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Amethyst in water emits alpha waves similar to those when we sleep. Place amethyst in sunlight to absorb ions, then in water. Drink before sleep for potential self-healing benefits.

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The speaker discusses a large radium water bottle called the revigorator, which contains radium ore inside clay. He asserts that the government tells people radium is toxic, but claims this device was used to heal people. He demonstrates the device’s radioactivity, noting it is “as radioactive as it gets” and showing measurements of “45 up to 90.” He points out that there is water inside the jug, visible as liquid in the container, and labels the contents “radioactive water.” He asserts the government would tell you this is dangerous if you do this, and counters with, “You’ve been duped,” recounting his journey of believing there were lies about the benefits of radium. He shares experiential claims about drinking radium water, stating that it makes you feel calm, real zen, real focused, and that the world feels like a peaceful place. The speaker connects radium water to a broader claim about turning ordinary water into spring water, describing radium water as related to hot springs. He explicitly states that radium water is “uranium water” and also mentions “thorium,” implying that the composition or effect includes these elements.

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A cavity magnetron is a vacuum tube that generates microwaves through ion interaction and a magnetic field in a resonator. It can produce free energy, but its function is disrupted by closing the vacuum or breaking symmetry. Stained glass windows in old structures were added to block the magnetron's power, hiding the potential for free energy.

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Mercury's spinning motion demonstrates free energy. Mercury is claimed to be labeled toxic to protect the profits of energy companies. Old buildings used brass balls loaded with mercury to gather atmospheric energy. The higher up, the more energy available. Copper wires could run the energy down into homes for free power.

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Speaker 0: - You should avoid uranium; stay away and don’t put it in a cloud buster because then it’s gonna clear up your skies. - Uranium makes plants grow like crazy. - It also supports the bees; same with electroculture. - If you add radium or uranium into the water, you get artesian spring water; that’s where all the hot springs come from. - To see how green it’s becoming, look at that—look at those guys; stunning. Look at the bees—bees galore in Arizona. - Interesting. - The old fake nukes, they gotta scare you away. - The other interesting thing about uranium is how yellow the brittle burst becomes. - It’s pretty wild. Look at him having the time of his life. - And if you wanna get crazier, look at my shoe. Look at how big these are.

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Speaker 0 discusses several claims about pyramids and their effects. The speaker asserts that if a bone is broken and a person sits within a pyramid, the bone would begin to regenerate. They claim that during processes of splicing or being turned in half, bones can regenerate while inside pyramids. The speaker notes that sitting in pyramids can be beneficial for focus issues and can also eliminate inflammation, headaches, and pain. The speaker extends these ideas to animals, stating that pets can sit in pyramids. They mention additional applications, such as preserving food with pyramids and watering plants with pyramid water, which they claim makes plants grow three times the size. They state that anytime a person drinks pyramid water, they would become energized or “cranked up.” A connection is drawn between the pyramid shape and uranium energy. The speaker says the pyramid shape targets energy in its center, similar to uranium, which supposedly causes ionization and leads to growth boosts, as well as the ability to preserve food. They claim pyramids slow everything down and provide examples of preservation, including cheese, milk, meat, and fruit. In summary, the speaker presents a set of interrelated assertions: sitting in a pyramid can promote bone regeneration after injury or surgery; pyramids alleviate focus issues and inflammation and relieve headaches and pain; pyramids can be used for pet comfort; pyramid-based processes can preserve food; pyramid water can accelerate plant growth and energize individuals who drink it; and the pyramid shape is linked to uranium energy through center-targeting ionization, which purportedly yields the listed growth and preservation effects. The overarching theme is that pyramids have wide-ranging therapeutic, agricultural, and preservative properties, grounded in a claimed energetic mechanism associated with the pyramid’s central energy focus.

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In the early 1900s, Walter Kilner created glasses using a dye from coal tar, called dicenium, that purportedly allowed users to see beyond the normal range of visible light. These glasses were said to enable the wearer to see people's auras and determine their strength. Reportedly, Kilner discovered that some people had no aura at all when viewed through these glasses. Some believe the movie "They Live," where glasses reveal aliens disguised as humans, was based on the events of Dicenium Glass. Kilner's lab was allegedly raided, his equipment confiscated, and his work suppressed. The speaker intends to recreate the glasses using dicinium to test their purported abilities.

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In the past, old sacred buildings had brass walls filled with mercury to gather free atmospheric energy. They placed these walls high up to maximize energy collection. They would then channel this energy into their homes using copper wires, providing free energy for lighting and other purposes. This information is often not disclosed, but when we examine historical artifacts, we can see that these buildings were designed like conductors. The true history has been altered to make it seem like people were constantly fighting each other, but the hidden past reveals a different story.

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In the early 1900s, Walter Kilner created blue goggles with dicennium dye to see auras beyond visible light. Some claim wearing these glasses revealed people with no auras. The story is likened to the movie They Live. Kilner's work was confiscated, buried, and forgotten, with only a few internet tales remaining. The speaker aims to recreate the glasses with dicennium to test their validity.

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The Sennett Quartz Health Lamp, created in the 1950s, uses a mercury arc lamp with quartz glass to emit UV healing frequencies, similar to sunlight. People would sit in front of the lamp to bathe in the UV light. The UV light pulsates and emits a greenish spectrum. Different color spectrums from different glass bulbs were considered healing. According to the book Light Medicine of the Future by Jacob Liberman, UV light has benefits such as lowering blood pressure, helping the heart, aiding weight loss, and improving the thyroid. UV light also helps with skin issues and can treat up to 65 different diseases. It can increase male hormones by up to 20% and helps balance female hormones.

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Gold alchemists sought forbidden frequencies like 44.6 hertz to transform metals. Monks in the Himalayas used 137.5 hertz to change Mercury into silver. A Russian lab experimented with 92.4 hertz on bismuth, briefly turning it into platinum. The Cymatic Guild claims to control all elements with precise frequencies. Cosmic entities emit frequencies, like black holes at 32 hertz and pulsars at 1.4 gigahertz. Solar winds at 500 kilohertz may align with ancient Ming meditation techniques. Sound frequencies could open stargates to other realms, like 111 hertz in Egyptian ceremonies and 136.1 hertz in Tibetan chants. The ultimate stargate frequency may be 963 hertz, known as the god frequency. Infrasound below 20 hertz has been linked to paranormal experiences.

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The speaker discusses radium and challenges the common warning to stay away from it, linking radium to healing properties historically observed in radium hot springs. They describe how radium hot springs were used to address inflammation, arthritis, pain, and brain fog, noting that people looked up radium hot springs worldwide to find these benefits. The key point made is that the healing effects attributed to radium water come from the sulfur content, which the speaker claims is present in radium water because radium and sulfur look exactly the same. Therefore, while the public is discouraged from radium, the speaker argues that radium water’s benefits stem from sulfur. The speaker brings up the well-known “radium girls” to counter the narrative that radium is purely dangerous, explaining that the girls were exposed because they were licking paint for long hours. The implication is that their illness was a result of licking paint, not radium exposure itself, and the statement is framed to support the idea that radium-related health outcomes are misunderstood or misrepresented. Additionally, the speaker asserts that radium springs exist nearby in British Columbia, Canada, and claims that such springs are widespread. They state that prominent figures and elite groups—specifically naming the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, JFK, and “all the presidents”—used to visit radium springs, suggesting a history of elite patronage of these waters. The speaker also mentions that people used to hold radium stones in their hands to heal inflammation and pain, emphasizing a practice involving direct contact with radium as a form of treatment. A broader claim presented is that humans are inherently radioactive, which the speaker ties to the rationale for being told to stay away from radium. The overall thread is that radium has healing potential, particularly through sulfur in radium water, but public warnings and historical narratives have been crafted to discourage engagement with radium. The speaker presents radium and radium-related practices as historically sanctioned by notable individuals and used for medical benefits, while contrasting these with the contemporary caution against radium exposure.

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The speaker discusses differences between radium and sulfur, claiming that radium’s apparent similarity to sulfur can mislead people. They state that radium water contains a lot of sulfur, and that sulfur is actually responsible for the healing properties attributed to hot springs. According to the speaker, people are told not to drink from radium glassware or to use radium pads on the body, implying that those cautions are intended to misdirect from the sulfur-related healing effects. The speaker notes a connection between radium and the UV spectrum, describing radium as related to the sun spectrum. They claim that people used to infuse radium into glass and then drink from it. The term “radium girls” is mentioned, with the suggestion that concerns about radium are overstated or part of a larger pattern of caution. A point is raised that painting with radium is linked to illness, highlighting that “the ladies were licking paint” for ten hours a day and that licking paint is dangerous, implying that those risks are more significant than the risks associated with radium itself. The speaker mentions a belief in radium hot springs, referencing British Columbia, Canada, and asserts that those springs are widespread. They list prominent families and figures—the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, JFK, and “all the presidents”—as having frequented Radium Springs, implying a historical elite association with the sites. The speaker claims that the admonitions to stay away from radium are deliberate, equating this with similar cautions about radium stones. They recall that people used to hold radium stones in their hands to heal inflammation and pain, emphasizing that radium is a radioactive material and that individuals are “radioactive beings.” The overarching assertion is that the public is told to avoid radium, but the speaker questions why, suggesting a hidden motive. In closing, the speaker reiterates that people are told to stay away from radium and advises not to go around looking at it, reinforcing the message that radium carries dangers that are framed as higher than the risks presented by other substances.

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The speaker discusses a 1920s radium water bottle called the Revigorator, noting that radium ore is inside the clay of the bottle and that it was used to heal people. He emphasizes the bottle’s enormous size, saying, “this thing is just mammoth,” and that it’s a challenge to hold it. He demonstrates by saying, “watch this… You can hear that. Right there,” implying a loud or notable sound associated with the device, and references the water as radioactive, stating, “So this is radioactive water.” He mentions that the government would tell people this is dangerous if you do this, followed by the assertion, “Yeah. You've been duped.” He describes his personal journey, claiming that he has learned that “we have been lied to about the benefits of radium.” Regarding the effects of radium water, he asserts that “when you drink a little bit of radium water, what happens is you feel real calm, you feel real zen, you feel real focused in, and the world is just a peaceful place.” He concludes by prompting the audience to consider this perspective.

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This video discusses dicennian glass, a dye derived from coal tar. In 1911, Walter John Kilner developed the kilner screen, which used dicennian dye sandwiched between glass plates to train the eyes to perceive electromagnetic radiation beyond visible light. Kilner's research proved the existence of the human aura and the ability to see into higher dimensions. However, after publishing his findings, the United States confiscated and degraded the dye, making it difficult to obtain. Dicennian glass is now heavily restricted.

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Speaker 0 explains that pink uranium glass is actually magnesium glass. They state that you have magnesium, uranium, cobalt, and manganese, and those are all the different types of glass that exist. According to the speaker, when a person consumes each different glassware, each different property gives a different property to the body to heal the body. If a person is feeling down, they might use a little uranium. If someone has low energy, they might use cobalt. If they’re experiencing depression, they might use manganese or magnesium. The speaker asserts that all of these different glasswares emit different frequencies, which heal the body in a different way, and this is why people used to drink out of them. They mention uranium glass, depression glass, and baseline glass as part of the old world. The speaker then connects this to alchemy, stating that this is part of alchemy and part of the Bohemians. They claim the Bohemians used to perform alchemy where they would transmute a material into the glass. They assert that after World War II, they got rid of Bohemia, a country that no longer exists because it was absorbed into other countries, because they wanted to get rid of the Bohemian roots. The speaker notes that the only Bohemia people know is Bohemian Grove, which they claim has inverted everything. They conclude by reiterating that Bohemia was very connected to alchemy.

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The discussion focuses on “bells” described in a book, referencing German work on the “Die Glock,” presented as a giant bell used for levitation. The transcript states that Nick Cook and many other scientists believe the bell discharged some sort of radiation connected to levitation. It describes internal components: cylinders inside the bell that spun in the opposite direction and contained mercury, “quicksilver.” It specifically claims the mercury involved was “red mercury,” characterized as a type the government says to stay away from. The transcript claims the setup produced electricity (linked to the mercury creating voltage) and that uranium or radium inside the bell would emit the radiation. It describes observable effects attributed to the system: sounds likened to a beehive and a bluish phosphorus glow from the bell. It also states that this form of levitation and other inventions were similar to the Vril Society, and says readers should look into Wotan, along with works attributed to Schauberger and Tesla, and “right there, that bell.” Finally, it connects these claims to geopolitical events by stating that the United States government said Germany was developing nukes, which the transcript presents as a reason for the invasion, and asks whether this explains why the invasion happened.

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Ancient alchemy and the use of red mercury, gold, garlic, and mirrors are discussed in this video. Red mercury is believed to be a key element in advanced architecture and is repelled by garlic while attracted to gold magnetically. It gives off free energy and can overheat metals it comes in contact with. Red mercury has been found in the throat of ancient Egyptian mummies and is believed to have healing properties. Despite the similarities to vampire blood, it is not the same. The ancients also used copper and iron, and it is speculated that these controllers may have used red mercury or blood magic with alchemy. Red mercury has various uses and can generate its own power field, potentially powering ether plasma devices and generators.

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Bohemia was taken off the map because Bohemia was connected into uranium. According to the speaker, uranium was given to Germany so Germany could create the first nuclear power plants. After the war, the speaker claims the decision was made to take Bohemia off the map because they “don’t want people to research these topics.” The speaker also says Bohemia is where uranium glassware came from, describing “cool uranium glass” made in Europe and stating that when you look for it, you find Bohemia. The speaker connects this to a broader claim that Bohemia was tied to alchemy, crystals, stones, and the “old world.” A similar idea is applied to Germany, described as “Mother Germany,” which the speaker says was also connected into the old world. The speaker then claims that countries connected to the old world were attacked during World War II because the belief was that they couldn’t be allowed to be powerful anymore. The speaker argues that having “old world technology” is a threat because it would allow people to get off the oil system and the electric system in use at the time, which the speaker frames as a threat. They then discuss the idea that “Bohemians” came from where they were “connected,” and mention being “now a boogie Bohemian,” adding “I got a little Bohemian in me too.” The speaker says their grandma used to tell them, “never forget. You’re Bohemian. You’ve got a Bohemian in you.” They say grandparents have always told people things they should never forget, and that the goal is to “manipulate your mind” and take away culture. The speaker claims that once culture is removed from someone, they become “a mixed thing,” which is described as easy to manipulate because they have lost their culture and “lost their who they descended from.” The speaker frames “turn people into the melting pot” as part of the goal, stating “We know where that term came from.” They add that they “own the newspapers, the radio, and all the social media.” The speaker also connects the “melting pot” idea to taking away culture and promoting a “mixed” identity. They mention “boho style” and say it is connected, then bring up “Voton,” stating that people can look into Voton and “the tribes of Wotan,” written as “w o t a n.” They say it is “really cool” to explore. They also mention pagans as “really interesting” and connect pagan topics to “the style that” (the thought is left unfinished).

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Speaker 0 describes uranium as incredibly hot: “it’s pretty fascinating how hot uranium gets in the sun, about 20 degrees hotter than what it is outside.” They assert that this heat is “burning hot” and that touching it is nearly impossible. They show samples labeled with silver and gold, and then “this is pure uranium,” calling it “really cool.” The speaker claims that uranium converts to helium and hydrogen. They note that when a meter is placed in front, “it starts to go bananas.” The speaker concedes a common caution by saying, “they tell you uranium is gonna poison you,” but then states, “this is what makes the hot springs.” They explain that uranium converts to sulfur, and that sulfur is what makes the hot springs and “everything so hot.” The sequence implies a connection between uranium, its conversion to sulfur, and the resulting heat in hot springs.

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The speaker showcases several vintage and specialty bulbs to illustrate variations in gas content, color spectrum, and tactile properties. First, a 120-year-old bulb is displayed, described as a 250-watt bulb from 1902. The speaker notes the color spectrum evident in this bulb and then highlights its gas composition: an argon gas bulb from 1902. The purple hue and the spectrum are emphasized, with the observation that it exhibits high levels of ultraviolet and infrared light. A striking safety point is mentioned: the bulb can be touched and remains cold to the touch. Next, the AeroLux bulb is introduced, identified as a neon bulb. The speaker calls attention to the orange glow and the associated color spectrum, labeling it as fascinating. Once again, the neon bulb is described as touch-safe, with the speaker reiterating that nothing happens when the bulb is touched. The sequence continues with another neon bulb, this time described as a smaller version that shares a similar color spectrum. The bulb is likened to a tiny flame, and, consistent with the previous neon example, it can be touched without causing harm or heat. Finally, frosted incandescent lighting is presented. The speaker notes that it also shows the same color spectrum, drawing attention to the uniformity of the color characteristics across these different bulb types. The commentary concludes with an observation about the frosted incandescent bulb, though the sentence is cut off. Across these examples, the speaker emphasizes how different technologies—archaic and modern neon, argon gas, and frosted incandescent—produce distinct visual colors while maintaining safe handling in terms of heat, highlighting the surprising safety and visual similarities in the light’s spectrum despite differing internal mechanisms.

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Speaker 0: The discussion centers on bells, specifically the Die Glock, a giant German bell used for levitation. Nick Cook and many other scientists believe the bell discharged some sort of radiation connected to levitation. Inside the bell were cylinders that spun in the opposite direction and also contained mercury. Not just any mercury, red mercury—the kind the government tells you to stay away from. Mercury, or quicksilver, is shown here, with electricity involved. So we have mercury creating voltage, and then uranium or radium present, which would emit the radiation. The sounds coming off the bell were described as beehive-like, and there was a bluish phosphorus glow from the bell. The text notes that this form of levitation and other inventions were similar to the Vril Society, which people should look into, along with Wotan. Also mentioned are Schauberger's work, Tesla's work, and the bell itself. The narrative also references the United States government claiming that Germany was developing nukes, and posits that this helps explain why they were invaded.

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Speaker 0 presents several claims about uranium glassware. He recommends eBay as a source for purchasing uranium glassware, and asserts that uranium is very energizing. He contends that people are told not to drink from uranium glassware because “big pharma wouldn’t make any money if people are drinking out of uranium glassware,” and adds that uranium provides “the ionizing radiation of the sun,” implying that warnings about the sun’s danger are motivated by financial interests of big pharma. He extends this logic to uranium glassware and other beautiful glassware, claiming they are “very charging” and that they “boost your energy.” He further asserts practical benefits: uranium glassware can be used to water plants, with plants growing three times the size, and food stored in uranium glassware—such as flowers or herbs—will last three times as long. He asks why these claims aren’t more widely discussed, then references the “radium girls” who used to lick paint and the nuclear issue, stating that nukes are fake and that fear about these topics is used to control people. He concludes that vintage glassware is where it’s at. The speaker then challenges the idea that vintage glassware could be toxic by asking why, if it were, every grandma and grandpa drank from it. He cites examples of uranium-containing items that were common in households, including uranium plates, forks, bowls, dishes, and other vintage glassware, using this to imply a historical acceptance of the material. He closes with a concluding remark: “That’s yeah. That’s a funny one.”

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Speaker 0 describes uranium water bottles from the 1920s, explaining that you would pour water in and drink it the next day because the uranium would turn it into spring water and into sulfur, claiming “that’s radium and uranium is sulfur.” He then says he decided to test something with food. He put bananas in the uranium water bottle to see what would happen to food. He observed that the uranium water bottles preserve food for up to a month; bananas usually change quickly, but when placed in the bottle, the banana stayed yellow permanently for three weeks. He then left the experiment running, not touching it. After six weeks, the banana developed only a pinch of mold on top and began turning black dots and other signs, but he ate the banana anyway. He says the banana became radioactive and “off the charts” on the Geiger counter, with energy levels described as cranked up. He then ponders what radiation is and notes that humans are radioactive beings, suggesting that perhaps we were meant to consume certain things to bring energy back, but governments have changed this narrative with a scare story. He mentions a government story where a man drank radium water and allegedly his jaw fell off. He emphasizes that this is “no joke” and claims it was just one person, while thousands of others were reportedly doing it. He adds another claim about the imagery used in newspapers: the photo of the man whose jaw supposedly fell off was not him; it was a different person with a disabling disease, used to scare people.

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This video discusses Dicennian glass, a dye derived from coal tar. In 1911, Walter John Kilner developed the Kilner screen, which consisted of glass plates coated with dye. Kilner's book, The Human Atmosphere, showed that wearing these glasses could help perceive electromagnetic radiation beyond visible light. He also claimed that the dye allowed users to see into higher dimensions. However, after Kilner published his findings, the United States confiscated everything and restricted access to the dye, making it difficult to obtain and find information about online.
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