0:04 So, um, we continue the topic of secret
0:07 societies and we're going to focus on
0:09 their secret weapon, which is mind
0:12 control. They're able to turn you into a
0:14 programmable robot that they can use as
0:16 a weapon.
0:18 Um, but before I start that, let's
0:21 review what we discussed last class.
0:25 This is a class of ideas and concepts.
0:27 So it's really important you understand
0:29 these concepts because we will build on
0:31 them throughout the semester. Okay. So
0:35 last class we discussed the
0:39 transformation of religious worldview
0:42 during the course of western history. So
0:45 at first there was the mother goddess
0:56 And
0:59 during this transition, the way that our
1:02 minds perceived the world radically
1:05 changed in three aspects. The first is that
1:07 that
1:10 before we understood that mind led to
1:13 matter. So the universe is just one
1:16 giant mind that vibrates. Okay? And the
1:20 intersection of these vibrations creates
1:23 atoms. Then that leads to matter. Okay.
1:25 But today in science class, you're
1:27 taught that's the opposite. It's the
1:31 brain that creates the mind.
1:34 And as you will discover throughout the
1:37 semester, this conception that the brain
1:40 creates the mind. It's very problematic.
1:42 Okay? So we will discuss this throughout
1:44 the semester. Okay. The second big
1:47 difference is before we understood the
1:49 world metaphorically.
1:52 Okay. So we saw that the world was
1:54 controlled by these forces that we could
1:57 not see and feel but they were there and
2:01 we gave names to them the gods. Now it's
2:04 all literal. In science class you're
2:06 taught that if you don't see it, it
2:08 doesn't exist. If you cannot measure it,
2:12 it does not exist. The third big
2:16 difference is that before we were
2:20 intuitive. We trusted our heart. We
2:23 trusted our eyes. But today in science
2:25 class, you're taught to not trust your
2:29 eyes. You're taught to trust the data,
2:32 the tools, the theory. So today is counterintuitive.
2:35 counterintuitive.
2:40 And this is why school is so hard.
2:43 Okay? We humans are learning machines.
2:44 That's what we're designed to do. To
2:47 learn, to absorb, to adapt. But school
2:50 is hard because you're taught ideas that
2:53 go against your own intuition.
2:57 Okay. So these are the main concepts
3:01 that we learned last class. So now I
3:07 want to talk about mind control. Okay.
3:13 So um let's go back to the four earliest
3:16 civilizations. These are mass societies.
3:18 So these four societies that first came
3:26 Uh the Indis Valley civilization, the
3:29 Harapen civilization which is now
3:33 northern India, Mesopotamia
3:36 which today is Iraq and of course the
3:40 last one is Egypt.
3:42 And of course, Egypt was for thousands
3:45 of years the most powerful, the
3:49 wealthiest, the most influential. Now,
3:51 when you have a mass society, your
3:55 biggest problem is social control. How
3:56 do you
3:59 control the population? How do you get
4:01 everyone to get along? And in each
4:03 society, they have different solutions.
4:06 Okay? So, in China, we develop a bureaucracy.
4:11 And what underpinned the bureaucracy of
4:14 course is something called the kju which
4:16 is the civil service examination. So
4:19 everyone's attention everyone's energies
4:22 was focused on getting their child to
4:25 pass the ku to become an official and
4:28 that's what gave China social stability.
4:31 And guess what guys it's still around
4:34 today. to that we call the gao okay but
4:35 it's the same system no difference at all
4:36 all
4:41 >> the IVC industization created religion
4:42 and what's remarkable about the religion
4:46 is it is one that preach egalitarianism
4:49 equality as well as peacefulness
4:53 and their religion becomes the prototype
4:57 for Buddhism today okay so what the
5:00 religion was puto Buddhism and for the
5:03 longest time The IVC was peaceful,
5:06 egalitarian. It was a very prosperous
5:09 society. Mesoptitania, the solution was
5:11 war. The difference between
5:14 Mesopotitania and other places is that
5:17 there are no natural defenses. In China,
5:20 we have mountains, deserts, seas to
5:23 protect China. But in Mesopotamia, it's
5:26 a desert. And so, it's really easy to
5:30 attack. And therefore they had centuries
5:32 of warfare and that's what kept the
5:34 society together because they were
5:36 always at war with each other. And with
5:41 Egypt the solution was the Pharaoh,
5:42 Pharaoh,
5:46 right? So
5:49 Egypt is unique in that they believe the
5:51 Pharaoh was God and therefore everyone
5:56 had to obey their God. The problem
6:01 though is that the pharaoh was not God.
6:05 And as a human in charge of an empire,
6:10 his life was always at risk. Okay. So
6:13 now I'm going to ask you a question.
6:17 What does it take to be a great leader?
6:19 In school, you're taught what skills do
6:20 you need to be a great leader? Just
6:21 shout out the answers. >> Leadership.
6:22 >> Leadership.
6:26 >> Leadership skills. But what are they?
6:31 What are they? Responsibility, right?
6:33 How about what else? Wisdom.
6:36 Wisdom. >> Openness.
6:38 >> Openness. Empathy.
6:40 Empathy.
6:41 >> Excuse me. >> Respect.
6:42 >> Respect. >> Regret.
6:44 >> Regret.
6:46 >> Respect. Yeah. What else?
6:48 Knowledge. Right.
6:49 >> Okay. This is what you're taught in
6:51 school. And we can go on for a long
6:52 time. Okay. There are hundreds of skills
6:55 you need to be a great leader. Guess
6:57 what guys?
7:01 Wrong. Okay. To be a great leader in the
7:05 world in history, you need three skills.
7:08 And if you just analyze what the leaders
7:10 of today are like, it will make sense to
7:13 you. Okay. So, Putin, Trump, every
7:15 leader in the world shares these three skills.
7:17 skills.
7:20 Okay. The first is unpredict predictability.
7:27 People cannot predict how you will
7:31 behave. You are a mystery to people.
7:35 That's the first skill. Second skill is
7:40 high stress tolerance.
7:42 So Donald Trump is probably the most
7:45 hated man in America. Guess what guys?
7:47 He goes to bed and he sleeps like a
7:51 baby. He does not care.
7:54 Okay? He gets up and he's tweeting. He's
7:55 giving speeches. He's talking to
7:58 reporters. He's the happiest man alive.
8:01 He does not care. And so, so the last
8:07 skill is lack of empathy.
8:08 He does not care what happens to other
8:10 people. All he cares is about himself.
8:15 And guess what guys? To do well in life,
8:17 you need these three skills.
8:20 Unpredictability. No one knows how you
8:23 think. No one knows how you behave. High
8:26 stress tolerance. You don't care. Lack
8:29 of empathy. You're very selfish. Okay?
8:31 And these are the three skills that
8:36 leaders need in order to uh do well. But
8:38 you know what? We can just use one word
8:40 to describe all three skills. The word
8:49 Dissociation just means that your mind
8:51 is part of your body. When you
8:53 dissociate, what what literally happens
8:56 is your mind leaves your body so that
8:58 you don't think that what's happening is
9:00 happening to you. It's happening to
9:01 someone else. It's like you become an
9:04 observer in a movie. Okay? You're in the
9:06 movie, but you're also watching the
9:09 movie. And this is what leads to these
9:11 three things. Unpredictability, high
9:14 stress tolerance, and lack of empathy. Okay.
9:15 Okay.
9:20 Um, another word for dissociation that
9:30 Donald Trump is so unpredictable because
9:32 he's literally
9:34 a 100 different people in a different
9:36 circumstance. He's a different person.
9:38 And that's why you can never actually
9:41 predict how he will behave. And all the
9:44 great leaders in history were like that.
9:48 Okay. So let me use game theory
9:51 to explain why this is the case. Okay.
10:00 So in game theory, we discussed before
10:03 how when you have a game where there are
10:08 millions of different players, okay,
10:10 the secret to winning this game is
10:13 cheating and you do that by forming
10:15 secret alliances,
10:18 right? So these three do it. The problem
10:21 is this is actually pretty obvious. We
10:24 understand this rule. So guess what? A
10:30 Okay.
10:34 So to win this game, if you want to win
10:37 this game, you have to be part of as
10:40 many powerful secret alliances as
10:42 possible. You have to be the
10:46 intersection of these
10:49 groups. Okay? So you're here, but you're
10:54 also here. You're also here. Okay. But
10:57 as we discussed pre previously, these
11:00 secret societies have developed systems
11:04 to make you loyal, to make you obedient,
11:05 to make sure that you will never betray
11:08 them. So the only way around this
11:11 problem is to create multiple personalities,
11:17 right? Because literally
11:20 you're a different person
11:23 in a different circumstance and
11:25 therefore they're never able to figure
11:29 out what you really think. Spies have
11:32 the skill. Okay. When spies are being recruited,
11:33 recruited,
11:35 um the one skill that they're looking
11:38 for is dissociation. Is this person able
11:41 to quickly dissociate from who he is?
11:43 Lack of empathy, basically. They're all
11:47 psychopaths basically. Okay. So in real
11:49 life in a game it's a person with the
11:52 most multiple personalities that wins
11:56 out. The problem though is when we we go
11:58 back to Egypt the pharaoh is born in
12:02 that position. So now the question is
12:06 are you able to take a person and create
12:08 multiple personalities with from that person?
12:10 person?
12:14 And the answer is yes. Okay. So I'm
12:19 By by the way, the word we use for this
12:22 is psychopath. Okay.
12:23 All right. If you have multiple
12:25 personalities, you're a psychopath.
12:27 All right. So I'm going to show you how
12:29 they do this in Egypt. Remember, a
12:31 pharaoh is born into that position. And
12:33 so now the priests who control the
12:35 pharaoh, they have to train that priest
12:37 to have multiple personalities. The the
12:40 mystery today is how would they do this?
12:41 And again, we don't know, but I'm
12:44 speculating how they would do this.
12:47 Okay. So, if you look at mythology,
12:51 Egyptian mythology is different from all
12:54 other world mythologies. There's Greek
12:56 mythology, there's Chinese mythology,
12:58 there's Babylonian mythology, but Egyp
13:00 Egyptian mythology, it's unique. Okay?
13:02 So, I'm I'm going to explain to you the
13:04 basic contours of the mythology. Very
13:06 simple. So, there are three main
13:09 characters in the mythology. There's
13:17 And there's Horus.
13:19 Okay, these are the three main gods that
13:23 Egyptians worship. Rah is what gave life
13:27 to the universe. He's a sun god. Osiris
13:30 is the god of civilization. He built
13:35 Egypt. Okay? And then Horus is the god
13:37 of kingship of empire. He's the one who
13:41 brings stability to the throne. Okay. So
13:43 there are different stories associated
13:46 with Rah, Osiris, and Horus. Rah, what
13:50 he does is every night he goes into the
13:52 underworld and he fights the serpent, Opthus.
13:55 Opthus.
13:57 Every night, Opus, the serpent, he's
14:00 trying to swallow the sun to prevent the
14:04 sun from rising. So Ra must kill him
14:05 every night. Okay? And there are
14:08 different ways that he kills Oythus.
14:11 Sometimes he stabs
14:13 Oythus with a knife. Sometimes he uses a
14:17 lance. Sometimes he burns
14:21 Opthus. Okay? Sometimes he strangles
14:22 Oythus. But there are different ways
14:25 that he kills Opus. But rest assured, he
14:27 kills Opthus every single night so that
14:31 the sun can rise in the morning. If one day
14:32 day
14:36 uh Ra doesn't defeat Oythus, well, you
14:37 have a solar eclipse. Okay, the sun
14:40 cannot rise. But rest assure Ra will
14:42 defeat him eventually. Okay, eventually
14:44 Ra gives birth to Osiris. And Osiris is
14:49 a great pharaoh. But his brother Seth,
14:51 Seth, it's pronounced Seth, okay? But
14:54 it's it's spelled Seth. Um he is
14:56 jealous. He wants a throne. So he tricks
15:00 Osiris. One day he says to Osiris,
15:03 "Look, I built a tomb and this tomb is
15:05 really comfortable."
15:08 And so Osiris, "Oh, let me try." So
15:11 Osiris jumps in the tomb and he's like,
15:13 "Wa, it's really comfortable." And of
15:16 course, Seth then closes the tomb and
15:20 then throws the tomb away. Now,
15:23 now good news is that is Osiris has has
15:25 a smart wife. He's pretty dumb, but but
15:27 Isis is pretty smart. So Isis is now
15:30 looking for Osiris and Seth's like, "Oh,
15:34 I can't allow Isis to find Osiris." So
15:37 Seth cuts Osiris into a million pieces.
15:42 Okay, so uh tomb. And then he cuts up
15:44 Osiris and throws Osiris all around the
15:47 world. But Isis is committed. So Isis
15:49 goes around the world and finds all the
15:52 pieces and reassembles
15:55 him. Okay. But he but she knows that
15:59 eventually Set will find them again. So
16:02 he she has sex with him really quickly
16:07 which gives birth to Horus and Horus is
16:10 wants the throne back. So he goes to war
16:12 with Set and they have a series of
16:13 challenges. Okay. And some of these
16:17 challenges include drowning.
16:19 So what they do is they turn each other
16:21 into hippos. They go into the bottom of
16:23 the river and they see who can hold the
16:24 breath the longest. They drown each
16:28 other. Okay. Basically, but also um
16:32 there's a challenge where set can you
16:37 see this word? Okay. R A P E. Okay. He
16:39 will do this to Horus because it's a
16:43 sign of domination. But eventually Horus
16:47 wins out and he becomes the pharaoh.
16:50 Okay. So this is the main structure of
16:52 Egyptian mythology. And as you can see,
16:56 it's really weird. Okay? And it doesn't
16:58 make really make sense as a story. It's
17:01 not a great story, but if you don't see
17:04 it as a story, but as a script, it makes
17:06 a lot more sense, right? It's not
17:08 something to be believed. It's something
17:13 to be acted out. Okay? Why? Because in
17:17 Egyptian religion, in the religion, the
17:21 pharaoh is a literal reincarnation of
17:24 Rah, Osiris, and Horus.
17:27 And when you act these things out, you
17:30 become the gods because you have their memories.
17:32 memories.
17:35 Okay? So, how? Let me explain this.
17:36 Okay? I I know you'll be confused by
17:38 this, but let let me explain. So, let's
17:42 go back to Kant. What Kant tells us is that
17:44 that
17:46 there are something called the nomina
17:48 which is the things in themselves. We
17:49 can never know the things in themselves.
17:52 We can never know true reality. We can
17:55 only know the phenomena which is the
17:59 things we see. In other words, we cannot
18:01 differentiate between what is true and
18:04 what is false. So if you're able to
18:07 control our experience, you're able to
18:11 control our memories. Okay. So, let me
18:13 give you another example of this.
18:16 Remember Monkey Island?
18:18 On Monkey Island, we we discussed this
18:21 previously. 100 people are transported
18:25 onto an island um randomly and they have
18:28 to survive millions of flesh-eating
18:30 monkeys. And this experience makes them
18:33 strong, wise, and united. They're
18:36 transported back to the real world, and
18:37 together they conquer the world
18:40 together. But now the challenge is how
18:43 do I ensure that my children and my
18:46 grandchildren and my grandchildren
18:49 inherit my legacy?
18:54 And the answer is through ritual.
18:56 Okay? So what you do is you take your
18:58 children, you put them on an island and
18:59 you tell them a story and then you give
19:01 them psychedelics. Psychedelics
19:04 Psychedelics
19:08 are drugs that enhance your experience.
19:11 So you actually believe the story is
19:13 happening to you. Okay? It's like being
19:16 put into a movie. Okay? And then you
19:21 have these rituals that make you believe
19:22 that you actually experienced this yourself.
19:24 yourself. Okay?
19:26 Okay?
19:34 And this is the great secret of the
19:37 human brain. Every human brain can be
19:42 programmed in a certain way. Okay, so
19:44 let's go back to the story. What's going
19:47 on here? This is a recipe for
19:50 programming the pharaoh into separate
19:51 identities. All three of these
19:54 individuals, Rah, Osiris, Horus,
19:57 represent different identities. Rah
20:00 represents the virtuous
20:05 hero, right? Osiris represents the
20:08 passive victim
20:12 and Horus represents the vengeanceful child.
20:19 Okay,
20:24 does that make sense? Okay. So,
20:26 by doing these different rituals, I can
20:27 get the pharaoh to believe he's a
20:28 different person in different circumstance.
20:30 circumstance.
20:33 So, while the pharaoh is drugged up, the
20:35 pharaoh is dressed up as Ra and he will
20:38 take an effigy or a real person and he
20:41 will stab, lance, burn or strangle that
20:43 person to feel as though you're a
20:45 virtuous hero.
20:49 And also what will happen is that the
20:52 pharaoh will then be um asked to be
20:55 Osiris and guess what the person will be
21:00 put in a tomb cut up and have sex with a
21:01 prostitute. Okay, pretending to be a priest
21:03 priest
21:07 and then Horus will be of course this. Okay.
21:08 Okay.
21:12 >> So, this is all to create trauma
21:14 which creates disassociation
21:18 which allows the priest to program the pharaoh.
21:20 pharaoh.
21:24 >> Okay. Does that make sense?
21:26 >> Okay. So,
21:29 how this works is while this is
21:33 happening, there's the the um pharaoh is
21:35 under a lot of trauma, but there's
21:37 always someone there to support the
21:40 pharaoh, and that's Isis, right? So,
21:42 there's a priest in the ISIS mask using
21:45 ISIS voice to calm the pharaoh, even
21:47 have sex with the pharaoh to make the
21:50 pharaoh dependent on Isis. And now Isis
21:54 becomes the controller.
21:56 the person that the pharaoh will always
21:58 trust. So if the priest ever want to
22:01 tell Pharaoh to do something, then late
22:03 at night while the pharaoh's sleeping or
22:06 on drugs, Isis wearing the mask can come
22:10 in and whisper the pharaoh what to do. Okay?
22:12 Okay? And
22:14 And
22:18 in the system there are different ways
22:20 in which the priest can use to activate
22:23 the different identities. But the main
22:27 mechanism is smell. Okay,
22:29 Okay, smell.
22:31 smell.
22:34 And what this means is that while all
22:35 this is happening, there are different
22:39 scents for different identities. Okay,
22:42 so for example with raw it might be incense.
22:44 incense.
22:48 Okay, but with Osiris it might be
22:51 I don't know roses. Who knows? Okay. But
22:53 so what happens is when the pharaoh is a
22:55 throne room and the priest need the
22:58 pharaoh to make a certain decision, the
23:00 priest will let out different scents
23:03 which will activate different emotions
23:05 in the pharaoh which then determines how
23:08 the pharaoh will make the decision.
23:10 Okay? So there's different control mechanisms.
23:12 mechanisms.
23:14 Okay? And what's important for us to
23:17 understand is we're all like this,
23:21 right? Because for example
23:23 um we have different identities. At
23:26 school we're a student but at home we're
23:28 a child. We're outside we're friends.
23:30 We're a friend. When we're at work we're
23:34 an employee. So we behave differently
23:36 depending on the different circumstance.
23:38 And the circumstance activates a certain
23:39 emotion, certain identity, certain
23:43 behavior, certain actions in us. Okay.
23:45 So we're all programmable, but the
23:47 pharaoh has to be programmed to a
23:50 certain degree. Okay? So to better
23:51 understand this, let me give you an
23:54 example. Let's just say that you are the
23:56 best football player, the best soccer
23:58 player in the whole world. No one can
23:59 beat you. You're you're basically messy. Okay?
24:00 Okay?
24:02 But one day, for example, for whatever
24:04 reason, you wake up and you lose all
24:07 your memory. You forget what your name
24:09 is. You forget who your friends are. You
24:12 even forget that uh you play soccer. And
24:14 what's also really strange is the entire
24:17 world forgets that you play soccer.
24:18 Okay? So, you're just wandering around
24:20 and you have no idea who you are. And
24:22 you do this for like 10 years. Suddenly,
24:25 one day for for whatever reason, you're
24:27 on soccer field and someone kicks you a
24:29 ball and you kick it back. Would you
24:30 still be the best soccer player in the world?
24:33 world?
24:35 The answer is yes, you would be. Right?
24:37 Why? Because you've been trained. It's
24:39 muscle memory. It's in it's your subconscious.
24:46 So that's the trick here. The trick is
24:50 to train you in a certain way
24:53 to make you a robot.
24:55 Okay. Is it possible for me to make
24:57 someone into a killer? Yes. Because what
25:00 I do is I make that person take a lot of
25:03 psychedelics and then train that person
25:05 to shoot someone with a gun. Okay? And
25:06 then while he's shooting that person, I
25:08 use the word acadabra.
25:11 So what happens is the person if he's
25:14 walking has a gun, all all they do is
25:15 use the word acadabra. Takes a gun and
25:18 shoots someone. Okay? All right. So
25:20 through programming, I can turn anyone
25:21 to a robot. I can turn someone anyone
25:24 into a sex robot, a killer robot, even a
25:27 sex killer robot. Okay? Okay, I can do
25:28 all this.
25:31 >> And that's this great secret here. All
25:34 right, so 5,000 years ago in Egypt, they
25:36 were doing this. And but again, okay,
25:38 it's what's really important is this is
25:40 all speculation. And it's really
25:42 important for you to doubt and question
25:45 me because we don't actually know that
25:46 this happened. All the records have been
25:48 lost to us. And obviously, this would be
25:52 the greatest state secret of Egypt. But
25:54 from my perspective, it makes sense
25:58 because the Pharaoh needs to be like
26:00 this in order to survive, right? Because
26:02 the Pharaoh has brothers who want his
26:06 throne. If he's a nice guy, guess what?
26:09 Dead, right?
26:11 So that's true for everyone in power. If
26:13 you're a nice person who feels sorry for
26:18 poor people, you're dead. Okay? So you
26:20 have to have certain characteristics in
26:22 order to be a great leader and the main
26:25 characteristic is dissociation.
26:27 So the pharaoh so the priests are
26:30 actually protecting the pharaoh. Okay,
26:33 >> does that make sense? All right. So what
26:35 I I know this is hard but I need you
26:38 guys to remember the story of Egyptian
26:40 mythology because we'll use it over and
26:43 over. Also, these techniques that they
26:47 use, uh, tombs, cutting you up, um, sex,
26:50 drowning, uh, rape are also techniques
26:54 that we still use today.
26:56 So, what they did in Egypt 5,000 years
27:00 ago, we still do today. There's
27:02 absolutely no difference. And I will
27:05 show you this as we move on. Okay. But
27:08 are there any questions so far? Yeah.
27:09 >> Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Can you speak in
27:11 the microphone, please?
27:15 So they only trained the pharaoh by this
27:18 method and and not his relatives know
27:20 his brothers or something.
27:22 >> Okay, that's a great question. Okay,
27:23 that's a great question. So who's being
27:26 trained into this system? And the answer
27:30 is everyone, right? Because the people
27:32 really in control are the priests.
27:33 They're what what we today call the deep state.
27:35 state.
27:38 And it's possible the pharaoh gets gets
27:41 an accident and dies. Okay. So you need
27:44 someone right away to replace the
27:47 pharaoh. So everyone is being everyone
27:49 in the royal family is being trained
27:52 into this. The problem arises when the
27:54 priest class divides into different
27:57 political factions who all want power.
28:00 Then they program the pharaoh's brother
28:03 to create a civil war.
28:07 Okay. So everyone who who is in a royal
28:09 family is being programmed like this.
28:11 But then this raises a really
28:12 interesting question is like why would
28:16 they agree to this right now? What's
28:19 interesting is that
28:23 um these psychedelics and these uh
28:25 trauma create something called NDE.
28:27 Okay. What we call neardeath
28:30 experiences. So for like a minute or 10
28:31 minutes or or half an hour they are
28:34 literally dead. And what we know is when
28:37 that happens and and it's really
28:39 interesting is when you are feel you're
28:42 almost dead you transcend into the
28:45 spirit world. In the spirit world you
28:48 actually meet God. And we know this
28:51 because tens of thousands of people have
28:55 had an ND ND near-death experience. you
28:57 know, they got in a car crash and they
28:59 blacked out or they were drowning and
29:01 they almost died or they had a heart
29:03 attack and died. They all went to to
29:07 meet God and they all said up there in
29:09 the spirit world, it's all peaceful.
29:12 It's all love. You can feel God in you.
29:14 But God told me I cannot die. I have to
29:16 come back and tell people the true
29:19 spirit world. So the royal family does
29:22 this because it gives them wisdom and
29:25 access to the spirit world so that they
29:28 feel as though they're truly God.
29:29 Okay? And that's why they agree to do this,
29:31 this,
29:34 right? But then the question then is how
29:37 do the priests know how to do this?
29:38 because they they experiment on
29:41 themselves because they're priests and
29:42 they want to access the spirit world
29:45 themselves and they recognize that uh
29:46 near-death experiences and psychedelics
29:48 are the best two ways to go into that
29:51 world. So, they drown themselves, they
29:54 cut themselves up, um they starve
29:56 themselves, um there are lots of ways to
29:58 create near-death experiences, okay? But
30:00 but that's how they know the secrets.
30:03 And what's amazing is we have not
30:07 improved on Egyptians today. like all
30:08 the modern technology, all the modern
30:10 medicine, science, we're just doing what
30:13 they're doing. Okay. Okay. So, does it
30:15 make sense, guys?
30:17 >> Okay. Any more questions before I move on?
30:20 on?
30:21 >> So, there's >> Okay.
30:22 >> Okay.
30:24 >> There's no difference between heaven and hell.
30:25 hell.
30:27 >> Sorry. Excuse me. There's no different
30:30 between heaven and hell because I mean um
30:32 um
30:34 technically speaking if if you do bad
30:36 things you will never go to heaven but
30:40 uh and then when if you experience NE
30:42 and you still meet the spiritual world
30:44 then you'll realize that there's no
30:45 difference between heaven and hell.
30:46 >> Okay that that that's a great question.
30:49 Okay. So what is h heaven? What is hell?
30:50 Why should you do bad things? Why should
30:52 you do good things? You know, there's no
30:54 difference. Okay. So what people who
30:57 suffer NDE will tell you is this. You go
30:58 up to the spirit world, the first thing
31:00 that will happen is something called a
31:02 life review.
31:04 What is a life review? A life review is
31:05 this. You're able to see exactly what
31:08 you did your entire life. So if you're a
31:10 bad person, that's hell because you're
31:12 able to now feel pain for the first
31:14 time, right? Dissociation means you
31:17 don't feel any pain. But guess what?
31:18 You're just tricking yourself because
31:19 when you're up in the spirit world, you
31:22 have to see exactly what you did to
31:23 other people. You have to feel their
31:26 pain. Okay? That's what hell is. In
31:28 heaven is you can see the good that you
31:31 did. Okay? So what they say is that when
31:34 you do evil, you create negative energy
31:36 and when you do good, you create
31:38 positive energy. And you can't see that
31:40 in this world, but up in the spirit
31:41 world, you're able to see for yourself
31:43 finally how much evil you did and how
31:46 much good you did. Okay. And and that's
31:51 what heaven and hell is. Okay. And um I
31:52 mean I don't want to go too much into
31:56 this, but another another theory is that um
31:58 um
32:00 when you die, the only thing that that
32:03 is that remains in you is love. Okay? So
32:05 love is actually a physical force. And
32:08 the more love you have, the higher you
32:10 can ascend in the spirit world. And the
32:11 less love you have, well, you're kind of
32:13 stuck and and you you have to come back
32:15 and do it again.
32:19 Okay. So, um, be a nice person. All
32:21 right. Okay. Great question. Okay. So,
32:23 so are we clear about this? Okay. Well,
32:24 we'll we'll discuss more about
32:26 near-death experiences later on in the
32:28 spirit world later on. Okay. But I I
32:29 want to I want you to understand that
32:31 5,000 years ago in Egypt, they
32:34 discovered how to program the feral into
32:37 a robot that they can control. And we
32:41 still use same techniques today. Okay.
32:43 Any questions before I move on?
33:01 Okay. So, um as you can see,
33:04 as you can see in Egypt, it's the
33:06 priests who are willing control. The
33:08 pharaohs are just a puppets. Okay? And
33:10 it makes sense, right? Because one
33:12 person cannot control an entire empire.
33:13 It's the priests, the bureaucrats who
33:20 Okay, so we talk about dissociative
33:22 identity disorder, right? And you think,
33:25 wow, it's really great to have all this
33:28 power, but actually the one thing about
33:30 dissocive personality disorder is you
33:32 can never feel happiness.
33:35 In fact, you can only feel misery. So
33:36 the way to reduce your misery is by
33:38 making others more miserable than you are.
33:39 are.
33:40 >> Okay? Okay, so the people in power are
33:42 committed to making the world as evil
33:45 and as unhappy and as miserable as
33:46 possible because that's the only way
33:48 they can feel good about themselves.
33:50 Okay, so this is dissocive identity
33:54 disorder. Um, as you can see, it's
33:57 really bad. Okay, you have identity
33:59 confusion. You have changing memories,
34:01 flashbacks, uh, intrusive thoughts,
34:03 okay, internal voices. It's it's not a
34:08 great feeling to have this.
34:19 Sorry. What is going on here?
34:41 Okay. So now I want to talk about 911
34:44 and the war on terror. This is Donald
34:47 Rumsfield. And after 911, America
34:49 decided that they need to take
34:51 offensive. They need to hunt down the
34:54 terrorists and
34:56 control their behavior and so they start
34:59 to arrest terrorists.
35:03 But then bad things start to happen.
35:05 Okay. So this is a prison in Iraq, Abu
35:07 Grabi, where they arrested terrorists
35:09 and they were doing strange thing to
35:13 these terrorists as you can see.
35:16 Okay, so
35:23 this is pretty disgusting stuff. And
35:25 this was leaked to CBS News and CBS News
35:32 Okay.
35:34 All right. So, it's pretty disgusting.
35:38 So, now the question then is why is this
35:40 happening? And there they've been
35:41 different explanations. The military
35:44 says these are soldiers who went crazy
35:46 and they went rogue. So, we we've
35:48 arrested them and we punished them. But
35:50 then they discovered that they're
35:51 actually psychologists who were
35:54 responsible for this program. So, these
35:57 are two psychologists um and they were
36:02 sued by the victims and during the court
36:04 testimony we discovered that they were
36:07 paid $80 million by the CI CIA to
36:09 develop this program. So, what is going
36:12 on here? This is not something that
36:14 happened randomly. It was designed by
36:16 the government by the CIA. So, why is
36:18 this happening? Well, they call it
36:20 enhanced interrogation. Okay,
36:23 Okay,
36:26 this is a book, The Dark Side by Jay
36:29 Mir, who's a fantastic reporter. I I
36:31 highly recommend this book. Uh she's a
36:33 reporter for New Yorker and spent years
36:36 looking into why this torture happened.
36:40 And what she argued is it's an
36:44 experiment to change the mentality of
36:46 these terrorists.
36:48 And the theory is called learned
36:50 helplessness. You can basically take
36:52 someone like Rah, okay, the virtuous
36:55 hero and turn him to Osiris through
36:59 certain techniques. Okay, remember Rah,
37:01 the identity is the virtuous hero who
37:03 fights Opus every day. Osiris is a
37:06 person who gets tortured by Set every
37:09 day. Okay. So the goal of this
37:14 experiment is to turn Ra into Osiris. [Music]
37:17 [Music]
37:20 And the person who help learn
37:22 helplessness is also the person who
37:25 developed a new theory called
37:27 positive psychology.
37:31 His name is Martin Sigloman. Okay. So
37:34 positive psychology that you're learning
37:38 in school is brainwashing. Okay.
37:40 Okay.
37:43 All right. So that's a theory and it's a
37:44 great theory and this is what most
37:48 people believe. The problem though is it
37:51 doesn't actually work because after the
37:52 CIA started to torture all these
37:55 prisoners, they became ISIS, Islamic State.
37:57 State.
38:00 ISIS is the name of what? the Egyptian
38:03 goddess who saved Osiris, right? And who
38:04 father Horus. Do you think it's a
38:09 coincidence? Maybe not. Okay, maybe not.
38:12 So, ISIS is this fanatical death cult
38:14 that are terrorists who go around the
38:15 Middle East and kill a lot of people.
38:17 Okay, you might have seen their videos
38:19 where they do a lot of nasty stuff like
38:22 beheading people. Okay. So, what a lot
38:24 of people discovered is that there's
38:27 actually a
38:34 direct connection between sorry ISIS
38:38 and this torture. In fact,
38:41 in many academics, so for example,
38:43 Jeremy Suri and Andrew Thompson, they
38:45 discovered that many of the ISIS
38:46 fighters the US is currently combating
38:48 in the Middle East deep into extremism
38:51 during a time in prisons controlled by
38:53 the United States. So, it's really
38:55 strange. The United States thought that
38:56 they they were going to use the
39:00 psychology to train to turn Rah, the
39:03 terrorist, into Osiris, the citizen. But
39:05 they end up doing the reverse. Osiris
39:09 became rah. How stupid were they? Right?
39:10 And these guys were paid $80 million to
39:20 Okay, so this is human rights first, an
39:22 organization that start to interview
39:27 these prisoners of uh of of of America.
39:31 Okay. And what they discovered is these
39:35 prisoners told them sorry this okay
39:36 their testimony shows that ISIS
39:38 recruitment is still ongoing unchecked
39:40 by Egyptian authorities and field and
39:41 substantial part of the torture and
39:43 other abuse that pervade Egyptian
39:45 prisons. So it's really strange how
39:49 these prisons are almost training
39:53 ISIS terrorists.
39:55 What's going on? Well,
40:01 let's go back to Guanton Bay. Okay, the
40:03 answer lies in these prisons and what
40:06 they doing there. So, most of these
40:08 prisoners were so traumatized they
40:11 forgot what happened. But we have one
40:15 man um Abu Zuba who remember what
40:18 happened. He's a Saudi citizen who was
40:20 captured and he told us what were they
40:22 what what they were doing to him. Okay.
40:23 So, we're going to go through your story
40:25 and you tell me what the story reminds
40:28 you of. So, they basically were
40:31 force-feeding him, torturing him,
40:38 Then they put him in a coffin and they
40:47 Then they use a power drill to do this
40:51 to him. Okay. To basically cut him up.
40:54 Whoa. Do you guys remember the story?
40:57 >> Oh, and also sexual humiliation, right?
40:59 Where they had a woman who tried to
41:09 also guys,
41:16 >> What the story? What what what is the
41:20 story guys? What is the story?
41:23 It's a story of Egypt. This is what they
41:26 did to Pharaoh 5,000 years ago. It's the
41:29 same story. It's the same script. In
41:32 other words, they're not trying. What
41:34 they're really doing is they're trying
41:37 to turn these people who are mostly
41:41 innocent into terrorists. They're trying
41:45 to turn these people into drones that
41:47 they can program and unleash in the
41:51 Middle East. That's the real goal.
41:54 Okay. So, it wasn't that the experiment
42:02 ISIS is an American creation designed to
42:06 create as much chaos as possible in the
42:09 Middle East. Let me ask you this question.
42:11 question.
42:14 If you really wanted to get information
42:16 from these terrorists,
42:19 what's the best way to do that?
42:22 >> Pay the money. Be friends with them. Be
42:23 nice to them. Take them out to dinner.
42:25 Okay? We have lots of evidence to
42:27 suggest that if you just be nice to
42:28 these people, they'll tell you
42:29 everything they know. You don't have to
42:31 torture them. You torture them because
42:33 you're trying to turn them into secret
42:35 weapons to be unleashed
42:39 in the world. Okay.
42:42 All right. So
42:44 5,000 years ago, they were doing this to
42:46 Pharaoh and now they figure out how to
42:50 do this to anyone using drugs, using torture,
42:51 torture,
42:54 using ritual abuse.
42:58 Okay, so all these ISIS fighters,
43:00 they're robots controlled by the
43:02 American military. They're drones, the
43:04 human drones used. Okay, why is this
43:08 important? It's important because
43:10 5,000 years ago, trying to control the
43:12 feral was first and foremost about
43:14 social control. So,
43:17 So, so
43:18 so
43:20 there's a program called MK Ultra
43:23 started in the 1950s and60s led by a
43:26 chemist called Sydney Gobble. Okay? And
43:29 the point of MK Ultra was to figure out
43:32 how to brainwash people.
43:35 And for the longest time, this was
43:38 considered a conspiracy theory. But a
43:40 few years ago, the CIA, the US
43:41 government admitted, "We actually did
43:43 this." But not anymore. Okay? We did
43:45 this before, but not today. Not today.
43:48 Okay? Okay. So, if you're curious, there
43:51 are lots of there are lots of documents,
43:53 government documents,
43:55 um, on the internet that you can read.
43:58 Okay. But the NBA Ultra was a program
44:00 designed to test the effects of drugs
44:03 and brainwashing on innocent American
44:08 citizens, especially children. Okay.
44:13 Um, so some of the documents that are
44:15 now public and and guys, just so you
44:17 know, most of the documentation, the
44:18 most sensitive documentation was
44:20 destroyed by the participants. So we
44:22 only have a few of the documents. But
44:24 some of the things that they were doing
44:27 was brainwashing, okay? Using drugs,
44:30 hypnosis in order to control people's
44:32 minds, okay, interrogation techniques.
44:37 Um, they were working with foreign
44:40 intelligence officials to conduct mind
44:42 control research. Okay, so the things
44:43 you couldn't do in the United States
44:46 legally, they were doing in Egypt, which
44:48 created what guysa.
44:53 Okay. Um, they were also doing things
44:54 that were really weird. For example,
44:56 they they started a brothel. And so if
44:58 you came to the brothel, they gave you drugs,
45:00 drugs,
45:02 okay? Like LSD. And they were trying to
45:07 figure out how to control your mind.
45:09 But they won't do this to most people,
45:12 right? Okay. Well, I'll show you later
45:16 on. Um, you'll be surprised.
45:18 Okay. Okay, so this is Sime Gobbley and
45:23 he was the man responsible for MK Ultra
45:26 and he's a chemist. Okay, so he's trying
45:31 to figure out how to use these drugs to
45:35 control the population. And you're like,
45:38 well, this is just weird. And if you
45:40 talk to experts, like, well, the MK
45:43 Ultra results were terrible. But then
45:47 ask yourself this. What is social media?
45:52 What is if if you feel bad and you go to
45:55 a doctor and the doctor gives you drugs,
45:58 how do they know these drugs work? Okay,
46:02 so MK Ultra did work, but they they they
46:04 were they hide the fact of its
46:06 effectiveness and the results of MK
46:11 Ultra have spread throughout society.
46:14 Guys, good news. You're now the pharaoh.
46:16 Okay, each and every one of you are now
46:18 the pharaoh. Congratulations. Something
46:27 Sorry, I'm just Why is this happening?
46:30 Okay, you may not know this, but
46:33 psychologists have been known to have a
46:37 greater propensity to have mental
46:39 illness than most people. Your
46:41 psychologist is literally more screwed
46:44 up in the brain than you are. Okay, you
46:46 don't believe me? Do some research. And
46:49 this is really weird because
46:52 if you went to a doctor and the doctor
46:55 was fat and unhealthy,
46:58 that' be that'd be problematic, right?
47:02 Um, also
47:04 I have not met anyone who's gotten
47:07 better psychologically after seeing a
47:08 psychologist. You guys might have and
47:09 I'm sure there are lots and lots of
47:11 people who benefited from seeing a
47:13 psychologist, but I myself have never
47:17 met anyone or seen anyone who's benefit
47:18 from seeing a psychologist. That's
47:20 really weird because if you break your
47:23 leg and you go to a doctor and like for
47:25 years and years doesn't get better,
47:28 well, that's a problem, right? Okay. So,
47:30 um something to keep something to keep
47:47 So I I know this was a lot to take in
47:49 um and we'll be expanding these topics
47:53 as we move on. Okay. But some key
47:56 takeaways is
47:58 all societies are first and foremost
48:02 concerned with social control.
48:06 And what's really interesting is who we
48:09 are as a human being has not changed in
48:11 thousands of years. So that the way the
48:13 way they were controlling the pharaoh in
48:15 Egypt 5,000 years ago is still is really
48:17 the way that they control us today. And
48:21 I'll show you how as we discuss mass as
48:24 the mass media, okay, and mass education
48:28 and mass psychology. Okay. Um we have a
48:29 question here.
48:32 In that case, shouldn't the social media
48:35 be controlled by government? Like for
48:37 example, why Twitter and or say X could be
48:39 be
48:44 a personal thing by owned by Elon Musk?
48:47 >> Okay, that's a great question. Okay, so
48:49 if it's true that social media is a
48:51 mechanism for social control, why are
48:52 they being controlled by private
48:55 citizens who've made billions of dollars
48:58 doing it? Right? Okay. Well, let me ask
49:00 you this question. Who built the internet?
49:02 internet?
49:03 You guys do you guys know who built the
49:06 internet? The US military, right?
49:10 Because the internet is is um controlled
49:12 by these cables that run around the
49:14 world. Who who who built all these
49:16 cables? The US military. Do you think
49:18 they would do this for free? Why would
49:22 they do this? Okay. So, Twitter,
49:24 Facebook, that's the public face. Okay.
49:27 What what people forget is behind
49:32 Facebook and Twitter are all the this
49:34 infrastructure that's being controlled
49:36 and protected by the US military. So why
49:40 would why would the military do this? Okay?
49:41 Okay?
49:44 Right? And again,
49:47 this is a class about speculation, about
49:49 theories. Okay? I'm not telling you
49:50 what's true. I'm I'm just raising
49:53 questions and possibilities about what's
49:58 really going on. Okay. And also like um
49:59 um
50:02 I don't know what they did in Egypt
50:04 5,000 years ago. I'm just speculating.
50:05 It's just a theory. It's a nice theory,
50:08 but I have no evidence that it's true.
50:10 Okay. This is just a disclaimer. Take
50:13 what I say with a grain of salt. Be
50:16 skeptical and doubtful of what I say.
50:23 Okay, great. Okay, so I'll I'll see you