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The transcript traces a broad, interwoven set of claims about hidden history, underground structures, and manipulated timelines, centering on Iran but weaving in examples from around the world. - Iran and Tehran: The host questions whether Iran is “not going along with the mainstream story” about control of the population and asks what in Tehran “they want destroyed and erased forever?” A Truth Social post from Donald J. Trump allegedly urged an evacuation of Tehran, prompting a mass evacuation that night. The host contends a “post-World” element is evacuated, focusing on the Golisthan Palace as a symbol of an old-world architecture that supposedly does not belong in the timeline and that its photos are extraordinary. - Golisthan Palace and underground expectations: The host describes the palace as featuring griffins at the entrance and asserts it is a “palace from the old world” connected to others underground, with a subterranean storage area beneath Salem Hall that is said to be larger than visible and labeled for storage. - National Museum of Iran: A half-mile away lies the National Museum of Iran, described as a massive box of land housing artifacts that supposedly reveal “something else happened here” than the mainstream narrative. The host notes that hands are removed from some items and points to a supposed basement level of the museum as evidence of hidden, off-limits artifacts that predate Islam or feature iconography tied to Zoroastrianism, female rulers, or alternative power structures. - Basements and “off-limits” artifacts: The program reiterates that basements of museums often hold millions of artifacts not on display, and claims this is a pattern consistent with a broader attempt to conceal the true past. The host suggests that the basement storage of the National Museum of Iran contains pivotal, undisclosed artifacts, perhaps including tablets and human remains. - Censorship and tech platforms: The host repeats that censorship is returning and platforms control narratives. A promotional pivot introduces Rumble and its Wallet as a tool to resist big-tech and big-bank influence, claiming it allows users to store digital assets (Bitcoin, Tether Gold, and USAT), tip creators without middlemen, and avoid bank censorship. The host urges viewers to open an account at wallet.rumble.com. - Repetition of “truth” and pattern: A recurring theme is that the true history is hidden in basements and underground spaces, and that many museums’ basements house millions of artifacts that are not accessible to the public. The host cites prior episodes (episode 113, 109, 108, 52, 41, 43) to support the claim of a deliberate cover-up and to illustrate “patterns and repetition” across locations. - Underground cities, tunnels, and old-world technology: The host asserts Tehran sits atop an old-world tunnel network and that Iran announced a tunnel project in November 2024; by January 2025, locals reportedly uncovered an underground city beneath five old-world homes. The host posits that many underground networks and tunnels exist worldwide and have been modernized while the public remains unaware, suggesting old-world technology persists under modern cities. - The old-world, older-than-addressed timelines: The speaker asks what under the feet of cities, what tunnels, vaults, chambers, and artifacts lie under the old world. They reference giant beings, tablets, and elongated-skull findings (as discussed in prior episodes) and argue that the artifacts in Iran’s basement could expose a story divergent from the widely told history. - Architecture and timeline inconsistencies: The host explores multiple examples to argue that the mainstream narrative about construction timelines is inconsistent. They discuss the National Museum of Iran’s basement, and then move to global cases, including: - Saint Peter and Paul Church in San Francisco and 666 Filbert Street, noting allegations that the second church on the site was completed in 1924 and bombed in 1926-27, implying a recurring “fire narrative.” - Saint Anne Shrine in Fall River, Massachusetts, where a postcard allegedly shows a founding date (1869) earlier than construction dates claimed (1891), used to claim the building was “founded,” not constructed, by a previous civilization. - The Greene County Courthouse (Ohio) and a comparable courthouse in Illinois, both claimed to have been constructed in under a year in the late 19th/early 20th centuries, with multiple earlier courthouses said to exist on the same sites, all accompanying a “fire narrative.” - The Manitowoc County Courthouse (Wisconsin) and a Benton County Courthouse (Iowa), each said to have been built rapidly in the early 1900s, cited as evidence that a single builder and sons complete grand palaces in short periods, then disappear from future projects. - AI-generated names and patterns: The host highlights recurring AI-generated names (e.g., Richard Blackhead, Peter Desroaches, John Warner, Mary, Alice) as evidence of scripted or constructed narratives, arguing that the same names and characters recur across locations and episodes. - Overall claim and call to action: The host asserts that the timeline is dramatically misrepresented, that many old-world buildings and underground systems are older and more advanced than the story told, and that artifacts and subterranean networks under cities reveal a truth that is being suppressed. They urge viewers to continue digging into locations being illuminated, to question evacuations and the reasons behind them, and to consider that “the truth about what was once here before us is all under attack right now.”

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In Marrakech, on the night of Friday eight to Saturday nine, there is something happening in the sky. The speaker asks viewers to explain in the comments.

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Tomorrow, a wheel will be transported 100 meters underground to the ATLAS experiment at CERN. Hundreds of people have worked on this wheel for several years. It is considered a magnificent piece of engineering and science. It is now ready to be taken and do its job.

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Today marks a huge milestone: we've successfully purchased land for Epic City! This 402-acre space in Josephine, Texas, just 20 minutes from Epic, will be the future of living. Epic City is more than just a neighborhood; it's a meticulously designed community centered around Islam. It will feature single-family homes, townhomes, apartments, and senior living, with a mosque and school at its heart. We'll have parks for Eid prayers, carnivals, community events, and sports fields for soccer, cricket, tennis, and volleyball. Epic City will celebrate diversity and promote unity, fostering belonging for all residents. Together, we are building Epic City, the city of tomorrow, starting today. This will be the epicenter of Islam in America.

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The Sumerian King's List, stolen from the Iraqi National Museum, points to Dilmun, a land of immortality and perfect health. Excavations in Bahrain, near Dubai, have unearthed antiquities and burial mounds, suggesting Dilmun's location. Since these discoveries in the 1950s, Dubai's population and investment have exploded. Texts mention the kasha tree in Dilmun, a symbol of healing and immortality. Is this why the Sumerian King's List was stolen? Why the region remains a conflict zone? The answers may be buried beneath the sand, hidden in museums. The old world isn't gone. It's here, and we're starting to see it. Is it a coincidence, or the truth? You decide.

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Lumma Partners presents a fifth dentist production of Terrence of Arabia, from the creator of the Lumascape. The production includes keynotes at two events: the Brand Safety and AI Summit and the World Government Summit. A striking claim is made that “The Arabian Peninsula may never recover.”

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CERN may have a quantum camera at the Large Hadron Collider that can capture a three-dimensional image of every particle on Earth, predicting their future positions. This could explain strange occurrences in the world. If those in control don't like what they see, they may try to change the future. Stay tuned for part 2.

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At the South Pole Station, there are advanced technologies that most people are unaware of. One such technology is the directed energy weapon system, which is not commonly known. Additionally, the ice cube neutrino detector is not just a listening device, but it is actually the largest directed energy weapon system in the world. These technologies are worth exploring and understanding.

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In Dubai, the speaker asks if it will rain, but it's actually a sunny day. The UAE government invested $20 million in cloud seeding research. Cloud seeding involves releasing salt into clouds to make droplets bigger and cause rain. The National Center of Meteorology in Abu Dhabi controls the cloud seeding process, which includes sending aircraft to specific cloud locations. The center manufactures a salt substance that is put into flares to enhance rainfall.

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The video centers on a set of extraordinary claims about underground tunnels, hidden pyramids, and supposed concealment by authorities in order to maintain a controlled narrative of ancient history. Key points raised: - Puebla Tunnels: Tunnels found in 2015 under a Mexican city, described as high enough to ride through on horseback and extending more than 10 kilometers (6.21 miles). These tunnels were reportedly blocked off from the public during a two-year renovation (2015–2017) so the city could renovate the system before opening it again, with the presenter suggesting the blocks were to protect a mainstream narrative. - The presenter asserts that the tunnels and mud deposits imply a worldwide event and an advanced premodern civilization that was wiped out, resetting history to the 17th–18th centuries, arguing that a more advanced group lived here earlier than commonly taught. - Connection to churches and other structures: Four entrances to the tunnels were said to connect directly to the Los Romedios Church, with implications that churches were built atop or over tunnel networks and possibly atop a much older subterranean layer. - Catacombs and pyramids: The presenter speculates that the tunnels may be catacombs and argues that beneath certain sites, including the church, there is a massive pyramid. They claim the pyramid beneath the church—referred to as the Great Pyramid of Chulula—has a greater volume than the Great Pyramid of Giza and is the largest pyramid by volume discovered so far. They describe a network of tunnels beneath the grass covering the pyramid and question why the grass has not been removed, arguing that preservation excuses are used to keep the site concealed from public view. - Dating controversy: The presenter disputes official timelines, asserting the tunnels were built earlier than the claimed 1531 date tied to local lore and suggesting the church was built atop the tunnels, implying the builders knew of what lay underneath from the start. - Turkey site and Myra: A separate site in Myra (southern Turkey) is described as a melted palace carved into rock, resembling a mountain. The narrative references Charles Fellows’ 1840s exploration, noting claims of color decor in the eighteenth century but alleging color has since disappeared, and proposing a large necropolis with hundreds of tombs, many damaged or looted since the eighteenth century. - Ground-penetrating radar discovery: In 2009, archaeologists detected an ancient city using ground-penetrating radar, revealing anomalies and hidden structures, which the presenter uses to bolster the claim that there is much more beneath the surface than mainstream accounts acknowledge. - Refrains on transparency: The host repeatedly argues that the mainstream narrative withholds information about these sites and that restoration or preservation explanations are used to keep discoveries from the public, asserting that “the mainstream narrative is not transparent at all.” Throughout, the speaker emphasizes that these discoveries challenge established history, suggesting that the “old world” left behind a hidden, sophisticated network of tunnels and pyramids, and that public access and official explanations are tightly controlled. The video also teases an upcoming series and next week’s episode about a necropolis in Southern Turkey.

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In this video, the speaker discusses their experience at the South Pole Station in Antarctica and the technology present there. They claim that the IceCube Neutrino Detector can transmit at high voltages and serve as an air traffic control station for off-world and on-world craft. They also mention faster-than-light communications and the facility's potential to generate earthquakes. The speaker reveals the existence of an energized ELF system and a powerful green laser at the Atmospheric Research Observatory. They suggest the presence of a secondary power supply that may violate the Antarctic Treaty. For more information, the speaker directs viewers to their website deciphering.tv.

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We are announcing the secret project of building Ironman. The national Christmas tree will be lit with a push-button electrified system.

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In Saudi Arabia, you can harness the power of the ether for free and unlimited energy. However, the elites today prioritize profit over providing free energy to the people. This is why much of our history has been intentionally concealed. In today's world, it's all about profits rather than prioritizing the well-being of individuals. It's important to question everything.

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We’re told we’ve found over 40 cisterns beneath this location in Istanbul, with the ground described as effectively hollow. The presenter asserts there is a “master planned grid” below the streets and structures, now turned into museums or restricted to the public in the last century. Every cistern, tunnel, or substructure is described as part of an underground blueprint, not just water reservoirs. The host contends that the popular claim of a massive 2,100,000-square-foot palace is incorrect or incomplete; instead, what’s visible today is the basement, while the underlying old world remains. He references episode 33 from 2023, noting a huge golf course next to the stadium and surrounding hotels that supposedly cover ancient remains, suggesting the area could be built over old world buildings. He also cites Balboa Park observations of a land layout described as a perfect square with 90-degree angles, arguing that such cuts are used to hide what lies beneath. The Cistern Of Ayatou(s) (Aiatus) is presented as directly beneath the VEFA Stadium, with the playing surface roughly where the cistern floor was and the enclosing walls aligned with cistern walls. The stadium was built in the 1920s, just before the city’s name changed from Constantinople to Istanbul. The host claims that the cistern they refer to as Ayatouz covers an area of four by 85 meters or approximately 223,000 square feet, over what would be three NFL football fields, and that the grass does not fully cover it because the cistern goes down 13 to 15 meters (roughly 43 to 49 feet)—describing it as a four- to five-story underground building. He asserts this was a “massive destruction project” in the 1920s and 1930s, not a simple covering. Breaking news is announced mid-episode: the stadium is being demolished at the time of posting, with the presenter promising to investigate further. He zooms in on a side wall showing bricks and questions why such structures would be demolished if truth were being told. He argues that old world structures have been destroyed globally over the last two centuries as a means of hiding the underground, and references a 1958 photo showing the outer wall that allegedly encircles the ancient palace. The host introduces the Ipek Badrum Cistern as situated below Children’s Park, with photos from the Nichols v. Artmanov collection and William Earl Bech of Dumbarton Oaks, suggesting these images confirm underground chambers. He insists the old world is beneath the ground and that history books are “completely made up stories.” He claims that since the name change (from Constantinople to Istanbul) in the early 20th century, a deliberate effort has occurred to destroy old world sites, with the cisterns connected or only partially buried. Also mentioned are other underground cisterns near the area, including the Cistern Of Aspar and the Phloxanos Cistern, all described as having similar shapes and features, with Medusa heads visible in some. The presenter asserts there are 64 known cisterns in Istanbul, with 26 dated by mainstream construction dates, and he vows to expose them as interconnected, ancient underground structures, all part of a single vast palace beneath the city. He ends by positing that this isn’t unique to Istanbul; underground palaces and hidden corridors are present worldwide, and their existence is being buried and not taught to the public.

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Is the moon a mirrored image of Earth? Some believe so, pointing to the resemblance between the two. Admiral Richard E. Bird's claim of seeing land beyond Antarctica adds to the speculation. In Prague, the oldest working Astronomical Clock is showcased, which follows a geocentric view of the universe, not heliocentric. Prepare to be amazed.

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The video launches with a provocative premise: the history we’ve been taught may hide the truth about who we are and what was here before us, using Sardinia, Italy, and the Giants of Monte Prama as a case study. After four excavations from 1975 to 1979, roughly 5,000 underground items were found at the site, including 15 heads and 22 torsos, among others. The claim is that many pieces were moved and stored for thirty years in the National Archaeological Museum of Cagliari, with the number of items and their condition allegedly undisclosed or unverifiable, and that only a subset has been exhibited while the rest remain hidden from the public view along with the statues. The speaker argues that archaeologists’ work would be illegal to perform today, yet the authorities publish numbers that are easily questioned. The video asserts that what is taught in schools is based on select pieces shown to the public, while the majority of finds were kept in basements or backrooms for decades. It is claimed that the restoration and subsequent display have been selective, with many pieces not accessible to the public and a broader narrative being pushed about the site’s significance, timeline, and origins. A central accusation is that Monte Prama’s timelines are manipulated. There’s criticism of dating, such as a late fourth-century BC abandonment versus other proposed centuries, asserting that the dates are “made up,” and that local or regional authorities have altered timelines to fit a narrative. The video references the use of local leaf tests to assert ages between the eleventh and eighth centuries BC, and claims these are debatable and not definitive proof of the site’s history. It contends that limestone preservation would require destructive testing or ancient processes, and argues that the heads have been damaged or removed, obscuring what the past looked like and what people held or wore. The narrator speculates about six fingers, watches, and other artifacts possibly hidden in the stonework, joking about Apple Watches, then insists that hands, feet, and other parts have been removed to conceal information. The Giants are described as over eight feet tall, with elongated heads and horns, and the video maintains that the depictions reveal a different history than the conventional narrative. It claims more than 25 statues existed, with the total later estimated to be 44, and asserts that more are stored in back rooms. The restoration project, the video asserts, should be transparent and livestreamed so the public can see the process. It accuses the group behind the official exhibition of manipulating information, destroying or hiding evidence, and restricting access to the site for decades. Beyond Sardinia, the discussion expands to the broader region, linking Sardinia to Syria (episode references Palmyra and the Temple of Baal) and touching on Georgia (the Lord’s Fortress), Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Tartaria. The narrator asserts that these regions contain melted rock-town structures and extensive tunnel networks, sometimes described as multi-level, ancient urban settlements connected by underground passages. Carbon dating is criticized as being unreliable for proving human presence at these sites, and there is a persistent assertion that mainstream archaeology fabricates or withholds the truth. In Georgia and adjacent regions, tunnels, staircases, and hidden halls are described as evidence of advanced subterranean civilizations, with claims that earthquakes or other disasters are misrepresented by mainstream accounts. The speaker references political figures and questionable provenance for dates, and ends by urging continued exploration and public scrutiny, implying a global pattern of hidden or manipulated premodern advanced knowledge. The closing note teases more content next Saturday, inviting viewers to weigh in on what is truly below the sand and what ancient civilizations might have built beneath the surface of the world.

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Tonight's special dives into the mystery of floating spheres seen globally, reminiscent of the "Sphere of Betz" case where a woman found an object with strange properties in a lagoon. Could these be the same objects seen in videos worldwide? These spheres have been spotted in England and Dubai and are said to be observing us, even scanning our brainwaves. A pilot also testified in the U.S. Senate that spheres are the most common UAP sightings reported by military pilots. We will also explore Oliver Kastrus's 1996 footage showing spheres creating crop circles, suggesting non-human tech. There are also sightings at England's Manchester Airport, and similar reports from Mexico City's International Airport, though less documented. Don't miss the special, it's only the first stage of this deep dive.

ColdFusion

Elon Musk's Moon Tourism Explained!
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Elon Musk announced a lunar tourism project at SpaceX, involving eight passengers on the BFR spaceship for a five-day moon flyby. The first passenger is Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa, who aims to inspire artists during the journey. The mission emphasizes innovation and potential spin-off technologies, marking a new era in private space exploration.

Breaking Points

Trump Shocks EVERYONE With "Golden Dome" Plans
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President Trump announced the Golden Dome project, a state-of-the-art missile defense system integrating advanced technologies for land, sea, and space. Canada expressed interest in joining the initiative. The system aims to intercept missiles globally, with a projected success rate near 100%. Initial funding of $25 billion is included in a broader $175 billion budget, though estimates suggest costs could reach $542 billion. Critics question the rationale behind the project, citing a lack of clear threats from nations like Iran, North Korea, or China. The proposal parallels 1980s defense spending, raising concerns about fiscal responsibility amid significant tax cuts. Trump faces challenges reconciling support for the Freedom Caucus, which advocates for Medicaid cuts, with his populist messaging. The bill includes substantial corporate tax cuts and potential Medicaid reductions, leading to skepticism about its feasibility and long-term impacts on healthcare costs. Overall, the situation reflects ongoing tensions within Republican priorities and fiscal strategy.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #2231 - Jimmy Corsetti & Dan Richards
Guests: Jimmy Corsetti, Dan Richards
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Joe Rogan hosts a discussion with Dan Richards and Jimmy Corsetti, focusing on topics related to ancient civilizations, archaeology, and the controversies surrounding them. They begin by discussing the debunking of claims made by Flint Dibble regarding plant domestication and adaptation, emphasizing the complexities of natural selection in agriculture. The conversation shifts to Baalbek, a site in Lebanon known for its massive stones, which are believed to have been moved and constructed by an advanced civilization. Corsetti highlights the impressive engineering feats involved in the construction of Baalbek, including the transportation of stones weighing up to 1,500 tons, and questions the conventional narratives surrounding its origins, suggesting that the Romans may not have been responsible for its construction. They also touch on Gobekli Tepe, an archaeological site in Turkey that challenges established timelines of human history. Corsetti notes that only a small percentage of Gobekli Tepe has been excavated, raising questions about the motivations behind the lack of further exploration. He suggests that the Turkish government’s focus on tourism and potential economic benefits may hinder archaeological efforts. The discussion then moves to the Great Pyramid of Giza, where they explore the existence of a hidden chamber discovered through muon technology. They express frustration over the lack of plans to investigate this chamber, emphasizing the importance of uncovering the mysteries of the pyramid and its construction. The conversation also delves into the Rishat Structure in Mauritania, which some speculate could be linked to the legend of Atlantis due to its concentric circles and geographical features. Corsetti argues that the site deserves further exploration, as it may hold significant clues about ancient civilizations. Throughout the discussion, they critique mainstream media and academic narratives, highlighting how biases and political agendas can distort public understanding of history and science. They emphasize the need for open-mindedness and critical thinking in exploring ancient history, advocating for a more nuanced understanding of humanity's past. The episode concludes with reflections on the implications of these discussions for contemporary society, including the influence of powerful interests on public discourse and the importance of independent thought in the face of prevailing narratives.

Philion

The Line City Dystopia
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Neom, the Line, is described as the dumbest architectural endeavor ever attempted. It will be home to 9 million residents within a 34 square kilometer footprint, designed to provide a healthier, more sustainable quality of life. Travel end to end in 20 minutes with zero carbon emissions. The video portrays Saudi modernization as a wind-stripped ecotopia: a 106-mile long, narrow city with no roads, no cars, and no pollution. It claims daily needs within a five-minute walk and sustainable living, while noting a guardianship regime and limited autonomy. There are tribal evictions, a protester was shot, and cloud seeding was proposed to bring rain. Critics call it a vanity project that uses nature and culture as props for a corporate-political spectacle. Oil has defined the economy, accounting for about 40% of real GDP and about 75% of total budget revenues since 2010, peaking at 93% in 2011. Neom plans cost up to 1.5 trillion, with reports of scaling back and delays.

American Alchemy

BREAKING: New Scans Show Massive Structures Under the Pyramids
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A broad discussion unfolds around a novel radar-based technique that aims to reveal interior details of ancient structures, particularly the Great Pyramid and the Khafre pyramid. The guest researchers describe how a synthetic aperture radar approach, enhanced with a method they call the Beyond Protocol or Doppler tomography, interprets micromovements on the structure’s surface to infer hidden chambers and substructures. They emphasize that standard radar penetration is limited, so their technique relies on detecting subtle vibrations and translating them into tomographic slices that purportedly reveal internal features. The conversation covers how the method uses existing satellite data, how the incidence angle and processing choices influence depth penetration, and how the resulting 3D reconstructions are built by overlaying tomographic results onto conventional architectural diagrams. Throughout, the researchers discuss specific findings such as unprecedented tubular structures beneath the pyramids, possible shafts connected to known chambers, and a so‑called big void that has sparked ongoing debate with other scanning modalities. A recurring theme is the tension between the new technique and established methods like muon scanning. The participants compare the surface-phonon signals detected by radar with muon-detection results, noting both alignments and discrepancies. They acknowledge limitations, such as signal attenuation in certain bedrock types and the difficulty of distinguishing genuine internal features from background noise or layover effects. The dialogue also delves into how different data acquisitions, processing pipelines, and even hardware constraints (and the wish for more computing power) shape what can be interpreted from a single pass, or a few passes, over a site. Several case studies are reviewed, including validations against the Osiris shaft and the Gran Sasso laboratory, used as proof of concept, and a controversial claim about kilometer-deep tubular structures under the Giza plateau, which the team frames as a live question requiring further, higher‑fidelity testing. Towards the end, the speakers reflect on the practical and epistemic path forward: the need for real-time or near-real-time tomography, more expansive datasets, independent controls, and collaborative work with established teams to reconcile differences between technologies. They acknowledge the role of governance and funding, discuss potential philanthropic or nonprofit backing, and agree that rigorous, repeated testing is essential to advance any credible interpretation of what these interior features could signify about ancient construction, function, and metallurgy beneath the Giza plateau.

Johnny Harris

Why Saudi Arabia is Building a $1 Trillion City in the Desert
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The speaker explores NEOM, a massive futuristic city being built in the Saudi Arabian desert, funded by the kingdom's oil wealth. Despite skepticism about its feasibility, construction is ongoing, with extensive activity and new roads emerging. The speaker meets local Bedouin tribes, highlighting their traditional nomadic lifestyle amidst rapid modernization. NEOM aims to transition Saudi Arabia from an oil-dependent economy to diverse industries, including tourism and renewable energy. However, the project has led to forced relocations and unrest among affected communities, raising concerns about the future of both the Bedouin culture and the kingdom's ambitious plans.

Philion

Akon's Fake City
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Akon City was supposed to open in 2026, but then COVID hit. Akon has given up his music career to pursue entrepreneurship in Africa, focusing on technology and solar power. The project, costing over six billion dollars in Senegal, features districts like African culture Village, technology, and centerwood, with Akon Tower and a solar power plant; Phase one by 2026 and Phase two by 2029, including roads, hotels, a hospital, and more.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #2374 - Ben van Kerkwyk
Guests: Ben van Kerkwyk
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Hidden beneath Egypt's sands lies a labyrinth described by antiquity as larger and grander than the pyramids. Ben van Kerkwyk recounts a central atrium spanning tens of meters, at its center a long, metallic 40-meter object whose nature remains uncertain. Ancient writers, from Herodotus to Diodorus Siculus and Pliny the Elder, claimed the labyrinth housed thousands of rooms and vast courts, surpassed in labor by no other structure. Petri later reported a ruined Roman town at the surface, and modern crews at the site of Hara say underground walls and chambers lie beneath a water table around five meters. Between 2008 and the 2010s, the Matahar expedition, in collaboration with the Supreme Council of Antiquities and other institutes, used ground-penetrating radar, geomagnetism, low-frequency seismic tomography, and electrical resistivity to image the labyrinth. They found a dense maze of granite walls and wide corridors, extending at least two sectors with walls hundreds of meters across. The survey shows a water table about 5 meters below the surface; deeper levels may be drier. The labyrinth is said to span about 100 meters by 150 meters, with a large central atrium connecting multiple levels, and the bottom layers appear less waterlogged, potentially free of groundwater. Van Kerkwyk also highlights the pre-dynastic precision stone vessels, which modern scanning and geometry studies suggest were produced with extraordinary accuracy, including near-zero tolerance for flatness and circularity. Tubular drill marks appear on some pieces, while copper traces are conspicuously absent in tested fragments. In one set of analyses, titanium and other alloys appeared in tiny fragments, prompting speculation about exotic tool materials. Max Zamalov's SEM work raised the possibility of nuclear machining and even titanium usage in fabrication, though he emphasizes that more testing is needed. The Vase Scan project has since brought dozens of vessels into museum collections for scanning and verification. The conversation shifts to politics and gatekeeping in archaeology, with examples of data suppression around Matahar and other expeditions and tensions with Zahi Hawass and Egyptian authorities. The discussion links independent scanning approaches—space-based, muon, and radar—to claims about ancient technologies, star glyphs and stargates, notably at Dendera, where glyphs are interpreted as Stargate imagery. Van Kerkwyk argues that the labyrinth could be the century's biggest archaeological find if verified, and he advocates open investigation rather than premature conclusions. The dialogue probes civilization's oscillation between rise and fall, and whether ancient mastery predates dynastic Egypt.
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