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00:00We are accustomed to our own technology and find it difficult to recognize that the ancients
00:16may have had sophisticated technology of their own.
00:25Since the technology of the ancients is not obvious to us, are we looking in the wrong place?
00:38Could it be they had power systems, but they were entirely different from ours today?
00:55To be continued...
01:02To be continued...
01:08To be continued...
01:27Looking at the architecture of structures from ancient Egypt stimulates a sense of wonder.
01:39Clearly, Egyptian monuments rival the grandeur of our most modern buildings today.
01:46Yet we are taught to believe that we are the ones with knowledge of high technology, something
01:51the ancients could not possibly have had.
01:55As long as we think that the ancients weren't able to use high technology, then we're not
02:01looking for it.
02:02And yet, the evidence is right in front of our eyes.
02:08We find megalithic sites everywhere around the world.
02:11There are certain things in common that they all seem to know, and we don't know it.
02:17A lot of people are trying to figure out why mankind built these structures out of these
02:27huge megalithic stones.
02:30We don't even know how to move 200, 300 ton stones very well today, let alone 4,000 or 5,000
02:37years ago.
02:38I started looking at megalithic structures from an electromagnetic point of view.
02:44And sure enough, I began to find that there were these energies there present in measurable forces.
02:50Strange things happen sometimes in sacred sites.
02:55And those are clues that the physics that were taught in school is not everything.
03:03For thousands of years, the pyramids and the Sphinx stood as sentinels on the open desert.
03:14Yet, in recent years, a 20-mile wall, 14 feet high, was installed around the enormous site of the Giza Plateau.
03:25There are about 100 armed guards patrolling the pyramids at night.
03:34Applications for investigative academic research, while entertained initially, are almost all routinely refused.
03:44Unlike in times past, tourists are now being restricted from taking photographs in the Egyptian museum.
03:53The monuments of Egypt are world heritage sites.
03:59Why is access and legitimate scientific research being systematically restricted?
04:06Much of ancient Egypt remains undiscovered.
04:14Satellite images show traces of buried structures that are still not excavated.
04:20In the name of protecting sites, are Egyptian authorities preventing us from learning the truth about our ancient past?
04:29Despite strict regulations on what kind of research is allowed, there is still an extraordinary amount of evidence that shows that the ancient Egyptians had knowledge that has been lost.
04:47We don't have the technology to build the pyramids now. Not even close.
04:52We're not the most evolved we've ever been. And that is one of the blinders that has stopped us from imagining that the ancients could have been far smarter than us.
05:04Hakim Awian was raised by indigenous elders who lived in the area of the Band of Peace.
05:12Having preserved the ancient Suf language, stories were passed down generation after generation.
05:20Fragments of knowledge from the ancient past were thus preserved.
05:25If my colleague, the scholar, learned to say that the Egyptians have a piece of rope put around a block of stone, at least 60 ton weight,
05:38and pulled and pushed by animals and run on wooden blocks, this is what the scholars are saying.
05:45We may never be exactly sure how the pyramids were built. Yet, we can begin to reconstruct our understanding of the culture living in the Golden Age and their values.
06:00Traditional Egyptology insists that the pyramids were built by slaves to feed the egos of kings.
06:09Does this fit with our emerging construct of Egypt in a Golden Age?
06:14There is no slavery. All workers are willingly pyramids builders.
06:23This is a qualified people of architecture, engineers, and they deal with all the power by cutting stones, transfer it and use it.
06:36And that is clear, not only in the pyramids, but in the temple walls and many places. You can see that clearly.
06:45There are clues throughout Egypt that point to knowledge of high technology.
06:51A fascinating thing occurred when a chunk of stone recently fell off a lintel at Abydos Temple and controversial images resembling a helicopter and other advanced looking vehicles were revealed under the stone.
07:10It would seem that the images were covered in the distant past when things were changing politically in Egypt.
07:18Nowadays, Egyptian tour guides are explicitly instructed not to point these out to tourists.
07:29The Egyptological explanation is that it is multiple hieroglyphs overlapping from distant kings' inscriptions.
07:39But, like many things in Egypt, the explanation is still debatable.
07:44Another controversial object that Egyptologists merely deem impossible is the artifact commonly known as the Baghdad Battery that generates a mild electrical charge.
08:05Similar ancient artifacts that match these objects have been found in Egypt.
08:12We can't say for certain, but it would appear that the Egyptians documented the existence of these artifacts as well.
08:22Recreations of these objects have been made and have successfully created electric current.
08:31Also noteworthy are strange representations of objects that resemble light bulbs, found in the crypts at Dendero.
08:40There was no natural light inside these underground crypts, but we see no soot from torches or oil lamps, the only lights we know the ancients used.
08:52Could the ancient Egyptians have had their own source of electrical power?
08:58If nothing else, the ancients had to cut, move and lift massive stone blocks that would challenge our engineers today.
09:08What was their secret?
09:11We automatically assume that ancient structures are for ceremonial and religious purposes.
09:18Maybe the pyramids served a completely different function than previously imagined.
09:25There's been lots of speculation about what the pyramids were actually built for.
09:30The most accepted notion is that they were tombs.
09:34Much more complicated situation with the Great Pyramid than most people understand or most people believe,
09:47including a lot of Egyptologists who see it simply as a tomb for the Pharaoh Khufu.
09:53That idea is childish for the following reason.
09:57I mean, it's obvious we don't find mummies in the pyramids.
10:00And of course, not finding a single mummy in any of the pyramids doesn't seem to deter the people who think that that's what they were for.
10:10Yes, there's something that's sometimes referred to as a stone sarcophagus or coffer in it, a beautiful granite structure.
10:18But that doesn't prove definitively in my mind that it was ever actually used for a tomb.
10:23It may have been used for many other purposes.
10:26Pyramids were built not as a tomb.
10:34There are some pyramids built in a different construction like the one in Saqqara, a steppe pyramid that is tomb.
10:41Look at the obvious difference in construction between the steppe pyramid and the Great Pyramid.
10:47The difference in style of construction would logically indicate they were built in different time frames.
10:57The buildings we know to be tombs, like the steppe pyramid at Saqqara and the flat-topped mastabas, also at Saqqara,
11:05are very different from the smooth-sided pyramids at Giza and Dashur.
11:11Typically, in Egypt, older constructions are built of larger stones.
11:18New constructions are built of smaller stones.
11:22Also, in archaeology, older structures are deeper.
11:26Newer structures are found closer to the surface.
11:31Every other tomb that has been found is highly decorated with names of the occupant.
11:38The inside of these pyramids seem solely functional and not decorative at all.
11:44But if we stop altogether and say, okay, if they weren't tombs, what were they?
11:53What are the biggest structures that modern man builds on the planet?
11:58The biggest, most awe-inspiring structures we create are hydroelectric dams.
12:04Why are we willing to invest such awe-inspiring amounts of labor and effort in constructing those?
12:13Because we know we're going to get a very valuable physical return in the form of electricity.
12:18And by comparison, I wonder if the ancient megalith builders weren't willing to invest such staggering amounts of resources
12:26by even smaller populations because they knew that they could get something very physical and worthwhile back from it.
12:33People are fascinated by Egyptian monuments.
12:37And some report the energy is palpable at these sites.
12:41Is it possible to confirm this energy through scientific means?
12:47What I've been finding in the last 20 years of research is a lot of experiments have been done
12:53that show that there's a certain type of energy that does not exist in our current science.
13:00It's unknown in our current science.
13:02We call it subtle energy.
13:04This is a whole new trend of thought in looking at ancient structures
13:09that maybe the ancients understood subtle energies.
13:17So this appears to be a technology that may have existed in megalithic societies.
13:24You know, these societies that built things out of big stones.
13:29It makes sense that you could motivate an entire population
13:33to invest so heavily in building these structures, I think.
13:37And I don't mean to say by any means that this is the only purpose of the megaliths.
13:42But I think it's pretty clear that it's at least one of the primary
13:46or one of the important purposes for building these structures.
13:50We find megalithic sites everywhere around the world.
13:55And there's a tendency to make circles or certain types of formations.
13:59Megalithic sites occur all over the world.
14:05Is their placement random?
14:08Or does the location of these sites reveal yet another hidden layer of ancient knowledge?
14:14One thing I've found looking at different megalithic structures over a few continents
14:21and numerous places around the world, overwhelmingly these places, the pyramids,
14:26the stone hinges, etc. of the world, were placed on ground where an unusual type of geology
14:33naturally concentrates the regular daily natural electromagnetic fluctuations
14:39that occur everywhere on the earth each day.
14:42If you go into England, for example, the ley lines that cross England, the Michael Line,
14:48which is hundreds of miles long that crosses England, that carries this energy along that line.
14:55It will therefore generate electric currents in the land called telluric currents
15:01in the straight geological sense of that word.
15:04And those occur everywhere on the planet.
15:07But we know that this ley energy, this subtle energy, passes along these lines.
15:12There are certain special types of geology that will magnify those several fold.
15:18And that's where we found the megalith builders preferred to put their monuments.
15:25And typically where lines cross, where you have more than one line intersecting, temples were often built.
15:33These are called conductivity discontinuities, which sounds highly technical,
15:38but it's merely the place where one area of ground that has a good ability to conduct electricity
15:46meets another area of ground that has a lesser ability to conduct these natural electric currents.
15:52The Chinese had the same tradition. They called them dragon lines.
15:56It was illegal for a commoner to be buried on such a line.
16:00A king had to be buried on such a line. They put palaces there.
16:07There's a whole series of sacred sites. They're always built on lines like this.
16:14I want to say in this area about the location of the temple.
16:19You have to have symbols appear on the ground.
16:23When it's seen, then this is the place where people naturally come to get more healthy energy from that spot.
16:35You know, energy pops from the earth.
16:38Earth.
16:39And it appears as though they were attempting to control the flow of this energy and use it for their own purposes.
16:51The key hours, unfortunately, are the pre-dawn hours.
16:58If you really want to study this, you've got to get up at 3 and get out there very fast.
17:02That's because the energy that is involved in these sites, that's really fueling most of it,
17:09originates with the daily changes in the earth's geomagnetic field.
17:15It's strongest during the day, weakest at night.
17:18And in the hours leading up to dawn, the weaker field lines now come roaring back to closer to full strength very quick.
17:28It's the most dramatic time in terms of change of magnetic strength per hour.
17:34It's the most dramatic time of the day.
17:36And wherever you have a changing magnetic field occurring,
17:40you are generating electric current in anything present that will conduct electricity.
17:46It's a simple principle of physics known as induction, and it's a universal.
17:56Normally, in everyday life, we don't ever see large concentrations of this energy.
18:02Normally, it'll show up at, say, mountain tops, at sacred sites.
18:07You'll feel a certain calm, a certain peace.
18:11Sometimes people in those places report mystical experiences.
18:16They'll see into some other dimension, okay?
18:18They'll see into some of the time.
18:20The Chinese have known about this for a long time, and they call it Qi.
18:24The Hindus, in their ancient texts, call it Prana.
18:28And the yogis, who maintain a very ancient tradition, use it.
18:33It affects a variety of different processes.
18:35Electricity, magnetism has a strong effect on that.
18:38So it modifies all the other laws of physics.
18:43When you look back on how sacred sites were chosen,
18:47and buildings like the pyramids were constructed,
18:51the suspicion arises that they understood quite a bit more about this stuff than we do,
18:58and they may have been using it in their engineering.
19:01Then, the megalith builders designed these structures,
19:05and then built them in such a way as to further concentrate those energies.
19:10So they definitely seemed to have known what they were doing.
19:17We are not used to things built out of stone being high technology.
19:22It is clear that several different kinds of stone from a variety of sources
19:28were used to construct Egyptian monuments.
19:37Did the distinct qualities of the stones serve a special purpose?
19:41What I do find fascinating is that the core of the pyramids, at least at Giza,
19:48are made out of one type of limestone.
19:50Now, it is the limestone that was closest, but it also happens to be the type that's called dolomite,
19:55because it's got a high magnesium content.
19:58And because of that metal content, that kind of limestone conducts electricity pretty well.
20:03And then they chose to sheath the pyramid in the wider Tura limestone,
20:09which, granted, it's wider and it's prettier and all that,
20:12but it also has almost zero magnesium content.
20:17And therefore, it's a much poorer conductor of electricity.
20:20It's closer to a pure calcium carbonate, which is what all limestone is.
20:25And pure calcium carbonate conducts electricity much more poorly than dolomite does.
20:31It's interesting to me that those outer stones were the ones that they cut so precisely
20:36that all these thousands of years later you still can't get a razor blade between them.
20:41Because, basically, what we've got here is we've got a situation
20:44with a highly electrically conductive core of those pyramids
20:48wrapped in what is effectively a very effective insulator.
20:53Why the granite in the passageways, you know?
20:56And so, of course, I'm thinking from an electrical point of view and a physical point of view,
21:00is there anything special about granite?
21:03And, yeah, there is. Granite is slightly radioactive.
21:06And it will ionize or electrify the air.
21:10It releases radon gas, which is radioactive.
21:15Granite is a transmission stone. It's not dead stone. It's alive.
21:20So, you have these sealed shafts with granite linings.
21:25And I wonder if it wasn't designed to keep an electrical charge present in those shafts.
21:32They were built exactly like, if you will, an insulated wire, only more so because you've got all the charge in the ground
21:40that spread across the base, concentrated all the way up into this tiny spot at the top.
21:47We find similarities in three different constructions.
21:56The one at Giza Hill, Valley Temple, and one at Abydos, and another one abroad in England, the Stonehenge.
22:05Same material being constructed with, and same way and same technique.
22:10But the construction there, it's built in addition to have the water because it's water bed.
22:19It's a huge water bed and it's still working, still producing water.
22:25In Egypt, you do have a similar situation to England in that you have limestone aquifers under the monuments.
22:33An aquifer is an underground layer of porous, water-bearing rock.
22:40Water flows through the aquifers as rainfall, or when rivers and lakes flood, the water drains into them.
22:48And movement of water through limestone or chalk aquifers is known to produce electrical charge by two different processes that are self-reinforcing.
22:57And I've personally measured this for a week at a stretch at Silbury Hill in England, for example.
23:03Before and after thunderstorms, as the water is sinking into the ground,
23:07we measured the increase in ground current, the change in the magnetic field as that happened, etc.
23:16And in Egypt, you had the Nile crashing, dropping every year, and then flooding again.
23:21And that movement of water up and down through the layers of limestone would generate electrical charge.
23:32Flowing water generates at least a mild electrical charge, which means it generates an electric current,
23:40which means it generates a magnetic field as well.
23:42So if you were looking to give an electrical charge, a little boost to say a mound or something like that,
23:48it makes a lot of sense to have it at a minimum running water.
23:51And in fact, at Tiwanaku on the south shore of Lake Titicaca, their biggest monument, the Acapana Pyramid,
23:59was terraced in such a way as to have the water come down in waterfalls that alternated outside the pyramid, inside the pyramid.
24:07But that kind of falling water generates enough electric charge that one of the common school physics experiments is
24:16you can, in your own sink at home, if you can divide the stream of water coming out of your faucet into two separate streams,
24:23you can take a little LED indicator light and put it between the streams,
24:28and it will generate enough electricity that maybe every 20 seconds or so the light bulb will come on.
24:32And then the question is, did some of those layers of limestone run up the Giza Plateau?
24:40And they did, and they did, you know, come up to the surface underneath where some of the pyramids are located.
24:46The idea would be that it would be the rising and falling of the Nile that would produce this electric ground current
24:53by moving through the different layers of the limestone aquifer.
24:59And when there was a dip, say, in that supply, maybe that's when the ionized air in the granite shafts
25:07and galleries could help keep the process going, if you will.
25:12I tend to wonder if the electrified shafts might not have been able to act in a similar fashion to your car battery
25:17when you come to a stoplight.
25:19Normally, your battery is not being used when you're driving your car.
25:22The alternator provides all the juice.
25:24But when you stop and that alternator is turning very weakly,
25:28that's when you want the battery there to keep everything going so your engine doesn't cut out.
25:33So you've got this concentration of negative charge from the ground at the peak of the pyramid or mound,
25:44and a concentration of positive charge above it.
25:47And if those two become strong enough, you can start to get brush discharge,
25:53which would mean it would glow like ball lightning, for example.
25:59It's a theory.
26:00Why in the Great Pyramid is there no frescoes, there's nothing, no decorations at all?
26:11Now, some people have proposed the idea that the pyramids are actually energy machines.
26:17And so I liken this to the fact, like, you wouldn't put a decoration inside your oven.
26:23I was talking with a woman who had spent some time in the Great Pyramid,
26:26and her comment was, it felt like I was in a machine.
26:33She said it was not like this, oh, it's a wonderful shrine.
26:36She said it felt very functional.
26:39In fact, she made a comment that I actually think is probably right on.
26:43She said, I felt as if I wouldn't have wanted to be in here when it was right.
26:48Invisible subtle energy occurs around us all the time and is measurable by science.
27:05We had noticed a lot of people showing us photographs from megalithic sites
27:09that disproportionately often seem to have these bowls of light in there, usually flash photos.
27:16Orbs are often written off as dust or other particles in the air.
27:22But that does not change the fact that they seem to occur more often in particular places at particular times.
27:30At Tikal, at the top of the most energetic pyramid that we found down there,
27:37we took a lot of flash photos during the course of our eight-hour stakeouts,
27:42which would run from roughly 3 a.m. till 11 a.m.
27:46And on the pyramids that were electrically dead, that had no juice, nothing going on,
27:50which were the big fancy ones, but the most recently built ones.
27:56We would take photos and find out eventually when they were developed,
28:01no orbs, no glowing balls of light.
28:04But on the oldest pyramid down there, where we did work and got all kinds of results,
28:10that was 1,200 years older than the big fancier ones.
28:13In that case, the photography we got back from our own simple flash cameras,
28:20they were literally choking the screen with these balls
28:25at the period at which the air was highest in electrical charge.
28:29And on the strongest day down there, I was recording electrical charge higher
28:34than I've recorded even in thunderstorms back home.
28:37We don't know what orbs are, but our personal guess is that they're balls of ionized or electrified air
28:47that will tend to hang together.
28:49A good analogy would be ball lightning, where it's simply so electrified
28:55that the molecules are excited enough to glow.
29:02Other evidence shows that there is energy occurring naturally everywhere on the planet,
29:07that our science knows about but seems to ignore.
29:13Nikola Tesla sought to provide the world with free, wireless electricity for everybody on Earth.
29:20He discovered that electricity occurred naturally throughout the Earth's atmosphere and ground.
29:27The telluric currents in the ground, that John Burke discussed,
29:32and the electricity present in the ionosphere in the atmosphere,
29:35which is ionized by the Sun,
29:39he also created and developed ways to harness those energies.
29:44Tesla. Who would teach Nikola Tesla to get to that power of electricity?
29:52He didn't invent it, it's already there, but he know how to use it.
29:58And not only that, he did not take an advantage like Mr. Edison.
30:07Tesla wanted to harness the natural energy that exists everywhere on Earth,
30:12and make it free to the public.
30:15Edison endeavored to produce and distribute electricity by creating a regulated monopoly for profit.
30:22He became rich and the people more light into their homes.
30:28So Nikola Tesla, he's the one to think of how to use this energy.
30:34Between 1901 and 1917, the Tesla Tower was built on Long Island as a wireless broadcasting system for telephone and electrical signals.
30:47Interestingly, it was constructed on an aquifer with descending passageways and tunnels beneath it.
30:56At the time, few understood how it worked.
31:00Tesla's funding was ultimately dropped by JP Morgan because Tesla wanted the wireless electricity to be free,
31:08and therefore JP Morgan couldn't make a profit.
31:13So even though Tesla's genius was seen by many, he was still driven into obscurity.
31:20The energy to create free wireless energy has always existed on our planet and still exists today.
31:28And it's not only energy on our planet, there's plenty.
31:33Rivers are flowed by energy.
31:37Tsunami is energy. Frequencies are energy.
31:42If we have the electricity now, it's based on explosion energy.
31:46Now, the sound energy is based on a technology different from the explosion energy,
31:52and it's known as implosion energy.
31:54This energy was not the kind of energy that we have that pollutes.
31:59It was a completely passive energy that had no byproducts.
32:06The energy we use today is generated by combustion and is non-renewable.
32:12It is called explosion energy and leaves exhaust and pollution.
32:17Our system all over the planet today is based on the explosion energy.
32:23That's why the petrol is too expensive.
32:27In contrast, implosion energy, like solar panels and wind power, is clean and renewable.
32:35We are beginning to realize that we need sustainable energy.
32:39Implosion energy, very simple.
32:41All what you need is the beam of the sun on a running water.
32:47Not just running in a straight line, but in a zigzag.
32:50And you find all the tunnels are in a zigzag form for such a purpose.
32:56In addition to the limestone aquifers underneath the pyramids,
33:00there is evidence of a network of man-made tunnels.
33:04As a boy, when I'm living in my house, which is a few hundred yards away from the nose
33:15of what we call the Sphinx Tefnuti, this was my playing yard.
33:20And I know tunnels, I walked in these tunnels, I swim in these tunnels, I crawled in these tunnels.
33:26And I know that this is one way of creating energy.
33:30Now, this costs nothing. I mean, all what you need is a beam of the sun reaching the running water underneath the tunnel.
33:48And you can see that there are many openers.
33:51And each tunnel permits this sun beam to reach the water.
33:56And when it does, then the energy is there.
33:58Energy is not just to run your car or run the people, feed the people.
34:12If the pyramid fields of the band of peace and the network of underground tunnels are still there,
34:19why don't they generate energy the way they used to?
34:23In the condition of the pyramids now, stripped of those smooth, insulating outer casings,
34:28it's going to leak electrical air about as well as a car radiator radiates heat.
34:35I mean, it's almost perfectly designed to weaken that.
34:38And yet still, you get these reports of people like Siemens, who was one of the pioneers of electricity.
34:44And he was an Englishman. There's even a unit of electrical, I believe, resistance named after him called the Siemens.
34:51He was on top of the Great Pyramid, I think, during the 1880s.
34:54And they began to notice that when his Arab guide stood up and spread his fingers, they'd hear a ringing.
35:02And when he closed them, you wouldn't.
35:05And he stood up and he could sense the literal electricity in the air.
35:09And on the spot, he improvised an instant laden jar, which is one of the earliest things they used to use to store electric charge.
35:20And he did it by opening a wine bottle, wetting some newspaper, wrapping the wet newspaper around the glass wine bottle,
35:26and holding the wine bottle up above his head until sparks started to issue from the wine bottle.
35:34And at that point, his Arab guides started calling, accusing him of things like witchcraft.
35:39They got into a physical struggle, and he accidentally touched one of the guides with the charged wine bottle,
35:45and it knocked the man to the ground and unconscious for a short period, after which they took off down the pyramid.
35:51But there was, in other words, a professional scientist familiar with electricity in its rudimentary but accurate forms,
35:59sensing exactly that, even in this ruined condition that the pyramid's in today, yeah.
36:09If you come to the Egyptian Museum, there is an item over there known as the Schist disk,
36:15found by Dr. Walter Emery, and he said, or he think, that it could be a vase for a lotus flower. No.
36:26The Schist disk was found at Saqqara in a burial chamber that no one is allowed to visit.
36:34Other goods found in the chamber were simple ropes, pottery, and grains.
36:39The disk shows clear evidence of sophisticated technology in the way it was built,
36:47and it seems out of context with the rest of the grave goods.
36:52Is this the original context for this artifact?
36:56Or is it possible that it has had a long journey over the last several millennia,
37:01and this just happened to be its final resting place?
37:04Look at this hollow stone tube.
37:10It looks as though the Schist disk could fit over it.
37:14It would take sophisticated instruments to shape the tube so precisely.
37:19How did they do it?
37:21To cut the stone.
37:24This is a biasonic cut,
37:27with no metal instruments like bronze chisel or this, no.
37:36It's another stone.
37:38And this other stone, it's the hardest stone you can find, which is the diamond.
37:44There are pieces of stone lying around that show concave shapes
37:50that actually have the machine tooling marks on it.
37:52The evidence of the high technology is right in front of us.
37:58Look again at these quartz objects.
38:02Aside from their unique and amazing shapes,
38:05could they have had another purpose?
38:09Today, quartz crystal is used as the basis of all kinds of modern technology.
38:15It is most commonly used in crystal oscillators.
38:18Technology uses oscillating frequencies from tiny quartz crystals that vibrate at certain speeds,
38:26with a signature vibration for each device.
38:30AM-FM radios, CDs and DVDs, computer processors and Ethernet rely on quartz crystals.
38:38Could it be that the ancients were tapping into this technology and using it on a much larger scale,
38:46in a way we can only begin to imagine?
38:49Of course, we can't say for certain, but based on what we've seen, we can theorize.
38:55Energy can be created and manipulated in many ways.
39:05It is the lifeblood of a civilization, and therefore an important resource.
39:10In Egypt, there are 67 constructions all along the Nile-like sails.
39:19And for those who have the eye, they can tell from the shape of that construction.
39:29The straight form of angles, that is a pyramid or a construction for energy.
39:36A plan for energy. That's what we have.
39:43The theory that's always struck me, that they were intended actually to somehow or another spiritualize the whole civilization.
39:51In other words, to provide a widespread, high level of energy that people needed because a descending age was upon them.
40:00And I believe what the pyramid and certain structures were constructed for was to basically act as a kind of the equivalent of a street light.
40:11You know, if you're in a neighborhood that's maybe not the nicest neighborhood, and it gets dark at night, you like to have bright lights go on.
40:20And that's effectively what the Great Pyramid was.
40:22Now, these were not lights that illuminated it so that people could see where they were going.
40:27It was basically a device, a generator for, if you will, broadcasting and transmitting throughout the planetary structure.
40:35A type of field which uplifted the entire humanity.
40:38And maybe those pyramids were built in some sense or another to stay the decline.
40:48Let's call them in some sense or another spiritual granaries designed to somehow store an emotional or spiritual or psychological or some sort of energy that was needed to keep people from becoming the total barbarians that they subsequently became.
41:06We had the ability to basically prop up humanity for a while using the system.
41:16But what we saw was the street light eventually went out.
41:27The original knowledge got lost and the later builders were building them out of ego.
41:32They were monuments to the king, if you will, but they were no longer engines that could help feed their people.
41:38Catastrophes around the world damaged or, if you will, decommissioned some of these sites.
41:46So some of them went offline, just like a power plant going offline.
41:49I tend to wonder if the few people who knew the secrets to the energy connection with those pyramids didn't die off.
41:59If it was a thin chain of, for example, a shaman to his apprentice, and if the wrong people get killed at the right time, that chain is broken, that knowledge gets lost.
42:08As long as we think we are more advanced than we've ever been, we are blind to technology based on subtle energies.
42:20It's not fair also. It's not fair to deny what you can see and touch by your own hands.
42:28This is only the technique, and we have that technique still.
42:33But nobody wants to listen.
42:36Listen!
43:06Transcription by CastingWords
43:36CastingWords
44:06CastingWords
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