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The Bible has a lot to do with the U.S.
Especially the Old Testament.
I am of the mind that the Old Testament was the U.S.
When you look at the level of destruction,
especially fearing of that and heading south,
like the...
Yeah, a lot of those mountains look a lot like some pyramids
that didn't work out.
Yeah, some desertification.
When you read about the Titans,
and then you kind of like mesh that with the Old Testament,
there's a lot of the like demigod,
Titan Nephilim that works really well in the geography here.
All right, guys, here with Owen and Christopher,
we're going to talk soil to that.
Yes, still, man.
You brought some...
I did.
...of the air, right?
Some biochar to be exact.
I'm sort of a snob about the carbon.
Hmm, so what is this to exactly?
Well, biochar is actually fixed carbon,
and we fix it in an oxygen-less environment.
So it's super stable.
So it's not like charcoal,
like a lot of people get biochar and charcoal mixed up.
Charcoal, they're usually doing pit burns,
where a lot of oxygen goes the head in works on the carbon,
and it creates a secondary oxidative stress.
This is fixed because there was no oxygen in the burn.
So apparently, this is stable for up to about 15,000 years.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a long time.
That's a very long time, Governor.
Holy crap.
So it makes a cumulative thing.
So when you add it to your garden, your soil's space,
that it won't go away unless it gets washed away.
I need to buy some of this.
We got a garden at the house now.
Oh, no.
You got a garden.
And this thing, this filter's water really well.
Yeah.
Yeah, the water filtration thing we're finding is probably
the biggest benefit,
because we're getting them between four and five times the yield.
And the science now is coming back with it,
and it's because of the way this structures water.
Everybody's heard of carbon filters.
Yep.
When you get a carbon filter that's actually made out of biochar
or activated carbon, the filtration and the structuring
of the water is even greater.
And it's because we're finding that on a micro level,
we were all told as kids that diamonds
were essentially carbon that was compressed.
Well, in the making of the biochar,
you get really, really, really small diamonds.
And so how people would decant alcohols,
different types of alcohols and like a crystal vase
or something like that.
This is kind of decanting the water that runs through it
through a diamond vase.
That's a good way of looking at it.
Wow.
So there's actual diamonds coming up.
Yeah, yeah.
I have some pictures on Instagram.
Holy crap.
Yeah, because I've never had it analyzed
till just this last year.
And now that we're seeing it at a micro level
and seeing all the diamonds in it,
it's pretty amazing.
That's insane.
Yeah, and what got me interested in this stuff
is one, the farming,
but also the social engineering around carbon
because the demonizing of carbon
and we're made out of carbon.
So it almost seems like that bad dad
that is like blaming everything on the kids.
Like, oh, my life would be better without these kids.
And we're just like, we're kids.
Exactly.
Yeah, I'm carbon.
Yeah, I'm carbon, man.
And so in the way I look at the wizard stuff
in the social engineering, I'm like, so car,
you know, and then when he started talking
about how we have a carbon deficit.
Yes.
I got interested.
And that's what I wanted you guys to hang
because I'm like, more people should know about this stuff
because it's true.
If you if you grow plants with this
or even just put it on top of fruit trees and stuff,
it's just a yield growth.
Yeah, my fruit tree just died.
So I need to.
What kind of fruit tree was it?
It was lemon.
I have lemon, pomegranate, and orange.
Must be nice.
You don't have citrus.
You're not allowed to talk badly about citrus around.
I love citrus, Gregor.
He birds on the internal level.
Okay, I can't grow at night at home.
No, I'm trying, but yeah, it's too cold.
Oh, it's too cold.
I am inside though.
I put a lot of effort into my orange tree.
Okay.
But I love oranges, man, good for you.
Out here, we can only grow citrus because it's too hot.
That's true.
We need stuff with a skin.
Well, out here too, you don't have much carbon
in the ground anyway.
The desert for the most part, I mean,
I'm sure you're buying top soil and things like that from.
But what makes usually what makes
when you see really good soil, it looks dark, right?
Well, the dark component tree of it
is this black carbon.
And so usually what makes the soil alive
is the fact that you have this little structure carbon
in there, and that attracts all your micro riser,
which is your fungus, and it attracts all the good bacteria.
So like, you know, you just had Zach Bush on the whole thing
is about having the probiotics in your gut
and all that really helps everything happen.
What's the same thing in our soil?
Our soil needs to have the probiotic content
for it to do all the work.
Yeah, that's almost like a perfect empty condominium.
It is.
And all the best, you know, bacteria move in there.
So if you mix that with some like good, you know,
compost and some animal manure and stuff,
it's a goldmine.
Incredible.
I know you got a lot of land, so you're doing this.
Oh, yeah, far.
Yeah, and you can just turn, you know, woodships into bio,
tell them about the rainforest.
Oh, yeah, the biomass, so like the way we actually make this
is we just take woodships from a wood mill,
and we cook it in these special kilns, and that makes it.
Well, the Amazonians did that.
I think the conquistadors started talking about
the Amazonian agriculture in the early 1500s,
and they said it was more intensive
than even what they had seen in Asia.
Damn.
So that was amazing when I read that.
I was like, whoa, and what they saw was they would essentially
do a chop and drop system where they would grow
the light demanding plants.
The light demanders grow really fast.
They would chop them, but they would chop them
so they would fall over these little kilns that they made.
And then once all the kilns were covered,
then they look like their kilns look like tandoori ovens.
Once all the kilns were covered,
then they would throw dirt on top of that to kind of seal it in,
and then they would light the fire inside those little kilns
and cook it down, and they wouldn't ever move it.
And then after it was cooked down, then they would plant it.
And so that was the way the Amazonian culture
was able to grow and be so massive.
Well, when the disease from the conquistadors took them out,
the jungle reclaimed it, but they reclaimed all the,
when the trees came back in,
there was all this carbon in the ground.
And then that's why the Amazonian rainforests
is as massive as it is.
That's not us, that's not us.
Yeah, it is a largest rainforest, right?
Yeah, it is, and it wasn't like that.
That's the thing that like a lot of people are under the
misnomer, like when we see something as it is,
now we think it's always been that way.
Like the opposite happened in the Sahara.
My professor in Geopalmers,
he showed that the Sahara went away
because when they were building the different pyramids
in Northern Africa, they needed fly ash.
So they started chopping the forest back there,
and they chopped so much of it down
to create the fly ash for the Geopalmer.
Yeah, like they poured that, you know,
like we kind of did kind of solve the pyramid thing.
Yeah, but they're molded Geopalmers.
Like they made the stone and poured it.
And so they were using all the trees to do that,
and then it starts this vicious cycle
where they don't get rain,
and then it becomes a desert versus the opposite happened
in the Amazon.
Okay, yeah.
It wasn't aliens that built the pyramids?
No.
You know, they might have looked a little like that
with their head sizes, but whatever.
Yeah, more like the Nephys.
The Nephys were building it.
They had somebody.
But they had polymer.
I think we might be related to them.
So that's you.
I mean, we're so, I mean, yeah, we're tall.
People used to be nine feet back in the day.
I have to watch my words around you.
That's true.
So my end word is Nephilim.
How dare you?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So yeah, the rain forest, as we know it now,
was not what was endemic to that area.
It was actually, it happened to be a secondary growth
off of the biochar that the Amazonians,
because the Amazonian culture,
the numbers at the conquistadors were saying
were like upwards of like a hundred million peopleites.
Yeah, I'm right.
It was massive.
They said it was more culturally intensive,
like agriculturally intensive than what they had seen in Asia.
No way.
Yeah.
That's hard to pay.
Yeah, the pyramids there, like all that stuff,
that came from massive civilizations.
Yeah, it's logically, it has to be.
The things are giant.
You can't make those today though, right?
Yeah.
Not as advanced.
Well, you could if you like.
Yeah, yeah.
We were told a lot of things.
Like, there's like, I brought up Dr. Davidivitz earlier
with the geopolymers.
He's, you know, contracted to help, you know,
a lot of military installations go in.
So these things are being built,
just the public isn't really.
Oh, so pyramids are being built?
Not necessarily pyramids,
but let's just say geopolymer rich structures.
Got it.
Because when people talk about tartarian structures,
they talk about all these things that are, you know,
are essentially indestructible and very old.
And construction guys hate that because it caused so much
to flip them and like break them down.
Yeah, yeah, like what was it, the, the, um,
in Philadelphia?
The comptroller of Philadelphia when he was telling the,
the congressman of Philadelphia, hey, look,
we all go bankrupt if we knock down city hall.
Yeah, we, we can't do it.
That wasn't built by wage slaves.
Yeah.
That was built by some other people that, that had,
you mean, it wasn't horses and wagons and aromas?
It wasn't horses and wagons and little come alongs
and pulley.
Yeah.
That's how the pyramids were built, right, slaves?
No.
That's what I would remember as a kid, the learning.
Yeah, yeah, we were all taught that.
But like, like, if you ever get a chance,
Dr. Davidovitz is an incredible person.
He was actually kicked out by, of Egypt from, uh,
Zahari Hawass, I always, oh, I know that, huh?
Yeah, yeah, he's the, he's the, the big guy that's, you know,
pushing the slave narrative of Northern Africa.
But that, in 1979, he had figured out what I'm talking
about with the Pyramids.
She is.
1979.
Holy shit.
Yeah, and the Geopomers, they get harder over time,
same with Roman aqueducts.
Yeah.
And so they're just like, no one knows how.
And it's like, yeah, you can make this stuff.
Yeah, like, I've made Geopomers.
I'm actually here in, in Las Vegas to actually go to,
I'm, uh, this Thursday, I'm going to go talk with my Geopalm
or producer.
I'm actually going to be interviewing them for my pod.
So I'm excited to see their plant and how they're doing it.
Cause I've made them myself, but it's, it's a pretty
labor intensive.
What does that process work to make one?
You have to find volcanic ash.
I can't just buy that.
Puzzle on a cache.
Oh, it depends.
Like where I lived in Central America, I could get it.
Most of the cement companies used instead of fly ash, they
use volcanic ash.
That's why the cement down there was so good.
But, uh, the main thing that's hard to get is this, this, uh, this,
substrate called natron.
And natron mixed with fly ash or some other high-heat ash mixed.
Like a wrap or natron?
Natron.
What up, natron?
Yeah.
Natron, uh, silica, like a sand, some sort of sand.
And then also a very, very highly rich calcium bentonite clay.
Those are your substrate for geopalmers.
Yeah.
So like the areas in, um, near Rome where you have all these old
aqueducts and things like that that are geopalmers, they had the, they had
the pazelon, the volcano, the volcano called pazelon.
So they used pazelonic ash.
They were, you know, on the Mediterranean, so they had tons of sand
and they also had tons of crustaceans.
And the reason why it's a, it's a harry huasca.
It's so pissed off at my, my teacher was that, you know, they pushed
this whole narrative that, oh, northern Africa was flooded.
That's why we find sea shells at the base of this finks in the
base of the, the pyramids on, on the, it's such a crazy call to be like,
it must be like, it was flooded by an ocean.
Yeah, yeah, what an assumption.
Yeah, totally.
A debate of it.
So it was like, no, no, you dip.
I don't know if I'm allowed to curse here or so.
Yeah. No, you dipshit.
They actually use the crustaceans that were in the Nile river.
The calcium bentonite clays right there.
They deforested and pulled all the fire ash right there.
In the largest nature and deposit in the world in northern Africa.
Here it is.
There it is.
And this is the cool thing that they dry mixed it.
What's up?
So whenever you're doing concrete work, what makes it so heavy is this wet?
Oh, so he was able to show because any, any archaeologists will tell you,
no, the, the cities that were alive when these were being built were not slave
cities.
And they were artisan cities.
They find all this high, all slaves do is bitch anyway.
I hate working on slaves.
They're just like, why do you keep whipping me?
I'm like, because I know you can work harder.
Yeah, exactly.
Like they don't do a good job.
Yeah, too much time for music.
And yeah, so, so they were able to show like the archaeologically that the people
that were building these things were not under the whip.
And so Davidivist was able to show, no, no, they would dry mix it and they
had hoof it up and they had forms because whether you're in South, South
America or in Egypt, even now they found this in Gobekli, Tepet and
Turkey, wherever these pyramids are, you'll see that there's a little
indention against each rock.
Yeah, I've seen those and so that said, that's in Montana too.
Have you seen that wall?
Oh, dude, I don't want to sidetrack because he's making a point, but like,
there's massive multi-tun perfect like wall in Montana near where I live.
And they're just people are claiming it's like a natural phenomenon.
It looks, it's insane.
Rogan's covered it.
So people know about it, but it's like, but they all those little notches that little
notch is like, I do construction, I have a construction company.
And whenever you're doing a freeform pour, you have these forms that you have
to lean something against it.
So when you do your pour, it doesn't got it.
And literally the notch is on every single one.
So you just know that they did the dry mix from the top.
They poured the water in, they let the heat of the day come because the casing
stones on the outside were black.
And also when you look at the side cut of the pyramid, it actually looks like a
massive rocket stove, which is another love of mine.
And so what David of its was able to show was they heated it from the inside
with the rocket stove type thing and then the heat from the sun heated the outside.
It was able to raise the temperature of the geopolymer to a sufficient heat
where it set much faster and they just worked their way.
And he predicted, he said, you'll find a spiral because for years and years and
years, people were saying, oh, no, we've mapped every single part of the great pyramid.
Yeah, he's like, no, no, you'll find that there's, there, there should be a spiral
going to the very top to where, you know, the, the, wow.
And they found it.
No way.
Yeah, it's there.
The spirals on the inside of the paper found the inside because think about it,
if you're building like the way he said they were building, you'd be working
like this as you were working to repeat like a staircase almost.
Yeah, like all of us have seen like the conical shapes, like a pyramid is just an
octagon.
They, most people think it's a cubicle at the base where it's an octagon,
but just a four-sided cone is the best way of saying it.
And to get the, the energy or the material all the way to the peak, you'd move
in a spiral.
And so that was another one.
Like an inside scaffolding kind of exactly that's the path that you'd have to take
to, to position all the dry material to have a cure.
Yeah, this is, I find this stuff so fast and he builds a, a dome at our campground
that we do, the Bertrand campground.
And now I'm just so interested in, and building techniques because it's just,
I, like, when I was at the Vatican, I remember just being like, this is not,
like, how I've been taught construction works.
Like there's, and I just love building stuff, you know, it's like, it's, it's fun.
Yeah, these structures that were built were like, I mean, as somebody,
my dad was an architect, my sister's an architect.
Like I've been in that world my entire life, and the stories that were given
with how things are built are, it's not, yeah.
I wonder what that happened.
Well, it's because they, the, I think the social engineering is that we're the
apex. Right.
Right.
It doesn't get any bad enough, man.
We're, we're the apex.
Our little electronic do-hikki's, that's the way they do.
They didn't have red bill or, or, oh, exactly.
It's so, like, when you look at these older structures and God knows how old these
things are, like they're getting better with time.
And any of the stuff we build does not get better with time, Fox.
So it's like, my pickleball court, you know, you always have to, like, fix cracks.
It's not these guys.
No, 2000 years old.
It's perfect.
And the thing is, too, is I built in Central America.
So I've built in conditions where, where the, I'm more akin to knowing what
it would be like being a frontiersman building something.
And I will tell you the last thing that you can do on a piece of land that has
no roads is build something heavy.
Right.
Thanks.
It all sinks, including you trying to get the material to the, I didn't even think
about that.
It's all logistics is where you see the devil.
You know what I mean?
It's all the details.
Yeah.
Like I've, I literally had to invent a way of building because I lived in the,
the mostiest of the mush in Central America because I could not get heavy
materials to sight.
Yeah.
And DC is in a swamp.
Exactly.
And there's this beautiful dome.
The fight is thing.
He was like a Nick Saban kicker.
Like he's a all-American kick, like in the same kick, but he just got really into
like the arcs of the domes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, because I like, like my, my position was like as a kicker, you're always
watching trajectory and arcing, trajectory and arcing.
Right.
I mean, without doubt, like I used to catch punts from Reggie Roby, who was like an
all pro punter in the NFL.
My punters at my, at my college, like they would pump balls or 80 yards in the air.
And you, I would just watch the arc.
And then so I got really fascinated with the archers.
Yeah.
So like that dome, like the Congress dome, like how hard would that be to build in a swamp?
Impossible.
Yeah.
We just built a 42 foot dome, which is half the size of what they built in, in,
in, in Washington in a 42 foot diameter dome, we had a crane boom that was 60 feet
tall.
And we were building that only four feet off the ground.
Yeah.
And double it gets exponentially harder, too.
Exponentially harder.
And that was just the trellis of the frame.
Yeah.
That wasn't even doing all the masonry work.
Yeah.
And then having all those like naked dude sculptures.
Yes.
Geez.
That would be the fun part.
That's where his holy crop.
Yeah.
So there's a lot to consider.
And one of the things with the, with the carbon, that's really cool.
Part of what got me into carbon was this as a building amendment is amazing.
Like when we had this to concrete, because most concrete or cement is the binder and
concrete, it's very, very calcium rich.
And so looking into the geopalm or science and then looking into the concrete
science was like, oh my God, if I gave that, that calcium carbon, now we're cooking
with gas.
And it blocks, uh, yeah, maps and stuff, too.
Oh, holy blocks.
This is the, this is the magic because I've had to build for very EMF sensitive people.
And we've literally been able to get the internals of, of rooms and buildings to zero
away.
Zero micro.
He's not even penetrated.
No, especially 5G won't.
5G is a very short wave.
Damn.
And so it's actually not that hard to block if you have enough of this or it's actually
not a volume thing.
It's actually a size thing because these are all these like the best way you could think
of it is super computers and things like that are starting to use activated carbon as
the conductors because it can actually send a signal with zero latency.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's not that's awesome.
And because there's zero latency and you can send Ampage through it too with almost
zero resistance.
So I think it is zero resistance, but depending on manufacturing processes.
So the big no no word that you hear, especially in the truth of world is graphene.
Ooh, graphene is evil.
Well, graphene is going to be like the direction that most computing goes because of how
efficient the signal and the electrical current can be sent.
Well, when we actually put that in a chaotic mess, like say within in paint,
that same thing that will send a signal and be able to receive a signal with zero latency
will also reflect a signal if it's tangential to where the signal is coming from.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, that's not way wise graphene evil though.
Why do people say that?
Well, they're that because they put it in shots and stuff.
Well, they put in shots and a lot of the weather modification that's used.
They spray graphene because it's all in the chemicals.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I like to say a high aerosol, sorry, dispersion.
No, I say that specifically because there, there's a, there's this huge movement like
this states like Tennessee and Florida where we've banned chemtrails.
Yet everybody there still sees chemtrails and it's because the word chem trail is
actually not the right word for what we're seeing.
What we're seeing up there, the streaks in the sky is technically, and if people brought
legislation with the right word, it would actually make all the difference in the world.
But when they just switch it again, now they love switching the definition towards the world.
Cloud seating, you use the two words, cloud seating and high atmosphere aerosol dispersion.
If you use those two things, then you could actually have legislation that would actually do something.
It's like rumble still skin.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, you got man.
Well, you know how legal this, yeah, of course, of course, yeah.
So like image, like when they're like, look at this image from NASA, image, the definition
of image is not reality.
It's like a idea put in, you know, it's not a photograph.
You have to say photograph image is not like real.
That's so true.
That's a good one.
Yeah.
I wouldn't even think about that.
Imagination, image, exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So like they'll use this in modifying the weather, weather modification, geoengineering is a great
term in the geoengineering because it as a condensation nuclei, like something that attracts
water, it's perfect for storing water in the sky.
So like NASA, like 25 years ago, is saying, we're going to store all the
water in the future is going to be stored in the sky because they can make these nanoparticulates
of this.
They put it up in the air and they can drive this very easily with signals so they can
store water up in the atmosphere.
Wow.
Yeah.
And water can hold data.
It's it's a direct metaphor to the eye cloud and that's, that's cool.
Yes.
Cloud seeding is not, is not just for moving the liquid, it's actually for moving.
They can maybe release the water on demand on to know, no way, they did just make it
in.
Absolutely.
Oh, there's so many, I mean, so the whole thing happened in central Texas, right?
You know, how many months ago?
I'll do a hurricane or whatever.
No, in central Texas, they had this for 30 days, just like, 30 days, right?
I don't know how I know how many days there was, it was insane.
They, they essentially got a year's worth of rain in like a few hours there and it
killed a bunch of kids, like they did all this damage in central.
I might be thinking of one a few years ago, they've done it a lot, they do it a lot
in Texas.
Well, Texas is because it's part of the news, the central data corridor.
I don't even know.
So there's a four or so rabbit hole to rabbit hole.
Yeah.
It's like years ago, like they were talking about the whole thing with Kafta, NAFTA, about,
you know, having this, this highway from all the way down from South America, all the
way to the Tar Pits of Canada.
Okay.
And I like, it was in seeing where all these floods are and I live in the central part
of the United States too and seeing where all these massive farms are going out business
and then when my biochar company were helping the state of Iowa remediate a lot of their
water problems from big agriculture and what, what's this, what's Iowa telling me from
their legislature, they've approved something like 200 data centers.
And so when you look at all of the different data centers and all the different states,
it's found that same highway that they were talking about years ago that I thought was
going to be like an actual highway, it's the information highway and they're literally
putting it right up the spine of the Americas.
And so what they're doing now is they're devaluing the land by these controlled outbursts
of rain or these controlled outbursts of fire in these very specific farm in this flooded
area.
Exactly.
Why are, you know, sell it to us, you know, pennies on the dollar because it's not worth
anything.
It's climate change.
I mean, it's everything's getting so chaotic out there.
But again, it's because carbon is killing you now.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
But aren't I made out of carbon?
Exactly.
You can kind of see it's all tied together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the data centers are a really big deal and right down the center of Texas, I forget
how many have been approved for that.
It's that it's that because everything with data is about trunk lines.
You know, there's not so many of these satellites that we have up there in space.
They still need the, if we're going to be pooling all this data and creating all this
data, we still need a central area to actually distribute it from.
And so that's why you see the center of the United States kind of being gutted right
now.
Wow.
So move out of Texas, huh?
Well, it's kind of funny.
Who they've attracted there.
But you could, you could still survive all this stuff though, you know, you got to have
good grass.
I know another, another thing, but grass was really deep roots.
It doesn't flood.
That's not really.
Yeah.
It acts like a sponge.
So you need old grass?
We're bringing this Savannah back.
Well, yeah, like it's like six inches an hour versus like a quarter inch an hour.
So like old grass, you don't flood.
Yeah.
That's why cement golf courses like these places, it makes it really easy to flood.
Yeah, yeah.
You get the flash flooding because the water hasn't nowhere to go.
Right.
Got some grass guys.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
Good grass.
Some legit old school grass.
Yeah, the native grasses.
Even with the company there were we've been supplying them with biochar to do testing.
Yeah.
Because one thing about the grasses too was the natives used to burn it.
Why?
Well, they would burn it because they would see that it would actually, once again, fix
the carbon.
Yeah.
The burns are good.
Yeah.
The roots would, because when you burn, they would burn topside, but the deeper the roots
were, the new shoots would just be better.
Yeah, one even less.
Okay.
The grasses and dye, it was just you were essentially giving the ground back biomass.
In our area of Missouri, where we're just west of the Mississippi, was a savanna.
And the savanna was known at, like savannas are a very large eco tone.
It's when you move from forest to the plains.
That's where all the life is.
That's where all the life is because that's where all the boundaries.
Yeah.
Because the birds, the birds don't necessarily need trees.
They need a little grass.
And so all of your big, hooved animals and things like that eat that grass.
So you end up having this, you know, a glomeration of all these different animal types
that are all symbiotic with each other.
And then also the grasses give incredible sightlines to the predators.
You don't get the same thing in forests, especially forests that weren't native to that
place.
Yeah.
It's like the light comes in, but yet they have the protection.
It's like the coral reef of land, the savanna.
You know, it's like, like all the life is near the coast kind of where you have the coral
reef where you have like the light, but you also have the protection.
So that's a great way of putting it.
Thanks, man.
Yeah.
Yeah, like working with us are real.
I see that.
Like I'll take out some trees and I see more life come in because at first I'm like,
oh, I don't want to take out trees.
It's the forest.
Yeah, because it attracts grass, birds, light, white.
Yeah.
And then the big trees get bigger.
Yeah.
Your beach trees.
It's awesome.
Yeah.
And we have, there's so much evidence of really massive trees at one point, but like
when you have a lot of grass, you don't have, what the, whenever you buy forested land
which I've bought in many different countries is the first thing that when you're talking
to the conservationists is like, oh, you have to clear out these haplanes.
Huh.
And I thought like growing up with the whole programming that I had, that that was like,
never, never touch a tree.
And actually, it's actually the exact.
Is it?
Yeah.
No, all those new little trees that are starting to sprout up, they're competing for the very
limited nutrient base in the soil against the big, the bigger tree around it.
So they say for every inch of like, say, an oak tree per se, you take that in a foot
to the next tree that's closest to it.
So just by example, if you have a 12 foot, you know, at the base tree, you need 12 feet
in every direction.
One would no sap.
They need that much.
They need that much.
Holy crap.
At least that.
That's the main thing.
Yeah.
And other stuff can grow there.
It's just, it's more like, well, we're nitrogen fixing stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because you need your pollinators in the forest.
And that's a big problem we have with these overgrown forests is that there's not enough
pollinators.
The reason why the bees and the birds are going away, yes, there's glyphosate, yes,
there's all this other stuff.
But the main thing is, is the pollinators that used to be in the grasslands, well, there's
very little grasslands left, because there's the very little carbon.
Yeah.
It comes back fast.
It's like, I just, I plan a lot of wildflowers and it's like, bang, bees, birds.
It's almost like they're waiting somewhere where they're like, okay.
Yeah.
It's so weird out there.
That's why it returns.
Yeah.
Arden bees and birds everywhere.
Yes.
Everywhere.
Yeah.
The hummingbirds are amazing.
Do they have hummingbirds?
I love hummingbirds.
Yeah.
They might be my favorite bird, honestly.
Me too.
They're so innocent.
Yeah.
They're pretty prolific.
Yeah.
Like in the area, the last two areas I live, whether it's Costa Rica or Central Missouri,
they're there.
Yeah.
They got to eat like every seven minutes.
What?
Yes.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
It's really messy about them.
But I still love that.
They're like, dude, you got pollen?
Got pollen?
Yeah.
They love them though.
In the more pollinators you have, I live on a lake and we have lots of like natural pollinators
because of the lake and they're everywhere and they bring such a cool vibration when they
fly by you.
It's almost like an energetic.
Yeah.
Now that's what I love about them.
Yeah.
Another so cool.
Yeah.
And they seem almost curious.
They're like, what's up, dude?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm out of here.
They'll definitely like, you know, flea, but like if I just settled down and I'm just
like present, then they're like, bro, I tried to tell that to people, but it sounds almost
too intense, but it's so true.
I'm like, yeah, your vibe will attract different animals and insects.
Absolutely.
A hundred percent.
Oh, yeah.
In my opinion, I know that sounds intact, but I'm in nature all the time.
And it's just like, when you're just present, it'll be like, oh, no way.
Hey, Mr. Squirrel.
Yeah.
And when you're not, they're like, not there.
It's weird.
So the most with deer, like the deer, because every morning, there's deer by my property,
I'm walking my golden retriever and he wants to make friends with every animal.
And so like I noticed with the deer, if I'm like, listen to like a podcast and I'm like,
not present, the deer flea, like they don't, they don't like the not present vibrates.
Wow.
But if I'm not, and I'm just walking my dog and I'm being present with my dog and I'm
listening to nature, the deer will just hover.
Totally.
They're just like, hmm, hmm, you know, they're, they're very curious, but they're only curious
if you're present.
Yeah.
It's 100% having.
I wonder what that is.
You must be getting off a certain energy field.
Well, I think because they're so present, like, you know, I have this like thing in physics
is like frequency is location.
So when you're present, you're actually in the nature vibe, because I think everything
in nature is present.
But like when you're not present in your mind is, you know, wherever or scattered, then
when you're coming into contact with it, it wants to flee because you're not in its,
in its median tone.
Wow.
Yeah.
They say nature is healing though.
Yeah.
So I can.
Yeah.
I could see that.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
I find for me like, I've seen it over and over and over again in many different settings
where if I'm just present and I'm just in observation mode, the amount of natural
life that will actually make itself known is, is much greater than when I'm, that's
so fascinating.
Yeah.
There's no lies in nature.
That's what's so healing about it for me.
It just is what it is.
Yeah.
I guess.
You know, it's awesome.
Yeah.
I want to get to your level one day when I'm just in nature all day.
Yeah.
I mean, you, you garden, right?
Yeah.
But I think living in Vegas is tough, but yeah, I do that.
It's still nature here.
I mean, deserts are beautiful, you know?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Deserts incredible.
Yeah.
That's still nature.
I love your live stream by live stream.
Yeah.
Have you seen that?
I, I so, so I got this land where I have this like river and I'm like, and there's mountains
in the background and it looks like a green screen.
And so I live screened by the live stream, I, because I got deep platform before.
So I, I physically built a platform and I live stream with a live stream and it's just
so relaxing.
Like, it doesn't matter what I'm talking about.
People just want to see the river flow and it's like filled with like, uh, fish and
fish.
It's just like really cool.
It's in your backyard.
Well, I got a land up north a little bit, yeah, like when we'd have meetups and stuff,
like listening to meetups and stuff, we'd have like campground and my, my wife calls them
internet friends, so they're not technically allowed at my house.
That's true.
So it's only got this, yes.
And we got outdoor friends before, like I've had some friends that are like, you know, like
veterans that are just super intense.
I love them, but my wife's like, they're outdoor friends.
Yes.
They're a bit of fires.
Don't break them in stock.
No, because one time we did bring one of them inside and he was just like, and it was
just like, there's a bunch of kids around too.
And he was like, do you know how many people I'm like, okay, we're going outside.
That's not it.
No pink mist.
Yeah.
We were talking about pink mist or hypocrisy from Hillary Clinton inside.
Yeah.
You mentioned trees earlier.
I didn't want to ask you about the red woods because those are giant.
Yeah.
They're kind of close to each other, right?
Well, I don't know.
I've never been there.
I've only seen pictures.
I have a lot of theories about those particular.
What's the theories?
Well, you got that look in your eye.
You got some gravy.
What is it?
Yeah.
I think the red woods are the cedars of Lebanon.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So the biblical cedars of Lebanon, that whole thing, I don't think the Middle East is the
Holy Land.
I think that's all engineered.
I mean, it's pretty well written, especially if you look into the British way of doing things
in the mid-1800s, that that was pretty much an engineered space.
But I really think that the Holy Land was the Western United States, actually, where we
are right now.
When you go up into Utah and North, all the way up through Alaska and even into, on the
old maps, they called it the Isla de Isu, which is the island of Jesus.
That area just above the Bearing Straits, I think all this, this area was the Holy Land.
And they had to reframe it for their, I guess you'd call it the central banking interest.
Pretty much all the history that we know of over the last 500 years is written for the
central banking interests.
And they have a very good way of redirecting our attention away from what is so.
And kind of pigeonholing certain things and giving us a letter at herrings.
And so the Cedars of Lebanon, the way they're, what it's written about, and when you look
at the old maps of like the California and Oregon coastline, going up into Washington
and like the, you know, Canada and stuff like that, that fits so much better when you're
actually, if you're to take the biblical narrative that's given, that, that area fits
that so much better than what we're told of the Middle East.
You think the Salt Lake, Salt Lake is the Dead Sea?
I think so.
No way.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, I mean, that's what the Mormons, I think that they, I think they have that
gravy too.
Yeah, I think, I think there's a lot of redirects.
A lot of redirects.
Yeah.
They even name the same.
Yes.
I know.
Crazy.
Because that would give them the liability clearance.
Yeah.
We told you.
We told you.
That's totally.
We told you.
Yeah.
I mean, we're still under Roman law.
Like if you're too dumb to know what we're doing to you, you deserve it.
That's Roman law.
Yeah.
Cause there is, there is bullback if you lie lie.
If you lie lie and you never give the option, there's bull, there's bullback, karma,
right?
It really, it's there.
It is.
Yeah.
But if you tell them, it's almost like they feel almost defeated when they find out
versus like angry, you know, where they're like, oh man, really?
Yeah.
Florida Garden of Eden.
Yeah.
It's oranges.
Okay.
It's so.
That's a long ago.
Nice.
Long ago, thanks to that Florida was the garden of Eden.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't think the forebidden fruit thing was an actual fruit.
I think.
Not a four.
I think I was metaphor for sex, but, you know, there's so much evidence.
I was like, well, when everyone was sex, bro, like whatever you see a small, like if
you catch a kid like stealing or like a cookie, what do they do when you catch him?
They cover their mouth.
Well, what do they keep talking about in the eye of the covering the way they're covering
their, their genitals, cover the genitals in an allege meant to have sex.
Actually, when you look at the whole Hebrew and Greek, yeah, especially when you look
at it to like uncover one's nakedness, meant sex.
So anything, talking about nakedness dealt with sexuality.
So I believe with what Longo is saying about the foreheaded river is absolutely true.
Because there's only one foreheaded river in the entire world and it's in the fag of
the United States, the Florida, Alabama, Georgia border.
Nice.
There's the foreheaded rivers.
The foreheaded fag.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And that's also the only place in the world that grows goferwood.
Yeah, goferwood.
Yeah.
The hell is that?
Goferwood.
Goferwood is what they made the arc out of.
No.
So you have the arc, arc, Kansas.
Arkansas was the Southern Arkansas, they call it like Texarkana and down to the Eastern
part of Arkansas, was the highest concentration of goferwood in the world then going down
and just what do we call the arc?
Yeah, yeah.
So it's one of those things where they have to tell you.
Wow.
Yeah.
So Longo, longo exposing that.
It's pretty cool.
Yeah.
Longo.
This is blow my mind.
Yeah.
I think especially like the Old Testament, I am of the mind that the Old Testament was
the US.
And when you look at, when you look at the level of destruction, especially here in Nevada
and heading south, like the, like a lot of those mountains look a lot like some pyramids
that didn't work out.
Yeah.
Some desertification.
And then also when you look at that, I think the Greeks called it the Titanochomy.
When you, when you read about the Titans and then you kind of like mesh that with the
Old Testament, there's a lot of the like, you know, demigod, Titan, Nephilim, crossover
that works really well in the geography here.
Like when you read the Titanochomy and you see like how, how the demigods were destroyed.
And then you see the lay of the land and like how things were laid to waste makes a lot
of sense that that was the Southwest, you know.
And they always invert it.
It's a new world, is old world, you know?
Exactly.
Exactly.
And they knew how to get here.
Yeah.
So it's like they just were like, they probably did a spell where no one could go for centuries
and then they're like, all right, it's been, it's been wilded.
Let's do it again.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
No, I think that's totally it.
And that's why like the whole thing with the carbon is like literally like that we're
told, oh, there's too much CO2.
There's too much carbon where you and I know for a fact, the problem that we have is we
don't have enough carbon in the ground.
Yeah.
Like we need that.
Totally.
And so it's always an inversion with these guys.
Yeah.
Always, they're always telling you the effect of global warming that was always in the back
my head as a kid.
I know.
Like it was like margarine.
Remember all of it, it's just all, but it's like, oh, yeah, fat makes you fat, not
sugar.
Right.
It's just like crazy.
Just that salt was bad for you, Ronob.
Yeah.
And the salary comes from you got paid in salt, oh, yeah, salary, yeah, when it actually
hydrates you.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
I read through my grandparents saying, you know, is he worth his salt?
Yeah.
I was as a kid.
I was always trying to figure that out.
And I don't even know how many people are even culpable or if that just happens when you
kind of live a life where you lie a lot where you almost like it flips in your head because
I don't know.
I don't want to say there's some grand conspiracy, but because I've seen people see the world
upside down when they've lied a lot in their life.
Like they almost just start seeing it that way where hate is love and, you know what I mean?
It's like, like, they'll look at a nice family having a great time and be like, that's
hate.
You know, and you're like, dude, what happened to you?
You know?
Well, I think, you know, the thing is like for me, like what the, some of the people that
exposed me to agenda 21, like way back in the day that were like actually showing me
the white papers and then like reading some of the history behind the different philanthropic
institutes, I really think that this is an agenda.
I don't think.
Yeah, I think there's a level where it is.
Yeah, yeah.
I just think it's like way, away, it's way up there.
It's like you have a level.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did the Swiss used to be like the assassins of Europe, you ever went into the Swiss?
You know, like kings that go to a Canton and be like, you have to kill Austria and that's
what they did.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, Tony, they were like, they were like the toughest warriors.
And then they just got really into watches and shit because, because the transportation,
so how expensive it is to get things in and out, they'd have to make like one thing a
steel super valuable, so they got really into springs and little tiny things.
Dude, the Swiss are awesome people, man.
They're your people.
They're my people.
I'm part Swiss.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, definitely.
Definitely.
Those guys crush.
You can tell the cheekbones.
There's a love for shooting things.
Almost armed country in the world and lowest crime rate.
Wow.
Yeah, every dude goes in a boot camp and they all have like a gun for life and they just
are like, you can't invade us, we'll kill all of you.
Yeah.
And it works.
Yeah.
And they make the best particle colliders, too.
Dude.
What do you think that really is?
I think it's the, I think that's the original amount, Hermann.
No, what does that mean?
So like when the angels came down, like when they were cast out of heaven and they, you
know, it's essentially.
It's essentially where Jesus Christ, you know, did his, his last sermon.
Yeah.
That's called.
It's me.
Not his last sermon.
The last time he talked to his disciples, where he actually, you know, fortified his authority
as being the ruler of both heaven and earth.
That happened on Mount Hermann because that's where the angels fell to earth, too.
And so I think, sir, sir, and because there's like 10,000 particle colliders all around
the world, but certain is by far the largest that we know of.
There's probably some larger ones in Asia, but out of ones that we know of, and especially
under the lake that it goes under in the mountain, that it goes down.
Yeah.
That's a lot of juice.
And then you see that it has the big Shiva, you know, statue of the front of it, like
it, which is, you know, my time in India kind of informs us what that is, is that I think
that's just a gateway.
I think these, because whenever, like I, like I use devices that vortex things all the
time, what does a vortex do at the very center of a vortex?
You always have an opening.
Well, imagine you're creating a vortex with these highly charged particles as fast as
you can make them go under a ring of magnets.
That's so intense.
It is a portal.
Yeah.
Starr really call it, right?
I don't know if it's a stargate.
I mean, I know enough hippies that we call it a stargate, like in, I'm not saying that
as a derogatory thing, but like, it would definitely be a star if you see a star as like
a sono luminescent, you know, being up there in the sky.
But I actually think that they are, they're, because they have not been able to actually
create or break through a hard fast barrier, both above and below, they're trying to do
it on an aetheric level.
And so they know vortex, the vortex physics better than we do.
So they create these incredibly fast, strong, vorticular flows.
Do you think it's worked for them yet?
I think it, I think it, I think it has just because of how wonky certain aspects of reality
Mandela fucked.
Exactly.
That's shit's real.
What's your biggest Mandela?
Onyx, the Pokemon.
Did you guys play Pokemon?
I never played.
No.
I'd curious George is a big one.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
That one's done.
Yeah, don't fuck me up.
There's a lot though.
There's so many.
So many.
Yeah.
I've been Mandela affected.
Yeah.
He makes fun of me.
He calls it Mandela.
Mandela.
Mandela.
In my reality, it was always Nelson Mandela.
See?
They're in it's real.
It's real.
I thought he died in prison.
That's one of the ones that got me.
The reason I do the U is Franco Colombia.
I know.
I'm dead serious.
They're claiming his name ends with a U.
I always thought it was Franco Colombia.
Another bodybuilder?
No.
Oh, so that to me is one of the biggest Mandela's
because of like pumping iron.
Dude, it was Franco Colombia.
And now if you Google it, it says Franco Colombia.
It's like it has a U at the end.
I think they did that for you.
Because you were saying Mandela before that.
It's been, it came out.
Yeah, they're just like, I'm going to have for the only.
We got to mess it though.
The cornucopia one too is crazy.
The cornuc, I actually had fruit volume.
And I remember asking my mother,
there's so many like the whole thing with the C3PO, right?
Like I actually had empire strike back, you know,
sheets on my bed.
Like I had a bunk bed.
So I seriously, and so like, no, like that.
I would have known whether or not
if he had a golden calf or not.
Like, like I know that in my reality,
that wasn't like the silver leg.
Like what's going on?
Dots.
That makes sense.
Yeah, that one didn't make sense to me either.
Do you guys believe in infinite realities?
No, you don't.
You think there's a finite amount of realities?
I think there is, there is objective reality.
And I think we're all trying to find objective reality.
Because each one of us, none of us
are ever going to experience each other's realities.
I will never know what is like to look through your eyes.
I won't know what it's like to look through his eyes.
It's awesome, by the way, through my eyes.
I bet.
It's just looking down at it.
Yeah, we got on great.
What's your finger down?
Exactly.
So because the big assumption that we all make
is that we're all living the same reality.
But how many situations has it been
where you like you and a friend or a partner
or whatever has seen something?
And you think you're seeing it the same way.
And then you talk to him a little.
A little later.
Yeah.
And they saw it a totally different way
or have a different.
And so I think when the biggest mysteries out there
is objective reality.
So you think there is an objective reality?
There is an objective reality that just none of us
are really experiencing.
So only God experiences it.
Well, I think when the so-called
satory or enlightenment occurs, you fall in
into the objective cut.
You fall into the real stream.
The live stream?
By the live stream.
You fall into the real cut in that subjective reality.
But most of the time, what do you think
happens when that happens?
I think you're in you laugh.
You absolutely laugh like the Buddha.
Yeah.
Yeah, the first thing that happens.
About it is money.
It is because everything once again has been inverted.
I think our fall is the fall from objective reality.
Like if you're gonna look at it
and put in a Christian context.
So like what we're all trying to get back to
is like sin meant to miss the mark.
And so to be sinless is to hit the mark.
And the mark is objective reality.
Yeah, and I think part of the humor is
almost like when you see little kids lying about stuff
that doesn't matter.
And you're like, bro, just tell me.
Like I can see it.
Yeah.
And it's almost like we live our lives like that so much
that when you hit objective reality,
I bet it's just like, what was I doing?
Exactly.
You know what I think it is?
What?
I mean, for me personally,
because my experience is gonna be different than yours.
I think it's effortlessness.
Because like think about God.
God is...
Then I've been making fun of a lot
of really based people for a long time.
I'm sorry.
I know what you mean though, about like the flow, right?
Yeah, because it's literally like,
that's why I found it was an irony as an athlete.
It was like all my best performances.
I would be in the zone.
Flow state.
I was in the flow state.
But during the flow state, I wasn't doing it.
Right.
It was happening.
Right.
I was witnessing it happen.
But every time I was the doer,
the flow state would never happen.
And so reading all these books about flow state
and all the things that it takes.
So they say,
when you have to have skin in the game,
to it has to be dangerous,
there has to be preparation.
And for there has to be luck.
Hmm.
Because it doesn't like...
You can't control it.
You can't control it, right?
And so luck to me.
Yeah, I flow stated into a lot of ditches in my life.
So to me luck is another way of saying spontaneity.
And I really think God lives in the spontaneity of it.
And in the spontaneous cut,
then you're in that complete free will.
You're free of will.
You don't have will.
Because your willpower,
think about what your willpower does.
It immediately puts you in a funnel.
I am going to have this objective.
Well, if you're going to have this objective,
then you're not actually open to the freedom
that's actually available.
So I really think pure objective reality
is when you can have absolutely no will
when you can just be.
And one of the reasons I listen to like dudes like him
and like Jake and people like that
is because he can kick 60-yard field goals.
So it's not just like...
It's not just like normal internet talk.
It's like to understand that flow state,
like that he knows, you know,
and for me it was like classical piano and stuff like that.
It's like when you're operating at a high level,
you do kind of disappear.
Yes.
You know, you are, same with like very high-stress
stand-up comedy situations, it's the same thing.
I like almost have no memories of like half my career.
Yeah.
Just disappear.
Yeah, you're just like doing the thing.
Like you're just doing, you are it.
Yeah, and the flow state thing is really incredible too
because you won't really have a memory of like how,
the how of it.
Yeah, and it can drive you crazy sometimes almost
when you're like, I got to get back in.
Right.
You have to, right?
It's like self-assinating.
Yeah.
And it's, yeah, it's really, really interesting man.
That flow.
That's when identity can mess with people.
Identity is like, all the philosophers I've read,
they all say that's the identity is the biggest problem.
You go, right?
Well, ego is conditioning.
And so if you're attached to the conditioning,
that's identity.
Right.
So ego could be a great benefit.
Like you have conditioning to do this
and you're really good at it, right?
Yeah, you need somewhat of an ego.
Yeah, yeah.
A cross.
So ego gets the, it's like, it gets the misnomer
of being bad.
And I think that's like a new thing to say.
But it's not ego, it's a problem.
It's a Freud.
I mean, that little co-cat made ego sound bad, huh?
I, what do you call it, the id?
The id, the ego of the super ego, yeah.
He was so miserable that you ever read what he wrote.
Don't listen to miserable people.
Then he was so miserable and then he got like jaw cancer.
Like that's an irony, huh?
Oh, dude.
If there's a link to error with mental and physical health
other, totally.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
Physiogamy, you're really big end, too.
I am.
I think you grow into the face you are.
Yeah, you don't have the bone smashing.
That's all right now.
That's a hawk.
You know, I just heard about that, I had never,
I had never heard of that into a Reese's guest I had on.
That's insanity.
All these young kids are smashing their face.
Oh, that makes me sad, man.
To becoming a dad, it hurts more.
Like seeing kids in like a movie
or something and trouble, I can't watch that shit now.
Because it's really a bully.
Yeah, I think like a young kid smashing their face.
I'm just like, oh, that is terrible.
Yeah, they're smashing their face
or taking TRT in their 20s.
I know for why.
It's crazy, man.
Yeah, in the new world.
I mean, listen, I'm right now drinking caffeine
to be slightly more interesting.
So I don't want to be a hypocrite.
But that just, I mean, it's just so like pointless.
Yeah, it's kind of like the flow state.
We're just talking about it.
It's pointless.
Why?
Yeah.
Well, some girl gonna be like, oh, your jaw is great.
But what happens?
Nothing happens.
Yeah, what's the methodology?
What are they called looks maxing?
I saw that.
This dude's like breaking his legs to get taller.
Yeah.
So people are breaking their legs to grow two inches.
There's a surgery for that.
Like I joke a lot about being a hide supremacist.
It's really not as great as you,
like just if you're listening right now,
like it's not really like way better.
Like we have a way short of lifespan, actually.
I know.
We're always hitting our heads on these people's door.
We get CTE much, much, much.
Yeah, and when we go to a concert,
everyone's mad at us or hurts our esteem.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, we have our issues.
We have our issues, man.
Well, it's like a giraffe, man.
The gravity is like pulling you down.
Yeah, I think every inch or past five, 10,
you lose like a year on average, something like that.
Yeah, every, my kids play violin at the old folks homes.
And every time I go in there,
I'm always saying to Amy, I'm like,
no one's over six foot in here.
Yeah.
Well, my family lived in their 90s now.
They're like old Swiss vampires.
I think that's impressive about that.
Yeah.
Did you live a while?
You like half Chinese, right?
Yeah, half Chinese, but half Irish,
so it offsets, I think.
No, they live a while.
Irish has some good DNA.
Where do you get the height then?
My dad's Irish.
He's like 65.
Probably, you know, a few generations.
The Black Irish.
Yeah, conquering from the North.
It's conquerors.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what my dad Irish is too.
I have a good friend that's like really big
into showing like how the British Isles
were black, you know, in the 17 hackies.
I kind of like black truth or sometimes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like they're kind of hilarious.
They're like, William Shakespeare?
Black.
Yeah.
Well, you look at like the...
Some of it's right though.
Yeah, yeah.
When you look at all the manifests of the people
that were actually going, and this is what he points out.
The Moors, right?
Well, no, not the Moors.
The Barbers.
Who?
No, no.
This is like when he is talking about the flow
from the British Isles down into the Caribbean.
Okay.
The reason why they were so able to take over the Caribbean
so quickly was because they looked like them.
They were the lighter blacks.
I'd like to see some...
I need to see more on that.
I don't...
I haven't committed it to memory.
Light and black.
Light and black.
So they like, Haley Berry looking bitch.
Exactly.
Fine.
It's fine.
I can say...
There is some of that though.
You see that sometimes.
And I grew up in South Florida and the light-skinned Jamaicans
run.
The darkness.
Food, my friend in Idaho is a light-skinned Jamaican.
She's the one who's like...
She's European then.
Yeah.
Or she acts European, doesn't she?
She was in North...
Yeah.
Yeah.
They're really into like precious metal and...
Yeah.
But she's black.
The proof is in the pudding.
They'll mess with the light-skins.
That's right.
Yeah.
But she's still black though.
Yeah.
Well, it's fine.
This was fun.
Anything else?
So fun.
That was a blast.
Oh yeah.
You took a lot of notes.
I know.
These are all clips.
That's why I write lot notes.
Tell the people about a biotrat.
Yeah, yeah.
And by the way, I'm not even remotely associated financially.
I just love it.
Yeah.
Like I swear to God, I'm just like...
People need to learn this stuff.
Because it's like...
I get support.
I really do.
Yeah.
I'm selling black old biochar.
That's the name of it.
I'm guessing from my garden.
Blackholdbiochar.com.
We are making premium biochar.
It's not charcoal.
Like a lot of the biochar that you can buy from different very large box stores.
They're selling charcoal as biochar.
We're actually making...
We have like the...
From an alchemical perspective, you would call it a retort.
You would call it like a retort kiln, which means we isolate the outside environment.
Like next to no oxygen when we cook our biomass.
And so we get the really good stuff with all the nano-diamonds and all the rest of it
in it.
And so, yeah, blackholdbiochars where we're selling it.
We'll put a link in the video.
Awesome.
And then I have a podcast, the Bio-Crismo podcast, where all this good stuff...
That we're talking about.
Yeah, he does mine a lot too.
It's great.
Well, people got to flow all together, by the way.
Yeah.
Great.
We hang a lot.
Yeah, great.
Well, thanks for coming on, gentlemen.
That was fun.
Thank you so much, guys.
Peace.
Thanks for watching all the way to the end, guys.
It means a lot.
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