reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that the year does not begin in January but at the spring equinox, the return of life, in late March. The calendar, at its base, was simple: 13 months of twenty-eight days each, aligning with the lunar cycle. Because the sky is an clock, the sun marks days and seasons, and the moon marks the months, the cycle restarts in late March. Therefore, the number 13 represents renewal, not bad luck. However, the system supposedly discourages renewal by making people celebrate Saturn at Christmas and Janus at the New Year, trapping them in a temporal loop. The months themselves prove this misalignment: September means seven, not nine; October means eight, November means nine, December means ten; April is the first month, and the phrase about April Fools’ Day mocks those who still follow the natural cycle. The speaker asserts that when you control the calendar, you control time and people’s perception.
Key points:
- The year’s true start is the spring equinox, not January.
- The calendar’s original design would be 13 lunar months of 28 days, aligning with the lunar cycle.
- The cycle is renewed in late March, with 13 representing renewal.
- The system promotes celebrations of Saturn at Christmas and Janus at the New Year to trap people in a loop.
- The month names reveal calendar distortions: September is seven, October eight, November nine, December ten; April is the first month.
- April Fools’ Day is framed as a mockery of those who honor the natural cycle.
- Controlling the calendar is framed as controlling time and people’s perception.
Overall, the speaker presents a view that the conventional Gregorian calendar distorts the natural lunar-based 13-month cycle to keep people from renewal and to exert control over time perception. The argument emphasizes a hidden structure behind date naming and holidays, suggesting intentional manipulation to maintain a perpetual loop rather than true renewal.