Why scientists describe six states of matter, how Haym Salomon helped finance American independence, and why Yahowah’s dietary instructions continue exposing the divide between Towrah understanding and Churchianity drive this wide-ranging discussion through science, history, and restoration. The conversation explores Noah’s Ark, flood evidence, archaeology, and the meaning behind clean versus unclean food while examining how modern religion, institutional traditions, and historical narratives distorted understanding surrounding Yahowah, creation, and human civilization. Additional segments examine Neanderthal cave paintings, ancient history, bodily transformation, and humanity’s search for origins, connecting science, evidence, and historical questions to deeper discussions surrounding consciousness, creation, survival, and the nature of human existence.
SixStatesOfMatterExplained, HaymSalomonSavedAmerica, TowrahDietaryLaws, NoahsArkDiscovery, NeanderthalCavePaintings, ChaymAndMattersVlog, ScienceVsReligionTruth, YahowahCreationEvidence, AncientHistoryMysteries, ChurchianityFoodDeception, FloodEvidenceDiscussion, ConsciousnessAndCreation
#StatesOfMatter #HaymSalomon #NoahsArk #Neanderthals #Towrah #Yahowah #FloodEvidence #AncientMysteries #DietaryLaws #CreationScience #Churchianity #vlog|vlog-on-a-blog|111
SixStatesOfMatterExplained, HaymSalomonSavedAmerica, TowrahDietaryLaws, NoahsArkDiscovery, NeanderthalCavePaintings, ChaymAndMattersVlog, ScienceVsReligionTruth, YahowahCreationEvidence, AncientHistoryMysteries, ChurchianityFoodDeception, FloodEvidenceDiscussion, ConsciousnessAndCreation
#StatesOfMatter #HaymSalomon #NoahsArk #Neanderthals #Towrah #Yahowah #FloodEvidence #AncientMysteries #DietaryLaws #CreationScience #Churchianity #vlog|vlog-on-a-blog|111
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00:00I don't have time to do that though.
00:00:02Come a little closer and lend me your ears.
00:00:05Don't worry, you keep yours while I keep mine.
00:00:09In each episode, we'll dig into the major stories, uncover the truth and retrieve gems from Yarda's blog.
00:00:17We'll discuss what's right, bark about what's wrong, wag our tails at the thrill of discovery and take you on
00:00:23adventures through the exciting world we live in today.
00:00:25So, fasten your curiosity leash and get ready.
00:00:33Right then, coming to you with another episode of the Yadda's blog on a blog.
00:00:37Tomorrow's news disseminated today. Let's dive in.
00:00:42Well, good morning there. Kevin, how are you this morning?
00:00:46Good morning. I'm doing well, doing well.
00:00:48Pleasure to be able to broadcast our blog on the blog on the daily.
00:00:53Something both you and I now know that Wookiee does not know is he is now has competition for dog
00:01:00on duty.
00:01:00Have you seen the new sign off on Plumeria Asher?
00:01:05I have. That is really good. Absolutely.
00:01:08Yeah.
00:01:09Part of me wants to just cut that and put it into the show tonight at some point for the,
00:01:13you know, just just that little bit in a bit, you know?
00:01:15Yeah, I think I think we need to. I think we need to have a short on Plumeria Asher.
00:01:20For those who don't know what we're talking about, and that would be no one, everyone except for maybe Leia,
00:01:26Jon Voight and Kevin and I, is that we have a couple of songs on one's called Mr. Babylon.
00:01:37And I like to call it Mr. Babylon. And the other is Star Spangled Crossplay.
00:01:44And the songs are absolutely hilarious. They're both done in the Caribbean genre.
00:01:51And JV has just finished all the graphics behind Mr. Babylon. And it ends with Asher at the controls. So
00:02:00it is just it's hilarious.
00:02:03And of course, it's a it's a way of exposing Donald Trump as Rahab, as Satan incarnate, as the great
00:02:11destroyer and betrayer.
00:02:13And so that's what we're talking about. And it is really hilarious. We won't be playing that tonight on our
00:02:18family hour.
00:02:19We have two songs and maybe even three that will be part of family hour.
00:02:24We have the Ode to Ruth. I happen to also like it's a shorter song, but I like the name
00:02:32above all names with the pretty dancing Leia as our singer and our trumpeter.
00:02:41And then she has another kind of fun song that she wants to to play. That's also for family hour
00:02:49tonight.
00:02:49So we may be showing three songs on family hour and we'll we'll put off our babylon until you get
00:02:57it all dialed up and we get it posted on the site.
00:03:00But the music group is doing a spectacular job. And I think that the music is a huge part of
00:03:08what we're offering.
00:03:09I mean, having all original songs that are all specific to our message and missing and to Yama calling his
00:03:17people home.
00:03:19That's absolutely marvelous.
00:03:21Yeah, it's a great content to be able to reach more people, you know, a media to do that. Absolutely.
00:03:29Yep. So you're probably up to speed with with us now.
00:03:35Yesterday, you thought that the flip books were the latest and greatest.
00:03:38And by the way, the flip books are now our proprietary flip books are now live on the site.
00:03:43So we do have that capability and they are really, really well done and many, many features that are unique
00:03:52to them.
00:03:53But also the search capability now has been integrated and cleaned up and it is working beautifully.
00:04:02I've never seen any search feature. Yeah, that's anywhere close to it.
00:04:05Not only for the books and it brings you the cover of the book, the section of the book where
00:04:09the terms or terms you're looking for presented.
00:04:13But also if you click on that link, it will take you to the flip books and will have all
00:04:20the pages off to the left side where that term appears within context.
00:04:25And if you click on those, it'll only take you to that page in the flip book.
00:04:28It'll have the term that you were looking for highlighted.
00:04:32What a marvelous way to go about it.
00:04:35And that's the romper room side of things, because the Ph.D. side is what what happens with the videos,
00:04:43because to be able to search a video, you have to have a transcript.
00:04:47And so we have an automatic transcript generation capability now that we're deploying.
00:04:52And I think we have a little over half of the thousand hours of 1500 hours, a thousand videos.
00:05:00We have a little over half done.
00:05:02I think there have finished through December of last year going backwards in time.
00:05:08But not only we have the transcripts, what the search does is it presents every time your word or phrase
00:05:16is found in any of the blogs that we have done up to this point.
00:05:21And it shows a transcript of where it is in that particular blog presentation.
00:05:29But if you click on the thumbnail for the blog, it will not only take you to that place in
00:05:36our blog, but it will back you up about it's to the last full sentence regarding the statement pursuant to
00:05:49the word that you're questioning.
00:05:52And so you play it and it'll go on and you can go back in time or forward or whatever
00:05:56you wish to do, but it'll take you right to the proper place to have that word introduced in context.
00:06:03Yeah, I'm excited about that more than anything, because it kind of puts me out of a job because I
00:06:07really did a lot of because I was cutting the shorts.
00:06:11People would have questions.
00:06:12Hey, I remember him saying, where would he say that they'd, they'd ask on discord and stuff and I'd have
00:06:16to go back and look through the shorts or look through the video or kind of for memory and be
00:06:19like, Hey, that was, you know, cat seer harvest 73 at about 30 minutes, you know, or whatever.
00:06:25And could cut them the video and stuff.
00:06:27And it's not, I don't have to do that anymore.
00:06:29So thank you, Joe.
00:06:30They can use, they can use the site to do what, uh, what technology should be able to do.
00:06:37Mm-hmm.
00:06:38Uh, it's just a beautiful thing.
00:06:39And we're going to add a lot of new features to the, the, uh, site here over the next few
00:06:44days.
00:06:44We're going to have a, a new homepage look with, uh, the very structured, uh, material as you go down
00:06:50the homepage and what's available already at the bottom of the homepage is a direct link to resources.
00:06:54Since we're building up content, there are, uh, grammar tutorials.
00:06:59Uh, I don't know if we're going to consolidate them to one, two, three, or four, but I think there
00:07:03are four of them and they're, uh, getting very close to being ready to present.
00:07:07We're going to take the calendar, which has been residing within Shauna years as volume eight of Yadayawa and keep
00:07:15it there, but also bring it into the timeline.
00:07:18It won't actually be positioned within the timeline.
00:07:21It'll be a link from the time page, uh, to take you to it.
00:07:24So it's more available, uh, just lots of new things being, uh, added all the time and greater functionality, more
00:07:31stability on the site.
00:07:33And it still retains its aesthetic, uh, beauty.
00:07:37It's very pretty site.
00:07:38Yeah.
00:07:39You, uh, you, you mentioned you're like, Hey, so you're up to speed on the site.
00:07:42And I'm like trying, I'm there every day, but there's a lot to keep up with.
00:07:48There is.
00:07:49Yeah, there is.
00:07:50And it's just so beautifully presented.
00:07:52So anyway, we'll, we'll, uh, I would say probably in the next few weeks, we'll be so far along that
00:07:59we'll do.
00:08:00It'll be at least an hour show and maybe two, one hour shows with Joe, where we literally walk through
00:08:06the feature of the sites.
00:08:07Uh, and maybe it's a two of us and, and Leah and Joe since she was the artistic stylistic, uh,
00:08:15guide to the site.
00:08:16And we just walked through all the features and, and point out how to use them.
00:08:20Cause I don't think there's anybody other than maybe Joe and myself and perhaps you that knows really the full
00:08:26depth of the capability of that site.
00:08:28And, uh, and of course the real magic of it now isn't just in its elegance and it is elegance,
00:08:34very credible, beautiful place for Yahweh's name.
00:08:36And it isn't just in the library that's there, which is proprietary to us.
00:08:41It's not just to the thousand hours of logs and live streams that are now there.
00:08:45Isn't just in the, uh, hundred some odd, uh, unique and, uh, inventive, beautiful songs that are all, uh, written
00:08:54for the, uh, the site.
00:08:55It isn't just that it has a full news capability with the blog and is I think better than Facebook
00:09:01or X in that regard.
00:09:04It's not just that it has the full messenger and chat capability, which I think is also better than X
00:09:10and, uh, and Facebook or any other instant messenger kind of capability.
00:09:14Uh, it, you know, there's the whole thing has come together so beautifully, but what you see and can interact
00:09:24with is 10% of the site.
00:09:27Yeah.
00:09:2790% of it is that, is that admin tool that sits behind it and the self healing capabilities of
00:09:36it.
00:09:37And the fact that, that non technologists can, uh, do marvelous things in terms of, uh, of updating and, um,
00:09:48presenting material for the site.
00:09:51Yeah, absolutely. The admin panel, uh, it's a little overwhelming. I admit to actually touching and clicking on probably a
00:10:00third of the things in there that I'm comfortable with.
00:10:02Okay. I know what that does because I know it's self healing, but I still don't want to start making
00:10:07things inactive or, well, this doesn't go here or that doesn't go there or whatever, because it's like, uh, you
00:10:13know, I just, it's live.
00:10:15As, as, as Joe likes to say, we're, we're, uh, we're performing without a net on our site. There is
00:10:20no, we made a change. Yes. So yes, it's true.
00:10:24And one of the things that's interesting is that, uh, Joe is not a spectacular teacher. He's a spectacular programmer.
00:10:32And he's, he's doing this all so that all of the code is proprietary and it's all dynamically generated out
00:10:38of a database and other tables, uh, which is remarkable.
00:10:41Uh, but, uh, if I get his attention on the phone and we go through it because he wants to
00:10:47say, you know, you can do that. You, you don't need my help. You can actually do that.
00:10:51Uh, and if I tell, tell me something to click to set it up and I'll say, but that's not
00:10:58exactly what you said. And he says, but you're just impatient. You're not ready to analyze the results. We're not
00:11:03finished with the input.
00:11:05And he's got, you know, like, it's like an aircraft panel. He's got like a panel of, of 400 choices
00:11:11at the top and you've got to get all the toggles in the right position before you proceed.
00:11:17So it is, uh, it is a challenge and you'll say, okay, just slow down. This is a, you're not
00:11:23ready for that, uh, that phase of it yet. I wanted Joe to, uh, to do a tutorial. We, we,
00:11:28we may get him to, uh, to do one in the background for the admins, but we'll say we might
00:11:33get him recorded.
00:11:34As part of, but it's a marvelous presentation. I'm very proud of it. I know. Yeah, I was proud of
00:11:38it and it will be in service for the next thousand years.
00:11:43Yeah, it's, it is the Ness. Absolutely. The back, this is the banner.
00:11:47Yeah. All right. So we are, uh, going to do our vlog on the vlog. The first slide here is
00:11:53really interesting.
00:11:53Uh, and that, uh, someone presented, uh, graphically that there are six states of matter.
00:11:58We've all known, um, and everybody is aware of, of three, uh, which is a solid, uh, state, the liquid
00:12:07state and the gaseous state of matter.
00:12:09Uh, water, of course, is the most interesting of all, uh, compounds in this regard.
00:12:14Uh, and that, uh, that water is the only thing that I know of that actually expands when it, it
00:12:20goes from liquid, uh, to solid.
00:12:24Uh, and if it didn't do that, there'd be no life on the planet.
00:12:28Uh, so we ought to be really pleased with the fact that ice floats because if it didn't, literally there'd
00:12:35be no life on the planet.
00:12:37Uh, uh, so that's pretty clever of you. I want to make the exception, uh, with, uh, with water.
00:12:41Uh, the fourth state of course is plasma and plasma.
00:12:46I'm not sure we'd know a lot about plasma because of the exceedingly high temperatures of plasma.
00:12:51Uh, if it weren't for returning, uh, space, uh, capsules, right, uh, they had to encounter plasma with their heat
00:12:59shields and, and deflect away from it.
00:13:01And of course it was really necessary because it was the return to the atmosphere that actually was the brakes
00:13:07for that capsule.
00:13:09Uh, and without it, they wouldn't be able to break.
00:13:13Uh, and, uh, and then we had to figure out how to put heat shields on it to withstand that
00:13:19kind of temperature.
00:13:19And they used, uh, various forms of ceramic because metal is a conductor and the ceramics were insulators.
00:13:26Uh, but it, uh, it proved to us that there was a fourth state of matter.
00:13:31Now here they're talking about two more.
00:13:33What are those Kevin?
00:13:35And what, uh, what do you think of them?
00:13:37Oh, goodness.
00:13:38Well, we have the, the Bose Einstein condensate, uh, something about fermions at absolute, um, zero temperature.
00:13:47So we're talking the theoretical idea of Kelvin here, right?
00:13:51Correct.
00:13:52Um, particles, uh, occupy the same quantum state, uh, and behave like a single particle,
00:14:01which is sort of, uh, counterintuitive in my mind, uh, that something that would go from a,
00:14:08a, a, a, a, a, a lower state of vibration to a higher state of vibration is actually,
00:14:15it seems like they're with temperature, the way this is worded, lowering, therefore particle
00:14:21less, less activity in the electrons.
00:14:24You know, they, they are more, more, more particle nature, less wave nature, uh, with a decrease
00:14:30in temperature sounds counterintuitive.
00:14:34Yeah.
00:14:34You, every time you think of more energy, you think of more temperature, you know?
00:14:40Yes.
00:14:41At least I do anyway.
00:14:42Yeah.
00:14:43The thing that, that fascinates me about, um, uh, matter is the realization that matter
00:14:49is mostly not even in the solid state of something like a table.
00:14:54Well, a table is a great example because we think of a table as a solid, but it's not,
00:14:58it's a liquid glass is a liquid at that state, not a, uh, not a solid.
00:15:02Uh, but they, uh, uh, the fact is that matter is really organized energy and what we feel
00:15:12is matter because you can hold it.
00:15:14Like I can hold the solid that's containing this liquid is really just organized energy
00:15:20and that the voids are enormous compared to the particles so that, you know, here we're,
00:15:31you know, I can hold this here, recognizing that it's by trillions to one, the voids in
00:15:37this solid container, uh, are by trillions to one greater than the particles.
00:15:44And it's the bonds between them that keep the liquid, which also is, uh, has, uh, the same
00:15:53kind of nature, but it keeps them from flowing from one to the other because of the, uh, the,
00:16:00uh, electric fields and, and the like, uh, between them.
00:16:04But, but matter really is nothing but, uh, organized energy and a diminished form of energy.
00:16:09So you could, you could say the, um, uh, call it the, uh, the multiple states of energy
00:16:17and that matter would fall under energy.
00:16:23Absolutely.
00:16:24Absolutely.
00:16:24That's, uh, people, I, I, people don't realize that everything around them is vibrating at a
00:16:31different, uh, speed at a, at a different wavelength.
00:16:34We call that right.
00:16:36Um, everything's moving.
00:16:37It, it, yeah.
00:16:38And so it is possible to pass through what we perceive as a solid object.
00:16:43Um, if you are vibrating at a higher level than that, you know, that object is vibrating.
00:16:51Like you say that, yeah, the, the, the, the spaces between, uh, the, uh, electromagnetic
00:16:57charges between, you know, like you said, the spaces that are between the, the actual molecules.
00:17:02Yeah.
00:17:02Um, there are cosmic rays and that sort of thing.
00:17:05They're actually able to pass through our planet, the atmosphere and the planet come
00:17:09out the other side.
00:17:10Uh, so it's really fascinating that the nature of the two, that's what equals MCs two is, uh,
00:17:17uh, equals MC squared is really all about is that energy equals matter with matter multiplied
00:17:24by the square of the speed of light.
00:17:26Uh, so they are actually the same thing.
00:17:31That's what the equal sign means that mass and, uh, matter and, uh, and energy are exactly
00:17:37the same thing.
00:17:38They're just different amounts of the same thing.
00:17:42Right.
00:17:42And it's, it's, it's interesting that we have these, uh, these six states of matter.
00:17:47Okay.
00:17:48And that we perceive this as a, a six dimensional universe with Yahweh being in the seventh.
00:17:53Right.
00:17:54Yeah.
00:17:54So it's, it's interesting that as, as we were to, to traverse those six dimensions, we probably
00:18:01will, um, gain more perception of these different states, not just being able to perceive them
00:18:09because once we can perceive them, observe them, interact with them, then we're able
00:18:12to use them, you know, speak things into existence with fermions, I guess.
00:18:17I don't know.
00:18:18With, uh, with light being the literal definition of energy.
00:18:22I mean, it's the definition of the universe, uh, light speed and the nature of light define
00:18:28our universe.
00:18:29And so with light energy being the ultimate form of energy and the six stages of matter, uh,
00:18:37being diminished forms of it and falling underneath it, we do have a very clear idea too, of Yahweh
00:18:43in the seventh dimension, creating a six dimensional universe.
00:18:47Uh, and it speaks highly to, of the idea that, uh, we humans to have any opportunity to be more
00:18:55than we are, have to get well past those first three states.
00:18:59If we can't get past, uh, the state of, of solid liquid and gas of which we are all three,
00:19:08if
00:19:08we can't get past those states and, and go way beyond them and transition into energy, uh,
00:19:14then the laws of thermodynamics and the, uh, the whole nature of, of, uh, decay of, uh, of
00:19:21matter would put us in a position where we could never get off the planet.
00:19:24We could never, uh, live beyond our mortal existence.
00:19:28And it's one of the reasons why religions like Judaism, Christianity, and Islam that are
00:19:34all predicated upon bodily resurrection are going in the wrong direction.
00:19:38There is no value whatsoever to go from a physical body to a physical body.
00:19:44You still have all the same limitations.
00:19:45And so, uh, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam are just dead wrong.
00:19:51In that regard, you have to go from physical beings in three dimensions to a seven dimensional
00:19:58being that's, uh, whose soul is encapsulated in light energy.
00:20:03Yeah.
00:20:04It's, it's a nature of our soul and our Nesama, um, falling and being too damn enamored with
00:20:10this three dimensional existence, you know, too damn enamored with the things that, that
00:20:15happen here in the, Hey, I want a big house.
00:20:17I want wealth, I want power, but it is, uh, as, as they say in the Proverbs and as Dode
00:20:23says, it is all vanity.
00:20:25You know, those, those flowery plaques will fade away.
00:20:28You know, there's nothing that we, we put here in three dimensions that lasts like, like
00:20:33a soul will.
00:20:34And even at that point, um, Yahweh describes the disrupt destruction of souls, correct?
00:20:43Not setting them apart to shield, but the destruction of souls as the second, you know, uh, uh, fate.
00:20:48And so therefore the law of conservation of thermodynamics doesn't apply there.
00:20:54Energy is neither created nor destroyed.
00:20:55So therefore those souls are, are destroyed.
00:20:58He says destroyed, you know?
00:21:00Yeah.
00:21:00A soul is neither a energy nor is it matter.
00:21:03It's a state that is beyond our perception.
00:21:06Now, what's also interesting, you take religions like Judaism, Islam, and Christianity.
00:21:11These are Islam religions that are totally focused on man and Islam.
00:21:16It's man being, uh, ruthless man, being covetous man, uh, being deadly and man being, uh, uh,
00:21:24misogynist.
00:21:24That is the lowest man, man over, uh, over life, uh, uh, all focused on jihadi men.
00:21:32And in Christianity, it's so focused on men that not only did men create it, but their very God is
00:21:39a man.
00:21:40All right.
00:21:41And, uh, and so then you look at, uh, at Judaism and it's all focused on rabbis who are men.
00:21:48So in the religions of men, for men, where even the God and the case of Christianity is a man,
00:21:56uh,
00:21:57they're naturally focused on bodily resurrection.
00:22:00The body is everything to them.
00:22:02Uh, it's, that's why God looks at religion and said, how could you be so blankety blank, stupid?
00:22:09That is the problem.
00:22:10And I want people who are particularly Christians to recognize that men created a religion where men are God,
00:22:17where the solution is bodily resurrection.
00:22:20And the think about how idiotic that is, every aspect of it.
00:22:24Um, yeah, uh, I, I can't wait to, to trade my end, to trade mine.
00:22:31Yes.
00:22:31I'm not, I'm not enamored with it.
00:22:33Just saying.
00:22:34Yeah.
00:22:34Yes.
00:22:34Mine, mine's ready to go as well.
00:22:36Mine has taken very good care of me.
00:22:38If you know, for 71 years old and, uh, and my soul is at least 6,000 years old, some
00:22:43would say a billion years old.
00:22:44Uh, you know, I think it's all in all, uh, pretty good for the wear.
00:22:49Uh, but, uh, I'm, uh, when I come back, uh, I'm going to have a newer, leaner, stronger, uh, better
00:22:56eyesight, better hearing.
00:22:58Uh, you know, I'm going to be a little taller.
00:23:00I'm going to be a little, I'm going to buff up a bit, uh, in my, uh, my new version.
00:23:04But I don't see any reason why we shouldn't do that.
00:23:08All right.
00:23:08Let's, uh, let's talk about some of the items in the news.
00:23:10Oh yeah.
00:23:10This is an interesting one.
00:23:12Absolutely.
00:23:13Think about it.
00:23:14Were you aware of him?
00:23:16Yeah.
00:23:16I know.
00:23:17I'm Solomon.
00:23:18Yeah.
00:23:18I have, I've studied, I've studied him a fair amount.
00:23:22I, cause I'm fascinated, not so much about Kime, uh, Solomon, uh, but about, uh, American patriotism.
00:23:31Because Kime Solomon was more important to America's independence than were George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Adams, uh, Benjamin Franklin
00:23:44combined.
00:23:46And yet everybody will talk about Madison and Monroe and Washington and Jefferson and Adams and Franklin as the founding
00:23:56fathers of America.
00:23:57Right.
00:23:58Give them all the credit.
00:23:59Do you ever hear anybody talking about, uh, Kime, uh, Solomon?
00:24:02No, no, no.
00:24:05Without Kime Solomon, you would have never heard about the other six guys that I just mentioned.
00:24:09Right.
00:24:10That's the bottom line.
00:24:11They would have been.
00:24:12He gave what would be a equivalent.
00:24:16I can't read the number there, but it's, it's like 20 billion.
00:24:19Yeah.
00:24:2020 billion.
00:24:20Right.
00:24:21Is it 20?
00:24:22Yeah.
00:24:22Yeah.
00:24:22The equivalent of $20 billion today to fund the American revolution.
00:24:29And without that money, there were no guns.
00:24:32There were no uniforms.
00:24:33There was no boots.
00:24:35There was no tents.
00:24:36There was no George Washington as a general.
00:24:40There was no revolution.
00:24:42You know, Concord and they, and they shoot them down.
00:24:47I think whatever, half a dozen people that would have been it.
00:24:50And it would all have fizzled out without the funding of Kime Solomon.
00:24:55And so what does it say about American patriotism such that the man who is most responsible for American independence,
00:25:06the man who funded it all.
00:25:08He was the, the central bank of America, except he didn't loan the money.
00:25:13He gave the money.
00:25:14He was, he was the, uh, benefactor of the American revolution and 99.99, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9%
00:25:23of Americans have never heard of.
00:25:26Unbelievable, unbelievable.
00:25:28And his story is, um, look, I, I get it.
00:25:34Uh, ideally, uh, oligarchs bad, right?
00:25:37I mean, but oligarchs, Washington was an oligarch.
00:25:40Jefferson was an oligarch.
00:25:41These guys were, were doing what they were doing, uh, based in their own self-interest.
00:25:45And we, and, and the, the country just kind of, uh, happened to benefit from it.
00:25:49It was a, it was a synergy, a freedom for all, this idea of liberty, right?
00:25:53I'm going to, I'm going to challenge that.
00:25:54First of all, I think oligarchs are great.
00:25:59Okay.
00:26:00I think, I think oligarchs are great.
00:26:02And, uh, and I would tell you that the only two, uh, what we would call democracies, but they were
00:26:09not, they were oligarchies.
00:26:10The only two that had any staying power in world history, whereas the oligarchy of, uh, the Grecian islands,
00:26:18and which lasted about, uh, 200 years and the oligarchy of Sparta, they were it.
00:26:24There is no evidence that a democracy that is not an oligarchy has any chance of survival because it's, uh,
00:26:34it's, uh, two wolves and a lamb deciding what's for dinner.
00:26:38And in mass, we are just too stupid.
00:26:40Right.
00:26:40Right.
00:26:41And the unproductive and the uninformed are given control over the productive and the informed.
00:26:48So it's, uh, it's government by idiots on behalf of the selfish.
00:26:53I mean, it's absolutely our founding fathers despised it.
00:26:57A democracy.
00:26:58Oligarchy is how the country was founded actually with, as a representative government, you had to own land.
00:27:05You had to be vested in the system to be able to vote.
00:27:09And that's the, the deal of an oligarchy is for the people who contributed to the society, who built businesses,
00:27:18who owned land that was productive, who were making contributions to the society, got to decide how the money that
00:27:27they were giving to that government was spent.
00:27:30Now, if you allow people who are the net beneficiaries, even if they're, uh, parasites to decide, and they always
00:27:38exceed the ones who are productive, then it will cause the productive to say, what the hell am I doing
00:27:44this for?
00:27:45You know, you, you, you punish success and you reward failure.
00:27:50You're going to get very little success and a lot of failure over time, which is what's happened to the
00:27:56American economy.
00:27:57It's why it, uh, it doesn't function anymore.
00:28:00So I actually think that oligarchs are the reason that nations have gone through a prosperous stage.
00:28:09And when we turn on oligarchs and we think that democracy is is a good thing as opposed to a
00:28:16bad thing, that we lose the value of of the community.
00:28:22And you have people who are voting who are clueless as to economics.
00:28:30They're clueless as to what the cost is and the consequence of war.
00:28:34They're clueless as to debate and rhetoric and the proper appreciation of right and wrong.
00:28:41They don't know history.
00:28:45And they do not they're not in a position where they would even have studied the candidates well enough to
00:28:53make an intelligent decision.
00:28:55So I am not a fan of democracy.
00:28:57I have never been.
00:28:58I will never be.
00:29:00But I think oligarchies have a greater likelihood of success than really anything else.
00:29:09I happen to like Yawa's view of it, which got very clever.
00:29:14He he said, I said, I'm fully aware that people are not created equal.
00:29:18You're just not created equal.
00:29:19That's a that's an absolute lie.
00:29:22There are certain people who are just much smarter than others.
00:29:24Their their processor worked better.
00:29:26They're they're more rugged.
00:29:27They're more devoted.
00:29:28They have more grit.
00:29:29They have more courage.
00:29:31They have more character, which is we're not even close to being the same.
00:29:34Not even not even remotely close.
00:29:36Yeah. And so God realizes that and he doesn't want to truncate the productivity of those who are smarter and
00:29:44more dedicated and more willing to work.
00:29:46So he doesn't want to truncate their drive and he he doesn't want to reward lethargy.
00:29:55And yet he doesn't want the those who are down and out orphans and widows and that sort of thing
00:30:03to suffer.
00:30:06And so he came up with what I think is the perfect plan, which is that over a period of
00:30:1350 years during that 50 years, you would always leave.
00:30:19Part of your fields unharvested, whatever it was that you were doing, you would leave part of it unharvested and
00:30:26so that people that needed food or they needed shelter or they needed wool for fabric, they could go and
00:30:33harvest what they needed and then they could prepare it to turn it into something useful.
00:30:38Right. And so they had to work to do it, but it was available to them and then to reset
00:30:45everything so you don't get super wealthy and super poor every 50 years.
00:30:50All debts are forgiven.
00:30:52All workers are free and the land returns to to Yawa for redistribution.
00:30:59And and in that 50 years, then everything is reset and you can go and do your thing.
00:31:06It's I think it's a a great way that a father or a mother can work together to better the
00:31:13lives of their children and a grandchild.
00:31:17You know, those that would they would be able to encourage and nurture during their lifetime, but it would never
00:31:23go beyond that.
00:31:24So could you say that Boaz was the oligarch of Bethlehem in his day?
00:31:32Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah.
00:31:34So maybe I'm speaking selfishly when I say that I like oligarchs.
00:31:38I've been one, a political, though.
00:31:41I'm a non-political person, but, you know, I've always been vested in I've always worked.
00:31:47I've always built businesses, always hired people, given them opportunity.
00:31:53Yes, I've always been somebody who has built.
00:31:57And now we're building a house for Yawa's name.
00:31:59And so I like work.
00:32:02I like being in a position where you can encourage and uplift other people.
00:32:07And so, yeah, I view that as a positive.
00:32:11Yeah. Speaking to the Shemitah that you were talking about, we know we're not created equal.
00:32:17OK, Yawa also gives the opportunity to those that no longer want to choose.
00:32:23I mean, if you want to stay in your master's house after seven years, right, put your ear to the
00:32:28door, take the ear piercing, you know,
00:32:30and you get to stay with this master, right, that you don't you're not forced to go out on your
00:32:36own.
00:32:36You can stay. I got a house. I got food.
00:32:39Yeah. There there are so many people that are OK with being taken care of that way, you know.
00:32:45Right.
00:32:46And it is.
00:32:47It is a positive thing. It is a positive thing.
00:32:49Lots of people realized that in a society without safety nets, which is the only kind of society that you're
00:32:58that's going to be efficient and productive,
00:33:02that in that kind of society, many people are more attuned and more comfortable being taken care of.
00:33:10And they can do so.
00:33:12It doesn't mean you get to abuse them.
00:33:14And in fact, if you did abuse them, they would leave.
00:33:17The very fact that they're treated well is why they don't leave and they feel comfortable in that environment being
00:33:22taken care of.
00:33:23And that's fine, too.
00:33:26And I'm going to be honest with myself, the so-called safety and security of city walls as civilization was
00:33:33built is just not for me.
00:33:35You know, I mean, freedom is tough.
00:33:37Freedom is tough.
00:33:38It is hard work, you know, but I'm not one that as more people congregate, the safety and security of
00:33:45city walls.
00:33:45It's just I would never be a civilization guy that way, you know, nor nor for me.
00:33:50Is that in fact, that's probably the most controversial thing I've said recently is that when I look at at
00:33:58Abraham, I look at Dode.
00:34:02I look at Moshe, what I see, even Yashiyah, what I see is men when challenged, when troubled, run.
00:34:16And that's not me.
00:34:20I'm not running.
00:34:21I'm not going to cower.
00:34:22I'm not going to back down.
00:34:23You come at me.
00:34:24I'm going to come at you 10 times stronger.
00:34:26It's just the way we're going to play this game.
00:34:28And I think that confidence and chakma, courage is something that Yahweh really wants from us.
00:34:37And most men have lost it.
00:34:41So, you know, I think that one of the first things I'm going to do with Ilya is say, you
00:34:46know, that running away and hiding under the trees, we're not going to do that again.
00:34:50And with Dode, you know, you ran away from God.
00:34:53You ran away from your son.
00:34:56You ran away from Saul.
00:34:58You're just not going to do that.
00:34:59We're going to man up now.
00:35:01Okay.
00:35:01And Moshe, I would say, you know, you did at least 20 face plants.
00:35:05One was too many.
00:35:07Stop it already.
00:35:09You know, show your conviction.
00:35:11Show your courage.
00:35:13So I think that walls are actually good.
00:35:19I like walls.
00:35:22But city walls, no.
00:35:25I don't like, the only community wall I like happens to be the covenant.
00:35:31And it is there to keep those who don't belong out.
00:35:36You know, there were walls around Eden.
00:35:39And I think the walls in Eden, while they were necessary to keep death out, they were counterproductive because there
00:35:48was nothing in Eden to, that would cause challenges that could be overcome and therefore learning experiences.
00:35:55But the kind of walls that I don't like are security walls.
00:36:01The kind of wall you would put up to say, I'm afraid, I want to keep the bad element out.
00:36:09I'm just not.
00:36:10The Malak do a very good job and I'm comfortable with them.
00:36:13Right.
00:36:14For those that are fortunate enough.
00:36:17The last thing on Kaim here, he died penniless.
00:36:22Yeah.
00:36:22Ain't that something?
00:36:23Gave it all away, gave it all away, the equivalent of $20 billion today, and he gave it all away
00:36:30to finance the American Revolution.
00:36:33And there isn't one.
00:36:35And I don't even think there's one in a million Americans that know of it or credit him for it
00:36:40or mention it.
00:36:42So it has to be anti-Semitism that grew out of Christianity.
00:36:48And Christianity played such a significant role amongst many of the founding fathers.
00:36:53Certainly not Washington or Jefferson.
00:36:57Washington was a Freemason and that was what drove him.
00:37:03And Jefferson was a deist.
00:37:06He knew God existed, but he couldn't.
00:37:08He hated Paul.
00:37:09And so he wasn't a Christian either.
00:37:14But since most grew up in a Christian environment and Christianity is so anti-Semitic, that may be the reason
00:37:23why the most important of the founding fathers is accredited.
00:37:28That is the only reason, because let me tell you what.
00:37:30I read up on this guy.
00:37:32He checks all the boxes, all right?
00:37:34Ultra wealthy, ultra smart.
00:37:36He's running around the world.
00:37:37He's working in France a lot of the time for this thing.
00:37:40He is a Mason, okay?
00:37:43He checks all the founding father boxes, writings.
00:37:47You know what I'm saying?
00:37:49And the only thing that sets him apart from all the ones that find their faces on money or whatever,
00:37:56okay, is he's Jewish.
00:37:59Yeah, he's Jewish.
00:38:01That's it.
00:38:02So it's purely prejudice.
00:38:04Yeah.
00:38:07Let's see.
00:38:08We had one more up here.
00:38:10Oh, here we go.
00:38:11Oh, yeah, that one.
00:38:12That's kind of interesting.
00:38:13It would have been the news and Torah into one nice package.
00:38:20This is the one thing that the majority of Christianity is united on is rejecting God's dietary lives.
00:38:30And then this verse says, none of these are food versus all of these are food.
00:38:35First of all, Christianity, no matter which way you want to spell it, is absolutely rubbish.
00:38:44Absolutely and totally and completely rubbish.
00:38:46There was no Jesus, and I don't care if you want to call him Yeshua.
00:38:51That's a lie over a lie.
00:38:53He never existed.
00:38:55He was created by Paul in 52 CE.
00:38:58He is nothing but a crude counterfeit of the actual Messiah and Son of God, our Savior, Doad.
00:39:03And so churchianity, Christianity is the blight of humankind.
00:39:10Yahweh refers to it specifically as the plague of death.
00:39:14So I don't really give a rat's ass that Christians think that they can reject the Torah or that they
00:39:21think the Torah means laws.
00:39:23Torah does not mean law.
00:39:24It means teaching.
00:39:25And there are no dietary laws.
00:39:27There are no laws in the Torah.
00:39:29It's teaching and guidance.
00:39:30And it was Paul that went to war against the Torah, and he was demon-possessed and dead wrong.
00:39:38But also here, they cite Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14.
00:39:48There are three places in the Torah that talk about what you can eat.
00:39:53There's also a Dabatim 11.
00:39:55And what you read in the Torah is that you can eat whatever you want.
00:40:02God said it over and over again.
00:40:05You can eat whatever you want.
00:40:06There is no restriction, clean or unclean.
00:40:10Doesn't matter.
00:40:11Eat whatever you want.
00:40:11The only thing I'm going to say is don't drink blood because blood is going to be the means to
00:40:19redeem your soul.
00:40:20I'm going to use blood to redeem your soul.
00:40:23So I want you to pour it out on the Atoma, which is that bloody red man of the earth.
00:40:29But other than that, be thoughtful about it, but you can eat whatever you want.
00:40:33Then he has another section where the idiot would think that he's contradicting himself, but he's not.
00:40:39What he's saying is there are things which are healthy and things which are not.
00:40:45And I want to tell you what is healthy and what is not.
00:40:48And what he, his list was brilliant because what he essentially did is he said, these critters are bottom feeders.
00:40:59These are scavengers.
00:41:01The pig there will eat anything and stomach does not process it correctly.
00:41:06The horses and camels' stomachs work different than those of sheep, lambs and cows.
00:41:14And because of that, they will pass on pathogens to you that will kill you.
00:41:21So for most of humanity, the things that were on the don't eat list or unhealthy list were deadly for
00:41:32you to eat.
00:41:33That has largely changed.
00:41:36Shrimp were lethal.
00:41:39Pork was lethal.
00:41:41Shrimp and pork are no longer lethal.
00:41:46So that's why I think there's two reasons.
00:41:49I think that God makes a distinction and says three reasons, really.
00:41:52You can eat whatever you want to eat, but I'm going to tell you the things that are not healthy
00:41:56for you.
00:41:56And they were not healthy for better part of 6,000 years.
00:42:01Is that first of all, your soul is not affected by your body.
00:42:07Food is for the body.
00:42:11Intellectual nourishment.
00:42:14Learning is what feeds your soul.
00:42:17These things there have no influence whatsoever on your soul.
00:42:24And your body is worthless.
00:42:27So what he's trying to say is, it really doesn't matter.
00:42:31I'm going to give you some dietary advice so that you can keep the body alive long enough to accomplish
00:42:36what you need to in this life to nurture your soul.
00:42:39But what you eat has no effect whatsoever on your soul.
00:42:44And the religious, of course, would claim otherwise.
00:42:47But God makes a real distinction about the soul versus the body in that lesson.
00:42:53The other is that God knew that men would turn what he had to say into religious jargon.
00:43:02And in Judaism, the religion is predicated on the idea of God didn't give enough insight on dietary rules.
00:43:10So they created kosher and Judaism and the Talmud to come up with all of these laws, like separation of
00:43:19dairy and meat and plates and utensils and when you could eat what and blessing of a rabbi.
00:43:27It was all singular.
00:43:29It's to create a scheme where rabbis could control and fleece other people.
00:43:34And they have done so now for centuries.
00:43:39And God knew they were going to do it and said, so I'm here to tell you, there are no
00:43:42restrictions on what you can eat, whatever you want to eat, anytime, anywhere, anyhow.
00:43:48And we, of course, ran into a group of malcontents that wanted to disparage me because I teach from the
00:43:56Torah.
00:43:56The Torah says you can eat whatever you want.
00:43:58And then it says there are certain things that are not healthy for your body.
00:44:03OK, I'm getting rid of mine, man.
00:44:04Now, you can keep yours if you want to, and you can make religion out of out of kosher if
00:44:10you want to.
00:44:11But in fact, even one of the interesting things is on the list of things where these are not healthy
00:44:17for you to eat.
00:44:18There are three or four of those things that nobody has a clue as to what they are.
00:44:25Not even a clue as to what they are.
00:44:27So forget it.
00:44:28It's just utter nonsense.
00:44:30And anybody that comes at you with that kind of nonsense, you just shut them down.
00:44:34And go to yada, it's going to have a beautiful presentation.
00:44:38Right now I have one in an introduction to God.
00:44:43But I will soon have another in volume four of Coming Home.
00:44:49I'm working on three volumes simultaneously, three, four, or four, five, and six.
00:44:56All right.
00:44:56Could this be Noah's Ark?
00:44:58A lot of years ago, I guess it goes back now 25 years ago, I visited with Ron Wyatt's widow.
00:45:12Ron Wyatt is the person who found this site in eastern Turkey, fairly close to Mount Ararat, and his strategy
00:45:21was brilliant.
00:45:23He built a, probably in fact I've seen it before in his home, because as I said, I went to
00:45:33visit Ron's widow because he had passed away.
00:45:36But a three-dimensional, I don't know what you call them, but a three-dimensional.
00:45:43Diorama or markup?
00:45:44Yeah, diorama is probably a good term.
00:45:46A diorama where he put a border around it that he could put in the mountains of Ararat that surround
00:45:55Ararat and the valleys and everything else, and then fill it with water.
00:46:01And then he built to scale an arc that was to scale, the same as the mountains, and then gradually
00:46:10release the water to see where a hydrant dynamically, that model arc would come down.
00:46:20Because it could never come down on the top of a mountain, the way that water pushes away from the...
00:46:27Okay, so he wanted to follow the currents and just see where would it naturally come down.
00:46:31He marked the spot.
00:46:33And then he says, okay, that's in eastern Turkey.
00:46:35It's kind of between Lake Van and where Eden was, and Mount Ararat.
00:46:41He asked for permission of the Turks.
00:46:43Now, this is highly contested areas.
00:46:47It's where the Kurds are being gunned down by the Turkish government.
00:46:51But he went to the spot that his diorama said, that's where the Ark should be.
00:46:56And guess what?
00:46:58He found the Ark.
00:46:59Right.
00:47:00And he came back with copious amounts of petrified wood and all manner of metallic bolts and bonding gear.
00:47:12And he ran the metallurgy on the bolts, and I was able to look at it.
00:47:18He was able to confirm that the wood were, in fact, glue lamps, which is the only way it could
00:47:26have ever been done back in those days.
00:47:27And that he also looked at how it was, you know, like this.
00:47:34And then as the, over time, and with weight filling, you know, dirt and that debris and volcanic ash from
00:47:42Mount Ararat, it's a volcanic mountain, filling it, the sides would have come down and splayed like this.
00:47:47And so he looked at what would it have been in terms of its dimensions and how it would have
00:47:52splayed like this so that the length would be consistent with the dimensions that Yahweh had provided, but the width
00:48:00would have splayed out some.
00:48:02And he measured it, and it was consistent.
00:48:06And so he claimed to have found the Ark, Noah's Ark.
00:48:13And he's published books on it, he's published videos on it, he's famous for it.
00:48:20And you can go and actually look on Google Earth, and you can see the thing that is highlighted in
00:48:28this picture.
00:48:28It's right there.
00:48:29Anybody can view it.
00:48:31I've been there many times.
00:48:32And you can also recognize that the Turkish government was impressed enough with what he did.
00:48:40They turned it into a national park, and it's the Noah's National Park in eastern Turkey.
00:48:48Getting there is another thing.
00:48:49It's, you know, the civil war going on in Turkey with the Kurds.
00:48:53But every one of the discoveries of Ron Wyatt, who I know did not know Yahweh, but he was devoted
00:49:01to affirming the things in the Torah,
00:49:04which at one point in my life had meaning.
00:49:09Now, knowing that he found, or, you know, I don't know, I assume that he did.
00:49:14I examined all of the metallurgy.
00:49:17I examined the petrified wood, the glue lamps, all the evidence that he marshaled.
00:49:22I actually had in my hands.
00:49:23I was able to examine it, and I was convinced that he was right.
00:49:27And I love the theory that he used to find it.
00:49:30And he used the same analysis to determine the crossing of the Exodus.
00:49:38And he found Nueva Beach.
00:49:40And he was able to go out on dives and found coral-encrusted chariot wheels and swords and all that
00:49:46sort of thing.
00:49:47And he found that that was the one land bridge that would have made it even possible to get across
00:49:52the Gulf of Aqaba.
00:49:55And he found columns that had Yahweh's name chiseled into them, established, I think, by Solomon, one of which, both
00:50:06of which were there when he was there.
00:50:08They've both been subsequently stolen.
00:50:10But he has them photographed.
00:50:12I thought that was very interesting.
00:50:14And I still am convinced, based upon all of the data, that the mountain route and the Nueva Beach being
00:50:23large enough for that many people,
00:50:25and the land bridge that goes from there across and no place else so that it's not so steep down
00:50:30and back up, that he was absolutely right.
00:50:34That was brilliant.
00:50:35And I thought his proof of pictures of chariot wheels was also brilliant.
00:50:39I thought that his work on Mount Chorub was brilliant.
00:50:45He followed the route right on through.
00:50:48He found the rock.
00:50:49We photographed it on our site where it was split for the water.
00:50:53We found the base for the altar of the Golden Calf.
00:50:58And he found the charred top of Mount Chorub.
00:51:02And it is exactly where you would expect in eastern or western Saudi Arabia.
00:51:08Not in the Sinai.
00:51:10It is in western Saudi Arabia.
00:51:12And so I thought that was brilliant.
00:51:14All the glyphs that are cut in, scribed into the rocks with the menorahs, with Yahweh's hand.
00:51:19I mean, the Paleo-Hebrew writing.
00:51:22Yeah.
00:51:23It's brilliant.
00:51:24It's absolutely brilliant.
00:51:25And the Saudi Arabians recognize it because they put fences all around it.
00:51:30Because it destroys Islam.
00:51:32So I thought that was fascinating.
00:51:35And then you have a change there and sound rich.
00:51:39So I don't know what the issue may have been or maybe not.
00:51:45Then his most controversial finding.
00:51:49So far he was three for three in my book.
00:51:53And as I say, I read everything he wrote.
00:51:56I saw every video he ever produced.
00:51:59And I met with his widow and was in his home where all the evidence was stashed.
00:52:06And I did this about 25 years ago.
00:52:08And so I'm with him every step of the way here.
00:52:14Then his most controversial finding was that he managed to find what's called Jeremiah's grotto.
00:52:25It happens to be currently under the parking lot for the Jerusalem bus station, which abuts the Golgotha escarpment.
00:52:37And you can take a picture of it.
00:52:38In fact, in my other office, you'll see that there's a piece of limestone that sits on one of those
00:52:43shelves.
00:52:43It's from that encartment.
00:52:45And you can still see what looks like a skull in it.
00:52:50You know, there's three crosses high up on a hill.
00:52:52No.
00:52:53That's exactly where the crucifixion of Dode took place.
00:52:59And beneath it is Jeremiah's grotto.
00:53:02Now, getting to it requires somebody that does not have claustrophobia.
00:53:06I'm not going to be the guy that's going to do that.
00:53:09And he managed to wiggle his way through this whole path.
00:53:15He's got it all documented.
00:53:17And he ends up into this underground cavern.
00:53:22And it's illuminated.
00:53:24And there's a Moloch in there.
00:53:28And it is the Ark of the Covenant.
00:53:33And so the Ark of the Covenant was directly under Dode when he served as the Passover lamb.
00:53:38Right.
00:53:41And so he asked the Moloch, can I touch that?
00:53:47Nope.
00:53:48Can I take it?
00:53:48Nope.
00:53:50Can I take a picture of it?
00:53:51Sure.
00:53:51It won't expose because you're going to take a picture of it and it's going to just look like glowing
00:53:57light.
00:53:57But yeah, go ahead and take a picture of it.
00:54:00Can I come back?
00:54:01Can I bring others to see it?
00:54:02Well, only if they want to die.
00:54:05So, no, you don't want to do that.
00:54:07Well, what are we going to do?
00:54:09How are people going to know that this is here?
00:54:11And he says, it's my job to watch it.
00:54:14I'm guarding it.
00:54:15And when I am asked, is a date certain, that I will take the tablets that are here and I'm
00:54:23going to hold them up in rebuke of the Sunday laws.
00:54:28There will be a time when I need to hold these up.
00:54:31I've been directed to do so in rebuke of the Sunday laws, which is eight.
00:54:37Ron Wyatt up alive because he was a Christian.
00:54:39And he went to his deathbed where this was the last confession he made, which he says, I have been
00:54:45troubled with this from the beginning because the Malak told me that the tablets of stone were going to be
00:54:52to rebuke Christianity and the imposition of the Sunday laws.
00:54:57He says, so I'm going to hold them up at that time.
00:54:59But between now and then, I'm here to guard it.
00:55:03And so I've been convinced ever since that the story of Obed-Edom bringing the Ark of the Covenant into
00:55:09Jerusalem and the role of the Adam of Parah and the man from Edom and the restoration of the tent
00:55:18of the restoring witness on Mount Moriah for the two witnesses is all legit.
00:55:24And the Ark of the Covenant is going to be restored because on Kaporim, Dode needs to anoint the Ark
00:55:32of the Covenant with the bull's blood and that of the goat.
00:55:35And it's got to be the Ark of the Covenant for that to happen.
00:55:37And we're told that Dode's throne is going to be as brilliant as the sun.
00:55:42Well, the mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant is Dode's throne.
00:55:47They built two homes for Yahweh's name, right?
00:55:53So those don't really – and Yahweh traveled around in a tent, right?
00:55:57But there's only ever been one Ark.
00:56:00There's only one throne, right?
00:56:02So, yeah, it's kind of important to him.
00:56:06Yeah, I'm positive that's where it is and that we're going to retrieve it.
00:56:11And it's going to be ready for Dode to anoint on Kaporim.
00:56:15So that is this most difficult finding is the finding of the Ark of the Covenant.
00:56:23And there's lots of naysayers.
00:56:25And one of the interesting things, too, is there's a guy that has a huge following.
00:56:29And he posts all over Facebook.
00:56:32His last name is Rude.
00:56:33And he is Rude.
00:56:34In fact, I haven't made a post on him here.
00:56:38He was a clinger on to Ron Wyatt, liked the attention that Ron Wyatt got, and then decided he would
00:56:45dress up as a rabbi and make all sorts of wild claims based upon what he learned, but twisting it
00:56:51to serve his own agenda.
00:56:53You're familiar with those kind of people?
00:56:55Yeah.
00:56:56Yeah.
00:56:56Yeah.
00:56:56Well, Rude was one of those kinds of people.
00:56:59And it drove his widow and Ron absolutely crazy to be abused by this man.
00:57:07And he's still out there.
00:57:08And he had a post today on how you have to be devoted to the Torah and the way that
00:57:18God speaks to everyone is through the Messiah.
00:57:22And so you know how often Messiah is mentioned in the Torah?
00:57:29Forty-nine times?
00:57:30It's not a lot.
00:57:32Zero?
00:57:33Oh, Messiah.
00:57:34Okay.
00:57:35Yes.
00:57:35Messiah and the Torah.
00:57:36Zero.
00:57:37There is a reference to Hamasiach pursuant to a Leviticus, the high priest.
00:57:44And the high priest has to be anointed for that particular job.
00:57:49And, of course, what that is symbolic of is that when Doad returns to anoint the mercy seat of the
00:57:55Ark of the Covenant as our high priest, he is going to be anointed.
00:57:58And so it was symbolic of that.
00:58:00But it was not a Messiah as an individual.
00:58:03It was not a Messiah as a savior.
00:58:05It was not a Messiah as a title.
00:58:07And it wasn't about somebody other than the high priest as a lowy coen.
00:58:15And so as a figure, there is no mention of Messiah anywhere in the Torah.
00:58:21Messiah is actually on a 1 to 10 level of escalon of the titles that are important for God to
00:58:30bequeath upon men.
00:58:32The Messiah is not even in, well, let's say that he has 500 of them.
00:58:38He has a lot of them.
00:58:41Messiah might be in the top 100.
00:58:43But of Doad's titles, it's not in the top 10.
00:58:47Right.
00:58:48And he is the Messiah.
00:58:49And yet it's not in the top 10.
00:58:52There's so many titles that God gives to Doad that are more important than that.
00:58:56But it's this whole messianic thing and this idea that the Messiah is going to return and he's going to
00:59:02be your savior just doesn't exist in God's testimony.
00:59:07It's a man-made construct.
00:59:09There is a Messiah.
00:59:10He is the Son of God.
00:59:11His name is Doad.
00:59:12He is the Chosen One.
00:59:14But as I say, Messiah is small potatoes compared to his other accolades and titles.
00:59:24Yeah, absolutely.
00:59:25It's interesting that Ron Wyatt being – he obviously devoted his life to this because of his Christianity or whatever.
00:59:33And then to really struggle with it after the Jeremiah's Grotto incident, absolutely understandable.
00:59:41But I can never understand the leap that people make, I mean, to say that, well, we found the ark,
00:59:53Noah's ark.
00:59:54We found Mount Shoram with all these things, and they prove the Bible's true.
00:59:59Yeah, that's the point I really wanted to make to.
01:00:01Yes, I agree.
01:00:02Because, first of all, Bible is a bogus term.
01:00:06God does not have a Bible.
01:00:08And the Bible is not true.
01:00:10Bible is based upon Babel, which is the antithesis of what's true.
01:00:13It's called mingling to confuse.
01:00:17So, archaeology does not prove the Bible.
01:00:22Archaeology disproves Babel.
01:00:25So, exactly the opposite of what they claim.
01:00:28And their New Testament is contradictory in every possible way with the Torah, Prophets, and Psalms.
01:00:34So, their New Testament refutes the Torah, Prophets, and Psalms.
01:00:38The Torah, Prophets, and Psalms proves the New Testament wrong.
01:00:41And when they say Bible, they're talking about New Testament.
01:00:43But they've got no proof.
01:00:44They've got nothing.
01:00:45I mean, there's not a single contemporaneous eyewitness account of said mythical Jesus.
01:00:53Not one.
01:00:53There's no indication he lived because he didn't.
01:00:57He's made up.
01:00:58So, they have to go to find something in the Torah to try to prove that what they have is
01:01:05right.
01:01:05But if you prove that the Torah is right, you're proving that Christianity is wrong.
01:01:09Because it condemns it in every possible way.
01:01:12So, the other part is, if your faith is based upon whether or not there was an actual ark,
01:01:22as opposed to Yahweh's prophetic statements and his brilliance and the plan that he has laid out
01:01:28and the people through whom he has carried out his plan,
01:01:30if it's based on something tangible, like somebody says, that's the ark, must be true,
01:01:35then your faith is in nothing.
01:01:39You're missing the whole Neshama point.
01:01:42You're missing the entire point.
01:01:45Your mind and your faith are completely wasted.
01:01:48Rather than saying, the ark is true.
01:01:51Okay, so, yeah, I've got no problem with that.
01:01:53I'm fascinated when Ron Wyatt found the Nuiba Beach Crossing.
01:01:57I think, yeah, that's pretty clever.
01:01:58I like the fact that he found Mount Jorub, and it's got a burnt top.
01:02:02And I think, yeah, it's got the rock that was split in two.
01:02:05Yeah, it's nice.
01:02:06Now, I can visualize it.
01:02:07That's good.
01:02:09It's a nicety.
01:02:11But it doesn't take me anywhere.
01:02:13Yeah.
01:02:13I don't want it to take me anywhere.
01:02:15Rather than saying that picture there looked like it could be the ark,
01:02:21why not figure out why the ark was needed?
01:02:26Do you understand the fallen state of man?
01:02:28Do you understand how many men are always bad?
01:02:31And yet, do you understand why God gave up on man?
01:02:34And then do you figure out after many men became bad men,
01:02:38and that's always the case, and that God was not perfect,
01:02:43made a mistake, regretted creating man.
01:02:46Why was Noach chosen?
01:02:49What made him special?
01:02:50And how did he resolve the problem with Nassama man?
01:02:53And do you know that it was only Nassama man and not the whole world?
01:02:57It had nothing to do with normal Homo sapiens, just Nassama man.
01:03:01Can you figure that out?
01:03:02Do you understand the deep upwelling of seawater that the story actually tells
01:03:07and the location of the Burkle Impact Crater
01:03:10and all that residual oceanic material that came up as a 500-foot tidal wave
01:03:18and turned the Black Sea at that moment from freshwater to saltwater
01:03:23and raised the level 500 feet to wipe out all of the civilizations
01:03:28that had grown up around where Nassama man lived and what Nassama is?
01:03:33The nonsense of it made the Grand Canyon.
01:03:37The Grand Canyon proves the worldwide flood.
01:03:39The nonsense of the ark being on the Himalayan.
01:03:44It's absolutely nonsensical.
01:03:46But when you study Torah, you read Torah, you understand it,
01:03:50the deep upwelling of seawater.
01:03:52It's a regional air.
01:03:53It's a flood.
01:03:54And then you look at the names that God chose for these people
01:04:02and the regret that he had,
01:04:05and you see why water was chosen as the medium
01:04:08and how water will be used in the end on Teruah to purge the final remnant of their guilt.
01:04:15If you studied who Noah was, why he was chosen, how he was Chanuk,
01:04:21why the ark was important as opposed to God just intervening and saying,
01:04:25poof, I've saved these eight people and we're going to reboot now.
01:04:28Why it was important to demonstrate that a man could listen to God
01:04:32and finish the job and do as God had said and save his family
01:04:37and why there were eight souls on the ark and who Shem was as part of that story.
01:04:41The lesson isn't in a crumbling and decaying artifact.
01:04:50It's in the living and breathing testimony of our God in the Torah.
01:04:58Yeah.
01:04:59More time spent reading, less time spent digging in the dirt, folks.
01:05:03Yes.
01:05:04You're going to be better off for it.
01:05:07Again, I don't want to negate a genuine—these aren't archaeologists, by the way.
01:05:11These are influencers in the dirt.
01:05:15But the archaeology that is taking place in Yisrael, I think I would applaud it.
01:05:21I love the digs under the Temple Mount.
01:05:24The lead tablet that was found on that habo.
01:05:28That was beautiful.
01:05:29Absolutely.
01:05:30And what a time, too.
01:05:32What an interesting time for it to be discovered, you know?
01:05:35Oh, yeah.
01:05:36And, you know, when we created our Yad HaTorah script, not only did I use that,
01:05:44but I found, you know, some 20 examples going back in time from related languages.
01:05:51There was a script in Egypt, a script in Phoenicia, a script among the Moabites,
01:05:57of course, the various places where the script was available around Israel,
01:06:01but that was the oldest witness to it.
01:06:03And that's how we came up with the letters and the shapes of the letters that was the Joe Craig
01:06:10Yad HaTorah script
01:06:12that's available on the site at the resources page.
01:06:16Yeah, it tells a story.
01:06:18And the most important, I think, realization in that story was that the people that call,
01:06:26this is so stupid, that's letters there.
01:06:28But the people who call the LF an ox's head are wrong.
01:06:35And when we designated it as a ram's head, we were partly wrong, too.
01:06:42The fact is that the horns are absolute bull.
01:06:46First of all, there is no difference between a bull's head and an ox's head.
01:06:51The only difference in a bull and an ox is what happens, you know, down in the lower parts.
01:06:58An ox is a castrated bull, but it could be of any species.
01:07:03So it's a bull because very few people would want to castrate a bull because that's money.
01:07:08That bull, he is money to you.
01:07:10You're not going to castrate him.
01:07:12And so the bull has the horns of that letter.
01:07:17When that letter is drawn correctly, it's never a ram's set of horns that kind of curve around like that.
01:07:23It's bull's horns.
01:07:24And the yoke that comes across straight across it, you never yoke a ram.
01:07:32So it's not a ram's yoke and it's not ram's horns.
01:07:36But the image was always drawn with a tapered head.
01:07:40A tapered head is always that of a ram or sheep, where the more squarish head, the rectangular head, was
01:07:48that of a bull.
01:07:49And so it is a blend of the two.
01:07:52And it's important that it's known to be a blend of the two because they serve as the two most
01:07:58important symbols that God uses to fulfill the Moedim.
01:08:02And so that was one of the great lessons of that whole process is being opened up to that reality.
01:08:08And you just start looking at the evidence with an open mind and go where the clues lead.
01:08:13Yeah.
01:08:13The ram works on the first half of the menorah, the first of the Moedim.
01:08:19And the bull takes over and works on the back half of the Moedim and the back half of the
01:08:23menorah.
01:08:23That is exactly it.
01:08:25You know, you have a very sympathetic character in Dode fulfilling the Pesach Matsun Bakudim as the lamb.
01:08:34And then you have the guy with attitude who never backs down.
01:08:39He's not sympathetic.
01:08:40Just as tough as they come.
01:08:42You know, yeah, he's not sympathetic.
01:08:44He is.
01:08:45He's bullish.
01:08:46He's very positive.
01:08:47He's committed.
01:08:48You don't want to challenge him.
01:08:49Don't get in his way.
01:08:50And if he says, okay, I've heard your explanation.
01:08:53We're just going to do it this way.
01:08:55Just say, okay, that's the way we're going to do it.
01:08:57A bull's personality was necessary in the end because guess what?
01:09:01The lamb didn't work.
01:09:03I mean, it was a lovely sacrifice and the sacrifice is totally acceptable if you know about it.
01:09:08But no one paid any attention.
01:09:09It was a lamb.
01:09:12Right now we've got seven years left.
01:09:14It's either a bull and he gets your attention or you're trampled.
01:09:19It's done.
01:09:19There's nothing left for you.
01:09:21We don't have any time left to futz around.
01:09:23It's got to be strong.
01:09:26Absolutely.
01:09:27Well, what are you thinking?
01:09:28Do you want to talk about Neanderthal cave paintings or do you want to go back up to bed?
01:09:32You know, I have no problem with Neanderthal, but just because I am so fascinated by it.
01:09:39I am hoping as a special dispensation.
01:09:42Well, I know we cannot go back in time because if you interfered with anything back in time, you would
01:09:47destroy everything.
01:09:49The light speed and the nature of time, the very composition of our universe will not allow that.
01:09:58So trust me, I don't want to go back in time because if I could go back into my own
01:10:02life and make different decisions, you know, particularly that pretty girl that I didn't ask out when I was supposed
01:10:08to.
01:10:08I do not want to go back and have to play it out again.
01:10:12I'm happy where it turned out.
01:10:13I made a bunch of mistakes, but I would not want to have to try to correct them and end
01:10:18up with a better outcome.
01:10:20I do not want to do that.
01:10:23There is no better outcome.
01:10:24There is no better outcome.
01:10:26Yeah, I know that the life that I led prepared me for this.
01:10:30So there were good things and bad things all along the way, more good than bad.
01:10:35Yeah, regrets, I have a few, but too few to mention, right?
01:10:40Mine, too many to mention.
01:10:41But nonetheless, I don't want to go back in that sense.
01:10:45I don't really want to go back and see things like the Holocaust or the Inquisition.
01:10:51And I think that my blood would boil to the point where I would not be able to restrain myself
01:10:56and take those guards and munch their little heads in until they popped.
01:11:01So I don't want to do that kind of thing.
01:11:04Why be angry?
01:11:07And I really don't even have an interest archaeologically of seeing places like Athens or Rome or the pyramids or
01:11:16anything at their peak.
01:11:17I really don't because they were just all pagan shrines.
01:11:20And so man's stupidity, that's not an interest to me.
01:11:25I would like to go back in time and see what Jerusalem was like under Doe during the few years
01:11:30that he had it together.
01:11:32I think that'd be fun.
01:11:34But the thing I really want to see is I'd love to see the dinosaurs.
01:11:39And I would expect that you could be able to interact and communicate with dinosaurs in such a way that
01:11:45you wouldn't cause any kind of cosmic conflict.
01:11:47You know, if a dinosaur decided it was going to walk across that field a little slower than it would
01:11:52have otherwise, I just don't think that's going to change our reality.
01:11:57Do you?
01:11:59No, not in a sense of the whole if a butterfly flaps its wings kind of crap.
01:12:04No, it doesn't work that way as far as, yeah.
01:12:08Yeah, because at the end of the day, they all die, you know?
01:12:12I mean, so it's like, is the oil in a different spot now than it was before if that dinosaur
01:12:18didn't make it to a, whatever, you know?
01:12:20Yeah, it's not actually fast fossil fuels anyway.
01:12:23It's not fossil fuels at all, as a matter of fact.
01:12:25So I would like to interact because I just think they're magnificent creatures.
01:12:33And Neanderthal, because they didn't make it either, wouldn't it be interesting to be able to spend a little time
01:12:40with a Neanderthal group family and just to see kind of what life was like, what kind of language, what
01:12:49kind of tools, what life was like, knowing that there is none of them that survived.
01:12:54So you can't change history in this regard.
01:12:57I just think it'd be fascinating.
01:12:59The Neanderthals interest me.
01:13:02Homo sapiens, not so much.
01:13:04Yeah.
01:13:05To me, this is all Discovery Channel kind of stuff.
01:13:08This is the stuff that you, when you're laying in bed at night, you watch an hour program and it's
01:13:12interesting, but it doesn't take you.
01:13:16Because what we have, doing it as not necessarily going back in time or however, all time exists on a
01:13:24photon of light.
01:13:25So however we are viewing this, what we have is the truth.
01:13:31We have actuality.
01:13:33We know it's not this idea that dinosaurs may or may not had feathers.
01:13:38We will know for a fact.
01:13:40There will be no, it will be Sadak.
01:13:42There will be the truth about what dinosaurs look like.
01:13:44You'll clearly be able to witness them.
01:13:47Yeah.
01:13:47Whether you can walk with them or not, I don't know, but you'll be able to witness them absolutely unequivocally.
01:13:51And I think that witnessing the creative genius and the whole process of life, I think, would be fascinating and
01:13:59I hope to be able to do it.
01:14:00One of the things I can't watch those Discovery, I haven't watched a Discovery Channel or History Channel presentation since
01:14:07AI was invented.
01:14:08Because the recreations that are created, for the most part, mix in way too many elements that I know are
01:14:17untrue.
01:14:17And so it just bothers me to see so much myth.
01:14:21And most of the videos, even on Facebook and YouTube, where they're trying to tell a story, the filler video
01:14:28does not pertain.
01:14:29But it's a different place, a different time.
01:14:32And it's so fake that it just says, if you can't tell the story correctly, just don't tell it.
01:14:38Now, I had one, there was an archaeologist said, you know, there's a coin that had Yahshua's name on it.
01:14:50But he couldn't say Yahshua, he had to say Isaiah.
01:14:53And another one that had Hezekiah's name on it.
01:14:58And he didn't know his Hebrew name either.
01:15:02And they were in the same place, in the same dig in Jerusalem.
01:15:06And, of course, the two men knew each other.
01:15:08And to find those two side by side was, of course, an interesting affirmation.
01:15:14But the thing that bothered me is that they, rather than showing the coins, they created an AI of them.
01:15:22And they made the one from Hezekiah look like it came out of Greece.
01:15:26Right.
01:15:26And you're just going, oh, why did you have to go there?
01:15:30Now I can't even share it.
01:15:33Yeah, it was that, do you remember the video that we put up, you put it on your blog page,
01:15:38where the IDF shows that the temple, the scars are blown up or whatever, you know, the Al-Aqsa Mosque.
01:15:46And then the temple, you know, the home for Yahshua's name comes back out of, you know, the light and
01:15:51all of that.
01:15:52And we're like, number one, it's not even pointing the right direction, guys.
01:15:56Right.
01:15:56You know, it was pointing south.
01:15:59They wanted to have the viewpoint from the south.
01:16:00All people can get it right.
01:16:02And they pointed it south, not east.
01:16:05And you're going, come on.
01:16:06There's a reason for that orientation.
01:16:08And to come to find out the reason for that orientation, I had no idea until recently.
01:16:12And I saw it, and then I read about it.
01:16:15You know what the actual orientation is?
01:16:17It's really pragmatic for you.
01:16:19You know why?
01:16:20Because you would think that it would face south, because south on that ridgeline is Dode's home on the southern
01:16:28end of the city of Dode.
01:16:29And so that if you were at Dode, you could look up and see the temple from its proper perspective
01:16:35straight on.
01:16:37And the longer view.
01:16:37And it would follow that ridgeline.
01:16:40Everyone would have a longer view.
01:16:42Right.
01:16:42No, but because, of course, from Dode's home, the temple didn't exist, so the longer view was pretty meaningless.
01:16:48So there was no reason to do it from that point of view, right?
01:16:51And Solomon would get lost among all of his little girlies and become pagan too quickly.
01:16:57So that wasn't of any value.
01:16:59And no one else was going to live in the city of Dode that would be meaningful to Yawa to
01:17:04have that perspective.
01:17:05So that natural thought didn't had any merit.
01:17:11And so why was it facing east?
01:17:15I have a practical reason.
01:17:17I have a practical reason.
01:17:18Okay.
01:17:19So that you start your sacrifice as the sun goes down so that you're preparing your sacrifice so that it's
01:17:26in the shade.
01:17:27You have the shade of the temple over the altar outside so that you're not all hot and sticky during
01:17:32the spring in Jerusalem cooking your lamb.
01:17:36Okay.
01:17:38That's what I got.
01:17:39I don't think so.
01:17:40Okay.
01:17:40I don't think so.
01:17:40That's not it?
01:17:41Okay.
01:17:42I don't think so.
01:17:43I don't think so.
01:17:44So when we reestablish the tent of the Restoring Witness on the Temple Mount once the ugly scars of Islam
01:17:54are removed, we're obviously going to orient it in the proper place and it's going to face east, is it
01:17:59not?
01:18:01What's going in front of it?
01:18:03You know what's going in front of it because you just mentioned it.
01:18:05Yeah, the altar.
01:18:06The altars go in front of it, right?
01:18:09And what's going in that altar on Teruah?
01:18:13A bull.
01:18:14A bull.
01:18:15I am.
01:18:16Yeah, I'm going to.
01:18:16Yeah, you are.
01:18:17I am.
01:18:18And what's God going to do?
01:18:21He's going to light the flames.
01:18:23Light the flames, right?
01:18:24And we're going to have water.
01:18:26Right.
01:18:26And you're going to have Elia beside it and he's going to explain what's going on, correct?
01:18:31Right.
01:18:32What does God want to happen with all of that?
01:18:35Does he want his people, the 1,400 in particular that he's brought in for that, to see it?
01:18:41Yeah, absolutely.
01:18:42As many people as possible.
01:18:44It's going to be broadcast worldwide.
01:18:45Could they see it if they were in that, below the western wall where Jews like to gather now?
01:18:53No, they couldn't see it, could they?
01:18:54No.
01:18:54Wouldn't be able to see any of it.
01:18:56No matter which way it's focusing, they could not see it, right?
01:19:01Yeah, that wall has got to come down.
01:19:03That wall has got to come down even for a better view from the east, from Mount Olives.
01:19:08I mean, there is a parapet wall that's...
01:19:11Well, there is a wall on the eastern side, but the Mount of Olives is taller than Mount Moria.
01:19:20Yes, it is.
01:19:21Yeah.
01:19:22And the slope of it's pretty gentle.
01:19:25And so, 1,400 people, everyone can see exactly what's going to happen.
01:19:30The distances are close.
01:19:32The view is magnificent because it is the greatest show on earth.
01:19:37With the fulfillment of Tarot, with the sacrifice of the Adam of Parah, with Elia orchestrating the entire event, God
01:19:43igniting the fires, releasing the waters.
01:19:46The only proper grandstand, the stadium, is on the Mount of Olives.
01:19:51That's why when Yahweh returns with Dode, he's returning over the Mount of Olives to come in that way.
01:19:58And when he comes down that way, he's going to be facing directly into the temple from the proper perspective.
01:20:06It's that we're for sight lines.
01:20:09I've been working this out.
01:20:10I've spent a lot of time on Google Earth working this out.
01:20:13And what I can't get, I get that the mosque is gone, okay?
01:20:16And I get that whole thing, but there is that big, how to explain it, platform that they're built on
01:20:25that I'm not 100% sure was a part of the second temple.
01:20:29And I'm wondering if that platform stays or goes because that sucker's like 15 foot tall.
01:20:34And so, I mean, it gives you a nice relief, you know, a nice flat space and everything.
01:20:39So, yeah, I think what I have been trying to work this out.
01:20:42Okay.
01:20:43Well, I appreciate you doing that.
01:20:44But I do think that the big guys got it figured out.
01:20:49And what I'm expecting him to do is that he's going to return it as it was in the transition
01:21:00from Dode to Solomon.
01:21:04And so that the enlargement that was done by Herod all goes away.
01:21:11Right.
01:21:12And any platforms or anything that were built by the Romans and Hadrian, Hadrianopolis, all goes away.
01:21:20And anything that was touched by the Muslims, all goes away.
01:21:25And the top stones are now what it was for the foundation for Solomon.
01:21:33Now, for that to occur, the whole thing probably has to come down.
01:21:38It has to come down a lot because if you're underneath that thing now, you find that they were just
01:21:45building, building, building on top.
01:21:47And so the whole thing, I think, is going to come down for that to be possible.
01:21:53But the platform that we're going to be on is going to be the platform of our king.
01:21:59Not of the Romans, not of Herod, not of the Christians, not of the Crusaders, not of the Muslims.
01:22:10It's going to be the platform of our son.
01:22:14Yeah, because what I see on the Western Wall is a very nice hole for you to be able to
01:22:20take every – if you were to take a bulldozer and take that mosque and everything and just push it
01:22:24right towards where that Western Wall is, it's a nice big hole for everything to fall down into.
01:22:28And then it's off our Temple Mount.
01:22:33Yes, I think that if I were Yahweh and, you know, you can put yourself into his mindset and all
01:22:40of the corruption that's taken place on his special place, that all of the stuff that the Herods and the
01:22:48Greeks and the Romans and the Crusaders and the Muslims have added and the rabbis have added, everything that has
01:22:55been added, and I even think the entire Second Temple experiment.
01:23:00If I were Yahweh, I wouldn't just dispose of it.
01:23:04I would throw that garbage out into the asteroid belt.
01:23:09Right.
01:23:10I would have it in the whole place.
01:23:11Oh, man, get it off of my property.
01:23:14Get it off of my planet.
01:23:16You know, throw it into a volcano.
01:23:18I don't know what he's going to do, but I wouldn't have it anywhere.
01:23:21I wouldn't have a landfill near that place.
01:23:24Well, back to our original elements discussion, that it is possible because these are all natural things, the rock that
01:23:32they were used, the gold, whatever, you know, to elementalize.
01:23:36So they become dust.
01:23:37I mean, essentially, they could become dust and blown off the Temple Mount, you know.
01:23:42They could.
01:23:43A sandstorm that blows into Arabia, I don't have a problem with that.
01:23:47But, you know, it's going to be transformative.
01:23:51There's the last three and a half years are not going to be business as usual.
01:23:58Right.
01:23:59I love our little perch here as we sit with the sea around us and we get to broadcast this
01:24:05program.
01:24:06I love this.
01:24:06This is a beautiful spot.
01:24:07But we're not going to be in this spot.
01:24:11I know I like being able to wear my casual shirts and my drip dry shorts and you come here
01:24:16barefoot.
01:24:17For me, this is great.
01:24:19I love it.
01:24:20But this is not where we're going to be.
01:24:22This is not how it's going to go forward in that last three and a half years.
01:24:27It's going to be filled with miraculous kind of events.
01:24:30And the Teruah sacrifice is actually preceded by those four chariots.
01:24:37And it's all going to be very miraculous.
01:24:39The tablets of stone are going to be raised by Malak.
01:24:45There's going to be a banner that plays over our heads, a message board from Yahweh.
01:24:51I think that the Ark of the Covenant is going to be visible.
01:24:54I know it's going to be brought up and put in the tent to the Restoring Witness.
01:24:57But I think God's going to show it.
01:25:02A lot of stuff is going to happen.
01:25:03It's going to be literally the most, the greatest show on earth in the history of earth and in that
01:25:10period of time going forward.
01:25:12And speaking of that, we do have, we're not going to play Mr. Babylon tonight.
01:25:17But we do have two and maybe three songs that we're going to debut.
01:25:23The Ruth song will be lead among them.
01:25:26But we have two more that we'll be showing this evening.
01:25:31And that we do have for next week, we'll debut the Mr. Babylon.
01:25:37It is hilarious.
01:25:38And the graphics are brilliant.
01:25:40And we're working now on Star Spangled Cosplay, which is the couplet to Mr. Babylon that is even wilder than
01:25:50the other.
01:25:50So it's going to be great fun.
01:25:52We look forward to having everybody on our family hour at 6 o'clock Eastern time.
01:25:59And we'll see you there, Kevin.
01:26:01Thank you very much.
01:26:02Thank you, Rich.
01:26:05Shabbat shalom.
01:26:06Hey there, thanks for tuning in.
01:26:08That was Fetch, Gotta Run Now.
01:26:10Catch y'all on our next podcast.
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