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Flat earthers argue that Antarctica, a mysterious continent at the southern pole, is an ice barrier surrounding the flat earth. Attempts to circumnavigate it have failed, suggesting a hidden truth. Admiral Byrd's expeditions to Antarctica, including Operation High Jump, raised suspicions of a secret mission to combat Nazis. Byrd spoke of valuable resources in Antarctica on TV in 1954. However, his vision of international exploration never materialized. In 1959, a UN treaty banned public travel south of the 60th southern parallel, leaving Antarctica largely unexplored. Translation: Flat earthers believe Antarctica is an ice barrier around the flat earth. Admiral Byrd's expeditions hinted at hidden truths, but international exploration never happened due to a UN treaty in 1959.

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Hello, I'm here to discuss the new names of places around the globe, courtesy of Trump. The United States is now America Classic, and what used to be Canada is now Gay North Dakota. The Atlantic Ocean? That's the Ocean Of America now. Greenland is now Marjorie Taylor Greenland, and Alaska has been rebranded as McKinley's Happy Funland. We have two Oceans of America now, and Africa is being called Little Africa, due to a typo. Mexico is now America's pants, and the Middle East is the New Middle East. Africa is now Dark MAGA. Iceland is now Muskeland, and the North Pole? America's Santa's Workshop. Gaza is Mar-A-Lago East, and Russia is Big Loser Country, America Beat To The Moon, now a U.S. state. China is the Hundred Acre Wood, and Australia is Upside Down America. With all of Earth renamed as America, we're now calling it America Prime, and the Moon and Mars are now America's.

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Antarctica is mysterious and off-limits to ownership or independent exploration. Speculation arises from claims of world leaders attending secret meetings there, with ancient ruins and pyramids possibly hidden beneath the ice. Historical maps depict a once ice-free, green Antarctica connected to South America. The secrecy surrounding Antarctica fuels theories of a lost civilization and hidden truths.

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The ice walls in Antarctica are 150 feet high, with limited access for average people. Beyond the ice wall is unknown. The Antarctic Treaty, signed in 1959, allows peaceful activities only, with no military involvement. The treaty ensures compliance through ships and stations. The validity of the azimuthal equidistant map is discussed.

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On 07/29/2025, a massive magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, in the Aleutian subduction zone. We exposed this location as a gate built by the old world to give the entire world free energy, energy released from a massive power line. Was something destroyed underground, creating one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded? Military bases I believe were found from the old world are covering this fault line; they unlocked this technology after World War II; four weeks later, the sixth largest earthquake ever recorded. Three of the top eight earthquakes: 1952 (9.0), 1964 (9.2); 2025 ties this pattern near Prince William Sound. Raibachi Nuclear Submarine Base lies underwater with six old world facilities; Start One (1991) allows on-site inspections. A closed town near Tarzinskaya Bay sits atop an ancient crater and is restricted. The painting is becoming clearer; we are just getting started.

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There is a magnetic mountain at the North Pole called Black Rock, depicted on old maps as a Phantom Island. It is seen as a sacred place by many cultures. Some believe it was destroyed in the 1600s. Heat maps show wind blowing past this 33-mile-wide mountain, leading some to question the truth we've been told.

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War is coming to the Arctic Circle, with Greenland seen as part of a broader clash for the world’s most important trade route. Russia and China have already laid claim to large portions; the United States now seeks in. The discussion notes the growing competition over the Arctic, Iran, and Europe as flashpoints. Trump is calling for a Pentagon budget increase from 1.0 trillion to 1.5 trillion for 2027. He tweeted that after negotiations, the military budget should be 1.5 trillion “in the very troubled and dangerous times,” and suggested capping CEO compensation in defense contracts at 5 million per year. Following the tweet, Lockheed Martin stock jumped, as did other defense contractors. Glenn Greenwald is cited, saying the Pentagon fails its audit for the seventh consecutive year and questions how hundreds of billions of dollars move around, then notes a preference to increase budgets from 850 billion to 1.0 trillion to 1.5 trillion. Tucker Carlson is quoted suggesting war is coming and that Trump may know something others do not. Speaker 1 frames the budget increase as the kind of funding a country anticipates a global or regional war would have, calling it a “war budget,” not a peacekeeping one, and suggests we’re moving toward a big war. Speaker 0 adds that a large-scale attack against Iran is likely before the end of the year, and questions what will happen in the Arctic Circle. The panel introduces Ben Freeman, author of The Trillion Dollar War Machine, who joins to discuss. Freeman’s point is that the president justifies a larger foreign war budget by pointing to money generated abroad, including oil resources in places like Venezuela. The panel agrees the implication is that the military is “paying for itself” through conquest, and a speaker notes this echoes imperial patterns. Another participant emphasizes that China’s military budget is about a third to a quarter of the U.S. budget, but China has triple the personnel, arguing that quantity does not necessarily equal capability and that the U.S. remains the strongest military force. There is a claim that the current budget primarily funds contractors, not service members, veterans, or families; defense contractors’ revenues largely come from U.S. government contracts, and this is reflected in stock surges when large budgets are announced. The discussion cites a statistic that about 54% of the defense budget goes to Pentagon contractors, and notes a contrast: one in four military families faces food insecurity despite the existing trillion-dollar budget. The panel argues that perpetual war is used to justify the size of the budget, not merely to address threats, but to keep the defense industry tidal-wanked into profits. They discuss whether diplomacy with Russia could be a more effective path, and acknowledge a shift in U.S. policy rhetoric compared to earlier promises to avoid endless wars. There is mention that the Senate voted to limit presidential actions in Venezuela; the president defends war powers as constitutional, while critics point to campaigns that promised restraint on war. Ben Freeman promotes his book, The Trillion Dollar War Machine, noting its availability in hardback, Kindle, and audiobooks, and the discussion ends with praise for the book and thanks to Freeman.

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In 1962, Europe and America were connected by satellite across the Atlantic. However, it wasn't until 1966 that the link across the Pacific was completed. Now, using satellites, microwaves, and landlines, we can connect Europe with Africa, Asia, Australia, and America.

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The US and Russia are only two miles apart, separated by the Bering Strait and the Diomede Islands. Little Diomede belongs to the US and is home to the town of Diomede, population 82. Big Diomede belongs to Russia and is uninhabited, except for military personnel. Diomede is the closest American town to Russia. In winter, the water between the islands freezes, creating an ice bridge that makes it possible to cross the border by land. An international dateline runs between the islands, creating a 21-hour time difference. Crossing from the US side puts you in the future, making you a "time traveler."

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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 1943, nearly a thousand American soldiers sailed to Greenland to protect it from Nazi Germany, which controlled Europe and had set its sights on the Arctic. Their ship was torpedoed by a Nazi U-boat, and four chaplains sacrificed their life vests so that others might live. Their sacrifices helped win our freedom. Americans and Greenlanders stood together, but today, Greenland faces new threats from Russian aggression and Chinese expansion. Their shared legacy lives on in joint missions and Arctic patrols. Now is the time to stand together again for peace, security, and the future. America stands with Greenland.

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We've been to the border, Ukraine was invaded by Russia, and now private files are stored in the cloud. The Caribbean is in the Western Hemisphere, and we need to work together to address challenges. Plastic straws should be banned, but paper straws can be difficult to use. Women's teams got brackets in 2022. The US has an alliance with North Korea. AI stands for artificial intelligence.

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Susan Kokinda argues that the current moment marks the end of eighty years of British-led American foreign policy and the revival of a past strategic clarity embodied by the old war plan red. She contends that the mainstream view portrays Donald Trump as threatening alliances with Greenland, but she maintains Trump is dismantling imperial control and reviving a clear-eyed understanding of the real adversaries. Key points she highlights: - NATO and Greenland: NATO leaders are discussing protecting Greenland from the United States, with Bloomberg reporting that the United Kingdom and Germany are considering deploying NATO forces to Greenland to shield it from the U.S. Chatham House warns that the US, NATO’s leading power, threatening to attack a NATO member would damage Article Five’s credibility, and European states may seek support from global South states in the future. Chatham House also worries about potential U.S. cooperation on Arctic energy with Russia and a 28-point peace plan for joint Russian-U.S. rare earth extraction in the Arctic, signaling a realignment away from postwar Atlantic structures. - Greenland’s status: The notion that Greenland belongs to Denmark is described as an imperial relic. Greenland gained self-government in 2009, but Denmark still controls foreign policy, currency, and defense. Greenlandic and Danish tensions have risen, with Greenlanders seeking direct negotiations with the United States, bypassing Copenhagen. Kokinda asserts that when Trump talks about Greenland, he is addressing the dismantling of European colonial influence in the Western Hemisphere, a move NATO fears could unravel the postwar order. - War Plan Red: War Plan Red was a contingency for war with Britain, with Canada as Britain’s proxy. It was approved and updated under Navy Secretary Charles Francis Adams III. Adams III is the great-grandson of John Quincy Adams and the grandson of Charles Francis Adams Sr., Lincoln’s minister to Britain who prevented diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy. The implication is that the republic and empire are incompatible, and Trump is dusting off the modern equivalent of this plan. - Domestic cartels and economic policy: Kokinda claims British financial interests shape both international and domestic systems, including housing, health care, and the military-industrial complex. Trump has targeted large institutional investors in single-family housing, aiming to curb monopolistic practices by banning such investors from buying single-family homes. Barron’s noted real estate funds fell after the announcement. Trump also directed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase up to $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities to lower mortgage rates. She cites Trump’s call to move money away from private insurers toward direct payments to Americans to address health care costs. - Military-industrial complex reform: Trump demands that major defense contractors end stock buybacks and cap executive salaries, arguing they should be industrial rather than financial institutions. He plans to deliver this economic message at Davos and frame it as breaking the financial parasites to allow the real economy and families to grow. - Overall thesis: The strategy behind Greenland is not territorial expansion but ending NATO as an instrument of imperial control and securing the Western Hemisphere from monarchies. The war plan red framework shows the United States once understood who the real enemy was, and Trump is reviving that clarity. Domestic policies target housing, health care, and the defense sector to dismantle the cartels that Kokinda says oppress ordinary Americans. Kokinda invites viewers to subscribe to Promethean Action for more on these arguments and to join a broader movement to “finish off the British empire once and for all.”

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In 1943, nearly a thousand American soldiers sailed to Greenland to protect it from Nazi Germany, which sought to control the Arctic. Their ship was torpedoed by a Nazi U-boat, and four chaplains sacrificed their life vests so that others might live. Their sacrifices helped win our freedom. Americans and Greenlanders stood together. Today, Greenland faces new threats from Russian aggression and Chinese expansion. Their shared legacy lives on in joint missions and Arctic patrols. Now is the time to stand together again for peace, for security, for the future. America stands with Greenland.

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Do grocery stores in Northern Ossetia, Southern Russia, have food? It seems they do. Eggs are priced at $1.79, and large blocks of cheese cost $1. The situation raises questions about what is happening in America. Checking for toilet paper, it appears to be available. Overall, it looks like a decent place to live.

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I'm currently on a cartel bridge that migrants use to cross from Yuma, Arizona into Mexico at night. This bridge leads directly into the United States, making it incredibly easy to enter the country. All you have to do is cross this bridge, and you're in the US. This is made possible with a microtensor.

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HAARP will be activated soon, and its no-fly zones are crucial to understand. Zooming in on specific coordinates leads to an antenna array facility, with notable locations including one in Alaska and a remote island weather station. HAARP technology isn't exclusive to the U.S. and NATO; Russia also has similar capabilities. Access to HAARP facilities is restricted, requiring guided tours. The facility is known for heating the atmosphere, as mentioned by the History Channel, and is now privately owned after being military-operated. Additionally, it is linked to phenomena like the Aurora lights, known as Steve. More details will be discussed in a live session. Take care.

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- War is coming to the Arctic. The discussion notes that attention is focused on the Arctic, with General Mike Flynn and others echoing this concern. Medvedev publicly floated a referendum inviting 55,000 Greenland residents to vote to join Russia, and Greenland’s prime minister Jens Fredrick Nielsen stated that if faced with a choice, Denmark (NATO and the EU) would be chosen over the United States. - General Mike Flynn’s view: He emphasizes that the Arctic is a strategically critical region due to its resources and the potential for major power competition. He explains that there are treaties between the United States (and Denmark) dating back to 1951, which would need to be reconsidered or broken in the event of major shifts. He recounts the historical Bluey programs in Greenland during World War II, which supported naval facilities, communications, weather stations, and airfields to defeat Nazi Germany, illustrating Greenland’s ongoing strategic importance. - Arctic geography and assets: Flynn highlights Russia’s large icebreaker fleet (about 50–60, including nuclear-powered ones) versus the United States’ aging, non-nuclear icebreakers (about four). He notes that icebreakers enable passage and influence strategic transit routes, and that Russia’s investments in icebreakers reflect its need to operate in Arctic waters, where the United States lacks similar capabilities. He asserts the Arctic’s significance for resources and for transit of those resources, underlining why the region is pivotal in geostrategic terms. - Broader strategic framing: Flynn argues that the focus on the Middle East has been excessive and costly—citing Afghanistan and Iraq expenditures and outcomes—and contends that Greenland and the Arctic are central to a wider strategic picture. He says the Arctic hinges on geography and timing, including the Greenland Strait and the Denmark Straits, and stresses that Greenland’s status matters beyond its fisheries or natural resources. - The Iran and Venezuela threads, and the Pacific as the overlooked front: The discussion connects Greenland to a broader frame in which China’s rise (and BRICS) is a constant factor. Flynn suggests a shift toward viewing policy as a problem of economic containment, aimed at slowing China’s and Russia’s strategic ascendance, including in the Pacific. He warns of the risk of threats or actions that could provoke responses domestically. - Intelligence and policy execution concerns: Flynn questions the current state of U.S. intelligence capabilities, arguing that CIA collection may be weaker than commonly portrayed and urging tougher scrutiny of intelligence claims that inform presidential decisions. He stresses the importance of direct accountability and asks for clear objectives, timelines, and consequences if goals aren’t met for multiple theaters (Venezuela, Eastern Europe, Greenland, the Indo-Pacific). - Domestic and governance issues: The conversation includes concerns about corruption and “the rot” inside the U.S. government, asserting that domestic reform is necessary. Flynn emphasizes the need to fix homeland capabilities, including energy security and infrastructure, and to ensure the United States remains strong economically and militarily. - Operational considerations and caution about escalation: Flynn warns that the “response now” may come at home rather than in a regional theater, given that adversaries can reach the United States more easily. He cautions against drifting into war due to misaligned messaging and the risk of overextension. - President and strategy: The speakers discuss the potential political pressure on President Trump regarding foreign policy, urging transparent articulation of objectives for Venezuela, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Greenland, and the Indo-Pacific, along with a plan to “unask” or withdraw if goals are not achieved. They stress prioritizing American interests and domestic resilience. - Final notes: The conversation ends with a call for focusing on practical, America-first issues—gas prices, inflation, and the cost of living—while acknowledging the broader strategic stakes in Greenland, the Arctic, and global power dynamics.

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If you multiply 69 by 20 degrees, it's only 1380 feet, less than half a mile from what they say. People need permission to visit Antarctica due to the 1959 treaty. There's a firmament hiding God's creation of separating the waters. Time to wake up.

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There are certain areas near the Arctic and Antarctic Circles called no fly zones. These zones exist because there are undisclosed lands in those regions. Captain George Hubert Wilkins, who lived during the same time as Admiral Byrd, flew beyond Antarctica and claimed to have discovered many lands and peoples 5,000 miles further. These lands are intentionally excluded from our maps. The globe represents all the known land, making it a container. International pilots have designated no fly zones to prevent the discovery of these hidden lands.

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Portals exist on Earth that allow travel from one point to another, resembling the concept in the movie Stargate, but with a square frame. One known portal is at the HAARP facility in Alaska, which connects directly to Hawaii. Travel through these portals is instantaneous, unlike the cinematic depiction of space travel. Other portals are located in South America, Antarctica, Alberta, Canada, and Egypt, with some in Australia as well. All these portals are believed to be related to extraterrestrial technology. However, there is no definitive information on which specific alien species may have created them.

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Antarctica is a vast icy region with no independent access. Only guided tours are allowed, as there are no towns or permanent residences. What lies beyond the 150-foot ice wall remains a mystery. The Antarctic Treaty, signed in 1959, prohibits military activities and focuses on scientific research and government exploration. It is the longest and most successful treaty between nations. However, some argue that the presence of ships, stations, and equipment for treaty compliance resembles military activity.

Johnny Harris

The International Date Line, Explained
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Johnny Harris explores the complexities of the International Date Line, noting its irregular shape and the discrepancies in its representation across various maps. He explains how the line accommodates different countries' preferences for time zones, allowing nations like Samoa and Kiribati to align with Australia and New Zealand. Ultimately, he concludes that these lines are flexible and reflect countries' unilateral decisions rather than strict borders, emphasizing their significance in measuring time rather than land ownership.

Johnny Harris

The Longest Border in the World
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Johnny Harris explores the unique aspects of the U.S.-Canada border, particularly the 49th Parallel. He highlights enclaves like Point Roberts, where U.S. citizens must cross into Canada for schooling, and the Northwest Angle, the only U.S. land north of the 49th Parallel. The border's straight lines reveal unexpected complexities.

Johnny Harris

Why is Russia So DAMN BIG?
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Russia is the largest country, spanning 17 million square kilometers and encompassing over a hundred languages across 11 time zones. Historically, it began as a small group of Slavic peoples but expanded significantly after resisting Mongol invasions. Moscow emerged as a powerful center, leveraging fur trade and technology. Today, Russia consists of 85 territories, including 22 republics with distinct cultures, showcasing its vast diversity beyond the traditional image of the nation.
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