1
00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:02,919
Speaker 1: Okay, so get this. We're going deep today. Deep, yeah,

2
00:00:03,080 --> 00:00:04,000
like deep.

3
00:00:04,160 --> 00:00:06,759
Speaker 2: I like where this is going. Ancient mysteries, Oh yeah,

4
00:00:06,799 --> 00:00:07,799
I love a good mystery.

5
00:00:07,879 --> 00:00:12,480
Speaker 1: Conspiracies my favorite. It's gonna be a wild ride. Buckle up, everyone, seriously,

6
00:00:12,720 --> 00:00:16,800
we've got it all. Like what ancient Sumerian artifacts? Ooh,

7
00:00:16,920 --> 00:00:22,039
intriguing secret government projects? Sounds a little spoopy, Aliens, the

8
00:00:22,079 --> 00:00:23,120
whole nine yards.

9
00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:24,160
Speaker 2: Okay, you have my attention.

10
00:00:24,719 --> 00:00:28,480
Speaker 1: But here's the thing. It's not just about the sensationalism, right,

11
00:00:28,600 --> 00:00:31,320
We're going to try to separate fact from fiction.

12
00:00:31,199 --> 00:00:33,759
Speaker 2: You know, the evidence from the speculation exactly.

13
00:00:34,119 --> 00:00:35,240
Speaker 1: So let's start at the beginning.

14
00:00:35,320 --> 00:00:37,000
Speaker 2: Okay, love a good origin story.

15
00:00:37,119 --> 00:00:38,880
Speaker 1: Where else Ancient Sumeria?

16
00:00:39,640 --> 00:00:42,679
Speaker 2: Ah, yes, the cradle of civilization.

17
00:00:42,240 --> 00:00:44,799
Speaker 1: The civilization. They were way ahead of their.

18
00:00:44,719 --> 00:00:47,880
Speaker 2: Time, absolutely groundbreaking inventions left.

19
00:00:47,679 --> 00:00:52,200
Speaker 1: And right, writing, math, agriculture, the whole shebang.

20
00:00:51,920 --> 00:00:54,280
Speaker 2: The foundation of so much of what we know today.

21
00:00:54,679 --> 00:00:57,439
Speaker 1: But some people believe, and this is where it gets interesting,

22
00:00:57,479 --> 00:01:02,520
get me with it. They believe that the Sumerians help

23
00:01:02,799 --> 00:01:07,040
help like from who, from beings not of this world?

24
00:01:07,319 --> 00:01:10,680
Speaker 2: You're talking aliens, right, you got it? Okay, I'm listening.

25
00:01:11,560 --> 00:01:14,239
Speaker 1: These beings they're known as the Anunaki.

26
00:01:14,439 --> 00:01:15,680
Speaker 2: Yeah, I've heard that name before.

27
00:01:15,760 --> 00:01:19,480
Speaker 1: Anaki and Sumerian mythology. They're like these powerful.

28
00:01:19,040 --> 00:01:21,159
Speaker 2: Deities descended from the heavens, the whole bit.

29
00:01:21,719 --> 00:01:24,879
Speaker 1: But here's the thing, what's that? For some it's more

30
00:01:24,920 --> 00:01:25,959
than just mythology.

31
00:01:26,079 --> 00:01:29,040
Speaker 2: You think they were real, like flesh and blood.

32
00:01:29,200 --> 00:01:30,840
Speaker 1: Or whatever extraterrestrials are made of.

33
00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:32,560
Speaker 2: Okay, I'm intrigued. Keep going.

34
00:01:32,719 --> 00:01:35,040
Speaker 1: Proponents of this ancient astronaut theory.

35
00:01:35,159 --> 00:01:37,319
Speaker 2: Ah, yes, ancient astronauts.

36
00:01:37,319 --> 00:01:42,400
Speaker 1: They take the Sumerian texts and artwork literally literally, suggesting

37
00:01:42,400 --> 00:01:43,560
that the Aninachi were.

38
00:01:43,439 --> 00:01:45,799
Speaker 2: Real extraterrestrials who visited Earth.

39
00:01:46,000 --> 00:01:47,439
Speaker 1: And guess what they were after.

40
00:01:47,480 --> 00:01:48,920
Speaker 2: Let me guess world domination?

41
00:01:49,280 --> 00:01:53,319
Speaker 1: Close? What? Then? Gold? Really just gold?

42
00:01:53,599 --> 00:01:56,359
Speaker 2: Apparently they needed it for something back on their home planet.

43
00:01:57,280 --> 00:01:58,879
Speaker 1: Makes you wonder what their planet was like.

44
00:01:58,959 --> 00:02:01,480
Speaker 2: And to get this gold, they did something pretty wild.

45
00:02:01,760 --> 00:02:02,640
Speaker 1: Okay, lay it on me.

46
00:02:03,040 --> 00:02:05,879
Speaker 2: Genetically engineered early humans.

47
00:02:06,159 --> 00:02:09,960
Speaker 1: Hold on, genetically engineered humans to mine gold, that's the

48
00:02:09,960 --> 00:02:14,199
theory that's wild. It's like the ultimate cosmic mining operation.

49
00:02:14,520 --> 00:02:16,479
Speaker 2: Talk about exploitation and.

50
00:02:16,400 --> 00:02:19,639
Speaker 1: This whole theory. It's fueled by some intriguing artifacts.

51
00:02:19,840 --> 00:02:21,520
Speaker 2: Artifacts You mean like physical evidence.

52
00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:24,080
Speaker 1: Yeah, we're talking about Samerian cylinder seal.

53
00:02:24,159 --> 00:02:25,159
Speaker 2: Cylinder seals.

54
00:02:25,319 --> 00:02:27,240
Speaker 1: They sound mundane, but trust me they're not.

55
00:02:27,520 --> 00:02:30,240
Speaker 2: Okay, tell me more about these cylinder seals.

56
00:02:30,319 --> 00:02:34,240
Speaker 1: So picture this small cylindrical objects, often made of.

57
00:02:34,159 --> 00:02:37,039
Speaker 2: Stone, like little ancient rolling pins.

58
00:02:36,840 --> 00:02:38,759
Speaker 1: Kinda, and they're engraved.

59
00:02:38,319 --> 00:02:41,159
Speaker 2: Engraved with what like hieroglyphs or something.

60
00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:42,960
Speaker 1: More like intricate images and symbols.

61
00:02:43,000 --> 00:02:43,879
Speaker 2: Sounds pretty fancy.

62
00:02:43,960 --> 00:02:45,800
Speaker 1: Yeah, And they were used like a signature or a.

63
00:02:45,759 --> 00:02:47,599
Speaker 2: Stamp and stamp how did that work?

64
00:02:47,840 --> 00:02:51,439
Speaker 1: They would roll them over wet clay to make impressions.

65
00:02:50,960 --> 00:02:54,400
Speaker 2: So like a fancy ancient notary seal exactly.

66
00:02:54,960 --> 00:02:59,280
Speaker 1: But some researchers, they believe believe what they believe that

67
00:02:59,400 --> 00:03:03,280
certain sill under seals contain hidden knowledge.

68
00:03:02,919 --> 00:03:06,960
Speaker 2: Hidden knowledge like secret codes, like a blueprint passed down

69
00:03:07,000 --> 00:03:10,560
from the Anachi themselves, a cosmic blueprint. What kind of

70
00:03:10,560 --> 00:03:11,759
knowledge are we talking about here?

71
00:03:11,919 --> 00:03:14,039
Speaker 1: Some say it's information about stargates.

72
00:03:14,120 --> 00:03:17,039
Speaker 2: Stargates like portals to other dimensions.

73
00:03:17,080 --> 00:03:17,599
Speaker 1: You got it?

74
00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:20,400
Speaker 2: This is getting really sci fi, I know, right, So

75
00:03:20,599 --> 00:03:23,680
like wormholes, right exactly, the kind that lets you travel

76
00:03:23,719 --> 00:03:24,719
faster than light.

77
00:03:24,840 --> 00:03:27,319
Speaker 1: The real deal, interstellar travel.

78
00:03:27,680 --> 00:03:29,120
Speaker 2: Mind blowing stuff and.

79
00:03:29,120 --> 00:03:31,199
Speaker 1: This is where it gets even more interesting.

80
00:03:30,960 --> 00:03:32,639
Speaker 2: More interesting than stargates.

81
00:03:33,240 --> 00:03:36,800
Speaker 1: Fast forward to nineteen forty eight, post World War two Iraq.

82
00:03:37,319 --> 00:03:38,639
Speaker 2: Okay, what happened in Iraq?

83
00:03:39,240 --> 00:03:43,039
Speaker 1: Two American archaeologists, archaeologists, They find themselves with a lot

84
00:03:43,080 --> 00:03:43,479
of money.

85
00:03:43,599 --> 00:03:44,719
Speaker 2: Must have been a good dig.

86
00:03:45,319 --> 00:03:48,080
Speaker 1: But instead of, you know, investing it wisely, what did

87
00:03:48,120 --> 00:03:52,039
they do? They spent it on two Sumerian cylinder seals.

88
00:03:52,560 --> 00:03:55,120
Speaker 2: Just like that, on two ancient seals.

89
00:03:55,199 --> 00:03:56,960
Speaker 1: They were obsessed with these seals.

90
00:03:57,039 --> 00:03:59,439
Speaker 2: What was so special about these particular seals?

91
00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:01,400
Speaker 1: It's a million dollar question, isn't it.

92
00:04:01,439 --> 00:04:03,240
Speaker 2: Were they exceptionally beautiful?

93
00:04:03,560 --> 00:04:03,800
Speaker 1: Why?

94
00:04:04,039 --> 00:04:05,479
Speaker 2: Or historically significant?

95
00:04:05,680 --> 00:04:08,080
Speaker 1: Not particularly? They weren't even on display at the museum.

96
00:04:08,199 --> 00:04:09,800
Speaker 2: And why all the fuss.

97
00:04:09,520 --> 00:04:13,479
Speaker 1: These archaeologists they were adamant, adamant about what about getting

98
00:04:13,520 --> 00:04:14,599
their hands on those seals?

99
00:04:14,840 --> 00:04:16,680
Speaker 2: Sounds like they knew something we didn't.

100
00:04:16,800 --> 00:04:18,879
Speaker 1: And they paid a fortune for them too, a fortune?

101
00:04:18,879 --> 00:04:20,160
Speaker 2: Okay, Now I'm really curious.

102
00:04:20,199 --> 00:04:22,720
Speaker 1: And the whole purchase was shrouded in secrecy.

103
00:04:22,879 --> 00:04:24,639
Speaker 2: Secrecy, Why so secretive?

104
00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:26,519
Speaker 1: It definitely raises some eyebrows.

105
00:04:26,600 --> 00:04:29,439
Speaker 2: It makes you wonder if those seals held more than

106
00:04:29,519 --> 00:04:31,600
just historical value, right.

107
00:04:31,879 --> 00:04:34,800
Speaker 1: Some speculate that the knowledge embedded in those.

108
00:04:34,600 --> 00:04:38,079
Speaker 2: Seals knowledge you mean about the stargates.

109
00:04:37,560 --> 00:04:39,920
Speaker 1: Maybe even advanced an Naki technology.

110
00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:43,519
Speaker 2: Okay, so now we're talking about potentially dangerous.

111
00:04:42,920 --> 00:04:45,199
Speaker 1: Knowledge and who knows where that knowledge ended up.

112
00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:48,560
Speaker 2: Yeah, you've got me thinking what if it fell into

113
00:04:48,560 --> 00:04:49,439
the wrong hands?

114
00:04:49,959 --> 00:04:52,120
Speaker 1: That leads us to another thread in this story, a

115
00:04:52,160 --> 00:04:52,959
fascinating one.

116
00:04:53,040 --> 00:04:54,560
Speaker 2: Okay, I'm on the edge of my seat.

117
00:04:54,800 --> 00:04:58,120
Speaker 1: Dan Burish, who's Dan Burrish and Project looking Glass?

118
00:04:58,360 --> 00:04:59,600
Speaker 2: Project looking Glass?

119
00:05:00,360 --> 00:05:01,160
Speaker 1: Have you heard of it?

120
00:05:01,319 --> 00:05:03,639
Speaker 2: Vaguely? Something about time travel?

121
00:05:03,759 --> 00:05:04,759
Speaker 1: Right? You got it?

122
00:05:04,759 --> 00:05:05,439
Speaker 2: It's getting good.

123
00:05:05,519 --> 00:05:10,360
Speaker 1: So Dan Burish, he was a microbiologist microbiologist recruited in

124
00:05:10,399 --> 00:05:13,079
the early nineties, recruited for what to work at a

125
00:05:13,120 --> 00:05:17,240
super secret facility called S four near Area fifty one.

126
00:05:17,480 --> 00:05:21,120
Speaker 2: Wait, Area fifty one, as in the area fifty one.

127
00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:24,360
Speaker 1: The one and only Wow. Now, Varsi's assignment was tied

128
00:05:24,399 --> 00:05:26,600
to a project called Project Aquarius.

129
00:05:26,639 --> 00:05:29,240
Speaker 2: Project Aquarius, his task what was his task?

130
00:05:29,519 --> 00:05:34,199
Speaker 1: To analyze biological samples biological from extraterrestrial sources?

131
00:05:34,199 --> 00:05:38,560
Speaker 2: Pulled on you're saying he was analyzing alien DNA essentially, Yeah, okay,

132
00:05:38,560 --> 00:05:40,279
this is officially top secret stuff.

133
00:05:40,439 --> 00:05:42,600
Speaker 1: But S four it wasn't just about biology.

134
00:05:43,279 --> 00:05:44,439
Speaker 2: What else was going on there?

135
00:05:44,519 --> 00:05:49,319
Speaker 1: It was a highly compartmentalized facility. Compartmentalized meaning different levels

136
00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:52,360
dedicated to different projects, super secretive projects.

137
00:05:52,439 --> 00:05:54,040
Speaker 2: Sounds like something kind of a spy movie.

138
00:05:54,120 --> 00:05:56,199
Speaker 1: One floor they called it Alice's Floor.

139
00:05:56,279 --> 00:05:58,519
Speaker 2: Alice's Floor, Why Alice?

140
00:05:58,600 --> 00:06:02,360
Speaker 1: It housed Project Galilee, all about alien propulsion systems.

141
00:06:02,439 --> 00:06:06,279
Speaker 2: Alien propulsion systems, like how their spaceships work. Yep, Okay,

142
00:06:06,319 --> 00:06:08,480
this is getting more and more sci fi by the minute.

143
00:06:08,519 --> 00:06:11,920
Speaker 1: And then there was Project Sidekick. Project Sidekick dedicated to

144
00:06:11,959 --> 00:06:12,600
alien weapons.

145
00:06:12,680 --> 00:06:13,519
Speaker 2: Alien weapons.

146
00:06:13,879 --> 00:06:18,360
Speaker 1: Seriously, it's wild, right. But among all these crazy projects,

147
00:06:18,439 --> 00:06:21,040
there was one that stood out, one that really caught

148
00:06:21,040 --> 00:06:21,920
Berge's attention.

149
00:06:22,279 --> 00:06:25,480
Speaker 2: Project looking Glass, the one and only. Okay, tell me

150
00:06:25,519 --> 00:06:26,839
more about this looking glass.

151
00:06:27,079 --> 00:06:30,639
Speaker 1: It's described as a device capable of peering into the

152
00:06:30,680 --> 00:06:36,319
past and future time travel, potentially even accessing alternate timelines.

153
00:06:36,360 --> 00:06:39,079
Speaker 2: Alternate timelines. This is getting really complex.

154
00:06:39,160 --> 00:06:41,759
Speaker 1: And here's the kicker. What's that the tech behind the

155
00:06:41,800 --> 00:06:44,319
looking glass? Where do you think it came from?

156
00:06:44,600 --> 00:06:45,680
Speaker 2: I don't know. Give me a hint.

157
00:06:45,720 --> 00:06:50,279
Speaker 1: Two sources, ready, yeah, hit me salvage technology from crash UFOs.

158
00:06:50,439 --> 00:06:51,639
Speaker 2: Okay, that's not surprising.

159
00:06:51,800 --> 00:06:55,240
Speaker 1: And those ancient Sumerian cylinder seals we were talking about.

160
00:06:55,279 --> 00:06:59,279
Speaker 2: Hold on, you're saying they combined alien tech with ancient

161
00:06:59,360 --> 00:07:01,240
artifacts build a time machine.

162
00:07:01,319 --> 00:07:02,439
Speaker 1: That's the claim.

163
00:07:03,040 --> 00:07:03,920
Speaker 2: That's incredible.

164
00:07:03,959 --> 00:07:06,040
Speaker 1: And it wasn't just a passive viewing device. What do

165
00:07:06,120 --> 00:07:09,439
you mean? Burish suggested that the looking Glass could manipulate

166
00:07:09,480 --> 00:07:10,319
time and space.

167
00:07:11,040 --> 00:07:13,680
Speaker 2: Manipulate you mean, change the past or the future.

168
00:07:13,959 --> 00:07:15,480
Speaker 1: It's a mind blowing concept.

169
00:07:15,279 --> 00:07:16,439
Speaker 2: Right, absolutely mind blowing.

170
00:07:16,519 --> 00:07:17,439
Speaker 1: But here's another question.

171
00:07:17,720 --> 00:07:18,279
Speaker 2: What is it?

172
00:07:18,519 --> 00:07:19,759
Speaker 1: How did they operate this thing?

173
00:07:19,959 --> 00:07:22,279
Speaker 2: Good question? Was there like a big red button that

174
00:07:22,360 --> 00:07:24,439
said time travel?

175
00:07:26,000 --> 00:07:26,600
Speaker 1: Not quite?

176
00:07:26,800 --> 00:07:27,800
Speaker 2: How did it work? Then?

177
00:07:28,560 --> 00:07:32,079
Speaker 1: It required individuals with very specific abilities?

178
00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:33,759
Speaker 2: What kind of abilities?

179
00:07:33,839 --> 00:07:34,879
Speaker 1: Psychic operators?

180
00:07:35,240 --> 00:07:38,720
Speaker 2: Wait, psychics? You're telling me psychics were involved in this.

181
00:07:38,879 --> 00:07:41,360
Speaker 1: People with heightened extrasensory perception.

182
00:07:41,600 --> 00:07:45,199
Speaker 2: You know, so like psychic spies peering into different timelines.

183
00:07:45,319 --> 00:07:46,360
Speaker 1: That's one way to put it.

184
00:07:46,439 --> 00:07:48,800
Speaker 2: This is getting more and more fascinating, I know, right.

185
00:07:49,240 --> 00:07:53,079
Speaker 1: So they recruited and trained these psychic operators, trained them

186
00:07:53,079 --> 00:07:55,680
to do what to use the looking glass.

187
00:07:55,240 --> 00:07:59,079
Speaker 2: To view different timelines, for access historical events, to glimpse

188
00:07:59,120 --> 00:08:02,639
into potential fuel the whole shebang. Wow? So what did

189
00:08:02,680 --> 00:08:03,120
they see.

190
00:08:03,240 --> 00:08:05,079
Speaker 1: That's where things take a bit of a dark turn.

191
00:08:05,839 --> 00:08:10,319
Every timeline they viewed, every time converged on a single date,

192
00:08:10,920 --> 00:08:12,839
December twenty one, twenty.

193
00:08:12,360 --> 00:08:16,279
Speaker 2: Twelve, twenty twelve, the mine apocalypse. Are you telling me

194
00:08:16,319 --> 00:08:17,240
there's something to that?

195
00:08:17,600 --> 00:08:18,920
Speaker 1: It's a chilling thought, isn't it?

196
00:08:18,959 --> 00:08:19,680
Speaker 2: Definitely chilling?

197
00:08:19,839 --> 00:08:22,279
Speaker 1: And it wasn't just some arbitrary doomsday date?

198
00:08:22,480 --> 00:08:23,000
Speaker 2: What was it?

199
00:08:23,040 --> 00:08:28,000
Speaker 1: Then? The looking glass revealed a potential cataclysmic event. Cataclysmic

200
00:08:28,360 --> 00:08:31,480
like a massive geophysical pole shift pol.

201
00:08:31,279 --> 00:08:33,320
Speaker 2: Shift, like the Earth's poles.

202
00:08:33,000 --> 00:08:36,039
Speaker 1: Flipping, triggered by a surge of solar energy.

203
00:08:36,159 --> 00:08:41,879
Speaker 2: So you're talking earthquakes, tsunami's, global devastation.

204
00:08:41,600 --> 00:08:42,759
Speaker 1: The whole nine yards.

205
00:08:43,120 --> 00:08:46,639
Speaker 2: Wow, that's a pretty bleak outlook, say the least. So

206
00:08:46,799 --> 00:08:49,919
let me get this straight. We've got a potential apocalypse,

207
00:08:50,399 --> 00:08:53,679
a secret government project messing with time travel and psychic

208
00:08:53,759 --> 00:08:57,639
phenomena check, and ancient Sumerian artifacts holding the keys to

209
00:08:57,720 --> 00:08:57,960
it all.

210
00:08:58,080 --> 00:09:01,120
Speaker 1: Bingo, This is a lot to pros it is and

211
00:09:01,159 --> 00:09:02,840
it gets even more interesting, believe it or not?

212
00:09:03,080 --> 00:09:05,120
Speaker 2: More interesting? How is that even possible?

213
00:09:05,200 --> 00:09:08,320
Speaker 1: Just wait until you hear about Jrod Jay Rod, Who's

214
00:09:08,360 --> 00:09:11,120
that a benevolent extra terrestrial melon.

215
00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:13,519
Speaker 2: So a friendly alien.

216
00:09:13,200 --> 00:09:15,480
Speaker 1: From fifty two thousand years in the future.

217
00:09:15,200 --> 00:09:17,399
Speaker 2: The future. Okay, now you're really pulling me in.

218
00:09:17,559 --> 00:09:21,200
Speaker 1: He crash landed in a flying saucer in nineteen fifty three.

219
00:09:21,320 --> 00:09:23,799
Speaker 2: Nineteen fifty three, So the government's been hiding a real

220
00:09:23,879 --> 00:09:25,799
life et for decades.

221
00:09:25,879 --> 00:09:26,600
Speaker 1: It's wild.

222
00:09:26,639 --> 00:09:28,879
Speaker 2: I know, what was this Jerrod doing here? Did he

223
00:09:28,960 --> 00:09:30,919
come to warn us about the apocalypse?

224
00:09:31,000 --> 00:09:34,559
Speaker 1: His original mission, according to Bersh, was to find a

225
00:09:34,639 --> 00:09:38,519
cure for a disease plaguing his people in the future.

226
00:09:38,200 --> 00:09:39,879
Speaker 2: A time traveling doctor.

227
00:09:39,679 --> 00:09:42,559
Speaker 1: But his arrival ended up having a much larger impact,

228
00:09:42,960 --> 00:09:45,720
like what especially in relation to those twenty twelve events.

229
00:09:45,799 --> 00:09:49,039
Speaker 2: So this friendly alien from the future helped us avoid

230
00:09:49,039 --> 00:09:51,679
the apocalypse. He's like a cosmic guardian angel.

231
00:09:51,840 --> 00:09:54,159
Speaker 1: You could say that. But hold on, there's a twist,

232
00:09:54,240 --> 00:09:58,759
a twitch. Jrod, whose real name was Kyla Kyla. He

233
00:09:58,879 --> 00:10:01,480
revealed another truth about the twenty twelve.

234
00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:02,559
Speaker 2: Event another truth.

235
00:10:02,840 --> 00:10:05,240
Speaker 1: What do you mean it wasn't a natural disaster? It

236
00:10:05,279 --> 00:10:06,320
was it was sabotage.

237
00:10:06,320 --> 00:10:09,200
Speaker 2: Sabotage like someone planned it, That's what he claimed. Who

238
00:10:09,240 --> 00:10:11,159
would do such a thing? And why?

239
00:10:11,320 --> 00:10:12,639
Speaker 1: Those are the million dollar questions.

240
00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:15,000
Speaker 2: This just gets more and more intense.

241
00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:18,200
Speaker 1: J Rod pointed to a group he called the P

242
00:10:18,360 --> 00:10:19,159
forty fives.

243
00:10:19,679 --> 00:10:21,759
Speaker 2: Forty fives? Who are they?

244
00:10:22,200 --> 00:10:27,840
Speaker 1: These beings possibly future humans, evolved into a gray like form.

245
00:10:28,000 --> 00:10:30,240
Speaker 2: Hold On, are you saying our own descendants might have

246
00:10:30,320 --> 00:10:31,360
caused the apocalypse?

247
00:10:31,639 --> 00:10:33,639
Speaker 1: It's a mind boggling thought, right, that's a lot to

248
00:10:33,679 --> 00:10:35,320
take it in. And now we haven't even gotten to

249
00:10:35,360 --> 00:10:37,720
how the looking Glass itself might have played a role

250
00:10:37,759 --> 00:10:38,240
in all of this.

251
00:10:38,440 --> 00:10:40,639
Speaker 2: The looking Glass, you mean the time machine?

252
00:10:40,759 --> 00:10:43,720
Speaker 1: Remember it was creating artificial wormholes.

253
00:10:43,480 --> 00:10:45,919
Speaker 2: Right, messing with the fabric of space.

254
00:10:45,679 --> 00:10:48,679
Speaker 1: Time, and that might have had some unintended consequences, like

255
00:10:48,720 --> 00:10:52,120
what it might have actually disrupted the Sun's magnetic energy.

256
00:10:52,360 --> 00:10:55,159
Speaker 2: Hold On, you're saying we almost destroyed ourselves with our

257
00:10:55,200 --> 00:10:56,080
own time machine.

258
00:10:56,120 --> 00:10:56,840
Speaker 1: That's the theory.

259
00:10:57,120 --> 00:11:00,000
Speaker 2: That's some serious cosmic irony.

260
00:10:59,639 --> 00:11:02,200
Speaker 1: It is, and it adds another layer of complexity to

261
00:11:02,240 --> 00:11:03,000
this whole story.

262
00:11:03,240 --> 00:11:07,159
Speaker 2: Makes you think about the potential consequences of our actions, right.

263
00:11:07,720 --> 00:11:10,879
Speaker 1: Like what happens when we try to control time and space?

264
00:11:11,159 --> 00:11:12,000
Speaker 2: Big questions?

265
00:11:12,399 --> 00:11:14,480
Speaker 1: So where do we go from here?

266
00:11:14,600 --> 00:11:15,240
Speaker 2: Good question?

267
00:11:15,600 --> 00:11:17,840
Speaker 1: What role did these P forty fives play?

268
00:11:18,000 --> 00:11:21,320
Speaker 2: And how do we as humans in the present navigate

269
00:11:21,360 --> 00:11:21,679
all of.

270
00:11:21,639 --> 00:11:27,000
Speaker 1: This timelines, conspiracies, potential apocalypses. It's a lot to ponder,

271
00:11:27,200 --> 00:11:29,399
it is, and we'll delve into it further in the

272
00:11:29,440 --> 00:11:30,519
next part of our deep dive.

273
00:11:30,559 --> 00:11:31,720
Speaker 2: Okay, I'm ready for more.

274
00:11:31,840 --> 00:11:35,519
Speaker 1: This is fascinating, June, I definitely will. Okay, before we

275
00:11:35,559 --> 00:11:39,200
go any further with those timelines and that whole twenty

276
00:11:39,279 --> 00:11:43,000
thirty split thing, right, we should probably take a step back.

277
00:11:43,120 --> 00:11:44,080
Speaker 2: Yeah, okay, look.

278
00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:45,039
Speaker 1: At Dan Bursch again.

279
00:11:45,120 --> 00:11:45,960
Speaker 2: Yeah, good point.

280
00:11:46,600 --> 00:11:47,279
Speaker 1: His story.

281
00:11:47,360 --> 00:11:50,360
Speaker 2: It's a doozy it is, isn't it. I mean, time travel,

282
00:11:50,759 --> 00:11:55,440
psychic spies, aliens. It's easy to get caught up in

283
00:11:55,480 --> 00:11:55,720
all that.

284
00:11:55,879 --> 00:11:57,159
Speaker 1: Oh absolutely, But like.

285
00:11:57,120 --> 00:11:59,080
Speaker 2: How much of it can we actually believe?

286
00:11:59,360 --> 00:12:00,480
Speaker 1: You know, exactly?

287
00:12:00,559 --> 00:12:03,399
Speaker 2: Got to be skeptical, Yeah, healthy dose of skepticism.

288
00:12:03,519 --> 00:12:07,200
Speaker 1: Absolutely. And you know Burish's story, well, it's had its

289
00:12:07,200 --> 00:12:12,240
share of critics, people pointing out inconsistencies, you know. Ah, okay,

290
00:12:12,320 --> 00:12:16,759
like what well for starters that PhD he claimed to have? Yeah,

291
00:12:17,200 --> 00:12:19,519
apparently the university has no record of him.

292
00:12:19,720 --> 00:12:20,200
Speaker 2: Oh really?

293
00:12:20,399 --> 00:12:22,639
Speaker 1: Yeah, and then there's his military service, what about it?

294
00:12:22,799 --> 00:12:25,639
Official records don't quite match up with his story.

295
00:12:25,399 --> 00:12:29,080
Speaker 2: So maybe he uh embellished yeah, a little bit.

296
00:12:29,240 --> 00:12:32,240
Speaker 1: It's possible, and that kind of casts a shadow over everything,

297
00:12:32,480 --> 00:12:34,919
you know, makes you wonder it does.

298
00:12:35,320 --> 00:12:38,159
Speaker 2: But even so, yeah, there are parts of his story

299
00:12:38,240 --> 00:12:40,720
well they make you think, like what like when he

300
00:12:40,759 --> 00:12:42,639
talks about Zeta reticularly.

301
00:12:42,159 --> 00:12:46,120
Speaker 1: Data reticularly that's uh, that's the star system where Jerrod

302
00:12:46,120 --> 00:12:47,960
was from, right in gleast five to eighty one.

303
00:12:47,840 --> 00:12:50,480
Speaker 2: C two exactly. Those are just random names he pulled

304
00:12:50,480 --> 00:12:51,080
out of a hat.

305
00:12:51,279 --> 00:12:55,840
Speaker 1: Those are real, real star system studied by scientists for decades.

306
00:12:55,919 --> 00:12:59,039
Speaker 2: I mean, Zaeta reticuli. Yeah, it's connected to that famous

307
00:12:59,039 --> 00:13:01,200
Betty and Barney Hill abduction case.

308
00:13:01,240 --> 00:13:03,960
Speaker 1: Oh yeah, the one with the star map, the very same.

309
00:13:04,120 --> 00:13:06,440
Speaker 2: And some people might say that Bursch just you know,

310
00:13:06,720 --> 00:13:09,799
took that story woven it into his own narrative.

311
00:13:10,080 --> 00:13:12,399
Speaker 1: But then there's Glees five eighty one C.

312
00:13:12,879 --> 00:13:13,919
Speaker 2: That one's interesting.

313
00:13:14,039 --> 00:13:15,279
Speaker 1: What's so special about that one?

314
00:13:15,360 --> 00:13:18,080
Speaker 2: It wasn't discovered until two thousand and seven, oh wow,

315
00:13:18,200 --> 00:13:20,159
years after Bursch started telling his story.

316
00:13:20,240 --> 00:13:21,960
Speaker 1: So he's talking about a star system.

317
00:13:21,840 --> 00:13:23,679
Speaker 2: That scientists didn't even know about yet.

318
00:13:23,679 --> 00:13:25,120
Speaker 1: That's pretty wild, it is.

319
00:13:25,320 --> 00:13:28,960
Speaker 2: And what's even wilder? Yeah, Glease five eighty one C's

320
00:13:29,039 --> 00:13:33,039
is considered one of the most potentially habitable exoplanets.

321
00:13:32,360 --> 00:13:35,000
Speaker 1: We found no way. So he's talking about a planet

322
00:13:35,039 --> 00:13:36,679
that could support life.

323
00:13:36,399 --> 00:13:38,039
Speaker 2: And no one knew about it at the time.

324
00:13:38,240 --> 00:13:41,799
Speaker 1: That's either a huge coincidence or something else. Yeah, something else. Entirely.

325
00:13:41,879 --> 00:13:43,759
Speaker 2: It makes you think, doesn't it It does?

326
00:13:43,879 --> 00:13:44,440
Speaker 1: It really does.

327
00:13:44,759 --> 00:13:49,120
Speaker 2: Now, even if we put Bursch's personal story aside, there's

328
00:13:49,159 --> 00:13:51,720
a bigger picture here. What do you mean He's talking

329
00:13:51,759 --> 00:13:57,799
about governments experimenting with stuff, psychic phenomena, advanced technologies, time travel.

330
00:13:58,440 --> 00:14:00,440
Speaker 1: A lot to take in, it is, but it's.

331
00:14:00,240 --> 00:14:02,559
Speaker 2: Not completely out there, you know, what do you mean?

332
00:14:02,799 --> 00:14:05,679
I mean the CIA had that Stargate project.

333
00:14:05,759 --> 00:14:08,799
Speaker 1: Oh yeah, the psychic spies, oh back in the Cold War, right.

334
00:14:08,879 --> 00:14:12,519
And then there's all those stories about the Philadelphia.

335
00:14:11,840 --> 00:14:13,600
Speaker 2: Experiment, the one where they tried to make a.

336
00:14:13,600 --> 00:14:16,399
Speaker 1: Ship invisible, yeah, and maybe even teleport it.

337
00:14:16,399 --> 00:14:18,200
Speaker 2: It's all very X files, isn't it.

338
00:14:18,200 --> 00:14:20,480
Speaker 1: It is? So how do you reconcile all this?

339
00:14:20,759 --> 00:14:24,360
Speaker 2: You know, the skepticism about beersh but then some of

340
00:14:24,399 --> 00:14:29,320
his claims they seem to have some weight. It's tough.

341
00:14:29,360 --> 00:14:35,799
You gotta be critical, you know, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, right.

342
00:14:35,879 --> 00:14:37,559
Speaker 1: But we also don't want to be too quick to

343
00:14:37,639 --> 00:14:39,799
dismiss things just because they sound strange.

344
00:14:39,840 --> 00:14:42,039
Speaker 2: Exactly. I got to keep an open mind, open mind,

345
00:14:42,240 --> 00:14:42,600
but not.

346
00:14:42,639 --> 00:14:46,879
Speaker 1: An empty one, well put, so discerning but not dismissive.

347
00:14:47,039 --> 00:14:48,519
Speaker 2: That's it. That's the balance.

348
00:14:48,679 --> 00:14:49,159
Speaker 1: I like that.

349
00:14:49,279 --> 00:14:52,080
Speaker 2: And I think even if we can't prove or disprove

350
00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:56,559
everything Brush said, the questions he raises those are important.

351
00:14:56,679 --> 00:14:58,000
Speaker 1: Yeah, they really make you think.

352
00:14:57,840 --> 00:15:01,039
Speaker 2: About reality, about what we know, about the choices we make.

353
00:15:01,159 --> 00:15:04,840
Speaker 1: This whole conversation has me thinking about time differently. Oh yeah,

354
00:15:04,879 --> 00:15:06,080
Like is it really linear?

355
00:15:06,799 --> 00:15:07,399
Speaker 2: Good question?

356
00:15:07,639 --> 00:15:09,960
Speaker 1: Or are there are all these different timelines branching off,

357
00:15:10,080 --> 00:15:10,360
you know.

358
00:15:10,559 --> 00:15:13,159
Speaker 2: The multiverse. It's a mind blowing concept.

359
00:15:13,360 --> 00:15:14,279
Speaker 1: It is, it really is.

360
00:15:14,360 --> 00:15:16,879
Speaker 2: And that brings us back to those timeline wars, right,

361
00:15:17,039 --> 00:15:18,320
and that twenty thirty split.

362
00:15:18,399 --> 00:15:20,320
Speaker 1: Okay, so where do things stand now?

363
00:15:20,519 --> 00:15:24,320
Speaker 2: Well, according to Burish, we dodged a bullet in twenty twelve.

364
00:15:24,399 --> 00:15:25,799
Speaker 1: So we're on a better path.

365
00:15:25,840 --> 00:15:29,200
Speaker 2: Slightly better. But there's another split coming, another one around

366
00:15:29,240 --> 00:15:29,919
twenty thirty.

367
00:15:30,039 --> 00:15:33,240
Speaker 1: Okay, so what are the possibilities this time?

368
00:15:33,320 --> 00:15:37,320
Speaker 2: In one scenario, humanity wakes up, you know, wakes up.

369
00:15:37,240 --> 00:15:42,279
Speaker 1: We shed our illusions, we embrace unity, compassion, we unlock

370
00:15:42,440 --> 00:15:43,600
our true potential.

371
00:15:43,759 --> 00:15:46,320
Speaker 2: Sounds pretty utopian, it does, doesn't it.

372
00:15:46,480 --> 00:15:48,679
Speaker 1: No more war, no more.

373
00:15:48,559 --> 00:15:51,279
Speaker 2: Poverty, everyone living in harmony.

374
00:15:50,919 --> 00:15:52,120
Speaker 1: With each other with nature.

375
00:15:52,279 --> 00:15:54,279
Speaker 2: Sign me up for that timeline, Me too.

376
00:15:54,720 --> 00:15:57,559
Speaker 1: But there's another possibility the other side of the split,

377
00:15:57,879 --> 00:16:01,320
and that one's a bit grim. That one's there chaos control.

378
00:16:01,480 --> 00:16:07,600
Things get really bad, like how bad social unrest, economic collapse, environmental.

379
00:16:06,919 --> 00:16:10,279
Speaker 2: Disasters, oll dystopian nightmare pretty much. But what about those

380
00:16:10,320 --> 00:16:12,879
p forty five's Where do they fit into all this?

381
00:16:13,320 --> 00:16:16,080
Speaker 1: Right? Why would our own descendants want things to go

382
00:16:16,240 --> 00:16:18,840
so wrong? It's a puzzle, isn't it?

383
00:16:18,840 --> 00:16:19,200
Speaker 2: It is?

384
00:16:19,240 --> 00:16:20,879
Speaker 1: But remember their origin story.

385
00:16:21,120 --> 00:16:23,720
Speaker 2: They evolved in a post apocalyptic world.

386
00:16:23,600 --> 00:16:26,639
Speaker 1: Right, survival of the fittest conformity.

387
00:16:26,320 --> 00:16:28,120
Speaker 2: So they see our way of life as.

388
00:16:27,960 --> 00:16:31,960
Speaker 1: A threat individuality, freedom, It's all dangerous to them.

389
00:16:32,000 --> 00:16:34,919
Speaker 2: They're like time travelers, trying to preserve their own history.

390
00:16:34,639 --> 00:16:37,679
Speaker 1: Even if it means sacrificing ours. That's heavy, it is.

391
00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:40,960
And if they're really manipulating things behind the scenes, yeah,

392
00:16:41,039 --> 00:16:41,679
we might.

393
00:16:41,480 --> 00:16:44,519
Speaker 2: Be seeing their influence all around us, Like what all

394
00:16:44,559 --> 00:16:47,960
the anxiety and society, the distrust, the misinformation.

395
00:16:48,639 --> 00:16:49,919
Speaker 1: You think they're behind all that.

396
00:16:50,000 --> 00:16:53,559
Speaker 2: I'm not saying every online argument is orchestrated by time

397
00:16:53,600 --> 00:16:55,960
traveling grace, right, But we got to be aware of

398
00:16:56,039 --> 00:16:57,399
how information can be.

399
00:16:57,519 --> 00:16:59,080
Speaker 1: Used to manipulate us, to.

400
00:16:59,120 --> 00:17:02,159
Speaker 2: Shape our perception, to influence our choices.

401
00:17:02,519 --> 00:17:04,119
Speaker 1: Do They got to be vigilant.

402
00:17:03,759 --> 00:17:08,200
Speaker 2: Absolutely, stay informed, think, critically, question everything.

403
00:17:08,559 --> 00:17:11,240
Speaker 1: But what else can we do? I mean beyond that, how.

404
00:17:11,079 --> 00:17:13,440
Speaker 2: Do we navigate these timeline wars?

405
00:17:13,519 --> 00:17:15,559
Speaker 1: How do we make sure we end up on the

406
00:17:15,640 --> 00:17:17,640
right side of that twenty thirty split.

407
00:17:17,839 --> 00:17:19,279
Speaker 2: That's the big question, isn't it?

408
00:17:19,279 --> 00:17:21,279
Speaker 1: It is? And that's what I'm really curious about.

409
00:17:21,400 --> 00:17:23,559
Speaker 2: Well, that's exactly what we'll explore in the final part

410
00:17:23,559 --> 00:17:24,240
of our deep dive.

411
00:17:24,359 --> 00:17:28,319
Speaker 1: Okay, I'm ready, stay tuned, Welcome back, everybody. It's the

412
00:17:28,359 --> 00:17:32,319
final stretch of our deep dive. And man, what a

413
00:17:32,359 --> 00:17:33,079
trip it's been.

414
00:17:33,240 --> 00:17:35,240
Speaker 2: It really has. We've been through a lot, haven't we.

415
00:17:35,599 --> 00:17:39,960
Sumerian mysteries, government secrets, alien encounters.

416
00:17:39,559 --> 00:17:43,000
Speaker 1: Time travel, oh shebang. But before we wrap things up,

417
00:17:43,119 --> 00:17:45,880
I want to talk about those tools you mentioned, tools

418
00:17:46,160 --> 00:17:50,240
for navigating those timeline wars. Ah, yes, making sure we

419
00:17:50,319 --> 00:17:52,079
end up on the on the right side of that

420
00:17:52,119 --> 00:17:53,519
twenty thirty split.

421
00:17:53,359 --> 00:17:55,960
Speaker 2: Right right, because you know, it's all well and good

422
00:17:55,960 --> 00:17:59,480
to talk about about time traveling grays uh huh and

423
00:17:59,559 --> 00:18:00,920
government conspiracies.

424
00:18:01,000 --> 00:18:03,839
Speaker 1: It's fascinating, but it is what can we actually do

425
00:18:03,920 --> 00:18:04,359
about it?

426
00:18:04,480 --> 00:18:06,240
Speaker 2: Exactly? That's the key question.

427
00:18:06,240 --> 00:18:07,559
Speaker 1: That's what I'm really curious about.

428
00:18:07,640 --> 00:18:10,200
Speaker 2: Well, let's shift gears a bit, okay, less focus on

429
00:18:10,240 --> 00:18:15,640
the complexities of Burtish's story, okay, and more on practical strategies.

430
00:18:15,759 --> 00:18:16,759
Speaker 1: Practical strategies.

431
00:18:16,799 --> 00:18:20,200
Speaker 2: I like it for navigating the choices ahead, you know,

432
00:18:20,720 --> 00:18:21,519
for all of us.

433
00:18:21,759 --> 00:18:25,359
Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely, because I mean contemplating the existence of like,

434
00:18:25,759 --> 00:18:29,119
you know, time traveling grays. Right, it's fun. But yes,

435
00:18:29,359 --> 00:18:31,440
I'm more interested in what we can actually.

436
00:18:31,079 --> 00:18:34,200
Speaker 2: Do, you know, absolutely, And I think a good starting

437
00:18:34,240 --> 00:18:36,440
point of fundamental principle is knowledge.

438
00:18:36,640 --> 00:18:37,000
Speaker 1: Knowledge.

439
00:18:37,119 --> 00:18:38,000
Speaker 2: Knowledge is power.

440
00:18:38,240 --> 00:18:39,480
Speaker 1: Oh okay, I like that.

441
00:18:39,559 --> 00:18:42,039
Speaker 2: The more we know about what's going on, the forces

442
00:18:42,079 --> 00:18:44,799
at play, the better choices we can make, choices that

443
00:18:44,839 --> 00:18:47,039
are aligned with our values, with what we want.

444
00:18:47,359 --> 00:18:51,319
Speaker 1: Okay, So step one, stay informed exactly. But there's a

445
00:18:51,400 --> 00:18:54,400
lot of information out there, oh, tons of it. How

446
00:18:54,400 --> 00:18:56,720
do we know what's real and what's not.

447
00:18:56,880 --> 00:18:58,279
Speaker 2: That's where critical thinking comes there.

448
00:18:58,359 --> 00:19:00,960
Speaker 1: Critical thinking it's about.

449
00:19:00,279 --> 00:19:03,799
Speaker 2: You know, being discerning questioning what you see and hear.

450
00:19:04,039 --> 00:19:07,759
Speaker 1: Don't just believe everything you read, especially online. Right, whether

451
00:19:07,799 --> 00:19:09,720
it's mainstream media, social.

452
00:19:09,400 --> 00:19:11,440
Speaker 2: Media doesn't matter. Always question it.

453
00:19:11,880 --> 00:19:17,720
Speaker 1: So fact checking, fact checking, yeah, verifying sources, considering biases.

454
00:19:17,319 --> 00:19:21,359
Speaker 2: Absolutely, and remember critical thinking. It's not about being cynical

455
00:19:21,960 --> 00:19:26,000
or dismissive. It's about being curious, curious exactly, and committed

456
00:19:26,039 --> 00:19:27,039
to finding the truth.

457
00:19:27,200 --> 00:19:27,599
Speaker 1: I like that.

458
00:19:27,960 --> 00:19:30,720
Speaker 2: So we're being critical thinkers. Yeah, what else can we

459
00:19:30,759 --> 00:19:33,160
do to prepare for this? This timeline? Skillit?

460
00:19:33,279 --> 00:19:34,039
Speaker 1: That's what I want to know.

461
00:19:34,160 --> 00:19:37,079
Speaker 2: Well, let's think back to that utopian timeline we talked about,

462
00:19:37,160 --> 00:19:40,119
the one where everything works out, the one where humanity

463
00:19:40,240 --> 00:19:44,279
really steps up, embraces unity, compassion, all of that.

464
00:19:44,400 --> 00:19:45,640
Speaker 1: I like that timeline me too.

465
00:19:45,920 --> 00:19:47,599
Speaker 2: And it's not just wishful thinking.

466
00:19:48,240 --> 00:19:49,200
Speaker 1: It's not. No.

467
00:19:49,319 --> 00:19:53,839
Speaker 2: Remember, we have agency, We have the power to choose.

468
00:19:54,240 --> 00:19:56,559
Speaker 1: So you're saying that our choices actually matter.

469
00:19:56,720 --> 00:20:00,160
Speaker 2: They absolutely do. Every choice we make it shapes the

470
00:20:00,200 --> 00:20:01,519
reality we experience.

471
00:20:01,839 --> 00:20:05,279
Speaker 1: So even small acts of kindness, compassion, it all adds

472
00:20:05,359 --> 00:20:06,200
up can make a difference.

473
00:20:06,240 --> 00:20:08,599
Speaker 2: They can tip the scales, so to speak.

474
00:20:08,799 --> 00:20:10,640
Speaker 1: Wow, that's powerful.

475
00:20:10,759 --> 00:20:13,680
Speaker 2: It is. It's about aligning our actions with our aspirations,

476
00:20:13,799 --> 00:20:16,799
choosing love over fear, connection over division.

477
00:20:16,920 --> 00:20:19,519
Speaker 1: Okay, that makes sense, but let's be real here. Not

478
00:20:19,640 --> 00:20:22,359
everyone is going to like suddenly become an enlightened being

479
00:20:22,920 --> 00:20:25,519
true true, There's still gonna be conflict. There's still gonna

480
00:20:25,519 --> 00:20:27,839
be greed, people trying to take advantage.

481
00:20:27,880 --> 00:20:28,880
Speaker 2: That's the reality of it.

482
00:20:28,960 --> 00:20:32,240
Speaker 1: So how do we deal with that while still, you know,

483
00:20:32,279 --> 00:20:33,319
staying true to ourselves.

484
00:20:33,359 --> 00:20:37,000
Speaker 2: That's where discernment comes in. Discernment recognizing that not everyone

485
00:20:37,039 --> 00:20:40,920
is coming from a good place, setting boundaries, protecting.

486
00:20:40,480 --> 00:20:42,920
Speaker 1: Yourself from those energy vampires.

487
00:20:42,799 --> 00:20:46,119
Speaker 2: Exactly, those toxic relationships. Sometimes you got to say.

488
00:20:45,960 --> 00:20:47,680
Speaker 1: No, yeah, I can see that.

489
00:20:47,720 --> 00:20:51,880
Speaker 2: And it's about building inner strength, resilience so we don't.

490
00:20:51,680 --> 00:20:53,559
Speaker 1: Get swept away by all the negativity.

491
00:20:53,720 --> 00:20:56,920
Speaker 2: Exactly. The more grounded you are in your own values,

492
00:20:56,960 --> 00:20:59,599
in your sense of self, the less likely you are

493
00:20:59,599 --> 00:21:01,720
to be weighed by outside pressures.

494
00:21:02,039 --> 00:21:03,119
Speaker 1: So trust your gut.

495
00:21:03,319 --> 00:21:06,079
Speaker 2: Trust your gut, yeah, that inner compass, Stand your ground,

496
00:21:06,079 --> 00:21:07,519
stand your ground absolutely.

497
00:21:07,720 --> 00:21:08,279
Speaker 1: I like that.

498
00:21:08,319 --> 00:21:10,400
Speaker 2: And remember you're not alone in this.

499
00:21:11,200 --> 00:21:11,680
Speaker 1: What do you mean?

500
00:21:12,079 --> 00:21:15,000
Speaker 2: There are others out there, people who share your values.

501
00:21:14,599 --> 00:21:16,319
Speaker 1: And people who want a better world.

502
00:21:16,440 --> 00:21:20,039
Speaker 2: Exactly, find your tribe, connect with them. Build a community,

503
00:21:20,160 --> 00:21:24,279
a community of support, because together we're stronger.

504
00:21:24,720 --> 00:21:26,200
Speaker 1: Together, we can make a difference.

505
00:21:26,200 --> 00:21:26,839
Speaker 2: That's the idea.

506
00:21:27,000 --> 00:21:30,319
Speaker 1: This has been an amazing conversation. You've covered so much ground.

507
00:21:30,480 --> 00:21:34,960
We have ancient mysteries, time travel, the fate of humanity.

508
00:21:35,079 --> 00:21:37,079
Speaker 2: It's a lot to process, it is.

509
00:21:37,039 --> 00:21:39,440
Speaker 1: But ultimately it all comes down to choice.

510
00:21:39,680 --> 00:21:40,240
Speaker 2: Choice.

511
00:21:40,319 --> 00:21:43,480
Speaker 1: We have the power to shape our own realities.

512
00:21:42,880 --> 00:21:46,839
Speaker 2: And to contribute to the evolution of humanity as a whole.

513
00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:49,559
Speaker 1: Wow. That's a powerful thought, it is.

514
00:21:49,599 --> 00:21:53,839
Speaker 2: And as we head towards that twenty thirty crossroads, let's

515
00:21:53,880 --> 00:21:58,440
remember what we've talked about. Stay informed, stay vigilant, stay connected,

516
00:21:58,799 --> 00:22:02,319
and choose wisely, jess wise exactly, choose the path of love,

517
00:22:02,400 --> 00:22:03,319
the path of light.

518
00:22:03,759 --> 00:22:06,599
Speaker 1: Well said, Well said, And on that note, will leave

519
00:22:06,640 --> 00:22:09,440
you to ponder all of this mysteries of time, the

520
00:22:09,519 --> 00:22:10,720
possibilities of the.

521
00:22:10,680 --> 00:22:12,680
Speaker 2: Future, and the power of choice.

522
00:22:12,559 --> 00:22:16,279
Speaker 1: Until next time. Stay curious, stay engaged, and keep choosing

523
00:22:16,359 --> 00:22:16,960
love and light.

524
00:22:17,119 --> 00:22:17,799
Speaker 2: Absolutely

