0:01 There is a place on Earth that you're
0:03 not allowed to go to. A continent that
0:05 is larger than the United States and
0:07 Mexico combined where stepping foot
0:10 there without permission can land you in
0:12 prison can get you a good ass whooping.
0:14 It's not a military base. It's not a
0:16 government facility. It's an entire
0:19 continent. It's Antarctica. And most
0:21 people think it's just ice and penguins,
0:24 empty, worthless. What? But if that's
0:27 true, why does it cost tens of thousands
0:30 of dollars and months of permits to just
0:32 visit there? Why is it the only place on
0:34 Earth that is governed by an
0:37 international treaty signed by 58
0:39 nations? Me not being one of them. Why
0:42 are vast sections of it blurred out on
0:44 Google Earth? Why is that? Something is
0:46 not adding up here. I stink. I mean, I
0:49 smell something that stinks. For over a
0:51 century, explorers could visit
0:53 Antarctica freely. Scientists mapped its
0:55 coastlines, governments claimed
0:57 territories, and even tourists just took
0:59 expeditions there to explore. Then
1:01 suddenly in 1959, everything changed.
1:03 The Antarctic Treaty locked down the
1:05 entire continent under the most
1:07 restrictive international agreement in
1:10 human history. They say it's to keep you
1:13 safe cuz you'll die if you go there. But
1:15 locking down the entire continent, that
1:16 doesn't really make a lot of sense, man.
1:19 That's overkill. That's [ __ ] All
1:21 right, homie. Harry the rat says that's
1:23 [ __ ] Whatever's down there, whether
1:25 it be treasure, technology, or some kind
1:27 of truth that we're not ready for.
1:30 Someone decided that the rest of us
1:31 don't get to know. Uh we don't get to
1:32 know. I don't get to know. I get to
1:34 speculate and I get to talk about it and
1:36 have a lot of fun talking about it. But,
1:38 you know, you you just watch this video.
1:41 Anyways, buckle up. We're prying open
1:43 the coldest lock box on Earth, Antarctica.
1:54 First, let's start with mindbending
1:56 facts. Okay, we're going to be talking
1:58 about speculative conspiracies in the
2:02 next chapter. This one is facts that
2:04 seem like speculative conspiracies. In
2:06 1929, workers cleaning out an old
2:09 Turkish palace made a bizarre discovery.
2:11 Hidden in the archives was a map drawn
2:15 in 1513 by Admiral Perry Ree. You've
2:17 probably heard of him. is very famous.
2:20 It's not a obscure conspiracy document
2:22 that's dated somewhere when it's not
2:23 supposed to be dated and all that. It's
2:26 it's real. It's in a museum and it shows
2:29 something impossible. Okay. It shows the
2:32 coast of Antarctica 300 years before
2:35 anyone supposedly discovered it. How in
2:38 the is that possible? The map doesn't
2:39 just show that a southern continent
2:42 exists. It shows the actual coastline of
2:44 Antarctica accurate to within miles.
2:46 Well, what's the big deal about that?
2:48 The coastline has been buried under ice
2:51 for millions of years. No one in 1513
2:53 should have known what it looked like or
2:55 how to find out what it looked like.
2:57 Perry Ree noted on the map itself that
3:00 he compiled it from ancient sources,
3:02 some dating back to the 4th century BC,
3:05 which is a long, long time ago. So,
3:07 that's really confusing. And in 1960,
3:09 the US Air Force analyzed the map and
3:11 confirmed that its geographical details
3:13 match seismic surveys of the actual
3:16 bedrock beneath Antarctica's ice sheet.
3:18 How did they know that? I don't know.
3:20 I'm asking you. Do you know? Are you a
3:22 science person? Get in on my comment
3:24 section. So, think about what that means
3:26 for all of us. Someone thousands of
3:28 years ago mapped Antarctica when it was
3:31 covered in ice. Someone with technology
3:33 to survey an entire continent from
3:35 above. It seems like at least unless
3:38 they had one of those balls from
3:40 Waterorld and they got real d deep down
3:42 in the in the ocean and he was like or
3:44 whatever and then there was a squid.
3:46 Fortunately, it gets even more strange
3:49 and bizarre. The Aronteus Fenus map from
3:52 1531, not 1513, the Perry Reese map.
3:54 This is a completely different one. It
3:56 shows even more detail of the southern
3:59 land recently discovered rivers,
4:02 mountain ranges, coastlines, a swastika.
4:03 Why' they put a swastika on that? That
4:05 seems odd. We'll find out later in
4:07 chapter 2. With some of these
4:09 geographical markers matching the hidden
4:11 topography beneath miles of ice that
4:14 modern scientists only discovered with
4:16 ground penetrating radar in the '9s.
4:19 How? Now, critics, there are critics of
4:21 everything. They say it's a coincidence.
4:24 It's a coincidental resemblance to a
4:26 mythical continent that does not exist.
4:28 Or orinas, if that is his real name, was
4:30 just a goofy goober. Which that's
4:31 possible to be honest. It kind of makes
4:32 sense. people were really good at making
4:34 [ __ ] up. But they do seem to be more
4:36 like precise geographical surveys of
4:38 landscapes that have been hidden than
4:40 they do just made up nonsense like the
4:42 Voyage manuscript or something like
4:44 that. Anyways, how about Lake Vostto?
4:46 There's more. 2 and 1/2 miles beneath
4:49 the ice of Antarctica lies a lake the
4:53 size of Ontario, which is a province in
4:55 Canada. This lake has been cut off from
4:58 the surface world for over 15 million
5:00 years. I'm going to start referring to
5:02 us as surface dwellers in the surface
5:05 world. Lake Vostto, not speculative at
5:08 all. It's real. Russian scientists spent
5:11 20 years drilling a hole to reach it.
5:13 They finally broke through in 2012, and
5:15 what they found was very enlightening
5:17 from a science perspective and and and
5:19 how we understand life on Earth. The
5:21 lake itself is pristine, untouched. It's
5:23 a perfect time capsule from an age when
5:25 Antarctica was green and warm. And
5:27 that's not a conspiracy. It was at one
5:31 point green and warm like
5:35 the holy relic. Yeah. The water samples
5:37 that they collected from Lake Vosto
5:39 contained bacteria that evolved in
5:41 complete isolation and developed
5:43 survival mechanisms unlike anything else
5:45 on Earth because there aren't many
5:47 organisms that develop in complete
5:49 isolation. Okay? These organisms lived
5:51 in total darkness under crushing
5:53 pressure with no oxygen and somehow they
5:57 thrived for millions of years. How in
6:00 the is that even possible? Scientists
6:02 discovered at least 17 different species
6:04 of microbes in the waters of Lake
6:07 Vostto. Some represent entirely new
6:09 branches of the tree of life. They feed
6:11 on chemicals instead of sunlight. They
6:13 transform metals in ways we're still
6:15 trying to understand. and they can
6:16 survive in conditions that would
6:19 instantly kill any surface life from us
6:21 weak surface dwellers. Now, this beyond
6:23 the secrets of Antarctica has pretty
6:25 staggering implications. For example, if
6:27 life can exist in Lake Vastto's
6:29 impossible environment, life can
6:30 probably exist in other impossible
6:32 environments like on other planets.
6:36 Bing, ring, ding, ding. Lake Vostto is
6:39 just one of over 140 subglacial lakes
6:40 that have been discovered beneath
6:43 Antarctica. We have no idea what is in
6:45 the others and we can't access most of
6:47 them. You can't get a drill bit that
6:49 long. Believe me, I've asked. There
6:51 could be entire ecosystems down there
6:53 that have evolved separately from
6:55 everything we know on Earth in the
6:57 surface world for us surface dwellers.
6:59 Now, how about the blood falls? These
7:02 are real photos. What the is going on?
7:03 Oh, these. Don't worry about these.
7:05 These are just blood waterfalls emerging
7:08 from glaciers. It's just a normal thing,
7:11 guys. in Antarctica's McMmero Dry
7:13 valleys, which if McMurdo rings a bell,
7:15 you've probably seen The Thing. My
7:17 favorite movie of all time and my
7:19 favorite example of Cosmicor. In this
7:21 dry valley, something bleeds from the
7:23 ice. The blood falls, as they're called,
7:26 look like crimson waterfalls of blood.
7:28 They're pouring from a glacier called
7:30 the Taylor Glacier, and the red liquid
7:34 stains the white ice red. And for over a
7:35 century, nobody knew why. They were just
7:38 like, "That's probably hell down there."
7:40 But it isn't hell. It's somehow actually
7:42 more strange than that. It is ancient
7:44 seawater that's been trapped beneath the
7:47 glacier for 5 million years. It's just
7:49 leaking out of it and it's red. And it
7:51 isn't just old salt water. It's got
7:53 living things in it. Now, the red color
7:55 comes from iron oxide. But the iron
7:58 oxide isn't occurring from the oxidation
8:01 of iron in the normal process. It's
8:04 being produced by bacteria. Those
8:06 bacteria I mentioned that have strange
8:08 interactions with metal, they eat the
8:10 metal. They feed on the metal and then
8:13 they produce iron oxide. How? Why? What
8:16 in the heck? Oh, these little rascals
8:17 have also been sealed in complete
8:19 darkness for millions of years with no
8:21 sunlight, no oxygen, and no connection
8:23 to the surface world. But and somehow
8:25 they've just survived down there and
8:27 created their own ecosystem where they
8:29 can transform iron into sulfur compounds
8:32 and use that for energy. the process by
8:34 which they're doing this, scientists are
8:35 still trying to understand. To be fair,
8:37 they're really far away and hard to get
8:39 to. So, it makes sense as to why it's so
8:40 difficult. So, yeah, that's
8:43 unbelievable. These things use sulfur
8:46 and iron to live, and they don't use the
8:48 sun like everything else that lives.
8:51 They're cheosynthetic extreophiles is
8:52 what they're actually called. If you
8:55 want to Google those words, I promise
8:57 you won't get put on any lists.
8:59 I said that. I said I made it plural. I
9:04 said lists. Lists. Lists. Lists. Okay,
9:08 that's right. Lists. Lists. Lists. No.
9:12 Lists. I can't say that anymore.
9:13 I don't like that. So, yeah. A little
9:14 blood coming out of the ground. No big
9:17 deal. Scientists have also detected
9:19 massive geothermal activity beneath
9:21 Antarctica that doesn't match any
9:24 geological model of the continent. As
9:26 well, published research shows that heat
9:28 flux near the South Pole measuring twice
9:30 the expected values. Now, that might not
9:32 sound that dramatic, but it does
9:34 represent millions of watts of
9:36 unexplained energy generation. Is it
9:39 those little extreophile chemosynthetic
9:41 fellas chewing on sulfur and iron? Who
9:43 the knows? Something is producing
9:45 massive amounts of heat deep beneath the
9:48 ice, creating vast underground hot water
9:50 systems and caverns that we're only
9:51 beginning to map. Ground penetrating
9:53 radar and geological surveys have
9:55 revealed enormous voids beneath the
9:58 Antarctica ice sheet. Not small air
9:59 pockets, but cavities large enough to
10:02 contain entire cities. And they're not
10:04 natural formations. Halo reference.
10:06 They're spaces that have been carved out
10:09 by sustained heat sources that shouldn't
10:11 exist according to our current
10:13 understanding of Antarctic geology. This
10:15 cave is not a natural formation. The
10:17 heat signatures don't match volcanic
10:19 activity, radioactive decay, or any
10:22 other known geothermal process. They're
10:25 too large, too organized, and too
10:27 purposeful to be honest. Whatever is
10:29 generating these things, this heat, it's
10:31 been active for a very long time, and
10:35 it's quietly reshaping the subworld,
10:38 Antarctica, from below. Okay, guys,
10:40 that's that's a bit conspiratorial, but
10:42 something is going on in there, and we
10:43 don't really know exactly what it is cuz
10:45 it's so far away and so deep down there.
10:47 And recent satellite measurements show
10:49 that ice is melting from underneath at
10:51 an accelerating rate, which isn't due to
10:53 climate change. It's from an internal
10:55 heat source that science is having a
10:57 difficult time explaining, which by the
10:59 way is how science works. That's very
11:02 normal. Or it's cuz it's an alien under
11:04 there. What the Haven't you seen the
11:08 Haven't you seen uh the thing?
11:09 Some pretty odd things going on in
11:11 Antarctica. Let's be real. I think I
11:14 might go to check it out. Just kidding.
11:22 So, the purpose of act one was to show
11:24 you some very interesting things in
11:26 regard to Antarctica that are completely
11:28 real and we have a hard time explaining.
11:32 Act two is more of that, but like a lot
11:36 crazier. Between 1938 and 1939, Nazi
11:38 Germany conducted a massive expedition
11:41 to Antarctica. And they weren't there
11:43 for the scenery. They were there for the Vril.
11:45 Vril.
11:47 They were on their way to Hyperoreia.
11:49 This operation was led by Captain Alfred
11:51 Richard. He led it aboard the ship, the
11:53 Schwabin Land. Okay, guys, you've
11:54 probably heard of Schwabin Land. These
11:57 fellas on this expedition systematically
11:59 mapped over 350,000
12:01 square kilometers of Antarctic
12:02 territory, flying reconnaissance
12:06 missions, dropping thousands of metal
12:08 Nazi markers bearing swastikas to claim
12:11 the land for the Third Reich.
12:14 land. Newlandia.
12:22 They called this area that they put
12:24 their little markers down on New
12:28 Schwabin land or New Zabia, which is a
12:30 region in southern Germany and Bavaria.
12:32 I'm pretty sure it's where my family's
12:34 from. All right, guys. Bavaria. And this
12:37 wasn't a small scientific expedition. It
12:40 was a territorial conquest. The Nazis
12:43 big into territorial conquests. So why
12:46 were the Nazis up in Nvabin land? They
12:48 were there officially to establish
12:50 whailing stations and to obviously just
12:54 secure more territory for Germany. But
12:56 some people theorize they may have built
12:59 something much darker around these
13:01 documented facts. The theory is that the
13:04 Nazis discovered warm water areas heated
13:06 by geothermal vents and established a
13:10 secret base called base 211. That's the
13:12 theory. And according to this theory,
13:15 base 211 became a refuge for highranking
13:17 Nazis after the defeat of Germany in
13:20 1945. A development center for advanced
13:23 technology, including the vrillpowered
13:25 flying bell, the acorn. Have you seen
13:28 this? Have you seen this? I haven't seen
13:30 it, but I've seen of it. I've seen it
13:32 around or whatever. This is what people
13:34 believe base 211 looked like. A secret
13:37 Nazi hideway in Antarctica or Nvabin
13:40 land. All right. Is it real? I'm not
13:41 sure. We do know that they went up
13:44 there. Okay. We do know that. And they
13:46 put their little things. I believe some
13:47 of them are still up there. There is
13:49 more documented evidence post war, by
13:51 the way, of yubot and submarines turning
13:53 up where they shouldn't necessarily have
13:54 been. And some people believe that they
13:57 stopped in Antarctica on the way to
13:59 Argentina. I don't know. It's it's it's
14:01 a pretty deep rabbit hole. This video is
14:03 more just about Antarctica. Now, on to
14:06 postwar. In 1946, just one year after
14:08 the Nazi German surrender, the United
14:10 States launched Operation High Jump
14:12 under Admiral Richard Eird. I've talked
14:14 about this multiple times on my channel,
14:16 and everybody knows this, and most
14:17 people have heard of this story. There
14:20 was a a fairly large scientific
14:23 expedition, a massive military operation
14:26 involving 4,700 personnel, 13 ships, 33
14:27 aircraft, doing what was officially
14:29 described as a training exercise that
14:32 was just remarkably wellarmed. The
14:33 operation was planned to last 8 months,
14:36 but it ended abruptly after just 8
14:38 weeks. Official reports site harsh
14:39 weather conditions and equipment
14:42 failures, but the sudden termination of
14:45 something so large scale has fueled uh
14:47 decades of speculation. the theory and
14:50 people often cite alleged statements by
14:53 Admiral Richard Eird. Okay, they say he
14:55 encountered hostile forces or advanced
14:57 aircraft. There's a very famous story of
15:02 him, you know, being taken by UFO into
15:03 the middle of the earth into the hollow
15:06 earth and speaking to white Nordic
15:08 aliens that had swastikas all around
15:12 them and saying, "If you can't do the
15:14 it's over. You need to be a good guy."
15:16 So, Operation High Jump, totally real,
15:19 very strange, but it's what people often
15:22 cite in statements by Admiral Bird after
15:25 the event. That is what the real mystery
15:28 is. There is allegedly a secret journal,
15:31 a secret diary that details Admiral
15:33 Bird's encounter with white Nordic
15:36 aliens that took him into the hollow
15:38 Earth that was only accessible through
15:40 Antarctica. Beautiful green trees, green
15:44 grass, blue skies. better something for
15:46 the day I die with big white tall
15:48 aliens, long beautiful hair, and there's
15:50 just swastikas everywhere. And they say
15:52 telepathically, of course, do not use
15:56 nuclear bombs. We are not Nazis. We are
15:59 aliens. We are good guys. And stuff.
16:02 People attribute that to him. You know,
16:05 there's apparently a secret diary, but a
16:06 lot of this stuff appears to be just
16:09 entirely fabricated to be honest. But
16:11 that is the story. Now, something
16:13 incredible was documented during
16:16 Operation Hydron. On January 30th, 1947,
16:18 Lieutenant Commander David Bunger,
16:19 pretty cool name, was flying a
16:21 reconnaissance mission when he spotted
16:23 something that defied traditional
16:26 explanation of the Antarctic geography.
16:28 A vast area of ice-free land with blue
16:31 and green lakes in the middle of
16:34 Antarctica. Not trees necessarily, but a
16:36 significant discovery nonetheless. This
16:37 discovery was so significant that
16:39 Admiral Bird himself called it by far
16:41 the most important discovery of the
16:42 expedition. That's before they gave up
16:44 after eight weeks. Of course, Bunger
16:46 landed his sea plane on one of the lakes
16:48 and the water temperature was 38°
16:50 Fahrenheit, which is remarkably warm for
16:52 Antarctica. And the lakes were filled
16:53 with colored algae and the surrounding
16:55 area contained flowing water in a
16:57 landscape that none of them had ever
16:59 really seen before. And Bird described
17:01 it as looking like a landscape on
17:03 another planet. Here's pictures of it.
17:05 So, it's called Bunger Oasis. It's a
17:07 real documented photographed area and it
17:10 has a warm ice free zone. One of the
17:12 very few in Antarctica. So that's really
17:14 interesting. Now imagine them getting
17:15 sucked into a hole and their sea plane
17:18 gets redirected by a you know a flying
17:19 disc and then there's white people with
17:22 long hair and they're saying
17:24 or whatever the they'd say. How about
17:26 what looks like pyramids up there?
17:28 Right. Very strange. Modern satellite
17:31 imagery has revealed some intriguing
17:33 features across Antarctica. Users of
17:35 Google Earth have documented what
17:38 appears to be pyramids, geometric
17:41 structures, formations 180 ft wide by
17:44 230 ft tall with straight surfaces that
17:46 look artificial. Very strange things to
17:49 see in an ice continent. Plus, the
17:51 formations seem to remain ice-free in
17:53 spite of Antarctic conditions. They're
17:55 too regular and too geometric to be
17:57 natural formations. And unfortunately,
18:00 they're too isolated and inaccessible to
18:02 be investigated properly, especially not
18:05 by the public, me or you. Something also
18:07 disturbing is when people try to verify
18:09 the coordinates of these formations
18:11 online, they often find the locations
18:13 have been removed, the images have been
18:15 removed. Just across the board,
18:17 information has been removed from public
18:19 access or has been digitally obscured
18:22 when it comes to these geometric things
18:24 in Antarctica. Also, Antarctica has
18:26 become a bit of a hot spot for UFO
18:28 sightings. Research station personnel,
18:31 pilots, and tourists have all reported
18:33 unusual phenomena, which is just kind of
18:35 normal now. Discshaped objects emerging
18:37 from the ice, lights moving at
18:40 impossible speeds, structured objects
18:42 caught on security cameras, things like
18:44 that. Bizarre, unexplainable things. In
18:46 the world of the Antarctic pyramids and
18:50 Antarctic UFOs collides. In 2018, a
18:52 Google Earth user claimed to have
18:53 discovered what appeared to be a massive
18:56 entrance in the Antarctic ice. And when
18:58 people tried to verify the location,
19:00 they found that the coordinates had been
19:02 removed from public access and images of
19:04 it had been digitally destroyed. But
19:09 luckily, I have one here in this video
19:10 probably. I don't know what Tara put up
19:12 there. Thank you though, Tara. I really
19:13 appreciate it. And aside from that,
19:15 scientists have also detected strange
19:18 radio signals emanating from beneath the
19:21 ice. An experiment called the Antarctic
19:23 Impulsive Transit Antenna Experiment
19:26 recorded unusual radio bursts coming
19:28 from under the ice that don't match any
19:30 known natural phenomena. And to this
19:33 day, those signals appear to violate our
19:35 current scientific understanding of
19:38 particle physics. These radio waves are
19:40 being detected from below the horizon,
19:43 which is not possible to detect radio
19:45 signals from below the horizon. I don't
19:47 know a lot about particle physics to be
19:50 honest, but it's it shouldn't. It's just
19:52 bizarre. What the is happening and why
19:53 don't more people talk about it? Pardon
19:55 me for continuing to connect all these
19:57 theories by the way. But the alien
20:00 geometry radio theory connects to the
20:03 Nazi theory as well. Some geniuses,
20:05 theorists proposed that the advanced
20:07 technology that was allegedly developed
20:10 at base 211 during World War II was
20:11 actually reverse engineered from
20:13 extraterrestrial crafts. And these
20:16 geniuses suggest that Antarctica serves
20:18 as a kind of neutral zone where world
20:20 governments could interact with alien
20:22 civilizations hidden completely from the
20:24 public view and beneath the ice.
20:26 There isn't really a lot of credible
20:28 evidence, but there is consistent
20:30 reports of unusual aerial phenomena and
20:32 some very unexplained unexpected things.
20:35 And it does make sense if you were to
20:38 cast aside all doubt. Humans, aliens on
20:40 the same planet, let's say, and to
20:42 prevent worldwide hysteria, cuz I know
20:44 I'd be hysterial if some aliens showed
20:47 up. I'd be like, "No,
20:48 I'd handle it, dude. I've been prepping
20:49 with my little bro here." I would offer
20:52 him to them. to prevent hysteria. Just
20:54 hang out with them in Antarctica. Just
20:56 hang out with him in Antarctica. Just
20:57 don't even worry about hanging out with
21:00 him like at Trump Tower or whatever the
21:03 you know at Mara Lago or Wendy's or some
21:05 [ __ ] I don't know, Disneyland.
21:07 Hang out with him where nobody can see
21:09 and then there will be no problems cuz
21:11 no one will see. The public will not
21:14 know and it'll all be fine. There's also
21:16 the hollow earth theory, which I need to
21:17 make an entire video about this because
21:19 there's a lot of really interesting subs
21:21 stories in and around the hollow earth
21:25 that are I mean they're interesting.
21:26 Let's be real. They're they're very
21:27 interesting. The hollow moon already
21:29 talked about that. It's scientifically
21:32 explainable. Uh but the most enduring
21:34 theory in regard to Antarctica is
21:35 probably the hollow earth theory. It's a
21:37 theory that suggests our planet contains
21:40 a habitable inner world which is
21:41 accessible through openings at the
21:43 poles. one in the south. It's where
21:45 Admiral Bird flew his little suppository
21:48 craft in and one at the north. There are
21:50 several pieces of evidence that geniuses
21:52 point to when discussing the hollow
21:54 Earth. Admiral Bird's alleged alien
21:57 encounters. Number one, unusual aurora
21:59 phenomenon in Antarctica and magnetic
22:01 anomalies that can cause navigation
22:03 equipment to malfunction and satellite
22:05 imagery that shows missing data around
22:07 both poles. So, it's like they're hiding
22:11 it. Ah, good. I don't want to know about
22:13 that [ __ ] I'd rather just be a peeon
22:15 and just love my family and stuff. You
22:17 know, life ain't that bad. I don't need
22:19 to know about aliens. By the way, we
22:21 checked the polls are blurry on Google
22:23 Earth. There's no it's missing blurred
22:24 data. I'm not sure. That's not what
22:26 polls look like. I don't assume they
22:28 look blurry. Okay. I don't think you go
22:29 there and it's all blurred out. There's
22:31 a lot of blurred spots on the South and
22:33 North Pole. I don't know. I mean, I
22:35 guess I know why. Military installation,
22:38 whatever. The Who's going to who's who
22:40 who going to be like what? There's like
22:43 you can see military bases in the United
22:46 States and like what? Who? Don't blur
22:48 that. You're going to scare me. You're
22:50 going to scare the hoes. Now, of course,
22:53 scientists explain the blurring as
22:56 limitation of satellite orbits, but I
22:58 and my fellow geniuses interpret these
23:01 gaps as evidence of hidden openings to
23:03 the hollow earth and/or conspiracies.
23:05 Okay, guys. And the hollow earth isn't
23:07 really even a new idea. The Greeks had
23:09 the concept of Hades. The Buddhists
23:12 believed in Agartha. Human cultures for
23:14 a very long time have imagined vast
23:16 worlds beneath the feet. Us poor surface
23:19 dwellers. And Antarctica with its
23:22 unexplored depths beneath miles of ice provides
23:29 provides the perfect canvas for this
23:33 dream, this hidden world of monsters or
23:35 whatever. So the Nazis went to
23:37 Antarctica. Operation High Jump really
23:39 happened. Satellite imagery shows
23:42 missing data on the visual appearance of
23:44 Antarctica from the satellite view.
23:47 There is things that defy particle
23:49 physics and our understanding of it in
23:52 terms of uh hearing radio waves. Ding
23:54 ding ding ding ding. Lots of weird stuff
23:56 going on. There's also the ice wall
23:58 theory, which I think deserves its own
24:01 video because that is like a uh there's
24:02 some I could probably get into contact
24:06 with a p I know a pilot who believes
24:08 that that's a legit thing who's seen it
24:10 apparently allegedly. The scariest part
24:12 of all of this to me is the amount of
24:14 resources that are contained in the
24:17 continent of Antarctica. In 1991, a
24:19 bunch of countries signed the Madrid
24:21 Protocol. And that protocol banned all
24:24 mining in Antarctica until 2048. And
24:26 that's just 23 years away. And when that
24:28 treaty expires, a vote of 75% of
24:30 signatory nations could potentially open
24:33 Antarctica up for resource extraction.
24:35 So a lot of the ciness and secrecy and
24:38 desire to go there makes more sense when
24:40 you consider the following. Antarctica
24:43 contains an estimated 200 billion
24:45 barrels of oil, which is more than Saudi
24:48 Arabia. Its mineral wealth includes
24:50 gold, platinum, rare earth elements,
24:53 neodymium, little tiny alien bacteria
24:56 that can turn iron into sulfur and iron
24:59 oxide. Plus, coal reserves there dwarf
25:01 our existing deposits, and Antarctica
25:04 holds 70% of the world's fresh water
25:07 locked in ice. It's an unbelievably
25:09 valuable source of resources. It's
25:11 potentially priceless. So there's the
25:13 preventatory measure of the Madrid
25:15 protocol and on top of that current
25:17 extraction costs make it economically
25:20 unviable to utilize Antarctica for
25:22 resource extraction because if it was
25:24 real, you know, it's going to happen
25:26 eventually. But why is there a massive
25:28 military presence? Why are there nations
25:30 positioning themselves for 2048 if
25:32 resources aren't even accessible? Why
25:35 the Why is all Why do people care so
25:36 much about Antarctica aside from it
25:39 being a desolate place and them wanting
25:42 to do experiments up there for desolate
25:45 stuff? Why? Why? Why not just do it in
25:49 my backyard and pay me something? I'll
25:52 let you do it if you pay me.
25:54 It's not nearly as cold in my backyard.
25:56 Just come on.
25:58 I'm kind of the Clint Eastwood Squid of
25:59 conspiracy theories. You want to know
26:01 why? Apparently, the year that Brokeback
26:02 Mountain came out, it was reported that
26:04 Clint Eastwood hadn't actually seen the
26:06 movie. Therefore, he would not vote on
26:08 it, which would eventually prevent
26:10 Brokeback Mountain from receiving a
26:12 nomination for best picture of the year
26:14 at the Oscars, you know. And much like
26:16 Clint Eastwood, I also don't want to
26:18 spend my professional time watching men
26:21 kissing. Just kidding. It's my favorite thing.
26:28 By the way, it is possible to go to
26:30 Antarctica if you want to. If you're not
26:32 a military guy or a researcher of some
26:35 kind, you can go as a tourist. There are
26:36 ways to get there. You're looking at
26:39 tens of thousands of dollars minimum,
26:41 but the cost to get in isn't the real
26:43 barrier. It's the actual permits to get
26:45 in. Every commercial operator must work
26:48 through a international association of
26:50 Antarctica tour operators. And through
26:53 that, only 100 people are allowed ashore
26:55 at any time from cruise ships. And every
26:57 landing site must be pre-approved and
26:59 every activity must be monitored. So,
27:01 you're allowed to explore Antarctica
27:03 about as much as you're allowed to
27:04 explore North Korea. Something like
27:06 that. You're taking a carefully
27:09 choreographed tour of exactly what you
27:11 are allowed to see. Now, if you think
27:13 you can charter your own expedition,
27:14 you'll need permits from your home
27:16 country, environmental impact
27:18 assessments, proof of insurance that
27:20 most companies won't provide with search
27:22 and rescue guarantees that are
27:24 unbelievably expensive. Antarctica is a
27:27 system that is designed to keep average
27:30 people out. And it seems like for
27:33 reasons that are suspicious and
27:35 confusing, not exactly environmental
27:36 reasons. The biggest fortress in
27:39 Antarctica is not a geometric shape of
27:41 aliens or some kind of military base
27:43 from the United States. It's the legal
27:45 fortress there. Seven nations have
27:47 claims on pieces of Antarctica.
27:50 Argentina, Australia, Chile, France, New
27:52 Zealand, Norway, and the United Kingdom.
27:53 Some of these claims are overlapping
27:55 which could cause international
27:57 incidents but they don't because of
28:00 article 4 of the Antarctic treaty
28:02 freezes all territorial disputes as of
28:04 the time. You notice that I didn't
28:06 mention that America had a claim or Nazi
28:08 Germany had a claim or the Russians even
28:10 though they're all there. Well, the
28:12 Nazis aren't. They're they're gone. It's
28:13 because nobody can officially own
28:15 Antarctica. But there are seven nations
28:18 who claimed it first, who kind of get to
28:21 act like they do own it. When it comes
28:22 to controlling their sectors, it's a
28:25 legal maze. It's it's very confusing.
28:26 So, let's say you want to investigate
28:29 something in the British Antarctic
28:30 territory. You need permission from the
28:34 UK, but if the UK doesn't officially own
28:35 it because of the treaty, then they
28:37 don't really have any control, but they
28:39 control access because of their claim,
28:41 but other nations don't recognize the
28:44 claim because of the treaty. I don't f I
28:45 don't understand it. Uh it's very
28:47 difficult to understand. You just can't
28:49 get permission to go because a
28:52 bureaucratic deadlock. Uh it's perfect
28:53 for keeping people out. Oh yeah, China's
28:55 also there and they've been rapidly
28:57 expanding from zero to now five
28:59 Antarctic bases just in the last few
29:02 decades. They call it research, but it
29:04 looks like resource mapping. It's
29:06 exactly what they did in uh what they're
29:08 doing in Africa. The US operates three
29:10 year round stations and flies military
29:13 cargo planes to Antarctica regularly.
29:15 Russia maintains several bases and
29:17 conducts operations that have nothing at
29:19 all to do with penguins. They don't
29:21 exactly seem like research programs.
29:22 It's occupying forces maintaining
29:24 strategic positions waiting for 2048
29:26 when they can extract resources. It seem
29:29 seems like McMurdo base by the way is
29:31 the largest research station in
29:34 Antarctica. It is operated by Rathon,
29:36 which is a defense contractor that's
29:38 behind Advanced Weapon Systems. So, why
29:40 is the biggest research base in Antarctica
29:41 Antarctica
29:44 operated by
29:46 a defense contractor? I don't and we'll
29:49 never know, you know, born secret and
29:50 all that. So when someone tells you
29:52 Antarctica is off limits for
29:54 environmental production, immediately
29:56 make fun of them and say, "If so, then
29:59 why does the legal framework look
30:00 exactly like the framework that you
30:02 would want to create if you wanted to
30:04 maintain exclusive access to something
30:07 incredibly valuable while realistically
30:09 being able to keep everyone else locked
30:12 out?" Ask them that and do it in like a
30:14 mocking voice. Antarctica is not
30:16 protected by international law.
30:18 Antarctica is controlled by
30:20 international law, the globalists. But
30:21 unfortunately, if you do make fun of
30:23 them, you might have to hear a witty
30:25 retort. They're going to say something
30:27 like this. Antarctica isn't actually
30:30 just another continent. It is a living
30:32 climate control system for the entire
30:35 planet. Antarctica contains, like the
30:37 guy in the video earlier mentioned, 70%
30:39 of the world's fresh water locked in
30:41 ice. And if that ice were to melt,
30:44 global sea levels were to rise. And if
30:46 the Antarctic weather were to shift, the
30:47 entire planet would feel it. Plus, the
30:50 ecosystem in Antarctica is incredibly
30:52 fragile. For example, a single footprint
30:54 in the wrong place could remain visible
30:56 for decades. And the continent hosts
30:58 tons of unique microbial communities
31:00 that have evolved in isolation for
31:01 millions of years, potentially holding
31:03 keys to medical breakthroughs that we
31:05 haven't even been able to imagine yet,
31:07 nor access in any other part of the
31:10 world. Of course, it's a valuable area
31:12 that governments around the world take
31:14 very seriously because they have, you
31:16 know, the right things in mind. They
31:18 actually want to take care of the
31:22 people. And Antarctica has uh
31:24 some breakthroughs. They might say that
31:27 to you and then you can just hit them
31:29 with one of those and then go like this.
31:31 Realistically though, even smallcale
31:33 human activity can devastate different
31:35 colonies of creatures, penguins and
31:37 seals for for that matter. Plus, the
31:39 introduction of non-native species,
31:41 which humans love to do, even
31:43 microscopic ones could be catastrophic
31:45 for ecosystems that have no natural
31:47 defenses. And because Antarctica is so
31:50 isolated, it's uh you know, it is that
31:51 is very realistic. And when you take
31:54 into consideration that Antarctica is
31:56 arguably the most hostile environment on
31:58 Earth for human survival, I don't even
32:00 know about arguably. I think it is. Uh
32:03 we're talking temperatures of minus 120°
32:05 Fahrenheit and 200 mph winds and
32:07 blizzards that last for weeks. The
32:09 combination of that extreme cold,
32:12 hurricane force wind and complete white
32:15 out conditions uh year round can create
32:17 situations where rescue of a person can
32:19 become impossible. For example, in 2013,
32:22 a Russian research vessel was trapped in
32:23 ice for 10 days and it required an
32:25 international rescue effort that cost
32:27 millions of dollars and put dozens and
32:29 dozens of lives at risk. And those are
32:31 professionals. So imagine if they let
32:32 your hungry ass up there. That's not
32:34 theoretical. People die in Antarctica
32:36 regularly and the logistical challenges
32:39 of just operating there are staggering.
32:42 So there's plenty of realistic reasons
32:44 aside from all the fun ones. So anyways,
32:46 think what you will about Antarctica.
32:47 There is definitely valid reasons to not
32:49 go there. And there is some more
32:51 suspicious reasons and mythology and
32:53 lore that surrounds it that's very
32:55 interesting. And it is inarguable that
32:58 Antarctica is incredibly valuable. And
33:00 the continent contains billions of
33:02 barrels of oil, mineral deposits, and
33:04 70% of the world's fresh water. All
33:06 incredibly important things. And
33:08 important things make governments lie
33:10 and do weird [ __ ] So anyways, see you
33:12 guys in the next video. Go to sour.gg,
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