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00:01The views and opinions expressed on the show are those of the guests or hosts, and not
00:06necessarily those of the advertisers, networks, platforms, or stations, warning that the content
00:13of the show may not be suitable for all audiences, and that viewer discretion is advised.
00:19The show does not intend to provide medical, legal, or financial advice, and viewers or
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00:29presented.
00:31Welcome back, everybody, to Paranormal Intelligence Agency Radio Live.
00:35I'm your host, Jack Carey, and we are broadcasting from 300 feet deep in an abandoned nuclear missile
00:41silo somewhere lost in the post-apocalyptic wastelands of the Dakota Territories, and I
00:47am joined, as always, by the paranormal crime-fighting duo Daisy and the Sundance Kid are in the house
00:55tonight.
00:56They are charging a $10 cover and a two-drink minimum for those of you who want to see
01:02it live here in the silo.
01:05But it's been an interesting week.
01:09I've been kind of in a philosophical mood this week, and I thought maybe we should visit a few
01:19philosophical topics tonight.
01:21I'm going to read a published academic essay that I wrote called Natural Born Killer later
01:30in the show that I think many of you will find compelling in its points and arguments.
01:39And kind of to kick it off, we've got some interesting, you know, recent paranormal in the news, and
01:47that is Bob Lazar's kind of making some waves out there with Jeremy Corbell coming out with
01:55new information.
01:55So you can check that out on Jeremy Corbell's weaponized YouTube channel, which is always interesting.
02:04And apparently, Corbell has a new film coming out called Sleeping Dog.
02:10And Sleeping Dog is going to be a very interesting film, really, about the UFO phenomenon.
02:19So, interesting title.
02:22And it looks to be, if you watch the trailer, it looks to be an interesting film.
02:29Well, he's a pretty good filmmaker, so we'll have to watch and see how that is going.
02:36The markets have been interesting this week, and we do some market talk on this show because
02:42of the paranormal aspects of the economy.
02:47You're not going to hear that kind of talk on any other radio show.
02:50I can guarantee you that.
02:51But it was the paranormal world that led us into the areas of cryptocurrency, debasement, fiat currency,
03:01debasement trade.
03:04And, you know, really, if you take in totality of what the web bot and the future forecasting group have
03:14been
03:14saying for a while, you could do a lot worse, in my opinion, and I'm no expert, but you could
03:25do a lot worse
03:26than if you were a young person and you had guts and a little bit of money.
03:35You could do a lot worse than looking into the derivatives futures market on various commodities.
03:45I'll lay that out there.
03:47There's a lot of opportunity to be had in that area.
03:54And that kind of overlays into the crypto markets as well because they offer futures contracts on cryptocurrencies now.
04:04So, yeah, you could do a lot worse, in my estimation.
04:09The fiat currency system is sort of in the death throes of its current existence.
04:16And, you know, the argument can and has been made that the fiat currency system in and of itself
04:24was designed in order to eventually not be there anymore.
04:33It's a debt-based system, and it does so in such a way that over time, that debt becomes unpayable
04:42in various, you know, in any way.
04:45So, you know, we're currently somewhere around $30 trillion in debt, something like that.
04:51It would take an insane amount of GDP growth in order for us to ever have a tax base big
04:59enough to begin to pay that down.
05:02So, that leads to inevitable conclusions on an economic scale worldwide.
05:08And as I talked about in my last broadcast, I was discussing the fact that it currently doesn't look like
05:17the sort of revolution,
05:23I guess that's the best word for it, the revolution, economic revolution,
05:28that a lot of, like, crypto, hardcore crypto people have been hoping for probably isn't going to happen in that
05:36fashion.
05:36And the reason is because the powers that be, like companies like BlackRock,
05:47were smart enough to realize when they've been had, right?
05:54That's really what it comes down to.
05:56They got us.
05:57They realized, hey, they got us.
06:00And they began to convert everything over to tokenization in such a way that they will still maintain control over
06:09a new tokenized system.
06:11That's just the way it is.
06:14Revolutions are rarely clean, right?
06:17Revolutions in history are always an odd mixture of the old and the new.
06:25And sometimes that manifests in really horrific kind of ways, right?
06:31So, in some ways, tokenization is going to provide more of an equal playing field,
06:40but it's also not impossible to manipulate.
06:44Let's put it that way.
06:46And these dudes are master manipulators.
06:50That's just the way it is.
06:52When they control all of the liquidity, which is what is actually required in the system in order to make
06:59the current economic worldwide system work,
07:04it all comes down to how much liquidity is being pumped into the system because that's what makes it all
07:10flow.
07:11When that liquidity gets cut off, then you see a massive downturn in risk on trade, which is cryptocurrencies and
07:22the like.
07:23And that's what we saw starting past, going back to October the 6th, an event that I've talked about numerous
07:32times.
07:33That was the greatest deleveraging event in human history.
07:40So, yeah, it's something to note, right?
07:43And the crypto market hasn't been the same since.
07:46It has never quite recovered, although it's starting to get its legs underneath it at this stage.
07:53There are some very interesting news on the cryptocurrency.
08:03XRP apparently has got a lot of utility.
08:09That utility is going to apparently make it quite valuable over a very short period of time.
08:19And they're offering futures contracts on XRP right now that allow you to control up to 50,000 XRP at
08:30a time with a minimal underlying capital.
08:34That kind of opportunity doesn't really present itself all too often in life.
08:44Risk, gamble, you better believe it is.
08:47Yep, that's exactly what it is.
08:50You are rolling the dice, but the dice might be loaded on this one.
08:56You know what I mean?
08:59So, it's going to be an interesting summer.
09:03The summer is going to be extremely interesting in both the cryptocurrency and commodities markets.
09:11The war in Iran will probably become a blip on the screen, although it looks like they're still playing games.
09:20And, you know, who knows who's really in control and etc.
09:25It goes on and on.
09:26Like, that's ad nauseum right now in the mainstream media.
09:30But, no, it was the paranormal aspects of the web bot, its predictions, cyber prophecies of the economic change taking
09:40place,
09:40the demise of the fiat currency system, and the adoption of tokenization that led us into covering that aspect of
09:52humanity on this show.
09:55So, that's all that fits together.
09:58And it's been an interesting ride thus far.
10:02I still think we're in the very, very early stages of tokenization and cryptocurrency.
10:09It's, like, less than, like, 1% of the U.S. population even owns any cryptocurrency.
10:16That's crazy.
10:18That's just crazy to me.
10:20But that's the way it is.
10:23And so, that will lead to a very steep adoption curve.
10:30And the longer it takes for them to start the adoption curve, the steeper it will be in a shorter
10:41period of time.
10:43That's really the way that works.
10:46And so, you could see exponential-type moves out of cryptocurrencies like XRP.
10:54You're talking about, you know, what did Bitcoin went up 69 million percent since it was created.
11:02So, yeah, there's room.
11:04There's room for movement with these things, like crazy kind of movement, right?
11:11And Eric Trump is out there making some statements about XRP that were very interesting today.
11:17I would check those out if I were you.
11:19That is a good place to look.
11:23Paranormal in the news.
11:25The good general and a number of other missing scientists still have not been found.
11:32These are all people that were connected to one another through a series of government contracts to back-engineer alien
11:40technology.
11:40That's really what it comes down to.
11:44The general McCaslin was the guy in charge of Wright-Patterson Airfield.
11:48The Wright-Patterson Air Base is where they kept the bodies and the debris from Roswell.
11:53Well, in vaults, underneath, Hanger 23, not Hanger 18 as commonly quoted.
12:03It's actually Hanger 23 and Hanger 23, the number 23, is very important to all of this.
12:09But that's actually a subject for another show.
12:14The mystery of the number 23 is a show in and of itself.
12:17It's interesting to me that they made the Hanger 23,
12:21that they put the bodies and the craft under.
12:25So, the good general up and vanishes a few months after a rocket scientist female he was connected to also
12:36vanished under the same exact circumstances.
12:39A few items were missing, indicating that they may have gone hiking.
12:44And that's it.
12:46That's the only clue.
12:47Nothing else.
12:48So, and there's like five or six of these people now that are missing that are all scientists or military
13:00personnel
13:00that must have been connected to the legacy UFO program in some way.
13:05This has led me to the speculation that it is XProtect that is probably at the behind all of this.
13:16XProtect is what ufologists refer to as the embedded intelligence agents slash assassins that are employed by the aerospace industry
13:29subcontractors
13:31who run the SAP or special access programs that actually back engineer alien technology.
13:39Those guys are running security for these companies that have subcontractors.
13:45It's all extremely compartmentalized, and in some way, shape, or form, they have a license to literally take people out
13:54that are a threat to the ultimate disclosure of what it is we possess.
13:59And what we possess, apparently, if you listen to the likes of Representative Anna Paulina Luna and a few others,
14:11is that we apparently are in possession of a craft that didn't even originate in this dimension.
14:22Think about that.
14:25It's a craft that didn't even come from our reality.
14:30How do you disclose that?
14:35Without causing all kinds of ontological shock.
14:42You really can't.
14:44And so there's basically two camps.
14:47One camp is saying that humanity can survive ontological shock.
14:52And what is ontological shock?
14:53Well, that's kind of what the Maya faced when they abandoned their cities, right?
14:58It's what numerous civilizations have faced throughout the history of the world.
15:03And that's the point when your belief system fails.
15:06And so everything built up on top of that belief system, including your society, also fails.
15:14The patient can die.
15:18And in this case, the patient is human society itself.
15:23So you have one camp who's scared to death of that occurring, and at the same time, we're trying to
15:28protect proprietary breakthroughs using alien technology and trying to patent that in such a way that they can profit from
15:39it.
15:39And they employ ex-military special ops guys and gals who run these actual security programs.
15:55And a lot of people refer to them as the mirage men.
16:00That's more of a kind of an indication of Air Force intelligence.
16:03But a lot of these people came from Air Force intelligence, right?
16:09They get out of the military.
16:10They still have their security clearance.
16:12They get employed by a special access program subcontractor.
16:15Subcontractor, not the government itself, not even Lockheed Martin.
16:21It's a subcontractor of Lockheed Martin.
16:25And that subcontractor is completely anonymous and unknown because of security reasons.
16:31They then can employ these people who are skilled killers and who, it can be argued, have over time taken
16:41out quite a few different ufologists and investigators into this technology.
16:49And then you have the other camp who's saying, no, no, humanity can survive the ontological shock.
16:56Look, we need to be upfront.
16:58We need to lay it all out there and let the chips fall where they may.
17:06That's really where the two camps are.
17:09They're embedded in the Pentagon.
17:11They're fighting tooth and nail, one against the other, trying to determine the outcome of this whole conspiratorial thing that
17:23has occurred.
17:25So, you know, we live in the strangest, strangest of worlds.
17:32So, we are on the upswing of the Kali Yuga.
17:39That is a multi-thousand-year planetary cycle.
17:45And it really is an interesting thing because if you're on the surface of the Earth, every so many thousands
17:52of years, the trajectory of the Earth actually pops up out of a debris field that's blocking us from galactic
18:02center.
18:03And we can get bombarded by rays from galactic center.
18:09And this is a natural evolutionary process.
18:12We are handicapped on this planet because a lot of the time we spend being blocked from the galactic center
18:20and from these life-giving, life-evolving energies that normally would be bombarding us.
18:29And that normally bombard planets that have life on them.
18:33And this is a natural mechanism within the universe.
18:37It's how things are supposed to work.
18:39But we're on a kind of an imperfect spot.
18:43And every time that you go down the Kali Yuga cycle, you go through dark ages.
18:48And then when you come back up out of it and you get bombarded by the rays from galactic center
18:54that interact with our sun and thereby interact with our planet, harmonically speaking, then you get golden ages that occur
19:04and civilizations like Atlantis.
19:08And we are on the upswing now.
19:11Now, it is a turbulent time, but we are right on the cusp of what the web bot referred to
19:20as sci-fi world emerges.
19:23And when sci-fi world emerges, the economy completely changes at that stage.
19:31And it becomes a tokenized, completely tokenized economy.
19:36And the way we think about economics will change completely.
19:41So it's going to be a very interesting time to be alive.
19:46And, you know, from a paranormal investigation perspective, it's fascinating to watch how the paranormal through various channels, in this
20:03case, the web bot and remote viewing groups around the world,
20:08has led us into a sort of cascading event of economic change.
20:18How strange.
20:19What a strange world we live in.
20:21But that is the world we live in, right?
20:24So, and I would be remiss if I didn't mention Sasquatch.
20:31Right now is Sasquatch season.
20:34And by that, I mean this is the time of year when campers begin to go out and start camping.
20:41And in particular, people start to go out and pick wild berries in various forested areas.
20:49That is a very unwise decision, in my estimation.
20:56And I have a lot of data to back that up.
20:59There is, according to David Paul Lighty's of Missing 411 fame, a cluster of cases that all center around people
21:10who were picking wild berries.
21:13This, of course, leads us into the inescapable suspicion that they were somehow done in by a Sasquatch because of
21:26the competition for the food source.
21:27Right.
21:30So, and that's where Paul Lighty has kind of led the trail time and again, although he's, you know, scared
21:38to actually come right out and say, yeah, I think Sasquatch is the culprit.
21:43If you take all the missing 411 cases and you lay them on a map and that is published and
21:49out there on the internet at canammissingproject.com and you overlay that with a map of all of the most
22:00credible 10,000 or so Bigfoot sighting reports, they are a spot on match.
22:07And then you lay those two maps on top of each other and a third map of the cave systems
22:15known and documented on top of those and they're a spot on match.
22:21Those three things couldn't be a spot on match unless there was a causal connection between them.
22:28That's just the way it is.
22:30So it's very, very interesting stuff.
22:34There is, you know, some indication in the missing 411 cases of what I call an interdimensional predator actually taking
22:45people.
22:46That is a scary, scary scenario.
22:49But I believe that some footage of one of these things has been captured and that footage can be seen
22:57on my YouTube channel.
22:59It's just under Jack Carey, C-A-R-Y.
23:02And if you look at the video titled Invisible Predators, you're going to see footage taken by a man named
23:12Bob Garrett, subsequently disappeared.
23:19That's a story in and of itself.
23:22But he captured some footage of what appears to be a very predator-like being.
23:27And by that I mean predator from the movies, like this was a cloaked, not Bigfoot, whatever this thing was,
23:36it was shimmering just like the creature in the predator movies.
23:41And you can see it clearly on film.
23:44I have it looped on there and a couple of other examples taken from other researchers out there in the
23:51field.
23:51And when you put them all together, there are indications that we're dealing with something that is a truly unknown,
23:58unseen predator in the wilds of North America.
24:03And probably it's not Sasquatch.
24:07So that leads us to a very interesting place, a little testimony coming out of the wife of one of
24:18the best ufologists.
24:20He was actually a scientist, Bruce McAbee, and his wife had an encounter with one of these predator beings.
24:28And we'll cover that right after our break.
24:34All right.
24:35Good job, Jack.
24:39Yep.
24:43I've been watching a lot of Jeff Natalie, Nadolny's stuff here lately.
24:52It's pretty interesting.
24:53And what's the other one?
24:56Oh, Red Owl.
24:58Red Owl?
24:59Yeah, Red Owl is the name of the YouTube channel.
25:04Oh.
25:04And it's pretty interesting.
25:09They talk about stuff that's in caves, like giant man-eating worms.
25:15Wow.
25:16To, like, these shadow figures.
25:22Like the, like the djinn.
25:25Kind of, yeah.
25:26It's, you know, some of the stuff that they were going over and talking about, it sounded like djinn, but
25:34it really group.
25:36Uh, these are in groups, uh, in certain areas of certain, uh, national parks.
25:46Wow.
25:47Yeah.
25:47Crazy.
25:48Yeah.
25:51But, uh, but, uh, Jeff usually talks about stuff like, um, Dogman and Bigfoot.
25:59He's, he's had some really, really weird stuff coming up in here.
26:04Nice.
26:05Yeah.
26:06Yeah.
26:07In fact, uh, he's interviewed, like, a hunter.
26:09Uh, like, uh, government contractor he had on with him.
26:14The hunts Dogman.
26:18So, I don't know all about that, but, you know, hey.
26:22It wouldn't surprise me if, you know, some of them are tagged.
26:30And the, and the guy said that, oh, yeah, they used them in, like, Africa.
26:35I'm like, okay.
26:38He's, he's.
26:39That's crazy.
26:40Three or four of them, uh, part of his unit that went into some Africa thing that, I guess
26:49it, recently.
26:54But it's weird stuff, man.
27:07Cool.
27:08Wow.
27:09Yeah.
27:10This is going to get very, very philosophical very fast here in a little bit, so.
27:15Cool.
27:17Prepare thyself.
27:29We're going to drop a philosophy bomb.
27:33It's a careful.
27:34Have you had any, uh, winged, cryptid, uh, sightings sent to you lately?
27:41Not so, not so far this season.
27:44I haven't, I haven't had anything, although, you know, I do, this is such a sparsely populated
27:51state.
27:52I mean, you know, Denver had, Denver had, Denver and its suburbs had more people than this entire
27:58state.
27:59Yeah.
28:01That just is crazy to me, but, um, and this is a big state, so, and there's all kinds of
28:08paranormal stuff happening here, but, you know, there's 830,000 people, so.
28:14Well, it seems to be about this time of year is when I've had my sightings of pterosaur type
28:22Oh, yeah, yeah, so that, that's why I asked.
28:27That's my dream, is to get a, get a good sighting of a real pterosaur, I would love that, boy,
28:33that would be something.
28:34Yeah, so.
28:35Well, I saw a pair once, and then one really low.
28:40I, I, I told you all about that one.
28:42Yeah, yeah, that's, that is some crazy stuff.
28:4730 seconds, and we're back on radio side.
28:53Yeah, and every time I go through that area, I always get the feeling that I'm gonna, a
28:58Bigfoot or a, uh, a dog man's gonna cross the road there, too, one day.
29:03I'm coming through, I'm like, that's, I don't know why, but I always got, it, it just has
29:08weird feeling in that area.
29:10Yeah, here's your countdown, Jack, five, four, three, two, one, and you're back live and
29:21on the radio side right now.
29:26Welcome back, everybody, to Paranormal Intelligence Agency Radio Live.
29:30I'm your host, Jack Carey.
29:32I've got a face for milk gardens and a voice for smell-o-vision, and tonight we're talking
29:36about the predator beings that apparently are in our forest.
29:41Uh, you can see that footage on my YouTube channel, as I mentioned, and Dr. Bruce McAbee's
29:47wife had a run-in with one of these creatures, and she got a snapshot of the run-in, and
29:53he
29:54was able to filter it in such a way that he could ascertain that this thing was using some
30:00kind of light-reflective technology in order to do what it was doing and make itself invisible.
30:09The only thing they got was, like, this crazy arm, like, you can totally see the arm of this
30:16thing, whatever it is.
30:17Um, so, that happened on their property.
30:22It happened while she was deer hunting up in her deer stand on their own property.
30:28A 10-acre property that butts up to a forest.
30:33I guess my question is, what are the odds that the wife of a prominent ufologist has a
30:43run-in with one of these predator creatures on their very own property, and it not be related
30:49to some way, shape, or form to Dr. Bruce McAbee's work on ufology?
30:54How is that possible?
30:56Well, that defies the laws of probability in my estimation, and so I think there must
31:01be some weird causal connection between the two.
31:05This is the strange world that I live in.
31:12So, take a look at that and see what you guys think.
31:16Um, so this week's been a philosophical week.
31:20It's been a week where I was reminded of the mystery of death, and it is the ultimate rabbit
31:27hole, right?
31:28I mean, when you think about rabbit holes, the mystery of death is the ultimate mystery.
31:34It doesn't appear as though death is the end of existence, only in this particular form,
31:45perhaps.
31:46So, very, very interesting.
31:49Um, but I thought this would be a opportune moment to read an academic essay that has a
32:01philosophical view that you might find compelling.
32:07And I wrote this when I was at the Metro State University of Denver.
32:15It was published by them and actually entered into, uh, a competition.
32:21So, a few years ago, this is Natural Born Killer, by the way, by Jack Carey.
32:30A few years ago, I went through something of a spiritual, if not religious, conversion.
32:36This wasn't the typical case of a wandering soul finding a belief system that provided support
32:42and comfort.
32:43Rather, it was a horrific experience.
32:46The weirdest part of this enlightenment is the fact that it was all facilitated by a nature
32:52documentary.
32:53I had, for a while, been contemplating the larger picture of the universe and my place
32:59within it.
33:00In fact, this contemplation had really become all-consuming, and most of my time was spent
33:06pouring over dusty old tomes of arcane knowledge looking for something I couldn't quite define.
33:14I had recently become overwhelmingly disillusioned with the established religions of our day.
33:21They all, without exclusion, seem rife with hypocrisy and corruption, hollowed-out versions of what
33:29they were meant to be.
33:30In my mind, they now only exist to parasitically survive off the fears and hopes of the people
33:38who make up my species.
33:40It all seems like simple physics, really.
33:43A body in motion tends to stay in motion, and those belief systems have been in motion
33:50for a very long time.
33:53They now barrel down the tracks in such a fashion that I am often left wondering what mad engineer
33:59must be at the helm.
34:01One afternoon, during this turbulent period, I was lazily seated in front of the television,
34:07and suddenly a nature documentary began.
34:11I reached for the remote control, but before I could change the channel,
34:18these guys got their hook into me with a fantastic title.
34:24The name of the documentary was The Silent Killers of Monterey Bay.
34:29The subject of the piece was a pod of killer whales that were currently living in Monterey Bay
34:35outside San Francisco.
34:38The film starts with the narrator explaining that the pod is hunting and that they intend
34:44to capture this event on film and otherwise document the activity of the whales.
34:50The camera pans in on a lone seal that has become the object of the hunt.
34:56The seal spots the pod and knows that real trouble has just taken a liking to him.
35:02In a completely unexpected move, the seal swims directly over to the boat, holding the film crew.
35:11The boat crew is understandably surprised and a little shocked by this.
35:16The pod of killer whales, too scared of the people and the boat, keep their distance and the seal appears
35:22safe.
35:24He was a crafty bastard, that seal.
35:28At this moment, the narrator comes back on camera and says that in moments like these,
35:33they don't like to interfere with the workings of Mother Nature.
35:38Quote, we're required to have a hands-off approach, he said into the lens.
35:43Just about then, the engine of the boat started up and began to gurgle and hum.
35:48The boat slowly jilted forward and then began to pick up speed.
35:52A seal, crafty little guy that he was, knew that if the boat left, he was going to be dead
35:59meat.
36:01The killer whales began to pull out their toothpicks.
36:05The seal, desperate and afraid, began to pursue the boat with all of its might and was doing a really
36:12fine job, I might add.
36:14The boat crew realized what was happening.
36:17They began to pick up more speed in an attempt to leave the seal behind.
36:21The seal, overwhelmed with fright, began to jump out of the water and into the boat.
36:29Every time it jumped out of the water, it let out a blood-curdling scream.
36:34I was caught mesmerized by what I was witnessing.
36:38Finally, the boat began to leave the poor seal behind.
36:43Farther and farther away it fell as exhaustion took over.
36:47Those whales didn't take long.
36:50I soon discovered just how aptly named they are.
36:54They must have hit that seal going full steam, ripping its flesh and crushing its neck bone into a thousand
37:02tiny pieces.
37:04When these guys kill something, they aren't content to just eat it.
37:10They make a game of it.
37:12Tossing the poor creature to and fro like a beach ball at a rock concert.
37:17Just about the time that my horror turned into anger and I began to wish ill upon the boat crew,
37:23narrator, producer, and the rest of their ilk,
37:27a voice came on the screen.
37:30It was the voice of the narrator and he says,
37:33Now I know that this must seem like what this must seem like.
37:39And although all of you out there watching might be angered and repulsed by what just happened,
37:45there is something you don't know.
37:47That pot of whales had a baby with it.
37:50And it hadn't eaten in over two weeks.
37:53In fact, it was starving to death.
37:56The death of the seal, although savage to our way of thinking, means life for that baby whale.
38:04Just at this instant, a life-changing thing happened.
38:08I saw a flash of light like a bomb go off in my mind.
38:13I felt like I was being hit with a lightning bolt.
38:16I must have blacked out because I woke up on the floor.
38:19Only a few moments had passed, but my head was swimming.
38:22I gathered myself together and went outside with my dogs for a couple of hours to clear my head.
38:28That night before bed, I was irresistibly drawn again to the same nature channel.
38:35It was like I had been given a dose of truth serum and now I had a heroin-like grip
38:40on my soul.
38:41That night's feature documentary was on Japanese hornets.
38:46As far as bugs go, the Japanese hornet is just about as nasty as they come.
38:53They can spray acid from their tails and sense the carbon dioxide put out by a prey's breath or eye
38:59heat.
39:00Many a person has been blinded by these creatures.
39:04Once they have you blinded in the jungle,
39:08they emit an odor that draws the rest of the hive to you.
39:13Only a few stings render enough poison to completely down a victim.
39:18The pain apparently more than most humans can bear.
39:23The film crew had to wear tough suits covering their entire bodies in order to shoot the documentary.
39:29These hornets make their living by attacking honeybee colonies.
39:35The documentary crew was able to film only 30 Japanese hornets
39:43killing every one of 30,000 honeybees in a single colony in a single attack.
39:52It was death wholesale.
39:54These things were lopping off heads with their pinchers
39:57and spraying acid all over those bees, melting a hundred at a time.
40:01When the killing was done, they took all of the bees' larvae,
40:10flew it back to their own nest, and fed it to their young.
40:16As I lay in bed watching this, my skin crawled.
40:19I felt like I stood on the precipice of a great ravine and was about to be shoved in.
40:25I didn't sleep that night.
40:26The next day, I left the television off.
40:28I went into the room where I store all of my books,
40:31looking for a diversion from the question in my mind, standing just offstage.
40:36I picked up a book I had found at a used bookshop by a man named Alistair Crowley.
40:41I didn't know much about the man other than most of the world's religions
40:46considered him to be the wickedest man who ever lived.
40:51With a title like that coming from them, I knew whatever he had to say must be good.
40:57I randomly flipped through the book, stopping on a section where Crowley supposedly had channeled
41:03the Egyptian goddess Nuit.
41:06She was the Egyptian's idea and embodiment of the totality of the universe.
41:12In this channeled writing, the goddess Nuit is supposedly speaking through Crowley and says,
41:19I am divided for love's sake, for the chance of union.
41:26My mind went tumbling again.
41:29That was the question, really, that had been lurking in the shadows, ready to pounce.
41:47After the two films I had watched, it became abundantly clear that in order to perpetuate
41:53your own consciousness stream or life, you have to be adept at freeing up other life forms
42:00from theirs.
42:01We are all of us.
42:04Vampires.
42:07Consider it a zero-sum gain.
42:10Whatever life you have or enjoy was put there by another life form that no longer exists because
42:16of it.
42:17A transaction took place at that moment.
42:21You absorbed its energy.
42:23Predator and prey became one.
42:26Is that what Nuit meant?
42:30Vegetarians may think they have a pass on such brutality,
42:33but they are only ignorant of the facts.
42:35Recently, a prestigious university conducted a series of experiments on plants.
42:41In one experiment, they put a new plant in a container and stuck a match next to it and
42:47lit the match.
42:49The fire from the match, of course, damaged the plant.
42:53They then took an identical plant and placed it next to the first and placed an unlit match next
43:02to it.
43:10This means, of course, that the plants are conscious, and not only that, they appear to communicate.
43:17Research is ongoing, but vegetarians may be the biggest killers of all.
43:25All of this was leading me to an inescapable conclusion.
43:28If love can exist alongside brutality, then it must surely all be one creature, feeding, fighting, and loving
43:36itself in an endless exploration of self-love.
43:39It is only human perception which is terminally flawed, inexplicably unable to accept this
43:46purest of truths.
43:48Nuit's or Crowley's words rang in my head.
43:51I am divided for love's sake, for the chance of union.
43:55Had God split itself up into countless life forms in order to create the principle of love
44:02through union, wasn't the predator and prey scenario of our existence just another form of union?
44:11I had to get out.
44:12I needed air.
44:15I decided to go to the grocery store and pick up a few items that we needed for that night's
44:20dinner.
44:22Just at the stoplight, a block or two from my home, I began to hear sirens.
44:26They were faint at first, and then slowly they got louder and louder until they were blazing
44:31in my ears.
44:32I saw a black car going at least 80 miles an hour being pursued by a police car.
44:37They were going so fast it all seemed to blur and were gone in just a few seconds, the sirens
44:43slowly fading again.
44:45I wondered if the drivers knew that they were the same creature, and so in effect one chasing
44:50the other was like a dog chasing its tail.
44:53I don't even remember the rest of the drive to the store.
44:57Once there, I took a hand cart and wandered my way over to the meat department.
45:03There before me in homogenized glory were the hunks of animal flesh wrapped in plastic
45:08that I had come to depend on for my existence.
45:13I loaded up what I needed and headed for the door.
45:17Standing in line, Nuit's words hit me again.
45:20This time, I even heard it in a female voice inside my head.
45:25I am divided for love's sake, for the chance of union.
45:30Her words rang through me as she spoke.
45:33I couldn't go through with it.
45:36For some unknown reason, I couldn't buy the meat.
45:40The deal seemed too shady.
45:44I was getting off too easy.
45:47I placed the basket on the ground in front of me and turned to walk out.
45:52The others in line only stared in a sheepish manner as I walked out the door.
45:59That night, as I drifted off to sleep, a childhood memory long forgotten crept back into my mind.
46:06At the age of seven, I begged, pleaded, and cajoled my parents enough
46:10that they finally purchased me the BB gun I so desperately desired.
46:14It was a hot summer day when I took it out of the box.
46:18I filled it with BB pellets and began shooting the target it came with.
46:22After a few hours of that, I grew bored and I began looking for other targets.
46:27I spotted a blue jay on a telephone wire and coldly took aim.
46:33I don't remember pulling the trigger, but I remember how hard it hit the ground.
46:39My mother, who had been sunbathing at the time, looked up from her book just as it happened and began
46:44screaming at me.
46:45We both ran over to the bird.
46:48Blood was pouring from its beak and a hole now resided where an eye had once been.
46:53A wave of anguish swept over me.
46:56I began to weep uncontrollably.
46:58My mother began to cry too, not saying a word.
47:02I can still hear my father's voice from across the yard, calling us from within some long, dark tunnel.
47:10You guys quit messing around and come and get your cheeseburgers.
47:20And that kind of leads us into the mystery of death itself, right?
47:29Because life is sort of predatory.
47:33And what is death itself?
47:38Is it just a phase transition into another dimension?
47:43It's possible.
47:45It leads us into ghost theory, right?
47:49In an anomaly, I noticed.
47:53First of all, I grew up in a haunted antebellum mansion in southern Oklahoma.
48:01It was haunted as could be.
48:03There were full-on black, you know, figures moving across the house, dishes being smashed in the middle of the
48:12night, the whole thing.
48:13So, my whole childhood was full of that.
48:19And so, ghosts, as for me as a paranormal investigator, were never a mystery.
48:25I knew they existed.
48:28The real question is, why do they exist?
48:34Do we live in a reality where there is just some kind of moth trap mechanism by which some people
48:44get stuck in a semi-existent way in this reality?
48:52And we call them ghosts.
48:55Or is there something else at work there?
48:58Because the anomaly, when it comes to ghost theory, is called the caveman ghost anomaly, right?
49:09When was the last time that you saw somebody on a paranormal documentary, television show, paranormal caught on camera, what
49:21have you, of a caveman ghost?
49:27They're just not there.
49:30Are we to believe that ghosts didn't occur in the ancient past?
49:37And that somehow it's a modern day occurrence?
49:41Do ghosts just fade over time and eventually make that transition?
49:47These are all open questions.
49:49I don't pretend to have the answers to.
49:54But it's clear from a mountain of evidence that some people not only survive death but can interact with this
50:08reality in that other state.
50:14We call them ghosts, what have you, they're just people.
50:20Or should we say former people?
50:22I don't know.
50:24You know, what is the etiquette?
50:26What is ghost etiquette?
50:27I'm going to write a book called Ghost Etiquette.
50:32And, you know, that really kind of leads us back around to this whole idea of alien technology.
50:43And I say that because a lot of the scientists who are involved with the UFO program claim that there's
50:58something spiritual that we would describe as spiritual.
51:04But what is that really?
51:05Is that just another dimensional move of some kind?
51:09I don't know.
51:11I don't know.
51:13But, like my essay says, a brutality can't exist alongside the principle of love in this universe.
51:24And clearly it does.
51:26Is it our human perception which is flawed and not creation itself?
51:37Could it be that we just simply aren't seeing the fact that death is just a simple transition and nothing
51:48to be feared?
51:49And so the predator and prey scenario of our existence really isn't all of that dramatic that it seems to
52:00us to be?
52:02I don't know.
52:03I don't know the answer to that either.
52:05But these are good questions to ask ourselves.
52:08And, you know, in the world of ghost research and paranormal research, it's important to know that over time, technology
52:20will gain ground with this mystery.
52:25Technology has a way of gaining ground with all mysteries over time, and this is no different.
52:34So, you know, we are on the cusp of artificial intelligence actually changing medicine as we understand it.
52:43A lot of scientists are claiming that they are on the cusp of curing cancer, et cetera, extending life to
52:52at least 120 healthy years, that kind of a thing.
52:57So, you are seeing the sort of marriage of high technology with human lifespan and existence in a way that's
53:08going to sort of, you know, really revolutionize the future of humanity if it's not interrupted unexpectedly in some way.
53:19And could it be that there is something we're not quite understanding about the UFO phenomenon beyond this aspect of
53:32an actual technology being in our possession from another dimension?
53:38Could it be that because death is another dimension that there is somehow a connection between these things?
53:46I don't know.
53:47But a lot of researchers are beginning to ask those questions because of this little thing that was discovered called
53:55the hitchhiker effect.
53:56And the hitchhiker effect is the fact that people involved with ufology for long periods of time end up experiencing
54:05other kinds of paranormal activity that really logically shouldn't have a relationship to UFO mystery.
54:16I'm talking about, like, you know, people involved with the UFO program going home and experiencing poltergeist activity and haunting
54:26activity and light orbs following them and cryptid animal activity even.
54:33I mean, that kind of stuff.
54:35How is it connected to their research into alien technology if there's not something weirdly interdimensional about it?
54:46And, you know, all of that plays into the battle that's taking place for Disclosure.
54:53And you guys will have to join me next week.
54:55We will jump down another rabbit hole and we will explore the architecture of it.
55:00And until then, I will see you on the radio.
55:23You
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