not building buildings.
00:50:09.720 We're reclaiming them by digging them out.
00:50:12.000 And the evidence they cite for it is that there are buildings in places, and this is true.
00:50:16.980 It's kind of weird, where you can see a door frame half buried.
00:50:20.600 So it's like, there'll be a building, sidewalk going past it, and then you'll see half of a door sticking out.
00:50:26.540 And you're like, why did they put a door frame where that dirt is?
00:50:29.300 Did it sink?
00:50:29.580 Well, your parents' house has a basement.
00:50:31.060 That used to all be above ground.
00:50:32.480 It got buried.
00:50:33.580 So, actually, some people think that.
00:50:34.800 But it may actually be simple in that there used to be a cellar door and a pathway, and they just filled it in.
00:50:40.380 Well, also, when they say it.
00:50:41.660 Pretty easy explanation.
00:50:42.240 What do they mean we're just, like, they think, what do they mean we're just digging things up?
00:50:45.560 We see people build buildings.
00:50:46.640 Yes, but they're saying a lot of old buildings were there before the flood.
00:50:51.420 And so the idea is the poles shifted, and when the pole shifts, the water sloshes around the planet.
00:50:56.460 And when floods happen, the sediment then settles, leaving behind this thick mud.
00:51:00.420 Yeah, that's what they think happened in Atlantis.
00:51:01.900 The floodwaters came from the Atlantic into Africa.
00:51:05.520 You see the striations of the sand getting pushed up on.
00:51:08.080 So not only did when all that glacier ice melted, all that land went up, because there's no longer glacial pressure.
00:51:13.220 When that land went up in North America, Atlantis went down, because that's, I think, called static, some sort of static thing on Earth, where, like, if one part goes up, other parts go down.
00:51:21.980 Not only did that happen, but the ocean came and flooded mud all over top of it.
00:51:26.600 What would you guys do if it turned out that this advanced human civilization still exists and intentionally keeps us in the dark?
00:51:32.480 Like they went underground?
00:51:33.340 No, we'll let this happen.
00:51:33.960 Just hear me out on the ice wall.
00:51:35.040 Hear me out on my theory.
00:51:36.660 What if Atlantis existed and does exist, and when they wrote about it at their time, it seemed like this insane high-tech utopia, but to us, it's just like, it's okay.
00:51:49.200 It's like average.
00:51:50.260 Like, we discover it, and it's kind of like, it's like Atlanta in the 70s.
00:51:54.960 No, no, no, no, no.
00:51:55.520 It's not like, it would be amazing to an ancient person, but you're like, it's just kind of like...
00:51:59.940 But it's a great point, but even less than that, where it's like, they just had the wheel.
00:52:04.120 Yeah.
00:52:05.500 And they were like, it was crazy.
00:52:06.900 They could move stuff around, and it just went.
00:52:08.860 My guess is they had electricity, because they had Baghdad batteries they found where you could fill up clay pots with vinegar and like an iron rod and wrap it with copper.
00:52:16.540 I think that's the tech.
00:52:17.600 And then you link a bunch of them together, and you get power and like light bulbs and shit.
00:52:21.140 They use it for electroplating.
00:52:23.200 Yeah, stuff like that.
00:52:23.980 I don't know.
00:52:24.620 I don't think they had radio.
00:52:26.040 I would love to fantasize that maybe they had radio, and that's how they dominated the oceans.
00:52:30.020 You know, that's how they were such a global...
00:52:31.700 What about, what was that stuff, that napalm they had?
00:52:35.380 Was it like Roman...
00:52:35.920 Greek fire.
00:52:36.560 Greek fire.
00:52:36.820 There you go.
00:52:37.480 Yeah, the Greeks had that by 2000, by like zero BC.
00:52:41.180 Well, zero.
00:52:42.060 It's like, we try and wonder, like, how could they make something that would burn and stick to stuff so powerfully, and it was just literally feces?
00:52:47.640 When the Romans could build concrete underground, dude, Atlantis.
00:52:50.840 I wonder how advanced they were.
00:52:52.100 I really do like to think it was just kind of like an average American town from the 80s or something, which again, historically, that's massive, right?
00:53:00.020 Compared to what people had, but you would go there and be like, ah, like, yeah, it's...
00:53:04.020 It would be average American.
00:53:05.440 I think it'd be funnier if it was just in the Bronze Age, they were looking at something that was the Iron Age, and they're like, whoa!
00:53:10.660 No, I think there's something funny about it.
00:53:12.260 Spears last longer.
00:53:13.500 I think there'd be something funny about it being, like, kind of close to today, but just not impressive to us.
00:53:18.160 We're like, I don't know.
00:53:19.360 It was like, okay.
00:53:19.940 You shouldn't make that.
00:53:20.480 It'd be like hanging out in the 50s, but they're Neanderthals.
00:53:22.560 Maybe that'll be an eventual episode of Twisted Plot.
00:53:24.740 Atlantis.
00:53:25.460 But I think it'd have to be, like, the 1930s or whatever.
00:53:28.300 Yeah, or like the 40s, where it's not that advanced, but they have electricity.
00:53:31.640 Or like they're just trying to mechanize radio.
00:53:35.380 And they're like, we have an incredible cure.
00:53:38.120 If you are sick, we'll put leeches on you.
00:53:40.620 And they're like, whoa!
00:53:42.460 It's...
00:53:42.900 But with Neanderthals.
00:53:44.580 There's Neanderthals there.
00:53:45.840 There's also...
00:53:46.240 The last Neanderthals got taken to Atlantis as slaves, and they were used as, like, servants.
00:53:50.400 But they were educated, but they were still used as a servant class.
00:53:53.260 You know what you'd have to do...
00:53:54.160 That's my story.
00:53:54.780 I'm just making that up.
00:53:55.500 It would have to...
00:53:55.940 The whole thing would have to be gags about how, like, either mediocre or bad their technology is.
00:54:00.380 But then at the end, they have some tech that just mogs us.
00:54:02.700 Like, yes, oh, of course, our replica.
00:54:03.820 Yeah.
00:54:04.260 Where we are able to, like, infinitely create.
00:54:06.380 Randall Carlson's talking about that.
00:54:07.920 It's like, it's Atlantis, and then one guy goes, heavier than air, flying machines are
00:54:11.020 impossible.
00:54:12.360 They think that they did have, like...
00:54:14.520 Well, they postulate that they might have had, instead of explosive technology, they
00:54:19.520 have implos.
00:54:20.160 That's how they get their propulsions through.
00:54:21.560 They're implosive force, so that it causes vibration, and then that causes a rupture.
00:54:26.360 Where does the implosion go?
00:54:28.920 Well, there's different ways to look at it, because if you have, like, mercury, if you
00:54:31.920 squeeze one part of the mercury, the rest of it will shoot forward.
00:54:34.480 That's explosive.
00:54:35.320 If you implode an area, the other part of it will fire, like, squeeze, go firing off.
00:54:39.960 Maybe something like that.
00:54:41.420 Or maybe it just causes things to go back and forth so fast that it causes an electrical
00:54:44.580 charge.
00:54:45.520 It's like, we've built this 500-foot circumference sphere, and when we blow it up, it'll go
00:54:52.580 down to one foot.
00:54:54.520 Just...
00:54:55.120 With the implosion?
00:54:57.140 No, you'd have a sphere, and you'd implode part of the sphere, and the rest of the sphere
00:55:00.040 would shoot off.
00:55:03.140 What?
00:55:03.520 That's hypothetically, if you imploded, like, part of the sphere, compressed part...
00:55:06.920 Like, if you have a balloon, and you squeeze part of the balloon, the other part of the
00:55:08.980 balloon gets bigger.
00:55:09.800 Right, that's not implosive.
00:55:11.240 That's just, like...
00:55:12.040 The force of implosion would be like your hand squeezing.
00:55:14.040 It would be that kind of pressure.
00:55:15.280 You mean, like, when a combustion engine, and it goes down and up?
00:55:19.640 Hmm.
00:55:20.480 No.
00:55:21.160 Because the going down is just as part of the going up part.
00:55:23.420 Compressive?
00:55:23.880 Oh, yeah, there would still be compression.
00:55:25.220 Because you need to create the pressure, and then it explodes and shoots it back out.
00:55:29.580 Right, and how are they getting that compression to create that force?
00:55:33.260 Sound, maybe?
00:55:33.980 Like, if you see samoluminescence, when in a bubble underwater, it creates light.
00:55:38.260 Have you ever seen that?
00:55:39.060 If a bubble pops underwater, it creates light.
00:55:40.580 There's that shrimp or whatever, you ever see them?
00:55:43.240 It can, like, do the punch, which creates light.
00:55:46.000 Yeah, the mantis shrimp.
00:55:46.560 Yeah, there you go.
00:55:47.180 Dude, those things are crazy.
00:55:48.820 Whoa.
00:55:49.160 And have you ever bite down on, like, one of those old lifesavers, mint lifesavers in
00:55:52.900 a closet?
00:55:53.380 You can see it spark.
00:55:54.820 What?
00:55:55.340 Really?
00:55:55.480 If you have a mint lifesaver in the dark, yeah, bite down.
00:55:58.140 Don't do it.
00:55:58.500 It might hurt your teeth, but it causes...
00:56:00.240 You can see sparks.
00:56:00.820 If you ever...
00:56:01.620 Like, it's really, really dark in your bedroom at night, and then you have the blanket, and you
00:56:05.220 can see lightning go...
00:56:06.180 Like, electricity go across it?
00:56:07.200 Yeah, if you, like, wipe the pillow or blanket with your hand, it sparks.
00:56:09.980 We gotta tap into that.
00:56:11.240 That's a solar flare right there.
00:56:12.580 Yeah.
00:56:13.380 Oh, is it?
00:56:14.080 What do you guys...
00:56:15.080 We gotta tap into the static electricity of our wool blankets at night.
00:56:19.920 We power our home as we shuffle through the night.
00:56:22.760 Spacetime is the wool blanket, and the sun is the static...
00:56:27.120 I feel like right now, there's, like, God's watching this and going, ugh.
00:56:31.060 He's like, just get it right!
00:56:32.280 I've given you 46 years, Crossland!
00:56:34.320 Get it right!
00:56:34.940 I think that if another solar...
00:56:39.120 It's an interesting question, like, another solar flare hitting.
00:56:42.440 I don't buy into the theory that there was a civilization before...
00:56:46.680 I mean, I do, actually, because I believe in the Flood, but I mean before Adam and Eve.
00:56:49.840 I don't think there was a human civilization before Adam and Eve, but I think whether or
00:56:54.340 not you believe in that is gonna inform your beliefs about what is possible next, probably.
00:56:59.440 But what if there was an Atlantis and it was destroyed in the Flood?
00:57:01.880 Or just, yeah, or any, you know, pre-Flood civilization.
00:57:06.260 But in all seriousness, maybe there was an Atlantis.
00:57:09.660 It was not particularly advanced.
00:57:11.660 It was just...
00:57:13.400 They thought it was advanced afterwards.
00:57:15.640 Hot air balloons.
00:57:16.520 No, no, no, not even that.
00:57:17.480 Not even that.
00:57:17.800 That's way too much.
00:57:18.400 I'm saying it was an urban center.
00:57:20.680 And so in the urban center, things were just slightly more advanced, like they had an aqueduct.
00:57:24.520 And they were like, whoa!
00:57:25.540 And then the Flood wipes it out, and they tell legends of this great advanced civilization.
00:57:28.520 But it was only advanced back then.
00:57:30.700 Yeah, if you look at the raccotch...
00:57:32.040 I don't like what you're saying, but I'm saying like 20th century is still way too advanced.
00:57:35.300 They probably had horses.
00:57:36.780 They probably, because they did conquer area, according to legend, so they would have imported
00:57:40.480 a lot of foods and animals, I think.
00:57:42.840 Maybe they had elephants, who knows?
00:57:44.040 But if you look at the raccotch structure and that plateau that it's on, there's a lot
00:57:47.520 of ancient rivers where you would have the outlying farms.
00:57:50.560 There's other, like, moats dug.
00:57:52.800 You can see where they dug.
00:57:54.260 Nuke it and get to the bottom of it.
00:57:55.440 We should nuke Antarctica.
00:57:56.360 We have to get under the raccotch structure.
00:57:58.160 Well, Trump says he wants to reset these nuclear tests.
00:58:01.480 I say, let's just start nuking Antarctica to see what happens.
00:58:04.360 Dude, what's under Antarctica?
00:58:05.740 What could possibly go wrong?
00:58:06.500 Yeah.
00:58:07.340 I mean, I hear what Roseanne said...
00:58:08.760 No, because Trump's going to do that and then sue you.
00:58:10.200 You have to say you don't mean it to them.
00:58:11.260 No, no.
00:58:12.000 Trump should nuke the same spot in Antarctica, like, 50 times.
00:58:17.000 What if Trump...
00:58:17.560 Okay, honest question.
00:58:18.620 What if Trump came out and was like, I think we should nuke Antarctica in the exact same location
00:58:23.200 50 times just to see what happens?
00:58:24.980 That would, like, move America like a rocket ship.
00:58:27.020 You'd be like...
00:58:27.620 Digging a hole.
00:58:29.060 The whole earth would just...
00:58:30.540 But what would the response be?
00:58:33.080 Everyone would just...
00:58:33.620 The left would be like, no!
00:58:34.700 Yeah, yeah.
00:58:35.340 People on the right are going to be like, Trump is right.
00:58:38.580 We've got to nuke Antarctica.
00:58:40.120 That's a problem that's so weird.
00:58:40.360 And our could have been going non-nukes for too long.
00:58:43.640 People will be like...
00:58:45.540 You know, that's that meme where it's just like, people, dot, dot, and then it's like nothing.
00:58:48.500 And then Trump says, we've got to nuke the polls.
00:58:50.020 And everyone's like, we've got to nuke the polls.
00:58:51.500 You're like, you weren't even thinking that yesterday.
00:58:53.300 Now all of a sudden you think it's a good idea?
00:58:54.480 No.
00:58:55.600 Trump needs to come out just for no reason.
00:58:57.440 Trump just comes out and goes, my fellow Americans, I will not nuke Antarctica.
00:59:02.740 It's not going to happen.
00:59:03.920 It will never happen.
00:59:04.900 And then the left, every corporate press outlet's like, Trump must nuke Antarctica.
00:59:08.980 Do you want to nuke it to melt the ice?
00:59:11.200 I just want to dig a big hole.
00:59:12.620 Get under it?
00:59:13.100 No, I just think that if there's one thing man must do, it is to dig a hole.
00:59:18.340 And we have the technology to dig the biggest hole ever dug.
00:59:21.040 You would imagine they'd have done it already.
00:59:22.920 And they don't let people fly over Antarctica?
00:59:25.580 They don't have the will.
00:59:26.080 Okay, I'm just, there's nothing there.
00:59:28.840 Just nuke it.
00:59:30.180 Over and over and over again.
00:59:31.000 Oh, and that's why, that's the point.
00:59:32.560 You'd be like, you guys said there's nothing there.
00:59:34.100 Just nuke the thing.
00:59:34.820 And they're like.
00:59:35.140 There is nothing there.
00:59:35.920 I'm saying nuke it so we can get to the bottom of it.
00:59:37.660 Yeah, that's literally the bottom of Antarctica.
00:59:39.640 We should hollow it out and just make it a big, make it a big like.
00:59:44.140 The biggest transition ever built on Earth.
00:59:47.380 And you can ski down it.
00:59:49.280 And it's like 50 miles of slope.
00:59:52.160 And you're going like, you're going terminal velocity.
00:59:55.200 You're like a bowl you drop into on a skateboard.
00:59:56.380 That's how you'll shoot things up into space.
00:59:58.240 It's just a giant bowl.
00:59:58.900 And it'll be a big skate park up there.
01:00:00.620 I bet they'll go like 300 miles an hour up the other side and get 400 feet of air.
01:00:06.400 Magnetic launch.
01:00:07.120 You may build a magnetic track that launches you into orbit.
01:00:09.820 Well, I don't know about that.
01:00:10.960 I bet they got like underground base stations there.
01:00:12.960 You guys give me one argument why we shouldn't nuke Antarctica.
01:00:15.040 There's none.
01:00:15.480 That proves it.
01:00:15.920 Because you might harm the scientists that are working on super secret other off-world technology.
01:00:20.680 They're trying to simulate what it's like to be on Mars down there.
01:00:23.500 What do you guys think?
01:00:24.220 What would you do if a big solar flare hit tomorrow?
01:00:27.700 Same thing I'm doing right now, I guess.
01:00:29.420 Yeah, probably.
01:00:30.060 What?
01:00:30.460 What was it?
01:00:31.100 No, because you wouldn't be able to use the computer.
01:00:33.100 Oh, so what happens for the solar flare?
01:00:34.900 No, no, that's not correct.
01:00:35.740 We're in a Faraday cage.
01:00:36.420 Oh, really?
01:00:37.820 So we are.
01:00:39.040 That's why your phones don't work.
01:00:40.200 So the question is how strong of a solar flare.
01:00:42.900 If the big one hit, we are literally in a Faraday cage.
01:00:46.340 Based.
01:00:46.720 But you're, it's not going to block a massive solar flare like that.
01:00:52.000 So for those that don't understand, we are in a building in a building.
01:00:56.200 So the Timcast Studio is a gigantic metal building that acts like a Faraday cage.
01:01:01.620 Inside of that building is another building.
01:01:03.980 So the studio is actually, it's like a, I don't know, it's like 2,000 square foot, two-story,
01:01:10.200 four-room structure inside of a gigantic steel-framed building.
01:01:15.100 And so this makes it impossible for you to use your phone while you're in the building.
01:01:18.580 So if all the power went out, you mean?
01:01:20.840 A solar flare hit that like defied all our preventions, what would you guys do?
01:01:25.360 I don't, could, what would happen?
01:01:27.120 Could I still use my phone?
01:01:28.260 Like would it still have a charge?
01:01:29.500 No, it would fry.
01:01:30.160 Everything would blow?
01:01:31.020 Yeah, so basically what's happening is when the solar, so if you take like a copper circuit
01:01:37.580 and you ever see how they test radio waves?
01:01:41.260 Like they, you, how, how, antennas, magic.
01:01:46.440 You can actually extract energy from radio waves that are hitting the antennas.
01:01:50.020 It's just microscopic amounts.
01:01:51.960 A solar flare blasts your devices, your circuitry with a massive amount of energy.
01:01:56.420 So it fries it and it can't work properly.
01:01:58.680 If it's off, does it still fry it?
01:02:00.180 Just because the way it's built, it overcharges it.
01:02:02.640 Literally, antennas will absorb this electromagnetic charge.
01:02:07.160 So that your devices, every component of it will absorb the energy and fry.
01:02:11.060 Would my car be able to start?
01:02:12.600 No.
01:02:12.860 It's an 06.
01:02:13.880 There are certain components for your car.
01:02:15.400 Pre-1968 or something.
01:02:17.040 Yeah.
01:02:17.520 There are certain components you can put, there's like certain spare parts you can put in a
01:02:22.180 ferrity cage for certain cars so that if a solar flare hits, you could in theory put
01:02:25.740 it back into your car and still use it.
01:02:27.440 But yeah, generally.
01:02:28.000 If it hit, we, oh, I don't know how to.
01:02:30.180 I would try and confirm it and then I'd be like, I don't know even know how to confirm
01:02:33.100 what's going on, but I'd probably chop wood or something and light a fire.
01:02:36.780 So we need to get getting set up for the Timcast IRL backstage pass for our members on the Discord.
01:02:43.720 So go to Timcast.com, click join us in the Discord because we're not stopping.
01:02:47.860 We're actually going to keep going.
01:02:49.060 What happens now is we're going to begin pre-production for Timcast IRL and our Discord
01:02:52.980 members get to hang out while we do this.
01:02:55.100 It's almost like another podcast.
01:02:56.780 It's just not really, there's no coordination.
01:02:59.400 We're just literally talking about what we're going to do and we're making jokes and people
01:03:02.240 are getting water.
01:03:03.320 And then we were pre-recording our episode for tonight starting at 2 p.m.
01:03:09.020 It's a challenge because Fridays are pretty apocalyptically bad news days unless there's a scandal.
01:03:15.480 And so I would say more than half of the views we get on Friday night's episode are from
01:03:20.100 Saturday morning, Sunday morning, and Monday morning because people are out Friday nights.
01:03:23.880 So we decided to start doing a pre-record this way because there's no news after a certain
01:03:27.020 amount of time usually.
01:03:28.540 And this allows us to do the backstage pass for our members in the afternoon and then
01:03:32.800 go out and do their stuff Friday night and then watch Saturday morning.
01:03:35.060 It works out really well.
01:03:36.140 But that means we're going to get to it.
01:03:37.740 So you've got to join at Timcast.com.
01:03:39.900 You can follow me on X on Instagram at Timcast.
01:03:41.940 That's going to do it for our short culture war.
01:03:44.980 We were trying to have our culture war debates be more focused on more relevant subjects.
01:03:51.080 And we ended up not like no one's around today.
01:03:55.340 Everybody had some kind of emergency.
01:03:56.700 These things happen.
01:03:57.560 So this is why we did the episode today that we did.
01:03:59.240 But it was fun.
01:04:00.800 Anyway, Ian, do you want to shout anything out before we go?
01:04:02.780 Eddie in Crossland is my name.
01:04:04.140 And you can find me.
01:04:04.840 Well, it's just Ian Crossland at X YouTube Instagram.
01:04:07.420 Follow me on Instagram.
01:04:08.240 Check out my X stuff.
01:04:08.920 I've been pumping things out through Sora.
01:04:10.440 Tim and I both have.
01:04:11.140 Sora.com is ChatGPT's video creation, artificial intelligence.
01:04:15.780 So I uploaded my face, my likeness, my voice.
01:04:18.700 And you can add Ian Crossland me on Sora and make movies with me.
01:04:22.340 I've been experimenting with it.
01:04:23.960 And it is getting crazy powerful.
01:04:27.160 I think within two years, it's probably the entertainment industry is probably going to
01:04:30.320 be to the point where you license actors for like $1,000 a second.
01:04:34.680 And you can put them into your AI movie and you'll pay their estate.
01:04:38.320 But I'm going to give my likeness away for free to the human race.
01:04:40.960 It'll be public domain.
01:04:41.720 So anyone can make anything with me forever is ideal.
01:04:44.120 I think just it's super fun.
01:04:45.900 So you can find that stuff on Instagram and on X.
01:04:47.640 I'm pumping it out there.
01:04:49.100 Seamus Coughlin.
01:04:49.960 My name is Seamus Coughlin.
01:04:51.060 I'm the creator of Freedom Tunes.
01:04:52.580 I have produced over 700 animated videos.
01:04:54.800 And on the Freedom Tunes YouTube channel, we have over a million subs and over 290 million
01:04:58.860 views with $0 spent on marketing.
01:05:01.480 And the reason is because people are hungry for alternative entertainment.
01:05:04.920 They're hungry for entertainment made by people who don't hate them and their way of
01:05:08.140 life.
01:05:08.780 And today, almost all channels of entertainment media are controlled by radical leftists who
01:05:13.780 hate you, who hate your family, who hate your way of life, and have been slowly chipping
01:05:17.020 away at it with propaganda over the course of decades.
01:05:20.000 That's why myself and my team are expanding into creating a full-length animated show.
01:05:26.180 It's an anthology series which delivers a right-wing message with each episode through
01:05:31.460 story and through jokes rather than ham-fisted monologues or preaching.
01:05:36.400 We've got two weeks left to get fully funded.
01:05:38.980 And if you support the cause, you will get access to our finished 25-minute-long pilot episode.
01:05:43.720 So go to twistedplots.com, give $25, support the cause.
01:05:47.580 I've got the team, I've got the experience, and I've got the track record.
01:05:50.520 If you give me your support, I will be unstoppable and we will create the future of entertainment.
01:05:55.000 It is right-wing and it is grassroots.
01:05:57.500 Twistedplots.com.
01:05:58.720 There's another technique, Seamus, I think you've got to learn.
01:06:00.920 It's called the yes train.
01:06:01.860 Are you guys familiar with the yes train?
01:06:03.460 Yes, and?
01:06:04.340 If somebody says yes a certain number of times, they're more likely to say yes moving forward
01:06:08.980 to questions of behavior.
01:06:11.360 So the technique would be something like, Seamus, you like funny cartoons, right?
01:06:15.140 Of course.
01:06:15.660 Of course you do, and you think we've got a problem with leftist indoctrination in our
01:06:18.980 schools.
01:06:19.700 Absolutely.
01:06:20.280 And you really want to do something about it, don't you?
01:06:23.300 Of course, yeah.
01:06:24.220 That's right.
01:06:24.580 That's why you're going to give me 50 bucks.
01:06:26.680 Interesting.
01:06:27.460 Yeah, so typically what you want to do is you want to make them say yes seven times.
01:06:31.480 Yeah, eight times is a way to memorize.
01:06:33.180 You repeat something eight times to memorize it.
01:06:35.140 So it's one of the sales techniques where it's like, listen, you recognize we've got a
01:06:38.800 problem with leftist indoctrination in our culture.
01:06:41.660 Yes.
01:06:42.160 And you've seen these wacky movies and like the Bud Light thing.
01:06:44.960 Yes.
01:06:45.720 And you want someone to do something about it.
01:06:47.880 Yes.
01:06:48.320 Well, I can do it.
01:06:49.320 Here's what I've done.
01:06:49.960 It looks good, doesn't it?
01:06:51.000 Yes.
01:06:51.920 That's why we're going to do X, Y, and Z.
01:06:53.540 And I know that you really care about this cause.
01:06:55.480 You've already told me.
01:06:56.060 Yes.
01:06:56.580 Okay.
01:06:57.080 So pull out your credit card.
01:06:58.100 Yes.
01:06:59.040 Listen, regardless of the pitch or the techniques or whatever, we are building a future here
01:07:02.980 with conservative entertainment.
01:07:04.760 The right does need to make more content.
01:07:06.560 We need to make better content.
01:07:07.740 That's what we're doing here.
01:07:08.700 The funny thing.
01:07:09.080 We talk about it a lot.
01:07:10.400 We talk about how the left dominates the media.
01:07:12.320 We got to do something about it.
01:07:13.640 And myself and my team are.
01:07:14.600 You could also try coercion where you say something.
01:07:16.920 No, I'm just being sincere.
01:07:17.900 No, no.
01:07:18.260 I mean, maybe you try this, Jameis.
01:07:22.460 Go to twistedplots.com or I will run over a rabbit.
01:07:26.520 I'm not going to run over a rabbit.
01:07:28.360 I just want you guys to understand.
01:07:29.540 I'm not going to do that.
01:07:30.760 Do it or the rabbit gets it.
01:07:31.440 I'm going to make a cartoon.
01:07:32.840 Okay.
01:07:33.020 We got to go.
01:07:33.480 We got to go.
01:07:33.880 We got to go.
01:07:34.400 Thanks for hanging out, everybody.
01:07:35.380 We're back for the backstage for Timcast.com Discord members in about a second.
01:07:40.600 For the rest of you, we'll see you tonight at 8 p.m.
01:07:42.620 Thanks for hanging out.
01:07:43.320 Thank you.