There are actually bigger Olmec
heads that are made out of limestone that have been rained
on for 3000 years. And it's like a, it's like the face melted off
the front of it. So the pyramids would look like they've been
melting if they were there 12,000 years ago being rained on
until Egypt turns dry. The Great Pyramid is the one that is
aligned to TrueNorth perfectly. No, we're just so disconnected
from this outer world that exist around this that I'm kind of
getting off in the loo now, but this is the you know, this is
the time to talk about that. But yeah, I think that there are, I
think that there's definitely a natural energy that people
connect to. I'd like to welcome to the show,
Luke Caverns. How you doing I'm doing awesome, man. Thank
you so much for having me on. Luke? Oh, thank so much for driving
all the way over here. To come into the studio, man. Because we
originally were going to do this on Zoom. And I'm like, where do
you are? You're not that far away from me. Just Yes. Come on
over. We'll do a sit down, man. So I appreciate you making the
trip out here, man. Yeah, well, it took us a couple
of times, having to re scheduled the podcast. But uh, yeah, I'm
glad that the first time we're doing this is in person and it's
a real treat to be here and see your studio and meet you. And
yeah, it's for people watching. It's pretty amazing to see
somebody start a virtual, you know, podcast and move to in
person. It's, it's such a leap that I just want to publicly
acknowledge, amazing. Thanks so much, man. I
appreciate that. Yeah, I've been been hustling for a long time
with this man. So I appreciate those words. But I wanted to
have you on the show, man. Because your your take on
ancient mysteries, lost history, ancient Civilizations is super,
super cool. I like to geek out about that. So we're gonna go
deep down multiple rabbit holes in this conversation. Because
you're all you came all the way out here. So we're gonna just go
into it and and go at it. So I got to ask you, what was the
first? What was the thing that got you interested going down
this road of ancient civilizations, ancient
mysteries, because it's not the most lucrative of professions
if, if archaeologists tell us the truth, sure, yeah. Unless
you're Grave Digger or grave robbers. Yeah. And you're
Indiana Jones. And that's a different conversation. Yeah, that can that can be
profitable. It's not deadly. So my earliest, it's been
interesting, you know, going down this path, I haven't, I
hadn't really taken much time to sit and think about how the
journey has played out until I started coming on podcast, and I
had to talk about it. And so I've spent a lot of time
thinking about, you know, what am I what are some of my first
memories of falling in love with ancient history, I actually
think that the very first memory that I have, is maybe 2005. And
my parents are having over some of their some of their friends.
And they basically banish me to my room, and they're having some
of their friends over to watch movie they banished me to my
room. And they say, you know, the movie we were watching, it's
not appropriate, you go in and watch Star Wars on VHS and, and
I remember I'm sitting there watching Attack of the Clones on
VHS and my little, you know, old box TV. And, and I hear this
like thunderous sound of swords clashing, and people yelling in
the next room. And like my parents, my dad had a theater
room. So when the bass would rumble, it would shake the house
a little bit. And so I open up the door, and I look and I see
this, I see this just battle scene of these two ancient
armies clashing against each other. And so I walk up and
there was there's a glass door to the theater room, and I walk
up and I'm not supposed to, there were tons of movies I
wasn't supposed to watch but and so I walk up and I'm sitting
outside this glass door, and all I hear is this low rumbling
coming through the doors. And I'm just watching these two
ancient armies go at each other. And I it's just a very visceral
memory that I have. I've never seen anything like that. And
maybe it was the fact that my parents were telling me I
couldn't watch it. And, and so I sit down on the floor outside of
the outside of the theater room, and I watch like two and a half
hours of this movie without really hearing much of it at
all. And I don't know, I think just the imagery, like so many
people throughout the last two 3000 years that were obsessed
with the ancient past before them. Something about it just
resonated with me deeply. And then even from the time that I
was a little kid. It was like the it was like something in the
ancient world was calling out to me and like grabbing my heart,
and I never lost it. On top of that, as I started getting
older, my dad would tell me more about his dad and his
grandfather and his great grandfather, all of which Were
antiquarian and amateur archaeologists and treasure
hunters in the American Southwest. And so they spent,
they made their money in oil of which we don't have any of that
money now, but they made all their money in oil. And
basically, they use that oil money to fund expedition
searching for lost Spanish gold and lost Native American
treasures. And my grandfather, on my dad's side, he discovered
the seven last gold mines of New Mexico, it's like a, it's like a
big legend in, in New Mexico. And then probably, I want to say
70 years before that, in the 1890s. My great, great, great
grandfather is involved. If you pick up a book that's like the
legends of Texas, there's one called The Bill Kelly mine, and
it's about it's about the four Reagan brothers since that's my
paternal last name. And those four brothers, one of which is
my great, great, great great grandfather get caught in this
60 year treasure hunt for this last Spanish gold. That's that's
down in the canyons of Big Ben. And so I just grew up hearing
these stories and and in the end, there was a gold mine
operation that exploded and somebody died and they lost all
their wealth and and my dad was born in the fallout of that
poverty that came afterwards. So my dad did not pick up the
fascination for ancient history and exploration, my dad just had
to climb his way out of really bad life. I picked up the
fascination through my dad. So I guess that was sort of in my
blood, even though I didn't know any of those guys, but it just I
kind of ruminated on, you know, what my forefathers had done
before me. And that kind of inspired the sense of oh, man, I
want to do something like that, be an explorer and discover
ancient things. I have a whole bunch of Native American
artifacts that they discovered. In a in a box in North Carolina,
where my parents are at, on my mom's side, my grandpa, he was a
traveling missionary. But I guess he was kind of like a
biblical historian as well. So he cared about the the biblical,
he cared about the world that the Bible took place in. And
when I was I remember sitting in church, hearing him preach the
most fascinating parts of that was when he would put you in the
shoes of people living in the Near East at the time. And put
you in their shoes of what their life was like. And I didn't
realize but that was the beginning of me becoming an
anthropologist because I was curious about what their actual
lives are like. So my dad's side, I have this sense of
adventure and discovery on my grandpa's side, I have this, I
have this historian influence, and I guess, an anthropological
influence. And those two things just pushed me my, my entire
life towards where I'm at now. And then the last thing is, my
dad and I, the way that we bond still today, is watching
historical movies, or historical documentaries and pausing it
every 30 seconds to talk for 15 minutes about something, you
know, and then resume it. And so, so yeah, all of my familial
influences pushed me towards history. And I guess, sort of
being an explorer along with it. And your DNA, obviously. Yeah, yeah. It's, it's, there's no question
that's in the blood, so generational that I mean, you
could just I could as you're laying it all out, it's just
generational that you Yeah, that you were almost destined. Like
if you were on the other side, and you're writing out a soul
blueprint or soul plan. I'm like, What do I want to do this
life? I really want to be like, I want to go into like
adventures in archaeology and oh, this family go in this one.
This one. This one will walk you right through What's really what's really
interesting is I think when when It was there, man. Yeah, is
there so I have to ask you that. I was in kindergarten, we had a
career day and kindergarten but it was it was actually like your
school picture day, but But you would pick your outfit. Yeah,
you know, that would match with what you with what you wanted to
do. And I did not know, but I put on I put on Theodore
Roosevelt's like, his Ranger hat, or it was It wasn't even a
ranger or a cowboy hat. Some? Yeah, it was it was his field
hat I put, I put something like that on. And I put sort of like
a like a duster jacket on kind of like an explorer. And I had I
had the binoculars and I have that is my kindergarten class
photo is me as an explorer. And my mom, I didn't know about this
till maybe a couple years ago, and my mom pulled that out and
framed it for me and gave it to me for Christmas. Yeah. And so
now that photo sits on one of our bookshelves at home. But
yeah, I mean, even in kindergarten, you know, What was the movie with the two
ancient civilizations? Ancient environments? Were fighting each
other? I have a get I have a feeling I know what it is. What do you think it was? It's the Mummy. The Mummy. No, no, it wasn't the
mummy. I tell you what, though. I'll tell you what. I was so
scared to watch the mummy for the longest time. My dad was
always telling me oh, we got to watch this movie. We got to
watch this movie and he had this little drawer with VHS tapes in
it. And the one that was always sitting on top was the mummy
where you see Brendan Fraser and a woman necessary but then you
have the face. The sand Yeah, I never wanted to watch it because
it looked too scary. But I ended up watching him. I mean, maybe,
I don't know, at some point shortly after that, but it was
actually Troy. Okay. All right, Troy, that's,
that's a much better movie That that started my Troy
started everything. That's a great movie. And that's that's the earliest
memory I have of falling in love with ancient history. And then,
you know, I don't know, maybe I'm five or six, and I'm kind of
learning to read. And so I'm flipping through my
grandfather's on my mom's side, flipping through his ancient
history books. And I, you know, I could read the word Troy, T R,
O Y. And, and I take it to my grandpa, and I would have him
read to me about Troy in this book. And so it's this book
called Lost Cities. And I ended up stealing it from him. I don't
know, sometime when I was like, 10 years old, and I never gave
it back. So I think he's okay with it. Yeah, he's definitely
okay. So yeah It's funny, you know, going down
into, it's a good segue into lost cities, because Troy was a
myth. Yeah, for the longest time, I mean, was like, God,
it's just an analogy. It's something like, you know, it's
a, it's just a folklore, if you will. But then they found it.
They actually found Troy. So that, and I want to hear your
point of view on this means that kind of things are happening
more and more now where things that were thought to be legend,
they're finding proof of like they did that there was a city
off the coast of India, that they found underneath the ocean.
Okay, that was a a city that was myth. And they're like, No, it's
they found ads that's happening everywhere. It's starting to
happen more and more and established archaeology, or
traditional archaeology, or archaeologists, mainstream
archaeology, which sticks to the narrative that's been thrown at
them from 100 years ago, which we'll get into the pyramids in
Egypt in a minute. But the old guard is having a problem.
rectifying the way they think about things because it's been,
that's what I find fascinating about mainstream archaeologists,
is that they, they, they think that what they know, is the end
all be all, and there is no room for new ideas or new things that
come up in new ideas or new things could come up. But they
they can't move the needle too much. Yeah. Yeah. Like they
can't if they move the needle too much like No, no, no, no,
but that's what it was Sadra, 100 years ago, where I would
imagine that a field like archeology, and anthropology is
a field that is a constant state of change, constant state of
movement, because you're finding out new information, new
technologies, DNA, you know, they can go in and look at
things or carbon dating, other things that weren't available 50
years ago, is now available, new information is being found, or
new ancient civilizations are found in the Amazon or something
like that. Yeah, that confirm myths or something like that.
How do you think that, you know, because you're obviously the new
guard. And, you know, Ed, who was on the show before, who was
one of your, one of your teachers, and Burnett, who's a
wonderful, wonderful teacher leans more towards the older
guard, not that he's not open to things. I'm not trying to put
him on the spot. But two very different generations. How do
you see this moving forward? And why do you think the older
generation is? So like, they think their minds are closed?
And by the way, it's not just archaeology? It's physics. It's
all of it's all of it. It's all of it. Yeah. Wow. There's a lot to
unpack there. Yeah, so first? Yeah. Dr. Barnhart, professor of
mine, and I still travel with him. I think this year, he and I
are doing five trips together. So we're very, very close
friends. And yeah, sure. I mean, he's, he's, he's an
archaeologist, you know, I guess academic. Actually, actually,
like world class academic through through and, but he has
actually more of an open mind than a lot I would have. I would
have to agree with you. Yeah. And a bit more than others.
Yeah. Yeah. He's not you know, he's not he's not jumping on the
Atlantis ship. But he's got all kinds of ideas Atlantis ship Atlantis, what do
you mean, what's the Atlantis ship? Well, well, you know, there's,
there's this whole push now that we say this whole push you have
a lot of people who are diving into Atlantis is kind of like
the umbrella term for all of it. But people are interested in
lost civilizations that are kind of haven't quite been
identified. And I don't know, you know, you look at the
dialogues of Plato talking about, you know, the story of
Atlantis, that kind of becomes the umbrella term. And so
there's kind of like Graham Hancock's idea. There's this
idea that there was a globe spanning civilization 12,000
years ago, and people just put the title on that as Atlantis.
Really got it. Dr. Barnard is not jumping on that. But he has
tons of other ideas that aren't commonly accepted. And what I'm
hoping is that as time goes on, I'm not an academic. I went to
school for anthropology but I'm not an academic. But I am hoping
that the younger generation that's coming in, and maybe with
the with the advent of just an explosion of technology, that
people are going to become more open to paradigm shifting a lot.
You know? Don't you agree that right now
our paradigm shifting almost daily in our life AI when did AI
showed up? Oh, my God AI showed up. What a year ago?
Yeah. A year. And I mean, we know now it's, like really
showed up like when it became it's part of the Zeitgeist. It's
been around for a long time, YouTube's been using AI since
2010. Sure, and so many others, but like, now it's everywhere.
And it's going faster and faster and faster and faster. So our
paradigm has shifted constantly. And yet a lot of these academic
fields are moving like molasses. I'll give you I'll give you a
specific example of what I think is wrong with academia right
now. You have, I'm not gonna say his name, although he deserves
for me to say his name. There there is a there is an
archeologist who's very well, he's he's, you know, I mean,
he's, he's a world respected. Dr. Jones, Dr. Jones, Dr. Jones,
I understand. I understand. Call him out. It's okay. It's okay.
He's old. That's fine. Yeah, he he. I don't know he
he's out of he's a professor out of out of the Midwest. And he's
specializes in ancient South and Central or Central, Central and
South American archaeology. And he is probably like, the most
vehement vicious archaeologist that I have ever seen. And he's
a part of the he's a part of the organization that was trying to
get Graham Hancock's and ancient Apocalypse taken down off of
Netflix. Yeah, he's a part of that he's a part of that group.
And he even blocked me on Twitter. I've never even
interacted with this guy, just because you said, Sure, sure.
And because I'm open to ideas, I'm not crusading anything in
particular, but because I'm open to certain ideas. And because
I'm associated with people are friends with people got our
shows up, God forbid, I'm friends with people who have
slightly different views about ancient history than me. He's a
zealot. Yeah, exactly. And so he blocked me, because of the
people I'm associated with. He has tweeted about me more than
50 times since he blocked me, which, which is like the most
slimy thing you could do. And he's probably one of the guys
that's like, the best example I can give of somebody who is
totally fine with the status quo, you know, and doesn't
really care about pushing anything of real significance
forward. Now, why is that? Because he wrote the textbooks,
and he sells $180 textbooks to his students at University have
to buy his textbooks, and his textbooks have the information
that he doesn't want to be changed. He's just one example
of hundreds of people in all fields of academia that are
essentially gatekeeping, you know, the future. So it's going
to take this old guard to literally die, before things
start moving forward. And I don't know, maybe this next
generation people that are my age or so maybe they become
exactly like that, again, I don't know. But I just hope that
I just hope that this next generation looks at the at the
state of the world, and kind of realizes that people are going
to have to put their, they're gonna have to put their egos to
the side for the betterment of the world. You know. It's seems almost like that, I
think that the new generation, I don't think that's going to be a
problem, because the new generation information is
changing so rapidly, there are no textbooks in the way that
they were before they have to print them and have to sit there
and they're constantly being updated. All this information is
constantly updated, shows like this is getting information out
to the public, in ways that you would normally have to go into
an academic environment to have conversations like this, or even
to, you know, look into this stuff like the History Channel,
and, and these kinds of these kinds of in podcasts like this,
where we can go in deeper, but the information is changing so
rapidly, that I don't think that the the new guard that is coming
in is going to have an issue with that because I don't think
they'll have control of not like the old guard, the old guard,
like you wrote a book that book. Sure that book didn't change for
50 years, like you know, they've made it change. It was locked in
and if you wrote it, you have definitely an incentive to keep
it there as opposed to like, hey, maybe maybe they're right,
let me rewrite the book for edition five. And sorry, guys,
this is a constantly changing giant, constantly changing
field. Yeah, we're updating things constantly. So what we
taught you last year, probably we found something new that
changes that. You know, is is the egg the healthy part of that
the yolk the healthy part of the egg white the health bar. I
remember that. That was a that was a debate when I was coming
up like first of all, like no, no, no, no egg whites horrible.
That's the bad part for you now is the ideal, then they switched
it around. I remember that as a kid. I'm like, Guys, can we? Can
we at least with the egg? Can we at least figure that out? Just eat the egg man? It's gonna be okay. Now.
Alright, so let's dive into something real quick. The, the
14th, the worldwide civilization that Graham Hancock talks about?
I love Graham, I think he's, I think what Graham is doing is
remarkable. Whether you agree with everything or not, he's
asking questions. And he's forcing that he's forcing
dialogues that might have not been. Yeah. And that's all that
that's what a good investigator does, just posing questions.
Now, this idea of this 14 or 14,000 years ago, there was this
worldwide civilization. I love a good story, because I'm a
filmmaker. So I love a good story. And I love I love his
ancient Apocalypse show and all of this stuff. There are
elements of that theory that makes sense to me. I don't know
if there's enough information to say that there was one worldwide
civilization that all of sudden crashed down because even Rome,
which was a huge empire, and ran for about 1000 years, which is
pretty, pretty damn good. Wasn't the whole world. Yeah. Could it
be possibly, but man, it's been wiped out completely? I don't
think that that per This is my own personal thing. I don't
think there there was something that big maybe there was, I
think there might have been two or three. That could have been
an Atlantean Atlantean. Civilization, there could have
been Lumeria. That could have been a couple other big
civilizations. That's a possibility. What are your
thoughts on pre Younger Dryas? Do you agree with the Younger
Dryas theory in general that something happened 12,000 years
ago that caused I mean, the math the way he lays it out in that
in that show, and with Randall Carson, and and what Graham is
talking about, they lay out a very convincing hypothesis, very
convincing when there's actual, it seems to be geological proof,
things like that. I love to hear your thoughts on that whole
thing, sir. Yeah, yeah. So to start it off,
to start us off the Younger Dryas hypothesis, people. You
know, it's amazing that it's amazing that we somehow know for
certain what killed off the dinosaurs, but people are still
haven't figured out what happened 12,000 years ago, you
know, but There's no textbooks talking
about the dinosaur stuff. That's that important. Sure. Sure. Yeah. I think that,
but there's definitely enough evidence that something
cataclysmic happened to end the Ice Age. I think that a
plausible argument is that a large chunk of meteors from the
toward Meteor stream hit the North Atlantic ice cap, and just
instantly, he does that, yeah, instantly, just heated up the
world and ended the Ice Age. And so you have this global flooding
and the sea levels rise and everything. And I can say,
almost certainly without a doubt that maybe the majority of
humanity died during that George during that time period. I mean,
we have we lost 85% of our wildlife species in North
America. You ever notice when you go to a museum? There's not
really or when you go to a zoo? There's not really a North
America section, because we have like, rabbits, Fox, deer, Wolf
bear, wolf. We used to have We have moose a couple of years.
Sure, sure. But no, you're right. It's not like Africa. Yeah, we used to have all of
those species. You know, we had giant camels, we had elephants,
we had woolly mammoths. We have woolly mammoths. We had saber
toothed tigers, we had dire wolves. We had something called
the American lion, which looked exactly like the African lion
but twice as large. And so bear twos in the giant bear the short
faced bear the short, please. They think that the short face
bear was a barrier that stopped people from coming across the
Bering Strait or the Bering Strait started or balter, always
Bering Straits up north, and they think that that barrier was
so vicious that it was a barrier stopping people from coming into
the Americas. Although we know that that's not true. There were
people here before the Ice Age. Now we do how many? I don't
know. But yeah, I mean, all those species are gone. And, and
that's just to name a few. I didn't even mention the giant
sloth. I don't think there's so many. All those species are
gone. So you can imagine that if anybody was here in North
America, they're gone. And people all around the world, the
sea levels rise. You have people who are living along the
coastlines, you know, I don't really know if 12,000 years ago
there are people living farther inland because the amount of
trekking Yeah, yeah, I mean, you know, it's it's tough to live
further inland unless you're living along huge body of water.
But a lot of people died. A lot of coastal people died, probably
the majority of humanity died. So I totally agree with that. As
far as a 12,000 year old or pre Ice Age or Ice Age civilization,
I don't see it being impossible at all. I mean, they say that
the they say that moderately, are modern and are anatomically
modern human beings have been around for 200,000, maybe even
300,000 years. And so they didn't really do anything of
significance until 6000 years ago. So it took it took, it took
them at the very least 194,000 years to build itself to build a
town. You know, how do you want the same brain? Right, we had
the same brain drain you had you had people that were as smart as
Einstein living 150,000 years ago. You know, yeah, that so the
likelihood is that the likelihood is that there were
civilizations, the likelihood is I bet you there are
civilizations that existed 100,000 years ago, how, you
know, sophisticated, I don't know, but but But if you think about it on a
logical standpoint, if there was Did they engrave something on
the Hoover Dam for for future a civilization like ours, right
now exact just take our civilizations to civilization put 100,000 years
ago, and there's a cataclysmic, something happens, meteor hits,
the Yellowstone Volcano explodes, whatever that that
kills most 100,000 Yet, nothing's left. None of this.
There's no Styrofoam. There's no plastic, it's all gone. It's all
been worked on in the earth is I've been there twice. So yeah,
I think I think I saw a bunch of just taking it back in 100,000
years, it could all be what you would be not. There wouldn't be
bones left barely, unless it was hidden at a certain way. But
generally speaking, sure, it would be. I know, it's hard to
believe. But there was a show once on on history called
cowboy. I forgot the name of it. But it was like, What if all
humans left or something like that? Oh, really? Okay. And it
was such a fascinating show. Because they would literally
show like, if all humanity left today, how long would it take
for New York to go? And they just look, here's 1500 years
from now, the Empire State Building would crash? Because
they would Mongol? You know, they said that the last thing
humanity would have made that would still be functioning is
the Hoover Dam. Take about 100 100 120 years for it to the gear
the little things to pop and stop. Still Vegas would be the
last city to lose lights stuff that they have. They're
like engravings and things like that Hoover Dam because they
know it's gonna last forever. It's not going away. It's the
one thing that humanity in current day has made. That's
almost as it's so equivalent of last thing as long as a pyramid
sir. It's just so it was such a massive. I mean, I've ever been
there. Now. I want to go. It's just like you just there. Jesus,
man, it's can't even comprehend now, what they put in there A ton of people died in that
right? Oh, inside of people fell? Oh, absolutely. mean, it was a
whole other time. I bet you there has to be not to
get off in the weeds. But there has to be bodies of people who
are crushed by stones on the pyramids. And I'm like, well,
he's stuck down there. But they're gone. Yeah, they're
gone. So that's my point. So like, if there was if there were
if there were civilizations on earth 1000 years ago, you know,
how about if we reset every 10 15,000 years, every fifth 10
50,000 years, we said if you look into the yugas, you know,
the Yugas the the Indian cycle of true of you start from it's
24,000 years. So it's a 12 year cycle, you start at the top and
you're an enlightened, you're an enlightened species, meaning
that you are as close to source as possible. So you have access
to more information, you have access to more knowledge and so
on. And then as you start going down in time, and that cycle,
you start getting dumber and farther away from from ignorant
and you start losing your connection with source. I'm
getting a little spiritual here. And then when you get all the
way to the bottom of that, which is 12,000, which was about
12,000 years ago, oh really well, give or take. I'm not I'm
not excuse me, I'm mistaken on the time period, that when we
were at the lowest point was the Dark Ages. Because if you
remember why in this last 150 years, we have done insane
things. But we were sitting around for six, 400 years, 500
years. Nothing happened. Yeah, once wrote about quite a long
time when Rome fell. Nothing. Yeah, like it was the dark ages
and not one thing, then the Renaissance came. And that's
when we started to come back out. So we're now on the upward
swing. And that's why, at least from a spiritual standpoint,
we're supposedly accessing a lot more information, things are
starting to move much faster. And there's no argument of that.
I mean, I always wonder like, how is in the last 150 years?
We've done? I mean, my grandma, grandpa when he was born, there
was no cars. Oh, yeah. No planes. Electricity was a thing
recently. I mean, yeah. And now You know, he, when he died, the
Internet was in its infancy at AOL was kicking in when he died.
And when I was born, you know, I was born in the 70s, from the
70s to today. Good Lord, how much have we changed? So it's so
much information? That's so that's, that's the cycle. So
imagine if we are every 25,000 years recycling, like literally
just something happens. Okay, that didn't get it this time.
Let's reset, and we start the ball over again, with some sort
of cataclysmic thing. There is geological proof for multiple,
younger, dry or there's a younger drive. So there's a
couple other drives. There's multiple events over the
course of 1200 years or so. Yeah, there's 12000. About
there's multiple events over the course. So I want to say that
the Younger Dryas begins, I'm not an expert in this, but it
is. These are some rough dates. It begins around 12,800 years
ago, and it ends around 11,600 years ago. So that's like a 1200
year time span that multiple events happen to end the Ice
Age. It wasn't just like one thing
that just knocked that over the weekend. They think maybe right at the
very end, that's There was one thing, but there
was a bunch of things happening. Yes. So if a bunch of things
were happening, that could have given the people of the earth,
at least people who were in tune to that. The the the warning to
build those underground cities in Turkey? Oh, yeah. Or the ones
that they're discovering in China. And I mean, did you see
the one in China? That cavern system? It's okay, yes. I've seen some
about this on Twitter. Oh, my God, it's, I mean, they
still don't there's no, there's no record of it. No, they have
no idea who built it. It is massive, underground,
beautifully carved with things inside the walls. It was
stunning. Yeah. And then also in India, and all around the world,
there are these underground or inside mountain scenarios that
people could have very easily lived. So that that kind of
lines up. Like if they started seeing things like oh, man, oh,
shoot, we better start doing something about this. Yeah. Yeah. You know, it's,
it's, we're kind of at a point where it's anybody's best guess
as to what, as to what ancient cultures were doing, and what
they were in tune to, sometimes some, something I've tried to
think about is, think about how utterly handicapped we are in
modern society, there's no way that we could go out into the
wilderness and survive on our own. All the times I've been in
the jungle. If I actually had to live out there, I would die. You
know, think about, you know, animals seem to intuitively
predict be able to predict the weather. Yes. And you you, you
know, I visited indigenous people in the jungles of Central
America, and they are living in a different frequency a
different they're, I should say, they're attuned to different
things. You're you're Yeah, absolutely. And so, how do you
as a modern person, you know, I, I walk around with a crutch all
day, my phone in my pocket, you know, my car? Not our
technology, my air conditioning? Sure. How can I with all of my
books and everything, you know, that I read all the time? How
can I ever think that I can accurate accurately, put myself
in the shoes of an ancient person and be able to
definitively say what they were and we're not aware of, you
know, just their their, the I mean, we're studying Martians.
Basically, they lived a completely different life than
we do. Imagine how much you would be able to soak up. If you
lived outside every single day. I say outside just a much more
natural, yeah, much more natural way of life than then we have
today. Imagine how much you would soak up and know like, you
would be able. When the birds stop chirping. You go, Okay,
there's something there's there's other predator around or
there's going to be a storm. Let me look at the sky. You know,
you could you could smell it in the air. You could feel it in
the wind like we are just so our pineal gland is so calloused
now, you know, and literally, calloused or calcified. I
shouldn't say, you know, we're just so disconnected from this
outer world that exist around us that I'm kind of getting off in
the womb now. But this is the you know, this is the time to
talk about that. But yeah, I think that there are, I think
that there's definitely a natural energy that people
connect to, that you're supposed to be connected to. If enjoying this conversation, I
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inside. And I think that over the last,
I don't know, since the Industrial Revolution, we're
just slowly getting more and more and more disconnected from
the way we're supposed to be living. And I think that we're
not really at all in a place where we can definitively say
what was and wasn't happening some 12,000 years ago and what
people may have not been able to look, you guys even have
astronomers back then who were aware of different phenomena in
the sky to perhaps be able to, to predict meteor showers, you
know, or something that is going to enter into their atmosphere
and they need to burn burrow under the ground and build
cities underneath the ground. It just who knows man or maybe, you
know, you have those initial events in the Younger Dryas you
have these meteors from the toward MediaStream, pelting the
earth and then all of a sudden, all these people are like, Okay,
we got to go underground. Because when it hits the earth,
perhaps it raises the temperature, all of your
agriculture dies off. So you need to move underground. You
know, there's just so many things that can happen. You
know, I was talking to Christopher
Dunn the other day on the show, and it was something that I
came, I told him this and he completely agreed with me on it
is that we have built this technology in this technological
advancements that we've built on archaic energy. Yeah, we are
burning things to get electricity. Yeah, we are so
fragile, as a society. You know, anyone who's lost power in their
house for more than an hour, understands how how absolutely
vulnerable we are in this world, in the modern world. Because all
this technology is great, but Wi Fi goes out internet goes out.
This is absolutely useless. Absolutely useless. It does not
it does nothing for you. You know, everything without like
electricity. This room is just a box. That sounds cool. No one
can hear you screaming. Literally, it I always find that
fascinating that we've been we've spent so much energy on
creating technology, but we have not focused on the energy on how
to actually get energy in a more efficient, more robust way. Like
we are so burnt, we're basically cavemen. Yeah, we're burning
firewood, or oil to get electricity. You know, some something that's
funny that you just said, when you said, you know, if something
happened, like if our if our electric grid went off, and we
are, you know, say we can't power our phones anymore or
something, I think, you know, archaeologist, I don't know say
say it reminds me of people trying to study the study the
cult of Dionysus in Pompeii. So Pompeii the Mount Vesuvius
erupts and covers the city of Pompeii in a wall of ash. It's
excavated, you know, officially excavated some 1800 years later.
And they end up finding these rooms for the cult of Dionysus.
And I, and when you said, when you said, you know, this sounds
like a really cool box. It is my brain immediately went to Yeah.
Okay. So say, say a volcano erupts or something and people,
people excavate this room. 2000 years later, they would walk in
and they'll go, you hear the sound cancelling in here, look
at these old Oracle's that people are speaking into this
must have been a silence cults temple that people would come
into, right. And, and because it was so quiet, they could hear
maybe they thought they could hear the voices and the
microphones or the way that they spoke to the gods like, no,
that's not at all what this was meant for. That's what
archaeology is doing. We're probably so far off. I was with
I was with Dr. Barnhart in the not in the Museum of
Anthropology in Mexico City. And we were looking at the Maya gods
and he was like, he's like, Yeah, you know, they don't
really have a lot of love in their culture, do they? You
know, you don't see a lot of joy. Like you see another
culture, he's like, they're very McCobb and kind of scary. But on
the other hand, we're probably just dead wrong about everything
that we think about these people, you know, and so that
would that's what that's kind of, you know, giving your
audience an idea of like if people excavate this room 2000
years from now they're gonna have absolutely no idea what
they're looking at All the books will be gone. So
then all this knowledge is on paper, so it'll be gone I doubt
that this room would be around 2000 years but let's say argue
Yeah, for argument's sake that this this is made out of cement.
Yeah, you know, this is made out of like Roman cement, not hard
some sure sure Roman cement that's gonna last 2000 years.
And if it does, you're absolutely Right, they're gonna
find some you know, maybe they'll find some of these
resins. They'll think this they'll think
this was the gods. Yeah, this was this. This is the shrine
with the silence gods, right? You walk into the temple and
you'll hear anything. Yeah. Well, so Well, that isn't that
basically what ancient the theories of the Great Pyramids
were was basically a, you know, some British archaeologist, and
this is my understanding, please correct me if I'm wrong. Some
British archaeologists who first came into it, walked into the
Great Pyramid and they said, Oh, this must be a tomb for the, for
the Pharaoh. And, you know, there Look, there's a there's a
sort of coffin looking thing. That's what this is. And that
theory, which is a dude's idea, has been held on to by
mainstream archaeologists all these years, though, there is no
proof that anybody's have ever been found there. That anything
that connects to any other tombs that they found in Egypt, all of
the tombs are completely different, and nothing has ever
been, but yet, they still hold on to the idea that the Great
Pyramid is a tomb when there's absolutely, truly no proof
whatsoever that there was other than a British archaeologist
from the 1800s. Who said that, is that correct? Partly, yeah, okay. There's a
lot that goes into that. So, where, to us in the modern day,
the earliest literary source that we get that the pyramids
were used, that the Great Pyramids of Giza, because
that's, you know, it's different than the pyramid of gunas. Sure,
but if we're talking about the the Giza Pyramids, or let's say
that the five, the Five Great Pyramids, so let's start with
the step pyramid of Saqqara the pyramid of zoster, although that
one is different than the others. But after that you
actually have the first Great Pyramid is called the Red
Pyramid. That is, it's not at Giza, but it's, I want to say 15
or 50 miles south of Giza, then you've got the Great Pyramid of
Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure. And then you have the Bent Pyramid
in there as well. So the earliest literary evidence that
we have, that the great pyramids are being referred to as tombs
for you know, long dead pharaohs, is in about 450 BC.
When Herodotus travels to Egypt, from Athens, I believe in
Greece, and he's essentially just exploring Egypt and writing
about it. Is he the one is he the one who
told Plato about Atlantis? No, that's Solon Thank you. So, so, Solon, is about 150
years before Heraclitus. And Heraclitus is alive at the time
of Socrates. And Socrates is before right before Plato, I
believe so Plato is a little bit after as It goes, Socrates, Plato,
Aristotle, in the in this in the teacher, okay. Yes, yeah, and
the teacher to student And I think that I think that
Socrates and Heraclitus were friends, I think they I think
they knew each other. There were boys that Yeah, and so so
Heraclitus, he documents he documents Egypt, and maybe
around 450 BC, and he speaks to they always call them priests
but who a tour guide in Egypt. That is a real thing. By the
way, there were tour guides in ancient Egypt there there were Of course, because it was the
the biggest building on the planet and everyone who walked
by the like, Would you like a tour? Here buy this. Yeah, I that has been going on
forever. That has been going on for at least 2500 years. I can imagine just like you have
a generational generational tour guides. Why did you get in my
grandfather, the grandfather of graphite tour out of the Great
Pyramids. That's that's actually
hilarious. I bet you that that's the case. I'm sure. There are
people there. I'll get back to Radisson in a second. But there
are people in Egypt. So you know, the, you know, the
Egyptian headdresses that have the Cobra chef sitting up on the
front. They think that that comes from an ancient practice.
Oh, also Moses, how he can turn his he could turn the Cobra into
a staff. Turn the staff into back into a cobra film. Yes,
yeah. There are still people in Egypt that can do that. And that
is a practice that has been carried down for 1000s of years
turning a cobra into a staph yes, they can grab a cobra by
its head. And I don't know how these It's a it's a it's a it's a it's
a Vulcan nerve pinch. Yeah, it's something like that.
And so they'll grab a cobra by its head and it'll stiffen up
and turn into like a staff and people people, they'll take
they'll take that and they'll wrap it and put it up on top of
their head where the cobra is is alive within the cobra is still
alive. Yeah. Sitting on top of their head doesn't bite them or
anything. It's like these Egyptian snake charmer. And
there's a Egyptologist who's, he's really fascinating guy, Bob
Brier. He just retired. He's kind of one of these guys who
has a lot of these not really accepted theories about Egypt
but he's you He's an Egyptologist and just amazing.
He just retired. But one of his discoveries in Egypt was, I
guess, maybe not a discovery but he brought it to the forefront
and let people know about it. That these Egyptians snake
charmers and and the things that you that we hear about in the
book of Exodus is still happening today. There's still
people who can do it. So these, these cultural trades are being
handed down over time. So yeah, there were probably, yeah,
there. There were probably there. Today, some sort of gods.
Yeah. So anyways, so Harada is traveling through Egypt. And he
has a tour guide that takes him to the great pyramids and, you
know, he's course asked him the purpose of it, and they tell him
that the they tell him the names that we know today, which is
Khufu, Khafre, him and curry. And, and so that is, first, I
think its earliest literary evidence that we have of the
pyramids being attributed to somebody, there may be some
graffiti that goes back before that. But that's how far back it
goes as far as we know. And so that's 450 BCE. And just to give
people an idea of how much longer after the suppose time of
the pyramids, they say that the Great Pyramid was built in about
2560. You know, that's the exception. And so and so even if
it was built in 2560 BC, that's more than that's 2100 years
later that Herodotus is standing at the base of it. And he writes
down for us, essentially, who the Egyptian priests tell him
the pyramids were for the tour guides. Yeah. And so I think I
want to say that they that that is also the same source that we
get the 20 year estimate from that it was 20 years per
pyramid, which is That has been disproven, like,
just just math, it doesn't make, they would have to be putting so
many bricks up every second or every minute for that that time
on. Yeah, that certainly doesn't
make sense. Um, as far as when they were built. That's a tough
one to say, because the archeology, and the carbon
dating seems to be all over the place. Now, I have seen so
here's the thing, if we if we placed the pyramids at 12,000
years old, and I haven't seen anybody talking about this, and
I haven't put this in a video yet, I'm sure I will, one day.
The blocks in the great on the Great Pyramid are on the three
great pyramids of Giza, the blocks that are exposed right
now and most of the casing stones, although we all know on
the third pyramid, the smallest one mid career, whoever was
putting granite casing stones on them, but on the middle pyramid
and the Great Pyramid, those are all they were white limestone
Polish casing stones. Now, if they were there 12,000 years
ago, they are in Egypt during what is called the African human
period where Egypt is a swamp and it's raining a lot. I have
seen limestone megaliths in swamps that are 3000 years old,
and they're unrecognizable there. So there are 17 Olmec
heads in Mexico, that we only have 17 Because they're the ones
that survived. They're made out of basalt. Basalt is not as hard
as granite, but Basalt is not going anywhere. And you can
still, you know, it can be rained on for 3000 years, and
you'll still see the face there. There are actually bigger Olmec
heads that are made out of limestone that had been rained
on for 3000 years. And it's like a, it's like the face melted off
the front of it. So the pyramids would look like they've been
melting if they were there 12,000 years ago being rained on
until Egypt turns dry. So if we go back to 1000 years ago, it
probably takes 4000 more years, maybe around 8000 years ago 6000
BCE, that Egypt starts drying up and and people start really
moving close to the Nile. So there's some dilemmas there.
It's like limestone would be really, really, really, really,
really deteriorated after 4000 years of being rained on because
I've seen it. However, the explanation of the explanation
of Old Kingdom or Old Kingdom Pharaohs commissioning the
pyramids to be built in 20 years, there's actually one
Pharaoh Sneferu that they attribute to having built three
pyramids he built the pyramid of my doom which suppose you know,
collapsed the Bent Pyramid which they say had an issue in the way
that the corbels ceilings were aligned and so he had to narrow
the he had to narrow I guess the projection of how tall it was.
But for some reason, he still finished it and then he moved on
to the Red Pyramid. So how does one guy build three pyramids and
is over the course of his life? And each of them take 20 years
so I mean, how old is this guy by the end of the and He started when you were your
age. He had he had and he lived beautifully because he's bright
ending off around 90 Sure. In a time period where people were
not living till 90 Exactly. And so that's, it's
tough thing. It's a tough thing to buy outright. I'm kind of I
actually, I kind of find myself in a unique belief that I don't
really know, I don't know who shares these ideas. Although I
think Graham Hancock is is coming around to this idea, too,
that he believes that the Sphinx the origin of the space is
possibly a lot older than the rest of Egypt. And that I've
kind of just thrown this out there. This is an idea that
there may have once upon a time been a sphinx cult that just
like the coltan here, sure, yeah. Once upon a time, there
may have been a sphinx cult in Egypt. And we know that the
great pyramids are built on these kind of natural primordial
mounds, like if you go down into the bottom of the Great Pyramid,
I believe I've been there, but I've seen tons of photos of it.
That there there is a mound underneath the pyramid. And so
you have this idea, this primordial mound that they saw a
significant and they covered it up. For what exact purpose the
pyramid serves the entire purpose of that. I don't know I
don't believe that it was just a tomb. Maybe it was maybe
somebody decided they needed to be buried in there, because you
see that box that's like the right size of a person at that
time. But no evidence of of anybody in any of the three
great pyramids at all, that there's no evidence that they
were as hard physical, archaeological evidence that
people were buried and they're not on a body never found a
mummy. There's no hieroglyphs. There's no hieroglyphs. And
that's another thing. So when you this is this is, I think
maybe one of the biggest hang ups in Egyptology. That's, of
course, not really acknowledged much at all, by Egyptologist.
But when you go to the pyramid of Saqqara, which is said to
have been built by Zoster with his architect, Emo tip and about
2800, or that might be an over projection, but let's say around
2700 BC, that is the step pyramid that's built out of
modestly sized limestone blocks. I mean, it's probably this big,
so it takes maybe a couple of people Sure, sure, no, carry
that. And there's this huge labyrinth of tunnels underneath
the pyramid. And when you go down there, you know who this
Pyramid was built for, because his name is written all over the
labyrinths underneath the pyramid. And there's actually
hieroglyphs of him standing, performing divine ceremonies and
visiting his palace and the afterlife. And the walls, you
may have seen this before, where it's got the turquoise scarabs
all over the walls, the little blue, it's decorated, like his
palace and Memphis was when you're there it is, you know who
this pyramid is built for. But then the next five Pharaohs that
come through all are the next four pharaohs, but there's a
fifth one come through, and they all build pyramids that are even
bigger, even more grand. But but they don't really put their name
now we're not gonna humble they're humble. I'm not gonna
put my name in it. Yeah, no, they're not humble Faris. I
mean, I mean, we through literary evidence, we know that
synephrine was a good person. We know sniffer existed. We know
when he existed. And we know he was a good person. But there's
no way he's not. If he built a pyramid and he has his tomb
somewhere. There's no way he's not putting his name on there.
You know why you build you build the biggest building on the face
of the planet until the Eiffel Tower is built. And then you
don't put your name anywhere inside of it. Or even on the
mortuary temples on the outside of it. Just there's something
there that that that But as is traditional
Egyptologist still holding on to that idea that these are tombs.
Absolutely. Why that makes no sense. There's so much counter
evidence, yeah. To this, like this conversation, any logical
human being. I mean, we'd say there's just no evidence, Well, I kind of find myself in
this in between area where we have a precedence. For people
being buried in pyramids, there are other pyramids that are
buried. But these three great pyramids, the Bent Pyramid and
the Red Pyramid, these are all the most grand pyramids, and you
don't see the hieroglyphs in them, and in any of them, any,
any of the five of them anything. And I find myself at
this place where I'm thinking, okay, maybe, maybe, maybe the
guy who commissioned this is buried in it. But that cannot be
the only purpose of this pyramid. Look at all look at all
of the chambers and the labyrinth and the corridors that
are inside of the pyramid. There is a greater purpose to this
than a simple tomb. I mean, the traditional idea is that
sometime in remote history, people are taking their dead
kings and burying them out in the desert with all their
treasures and stuff. And either people go back out to visit the
king or people go to loot the Kings treasures. And as they
uncover them from the sand, they find this strange effect that
people are being Almost five in the sand. So Egypt starts to
grow this death cult, this is the traditional idea. A lot of
it makes sense. But it starts to get strange when it gets to the
Great Pyramids. So, so people started getting this idea that,
okay, the body needs to be mummified, there's something
significant about the shimmering sands of the desert, that
mummify people's bodies when you're buried in them. And this
is remote history, you know. And then, so eventually, they, they
noticed that they discovered this, because kings burials are
being looted, and their body is just sitting out in the open
with all the artifacts gone. So it's not a respectful way to
like, treat your, you know, your chieftain of, you know, whatever
old ancient Egyptian tribe you have. So they start putting
rocks on top of a building these things that look like a Twinkie
out of rocks. Oh, this is one way back. Yeah, yeah. And so
these are called mastabas. And so sure enough, people are
ripping the blocks off of the mastabas. And get it taking all
the king's treasure and stuff. And and you know, you come in
town, you're like, did we just bury the king with this thing
last week? Why is it for sale here? Let me ask you real quick. Why
are they being buried with treasure? If they understand,
then this is this is the stretch? If they understand that
they can't take it with them? Well, they thought they could.
So is that so that's the idea. Yeah, because, but even then,
though, with the as as time progressed, though, that idea
started to not make as much sense were in the later in the
later generations closer to where we are, they understood
that they're not taking the gold with them. Yeah, bye, bye. By the end of
the New Kingdom of Egypt, around 1000 BCE, when the Persians and
other people start to come in. A lot of these old ideas are gone,
like like the death cult of Egypt, people thinking they're
going to be reborn, and the next life, they're gonna be able to
take all their items with them. All that's kind of gone, by the
time the Greek start ruling Egypt, and you have Alexandre
and told me all the way down to Cleopatra. The Greeks keep the
tradition going, but they don't really, I mean, some of the
Greeks don't even believe in their own gods. So we're getting
back to a point of like heightened consciousness where
people are starting to realize the reality of the world that
they're in. So there's this time period where they think they're
going to take things with them. And so they build these mastabas
above ground, and then people still rob them, then they tunnel
under the ground and put a mastaba on top of that people
still break in and get them. So they think that their pyramid
came from, okay, we've we've tried burying them above ground
under giant rocks, it's not going to work, we've tried to
bury them under giant rocks inside of a tunnel underground,
that still doesn't work. So let's just build something so
big that nobody can ever get inside of it. And then
eventually, they think that there may have been a thought
that's like, Okay, if your body is now violated in the
afterlife, your body has to be protected in this life. And if
it's violated and people take stuff from it, it affects you in
the next life. So they thought that the Pharaoh was like, Well,
I'm just gonna build the biggest thing that the world's ever seen
in that didn't work. Because we know that people were tunneling
into and into it in the 1000s of years ago that people were were
tunneling in. So I see the logic behind why somebody might build
something that big. If we were to open up the pyramid, and
there's one chamber in there with a sarcophagus shaped box,
and you see hieroglyphs on the walls. If you're like, you're
like, Yep, I know. Yeah, okay. I built that. But you go into the
pyramid, there's no hieroglyphs, there is the box there. But
there's not even a lid to the box on it anymore. And that lid was not something
that someone was gonna just lift off Exactly. No hieroglyphs
anywhere. And but you have all of these other chambers? And I
mean, you even have, you have tunnels that are this big inside
of the pyramid pointing out to the sky towards astronomical
bodies that the Egyptians would have recognized. So I'm, so I'm
kind of at this point that I'm kind of at this point where I
think Graham Hancock and I actually agree on this is kind
of a nuanced answer. I think the Egyptians sometime after about
3000 BC, are responsible for the pyramids. If kings were buried
in them, it wasn't just a tomb, there was a much bigger purpose They might just like, well,
this, that big thing out there. Let's bury our King out there. There there if it Sure, sure.
There, I think, I think if it wasn't just a tomb, there's a
much bigger purpose. And I think it's obvious when you look at
the interior of the pyramids, I mean, people there, they're so
complex, that people are even trying to build machines out of
them. Like, you know, there's the Ram water pump theory,
there's the land of Kim, who's got this idea that they were
possibly chemical producing factories. I mean, they're
complex enough that people are theorizing like Christopher Dunn. Yeah, he's there. Yeah, of
course, Chris. They're so complex to be we're looking at
the interior trying to find a deeper meaning, which I think I
think it's it's something there's something that's there
what it is, we don't know. And I also think that it's possible
that in the Old Kingdom of Egypt, that begins around 3100
BCE, you have you have this king, we have this slate palette
called the normal palette and you see the very first Pharaoh
smiting the king. So Egypt used to be you basically like a tale
of two lands, you had the north and the south, Upper and Lower
Egypt, except upper was actually South Egypt and lower. But
anyways, one conquers the other in the Unites the Kingdom of
Egypt, and you begin the Old Kingdom, Early Dynastic Period.
And I think that during the, during that period, you had the
rule, you had like the absolute rule of a pharaoh, which is what
made Egypt so powerful. And these pharaohs were, I think, I
think, very spiritual and morally aligned people, for the
most part, and I think because of their absolute rule, and
because they have the Nile. So the thing is, the reason I'm
dubious about I say this all the time, I think when we're looking
for Atlantis, I don't think Egypt is the place to look for
Atlantis, because when you're looking for an ice age,
civilization, there is not a huge reason for people to be
living on the Nile 12,000 years ago, because all of Sahara is is
green at that point there. I think what makes sense is the
reason people are living along the Nile is because when the
Sahara dries up, you either have to go to sub Sahara, you know,
if you look at the Sahara Desert, below it, you have the
Congo and all of these green areas, and that's where all the
animals were, that's where the safaris are at, or you go along
the Nile, and a lot of people went along the Nile, and that
fertile soil on the Nile allows you to it's the most abundant
grain factory on the planet. And so that grain made Egypt
powerful. And when you have one guy who Egypt is the one place
in the ancient world where somebody could go to become a
God, who if you were Pharaoh, you were literally God. Sure.
And you could tell anybody what you wanted to what, what was
going to happen. And so I think is that for these from 3100 BC
until basically 2100 BCE, you have this old kingdom period.
And I think that I think that we were seeing probably a science
and technology that the world hasn't really ever seen since
then. And I think that possibly, I was just talking with a friend
of mine the other day, about the evidence of tools that we have
the built the pyramids, I mean, if you haven't seen the blocks
in person, it's hard to. I mean, I haven't Yeah, can do Copper Age. Yeah,
it's it makes no sense. So yeah, I mean, you have, you
have two and a half million megalithic limestone blocks per
Pyramid at Giza. And these blocks are five to six feet
tall, five to six feet long, and maybe four feet wide, or so cut
on six sides, and weigh how much. So the average block is
between of the most of the pyramid is between two to six
tonnes when you go inside the king's chamber, which is lined
with with read as well. And granted, you're looking at 20 to
80 tons. And these are, oh, it's crazy, you'll get 20 to 80 tons,
but the blocks are half the size as the ones on the outside. So I
mean, you're talking you're talking about blocks with an
insane amount of density. And that are lifted up in 15 foot
high ceiling perfectly. Yeah, perfectly aligned. So the blocks
that are in the ceilings are heavier than anything else in
the pyramid. And there's five chambers that include these that
include these, these megalithic rows as one granite blocks. And
the the tools that they attribute the Egyptians having
used are these two foot long bronze sauce and, and copper
chisels To cut to cut some of the
hardest, hardest rock around correct? Hardest rock on the planet that
some you know, some of the hardest rocks in the planet. And
yeah, I mean, in the blocks, the blocks and the blocks in the
king's chamber, as well as the casing and the outer stones on
the pyramid. I mean, they're so fine. That, you know, for two
and a half to four feet, they are just perfectly aligned to
each other perfectly pressed against each other. I mean,
there are some of them. You actually can't pluck a hair. If
you think about how fine I mean people say you can't put a
credit card. You can't pluck your hair and put it through the
cracks. Can you imagine like when you're
a kid you're building up like a Lego something on Legos. And you
start at the bottom of the base and you start trying to build
something when you're if you get off by one one block. The whole
damn thing comes the whole thing is off. Oh yeah. So can you
imagine that's an a Lego set? Can you imagine on the scale
that they were at the kind of precision that they're about?
It's it's not comprehensible? It isn't even to today would be a
very could we build it? Yeah. Got it, when they ignore the
cost of it, but the, with all of our computers? Sure with all and
even then, I mean, there's still a lot of Yeah, you don't you don't want
to think that's crazy about that as I was listening to a lecture
series on Archaeoastronomy are the study of ancient astronomy.
And so there's this, there's this really why I was excited to
listen to the episode, it was called the astronomy of the
Great Pyramid. And Oh, for 30 minutes, this this PhD, who
really well spoken, interesting, interesting lecture. But he's
talking about how, you know, it is per the Great Pyramid, as
well as all of the pyramids are aligned almost perfectly to, to
the cardinal directions. And it's not just, it's not just
magnetic north, it is true north, which means you had
highly advanced astronomy to be able to align a structure to
true north, but also the Great Pyramid, I think the base of is
13 acres, and you had to flatten out the ground for 13 acres
perfectly. And it's hard to comprehend that. And what's
amazing is that the great pyramid itself, you know, he he
builds up and builds up and builds up and builds up
everything. And it's amazing that of all the 118, around 120
pyramids that are in Egypt, the Great Pyramid is the one that is
aligned to TrueNorth. Perfectly, not but not I mean, the other
ones are close, but they're just they're just you know, fractions
of a degree off. Or maybe like one degree off, the Great
Pyramid is aligned perfectly. And at the very end. You know,
he's talking about like, if we were to do this today, we would
have to use highly advanced GPS, this, maybe this lecture is like
10 years ago. So the technology he's referring to is a bit
different than what we have 10 years later, but at the very
end, he goes he was and we just have to chalk this up as
coincidence, one of the 120 pyramids was going to be
perfect. It's just just so happens. That is the Great
Pyramid. It's perfect. I didn't Was that serious, Was he being
serious on that comment? Dead serious. That's how the
lecture ended. Oh, this buildup, and then he goes, he goes. So
we're just left to conclude that it happens to be coincidence
that the Great Pyramid is aligned, and I go, Oh, man, I've
listened this for 30 years. And I'm like, There's no way that
the great pyramid itself, the Great Pyramid, right happens to
be accidentally aligned. And so all this long tangent to say
that I think that the Old Kingdom is responsible for a lot
of the mysteries of ancient Egypt. And I think that they
probably had an understanding that wasn't even nobody even
came close to it until the until the Greeks come along some 2500
to 3000 years later, and start rediscovering a lot of these
ideas. And there's a huge precedents for that, that we can
get into. But I think that they probably had a technology that
constructed the pyramids, that was clean. And when they were
done, there wasn't any evidence of the tools that they used to
construct. Now the carbon dating that comes from the pyramids,
doesn't line up to the traditional narrative. And so
they think that this is this is as conservative as Egypt. I
mean, Egyptologists are very conservative. They're not going
to, you know, hypothesize things that are way, way out there
according to what they think. But even they will push and say,
oh, okay, maybe the pyramids are like 500 years older than we say
they are. And they're getting and they're
pushing back a little bit more. Yeah. Okay. Maybe 1000 years. Yeah, yeah, that's a lot. So. So
if they're 1000 years older, I'd say I'd say I think it's totally
plausible that they're not actually in the position that we
have them in, in the historical timeline, where exactly, it
would be probably a little bit older. At the very, very least,
I wouldn't be surprised if they were older. Even if they were
pushed back 500 to 1000 years. Our whole idea of the way we
studied archaeology and ancient history gets completely shaped
Sure. And so I think that I think that that's totally
possible but just just from looking at limestone myself
that's been rained on when I look at that in Central America
and I and it's actually harder limestone in Central America
than than in Egypt. I look at the pyramids. I'm like, Yeah,
that's a tough thing to get around. You look at the Assyrian
Yeah. So the Assyrian it's a megalithic structure. The
strangest thing in Egypt. It's it has bigger limestone blocks
than you see on the Great Pyramids. Actually, like they
could two to three blocks could fit inside of this room. That's
it. That's huge. Yeah, yeah, that's just way bigger. I mean,
one block is one of the one of the As blocks are like, at least
eight times larger than then the average blows, what what is it
for, they have no idea. So it's a multi storied structure that's
built into the ground. So it's not built up, it's built into
the ground. And it's got multiple floors with stairways
that go down. And it's filled two thirds of the way up with
water. And the limestone, that's there are these big, long,
perfectly flat slabs. And I just, and you know, people
theorize that this can be 12,000 years old. The only problem with
that is that 12,000 years ago, that area looked very similar to
the way Central America does today. And when you look at
Central American blocks that were around 3000 years ago, that
are also limestone, they're torn up from the water. So it's, they
can be older, but I just don't know if they can be 12,000 years
old, because you would see that you would see the destruction of
water on limestone In limestone being there the
thing that's underneath the casings, well, the casing is
limestone too. Right. So but but the rocks itself is what
limestone? Yeah, yeah. But so you think that couldn't be?
Well, then how? How would you? How would you argue the Sphinx
being older? Because the Sphinx is destroyed.
Yeah, yeah. It's pretty. It's pretty Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you
look, you look at the so at the top of the so one of the things
that I'll have this conversation will go okay, well, what about
the the limestone casing stones on the pyramids, we don't see
those anymore. Well, that's true, most of the limestone
casing stones are gone. But in the middle pyramids, the casing
stones are still there, at the very top. And the wear on those
is not the same as when you're down in the Sphinx pit, to look
at the walls on the Sphinx like the, the erosion that's inside
of it, the erosion. canals that are in there are two feet thick,
that water has been flowing down there in the Sphinx had to be
repaired at the time that at the time that they attribute the
pyramids to have been built. So there's a possibility that
they could be a bit older. Yeah, for sure. 12,000 years older is,
is is where you're going to If they were if they were 12,000
years old, they would look exactly like the Sphinx. That's
what I that's what I think. So which makes it Pretty tore up. Yeah, I mean,
the Great Pyramid looks those pyramids look pretty tore up.
It's it's a gray area, that it's a it's a possibility, because
I've always wondered just like, well, the technology for the
building got worse. Like, it's absolutely we don't start with
the best buildings ever. We started with like little tents.
And yeah, we went up to the Empire State Building and now
to, you know, all the amazing skyscrapers that we make. They
haven't gotten worse, generally. Yeah. So why did it get worse in
Egypt? Like we start with the Great Pyramid, and then we start
getting down to this like mud? Yeah, it makes no sense. And it's supposedly it is
supposedly, so the way that they the traditional idea is that,
you know, 3100 BC, Egypt is united. And then over the course
of 600 years, it goes, and it's like, all of a sudden, they
build the world's biggest building, which is that would be
a secara step pyramid. And there's like nothing before
that. There's not we don't have a precedent of large stone
buildings leading up to that it's just all of a sudden, I
mean, even the secara step pyramid in the labyrinth
underneath that Was that consider the oldest
pyramid? Yeah, that's considered the
first one. So that's considered the first
one before the Great Pyramid. Yeah. In the current timeline Yes. And so that's why I was
saying down in those labyrinths underneath that pyramid, you
it's very obvious who that pyramid is built for. And then
the five later pyramids which are bigger and better, no
hieroglyphs no names, no nothing. That's according to the
traditional timeline. So you got this step pyramid. Very
obviously, that's built for you've got then it's the then
it's the my doom pyramid. It's actually six pyramids. My Doom
pyramid step pyramid, Red Pyramid, cuckoos, pyramid
coffers, pyramid and min Curry's pyramid are all much, much more
impressively built in the secara step pyramid. None of them have
hieroglyphs inside of them at all. They're not decorated like
the like the underside of the secara pyramid is they don't
have a very obvious sarcophagus like the secara step pyramid
does. And then after the construction of the Menkaure
pyramid, there are others but they're all they're all
completely destroyed, like fallen apart. They were
constructed so badly that they actually look like they're
12,000 years old because they've just completely fallen apart It's almost like someone came
upon Sure sure. Yeah. came upon the great pyramids. Yeah, and
said, We let's build try to Yeah, yeah, I totally agree with
you. And I honestly used to build something like this. And
this is the best they they could do. Yeah, and that's why it's
like the step pyramid or the bent and all this stuff because
they can't Yeah, they don't know how they did it. think exactly that that like, it
certainly seems like they came upon this. The deeper you go,
the more strange it gets because In the Bent Pyramid, there are
there are cedars from Lebanon installed in the roofing of the
Bent Pyramid that are built into the pyramid that, you know,
people, architectural engineers, even independent people who pay
to go inside of it that aren't associated with academics or
anything. They'll go inside. They're like, yeah, there's no
way those were installed afterwards. Those were installed
during the construction, they carbon dated, it's 4600 years
old. It's like, how does any of this make sense? There's so much
evidence that locks it in at about between 4500 to 5000 years
old, then there's more evidence that pushes it back. Okay, maybe
this is 5500 to 6000 years old, that's essential. And then and
then you look at things from a logical standpoint, just
approaching and you're like, well, it looks like the all
these other pyramids are cheap imitation of what these were
trying to be like, these people came across it. Yeah, these
three different areas. How do you even how do you solve this
mystery? And it's why it's the greatest mystery of all time. It's one of them. Yeah. Without
without question. Yeah. So there's two things I wanted to
get your point of view on? Because these are let's go down
deeper in the mysteries of Egypt. Yeah, we'll get into
Mesoamerican a little bit. But in Egypt, there's I just want to say as well, I
don't have I have absolutely nothing invested in any of these
ideas. I'm just presenting the evidence as I know it. And of
course, it pushes me down for selling. No, I don't have any
textbooks I'm selling. Nobody's forced to buy anything from me.
I don't even have any products for sale. And and if the
pyramids were absolutely 100% proven to be 4600 years old, I
will go. Yeah, well, the Egyptians were accomplishing
some crazy stuff that we can't comprehend playing. If they're
proven to be 12,000 years old, holy crap, we just, Okay, well,
where's the civilization? We've got to learn? You know, we have
to open up a whole new study about the civilization that
built them 12,000 years ago, correct. Even if they're 1000
years older, that's a lot of rewriting of textbooks. Oh, my
God. Yeah. And so I don't have I don't have a stake invested in. I don't have a dog in this
fight. I find I find all of the ancient
world fascinating. I love the search for Atlantis and the
search for lost civilizations that could have existed during
the Ice Age. Just as fascinating as I find researching the Greeks
and Alexandria trying to study the I mean, the Greeks and
Alexandria are exactly like you and I curious, you know,
intelligent guys trying to uncover the mysteries of the
ancient world. And they did it. And that is really fascinating
to me. But that's not it's not, it's only half as old as as the
it's only half as old as the most conservative they in the
pyramid, I find that I find it all fascinating. So there's two things I want to
ask you about. Two things that were found in Egypt that I want
to hear what traditional archaeology has to say about it,
because it's so insane. Well, the obelisks that are all over
Egypt, there was one very famous one that's found in the in the
quarry. And there's scoops there scoop marks in the in the
hardest, some of the hardest rock ever. Yes, I think I think that yeah,
the unfinished obelisk. I think that's right, that's a red
granite, Which is like eight or nine on
the hardness scale, like diamonds, 10, something like
that. So it's extremely hard. And they're scoop marks, like
someone took an ice cream scoop and scoop them. So explanation
for the scoop marks would be one to the drill marks where they
actually see you see drilled holes that are perfect. And you
see engineers today look at and they go well, that's a drill
hole and like how would you even comprehend doing something like
this in the hardest rock? of its of its time, that kind of thing?
So those two technologies that are there is proof for I'd love
to hear your thoughts on what traditional archaeologists think
and then what your theories are. Yeah, so So okay, I'll start
with the course and then we'll go to the unfinished obelisk so
the cores are found all over Egypt and I believe we see them
in limestone and as well as granite now the cores are are
these these drill these drill holes I want to emphasize that
they're not it's not just like they drilled away and turned
everything that that used to be in the hole just to dust you
know, and then just sweep all the dust out No, no, they
literally burned it cord in there and pulled the core out.
So they left what you stuck. Like guys house yeah, they left
what used to be intact and you so you have this core, this
cylinder just exactly like this glass of solid granite and
limestone, and then you have the hole there. What the heck did
they have that did that? You know that? That is That So it's not a drill. It's
actually a coring. Yes, it's a it's a literal
coring. Yeah. Of the some of the hardest rock
on the planet. In a time period that they had Copper Age tools,
yeah, bronze, bronze age Copper, they had some bronze. This is not nothing of this is
doing this, right? No, none of this There's not even a precedent for
like, what is the tubular technology that they're even if
it's even if it's a hand crank drill that's cutting into it,
and they're able to pull something out. Where's that?
Well, I can imagine I can medal. Yeah, I can imagine what it
would be. I can picture it in my mind, but it's not in the
archaeological record. The even even what they what they say
could have done it. Well, where is it? Is that
what's the archaeologist? That's what traditional archaeologists Well, no, no, they don't even
say that. They say they say that it was Look away from the man behind
the curtain. Yeah. They say that it was I
think they think they say that it was copper, like little
copper hand. We're doing. Yeah. And so that's traditional idea.
And I think Flint Dibble on the Graham Hancock debate, yeah, he
says that as well. That's ridiculous. And then as far as
when you go to the so the unfinished obelisk is this. It's
massive. Like dinosaur sized It's like 120 tonnes or
something like that? 1200 tons 1200. Yeah. Okay. It's
massive. Yeah. Yeah. 1200 tonnes, I believe. Absolutely.
Gigantic. Like it's yes. It's yeah. It's hard to imagine how
big this thing is. And it was still it's still in
the ground. It's still in the ground. Yeah. Yeah. They didn't
think about they were planning to lift this. Yeah. And move it. Yeah. Yeah. And I think I think
that they don't because, or at least they think that they
didn't, because the because the granite cracked or something
like that, or it was just not it was just unfinished. But yeah,
so it's so large that you jumped down into this pit that is
around it. And the pit is, you know, you have you have the
obelisk laying on its side. And basically, you have this giant
bedrock of as one granite and you're just cutting out an
obelisk inside of it to raise it up. And so you jump down into
the pits that are along the sides of the obelisk, in the
pits are like seven feet tall. So you know, it's towering over
you even when you're standing next to it while it's laying
down. And then there are the scoop marks going underneath the
obelisk. And I think at one of the ends as well. And it
literally looks like somebody's scooping into strawberry ice
cream, right? Yeah, it's like soft strawberry ice cream. It's
exactly what it looks like. And so what they say. And you you
watch this, you watch this documentary before you actually
get to go view it, which is very strange that to go view the
unfinished obelisk, you have to You're funneled into this room
where they make you watch documentaries and how the
obelisk was made before you can go look at it. And it's it's their narrative.
Yeah, it was their narrative. So they have these dolomite
stones, the the stones that are this big, and it's a very hard
rock, and that they were to cut to cut the cut the obelisk out
of the ground, they take the block, and then they drop it on
the granite. And they're just doing that over and over and
over and over and over and over and over and over and over and
over and over again. Do you mean like grinding like
grinding corn into a paste? Yeah, yeah. they're just they're
just dropping a dolomite stone on granite dropping? Yeah, just. And it's, it's landing perfectly
every time. He's silent ladies and gentlemen. And yeah, for anybody listening.
I just I don't know what to say. It's, It makes no sense. Yeah, it makes no sense at all.
I mean, Why but I understand what is the
reason and they have to, they have to come up with an
explanation like that, which logically doesn't make any
sense. And we're now at a point where there's so much
information out there that that played 50 years ago, that played
100 years ago, if you're going on a tour of the apple is and
they show you a documentary, or they tell you what's going on,
you'd go okay, but now there's so much information, the
internet and everything And there's so many so many
people who are experts in different areas or different
areas that are maybe more educated on this specific thing
that can come they can come in and go they can come in and go
on no no. And they have a platform now to send out that
knowledge that can be or this or this Yeah, it can't be a can't
be gate kept by anybody else anymore. Now here's here's
another problem with these dolomite pounding stones. So So
let's say that, let's say that you can somehow I mean think,
Okay, we have to imagine we have to imagine somebody's mapped out
alright, this is going to be the OB let's say they draw it and
chalk along the ground. And it's just flat ground at some point
and we're going to, we're going to somehow cut the world's
biggest obelisk out of this bedrock. So then they go here's
your dolomite ball. To start dropping a hole in the ground,
yeah, from from scratch just from flat ground, boom, boom,
boom. It makes no sense. It doesn't make any sense. Now. Now
maybe if you're there for 1000 years, you get down here Like water dripping like water
dripping on a stone. Yeah, you get down at the
bottom, but then you have to cut me think about this, you have to
cut the ground away underneath the pyramid, or I mean
underneath the obelisk to raise it out, right? You know, you've
got to cut the bottom layer. How are you going to drop the How
are you going to drop this this really heavy dolomite ball? How
are you going to drop in a wall that's in front of you that have
a tunnel underneath? That doesn't make any sense. So
that's where that's where they're showing the scoop marks
of from and they think the only the only other explanation they
think is rather than dropping it. They're pounding it against
the against the granite like this. And just I guess they're
just chipping away the granite into like little tiny specks of
sand. But those scoops don't look no
erratic. No, they look perfectly. Yeah, like, like a
machine went in and scooped it out like an iceberg. Yeah, that
technique, it would look horrendous. It'd be like
digital, it would be like, yeah, it look all over the place. It
wouldn't be so so uniform. Yeah. Well, it's so miraculous
that I think I saw Ben van Kirk wake from Uncharted X, he's
asked a question that's like, well, what could what could what
could achieve this, I think this is when he's on on Joe Rogan.
And it's so miraculous that he's like, I can't think of anything
other than something that could basically melt the stone down
and soften it and scoop it away, like a molecular, you know, tool
to be able to melt it. It's so miraculous, that the only
explanation he come up with was like, like, sci fi something,
you know, that's how amazing it is. What actually did it? I have
no idea what I think it what I think it is, is I think that you
have people who are and we haven't gotten into this
necessarily, but I think you probably have the sacred cults
of knowledge, people who are doing psychedelics and tapping
into something that's just so far, so far outside of the realm
that that we're in right now. It's kind of like Nikola Tesla
said, you know, if you start studying, if you start looking
at science, things by was it the vibration frequency sounds
something along those lines or waves, you will make, you'll
make more strides in a decade than you have in a century in
science. And I think that I think that ancient people, were
probably privy to things in the natural world that we don't
know. And I think that they are exposed, they were able to
exploit the natural world so much more efficiently than we
are. And when they were done with something, it was done,
there was no there wasn't any evidence of how they did it. And
that's how clean their world was. And you look at the
Egyptians, they're damn near like the, the the best example
of people who I mean, we see like some trash dumps and later
Egyptian when they kind of lose and later Egyptian society when
they kind of, you know, when the Romans showed up, when Yeah,
when the Persians show up and the Greek show up and the Romans
show up like we see these trash dumps, but in the Old Kingdom,
and in the some of the Middle Kingdom as well. We're not
seeing this. And so I think that I think that these, I will also
say I think that the obelisks, I think that those are almost
more, it's easier to say, okay, these are definitely Egyptian
because the same kind of technology that it took to cut
those obelisk out of the ground, to lift them up to make all I
mean, the corners are razor sharp like that, like this table
on the herbalist and obviously there are it's red granite, it's
as smooth as this table. And they're also cutting into the
obelisk, Egyptian hieroglyphs all up and down all of the
herbalist and we see names in With with just chisels
there Yes. But Yeah, and angles. The
angles in the proportions of the hieroglyphs on the obelisks are
perfectly are perfect. And the names that are there are
perfect. And so I find myself where I'm just years and years
and years down this rabbit hole. I'm like, I found myself where
I'm like, okay, for me, I think it's a matter of loss
technology. I think there's no doubt yet. Yeah, dude, you look
at the you look at the Greeks later on the Antikythera
mechanism could theater, that's the computer, they could predict
all of the movements of our solar system on it. It was it
was like it was it was an ancient GPS. And it wasn't just
one. There are literary sources that tell us that there were
entire street corners in Alexandria, where a wealthy
person could go buy one. And you know, the Romans come in and
melt them all down and turn them into swords of quite obviously.
Yeah, but cheese, but I mean, dude, like. Yeah, I mean, I
think that I think that ancient people were way further along
than we give them credit for. And then at the end of that
lecture, didn't say, Well, we're just left to come include that
the Egyptians, just by accident, by coincidence, perfectly
aligned, the Great Pyramid to TrueNorth The one thing and I don't want
to get into the other pyramids yet, but the one thing that
when, when Dr. Dr. Ed, Dr. Bernhardt showed up, I asked
him, I'm like, why is it that the rest of the world, there's
pyramids all around the world, with, with, with, with
civilizations that should have never had any contact with each
other. And yet, they're all building pyramids. And there are
a lot of them. There's not a couple. There's a lot of
pyramids in, in America and the American Mesoamerica in India,
and China and Japan. And they're all around that same parallel
around the world, which is exactly well, how is that
possible? And he's like, Well, and this is his, this was his,
and I got I know, he's a friend of yours. Okay. But the the idea
he said is like, Well, I think apparently, I think the best
explanation for that is, human beings just eventually figured
out that the pyramid is the most stable. Sure, structural idea.
And I'm like, Man, that is, that's almost as bad as the what
you just said, like, well, we're just here to conclude that they
was just by coincidence that they didn't make it. That
doesn't make any sense. It's a very easy kind of cop out, in my
opinion. And that, you know, in the way that is, because that
just doesn't make there's so many other mysteries involved
with that conversation, which we'll get into of the how they
built it, where they built it, why they built it, what's the
purpose of them, all of that kind of stuff. So I'd love to
hear your thoughts on that connection, man. Well, I think that there's the
Egyptologist I was talking about earlier, Bob Brier. He has a, he
has a lecture series where he talks about the mysteries of the
pyramids and obelisks. And during his with everything that
that guy knows about about Egypt, and all of the unorthodox
ideas that he has that Egyptologist disagree with him
on, he gets to the pyramids, and he goes, he goes, I'm going to
explain the pyramids to you, I'm going to tell you about how it
doesn't take a higher mathematics to be able to
construct the pyramids, and that the pyramid shape and that the
structure of the pyramid, it wasn't significant to the
Egyptians. What? What do you like with all with all the other
ideas? You have that I agree with? This? You know, I don't,
it's fine. But um, I think that I think that and I'm starting to
just kind of develop this research now on my own. I think
that rather than I think, a good explanation to a lot of these
ancient mysteries, something that may be able to explain them
with more research, is that rather than a lost civilization,
or a, a department of people, you know, like the handbag
ministry, people bringing knowledge around the world,
correct? Sometimes I wonder if what if that is more spiritual
than it is physical? And what if people are tapping into plants
and psychedelics that rather than everyone being connect
rather than a physical cultural connection? Perhaps all these
people in the ancient world across different timelines and
1000s of years apart, are tapping into something, and
they're all seeing the same things in the same imagery.
They're all getting high around the world, and coming back and
coming back into their world. And that's actually the
iconography, the iconography and the things that they see. Do we
know that the Egyptians were were to hide off psychedelics?
Yeah, I mean, you see the lotus flower all over Egyptian
hieroglyphs. New research is just now showing the depth at
which Greeks were Oh, Ron Hira, were on psychedelics, the Romans
as well, ancient India as well. The Sumerians I mean, they're
there, and and do Mesoamerica, one of those America and South
America more than all of them, and even North America as well.
Yeah. All over. It's all over the ancient world. And I'll tell
you, I'll tell you something that I think is interesting.
Some of that, I think might be the best evidence of two
different cultures living at two different times, producing
similar iconography, building similar architecture, and having
the same political setup is the Maya and the Greeks. So the
Greeks are 5000 BCE, the Maya are I'm sorry, the Greeks are
500 BCE, the Maya are 500 ad. So the height of both both cultures
is 1000 years apart from each other. So and we know that
without a doubt, I mean, we know that that they didn't know each
other. So but when you look at the Maya world, city states,
you'll get the Greek world city states, the Greek world, look at
all the look at all the great battles other than the battles
that they had against Persia, they're all against themselves.
They're all word of each other. Yeah. You know, Sparta hated
Athens and vice versa. And, you know, they all didn't like each
other. Macedon had to conquer everybody to get him to, you
know, to get him to all play nicely. Even that didn't work.
They were hoping Alexander would die in part You know, the Maya
world, exactly the same thing. People say, you know, the word
Mayan empire gets thrown around. But the Mayan empire did not
exist, there was never an empire because they couldn't get along.
So the all they had were city states that all worship the same
gods, just like in Greece, they all worship the same God, some
of them put other gods above others and have their own little
cults to send the other, my world exactly the same thing.
The Greeks are well known for their columns, you know that
their columns and all the things, the Maya have columns
that are very similar, very similar as well, with the with
cylindrical, you know, a cylindrical column with
rectangular bases on both sides, same sort of architecture, the
Maya have temples that look very similar to ancient Greek
temples. And they're both prolific users of psychedelics.
And they both have the most inconspicuous, most obvious,
iconic pattern in their culture. Have you ever seen this pattern
before? It's just a spiral. That is the most common pattern in
the Greek world and the Maya world. So you're saying that this is
fascinating, because now you're diving into the spiritual is
that everyone's taking psychedelics of some sort,
whether it's For everyone watching, it's a
square to spiral, you look it up, Boom, boom, boom, It's called, it's called a
meander. That's what they call it meandering patterns. And it's
the most common pattern you see in the Greek world, and then I
extend into Rome. It's the most common pattern you see in the
Maya world. So you're saying that everyone's
doing acid wasn't doing peyote? Everyone's doing Ayahuasca
somewhere, there are tripping on some sort of psychedelic
somewhere in the ancient history, ancient world. And that
that is a doorway into the different realm, the other side,
a higher level of consciousness, right? Yeah. So while a yogi is
meditating in a cave for 30 years to get there, instead of
using psychedelics, they're taking fast tracks to
psychedelics. And it's a rougher ride, as well. Oh, yeah, from
what I understand this psychedelic is a much rougher
ride than going the long way around. Now, by them going,
they're all going, they all get tickets to the same place. It's
the same, it's the same party, everyone goes to the same party,
no matter where you are in the world, because the other side is
the other side. Yes. So they're all accessing this higher level
of consciousness. And that there, the truth is the truth.
Yes, pyramid is the strongest thing, the best kind of
construction. And these ideas are being allowed for them to
come in. So that's why the priests and the Oracles and
those kinds of people were getting this information because
they were high on something. Absolutely. So that information,
which then becomes protected, because we can't give it to them
to the common folk, they'll destroy each other with it. So
that's how they that's how they they maintain power. And also
they were able to, that explains the connection between all of
these civilizations, which had no reason, technical reason to
have any sort of connection, That is my Atlantis. That is my
Atlantis. So that is a wonderful, you see,
that makes sense to me. Even if, I mean, there's some leaps
there, you have to agree that there is another side, you have
to agree on a bunch of stuff. But that doesn't make sense. It
does also align in many ways with the Atlantean idea of Thoth
coming over and there's like a bunch of eight or nine different
chosen ones that went to different areas and, and built
up these areas. That all still lines together. Both those both
those stories can can be told that the same way doesn't
contradict each other. But I find it very plausible that that
is if you're thinking on a spiritual standpoint, very
plausible from all the Swamis and Yogi's and gurus that I've
spoken to. And mystics that I've spoken to the higher level of
consciousness you can get to them through psychedelics, and
being able to access it. That's pretty, is pretty fascinating. I
wanted to I wanted to kind of finish off the Egyptian side of
our conversation with two major questions. One, the basis I hear
so much about the vase is Ben from Uncharted. He's He's D
talks about the basis of time. Can you explain to the audience
what the vases are? And what is the the importance of why
there's the why they're so important, and then I'll come up
with my last question. Yeah, well, it's cool as an
archaeology nerd to or an ancient history nerd to see you
know, I saw I saw so Matt Bell, he's like the main collector of
them and and Ben from on Uncharted X. He's like, the main
promoter, you know, I mean, he's done so much to spread the word
about how amazing these vases are. And it's so cool to see,
you know, 1000 people retweet this photo of all of all of
these FC predynastic vases sitting on this table and
everyone's freaking out about them. That's really cool. So the
thing that makes the vases I'm so amazing and so intriguing is,
like we were talking about today as one granite. And we may have
talked about Dyer, right a little bit, we talked about
dolomite a little bit. These are some of the hardest stones on
the planet. And definitely the hardest stones that ancient
cultures were using in their construction. Not only were they
using them in construction, actually, and for going across
the established timeline, this is actually before, before,
they're just cutting them into these large blocks and using
them in their construction. They are making the most beautiful,
well carved proportionate vases. I mean, it's that's what we see
them as today as vases that the world has ever seen. I mean, a
lot of these heart artists are out of out of granite die, right
and Grando direct in there, maybe some dolomite vases as
well. So it's for the audience to
understand. It's essentially you found vases made out of
diamonds, basically, and someone carved in diamonds, polished
diamonds, in a way, in a way that in those times would have
been inconceivable in today's time, In a way in a way that is
inconceivable today, right? Like, it's not even doable today
is what you're saying? Almost. You would take in insane
investment to be able to make that happen. Yeah, I mean, we were talking
about not only engineering, but diamond tip this or that. Yeah, I mean, computers would
have to monitor the process to make sure that the proportions,
you know, and other people can explain this better than I can.
But the computers would have to you couldn't do no human could
make it themselves. No one would have to be Yeah, a computer, a
computer would have to make the vase to make sure that the
proportions are as accurate as they are. And so that's that's
kind of the thing is people say, Okay, well, these may be
fraudulent vases that were made today. Well that were made, you
know, because they have a history in dealers over the last
100 years. So they think that maybe the late 1800s, early
1900s. These are fake phases that are made by some kind of,
you know, post industrial revolution. But even then it's
impossible. Yeah, it's like, it's like, okay, are you
forgetting the fact that we would need a computer today to
make this? They weren't doing this 100 years ago, and getting
into these proportions? So it's, So the proportions of the days
are perfect, is what you're saying? as well? Yes. And so, so Okay, so you're
taking the world's hardest, no, and I'll try to explain this the
best I can. You're taking basically the ancient world's
hardest stones that were used, and you're creating these vases
out of them that are you know, sometimes there may be five or
six inches tall, five or six inches wide. And they have an
interior to them as well. Now the interior the wall, and the
interior is proportionate with the wall and the exterior. So
they're, they're perfectly parallel to each other from the
opening of the vase all the way down. You mean, at the bottom of the
width of it is perfect. The width of it is perfect and
perfectly proportional all the way around. That's insane. Yes,
on the hardest, some of the hardest, and some of them are so
within a degree of within a degree of they're perfect, I
guess proportionally or they're parallel to each other. Their
proportions are perfect to within 100 of a human hair. And
some of the vases are so thin, that they're as thin as a human
hair. Stop. Yeah, yep. Yeah, they're trans. That's
impossible. Like if you were gonna go that thin. It's true.
It's gonna break Translucent granite. Imagine
that, like you put a flashlight inside of it, and it turns into
a light bulb. Yeah, yeah. So no wonder he's losing his
mind over. Most people. Yeah, yeah. How does it How does
traditional archaeology explain this? That they were made by that
yeah, that they were made by craftsmen in a primitive in a
primitive, during a primitive era of Egypt called then the
kata culture. So you have no Kata one, two and three. It's
like, you know, the three different sections of necrotic
culture where we witnessed the pottery change and everything.
This isn't pottery. But yeah, they just say that the these
primitive cultures were carving these by hand, and it's just
something that they decided to stop doing before they built the
pyramids. That's the They do hear themselves, right,
as they speak out loud. I mean, this makes no sense. I mean,
just again, logically, these vases. So how old do they think
these faces are? So the latest date of these
vases is 3100 BCE. So right at the same time that Egypt
actually is established as a nation 5400 years the oldest is
about 4000. So they think 4000 to 3100 BC, which BC BC so then we're
looking at 6000 years old, 5 to 6000 like 5100 to 6000.
Yeah. Which is technical. The older
than, Oh, yeah, the pyramid? Oh, yeah, yeah. I mean,
technically, yeah, about five to 700 years older, according to
the traditional timeline, Because whoever made those vases
could probably make the pyramids. I know, right? It's obviously
the same. It's obviously the same quote unquote, technology.
I mean, the same people could have done either one. And to be
honest, and to be honest, who's to say, this is kind of, I don't
know, it's like, I guess it's kind of a vague statement. But
who's to say that, that these vases aren't harder to make than
just the pyramid itself, It sounds like it's, but the
thing is that the thing is fascinating is like, look at the
pyramid I get, because it's a massive construction, that had a
purpose that we have yet to really understand what it was,
yeah, that there's something big going on there. This is like a
vase. I mean, unless the vase is connected to some sort of
electrical grid around the world, and happens to just be
this big. This is more for decoration, or, or ceremony, or
something small, because it's a small item. It's not a grand
item. But the way it's made, it's made with Grant technology. I mean, it has to be it has to
be So then. So then this is
essentially and me carving wood, fiddling wood. And making
you know, a little horse out of a piece of wood, Get this get this to. So I think
there's a YouTube, there's a YouTube channel that tried to
recreate these vases. And now, can you with an ancient lathe.
So here's here's a whole other part of this mystery is that
these vases, are thought to have been chiseled away by hand
chisels. This idea of this idea of a lathe that you could put a
stone, the best way I can describe a lathe is and I'm not
an engineer, but it's a one to two people are turning a crank,
and you're essentially spinning some kind of drill onto a piece
of stone where you can make a vase out of it. But it's not
going to have the smoothness and the proportions and the
exactness of Perfect precision from top to
bottom It's not going to have that buy
into carve, so you're going to think it, it would be more
understandable if the vase was almost halfway solid. And there
was one, you know, like, if I were to sit here and go to two,
I could cut this very rough, ugly hole inside of a vase. But
to make the walls proportionate all the way around there. How
did you get in there, that's the thing. That's the thing that a
lathe wouldn't be able to do. So this YouTube channel recreated
the vase, the vases, but they're very rough, you know, very, very
rough sand materials. Yeah, they tried to do it as close as they
could. And they recreated the vase. But it's not. It's not
precise. Like it's a rough. I mean, they're very, very rough
vases. And it took them eight months to do it for one vase
from one vase to make a rough, ugly copy of what the of what
all of what these ancient pre dynastic vases look like. Now,
here's the thing is that Zasa in the step pyramid of Sikar, that
we talked about, he was buried with 40,000 vases of this kind,
yes, 40,000 of them. So this is just that. This is yes, it's so
think about that. You I would bet. I would bet anything that
you and I can get in the car and go to if Austin has a museum of
of ancient history or something. If there's an Egyptian section,
there'll be one of these vases, they're they're that common.
There's one in San Antonio that I went and took photos of last
week. They're everywhere. Every single Egyptian Museum you go
into you will find one of those bishops? Matt Bell has 17 of
them. There had to be there had to be 1000s, hundreds of
hundreds of 1000s I would say yeah, That would be as common as this
glass that we have. Yeah. So it's so if it takes me,
I just don't think there will be hundreds of 1000s of them if it
took seven months, six to eight months. One, you know, no, of
course. That's yeah. So that's why people were freaking out.
Because it's, it's, you know, it's amazing. So, alright, so
how do we get the dates, you know, because, you know,
everything gets tossed up into because it's such a popular
idea. Everything gets tossed up into, could this be 12,000 years
old? You know, it's just an interesting topic to think
about. So here's how we find them. They're basically almost
all found in graves. Just because it's found in a grave
from a certain time period does not mean that it is from Yeah,
that it's from that time period. These are things that could have
been handed down, inherited, whatever. So we find them in
Nubian graves, or at least that's kind of where that's kind
of where the original ones are found in the early 1900s. When
they start being documented. I think they're documented the
1800s as well. When people start really taking notice because for
the longest time, yeah, and the longest time in logging Timing
Egyptology all they're looking for is gold, you know, so it's
so funny. This this is how crazy archaeology and Egyptology could
be, and we're not that far removed from it is that when
Egyptology first started and archaeologists are going into
Egypt, they're opening up the sarcophagus and looking for the
gold. And they're grabbing the bones and like throwing them out
of the way. Yeah, they're taking, you know, old royal
mummies and going, get these bones out of here Like $1.50 a pound. They're looking for all the
treasures. They're tossing these vases to the side, you know, and
all they're looking for is the treasure. Oh, it's not here.
Well, let's just, let's just take all this stuff and put it
in storage. And so you have the literal bones of some of the
most important people in all of history in cardboard boxes
today, because their sarcophagus was violated by old
Egyptologist, and the flesh that was on these old mummies. to
fund these archaeological expeditions. They created this,
they created this like, fake scam product called Mumia. And
it was supposedly it was these it was like a ground up
liquefied version of ancient mummy remains. And they would
sell it to people in Europe, that it was supposedly cure
their ailments. So they're like violating the sites that they
are. Jesus. Yeah, I mean, there. Yeah, it's there. It's isn't it?
Yeah, it's crazy. We're not that we're not that far removed.
We're not so so these vases start. People start taking
notice around the late 1800s. And so where most of them are
found are Nubian grave sites in Aswan Egypt, which is kind of at
the bottom of the Nile at the southern tip of the Nile in
Egypt. And so these are 5000 to 5500 year old graves that
they're unearthing and we know how old they are, because you
can just carpet date the person that's buried with them. And
they'll have this stone vase next to him with as far as we
know, nothing in the vase. Unless, you know, these
archaeological digs were so poorly managed, that they didn't
even document what was in it, or they turn it up and pour it
upside down and like, oh, it was dirt. But really, the dirt was
something else, you know, so who knows, but it's been lost. Yeah,
yeah. So, so much has been lost. Um, however, when? A couple when
a couple friends of mine brothers of the serpent, if
you've ever seen their podcasts, there are two really, really
cool guys. Yeah, Kyle and Russ. They went to Egypt, and they saw
photos of what they were told was a 10,000 year old gravesite
like, like early pre that, you know, they're they're museums in
Egypt for pre dynastic Egypt. So dynastic Egypt is what we all
think of when we imagine the Pharaoh standing like this.
There are museums about what was going on in Egypt before that.
And in one of them, there's a photo of what they say was a
10,000 year old grave. And in that photo is one of those stone
vases. So it's been around forever. It's been around for a
long time. And they're finding these vases that go back to the
tip to not exactly the same bigger but similar. So this is
just came out that discovery of these vases at Gobekli Tepe I
think that that got publicized like two weeks ago or last week
or something. Look, man, I appreciate you
coming on the show. So so much, man. I look forward to our next
conversation about Mesoamerica and and all the other cool
stuff. But this has been honored and where can people find out
more about you, man? Just just basically just Google
my name Luke Caverns, Luke Caverns and that's my, that's my
Youtube, Instagram. And basically, I was thinking about
recently, I've been thinking about, you know, I'm writing my
first book, it's over the Olmecs right now. Now, I'm also writing
a book on Alexandria, but that'll be a long time from now.
I've been thinking about what exactly is it that I do as an
anthropologist, I think what I like studying is cross cultural
connections, like ancient cultures interacting with each
other. And what I'm realizing is that I'm really enjoying trying
to put together the puzzle pieces that we'll talk about. of
ancient Central American and South American cultures, how
they're interacting with each other through the jungles of
Panama, which is extremely hard to, to cross even crossing the
Pacific ocean or the coastlines, and how they're sharing ideas
with each other. There's a lot of mystery there, as well as how
the Greeks the Egyptians, and the Romans all interact in the
city of Alexandria and and there's something about the way
that cultures meeting that I really enjoy studying and
writing and making videos about. That's so yeah, that people can
that's basically what I do. And people can find my videos where
I talk about mysteries of Central America, South America,
and a little bit of like, Greco Roman Egypt as well. So yeah,
just on YouTube, Instagram, Tik Tok. Whatever. Appreciate you, man. Thank you
for everything you doing, man. Thank you so much. Thanks for
having me on. Yeah. Thanks for watching. Click on
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