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.
00:01:03.520There's also reports of a potential solar micro nova, which will wipe out all of humanity.
00:01:08.560And I know it has nothing to do with politics or what's actually going on the ground.
00:01:12.080But every once in a while, it's fun to, I don't know, doom prophesize.
00:01:17.520But 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.
00:01:29.080If that means the northern hemisphere may move, you might end up with Florida in a winterized, in a colder climate.
00:01:40.460I mean, I have no idea how crazy it's going to get.
00:01:42.480We've had these conversations quite a bit.
00:01:43.980Unfortunately, our guest, while exploring the hurricane to prove the pole shift was happening, was captured in wind currents and ripped to shreds.
00:01:54.840And out of respect for them, we'll only describe their death in minor graphic detail.
00:02:37.480Today, we have the most incredible infrastructure for storytelling that has ever existed with film, television, and streaming.
00:02:44.360And 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.
00:02:51.620That's why myself and my team have spent over 11 years creating over 600 animated videos, reaching over a million subscribers.
00:02:58.160And gaining over 290 million views with zero dollars spent on marketing.
00:03:02.260And now we're taking the next step to fight the culture war by making culture.
00:03:05.920I'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.
00:03:34.780And 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.
00:03:45.480And we need to do this before it's too late because civilization depends on having good stories.
00:04:21.800I 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.
00:05:32.520So we've got Whackaloon Ian and devout, faithful Seamus both going to be debating why or when the world may end from different perspectives.
00:06:49.660It's the strongest hurricane ever hit Jamaica.
00:06:51.640But 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.
00:07:01.080He's not some dude saying, this proves interdimensional aliens are coming.
00:07:04.260No, he's literally saying, I've got a—this readout is showing solar activity.
00:07:09.360I think the solar activity may result in this phenomenon happening.
00:07:36.640This is—the reason why—so we don't have our principal guest, unfortunately.
00:07:41.120But 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.
00:07:50.760I 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.
00:07:59.540So the theory, the hypothesis, better way to describe it, is that the poles shift every 6,500 years.
00:08:06.240The 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.
00:08:20.960That wipes out human civilization for the most part and leaves behind only small groups of people who then—what do they do?
00:08:28.560Desperately 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.
00:08:37.520What, 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?
00:08:43.880Well, Judaism's purported to have begun when God spoke to Abraham and made his covenant with him.
00:08:49.020There are some Christians who say that the earth was created 6,000 years ago.
00:09:03.400And 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.
00:09:11.740So there isn't just one perspective here.
00:09:14.360My 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.
00:09:21.900And before that, 6,500 years before that, you had the cataclysmic flood that destroyed Atlantis 12,800 years ago.
00:10:12.400So you can see the news blooper where they're showing Antarctica.
00:10:14.380And then they go, oh, oh, we're above the ice wall.
00:10:16.100And everyone's like, oh, you weren't supposed to show that, you silly goose.
00:10:18.500And humans are really advanced over there.
00:10:20.200They're flying around, and they're immortal.
00:10:21.900Pull 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.
00:10:27.500Look, see how on the left you have the hurricane.
00:10:29.560Then on the right, watch another spinning gyration forms.
00:11:13.280There's like—there's going to be some entities, angels, demons, god, or whatever it is.
00:11:17.800Something's looking down on us being like, how cute.
00:11:19.800Well, and this is what's fascinating to me, right?
00:11:22.080To me, this is the more interesting exploration is the way humans interact with weather.
00:11:27.860When all of humanity seems to have had a specific perspective throughout all of history, it's not to say that that perspective is correct,
00:11:35.160but it is to say there is something in our humanness that leans in the direction of believing that,
00:11:40.260and even if it's a misdirected instinct, we should probably know what it is.
00:11:43.680Because 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.
00:11:54.140So 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.
00:12:02.840And, 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.
00:12:11.360And 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.
00:12:18.900So everyone, like everyone seems to have this belief that climate and weather are affected by human moral behavior, which is fascinating.
00:12:26.840And what is it in us that wants to believe that?
00:12:30.020What if the only true religion is there's some just like up in heaven or in the clouds?
00:12:35.760There'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.
00:12:44.040And then he goes, let's see, what are we at?
00:27:26.020All the religions have got to be right.
00:27:28.060All the religions are pointing towards something that's true.
00:27:30.320So, I think that there's this old idea that in every heresy is a kernel of truth.
00:27:36.900Even when an idea is very wrong, there's some truth in it that keeps people in.
00:27:42.680Right, like when we argued this on the...
00:27:45.160Sorry to interrupt, but the Orthodox versus Catholic debate, where...
00:27:48.760I 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.
00:30:10.240So 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.
00:30:18.160And then all of a sudden starts saying something is true in the future.
00:30:22.500Or 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.
00:30:31.020So 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.
00:30:50.360Because T-O-O-N-S makes more sense because they're cartoons.
00:30:52.700And 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.
00:31:15.900So 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.
00:31:28.340Well, I hope those people come out of the closet.
00:31:40.080So 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.
00:31:57.740It's solidified from a superposition to a single point.
00:32:05.740You 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.
00:32:15.480So you can only jump to a universe that is almost entirely the same as the universe you are in.
00:32:20.900Yeah, it's like you can only walk into the next room.
00:32:22.880And 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.
00:32:30.460So if you go into sensory deprivation and then you hyper-concentrate on the universe you want to go to, you'll come out.
00:33:11.140Yeah, well, they would hum into those shafts and stuff to create tone that would send you into the fucking stratosphere, rocket your consciousness.
00:33:18.140And they would shine light down those chutes you see, and they would reflect down.
00:33:22.820So you'd get—at certain times of day, you'd get crazy light patterns in the room.
00:35:31.400Whenever 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.
00:35:40.040So I actually think that's rerouted our thinking in a way.
00:35:42.640Kind 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.
00:35:54.180Yeah, I think they play into each other.
00:35:56.340I 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.
00:36:08.760Reincarnation is more popular when you're living in a very affluent society.
00:36:14.340It's like, yeah, I could keep doing—I could keep existing in this world over and over and over again.
00:38:48.920This was like philosophers and astrophysicists who were talking about this.
00:38:55.000They 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.
00:39:04.860And they're like, how is it probable that we could evolve and exist so early?
00:39:09.380The 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.
00:39:18.160Just admit that you can't make sense of it, right?
00:39:20.120And they didn't want to, so they have these silly theories.
00:39:23.920But I think we had to exist at some point in time, right?
00:39:27.860If you are going to exist, you have to exist at some point in time.
00:39:31.000You 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.
00:39:37.200I don't think any of us exist on accident.
00:39:39.260We 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.
00:39:48.560But a part of who you are, a massive part of who you are, is the time that you live in.
00:39:53.760It's like, well, you couldn't possibly have existed at any other point in history.
00:39:56.640Because 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?
00:40:13.740And 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.
00:41:14.680This is why I warn people, because when you're talking about these people who go on ayahuasca,
00:41:18.200and 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.
00:42:13.820Where 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.
00:42:21.340That's the fucker I'm going to find out.
00:42:22.340The main character generation is the fucking—that's the problem.
00:42:25.080What'll happen is God will show you signs and make you think you're the main character.
00:42:29.040Gave me the name Crossland on purpose to make me think I'm special when I'm not.
00:42:32.620I'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.
00:42:42.480I actually—I come from the dimension where it was Ian Crossman, and—
00:42:46.380I tried to make that my first email address was Crossman, because my buddy's Strassman, and someone, Don Crossman, took it from Virginia.
00:44:23.760We know the more virtue you build up, the more free you are.
00:44:27.380Because, 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.
00:44:35.880So freedom means something very different on an internal level, and it's kind of complicated.
00:44:39.720What if the spirits actually are trying to distill cosmic knowledge through Ian, but Ian lacks—humans lack the ability to convey that information?
00:44:50.640I'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?
00:44:59.940I 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.
00:45:15.240But 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.
00:45:25.480But 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.
00:45:32.200Like, no, you're not supposed to be worshiping idols.
00:45:33.900Or, no, you're not supposed to be sacrificing children, whatever it is.
00:45:38.780I got—when I started being—trying to be more virtuous, I decided I'm going to confess my sins to the internet.
00:45:43.460So that was part of my early YouTube journey was telling—making videos talking about my secrets, my past, my humiliating things.
00:45:49.640And then it stopped interrupting my—I stopped getting interrupted.
00:46:01.160That'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.
00:46:08.780And then you can channel divine will because it's like—it must be a two-way radio between you and the spirit realm.
00:46:15.080I 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.
00:46:20.340You have to, like, open up to catch the frequency.
00:46:21.980Have you heard the DMT theory where the general idea is that all humans—you can look at it like this.
00:46:30.100If you couldn't see the hand and you could only see the fingertips, you would see five individual beings arguing with each other.
00:46:37.440And 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.
00:46:45.480So this is why—and this is why I like to point out, I think in every heresy there's a kernel of truth.
00:46:50.580We are—we do exist as individuals in the sense that God loves each of us and he created us and we're all unique.
00:46:56.480Like, 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?
00:47:07.160You aren't—your life is not really just yours to do what you want with.
00:47:10.280I was thinking about this the other day.
00:47:11.340I saw some very rich celebrities said, I'm not going to leave any of my wealth to my children.
00:47:15.160And 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.
00:47:30.940And, 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?
00:47:42.960Because I don't just exist for me, like, I exist as a part of my family.
00:47:49.780I exist—like, I exist as an American.
00:47:52.360You don't—and so we try to remove ourselves from the structures that actually very much give our lives meaning.
00:47:58.720So in that—I think that's the truth in that heresy.
00:48:01.420But I don't think that we're all, you know, the same being.
00:48:04.860I certainly don't think that's the case.
00:48:06.040Probably more connected through something unseen than the same.
00:48:09.840But, 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.
00:48:21.040I'm going to lose my finger that's not getting the wealth.
00:48:23.260But you've got to think about it that way.
00:48:24.420Whatever, 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.
00:48:32.320And as a father, it is your social role to provide for your children and not necessarily everyone else's children.
00:48:37.220So 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.
00:48:45.240And it's not to say that you can't or shouldn't help the poor or other people's children when you can.
00:48:49.440It's just that you've got to keep your primary duty in mind.
00:48:52.020Let's grab this—let's talk about this right here.
00:48:54.100The next Carrington-level solar superstorm could wipe out all our satellites' new simulations reveal.
00:50:46.640Yes, but they're saying a lot of old buildings were there before the flood.
00:50:51.420And so the idea is the poles shifted, and when the pole shifts, the water sloshes around the planet.
00:50:56.460And when floods happen, the sediment then settles, leaving behind this thick mud.
00:51:00.420Yeah, that's what they think happened in Atlantis.
00:51:01.900The floodwaters came from the Atlantic into Africa.
00:51:05.520You see the striations of the sand getting pushed up on.
00:51:08.080So not only did when all that glacier ice melted, all that land went up, because there's no longer glacial pressure.
00:51:13.220When 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.
00:51:21.980Not only did that happen, but the ocean came and flooded mud all over top of it.
00:51:26.600What would you guys do if it turned out that this advanced human civilization still exists and intentionally keeps us in the dark?
00:51:36.660What 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.
00:52:06.900They could move stuff around, and it just went.
00:52:08.860My 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.
00:52:42.060It'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?
00:52:47.640When the Romans could build concrete underground, dude, Atlantis.
00:52:52.100I 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?
00:53:00.020Compared to what people had, but you would go there and be like, ah, like, yeah, it's...