Temporal Concentrate - 11-15-2023
Episode Summary:
The document "2023-11-15 Temporal Concentrate" by CLIF HIGH discusses the author's perspective on time and its fundamental role in the universe. High challenges the conventional academic view of time, arguing that time is not just a necessary backdrop for the universe but an active, powering force. He criticizes the Big Bang theory for its inability to explain time and asserts that the universe continuously creates matter, with time being integral to this process.
High delves into the experiments of Kozyrev with "mirrors" that are essentially time concentrators. These experiments, conducted near Finland, involved exposure to concentrated time, resulting in effects akin to psychedelic experiences. Subjects reported visions, some horrific, and lasting mental effects. Notably, the experiments also induced physical changes in participants, such as hair color change, and even led to severe psychological impacts like suicidal tendencies.
The document further explores the impact of concentrated time on different materials. Experiments with lead weights and water revealed unexplained physical changes, such as increased weight and volume reduction, respectively. High emphasizes these findings to support his view of time as a driving energy in the universe.
High concludes by underscoring the potential of concentrated time exposure to enhance psychic abilities in individuals, as reported by many participants in the Kozyrev experiments. He advocates for further exploration of these phenomena to deepen our understanding of time and its relationship with the universe.
Key Takeaways:
- Clif High challenges traditional views of time, positing it as a fundamental, energizing force in the universe.
- He criticizes the Big Bang theory for its failure to explain time and duration.
- High discusses the universe's continuous matter creation, emphasizing time's integral role.
- The Kozyrev experiments, involving time concentration, led to psychedelic-like experiences and mental alterations.
- Participants in these experiments also experienced physical changes, such as hair color transformations.
- Exposure to concentrated time had significant psychological impacts, including suicidal tendencies in some cases.
- The experiments demonstrated that time exposure could enhance psychic abilities.
- High calls for more research into the role of time in the universe, suggesting that current physics has a limited understanding of it.
Temporal Concentrate - 11-15-2023
Hello, humans. Hello, humans.
Let's talk a little bit about time. Time is good stuff. Now, most of the academic world, all the physicists, all of these kind of people, all the scientists and electronics guys, everybody that thinks about time. Time has an understanding about time in our universe that I disagree with. And their version of understanding of time is not very well qualified nor quantified.
They can't really explain time. They talk around it. So my understanding of time is that time is what powers all of the universe. We have a pulse of time. 22 trillion times a second, 22 trillion iterations of it per second.
We have this pulse. The pulse has a duration. That's why we experience duration. We name duration as an aspect of time. But in my way of thinking, time powers everything.
And most of the academics would have you believe that the universe exists, whether or not there is time in it. And that's not really good thinking. Just like you can't have a molecule without the space for it to exist, you also can't have that molecule without the time for it to exist. And so time is every bit a fundamental characteristic of universe, of our materium, within the universe, just as is space. And to a great degree, academics in the science businesses think of space or time very much the same way as they think of space as something that's required, but something that's not very interesting and doesn't do much.
So their understanding of both space and time are not appropriate. Okay, so sort of asked backwards.
So there is no Big bang. Big Bang theory does not explain time, doesn't explain duration, doesn't explain energy in universe, doesn't explain where the Big Bang came from or any of that, right? It's very much like a religion in the sense that. And God decreed. And there was a big bang.
It's like, okay, that doesn't explain anything. It just labels some shit, right? But in my way of thinking, this pulse goes through universe. When it crosses itself, there's a level of complexity increase. When you increase the Complexity enough, you get the appearance of matter.
When matter appears, it must have space in it. And so the little bloop theory is that we're continuously creating matter. Bloop, bloop, bloop, bloop, bloop, bloop, bloop. And every time one of the little bloops creates a bit of a hydrogen ion, which is the very first, lowest level of matter to be created, we get space with it. Now, the Large Hadron Collider that the academics are using to smash our hydrogen atoms into smaller and smaller bits will accommodate them as long as they wish to run it, but they will never, ever find their God particle.
They'll never, ever find a particle that has consciousness or that could have consciousness, nor will they find a particle that has time. They won't be able to ever separate it all. We know that this is possible, though, because of Kozyrev's experiments with time. Kozyrev was actually able to have manufactured what they called mirrors. But these mirrors didn't reflect really anything.
They're concentrators. And so they're not reflectors of light nor any other kind of a radiation, but they're more like a time trap, a time concentrator. And these mirrors had, they performed a lot of experiments in the. Then we lose the. Well, it was the.
Then we lose the thread. I mean, these Kozyrev mirrors were apparently taken over by the Russian state and have disappeared into their version of obscured, classified material. Prior to that, we have the Kozyrev mirrors being used up near Finland, where they were indeed concentrating time. And people had effects from being exposed to concentrations of time. And many of these effects, we will note, have similar analogues to psychedelic journeys.
Okay, so the symptoms of being exposed to concentrated time in the Kozyrev mirrors, which were highly polished aluminum.
They were aluminum sheets that had been turned into or made into a spiral. So if you look down from the top and you look down at them, they were in this spiral creation. I mean, they had supports and so on, but it was kind of like a spiral tunnel in that sense. It was like an acoustic horn, the reverse of an acoustic horn. And so the wide end, so to speak, would capture the time and funnel it deeper and deeper and deeper into the narrow end of the Kozyrev mirror.
And if you went in there, you would experience this time in a concentrated fashion, and it would actually mess with your mind. It would alter your perceptions of the reality. It would augment those perceptions, and it would provide you with experiences that have analogs to the symptoms of having consumed shamanic level psychedelic drugs. Okay, so what's going on here? Hang on, guys.
We got more goofy kind of stuff on the side of the road. Who knows what's going on? Anyway, so people would get into these mirrors. They would see visions. Many of these visions were horrific, scared the absolute piss out of the people.
Many of the individuals went in there once and they would not do it again. And we're talking people that were advanced PhD kind of scientists in Russia land, right? Russian top dog physicists were doing these experiments, and they experimented on themselves going into it. And they had many of them. Many of these individuals said, that's it.
Once is enough for me. Not going to do that again because of the mental effects, right. And these mental effects were persistent to some degree after an exposure. And some of the people that had had multiple exposures had very persistent effects that would go on for months. And these effects even caused body changes.
So there was some level of manifestation, such that there was even physical changes in the bodies of the subjects as well as their mind. Some of the changes were, like, relatively subtle. There was a guy who was in his seventy s and had white hair, had white hair and a white beard. And his beard and hair reverted to brown and then over time became very black. And his beard and hair, up until his exposure to the Kozyrev mirrors, had never been black.
At most, he was sort of a brown guy, right, a brunette. And now he was very definitely his hair had incredibly black hair. So there were physical changes that nobody could have predicted, but we know that they had manifested as a result of these exposure to the Kozyrev mirrors. There were all kinds of nasty effects in the sense of people going, bash it crazy. And there were no murders as a result of this.
There were several attempted suicides. As far as I know, out of this one set of experiments, nobody actually ever suicided. But there were a couple of people that were rescued from suicide attempts. So it seriously affects your mentition for some period of time. Um, the nature of what they saw was not like they were seeing.
It's not like what's his name? I can't think. John D. Okay. John D.
Was this guy who was a shaman, a spy, military strategist, all of these kind of things for the royals in England way back in the day. I'm talking way back, pre 15th century. So a long time back, right. Anyway, he used to do what was called scrying. Scry where you'd get a bowl of water or something and you'd peer into it with, like, Zen intensity, and you would be presented with visions as your perception was altered by the intensity of your staring, et cetera, et cetera.
So it was kind of a form of divination, right? And you'd look to see what the spirits, what universe were going to bring you in the surface of this bowl of water. They used mercury. Not a good idea because of the vapors. They would use alcohol with oil dissolved in it.
All different kinds of things, hoping to get a better view into the future. So they did, at least from the 16 hundreds onward as we're coming out of the Kaliyuga we came out in last days of 1698 that we did have some experimentation with scrying and some of our techniques to get better at it. And so they tried to find liquids that would be more amenable to giving you a view of the future. Anyway though, Kozyrevs mirrors did not provide a scrying kind of a surface. Okay, Kozyrev's mirrors, the thing they built here was 3 meters, so 9ft in height, rIght?
And I'd have to go and look, but it was like a lot of fucking aluminum in this spiral. So it might have been 30, 40, 50ft of aluminum that had been polished and twisted into this spiral that you could walk into. And then there was a plate on the top and a plate on the bottom, basically sealing the whole thing up, right. Also polished aluminum on the inside that didn't polish the outside that was just left exposed and it developed aluminum oxide on it. Aluminum is really interesting.
If you're a welder you'll know this. It takes you 3500 degrees to melt through the aluminum oxide on a piece of aluminum that's just left to the air. But the aluminum underneath will melt at 1200 degrees. So the instant you get through the aluminum oxide as a welder you're already too hot for the underlying aluminum. So to weld aluminum takes a skill, takes a touch, it takes nuance and feeling.
You can't just slap a torch on it and expect this stuff to fuse anyway though. So they build the mirrors, people go into it. The experiences that they had, as I said, were much more like a psychedelic journey than scrying or anything like that. There were lots of visions, lots of prescient views of the future. And for most of the people they were not understandable.
There was no context in which to place them. They didn't go into them expecting anything. They did get all of these effects which they noted down, but because they in a general sense hadn't expected it, they didn't have any kind of framework for examining what they were being presented in terms of prescient images, nor did they know those images would be prescient. One of the guys in the experiment that they write about Kozyrev having been long dead by the time that these guys started working with his mirrors. But one of the guys noted that he was getting visions when he had his own methodology, he would go in for some people would go in, they could stay for an hour and a half and then they'd come out like a wet noodle, just totally exhausted their mind shot as though they had been indeed, on a shamanic level mushroom journey for ten or 12 hours.
It was at that level of effect, after about an hour and a half. This one guy, though, and I don't remember his name, one of the experimenters would go in for, like, anywhere from five, but no more than 15 minutes at a time. And he would do it repeatedly, once a day kind of a thing, and note all the effects and so on. And he eventually got to the point where he wrote down that he thought he was getting prescient visions that would show up approximately three months later in our manifesting reality. And so he started making notations of these, writing them down in his journal, the vision he got.
And then later on, he would make annotations saying that, yes, this one actually appeared. It showed up this way when he saw it in the Kozyrev mirror. It looked like everybody was wearing overcoats. But when they actually manifest, only one guy was wearing overcoat, and he was very striking or tall or something. So he noted differences between the manifestations of the freshened visions and the visions themselves.
Very interesting little experiment. Log to read. These can be found in the Russian version of a book called Kozyrev on Time. And it's actually about Kozyrev writing about the subject of time, not about him being precisely ready for his appointment. That kind of a deal, right?
Not that kind of on time. Anyway, Kozyrev's mirrors present a real anomaly that Western physics can't explain. Or they can explain it. They try and explain it away, but they really don't. They can't tell you why or what is happening.
And they say, basically, it's all in your head. It's all mental effects, and you're just diluting yourself to think that these other effects are actually appearing. Well, that's not really factual. We know that there are physical effects, like the guy's beard, but also other effects. These guys would take in mass with them, and they would make measurements on the mass.
I'm talking, like, lead weights, mercury, even mercury in a powdered form where it's been bonded with other materials, all different kinds of things where they could assay changes in mass. And they do get those. All right, so you do get changes in mass. So if you take in lead weights into the Kozyrev mirror, and they're there for any length of time at all, from 1 minute to 20 minutes, that kind of a deal. So it doesn't have to be there that long.
They will pick up more weight. So you can take a lead weight, like, from your barbell, and it says 25 pounds and you actually weigh it and get it down to the milligram. And you find out it's 25 point something. Something pounds, right? And then you go on into the Kozyrev mirror with it.
You take a couple of other things and stack them all up and come back out. And when you come back out with the lead weights and you weigh them on exactly the same scale. They would find that they would have gained five, six, seven, 8% of weight. Right. Of our measurement of their impact or their interaction with gravity.
And so we know that there were these physical effects. That could actually be perceived and measured from within material's exposure to Kozyrevs mirror. What was really fascinating were the experiments they did on water. Because water really reacted to the mirror. And would take on qualities that they described.
But even the scientists there could not explain. All right, so water is interesting. Water is non compressible. Okay? You can't compress water.
This is the basis for all hydraulics. The fact that water is not compressible. You can squeeze the air out, all of that kind of stuff. So at a minor, small fractional level, the water has some reaction to pressure. But the water itself is not compressible.
Yet. When they would take water into the Kozyrev mirror, it would lose volume, but would gain weight. So they would take a liter of water that weighed. And they would have the weight down to five digits on the other side of the decimal point. And they would take it in, and it would sit there.
And then they would bring it out. It would not fill the container the way it did when they took it in. There was space. That space would create a vacuum if the container was sealed. So the water itself was compressing to the point that it would create a vacuum within a sealed container.
And we're talking a thermos, that kind of thing, right. You wouldn't be able to get thermos open. Because the water inside had compressed. And vacuum created a vacuum of some strength inside the thermos. Then they started investigating it, getting it down to how much it lost in volume.
But it would actually gain in weight. So it would weigh more, but fill up less space. There were limits. They could take water that had been pre exposed. That had been exposed once, take it in, and it might have some small marginal amount of further action.
But usually not. Usually, they weren't able to measure anything that. So it wouldn't compress more the second time or third or fourth. That it had been taken into the Kozyrev mirror chamber. But all of these things are going in support of my idea that time is the energy of our universe, our material, and does not exist as a separate thing within the universe, okay?
It is an essential aspect of energy and everything else. And that we've just got, basically an ass backwards understanding in our physics as to how all this shit works. Kozyrev was really onto it, though, I think. And we really need to recreate some of these Kozyrev mirrors and really start investigating some of these effects. One of the effects that was really interesting was that the individuals themselves, after they'd had one of these mirror trips, would find themselves to be very increasingly psychic.
And it would continue for some period of time that they would notice that they were becoming more psychic as a result of having had that exposure. This was commonly reported by, I think, nearly everybody that went through the mirror experiments, all of the participants. And there were, like, maybe three or four individuals that wrote voluminously about it and were very prolific about and very detailed in their notation about what had happened to them and how they thought they were more psychic and how it was manifesting. So, very interesting there in terms of the understanding of time as the motive force of universe and our more roadship. Oh, my God.
Okay. And our material here. So we got stuff going on here. I'm going to have to sign off. Boy, that's state level rigs.
Okay. Anyway, I'm back here, and I got to go do stuff anyway. All right, guys, so time after time, make sure you understand where your time is and where it's going and what you're doing with it, and I'll talk to all you guys later.
Time Ain’t Nothing – 05-24-2023
Time Ain't Nothing - 05-24-2023
Episode Summary:
The author expresses skepticism about Einstein's concepts, specifically around time being a dimension. They argue that consciousness precedes physical matter and that contemporary understanding of quantum mechanics is flawed. They've conducted experiments based on Nicola Kozyrev's work and criticize Eric Weinstein's "geometric unity model", implying it doesn't reconcile Einstein's and quantum mechanics ideas. They mention Kozyrev's imprisonment for counterrevolutionary ideas, emphasizing his significant contributions after being released early from his sentence.
Nikola KoziRev, stepping away from conventional quantum mechanics, researched and documented the active qualities of time. His experiments showcased that objects, when subjected to specific conditions like shaking, changed in weight without altering mass. This was believed to be due to the object's interaction with the "pulse of the universe" and time's inherent qualities. Other experiments with mercury emphasized its potential significance in time research. Contrary to popular belief, Kozyrev and the author argue against the possibility of corporeal time travel, emphasizing the need for a fresh ontological understanding of the universe.
Kozyrev conducted experiments revealing that liquids, especially water and mercury, interact with "time stuff" differently than solids. He developed the "Kozyrevs mirror" based on these findings and took it to the North Pole, suspecting temperature fluctuations at the poles impacted time due to frozen water. Historical periods such as the Kali Yuga, Dwapara, and Bronze Age are linked to the solar system's distance from the galactic center, affecting human consciousness and technological advancements. The Harparan civilization, unique in its design and peace, mysteriously disappeared, with hints of ancient nuclear war in the Indus Valley.
The text discusses the concept of ages, specifically the transition from the Kali Yuga to the ascending Bronze Age. It describes the dominant influence of the Khazarian mafia during the Kali Yuga and their desire to maintain control in the Bronze Age. The writer is optimistic about shedding the lingering influences of the Kali Yuga, especially with advancements in understanding reality, time, and physics. There's also a mention of political issues, breakthroughs by the Russians in "time stuff," and a critique of Einstein's theories in favor of other physics perspectives.
The writer expresses skepticism towards celebrated scientists like Einstein, Pasteur, and Curie, claiming they were merely plagiarists and products of the Khazarian Mafia's propaganda. The author implies a mistrust towards anyone with a Nobel Prize, suggesting they're promoted by the Khazarian Mafia for an agenda. The author plans to return to their Kozyrev experiments after completing chores and anticipates discussing upcoming "emotional peaks" in future posts.
Time Ain't Nothing - 05-24-2023
Hello, humans. Hello humans. Almost noon. Heading back on the outward bound leg. Got all the chores done.
Got all the extra stops. Didn't run into any shortages today, which is interesting. It's always good that when there's things there that you need to get. Anyway, I wanted to talk about time stuff today.
I've been doing a lot of time experiments replicating Nicola Kozyrevs work. And he was a Russian guy. He worked in the well, the 1920s through the 1960s was his most productive period. Anyway.
There's a whole lot of us guys that are not involved in the physics world and even some guys that are involved in the physics world that have come to the conclusion that Einstein really fucked everybody over and that quantum is no good, doesn't work and is quantum mechanics and all of that kind of stuff is bogus. Okay, so going all the way back to Einstein's work in 19 five, there's no justification or excuse me, let me put it this way. Two thirds of the behavior that we can measure and assess from light are not explained by the photon. So Einstein came up with this idea. The photon, he says the light comes on in, it bounces off of something, and the photon goes over and strikes your eye.
And you get to see it, right? You get to see whatever the thing that the light bounced off of. Okay? So the photon does not explain a lot. It doesn't explain how the image is carried to your eye, right?
Because your eye does not deal in a pixelated fashion. It's not like a computer screen where each pixel has a specific representation and a potential color range and all of this kind of stuff. So the photon just does not explain it. We also have another really big problem with all of Einstein's stuff in that Einstein says that time is a dimension. And in all of Einstein's work, he treats time as a dimension.
And this is what causes the goofiness in quantum mechanics, where they talk about the collapsing of the field when you try and measure it. Okay, I'm not going to get into that today. That's another fundamentally bogus aspect of Einstein's understanding. So Einstein had a flaw in his thinking that was huge and giant. He may have known about this flaw or not.
There are some of these physicists that indeed do know that there is this flaw there. And the general flaw is that they are approaching everything from the idea that there is no consciousness. And the goal of the physics is to look at the grit and explain how grit evolves and creates consciousness. Okay? And so this is an impossibility.
It can never happen. Consciousness existed before there was grit. And grit is an artifact of what consciousness wants to do. And so their premise is wrong, their understanding is wrong. Their basic jumping off point is wrong.
So everything that they develop, anything that happens to work is going to be happenstance and coincidence and is going to involve machinations and twisted stuff in the math in order to make it work. So we have this thing that's called Planck's constant. Everybody raves about it. It's an essential part of the physics. It makes some of the Einsteinian understanding work.
Without it, none of the Einsteinian understanding works. And Planck's constant need not exist. It only exists because of a particular experiment in which the volume of space being measured was a cube. If they had done it in a sphere, or if they had done it in a tetrahedron, planck's constant is not needed and never would have had to have been invented. And it's like Heisenberg's principle of uncertainty exists because of Einstein, the same impetus that Einstein had when he converted time to a dimension, okay?
So in Einstein's math, all through it, time is like width or height or something, a distance, a physical distance that way. And this does not in any way encapsulate time. It's a very crude mathematical workaround that basically denigrates time to one of the other dimensions, and it involves us in living in a four dimensional world, okay? And that does not exist. Absent collapsing time into a dimension, there is no justification whatsoever for all of these nutty woo woo people saying interdimensional travel as though there is a corporeal life form that's at another frequency, in another dimension of frequency, x rays or something.
I don't know how they understand that. And that corporeal life form can translate itself somehow into our three dimensional reality and doesn't work. That can only happen in Einstein's. Screwy math, which is bogus and doesn't function. And this is why we've been held in this limbo for the last hundred plus years, is because everybody's trying to reconcile quantum mechanics and Einstein and it's never going to happen.
It's bad. It's bad science. It doesn't work. It comes from a basically flawed premise. And time is not a dimension.
And we know that this is a case. We also know that there are active qualities of time. And so I did an experiment, mathematic experiment, in which I expanded on Einstein's ideas and I took the idea of time and I created a matrices, a matrix in which every active quality of time that is different from all the other active qualities of the time was put in there. And I came up with a nine extra dimensions, okay? They're not dimensions, they're just simply qualities of time, active qualities of time.
There's both active and passive qualities. I'll get into that in a second anyway. And so I did that and I come up with these extra nine dimensions, which is like holy crud, that's exactly what Eric Weinstein did to create his geometric unity model, which is bogus. Okay? So in my opinion, it's possible, okay?
So I speculate, it's my opinion that Eric Weinstein is not as he is saying, okay? I speculate that on that opinion that he's sort of like maybe a Jeffrey Epstein character. So Epstein was supposedly a hedge fund trader guy, yet he made no trades and had no hedge fund. Right. He was just into blackmail and all of that.
And the banks covered up all of his blackmail and stuff by saying he was a hedge fund. Well, Eric Weinstein supposedly works for Theo Investments. Or I think that's it. But you don't see him crowing about any of his he never brags about any of the trades he makes. He never talks about it.
You never hear him talking any of the stuff about trading. He doesn't discuss assets that way. He does not naturally default to mathematic understanding and economic understanding of things. He could indeed be a very atypical person and indeed do lots of trading and all of that kind of stuff, but I don't see any evidence for it. I also know that his geometric unity stuff is bogus.
It's trying to reconcile Einstein's quantum mechanics, which will never happen, and you're just getting squirrelier and squirrelier and squirrelier trying to make this shit work, and you're diverging constantly from our reality. So, like I say, I work Duplicating Kozyrevs experiments because of what they show you, what they teach you about time. He was fascinated by time. He's an interesting guy, the greatest living astrophysicist, and he gets sent to a gulag for 20 years because he gets rated out for counterrevolutionary ideas. So he was a thought crime fellow, right?
He was a thought crime victim. They said he was guilty of thought crime, and so they stick him away in a gulag. They let him out early, ten years early. And during those ten years, he didn't have any access to any damn thing other than hard work and miserable food. But he thought about all this stuff, and he developed a whole series of experiments which he memorized, and he started doing them when he came out, and his understanding really grew in leaps and bounds.
And as he came out of the gulag, he totally divorced himself, separated himself in his work from the conventional understanding of quantum mechanics. At that point, the former Soviet society was evolving into the current Russian Federation society, and they were getting on board with all this Einsteinian shit because the west was doing stuff, and we were basing all of our things on it. We made the technology we did and invented all this shit in spite of Einstein's understanding. And whenever we come across reverse engineered space alien technology, it always defies the Einsteinian understanding of things, right? Because Einstein's understanding was bogus.
It just is not correct. Anyway, so Kozyrev did all these experiments in which he categorized and described the active qualities of time, and he was able to do some very interesting things with very little in the way of gear. So, for instance, he could take a resistor, put it into a circuit have active test gear on it, maintaining a test on the voltage and the flow of the electricity in through the resistor and its level of resistance, then he could do any number of things that would cause time to be invoked, like time stuff. And basically what he's doing is experimenting with time not as the dimension, but as the power of our universe here. And so what he would do would he would have next to the resistor, he could put a cotton ball and put acetone on it and let that acetone evaporate out of the cotton ball.
And in the process, that's going to change the quantification of the time stuff that is around that resistor to the extent that it will alter the resistor's capability, changing its ability to resist, increasing its ability to resist, or decreasing depending on how you do the experiment. There were other simple experiments that showed that time stuff is able to be like a technology independent of the time itself, right? So addressed by humans. And so one of them, he had a balance for weighing things, a non electronic balance, okay? He can use a triple beam balance or a hanging scale balance, it doesn't matter.
And what you do is you get yourself a lead weight and you put a lead weight in your balance and you weigh it down precisely. You weigh it down to the 10th or the hundredth of a gram. And so you know precisely how much this thing weighs. You've got physical weights that balance it out such that you've got its weight down to exactly 390.3 grams. All right?
Then you lock the balance. You lock the scale so that it doesn't wobble or move or anything. And then you take the weight off of you take the thing you're weighing the lead chunk of lead, and it could be iron and so on. Lead works better, has more of a deviation. Tungsten would probably work as well, or gold.
For this purpose, you need a very heavy lump of metal. And so what you would do would be to take that metal out and go and set it on a rubber insulating pad that insulates it from touching any other metal. And then you want to shake the fuck out of it, okay? So you put it in a paint shaker. You can put it on one of those oscillating mixer things that you find in laboratories, which is what Cozy ribbed used, and you just shake the fuck out of it for a few minutes.
You will then see that if you don't touch it with a human hand or metal but if you were to take, like plastic or non conductive tongs, wood, this kind of thing and pick that weight up after the oscillations have stopped, after the machine stops, you pick it up and you set that weight back into the scale. And then you release the scale. You will find that that weight is suddenly heavier, suddenly heavier by a very large percentage that is able to be measured. So out of the 390.3 grams, if you do this with a very pure form of lead, you can get an extra 19 or 20 grams of weight. So this is measurable.
This is significant. This is not an error caused by a gust of wind or something like that, right? This is not any kind of transient anomaly in the process of weighing it. This is an actual gain in weight, even though the mass has not changed. So shaking it does not in any way change the mass of that lead.
The only thing that it actually does is it disrupts that lead relative to the pulse of universe, such that the lead is retaining pulse effects of time and thus has more apparent weight even though the physical mass has not altered. Now, this will work even with wood. If you had a large enough chunk of wood that you could measure it and get it accurately, you could shake the fuck out of the wood and it would gain some level of additional time stuff. It's not as good as metal, though, right, in that regard. And there are some metals that this does not apply to mercury.
All right? So you can do this with mercury. Doesn't make a damn bit of difference. There are other things you can do with mercury to get it to absorb more time stuff. But mercury, I think, is our key to interacting with time because of the nature of the metal itself.
There's all kinds of interesting tests that Nikola Kozi Rev did with mercury, showing the effects of time, showing that, and that this is basically this is well, he did experiments with mercury and measuring and weighing mercury. When the Moon is on the other side of the planet and when the Moon is on this side of the planet, and all these other different kinds of things showing that the mass of the Mercury, its weight and its mass is affected by the conditions of the universe around us at a magnetic level, indicating its interaction with our time. Okay. And time is an active thing, and we have a time field that we live within that has all of these properties. And he's demonstrated this.
There's a couple of good books out there that go into Kozyrev's experiments and the active quality of time, they're starting to get reprinted more often. So there appears to be a growing awareness that the Einsteinian atheistic view is bogus and that we need a different approach to things, an ontological understanding of universe. And cozy. Rev had this right. Kozyrev is of the same opinion as myself that time is the power of universe.
It powers all of universe for us and gives us all of the energy in universe, provides us with our own energy and so on.
This understanding necessarily leads to a different view of physics and what you can do with it, right? And so, no, it's not possible that you can have time travel corporeal time travel. It just is not going to happen. You cannot take your body and go shove it into another point in time. First off, it would take probably more energy than exists in universe to bust into and intrude into the time pulse in a different area of the pulse itself.
This has to do with a lot of different things, and we know that there's no time travel because we're not seeing any evidence of it, right? There would be certain things that would happen relative to our time. If time travel was discovered anywhere at any point and people were actually able to travel in time, there will be effects of that throughout all of time, and they're quite numerous. This is one of the things that got cozy Riv to understand about the pulse of time. Now, he did not take his understanding the same direction or as far as I have, which is that he still believed, he still thought the universe was steady state.
And I don't buy that. I think we have this flickering oscillation that's 22 trillion times a second that actually is the nature of our universe, and it allows you to have different physics and explain so much if you just take that approach.
In any event, so cozy Reb discovered that liquids, water and mercury, chief among them, oil also, but water and mercury first, that liquids have the possibility of interacting with time stuff in a way that solids don't. And so he was doing all of these kinds of experiments on them. It led him to a whole series of conclusions about the nature of the time stuff and its interaction with our consciousness. And that's how he developed his Kozyrevs mirror, the time mirror that they took to the north pole. Now, he took it to the north pole because of this understanding of water and time stuff or mercury and time stuff, right?
So when water freezes, there is a component of time that is trapped within that frozen water, within the process of the freezing, and it happens no matter where you freeze water or under what circumstance. And Kozyrev was able to do a lot of experiments with freezing water with compressed gas and freezing water with ice or other methods so that he could freeze it quickly, freeze it slowly, and so on, and determine many of the subsets of that particular active component. That seems to show that water retains water, has memory relative to time. And in his experiments, he was able to determine that the freezing and thawing of water acts as an additional macro layer of putting time out into our environment. So in other words, you have a lot of frozen time stuff, so to speak, in the poles.
And so his idea was, oh, well, we can put my mirrors up near the north pole where every little tiny bit of fluctuation of temperature change is going to do something relative to time. It's either going to freeze more into the water, or it's going to release more, bearing in mind that the surface of the glaciers and all this kind of stuff melt in the sun and then refreeze, right? So this is going on constantly, and his understanding seemingly proved correct. Now, some interesting things about this, okay? Gets really convoluted.
There's some speculation and very few conclusions, but we do know some things, right? So we're not in the Kali Yuga. We're in the 325th year of the Dwapara, okay? The ascending dwapara the ascending Bronze Age. So we're 325 years into the Bronze Age, 325 years beyond the Kali Yuga.
And we know that this is the case. We have a demonstrable proof of this in that in the Kali Yuga, that's the densest point in our Great year as the sun goes around this center of the galaxy, in this basically a 26,000 year elves, that's called the Great Year. And so we know that the Kali Yuga is that place where humans live at their densest, where our solar system is furthest away from the galactic central, the galactic center, right? That's where we're furthest away from it. And so we know that's the point where humans are very dense and they were very dense.
But there's a lot of things that we know about that, right? That this is the point at which humans are not very bright. We're not producing stuff. All of life is living at a denser level that has less brightness or spark to it. And we see this in our history.
So if we look back to the point where so the Kali Yuga would be 1200 years long, and so if we add the 1500 years to that, then you get back into that period of time where we have all the biblical stuff, right? And so this was truly the densest of time. And we had no electricity, we didn't have telephones, we didn't have running water, we had none of this during that period of time. And it was pretty much that way all around the planet. And so now we know where we have demonstrable proof that we're not in the Kali Yuga, because I'm not writing an ass in to get food, right?
Aid car going like fuck into town trying to keep somebody alive anyway. So I'm not writing an ass to go get my food. I'm not restricted to 15 minutes walking time in the surfs, right? So these were dense periods of time where there was nothing there, really, for human technology and so on. Yet before that period of time, we find vast quantities of time where humans had much more advanced civilizations.
And it is not a case of just that civilizations decay. It is that we were moving into the Kali Yuga. So there's an ascending half and a descending half, about 13,000 years each. And at the point that all the Bible stuff happened was the point of the Kali Yuga. And that was the furthest, most downside of descending side of our great year.
Now, we also see on that side of things in our history, we find some incredible stuff, right? So in the Silver Age going, all right, so every age is of a different length. So the Golden Age is 4800 years long. Silver Age is 3600 years long. The Bronze Age is 2400 years long.
We're in a Bronze Age. Now, the Iron Age or the Kali Yuga, is 1200 years long. But it doesn't stop and start on a dime kind of a thing, right now. You don't just cross a line. So on the descending side, there is a all right, so let me stop and say that our great year is divided into four chunks.
These are further divided into an ascending half and a descending half. But four is the number of time, and four is associated with time in any number of civilizations. Now, in our case here, all of the yugas, all of these parts of our great year, each can be divided into four as well. And that fourth is meaningful. It's because of the waxing and waning part of this, right?
And so as we go in a descending point down into the Iron Age, we leave the Bronze Age. The Bronze Age is 2400 years long. One quarter of that is going to be 600 years. As we go from one age to the next on the descending side, there is a waning effect. So as we left the Bronze Age, there were 600 years that technology faded, that the light faded, that the brightness in human mind faded as we left the galactic center, as we got further and further away from it.
And so there was this waning period. It didn't just suddenly turn on a dime. There was 600 years of this. During the Bronze Age and into the Silver Age. We find existing now things like the Hopperan civilization, which lasted over a thousand years.
This was in the Indus Valley. Happaran. And this was in the Indus Valley. There was much of it that was now underwater. This civilization was unique in our understanding, in a bunch of ways.
First off, they had mass produced bricks. Everybody had their society was centrally or had some level of design to it, not central planning or anything like that. But this planning with their mass produced bricks, allowed them to recover every time the Indus Valley flooded. They could rebuild really quickly. Everybody's houses were of a known size.
All the houses were basically equitable. There were a few that were larger, but not very many. The bricks had defined dimensions and ratios that allowed all of their buildings to have that same design pattern, all the streets, et cetera, et cetera. This civilization is unique in that there's no sign of any war toys, okay? There's no sign of any weapons in the society that we can find.
There were no arsenals, there were no weapon stashes. People didn't have weapons in their houses. We find weapons relative to farmers and that kind of thing. So they did have those in terms of keeping track of stuff relative to animals, right. Livestock and dealing with bears or whatever, right?
So they had weapons for that purpose, but they did not, apparently have war. This was a very extensive society, millions of people, and it just, like, suddenly disappeared. There's some suggestion that it died in a nuclear war. There is some suggestion that there was nuclear war that separated the Bronze Age from the Kali Yuga. It's difficult to say this because the nuclear aspect of it, we can't say when it occurred, but we know that the Harparan Valley, the Indus Valley, has some areas where there's radiation levels that are ten and 20 times higher than they should be.
We find this in some of the deserts as well. So there's some suggestion that there was a great war here in Shading, into this. But in any event, so this is the way it goes, though. So out of the Bronze Age, there were 600 years into the Kali Yuga. It wasn't so bad.
We were getting worse and worse and worse as time went by. But over a course of 600 years, you'd sort of not really notice. Then we're deep into the Kali Yuga. We go the next 600 years from the Kali Yuga, and no real increases technology, nothing getting invented, any of this sort of thing. People are basically dense mentally.
It's during this period of time that we actually get the emergence of the Khazarian mafia. They came out of the Kali Yuga. They dominated the Kali Yuga, and all of their money, you know, the interest bearing currency, all of that is coming from the Kali Yuga. Now, as you go, we've turned the bin, so to speak. We're around the bottom of the Ellipse, we're out of the Yuga, and we're heading up into the Bronze Age.
We're in the Bronze Age, heading up towards the Silver Age in an ascending cycle. And we have this one quarter of the previous age as an overlap as we get out of these. So one quarter of 1200 years is 300 years. So if you look, we had waning Kali Yuga influences over the last 300 years and out of the last 325 and over these 25 years, last 25 years, we've been really starting to step it up. So on the ascending side well, okay, on both sides, ascending or descending, you'll have the overlap from the previous age, and then you'll have one quarter of that time as the time that is required to establish the qualities of the age you're in.
So one quarter of our 300 years, and we come down to 75 years. So we're at the 325th year of the Dwapara ascending Bronze Age, and we've gone through our 300 years of hangover so to speak, from the Kali Yuga. And we're into the 25 years, into the establishment of the time, the qualities of this age that we're in, the Bronze Age, so we're starting to invent shit. We've got copper, which is the heart of bronze, and we're going apeshit with it all getting better and better and better as we go up. But we got the Khazarian mafia wanting to hold us back into the Kali Yuga.
They want to hold us back into a situation, a time when they have control. Now, it's not going to happen. That can't happen in the normal course of things anyway. These people are deluded in trying to maintain this against time, but we know they're deluded about all of this kind of stuff anyway, because these are the people that say, you got to come up with a physics that shows how consciousness evolved from grit, and it just is not going to happen. It didn't evolve from grit.
And so we've got a big disconnect that we're going through at the moment. And that's one of our big problems at this time, is that we're still dealing with these hangovers from the Kali Yuga in the form of the fake physics that's been put on us, the fake money, all of this stuff that hangs on, but we're shedding it. This is that period of time where all of this stuff gets shed. This is why I'm very optimistic this is a good thing for humans. We're getting rid of all of the Khazarian mafia crap.
We're getting rid of all of these hangovers from the old age, and we will get real and get righteous with our understanding of this reality and physics. So this is going to be a good thing anyway. And so we've got 50 more years setting, it's called the set period, in which we set the qualities of the age we're in. And I actually think we're on the cusp, right? I think that our setting the qualities of this age will accelerate as we accelerate the process of moving into this 75 year period of time.
We're moving in towards the halfway mark of it. And so we'll get more solid with these qualities that we're setting in here. And this is the Age of Aquarius. This is all really cool that way. And the impact on our social order will be most severe over these next 20 years or so, right?
And thereafter, hopefully within like 20 years, we'll have done with the Khazarian mafia. Part of the things that's going to occur is that we're going to face the reality. And so this is all the good news. All the people coming up with all of the language, laying out racism, anti Semitic, transphobe, all of this, every one of those words, we're going to deal with it, we're going to get down in there, we're going to get in there and remove this as an issue. So 20 years from now, no.
One will give a shit. Anti Semitic. What's that mean? Transphobe? What's that mean?
Oh, that's some of that old lang, right? Old language from the past. It doesn't mean anything anymore. It has no meaning whatsoever, and you won't be able to intimidate or control or do anything with the language relative to the general population. Anyway.
Guys, I got to go and do stuff. I got a lot of chores and things here. But time really does power everything in the universe, okay? It is the pulse of time that gives your body the ability to draw breath and cause chemical changes to occur within it. And time is not a dimension.
Einstein and all of these other guys, basically, I would say that anybody that got a Nobel Prize for physics and probably most of the people that got Nobel Prizes for mathematics and chemistry are wrong, all right? Because they're working on this Einsteinian understanding, which is totally, totally bogus, which we will shed over these next 25 years, and we will do so in a very rapid way once we get through our current political problems, because we now know that the Russians have achieved some remarkable breakthroughs in dealing with time stuff. They've been able to accelerate cozy, rev's work from 1967 to the point that they can now make matter more dense for their weapons. So this would be like being able to add more time stuff to a bullet such that that bullet doesn't require any more gunpowder to shoot. It technically weighs more if you were to weigh it, but it's going to be much denser as well.
And so you'd be able to shoot that bullet, and it would not break up the way that a non time stuff enhanced bullet would, right where the lead would shatter and break open and so on. When it hit a body. This one might be able to go a time enhanced bullet might be able to go through an armor piercing or an armored vest or an armored car and still do damage and still retain some of its original qualities. And they can do things, too, like removing the time stuff ahead of their missiles and stuff, especially for turns. And so this means that you can turn without inertia you can turn without an additional torque affecting the body that is being turned.
And in doing so, it makes the plasma engine incredibly fucking efficient, because for the addition of the extra time stuff can be done in such a way that the missile is dealing with less mass and less weight. And so you get more oomph for the amount of fuel you've got in there. All different kinds of benefits come from dealing with the time stuff and the cozy, rev understanding of our reality. And I think we'll get in there, especially when we can start talking to the Russians in a more or less open fashion about this kind of stuff once we're all on the same side of our Khazarian problem, right? Once we join the Russians and saying, hey, Ukraine and Khazaria central banks, all of this shit's got to go, at that point, we'll be able to make very serious advances because we'll be able to say, okay, no, this 100% bogus.
Let's just disregard all this E equals MC squared shit that Einstein sold. He didn't come up with it. That was in existence in 1863. So we had the ability to make nuclear bombs, theoretically in the mid 18 hundreds. In terms of a physics understanding, no one did it because of the Mitchellson Mori experiments that derailed that understanding of things, which was all about the ether and so on.
But nonetheless, we did have that knowledge then, and Einstein merely plagiarized it. And it's amazing how many of the, quote, scientists that we think of as being like top dogs, like Pasteur and Curie and Einstein, right? It's amazing how many of these are simply products of the Khazarian Mafia's propaganda arm. And pasteur was a plagiarist. He didn't come up with Germ theory.
It was 160 years old by the time he started talking about it. And Curie did all kinds of stuff. Especially Madame Curie. Relative to X ray diffraction, that was all known that she was plagiarizing and she was just promoted by the Khazarian Mafia, basically. Like I say, anybody with a Nobel Prize has been promoted by the Khazarian mafia.
And so there's some agenda there, and I don't trust any of the shit that they put out. Anyway, I'll got to get back to my Kozyrev experiments after I do some yard work and stuff. But I'll post these and we'll get into some more stuff later this week as we get to some of our big, ugly emotional peaks. I'm sure there's going to be stuff there that's going to be require some verbiage around it. Anyway, guys, take care and talk to you later.