Support the show:
https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US
Buy Grow kit:
https://modernmushroomcultivation.com/
Speaker 0 (0s): Yeah, our life, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the TrueLife podcast. We are here with the author of No Absolutes, a fascinating individual, and a friend of mine. I'm not afraid to call him a friend of mine. He's a great person. And we're going to get into some more ideas about No Absolutes in history and anything else that comes our way. Benjamin. Is there any, you want to introduce yourself and if you want to start off with,
Speaker 1 (28s): Yeah, actually it looks like my livestream popped up and I'm getting a me in the background. So one second.
Speaker 0 (50s): Sorry
Speaker 1 (51s): About that.
Speaker 0 (52s): No apologies, man. No Absolutes. No apologies. It
Speaker 1 (55s): Happens right. There we go.
Speaker 0 (58s): So we again, go ahead. I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (1m 1s): No, please go ahead.
Speaker 0 (1m 3s): So we began our momentary conversation before the podcast talking about symbols, talking about it's almost like another language, these obtuse, but familiar ideas that seem to be implanted in us by being bombarded on us. And I know a little bit about them, but I think it's a, and you may think it's a nice segue into history. Can you tell me a little bit about what you know about symbols or what do you think about some of those ideas?
Speaker 1 (1m 33s): Sure. Well, I mean, you know, symbology is all around us. It's, you know, our writing is simple, right? Which kind of goes back to, you know, words are important, how we think are important, you know, because that symbology is, it's very powerful. We're, we're attached to symbology inextricably, you know, you touched on it in a video that she made yesterday, I believe, but, you know, we have ancient symbols that have traversed the world, and yet we don't, we don't really have a good meaning of what they are.
And w you know, one of those symbols is that swastika, the swastika symbol, which it happens in the one you showed was the, the east Indian one, but it occurs in indigenous tribes across the world. And from my understanding, a lot of those indigenous tribes use that as kind of like a signifier for the season and the changing of the seasons, the, for the hemispheres, you know, the segments of it.
And then the dots would represent the equinoxes. And that was also a tool for how they constructed structures to orient them into the right directions to, and, you know, that's just one of how many hundreds, if not thousands of symbols that, that are all around us, another one you pointed to as the Starbucks one and recall, I'm not, it was a few years ago, but I think somebody did a dive on that. And it goes back to the restroom, I think, and it was the God and MENA goddess MENA the scene or something like that.
So, you know, it's really interesting that we see a symbol like that pop-up today, and we see them all around, you know, CERN just turned on and they have a symbol of Shiva in front of CERN, you know, and then we have less familiar ones, of course, but our history is replete with symbols. And so I wanted to segue that into, you know, kind of the history of things in my book. I've just did a brief history of things. And since then, I've done a lot more research and, you know, it really seems to me that there's a cyclical kind of nature to what we call society, what we call our ancient societies are actually from the evidence that I've been exposed to.
And I've researched, they're kind of a repop of civilization after the late, the last cataclysm, which I, how familiar are you with? Like the younger, Dryas curious,
Speaker 0 (4m 21s): I'm pretty familiar with it. I've seen a lot of like Charles Hopkins work on catastrophism and, you know, I've seen some interesting maps in the ancient maps of the sea Kings. There's a great book by called the Adam and Eve story. That is all about cataclysms. So I'm kind of familiar, but I'm sure you can enlighten me and the audience with, with some of the younger Dryas information.
Speaker 1 (4m 43s): Well, so a lot of like there's Randall Carlson and I, you know, he's a big proponent that there was an impact or event. The more and more I've researched into that. I think there definitely was an impact there, but I don't think it was caused from a common, I actually think it was ejected from my son. And it's really interesting when we start to look at like the oldest structures in the world, you know, you have all of these polygon walls, we have all of these pyramid structures, you know, they just discovered a huge pyramid under the water off the coast of Portugal heading towards DA's doors.
And I noticed you have Atlantis and in your map back there, but when, and all, all we're finding is more and more evidence of this, and it's older and older and older, you know, you got <inaudible>, you're all, you know, dated two 11,800 years or BC. You have all of these really ancient sites that are just getting older and older and older. And then there's another phenomenon where some of the technology that is used to these sites is seemingly more and more advanced.
You know, we, you know, there's a polygon of walls in, down in Peru, you know, even the great pyramid. We couldn't recreate those structures today, even with modern technology, you know, there might be some engineers who say I could do it, but by and large, you know, the other, the other side of that equation is could you get societal, will, could you get the funding? Could you, you know, could you orient the labor to do something like that for that kind of undertaking? And so what are the purpose of those things?
And, you know, they're all claiming to be barrel chambers by what we're taught in textbooks from, you know, high school, the one thing that's consistent across all the world and wherever we find these things, these megalithic structures is there's no inscriptions, there's no writing on the wall. And if it was some sort of burial chamber religious thing, there's usually all sorts of adornments to those types of structures. And we just don't see that.
So then that begs the question, well, why don't we see that? And my hypothesis is that these are actually more machines than they are just structures. You know, there's electric potential between different types of rocks that are used. There's all sorts of evidence that these things have some sort of greater purpose than just a giant monument to our God for, you know, a sacrificial chamber for a Pharaoh.
And it's really interesting when you start to correlate that evidence with evidence of cyclic cyclical disasters on this planet, I did have a good point to that. No, I'm joking. So, and you know, now we're learning about all sorts of different cycles in this planet. There's a seven year oscillation in the core from a magnetism. We know that the magnetic poles are continually moving and they've started moving in certain directions and they haven't checked back.
And now they're pretty far off kilter. There's a lot of hypothesis is of, you know, a whole flipping principle, this placement, all of these things. But when you look correlate that with chiro geologic records, we see magnetic shifts in the geologic record every 13, some thousand years, which is about the younger Dryas area. And then attached to that you had, so the hypothesis is this Atlanta says what it's typically called these days was a global civilization.
There's genetic record to back that up. Now ther...