Hey guys, Saturday,
it's Saturday. I
guess that means speculation Saturday,
we get a little silly.
We might we might release on Friday though, because we're recording it. I like to just go ahead and
day two we've never recorded midday.
It's weird.
Unless it was like really early in podcast like we used to record it super middle of the day when we were scripted. Normally,
this is called Fun Fact Friday. It's a weekly show where we discuss topics and facts about them, but on sometimes on sometimes, but sometimes we do a silly speculation Saturday where we talk about crazy weird stuff, conspiracy theories, paranormal events, things that are you know, not necessarily facts, but they're fun to talk about and learn about and we do get a little bit silly. Yeah, a little silly, a little. Sometimes we we go into a little darker topics. So you know, listener discretion
is advised. If you got kiddos, maybe skim through, decide if you want to let them listen, because we do have something that gets a little dark. On this episode. Do we? Oh, yeah. We're gonna be talking about about some some crazy experiment. And what are we talking about? The Philadelphia? It's a great segue. Yeah. Yeah, the Philadelphia Experiment. But first. So I like had a whole thing built up, and then I just let it fall. The energy just wasn't there. Sorry, everybody.
So I'm driving Bronco around.
Oh my gosh.
My truck had a recall and the loaners a bronco. It's one of the newer ones and it's really nice. I really like it, but I'm not trading my truck in like my truck. Oh, you could buy me one. Do you want a bronco? Yeah, no. If any of our listeners want to send by me want to buy by Leila Bronco, just look up how much they cost. I'm just mail it to us. You can go FunFactFriday.com click the donate button and send us a
check. If anybody wants to buy a car, I Leila's Leila's researching how much of Bronco costs, I'm going to say they probably start at around 30 Isn't and then go up to probably about 80 or 90, depending on the options you want. Good. Excellent.
We have as a loaner. Ford Bronco sport? Oh, yeah. For
everyone. 30 starts at about 30. Which means if it's on the website, if it starts at like 30, then that's like, you can't even find one. Yes, this was like zero options. Yeah. But yeah, I had a recall on a truck. I say, You know what, I'm gonna go on a little thing before we go to the next segment. I have made some bad decisions. Yeah, in the last week or so. We were working on putting the screened in porch on the back of the
house. And you know, doing it all myself not paying anybody to do this, because oh my gosh, the price is to get somebody to do this. But anyway, I was I had the drill out. And I was drilling something. And the piece of metal that I was drilling to the piece of wood came loose and spun because you know, drills go fast, and just sliced two of my fingers. And I screamed, and it hurt. And I was like, Oh my gosh, that was so stupid of me. Why didn't I have my hand further awake, I knew
that that was a possibility for happening. And then I grabbed the piece of wood to study myself to do it again. And do it again. I sliced my thumb over just just not paying attention twice in a row had band aids over my hand. It was ridiculous.
And then I was working on a computer and I was trying to to get a bunch of hardware installed on it and all this stuff well I bumped the it's one of those single board computers but I was adding stuff to it and make it you know better and I broke the power button which was already loose was already it's been messed up the whole time I've had this thing and the the anyway I broke it loose I was okay let me just rip it completely off. And I want to rip it completely off. It wasn't
coming off. So I took my knife like like an idiot and pried it up underneath the button and shorted out great marks because I still had it plugged in and just spark shut off of the end of it all work. So I had to I had to build a specialty tool out of two twisty ties tied together and like maybe this was a good one. All right. I use twisty ties to bridge the gap. And anyway I wired up a button I got it I got it all working again. Yeah, that's really well it looks it looks a little it
looks a little wonky. But but you know, I just keep as I was made some not paying attention. I need to start paying more attention. And yeah, so let's move on to what what
Do you hear that?
What is that noise? I've
heard Mayor come into town. And you know, he has to announce what Fun Fact Friday Now how's the good news segment back? Hey,
good news, everybody. We got some good news. I found a cool story.
And the good news. My good news is that the good news segment is back. That's it. Awesome.
So, mines real quick. So I'll run through it real quick. I'm gonna turn turn the volume down on this a little bit. So not super annoying. Yeah, dramatic. So a you UK agricultural tech firm is pioneering bacterial batteries for hope and hopes that they will allow farmers in the future to collect precise data about soil conditions with computing
equipment powered by the soil itself. What designed to be installed and forgotten about the batteries absorb power through a bio electric chemical processes that occur within soil microbes. Collecting these electrons via a cheap array of electrodes. The idea is that the resulting power can be used to run sensors, and computers that help farmers monitor moisture content and other key markers to maximize yield. The firm is
called Are you ready for this? Yeah, battery. Because it's a bacteria powered battery.
I like it, I can make puns, so
Okay. Okay. So the idea comes from Brazil, from a soil microbial fuel cell that was developed in 2019. And it was to power a water filtration system, I think this is great. Because if they basically they just jam these things in the ground, and the natural processes create enough electricity to power, very low power devices, like sensors and things. And then of course, those sensors can be monitored by like a, you know, a
radio antenna on the on the farm somewhere. And they can have like real time data on a map, that, you know, this part of the field is getting a little dry, let's go over there. And, you know, that sort of thing is really neat. And, and also, and also they are cheap, was like $29. So I was like, Man, I wanna I want a little battery. I want to charge the cell phone with my yard. And I can't find any information on how to buy one, I went to the backcountry website, and everybody looks super
British on it. Oh
my gosh, they do. He showed me.
Anyway, yeah, the link will be in the show notes today, I thought it was a neat story. I thought it's this kind of innovation we need, we need to be able to. It looks like just like some little plastic tubes, it does get jammed into the ground, and it just pulls just enough electricity. And with all these low power devices coming out, you know? Yeah, there you go. Right. What do you got?
I got spiders can hear through their spider webs. So that was the I was gonna leave it at that. But they can hear through their spiderwebs like the silk vibrates at such a rate that long distance sound detection?
Well, what's what's crazy. Okay, let's go. Is that Is that pretty much it? Yeah, it did. Was there something? Okay. So this is just a recent discovery or? Yeah, I just thought it was really neat. Yeah, it is. And we're gonna in the segment, we're gonna continue talking about that. Are you good? Yeah. Okay. And this is Fun Fact, Friday news for this week. That reminds me of a video, I watched a while back. And they had taken cameras, like, good, pretty good cameras.
And they said, You don't have to really even use a super good camera. But they can record a video through glass from far far away. And if there's anything in the room, like a leaf, or a empty plastic bag with chips, something that would that's real light, and would move a lot with sound vibrations. They can look at that item in a video and extract sound based on the micro vibrations of whatever the item is. And I was like, That's neat. Yeah. And they were like, of course, we're not going to tell
you how we do it. But they did it. And I don't think you're gonna go look it up because it was a long time ago. And it was on TV. So I don't know if that exists on the on the internet. I'm sure it does. Most things do. Yeah, but
it's just these dudes and they figured out how the silk vibrates in such a way that it lets the spiders hear it with their specialized little senses. What kind
of music do you think spiders like?
I think metal smooth jazz and smooth jazz. They're like a smooth jazz metal.
I can see I can see a spiral I can sort of jazz, honestly, just chill on on the web like it's a hammock.
Spider, chill. They have the right of them. So no one messes with them.
They have to eat bugs, though.
I mean, if that's all I ate, I'm sure they think we're weird for eating animals. Right?
It's about me the animals. So what is what is the Philadelphia Experiment? From your understanding? I know that you're new to this whole entire concept. I
haven't read a lot about it. So basically,
what I just told you when I was pitching the idea to you?
Yeah, I know. A lot. What do you even call it? Legend? Yeah, like an urban legend. Right? Have a boat, a ship? It's a boat.
I don't know when a boat becomes a ship? Or what size? Exactly? When does
it When? When does anything become anything?
Like, it's like the heap of sand problem.
It's the heap of sand. It's the chalk breaking in half, right? It's the windows of windows a trip become a vacation. It's the wind as a plant become a vegetable. So
let's run through and explain some of those for people who may not have heard those things before a heap of sand. If you've got a heap of sand in your hand, and you take away two grains do so have a heap of sand. Yeah, I'd say so. What if you take away all but two? Do you still have a heap of sand? Most would say no. So where when does a heap become a heap? Yeah. So it's when you use imprecise language? These things come up. What was the other one that you just mentioned?
When does a tree become a vacation?
Um, I feel like a vacation. has a certain has a goal. It has a goal of either having a whole lot of fun or doing some relaxing, doing absolutely nothing, right. And a trip normally has a purpose. Like you're you're taking a trip because you want to do this thing. Or you have to do this thing.
When does the plant become a vegetable?
I feel like the heap of sand in the vegetable thing. It's kind of a there's not a definition. But I know what when I see it. Yeah, sort of thing.
And then I just thought of one. But uh oh, when does an animal become a pet? Like when there's an animal that you're keeping up with the whole crow thing?
Right? You're not allowed to have a crow.
But how do they know?
How do you know when when something's a pet versus when it's a? I don't know. Because like, I guess it would depend on the animal. So I feel like if they come to you, voluntarily, even when foods not involved, they've kind of adopted you as their master. Versus and of course, if you go by it and keep it, but I feel like if you're taking care of it, and there's no you don't really have emotional connections with animals, it seems like you do but you don't. But it's I don't
know. I don't know, just kind of one of those. But there was one that you said. You said I said he was a chalk. I love that one. If you have a piece of chalk and you break it in half, how much chocolate do you have? You don't have to like neither of us have that. Right, right. You don't have two halves of one piece of chalk half of a piece of chalk. You can't have a half of chalk you have chalk you have a piece of stick
of chalk. Doesn't matter how big how small. I hate the word chalk, chalk. Chalk,
you got to put the URL in there. I'm gonna start calling chalk. Chalk, like the microwave, a microwave, a microwave. So, to the actual subject here. What the Philadelphia Experiment is, is a situation that happened back in 1943. In the fall, a USS Navy destroyer that was in Philadelphia called the USS Eldridge
disappeared, which is a weird name for a boat. Right? I was gonna name a boat Eldridge and I wanted it to clip out a reality. Right?
So it kind of fell into the backrooms. It supposedly disappeared. Yeah, reappeared in Norfolk, Virginia, like 10 minutes earlier than a disappeared. And then a little while later popped back to Philadelphia. That's the story. And on the ship, when I got back, all of the dudes on the ship, were not the same. Ever after that. Some of them were like, phasing in and out of reality. Some of them were few I used to fused this is all allegedly, this is all a story.
So some of them were fused with the ship itself. Like they were halfway inside the ship and halfway outside the ship like not not halfway in the doorway, like their stomach was attached to the wall and their legs were on the other side of the wall. Some of them fell into the water, like appeared in midair. Some of them were just just dead, you know. So it was the story is quite scary. It wasn't a fun time. If you think you're right. It was not it was not one of those top 10 times in your life.
This was definitely one of the 10 moments of all time.
Oh, wow. So the the official story on the Navy history and heritage command. It's history.navy.mil/wrong
Oh, do I know I was looking at the Philadelphia Experiment. Okay. Do I know how I spelled Philadelphia?
How did you spell Philadelphia?
open bracket?
Ah, wait. No, no. Okay. Good. Good. Good.
The open bracket is right next to the P. So you can see where this came from? open bracket H ILIDLPHI. A la pronounce it Hillwood del Fiala you
didn't pronounce the open bracket? open bracket? It's like a who sound?
No, yeah, have an upward because it's going into the word.
Because open bracket may go?
Well, Adelphia Philadelphia Ella.
Nice. The Hill. Oh, it's gonna have like some some throat flim in Philadelphia. You hate you hate us so bad Philadelphia. So the ship was involved in an experiment where they were doing putting d causing wire around it. And so basically, this these big wires that go, I mean, like big, thick cables that go around the ship. And what they do is a ship has a magnetic signature, right. And if you run electricity the right way
through a wire, it will negate the magnetic field. They used to have this on old computer monitors the big huge old computer monitors because if you ever got a magnet close to a computer monitor, it would create like this cool, colorful ripple effect, which was really neat to look at. But you know, you don't want that while you're playing a game. This colors, the
pixels and stuff because of how CRTs work. But most monitors had a button that would run electricity through a small wire around the entire screen, which would erase the magnetic reset basically reset the magnetic field of the monitor. So that's what the causing is. And what they were saying. This is the official story. We were trying to make the ship invisible to the magnetic mines that they would have to go through and certain areas that they were, you know getting involved in
World War Two. But it was overheard, we're trying to make the ship invisible. And then rumors spread around and all this kind of stuff. However, there were witnesses. There were witnesses on the SS Andrew for Rousseff for Rusev. The and SS Andrew for Rusev. It observed the arrival via teleportation of the Eldridge and the Norfolk area. So basically they people on the ship on the Firoozeh said that they saw it is always like,
Whoa, that ship just came out of nowhere. And the official story is that they took a secret back way to get from Philadelphia, to Novick. There's like some channels and rivers and stuff that the military is allowed to use and nobody else was. So they wouldn't have been thinking about oh, maybe it came from that that way. But now this this first. I think his name was Alan. I think so. Yeah. His name was something out Captain Allen, or something. Anyway, he had a story that he saw the ship just
to clear. Yeah, Carl Allen. But officially, nah. Yeah, so I looked. I was looking into the official stories and whatnot and on some skeptic websites, because I always like to get both sides, you know, but down at the bottom of the official
one on the middle website. After many years of searching the staff of the archives and independent research truths have not located any official documents that support the assertion that an invisibility or teleportation experiment involving than a Navy ship occurred at Philadelphia or any other locations. So they were messing around with Einstein was part of this. Einstein was like, trying to deal with invisibility, maybe some teleportation stuff. But he was
involved with it. And the beauty of this statement right here after many years of searching, okay, so they're like, Okay, we've been doing this forever. The staff of the archives and independent researchers have not located any official documents. So digging through documents, and if any, any documents existed of this or still exist of this, do you think they're just gonna throw them in the archives? Something where we teleported a ship? Do you think this is that they're gonna keep,
you know, out in the open? Like, they'd be like, oh, yeah, for sure. Anyway, so there's obviously not going to be any official documents. But listen, how specific that gets that the support the assertion that invisibility or teleportation experiment involving a Navy ship occurred at Philadelphia or any other location. Okay, so let's break that down. That support the assertion that an invisibility or teleportation experiment involving a Navy ship occurred. So I think they were
experimenting with this thing. You know how successful they were? I think they were really trying to teleport this ship. Or make it invisible. Because How useful would that be in a war? Yeah, did, you'd win? Like, if you tell if you can figure out how to teleport something. And you can figure out how to be precise with it. You can literally just teleport a hand grenade into Hitler's office. You know? You don't I mean, yeah. Am I wrong? So obviously, you know, that all governments
experiment with weird stuff. They're like, why don't we put a little of this money that we have infinite of? Why don't we just put a little bit of that into this crazy stuff? Because what if something pays off? You know? I'm all Yeah, I'm for. I'm not for using these things for war. Killing. But I am for experimenting with the weird stuff. You know? Because sometimes, yeah, you don't know what you'll find. Yeah. I mean, you know, flight, right? Am I right? Are you right? At one
point, people were like, nah. flight planning, that's not gonna that's not a thing. Unless you want to get a balloon and shoot some fire into it. Which, that's crazy. I want to do hot air balloon. But it's so scary. So many people die doing that.
So why would why would they go? Where did the start off at?
The started off as Project rainbow? No.
What were like where?
Philadelphia?
Why would they go from Philadelphia to Norfolk? Norfolk?
Why would they? Because there's also another Naval Yard there.
Is it the closest
200 Miles give or take? But yeah, probably. But yeah, the Naval Yard at Norfolk is huge. You've got relatives who used to work there. I think maybe it's Portsmouth. I don't know. There's a bunch of naval yards in Virginia. Yeah. And I don't know why they chose that one. I haven't dug super, super deep into this. There is a movie based on this event. Yeah. And that leads into one of the things that we've talked about what other conspiracy theory things? Did they make the movie?
To erase the real thing?
Yeah. And people's brains started with the Disney.
Yeah, with frozen with HAARP. And with, you know, a harpist? No. Okay, so HAARP is a high altitude or atmospheric antenna array, or I can't remember what it stands for, but I could probably look it up. Anyway. It's this antenna array up in Alaska, that they beam waves up into the atmosphere and bounce it off stuff in the atmosphere, and send these high intensity radio waves different places, and they can cause like
earthquakes and stuff. Allegedly. They can cause earthquakes using these radio waves bounced off the atmosphere, allegedly, it was called HAARP. And people were searching HAARP government government HAARP program all that. So now the government has a new program called harp, and it's the Home Affordable Refinance Program.
Oh my gosh.
So when people go and search for harbor they get that instead of
I mean, it's a smart thing. Yeah,
it's called Yoast SEO, search engine optimization. It's redirection. It makes and like making a movie about something if if I bring up the Philadelphia Experiment, if you've heard or seen or heard of or seen that movie, that's the first thing that's going to come to your mind. Oh, that's just a movie. That didn't happen. But the part that always fascinated me was the the organic matter on the boat, not phasing and moving
the same as the metal and you know, not organic matter. So like people didn't reappear exactly where they should have, you know, I mean, because they were like, stuck in the walls and stuff.
Do they have any proof of that though?
I there's some pictures. Where? Let's see, where is it? On not military.com express.co.uk. How
did you finally website?
Yeah, I'm in Firefox. But yeah, there's a picture right here of a dude phased into the
Yeah, this is a film on salary alteration crap.
Oh, I understand that pictures can be fake. You think it would go on the internet and tell lie. I completely understand that pictures can be faked. And it just I understand that. Do you? Some things are fun to think about. That didn't happen. Yeah. You know what's really cool? Unicorns. Yeah, that's pretty. It's pretty dope. And they only exist in North Korea, as I'm told.
So I used to think that narwhals didn't exist in Wait, no, you know, what I didn't think existed until like really recently. Swordfish. Because they like they're so silly. They're so silly. Other big
long, pointy sword for an
African thing flying fish existed?
Do you know what didn't exist? With proof until like the the early 1900s.
Gorillas? Yeah, we talked about that in the show. Yeah,
we've talked about on the show before that one always blew my mind because like, you just assumed Yeah. Yeah, I just always assumed Oh, yeah. People know about gorillas because gorillas are around. Yeah, but they were like a myth and legend,
Sina gorilla. Let's see Zoo.
There's a there's a at the zoo. On the internet I've seen on the internet. And I've seen him at the zoo. And on movies. Now.
It's also claimed that there was like an eerie green blue glow surrounded, surrounding the ship. Yes.
And that makes sense. It sort of does. I can go into the seat because I've been talking about like the official thing and kind of talking about that. But there's a thing called cell. St. Elmos fire once you look that up on talking about it, okay. It's a phenomenon. I'm trying to find where they were talking about it in this article. It's a phenomenon that produces a type of fire. That is like green. And yet St. Almost fire. It's a film, but it just talks about that being it's just
part of the plot. But yeah, so St. Almost fire is like this green fiery plasma. That happens. It's a phenomenon that is documented, you know. And I was trying to, I was trying to find where they were talking about it in the article. But I'm just gonna go back to the
primarily seen in like, thunderstorms or volcanic eruptions, right, where
there's a lot of energy being produced, produced and expelled, but expelled treated. And if they were doing the causing around the ship, and I don't know what kind of power source they had for the ship, because the military always has a bunch of stuff that they're already using that we just aren't allowed to know about yet. Yeah. They made it out to a whole new nuclear plant inside that ship. to power it, you know, because that's what they power subs with is new nuclear.
Yeah. And I'm sorry. So I feel
like there is a lot of ways to debunk this. Right. But, okay, what
I what I see is no official documentation that had happened, which is consistent with secret government experiments. Especially with war technology. I also see high volumes of power and electricity. Yeah, I see Einstein being being involved. And he did a lot of stuff with like, electromagnetism and you know, quantum Listen, that's that's the official terms. And they were trying to do stealth
stuff. And then there's also, if, you know, I don't know, when the reports started coming out about this happening, I'm assuming shortly after it happened. Could that have been a psyop? Where they were trying to scare the Nazis into thinking we were going to have teleporting ships soon. Yeah. And we're going to just start teleporting into the, into your your lakes and start blast. And so anyway, started blasting. A lot of the
stuff, along with all of these types of things are just like, countries trying to compete for technology. Yeah, Space Race. That's what I was just like,
hey, I'm better than you. Yep.
That's all that like politics is. And
if you look at, if you look at when those things happen, there's always a element of Imagine what we could do with this technology. You're wanting to start a war with us, look what we can do, we can go to the moon. Well, I mean, allegedly, right, like right now, all the satellites in space that we rely on for a lot of our current technology. If you take out a bunch of those satellites all at once that were cripples the US
economy. Yeah, are we gonna do about it, right. And if another country or entity of some kind, has satellite killing technology, like EMP is or even just, you know, they send the satellite up to shoot rocks that are satellites, because that will do damage, because satellites are very, very fragile. They can just go up there and just start spraying
space junk everywhere and just take it on satellites. So when a country says, Hey, we're gonna start putting satellites in orbit, all the other countries that already have satellites in orbit are like, Oh, what are you putting up there? You know, it becomes a thing. So as countries gain and technology they become more people become other countries become more weary of them. And it's just you know, technology always pushing forward. So it always ends up becoming a mutually assured
destruction because we all rely on the same things. And if you blow up our satellites were blown up years and then nobody has satellites Do you want that? And they're like, Well, no, I guess not. So let's let's figure this out somehow else. And now it's just kind of all down to drones. What's going to happen is we're gonna have a war where you got drones fight and drones, you know, wins that war me. Whoever's invested in the drone making companies like Yeah, yeah, all right, maybe. Anyway,
back to the the Express dot code UK article. It was called Project rainbow. This this goes more on the woowoo side and less on the math side. So author researcher Robert Gorman, said the Navy used a variation of Albert Einstein's unified field theory, and they used it to bend light to render the ship invisible, as it was Cade, encased in electromagnetic fog.
There's a green fog. Alfred biologic, who claims to have been a member of the scientific team said powerful electromagnetic fields were engineered around the Eldridge and its skeleton crew. So not a crew of skeletons. It wasn't, you know, wasn't the ship, crewed by people who were just bones? Skeleton Crew just means they only had a few people on the boat, like, absolutely necessary to be there because they're doing this experiment. And they don't know what's gonna
happen, and they wanted to kill as few people as possible. The whole experiment was supposed to be a hyper secret, but it was seen by a merchant ship called a merchant seaman called Carl Meredith Allen. That was an answer we were talking about earlier. AKA Carlis Ulundi.
First of all, Alan, yeah. What's his official name? Right, Carlos. Gotcha.
So they just called him Carl Allen. Gotcha. He was on the nearby ship liberty. So that was a pretty separate ship. Miraculous reference. I don't understand them or government said. He says he saw the ship enveloped in a green fiery fog. He says he could insert his arm into the terrific flow of this energy, and then the ship disappeared. Eldridge then teleported and appeared at a naval Dockyard enough at Virginia before reappearing back in Philadelphia had terrible
consequences. They were molecularly fused the ship bonded to the metal. As if it was teleported men were driven insane men caught on fire and terrible, horrible, horrific things started happening to the crew. Bayla, who wrote the Philadelphia Experiment and other conspiracies said, the first thing they found was two sailors buried in the steel deck dying or near dead. Two more were found standing upright and the bulkhead as sailors were missing. Other sailors were
missing or vaporized. According the supporters and supporters of the report. The Navy quickly shelved the experiment they're like oh, maybe we don't need to do is a level beyond top secret never to be declassified. I was made into HitFilm in 1984. Scientists ran electric current through hundreds of metal electric cables around the hull of the ship to see if they can make the ships and visible to underwater and surface mines. So there you go. That's a little a little less like NAT type
article. I don't I don't like when they just straight up trying to debunk stuff. So linked in that article. And related, of course, let's see what why does it say that? That's a weird way to start the article. But it still like the article is teleportation cracked scientists send particle into orbit from the lab, and the first line of the article is boffins managed to teleport a photon to a satellite orbit in
orbit more than 300 miles away, was boffins. I know boffins means gonna explain who, right like yeah, like some who was a boffins, but that's the first line in the article. Anyway. Humongous
spider behind your monitor.
What? Another spider? Yeah, there's a lot I got a I got a spray out here. I don't see it.
It's like on your monitor. Not
Oh, it's invisible to me. Yeah, it's is it the Philadelphia Experiment?
We should name it. Put in a little box fighter Adelphia
spider Delphia? Oh, yeah, so basically, some Chinese scientists have teleported a particle into the space a space station or a satellite into a satellite lievable like how do you know? How do you know you did? Probably they probably have they probably have a right way to know
although a hater of the whole like time travel. Teleportation stuff in series and crap.
Whoa, yeah. And fiction in fiction and fiction. I love it.
I hate it.
I love it. I hate it. No, no, hold on. No, no. Let me put a caveat. No, I'm putting a caveat. What is it? I'm not saying I love it every time. Most of the time. I hate it. I love it when it's done. Right. Okay,
yeah. Okay, yeah. When it's done, right, I can believe it. But like or not believe it, but like, you know what I mean, when it's
used as a crutch, because the writers couldn't figure out a way to figure to fix their problems. MCU MCU when they use multiple universes or time travel to fix problems that they made writing earlier, that's when I have a problem with it. There are a few time travel, things that really stand out in my head. There is a book series called The first book is called rewinder. Very, very good book. It starts out and you know, I said it just said it in an alternate timeline. Anyway,
long, long way into the book without too many spoilers. He ends up in our timeline from his previous timeline, the main character and it's because he goes back and messes with American history. A little bit on accident. I it was a good book. It's it's fairly lighthearted, still kind of serious. It's fun. All of this time travel stuff makes sense. A internet I guess acquaintance person of mine wrote a series a time travel series. Her name is Pauline Turner. You can check
out her books on Amazon. I'll try and remember to put a link independent author self published. And she is just the best. I
love to see the one that called us to people in the app over Yes,
she's down in the Down Under and she calls us the people in the app over. I love it. I love it. But um, one more thing primer is the best time travel film. Just from a technical How did that work? There's no paradoxes. That that sort of thing because every other time travel thing has paradoxes and problems but
it does. Yes, it does.
And I'm not about it. So I can go into
what do you consider the present?
When you when you wake up on Christmas and you go into the den, after you put the cinnamon rolls in the oven, and you open up the den door and the stuff under the tree Those are the presents. Oh. The present is what is currently happening where we currently are in the foam of space time reality?
Yes. But when you have the element of time travel, what do you consider the present? What do you consider the future? What do you consider the past?
It depends on the point of view, the point of view,
and if time travel exists, then this must mean that everything has already happened. Because if you can go into the future so, there's has had to happen already.
There's a lot of difference.
Being the president president doesn't exist, the president president
doesn't exist. How about that debate last night? Whose
display last night?
So, not gonna, we're not going into that.
We're not okay. We're
not a political show? No, but I am going to say, there's a lot nothing political. There's lots of things. There's lots of different theories about how reality is structured in relation to time. There are some theories that all of space and time like just imagine a cube.
Okay, and I'm imagining made up of cubes. Right? That's not okay. Oh, like, okay, like one of the little cube made out of cube, kindergarten thing. Exactly,
exactly. But on a scale, the array, unfathomable scale. Now, every one of those cubes is an A, a instant, in the major cube, which is all of reality. Okay. And consciousness, what we experience as consciousness is moving through the cube in a particular way. And that's what we're experiencing is moving through all possible phases in a logical, consistent way. Anyway, there's, there's lots of ways to do everything everywhere, all at
once, exactly. But our consciousness is what is what has us writing this causality based, you know, one event leads to another leads to another event where in reality, everything's already planned out, everything's already happened, right. And we're just we're basically like watching a movie, but experiencing it. And that's one one theory that I can share all the time travel. Now, all of them there, there was, I'm trying to remember the name of it. There was a secret time
travel experiment done by the CIA. That succeeded. Back in the 80s. And I will go into that, on another episode of solely speculation Saturday, because I found it fascinating. It was only like a 20 or 20 something page report on it. But they basically found a way that we could time travel, but it's not like you physically time travel to the place. It's more of like you can watch any thing that's ever happened, or it's going to
happen like remote viewing. And then there's the chrono Chrono visor, which was a thing with the Catholic Church where they made a television that could view any moment in history. Anything that's already happened. And that's a really interesting, Deep Dive. So, but the one with the CIA was really interesting, I'll go into some time, I'm going to read out read
the whole thing. Again, I read the whole report. And what's crazy, is that the CIA wrote up this whole paper on how to do this time travel thing, but it also involves being able to use the same energy that you use to time travel, to heal yourself with that same energy. And then also, one of the pages of the
report is not there, it's missing. And one of the other pages basically says there's a missing report, or basically it was out of his theorized or was actually in, they're gonna have to read it again, that if you do the time travel remote viewing thing correctly, and you focus on the missing page, you'll get to read the missing page. So you have to be able to do it to get to that last page. So Oh, very interesting stuff. I don't know if I want to like people try it and people you know, have been
trying to do it and trying to figure it out. Because they say it was a success and basically it's just sitting in getting yourself into the right mind state, but I don't want to mess with it because
it sounds like similar to astral projection. But
no, listen to this. Yeah, check it check this out. This isn't a CIA document, right? No, this all could be a sign up to, but
there's dead government people trying to take my body. No,
just hold on. I'm telling you something that keep I'm about to get to it. I'd have to have disclaimers. There's writings in the report saying that you have to do certain what did they call like? religious rituals before you do this time travel, because your consciousness can be taken over by what they called extra dimensional. I think they call it like, extra dimensional beings. So it's actual astral projection and you leave your body and something else can get
into your body. That's why I don't mess with any of that.
I don't mess with astral projection. That's why
I don't mess with Weegee boards. That's so scary.
Spooky anywho any what?
Any? What?
I'm gonna start saying that. Hey, wear this shirt. Anyway.
Dot dot dot. I think that's pretty much it. For the Philadelphia Experiment. Oh, no. One more thing. I can't find the source for it. I want to say it was mysterious universe. I was listening a long time ago. You don't like mysterious universe. Everybody else does. Oh, no. There's plenty people don't like it. But it's just not everybody cup. It's not everyone's cup of tea. Really? Listen to it. The thing about them is they they? It depends on the topic for me.
Yeah, cuz like us. It's like we're lame. I don't
like Bigfoot. Yeah, I like I'm fine with Bigfoot as an owl. Look, that's a Bigfoot, like a carved Bigfoot. Somebody made that that's cool. Whatever. But the Bigfoot phenomena. It's either a dude in a suit, or it's a creature that is really good at hiding. Yeah, that's it. Of course. There's the theories. It's an alien. It's an extra extra dimension there and then they go crazy with it. But it just always seems the same to me. And like, whenever they start talking about Bigfoot, I'm
just like, man, but it's a good show, mysterious universe. I like the guys who do it. They seem like genuinely nice guys. And it's good show. But the story from a series Univer I think it was from mysterious universe that a old old old sailing vessel back in like the 17 or 1800s, or maybe even 1600s. They found some journals from some people on the boat. That they were in the area between Philadelphia and Norfolk. And they looked over on whatever side of the ship they
were on. They looked over and they saw what they described as a impossibility. It was a impossibly long, complicated metal ship. They didn't really know how to describe it. Other
than that I wanted to be on this boat. So they're basically saying, I know what I think is, is I think that they they saw the Eldridge I think the Eldridge flashed way back in time, took a shortcut through the 1600s or whenever and then popped up in Norfolk, Virginia, you know, I like to you know, I think that because that's the most interesting version of the story.
Sometimes that's the way you got to do it. That's
the way I do it. Stuff like this that happened 80 years ago that there's no way to prove or disprove that they make movies about you have people spending a whole bunch of time trying to debunk it or bunk it and I'm just like, You know what, I liked the version where they disappeared went back to the 1600s got seen by an old sailing vessel popped up and then and then took another trip back and ended up fused into the ship I don't like that people were fused into the ship if
that's the truth, but that's the most interesting version of the stories that's the one I believe for now. Until a better one comes out. Yep. But yeah, let us know if you like the speculation Saturday versus the Fun Fact Friday let us know. A topic useful you'd like us to cover either just for fun facts or with a little bit of a conspiracy slant to it. And we'll take it into consideration male FunFactFriday.com I can't I can't even did you have anything else Oh, value for value. Value
value value for value is a podcast that is ours. We had a boost this week and a boost what is the boost? Say
I'm not there yet. Oh, it says boost.
False. It says boost this like five O's. It says boost is a 847 SATs from at Gislason. Nice and we looked it up. And we looked up 847 Because the numerology matters when it comes to Satoshis.
And its Angel numbers.
It's an Well, every number has an angel number, I think. And I don't know I don't subscribe and all that stuff, achieve your dreams. Yeah, achieve your dreams. And
it was an area code area code for Chicago. So he's either a Chicago in or he wants us to achieve our dreams. Or she or she.
But yeah, let us know what ace 47 means or don't keep keep your secrets. Just you don't have to tell us whatever. But yeah, Satoshis are a way that you can what's it called support the show? We do appreciate all monetary support that we receive. It kind of keeps us going a little bit. Sometimes we're like out and we wonder what episode we're gonna but we get you know, your, your, your pitching and chip in a little bit. Yeah. And we definitely appreciate it. We
appreciate all of our all of our listeners. We also appreciate the streams people streaming Satoshis to us through modern podcast apps that that have that functioning got a new podcast f.com I'm looking for some streams we do have some streams. I don't know if the stream people who stream want to be mentioned. You know who you are. I'm sure Alan C. Paul didn't mind getting mentioned. Let's check out Alan and see Paul's music in the new podcast apps met him down at a pod fest.
Really, really great guy. Thank you. Appreciate it. Definitely. Because that adds up to a lot. Let's see I clicked away like a like an idiot. Anyway, value for value means we put the show out for free. Whatever it's worth to you help us out? Yeah, right here. I mean, 2025 Satoshis. Is what we're getting, which that's a split. Some of it goes to Dreb Scott. Thank you, Dreb Scott for the chapters and transcripts for our episodes. We definitely
appreciate that and your continued support. But yeah, Alan see Paul on the birthday part to hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of Satoshi streamed. That's awesome. If you look at every every one of these every minute and he's sending us 25 sets, which Yeah, can't argue with that. Yeah, can't do that. We appreciate that. Everybody have a fantastic weekend.
We hope to see you again. Hope
to see you again. Or see you I mean I don't know. Oh boy, it
is hot in here. That was a doozy and I'm sweating. It is hot in here.
Fun Fact Friday with Leila and David is a metus media production. All rights reserved unless otherwise stated. If you'd like to help support the show, you can make a donation over at Fun Fact Friday. Just click the donations like Come follow us next week for another Fun
Fact Friday.