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Eve Of Destruction – 11-03-2023

Eve Of Destruction - 11-03-2023

Eve Of Destruction - 11-03-2023

Episode Summary:

The document appears to be a transcript or a collection of statements from an individual discussing a variety of topics, including societal fears, geopolitical tensions, and predictions about the future. The speaker begins by mentioning the heavy rainfall and moves on to discuss the collective anxiety about the possibility of nuclear war and the "eve of destruction." They express a lack of fear, differentiating it from anxiety, and suggest that they and others who are not afraid will appear crazy to those who are panicking.

The speaker refers to the "Khazarian mafia," a term often associated with conspiracy theories about a shadowy group manipulating world events. They accuse this group of attempting to create nuclear war and express a sense of non-attachment to the outcome, citing their own experience with death and a practice of Zen non-attachment.

The narrative then shifts to discuss the legal troubles of public figures like Bill Gates, who is mentioned in connection with child rape charges. The speaker believes that the universe is bringing justice to such individuals and that the "Khazarian mafia" is in a state of panic as their control wanes.

The speaker also delves into a discussion about the Kali Yuga, a concept in Hinduism referring to the age of vice, predicting that humanity is moving beyond this period into a time of great invention and discovery. They mention a 75-year cycle post-Kali Yuga, divided into three parts: the hangover from the Kali Yuga, a period of acknowledging and destroying its effects, and a final phase of invention and progress.

The speaker predicts that the "Khazarian mafia" will be exposed and become a part of history, and humanity will gain a new understanding of the universe, leading to significant technological advancements. They foresee a future where a new generation, born post-COVID, will be the parents of the most inventive humans in history, contributing to a period of discovery and innovation.

In the final part of the document, the speaker offers reassurance that despite the fears of destruction, humanity is not at its end. They mention space aliens and suggest that there will be issues to face in the coming years, but emphasize that there is a bright future ahead. The speaker concludes by acknowledging that there is much work to be done and that the challenges ahead will keep humanity busy.

The document is a blend of personal philosophy, predictions about technological and societal developments, and commentary on current events, all presented with a sense of optimism for the future despite the looming fears of catastrophe.

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Key Takeaways:
  • The speaker does not fear the potential for nuclear war.
  • They believe the "Khazarian mafia" is losing its grip on global events.
  • Bill Gates is facing serious legal charges, which could have wider implications.
  • Humanity is transitioning from the Kali Yuga to a period of enlightenment.
  • The future holds significant technological and philosophical advancements.
  • The next generations are predicted to be highly inventive and transformative.
  • There is an optimistic view of humanity's ability to overcome current and future challenges.
Predictions:
  • The "Khazarian mafia" will be exposed and lose power.
  • Bill Gates' trial will lead to broader revelations of corruption.
  • Humanity will enter a 25-year period of acknowledging and destroying the effects of the Kali Yuga.
  • A new understanding of physics and reality will emerge, leading to technical leaps.
  • The next 50 years will be marked by invention and discovery.
  • Space aliens will become a significant part of humanity's challenges and advancements.
  • Israel will not recover from its current mistakes, leading to significant changes.
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Eve Of Destruction - 11-03-2023

Hello, humans. Hello, humans. November 3, outward bound and looking at property and doing chores. It's about eleven something. Here, let me get the wind out of here.

Starting to rain again. We had like 4.43 inches in about 17 hours. And the other day anyway, I wanted to talk about everybody freaking out. Not right now, but in a couple of days. In a few days, they're going to be freaking out over the fact that we stand on the eve of destruction, okay?

This is going to be the near death experience for the paradigms that lots of people live by, all right? So this near death experience that's coming up, well, are we brushing up against nuclear war? Is the world going to destroy itself? And it's not really the world, it's humanity. Yada, yada, yada.

The sum of all fears, right now, I'm a paranoid son of a bitch, but I don't have fear, all right? There's a big difference. Anxiety and anxiousness about your personal situation in the future is not necessarily fear. Fear has these other qualities in terms of emotions. But we're going to come up to the sum of all fears, right?

There will be people like myself and some other people wu, people that won't be participating in this. We won't have fear. You'll see us acting like, oh, okay, nothing happened, and you'll think we're absolutely fucking crazy, but we know that everything is perfect. We don't live in the constructed matrix from the Khazarian mafia, so we don't believe the shit they're putting out and what they're trying to do, right? And so we ignore that.

The fact that they're attempting to create nuclear war and annihilate a big chunk of humanity is their concern, so to speak. But while it might technically seem to be my concern, there is nothing at all that I could do to affect that, right? I couldn't stop it, couldn't alter it, couldn't delay it, none of that. If the Kazarian mafia is trying to get nation states to nuke each other, one little human out here saying you're a bunch of fucktards isn't going to delay a lot, right? And so at some point, as a human, you say, well, non attachment, right?

I don't have any attachment to the outcome personally. I have a big leg up. I've got a super secret power, so to speak, right? I'm not a superhero or anything like that. It's just that I have confidence because I've died, right?

I've been dead.

It's no longer a big thrill. The thrill is gone, right? And so there's not a lot of emotional attachment to this being dead business. Sooner or later here, I'm going to be dead again anyway, and I'm not attached to that at that point either. And so I practice non attachment from my Zen days.

And so it's like I put effort out to achieve a particular goal, but if it doesn't arise, if it doesn't manifest in spite of my effort, then that's the way it should be. That's the way universe wants it. And basically we're kind of like playing games with the universe to say, okay, I think I have XYZ as a need now and I'll try QRS in order to fulfill that need and see if universe supports it. And if it doesn't, it obviously won't fill the need and we'll have to address it some other way. And so this is like universe decides all this shit.

But let me tell you, the Kazarian mafia is going to be pushing and pushing and pushing. They're into some serious world of hurt. There's all kinds of things breaking open on them and they don't like it and they're really freaking out. So they're going to push the sum of all fears. They're going to push us to the eve of destruction to see if they can tip us over, to see if universe would support them having humanity be duped into nuking itself.

And I personally don't think that's the case. We'll certainly find out, but I'm not particularly worried that they're going to succeed.

The level of energy involved that they're able to generate and apply effectively is way down and they're being degraded by the day. I mean, even yesterday you start seeing on Twitter about Bill Gates being charged with child rape and how this guy could go to jail for the rest of his life and this is going to freak out so many people as this proceeds. And you can imagine the kind of legal talent that he can get and stuff, but he's absolutely fucking guilty. You can see it in his face and he's been doing evil and so on and so forth. So universe wants his karma dealt with, right?

It wants activities that he's been a part of to be out there. This is why all this shit's happening. And so we'll see in my opinion, that the Khazarian mafia is going to get like batshit fucking crazy, running around in circles, peeing on themselves, histrionic jumping up and down, shouting, trying to do every fucking thing they can to cause us to go into nuclear war and have this great distraction, et cetera, et cetera. It's not going to work.

The energies have already moved beyond their ability to control them and pull them back in, so we won't have the level of chaos that they're after, nor the form of chaos that they're after. And this is going to cause them, as I say, some real problems. Got to go slow here. The whole road is covered with smoke. People are clearing brush now that the rains have come, so we've got big fires all over anyway.

So Kazarian mafia, the deep state, they're really freaking out their individual high up people are being attacked and being brought to public justice, right? So there's a couple of issues there with a Bill Gates trial. One is, what if he should be found guilty and have to go to prison. That's on the far side of the trial. Their big worry really is not that Bill Gates may be worried about it, but the Kazarian mafia doesn't care so much about that.

But they do care about the trial because of course that brings up Epstein and all of those kind of things. And then the association around child rape is the control mechanism for the Kazarian mafia, for all the non Kazarians, okay? And so they don't want that shit exposed and it's going to be exposed in a big way with very public names. Like, you know, maybe at one point he was like the I think he was like the richest tech person at one point, but he might have been, know, one of the richest people in the United States. But in any event though, so we're going to have this as a public trial.

There could be all kinds of stuff coming, know epstein, Epstein, Epstein, Epstein. And then everybody who was on an Epstein airplane is going to start instantly being suspected after we find out what all the shit is, know Bill Gates did, so on and so forth, right? And so the Kazarians are like majorly worried, major, major. And they're doing everything they can to hold it together. This is a natural outcome of us entering this 326th year past the Kali Yuga, right?

There's a bunch of Hindus that mathematicians that sat around in the 18 hundreds and it's not like they had computers or anything to distract them. So they really thought about this stuff really deeply and they analyzed previous patterns and stuff. And so the pattern we're in now is that we were in a 75 year block and we've completed one third of that 75 years here. Well, actually we've done almost 25 years now and we'll be entering into the 26th year shortly. I'd have to go back and look at my notes just to see when we actually enter into that.

But the 75 year block was broken up into thirds. One third was putting behind us and examining being able to examine and see the themes, the metrics that were overlaid on that 25 years that were the hangover from the Kaliyuga. So you can think of it as 300 years after the Kaliyuga. We're not in any kind of an influence from it really, but we still have the hangover the way you would if you'd drunk too much the night before and you had an adequate sleep and you're sort of okay, but there's still all of the mental hangover from having done that. So that 25 years was the hangover period and we're leaving that hangover period now.

And then we're going to come into 25 years where we acknowledge and destroy the effects of the Kali Yuga on humanity. And of course this is not like there's clear demarcations. We've been doing some of that for a number of years. So it fades from one into the other. The fact that we can split it into 25 years is sort of chunks of a theme is something, an overlay that we put on these 75 years because at the beginning of the 75 years, we're in an intense Kaliyuga hangover.

And at the end of the 75 years, we are into the bright, shining sparkles of the invention period that then is the rest of the Bronze Age. But to get there, we're going to have to go through a number of inventions. So we've got, like, 50 years ahead of us. And over this next 50 years, we're going to examine all of the shit we went through in the Kali Yuga and get ourselves right with our universe. And then in the last 25 years, we're going to start inventing new shit once we've got an understanding of what works, what didn't, where we were lied to, what we discovered to be factual, et cetera, et cetera, right?

And so these are going to be a very interesting 50 year period of time. And so right now I could do like a Yuktasvar like he did in 1894. This Hindu mathematician said, the Kali Yuga is over, blah, blah, blah. We're going to get into a period of electricity and fine matter, okay? He was talking about micro and nanomatter, right?

And now I can say that. I can just make this statement because I know very factually that over these next 50 years we're going to have an invention bloom like you would not have believed ever. It's never been experienced in our past thousands of years because we've been on a descending track and then ultimately ended up in the 2400 years of the Kaliyuga, where our only thoughts about technology are donkeys walking around in a circle, pulling a grain grinding wheel, that kind of thing, right? That's our biggest. Or maybe we get into sailboats.

And that's really the biggest thinking we're doing about technology in the Kali Yuga. Then we come out of it, we go through this period of 300 years getting everything sort of opened up, looking at shit. Then we get the hangover period, which is we're getting done with. And then we go into this next 25 years where we say, okay, in the past, we used to think that this was true, and now we know that that's not true. Do we have something to replace it or do we have to start thinking about this in order to find something to replace that understanding?

Because we know that that understanding is not factual, right? And so these 25 years are going to be a lot of it very disruptive for people that have any kind of a or for everyone that has attachments to the previous paradigm and those things that support it. So over this next 25 years, we're going to reexamine gravity and totally redo our thinking on gravity and all of the nature of our reality and all of this kind of stuff which will allow us to make fantastic technical leaps in the subsequent 25 years. Now, of course, we'll be making those leaps long before that last 25 year period. We'll start doing some of this stuff ten years from now, that sort of deal, right?

Because it's not a clear demarcation, it's a gradation. Anyway, though, the Kazarian mafia in 25 years will be part of the history and stuff we are replacing. We'll know about them, we'll know about all of their evil. We'll be able to identify them all. We'll have history books written about all the fuckers and what they did and so on, right?

But also, during that period of time, like I say, we'll have a complete understanding or a different understanding of our universe and what makes it tick, how it all operates, and we'll start operating it and doing stuff. And so we can say right now that there will be a generation that will be born, not of this generation. So people that are having kids today, next year, the year after, that kind of thing, this generation, this first post COVID generation, those people are going to be the parents of the largest group of inventive humans we've ever seen in our humanity. And so that large group of inventive humans will start being born on this planet 18 years, 20 years from now, right? And their lives, as they grow up, they will grow up and they'll start making contributions, and even the people that are being born now will be making contributions on new inventions, new understanding of physics, blah, blah, blah.

And we will start actively seeing this. We should be recording new stuff in a very large way five years from now, right? And we'll get into some really serious shit with space aliens and all of this sort of thing. And so it's going to be ever so jampacked with all kinds of interesting crap to pay attention to. But anyway, so what I'm saying here is that there is a future, a very bright, great future, beyond this point of the evil Kazarian mafia freaking out and trying to push us into the eve of destruction, right?

It is not we're not coming to that end. This is not the end of humanity. It's not the end of civilization. There's lots of reasons to fear this, to have anticipation about it. I take Elon Musk's admonishment seriously.

We need to discuss it, we need to really get into it anyway, but it's not going to manifest. In spite of everything that they're doing, it's not going to manifest.

So anyway, so take heart. We've got a lot of fucking work to do, but that'll, you know, it'll keep us busy and keep us out of trouble, all right? So because trouble is going to be coming our way anyway, we've got issues and trouble with the space aliens in just a couple of years, but all of the rest of the stuff is going to continue in spite of that or because of it or to supplement it. But in any event, though, people like myself, Max Egan, a bunch of other people know the Kazarian mafia is moving us to the eve of destruction, is not the same thing as saying, oh, my God, oh, my God. There's going to be a nuclear war, right?

They want a nuclear war, but that's up to all of us. And so, as I say, we're not going along with the energies the Kazarian mafia is putting out. Look at how badly the Israelis have behaved and the mistake that they made. Any kind of goodwill for Israelis in a marginal population is gone. The only thing they've got are their adherents and the brainwashed people, most of them Christians, that support the concept of Israel, even though they're not necessarily all that thrilled with what the Israelis are doing, right?

And that's going to just morph. There's going to be huge changes along these lines. Israel, in my opinion, won't recover. It will not recover this mistake. It's going to be quite interesting to see how it all manifests.

Okay, so I've got to stop and do stuff here. We'll.


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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER If you want to build a better future, you must believe in secrets. The great secret of our time is that there are still uncharted frontiers to explore and new inventions to create. In Zero to One, legendary entrepreneur and investor Peter Thiel shows how we can find singular ways to create those new things. Thiel begins with the contrarian premise that we live in an age of technological stagnation, even if we’re too distracted by shiny mobile devices to notice. Information technology has improved rapidly, but there is no reason why progress should be limited to computers or Silicon Valley. Progress can be achieved in any industry or area of business. It comes from the most important skill that every leader must master: learning to think for yourself. Doing what someone else already knows how to do takes the world from 1 to n, adding more of something familiar. But when you do something new, you go from 0 to 1. The next Bill Gates will not build an operating system. The next Larry Page or Sergey Brin won’t make a search engine. Tomorrow’s champions will not win by competing ruthlessly in today’s marketplace. They will escape competition altogether, because their businesses will be unique. Zero to One presents at once an optimistic view of the future of progress in America and a new way of thinking about innovation: it starts by learning to ask the questions that lead you to find value in unexpected places.

Why should I do business with you… and not your competitor? Whether you are a retailer, manufacturer, distributor, or service provider – if you cannot answer this question, you are surely losing customers, clients and market share. This eye-opening book reveals how identifying your competitive advantages (and trumpeting them to the marketplace) is the most surefire way to close deals, retain clients, and stay miles ahead of the competition. The five fatal flaws of most companies: • They don’t have a competitive advantage but think they do • They have a competitive advantage but don’t know what it is—so they lower prices instead • They know what their competitive advantage is but neglect to tell clients about it • They mistake “strengths” for competitive advantages • They don’t concentrate on competitive advantages when making strategic and operational decisions The good news is that you can overcome these costly mistakes – by identifying your competitive advantages and creating new ones. Consultant, public speaker, and competitive advantage expert Jaynie Smith will show you how scores of small and large companies substantially increased their sales by focusing on their competitive advantages. When advising a CEO frustrated by his salespeople’s inability to close deals, Smith discovered that his company stayed on schedule 95 percent of the time – an achievement no one else in his industry could claim. By touting this and other competitive advantages to customers, closing rates increased by 30 percent—and so did company revenues. Jack Welch has said, “If you don’t have a competitive advantage, don’t compete.” This straight-to-the-point book is filled with insightful stories and specific steps on how to pinpoint your competitive advantages, develop new ones, and get the message out about them.

The number one New York Times best seller that examines how people can champion new ideas in their careers and everyday life - and how leaders can fight groupthink, from the author of Think Again and co-author of Option B. With Give and Take, Adam Grant not only introduced a landmark new paradigm for success but also established himself as one of his generation’s most compelling and provocative thought leaders. In Originals he again addresses the challenge of improving the world, but now from the perspective of becoming original: choosing to champion novel ideas and values that go against the grain, battle conformity, and buck outdated traditions. How can we originate new ideas, policies, and practices without risking it all? Using surprising studies and stories spanning business, politics, sports, and entertainment, Grant explores how to recognize a good idea, speak up without getting silenced, build a coalition of allies, choose the right time to act, and manage fear and doubt; how parents and teachers can nurture originality in children; and how leaders can build cultures that welcome dissent. Learn from an entrepreneur who pitches his start-ups by highlighting the reasons not to invest, a woman at Apple who challenged Steve Jobs from three levels below, an analyst who overturned the rule of secrecy at the CIA, a billionaire financial wizard who fires employees for failing to criticize him, and a TV executive who didn’t even work in comedy but saved Seinfeld from the cutting-room floor. The payoff is a set of groundbreaking insights about rejecting conformity and improving the status quo.

In The $100 Startup, Chris Guillebeau tells you how to lead of life of adventure, meaning and purpose - and earn a good living. Still in his early 30s, Chris is on the verge of completing a tour of every country on earth - he's already visited more than 175 nations - and yet he’s never held a "real job" or earned a regular paycheck. Rather, he has a special genius for turning ideas into income, and he uses what he earns both to support his life of adventure and to give back. There are many others like Chris - those who've found ways to opt out of traditional employment and create the time and income to pursue what they find meaningful. Sometimes, achieving that perfect blend of passion and income doesn't depend on shelving what you currently do. You can start small with your venture, committing little time or money, and wait to take the real plunge when you're sure it's successful. In preparing to write this book, Chris identified 1,500 individuals who have built businesses earning $50,000 or more from a modest investment (in many cases, $100 or less), and from that group he’s chosen to focus on the 50 most intriguing case studies. In nearly all cases, people with no special skills discovered aspects of their personal passions that could be monetized, and were able to restructure their lives in ways that gave them greater freedom and fulfillment. Here, finally, distilled into one easy-to-use guide, are the most valuable lessons from those who’ve learned how to turn what they do into a gateway to self-fulfillment. It’s all about finding the intersection between your "expertise" - even if you don’t consider it such - and what other people will pay for. You don’t need an MBA, a business plan or even employees. All you need is a product or service that springs from what you love to do anyway, people willing to pay, and a way to get paid. Not content to talk in generalities, Chris tells you exactly how many dollars his group of unexpected entrepreneurs required to get their projects up and running; what these individuals did in the first weeks and months to generate significant cash; some of the key mistakes they made along the way, and the crucial insights that made the business stick. Among Chris’s key principles: if you’re good at one thing, you’re probably good at something else; never teach a man to fish - sell him the fish instead; and in the battle between planning and action, action wins. In ancient times, people who were dissatisfied with their lives dreamed of finding magic lamps, buried treasure, or streets paved with gold. Today, we know that it’s up to us to change our lives. And the best part is, if we change our own life, we can help others change theirs. This remarkable book will start you on your way.

Bold is a radical, how-to guide for using exponential technologies, moonshot thinking, and crowd-powered tools to create extraordinary wealth while also positively impacting the lives of billions. Exploring the exponential technologies that are disrupting today's Fortune 500 companies and enabling upstart entrepreneurs to go from "I've got an idea" to "I run a billion-dollar company" far faster than ever before, the authors provide exceptional insight into the power of 3-D printing, artificial intelligence, robotics, networks and sensors, and synthetic biology. Drawing on insights from billionaire entrepreneurs Larry Page, Elon Musk, Richard Branson, and Jeff Bezos, the audiobook offers the best practices that allow anyone to leverage today's hyper connected crowd like never before. The authors teach how to design and use incentive competitions, launch million-dollar crowdfunding campaigns to tap into tens of billions of dollars of capital, and build communities - armies of exponentially enabled individuals willing and able to help today's entrepreneurs make their boldest dreams come true. Bold is both a manifesto and a manual. It is today's exponential entrepreneur's go-to resource on the use of emerging technologies, thinking at scale, and the awesome impact of crowd-powered tools.

The answer is simple: come up with 10 ideas a day. It doesn't matter if they are good or bad, the key is to exercise your "idea muscle", to keep it toned, and in great shape. People say ideas are cheap and execution is everything but that is NOT true. Execution is a consequence, a subset of good, brilliant idea. And good ideas require daily work. Ideas may be easy if we are only coming up with one or two but if you open this book to any of the pages and try to produce more than three, you will feel a burn, scratch your head, and you will be sweating, and working hard. There is a turning point when you reach idea number six for the day, you still have four to go, and your mind muscle is getting a workout. By the time you list those last ideas to make it to 10 you will see for yourself what "sweating the idea muscle" means. As you practice the daily idea generation you become an idea machine. When we become idea machines we are flooded with lots of bad ideas but also with some that are very good. This happens by the sheer force of the number, because we are coming up with 3,650 ideas per year (at 10 a day). When you are inspired by an extraordinary idea, all of your thoughts break their chains, you go beyond limitations and your capacity to act expands in every direction. Forces and abilities you did not know you had come to the surface, and you realize you are capable of doing great things. As you practice with the suggested prompts in this book your ideas will get better, you will be a source of great insight for others, people will find you magnetic, and they will want to hang out with you because you have so much to offer. When you practice every day your life will transform, in no more than 180 days, because it has no other evolutionary choice. Life changes for the better when we become the source of positive, insightful, and helpful ideas. Don't believe a word I say. Instead, challenge yourself.

A Guide to Resilience: How to Bounce Back from Life's Inevitable Problems Christian Moore is convinced that each of us has a power hidden within, something that can get us through any kind of adversity. That power is resilience. In The Resilience Breakthrough, Moore delivers a practical primer on how you can become more resilient in a world of instability and narrowing opportunity, whether you're facing financial troubles, health setbacks, challenges on the job, or any other problem. We can each have our own resilience breakthrough, Moore argues, and can each learn how to use adverse circumstances as potent fuel for overcoming life's hardships. As he shares engaging real-life stories and brutally honest analyses of his own experiences, Moore equips you with 27 resilience-building tools that you can start using today - in your personal life or in your organization.

What if someone told you that your behavior was controlled by a powerful, invisible force? Most of us would be skeptical of such a claim--but it's largely true. Our brains are constantly transmitting and receiving signals of which we are unaware. Studies show that these constant inputs drive the great majority of our decisions about what to do next--and we become conscious of the decisions only after we start acting on them. Many may find that disturbing. But the implications for leadership are profound. In this provocative yet practical book, renowned speaking coach and communication expert Nick Morgan highlights recent research that shows how humans are programmed to respond to the nonverbal cues of others--subtle gestures, sounds, and signals--that elicit emotion. He then provides a clear, useful framework of seven "power cues" that will be essential for any leader in business, the public sector, or almost any context. You'll learn crucial skills, from measuring nonverbal signs of confidence, to the art and practice of gestures and vocal tones, to figuring out what your gut is really telling you. This concise and engaging guide will help leaders and aspiring leaders of all stripes to connect powerfully, communicate more effectively, and command influence.

New York Times bestselling author and social media expert Gary Vaynerchuk shares hard-won advice on how to connect with customers and beat the competition. A mash-up of the best elements of Crush It! and The Thank You Economy with a fresh spin, Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook is a blueprint to social media marketing strategies that really works. When managers and marketers outline their social media strategies, they plan for the "right hook"—their next sale or campaign that's going to knock out the competition. Even companies committed to jabbing—patiently engaging with customers to build the relationships crucial to successful social media campaigns—want to land the punch that will take down their opponent or their customer's resistance in one blow. Right hooks convert traffic to sales and easily show results. Except when they don't. Thanks to massive change and proliferation in social media platforms, the winning combination of jabs and right hooks is different now. Vaynerchuk shows that while communication is still key, context matters more than ever. It's not just about developing high-quality content, but developing high-quality content perfectly adapted to specific social media platforms and mobile devices—content tailor-made for Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter and Tumblr.

From the best-selling author of The Black Swan and one of the foremost thinkers of our time, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a book on how some things actually benefit from disorder. In The Black Swan Taleb outlined a problem, and in Antifragile he offers a definitive solution: how to gain from disorder and chaos while being protected from fragilities and adverse events. For what Taleb calls the "antifragile" is actually beyond the robust, because it benefits from shocks, uncertainty, and stressors, just as human bones get stronger when subjected to stress and tension. The antifragile needs disorder in order to survive and flourish. Taleb stands uncertainty on its head, making it desirable, even necessary, and proposes that things be built in an antifragile manner. The antifragile is immune to prediction errors. Why is the city-state better than the nation-state, why is debt bad for you, and why is everything that is both modern and complicated bound to fail? The audiobook spans innovation by trial and error, health, biology, medicine, life decisions, politics, foreign policy, urban planning, war, personal finance, and economic systems. And throughout, in addition to the street wisdom of Fat Tony of Brooklyn, the voices and recipes of ancient wisdom, from Roman, Greek, Semitic, and medieval sources, are heard loud and clear. Extremely ambitious and multidisciplinary, Antifragile provides a blueprint for how to behave - and thrive - in a world we don't understand, and which is too uncertain for us to even try to understand and predict. Erudite and witty, Taleb’s message is revolutionary: What is not antifragile will surely perish.

The Cluetrain Manifesto began as a Web site in 1999 when the authors, who have worked variously at IBM, Sun Microsystems, the Linux Journal, and NPR, posted 95 theses about the new reality of the networked marketplace. Ten years after its original publication, their message remains more relevant than ever. For example, thesis no. 2: “Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors”; thesis no. 20: “Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them.” The book enlarges on these themes through dozens of stories and observations about business in America and how the Internet will continue to change it all. With a new introduction and chapters by the authors, and commentary by Jake McKee, JP Rangaswami, and Dan Gillmor, this book is essential reading for anybody interested in the Internet and e-commerce, and is especially vital for businesses navigating the topography of the wired marketplace.

From the founders of the trailblazing software company 37signals, here is a different kind of business book one that explores a new reality. Today, anyone can be in business. Tools that used to be out of reach are now easily accessible. Technology that cost thousands is now just a few bucks or even free. Stuff that was impossible just a few years ago is now simple.That means anyone can start a business. And you can do it without working miserable 80-hour weeks or depleting your life savings. You can start it on the side while your day job provides all the cash flow you need. Forget about business plans, meetings, office space - you don't need them. With its straightforward language and easy-is-better approach, Rework is the perfect playbook for anyone who's ever dreamed of doing it on their own. Hardcore entrepreneurs, small-business owners, people stuck in day jobs who want to get out, and artists who don't want to starve anymore will all find valuable inspiration and guidance in these pages. It's time to rework work.


Tesla's main source of inspiration.
Roger Joseph Boscovich, a physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, theologian, Jesuit priest, and polymath, published the first edition of his famous work, Philosophiae Naturalis Theoria Redacta Ad Unicam Legem Virium In Natura Existentium (Theory Of Natural Philosophy Derived To The Single Law Of Forces Which Exist In Nature), in Vienna, in 1758, containing his atomic theory and his theory of forces. A second edition was published in 1763 in Venice

Bill Clinton's Georgetown mentor's history of the Conspiracy since the Boer War in South Africa.
TRAGEDY AND HOPE shows the years 1895-1950 as a period of transition from the world dominated by Europe in the nineteenth century to the world of three blocs in the twentieth century. With clarity, perspective, and cumulative impact, Professor Quigley examines the nature of that transition through two world wars and a worldwide economic depression. As an interpretative historian, he tries to show each event in the full complexity of its historical context. The result is a unique work, notable in several ways. It gives a picture of the world in terms of the influence of different cultures and outlooks upon each other; it shows, more completely than in any similar work, the influence of science and technology on human life; and it explains, with unprecedented clarity, how the intricate financial and commercial patterns of the West prior to 1914 influenced the development of today’s world.

This is the July, 2016 ALTA (Asymmetric Linguistic Trends Analysis) Report. Also known as 'the Web Bot' report, this series is brought to you by halfpasthuman.com. This report covers your future world from July 2016 through to 2031. Forecasts are created using predictive linguistics (from the inventor) and cover your planet, your population, your economy and markets, and your Space Goat Farts where you will find all the 'unknown' and 'officially denied' woo-woo that will be shaping your environment over these next few decades.

Time is considered as an independent entity which cannot be reduced to the concept of matter, space or field. The point of discussion is the "time flow" conception of N A Kozyrev (1908-1983), an outstanding Russian astronomer and natural scientist. In addition to a review of the experimental studies of "the active properties of time", by both Kozyrev and modern scientists, the reader will find different interpretations of Kozyrev's views and some developments of his ideas in the fields of geophysics, astrophysics, general relativity and theoretical mechanics.

How UFO Time Engines work - Clif High

The webpage discusses the workings of UFO time engines according to N.A. Kozyrev's experiments. The LL1 engine is described as a hollow metal sphere with a pool of mercury metal inside. When activated by electrical energy, it creates a uni-polar magnetic field causing the mercury to spin at a high rate and induce "time stuff" to accumulate on its surface. The accrued time stuff is siphoned down magnetically to the radiating antennae on the bottom of the vessel, providing self-sustaining power and allowing for time travel. The environment inside UFOs is likely volatile and not suitable for humans.

The Body Electric tells the fascinating story of our bioelectric selves. Robert O. Becker, a pioneer in the filed of regeneration and its relationship to electrical currents in living things, challenges the established mechanistic understanding of the body. He found clues to the healing process in the long-discarded theory that electricity is vital to life. But as exciting as Becker's discoveries are, pointing to the day when human limbs, spinal cords, and organs may be regenerated after they have been damaged, equally fascinating is the story of Becker's struggle to do such original work. The Body Electric explores new pathways in our understanding of evolution, acupuncture, psychic phenomena, and healing.

Unique, controversial, and frequently cited, this survey offers highly detailed accounts concerning the development of ideas and theories about the nature of electricity and space (aether). Readily accessible to general readers as well as high school students, teachers, and undergraduates, it includes much information unavailable elsewhere. This single-volume edition comprises both The Classical Theories and The Modern Theories, which were originally published separately. The first volume covers the theories of classical physics from the age of the Greek philosophers to the late 19th century. The second volume chronicles discoveries that led to the advances of modern physics, focusing on special relativity, quantum theories, general relativity, matrix mechanics, and wave mechanics. Noted historian of science I. Bernard Cohen, who reviewed these books for Scientific American, observed, "I know of no other history of electricity which is as sound as Whittaker's. All those who have found stimulation from his works will read this informative and accurate history with interest and profit."

The third edition of the defining text for the graduate-level course in Electricity and Magnetism has finally arrived! It has been 37 years since the first edition and 24 since the second. The new edition addresses the changes in emphasis and applications that have occurred in the field, without any significant increase in length.

Objects are a ubiquitous presence and few of us stop and think what they mean in our lives. This is the job of philosophers and this is what Jean Baudrillard does in his book. This is required reading for followers of Baudrillard, and he is perhaps the most assessable to the General Reader. Baudrillard is most associated with Post Modernism, and this early book sets the stage for that journey to the post modern world.
We are all surrounded by objects, but how many times have we thought about what those objects represent. If we took the time to think about the symbolism, we could arrive at easy solutions. We have been so accustomed to advertising the automobile representing freedom is an easy conclusion. But what about furniture? What about chairs? What about the arrangement of furniture? Watches? Collecting objects? Baudrillard literally opens up a new world and creates the universe of objects.
It is not that the critique of a society or objects has not been done before, but Baudrillard’s approach is new. Baudrillard examines objects as signs with a smattering of Post-Marxist thought. In his analysis of objects as signs, he ushers in the Post-Modern age and world for which he would be known. Heady stuff to be sure, but is presented by Baudrillard in a readily accessible manner. He articulates his thesis in a straightforward manner, avoiding the hyper-technical terminology he used in his later writings.

Moving away from the Marxist/Freudian approaches that had concerned him earlier, Baudrillard developed in this book a theory of contemporary culture that relies on displacing economic notions of cultural production with notions of cultural expenditure.

The book begins with Sidis's discovery of the first law of physical laws: "Among the physical laws it is a general characteristic that there is reversibility in time; that is, should the whole universe trace back the various positions that bodies in it have passed through in a given interval of time, but in the reverse order to that in which these positions actually occurred, then the universe, in this imaginary case, would still obey the same laws." Recent discoveries of dark matter are predicted by him in this book, and he goes on to show that the "Big Bang" is wrong. Sidis (SIGH-dis) shows that it is far more likely the universe is eternal

In this book you will encounter rare information regarding your true identity - the conscious self in the body - and how you may break the hypnotic spell your senses and thinking have cast about you since childhood.

Do we see the world as it truly is? In The Case Against Reality, pioneering cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman says no? we see what we need in order to survive. Our visual perceptions are not a window onto reality, Hoffman shows us, but instead are interfaces constructed by natural selection. The objects we see around us are not unlike the file icons on our computer desktops: while shaped like a small folder on our screens, the files themselves are made of a series of ones and zeros - too complex for most of us to understand. In a similar way, Hoffman argues, evolution has shaped our perceptions into simplistic illusions to help us navigate the world around us. Yet now these illusions can be manipulated by advertising and design.
Drawing on thirty years of Hoffman's own influential research, as well as evolutionary biology, game theory, neuroscience, and philosophy, The Case Against Reality makes the mind-bending yet utterly convincing case that the world is nothing like what we see through our eyes.

At the height of the Cold War, JFK risked committing the greatest crime in human history: starting a nuclear war. Horrified by the specter of nuclear annihilation, Kennedy gradually turned away from his long-held Cold Warrior beliefs and toward a policy of lasting peace. But to the military and intelligence agencies in the United States, who were committed to winning the Cold War at any cost, Kennedy’s change of heart was a direct threat to their power and influence. Once these dark “Unspeakable” forces recognized that Kennedy’s interests were in direct opposition to their own, they tagged him as a dangerous traitor, plotted his assassination, and orchestrated the subsequent cover-up.

2020 saw a spike in deaths in America, smaller than you might imagine during a pandemic, some of which could be attributed to COVID and to initial treatment strategies that were not effective. But then, in 2021, the stats people expected went off the rails. The CEO of the OneAmerica insurance company publicly disclosed that during the third and fourth quarters of 2021, death in people of working age (18–64) was 40 percent higher than it was before the pandemic. Significantly, the majority of the deaths were not attributed to COVID. A 40 percent increase in deaths is literally earth-shaking. Even a 10 percent increase in excess deaths would have been a 1-in-200-year event. But this was 40 percent. And therein lies a story—a story that starts with obvious questions: - What has caused this historic spike in deaths among younger people? - What has caused the shift from old people, who are expected to die, to younger people, who are expected to keep living?

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

The Tavistock Institute, in Sussex, England, describes itself as a nonprofit charity that applies social science to contemporary issues and problems. But this book posits that it is the world’s center for mass brainwashing and social engineering activities. It grew from a somewhat crude beginning at Wellington House into a sophisticated organization that was to shape the destiny of the entire planet, and in the process, change the paradigm of modern society. In this eye-opening work, both the Tavistock network and the methods of brainwashing and psychological warfare are uncovered.

A seminal and controversial figure in the history of political thought and public relations, Edward Bernays (1891–1995), pioneered the scientific technique of shaping and manipulating public opinion, which he famously dubbed “engineering of consent.” During World War I, he was an integral part of the U.S. Committee on Public Information (CPI), a powerful propaganda apparatus that was mobilized to package, advertise and sell the war to the American people as one that would “Make the World Safe for Democracy.” The CPI would become the blueprint in which marketing strategies for future wars would be based upon.
Bernays applied the techniques he had learned in the CPI and, incorporating some of the ideas of Walter Lipmann, as well as his uncle, Sigmund Freud, became an outspoken proponent of propaganda as a tool for democratic and corporate manipulation of the population. His 1928 bombshell Propaganda lays out his eerily prescient vision for using propaganda to regiment the collective mind in a variety of areas, including government, politics, art, science and education. To read this book today is to frightfully comprehend what our contemporary institutions of government and business have become in regards to organized manipulation of the masses.

Undressing the Bible: in Hebrew, the Old Testament speaks for itself, explicitly and transparently. It tells of mysterious beings, special and powerful ones, that appeared on Earth.
Aliens?
Former earthlings?
Superior civilizations, that have always been present on our planet?
Creators, manipulators, geneticists. Aviators, warriors, despotic rulers. And scientists, possessing very advanced knowledge, special weapons and science-fiction-like technologies.
Once naked, the Bible is very different from how it has always been told to us: it does not contain any spiritual, omnipotent and omniscient God, no eternity. No apples and no creeping, tempting, serpents. No winged angels. Not even the Red Sea: the people of the Exodus just wade through a simple reed bed.
Writer and journalist Giorgio Cattaneo sits down with Italy's most renowned biblical translator for his first long interview about his life's work for the English audience. A decade long official Bible translator for the Church and lifelong researcher of ancient myths and tales, Mauro Bilglino is a unicum in his field of expertise and research. A fine connoisseur of dead languages, from ancient Greek to Hebrew and medieval Latin, he focused his attention and efforts on the accurate translating of the bible.
The encounter with Mauro Biglino and his work - the journalist writes - is profoundly healthy, stimulating and inevitably destabilizing: it forces us to reconsider the solidity of the awareness that nourishes many of our common beliefs. And it is a testament to the courage that is needed, today more than ever, to claim the full dignity of free research.

Most people have heard of Jesus Christ, considered the Messiah by Christians, and who lived 2000 years ago. But very few have ever heard of Sabbatai Zevi, who declared himself the Messiah in 1666. By proclaiming redemption was available through acts of sin, he amassed a following of over one million passionate believers, about half the world's Jewish population during the 17th century.Although many Rabbis at the time considered him a heretic, his fame extended far and wide. Sabbatai's adherents planned to abolish many ritualistic observances, because, according to the Talmud, holy obligations would no longer apply in the Messianic time. Fasting days became days of feasting and rejoicing. Sabbateans encouraged and practiced sexual promiscuity, adultery, incest and religious orgies.After Sabbati Zevi's death in 1676, his Kabbalist successor, Jacob Frank, expanded upon and continued his occult philosophy. Frankism, a religious movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, centered on his leadership, and his claim to be the reincarnation of the Messiah Sabbatai Zevi. He, like Zevi, would perform "strange acts" that violated traditional religious taboos, such as eating fats forbidden by Jewish dietary laws, ritual sacrifice, and promoting orgies and sexual immorality. He often slept with his followers, as well as his own daughter, while preaching a doctrine that the best way to imitate God was to cross every boundary, transgress every taboo, and mix the sacred with the profane. Hebrew University of Jerusalem Professor Gershom Scholem called Jacob Frank, "one of the most frightening phenomena in the whole of Jewish history".Jacob Frank would eventually enter into an alliance formed by Adam Weishaupt and Meyer Amshel Rothschild called the Order of the Illuminati. The objectives of this organization was to undermine the world's religions and power structures, in an effort to usher in a utopian era of global communism, which they would covertly rule by their hidden hand: the New World Order. Using secret societies, such as the Freemasons, their agenda has played itself out over the centuries, staying true to the script. The Illuminati handle opposition by a near total control of the world's media, academic opinion leaders, politicians and financiers. Still considered nothing more than theory to many, more and more people wake up each day to the possibility that this is not just a theory, but a terrifying Satanic conspiracy.

This is the first English translation of this revolutionary essay by Vladimir I. Vernadsky, the great Russian-Ukrainian biogeochemist. It was first published in 1930 in French in the Revue générale des sciences pures et appliquées. In it, Vernadsky makes a powerful and provocative argument for the need to develop what he calls “a new physics,” something he felt was clearly necessitated by the implications of the groundbreaking work of Louis Pasteur among few others, but also something that was required to free science from the long-lasting effects of the work of Isaac Newton, most notably.
For hundreds of years, science had developed in a direction which became increasingly detached from the breakthroughs made in the study of life and the natural sciences, detached even from human life itself, and committed reductionists and small-minded scientists were resolved to the fact that ultimately all would be reduced to “the old physics.” The scientific revolution of Einstein was a step in the right direction, but here Vernadsky insists that there is more progress to be made. He makes a bold call for a new physics, taking into account, and fundamentally based upon, the striking anomalies of life and human life.

Using an inspired combination of geometric logic and metaphors from familiar human experience, Bucky invites readers to join him on a trip through a four-dimensional Universe, where concepts as diverse as entropy, Einstein's relativity equations, and the meaning of existence become clear, understandable, and immediately involving. In his own words: "Dare to be naive... It is one of our most exciting discoveries that local discovery leads to a complex of further discoveries." Here are three key examples or concepts from "Synergetics":

Tensegrity

Tensegrity, or tensional integrity, refers to structural systems that use a combination of tension and compression components. The simplest example of this is the "tensegrity triangle", where three struts are held in position not by touching one another but by tensioned wires. These systems are stable and flexible. Tensegrity structures are pervasive in natural systems, from the cellular level up to larger biological and even cosmological scales.

Vector Equilibrium (VE)

The Vector Equilibrium, often referred to by Fuller as the "VE", is a geometric form that he saw as the central form in his synergetic geometry. It’s essentially a cuboctahedron. Fuller noted that the VE is the only geometric form wherein all the vectors (lines from the center to the vertices) are of equal length and angular relationship. Because of this, it’s seen as a condition of absolute equilibrium, where the forces of push and pull are balanced.

Closest Packing of Spheres

Fuller was fascinated by how spheres could be packed together in the tightest possible configuration, a concept he often linked to how nature organizes systems. For example, when you stack oranges in a grocery store, they form a hexagonal pattern, and the spheres (oranges) are in closest-packed arrangement. Fuller related this principle to atomic structures and even cosmic organization.

To prepare Americans and freedom loving people everywhere for our current global wartime reality that few understand, here comes The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare (CG5GW) by Lieutenant General, U.S. Army (Retired) Michael T. Flynn and Sergeant, U.S. Army (Retired) Boone Cutler. General Flynn rose to the highest levels of the intelligence community and served as the National Security Advisor to the 45th POTUS. Sergeant Boone Cutler ran the ground game as a wartime Psychological Operations team sergeant in the United States Army. Together, these two combat veterans put their combined experience and expertise into an illuminating fifth-generation warfare information series called The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare. Introduction to 5GW is the first session of the multipart series. The series, complete with easy-to-understand diagrams, is written for all of humanity in every freedom loving country.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Biosphere :

  • Vernadsky defined the biosphere as the thin layer of Earth where life exists, encompassing all living organisms and the parts of the Earth where they interact. This includes the depths of the oceans to the upper layers of the atmosphere.
  • He posited that life plays a critical role in transforming the Earth's environment. In this view, living organisms are not just passive inhabitants of the planet, but active agents of change. This idea contrasts with more traditional views that saw life as simply adapting to pre-existing environmental conditions.
  • One example of this transformative power is the oxygen-rich atmosphere, which was created by photosynthesizing organisms over billions of years.

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Noosphere :

  • The concept of the noosphere can be seen as the next evolutionary stage following the biosphere. While the biosphere represents the realm of life, the noosphere represents the realm of human thought.
  • Vernadsky believed that, just as life transformed the Earth through the biosphere, human thought and collective intelligence would transform the planet in the era of the noosphere. This transformation would be characterized by the dominance of cultural evolution over biological evolution.
  • In this paradigm, human knowledge, technology, and cultural developments would become the primary drivers of change on the planet, influencing its future direction.
  • The term "noosphere" is derived from the Greek word “nous” meaning "mind" or "intellect" and "sphaira" meaning "sphere." So, the noosphere can be thought of as the "sphere of human thought."

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

A close analysis of the architecture of the stupa―a Buddhist symbolic form that is found throughout South, Southeast, and East Asia. The author, who trained as an architect, examines both the physical and metaphysical levels of these buildings, which derive their meaning and significance from Buddhist and Brahmanist influences.

Building on his extensive research into the sacred symbols and creation myths of the Dogon of Africa and those of ancient Egypt, India, and Tibet, Laird Scranton investigates the myths, symbols, and traditions of prehistoric China, providing further evidence that the cosmology of all ancient cultures arose from a single now-lost source.

It is at the same time a history of language, a guide to foreign tongues, and a method for learning them. It shows, through basic vocabularies, family resemblances of languages―Teutonic, Romance, Greek―helpful tricks of translation, key combinations of roots and phonetic patterns. It presents by common-sense methods the most helpful approach to the mastery of many languages; it condenses vocabulary to a minimum of essential words; it simplifies grammar in an entirely new way; and it teaches a languages as it is actually used in everyday life.
But this book is more than a guide to foreign languages; it goes deep into the roots of all knowledge as it explores the history of speech. It lights up the dim pathways of prehistory and unfolds the story of the slow growth of human expression from the most primitive signs and sounds to the elaborate variations of the highest cultures. Without language no knowledge would be possible; here we see how language is at once the source and the reservoir of all we know.

Taking only the most elementary knowledge for granted, Lancelot Hogben leads readers of this famous book through the whole course from simple arithmetic to calculus. His illuminating explanation is addressed to the person who wants to understand the place of mathematics in modern civilization but who has been intimidated by its supposed difficulty. Mathematics is the language of size, shape, and order―a language Hogben shows one can both master and enjoy.

A complete manual for the study and practice of Raja Yoga, the path of concentration and meditation. These timeless teachings is a treasure to be read and referred to again and again by seekers treading the spiritual path. The classic Sutras, at least 4,000 years old, cover the yogic teachings on ethics, meditation, and physical postures, and provide directions for dealing with situations in daily life. The Sutras are presented here in the purest form, with the original Sanskrit and with translation, transliteration, and commentary by Sri Swami Satchidananda, one of the most respected and revered contemporary Yoga masters. Sri Swamiji offers practical advice based on his own experience for mastering the mind and achieving physical, mental and emotional harmony.

William Strauss and Neil Howe will change the way you see the world - and your place in it. With blazing originality, The Fourth Turning illuminates the past, explains the present, and reimagines the future. Most remarkably, it offers an utterly persuasive prophecy about how America’s past will predict its future.

Strauss and Howe base this vision on a provocative theory of American history. The authors look back 500 years and uncover a distinct pattern: Modern history moves in cycles, each one lasting about the length of a long human life, each composed of four eras - or "turnings" - that last about 20 years and that always arrive in the same order. In The Fourth Turning, the authors illustrate these cycles using a brilliant analysis of the post-World War II period.

First comes a High, a period of confident expansion as a new order takes root after the old has been swept away. Next comes an Awakening, a time of spiritual exploration and rebellion against the now-established order. Then comes an Unraveling, an increasingly troubled era in which individualism triumphs over crumbling institutions. Last comes a Crisis - the Fourth Turning - when society passes through a great and perilous gate in history. Together, the four turnings comprise history's seasonal rhythm of growth, maturation, entropy, and rebirth.

4th Turning

Excess Deaths & Why RFK Jr. Can Win The Democratic Presidential Race - Ed Dowd | Part 1 of 2 - 06-21-2023

All original edition. Nothing added, nothing removed. This book traces the history of the ancient Khazar Empire, a major but almost forgotten power in Eastern Europe, which in the Dark Ages became converted to Judaism. Khazaria was finally wiped out by the forces of Genghis Khan, but evidence indicates that the Khazars themselves migrated to Poland and formed the cradle of Western Jewry. To the general reader the Khazars, who flourished from the 7th to 11th century, may seem infinitely remote today. Yet they have a close and unexpected bearing on our world, which emerges as Koestler recounts the fascinating history of the ancient Khazar Empire.

At about the time that Charlemagne was Emperor in the West. The Khazars' sway extended from the Black Sea to the Caspian, from the Caucasus to the Volga, and they were instrumental in stopping the Muslim onslaught against Byzantium, the eastern jaw of the gigantic pincer movement that in the West swept across northern Africa and into Spain.Thereafter the Khazars found themselves in a precarious position between the two major world powers: the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium and the triumphant followers of Mohammed.As Koestler points out, the Khazars were the Third World of their day. They chose a surprising method of resisting both the Western pressure to become Christian and the Eastern to adopt Islam. Rejecting both, they converted to Judaism. Mr. Koestler speculates about the ultimate faith of the Khazars and their impact on the racial composition and social heritage of modern Jewry.

Few people noticed the secret codewords used by our astronauts to describe the moon. Until now, few knew about the strange moving lights they reported.
George H. Leonard, former NASA scientist, fought through the official veil of secrecy and studied thousands of NASA photographs, spoke candidly with dozens of NASA officials, and listened to hours and hours of astronauts' tapes.
Here, Leonard presents the stunning and inescapable evidence discovered during his in-depth investigation:

  • Immense mechanical rigs, some over a mile long, working the lunar surface.
  • Strange geometric ground markings and symbols.
  • Lunar constructions several times higher than anything built on Earth.
  • Vehicles, tracks, towers, pipes, conduits, and conveyor belts running in and across moon craters.
Somebody else is indeed on the Moon, and engaged in activities on a massive scale. Our space agencies, and many of the world's top scientists, have known for years that there is intelligent life on the moon.

The article delves into the history of the Khazars, a polity in the Northern Caucasus that existed from the mid-seventh century until about 970 CE. Contrary to popular belief, the term "Khazars" is misleading as it was a multiethnic entity, and it's uncertain which specific group adopted Judaism. The Khazars first emerged in the seventh century, defeating the Bulgars, which led to the Bulgars' dispersion to various regions. The Khazar Empire was established through the expulsion of the Bulgars and was multiethnic in nature. The language spoken by the Khazars is debated, with some suggesting Turkic origins and others pointing to Slavic. The Khazars had several cities and fortresses, with significant archaeological findings. The Khazars had interactions with various empires, including wars with the Arabs and alliances with Byzantine emperors. By the mid-10th century, the Khazar capital of Itil was destroyed by the Russians. The article concludes that much of what is known about the Khazars is based on limited sources.

#Khazars #History #Caucasus #Judaism #Bulgars #Empire #Multiethnic #LanguageDebate #ArabWars #ByzantineAlliances #Itil #RussianInvasion #Archaeology #ReligiousConversion #TabletMag

In The Science of the Dogon, Laird Scranton demonstrated that the cosmological structure described in the myths and drawings of the Dogon runs parallel to modern science--atomic theory, quantum theory, and string theory--their drawings often taking the same form as accurate scientific diagrams that relate to the formation of matter.

Sacred Symbols of the Dogon uses these parallels as the starting point for a new interpretation of the Egyptian hieroglyphic language. By substituting Dogon cosmological drawings for equivalent glyph-shapes in Egyptian words, a new way of reading and interpreting the Egyptian hieroglyphs emerges. Scranton shows how each hieroglyph constitutes an entire concept, and that their meanings are scientific in nature.

The Dogon people of Mali, West Africa, are famous for their unique art and advanced cosmology. The Dogon’s creation story describes how the one true god, Amma, created all the matter of the universe. Interestingly, the myths that depict his creative efforts bear a striking resemblance to the modern scientific definitions of matter, beginning with the atom and continuing all the way to the vibrating threads of string theory. Furthermore, many of the Dogon words, symbols, and rituals used to describe the structure of matter are quite similar to those found in the myths of ancient Egypt and in the daily rituals of Judaism. For example, the modern scientific depiction of the informed universe as a black hole is identical to Amma’s Egg of the Dogon and the Egyptian Benben Stone.

The Science of the Dogon offers a case-by-case comparison of Dogon descriptions and drawings to corresponding scientific definitions and diagrams from authors like Stephen Hawking and Brian Greene, then extends this analysis to the counterparts of these symbols in both the ancient Egyptian and Hebrew religions. What is ultimately revealed is the scientific basis for the language of the Egyptian hieroglyphs, which was deliberately encoded to prevent the knowledge of these concepts from falling into the hands of all but the highest members of the Egyptian priesthood.

Anthony C. Yu’s translation of The Journey to the West,initially published in 1983, introduced English-speaking audiences to the classic Chinese novel in its entirety for the first time. Written in the sixteenth century, The Journey to the West tells the story of the fourteen-year pilgrimage of the monk Xuanzang, one of China’s most famous religious heroes, and his three supernatural disciples, in search of Buddhist scriptures. Throughout his journey, Xuanzang fights demons who wish to eat him, communes with spirits, and traverses a land riddled with a multitude of obstacles, both real and fantastical. An adventure rich with danger and excitement, this seminal work of the Chinese literary canonis by turns allegory, satire, and fantasy.

With over a hundred chapters written in both prose and poetry, The Journey to the West has always been a complicated and difficult text to render in English while preserving the lyricism of its language and the content of its plot. But Yu has successfully taken on the task, and in this new edition he has made his translations even more accurate and accessible. The explanatory notes are updated and augmented, and Yu has added new material to his introduction, based on his original research as well as on the newest literary criticism and scholarship on Chinese religious traditions. He has also modernized the transliterations included in each volume, using the now-standard Hanyu Pinyin romanization system. Perhaps most important, Yu has made changes to the translation itself in order to make it as precise as possible.

One of the great works of Chinese literature, The Journey to the West is not only invaluable to scholars of Eastern religion and literature, but, in Yu’s elegant rendering, also a delight for any reader.

The Oera Linda Book is a 19th-century translation by Dr. Ottema and WIlliam R. Sandbach of an old manuscript written in the Old Frisian language that records historical, mythological, and religious themes of remote antiquity, compiled between 2194 BC and AD 803.

  • The Oera Linda book challenges traditional views of pre-Christian societies.
  • Christianization is likened to a "great reset" that erased previous civilizations.
  • The Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people.
  • The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting patterns in history.
  • The importance of identity and understanding one's roots is highlighted.
  • The Oera Linda book offers wisdom and insights into several European languages.

The Oera Linda book offers a fresh perspective on our history, challenging the notion that pre-Christian societies were uncivilized. It suggests that the Christianization of societies was a form of "great reset," erasing and demonizing what existed before. The Oera Linda writings hint at an advanced civilization with its own laws, writing, and societal structures. Jan Ott's translation from the Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people. The text also touches upon the guilt many feel today, even if they aren't religious, about issues like climate change and historical slavery. It criticizes the way science is sometimes treated like a religion, with scientists acting as its preachers. The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting that understanding history requires recognizing patterns and cycles. Christianity is portrayed as one of the most significant resets in history, with sects fighting and erasing each other's scriptures. The importance of identity is highlighted, with a focus on the Fryans, a tribe that faced challenges from another tribe from Finland. This other tribe had a different moral compass, leading to conflicts and eventual assimilation. The text suggests that the true history of the Fryans and their values might have been distorted by subsequent Christian narratives. The Oera Linda book is seen as a source of wisdom, shedding light on the origins of several European languages and offering insights into values like freedom, truth, and justice.

#OeraLinda #History #Christianization #GreatReset #FryanLanguage #JanOtt #Civilization #OldTestament #Church #SpiritualAbuse #Identity #Fryans #Autland #Finland #Slavery #Christianity #Sects #Genocide #Torture #Bible #Freedom #Truth #Justice #Righteousness #Language #German #Dutch #Frisian #English #Scandinavian #Wisdom #Inspiration #European #Values

The Talmud is one of the most important holy books of the Hebrew religion and of the world. No English translation of the book existed until the author presented this work. To this day, very little of the actual text seems available in English -- although we find many interpretive commentaries on what it is supposed to mean. The Talmud has a reputation for being long and difficult to digest, but Polano has taken what he believes to be the best material and put it into extremely readable form. As far as holy books of the world are concerned, it is on par with The Koran, The Bhagavad-Gita and, of course, The Bible, in importance. This clearly written edition will allow many to experience The Talmud who may have otherwise not had the chance.

This five-volume set is the only complete English rendering of The Zohar, the fundamental rabbinic work on Jewish mysticism that has fascinated readers for more than seven centuries. In addition to being the primary reference text for kabbalistic studies, this magnificent work is arranged in the form of a commentary on the Bible, bringing to the surface the deeper meanings behind the commandments and biblical narrative. As The Zohar itself proclaims: Woe unto those who see in the Law nothing but simple narratives and ordinary words .... Every word of the Law contains an elevated sense and a sublime mystery .... The narratives of the Law are but the raiment Thin which it is swathed.

Twenty-one years ago, at a friend's request, a Massachusetts professor sketched out a blueprint for nonviolent resistance to repressive regimes. It would go on to be translated, photocopied, and handed from one activist to another, traveling from country to country across the globe: from Iran to Venezuela―where both countries consider Gene Sharp to be an enemy of the state―to Serbia; Afghanistan; Vietnam; the former Soviet Union; China; Nepal; and, more recently and notably, Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, where it has served as a guiding light of the Arab Spring.

This short, pithy, inspiring, and extraordinarily clear guide to overthrowing a dictatorship by nonviolent means lists 198 specific methods to consider, depending on the circumstances: sit-ins, popular nonobedience, selective strikes, withdrawal of bank deposits, revenue refusal, walkouts, silence, and hunger strikes. From Dictatorship to Democracy is the remarkable work that has made the little-known Sharp into the world's most effective and sought-after analyst of resistance to authoritarian regimes.

Bill Cooper, former United States Naval Intelligence Briefing Team member, reveals information that remains hidden from the public eye. This information has been kept in topsecret government files since the 1940s. His audiences hear the truth unfold as he writes about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the war on drugs, the secret government, and UFOs. Bill is a lucid, rational, and powerful speaker whose intent is to inform and to empower his audience. Standing room only is normal. His presentation and information transcend partisan affiliations as he clearly addresses issues in a way that has a striking impact on listeners of all backgrounds and interests. He has spoken to many groups throughout the United States and has appeared regularly on many radio talk shows and on television. In 1988 Bill decided to "talk" due to events then taking place worldwide, events that he had seen plans for back in the early 1970s. Bill correctly predicted the lowering of the Iron Curtain, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the invasion of Panama. All Bill's predictions were on record well before the events occurred. Bill is not a psychic. His information comes from top secret documents that he read while with the Intelligence Briefing Team and from over seventeen years of research.

The argument that the 16th Amendment (which concerns the federal income tax) was not properly ratified and thus is invalid has been a topic of debate among some tax protesters and scholars. One of the individuals associated with this theory is Bill Benson, who asserted that the 16th Amendment was fraudulently ratified. Here's a brief overview of the argument: 1. Research and Documentation: Bill Benson, along with another individual named M.J. "Red" Beckman, wrote a two-volume work called "The Law That Never Was" in the 1980s. This work was a product of Benson's extensive travels to various state archives to examine the original ratification documents related to the 16th Amendment. 2. Claims of Irregularities: In his work, Benson presented evidence that claimed many of the states either did not ratify the 16th Amendment properly or made mistakes in their resolutions. Some of these alleged irregularities included misspellings, incorrect wording, and other deviations from the proposed amendment. 3. Philander Knox's Role: In 1913, Philander Knox, who was the U.S. Secretary of State at the time, declared that the 16th Amendment had been ratified by the necessary three-fourths of the states. Benson's contention is that Knox was aware of the various discrepancies and irregularities in the ratification process but chose to fraudulently declare the amendment ratified anyway. 4. Legal Challenges and Court Rulings: Over the years, some tax protesters have used Benson's findings to challenge the legality of the income tax. However, these challenges have been consistently rejected by the courts. In fact, several courts have addressed Benson's research and arguments directly and found them to be without legal merit. The courts have repeatedly upheld the validity of the 16th Amendment. 5. Counterarguments: Critics of Benson's theory argue that even if there were minor discrepancies in the wording or format of the ratification documents, they do not invalidate the overarching intent of the states to ratify the amendment. Additionally, they assert that there's no substantive evidence that Knox acted fraudulently. It's worth noting that despite the popularity of this theory among certain groups, the legal consensus in the U.S. is that the 16th Amendment was validly ratified and is a legitimate part of the U.S. Constitution. Those who refuse to pay income taxes based on this theory have faced legal penalties.

The article delves into the evolution of the concept of the ether in physics. Historically, the ether was postulated to explain the propagation of light, with figures like Newton and Huygens suggesting its existence. By the late 19th century, Maxwell's electromagnetic theory linked light's propagation to the ether, a theory experimentally validated by Hertz in 1888. Lorentz expanded on this, focusing on wave transmission in moving media. The article contrasts the English approach, which sought tangible models, with the phenomenological view, which aimed for a descriptive approach without specific hypotheses. The piece also touches on various mechanical theories and models proposed over the years, emphasizing the challenges in defining the ether's properties and its evolving nature in scientific discourse.

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Clif High & Sarah Westall on Antarctica and Tartaria and Consciousness – 03-25-2022

Clif High & Sarah Westall on Antarctica and Tartaria and Consciousness - 03-25-2022

Clif High & Sarah Westall on Antarctica and Tartaria and Consciousness - 03-25-2022

Episode Summary:

The PDF discusses the concept of "wu" and its implications on understanding reality, consciousness, and human experience. "Wu" is described as an indescribable aspect of reality, closely related to the Tao, representing things not present to our senses or obscured from our minds. It is suggested that "wu" encompasses everything hidden or denied in our consciousness, and it's something that powers try to obscure from individuals. The discussion also touches on the idea that there are only two models proposed for the universe: quantum mechanics and the ether, with the latter being favored in the conversation. The ether is described as supporting consciousness, which in turn supports the material world where matter exists. The concept of "wu" is said to be right beyond the universe, which is defined as the sum total of every human's experience throughout history. The text also explores the idea of reincarnation and the equality of all human experiences in contributing to the universe.

The conversation further delves into the understanding of language, emotions, and thoughts. It is suggested that emotions drive language and thoughts, with the speaker noting the importance of using appropriate words and the power of language. The speaker also shares their enlightenment experience, highlighting the significance of proper naming and the power of thoughts. The discussion suggests that thoughts are dangerous as they can influence and change social orders, emphasizing the need for societies to examine and accept new thoughts carefully. The text also mentions the breakdown of social orders due to the intrusion of "wu" and the crumbling of frameworks built on lies. This breakdown is said to lead to a dangerous period where individuals without perceptual anchors might gravitate towards any leadership, good or bad. The conversation ends with reflections on current events, suggesting that there is a shift in the social order and media's stance towards political figures, with individuals within the media and politics being investigated.

#Woo #Tao #Consciousness #Reality #Universe #Ether #QuantumMechanics #MaterialWorld #Reincarnation #HumanExperience #Language #Emotions #Thoughts #Enlightenment #SocialOrder #Leadership #PerceptualAnchors #Investigation #Media #Politics #Shift #Change #Breakdown #Framework #Discovery #Senses #Obscured #Hidden #Power #Authority #Knowledge #Understanding #Perception #Experience #History

Key Takeaways:
  • "Wu" is an indescribable aspect of reality, akin to the Tao.
  • Wu represents things not present to senses or obscured from consciousness.
  • Two models for the universe are discussed: quantum mechanics and the ether.
  • The ether supports consciousness, which in turn supports the material world.
  • Human experience contributes equally to the universe, regardless of its duration or impact.
  • Emotions drive language and thoughts.
  • Thoughts are powerful and can influence and change social orders.
  • There's a noted breakdown in social orders due to the intrusion of "wu".
Predictions:
  • The breakdown of social orders due to the intrusion of "wu" will lead to a dangerous period where individuals might gravitate towards any leadership, whether good or bad.
  • There is a shift in the social order and media's stance towards political figures, with individuals within the media and politics being investigated.
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Clif High & Sarah Westall on Antarctica and Tartaria and Consciousness - 03-25-2022

Hi, Cliff. Welcome back to the program. Thank you very much. I'm very happy to be here, especially at this time. Oh, I'm so excited to have you back.

I have been binging on your shows, and it's been like I told you in the email, it's been therapeutic for me because you're looking at things from a big picture. Because if I look at trees, I get anxious. But if I can look at the bigger picture, that's what I need to have sanity. So you've been kind of providing that for me. So I thank you for that.

But let's get into it. First of all, what the heck is wu? People want to know what is because all your shows are based on wu. So what is that? Okay, so we can look at it a number of ways.

It is not simply an idea. It is an attempt to describe something that exists in our reality that is almost indescribable. So it is very close to the Tao, and I think the Tao actually is part of the Wu. It is a small part that they identified. But the Tao or the Wu is everything that is not present to our senses.

Those things we deny in our minds, those things that are hidden by our minds, those things that are hidden by our senses, those things that others would hide through obscuring our thinking. Okay, so anything that the powers that be want to obscure from you is woo. The fact that they are obscuring it from you is woo. Right? We live in woo.

Now, that's one way to look at it as sort of this abstract, sort of quasimorphous vague kind of a thing. There's other ways to look at it. There has only been two models ever proposed for universe. One is quantum mechanics, which I believe is flawed. And the other is the ether.

The ether predates quantum mechanics and actually has atomism and quantum mechanics as a small subset of it. Sure. And that etheric perspective dates back thousands of years. Right. And that perspective says there is consciousness, and unconsciousness is supported the ether by consciousness.

Now, you can call consciousness God, Allah, anything you want, but as far as we're concerned in this discussion, it is actually consciousness. Right. And so consciousness supports the ether. On the ether is the field. Within the field is the materium, this place where matter exists, our bodies are and in which all of universe is.

And wu is right on the other side of universe, and universe is described. It is delineated as the sum total of every human's experience in life. Is that all through history? All through history, all in perpetuity. And so universe is described that way.

So universe does not include the thinking of aliens unless it intrudes on the thinking of humans. So universe we describe here is precisely from a human perspective. Okay? But it is a remarkable concept because it means that all humans are equal whether you live two minutes and die, or whether you live 100 years and contribute and die. All human experience is equal because it is the sum total of all of our experience over time that makes up universe.

Bearing in mind. As a wu person, I know I'm reincarnated, so I will throw many, many lives into the sum total of universe. And so every person's experience, every person's suffering, joys, et cetera, are equal in their contribution to universe. Very nice, right? This is a very even playing field.

And so it is universe and wu are like, right there. Okay? So universe runs up to wu, and we subsist in wu. Other people have created a framework, a narrative that they present to us as reality that is not wu, that is constructed. And it's trying to block out all of the Woo that would otherwise inform our decisions.

So as a wu person, I can go into a room and I recognize that I am a sigma male. As a sigma male, I have sensory apparatus. I have energy bodies that extend out many, many feet, and I can tell instantly if there is another male in that room or female that threatens me. I can also tell as a woo person that that person is lying without hearing their words because of how they look, the aura around them, and the intent. Feel.

It correct. It is a perception. Feeling is a weird word, okay? I hate to use it because we have three minds. We have a body mind.

And you know your body mind when you hit a hammer on your toe because all of your consciousness rushes right to that toe, that's body mind, okay? Desire mind is obviously desire mind. Then we have feeling mind. Feeling mind is not emotions. Feeling mind is sensory perception.

Women have an exquisite perceptibility of feeling. Men have an exquisite perceptibility of desire, all right? And that's why we complement. Now, feeling is many times confused with the more gross form of sensory perception. So I just don't like using the word.

But you are correct. They bastardize the word into being something that is irrational versus just part of our being. And that's correct. And so many years ago, on the path into this work, when I was getting ready to start to get the idea for the algorithm, I went through an Enlightenment experience, which was the blinding white flash. Seeing your universal body, total loss of time, you're just drenched in sweat, and this stuff just oozes out of you, and you don't know what's going on.

And subsequent to that, I've had a very difficult time using or accepting inappropriate words applied to things. And so it is true, and I've run across this before that one of the first things that happens to people after they have an enlightenment experience is that they must use the proper names for things. It's just you have to do it right. You just cannot help yourself. And so language matters in a way that is really crucial.

And as the person I am as a linguist, because I've made my living for 30 plus years, 40 years, as a linguist with computers or with humans. And as a linguist, I'm very pleased now because we've reached the tipping point and the lies are starting to fall off, and we will get into 2780 years of knowledge. And in that course of that knowledge, we will discover our own true human history, the much more of the history of universe than that has been heard from us. But beyond all of that, the single greatest thing is that we will have a tendency to concentrate on perfecting communication for accuracy. Interesting.

Yeah, because I know that when I did a lot of data modeling back in the day, where I managed kind of broad computer systems right. And for telecommunications, and one of the big stumbling blocks was everybody had a different definition for a single word, and you had to get to a common definition on a word before you could actually design it properly. Correct? Yeah. And I learned that even basic words and so much of our arguing and so much of our confusion is because we disagree on basic words and the meanings.

It's the ambiguity. And it is actually not a mental thing. Okay? I've studied this for years and years. It is an emotional thing.

It strikes us when we go into puberty. And what happens to us is that we get into puberty and our parents are just so lame. They're just such numb nuts. They are language. I know.

And their language just does not suit us. And so I have this emotion and no, their word does not make sense for my emotion. So I have a word, and then I attach my emotion to that. And I'm slanging, right? And so slang is something that comes up with children.

They have a brief burst of it from, say, age three to five or six. It'll fade off for a couple of years once they start getting socialized. Then they have group slanging, say from eight to eleven, and then they start getting into puberty, and it gets really serious because they have that emotional impact to put to those words. So they actually will take old words or create new words, and they will attach emotional meaning to it. And this is the disconnect with old people, because old people will hear these sounds, but they have no way of knowing what is the emotional attachment to that sound.

So you can come on up and have some guy say, no, you can't SAS me. I can't have you SAS me. And you say what?

You see the point. You have no way of knowing a connection there. And so it is the ambiguity of language, but it is driven by our emotions. Now, I actually found a way around it in doing my predictive linguistics by not concentrating on the definition, the definition of the word, I started going to words as descriptors. So words were within descriptors of human emotion.

Once you start looking at it that way, then you find that, yes, languages are related graphically and phonetically and evolutionarily. But across languages, throughout all human culture, you can find that every language will have a cluster of words that will represent this class of emotions, another cluster that represents this class of emotions. So if you were to go to Pilcheck's Wheel of Emotion, he was a sociologist out of I think he's Polish, but out of, like, the 70s or eighty s, and he put together this thing of a wheel of emotions. I altered it for my own purpose and used that as the basis for my emotional reduction engine. But you can lay out all of the emotions that humans can have, and then you can start describing them in detail.

And you will then be able to, once you've got that descriptor support for each of the emotions, you can take those words in your language, and you will find correspondence in other languages. And so you can translate words emotionally rather than through meaning. And that's how you get at the stuff that I get at. Makes sense. Well, yeah.

And is it all thought or all emotional? Or is it kind of thoughts, too? Or is a thought an emotion? Okay, so we do not have thoughts absent emotion. We do not have movement absent emotion.

Now, here's how the body okay, so we have a desire mind and a feeling mind that are normally pretty well joined, right? And then we have a body mind that just sort of hangs out there, and occasionally they all fuse. But in our feeling and desire from which our emotions emerge, those are body prompts. And so the body mind is actually the driver of everything. And so, absent an emotion, I won't get up out of this chair, or I won't make my mouth move and talk to you, right?

Okay. I have to have an emotive nature. Now, humans are matter. We're coarse condensates of energy that is clustered together into a subsection of the field controlled by a subsection of consciousness. So my subsection of consciousness is controlling this subsection of the field in which my body is.

And that matter is being moved by what we can call prana ki chi spirit, whatever anime, whatever you want to put word put on it. But it is that energy that comes from consciousness that puts us together here and makes that matter move. But that energy responds to the matter in a feedback loop. And that's what causes emotions, because emotions are chemical. They're biochemical, but at some point, they translate into the abstraction, which is not an abstraction, but it is a permutation of consciousness that we call thought.

And so thought is dangerous, as the ancients would tell you, someone wandering in from a foreign land that had weird thoughts was put to death because thoughts could pollute the social order. Right. Thoughts are powerful, much more powerful, because it's energy coming into the matter as opposed to energy coming from the matter outward. And so the thoughts that come into you are really dangerous, especially if you do not have a society structured to examine and then decide to accept new thoughts. Right.

And that's what we're dealing with right now. That phenomena is the core because they're trying to keep those new thoughts out and we're trying to bring those new thoughts in, or we're trying to put those thoughts out. I mean, I don't know how that both. It's simultaneous. It can't be one without the other.

You must do that. Right. And so this is why I always follow this thing called first principles thinking, in which you get a real solid chunk of something that you can hang on to in terms of your thinking, and you build on it from there. And you can take these first principles thinking efforts all in huge levels. I mean, fantastic amounts of this.

This kind of like a framework. Exactly. It's a computer framework, in a sense, for your own thinking. And the beauty of it is that if you discover you've made a mistake, you can simply backtrack to the point that the error crept into your thinking, pick up from there and correct, and you don't have to go all the way back. So as a thinker, I don't have to abandon all of my core principles when one of them is proved to be wrong in the changing circumstances.

As a first principles thinker, I recognize that I live here where materium is is the place of change. You reset up your framework, and I always see it as a cloud. I have a framework. And then outside that framework is this big cloud myth. And that cloud kind of dissipates.

Yeah. Yes. Okay, so there you go. The thinking is where you have gelled a certain part of the Woo that you feel comfortable with. This is your little bit of Woo soup that you feel comfortable with.

On the outside of that is the Woo that is out there. And that's unknown Woo is all about discovery. And discovery only lasts as long as it lasts because you can discover something and then almost immediately discover something that invalidates what you just discovered. Discovery is not meaning that it is truth or that is valid or perpetual or worth looking at. It just means that you found it, you can analyze it, and then you can go on from there.

So this is the weird part for everybody now. So our social order is breaking down. The reason it is breaking down is because the Woo is intruding through the framework. Because the framework was built of lies, and initially it had been built solid, and then eventually all the wood in the framework rotted. And it was placed with this earsats paper and paper machete.

It was like tofu construction in China where it's not really cement. You're not really sure what that stuff is, but it's crumbling underneath you anyway. And so we're at that point where the framework had been eroded by all of the lies and now the lies can't stitch it together anymore. There's no there and so they are crumbling. We have reached a point in these last couple of days where I'm saying that it was in the last 12 hours, but it was probably in the last couple of days for sure, in which the overwool will totally smash the framework and it'll just go floating about and drift off and we're going to have to clean it up.

And the normies, the normal population is now going to be put into this position of having no perceptual anchors. And so this is going to be a very dangerous period of time. I do not think it will be turned the way that the same period 100 years ago was turned and they made Germany into the Nazi state. I think that, in fact, those people that made Germany into the Nazi state and got us into the war the Prescott Bushes that were financing Germany from the United States and the complicit senators and all of that all of those kind of people, I think, are in the process of being thrown out of the social order out of participating in the social order as a direct result of our entering into the age of Aquarius. And I'm taking as the entry point December 20 eigth when we had this grand conjunction and all the planets moved over onto the same side of the cone that we follow in behind the sun.

And so all of our energies, all of our mass, everything was concentrated in this one area. And so it changed everything. That was the real tipping point. We small humans are just now experiencing the tipping point created by Saturn and Jupiter, right? That kind of thing.

And so our world is upending and the poor normies are being cast adrift. The problem at this point is that without leadership, the normies will gravitate to any leadership, good or bad. Right? But the good part is that the overwoo is showing the perpetrators of the lie, the builders of the false framework for who they are. And we're seeing evidence of that now.

Look at how the mainstream media has turned on Biden, okay? It's not just that he screwed up, right. There was another subtle twist in there. If you listen to the language that the individual people are using when they're out there getting on his case where know, Biden could do no wrong, right. The words they're using are betraying a level of personal fear.

They sniff the change in the wind. They know that the social order has changed and that they know that the devolution is in progress, that the Biden and all of those people that put him into power are on their way out. And the media fear the retribution that is coming to them. They're trying to save their butt is what they're trying to do. Many of them will hang.

I hope so. Well, look at this. Look at the people don't understand how well okay, so most individuals don't have first principles thinking and working for them. And so they won't examine an idea really thoroughly. They'll just get a hint of it the headline issue, right?

And so a headline is, Durham is investigating Russiagate. And so he's investigating and you read and he's investigating some political guys that probably put together this devious thing to get at their political enemy, one Donald Trump. And so Durham's investigating this, but people just don't quite understand that when they say he's investigating the Russia gate, that the media are culpable. Individuals within the media are culpable, and they will go down for it. They are being investigated as well as the political people that they had all those ties to.

And I'm of the opinion that within the last few days, an idea dawned. Piece of information was handed out because there are certain individuals that are really scrambling now, and they've totally changed their language. They've gone into CYA mode, and it will get a lot worse. This is a very predictable milestone in a progression that, once begun, can't be stopped. And we're in it already, so it won't be stopped.

So this is truly a fantastic time because for the Woo guys, right, because my whole thing was I'm glad I'm alive now because I have skills that will be able to aid me in poring through the Woo, searching for our true human history and the history of this planet. This information will be coming out now that the framework, the paradigm is falling away because that paradigm not only directed our attention over here and held it within this box, it was deliberately set up to obscure from us stuff that's out there in the Woo that's direct to us. So I'm fascinated about all the stuff that's hidden from us, about Antarctica, and I'm fascinated about all the stuff under the bottom of the ocean that's hidden and so on and all of this kind of stuff. And Tartaria, Tartaria, how could there be a huge empire just a few hundred years ago, according to the maths and stuff, and it not have relevance to us today. Something is really OD there, and I've heard multiple things on it, and I'm not sure if I believe some of the things that are coming out on it.

They were purposely hidden tateria because they corrupted it and wanted to keep it. I heard some weird things. I kind of think they're doing what they're doing to us right now. Like they destroyed that empire and then they covered it up, kind of like what I think they're trying to do what they did to Tateria, to us, and maybe I'm wrong. That's just a gut I have.

I have no proof. This is the thing, okay? So in the Wu, you don't have a whole lot of solid stuff to stand on, okay? And you're going to run into lots of interpretations that are inaccurate because of that. So you have to say, okay, there's evidence, and that's this building, that's this old map, here's some documentation, then there's everybody's opinions on that evidence and all their conclusions.

So if it sounds like a conclusion, I'm throwing it away at this stage, and I'm just looking at the evidence. What I like to do is say, okay, we've got buildings. We've got buildings that are covered in mud. We've got some old map fragments. Now, is there anything else out in our current society life now that would support that?

And so I go out, I look around, and curiously, or expectedly, there is, okay, so we have the empire of Tartaria. And do we have remnants of that empire in the peoples? Yes, we do, because we have the Tartars. We have the Caucus peoples, and the Tartars and the Caucus peoples had a particular history, okay? And so what is revealed if you go deep enough into the Tartars and the Caucus peoples, also called the Cossacks, okay, if you look into that, you're not supposed to talk about the Cossacks.

It was done away with in the Bolshevik Revolution. Why was this? Because if you concentrate on the Cossacks, you find out that the last or that the officialdom of the area, which was the Russian SARS, used the Cossacks to do what? Destroy the last of the giants?

Yeah, they destroyed the giants. I heard that.

Okay, so now if you go back to pre Russian Revolution and you root around in the documentation and stuff, you will find descriptions and drawings, because it was back into the 18 I want to say 1880s or 1890s, you will find drawings of Cossacks bringing caged giants to the Tsar. Isn't that crazy? There's newspaper clippings from here with giants and bones and things, right? And actually, here's something else. I had a relative in the Depression that was working, got his job through a casual association with somebody that was a freemason, and he made a dollar a day going out in terrible conditions and heaving giant sacks of bones, huge sacks of bones, off into the ocean, out of ships off the coast of California.

And these were the bones of giants. These sacks would have one or two femur bones in them, and it would take eight and ten people to lift them up and heave them over the side. And that's all they did all day long, was to heave this stuff over the side into the ocean, because this was found in California, and as the Mason said, it could not be there. So now, was Tateria a brutal regime, or was it? Just go ahead.

So I go and I look into what I know of in the way of records from the Byzantine Empire. Okay? Because the Byzantine Empire rubbed shoulders throughout the entire period of time for like, 1140 years. So they were the longest lived modern day empire around. And their records would seem to indicate that Tartaria was a remnant when they were growing up, so to speak.

All right? So the records that we have about Tartaria are, as an empire, are so minuscule and probably so deliberately destroyed and hidden that we have no real way of knowing what was going on there. We have to assume that their ethos is not ours. Just like in Justinian's time or any of these other times. They don't have the same kind of ethos as ours.

So to apply the word of brutal would be a conclusion. Right? We don't know. But we do know they were extensive. They were rich, they were into some serious mining.

They had some interesting building techniques that they got from somebody else. Because there was no sign of evolution of these techniques. It just suddenly started in their construction. We know that there's social order people that have a remnant of a Tartarian history just the way that we have Chinese now that are, in essence, the remnant of ancient Chinese empires. Right?

We have the Mesoamericans, the Mexicans are the remnants of the ancient Aztec Empire. That sort of a thing. So there is evidence for it. Why it should be obscured is a very interesting question indeed. Well, and is that why there's the Dark Ages or the Middle Ages is because there's something behind that.

There is more there. Go ahead. Right. That's the anatoly Fomenko. Okay, so there's this Russian guy.

This Russian guy is very educated. He's a mathematician. And he says, shit don't make can't. Shit just does not make sense in history. And so he set about this huge effort and lots of people came to him and they've been building on it.

It's an international effort. And they have discovered that if you were to look at King Lists, right, who inherited the country from who and was the king for how long and so on, there are duplicates of King Lists. Names are almost even the same. And so 1200 years of history and all these kings here is basically repeated here for the next section. So he thinks the Middle Ages did not exist.

And he has evidence to prove that the people we think of as running around in the little, like, from Hollywood, the funny little Roman skirts and stuff, the gladiators with their short swords and the little skirts and their tunics and stuff didn't happen. Okay? If you actually look at the representation of most of the Roman Empire, they were dressed in what we think of as medieval garb. Okay? So this 800 years, 900 years of history doesn't exist.

It was put in there. The reason it was put in there is because of this weird thing about humans we don't want someone else to have a one up on us. And so this Anatoly Fomenko and he's a brilliant researcher and I'm going to just encapsulate his conclusion into one kind of pithy little saying. And that is that one day a white guy ran into some Chinese fellows and the Chinese fellows said our empire is 6000 years old. And the white guy said, well, yeah.

And he says, well, my empire is 7000 years old. And neither one of them were factual, right? And so at some point it became sort of quasi official braggadatio and they just had to backfill the support. And they did that through the Jesuits. And the Jesuits have a history of altering history, okay?

We know that they are the ones that have been altering history for the Catholic Church for generations. And they have multiple accounts of history and they keep them all separate so they can build on them and they usually don't get too trashed up in it. So we know from Anatoly's work that this particular group of Jesuits in this particular time constructed 800 years of history which did not exist. And that's why we have the Dark Ages where there's no real there there. And that's why it doesn't line up with what was happening in Mesoamerica.

That's why we don't have the one to one. We don't have an accurate correspondence to Columbus coming here to North America and what he discovered here. Because all of our history has been lies. Yes. Right.

So did you know that the Chinese were on the West Coast when Columbus was in Hispaniola? No. Right. Chinese have been coming to California perhaps for one 5000 hundred years, intermittently. The only reason they never colonized the United States or what we think of as North America was because they were grossly out.

It's a huge distance to come. The Chinese are not logistically good sailors. They only had one giant expedition of exploration ever. And since then it was just little ones. And the fact that we had 60 million people living in the continent at that time and it was pretty developed.

They had developed cities, they had all sorts of stuff. Well, here's the thing no, they didn't. Okay, well, there were some cities. Well, that's what I heard. I mean, maybe that's bad information.

We have to be careful about that. Because here's the thing about the North American population. These individuals, for whatever reason and you can put on many different kinds of reasons they're not technologically bent, right? So they just don't go there. Africans are that way to some extent.

The Hindus are that way. They're very inventive and so on and into technology now. But in their ancient history or not ancient history, but I mean, in the modern ancient history of a few thousand years ago they were not. Really out there crafting new inventions, the way that we see in Europe and so on. They weren't driven by the extremes of environment that cause you to have to alter your environment in order to survive.

That's what makes you really an inventive person. So the people in North America didn't have the wheel. They had invented the wheel, but they'd never applied it to anything other than toys. So they didn't have chariots. They didn't have so you see the North American Indians pulling with their horses, pulling people on basically two sticks with some blankets through it, bouncing across all this stuff.

They didn't have wheels. They didn't build roads. They were not that oriented that way. That was not their relationship with living with the planet. And so they see that in us as a negative.

Right, because our relationship of living with the planet degrades the planet in their view, because we build roads, we cut down trees and so on. For instance, the natives around here at that time would go on out and only harvest what they needed out of a cedar tree in a particular way. And so in order to leave that tree to grow, so they would take a particular section of bark, cut out some of the wood, they would pack it back in, and then they'd put the bark around it, and the tree would recover. Same thing with the spruce and some of the others. So they had that kind of a relationship with the planet that did not make them technological.

So the cities and so forth that were here, which I grant you, there may be some evidence of that, because there is evidence of vast civilizations were inherited by these people, not created by them. Okay, well, that could have happened. And there's some facts that maybe Tartarians created it because some of the same architecture that they use. Yes, and screw the architecture, because that is really an aesthetic which can be copied. Sure, yeah.

But look to the actual building techniques. Well, that's maybe more yeah, more pertinent. Okay. But so there is that. And there's weirdnesses about North America.

We see in the journals of the original Founding Fathers where they came here in their first weeks and stuff. Here they said, this land has shown evidence to us daily of having been through a great catastrophe. And they also mentioned the giant bones they found and the big graveyards and no people and how the natives told them that the giants used to eat humans and all of this kind of stuff. Thomas Jefferson writing about this sort of thing. Right.

And so we see those kind of weirdnesses. We also find in small boat journals going back hundreds of years, we find that the whole Mississippi Delta, the area of Louisiana, all the way up through the Mississippi into the Missouri conjunction, was riddled with okay, that looked like Egyptian stell that were not wood. They were stone. They were foresighted. They had the pyramid top, and they had four faces, and they had, I think, two or three languages that were describing something that we didn't know what it was.

They turned out to be navigation markers. So I know of a journal, and I've got it around here somewhere in one of my many boxes of books. This journal has an article in it in which this guy is describing his great uncle's or great grandfather's sea captain's journal, where this guy was paid by what was going to be later the Smithsonian to go. And this would have been in the 1790s and through the 1820s. So for over 30 years, this guy made a living with his boat and his crew and wrote in his journal, and then this article was written about it, and he was paid to go and remove these stell from the collect them and put them in his boat, haul them back to Washington, DC.

From the Delta area of the Mississippi. And these stell were, by the way, one of the languages was Hertic, which is a form of Egyptian so. Why do you mean so? They made an effort to hide the history of North America, the true history of North America. I think the history of Antarctica is somehow tied to the history of North America.

And maybe I'm wrong, but something happened. And I also think Tateria is connected to all this stuff as mean because Antarctica has pyramids. And you're the one that told me this pyramids that are so huge they have doors for giants, which is probably this giant race that got or somebody else. Yes, somebody else from somewhere or whatever, or maybe it was spaceships wanted to fly in. Who knows, right?

But since then, it's come out through the Google Earth and through all of these researchers that go and risks snowblindness. Looking at satellite photos of Antarctica, they found tons of stuff, including things that are like 20 story spires or like a 20 story needle apartment building kind of a thing sticking up out of the ice. And if you go to some of these other channels, like Bruce Seesall and Mars Anomalies, there's guys there that have contacts with people that have been to Antarctica, that have provided them with pictures of stuff that in the distance. Those are not mountains. Those are human creations, or somebody created these structures, and we think of them as a mountain.

And you can clearly see that it is not that. It's some kind of an artificial thing that had been built. And so Antarctica is truly amazing because in the 1970s, there was military expeditions that were run by the US army. And within the US. Army there was a subsection that had to do the work, and that was a subsection section of the infantry.

And my father was an officer in the US army infantry, and he was at one point, given these four eight millimeter movies 435 millimeter movies. They were on small little reels, though. And all we had at that time was an eight millimeter home movie camera kind of thing. And my dad had to go rent a projector and so on to show them to us. And I watched them maybe three or four times when I was a kid.

I was probably sorry it wasn't the 70s, it was in the 50s. Sorry, I was going to say the 70s. Wow, there's more expeditions. Okay, no, that makes sense. But I saw it in the 60s.

We watched those movies in 1968 in Virginia, and in those movies there was one long one and three small ones, and in one of them, the guy was saying actually had sound with him, and they had professional Army PR guys that were as the anchor or the describer or whatever you want to say, the personality. And he was taking him through and off in the distance, you see this giant black mountain, and you see these little trucks and stuff down at the base of it. There's no snow anywhere, anywhere in these films, by the way, in this one particular film. And he says, oh, yeah, look at this. And he holds up this lump of coal, this lump we don't know what it is.

It's very round, it's very shaped, it's not irregular, it's very black. And he says, this is the hardest cleanest burning anthrocyte that can be found, according to the scientist. He gives off a bunch of statistics about it, and then he says that's what that mountain is made out of, just sitting there. All you have to do is scoop it up and take it. You don't have to mine it.

So there is a conical shaped mountain of coal sitting in Antarctica. And the guy says in this movie, he says, this was in the 50s, so our population was smaller. And he said Scientist so and so estimates that there's enough coal in that one mountain to supply all of the United States's energy needs for the next 200 years. Wow. Okay, so I've seen some clips of Antarctica where people are swimming in hot baths, and there's so much more there.

And when they had all the world leaders, a bunch of world leaders went down there right about the time that Trump won. It was like they all met. It's almost like it's a headquarters for something. Exactly. And that was part of is the this is the weird, terrible thing we're at right now.

Okay? So all of the world is living in Devolution. So we've had an evolutionary process relative to government that's gone on for all of my life. It's getting bigger and bigger and bigger and bigger and growing and morphing and so on. Now we're coming into Devolution.

So all of government is going to disappear over these next 18 or 20 years, and we'll keep what we need and throw away the rest. This is happening because of the nature of that government is inimicable to humans. In my opinion, it is easiest to just simply categorize it as being run by the mantids. And it is my opinion that there is a being, a thing that is giving instructions, and people go to Antarctica to receive instructions and to have their minds altered. Okay?

And so these people go there specifically for that purpose. They went there after around the Trump time, once he came into power, because Trump was a pivotal wedge that disrupted the evolutionary growth of the government up to its ultimate end, which would have happened by 2024. So, okay, was a spoiler. He was a disruptor, disruptive influence. Right.

A change agent is how we refer to it socially. Someone had selected Trump to be the agent of change that was necessary. That change was coincident with our moving into the Aquarian Age. I believe that was planned. I believe that what we're experiencing now would not have happened two years ago would not have happened five years ago because of the energies of that time that it had to happen now, and that the planners were astute.

Enough to coincide to sync up their efforts with the slide into the Age of Aquarius because of the energy that it provides all of humanity as well as their efforts. And so when they went down, so when Trump becomes president, that totally came out of the blue. It disrupted it. They had cheated so well, they knew they were going to win, just like they've been cheating since 2004 and so on with these machines. Right.

There's evidence of this. People have been discovering this evidence and they have set these plans in motion to create a state of devolution. In devolution. The idea is that we will dissolve away functionality from those that we wish to isolate. And so we basically dissolved the government away, leaving Biden and the other puppets up there and fully exposing the people that pull the puppet strings.

And therefore the mass of the people of the country, of the world can look up and see how they've been manipulated and then they won't go along with it anymore. So this is a particular kind of a magic technique. This is a demystifying magic technique where I was going to say, don't you think they did it to themselves with this vaccine? Because suddenly people are going to say, no, this is so much bigger than that. That is simply really because with people dying in mass, it's going to be I know there's all these other things, but people have to go, screw you, we got to figure this out.

Correct. And they will be doing that, and many people will stop at that level and exist at that level. But the woo is deep and is ancient. There's stuff floating out there that we need to examine that's going to be floating up at us here. So that is just an aspect, not even really a dominating aspect.

Okay. This is a war. You can characterize it as a spiritual war. You can characterize it as a war against good and evil. You can characterize it as a war to liberate humanity from the globalists.

You can also, in my mind, characterize it as a war to liberate humanity from alien influences. The beings that they think are Satanic, the ones that they're taking direction from, that they think is their God. Correct. Okay. I think they've been duped by these other beings or some other bad guy and they think it's God.

No. Okay, so I don't think that these beings are consciousness. These beings are not the creators of the universe. No. Okay, go ahead.

Okay. And the globalists, but the globalists believe these beings. They may indeed some of the globalists may be so naive and stupid as to believe these beings to be the creators of universe. Right? But the others, I think, are just Lucifer, right?

And they're sympathetically vibrating to what these beings are able to enhance. Okay, so here's the way of our planet. If you have an idea that is set in your mind and you set that idea hard enough and put all of your life force behind it, you can manifest that idea. It doesn't matter what it is. It may only be able to be supported by universe because it's so weird and twisted for a brief minute, but you could do it, right?

On the other hand, if you were to try and manifest something that was harmonious to universe, you're going to get a lot more support from universe in doing that. But it is the putting that thought into the matter, the condensate energy that makes it actually happen and manifest. Now this is because we are energy. We are vibrating energy just sitting here quivering. Our quivering is in sync, patient is in sync with the universe.

And that quivering powers our pulse, our thoughts, our sweat, the chemical reactions in our body, everything, our emotions, all of that is all energy. It's all frequency. These beings have the ability to see us with senses that we do not have. These senses that they have allow them to see in through our flesh, to see in through the barriers to our eyes. Because we only see that that is reflected.

We can only see reflected light. These beings can see origination of light. They see the biophotonic in us. So they can see our various millions of vibrations that are in us that cord together to form our energy bodies. And we have some people that can do that, like Sherry Edwards or can hear hundreds of times better or I mean, there's people that are able to do that.

Go ahead. As a result of my enlightenment experience, I see auras. It's just a pain in the fucking ass because I get emotional impacts from auras. It's great. If I'm in an Aikido, dojo I'm very good at that because I can see the aura which is ahead of the thought.

I can react without having to have a thought because I'm reacting my aura to them. So I'm very powerful and very fast. Right. Because there's no thought involved. I haven't been able to eliminate that process.

But yes, we have people that can do that, but these beings have one more beyond that. Yeah, they have other capabilities. Okay. There's one other one that is key and that is resonance. Okay?

So if we were to take a clock and it's got a pendulum, and you put it on a wall and you put another clock with a pendulum on the wall and you set it to a different set of stroke, at some point they will become resonant and they will both be penduluming. They will both be swinging at the same rate. These beings have the ability to push through your energy bodies with their key, with their life force and push on your energies until they set up a vibratory resonance that then they can draw you into them to the thoughts and the grosser forms of it all, the negative kind of ugly. It's easy to see. Right.

Okay. So it's easy for them to see that in individuals, to see that negative force and it's easy for them to manipulate. That's why all of the sociopaths, the psychopaths and the pedophiles are their victims, so to speak. Right. And so vampires, energy vampires don't go after regular people.

I'm impervious to it. Right, you're impervious to it. They can't really do this kind of stuff to us. They freak us out and so on, but they're not going to be able to energetically motivate us the way that they do these other humans. And they have put those other humans through their manipulation over the course of centuries into positions of power to generate this point where we are at now.

And they're in the process. They have basically been running for a couple of thousand years a human farm and they're harvesting. So the ones who are dying have been diluted to taking the shot by the psychopaths that have been had that resonance. So these beings through the psychopaths, through resonating, all the psychopaths all around the planet, look at how it's all global Chinese, everybody, all the governments are out trying to vacci people. All the governments are controlled and they're all resonating on this same pulse.

And that pulse, even though it goes through the government has still been sufficiently strong enough to get billion or more people vaccinated or dead through the clot shot. And that's how it works. Yeah. And the thing that is so disturbing is so much of our family and our loved ones were duped into it. Right.

So we are in a situation. That's why I know you've said this is going to be a very dark time. I am just convinced that there are some positive things we can do to keep them from getting sick and to reverse it for not everybody, but for small groups because not everybody's even going to listen to us. But there is a way to do some there's hope, I think, but not without hope. Yeah, I think there's hope, but I think it's so disturbing because when we are talking about massive and I think that's part of now, do you think that the saline solution or the placebo was given to some of these bad guys?

Because why would they kill off they're not going to kill off their own troops. Well, first off, the beings that are organizing it don't care.

Do.


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The number-one best-selling pioneer of "fratire" and a leading evolutionary psychologist team up to create the dating book for guys. Whether they conducted their research in life or in the lab, experts Tucker Max and Dr. Geoffrey Miller have spent the last 20-plus years learning what women really want from their men, why they want it, and how men can deliver those qualities. The short answer: Become the best version of yourself possible, then show it off. It sounds simple, but it's not. If it were, Tinder would just be the stuff you use to start a fire. Becoming your best self requires honesty, self-awareness, hard work, and a little help. Through their website and podcasts, Max and Miller have already helped over one million guys take their first steps toward Miss Right. They have collected all of their findings in Mate, an evidence-driven, seriously funny playbook that will teach you to become a more sexually attractive and romantically successful man, the right way: No "seduction techniques" No moralizing No bullshit Just honest, straightforward talk about the most ethical, effective way to pursue the win-win relationships you want with the women who are best for you. Much of what they've discovered will surprise you, some of it will not, but all of it is important and often misunderstood. So listen up, and stop being stupid!

Words of affirmation, quality time, gifts, acts of service, physical touching - learning these love languages will get your marriage off to a great start or enhance a long-standing one! Chapman explains the purpose of each "language" and shows you how to identify the one that's meaningful to your spouse now. Updated to reflect the complexities of relationships in today's world, this new edition of The 5 Love Languages reveals intrinsic truths and provides action steps in each chapter that will help you on your way to a healthier relationship. Also includes an updated personal profile. With a divorce rate that hovers around 50 percent, don't let yourself become a statistic. In Things I Wish I'd Known Before We Got Married, Gary Chapman teaches you and your future spouse how to work together as an intimate team! He shares with engaged couples practical tips he wishes he knew before he got married. Discussion centers around love, romance, conflict resolution, forgiveness, and sexual fulfillment. Included are insightful questions, suggestions, and exercises.

A one-page tool to reinvent yourself and your career. The global best seller Business Model Generation introduced a unique visual way to summarize and creatively brainstorm any business or product idea on a single sheet of paper. Business Model You uses the same powerful one-page tool to teach listeners how to draw "personal business models," which reveal new ways their skills can be adapted to the changing needs of the marketplace to reveal new, more satisfying, career and life possibilities. Produced by the same team that created Business Model Generation, this audiobook is based on the Business Model Canvas methodology, which has quickly emerged as the world's leading business model description and innovation technique. This book shows listeners how to: - Understand business model thinking and diagram their current personal business model - Understand the value of their skills in the marketplace and define their purpose - Articulate a vision for change - Create a new personal business model harmonized with that vision - And most important, test and implement the new model When you implement the one-page tool from Business Model You, you create a game-changing business model for your life and career.

The bible for bringing cutting-edge products to larger markets—now revised and updated with new insights into the realities of high-tech marketing In Crossing the Chasm, Geoffrey A. Moore shows that in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle—which begins with innovators and moves to early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards—there is a vast chasm between the early adopters and the early majority. While early adopters are willing to sacrifice for the advantage of being first, the early majority waits until they know that the technology actually offers improvements in productivity. The challenge for innovators and marketers is to narrow this chasm and ultimately accelerate adoption across every segment. This third edition brings Moore's classic work up to date with dozens of new examples of successes and failures, new strategies for marketing in the digital world, and Moore's most current insights and findings. He also includes two new appendices, the first connecting the ideas in Crossing the Chasm to work subsequently published in his Inside the Tornado, and the second presenting his recent groundbreaking work for technology adoption models for high-tech consumer markets.

Endless terror. Refugee waves. An unfixable global economy. Surprising election results. New billion-dollar fortunes. Miracle medical advances. What if they were all connected? What if you could understand why? The Seventh Sense is the story of what all of today's successful figures see and feel: the forces that are invisible to most of us but explain everything from explosive technological change to uneasy political ripples. The secret to power now is understanding our new age of networks. Not merely the Internet, but also webs of trade, finance, and even DNA. Based on his years of advising generals, CEOs, and politicians, Ramo takes us into the opaque heart of our world's rapidly connected systems and teaches us what the losers are not yet seeing -- and what the victors of this age already know.

This lushly illustrated history of popular entertainment takes a long-zoom approach, contending that the pursuit of novelty and wonder is a powerful driver of world-shaping technological change. Steven Johnson argues that, throughout history, the cutting edge of innovation lies wherever people are working the hardest to keep themselves and others amused. Johnson’s storytelling is just as delightful as the inventions he describes, full of surprising stops along the journey from simple concepts to complex modern systems. He introduces us to the colorful innovators of leisure: the explorers, proprietors, showmen, and artists who changed the trajectory of history with their luxurious wares, exotic meals, taverns, gambling tables, and magic shows. In Wonderland, Johnson compellingly argues that observers of technological and social trends should be looking for clues in novel amusements. You’ll find the future wherever people are having the most fun.

Nothing “goes viral.” If you think a popular movie, song, or app came out of nowhere to become a word-of-mouth success in today’s crowded media environment, you’re missing the real story. Each blockbuster has a secret history—of power, influence, dark broadcasters, and passionate cults that turn some new products into cultural phenomena. Even the most brilliant ideas wither in obscurity if they fail to connect with the right network, and the consumers that matter most aren't the early adopters, but rather their friends, followers, and imitators -- the audience of your audience. In his groundbreaking investigation, Atlantic senior editor Derek Thompson uncovers the hidden psychology of why we like what we like and reveals the economics of cultural markets that invisibly shape our lives. Shattering the sentimental myths of hit-making that dominate pop culture and business, Thompson shows quality is insufficient for success, nobody has "good taste," and some of the most popular products in history were one bad break away from utter failure. It may be a new world, but there are some enduring truths to what audiences and consumers want. People love a familiar surprise: a product that is bold, yet sneakily recognizable. Every business, every artist, every person looking to promote themselves and their work wants to know what makes some works so successful while others disappear. Hit Makers is a magical mystery tour through the last century of pop culture blockbusters and the most valuable currency of the twenty-first century—people’s attention. From the dawn of impressionist art to the future of Facebook, from small Etsy designers to the origin of Star Wars, Derek Thompson leaves no pet rock unturned to tell the fascinating story of how culture happens and why things become popular. In Hit Makers, Derek Thompson investigates: · The secret link between ESPN's sticky programming and the The Weeknd's catchy choruses · Why Facebook is today’s most important newspaper · How advertising critics predicted Donald Trump · The 5th grader who accidentally launched "Rock Around the Clock," the biggest hit in rock and roll history · How Barack Obama and his speechwriters think of themselves as songwriters · How Disney conquered the world—but the future of hits belongs to savvy amateurs and individuals · The French collector who accidentally created the Impressionist canon · Quantitative evidence that the biggest music hits aren’t always the best · Why almost all Hollywood blockbusters are sequels, reboots, and adaptations · Why one year--1991--is responsible for the way pop music sounds today · Why another year --1932--created the business model of film · How data scientists proved that “going viral” is a myth · How 19th century immigration patterns explain the most heard song in the Western Hemisphere

Ours is often called an information economy, but at a moment when access to information is virtually unlimited, our attention has become the ultimate commodity. In nearly every moment of our waking lives, we face a barrage of efforts to harvest our attention. This condition is not simply the byproduct of recent technological innovations but the result of more than a century's growth and expansion in the industries that feed on human attention. Wu’s narrative begins in the nineteenth century, when Benjamin Day discovered he could get rich selling newspapers for a penny. Since then, every new medium—from radio to television to Internet companies such as Google and Facebook—has attained commercial viability and immense riches by turning itself into an advertising platform. Since the early days, the basic business model of “attention merchants” has never changed: free diversion in exchange for a moment of your time, sold in turn to the highest-bidding advertiser. Full of lively, unexpected storytelling and piercing insight, The Attention Merchants lays bare the true nature of a ubiquitous reality we can no longer afford to accept at face value.

Some people think that in today’s hyper-competitive world, it’s the tough, take-no-prisoners type who comes out on top. But in reality, argues New York Times bestselling author Dave Kerpen, it’s actually those with the best people skills who win the day. Those who build the right relationships. Those who truly understand and connect with their colleagues, their customers, their partners. Those who can teach, lead, and inspire. In a world where we are constantly connected, and social media has become the primary way we communicate, the key to getting ahead is being the person others like, respect, and trust. Because no matter who you are or what profession you're in, success is contingent less on what you can do for yourself, but on what other people are willing to do for you. Here, through 53 bite-sized, easy-to-execute, and often counterintuitive tips, you’ll learn to master the 11 People Skills that will get you more of what you want at work, at home, and in life. For example, you’ll learn: · The single most important question you can ever ask to win attention in a meeting · The one simple key to networking that nobody talks about · How to remain top of mind for thousands of people, everyday · Why it usually pays to be the one to give the bad news · How to blow off the right people · And why, when in doubt, buy him a Bonsai A book best described as “How to Win Friends and Influence People for today’s world,” The Art of People shows how to charm and win over anyone to be more successful at work and outside of it.

Business Model Generation is a handbook for visionaries, game changers, and challengers striving to defy outmoded business models and design tomorrow's enterprises. If your organization needs to adapt to harsh new realities, but you don't yet have a strategy that will get you out in front of your competitors, you need Business Model Generation. Co-created by 470 "Business Model Canvas" practitioners from 45 countries, the book features a beautiful, highly visual, 4-color design that takes powerful strategic ideas and tools, and makes them easy to implement in your organization. It explains the most common Business Model patterns, based on concepts from leading business thinkers, and helps you reinterpret them for your own context. You will learn how to systematically understand, design, and implement a game-changing business model--or analyze and renovate an old one. Along the way, you'll understand at a much deeper level your customers, distribution channels, partners, revenue streams, costs, and your core value proposition. Business Model Generation features practical innovation techniques used today by leading consultants and companies worldwide, including 3M, Ericsson, Capgemini, Deloitte, and others. Designed for doers, it is for those ready to abandon outmoded thinking and embrace new models of value creation: for executives, consultants, entrepreneurs, and leaders of all organizations. If you're ready to change the rules, you belong to "the business model generation!"

#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER If you want to build a better future, you must believe in secrets. The great secret of our time is that there are still uncharted frontiers to explore and new inventions to create. In Zero to One, legendary entrepreneur and investor Peter Thiel shows how we can find singular ways to create those new things. Thiel begins with the contrarian premise that we live in an age of technological stagnation, even if we’re too distracted by shiny mobile devices to notice. Information technology has improved rapidly, but there is no reason why progress should be limited to computers or Silicon Valley. Progress can be achieved in any industry or area of business. It comes from the most important skill that every leader must master: learning to think for yourself. Doing what someone else already knows how to do takes the world from 1 to n, adding more of something familiar. But when you do something new, you go from 0 to 1. The next Bill Gates will not build an operating system. The next Larry Page or Sergey Brin won’t make a search engine. Tomorrow’s champions will not win by competing ruthlessly in today’s marketplace. They will escape competition altogether, because their businesses will be unique. Zero to One presents at once an optimistic view of the future of progress in America and a new way of thinking about innovation: it starts by learning to ask the questions that lead you to find value in unexpected places.

Why should I do business with you… and not your competitor? Whether you are a retailer, manufacturer, distributor, or service provider – if you cannot answer this question, you are surely losing customers, clients and market share. This eye-opening book reveals how identifying your competitive advantages (and trumpeting them to the marketplace) is the most surefire way to close deals, retain clients, and stay miles ahead of the competition. The five fatal flaws of most companies: • They don’t have a competitive advantage but think they do • They have a competitive advantage but don’t know what it is—so they lower prices instead • They know what their competitive advantage is but neglect to tell clients about it • They mistake “strengths” for competitive advantages • They don’t concentrate on competitive advantages when making strategic and operational decisions The good news is that you can overcome these costly mistakes – by identifying your competitive advantages and creating new ones. Consultant, public speaker, and competitive advantage expert Jaynie Smith will show you how scores of small and large companies substantially increased their sales by focusing on their competitive advantages. When advising a CEO frustrated by his salespeople’s inability to close deals, Smith discovered that his company stayed on schedule 95 percent of the time – an achievement no one else in his industry could claim. By touting this and other competitive advantages to customers, closing rates increased by 30 percent—and so did company revenues. Jack Welch has said, “If you don’t have a competitive advantage, don’t compete.” This straight-to-the-point book is filled with insightful stories and specific steps on how to pinpoint your competitive advantages, develop new ones, and get the message out about them.

The number one New York Times best seller that examines how people can champion new ideas in their careers and everyday life - and how leaders can fight groupthink, from the author of Think Again and co-author of Option B. With Give and Take, Adam Grant not only introduced a landmark new paradigm for success but also established himself as one of his generation’s most compelling and provocative thought leaders. In Originals he again addresses the challenge of improving the world, but now from the perspective of becoming original: choosing to champion novel ideas and values that go against the grain, battle conformity, and buck outdated traditions. How can we originate new ideas, policies, and practices without risking it all? Using surprising studies and stories spanning business, politics, sports, and entertainment, Grant explores how to recognize a good idea, speak up without getting silenced, build a coalition of allies, choose the right time to act, and manage fear and doubt; how parents and teachers can nurture originality in children; and how leaders can build cultures that welcome dissent. Learn from an entrepreneur who pitches his start-ups by highlighting the reasons not to invest, a woman at Apple who challenged Steve Jobs from three levels below, an analyst who overturned the rule of secrecy at the CIA, a billionaire financial wizard who fires employees for failing to criticize him, and a TV executive who didn’t even work in comedy but saved Seinfeld from the cutting-room floor. The payoff is a set of groundbreaking insights about rejecting conformity and improving the status quo.

In The $100 Startup, Chris Guillebeau tells you how to lead of life of adventure, meaning and purpose - and earn a good living. Still in his early 30s, Chris is on the verge of completing a tour of every country on earth - he's already visited more than 175 nations - and yet he’s never held a "real job" or earned a regular paycheck. Rather, he has a special genius for turning ideas into income, and he uses what he earns both to support his life of adventure and to give back. There are many others like Chris - those who've found ways to opt out of traditional employment and create the time and income to pursue what they find meaningful. Sometimes, achieving that perfect blend of passion and income doesn't depend on shelving what you currently do. You can start small with your venture, committing little time or money, and wait to take the real plunge when you're sure it's successful. In preparing to write this book, Chris identified 1,500 individuals who have built businesses earning $50,000 or more from a modest investment (in many cases, $100 or less), and from that group he’s chosen to focus on the 50 most intriguing case studies. In nearly all cases, people with no special skills discovered aspects of their personal passions that could be monetized, and were able to restructure their lives in ways that gave them greater freedom and fulfillment. Here, finally, distilled into one easy-to-use guide, are the most valuable lessons from those who’ve learned how to turn what they do into a gateway to self-fulfillment. It’s all about finding the intersection between your "expertise" - even if you don’t consider it such - and what other people will pay for. You don’t need an MBA, a business plan or even employees. All you need is a product or service that springs from what you love to do anyway, people willing to pay, and a way to get paid. Not content to talk in generalities, Chris tells you exactly how many dollars his group of unexpected entrepreneurs required to get their projects up and running; what these individuals did in the first weeks and months to generate significant cash; some of the key mistakes they made along the way, and the crucial insights that made the business stick. Among Chris’s key principles: if you’re good at one thing, you’re probably good at something else; never teach a man to fish - sell him the fish instead; and in the battle between planning and action, action wins. In ancient times, people who were dissatisfied with their lives dreamed of finding magic lamps, buried treasure, or streets paved with gold. Today, we know that it’s up to us to change our lives. And the best part is, if we change our own life, we can help others change theirs. This remarkable book will start you on your way.

Bold is a radical, how-to guide for using exponential technologies, moonshot thinking, and crowd-powered tools to create extraordinary wealth while also positively impacting the lives of billions. Exploring the exponential technologies that are disrupting today's Fortune 500 companies and enabling upstart entrepreneurs to go from "I've got an idea" to "I run a billion-dollar company" far faster than ever before, the authors provide exceptional insight into the power of 3-D printing, artificial intelligence, robotics, networks and sensors, and synthetic biology. Drawing on insights from billionaire entrepreneurs Larry Page, Elon Musk, Richard Branson, and Jeff Bezos, the audiobook offers the best practices that allow anyone to leverage today's hyper connected crowd like never before. The authors teach how to design and use incentive competitions, launch million-dollar crowdfunding campaigns to tap into tens of billions of dollars of capital, and build communities - armies of exponentially enabled individuals willing and able to help today's entrepreneurs make their boldest dreams come true. Bold is both a manifesto and a manual. It is today's exponential entrepreneur's go-to resource on the use of emerging technologies, thinking at scale, and the awesome impact of crowd-powered tools.

The answer is simple: come up with 10 ideas a day. It doesn't matter if they are good or bad, the key is to exercise your "idea muscle", to keep it toned, and in great shape. People say ideas are cheap and execution is everything but that is NOT true. Execution is a consequence, a subset of good, brilliant idea. And good ideas require daily work. Ideas may be easy if we are only coming up with one or two but if you open this book to any of the pages and try to produce more than three, you will feel a burn, scratch your head, and you will be sweating, and working hard. There is a turning point when you reach idea number six for the day, you still have four to go, and your mind muscle is getting a workout. By the time you list those last ideas to make it to 10 you will see for yourself what "sweating the idea muscle" means. As you practice the daily idea generation you become an idea machine. When we become idea machines we are flooded with lots of bad ideas but also with some that are very good. This happens by the sheer force of the number, because we are coming up with 3,650 ideas per year (at 10 a day). When you are inspired by an extraordinary idea, all of your thoughts break their chains, you go beyond limitations and your capacity to act expands in every direction. Forces and abilities you did not know you had come to the surface, and you realize you are capable of doing great things. As you practice with the suggested prompts in this book your ideas will get better, you will be a source of great insight for others, people will find you magnetic, and they will want to hang out with you because you have so much to offer. When you practice every day your life will transform, in no more than 180 days, because it has no other evolutionary choice. Life changes for the better when we become the source of positive, insightful, and helpful ideas. Don't believe a word I say. Instead, challenge yourself.

A Guide to Resilience: How to Bounce Back from Life's Inevitable Problems Christian Moore is convinced that each of us has a power hidden within, something that can get us through any kind of adversity. That power is resilience. In The Resilience Breakthrough, Moore delivers a practical primer on how you can become more resilient in a world of instability and narrowing opportunity, whether you're facing financial troubles, health setbacks, challenges on the job, or any other problem. We can each have our own resilience breakthrough, Moore argues, and can each learn how to use adverse circumstances as potent fuel for overcoming life's hardships. As he shares engaging real-life stories and brutally honest analyses of his own experiences, Moore equips you with 27 resilience-building tools that you can start using today - in your personal life or in your organization.

What if someone told you that your behavior was controlled by a powerful, invisible force? Most of us would be skeptical of such a claim--but it's largely true. Our brains are constantly transmitting and receiving signals of which we are unaware. Studies show that these constant inputs drive the great majority of our decisions about what to do next--and we become conscious of the decisions only after we start acting on them. Many may find that disturbing. But the implications for leadership are profound. In this provocative yet practical book, renowned speaking coach and communication expert Nick Morgan highlights recent research that shows how humans are programmed to respond to the nonverbal cues of others--subtle gestures, sounds, and signals--that elicit emotion. He then provides a clear, useful framework of seven "power cues" that will be essential for any leader in business, the public sector, or almost any context. You'll learn crucial skills, from measuring nonverbal signs of confidence, to the art and practice of gestures and vocal tones, to figuring out what your gut is really telling you. This concise and engaging guide will help leaders and aspiring leaders of all stripes to connect powerfully, communicate more effectively, and command influence.

New York Times bestselling author and social media expert Gary Vaynerchuk shares hard-won advice on how to connect with customers and beat the competition. A mash-up of the best elements of Crush It! and The Thank You Economy with a fresh spin, Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook is a blueprint to social media marketing strategies that really works. When managers and marketers outline their social media strategies, they plan for the "right hook"—their next sale or campaign that's going to knock out the competition. Even companies committed to jabbing—patiently engaging with customers to build the relationships crucial to successful social media campaigns—want to land the punch that will take down their opponent or their customer's resistance in one blow. Right hooks convert traffic to sales and easily show results. Except when they don't. Thanks to massive change and proliferation in social media platforms, the winning combination of jabs and right hooks is different now. Vaynerchuk shows that while communication is still key, context matters more than ever. It's not just about developing high-quality content, but developing high-quality content perfectly adapted to specific social media platforms and mobile devices—content tailor-made for Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter and Tumblr.

From the best-selling author of The Black Swan and one of the foremost thinkers of our time, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a book on how some things actually benefit from disorder. In The Black Swan Taleb outlined a problem, and in Antifragile he offers a definitive solution: how to gain from disorder and chaos while being protected from fragilities and adverse events. For what Taleb calls the "antifragile" is actually beyond the robust, because it benefits from shocks, uncertainty, and stressors, just as human bones get stronger when subjected to stress and tension. The antifragile needs disorder in order to survive and flourish. Taleb stands uncertainty on its head, making it desirable, even necessary, and proposes that things be built in an antifragile manner. The antifragile is immune to prediction errors. Why is the city-state better than the nation-state, why is debt bad for you, and why is everything that is both modern and complicated bound to fail? The audiobook spans innovation by trial and error, health, biology, medicine, life decisions, politics, foreign policy, urban planning, war, personal finance, and economic systems. And throughout, in addition to the street wisdom of Fat Tony of Brooklyn, the voices and recipes of ancient wisdom, from Roman, Greek, Semitic, and medieval sources, are heard loud and clear. Extremely ambitious and multidisciplinary, Antifragile provides a blueprint for how to behave - and thrive - in a world we don't understand, and which is too uncertain for us to even try to understand and predict. Erudite and witty, Taleb’s message is revolutionary: What is not antifragile will surely perish.

The Cluetrain Manifesto began as a Web site in 1999 when the authors, who have worked variously at IBM, Sun Microsystems, the Linux Journal, and NPR, posted 95 theses about the new reality of the networked marketplace. Ten years after its original publication, their message remains more relevant than ever. For example, thesis no. 2: “Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors”; thesis no. 20: “Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them.” The book enlarges on these themes through dozens of stories and observations about business in America and how the Internet will continue to change it all. With a new introduction and chapters by the authors, and commentary by Jake McKee, JP Rangaswami, and Dan Gillmor, this book is essential reading for anybody interested in the Internet and e-commerce, and is especially vital for businesses navigating the topography of the wired marketplace.

From the founders of the trailblazing software company 37signals, here is a different kind of business book one that explores a new reality. Today, anyone can be in business. Tools that used to be out of reach are now easily accessible. Technology that cost thousands is now just a few bucks or even free. Stuff that was impossible just a few years ago is now simple.That means anyone can start a business. And you can do it without working miserable 80-hour weeks or depleting your life savings. You can start it on the side while your day job provides all the cash flow you need. Forget about business plans, meetings, office space - you don't need them. With its straightforward language and easy-is-better approach, Rework is the perfect playbook for anyone who's ever dreamed of doing it on their own. Hardcore entrepreneurs, small-business owners, people stuck in day jobs who want to get out, and artists who don't want to starve anymore will all find valuable inspiration and guidance in these pages. It's time to rework work.


Tesla's main source of inspiration.
Roger Joseph Boscovich, a physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, theologian, Jesuit priest, and polymath, published the first edition of his famous work, Philosophiae Naturalis Theoria Redacta Ad Unicam Legem Virium In Natura Existentium (Theory Of Natural Philosophy Derived To The Single Law Of Forces Which Exist In Nature), in Vienna, in 1758, containing his atomic theory and his theory of forces. A second edition was published in 1763 in Venice

Bill Clinton's Georgetown mentor's history of the Conspiracy since the Boer War in South Africa.
TRAGEDY AND HOPE shows the years 1895-1950 as a period of transition from the world dominated by Europe in the nineteenth century to the world of three blocs in the twentieth century. With clarity, perspective, and cumulative impact, Professor Quigley examines the nature of that transition through two world wars and a worldwide economic depression. As an interpretative historian, he tries to show each event in the full complexity of its historical context. The result is a unique work, notable in several ways. It gives a picture of the world in terms of the influence of different cultures and outlooks upon each other; it shows, more completely than in any similar work, the influence of science and technology on human life; and it explains, with unprecedented clarity, how the intricate financial and commercial patterns of the West prior to 1914 influenced the development of today’s world.

This is the July, 2016 ALTA (Asymmetric Linguistic Trends Analysis) Report. Also known as 'the Web Bot' report, this series is brought to you by halfpasthuman.com. This report covers your future world from July 2016 through to 2031. Forecasts are created using predictive linguistics (from the inventor) and cover your planet, your population, your economy and markets, and your Space Goat Farts where you will find all the 'unknown' and 'officially denied' woo-woo that will be shaping your environment over these next few decades.

Time is considered as an independent entity which cannot be reduced to the concept of matter, space or field. The point of discussion is the "time flow" conception of N A Kozyrev (1908-1983), an outstanding Russian astronomer and natural scientist. In addition to a review of the experimental studies of "the active properties of time", by both Kozyrev and modern scientists, the reader will find different interpretations of Kozyrev's views and some developments of his ideas in the fields of geophysics, astrophysics, general relativity and theoretical mechanics.

How UFO Time Engines work - Clif High

The webpage discusses the workings of UFO time engines according to N.A. Kozyrev's experiments. The LL1 engine is described as a hollow metal sphere with a pool of mercury metal inside. When activated by electrical energy, it creates a uni-polar magnetic field causing the mercury to spin at a high rate and induce "time stuff" to accumulate on its surface. The accrued time stuff is siphoned down magnetically to the radiating antennae on the bottom of the vessel, providing self-sustaining power and allowing for time travel. The environment inside UFOs is likely volatile and not suitable for humans.

The Body Electric tells the fascinating story of our bioelectric selves. Robert O. Becker, a pioneer in the filed of regeneration and its relationship to electrical currents in living things, challenges the established mechanistic understanding of the body. He found clues to the healing process in the long-discarded theory that electricity is vital to life. But as exciting as Becker's discoveries are, pointing to the day when human limbs, spinal cords, and organs may be regenerated after they have been damaged, equally fascinating is the story of Becker's struggle to do such original work. The Body Electric explores new pathways in our understanding of evolution, acupuncture, psychic phenomena, and healing.

Unique, controversial, and frequently cited, this survey offers highly detailed accounts concerning the development of ideas and theories about the nature of electricity and space (aether). Readily accessible to general readers as well as high school students, teachers, and undergraduates, it includes much information unavailable elsewhere. This single-volume edition comprises both The Classical Theories and The Modern Theories, which were originally published separately. The first volume covers the theories of classical physics from the age of the Greek philosophers to the late 19th century. The second volume chronicles discoveries that led to the advances of modern physics, focusing on special relativity, quantum theories, general relativity, matrix mechanics, and wave mechanics. Noted historian of science I. Bernard Cohen, who reviewed these books for Scientific American, observed, "I know of no other history of electricity which is as sound as Whittaker's. All those who have found stimulation from his works will read this informative and accurate history with interest and profit."

The third edition of the defining text for the graduate-level course in Electricity and Magnetism has finally arrived! It has been 37 years since the first edition and 24 since the second. The new edition addresses the changes in emphasis and applications that have occurred in the field, without any significant increase in length.

Objects are a ubiquitous presence and few of us stop and think what they mean in our lives. This is the job of philosophers and this is what Jean Baudrillard does in his book. This is required reading for followers of Baudrillard, and he is perhaps the most assessable to the General Reader. Baudrillard is most associated with Post Modernism, and this early book sets the stage for that journey to the post modern world.
We are all surrounded by objects, but how many times have we thought about what those objects represent. If we took the time to think about the symbolism, we could arrive at easy solutions. We have been so accustomed to advertising the automobile representing freedom is an easy conclusion. But what about furniture? What about chairs? What about the arrangement of furniture? Watches? Collecting objects? Baudrillard literally opens up a new world and creates the universe of objects.
It is not that the critique of a society or objects has not been done before, but Baudrillard’s approach is new. Baudrillard examines objects as signs with a smattering of Post-Marxist thought. In his analysis of objects as signs, he ushers in the Post-Modern age and world for which he would be known. Heady stuff to be sure, but is presented by Baudrillard in a readily accessible manner. He articulates his thesis in a straightforward manner, avoiding the hyper-technical terminology he used in his later writings.

Moving away from the Marxist/Freudian approaches that had concerned him earlier, Baudrillard developed in this book a theory of contemporary culture that relies on displacing economic notions of cultural production with notions of cultural expenditure.

The book begins with Sidis's discovery of the first law of physical laws: "Among the physical laws it is a general characteristic that there is reversibility in time; that is, should the whole universe trace back the various positions that bodies in it have passed through in a given interval of time, but in the reverse order to that in which these positions actually occurred, then the universe, in this imaginary case, would still obey the same laws." Recent discoveries of dark matter are predicted by him in this book, and he goes on to show that the "Big Bang" is wrong. Sidis (SIGH-dis) shows that it is far more likely the universe is eternal

In this book you will encounter rare information regarding your true identity - the conscious self in the body - and how you may break the hypnotic spell your senses and thinking have cast about you since childhood.

Do we see the world as it truly is? In The Case Against Reality, pioneering cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman says no? we see what we need in order to survive. Our visual perceptions are not a window onto reality, Hoffman shows us, but instead are interfaces constructed by natural selection. The objects we see around us are not unlike the file icons on our computer desktops: while shaped like a small folder on our screens, the files themselves are made of a series of ones and zeros - too complex for most of us to understand. In a similar way, Hoffman argues, evolution has shaped our perceptions into simplistic illusions to help us navigate the world around us. Yet now these illusions can be manipulated by advertising and design.
Drawing on thirty years of Hoffman's own influential research, as well as evolutionary biology, game theory, neuroscience, and philosophy, The Case Against Reality makes the mind-bending yet utterly convincing case that the world is nothing like what we see through our eyes.

At the height of the Cold War, JFK risked committing the greatest crime in human history: starting a nuclear war. Horrified by the specter of nuclear annihilation, Kennedy gradually turned away from his long-held Cold Warrior beliefs and toward a policy of lasting peace. But to the military and intelligence agencies in the United States, who were committed to winning the Cold War at any cost, Kennedy’s change of heart was a direct threat to their power and influence. Once these dark “Unspeakable” forces recognized that Kennedy’s interests were in direct opposition to their own, they tagged him as a dangerous traitor, plotted his assassination, and orchestrated the subsequent cover-up.

2020 saw a spike in deaths in America, smaller than you might imagine during a pandemic, some of which could be attributed to COVID and to initial treatment strategies that were not effective. But then, in 2021, the stats people expected went off the rails. The CEO of the OneAmerica insurance company publicly disclosed that during the third and fourth quarters of 2021, death in people of working age (18–64) was 40 percent higher than it was before the pandemic. Significantly, the majority of the deaths were not attributed to COVID. A 40 percent increase in deaths is literally earth-shaking. Even a 10 percent increase in excess deaths would have been a 1-in-200-year event. But this was 40 percent. And therein lies a story—a story that starts with obvious questions: - What has caused this historic spike in deaths among younger people? - What has caused the shift from old people, who are expected to die, to younger people, who are expected to keep living?

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

The Tavistock Institute, in Sussex, England, describes itself as a nonprofit charity that applies social science to contemporary issues and problems. But this book posits that it is the world’s center for mass brainwashing and social engineering activities. It grew from a somewhat crude beginning at Wellington House into a sophisticated organization that was to shape the destiny of the entire planet, and in the process, change the paradigm of modern society. In this eye-opening work, both the Tavistock network and the methods of brainwashing and psychological warfare are uncovered.

A seminal and controversial figure in the history of political thought and public relations, Edward Bernays (1891–1995), pioneered the scientific technique of shaping and manipulating public opinion, which he famously dubbed “engineering of consent.” During World War I, he was an integral part of the U.S. Committee on Public Information (CPI), a powerful propaganda apparatus that was mobilized to package, advertise and sell the war to the American people as one that would “Make the World Safe for Democracy.” The CPI would become the blueprint in which marketing strategies for future wars would be based upon.
Bernays applied the techniques he had learned in the CPI and, incorporating some of the ideas of Walter Lipmann, as well as his uncle, Sigmund Freud, became an outspoken proponent of propaganda as a tool for democratic and corporate manipulation of the population. His 1928 bombshell Propaganda lays out his eerily prescient vision for using propaganda to regiment the collective mind in a variety of areas, including government, politics, art, science and education. To read this book today is to frightfully comprehend what our contemporary institutions of government and business have become in regards to organized manipulation of the masses.

Undressing the Bible: in Hebrew, the Old Testament speaks for itself, explicitly and transparently. It tells of mysterious beings, special and powerful ones, that appeared on Earth.
Aliens?
Former earthlings?
Superior civilizations, that have always been present on our planet?
Creators, manipulators, geneticists. Aviators, warriors, despotic rulers. And scientists, possessing very advanced knowledge, special weapons and science-fiction-like technologies.
Once naked, the Bible is very different from how it has always been told to us: it does not contain any spiritual, omnipotent and omniscient God, no eternity. No apples and no creeping, tempting, serpents. No winged angels. Not even the Red Sea: the people of the Exodus just wade through a simple reed bed.
Writer and journalist Giorgio Cattaneo sits down with Italy's most renowned biblical translator for his first long interview about his life's work for the English audience. A decade long official Bible translator for the Church and lifelong researcher of ancient myths and tales, Mauro Bilglino is a unicum in his field of expertise and research. A fine connoisseur of dead languages, from ancient Greek to Hebrew and medieval Latin, he focused his attention and efforts on the accurate translating of the bible.
The encounter with Mauro Biglino and his work - the journalist writes - is profoundly healthy, stimulating and inevitably destabilizing: it forces us to reconsider the solidity of the awareness that nourishes many of our common beliefs. And it is a testament to the courage that is needed, today more than ever, to claim the full dignity of free research.

Most people have heard of Jesus Christ, considered the Messiah by Christians, and who lived 2000 years ago. But very few have ever heard of Sabbatai Zevi, who declared himself the Messiah in 1666. By proclaiming redemption was available through acts of sin, he amassed a following of over one million passionate believers, about half the world's Jewish population during the 17th century.Although many Rabbis at the time considered him a heretic, his fame extended far and wide. Sabbatai's adherents planned to abolish many ritualistic observances, because, according to the Talmud, holy obligations would no longer apply in the Messianic time. Fasting days became days of feasting and rejoicing. Sabbateans encouraged and practiced sexual promiscuity, adultery, incest and religious orgies.After Sabbati Zevi's death in 1676, his Kabbalist successor, Jacob Frank, expanded upon and continued his occult philosophy. Frankism, a religious movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, centered on his leadership, and his claim to be the reincarnation of the Messiah Sabbatai Zevi. He, like Zevi, would perform "strange acts" that violated traditional religious taboos, such as eating fats forbidden by Jewish dietary laws, ritual sacrifice, and promoting orgies and sexual immorality. He often slept with his followers, as well as his own daughter, while preaching a doctrine that the best way to imitate God was to cross every boundary, transgress every taboo, and mix the sacred with the profane. Hebrew University of Jerusalem Professor Gershom Scholem called Jacob Frank, "one of the most frightening phenomena in the whole of Jewish history".Jacob Frank would eventually enter into an alliance formed by Adam Weishaupt and Meyer Amshel Rothschild called the Order of the Illuminati. The objectives of this organization was to undermine the world's religions and power structures, in an effort to usher in a utopian era of global communism, which they would covertly rule by their hidden hand: the New World Order. Using secret societies, such as the Freemasons, their agenda has played itself out over the centuries, staying true to the script. The Illuminati handle opposition by a near total control of the world's media, academic opinion leaders, politicians and financiers. Still considered nothing more than theory to many, more and more people wake up each day to the possibility that this is not just a theory, but a terrifying Satanic conspiracy.

This is the first English translation of this revolutionary essay by Vladimir I. Vernadsky, the great Russian-Ukrainian biogeochemist. It was first published in 1930 in French in the Revue générale des sciences pures et appliquées. In it, Vernadsky makes a powerful and provocative argument for the need to develop what he calls “a new physics,” something he felt was clearly necessitated by the implications of the groundbreaking work of Louis Pasteur among few others, but also something that was required to free science from the long-lasting effects of the work of Isaac Newton, most notably.
For hundreds of years, science had developed in a direction which became increasingly detached from the breakthroughs made in the study of life and the natural sciences, detached even from human life itself, and committed reductionists and small-minded scientists were resolved to the fact that ultimately all would be reduced to “the old physics.” The scientific revolution of Einstein was a step in the right direction, but here Vernadsky insists that there is more progress to be made. He makes a bold call for a new physics, taking into account, and fundamentally based upon, the striking anomalies of life and human life.

Using an inspired combination of geometric logic and metaphors from familiar human experience, Bucky invites readers to join him on a trip through a four-dimensional Universe, where concepts as diverse as entropy, Einstein's relativity equations, and the meaning of existence become clear, understandable, and immediately involving. In his own words: "Dare to be naive... It is one of our most exciting discoveries that local discovery leads to a complex of further discoveries." Here are three key examples or concepts from "Synergetics":

Tensegrity

Tensegrity, or tensional integrity, refers to structural systems that use a combination of tension and compression components. The simplest example of this is the "tensegrity triangle", where three struts are held in position not by touching one another but by tensioned wires. These systems are stable and flexible. Tensegrity structures are pervasive in natural systems, from the cellular level up to larger biological and even cosmological scales.

Vector Equilibrium (VE)

The Vector Equilibrium, often referred to by Fuller as the "VE", is a geometric form that he saw as the central form in his synergetic geometry. It’s essentially a cuboctahedron. Fuller noted that the VE is the only geometric form wherein all the vectors (lines from the center to the vertices) are of equal length and angular relationship. Because of this, it’s seen as a condition of absolute equilibrium, where the forces of push and pull are balanced.

Closest Packing of Spheres

Fuller was fascinated by how spheres could be packed together in the tightest possible configuration, a concept he often linked to how nature organizes systems. For example, when you stack oranges in a grocery store, they form a hexagonal pattern, and the spheres (oranges) are in closest-packed arrangement. Fuller related this principle to atomic structures and even cosmic organization.

To prepare Americans and freedom loving people everywhere for our current global wartime reality that few understand, here comes The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare (CG5GW) by Lieutenant General, U.S. Army (Retired) Michael T. Flynn and Sergeant, U.S. Army (Retired) Boone Cutler. General Flynn rose to the highest levels of the intelligence community and served as the National Security Advisor to the 45th POTUS. Sergeant Boone Cutler ran the ground game as a wartime Psychological Operations team sergeant in the United States Army. Together, these two combat veterans put their combined experience and expertise into an illuminating fifth-generation warfare information series called The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare. Introduction to 5GW is the first session of the multipart series. The series, complete with easy-to-understand diagrams, is written for all of humanity in every freedom loving country.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Biosphere :

  • Vernadsky defined the biosphere as the thin layer of Earth where life exists, encompassing all living organisms and the parts of the Earth where they interact. This includes the depths of the oceans to the upper layers of the atmosphere.
  • He posited that life plays a critical role in transforming the Earth's environment. In this view, living organisms are not just passive inhabitants of the planet, but active agents of change. This idea contrasts with more traditional views that saw life as simply adapting to pre-existing environmental conditions.
  • One example of this transformative power is the oxygen-rich atmosphere, which was created by photosynthesizing organisms over billions of years.

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Noosphere :

  • The concept of the noosphere can be seen as the next evolutionary stage following the biosphere. While the biosphere represents the realm of life, the noosphere represents the realm of human thought.
  • Vernadsky believed that, just as life transformed the Earth through the biosphere, human thought and collective intelligence would transform the planet in the era of the noosphere. This transformation would be characterized by the dominance of cultural evolution over biological evolution.
  • In this paradigm, human knowledge, technology, and cultural developments would become the primary drivers of change on the planet, influencing its future direction.
  • The term "noosphere" is derived from the Greek word “nous” meaning "mind" or "intellect" and "sphaira" meaning "sphere." So, the noosphere can be thought of as the "sphere of human thought."

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

A close analysis of the architecture of the stupa―a Buddhist symbolic form that is found throughout South, Southeast, and East Asia. The author, who trained as an architect, examines both the physical and metaphysical levels of these buildings, which derive their meaning and significance from Buddhist and Brahmanist influences.

Building on his extensive research into the sacred symbols and creation myths of the Dogon of Africa and those of ancient Egypt, India, and Tibet, Laird Scranton investigates the myths, symbols, and traditions of prehistoric China, providing further evidence that the cosmology of all ancient cultures arose from a single now-lost source.

It is at the same time a history of language, a guide to foreign tongues, and a method for learning them. It shows, through basic vocabularies, family resemblances of languages―Teutonic, Romance, Greek―helpful tricks of translation, key combinations of roots and phonetic patterns. It presents by common-sense methods the most helpful approach to the mastery of many languages; it condenses vocabulary to a minimum of essential words; it simplifies grammar in an entirely new way; and it teaches a languages as it is actually used in everyday life.
But this book is more than a guide to foreign languages; it goes deep into the roots of all knowledge as it explores the history of speech. It lights up the dim pathways of prehistory and unfolds the story of the slow growth of human expression from the most primitive signs and sounds to the elaborate variations of the highest cultures. Without language no knowledge would be possible; here we see how language is at once the source and the reservoir of all we know.

Taking only the most elementary knowledge for granted, Lancelot Hogben leads readers of this famous book through the whole course from simple arithmetic to calculus. His illuminating explanation is addressed to the person who wants to understand the place of mathematics in modern civilization but who has been intimidated by its supposed difficulty. Mathematics is the language of size, shape, and order―a language Hogben shows one can both master and enjoy.

A complete manual for the study and practice of Raja Yoga, the path of concentration and meditation. These timeless teachings is a treasure to be read and referred to again and again by seekers treading the spiritual path. The classic Sutras, at least 4,000 years old, cover the yogic teachings on ethics, meditation, and physical postures, and provide directions for dealing with situations in daily life. The Sutras are presented here in the purest form, with the original Sanskrit and with translation, transliteration, and commentary by Sri Swami Satchidananda, one of the most respected and revered contemporary Yoga masters. Sri Swamiji offers practical advice based on his own experience for mastering the mind and achieving physical, mental and emotional harmony.

William Strauss and Neil Howe will change the way you see the world - and your place in it. With blazing originality, The Fourth Turning illuminates the past, explains the present, and reimagines the future. Most remarkably, it offers an utterly persuasive prophecy about how America’s past will predict its future.

Strauss and Howe base this vision on a provocative theory of American history. The authors look back 500 years and uncover a distinct pattern: Modern history moves in cycles, each one lasting about the length of a long human life, each composed of four eras - or "turnings" - that last about 20 years and that always arrive in the same order. In The Fourth Turning, the authors illustrate these cycles using a brilliant analysis of the post-World War II period.

First comes a High, a period of confident expansion as a new order takes root after the old has been swept away. Next comes an Awakening, a time of spiritual exploration and rebellion against the now-established order. Then comes an Unraveling, an increasingly troubled era in which individualism triumphs over crumbling institutions. Last comes a Crisis - the Fourth Turning - when society passes through a great and perilous gate in history. Together, the four turnings comprise history's seasonal rhythm of growth, maturation, entropy, and rebirth.

4th Turning

Excess Deaths & Why RFK Jr. Can Win The Democratic Presidential Race - Ed Dowd | Part 1 of 2 - 06-21-2023

All original edition. Nothing added, nothing removed. This book traces the history of the ancient Khazar Empire, a major but almost forgotten power in Eastern Europe, which in the Dark Ages became converted to Judaism. Khazaria was finally wiped out by the forces of Genghis Khan, but evidence indicates that the Khazars themselves migrated to Poland and formed the cradle of Western Jewry. To the general reader the Khazars, who flourished from the 7th to 11th century, may seem infinitely remote today. Yet they have a close and unexpected bearing on our world, which emerges as Koestler recounts the fascinating history of the ancient Khazar Empire.

At about the time that Charlemagne was Emperor in the West. The Khazars' sway extended from the Black Sea to the Caspian, from the Caucasus to the Volga, and they were instrumental in stopping the Muslim onslaught against Byzantium, the eastern jaw of the gigantic pincer movement that in the West swept across northern Africa and into Spain.Thereafter the Khazars found themselves in a precarious position between the two major world powers: the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium and the triumphant followers of Mohammed.As Koestler points out, the Khazars were the Third World of their day. They chose a surprising method of resisting both the Western pressure to become Christian and the Eastern to adopt Islam. Rejecting both, they converted to Judaism. Mr. Koestler speculates about the ultimate faith of the Khazars and their impact on the racial composition and social heritage of modern Jewry.

Few people noticed the secret codewords used by our astronauts to describe the moon. Until now, few knew about the strange moving lights they reported.
George H. Leonard, former NASA scientist, fought through the official veil of secrecy and studied thousands of NASA photographs, spoke candidly with dozens of NASA officials, and listened to hours and hours of astronauts' tapes.
Here, Leonard presents the stunning and inescapable evidence discovered during his in-depth investigation:

  • Immense mechanical rigs, some over a mile long, working the lunar surface.
  • Strange geometric ground markings and symbols.
  • Lunar constructions several times higher than anything built on Earth.
  • Vehicles, tracks, towers, pipes, conduits, and conveyor belts running in and across moon craters.
Somebody else is indeed on the Moon, and engaged in activities on a massive scale. Our space agencies, and many of the world's top scientists, have known for years that there is intelligent life on the moon.

The article delves into the history of the Khazars, a polity in the Northern Caucasus that existed from the mid-seventh century until about 970 CE. Contrary to popular belief, the term "Khazars" is misleading as it was a multiethnic entity, and it's uncertain which specific group adopted Judaism. The Khazars first emerged in the seventh century, defeating the Bulgars, which led to the Bulgars' dispersion to various regions. The Khazar Empire was established through the expulsion of the Bulgars and was multiethnic in nature. The language spoken by the Khazars is debated, with some suggesting Turkic origins and others pointing to Slavic. The Khazars had several cities and fortresses, with significant archaeological findings. The Khazars had interactions with various empires, including wars with the Arabs and alliances with Byzantine emperors. By the mid-10th century, the Khazar capital of Itil was destroyed by the Russians. The article concludes that much of what is known about the Khazars is based on limited sources.

#Khazars #History #Caucasus #Judaism #Bulgars #Empire #Multiethnic #LanguageDebate #ArabWars #ByzantineAlliances #Itil #RussianInvasion #Archaeology #ReligiousConversion #TabletMag

In The Science of the Dogon, Laird Scranton demonstrated that the cosmological structure described in the myths and drawings of the Dogon runs parallel to modern science--atomic theory, quantum theory, and string theory--their drawings often taking the same form as accurate scientific diagrams that relate to the formation of matter.

Sacred Symbols of the Dogon uses these parallels as the starting point for a new interpretation of the Egyptian hieroglyphic language. By substituting Dogon cosmological drawings for equivalent glyph-shapes in Egyptian words, a new way of reading and interpreting the Egyptian hieroglyphs emerges. Scranton shows how each hieroglyph constitutes an entire concept, and that their meanings are scientific in nature.

The Dogon people of Mali, West Africa, are famous for their unique art and advanced cosmology. The Dogon’s creation story describes how the one true god, Amma, created all the matter of the universe. Interestingly, the myths that depict his creative efforts bear a striking resemblance to the modern scientific definitions of matter, beginning with the atom and continuing all the way to the vibrating threads of string theory. Furthermore, many of the Dogon words, symbols, and rituals used to describe the structure of matter are quite similar to those found in the myths of ancient Egypt and in the daily rituals of Judaism. For example, the modern scientific depiction of the informed universe as a black hole is identical to Amma’s Egg of the Dogon and the Egyptian Benben Stone.

The Science of the Dogon offers a case-by-case comparison of Dogon descriptions and drawings to corresponding scientific definitions and diagrams from authors like Stephen Hawking and Brian Greene, then extends this analysis to the counterparts of these symbols in both the ancient Egyptian and Hebrew religions. What is ultimately revealed is the scientific basis for the language of the Egyptian hieroglyphs, which was deliberately encoded to prevent the knowledge of these concepts from falling into the hands of all but the highest members of the Egyptian priesthood.

Anthony C. Yu’s translation of The Journey to the West,initially published in 1983, introduced English-speaking audiences to the classic Chinese novel in its entirety for the first time. Written in the sixteenth century, The Journey to the West tells the story of the fourteen-year pilgrimage of the monk Xuanzang, one of China’s most famous religious heroes, and his three supernatural disciples, in search of Buddhist scriptures. Throughout his journey, Xuanzang fights demons who wish to eat him, communes with spirits, and traverses a land riddled with a multitude of obstacles, both real and fantastical. An adventure rich with danger and excitement, this seminal work of the Chinese literary canonis by turns allegory, satire, and fantasy.

With over a hundred chapters written in both prose and poetry, The Journey to the West has always been a complicated and difficult text to render in English while preserving the lyricism of its language and the content of its plot. But Yu has successfully taken on the task, and in this new edition he has made his translations even more accurate and accessible. The explanatory notes are updated and augmented, and Yu has added new material to his introduction, based on his original research as well as on the newest literary criticism and scholarship on Chinese religious traditions. He has also modernized the transliterations included in each volume, using the now-standard Hanyu Pinyin romanization system. Perhaps most important, Yu has made changes to the translation itself in order to make it as precise as possible.

One of the great works of Chinese literature, The Journey to the West is not only invaluable to scholars of Eastern religion and literature, but, in Yu’s elegant rendering, also a delight for any reader.

The Oera Linda Book is a 19th-century translation by Dr. Ottema and WIlliam R. Sandbach of an old manuscript written in the Old Frisian language that records historical, mythological, and religious themes of remote antiquity, compiled between 2194 BC and AD 803.

  • The Oera Linda book challenges traditional views of pre-Christian societies.
  • Christianization is likened to a "great reset" that erased previous civilizations.
  • The Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people.
  • The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting patterns in history.
  • The importance of identity and understanding one's roots is highlighted.
  • The Oera Linda book offers wisdom and insights into several European languages.

The Oera Linda book offers a fresh perspective on our history, challenging the notion that pre-Christian societies were uncivilized. It suggests that the Christianization of societies was a form of "great reset," erasing and demonizing what existed before. The Oera Linda writings hint at an advanced civilization with its own laws, writing, and societal structures. Jan Ott's translation from the Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people. The text also touches upon the guilt many feel today, even if they aren't religious, about issues like climate change and historical slavery. It criticizes the way science is sometimes treated like a religion, with scientists acting as its preachers. The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting that understanding history requires recognizing patterns and cycles. Christianity is portrayed as one of the most significant resets in history, with sects fighting and erasing each other's scriptures. The importance of identity is highlighted, with a focus on the Fryans, a tribe that faced challenges from another tribe from Finland. This other tribe had a different moral compass, leading to conflicts and eventual assimilation. The text suggests that the true history of the Fryans and their values might have been distorted by subsequent Christian narratives. The Oera Linda book is seen as a source of wisdom, shedding light on the origins of several European languages and offering insights into values like freedom, truth, and justice.

#OeraLinda #History #Christianization #GreatReset #FryanLanguage #JanOtt #Civilization #OldTestament #Church #SpiritualAbuse #Identity #Fryans #Autland #Finland #Slavery #Christianity #Sects #Genocide #Torture #Bible #Freedom #Truth #Justice #Righteousness #Language #German #Dutch #Frisian #English #Scandinavian #Wisdom #Inspiration #European #Values

The Talmud is one of the most important holy books of the Hebrew religion and of the world. No English translation of the book existed until the author presented this work. To this day, very little of the actual text seems available in English -- although we find many interpretive commentaries on what it is supposed to mean. The Talmud has a reputation for being long and difficult to digest, but Polano has taken what he believes to be the best material and put it into extremely readable form. As far as holy books of the world are concerned, it is on par with The Koran, The Bhagavad-Gita and, of course, The Bible, in importance. This clearly written edition will allow many to experience The Talmud who may have otherwise not had the chance.

This five-volume set is the only complete English rendering of The Zohar, the fundamental rabbinic work on Jewish mysticism that has fascinated readers for more than seven centuries. In addition to being the primary reference text for kabbalistic studies, this magnificent work is arranged in the form of a commentary on the Bible, bringing to the surface the deeper meanings behind the commandments and biblical narrative. As The Zohar itself proclaims: Woe unto those who see in the Law nothing but simple narratives and ordinary words .... Every word of the Law contains an elevated sense and a sublime mystery .... The narratives of the Law are but the raiment Thin which it is swathed.

Twenty-one years ago, at a friend's request, a Massachusetts professor sketched out a blueprint for nonviolent resistance to repressive regimes. It would go on to be translated, photocopied, and handed from one activist to another, traveling from country to country across the globe: from Iran to Venezuela―where both countries consider Gene Sharp to be an enemy of the state―to Serbia; Afghanistan; Vietnam; the former Soviet Union; China; Nepal; and, more recently and notably, Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, where it has served as a guiding light of the Arab Spring.

This short, pithy, inspiring, and extraordinarily clear guide to overthrowing a dictatorship by nonviolent means lists 198 specific methods to consider, depending on the circumstances: sit-ins, popular nonobedience, selective strikes, withdrawal of bank deposits, revenue refusal, walkouts, silence, and hunger strikes. From Dictatorship to Democracy is the remarkable work that has made the little-known Sharp into the world's most effective and sought-after analyst of resistance to authoritarian regimes.

Bill Cooper, former United States Naval Intelligence Briefing Team member, reveals information that remains hidden from the public eye. This information has been kept in topsecret government files since the 1940s. His audiences hear the truth unfold as he writes about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the war on drugs, the secret government, and UFOs. Bill is a lucid, rational, and powerful speaker whose intent is to inform and to empower his audience. Standing room only is normal. His presentation and information transcend partisan affiliations as he clearly addresses issues in a way that has a striking impact on listeners of all backgrounds and interests. He has spoken to many groups throughout the United States and has appeared regularly on many radio talk shows and on television. In 1988 Bill decided to "talk" due to events then taking place worldwide, events that he had seen plans for back in the early 1970s. Bill correctly predicted the lowering of the Iron Curtain, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the invasion of Panama. All Bill's predictions were on record well before the events occurred. Bill is not a psychic. His information comes from top secret documents that he read while with the Intelligence Briefing Team and from over seventeen years of research.

The argument that the 16th Amendment (which concerns the federal income tax) was not properly ratified and thus is invalid has been a topic of debate among some tax protesters and scholars. One of the individuals associated with this theory is Bill Benson, who asserted that the 16th Amendment was fraudulently ratified. Here's a brief overview of the argument: 1. Research and Documentation: Bill Benson, along with another individual named M.J. "Red" Beckman, wrote a two-volume work called "The Law That Never Was" in the 1980s. This work was a product of Benson's extensive travels to various state archives to examine the original ratification documents related to the 16th Amendment. 2. Claims of Irregularities: In his work, Benson presented evidence that claimed many of the states either did not ratify the 16th Amendment properly or made mistakes in their resolutions. Some of these alleged irregularities included misspellings, incorrect wording, and other deviations from the proposed amendment. 3. Philander Knox's Role: In 1913, Philander Knox, who was the U.S. Secretary of State at the time, declared that the 16th Amendment had been ratified by the necessary three-fourths of the states. Benson's contention is that Knox was aware of the various discrepancies and irregularities in the ratification process but chose to fraudulently declare the amendment ratified anyway. 4. Legal Challenges and Court Rulings: Over the years, some tax protesters have used Benson's findings to challenge the legality of the income tax. However, these challenges have been consistently rejected by the courts. In fact, several courts have addressed Benson's research and arguments directly and found them to be without legal merit. The courts have repeatedly upheld the validity of the 16th Amendment. 5. Counterarguments: Critics of Benson's theory argue that even if there were minor discrepancies in the wording or format of the ratification documents, they do not invalidate the overarching intent of the states to ratify the amendment. Additionally, they assert that there's no substantive evidence that Knox acted fraudulently. It's worth noting that despite the popularity of this theory among certain groups, the legal consensus in the U.S. is that the 16th Amendment was validly ratified and is a legitimate part of the U.S. Constitution. Those who refuse to pay income taxes based on this theory have faced legal penalties.

The article delves into the evolution of the concept of the ether in physics. Historically, the ether was postulated to explain the propagation of light, with figures like Newton and Huygens suggesting its existence. By the late 19th century, Maxwell's electromagnetic theory linked light's propagation to the ether, a theory experimentally validated by Hertz in 1888. Lorentz expanded on this, focusing on wave transmission in moving media. The article contrasts the English approach, which sought tangible models, with the phenomenological view, which aimed for a descriptive approach without specific hypotheses. The piece also touches on various mechanical theories and models proposed over the years, emphasizing the challenges in defining the ether's properties and its evolving nature in scientific discourse.

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Feliz día de los Extraterrestres – 09-14-2023

Feliz día de los Extraterrestres - 09-14-2023

Feliz día de los Extraterrestres - 09-14-2023

Episode Summary:

On the 13th, a significant event occurred which was termed "Alien Day." The Mexican Congress displayed space alien bodies, sparking discussions and debates. This revelation challenges many traditional beliefs, particularly those held by the Khazarian mafia. The author mentions that this will lead to a broader understanding of reality and will challenge the Khazarian's viewpoint. A while ago, the author was informed about caches of alien artifacts discovered in Mexico, south of Mexico City. These artifacts included sculptures, paintings, and even devices. Two distinct groups found these caches, one buried and the other in a sealed cave. One of the groups discovered small alien bodies and a spaceship suitable for their size. The author also mentions a personal experience in Mexico, including an earthquake he experienced while teaching at La Unum, a large university. Rumors have circulated that some of these alien artifacts, including the bodies, were being sold on the dark web. The author emphasizes the moral integrity of many involved in these underground transactions. He concludes by suggesting that more revelations about these alien artifacts will emerge in the coming months.

#AlienDay #MexicanCongress #SpaceAliens #KhazarianMafia #Reality #Artifacts #MexicoCity #Sculptures #Spaceships #LaUnum #Earthquake #DarkWeb #Cryptos #Revelations #Bodies #Spaceship #Teaching #Rumors #Transactions #Morality #Discovery #Cave #Buried #Debate #Government

Feliz día de los Extraterrestres - 09-14-2023

Ola ola Jumanos ola. Homana como stylestead. Buenos diaz. Muchachos. Happy Alien day.

So today's the 13th. Yesterday was actually really Alien Day. It the twelveTH. That was when the Mexican Congress had space alien bodies and Coutre mall on display. They were talking about them, and these ain't humans.

So we're here. We're here. Now things really start taking off from this point forward. You'll start seeing other governments kick in with their space alien hordes and caches and stuff they've found, all of that sort of thing. We'll start getting more or less open debate and it'll be taken away from the cabal, from the mother weppers right.

They're the ones that keep denying all of this because it suits their agenda to have you try and believe that the Torah is the actual description of the Earth, that the Earth's only 6000 years old, and all of this kind of crap. All this basically horseshit that's in the Talmud and in the Jewish understanding of our reality, or at least what is told to the Jews as to how they should understand our reality, because it all comes from the Khazarians anyway. Though this is a big blow to the Khazarian mafia. It won't be recognized as such for probably another year, but it's going to start off a whole slew of things that are going to remove a lot of the support from the Khazarian's viewpoint. It's going to open up a giant hole in the normies heads and they're going to have to expand their view of reality, which again will include a larger view of the Khazarian Mafia and their influence and all of this sort of thing.

Now, there's some details about the Mexican stuff that I've discussed in the past, right? I don't know how long ago it was, maybe it was six, eight, nine months or something. But like some serious amount of time back. Let me think here. Okay, september now, so probably it was over a year ago, and may well have been closer to a year and a half ago, but some people I know were gifted photographs of a cache of alien stuff that had been found in Mexico, south of Mexico City.

Okay? And what they found were paintings. Sculptures, primarily sculptures. A lot of jade, a lot of space aliens carved in jade, depictions of space alien spaceships in stone and jade and this kind of thing, other carvings, and then what appear to be devices. Okay, so there's some stuff that was found in this one.

Let me back up. There are two different groups, both of which are south of Mexico City. One by just not that much, maybe a couple of hundred miles, another by a serious amount, five or 600 miles, that kind of thing. Right. So there are two groups, independent of each other, that have each come across caches of space alien material that had been buried.

In my understanding, one was buried, one was in a cave. Okay? And the cave had been sealed. How? I don't know.

I don't know any of the details. I didn't get into that. I was much more taken with querying the guys on what they actually had found and this sort of thing. Right? So these two caches of space alien material are very large relative to what was shown in the Mexican Congress.

So there's tons more stuff that has yet to come out. Now, one of the two groups I think is the one in the far South I'm not sure at this point had said that they had small bodies. The bodies were under 3ft high, and they had a space alien spaceship that was of an appropriate size for bodies that big. In other words, they were saying that this spaceship was, like, 10ft across and a human couldn't get into it. Right.

That it had an opening. The opening would not accommodate most adult males. Right. You just could not get yourself into the interior of the vessel because it was so small.

All kinds of information about the space aliens that this group in the South I think it was the one in the south had found. So the group in the north will just separate them this way. Group in the north didn't have bodies. They had all kinds of other stuff created by humans and saved by humans. So there were some remnants of stuff that they think were, like, bits and pieces of alien material, right?

Stuff they used or whatever. They don't have forks and spoons, but it'd be kind of like that, right, that the humans saved what may be otherwise trivial bits of stuff, but they didn't have any bodies. Now, the ones in the south, the storehouse of these things that they found in the south, this is where they had the bodies. Now, I don't know that the bodies they displayed were the ones that I was aware of, that I'd had photos of, because I didn't see any. They're obviously being displayed reverentially and with much more care in the Mexican Congress than in the photographs where they were found in this area, this sort of pit.

I think the southern one was the cave, and the northern one was the dig. I got contacted by two different groups. I got two sets of photos pretty much, like, within a week of each other. So it was a little confusing for me as to which was which at the moment. But in any event, the ones at the cave was where they found the little tiny spaceship and the bodies.

And as I say, I think that was the one in the south. Now, they also have devices, okay? So, like little handheld things that the little tiny space aliens would use. Now, one of the guys who had all right, so one of these two groups I think it's one of these two groups comes to me through my buddy Joe, right? Joe from Tampa j snip four.

The other group contacted me from this professor I know who is the son of a guy I knew at La Unum. Okay, so Enrico is the son of a professor at the La Unum. The university actually, I think they mentioned that on the Mexican congressional hearing that these things had been examined and validated at La Unum. Right. This is the largest university, I think, in the Americas, maybe the largest university in the planet.

It's fucking huge. I taught classes there in It and SQL Server, and SQL design, search design, search patterns, disappearing data. I did a lot of how to design algorithms so that you're aware of the errors that they're going to throw, that sort of thing. Right.

This was for a class that La Una Moran for the Mexican government. All right, it was a fun trip. I got treated to an 8.3 earthquake. Oh, man, that was something, man, that destroyed me too. I've still got damage from that.

I'm still working on it. Bounced me down. I was in Mexico City, in Zonarosa, in the red zone, right over near the area where the brothels and stuff are. But it was a cheap hotel, but it was just massively elegant. I had a five room suite all to myself.

It wasn't that booked up. And the whole hotel is made out of these giant, massive stones. So when the earthquake hit, the hotel didn't crumble or fall or anything, but I was in a stairway going down to breakfast when it hit. And my room was on the fourth floor and I was on the third floor, just about to turn the little thing in the stairway. I always take the stairs.

I hate elevators. If it's ten floors or less, I'll take the stairs. But anyway, so as I'm walking down the stairs, it just turned around and was like at the third floor, just starting to head down the stairs to the second floor, the earthquake hits and it bounced me. It literally lifted me up off my feet. I was not holding on to any rails or anything.

And it bounced me up across the little tiny stairway hallway, so to speak, the width of the stairway and smash me into the wall over there. And that's where I still have the damage to my shoulder from that into that elbow. It's in 93, so it's taking a long time. Anyway, and then I fell down the rest of that half flight of stairs and impacted the wall down there. And then it was still shaking and I got the fuck out and popped out into the dining room.

And all hell is breaking loose on the dining room there. But anyway, that was actually the first little precursor earthquake. The big 8.3 happened as we were having breakfast. I was having breakfast with my contact down there who was going to take me over to La Unum and was going to act as translator and we're sitting there. He's a young man in his late 30s maybe.

And he looks at me. It looked really weird. It's just great breakfast, man. Just an incredible breakfast. I'm just scarfing it down like mad.

Figured the earthquake thing was all over. And then the 8.3 hit. And when it hit, it was just fantastic. The floor was buckling. It was all these giant stone slabs that were just moving around like tiles in a majong game, just whipping back and forth, lifting up people, moving their tables, being thrown up, and everything was in disruption.

Everybody running like fuck to get out of the dining room and kitchen, get out of the building, because we all thought it was going to come down on us. It was that violent. And everybody's standing out in the street and people are pouring out of a building across the way, which was some kind of a government building. And all of those people that came out were guarded by all these fierce looking Mexican troops with submachine guns who were like really serious about it. So maybe it was a bank or something.

I don't know what it was across the street, but like two blocks down there was a modern hotel, probably 1215 stories. And from where I was standing there in the street trying to make sure I was out of the way of any of the guys with the machine guns, just looking at everything, just taking it all in. And I saw the top of that hotel. The hotel was rocking. It was just moving back and forth.

And I thought for sure that thing was going to come down. And I was like, oh, my God. One of the guys that I was also teaching at Launum, not in my party, but was within this general contract, so he did I think he was doing data analysis, mathematics and impacts with mathematics on your algorithms. Anyway, I didn't attend his lecture, so I don't know what it was. He was in the same plane as me that previous night coming in.

So I'd met him and talked to him, and he'd gone to that hotel. I'd gone to the Zona Rosa Hotel, which was shorter and Homeier and that kind of thing, right? As a consultant, you stay in too many of these anonymous kind of places. I just don't like them. Anyway, though, this guy I was talking to, the other instructor, he was up in like one of the top floor rooms, had a magnificent view of the city.

And then the earthquake hits. The little one freaked him out. He was in the bathroom, he said, when it happened, having a shower and didn't know what was going on. He got out and all of that, and he's a little bit rattled. And then the big one hits like maybe it was 1520 minutes later.

It had been long enough that I'd gotten down to the dining room and had been talking to my companion had just started eating this marvelous oatmeal with chocolate nibs in it. Boy that was good stuff. And had some Mexican bacon there on the side with this. It was just really good. Anyway, just really getting into it when that earthquake hit.

Now, my friend up in the big hotel, I think he was on the 11th floor. I don't think he was actually on the twelveTH floor, but anyway, he was in his room, had just gotten himself dressed, the big earthquake hit and it literally flung him off of his bed and he said he impacted on the sliding glass door, which he had just shut not five minutes before. If he had not shut that sliding glass door, he thinks he would have just been pitched right over the little balcony and would have been crushed his head on the pool down below, which didn't have any water in it by the way they were working on it. So anyway, so he was just like seriously freaked out. I learned all this because after everybody got sort of calmed down and stuff, we picked him up in this cab.

The cabs in Mexico City. Are these Volkswagen bugs? So everybody's really crammed in there. So anyway, so we're having a great conversation and driving along trying to avoid all the debris and stuff. We didn't know what the fuck to do.

We just went to work, right? Because we didn't know if they were going to have the classes or what they ended up having them. I got to give them credit for that damage and all this kind of stuff. But it was a marvelous educational experience. These guys got some in depth discussion on what they wanted to understand.

We got them to a programming SQL all in the midst of people running around, sirens from the aid cars and these guys are just sitting there taking it all in. They got some real mental control. I really like that trip so many different ways. That was the trip that my plane got struck by lightning twice on the way in, maybe at like midnight or after the previous night. And that's when I had the blinding flash of insight about the human psychicness and the leaking of language and that set me off on the whole thing.

Which brings us up to today and the space alien yesterday. So anyway, love Mexico. You know, I agree with Max Egan. Don't anybody go to Mexico. It's a terrible place.

It's full of, you know, your life will be at risk. Never ever go there.

But anyway, so there have been rumors for some time that one of these caches we didn't know which I didn't get involved with it. There's reasons I didn't want to get involved with it relative to our own fucking government and my problems with the FBI or whoever the fuck, right, whoever follows me, that kind of thing.

So I didn't really get involved with a lot of that stuff, but there were rumors that one of these caches of space alien stuff was being sold on the dark web, okay? So as far as the rumor was concerned, it was factual. There was a maybe even still is I haven't been to look on the Tor side of the internet, the dark web, the Unixed non URL world where they use Tor addresses. There is a site that has photos and this kind of stuff and has mechanisms for contacting them. And they're selling these things in cryptos.

They give you a Mexican peso price or a dollar price. I think there's a dollar price as well and a euro to get you started on this. But that's the point at which the negotiations begin. And so the idea is that if you're interested in this, you're going to contact these people with the contact information that's given there. And basically it works by you go and put your email address in a particular blockchain with a minimal payment and it's like, I don't know, maybe it costs ten cents to put your name in there and they contact you, right?

But you put crypto in there and you've got your email address and so they've got an ability to contact you and they know that you know how to use cryptos and that you've got the fuckers.

And so it establishes a bona fide on your part to meet them. Now I find that when I'm dealing with people in sketchy business, the more paranoid they are, the more they go through these kind of machination, these convolutions and stuff to assure their safety and assure that they know who they're dealing with, the more I trust that they are actually operating from a position of truth relative to their stated position. Right.

So the more trouble, the more likely they are to be legit. And I'll tell you that when you get into these transactions, that for a lot of different stuff, and this is from personal experience, when you get into these transactions that are extra governmental so that some government somewhere doesn't want you doing this for whatever reason. So I refuse to say that they're illegal, they are illegal. There's laws against them, but these are not moral nor binding laws on me. So I don't choose to be bound by their laws, especially if it's not a government that I happen to have to exist under.

It's not moral ambiguity, it's a question of legal certainty. I'm quite certain that their actions are immoral, as are their laws and I just don't intend to follow them. But when you get into these kind of transactions and you're doing business with people at a crypto level on this, in my personal experience over these last couple of decades here, well, last decade with cryptos. But these are some of the nicest pirates you're ever going to want to meet. They're some of the nicest criminals and they're honorable and so on.

So I have dealt with them where through no fault of theirs and I was willing to accept that through no fault of theirs, the package that had been promised to me was interdicted by a government somewhere and I didn't get it right. They resent it at their cost and it's like fuck. Because they are basically moral people like myself. It's what I would have done that the customer would not have gotten it because of something I had done that had tipped off the government or whatever. And so if it would have been me, I would also have made it up if I had the wherewithal to do so.

In any event though, so there have been rumors that these caches of alien stuff, including the bodies presumably were for sale. Now, there's a lot of other rumors out there that you can find if you want to go and hunt that suggest that there's some portion of the Mexican government. I don't know if it's involved with the US. Government in this or not, but there's some agency or group or whatever of the Mexican government that's been going out trying to prevent these sales that they are also savvy to what's going on in Mexico relative to digging up all these alien things. And believe me, there's far more yet to be revealed, okay?

So it's not just these bodies, it's far more yet to be revealed. This will all be coming out over these next few months. As I say, I expect other governments to get in on the act and it's going to be quite interesting, especially when the Russians start coming out with stuff.

Anyway, I don't know if anything ever sold. Okay, I do know there was activity on the blockchain. I do know that, okay, I won't go into the details there, but I do know that there were several hundreds of email addresses that were put into this blockchain with the intent of getting contacted by these people such that you could interact with them and potentially buy some of these items. Okay? This is not something that I've done.

I didn't get involved in that, right? But I went back and checked later to see how that activity had been on the blockchain. Now all of those addresses are encrypted. So you can go to that blockchain now and you're not going to find Elon Musk@x.com there, right? It's not that kind of a thing.

You'll find an encrypted email address with military 100 and 256 byte encryption. So you're not going to crack it, not easily anyway. Just be luck anyway though. So as I say, I don't know if anything sold. I don't know how many transactions or any of that, but I do know that several hundred people had come across and maybe it was like 250 or more at the time I checked it.

And that would have been maybe February of this year, maybe March sometime back. It was just something I was keeping track of, but I wasn't really intent on because I wasn't going to buy anything.

Struck me as too many hitches in the get along. And sooner or later there's going to be some level of prohibition legally about owning this stuff at a personal level, right, if it does not already exist. Because I'm certain there's laws, they could say, oh, no, it falls under this law. You can't buy it. Right.

There's always a law for what they want anyway. But I do know that there was activity. A lot of people took it seriously and a lot of people apparently were intent on getting contacted and stuff. Now, did they ever contact anybody? I don't know.

The stuff they were offering for sale, though, included, let me think here least 18. So I remember two solid images of nine pictures, three across, three down.

We've got at least 18 photographs of what were said to be different devices that were found in this cache. Okay. Some of these devices did not look like they were made out of metal. That was very interesting alone. It didn't look like plastic.

It was kind of weird looking stuff. Might have been biological, I don't know. Anyway, though, these were claimed to be devices that were found or extracted from the area around the mummified aliens. And I don't know if they took them out of the spaceship. I don't know any of the details about it.

As you can imagine, there's not a lot of forthcoming volumes of text describing all of this when basically I'm quite sure everybody there is assuming it's illegal as fuck and they don't want the Mexican government to come with their submachine guns and shoot the fuck out of them and take the stuff, right? So anyway, like I say, this is all very much on the down low anyway. So now the Mexican government has come up with this entree that's going to put them at the pinnacle of this for some period of time until someone else comes up with something that's more exciting. Because I bet you that over the next week or two, we'll hear about more space alien stuff coming out of Mexico. There were a lot, by the way, there was a lot of elegant cast gold representation of spaceships and aliens and that kind of stuff in this cache.

And this was some very interesting casting work. All right, so it's not like these were made by the space aliens. These were made by the natives that interacted with the space aliens and were so enthralled or whatever. And they cast gold images of the aliens, of the spaceship, of the aliens standing there in what looks like these, I don't know, like little tiny boots with like life rafts on the bottom or something. So like really fat feet, boots.

And the little alien in the gold statue is holding something in his hand. I couldn't see it from the photo but maybe presumably one of the devices that they've got there for sale. So anyway, I'm hoping that all this shit starts coming on out and we'll see the backstory on this and I'm certain there is more to be discovered. That was what one of the groups, I think the group that was in the dig, which I think that was the north where they actually just found it in a field kind of a thing and kept digging and there was more and there was more and there was more. I think that was the one that was somehow associated with the volcano, either on the side of a volcano or something like that.

So anyway, here we are now. We're now into Alien year. Yesterday is Happy Alien Day. So next year, September twelveTH anniversary. Happy Alien Day.

Going to be fun guys. Going to be tremendously fun. I'm getting through the fog here. It's dangerous as fuck. You can't see the car ahead of you, 10ft away.

And I'm going to have to go and do my chores here. But I'll have another one of these on the way out. I suspect over the next few weeks that we'll be doing a lot of talk about aliens and it's going to really start affecting the social order. This is actually one of the things that the Kazarian mafia was desperate to control and I'm pleased that they can't that it's out now and that they just won't have any option to use it and shovel it to their ends. Anyway, as I say, happy Alien Day and we'll see you right.

Going to be quite the interesting, quite the interesting future. World changed yesterday, Doug.


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The bible for bringing cutting-edge products to larger markets—now revised and updated with new insights into the realities of high-tech marketing In Crossing the Chasm, Geoffrey A. Moore shows that in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle—which begins with innovators and moves to early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards—there is a vast chasm between the early adopters and the early majority. While early adopters are willing to sacrifice for the advantage of being first, the early majority waits until they know that the technology actually offers improvements in productivity. The challenge for innovators and marketers is to narrow this chasm and ultimately accelerate adoption across every segment. This third edition brings Moore's classic work up to date with dozens of new examples of successes and failures, new strategies for marketing in the digital world, and Moore's most current insights and findings. He also includes two new appendices, the first connecting the ideas in Crossing the Chasm to work subsequently published in his Inside the Tornado, and the second presenting his recent groundbreaking work for technology adoption models for high-tech consumer markets.

Endless terror. Refugee waves. An unfixable global economy. Surprising election results. New billion-dollar fortunes. Miracle medical advances. What if they were all connected? What if you could understand why? The Seventh Sense is the story of what all of today's successful figures see and feel: the forces that are invisible to most of us but explain everything from explosive technological change to uneasy political ripples. The secret to power now is understanding our new age of networks. Not merely the Internet, but also webs of trade, finance, and even DNA. Based on his years of advising generals, CEOs, and politicians, Ramo takes us into the opaque heart of our world's rapidly connected systems and teaches us what the losers are not yet seeing -- and what the victors of this age already know.

This lushly illustrated history of popular entertainment takes a long-zoom approach, contending that the pursuit of novelty and wonder is a powerful driver of world-shaping technological change. Steven Johnson argues that, throughout history, the cutting edge of innovation lies wherever people are working the hardest to keep themselves and others amused. Johnson’s storytelling is just as delightful as the inventions he describes, full of surprising stops along the journey from simple concepts to complex modern systems. He introduces us to the colorful innovators of leisure: the explorers, proprietors, showmen, and artists who changed the trajectory of history with their luxurious wares, exotic meals, taverns, gambling tables, and magic shows. In Wonderland, Johnson compellingly argues that observers of technological and social trends should be looking for clues in novel amusements. You’ll find the future wherever people are having the most fun.

Nothing “goes viral.” If you think a popular movie, song, or app came out of nowhere to become a word-of-mouth success in today’s crowded media environment, you’re missing the real story. Each blockbuster has a secret history—of power, influence, dark broadcasters, and passionate cults that turn some new products into cultural phenomena. Even the most brilliant ideas wither in obscurity if they fail to connect with the right network, and the consumers that matter most aren't the early adopters, but rather their friends, followers, and imitators -- the audience of your audience. In his groundbreaking investigation, Atlantic senior editor Derek Thompson uncovers the hidden psychology of why we like what we like and reveals the economics of cultural markets that invisibly shape our lives. Shattering the sentimental myths of hit-making that dominate pop culture and business, Thompson shows quality is insufficient for success, nobody has "good taste," and some of the most popular products in history were one bad break away from utter failure. It may be a new world, but there are some enduring truths to what audiences and consumers want. People love a familiar surprise: a product that is bold, yet sneakily recognizable. Every business, every artist, every person looking to promote themselves and their work wants to know what makes some works so successful while others disappear. Hit Makers is a magical mystery tour through the last century of pop culture blockbusters and the most valuable currency of the twenty-first century—people’s attention. From the dawn of impressionist art to the future of Facebook, from small Etsy designers to the origin of Star Wars, Derek Thompson leaves no pet rock unturned to tell the fascinating story of how culture happens and why things become popular. In Hit Makers, Derek Thompson investigates: · The secret link between ESPN's sticky programming and the The Weeknd's catchy choruses · Why Facebook is today’s most important newspaper · How advertising critics predicted Donald Trump · The 5th grader who accidentally launched "Rock Around the Clock," the biggest hit in rock and roll history · How Barack Obama and his speechwriters think of themselves as songwriters · How Disney conquered the world—but the future of hits belongs to savvy amateurs and individuals · The French collector who accidentally created the Impressionist canon · Quantitative evidence that the biggest music hits aren’t always the best · Why almost all Hollywood blockbusters are sequels, reboots, and adaptations · Why one year--1991--is responsible for the way pop music sounds today · Why another year --1932--created the business model of film · How data scientists proved that “going viral” is a myth · How 19th century immigration patterns explain the most heard song in the Western Hemisphere

Ours is often called an information economy, but at a moment when access to information is virtually unlimited, our attention has become the ultimate commodity. In nearly every moment of our waking lives, we face a barrage of efforts to harvest our attention. This condition is not simply the byproduct of recent technological innovations but the result of more than a century's growth and expansion in the industries that feed on human attention. Wu’s narrative begins in the nineteenth century, when Benjamin Day discovered he could get rich selling newspapers for a penny. Since then, every new medium—from radio to television to Internet companies such as Google and Facebook—has attained commercial viability and immense riches by turning itself into an advertising platform. Since the early days, the basic business model of “attention merchants” has never changed: free diversion in exchange for a moment of your time, sold in turn to the highest-bidding advertiser. Full of lively, unexpected storytelling and piercing insight, The Attention Merchants lays bare the true nature of a ubiquitous reality we can no longer afford to accept at face value.

Some people think that in today’s hyper-competitive world, it’s the tough, take-no-prisoners type who comes out on top. But in reality, argues New York Times bestselling author Dave Kerpen, it’s actually those with the best people skills who win the day. Those who build the right relationships. Those who truly understand and connect with their colleagues, their customers, their partners. Those who can teach, lead, and inspire. In a world where we are constantly connected, and social media has become the primary way we communicate, the key to getting ahead is being the person others like, respect, and trust. Because no matter who you are or what profession you're in, success is contingent less on what you can do for yourself, but on what other people are willing to do for you. Here, through 53 bite-sized, easy-to-execute, and often counterintuitive tips, you’ll learn to master the 11 People Skills that will get you more of what you want at work, at home, and in life. For example, you’ll learn: · The single most important question you can ever ask to win attention in a meeting · The one simple key to networking that nobody talks about · How to remain top of mind for thousands of people, everyday · Why it usually pays to be the one to give the bad news · How to blow off the right people · And why, when in doubt, buy him a Bonsai A book best described as “How to Win Friends and Influence People for today’s world,” The Art of People shows how to charm and win over anyone to be more successful at work and outside of it.

Business Model Generation is a handbook for visionaries, game changers, and challengers striving to defy outmoded business models and design tomorrow's enterprises. If your organization needs to adapt to harsh new realities, but you don't yet have a strategy that will get you out in front of your competitors, you need Business Model Generation. Co-created by 470 "Business Model Canvas" practitioners from 45 countries, the book features a beautiful, highly visual, 4-color design that takes powerful strategic ideas and tools, and makes them easy to implement in your organization. It explains the most common Business Model patterns, based on concepts from leading business thinkers, and helps you reinterpret them for your own context. You will learn how to systematically understand, design, and implement a game-changing business model--or analyze and renovate an old one. Along the way, you'll understand at a much deeper level your customers, distribution channels, partners, revenue streams, costs, and your core value proposition. Business Model Generation features practical innovation techniques used today by leading consultants and companies worldwide, including 3M, Ericsson, Capgemini, Deloitte, and others. Designed for doers, it is for those ready to abandon outmoded thinking and embrace new models of value creation: for executives, consultants, entrepreneurs, and leaders of all organizations. If you're ready to change the rules, you belong to "the business model generation!"

#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER If you want to build a better future, you must believe in secrets. The great secret of our time is that there are still uncharted frontiers to explore and new inventions to create. In Zero to One, legendary entrepreneur and investor Peter Thiel shows how we can find singular ways to create those new things. Thiel begins with the contrarian premise that we live in an age of technological stagnation, even if we’re too distracted by shiny mobile devices to notice. Information technology has improved rapidly, but there is no reason why progress should be limited to computers or Silicon Valley. Progress can be achieved in any industry or area of business. It comes from the most important skill that every leader must master: learning to think for yourself. Doing what someone else already knows how to do takes the world from 1 to n, adding more of something familiar. But when you do something new, you go from 0 to 1. The next Bill Gates will not build an operating system. The next Larry Page or Sergey Brin won’t make a search engine. Tomorrow’s champions will not win by competing ruthlessly in today’s marketplace. They will escape competition altogether, because their businesses will be unique. Zero to One presents at once an optimistic view of the future of progress in America and a new way of thinking about innovation: it starts by learning to ask the questions that lead you to find value in unexpected places.

Why should I do business with you… and not your competitor? Whether you are a retailer, manufacturer, distributor, or service provider – if you cannot answer this question, you are surely losing customers, clients and market share. This eye-opening book reveals how identifying your competitive advantages (and trumpeting them to the marketplace) is the most surefire way to close deals, retain clients, and stay miles ahead of the competition. The five fatal flaws of most companies: • They don’t have a competitive advantage but think they do • They have a competitive advantage but don’t know what it is—so they lower prices instead • They know what their competitive advantage is but neglect to tell clients about it • They mistake “strengths” for competitive advantages • They don’t concentrate on competitive advantages when making strategic and operational decisions The good news is that you can overcome these costly mistakes – by identifying your competitive advantages and creating new ones. Consultant, public speaker, and competitive advantage expert Jaynie Smith will show you how scores of small and large companies substantially increased their sales by focusing on their competitive advantages. When advising a CEO frustrated by his salespeople’s inability to close deals, Smith discovered that his company stayed on schedule 95 percent of the time – an achievement no one else in his industry could claim. By touting this and other competitive advantages to customers, closing rates increased by 30 percent—and so did company revenues. Jack Welch has said, “If you don’t have a competitive advantage, don’t compete.” This straight-to-the-point book is filled with insightful stories and specific steps on how to pinpoint your competitive advantages, develop new ones, and get the message out about them.

The number one New York Times best seller that examines how people can champion new ideas in their careers and everyday life - and how leaders can fight groupthink, from the author of Think Again and co-author of Option B. With Give and Take, Adam Grant not only introduced a landmark new paradigm for success but also established himself as one of his generation’s most compelling and provocative thought leaders. In Originals he again addresses the challenge of improving the world, but now from the perspective of becoming original: choosing to champion novel ideas and values that go against the grain, battle conformity, and buck outdated traditions. How can we originate new ideas, policies, and practices without risking it all? Using surprising studies and stories spanning business, politics, sports, and entertainment, Grant explores how to recognize a good idea, speak up without getting silenced, build a coalition of allies, choose the right time to act, and manage fear and doubt; how parents and teachers can nurture originality in children; and how leaders can build cultures that welcome dissent. Learn from an entrepreneur who pitches his start-ups by highlighting the reasons not to invest, a woman at Apple who challenged Steve Jobs from three levels below, an analyst who overturned the rule of secrecy at the CIA, a billionaire financial wizard who fires employees for failing to criticize him, and a TV executive who didn’t even work in comedy but saved Seinfeld from the cutting-room floor. The payoff is a set of groundbreaking insights about rejecting conformity and improving the status quo.

In The $100 Startup, Chris Guillebeau tells you how to lead of life of adventure, meaning and purpose - and earn a good living. Still in his early 30s, Chris is on the verge of completing a tour of every country on earth - he's already visited more than 175 nations - and yet he’s never held a "real job" or earned a regular paycheck. Rather, he has a special genius for turning ideas into income, and he uses what he earns both to support his life of adventure and to give back. There are many others like Chris - those who've found ways to opt out of traditional employment and create the time and income to pursue what they find meaningful. Sometimes, achieving that perfect blend of passion and income doesn't depend on shelving what you currently do. You can start small with your venture, committing little time or money, and wait to take the real plunge when you're sure it's successful. In preparing to write this book, Chris identified 1,500 individuals who have built businesses earning $50,000 or more from a modest investment (in many cases, $100 or less), and from that group he’s chosen to focus on the 50 most intriguing case studies. In nearly all cases, people with no special skills discovered aspects of their personal passions that could be monetized, and were able to restructure their lives in ways that gave them greater freedom and fulfillment. Here, finally, distilled into one easy-to-use guide, are the most valuable lessons from those who’ve learned how to turn what they do into a gateway to self-fulfillment. It’s all about finding the intersection between your "expertise" - even if you don’t consider it such - and what other people will pay for. You don’t need an MBA, a business plan or even employees. All you need is a product or service that springs from what you love to do anyway, people willing to pay, and a way to get paid. Not content to talk in generalities, Chris tells you exactly how many dollars his group of unexpected entrepreneurs required to get their projects up and running; what these individuals did in the first weeks and months to generate significant cash; some of the key mistakes they made along the way, and the crucial insights that made the business stick. Among Chris’s key principles: if you’re good at one thing, you’re probably good at something else; never teach a man to fish - sell him the fish instead; and in the battle between planning and action, action wins. In ancient times, people who were dissatisfied with their lives dreamed of finding magic lamps, buried treasure, or streets paved with gold. Today, we know that it’s up to us to change our lives. And the best part is, if we change our own life, we can help others change theirs. This remarkable book will start you on your way.

Bold is a radical, how-to guide for using exponential technologies, moonshot thinking, and crowd-powered tools to create extraordinary wealth while also positively impacting the lives of billions. Exploring the exponential technologies that are disrupting today's Fortune 500 companies and enabling upstart entrepreneurs to go from "I've got an idea" to "I run a billion-dollar company" far faster than ever before, the authors provide exceptional insight into the power of 3-D printing, artificial intelligence, robotics, networks and sensors, and synthetic biology. Drawing on insights from billionaire entrepreneurs Larry Page, Elon Musk, Richard Branson, and Jeff Bezos, the audiobook offers the best practices that allow anyone to leverage today's hyper connected crowd like never before. The authors teach how to design and use incentive competitions, launch million-dollar crowdfunding campaigns to tap into tens of billions of dollars of capital, and build communities - armies of exponentially enabled individuals willing and able to help today's entrepreneurs make their boldest dreams come true. Bold is both a manifesto and a manual. It is today's exponential entrepreneur's go-to resource on the use of emerging technologies, thinking at scale, and the awesome impact of crowd-powered tools.

The answer is simple: come up with 10 ideas a day. It doesn't matter if they are good or bad, the key is to exercise your "idea muscle", to keep it toned, and in great shape. People say ideas are cheap and execution is everything but that is NOT true. Execution is a consequence, a subset of good, brilliant idea. And good ideas require daily work. Ideas may be easy if we are only coming up with one or two but if you open this book to any of the pages and try to produce more than three, you will feel a burn, scratch your head, and you will be sweating, and working hard. There is a turning point when you reach idea number six for the day, you still have four to go, and your mind muscle is getting a workout. By the time you list those last ideas to make it to 10 you will see for yourself what "sweating the idea muscle" means. As you practice the daily idea generation you become an idea machine. When we become idea machines we are flooded with lots of bad ideas but also with some that are very good. This happens by the sheer force of the number, because we are coming up with 3,650 ideas per year (at 10 a day). When you are inspired by an extraordinary idea, all of your thoughts break their chains, you go beyond limitations and your capacity to act expands in every direction. Forces and abilities you did not know you had come to the surface, and you realize you are capable of doing great things. As you practice with the suggested prompts in this book your ideas will get better, you will be a source of great insight for others, people will find you magnetic, and they will want to hang out with you because you have so much to offer. When you practice every day your life will transform, in no more than 180 days, because it has no other evolutionary choice. Life changes for the better when we become the source of positive, insightful, and helpful ideas. Don't believe a word I say. Instead, challenge yourself.

A Guide to Resilience: How to Bounce Back from Life's Inevitable Problems Christian Moore is convinced that each of us has a power hidden within, something that can get us through any kind of adversity. That power is resilience. In The Resilience Breakthrough, Moore delivers a practical primer on how you can become more resilient in a world of instability and narrowing opportunity, whether you're facing financial troubles, health setbacks, challenges on the job, or any other problem. We can each have our own resilience breakthrough, Moore argues, and can each learn how to use adverse circumstances as potent fuel for overcoming life's hardships. As he shares engaging real-life stories and brutally honest analyses of his own experiences, Moore equips you with 27 resilience-building tools that you can start using today - in your personal life or in your organization.

What if someone told you that your behavior was controlled by a powerful, invisible force? Most of us would be skeptical of such a claim--but it's largely true. Our brains are constantly transmitting and receiving signals of which we are unaware. Studies show that these constant inputs drive the great majority of our decisions about what to do next--and we become conscious of the decisions only after we start acting on them. Many may find that disturbing. But the implications for leadership are profound. In this provocative yet practical book, renowned speaking coach and communication expert Nick Morgan highlights recent research that shows how humans are programmed to respond to the nonverbal cues of others--subtle gestures, sounds, and signals--that elicit emotion. He then provides a clear, useful framework of seven "power cues" that will be essential for any leader in business, the public sector, or almost any context. You'll learn crucial skills, from measuring nonverbal signs of confidence, to the art and practice of gestures and vocal tones, to figuring out what your gut is really telling you. This concise and engaging guide will help leaders and aspiring leaders of all stripes to connect powerfully, communicate more effectively, and command influence.

New York Times bestselling author and social media expert Gary Vaynerchuk shares hard-won advice on how to connect with customers and beat the competition. A mash-up of the best elements of Crush It! and The Thank You Economy with a fresh spin, Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook is a blueprint to social media marketing strategies that really works. When managers and marketers outline their social media strategies, they plan for the "right hook"—their next sale or campaign that's going to knock out the competition. Even companies committed to jabbing—patiently engaging with customers to build the relationships crucial to successful social media campaigns—want to land the punch that will take down their opponent or their customer's resistance in one blow. Right hooks convert traffic to sales and easily show results. Except when they don't. Thanks to massive change and proliferation in social media platforms, the winning combination of jabs and right hooks is different now. Vaynerchuk shows that while communication is still key, context matters more than ever. It's not just about developing high-quality content, but developing high-quality content perfectly adapted to specific social media platforms and mobile devices—content tailor-made for Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter and Tumblr.

From the best-selling author of The Black Swan and one of the foremost thinkers of our time, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a book on how some things actually benefit from disorder. In The Black Swan Taleb outlined a problem, and in Antifragile he offers a definitive solution: how to gain from disorder and chaos while being protected from fragilities and adverse events. For what Taleb calls the "antifragile" is actually beyond the robust, because it benefits from shocks, uncertainty, and stressors, just as human bones get stronger when subjected to stress and tension. The antifragile needs disorder in order to survive and flourish. Taleb stands uncertainty on its head, making it desirable, even necessary, and proposes that things be built in an antifragile manner. The antifragile is immune to prediction errors. Why is the city-state better than the nation-state, why is debt bad for you, and why is everything that is both modern and complicated bound to fail? The audiobook spans innovation by trial and error, health, biology, medicine, life decisions, politics, foreign policy, urban planning, war, personal finance, and economic systems. And throughout, in addition to the street wisdom of Fat Tony of Brooklyn, the voices and recipes of ancient wisdom, from Roman, Greek, Semitic, and medieval sources, are heard loud and clear. Extremely ambitious and multidisciplinary, Antifragile provides a blueprint for how to behave - and thrive - in a world we don't understand, and which is too uncertain for us to even try to understand and predict. Erudite and witty, Taleb’s message is revolutionary: What is not antifragile will surely perish.

The Cluetrain Manifesto began as a Web site in 1999 when the authors, who have worked variously at IBM, Sun Microsystems, the Linux Journal, and NPR, posted 95 theses about the new reality of the networked marketplace. Ten years after its original publication, their message remains more relevant than ever. For example, thesis no. 2: “Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors”; thesis no. 20: “Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them.” The book enlarges on these themes through dozens of stories and observations about business in America and how the Internet will continue to change it all. With a new introduction and chapters by the authors, and commentary by Jake McKee, JP Rangaswami, and Dan Gillmor, this book is essential reading for anybody interested in the Internet and e-commerce, and is especially vital for businesses navigating the topography of the wired marketplace.

From the founders of the trailblazing software company 37signals, here is a different kind of business book one that explores a new reality. Today, anyone can be in business. Tools that used to be out of reach are now easily accessible. Technology that cost thousands is now just a few bucks or even free. Stuff that was impossible just a few years ago is now simple.That means anyone can start a business. And you can do it without working miserable 80-hour weeks or depleting your life savings. You can start it on the side while your day job provides all the cash flow you need. Forget about business plans, meetings, office space - you don't need them. With its straightforward language and easy-is-better approach, Rework is the perfect playbook for anyone who's ever dreamed of doing it on their own. Hardcore entrepreneurs, small-business owners, people stuck in day jobs who want to get out, and artists who don't want to starve anymore will all find valuable inspiration and guidance in these pages. It's time to rework work.


Tesla's main source of inspiration.
Roger Joseph Boscovich, a physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, theologian, Jesuit priest, and polymath, published the first edition of his famous work, Philosophiae Naturalis Theoria Redacta Ad Unicam Legem Virium In Natura Existentium (Theory Of Natural Philosophy Derived To The Single Law Of Forces Which Exist In Nature), in Vienna, in 1758, containing his atomic theory and his theory of forces. A second edition was published in 1763 in Venice

Bill Clinton's Georgetown mentor's history of the Conspiracy since the Boer War in South Africa.
TRAGEDY AND HOPE shows the years 1895-1950 as a period of transition from the world dominated by Europe in the nineteenth century to the world of three blocs in the twentieth century. With clarity, perspective, and cumulative impact, Professor Quigley examines the nature of that transition through two world wars and a worldwide economic depression. As an interpretative historian, he tries to show each event in the full complexity of its historical context. The result is a unique work, notable in several ways. It gives a picture of the world in terms of the influence of different cultures and outlooks upon each other; it shows, more completely than in any similar work, the influence of science and technology on human life; and it explains, with unprecedented clarity, how the intricate financial and commercial patterns of the West prior to 1914 influenced the development of today’s world.

This is the July, 2016 ALTA (Asymmetric Linguistic Trends Analysis) Report. Also known as 'the Web Bot' report, this series is brought to you by halfpasthuman.com. This report covers your future world from July 2016 through to 2031. Forecasts are created using predictive linguistics (from the inventor) and cover your planet, your population, your economy and markets, and your Space Goat Farts where you will find all the 'unknown' and 'officially denied' woo-woo that will be shaping your environment over these next few decades.

Time is considered as an independent entity which cannot be reduced to the concept of matter, space or field. The point of discussion is the "time flow" conception of N A Kozyrev (1908-1983), an outstanding Russian astronomer and natural scientist. In addition to a review of the experimental studies of "the active properties of time", by both Kozyrev and modern scientists, the reader will find different interpretations of Kozyrev's views and some developments of his ideas in the fields of geophysics, astrophysics, general relativity and theoretical mechanics.

How UFO Time Engines work - Clif High

The webpage discusses the workings of UFO time engines according to N.A. Kozyrev's experiments. The LL1 engine is described as a hollow metal sphere with a pool of mercury metal inside. When activated by electrical energy, it creates a uni-polar magnetic field causing the mercury to spin at a high rate and induce "time stuff" to accumulate on its surface. The accrued time stuff is siphoned down magnetically to the radiating antennae on the bottom of the vessel, providing self-sustaining power and allowing for time travel. The environment inside UFOs is likely volatile and not suitable for humans.

The Body Electric tells the fascinating story of our bioelectric selves. Robert O. Becker, a pioneer in the filed of regeneration and its relationship to electrical currents in living things, challenges the established mechanistic understanding of the body. He found clues to the healing process in the long-discarded theory that electricity is vital to life. But as exciting as Becker's discoveries are, pointing to the day when human limbs, spinal cords, and organs may be regenerated after they have been damaged, equally fascinating is the story of Becker's struggle to do such original work. The Body Electric explores new pathways in our understanding of evolution, acupuncture, psychic phenomena, and healing.

Unique, controversial, and frequently cited, this survey offers highly detailed accounts concerning the development of ideas and theories about the nature of electricity and space (aether). Readily accessible to general readers as well as high school students, teachers, and undergraduates, it includes much information unavailable elsewhere. This single-volume edition comprises both The Classical Theories and The Modern Theories, which were originally published separately. The first volume covers the theories of classical physics from the age of the Greek philosophers to the late 19th century. The second volume chronicles discoveries that led to the advances of modern physics, focusing on special relativity, quantum theories, general relativity, matrix mechanics, and wave mechanics. Noted historian of science I. Bernard Cohen, who reviewed these books for Scientific American, observed, "I know of no other history of electricity which is as sound as Whittaker's. All those who have found stimulation from his works will read this informative and accurate history with interest and profit."

The third edition of the defining text for the graduate-level course in Electricity and Magnetism has finally arrived! It has been 37 years since the first edition and 24 since the second. The new edition addresses the changes in emphasis and applications that have occurred in the field, without any significant increase in length.

Objects are a ubiquitous presence and few of us stop and think what they mean in our lives. This is the job of philosophers and this is what Jean Baudrillard does in his book. This is required reading for followers of Baudrillard, and he is perhaps the most assessable to the General Reader. Baudrillard is most associated with Post Modernism, and this early book sets the stage for that journey to the post modern world.
We are all surrounded by objects, but how many times have we thought about what those objects represent. If we took the time to think about the symbolism, we could arrive at easy solutions. We have been so accustomed to advertising the automobile representing freedom is an easy conclusion. But what about furniture? What about chairs? What about the arrangement of furniture? Watches? Collecting objects? Baudrillard literally opens up a new world and creates the universe of objects.
It is not that the critique of a society or objects has not been done before, but Baudrillard’s approach is new. Baudrillard examines objects as signs with a smattering of Post-Marxist thought. In his analysis of objects as signs, he ushers in the Post-Modern age and world for which he would be known. Heady stuff to be sure, but is presented by Baudrillard in a readily accessible manner. He articulates his thesis in a straightforward manner, avoiding the hyper-technical terminology he used in his later writings.

Moving away from the Marxist/Freudian approaches that had concerned him earlier, Baudrillard developed in this book a theory of contemporary culture that relies on displacing economic notions of cultural production with notions of cultural expenditure.

The book begins with Sidis's discovery of the first law of physical laws: "Among the physical laws it is a general characteristic that there is reversibility in time; that is, should the whole universe trace back the various positions that bodies in it have passed through in a given interval of time, but in the reverse order to that in which these positions actually occurred, then the universe, in this imaginary case, would still obey the same laws." Recent discoveries of dark matter are predicted by him in this book, and he goes on to show that the "Big Bang" is wrong. Sidis (SIGH-dis) shows that it is far more likely the universe is eternal

In this book you will encounter rare information regarding your true identity - the conscious self in the body - and how you may break the hypnotic spell your senses and thinking have cast about you since childhood.

Do we see the world as it truly is? In The Case Against Reality, pioneering cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman says no? we see what we need in order to survive. Our visual perceptions are not a window onto reality, Hoffman shows us, but instead are interfaces constructed by natural selection. The objects we see around us are not unlike the file icons on our computer desktops: while shaped like a small folder on our screens, the files themselves are made of a series of ones and zeros - too complex for most of us to understand. In a similar way, Hoffman argues, evolution has shaped our perceptions into simplistic illusions to help us navigate the world around us. Yet now these illusions can be manipulated by advertising and design.
Drawing on thirty years of Hoffman's own influential research, as well as evolutionary biology, game theory, neuroscience, and philosophy, The Case Against Reality makes the mind-bending yet utterly convincing case that the world is nothing like what we see through our eyes.

At the height of the Cold War, JFK risked committing the greatest crime in human history: starting a nuclear war. Horrified by the specter of nuclear annihilation, Kennedy gradually turned away from his long-held Cold Warrior beliefs and toward a policy of lasting peace. But to the military and intelligence agencies in the United States, who were committed to winning the Cold War at any cost, Kennedy’s change of heart was a direct threat to their power and influence. Once these dark “Unspeakable” forces recognized that Kennedy’s interests were in direct opposition to their own, they tagged him as a dangerous traitor, plotted his assassination, and orchestrated the subsequent cover-up.

2020 saw a spike in deaths in America, smaller than you might imagine during a pandemic, some of which could be attributed to COVID and to initial treatment strategies that were not effective. But then, in 2021, the stats people expected went off the rails. The CEO of the OneAmerica insurance company publicly disclosed that during the third and fourth quarters of 2021, death in people of working age (18–64) was 40 percent higher than it was before the pandemic. Significantly, the majority of the deaths were not attributed to COVID. A 40 percent increase in deaths is literally earth-shaking. Even a 10 percent increase in excess deaths would have been a 1-in-200-year event. But this was 40 percent. And therein lies a story—a story that starts with obvious questions: - What has caused this historic spike in deaths among younger people? - What has caused the shift from old people, who are expected to die, to younger people, who are expected to keep living?

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

RFK Jr: 23.5% GREATER likelihood of dying - 09-06-2023

The Tavistock Institute, in Sussex, England, describes itself as a nonprofit charity that applies social science to contemporary issues and problems. But this book posits that it is the world’s center for mass brainwashing and social engineering activities. It grew from a somewhat crude beginning at Wellington House into a sophisticated organization that was to shape the destiny of the entire planet, and in the process, change the paradigm of modern society. In this eye-opening work, both the Tavistock network and the methods of brainwashing and psychological warfare are uncovered.

A seminal and controversial figure in the history of political thought and public relations, Edward Bernays (1891–1995), pioneered the scientific technique of shaping and manipulating public opinion, which he famously dubbed “engineering of consent.” During World War I, he was an integral part of the U.S. Committee on Public Information (CPI), a powerful propaganda apparatus that was mobilized to package, advertise and sell the war to the American people as one that would “Make the World Safe for Democracy.” The CPI would become the blueprint in which marketing strategies for future wars would be based upon.
Bernays applied the techniques he had learned in the CPI and, incorporating some of the ideas of Walter Lipmann, as well as his uncle, Sigmund Freud, became an outspoken proponent of propaganda as a tool for democratic and corporate manipulation of the population. His 1928 bombshell Propaganda lays out his eerily prescient vision for using propaganda to regiment the collective mind in a variety of areas, including government, politics, art, science and education. To read this book today is to frightfully comprehend what our contemporary institutions of government and business have become in regards to organized manipulation of the masses.

Undressing the Bible: in Hebrew, the Old Testament speaks for itself, explicitly and transparently. It tells of mysterious beings, special and powerful ones, that appeared on Earth.
Aliens?
Former earthlings?
Superior civilizations, that have always been present on our planet?
Creators, manipulators, geneticists. Aviators, warriors, despotic rulers. And scientists, possessing very advanced knowledge, special weapons and science-fiction-like technologies.
Once naked, the Bible is very different from how it has always been told to us: it does not contain any spiritual, omnipotent and omniscient God, no eternity. No apples and no creeping, tempting, serpents. No winged angels. Not even the Red Sea: the people of the Exodus just wade through a simple reed bed.
Writer and journalist Giorgio Cattaneo sits down with Italy's most renowned biblical translator for his first long interview about his life's work for the English audience. A decade long official Bible translator for the Church and lifelong researcher of ancient myths and tales, Mauro Bilglino is a unicum in his field of expertise and research. A fine connoisseur of dead languages, from ancient Greek to Hebrew and medieval Latin, he focused his attention and efforts on the accurate translating of the bible.
The encounter with Mauro Biglino and his work - the journalist writes - is profoundly healthy, stimulating and inevitably destabilizing: it forces us to reconsider the solidity of the awareness that nourishes many of our common beliefs. And it is a testament to the courage that is needed, today more than ever, to claim the full dignity of free research.

Most people have heard of Jesus Christ, considered the Messiah by Christians, and who lived 2000 years ago. But very few have ever heard of Sabbatai Zevi, who declared himself the Messiah in 1666. By proclaiming redemption was available through acts of sin, he amassed a following of over one million passionate believers, about half the world's Jewish population during the 17th century.Although many Rabbis at the time considered him a heretic, his fame extended far and wide. Sabbatai's adherents planned to abolish many ritualistic observances, because, according to the Talmud, holy obligations would no longer apply in the Messianic time. Fasting days became days of feasting and rejoicing. Sabbateans encouraged and practiced sexual promiscuity, adultery, incest and religious orgies.After Sabbati Zevi's death in 1676, his Kabbalist successor, Jacob Frank, expanded upon and continued his occult philosophy. Frankism, a religious movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, centered on his leadership, and his claim to be the reincarnation of the Messiah Sabbatai Zevi. He, like Zevi, would perform "strange acts" that violated traditional religious taboos, such as eating fats forbidden by Jewish dietary laws, ritual sacrifice, and promoting orgies and sexual immorality. He often slept with his followers, as well as his own daughter, while preaching a doctrine that the best way to imitate God was to cross every boundary, transgress every taboo, and mix the sacred with the profane. Hebrew University of Jerusalem Professor Gershom Scholem called Jacob Frank, "one of the most frightening phenomena in the whole of Jewish history".Jacob Frank would eventually enter into an alliance formed by Adam Weishaupt and Meyer Amshel Rothschild called the Order of the Illuminati. The objectives of this organization was to undermine the world's religions and power structures, in an effort to usher in a utopian era of global communism, which they would covertly rule by their hidden hand: the New World Order. Using secret societies, such as the Freemasons, their agenda has played itself out over the centuries, staying true to the script. The Illuminati handle opposition by a near total control of the world's media, academic opinion leaders, politicians and financiers. Still considered nothing more than theory to many, more and more people wake up each day to the possibility that this is not just a theory, but a terrifying Satanic conspiracy.

This is the first English translation of this revolutionary essay by Vladimir I. Vernadsky, the great Russian-Ukrainian biogeochemist. It was first published in 1930 in French in the Revue générale des sciences pures et appliquées. In it, Vernadsky makes a powerful and provocative argument for the need to develop what he calls “a new physics,” something he felt was clearly necessitated by the implications of the groundbreaking work of Louis Pasteur among few others, but also something that was required to free science from the long-lasting effects of the work of Isaac Newton, most notably.
For hundreds of years, science had developed in a direction which became increasingly detached from the breakthroughs made in the study of life and the natural sciences, detached even from human life itself, and committed reductionists and small-minded scientists were resolved to the fact that ultimately all would be reduced to “the old physics.” The scientific revolution of Einstein was a step in the right direction, but here Vernadsky insists that there is more progress to be made. He makes a bold call for a new physics, taking into account, and fundamentally based upon, the striking anomalies of life and human life.

Using an inspired combination of geometric logic and metaphors from familiar human experience, Bucky invites readers to join him on a trip through a four-dimensional Universe, where concepts as diverse as entropy, Einstein's relativity equations, and the meaning of existence become clear, understandable, and immediately involving. In his own words: "Dare to be naive... It is one of our most exciting discoveries that local discovery leads to a complex of further discoveries." Here are three key examples or concepts from "Synergetics":

Tensegrity

Tensegrity, or tensional integrity, refers to structural systems that use a combination of tension and compression components. The simplest example of this is the "tensegrity triangle", where three struts are held in position not by touching one another but by tensioned wires. These systems are stable and flexible. Tensegrity structures are pervasive in natural systems, from the cellular level up to larger biological and even cosmological scales.

Vector Equilibrium (VE)

The Vector Equilibrium, often referred to by Fuller as the "VE", is a geometric form that he saw as the central form in his synergetic geometry. It’s essentially a cuboctahedron. Fuller noted that the VE is the only geometric form wherein all the vectors (lines from the center to the vertices) are of equal length and angular relationship. Because of this, it’s seen as a condition of absolute equilibrium, where the forces of push and pull are balanced.

Closest Packing of Spheres

Fuller was fascinated by how spheres could be packed together in the tightest possible configuration, a concept he often linked to how nature organizes systems. For example, when you stack oranges in a grocery store, they form a hexagonal pattern, and the spheres (oranges) are in closest-packed arrangement. Fuller related this principle to atomic structures and even cosmic organization.

To prepare Americans and freedom loving people everywhere for our current global wartime reality that few understand, here comes The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare (CG5GW) by Lieutenant General, U.S. Army (Retired) Michael T. Flynn and Sergeant, U.S. Army (Retired) Boone Cutler. General Flynn rose to the highest levels of the intelligence community and served as the National Security Advisor to the 45th POTUS. Sergeant Boone Cutler ran the ground game as a wartime Psychological Operations team sergeant in the United States Army. Together, these two combat veterans put their combined experience and expertise into an illuminating fifth-generation warfare information series called The Citizen's Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare. Introduction to 5GW is the first session of the multipart series. The series, complete with easy-to-understand diagrams, is written for all of humanity in every freedom loving country.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Biosphere :

  • Vernadsky defined the biosphere as the thin layer of Earth where life exists, encompassing all living organisms and the parts of the Earth where they interact. This includes the depths of the oceans to the upper layers of the atmosphere.
  • He posited that life plays a critical role in transforming the Earth's environment. In this view, living organisms are not just passive inhabitants of the planet, but active agents of change. This idea contrasts with more traditional views that saw life as simply adapting to pre-existing environmental conditions.
  • One example of this transformative power is the oxygen-rich atmosphere, which was created by photosynthesizing organisms over billions of years.

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

Vladimir I. Vernadsky (1863-1945) was a Russian and Ukrainian mineralogist and geochemist who is best known for his work on the biosphere and the noosphere concepts. His ideas have profoundly influenced various scientific fields, from geology to biology and even philosophy. Here's the summary of his one of his concepts:

Noosphere :

  • The concept of the noosphere can be seen as the next evolutionary stage following the biosphere. While the biosphere represents the realm of life, the noosphere represents the realm of human thought.
  • Vernadsky believed that, just as life transformed the Earth through the biosphere, human thought and collective intelligence would transform the planet in the era of the noosphere. This transformation would be characterized by the dominance of cultural evolution over biological evolution.
  • In this paradigm, human knowledge, technology, and cultural developments would become the primary drivers of change on the planet, influencing its future direction.
  • The term "noosphere" is derived from the Greek word “nous” meaning "mind" or "intellect" and "sphaira" meaning "sphere." So, the noosphere can be thought of as the "sphere of human thought."

It's worth noting that Vernadsky's ideas were formulated in a period when the world was experiencing rapid technological changes and were before the advent of concerns about global challenges like climate change. Today, his ideas can be seen in a new light, as we recognize the significant impact human activity has on the planet, from the changing climate to the alteration of biogeochemical cycles. Overall, Vernadsky's thesis about the biosphere and the noosphere offers a holistic perspective on the evolution of the Earth and humanity's role in that evolution. It emphasizes the profound interconnectedness between life, the environment, and human cognition and culture.

A close analysis of the architecture of the stupa―a Buddhist symbolic form that is found throughout South, Southeast, and East Asia. The author, who trained as an architect, examines both the physical and metaphysical levels of these buildings, which derive their meaning and significance from Buddhist and Brahmanist influences.

Building on his extensive research into the sacred symbols and creation myths of the Dogon of Africa and those of ancient Egypt, India, and Tibet, Laird Scranton investigates the myths, symbols, and traditions of prehistoric China, providing further evidence that the cosmology of all ancient cultures arose from a single now-lost source.

It is at the same time a history of language, a guide to foreign tongues, and a method for learning them. It shows, through basic vocabularies, family resemblances of languages―Teutonic, Romance, Greek―helpful tricks of translation, key combinations of roots and phonetic patterns. It presents by common-sense methods the most helpful approach to the mastery of many languages; it condenses vocabulary to a minimum of essential words; it simplifies grammar in an entirely new way; and it teaches a languages as it is actually used in everyday life.
But this book is more than a guide to foreign languages; it goes deep into the roots of all knowledge as it explores the history of speech. It lights up the dim pathways of prehistory and unfolds the story of the slow growth of human expression from the most primitive signs and sounds to the elaborate variations of the highest cultures. Without language no knowledge would be possible; here we see how language is at once the source and the reservoir of all we know.

Taking only the most elementary knowledge for granted, Lancelot Hogben leads readers of this famous book through the whole course from simple arithmetic to calculus. His illuminating explanation is addressed to the person who wants to understand the place of mathematics in modern civilization but who has been intimidated by its supposed difficulty. Mathematics is the language of size, shape, and order―a language Hogben shows one can both master and enjoy.

A complete manual for the study and practice of Raja Yoga, the path of concentration and meditation. These timeless teachings is a treasure to be read and referred to again and again by seekers treading the spiritual path. The classic Sutras, at least 4,000 years old, cover the yogic teachings on ethics, meditation, and physical postures, and provide directions for dealing with situations in daily life. The Sutras are presented here in the purest form, with the original Sanskrit and with translation, transliteration, and commentary by Sri Swami Satchidananda, one of the most respected and revered contemporary Yoga masters. Sri Swamiji offers practical advice based on his own experience for mastering the mind and achieving physical, mental and emotional harmony.

William Strauss and Neil Howe will change the way you see the world - and your place in it. With blazing originality, The Fourth Turning illuminates the past, explains the present, and reimagines the future. Most remarkably, it offers an utterly persuasive prophecy about how America’s past will predict its future.

Strauss and Howe base this vision on a provocative theory of American history. The authors look back 500 years and uncover a distinct pattern: Modern history moves in cycles, each one lasting about the length of a long human life, each composed of four eras - or "turnings" - that last about 20 years and that always arrive in the same order. In The Fourth Turning, the authors illustrate these cycles using a brilliant analysis of the post-World War II period.

First comes a High, a period of confident expansion as a new order takes root after the old has been swept away. Next comes an Awakening, a time of spiritual exploration and rebellion against the now-established order. Then comes an Unraveling, an increasingly troubled era in which individualism triumphs over crumbling institutions. Last comes a Crisis - the Fourth Turning - when society passes through a great and perilous gate in history. Together, the four turnings comprise history's seasonal rhythm of growth, maturation, entropy, and rebirth.

4th Turning

Excess Deaths & Why RFK Jr. Can Win The Democratic Presidential Race - Ed Dowd | Part 1 of 2 - 06-21-2023

All original edition. Nothing added, nothing removed. This book traces the history of the ancient Khazar Empire, a major but almost forgotten power in Eastern Europe, which in the Dark Ages became converted to Judaism. Khazaria was finally wiped out by the forces of Genghis Khan, but evidence indicates that the Khazars themselves migrated to Poland and formed the cradle of Western Jewry. To the general reader the Khazars, who flourished from the 7th to 11th century, may seem infinitely remote today. Yet they have a close and unexpected bearing on our world, which emerges as Koestler recounts the fascinating history of the ancient Khazar Empire.

At about the time that Charlemagne was Emperor in the West. The Khazars' sway extended from the Black Sea to the Caspian, from the Caucasus to the Volga, and they were instrumental in stopping the Muslim onslaught against Byzantium, the eastern jaw of the gigantic pincer movement that in the West swept across northern Africa and into Spain.Thereafter the Khazars found themselves in a precarious position between the two major world powers: the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium and the triumphant followers of Mohammed.As Koestler points out, the Khazars were the Third World of their day. They chose a surprising method of resisting both the Western pressure to become Christian and the Eastern to adopt Islam. Rejecting both, they converted to Judaism. Mr. Koestler speculates about the ultimate faith of the Khazars and their impact on the racial composition and social heritage of modern Jewry.

Few people noticed the secret codewords used by our astronauts to describe the moon. Until now, few knew about the strange moving lights they reported.
George H. Leonard, former NASA scientist, fought through the official veil of secrecy and studied thousands of NASA photographs, spoke candidly with dozens of NASA officials, and listened to hours and hours of astronauts' tapes.
Here, Leonard presents the stunning and inescapable evidence discovered during his in-depth investigation:

  • Immense mechanical rigs, some over a mile long, working the lunar surface.
  • Strange geometric ground markings and symbols.
  • Lunar constructions several times higher than anything built on Earth.
  • Vehicles, tracks, towers, pipes, conduits, and conveyor belts running in and across moon craters.
Somebody else is indeed on the Moon, and engaged in activities on a massive scale. Our space agencies, and many of the world's top scientists, have known for years that there is intelligent life on the moon.

The article delves into the history of the Khazars, a polity in the Northern Caucasus that existed from the mid-seventh century until about 970 CE. Contrary to popular belief, the term "Khazars" is misleading as it was a multiethnic entity, and it's uncertain which specific group adopted Judaism. The Khazars first emerged in the seventh century, defeating the Bulgars, which led to the Bulgars' dispersion to various regions. The Khazar Empire was established through the expulsion of the Bulgars and was multiethnic in nature. The language spoken by the Khazars is debated, with some suggesting Turkic origins and others pointing to Slavic. The Khazars had several cities and fortresses, with significant archaeological findings. The Khazars had interactions with various empires, including wars with the Arabs and alliances with Byzantine emperors. By the mid-10th century, the Khazar capital of Itil was destroyed by the Russians. The article concludes that much of what is known about the Khazars is based on limited sources.

#Khazars #History #Caucasus #Judaism #Bulgars #Empire #Multiethnic #LanguageDebate #ArabWars #ByzantineAlliances #Itil #RussianInvasion #Archaeology #ReligiousConversion #TabletMag

In The Science of the Dogon, Laird Scranton demonstrated that the cosmological structure described in the myths and drawings of the Dogon runs parallel to modern science--atomic theory, quantum theory, and string theory--their drawings often taking the same form as accurate scientific diagrams that relate to the formation of matter.

Sacred Symbols of the Dogon uses these parallels as the starting point for a new interpretation of the Egyptian hieroglyphic language. By substituting Dogon cosmological drawings for equivalent glyph-shapes in Egyptian words, a new way of reading and interpreting the Egyptian hieroglyphs emerges. Scranton shows how each hieroglyph constitutes an entire concept, and that their meanings are scientific in nature.

The Dogon people of Mali, West Africa, are famous for their unique art and advanced cosmology. The Dogon’s creation story describes how the one true god, Amma, created all the matter of the universe. Interestingly, the myths that depict his creative efforts bear a striking resemblance to the modern scientific definitions of matter, beginning with the atom and continuing all the way to the vibrating threads of string theory. Furthermore, many of the Dogon words, symbols, and rituals used to describe the structure of matter are quite similar to those found in the myths of ancient Egypt and in the daily rituals of Judaism. For example, the modern scientific depiction of the informed universe as a black hole is identical to Amma’s Egg of the Dogon and the Egyptian Benben Stone.

The Science of the Dogon offers a case-by-case comparison of Dogon descriptions and drawings to corresponding scientific definitions and diagrams from authors like Stephen Hawking and Brian Greene, then extends this analysis to the counterparts of these symbols in both the ancient Egyptian and Hebrew religions. What is ultimately revealed is the scientific basis for the language of the Egyptian hieroglyphs, which was deliberately encoded to prevent the knowledge of these concepts from falling into the hands of all but the highest members of the Egyptian priesthood.

Anthony C. Yu’s translation of The Journey to the West,initially published in 1983, introduced English-speaking audiences to the classic Chinese novel in its entirety for the first time. Written in the sixteenth century, The Journey to the West tells the story of the fourteen-year pilgrimage of the monk Xuanzang, one of China’s most famous religious heroes, and his three supernatural disciples, in search of Buddhist scriptures. Throughout his journey, Xuanzang fights demons who wish to eat him, communes with spirits, and traverses a land riddled with a multitude of obstacles, both real and fantastical. An adventure rich with danger and excitement, this seminal work of the Chinese literary canonis by turns allegory, satire, and fantasy.

With over a hundred chapters written in both prose and poetry, The Journey to the West has always been a complicated and difficult text to render in English while preserving the lyricism of its language and the content of its plot. But Yu has successfully taken on the task, and in this new edition he has made his translations even more accurate and accessible. The explanatory notes are updated and augmented, and Yu has added new material to his introduction, based on his original research as well as on the newest literary criticism and scholarship on Chinese religious traditions. He has also modernized the transliterations included in each volume, using the now-standard Hanyu Pinyin romanization system. Perhaps most important, Yu has made changes to the translation itself in order to make it as precise as possible.

One of the great works of Chinese literature, The Journey to the West is not only invaluable to scholars of Eastern religion and literature, but, in Yu’s elegant rendering, also a delight for any reader.

The Oera Linda Book is a 19th-century translation by Dr. Ottema and WIlliam R. Sandbach of an old manuscript written in the Old Frisian language that records historical, mythological, and religious themes of remote antiquity, compiled between 2194 BC and AD 803.

  • The Oera Linda book challenges traditional views of pre-Christian societies.
  • Christianization is likened to a "great reset" that erased previous civilizations.
  • The Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people.
  • The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting patterns in history.
  • The importance of identity and understanding one's roots is highlighted.
  • The Oera Linda book offers wisdom and insights into several European languages.

The Oera Linda book offers a fresh perspective on our history, challenging the notion that pre-Christian societies were uncivilized. It suggests that the Christianization of societies was a form of "great reset," erasing and demonizing what existed before. The Oera Linda writings hint at an advanced civilization with its own laws, writing, and societal structures. Jan Ott's translation from the Fryan language provides insights into the beliefs and values of the Fryan people. The text also touches upon the guilt many feel today, even if they aren't religious, about issues like climate change and historical slavery. It criticizes the way science is sometimes treated like a religion, with scientists acting as its preachers. The cyclical nature of time is emphasized, suggesting that understanding history requires recognizing patterns and cycles. Christianity is portrayed as one of the most significant resets in history, with sects fighting and erasing each other's scriptures. The importance of identity is highlighted, with a focus on the Fryans, a tribe that faced challenges from another tribe from Finland. This other tribe had a different moral compass, leading to conflicts and eventual assimilation. The text suggests that the true history of the Fryans and their values might have been distorted by subsequent Christian narratives. The Oera Linda book is seen as a source of wisdom, shedding light on the origins of several European languages and offering insights into values like freedom, truth, and justice.

#OeraLinda #History #Christianization #GreatReset #FryanLanguage #JanOtt #Civilization #OldTestament #Church #SpiritualAbuse #Identity #Fryans #Autland #Finland #Slavery #Christianity #Sects #Genocide #Torture #Bible #Freedom #Truth #Justice #Righteousness #Language #German #Dutch #Frisian #English #Scandinavian #Wisdom #Inspiration #European #Values

The Talmud is one of the most important holy books of the Hebrew religion and of the world. No English translation of the book existed until the author presented this work. To this day, very little of the actual text seems available in English -- although we find many interpretive commentaries on what it is supposed to mean. The Talmud has a reputation for being long and difficult to digest, but Polano has taken what he believes to be the best material and put it into extremely readable form. As far as holy books of the world are concerned, it is on par with The Koran, The Bhagavad-Gita and, of course, The Bible, in importance. This clearly written edition will allow many to experience The Talmud who may have otherwise not had the chance.

This five-volume set is the only complete English rendering of The Zohar, the fundamental rabbinic work on Jewish mysticism that has fascinated readers for more than seven centuries. In addition to being the primary reference text for kabbalistic studies, this magnificent work is arranged in the form of a commentary on the Bible, bringing to the surface the deeper meanings behind the commandments and biblical narrative. As The Zohar itself proclaims: Woe unto those who see in the Law nothing but simple narratives and ordinary words .... Every word of the Law contains an elevated sense and a sublime mystery .... The narratives of the Law are but the raiment Thin which it is swathed.

Twenty-one years ago, at a friend's request, a Massachusetts professor sketched out a blueprint for nonviolent resistance to repressive regimes. It would go on to be translated, photocopied, and handed from one activist to another, traveling from country to country across the globe: from Iran to Venezuela―where both countries consider Gene Sharp to be an enemy of the state―to Serbia; Afghanistan; Vietnam; the former Soviet Union; China; Nepal; and, more recently and notably, Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, where it has served as a guiding light of the Arab Spring.

This short, pithy, inspiring, and extraordinarily clear guide to overthrowing a dictatorship by nonviolent means lists 198 specific methods to consider, depending on the circumstances: sit-ins, popular nonobedience, selective strikes, withdrawal of bank deposits, revenue refusal, walkouts, silence, and hunger strikes. From Dictatorship to Democracy is the remarkable work that has made the little-known Sharp into the world's most effective and sought-after analyst of resistance to authoritarian regimes.

Bill Cooper, former United States Naval Intelligence Briefing Team member, reveals information that remains hidden from the public eye. This information has been kept in topsecret government files since the 1940s. His audiences hear the truth unfold as he writes about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the war on drugs, the secret government, and UFOs. Bill is a lucid, rational, and powerful speaker whose intent is to inform and to empower his audience. Standing room only is normal. His presentation and information transcend partisan affiliations as he clearly addresses issues in a way that has a striking impact on listeners of all backgrounds and interests. He has spoken to many groups throughout the United States and has appeared regularly on many radio talk shows and on television. In 1988 Bill decided to "talk" due to events then taking place worldwide, events that he had seen plans for back in the early 1970s. Bill correctly predicted the lowering of the Iron Curtain, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the invasion of Panama. All Bill's predictions were on record well before the events occurred. Bill is not a psychic. His information comes from top secret documents that he read while with the Intelligence Briefing Team and from over seventeen years of research.

The argument that the 16th Amendment (which concerns the federal income tax) was not properly ratified and thus is invalid has been a topic of debate among some tax protesters and scholars. One of the individuals associated with this theory is Bill Benson, who asserted that the 16th Amendment was fraudulently ratified. Here's a brief overview of the argument: 1. Research and Documentation: Bill Benson, along with another individual named M.J. "Red" Beckman, wrote a two-volume work called "The Law That Never Was" in the 1980s. This work was a product of Benson's extensive travels to various state archives to examine the original ratification documents related to the 16th Amendment. 2. Claims of Irregularities: In his work, Benson presented evidence that claimed many of the states either did not ratify the 16th Amendment properly or made mistakes in their resolutions. Some of these alleged irregularities included misspellings, incorrect wording, and other deviations from the proposed amendment. 3. Philander Knox's Role: In 1913, Philander Knox, who was the U.S. Secretary of State at the time, declared that the 16th Amendment had been ratified by the necessary three-fourths of the states. Benson's contention is that Knox was aware of the various discrepancies and irregularities in the ratification process but chose to fraudulently declare the amendment ratified anyway. 4. Legal Challenges and Court Rulings: Over the years, some tax protesters have used Benson's findings to challenge the legality of the income tax. However, these challenges have been consistently rejected by the courts. In fact, several courts have addressed Benson's research and arguments directly and found them to be without legal merit. The courts have repeatedly upheld the validity of the 16th Amendment. 5. Counterarguments: Critics of Benson's theory argue that even if there were minor discrepancies in the wording or format of the ratification documents, they do not invalidate the overarching intent of the states to ratify the amendment. Additionally, they assert that there's no substantive evidence that Knox acted fraudulently. It's worth noting that despite the popularity of this theory among certain groups, the legal consensus in the U.S. is that the 16th Amendment was validly ratified and is a legitimate part of the U.S. Constitution. Those who refuse to pay income taxes based on this theory have faced legal penalties.

The article delves into the evolution of the concept of the ether in physics. Historically, the ether was postulated to explain the propagation of light, with figures like Newton and Huygens suggesting its existence. By the late 19th century, Maxwell's electromagnetic theory linked light's propagation to the ether, a theory experimentally validated by Hertz in 1888. Lorentz expanded on this, focusing on wave transmission in moving media. The article contrasts the English approach, which sought tangible models, with the phenomenological view, which aimed for a descriptive approach without specific hypotheses. The piece also touches on various mechanical theories and models proposed over the years, emphasizing the challenges in defining the ether's properties and its evolving nature in scientific discourse.

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Old instruction set – 08-02-2023

Old instruction set - 08-02-2023

Old instruction set - 08-02-2023

Episode Summary:

The speaker discusses the unique perspective that Patanjali's Yoga Sutras are not about traditional yoga, but instead, a manual for mind-to-machine interfaces used by aliens. These interfaces were critical, with misuse posing life-threatening risks. Over time, these machines disappeared, but the instruction manual persisted. The Yoga Sutras were written down as a sequence of instructions. Many misunderstand this manual, correlating it with enlightenment. The speaker practiced concentration techniques from the Sutras and emphasizes its difference from meditation, as concentration ensures correct interface use.

The text presents an alternative interpretation of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, suggesting they might be an instruction manual for space travel via mental processes and machine interfaces, rather than a guide to enlightenment. The author believes that most who pick up the Sutras abandon them, but those who persist can develop mental rigor and discipline. Drawing from their 50-year experience, they've achieved their goals and feel confident interfacing with these supposed space machines. They further explore the oral traditions of the Torah and highlight the ease of memorizing the Sutras compared to larger religious texts.

The commentary on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras has been misinterpreted over time, with many focusing on meditation and enlightenment. However, the book's true intent is to offer instructions on safely operating mind-machine interfaces, not achieving enlightenment. There are risks associated with these machines, which can be fatal if not used correctly. The LK 99 discovery could potentially change our world, offering devices controlled by thought. The Patanjali Sutras offer valuable guidance for this, especially with the possibility of existing machines in secret government locations. There's speculation on space aliens' intentions and the role of historical figures in this narrative.

#Bible #Cities #Coast #Commentaries #Concentration #ConcentrationExercises #Discovery #Elohim #Enlightenment #EnlightenmentExperience #Etymology #HistoricalFigures #Hindi #HinduLanguages #Humans #InstructionManual #Instructions #Judaism #LK99 #MachineInterface #Machinery #Meditation #Memorize #MentalRigor #MindMachineInterfaces #MindToMachineInterfaces #Misinterpretation #Mongols #OralTradition #OutwardBound #PatanjaliYogaSutras #PatanjalisYogaSutras #Powers #Practical #SafetyInstructions #SpaceAliens #SpaceTravel #Superheroes #SuperhumanPowers #Talmud #TemporalCoincidence #ThoughtControl #Torah #Translations #Workbook #Yoga #YogaTeachers

Old instruction set - 08-02-2023

Hello, humans. Hello, humans. Outward Bound heading back out to the coast. It's on its way to eleven.

What's going on there? Okay.

And anyway, so as I say, very excited about the LK 99. It's very interesting conceptually to me at this very deep level that that's emerging at the same time that my discovery, which is a maybe, okay, so I'm maintaining it's a discovery. We have yet to prove it, though, right? The LK 99 is in the process of being proven, and my discovery about Patanjali's Yoga Sutras not being about yoga as we understand it, right? No stretchy pants, any of that kind of shit.

It's interesting that these two are temporally coincident. I like temporally coincident things, right? It provides another layer of meaning to all of this sort of thing. Man, have they done some serious logging here. Anyway, so if I'm accurate, then Patanjali's Yoga Sutras are a recitation of line by line by line instructions from a manual on how to use these mind to machine interfaces that the space aliens had.

And then we had an instruction book. And then over time, everybody memorized the instructions because it's really fucking important because you can kill yourself and others if you don't and you're the operator of one of these machines.

Then over time, it became where the machinery wasn't here anymore. Presumably the space aliens took it all with them when they left. I have reasons to think I understand why they left as well, so I'll have a little talk about that later. But anyway, the mind to machine interface persisted as a set of instructions. Step A, step B, step C, and so on.

Patanjali's Yoga Sutra is 151 lines, individual lines, aphorisms. They say sutras, which is a single line of text intending to convey an idea without elucidation or an expansion of that idea. No commentary or anything, just the lines itself. Very much as though we had memorized 150 sets of instructions on how to use these machines and then wrote them down. And then later on, somebody says this must be related to getting enlightenment, right?

And so here's the thing. If we look at this realistically, the Yoga Sutras are very good. I've practiced the concentration exercises since I was 17 earlier, probably 15 when I had my first glimpse of one of these books. Anyway, so I practice it's divided into three sections. There's a general introduction of 50 sutras.

Then there's the concentration area of 50 sutras. Then there's the powers. That's 51 sutras. The powers, by the way, are what happen when you are able to control these mind machine interfaces. It's not like people understand the word today as being somehow like, superpower.

Okay? All right, so all superheroes come from Judaism, all right? That's the idea. The Ubermensch. So the Jews have this idea that the El the Elohim are so we get all the superhero comics, all of this.

It stems from the Jewish tradition, from judaism, which actually it goes all the way back to the Babylonian Talmud, which predates the Jewish Talmud. And we get the idea that the l are Superman and we're know the Schlubs, the Nebbish, and they have all these powers and stuff. Now, in the Yoga Sutras idea, people got the idea that if you did these concentration exercises and stuff, you could acquire personal power in your brain and your body that would allow you to do these superhero things, right? Because in the past and we're talking far distant past, I'm figuring about 13,000 years back, something like that. But in the past, you were able to connect yourself to one of these machines and you would get the cities, the powers.

And the powers are the ability to travel space, zip around, operate machinery, all different kinds of things. Because it was not just their spaceships that were connected to these mind to machine interfaces. This was like the generalized interface for their society. There are reasons to suspect that the Elohim were very bad at operating this equipment themselves. There's reason to suspect that they did not invent it, that they stole this technology and used it and used it with their slaves.

And there's reason to suspect that humans have an inherent native capacity that the Elohim do not, and that that's why we were valuable to them.

We have reasons to suspect a lot of these various different permutations of this thought. Right? Anyway, so superheroism derives from the ability of humans in the past, thousands of years ago, to get basically superhuman powers with their mind by jacking into these machines and controlling them a certain way. Now, as I say, I've had one of these books. I bought my first copy when I was 17.

I read one when I was 15 and started practicing the concentration exercises in the middle of the book, assuming at that point, like everybody else, that these cities, these powers were inherent based on your mental acumen in reading the book and then your persistence in pursuing the exercises laid out, because these exercises are incredibly practical. Okay? So Patanjali's Yoga Sutra is not an esoteric book that, know, contemplate upon your navel looking like the moon or something, right? None of that kind of shit, none of this bizarro new Age inappropriate linkage of things. It's a very practical manual.

Step by step by step. This is a workbook. Usually it's rejected by yoga teachers because they don't grasp it and they have reverence for it because everybody else does, but they don't have a fucking clue as to what it means and what it's for, except in the broad sense in the commentaries, what the commentaries may give to them. But the commentaries are bunches of people over thousands of years that said, oh, I think this must mean this. And if you do this, then you will get this kind of a power on your way to enlightenment.

But let me point something out here. Patanjali's Yoga Sutra is the most translated book on the planet. There are more translations of this book into more Hindu languages than there is for the Bible, okay? There are more translations of this book and variants in India alone than exist translations of the bible in other languages. So I think last I looked, there were 21 Hindu languages in which you could find the Christian bible that had been translated and there's 44 and climbing Hindu languages that have translations of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras.

But given that, given that it's the most translated book fucking ever, it's a failure. An abysmal failure. Absolutely abysmal failure, okay? Because that's assuming that you think the idea for this book is that people would get enlightenment, that they would follow this book and have a spontaneous enlightenment experience, talk to God, all of that kind of shit, and become something that they are not. In other words, transform themselves as per the instructions of the book by doing these mental exercises and see it doesn't happen.

By my reckoning, we may have had as many as maybe 10,000 people over the course of millennia, over the course of thousands and thousands of years, maybe over the course of like 13,000 years, we've had 10,000 people that have had some level of an enlightenment experience as a result of working through Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. And I count myself in that category because I'm a very astute student and a persistent student of the techniques that are involved in Patanjali's book, especially those in the section entitled Concentration. Okay? So it's not about meditation. This is explicitly about concentration.

That word cannot be translated. The title of that second section cannot be translated effectively as meditation has nothing to do with meditation. It has to do with concentration. And concentration is an entirely different thing intending to create an entirely different dynamic and result than does meditation. And the reason that you need the concentration is so that you don't fuck up.

So if we were to look at this book as being instructions on how to use these machines with the intention of like going flying with them and space travel and shit, then it is very important that you understand the details and practice the details diligently that are outlined and provided for you as instructions in section two. Because the idea is, as you find in section three, that you have a, quote, identity or identify with a point in far distant space. And then if you do certain things within your mind and allow a certain process to occur and actively work that process, then the machine interface will accept that as an instruction set that is very powerful and it will move you instantaneously to that spot in space that you had been concentrating on. But you can see that if your concentration is a little sloppy, it ain't going to end well, right? This is why you could crash easily.

Now, here's the thing. I know that this is the case, that I know that Patanjali's Yoga Sutras are not about yoga as we understand it. They're not about trying to get enlightened, they're not about altering your mind other than explicitly on how to keep yourself safe in dealing with the space aliens mind to machine interface. I know this because within the book itself are cautions. So when have you ever run across a meditation or a yoga book that says to you, best not go too fast, okay, and best not take too large of a jump, all right?

So it's telling you that you want to like, okay, so you want to go to that solar system and a planet in that solar system. You're better off just hitting the solar system and stopping and getting your bearings and then going for the planet than attempting to jump right to the planet for a number of reasons which are detailed within Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. If you read it as though it's an instruction manual and not a general guide to meditation and so on right now. So here's the thing, it has been hugely unsuccessful because basically we can say, all right, Gutama the Great Budha, he used Patanjali's Yoga Sutras and he did all this shit and he came up with the middle way after 20 plus years and he became enlightened. Okay, all right, well, that's fine.

So we got one. And then if you really look through it, if you look through all the Rinpoches, all of the people that were reasonably enlightened by the process that said that they'd reached a certain peak or a notable transformation point, as I say, I can actually number, I can enumerate and name maybe 31 such people. And this is over thousands of years. So this is a really stupid book if that's its goal, because it doesn't yield much. All right?

Plus we would have to say that most of the people that pick up the book abandon it even if they've got it on their shelves all their life. They don't really do anything with it because it doesn't make any sense to them, even with the commentaries. Yet it is eminently practical, yet it is straightforward. It's very much an instruction manual. Do this, then do this, then do this, okay?

Very much that. And yet you would think that an instruction manual would have some point to it, some point other than maybe in my case, 31. But I'm giving a let's be very wide in our net and let's say that every Nepalese and Hindu and Tibetan monastery that they all had at least one of their people become enlightened through using Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. If that were the case, then maybe we've had, as I say, maybe there's been 10,000 people on the planet out of how many billions, trillions of people in these last 13,000 years that have had an enlightenment experience as a result of using this book. Now, I've had experiences, but I don't know that I would call myself enlightened in that regard.

But I have had noticeable continually reinforced mental changes as a result of doing the concentration exercises. And demonstrably, I can claim that having done those exercises for 50 plus years has actively aided the progress of my life in our goofy ass civilization, right? So I've been able to achieve my goals partly because of the mental toughness, the mental rigor and discipline that I got from following Patanjali's Yoga Sutras misguidedly thinking they were about enlightenment. Now that I'm of the opinion that they're actually an instruction manual for one of these boats, I feel quite confident that even with all of the cautions that are detailed in Patanjali's book and the horrific potential for problems, for doing it wrongly. I would not hesitate to put myself in connection with one of those machines and use what I've learned from his instruction manual on how to operate these.

Okay, because for a lot of different reasons, but I have a serious amount of acumen with this book. I've had three copies, four copies. My primary copy was stolen when we moved. My office was raided. I'm assuming it was the feds.

I lost no money, no devices. None of that kind of shit was stolen. All that was stolen was paperwork, vast quantities of paperwork and old records and shit. So anyway, that aside, as I say, I would feel confident hooking myself up to one of these machines.

It'd be kind of cool wanting to see how it's actually going to affect me. And the instruction sets in. Patanjali's Sutras are quite explicit as to what happens, how you do this, et cetera. Now, here's the thing.

There are people that claim an oral tradition for the Torah, okay? That there was an oral Torah that was handed down through the ages and then eventually written down. Now, I dispute this for a number of reasons. One of the reasons is the self referential nature of the Torah itself, saying that the l commanded these people to be scribe and to set down these words. And we don't care who these people are, right?

There's no attribution of so and so is an author. There were general titles assigned to authorship in the Torah. But the book itself, in the actual writing of it, it says that the El, it actually says El Yon, I think he most high, the leader of the Elohim caused these people to become scribes in order that they may set this shit down. Okay? So we have that same kind of situation with stuff here, but there's minor differences in a couple of versions of the Torah.

But there's not a wide enough spread, in my opinion, nor a long enough history external to that in other social areas, other social groups for me to say, okay, there was a long history of an Oral Torah, and it was eventually written down. I don't see that I see that the Jewish scribes, the Essenes, actually, they weren't Jewish at that point, were told to write this shit down. They did write it down, and that was the end of it, right? And then we've had it since then. Patanjali's Yoga Sutras is 151 lines.

You can memorize this. It's not like trying to memorize the whole Torah, even in sections, right? The Patanjali's yoga sutras are real straightforward. It would be like memorizing a manual on how to tune a carburetor, right? The 150 instructions on how to tune a carburetor.

You guys probably don't know what that is, but nonetheless or instructions on how to bleed your brakes. You can memorize those, right? They're not that numerous. And so panhanjali's yoga sutras are of that order. And we do have deviation that can be separated out by the etymology of the word, by the evolution of the word through time and through social orders and social contacts.

So, for instance, a particular word means a type of a tree in Hindi, and then later on, the Mongols come on in and invade. And the nature of that word changes because that particular tree's wood is used by the Mongols in their process of making bows. And so we start getting an accumulation of words around this word for tree that alter its meaning, okay? So that's the kind of thing that has occurred over time with all these damn commentaries on his Yoga Sutras. And some people are making commentaries on commentaries, so they're not even really addressing the original material in any event, though.

So it's been tremendously unsuccessful in spite of being widely read. So we should just say, fuck, it doesn't work. Nobody gets enlightened except for these rare people, and it might be their personal biology that allows this. And I think that what's happened is that the book is not intended to provide you with general instructions on how to become enlightened. It is explicitly, as it says, intended to provide you instructions in keeping yourself safe and effectively operating these mind to machine interfaces.

And there is lots of cautions in there. So I do not know personally of any meditative technique that will cause any of the problems that are listed in the Yoga Sutras. I don't care how deep you get, you are not going to cause sudden death or any of these other things that are cautioned against in the Yoga Sutras by simply contemplation. Right? And here's the whole thing.

The concentration that is put in here is anything the instructions on concentration, how to sharpen your mind, how to focus it, how to keep it there, how to maintain the energy levels, all of these various different things are anti meditative, okay? So they're about concentrating fiercely, holding a thought fiercely, not any kind of a meditative thing intended to affect your body and general mental condition. So I think I'm right. The Patanjali's Yoga Sutras have nothing to do with meditation and enlightenment. As we understand it and in fact, our instructions.

So it came about that I came across this idea and been working on it for some time and then started talking about it. Because I have convinced myself at this stage that the etymology of the language within there goes way back, beyond everybody's understanding of when this book was first written. And that an oral tradition for the Yoga Sutras makes ever so much sense. And it would also account for the slight variation that we get in the Yoga Sutras over time, they do change. Certain people have changed them.

Some people have acknowledged that they changed them figuring this word was better in Sanskrit and that it didn't matter. All right. I think it actually does matter that you've got to get the Sanskrit correct because your life is at risk once you join to these machines. What happens to the machine happens to you and your body. You could kill yourself by not being able to effectively separate your mind from the process that is involved in this machinery.

You can kill yourself by misjudging, as it says, don't go too fast. Right. Take small jumps because you have to learn how to do this. And you could appear in the middle of a star, that kind of thing. Actually, that's not quite possible, but you could certainly smack into one.

So anyway, so it's interesting that both of these things are occurring at the same time. The LK 99 coming on the scene, which would potentially bring us devices that would go fly about and then we're going to have to have some way of controlling these fuckers, right? And so maybe we will discover soon that we've got some form of and actually you could probably use LK 99 as a transmission vehicle for thought waves now that I'm thinking about it. But I'll have to really examine that idea later. In any event, though, so our world's changed with the discovery of the LK 99.

And then my little tiny part, which is the detailing of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, which admittedly, don't do us a whole fucking lot of good unless we get one of these machines. But I'm also quite convinced that there's people in government holes in the ground that have these machines. So it's not like totally hopeless. Now I just need to connect with them, get them to understand they're looking at this shit all wrong, that we've had these machines in the past and that's one of the reasons the l did what they did. By the way, I don't know about the Davas and that's what I'm calling the larger group of the space aliens.

I don't know for sure about them, but the l appear to have been poor operators of this technology. It also does not originate with them. So they found it somewhere, adapted it, stole it, or whatever the fuck and brought it here and discovered that humans could really use this stuff now, here's the thing. There's enough evidence sort of pointing in that direction that I think maybe the l were intent on modifying humans to be better operators of this technology. And that that's what led to Adam and know Joshua who is Jesus, all of these kind of things, right?

Or Joseph. Who is Jesus? Personally, I think that the El were trying to create better operators, better slaves. Anyway, so a lot of debate about that, I'm certain, but nonetheless, we're going to get into Sci-Fi world here anyway, so I'm all excited. This is gonna be cool stuff.

Alright guys, I gotta go do stuff. I'll talk to later about some more of this. As I say, it's quite fascinating. I'm still working on my version of the Patanjali Sutras. I have to go back and do etymology constructs going way the fuck back.

So it's tedious, but it's very interesting and very rewarding in the effort. And as I say.