A long-form Gregg Braden compilation: satellite imagery of structures emerging beneath Antarctic ice as the cap thins, the geological record of magnetic pole reversals (which we have not yet experienced as a technological civilisation), and his case for re-examining the policy framing around climate.
Transcript
whatever we find in the ships in the ice and Antarctica for example or the technology that's there or from another world it's always being positioned from a place of fear well if if we're in a simulation even a massive on a massive scale there would be limitations of what's how much data can the simulation hold that many of people in our community really don't know what crude oil is they don't know where comes from there's controversy about where it comes from and I want to address all this we cannot produce produce crude oil artificially what Mother Nature is doing under our feet in the earth to produce this compound we cannot reproduce what that means is if it's gone our society is going to change tremendously we may want to rethink the policies that are being presented to us that we're being asked to support it's not like an Extinction event for humans we've never seen a magnetic pole reversal in a technological Society as a geologist Antarctica now is covered in ice but used to be a a very warm arid forested continent and the ice has been there about 20,000 years well now that the ice is thinning from global warming the satellites are showing surprisingly very complex structures under that ice they're uh human or or intentionally made we don't know who made them uh so these aren't little you know log Huts I mean these are vast uh architectural complexes and the assumption is that who or whatever left those there you know left them there before 20,000 years ago when the ice accumulated and there's a good possibility that their technology would be intact in those at least some some evidence of of that technology would be intact so John I think we're we're at this really critical threshold all these changes being proposed in the world uh we are are looking at at creating an earth very different than we have right now uh when the evidence comes to light when the disclosure happens when the evidence from Antarctica it will come to light when the evidence uh shows that the the climate that's being proposed is is not good for us the bottom line I think for society uh is it just blows The Narrative of the world and our place in the world that we've been led to believe and I'm I'm been thinking a lot about this how is that received you know how are we really conditioned psychologically to to all of a sudden I mean this isn't a gradual I mean this this gonna happen pretty quickly uh how are people how is society going to deal with that and how do we Embrace that new story uh in a healthy way and I think one of the things it's going to do John is it's going to to tear down the uh the them and US scenario that that we have been conditioned uh whether it's Earth or off Planet uh whether it's you know politically economically I think a lot of these barriers are going to have to fall as we come to terms with the Deep truth of who we are and our relationship to the world and and so our conversation about carbon dioxide Antarctica uh you know disclosure all of that I think those are all feeding into whatever's going to happen with that new story you make it you make an interesting point and uh and that is that uh in fact that this could be some kind of adhesive uh process that brings together and glues together uh Humanity in the face of all this new kinds of things the alternate track to that of course is that there is a split and there is one segment that it just goes you know and backs up in fear and drives them off into the other direction and the other segment kind of Embraces and goes forward and is ready for all of this and so there there two kind of interesting scenarios in there uh I hadn't thought much about the fact that it could really be the thing that binds together a whole lot of people in in the in the in the culture in thei civilizations around the these new kinds of things but uh it's going to it if it happens it is going to be or when it happens I guess it's going to be extraordinary it has the potential it I've followed this for decades and people have you know disparaged me and laughed at me and said how you know and I've had to be kind of cryptic about talk little talk you don't you don't go through the middle of the Pentagon by the way and tell them that the aliens are all going to show up and it's going to blow up the world or anything like that so but the uh but the the downstream implications of of building a compatible and integrated kind of relationship with a society that was a million years old is just wild and crazy and it's beyond our kind of an ability to effectively think of you know really think about how that all might work because it would essentially blow up all of the pr the underpinnings of how we built our understanding our Paradigm of how this all works yeah well and I think that's we've talked about this in in our quartet program I I believe as a as a species we are and civilization we're at a very vulnerable place right now we've opened the doors to the techn techology we can engineer nature and what's so interesting to me John is you know we can we can edit genes and DNA uh in vitro right now we you know we we understand the the uh the higs bosan and the higs field and and the underlying nature of reality all of that we still have yet to come to terms with who we are in our origin yeah uh and the the old story is falling apart so quickly Darwin's idea of of evolution the evidence simply doesn't support it a lot of the college professors that have been teaching it know that what they're teaching is wrong they don't they don't want to mess with the change so they're they're retiring now we've got new professors coming up through the ranks that are saying we can't teach this anymore so and Greg the same thing is happening with einsteinian physics and that there are you know the electric Universe guys will just convince you for sure I mean if you're smart enough to follow them that Einstein was wrong and that it's not about magnet it's not about gravity from Mass it's Gravity from magnetism and so on and so there's just really big structural kind of fissures in within all of this well there is and and I think what it it has the potential to bring us together with a a new story that is uh that reflects the evidence uh is based on and and so inclusive of so many uh uh cultures and traditions that feel excluded today I think we we we have that potential and I think it's going to happen pretty quickly then I I keep going back you know and I'm I'm looking at World economic Forum just finished their meetings they published their their notes about what they see happening in the world that used to not concern me at all uh until they signed a formalized agreement with the United Nations that the UN would work to implement their Vision through the sustainable development goals and now we're seeing the UN is trying to do uh essentially or the proposal is to do what corporations do to have lobbyists to have un lobbyists lobbying for reductions in CO2 lobbying for reductions in in the temperature and and uh you know uh health health initiatives and lobbying Congress of the United States and and that's different we've ever had in the past so we've got that going on at the same time we've got all of uh all the evidence telling us we're not what we've been told and we're much more than we've been led to believe and uh and all of those are converging they're all coming together at the same time right now on the one hand the other hand we've got a generation of young people who are conditioned to disengage from any of this colored by extraterrestrial life and ideas and standings I mean it's just amazing you know it's hard to have the conversation as you said without being ridiculed um you were in the Pentagon I I wasn't I was working uh in the defense industry in the 80s during the Cold War and among our cubicles we didn't have full offices we had uh you know government cubicles we would have these conversations but you couldn't have them uh you know within earshot of your supervisors or anybody else because everybody thought it was crazy but you know again you look at just look at the from an unbiased perspective just take the facts if we were to achieve all of the climate goals that are being proposed by the WF implemented through the UN and now uh big Tech is is on board with this it puts us right smack into the pine Epoch is what it's called it's not the ER it's the pine Epoch why is that important it happens to be when the first humans emerged on Earth about 200,000 years ago it puts us into the the temperature range of a a much cooler Planet uh not Ice Age necessarily but a cooler Planet uh lower CO2 levels life much less abundant right now and then when you when you look at the indigenous Traditions almost well I have not studied every indigenous tradition in the world every indigenous tradition in the world I've ever studied everyone down to the T John every one of them says we are the product of a greater Cosmic Community not one of them says anything about us evolving slowly gradually over a long period of time more primitive forms of life and and they say these things independently so when you look at at the stories you look at the Samarian history you look at the Egyptian history the Aboriginal history the from the andian cosmology we emerge during this time and those are responsible for our emergence they say come back and they come back at the end of of of this great cycle well the end of the great cycle uh the Mesoamerican end was 2012 that was the big deal about 2012 but but there's a buffer it's an 18-year buffer on either either side and that 18-year buffer ends in the year 2030 when so many of these narratives and initiatives are uh the goals are are for them to be achieved at the same time also now this is this is another another Vector coming in we talk about natural phenomenon uh our lives are deeply interconnected with the magnetic fields of the earth uh and of the the sun those are they're related magnetic field affects every blade of grass every form of life every CEO of every corporation every leader of every nation and our magnetic field is it is a mysterious phenomenon it's believed to be driven by the motion of the core inside the Earth relative it's spinning independent of uh of the the in core spending independent of the outer core outer core is spending independent of the mantle and the mantle independent of the crust the scientific Community released a report saying it looks like our inner core has either slowed to an imp I saw that imp imperceptible rotation or it may have stopped all together which we know it's done in the past and when that happens it is a precursor to a magnetic pole reversal uh and that is not necessarily uh you know it's not like an Extinction event for humans but we've never the best my knowledge we we've never seen a magnetic pole reversal in a technological Society where everything is based upon the assumption that the magnetic field is uh is static that it's going to continue as it has so all of our Communications all of our computers uh you know the power grids that that provide heat and light and electricity and pump our water and agriculture I mean everything the memory the memory on our hard drive is linked to the magnetic field of the planet the memory on our flash drives if we lost that field for a period of time which our ancestors say has happened in the past uh then we would lose so much of the information uh at the time we sto writing it we would have our written material but we'd lose a lot of that digital information and if all of that is happening at the same time these other things are happening uh it would set the stage for a reset on a level we've we've never even considered before yeah it's that's a it's a marvelous and important point that you make because in all of our conversations even over at quartet we have really not talked about the magnetic pole shift and we really need to do that because it is if you will the most inevitable thing and the indicators are all over the place and the implications are huge because all of life as you suggest kind of dances to the to the to the song to the tune of the of whatever the the mag magnetism is and so uh now let me tell you that could be the big catalytic event that kind of GA grabbed everybody's brain and in their head and there and told them wait a second we don't need to we don't need to do this anymore it it could be you know John when I was uh a geologist back in in the industry back in 19 late 70s early 80s uh my job was to look at the magnetic field of of the earth and see what's happening and I could see it was very that's no secret it was clear that we're we've been in Decline the magnetic fields of the earth about 2,000 years ago interestingly uh and it has been in constant decline but last flip where North becomes Sout --- ey form what are called hydrocarbon molecules very simple one is methane methane gas uh methane molecule looks like what you're seeing on the screen right now CH4 carbon hydrogen 4 Carbon is the black sphere in the center of the molecule and then there are four white molecules around it this is this is the simple the simplest one uh that is naturally occurring it occurs within the Earth uh butane is one that is more familiar we use this often for cooking and uh you know for for lighters and things like that C4 h10 four carbons uh 10 hydrogen and you can see it's a little bit more of a of a complex molecule here the black uh spheres are the carbons and the white are are the hydrogens you can count them out and these these are our schematic diagrams but we know that these are real because recent uh technology has allowed scientists to actually photograph these and this is fascinating to me so what you're seeing in the upper leftand corner is the schematic of a a very complex hydrocarbon molecule it's called hexabenzocoronene Uh upper leftand corner you're seeing the schematic now you're through the the photographs photo micrographs you're actually able to see the molecules themselves that are depicted through the schematic so I want you to see this this isn't just an abstract concept I mean these molecules are really there this uh was published in the prestigious Journal peer-review Journal science uh September of 2012 so we've we've known this uh for quite a while and we've known how how these molecules work what I I really want to emphasize here is here we are in the 21st century all this high-tech that we've got you know artificial intelligence and internet and virtual realities and the metaverse and all that and to this day we cannot produce crude oil artificially what Mother Nature is doing under our feet in the earth to produce this compound that is used in over 6,000 facets of everyday life we cannot reproduce what that means is if it's gone our society is going to change tremendously now there is a lot of controversy about where it comes from how long it will last and if it will ever be gone I'm going to address that but I want to emphasize that we it's so is such a a mysterious compound in some respects uh that we to this day we cannot produce this in the lab we can't make it artificially so why is this important well it's because of the way we use it crude oil plays a vital role every day in our Liv some of it is obvious some of it's not and this is important because when I'm talking to young people about this young people come to our Live Events and again they're being taught to demonize anything carbon based and to hate oil and to fear the oil when they think of oil they're thinking of gasoline in the car and that's it or you know oil in the engine to make the car run they have zero clue that every facet of their lives including the technological facets of all the gadgets they love could not exist without petroleum products they have no clue as to that so I mean I'm just giving you a quick example here Sports Products uh you know the tires on bicycles tires on motorcycles tires on automobiles all petroleum based when it comes to the green renewable energy you're seeing here like the the windmills and the solar panels it takes a tremendous amount of hydrocarbons of petroleum based energy to produce those windmills to uh to produce the solar panels to melt the silica that comes from the earth into the form of of silica that is required for a solar panel it doesn't just come out of the earth uh for the wires to create the wires and the batteries and to remove these products from the Earth to even uh produce Cobalt to produce uh you know the the different materials we need for batteries and it all is hydrocarbon based we don't think about this stuff our food the water that comes out of the earth to irrigate our crops because so much of the world is in drought right now it comes from hydrocarbons and you say well you know you could use solar panels do that that's absolutely true and the solar panels and the aluminum frames or the the steel frames uh that house them and the wires and the batteries and the concrete pads all are hydrocarbon intensive to produce medicines Cosmetics look at this I mean I'm just listing a few of them here I want you to see how oil is used so then you can see why is so important in these 6,000 products so what you're seeing on the screen one of the Mysteries of the way that uh the oil functions uh the orange that you're seeing here this is this is where the the crude oil and there are many different kinds of crude oil crude oil heavy crude oil light crude oil Sweet crude oil sour all Define different properties uh of the oil itself but all together the composite when they go into to a furnace right here in the orange here's the interesting thing as that furnace creates different temperatures there are different produ s that are produced from the oil that comes out of the ground the different temperatures are breaking down the molecules uh different temperatures different pressures so higher temperatures when this first goes in higher temperatures you're going to get the heavy diesel fuel uh by the way if you ever see any oil refineries this is why you see the towers the tower this is what's happening in the towers so the heavy oil is coming out first then the temperatures begin to cool a little bit and you get the a little bit lighter oil lighter Diesel and then you get the kerosin then you get the Napa and let me just give you a better idea here so you can see the temperatures so higher temperatures 1050 degrees Fahrenheit residual fuel oil uh comes out now the temperatures cooling down 650 to 1,50 you get heavy gas oil then 450 to 650 is Diesel and uh heating oil 350 to 450 kerosene jet fuel 185 to 350 it's Napa 85 to 185 is the gasoline that we're using in our automobile so look at all the products that come out before it ever gets to the gasoline and then the cooler temperatures less than 85 degrees Fahrenheit is the butane and and the the lighter products so this is how uh the energy that comes from the earth is producing and by the way it's taking fossil fuels to to do the heating to produce what it is that's coming from the the fossil fuels so we talk about a barrel of oil a lot of people are surprised by this I know when I was a kid uh in the midwest we used to burn our own trash in our own backyards everybody had a 55 gallon barrel that used to be called a an oil barrel 55 gallons and we would put our trash and we burn our trash you know daily or weekly in that before it became centralized before the trash trucks came to pick up your trash and take it to a landfill uh and they were 55 gallon drums so a lot of people are surprised when they learn that one barrel of oil is not 55 gallons it's 42 US gallons and there's a reason for that back in the 1800 I'll just give you the history in the 1800s the barrels that began that were used for the early production of oil had been used to hold other things like fish for example in the docks so they reuse those barrels that to hold fish and other products uh to ship the the oil in the early oil production the ear early oil industry and one of those barrels at 42 gallons would weigh 300 lb and that was a nice even number it was a good weight that could be transported so they stuck with it so 42 gallons is uh is a barrel of oil from those 42 gallons I'm going to these numbers aren't going to add up exactly because of rounding but uh but it gives you a good idea from a 142 gallon barrel of oil uh about 19 gallons is gasoline all right so that's that's the The Lion Share of what's happening there 10 approximately 10 gallons for diesel and and heating oil four gallons for jet fuel almost two gallons for heavy fuel oil uh a gallon and a half for propane asphalt and Road oil uh just about a gallon petrochemical feed stocks that they use for other products uh one and then and then all the other products uh approximately five not exactly but approximately five if you add these up they're not going to add up there to 42 it'll be a little bit more because of the rounding uh but it just gives you proportionally what kinds of products are coming out of of a barrel of oil we use a lot of this stuff I mean just in cosmetics and personal care Alone um hair colors uh mascara nail polish lipstick perfume most lotions that you're using on your skin lip balm toothpaste deodorant uh shaving cream soap hearing aids the because of the the plastic casing for the hearing aid again shampoo contact lenses Combs brushes now can we make these from other products absolutely absolutely we can however on the magnitude that they are used globally it's not possible to use as other products so for example um uh I mean there are toothpastes I use toothpaste that has no Petroleum in it it is handcrafted locally it's you know things like baking soda and myrr uh the um the herb or the um the mineral myrr uh cinnamon uh turmeric things things like that but it's not produced that way on a on a commercial basis can we make clothing that is not used uh uh petroleum products absolutely we can but to do that so for example if you're making hemp based clothing and again I'm I live in a small rural community and there are places where that happens it is a cottage industry it is not a global industry and to do that you've got to grow tremendous amounts of hemp and to do that to grow it uh on a consistent and reliable basis commercially viable basis uh is going to require fossil fuels to to do that can it be done small you know local cottage industries yes yes it can absolutely it can but every day we've got over 6,000 daily applications and a lot of I'm just going to read some of these because young people aren't aware that the petroleum products are used in things like medicines antihistamines the candles that we that we rely on of course we can burn candles from other things but they can't be produced what would happen to if we went to beeswax for all the candles on the planet what would that do to the bee population I mean you just think about things like that the paints uh the the the capsules that encapsulate so much of the the nutrients and the supplements that we take so battery cases uh the the way that we are producing antiseptics insect repellant fertilizers guitar strings anifree eyeglasses parachutes you know one of the things that a lot of young people might think about is computers in general we could not be having this conversation because the computer or the phone or the iPad you're seeing this on is not possible without petroleum based products the casings that are uh that house the electronics the electronics themselves the wires the way the wires are coated the way the wires are uh are connected together the component on that the wires are connecting together uh you know sheets pillows hand lotions all these things uh are petroleum using petroleum based products to make them viable on the global market today now once again I'm just going to say many of these can be produced in cottage industries on a local level for smaller smaller uh consumption not on the global basis that we're producing it right now so I want to give you some sense if we had a day with no petroleum products in our lives I mean this just a handful of things the food in the grocery store that you are uh so accustomed to to seeing that food is using petroleum based products uh for irrigation to bring the water out of the ground it's using it uh for harvesting it's using it for transport it is using it to get the people into the fields that are doing the harvesting and the transporting uh it is using it for the refrigeration or for the heating whatever it is that needs to be done for the cooling for the lighting of of the stores where it's being produced so petroleum plays a very powerful role in our lives where does it come from there's a lot of controversy around this I'm going to be straight up very honest with you the reason is because no one has ever seen petroleum produced in the earth we have theories theories no one living today has seen petroleum produced so we don't know for sure and I got to tell you my geologist colleagues my science colleagues don't like it when I say that but it's a true story we have theories one of the theories that's been around for a long time I remember when I was a kid this is a commercial I always see oil comes from dead dinosaurs and this is a Sinclair uh oil and gas company Sinclair Gas Stations you still see in some parts of of the United States with the dinosaur logo by the way it's a brontosaurus it's a green Brontosaurus that you're seeing here because the thinking you used to be that oil comes from what is called a biotic source that means that the oil the petroleum the crude oil petroleum products --- you have anything to replace it makes no sense and yet that's what we're exactly we're being asked to do today so uh what are some of the Alternatives electricity you want to go all to electricity well the problem is that electricity where's the electricity coming from what are we using to generate the electricity do we have I'll just tell you right now we do not have the infrastructure we don't have the power grid we have an aging uh dilapidated power grid that is so vulnerable in so many ways um that this is is not a viable answer if we go to 100% electric automobiles then we're in all the problems with the the Renewables because all of those automobiles are relying up on 17 Rare Earth elements very few are found here in the United States in commercially viable uh amounts they are primarily located in countries that we are not on the best terms with uh we can't count on them in the future do you want to put your future into unreliable sources of those 17 Rare Earth elements they're Rare Earth because there aren't there's not much of them there when those deposits are gone we don't know of any other deposits the way way they're being mined right now uh in some like Ethiopia for example is horrible with child labor in uh they have they have no protective clothing they're Barefoot wearing t-shirts and shorts standing in the water trying to to pull out the uh the ore in baskets that they're going to now carry up into the surface and hand over to some adult who's going to take it off to some somewhere and ship it up to China to be refined to sold to the World um UNICEF has done reports on this Amnesty International has done reports on this it's a very sad story a lot of people don't want to look at it uh how can we solve the problem if we're not honest about the problem electricity is not going to be the answer the Renewables aren't going to be the answer a lot of people wrote to me about hydrogen and they think oh hydrogen is just clean gas you know what's the problem with that well let me talk to you about hydrogen there is not just one hydrogen there are different kinds of hydrogen there is what's called gray hydrogen there's blue hydrogen there's turquoise hydrogen there's green hydrogen the colors are based upon the form of energy that is required to free the hydrogen even if it's water you know water is H2O so you got two hydrogens one oxygen you say okay you break out hydrogen away from the oxygen you've got energy that's true what energy are you using to free the hydrogen and now you're back into the same boat if you're using Renewables you're using a solar panel I mean that's cool in the moment that it's working it's toxic to make it's fossil and fuel intensive to make and when the solar panels are no longer viable they are toxic uh to dispose of and now we've got landfills leeching toxic uh Rare Earth elements into agriculture into the groundwater because we somebody didn't think ahead what do you do with solar panels after they've reached their 25y year lifespan nobody really thought about that and they're showing up in in the landfills they break and and the toxins are seeping into the earth now there are places a few that are now starting to to recycle it takes time it takes energy it takes human intervention Manpower somebody's got to be hired to go out open up that solar panel pull out those minerals you got to recognize what they are and it simply is not happening on the large scale it's not happening on a a viable basis but look at this all the hydrogens where's the energy coming from here you go uh gray hydrogen the source is methane or coal that is petrochemicals those are hydrocarbons that is oilbased methane or coal for blue hydrogen that's the same thing methane for turquoise hydrogen renewable energy for green hydrogen but it's not really green because you're using fossil fuels to create the green energy to free the hydrogen so it is uh it's a a a difficult conversation a lot of people don't want to have it because it does not support the narratives that you and I are being asked to embrace I'm just being straight up with you I want you to see where this is going do we have Alternatives we do and I've talked about these and and other people have as well we have bridging Technologies now here's what I mean by this there is an ultimate source of energy I believe we will see it in our lifetimes I'll see it in my lifetime I'm I'm sure of that uh and um many of you I think are going to see it in your lifetimes as well I hope you're with us to see it we're not there today it is what is called an exotic form of energy I'll talk about in a moment to get to that exotic form of energy we've got things right now I mean we could turn the key and start using proven Technologies right now one of those I did an entire video about it's uh it's listed below uh it was an element that was discovered during the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos New Mexico right up the road from where I I am in this studio right now I'm outside of Santa Fe Los Alamos is is just like right up the road 20 miles up the road and there were elements that were discovered that that could be used to produce energy the problem was Manhattan Project was during war time as World War II and they didn't go with some of the other elements because they needed the byproducts of uranium for the weapons they needed the plutonium for the nuclear reactors they needed plutonium for the nuclear weapons that became an entire industry so there were other elements and again I did an entire video on this I'll encapsulate it here one of those was element 90 it was called it is still called thorium thorium amazing it uh element produces zero greenhouse gases it it works in in a a modified reactor but it produces zero greenhouse gases it's inex inexpensive to produce it cannot melt down down like a Fukushima reactor can't be weaponized like plutonium in a bomb it's abundant in the Earth's crust most Nations have access to uh to thorium and the waste products could be recycled into the fuel so this is one example of an element that can be used for what is called base load energy base load energy is the stuff it's always there no matter what the temperature no matter if there's wind or no wind sun no wind hot 140 degrees and buy cold in the you know Siberia makes no difference uh it is pumped through the the grid uh so this is an opportunity for us to to upgrade the grids in our nation I'm in the US or in the world um it is available to us now it is a proven technology it's efficient take a look at this one ton of thorium produces the energy of 250 tons of uranium thorium costs about $1.98 per watt coal is 230 a watt so it's even cheaper now this is where the narratives and the wokeness come in because it has influenced our sources of information in media and if you do a Wiki search or a Google search you're probably going to come with articles that say this is theoretical it is an unproven technology it can't be because we've already had the thorium generators thorium reactors that were up and running uh in the United States in Germany in India in China and I remember when I I was uh in college 1970s we had uh we had thorian based plants uh in the United States they were shut down in the early 1980s in favor of other forms of energy so politics came into this I just want you to know it's not like this pure theoretical idea it's called a molten salt reactor MSR and because it's a molten salt reactor it works on a different principle than nuclear reactor and it's that different principle that makes it impos it cannot melt down the physics won't allow it to melt down can't be made into weapon I love that uh it can't do what Fukushima did it can't be you know used as a weapon against our Global family and I I've got really strong feelings about how the elements of Mother Earth are used or weaponized to hurt uh to hurt our brothers and sisters and especially with the technology we have now so what I'm saying to you is Thorium is is a stepping stone it's not the answer cannot be the answer forever we've got something better on the horizon but thorium is a stepping stone it's a bridge so if you took this current energy equation 89% fossil fuels 11% Renewables all right let's keep the Renewables use them where we can to um supplement but if you took that 89% take away the coal petroleum natural gas and you put Thorium in there clean sustainable reliable zero greenhouse gases if you're concerned about that uh I did a whole video again again on on co2 and I'm just going to tell you if you didn't see that video we do not want to go to the Target levels that are being proposed by the UN and the world economic Forum it it is a death sentence for our world to do that for the forest of the world for the life of the world and we don't have to guess because we've seen it in the geologic history in the past you go back the last time we saw carbon dioxide level 180 to 250 parts per million Pine we know exactly what happened during the pine era it's not good for us so if it's not good for us you have to say who's it good for that's a whole different conversation that's another video so thorum thorium is a bridge it's a stepping stone a stepping stone to what well to an ultimate form of energy and many of you have heard me and many other people talk about what we know is that every cubic centimeter like that little sugar cube you see right there is about a cubic centimeter every cubic centimeter of empty space is not empty it is teeming with tiny vibratory uh elements that are called plank uh plun energy named after the physicist MOX plunk uh it is called the quantum vacuum and we have the ability to harness that energy to harness those vibrations tremendous amount of energy the energy density tended 90 93rd gram per cubic centimeter so in the size of a sugar cube 10 to the 93r grams of energy is enough to run our nation uh just from that one for for a very long time just in that one little sugar cube that could be the base load energy and smaller units could be maybe what powers our automobiles or maybe our automobiles are working off the resonance from the energy uh that's being produced through these Technologies I think we will see this and it's already been proven in the laboratory it is not commercially viable now we're not seeing it on a commercial basis and I I think this is where this conversation overlaps in other conversations like the conversation of disclosure uh you all know that disclosure is is occurring right now on different levels not so much on the mainstream Al level although that that's changing but the disclosure that we are uh part of a greater community in our in our cosmology that we have had interactions we have I they've been recorded for thousands of years by our indigenous ancestors we've had interactions with uh advanced intelligence um either from the future of the planet we live in now so coming back to give us information or from other worlds that are coming to give us information and we have derived technology from those sources and that technology is based on forms of energy that make what we're doing now seem like Child's Play that make what we're doing now seem so primitive and ultimately we will have access to that either through uh uh through the inventions that are already created or the disclosure when disclosure happens and I think it will happen on this level uh this is the kind of disclosure Ure that will benefit everyone because it will free us from the shackles of limited energy and from the fear of not having that energy because the energy is is abundant uh and we have the technology to access that so everything I'm talking about is a bridge to what I think ultimately will happen is it going to happen this week or next week probably not so if we're concerned about petroleum uh then the thing to do is stop burning it it's going to last longer and allow ourselves to go with a form of Base load energy that is sustainable it's it's not going to be susceptible to uh you know hurricanes coming up through the gulf or to Cyclones that are would just hit our our brothers and sisters in New Zealand um it's not going to be uh susceptible to Extremes in climate and temperature you don't need the wind you don't need the sun makes tremendous sense and uh and I want to say to people out there who are in the energy industry I want to thank you for the work that you've done and I want you to know that when we develop new forms of energy doesn't mean that the oil and gas industry goes away on the contrary we need to keep producing that oil and gas for the 6,000 plus uh reasons that I mentioned earlier the technology the clean green sustainable Technologies cannot happen without hydrocarbons right now that's the world we live in that is maybe that'll change you know in years to come uh but the the wor --- m for us are we higher than we were 10 years ago yes are we higher than we were 20 years ago yes we are is that a bad thing well if we go back and look at history it doesn't look to be a bad thing because Earth not only survived Earth thrived I'm going to show you that in those high levels of CO2 but again what you're seeing here is that the CO2 levels that we have today even though they're higher than they were 10 10 years 20 years ago they are nowhere near we are on the low end of where carbon dioxide is historically on our planet now what is driving the CO2 here's a mindblower I did an entire presentation on this check the link uh Below in the comment section and uh and you can see the entire video I've got it up here absolutely no charge scientists have recently discovered there are processes underneath our feet between the core and the mantle and the crust of the planet that are driving climate change all right that does not fit the narrative it's not what our presidential candidates want want to talk about it's not what high-tech wants you to know it's not what the world economic Forum wants you to know it's not what the United Nations wants you to know it's what's happening all right and I do an entire video in much detail I'm just going to highlight right now the bottom line is that there are changes in the core that are driving changes in the mantle the mantle is a a hot molten material there are places where is being forced into the crust as it does on a cyclic basis about every 13,000 years 12 to 13,000 years and there are reasons for that as that warm magma is coming up near the surface under the crust it is and here's a a beautiful model what you're seeing right now on on the right hand side these are called mantle plumes these are computer models they're computer Imaging modeling where this magma is coming from the mantle uh in a couple of places on Earth and then it spreads and it's warming the Earth it's warming the oceans there it is right there so what you see is it is happening under the Pacific Ocean and it's happening under uh parts of Africa and into the Middle East you would expect to see increased seismic activity where these things are happening and that's exactly what you're seeing Syria turkey Pakistan India but you're also seeing it in the Pacific Ring of Fire uh you're seeing it in um uh in the islands all right uh in in the Pacific so what is the the implication the climate implication now I want you to look at the bottom of your screen this isn't my theory this isn't a conspiracy look at the bottom of the screen this is climate. nasa.gov NASA knows what I'm saying to you here's the quote 90% of global warming is occurring in the ocean causing the water 's internal heat to increase since modern recordkeeping began in 1955 all right what's the big deal what does that mean if you remember your high school physics cold water holds more gas carbon dioxide is a gas the oceans of our planet are the biggest it's called a sink a carbon dioxide sync sin K or or a sponge or an absorber of carbon dioxide and and they continue to the oceans are absorbing a lot of carbon dioxide as are the forests that's going to be important in a minute when the oceans are cooler they hold more carbon dioxide when the oceans warm guess what happens they will hold less gas where does that gas go it's emitted into the atmosphere it's exactly what's happened 340 gigatons of CO2 annually are coming from the ocean uh as opposed to 35 to maybe 40 gigatons from industry all right so the oceans are where most of the CO2 is coming from the oceans are warming but look at this they're warming from the bottom up Glaciers are melting from the bottom up they're melting from underneath that would not be the case if the warming was from the atmosphere I'm not saying to you anything that scientists don't already know these scientists just don't have a platform uh and they are beholden in many cases in academics they're Holden to funding sources and they they can't talk about stuff like this so this is NASA telling us 90% yeah are we contributing a little bit but it's not causing the climate change we are not the sole source of CO2 we're not the sole source of greenhouse gases that is a statement that was made by one of the participants at the cop 28 in a television interview he said we are the source of the greenhouse gases not true fossil fuels he said are the source not true all right so this is where this is coming from now I'm just going to do this again I'm going to do this very quickly is carbon dioxide bad for us well let's take a look at the past Triassic period in geologic history uh is is a a very specific Mark in time carbon dioxide was high 2,000 parts per million right now it's only 417 parts per million Earth didn't die forests were green it was warm on Earth how warm between 122 and 140 deges Fahrenheit was the global temperature these are like Dubai temperatures as a global average un uncomfortable for some people but certainly not not the end of the world now look at this Jurassic Period and we've all heard of this because of the movies CO2 dropped to a thousand parts per million and again we're at 4177 thousand parts per million the average global temperature not bad 80 degrees 80.6 81 degrees during a day 59 degrees at night those are nice temperatures with a, parts per million much more than we've got right now but then look at this during the Cretaceous Period CO2 jumped back up to 2,000 parts per million it didn't drive the temperatures up look at this global average temperatures 82 degrees Fahrenheit it's actually uh two degrees warmer and 52 degrees Fahrenheit at night there is not a direct correlation between carbon dioxide and temperatures there other factors and those factors are not in incorporated into the climate models that are being used right now by the way where you see in the Jurassic Cretaceous those higher levels of carbon dioxide the forests were deep dense green abundant abundant sea life abundant land life this is diversity of life that was thriving because CO2 is food for the plants it's food for the forest now United Nations World economic Forum they have given us very specific specific targets now I'm speaking quickly because this is a summary to more detail in the other videos the they're giving us targets they want to meet 2021 carbon dioxide level is 44.7 parts per million United Nations is using two uh the year 2010 is the Baseline all right at 390 parts per million all right and what the UN wants to do the goal is a 45 % reduction from 2010 levels all right 2010 390 parts per million 45% reduction in that would be 24.5 parts per million if that sounds low to you you're right on that is dangerously low you don't want our planet to drop to 24.5 parts per million let me show you why this is from a peer-reviewed paper uh published in the journal Nature this is nature Communications 2019 so it's fairly recent if we were to reach those climate goals when was the last time we saw them on planet Earth it was during a Time called the Pline Epoch all right this is a direct quote from that paper the study shows that for the entire Pline era CO2 concentrations averaged 250 50 parts per million they average 250 look at this the UN wants us to go all the way down to 214 what was earth like at 250 parts per million during the PTO scine well check this out the average CO2 the average temperature the average ice and what it did to life during the pine the average 250 parts per million today it's 417 parts per million the average temperature was 46° F today it's 57 so the average global temperature would cool by 11° the ice coverage this is a big deal for agriculture for when we plant when we Harvest when Seasons begin when Seasons end when the rain happens when the rain stops when the Snows come when the Snows stop the ice coverage during the pine look at this 8% of the earth and 25% of all the land were covered in ice primarily uh northern Europe North America certainly up through Canada today we're nowhere near that only 3% of the earth and only 11% of the land is covered in ice do you want to go back where the global temperature is 46 degrees average where 25% of our land is covered in ice look at this during the Pline there was a loss of forests forests died because the the food for the forest the CO2 was low and the ice covered the forest the forest couldn't live under the ice there was an Extinction of large mammals at least 32 species died over the course of a couple of thousand years what's NASA saying right now in the little bit of warming that we've had the little the little warming and the little bump in CO2 that we've had in the last 20 years NASA says Earth is now Greener now than it was 20 years ago Earth's Forest are thriving and this is important because the forests are absorbing excess carbon dioxide that is produced through volcanoes through natural uh events as well as through human industry we need those forests if we go back to 46 degrees Fahrenheit average temperature 25% of the land mass covered in in ice we lose Forest we lose the ability to absorb that CO2 I'm not even talking about the sun and the solar minimum I'm not even talking about the malanovic cycles that play into this all contributing to these shifts in the climate so if we were to meet those un United Nations World economic Forum goals we would see an earth like we have not seen since the pine so now you got to ask the question who benefits from that who benefits from a planet that has less Forest is colder has has fewer forms of life and it's going to impact human life human migration we're going to lose people who benefits from a lower human population and a lower animal population a colder climate with fewer forests the answer to that question is beyond the scope of what I can do well in this I wanted this to be concise I wanted you to see where the UN data is coming from but I'll give you the answer in a nutshell it's not us this isn't good for us we don't benefit from this and you have to ask yourself who does that is a conversation for an entire video the climate hysteria that we're seeing right now who benefits from that the well-intentioned people that are perpetuating what we now have to call Lies We have to call them lies because the data is there the scientific Community knows that the models are running hot and yet they are still attempting to collapse an entire industry based on fossil fuels that are arguably contributing to higher levels of of CO2 if you think that's a problem uh then you have to ask why have we not brought forward the technologies that we've had for over 70 years that the industries today simply don't want on the market because they can't compete with them there's an economic principle going on here this also ties into what is being called disclosure you know disclosure we talked about in other other videos a lot of people are talking about the disclosure of our relationship to Life Beyond this world if we have vehicles that have come from somewhere else either another planet or in a future time that are traveling back in time if we have that and we're being told we do and if we have the beings inside those vehicles and we're being told that we do then we also have to have something else those Vehicles didn't get here on a Ford V8 internal combustion engine they didn't get here on on what was power in your dad's Chevy Camaro you know th those eight eight cylinders they are moving on a form of energy that not only is a form of propulsion but is a source of energy that could revolutionize our planet not just revolutionize but free human kind from the bondage and the shackles of the Tyranny that has come from a finite source of energy that we've been using for 150 years all right if we want to phase out those fossil fuels if we really want that and I'm not sure that we do I think we can keep those fossil fuels and incorporate the new forms of energy as well and have them very harmoniously giving us options because one size can't fit all one size can't fit all on a planet and as geographically as diverse as climatologically as diverse as ethnically as diverse we have different needs different dreams different goals different desires different ways of living and there's room for all of it without the hysteria of frightening people than keeping people in fear so once again we have to ask ourselves the question the choices we're making are we making the choices based on the love of what we know is possible and our lives or have we see succumb to the fear of what happens if we don't make those choices there's a fifth generational warfare that's being directed at you and me so that we do the former so that we make our choices based upon the fear uh that is being perpetuated through climate science that simply is not supported by the data