Big Money Is Quietly Betting on Plasma Energy

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Summary

➡ This text discusses the potential of plasma energy as a cheaper, cleaner source of power, and how it could change the global economy. It also mentions the importance of investing in silver due to its increasing value and use in high-tech industries. The text warns about upcoming economic instability and advises protecting assets with gold and silver. Lastly, it shares a personal story about the speaker’s love for sports, particularly golf, and how it has shaped his life.
➡ The speaker discusses the importance of having an open mind and being willing to learn and adapt, differentiating between being intelligent and being smart. They also delve into the topic of energy, specifically plasma energy, and its potential impact on the economy. They express concern over the mysterious disappearances of scientists linked to plasma energy research, while large corporations are investing heavily in this field. The speaker also mentions the challenges posed by our outdated energy grid and the potential consequences of disruptions in the oil market.
➡ The text discusses the potential of free energy, referencing Tesla’s theories, and compares the current development of AI to the Manhattan Project. It also touches on the changing dynamics of the petrodollar and the implications of this shift. The text suggests that the development of renewable energy could drastically change economies and prosperity, and hints at a possible connection between the deaths of nuclear scientists and the pursuit of free energy. Lastly, it mentions the significant investments being made into AI and data centers, likening it to a wartime mobilization.
➡ The text discusses the potential of a new form of clean, renewable, and cheap energy, and the resistance it faces from those who control oil. It also explores the possibility of harnessing energy from spent fuel rods from nuclear power plants. The author mentions the significant investments being made into this new energy form, despite uncertainty about its public availability. The text also delves into the mysteries of the Great Pyramid of Giza and its potential connection to free energy, urging readers to question established beliefs and explore new possibilities.
➡ The text discusses the importance of having an open mind and questioning what we’ve been taught, using examples like conspiracy theories and the potential impact of AI. It suggests that being smart is about being open to new ideas, not just being well-educated. The text also explores how AI might change the economy and job market, and the limitations of AI in terms of creativity and intuition.
➡ The text discusses the concept of free energy, referencing historical figures like Nikola Tesla and JP Morgan. It suggests that free energy technology might have been suppressed due to competing interests in oil and timber. The text also mentions a conspiracy theory about Enron’s involvement in free energy research and the suspicious circumstances surrounding the collapse of Building 7. The speaker appreciates thought-provoking discussions and looks forward to sharing exciting, revolutionary industry news in the near future.

Transcript

Just think of the prosperity of having a much cheaper, cleaner source of energy. So many of the wars that are fought over things like energy. And it becomes, it’s interesting because when you, when you hear about the deaths of these nuclear scientists, it was always, it was framed as scientists that were involved in nuclear capabilities, had nothing to, they never talked about, you know, specializing in plasma energy. You know, there’s a fine line between conspiracy and reality. But, you know, I watched a video on Nikola Tesla and how he believed that the great pyramid of Giza was actually a.

They believe that he was involved in using that technology of free energy that would be transmittable across the globe to different receiving stations. And. Welcome to business Game Changers and the Friday night Economic Review. I have Andy Schectman coming back to the program tonight. It’s going to be different. We are going to talk about the changing economy that’s going to come from energy and we’re going to explore plasma energy and whether plasma energy is the real deal. And while we know, personally, I know it’s real, it’s. That’s all the energy around us and we know that it’s real and it’s what Tesla was working on.

And so we’re going to talk about how. Because we know that all these corporations are investing in it, large corporations. I’m going to talk about who’s investing in it and what does that mean to the plausibility of this realistically coming through and the global war that we’re watching right now, we are watching powerful factions fighting it out on the global stage. You know, people are watching the politicians fight it out really like two camps which don’t represent the average person anyways. I think it’s a reflection of global power fighting it out over these big economic issues like energy, like the dollar, like banking systems.

We’re watching all of that go on right now. So I brought to his attention the plasma energy and the scientists that have been killed. And we’re going to talk about that today. And it kind of piqued his interest and he started talking about this Y files and now he got me interested in this other show that he always watches. So this one I think you’re going to enjoy. If you have not protected your assets with gold and silver, you really need to. I think silver is the best buy of a lifetime right now. Everything we’re going to be talking about today when it comes to AI and the data centers and the way the future is going is based on silver.

And I don’t even see it the Monetary part of silver is almost secondary now to the high tech industrial use that it has. It is really valuable and I, I just. It’s a golden opportunity to buy a valuable metal that someday and I don’t know how long it’s going to take. A Goldman Sachs claims it’s going to be 309. That’s what they are estimating. It could get up to 309 this year and what is it, 75? I don’t know what it’s really going to do. All I know is it’s seriously undervalued. If you haven’t looked at it yet I really highly recommend you look at it.

It also will be a hedge against the real instability that is coming. We know it’s coming. The last oil tanker has already landed. We don’t know how much devastation we’re going to see with the straight of our moose. This is coming. We’re going through some, we’re going to go through some hard times so it’s good to prepare either way. So if you are interested, buy from a company that doesn’t scam you. You are going to get very premiums. You should not be paying more than you should be and the premiums matter. And I’m telling you a lot of the gold companies out there are taking advantage of you not knowing what you’re doing.

Miles Franklin will not. They’ll give you competitive prices and in fact they don’t even publish their price list. So if you want their private price list and you’re interested in being treated with respect go to sarah westall.com Miles Franklin fill out that form and they will help you today again s.com miles franklin okay, let’s get into this really fascinating. We kind of take a different direction tonight with Andy Schectman. Hi Andy, welcome back to the program. Sarah, it’s great to be back with you. Thank you for having me. And people don’t realize you don’t know if you want people to know this but you and your team are winning your golf league so far.

Yeah, it’s, it’s, it. You know what, as someone who wouldn’t have made it through adolescence without athletics, baseball in particular but you know, baseball, basketball, football, skiing, golf, everything. It defined my life. It made me who I am. And I think there’s a lot to say for organized sports. It teaches you teamwork. It teaches you hard work, initiative, doing things on your own, getting better, loving what you do. You can’t really be good at something unless you love it in my opinion like really Love it allows you to get up every morning like I do every day.

I never have had a Monday morning where I was really bummed out to go to work. Same thing is true about athletics. And I love playing golf. So do the other seven guys on my golf team. We play here in Southern Florida in a league with 12 other country clubs. And we’re coming down to the nitty gritty. We’re just barely in first place. Top four teams make the playoffs. Two weeks left, we’ll be back into the playoffs again two years in a row. We won it two years ago. Lost in the championship last year. So we have a score to settle.

But, yeah, thanks for bringing that up. It’s exciting. It’s a lot of fun. I look forward to tomorrow, to our match. Well, okay, so you grew up playing baseball. How did you get out of, or didn’t you get out of having a baseball swing with your golf swing? Or did you grow up playing golf, too, so you never developed a bad habit? Well, I played softball all around North America, into my 40s, all through Canada and the United States and on some pretty serious teams. And they’re a completely different swing because at that level of softball, you’re, you’re.

You don’t stand static in the box. Typically, you’ll move as the pitch is coming. You’ll walk this way, you’ll to hit it to left field, to hit it to right field. At that level, you have to be able to hit a fly ball, a ground ball, a line drive, left field, right field. You have to be able to do that. And what I found is it took me a long time. I didn’t really start golfing until much later in life. It took me a long time to realize you can’t move your feet when you swing a golf ball as a golf club, I mean, you have good hand eye, but over time, it’s like shooting a gun.

And right at the last second, you’re moving your hand. It’s very difficult. It doesn’t work. It’s the Happy Gilmore swing. You know what it is? The swing itself is very similar with the straight arm, but the mechanics of the, the feet and the quiet body are very different. I guess it’s because I love it. And you get out there and you grind and you work for a while and you kind of make a little bit of progress. And, you know, living in Florida for five years has helped me get to a level where I’m able to hang with some of these better players.

But that’s also when you’re competitive. I never, because I don’t play enough. I could never get past the, the stance, you know, because when you’re hitting. I grew up playing softball and you have a different st. You, you just stand differently and I, I just, I don’t play enough to get past some of those habits. Well, that’s the thing with golf. A lot of people don’t get past the I have to suck part and everyone does. There’s never, I don’t even think Tiger woods was a magician, you know, when he was started swinging he was a little boy like two years old.

But everyone who plays golf goes through the I suck phase and you start to make progressions and you know that one or two shots, they always talk about the bring you back to me again. I mean it’s the one thing I do other than work and read, study, you know, in terms of anything other than those things, being a husband, father, that kind of stuff that allows my brain to be quiet and which to me is invaluable beyond belief for me. So I don’t know, I look like. It’s funny because I was the kid in baseball that on a Saturday morning game at 9am I’d be up at 4:30 in the morning, put my uniform on and get back into bed.

You know, like that’s the kind of passion that I have. I feel I’m already thinking about the first hole tomorrow and I know the course we’re playing. And that’s what I mean about being good at something or the pursuit of excellence comes with loving what you’re doing. And that’s why I don’t mind reading three hours a day to talk with people like you. Although a lot of the things that you talk about and I think we’re going to talk about today expand my mind. And that’s the thing, you know, there’s a difference between being intelligent and smart.

I know a lot of intelligent people that are smart. I know a lot of smart people that are less intelligent, meaning they’re not as educated. But I also know a lot of intelligent people that are dumb. And what I mean by that is being able to open your mind and your be with no preconceived notions to other viewpoints and to other things to expand your mind, something you’re excellent at. And you’ve helped me with that too. Listening to a lot of your videos about things that I have never been, I’ve never been exposed to and listening and learning and accepting and taking pieces of information that other people may not listen to to Me, that’s the delineation between intelligent and smart.

Smart people have open minds and can change their opinions and their viewpoints. Sometimes intelligent people can’t do that. So, anyways, no, I’m looking forward to chatting with you and thank you for having me back here today. And what you got in mind? Well, your game for this today, I wanted to talk about a few different things because I think that energy, you know, the petrodollar for so long, since Nixon took us off the gold standard, we were on the petrodollar and then we went off the petrodollar a few years ago, and for the most part, and still extremely important for society.

But now with these data centers, we’re having a serious challenge to our system. Right? And they want to go to electric grid. They want to do all these things. Now we’re seeing plasma energy, really making some headway. I did a lot of shows back in the day with Albert Abel, who was a scientist who was working on plasma energy. I even talked to other scientists or rocket scientists that were working on plasma energy. They’re really the edge of science, have been working on it behind the scenes. And now I’m looking and there’s so many of the large companies are plowing money into plasma energy.

And then the AI now we’re running into those complications. And then we have the scientists, these 11 scientists that have just been killed who look like a lot of them were tied to plasma energy. I think there’s a big story here with plasma energy and the entire economy and where it’s going. It’s scary that you, if what you’re saying is true about the people who understand how it works, because this is a technology that is not, you know, when I think of plasma, I think of the sun, right? And how do you harness plasma energy and how do you make it a utility and how do you commercialize it? But when you realize that this is a field that has, I suppose, some.

Some specific experts on it who just seem to be mysteriously winding up on the Clinton list or however they’re disappearing. I say that tongue in cheek with the Clinton list, but I mean, everybody knows what you’re talking about. Where are they going? And why is it that you’re seeing this become more than just an isolated incident? I’m sure there are some folks within the traditional forms of energy that have a problem with, with using and moving towards plasma. And you could say the same thing. You know, we’ve seen that all throughout. You go all the way back to, you know, Nikola Tesla, and his idea of free energy that was railroaded by JP Morgan who found out when JP found out what he was doing would directly conflict his investments.

And so there’s a lot of, I’m sure a lot of pushback against it. But no, I mean I think you can see what happens with just a couple of weeks of disruption in the oil market. You can see that. You can see a country like China and the massive amount of nuclear facilities that they’ve been building, 20 or 30 of them in the last several years in the United States. Zero. So energy and energy independence is a huge deal. Not lost on I think anyone really. Now you see it more than ever. What do you make of the.

I just start wondering the disappearance of these scientists. I just start wondering if this is a war going on behind the scenes. It’s going to fundamentally change the entire economy. And the scientists that are on the cutting edge of it are disappearing. But the big corporations are plowing money into it. And I mean I was just looking at it, the money, the companies that are plowing money into it. Let me grab you the names of some of these. Microsoft, Google, Chevron, Chevron, the venture capital country or venture capital companies, the sovereign capital. It’s all plowing into this area.

What does that mean? I mean when you see that and then you see these top sciences dying and then you see us going off the gold or we’re going off the petrodollar this point you see the grids all suffering under the AI, meaning that now there’s a demand for it. I mean are they creating the demand? I mean there’s a demand anyways. Right, but are they creating more of a demand? Well, and maybe showing what happens when the oil, when the oil flow gets disrupted, there’s no question. And you know, it gets even more interesting when you look at the bleed down of our strategic petroleum reserves to as low as they’ve ever been.

Nearly. What happens when you run out of energy that we take for granted? Right. And you’re right, the grid that we have is so outdated. Admittingly I don’t know enough about. You know, Mike Adams and I have talked a little bit about it. He’s big into this as well. And another amazing guy. And I would say to you that there is no question but that energy is going to be a problem. And not only is it, when you talk about free flowing energy and the disruption, what it does to the cost of oil, but oil is the byproduct of everything in this country.

Everything. Anything in my room or yours. From the clothes you’re wearing to the screen you’re looking at, to whatever behind you. All is a byproduct of oil, either in production or distribution. So there’s no question that finding something that would be far more economical and abundant and available would be fantastic. What do you know about the ability to produce it domestically and what is involved in producing it? I know you’re supposed to be asking me questions, but this is a topic that I’m not an expert on, but I love to think my way through these things.

Well, you know, the interviews that I have done in the past and the diving into it, I’ve worked with some scientists. This was based on the, the patents at the University of Colorado where they were, you know, the, the electron goes around the nucleus, right? It keeps going, or the center of the atom and it goes around, right? And if the theories of physics, if the, the theories of physics is everything slows down, right, over time. But if, if the electron slows down to a stop, then matter doesn’t exist. And they said, well, how can. The theory of entropy is that things slow down over time, right? And.

But if the electron slows down over time, then matter wouldn’t exist. So it doesn’t make sense. So they theorized that if they could take the energy from the electron, that something else would give it energy. And so they took, they artificially took the energy from the electron and then it got it zapped and kept going and they take it and it zapped, it got zapped from the plasma field. And so they were indirectly tying into the plasma field. That was their method of getting to the, to plasma energy. I know that there’s different methods that people are using to tap into and Tesla did it a different way.

I like to use that example because it makes sense to me of how you can get to the plasma energy field, but that energy is all around us. And they were doing the experiments because they, by doing that they could create this endless battery where they put it through a channel and they’d keep taking the energy from the electron and then it zap it again and they just keep doing it and they could create this endless battery. That was their theory. And so they’re getting closer and closer and all these different scientists have a little. There’s different methods.

I need to look into it more because that’s the method I was looking at. And some of the rocket scientists that I was talking to, rocket science, they truly were rocket scientists. They were, they were coming up with ways to tap into the plasma energy to get the rockets to Mars. And they could get there, they could get there in like three days. They were fast. They just didn’t know how to stop. At that time it was, they were going too fast. That’s a problem. It was a problem. Yeah. And so we, we are at the edge of being able to have free energy.

Tesla had all that figured out. The. Famously mit. Trump’s uncle grabbed the Tesla files and kept it for mit. Now there’s something I didn’t know. Yeah, his uncle was the one who was responsible for all the Tesla files. So there’s a lot going on in this area, which really is interesting. And the AI data centers, I think it’s military time mobilization, all these. It’s not just the, the civilian architecture for AI, Military and civilian is so intertwined now that it’s almost like the, the, what was the nuclear program back then? It was called the, you know, the program, the wartime program.

Anyways, it’s like we’re in a Manhattan Project. Yes, it’s like the Manhattan Project. And they’ve, they’ve compared it to that, that we are the AI dentist centers. And the build out of AI is like the current, like the Manhattan Project. And so all these executive orders and then they, last week they just. The AI guys put a lot of pressure on Trump. He was going to ask for the AI models to have voluntary, voluntary. For them to go through voluntary checks to make sure that whatever they do is good for humanity. Right. At the last minute they pulled out because that if they did that.

So now they have no checks. If they did that, that would slow down the AI race. And so they’re in this like wartime mobilization every way to build these things up. How does that tie into the energy infrastructure? How does it tie into all this stuff? I think they’re trying to create a demand when all these companies are pouring money into it. I mean, it’s a fascinating thought. I mean, I’m just a theory. No, I mean it’s a fascinating thought. Renewable energy would change the world. I mean, it would very quickly, you know, it would change economies, it would change prosperity.

It would just think of the prosperity of having a much cheaper, cleaner source of energy. So many of the wars that are fought over things like energy and, you know, it becomes. It’s interesting because when you hear about the deaths of these nuclear scientists, it was always. It was framed as scientists that were involved in nuclear capabilities had nothing to. They never talked about specializing in plasma energy. There’s a fine line between conspiracy and reality. But I watched A video on Nikola Tesla and how he believed that the Great Pyramid of Giza was actually a. They believe that he was involved in using that technology of free energy that would be transmittable across the globe to different receiving stations.

Could it be true? Yeah, why not? I mean, if we’re able to split an atom and we’re able to do these kinds of things with, you know, nuclear technology, who’s to say that this isn’t something that could be refined? Especially when you start to see people that are mysteriously dropping by the wayside. Not, you know, 1, 2, 3. How about like 10 or 12? I’ve seen that and yeah, there’s 11, I think maybe 12. I don’t. It’s, it’s, it’s a very again fine line between conspiracy and reality. But when you get to Microsoft and those kind of companies getting involved, it even becomes more legitimate.

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So what’s going on there? And then we went off the petrodollar. The entire economy was based on petroleum and now they. And you’re going to, you know more about the details of that, how we went off the petro system. Are we still on it? Sort of. Or are we. Well, I mean when Saudi Arabia at the fiftieth anniversary a couple of years ago. And you know, they decided at that point, I guess to not be exclusive to the US being the petrodollar, but to still take dollars, but to take other things as well. And you’re beginning to see that’s really the center of the problems in this country is you’re seeing largely through settlement for energy.

These countries design in the global south deals, if you will, that are outside of the dollar, largely for energy. For example, you have the sips, the Cross Interbank Payment system and the Enbridge. Both are not compatible with Swift that are trading central bank digital currencies from one country to the next using their own currency instead of the dollar and settling in balances in gold. What does that have to do with anything? Well, it’s because normally everything that was ever done in energy settled in US dollars. And when you have US dollars, you have to reinvest the excess into Treasuries to give it some return.

In a liquid market, both of those things are starting to fall. De dollarization, debasement of the currency and if it were a word it would be called detreasurization, which is the bigger one. All of it related to the petrodollar not being the global standard anymore. The only global standard for oil settlement. It still is predominantly what countries settle oil in, settle energy in. But it’s beginning to break away from that little by little, which is a big deal and creates less and less demand for the dollar. And if there’s less demand for the dollar, you don’t have to recycle as many of those dollars back into the Treasuries, creating less demand for Treasuries, raising rates.

And maybe that all has to do with the fact that these countries realize, well what the hell do we need to take dollars for that are being inflated away that Saudi Arabia said we’ll take other things that allow us to stand on our own two feet. So yeah, you could, I think I could draw a parallel there that the petrodollar is not dead, but it’s, you know, it’s maybe running on four of six cylinders, if you will, kind of thing. And it’s beginning to lose its momentum globally. Why not start looking at a alternative form of energy that would perhaps very quickly reverse the damage that is being done by selling dollars and Treasuries if the United States was at the center of that new technology, you know, the economic consequence of that is extraordinary.

So I think that’s something that should be followed. In fact, you’ve incentivized me to dig a little bit more into it. And is there from your interviews, is there a chance that this will be commercialized? Have they made any progress at all in being or is it still in the hypothetical? Well, I mean I need to look at it more because of how much money is going into it from these big corporations. That tells me because before then it was all. It couldn’t go forward for the public. Right. It was all just more specialized high tech.

They’re doing it in more the projects that aren’t in the public’s eye. Right. But in the military projects or the high tech projects. But the fact that they’re plowing this money in that means they’re looking at it for the public and they’re looking at it differently. And I think that the petrodollar changing gave it a headway. But all these scientists being killed, maybe that’s the war. I mean maybe that’s part of the war that we’re having. This war is not a conventional war. This is a, you know, the mobilization of AI and data centers and all the money that’s going into it is very much like mobilization wartime mobilizations in the past.

But it’s going to AI and data centers. And they truly believe, or should I say, I don’t want to say they truly believe. I think they do. They act like they do. I guess you can’t ever prove that, that they need to win this in order to maintain their control and power in the world. They need to be ahead of everybody. And it’s something like this first to market is going to win in a big way. It’s an interesting, it’s an interesting thought, one that I will dig deeper into myself but I think one that is certainly going wood after watching what happened here during a disruption of oil flow, what can really happen and you could argue we haven’t even begun to see the, the effects of this blockade of the straits.

There was a lot of oil that was on ships already out to sea sitting there, which has already been offloaded. And we’re draining our strategic supply. We’re draining the ability to replenish it quickly. I think you can certainly see that a new form of clean, renewable, cheap energy would be, would be a big deal. But at the same time, those who control the oil are very powerful folks. They are sure they, they don’t want to, to give up that, that’s what I mean, give up that golden goose. There’s a war going on with this. And your question of how close are they, are they to Actually making it publicly available.

I, I don’t know that question. How, how realistic is it within the next one to five years? I don’t know, but they’re pouring a lot of money into it. Yeah, well, it makes sense. It does. Because, you know, the ramifications again of not only the dollar losing demand globally for settlement in energy and other alternatives being applied globally, just the fact that that energy itself is finite in the way that it exists now is crazy. Now, you know, I don’t know the delineation here, but maybe there is something to do with this. But I have a client who’s somewhat of a mentor to me, always has been, and he was a damages expert or is a damages expert and became an incredibly wealthy man by representing all of the nuclear power plants in their lawsuit against the Department of Energy.

And it was the Yucca Mountain in Las Vegas energy deal that where they were going to store all the spent rods of the nuclear energy plants, the spent fuel rods, where they only use just like a few percent of these rods and then they have to get rid of them. Right. Because of the radioactive decay. And they were going to send everything to Yucca Mountain, which is deep underground in Nevada. And it was mothballed. The pushback was too extreme. And so for years all of the power plants were contributing money to this fund at the Yucca Mountain Fund at the Department of Energy.

When the thing got mothballed years ago was too much pushback against it. The Department of Energy said, you got to keep paying the money. At the same time, they had to build on site containment centers for these spent fuel rods, which have massive amount of energy still locked up within them. And I wonder if this plasma energy idea has the ability to harness and access these spent fuel rods, that in essence you’re just using a tiny bit of it. And then now they still have to keep them on site, in containment instead of sending it somewhere, like to the Yucca Mountain project.

But he became very wealthy as they sued the US Government and largely, I believe, won. So I guess it’s an interesting thought to think of. Could we take this type of renewable energy and apply it towards what we already have, which is in essence, trash using current technology, but there’s still a tremendous amount of energy. I mean, we just all need to study this more because we know how much energy is the basic part of our economy. It’s everything. It is, it’s everything. You don’t have an industrialized society without it. Yeah, and the tie of Trump’s uncle is pretty interesting too.

And the fact that all these big corporations are investing in it, and for years I saw no movement, and I’m. I wasn’t expecting to see that all these companies were investing in it. And that tells me there’s something different. They don’t invest in things they don’t think could possibly be beneficial. Do you ever watch the Y Files? No. Okay, so the Y Files is an incredible show, and it’s on YouTube. Now, the guy that does it, he’s a brilliant scientist. There’s a little comic relief that he uses with this fish. Oh, now I know what you’re talking about.

Yeah. And remember the dumb fish? Yeah. And it’s. The fish is kind of annoying. Some people laugh and like it, but the stories are legit and they’re rooted in. In science. Very often, I would urge everyone to go watch the Y Files episode on Nikola Tesla and the. The Great Pyramid of Giza and how they intertwine it all together. It shaped my mind in the way that I think and look at a lot of things. And I watch all of the Y Files, the ones that I really love, believe it or not, was the hollow moon one that he talks about.

And interesting. Now, this one, you know, my father turned me on to it, and I’m like, come on, dad. You watch it and you look at the NASA scientists and the Harvard astronomy professors and the things that they quote and say. You look at the comments from guys like Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong and all this stuff and come back to me and tell me, you know, I was like, wow. After I said what I mean, what were you smoking last night? I was like, whoa, that’s interesting. Then I started digging into it. My favorite one was the pyramids.

And this one, you know, when you question the world, right. So. And I think we should. Right. Things like this that we should question. You look at the Great Pyramid of giza. It’s within 1/15th of a degree to pure north, true north. And even with modern equipment, you couldn’t do that. Its sides are like perfect symmetry to within 2 inches. But the craziest part of all, Great Pyramid. And I use it because this is where they talk about free energy. Was from the Great Pyramid. And there’s residue of chemicals that would be involved in the chambers.

If that were true. The two things that blew my mind, unlike anything else. Yes. They dragged the stone the entire length of the state of Florida from where the quarry was. It’s not indigenous to where the pyramids are, you know, aligned to 1 15th of a degree. Okay. They didn’t do all that crap. Here’s the craziest one. They were the Chinese. The Egyptians were obsessed with the equinox, where the day and the night are the same time. And if you take the number of seconds in an equinox, which is like 30. I forgot the number. Like 31,600, whatever the number is, number of seconds in an equinox, and you multiply it times the base of the pyramid, it is within like 99.8% accurate to the circumference of the Earth at the equator.

And if you take and multiply the seconds in the day of the equinox times the height, it’s like within 99.9% of the radius of the planet at the polar. I mean, impossible to do. And especially when, you know, unless you’re looking at it from up top, you see these things. And I did this at Jean Claude’s. You know, Jean Claude has a more of a. I guess you could say mystical audience, but they’re very in tune to gold. And I was asked to speak at his conference, so I wanted it to be more mystical and relating gold with the Egyptian culture.

And gold is very intertwined in their culture. Like, how the hell did they know how to mine it, refine it, and fashion King Tut’s masks to perfect symmetry in methodology that even craftsmen today would have a hard time doing. And then you look at the pyramid and the 1/15th of a degree and the equinox and the measurements, it’s like, okay, there’s a lot of stuff. And the Great Pyramid is known. And you watch the Y Files, they talk about this free energy. There are a lot of things that we have been conditioned to believe that 100.

And this is what I was saying earlier, the difference between smart and intelligent. The intelligent person may say you’re an idiot. Really, you believe that crap. But open your mind, suspend all your preconceived notions and sit down and watch these episodes on the Y Files about Nikola Tesla, about the hollow moon, and about the great pyramids of Giza, and. And you come back and ask yourself, honestly, I mean, is there a lot we think we know that we really don’t? And there’s no way that. I mean. So I find your ability to want to dig deep into this stuff endearing.

And I think if more people were like you, we’d be a smarter civilization, that’s for damn sure. Well, think of it, Andy. We can have things that are so obvious, you know, like what? You’re just talking about the Pyramid. Once they show it to you or you see it, whether somebody shows you it or you see it on your own, however you come to that information, it’s so obvious that you, you have to change. It’s like, okay, this is not what we think it is, right? But people, the intelligent versus smart thing, if you’re taught that it’s a certain thing like it was built in 20 years by the Egyptians and with sticks and stones, it doesn’t matter what information comes to you, you they don’t believe it, right? They can’t see the most obvious information for what it is.

And what is that? What is the difference between somebody that can see something that’s just so obvious and say okay, my paradigm needs to change. And those who are just stuck in what they were taught difference between smart and intelligent. Smart means you have an open mind. Intelligent means you’re well educated but reading the wrong stuff and indoctrinated into the wrong stuff. And I don’t want to get real crazy on this, but I’ll simply say, I mean you can look at Building seven that collapsed, fell straight down in a fashion as if it was demolished. And they admit there was nothing from the aircraft hit it, it just started on fire.

And so it starts on fire and a building collapses like that and it just happens to be filled with all the Enron records and all of this stuff in a fashion just down like that. There’s a fine line between conspiracy and reality. And I showed that to a very good friend of mine who is very well educated and he thought I was insane. I don’t know. I think some people just do not have the ability to get past the promise to get past it. It’s that these are the same people think Lee Harvey Oswald shot President Kennedy and somehow a bullet traveled around and pushed him backwards when he was shooting from behind him.

I don’t even want to say because he’s going to get mad at me if he’s watching. My brother in law believes that. I’m sorry David, I love you but, but he believes that and it’s like, come on, Jesse Ventura used to have a show. You know, he was, he was expert marksman, a Navy Seal and he had a show and it was all about debunking these things. He got up on a cherry picker and tried for 10 minutes the double bolt action shotgun and or rifle. He couldn’t even get two shots off in that time, let alone hit a moving target.

And how did his head go back into the left? You always remember that from the movie with Kevin Costner. Back into the left, Back into the left. But he was shooting from behind. So how does your head go back into the left if you’re getting shot with the bullet from behind? All of this stuff, it’s like, open your mind and use logic and break free from what you have been told. Because maybe there are reasons that these things happened. Like, in terms of the pyramid, it would invalidate a lot of the things perhaps that we have been taught about, you know, civilization and the origins of it and things that maybe we aren’t, you know, the public shouldn’t hear, they’re not capable of hearing.

I mean, there are a lot of things like that. And I think it’s important to open your mind to it. And, you know, it’s too bad that you have to feel almost sheepish talking about it, because people will think you’re an idiot. Well, I am not the most highly educated person. Classically, I am now out of self desire. I read three hours a day, seven days a week to be able to converse about things like this with people like you. But I would argue that I’m a lot smarter than some of the more intelligent people I know because I have an open mind and I’m able to see both sides of the story and then make my own interpretation.

But I am far closer to your side of reality than others. Well, it still needs. We’re not ignoring facts and things that are logical. We’re just putting it into a frame that’s. I think it’s more logical. Well, and that’s the point. We’re not ignoring these other data points. I think that’s the point. Other people are ignoring the things that are logical and turning a blind eye to what should be looked at simply because it goes against what the church said or what the history book said or what anything said. And I think you have to. You know, and the why files, as crazy as this sounds, has opened my eyes to this.

I want more people to check it out. It really. There are some. I’m gonna watch it. Well, he’s gonna probably give me some ideas for my show. Oh, there’s no question. Well, and I think that the very nature of our economy is. Might be shifting a bit here where I was listening to Sam Altman. I know a lot of people think he’s evil and whatever, but he. You have to listen to where. What people are saying so you can understand kind of what they’re thinking about from an economic standpoint. And he was talking about intelligence is going to be monetized.

So the, the AI systems themselves, you’re going to have to pay a certain amount to get intelligence and work on certain problems and that the economic system is going to shift more around that as well. I just started thinking about that. I don’t know what to think yet about what he said and how that’s really going to go. If that’s just kind of. That makes sense. It totally makes sense because within a few years or less, AI will have the cumulative intelligence of the whole everything, you know, I mean, everything that you can cram into books and encyclopedias and dictionaries and any type of research papers.

And I mean, it will all be there. Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang. So, yeah, I think it will. I mean, it already is being monetized to an extent. You have to pay for it already. But to create, you know, like, for example, I was watching a video about a guy who said I had the greatest, most secure job or education in the world, how to become a programmer. Now, it might be the worst because AI is programming. It’s telling you it takes all of the information that the programmers know to create the code and then it puts it all together and probably is able to, you know, extrapolate things or to code things that.

Why do you need to pay someone huge money for when you get this learning? We’re going to need a lot, we’re going to need a lot less of them. But they are finding a problem because they’re not developing the greater skills that they need to develop the AI. Well, but that’s the point. Like when everyone says, well, you know, when I say, well, it’s going to decimate the radiology profession. Why do you need a doctor getting paid huge money to look at an X ray when AI can do it? Well, they say, well, there’ll be one person to look at all the things.

But how do you get to be that one person? You have to grind your way through all of the schooling and get through and to get to be and see millions of X rays to get to that point. It’s like anything. How do you get to that point if you just get rid of the field? Yeah, it’s not. That’s right. What came first, the chicken or the egg, Right? Yeah. It doesn’t make sense. We’re going to be stuck in this, never going to evolve. I think that there’s going to. The two sides of the, the extremes are going like.

Let’s look at the medical profession, for example, the, the nurses, the, the people that work directly with the people and nurture human beings that’s going to be more valued because AI can’t value that. And you know, my mom just died and the, the nurses who were taking care of her at the end, they, it was like, oh God, these people were great. The nurses that work with people or the healthcare workers might not be just nurses, health co workers that have that people skill and then the talented ones that can move the field forward. Novelty AIs can’t come up with novelty.

It also isn’t able to take pattern recognition intuition and see, see and see how things bigger picture things before it has the data to prove it. And I’ve been arguing with ChatGPT and I said, and ChatGPT told me that it’s like you’re better at this than I am. And I go, that’s why I’m always arguing with you. Because you can’t see it. It’s because the, the AI can’t, can’t synthesize the data with intuition and pattern recognition. Yeah. And so. Yeah, well yet. But it takes creativity and intuition that they don’t. It, it doesn’t have. Maybe it can, but it’s not yet.

And I do think both sides. It can only synthesize what it has. It can’t come up with new, is my point. Right. Well, you know what? Again, I find AI to be incredibly exciting and incredibly frightening at the same time. It’s going to change the world, no question about it. As would be something like free energy, which, you know, if it existed way back when, you know, a couple hundred years ago with Nikola Tesla and JP Morgan at the turn of the century, who’s to say, or 150 years ago, rather, who’s to say that you know, that what you’re talking about isn’t already something understood in a reality? If someone really did get his paperwork, someone did understand it.

Who’s to say? And you know, maybe, maybe you’re on to something. Watch the Y files and see what I’m talking about. And I’m sure there’s tons of videos out there that talk about his research and what he had tried to do and how he had had the whole thing set up. And then JP Morgan pulled the funding on it because it would, it would have competed with his oil and his timber, which was all the things that were needed, this would have competed with. And he pulled it and so. And then discredited him. Died broke. You know what Dave Hodges told me? He told me that Enron was working toward.

He was in a meeting with Kenley and They were working on bringing out free energy, the plasma energy. Well, is there any coincidence that Building 7 collapsed? I mean they had all the Enron documentation. I’m just saying he had a bunch of, he’s like we’re gonna, this is really important stuff. He had a bunch of dead man switches. He said this could get us killed, but we need to move this forward. And then they pinned, they claimed that he committed suicide. He believes that he didn’t commit suicide. He went into witness Prot. Him. I don’t know if that’s true or not, but that’s the story.

And he said he was part of this group that was working on it. Wow. You know what? Here again, fine line between conspiracy and reality. I, I look, what do you say? I don’t know. But I love those mind expanding thoughts. Sarah, you’re amazing, lady. You think of things in a very unique way. Well, that’s very important. Thanks for expanding my mind once again. Okay, well, thank you. And you now you have me onto the Y files. I gotta go look at the Y files, check it out. I don’t. Talking about that guy and his fish.

Yes. It’s a gold book, isn’t it? It’s a huckle, it’s a big gold one, right. It’s a big goldfish in a bowl next to him. And it, it’s like, it’s, it’s his side humor, like, you know, you know, comic relief, so to speak. But he does that to make it seem like it’s not as serious as it is because it’s, it’s right. He’s putting out some pretty, he’s put out stuff and he’s more or less acknowledged some of the stuff he puts out that, you know, it’s, he could get in trouble for. But I, I don’t know, I, I like it because I like to expand my mind and I think people should do more of that.

So. Well, that’s what the university should do. Well, thank you. And where can they. Sarahwestall.com Miles Franklin, right? Yes. And hopefully in the very near future I’m gonna have so many exciting things to tell your audience about that will be revolutionary to this industry that we are going to be on the forefront of. And I’m almost there working with things that I’m not able to say just yet, but so close that I think will make your listeners really excited. Not quite free energy, but nonetheless very much a new thing in this industry that will be amazing and I can’t wait to talk about it soon.

I look forward to seeing you in two weeks. Good luck on your goal. I really appreciate you. Thank you. I appreciate you having me here, sir. I do. You’re one in a million. And I’ll be honest with you. Today I did. Let’s see, I did Liberty and finance at 9, Mark Z at 10, Adam Taggart at 11, Michael Gentile at 12, you at 1, and now I have Jean Claude at 2, and then I’m done. And that is a typical. Not always that crazy, but I’ll typically do four or five a day. And there’s no one that asks me tougher questions for me to actually think about that I had no preparation for.

You know, that you said, let’s talk about free energy today, okay? You make me think, and I like that. And if nothing else, I hope other people are thinking about what you’re saying. So thank you for letting me be a little part of what you’re doing. I hope you have a great rest of your week. I’ll see you in two weeks. And until then, I look forward to picking up where we left off. Go kick up. Go kick some butt in your golf tournament. Thanks.
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