📄 Extracted Text (21,183 words)
[00:00:00] kind of opened up the idea that they
[00:00:02] would need a pathy and then
[00:00:04] >> bingo
[00:00:05] bingo that opens up the idea that they
[00:00:08] would need a psych [music]
[00:00:11] >> information is the oxygen of the
[00:00:14] democracy.
[00:00:14] >> There's so much evidence out there that
[00:00:16] even if [music] less than 1% is true
[00:00:20] that enough to collapse the current
[00:00:22] paradigm and change the whole planet.
[00:00:28] asking, "Did you see the Trigger Smart
[00:00:30] interview with Aaron John Aaron Bray?"
[00:00:31] That's literally what we're about to
[00:00:32] watch. I just spent my whole morning
[00:00:35] watching their longer version and I'm
[00:00:37] one hour of the way through it. And at a
[00:00:39] certain point, I was like, "Dude, we
[00:00:41] just got to watch this all together cuz
[00:00:43] this is probably one of the most
[00:00:46] compelling and important theories that's
[00:00:49] come out so far." And I got to say, I
[00:00:51] was pretty dismissive of the exploding
[00:00:53] microphone theory um pretty early on.
[00:00:56] And I think that came out of ignorance
[00:00:58] um to the concept of shaped charges and
[00:01:01] to the intricate dynamics of how more
[00:01:05] than one version of an explosion could
[00:01:07] be happening here. And thank goodness
[00:01:10] [snorts] for people like John Aaron Bray
[00:01:11] that stayed on it and really dug it open
[00:01:16] and are here now to explain it in great
[00:01:20] detail um in a way that makes it make a
[00:01:22] lot more sense. Um, and I know a lot of
[00:01:26] you guys have been saying it was the mic
[00:01:27] since day one. And for me, what really
[00:01:30] gets me thinking on this train of
[00:01:32] thought is the shirt. The shirt. We've
[00:01:37] had enough time now to explore enough
[00:01:39] theories, to talk about the bullets
[00:01:40] enough times that the shirt needs to
[00:01:44] make sense.
[00:01:46] And ultimately, I don't think anyone,
[00:01:49] especially when when Bray talks about
[00:01:53] the speed at which the shirt lifts up
[00:01:55] and the frames in which the shirt lifts
[00:01:58] up. And when you actually analyze how
[00:02:00] much time it took for the shirt to lift
[00:02:02] up,
[00:02:04] you have to have an explanation for
[00:02:06] that. And honestly, I don't know as a
[00:02:08] rifle round explains it.
[00:02:11] Um, I would be very interested to hear
[00:02:13] Valhalla's uh take on it.
[00:02:16] Um, the black stuff in the car is a big
[00:02:19] data data point here for sure.
[00:02:23] Lastly, are drones, but uh, so Sam
[00:02:26] Parker is currently on X digging into
[00:02:30] drones and actually examining Frank
[00:02:33] Turk's phone screen during the event in
[00:02:35] extreme detail.
[00:02:38] And I think Sam Parker is on to
[00:02:39] something that Frank Turk seemed to be
[00:02:44] watching surveillance footage or
[00:02:46] something on his phone. He definitely
[00:02:48] wasn't FaceTiming and we're definitely
[00:02:50] not seeing reflections on his phone. And
[00:02:52] it's interesting. And I haven't gotten a
[00:02:54] chance to look at Sam Parker's latest
[00:02:57] piece of that expose.
[00:03:01] What are we talking about? We're talking
[00:03:02] about the exploding microphone theory
[00:03:04] and we're going to watch a video from
[00:03:07] one of the best explanations I've seen
[00:03:09] so far about it. I've been very
[00:03:10] skeptical of the exploding microphone
[00:03:11] theory because obviously an explosion
[00:03:13] would like explode in every direction
[00:03:15] and it would leave charring on his shirt
[00:03:17] and like obviously we would see an
[00:03:19] explosion if it happened and the
[00:03:21] microphone wouldn't stay on his shirt.
[00:03:22] Duh. So there was all these elements
[00:03:23] that I was dismissive of the exploding
[00:03:26] microphone theory um because of a basic
[00:03:29] understanding of explosions without
[00:03:31] getting into depth about shaped charges
[00:03:33] and all the other
[00:03:37] types of things. We're going to spend uh
[00:03:39] probably an hour or so going through
[00:03:41] this exploding microphone theory and
[00:03:44] just uh talking about it and we're going
[00:03:46] to watch Trigger. Big shout out to
[00:03:48] Triggers. Um, if you're not already
[00:03:51] familiar,
[00:03:53] Trigger Smart on YouTube, give him a
[00:03:54] subscribe, give him a like, give him a
[00:03:58] share.
[00:04:00] Um, because this guy's doing amazing
[00:04:01] work. He's been doing amazing work from
[00:04:03] the start. And it's good that we have
[00:04:05] objective investigators
[00:04:08] taking all different angles on this um,
[00:04:12] thing. A little bit of housekeeping
[00:04:14] here. They had some audio issues. Um,
[00:04:17] and so the gal whose name I forget, uh,
[00:04:20] her audio was not John John Aaron Bray,
[00:04:24] the guy that's going to come on and
[00:04:25] explain the theory, he wasn't able to
[00:04:27] hear her audio the whole time. So, I
[00:04:29] assume that they've cut it in a way that
[00:04:30] it doesn't get in the way in this edit,
[00:04:33] but she's just hanging out and only her
[00:04:36] and these two guys can talk to each
[00:04:37] other, but she can't talk to the guest
[00:04:39] that's about to come on. So, if there's
[00:04:41] some weird stuff about that, that's why.
[00:04:44] >> Let me get our audio. John, did you want
[00:04:46] to introduce yourself?
[00:04:49] >> I'm uh John Bray and John Aaron Bray on
[00:04:52] next.
[00:04:54] >> How's that audio?
[00:04:55] >> John has been
[00:04:58] very in-depth covering the microphone
[00:05:01] theory and he has a lot of data to back
[00:05:04] it up.
[00:05:05] >> He has some visuals and he's also it's
[00:05:08] basically been his day one theory. Um
[00:05:10] did you want to tell us kind of like how
[00:05:11] you got into like what what made you
[00:05:13] kind of go this route? Not not super in
[00:05:15] detail, but just kind of like a high
[00:05:16] level.
[00:05:17] >> Um well, immediately I saw the video and
[00:05:20] I thought it was AI cuz it just looks so
[00:05:22] strange to me. And then um my my
[00:05:25] background is in body armor. I developed
[00:05:27] the um refurbishing program for the army
[00:05:30] for their So this dude's a nerd. He's a
[00:05:35] science nerd and he develops body armor
[00:05:37] which you'll see as his as his expertise
[00:05:40] is on display throughout the interview.
[00:05:42] You'll get a sense for like, oh, that's
[00:05:44] why this dude is so freaking smart and
[00:05:46] so nerdy. And he understands these
[00:05:47] various physics components. He
[00:05:49] understands ballistics components. He
[00:05:51] understands imaging and modeling
[00:05:53] components for um all these things. And
[00:05:56] obviously he's also drawing outside of
[00:05:58] his like direct expertise in this um
[00:06:01] theory and analysis.
[00:06:03] But it becomes quite apparent that bro
[00:06:06] knows his
[00:06:07] >> IOTVs OTVs. So I saw how his shirt
[00:06:11] deformed and I was certain that he had
[00:06:13] body armor on, but you know within the
[00:06:16] end of the day it was pretty obvious
[00:06:17] they didn't. So I started to basically
[00:06:20] run analysis on it and that led me to
[00:06:22] the microphone.
[00:06:24] >> And yes, that is he is holding the exact
[00:06:26] same microphone as Charlie Kirk is
[00:06:27] wearing. That is correct. Um, the only
[00:06:30] sorry he's holding the same microphone
[00:06:32] that Charlie Kirk was holding on the
[00:06:33] day.
[00:06:34] >> Thing that could really convince me is
[00:06:36] is that he was shot in the chest. That's
[00:06:38] that's the from from the physical, you
[00:06:42] know,
[00:06:42] >> they'll mention this later. I hope they
[00:06:44] have it in this edit. He mentions this
[00:06:47] in the interview later on that actually
[00:06:49] when you think back to the original
[00:06:52] reporting
[00:06:55] there was reporting that his chest was
[00:06:57] caved in.
[00:07:00] There was
[00:07:03] that's all
[00:07:05] gone out the window now. We never see or
[00:07:08] hear that anymore. But during the first
[00:07:10] few days, like right when it happened,
[00:07:13] there were some reports that were saying
[00:07:15] that his chest was caved in at the
[00:07:17] hospital
[00:07:18] and we didn't know what the that
[00:07:20] was about.
[00:07:20] >> Evidence and the the energetic kind of
[00:07:23] uh dispersion. That's the only thing
[00:07:25] that could make any sense to me.
[00:07:27] >> Fair. What about some people talking
[00:07:29] about Iran coming in and hitting his
[00:07:31] necklace and bouncing up?
[00:07:33] >> I just find that really unlikely. It's
[00:07:35] just the the other uh if you've seen um
[00:07:41] Jesse on Fire and uh Heavy Duty Country
[00:07:44] Dan's um if you've seen the new video of
[00:07:48] their their rounds.
[00:07:51] Uh it would just be another data point
[00:07:54] to let you know that no the bullet
[00:07:59] >> I am starting to get very confused.
[00:08:00] >> The bullet could not have been stopped
[00:08:02] by a necklace. It couldn't have been
[00:08:04] deflected by a necklace. There's not a
[00:08:05] chance. Um, here's our boys. Heavy duty
[00:08:09] country and Jesse on fire. [panting]
[00:08:12] >> This is Jesse.
[00:08:13] >> They make all types of short
[00:08:14] >> brother. Sup? [laughter]
[00:08:17] >> No, this Jesse
[00:08:19] >> Jesse, my little brother. Um, they're
[00:08:22] both gangsters. Jesse's a beast. Uh, so
[00:08:25] check out where they shoot through the
[00:08:27] freaking cinder blocks here.
[00:08:31] >> Oh boy.
[00:08:39] Oh my lord.
[00:08:41] >> Nice.
[00:08:45] Just explodes
[00:08:49] Completely explodes Threw two
[00:08:52] whole rows of meat. Explodes a cinder
[00:08:55] block. Pushes the other cinder block off
[00:08:58] the table.
[00:09:00] No necklace is doing to that
[00:09:02] bullet, right? Okay.
[00:09:04] >> It exploded.
[00:09:05] >> It exploded. Then they shoot through a
[00:09:08] metal.
[00:09:08] >> That's a direct hit.
[00:09:11] >> They shoot a little a little steel.
[00:09:14] direct hit.
[00:09:16] >> Holy That
[00:09:17] >> And when I first watched the video, I
[00:09:18] thought he missed even though Jesse said
[00:09:20] he hit it.
[00:09:21] >> Here's the video.
[00:09:25] I thought he'd missed just cuz like I
[00:09:29] don't know. But then you can see the
[00:09:30] hole right there in the middle.
[00:09:34] >> straight through the plate.
[00:09:39] [sighs and gasps]
[00:09:39] And that's a steel plate designed for
[00:09:41] shooting.
[00:09:42] It's designed to take rounds. So it's
[00:09:47] just not designed to take 30 six rounds.
[00:09:49] So,
[00:09:50] um, the necklace obviously did not
[00:09:53] deflect this bullet at all.
[00:09:54] >> Um, objects that are involved in the
[00:09:56] movement. It
[00:09:57] >> Dude, if that actually hit Charlie, it
[00:09:59] would have been a whole different scene.
[00:10:02] It would have been so up. That
[00:10:04] would have been the most up video
[00:10:05] on the internet. Oh my god. I'm [sighs]
[00:10:10] Dude, that would have been really messed
[00:10:11] up. Even more messed up than it was.
[00:10:14] just doesn't they don't the the energy
[00:10:17] doesn't align to that sort of scenario.
[00:10:19] The whole reason I started to do the
[00:10:21] whole vector map uh pixel flow was to
[00:10:24] try to pinpoint where the bullet may
[00:10:27] have hit him in his bulletproof vest,
[00:10:28] but in the middle of kind of creating
[00:10:31] the code to run that. Um it became
[00:10:34] obvious that he didn't have a vest on
[00:10:36] the pictures with, you know, you could
[00:10:38] see his nipples and then it was just,
[00:10:40] you know, the back line of where he's
[00:10:42] hunched over in his seat. There's
[00:10:44] there's no way even a um executive vest
[00:10:47] could be concealed to that point.
[00:10:50] >> I even had reporting
[00:10:53] like in the days following that I had
[00:10:56] people telling me that Charlie had a
[00:10:58] special like topend military bulletproof
[00:11:02] vest that was designed to look like bare
[00:11:05] chest underneath his so it was like
[00:11:07] shaped with like nipples and stuff so
[00:11:09] that it would be disguised and you
[00:11:11] wouldn't know he was wearing a a vest.
[00:11:13] And I was like, "Dude, I don't know,
[00:11:15] man. [laughter]
[00:11:16] I don't know, man." Um, we definitely
[00:11:19] know he was not wearing a vest at this
[00:11:21] point. That's been confirmed left,
[00:11:22] right, and center. [snorts]
[00:11:25] But, you know, there was a lot of
[00:11:26] unknowns at the start. There was a lot
[00:11:27] of unknowns at the start. But there
[00:11:30] there was a lot of people's perspectives
[00:11:32] that got kind of deflected by the vest,
[00:11:35] so to speak, by the concepts that we all
[00:11:37] kind of looked at at the start. And I
[00:11:40] think that a lot of people's attention
[00:11:42] to the shirt sort of dissipated because
[00:11:46] we kind of wrapped it into this vest
[00:11:48] question. And then we never revisited
[00:11:50] the shirt quite so much. Because if you
[00:11:53] remember, we were only watching the
[00:11:55] original video footage online for like 3
[00:11:58] or 4 days before the blanket went down
[00:12:00] and you weren't allowed to watch the raw
[00:12:02] footage anymore. And [snorts] then
[00:12:05] people are posting on YouTube and
[00:12:06] YouTube has restrictions.
[00:12:08] And so it's been a long time since most
[00:12:10] people have seen the original footage
[00:12:12] all the way through the shot. Um, so I
[00:12:15] did pull up uh some of the original high
[00:12:17] quality footage um that I had available
[00:12:21] here. Um, I haven't looked through to
[00:12:22] see if I have a ton of different angles,
[00:12:24] but we might go through some of that
[00:12:26] footage uh frame by frame a little
[00:12:28] later. Um, not to watch the bloody part.
[00:12:31] Uh, hopefully we'll avoid that, but to
[00:12:33] watch the shirt part hopefully. Um,
[00:12:35] we'll see. We'll see if we get there or
[00:12:36] not. So then that left me just to run
[00:12:39] the um the code as I had it and I
[00:12:42] immediately noticed that there was kind
[00:12:44] of a epicenter in the center upper
[00:12:48] sternum of his shirt. Um and that led me
[00:12:52] to kind of start to question the the
[00:12:55] three main kind of energetic centers of
[00:12:58] the event which is the shirt that pulled
[00:13:00] up to his face basically almost to his
[00:13:03] cheek. uh magnetic clasp that moved
[00:13:06] across his neck. And what I first
[00:13:08] thought was a uh lanyard wire to like an
[00:13:11] earpiece flying over his head, but it
[00:13:14] wasn't even a day into the event that
[00:13:16] someone pointed out that he didn't have
[00:13:17] an earpiece on. That became pretty
[00:13:19] obvious.
[00:13:20] >> And then a better quality video became
[00:13:22] available and it was pretty obvious that
[00:13:24] it was his necklace that flew up and
[00:13:26] over his head and it wasn't, you know, a
[00:13:28] wire. So then I was left with three
[00:13:30] different things that kind I had to
[00:13:32] figure out to explain how they were they
[00:13:35] were obviously tied together because
[00:13:36] they moved they started movement at the
[00:13:39] same time and they kind of moved in in
[00:13:42] kind of opposite directions of each
[00:13:44] other. The shirt you know pulling up on
[00:13:46] his face and the magnetic clasp kind of
[00:13:49] moved opposite of each other at first
[00:13:50] and then the magnetic clasp flows back
[00:13:53] across his chest as this as the shirt
[00:13:55] relaxes. Um, and then the the necklace
[00:13:58] was what really what puzz puzzled me the
[00:14:01] most because it's the most
[00:14:02] >> I really want John Bray to watch the
[00:14:05] footage from behind that Candace saw. I
[00:14:08] very much want him to watch that footage
[00:14:12] just to confirm things.
[00:14:14] >> Energetic object of the event. It moved
[00:14:16] the quickest. It had the most amount of
[00:14:18] energy kind of displaced in it and it
[00:14:20] was enough.
[00:14:22] >> And real quick before we get far away
[00:14:24] from this, I have his video queued up
[00:14:27] here so that we don't have to watch this
[00:14:30] is on his X feed. Um,
[00:14:34] and I have it paused at a point where
[00:14:38] it's in the gore, but we're not like
[00:14:40] watching the gore.
[00:14:43] And part of what he talks about that
[00:14:45] he'll talk about later, and you should
[00:14:46] go to his X feed and watch this on his X
[00:14:48] feed because X doesn't have censorship
[00:14:51] um in this regard at least. So you can
[00:14:53] actually watch this whole video. But see
[00:14:55] this this thing right here. He has this
[00:14:58] video that somewhat tracks this apparent
[00:15:02] object frame by frame. And it does seem
[00:15:05] to be a angular chunk falling in the
[00:15:10] blood flow. A like kind of ahead of the
[00:15:13] blood flow as though the blood had
[00:15:14] pushed it out. We're going to play just
[00:15:16] like two frames of it here. And you'll
[00:15:18] watch it go from here down to here. And
[00:15:20] just notice that this is not a liquid
[00:15:22] flow. This appears to be a solid
[00:15:25] something that is moving with the flow.
[00:15:29] I have it muted as well.
[00:15:32] Or I don't have it. Or I don't have it
[00:15:33] muted. Now I have it muted.
[00:15:36] Oh, that was so fast.
[00:15:40] Okay.
[00:15:43] See that? See that piece? Maybe it's a
[00:15:46] droplet.
[00:15:48] But the more the frames of this that you
[00:15:50] analyze, the more it looks like it has
[00:15:52] squared cornered edges and seems to be a
[00:15:56] distinct physical object.
[00:16:00] Um, I don't know if Twitch allows gore
[00:16:02] or not, but I'm also going to clip this
[00:16:03] onto YouTube, and I just want to
[00:16:05] maximize the possibility that other
[00:16:06] people can see it. Um, and so I highly
[00:16:09] recommend that people go and follow John
[00:16:12] Bray, J O N A R O N B R A Y, on Twitter,
[00:16:17] and go watch this for yourself. He
[00:16:19] posted this video on December 4th. It's
[00:16:21] not super far down his timeline. Um, he
[00:16:23] doesn't post excessively.
[00:16:26] And you could just search for the f the
[00:16:28] phrase a distinct black rectangular damn
[00:16:30] it a distinct black rectangular object.
[00:16:34] And he he even does approximate
[00:16:36] measurements based upon the size.
[00:16:40] And it looks weird. Um I might go and
[00:16:44] look for other frames of it off screen
[00:16:46] here for a second while he talks.
[00:16:50] Enough energy to actually break the
[00:16:52] necklace. So then I refined the code to
[00:16:54] really hone in on those those details.
[00:16:57] And um my first runs the red dots are m
[00:17:01] mapping the epicenter frame to frame. So
[00:17:05] every frame there's pixel movement and
[00:17:07] wherever there was the most pixel
[00:17:09] movement in the frame it it maps it with
[00:17:11] a red dot. When there's a lot of
[00:17:13] movement going on it can it just it can
[00:17:16] be random. But when you have a lot of
[00:17:18] quick movement it's pretty accurate
[00:17:19] especially when you have multiple
[00:17:20] angles. So between the two front angles
[00:17:23] that we had, um I was able to basically
[00:17:28] pinpoint the epicenters around his
[00:17:30] sternum and then I noticed that the
[00:17:32] magnetic class kind of followed that. So
[00:17:36] that led me to kind of um investigate
[00:17:39] what the magnetic clasp was all about.
[00:17:41] And then I found the model of the
[00:17:43] microphone. And then
[00:17:46] >> um one of the first things
[00:17:49] that uh I know he's not the most
[00:17:51] exciting speaker on the planet. That's
[00:17:53] not his job. He's a nerd. His job is to
[00:17:55] be really really smart. Um and our job
[00:17:58] is to try to decode the really really
[00:18:00] smart and make it accessible to lots of
[00:18:02] people. And one of the first things that
[00:18:05] was confusing to me is like or that that
[00:18:08] had me um questioning the microphone
[00:18:10] theory is that I know how these
[00:18:12] microphones work. I think I have one
[00:18:13] around here somewhere. Um they have a
[00:18:16] magnet that goes underneath or on the
[00:18:20] other side of the shirt. You can put it
[00:18:21] on the front or on the back. And then
[00:18:22] the magnet pins through the shirt and
[00:18:24] it's like they're not that strong. Like
[00:18:26] they're strong but they're not that
[00:18:27] strong. Obviously it would just blow
[00:18:29] off.
[00:18:31] Do I have one?
[00:18:34] My f my my little microphone must be
[00:18:37] somewhere else.
[00:18:41] That's all right. It's not essential at
[00:18:43] all. Um, so I was trying to get around
[00:18:47] that and he addresses that quite
[00:18:48] directly later. They ask him that
[00:18:50] question.
[00:18:50] >> Then the pictures of them kind of
[00:18:51] mounting it on it.
[00:18:52] >> What we'll do is we'll speed up speed up
[00:18:54] a little bit.
[00:18:55] >> In the past, how did he wear the
[00:18:56] microphone? And um when he first got the
[00:18:59] mic, he wore it on the outside of his
[00:19:00] shirt and then it slowly kind of evolved
[00:19:02] and then they put it underneath his
[00:19:04] shirt. And that day it's it's kind of
[00:19:06] like mounted in a pecular way that it's
[00:19:08] it's almost like standing on its side
[00:19:10] where the mag it's kind of bes
[00:19:15] peak maps right below that like kind of
[00:19:17] 45 degrees like a trajectory that
[00:19:19] matches what you would expect if the
[00:19:21] bottom of that microphone kind of blew
[00:19:22] out. So then I found a video of someone
[00:19:24] actually disassembling the mic and then
[00:19:25] I saw where the battery was and the
[00:19:27] battery was right in that area. So that
[00:19:28] led me to start investigate like what
[00:19:30] could this battery been modified
[00:19:31] somehow. And then so when you listen to
[00:19:33] these theories, [clears throat] don't
[00:19:35] just listen for like the theory itself.
[00:19:41] I'm always listening for the details of
[00:19:44] how they came to that conclusion to
[00:19:47] backineer their logical process to judge
[00:19:50] is this a logical person? Have they
[00:19:52] adjusted for variables? Have they
[00:19:54] thought about how they might be
[00:19:55] incorrect? Have they double-checked
[00:19:57] themselves? Have they, you know, done
[00:19:59] all the due diligence required to make
[00:20:02] their thought process more trustworthy?
[00:20:04] And often that's not very entertaining
[00:20:06] to listen through, but it's critical for
[00:20:09] an actual like process of inquiry in
[00:20:12] order to get down to the truth. And
[00:20:13] that's like that's the kind of
[00:20:14] researcher you want doing this sort of
[00:20:16] thing. It was even a year ago before
[00:20:19] that event that the uh Grim Pager or
[00:20:21] Grim Beeper attacks, the the MSAD paged
[00:20:24] attacks happened and I I studied those
[00:20:25] and I realized that you know those
[00:20:26] pagers were in circulation for over a
[00:20:28] decade before they were detonated and
[00:20:30] the batteries went through airport
[00:20:31] scanners. They were completely
[00:20:32] functional that whole time.
[00:20:33] >> That's completely functional.
[00:20:35] >> Yeah. That that really opened my mind to
[00:20:37] the fact that Charlie's microphone was
[00:20:39] the older model. He had those
[00:20:40] microphones for quite a while and he's
[00:20:41] traveled all over. So there's ample
[00:20:43] opportunity for someone to get a hold of
[00:20:44] it. And you can see how quickly you can
[00:20:46] get the battery out of it. You don't
[00:20:46] need to solder anything. You can just
[00:20:48] pop it out and basically replace it with
[00:20:49] a loaded battery and the user would
[00:20:52] never know. You could go on using it. It
[00:20:53] would have approximately 75% of the the
[00:20:55] charge capacity and you it would take
[00:20:58] someone that would use it all the way
[00:20:59] empty all the time to even notice that
[00:21:01] it changed. So that made it plausible.
[00:21:03] And then
[00:21:04] >> can you imagine how crazy it
[00:21:06] would have been though if Charlie had
[00:21:07] just gotten a little more paranoid and
[00:21:09] had checked the batteries on his
[00:21:11] electronics?
[00:21:13] That'd be crazy, dude.
[00:21:18] Um, English is your second language, so
[00:21:20] it's quick. Here's what I'll do is I'll
[00:21:21] try turning on captions for you. I know
[00:21:23] it won't help a ton, but it maybe it'll
[00:21:25] help a little bit. And
[00:21:26] >> I started to study the injuries from the
[00:21:27] pager attacks, which they were the
[00:21:29] pagers themselves were were alkaline
[00:21:31] batteries. They were round like double A
[00:21:33] style batteries. So, they left like
[00:21:34] black residue, but they didn't leave any
[00:21:36] >> key point right here. Key point.
[00:21:39] Two different kinds of battery packs
[00:21:41] leaving two different types of residue.
[00:21:42] >> Burns and they didn't really like char
[00:21:44] the victims. And it was pretty
[00:21:45] directional. The uh
[00:21:46] >> So you're saying the the ones in Lebanon
[00:21:48] did not leave charring?
[00:21:49] >> Yeah. They what they left was the
[00:21:50] alkaline battery was like the insides of
[00:21:52] the alkaline battery like a black
[00:21:53] residue from the alkaline battery. The
[00:21:54] walkie-talkies that followed the day
[00:21:55] after they had lithium batteries and
[00:21:56] they didn't leave any charring or any
[00:21:57] residue. They were pretty
[00:21:58] >> see how what what I'm hearing in the
[00:22:01] background here is that he studied not
[00:22:04] he didn't just like look up a few news
[00:22:06] articles about the pager attacks. He
[00:22:08] went and actually looked at the
[00:22:09] individual instances and compared what
[00:22:12] type of charge was this one and that
[00:22:14] one, which type of battery was this one
[00:22:15] and that one, what's an image of each of
[00:22:17] these attacks and images of each of
[00:22:19] these attacks.
[00:22:20] And yeah, funny funny frame of her. Um,
[00:22:25] and I didn't realize that the lithium
[00:22:29] battery charges didn't leave any
[00:22:30] charring because that was one of the
[00:22:32] main critiques I always had of the
[00:22:34] explosive theory is that like we would
[00:22:36] see evidence of an explosion. But like
[00:22:39] between it being a shaped charge and and
[00:22:41] built into the lithium ion battery pack
[00:22:43] like that, maybe we wouldn't actually
[00:22:46] >> pretty much clean. Um, so that's where I
[00:22:48] was like, well, that's that's bizarre
[00:22:50] because immediately, you know, like
[00:22:51] everyone else, you think explosion, you
[00:22:52] think it's going to be like a a lot of
[00:22:54] radial damage. There'll be charring and
[00:22:55] residue left. So that opened up to the
[00:22:57] possibility that it could be a
[00:22:58] completely clean burn. Um, but then I
[00:23:01] was kind of perplexed like why would why
[00:23:03] would someone go through the effort of
[00:23:04] this and not have a means to cover it
[00:23:06] up, right? If if they killed Charlie
[00:23:07] with a a loaded microphone bomb,
[00:23:10] everyone would know who it is. So that
[00:23:11] kind of opened up the idea that they
[00:23:14] would need a psy and then
[00:23:15] >> bingo.
[00:23:17] Bingo. That opens up the idea that they
[00:23:19] would need a psy because the first thing
[00:23:22] you think when you think an exploding
[00:23:24] microphone is you think of exploding
[00:23:25] pagers.
[00:23:28] But there is a you know there is
[00:23:30] precedent for um
[00:23:34] technological advances like that being
[00:23:35] repurposed and retoled and reused.
[00:23:39] Um,
[00:23:41] so [snorts]
[00:23:44] sorry, I'm getting distracted over here
[00:23:45] by some of these planes.
[00:23:50] Probably nothing.
[00:23:52] Probably nothing.
[00:23:55] Just keep my eyes out. Just keep my eyes
[00:23:57] out.
[00:23:59] I've got two different trackers running.
[00:24:03] And the rifle kind of made sense to me,
[00:24:04] like the whole the weirdness and
[00:24:06] stranges about it. But I put my mind in
[00:24:09] kind of the conspirators, right? If I
[00:24:10] wanted to pull this sort of event off, I
[00:24:12] would want the wound and the event to
[00:24:14] look like a rifle shot. And in my mind
[00:24:16] immediately, what I thought was it
[00:24:17] looked like a chess shot. So then I was
[00:24:18] like, what if this was designed to be to
[00:24:21] mimic a chess shot of a 36 36.
[00:24:23] >> So let's talk about that really quick
[00:24:24] because a lot of people are going to
[00:24:26] [snorts]
[00:24:26] >> So
[00:24:28] I know a little bit more than you guys
[00:24:30] do about what Baron has and what Baron's
[00:24:32] talking about. And I'm not going to give
[00:24:34] any of his away. not going to jump
[00:24:36] the shark on Baron's expose,
[00:24:39] but when it comes out,
[00:24:41] it's going to be explosive,
[00:24:44] so to speak. Let's just say that. Um,
[00:24:47] and I think it's all going to fit very
[00:24:50] neatly into this emerging theory.
[00:24:55] I think there's a couple pieces that
[00:24:56] still need to fit into place that sort
[00:24:59] of don't exactly align. Maybe it's like
[00:25:01] old hangers on from other theories that
[00:25:03] have built into this that don't really
[00:25:06] um actually fit into this kind of
[00:25:09] amalgamated version of what probably
[00:25:11] happened.
[00:25:13] But I think we're honing in on what what
[00:25:15] happened here.
[00:25:18] And I think Baron holds some key pieces
[00:25:20] of evidence and you're not going to want
[00:25:22] to miss. I don't know whether he's going
[00:25:25] to do it this week or next week.
[00:25:29] I [clears throat] don't know.
[00:25:30] But I admire that Baron takes his time
[00:25:33] to really run down all of his leads and
[00:25:35] be very thorough um before he breaks
[00:25:38] things.
[00:25:40] But when he breaks that story, it's
[00:25:41] going to break everything wide open. I
[00:25:44] think I think it's going to change the
[00:25:45] whole conversation. And he's hinted at
[00:25:48] it a lot. If you've been listening
[00:25:49] carefully, you can kind of put together
[00:25:52] what's what's going on there. Especially
[00:25:54] last night, he dropped some major hints
[00:25:56] last night. to say like what what's your
[00:25:58] official explanation as to why the
[00:26:00] official narrative wouldn't work?
[00:26:02] >> Well, it's because it's the order of
[00:26:04] events. So you when you watch the events
[00:26:06] unfold in slow
[00:26:07] >> I love that he has a totally different
[00:26:09] explanation for why the mainstream
[00:26:10] theory doesn't work. And his is just as
[00:26:12] obviously true as just saying like a 306
[00:26:16] would blow his head off. Um, but his is
[00:26:20] a completely separate and distinct
[00:26:22] analysis of why it wouldn't work being
[00:26:24] the timing of the shirt and the things
[00:26:25] that raise up in different directions
[00:26:28] before the wound appears, before the
[00:26:30] cavitation happens. Um,
[00:26:33] that is extremely compelling and I can't
[00:26:35] believe that more of us didn't think to
[00:26:37] say that.
[00:26:39] motion frame by frame. The necklace, the
[00:26:41] microphone movement, and the shirt all
[00:26:43] precede the appearance of the neck one.
[00:26:45] And with a high velocity impact to the
[00:26:46] neck, the zone two of the neck
[00:26:47] particular, you would have instantaneous
[00:26:49] effects, right? You would have automized
[00:26:50] blood. You would have cavitation.
[00:26:52] There's no way that you would have it's
[00:26:54] 43 seconds delay from when the shirt
[00:26:56] first moves to when you see the neck
[00:26:57] wouldn't even appear. And it's
[00:26:59] >> and remember, this guy works for the
[00:27:02] military refurbishment body armor
[00:27:04] programs.
[00:27:06] He's very familiar with the kind of
[00:27:08] things he's talking about here.
[00:27:10] >> A whole second before blood appears out
[00:27:11] of the neck wound.
[00:27:12] >> Yeah, that's the strangest part to me is
[00:27:13] that delay.
[00:27:14] >> So then I studied uh you know the
[00:27:16] forensics of high velocity impacts and
[00:27:17] there's there's so much you know um case
[00:27:19] studies on it and and examples of people
[00:27:21] being shot in the neck in the exact same
[00:27:22] area and nothing about it made sense.
[00:27:24] There's there's no high velocity blood
[00:27:25] no blood automization. Um, and then the
[00:27:28] stranges of the leaked autopsy reports
[00:27:29] like them trying to say that the C1 was
[00:27:31] hit when you know the trajectory was
[00:27:33] almost impossible for that to happen and
[00:27:35] then like it traveled down to the C6 and
[00:27:37] that I just couldn't understand why they
[00:27:39] would go through efforts to try to
[00:27:40] explain that. But
[00:27:42] >> to kind of the the aftermath, right? So
[00:27:45] once I thought I had a solid grasp on
[00:27:47] what caused the shirt to move, what
[00:27:48] caused the necklace to move, what caused
[00:27:50] his body to react in the way it did, the
[00:27:51] way his his hands grasp together, his
[00:27:53] his I think this is the last missing
[00:27:55] piece that needs to sort of be wrapped
[00:27:57] up into [snorts] whatever this theory is
[00:27:59] that's emerging. Um because I think that
[00:28:03] these guys do a good a good job of
[00:28:04] explaining why electrocution doesn't
[00:28:06] exactly make sense. And I'm sure they'll
[00:28:07] get to that in a moment here. [snorts]
[00:28:10] And
[00:28:12] we do have the understanding that a you
[00:28:14] know base brain stem injury will cause
[00:28:17] the decorticate posturing response the
[00:28:20] sort of like hands curling in
[00:28:23] but without a high velocity impact of a
[00:28:25] rifle round even with it it's still not
[00:28:28] hitting the right part of his brain stem
[00:28:30] by our understanding by my
[00:28:32] understanding. But without that bullet
[00:28:34] impact, it's like what's causing
[00:28:37] Charlie's posturing as he dies. Is it is
[00:28:41] is I don't know. Is we we need some
[00:28:43] experts to talk about like if there's an
[00:28:45] injury to the heart like what if there
[00:28:48] what if this shape charge actually blew
[00:28:50] a hole in his chest straight through to
[00:28:51] his heart. Um or what if there's some
[00:28:54] other device going on? What if
[00:28:57] is it possible that that's just from
[00:28:59] severing the corateed artery? I don't
[00:29:01] believe so. Um, so I don't know. Uh, I
[00:29:04] don't know how you square his posturing
[00:29:07] and the the physical response we saw
[00:29:09] from his body when he got hit, but
[00:29:12] everything else is circling in on pretty
[00:29:13] >> his elbows lift up and his arms come in
[00:29:15] and particularly his legs. If you look
[00:29:16] at his legs, his knees immediately come
[00:29:18] together and he lifts himself out of the
[00:29:19] chair.
[00:29:20] >> And so that that's that's indicating
[00:29:21] that he had midbrain and brain stem
[00:29:23] damage. And then that made perfect sense
[00:29:25] to me. That's why they have to lean on
[00:29:26] the C1 damage because that's the only
[00:29:28] way that you could have that sort of
[00:29:29] physical reaction from u a ballistic
[00:29:31] impact outside of a headshot. It would
[00:29:33] have to be at the very base of the of
[00:29:35] the spine for a bullet to cause a
[00:29:36] physical reaction like that. So, you
[00:29:38] know, it made me think that possibly the
[00:29:42] the narrative was being crafted kind of
[00:29:44] on the fly. And so then I started
[00:29:46] questioning that the
[00:29:47] >> the narrative was definitely being
[00:29:48] crafted on the fly
[00:29:50] for sure.
[00:29:53] wound like the the bleeding of the neck
[00:29:55] wound, the delayed bleeding of it and
[00:29:56] the shape of it and particularly the
[00:29:58] trajectory of the magnetic clasp which
[00:30:00] basically tells you the trajectory of
[00:30:01] the whole microphone. Right? They were
[00:30:02] connected together and how it they lined
[00:30:04] up perfectly with where the wound
[00:30:05] appeared and then the wound had this
[00:30:07] strange you know rectangular appearance
[00:30:09] and the delayed bleeding. If you look
[00:30:10] very closely frame by frame, you can
[00:30:12] actually see the def deformation of the
[00:30:13] of the flesh.
[00:30:14] >> Acute reflex posturing.
[00:30:19] Acute reflex posturing
[00:30:27] refers to involuntary stereotype motor
[00:30:29] responses that occur immediately
[00:30:30] following a traumatic brain injury. And
[00:30:32] then there's different types of acute
[00:30:34] reflex posturing. I presume, right?
[00:30:39] You're a doctor. Am I correct in my
[00:30:42] layman's understanding that acute reflex
[00:30:44] posturing is the categorical term and
[00:30:46] then there's different types of acute
[00:30:47] reflex posturing including decorticate
[00:30:50] and derebrate
[00:30:52] right
[00:30:54] yeah and those would I would assume
[00:30:56] would depend on where the injury exactly
[00:30:59] occurred to what brain material spinal
[00:31:01] material
[00:31:07] separating brain stem from spinal cord.
[00:31:10] Yes. Boom.
[00:31:14] Cool.
[00:31:16] Um,
[00:31:22] the most recognized form is the
[00:31:23] fencering response,
[00:31:25] the unilateral extension of one arm and
[00:31:28] flexion of the contra contraateral arm
[00:31:32] like this, which you guys can't see.
[00:31:34] That's interesting. I've seen that
[00:31:36] actually in uh extreme sports, which is
[00:31:39] kind of dark to think about.
[00:31:42] [clears throat] Doesn't have to be above
[00:31:43] cortex. You were making coffee. What did
[00:31:46] you miss? Only some homies solving the
[00:31:47] case.
[00:31:49] Pers had been in play for a decade.
[00:31:51] Yeah.
[00:31:55] Your dad thinks the AJ we see now is a
[00:31:57] clone. Having lived in Austin and
[00:31:59] knowing his personal trainer and knowing
[00:32:01] his whole team, he's not a clone. But he
[00:32:04] has changed
[00:32:06] um the fencing response. Uh
[00:32:10] really quickly, let's just get a
[00:32:12] layman's understanding. Decorticate
[00:32:14] posturing
[00:32:16] versus deceit.
[00:32:19] Derebrate.
[00:32:24] The corticate posture is characterized
[00:32:25] by arms flexing towards the body,
[00:32:27] clenched fists. In contrast, deserbrate
[00:32:30] posture involves the arms and legs fully
[00:32:32] extended, wrists and fingers fingers
[00:32:33] curled. So we definitely did not see
[00:32:35] derebrate posturing. Correct. Doctors,
[00:32:39] we saw what looked a lot more like
[00:32:41] decorticate posturing, but obviously,
[00:32:44] right, uh doctors that are in the chat,
[00:32:46] do you guys feel confident that it was f
[00:32:48] like 80% or 90% yes, that was
[00:32:51] decorticate posturing, or is it the kind
[00:32:53] of thing where it's like it looked like
[00:32:54] it, but it's hard to say for sure
[00:32:56] because obviously decorticate?
[00:33:01] My layman understanding would be that it
[00:33:04] it seemed pretty obvious that that
[00:33:05] posturing was like very much it was very
[00:33:08] much a thing but
[00:33:12] I always hesitate to
[00:33:15] it was decorticate and you are a nurse
[00:33:17] practitioner thank you I appreciate that
[00:33:19] expertise 95% sure decorticate cool and
[00:33:22] so dorticate would indicate injury to
[00:33:24] brain stem not spinal cord right spinal
[00:33:26] cord would would be deserebrate
[00:33:31] which would be sticking out your arms.
[00:33:38] Also happens in seizures.
[00:33:42] Good point.
[00:33:45] That's a good point.
[00:33:49] Miami melo.
[00:33:52] Yeah.
[00:33:54] So yes. So yes, correct, Vendy. What we
[00:33:57] are then extrapolating is that it hit in
[00:34:00] theory something affected the brain stem
[00:34:02] or the brain not the spine.
[00:34:06] Grandma. Interesting. Half. Um, does
[00:34:10] anyone have any sense, uh, any of you
[00:34:12] doctors and nurses, do you have a sense
[00:34:14] of whether you can get decorticate
[00:34:16] posturing from electric shock or from
[00:34:21] seizure induction or from
[00:34:25] Yeah, you have epilepsy and that's
[00:34:26] exactly what happens.
[00:34:28] Or just other brain aneurysms. That's
[00:34:30] interesting. That's interesting. Yeah,
[00:34:33] we're going to need some expert takes on
[00:34:34] camera because obviously I love you
[00:34:36] chat, but we can't trust chat as a
[00:34:38] source. Chat is a fun way to kind of
[00:34:40] like guide the investigation for sure
[00:34:42] though. Um, sorry, my computer keeps on
[00:34:45] changing the size of everything,
[00:34:49] seizures for sure
[00:34:53] caused by the cyclomite explosive.
[00:34:56] But the thing is that the cyclomite
[00:34:58] explosive is down here in front is the
[00:35:00] idea.
[00:35:03] Yeah. Watch anyone who's ever been
[00:35:05] tased. Yeah. Exactly right.
[00:35:09] Not a result of electrocution. Jay Love.
[00:35:11] I I would argue that I've seen similar
[00:35:14] posturing and tasings,
[00:35:16] but I ain't no expert,
[00:35:19] but he uh John is going to talk about
[00:35:22] the plant that exploded, and we might
[00:35:25] dig a little deeper into it.
[00:35:26] >> That's just the trajectory of the um the
[00:35:28] microphone, the direction it was
[00:35:29] traveling. So, So, a quick question that
[00:35:31] people are going to have is are you
[00:35:32] saying that the microphone itself
[00:35:34] exploded or you saying that something
[00:35:35] exploded out of the microphone towards
[00:35:36] his neck?
[00:35:36] >> I I believe that the microphone was
[00:35:38] designed to replicate a 30 off a 30
[00:35:40] off six impact to the chest and there
[00:35:43] was unforeseen shrapnel that came off of
[00:35:44] the microphone, the ca either the
[00:35:46] battery or the magnetic clasp that
[00:35:47] struck his neck that they didn't prepare
[00:35:49] for. And so, when the very obvious neck
[00:35:52] wound became kind of the center point of
[00:35:54] the event, they had to shift the
[00:35:55] narrative from a chest shot to a a
[00:35:57] single neck shot. And they had to
[00:35:59] explain the physical reactions that we
[00:36:00] we all saw by you know the the C1 impact
[00:36:03] and the you know the vertebrae damage
[00:36:05] when when in reality I believe he
[00:36:07] probably had chest damage too. And if
[00:36:08] you remember there was leaks from the
[00:36:10] hospital that described massive chest
[00:36:11] damage his chest was caved in and even
[00:36:13] some of the first reports of uh the
[00:36:15] autopsy which I have been they've been
[00:36:17] >> um the New York Times article even
[00:36:18] mentioned uh chest but then it was
[00:36:20] redacted and it's changed later and you
[00:36:22] can't find any mention of that again.
[00:36:23] But the the whole even the first uh
[00:36:25] witness that I saw from the crowd said
[00:36:27] that he was shot in the chest and blood
[00:36:28] came out from underneath the shirt.
[00:36:30] >> Yeah.
[00:36:30] >> Yeah.
[00:36:30] >> So, you know, it's I feel like that
[00:36:33] there was a scramble to cover up any
[00:36:35] chest wound because they only had a
[00:36:36] single rifle shot and you can't have two
[00:36:38] different wounds with a single rifle
[00:36:39] shot. And I think that explains the
[00:36:41] stranges at the hospital with the phys
[00:36:43] physicians and the uh surgeon not be
[00:36:44] able to go back in and then um you know
[00:36:46] autopsies ordered overnight and then
[00:36:48] flying him out and then the uh security
[00:36:50] footage from the hospital getting
[00:36:51] confiscated. It all just seemed kind of
[00:36:53] out of the ordinary and unnecessary
[00:36:54] unless you had something to hide, like a
[00:36:56] very obvious chest swing, right?
[00:36:58] >> So, so just real quick, sorry to cut you
[00:36:59] off there. Um, some people are saying
[00:37:00] that he sounds nervous. Yeah, this is
[00:37:01] not what he does. He does not do
[00:37:02] podcasts. He does not do interviews
[00:37:04] regularly. So, we're going to be giving
[00:37:05] him some grace because he is not doing
[00:37:06] this on a regular basis. So,
[00:37:08] >> and I would say that for anyone to hop
[00:37:10] on a live stream and completely, you
[00:37:12] know, flush out their entire very
[00:37:14] complicated theory, you know, amongst
[00:37:16] all these people online is is a
[00:37:18] nerve-wracking thing. So, I John, I
[00:37:20] think you're knocking it out of the
[00:37:20] park. You're doing a great job. Hey
[00:37:21] chat, vote in the chat. Is it
[00:37:23] nerve-wracking or nerve-wracking?
[00:37:27] Because it's nerve-wracking, right? It's
[00:37:29] not nerve-wracking. It's nerve-wracking.
[00:37:33] It's racking, right? It's rack.
[00:37:36] Cool. I'm not the I'm not the idiot
[00:37:38] here. I'm not saying she's an idiot
[00:37:40] either. We all have these little things.
[00:37:42] Candace is actually the queen of like
[00:37:44] saying the little thing a little
[00:37:45] differently, which I think is hilarious.
[00:37:48] Get wrecked, baby. Yeah. getting racked.
[00:37:52] >> All right. So now some people are asking
[00:37:53] to have you explain this.
[00:37:56] So um and actually you said that you
[00:37:58] either wrote software or you use
[00:37:59] software for this. So who um I guess you
[00:38:01] want to walk people like through the
[00:38:02] software piece of it like how you came
[00:38:03] up with this kind of grid that shows
[00:38:04] where the the pressure and the power and
[00:38:05] energy was.
[00:38:06] >> Yeah. So I took the MT Labs the MIT labs
[00:38:08] optical flow software and I modified it
[00:38:10] to specifically look for epicenters
[00:38:12] frame to frame. So what it's doing is
[00:38:13] looking frame to frame to video and
[00:38:15] looking on how the pixels move. It's
[00:38:17] because his shirt has those freedom
[00:38:18] texts across it and u you know his
[00:38:20] shirt's white and then we have the black
[00:38:21] magnetic clasp on the shirt. It gives us
[00:38:23] a lot of vectors to to track. So
[00:38:25] basically the software is looking at
[00:38:26] every frame and it's mapping the
[00:38:27] movement in between those frames and
[00:38:28] then it's putting a red circle on
[00:38:29] epicenter of those movements.
[00:38:32] Does that make sense, chat? That it's
[00:38:34] tracking
[00:38:36] [clears throat] the pixel movements in
[00:38:39] the camera
[00:38:40] in the footage and the red dot is
[00:38:43] appearing wherever um wherever the
[00:38:46] single greatest point of movement
[00:38:48] happens. Interesting that right then
[00:38:51] it's right there. Don't know why.
[00:38:54] >> And you can see the the the color
[00:38:55] mapping is is showing you where the
[00:38:57] areas of the highest movement. So it
[00:38:58] kind of shows you the previous frame
[00:39:00] where the movement moved from the
[00:39:01] previous frame to the next skin.
[00:39:03] >> Yeah.
[00:39:03] >> And Baron is drawing a lot of attention
[00:39:05] to this one underneath his armpit
[00:39:08] >> down here and I know why. And when Baron
[00:39:13] shows that evidence, it's going to be
[00:39:14] wild.
[00:39:15] >> Yeah. Okay. So like in this one, is the
[00:39:17] red circle where the focus is or is that
[00:39:19] just
[00:39:19] >> the red circle is where the the peak
[00:39:21] movement happened from the previous
[00:39:22] frame to that frame across
[00:39:24] >> and you see the heat frame from where
[00:39:25] the text was. It's showing you the text
[00:39:26] was in the previous frame. it was there.
[00:39:28] And then you can see where the text on
[00:39:29] his shirt is now where where the the
[00:39:31] shirt pulls up across his face.
[00:39:32] >> Yeah.
[00:39:33] >> So here you can actually tell that this
[00:39:37] piece of shirt is already actually
[00:39:39] actually already reached its top height
[00:39:41] and is about to come down.
[00:39:44] >> Okay. So quick question on this. So,
[00:39:45] this is a separate theory that I'll
[00:39:46] probably ask you about, but the electric
[00:39:48] >> if it was actually a rifle round going
[00:39:50] through the into the neck and then the
[00:39:52] shirt responding to that, you would
[00:39:53] think that it would be like bam,
[00:39:55] cavitation, and then airwave then pushes
[00:39:58] the shirt out
[00:40:01] and the airwave pushing fabric would be
[00:40:03] fast obviously, but like bro,
[00:40:10] theory, he was saying that, you know, he
[00:40:12] was trying to explain like the burn
[00:40:13] under his like chest, nipple area, But
[00:40:14] in your stuff you're showing here, it's
[00:40:16] not that low. Correct. It's higher up on
[00:40:17] his chest.
[00:40:18] >> Yeah. And and the other angle maps it
[00:40:20] slightly different. Um you know, because
[00:40:21] the pixels are going to be different
[00:40:22] from different angles. Um but they're
[00:40:23] both in that general area.
[00:40:24] >> Okay. So they're both kind of by the f
[00:40:26] of freedom.
[00:40:26] >> Yeah. Exactly. The shape charge theory
[00:40:28] basically is that it's not like a
[00:40:30] general basic explosive. It's not a
[00:40:32] radial force. It has a um a small charge
[00:40:34] and a cone and it basically directs a a
[00:40:36] high energy jet out of the cone. So it's
[00:40:38] made to penetrate armor, but you can use
[00:40:40] it on soft targets, too. And it allows
[00:40:42] you to create a wound that's very
[00:40:43] similar to a rifle wound where it leaves
[00:40:45] a deep wound channel and it'll it'll
[00:40:47] even leave copper fragmentation into the
[00:40:49] wound. So, did you hear that?
[00:40:52] A shape charge
[00:40:54] is designed to leave a deep directed
[00:40:57] wound path that would mimic very much a
[00:40:59] rifle round and will even leave copper
[00:41:02] fragmentation in the wound sometimes.
[00:41:05] And this dude manufactures and repairs
[00:41:07] body armor. the squib stuff. Baron's
[00:41:10] gonna bring the squib stuff back later.
[00:41:13] [snorts]
[00:41:15] And again, maybe the theory sounds
[00:41:17] stupid to you, but you need a version of
[00:41:20] events that accounts for the movement of
[00:41:23] the shirt at that insane speed. At that
[00:41:27] insane speed, the shirt responded before
[00:41:31] anything else. Basically,
[00:41:35] >> what we're seeing the shirt moving is
[00:41:36] the overpressurization. So the pressure
[00:41:38] that didn't penetrate the flesh
[00:41:39] basically is escaping through the shirt
[00:41:40] and that's what causes the shirt to
[00:41:41] balloon up and move so much that the
[00:41:43] shirt that pulls up across his face on
[00:41:45] the opposite side of the microphone is
[00:41:46] actually from his necklace. The pendant
[00:41:47] on his necklace, the cross pendant is
[00:41:49] pushed down and then it can't go down
[00:41:50] anymore. So then it follows the kind of
[00:41:52] the path of the necklace and raises up
[00:41:53] across and that's what lifts his shirt
[00:41:54] up across his face.
[00:41:56] >> Okay. So you're saying the downward
[00:41:57] pressure of the explosion puts pressure
[00:41:58] down on the pendant that stretches the
[00:41:59] necklace. That force builds up and then
[00:42:00] it pops back up and that's why you see
[00:42:01] it kind of goes vertically like straight
[00:42:02] up in the air.
[00:42:02] >> Yeah. If you can actually see one frame
[00:42:03] where the cross is peeking out next to
[00:42:05] his face but it gets caught and the
[00:42:06] necklace breaks. So then the necklace
[00:42:07] slides out of the cross pendant and the
[00:42:09] cross pendant falls back down. And
[00:42:10] that's why his shirt falls back down so
[00:42:11] quickly. And then immediately after
[00:42:12] that, you'll see the appearance of the
[00:42:13] wound on his neck.
[00:42:14] >> Okay. So for this,
[00:42:15] >> you see that part, the the magnetic
[00:42:17] clasp goes on the back side. So that
[00:42:18] that part that we're seeing right now
[00:42:19] that he has a suction cup is against
[00:42:20] Charlie's chest. And that's the battery
[00:42:22] is against his chest also. So the if the
[00:42:24] shape charge was put anywhere, it's
[00:42:25] going to be putting that gold battery
[00:42:26] right there.
[00:42:27] >> No. See how he actually disassembled
[00:42:29] this specific wireless microphone,
[00:42:32] analyzed its specific components, its
[00:42:35] specific build, how it was on his shirt.
[00:42:38] >> I think with the previous pager attacks
[00:42:39] and the cell phones, they just replaced
[00:42:41] a portion of the battery. Correct.
[00:42:42] >> Right. They basically took uh 20% of the
[00:42:44] sale and replaced it with the explosive.
[00:42:46] >> Okay. And [snorts] I I am I think that
[00:42:48] this theory is compelling. I'm not
[00:42:50] convinced 100% just like Baron says. Um,
[00:42:53] but I think it's compelling because the
[00:42:55] one of the weirdest things about the
[00:42:57] wound and the blood is the slow flow of
[00:43:00] blood and the weird size of the wound.
[00:43:03] Zeb Boyin right from the start was
[00:43:05] pointing out and he's a literal
[00:43:06] ballistics expert and he was pointing
[00:43:08] out that entry wounds are not that big
[00:43:10] that the entry wound that the wound is
[00:43:12] way too big to be an entry wound even
[00:43:14] for a 30 six which we know it can't be.
[00:43:18] And um
[00:43:21] and so then the the ne the very next
[00:43:23] point is okay we have questions.
[00:43:26] >> What actually causes a wound like that
[00:43:28] and what actually causes bleeding like
[00:43:30] that
[00:43:34] >> but also a little bit they probably did
[00:43:36] with with this um they just replaced it
[00:43:38] with a smaller cell battery um a shorter
[00:43:40] a slightly shorter battery and then they
[00:43:42] put the shape charge in the end of the
[00:43:43] space that was left over
[00:43:44] >> and that would make it so it would still
[00:43:45] function. They could still live stream
[00:43:46] and everything with it, but obviously
[00:43:47] the battery wouldn't last as long.
[00:43:49] >> Exactly.
[00:43:49] >> Okay. Now, someone is asking you to
[00:43:51] explain how the pendant broke one more
[00:43:52] time just so they can understand it.
[00:43:54] >> Basically, the pendant, the necklace,
[00:43:55] >> No, we're not saying that it's an exit
[00:43:57] wound and the entrance wound is on his
[00:43:58] chest. He'll get to explaining this. He
[00:44:01] believes that there is probably a wound
[00:44:04] on the chest,
[00:44:06] which is why they had to control the
[00:44:08] body so thoroughly, but that
[00:44:10] accidentally a piece of the microphone
[00:44:13] housing exploded off and probably nicked
[00:44:16] him in the neck and caused that wound on
[00:44:19] accident and that that was not
[00:44:20] intentional. So he'll explain in a
[00:44:22] little bit how they have a a initial
[00:44:26] charge that was designed to lift it off
[00:44:28] of the the chest and then pow it was
[00:44:31] supposed to then shoot him in the chest
[00:44:33] with it so to speak. But he believes
[00:44:36] that because of the way the microphone
[00:44:37] was resting on Charlie's shirt kind of
[00:44:39] at an angle like with the shirt a little
[00:44:40] twisted instead of rising it off the
[00:44:42] shirt chest directly, he believes that
[00:44:44] it rise it rose sort of at an angle and
[00:44:48] then exploded at a weird angle and
[00:44:49] caused a little bit of a piece to
[00:44:52] fly off and nick Charlie right here and
[00:44:54] caused that nick in his corateed artery
[00:44:56] and then the bleeding. That is my
[00:44:59] [clears throat] understanding of his
[00:45:00] theory
[00:45:02] >> was was moved by the force of the the
[00:45:04] explosion and then it crossed the path
[00:45:06] of the shape charge. So when that the
[00:45:08] pendant was pushed down and it and it it
[00:45:11] met the end of the slack of the necklace
[00:45:12] and then it's like a pendulum it swung
[00:45:14] up and started to come out the shirt and
[00:45:15] that pulled the necklace across and it
[00:45:17] ended up crossing that peak that we see
[00:45:18] in the middle of his chest and that's
[00:45:19] what snapped the necklace and then the
[00:45:21] momentum of the necklace forced it over
[00:45:22] his head. So that's why when we see the
[00:45:23] necklace fly up and over his head it's
[00:45:25] broken. is a single single strand 26
[00:45:27] inches of necklace instead of being you
[00:45:28] know a loop connected
[00:45:30] >> and we don't know at this point what the
[00:45:31] coroner's report said. I've seen some
[00:45:32] people asking about that and I've I've
[00:45:34] tried to kind of interject a little bit
[00:45:35] too. I mean that's part of the problem
[00:45:36] you guys is that we don't know exactly
[00:45:38] you know what the corer had to say what
[00:45:39] the autopsy said what the doctors you
[00:45:40] know officially said. I mean we're we're
[00:45:42] going off of third fourth fifth party
[00:45:44] information.
[00:45:45] >> And if you're also taking into
[00:45:46] consideration things like
[00:45:47] >> oh cool it looks like they got our audio
[00:45:48] working at some point. Now, Candace is
[00:45:50] saying that, you know, uh, Kulit never
[00:45:52] said what he said or that what he said
[00:45:53] was made up and that the surgeon never
[00:45:54] said that. We're kind of getting to the
[00:45:56] point where can we believe anything
[00:45:56] that's been told so far?
[00:45:58] >> No, we can't believe a single
[00:45:59] thing that we've been told by TP USA or
[00:46:01] anyone that works there. Not a single
[00:46:03] person. No way.
[00:46:05] >> We can't believe Turk saying that he
[00:46:08] found the necklace over top of his bag.
[00:46:10] We can't believe any reporting about the
[00:46:12] autopsy, anything about the spinal
[00:46:15] injuries, anything about the bullet
[00:46:16] fragmentation.
[00:46:18] So like the fact that he had broken
[00:46:20] vertebrae you know and like is that true
[00:46:22] or anything people are trying to make
[00:46:24] these other narratives fit that now like
[00:46:25] what he's electrocuted how do you
[00:46:26] account for the vertebrae do we even
[00:46:27] know the vertebrae are broken
[00:46:28] >> and so why why the speculation because I
[00:46:30] think uh inquiring minds want to know
[00:46:31] and there are a lot of us who just
[00:46:33] cannot stand to sit around and wait for
[00:46:35] you know a year plus and it's just it
[00:46:37] just doesn't feel right that's at least
[00:46:39] I'll speak for myself in saying that I
[00:46:40] can't just sit around and
[00:46:41] >> what up Cyclops welcome to the party um
[00:46:43] and by the way guys while we're talking
[00:46:45] about this we are gonna get to the
[00:46:48] explosives plant that manufactures these
[00:46:50] exact explosives just mysteriously
[00:46:53] blowing up one month after
[00:46:59] that shit's suspicious as hell
[00:47:05] >> and twiddle my thumbs and wait I've got
[00:47:07] to keep digging
[00:47:08] >> so the next thing the next movement I
[00:47:09] guess so explodes it sends that the
[00:47:11] magnet in the in the mic start to go to
[00:47:12] the direction of the you know I guess a
[00:47:13] shape charge would knock it that way
[00:47:15] >> um so a shape charge has to have a
[00:47:16] standoff off. You can't that it has to
[00:47:18] create a jet before it can penetrate.
[00:47:19] It's not penetrating with brute force.
[00:47:21] It's actually, you know, creating a
[00:47:22] high-speed jet that's basically turning
[00:47:24] anything it contacts into liquid.
[00:47:25] >> No, we're not saying energy weapons.
[00:47:27] We're saying shaped explosive charges,
[00:47:28] which are very normal. They very much
[00:47:31] exist. This is not not tinfoil that
[00:47:34] those exist. We've not seen them
[00:47:36] necessarily used in this way before,
[00:47:40] but no one had ever seen the pager
[00:47:42] attack until the pager attack happened
[00:47:44] either. But um so it needs a 2 cm
[00:47:47] standoff. So they they would have to
[00:47:49] design uh a primer charge that kind of
[00:47:52] um forces the microphone away from his
[00:47:54] flesh before the the shape charge goes
[00:47:56] off. And if you look at the particularly
[00:47:58] um Cub's video, the highest resolution
[00:48:00] video that's kind of to Charlie's right
[00:48:02] or left hand side, um you'll you can see
[00:48:05] that the microphone lifts up and kind of
[00:48:07] almost touches his face before it starts
[00:48:08] to make the trajectory across his body.
[00:48:10] And it's it's my belief that that's the
[00:48:12] the primer charge creating the standoff
[00:48:14] space. And that primer charge is what
[00:48:15] causes the necklace to move. And then
[00:48:17] once the um the primary charge, the
[00:48:19] shape charge goes off, it actually snaps
[00:48:21] the necklace. And that's when you see it
[00:48:22] break loose and fly over his head. And
[00:48:24] that's when the trajectory of the
[00:48:25] microphone's changed from just kind of
[00:48:26] lifting up to his face to going across
[00:48:28] his body. Um and at that same time, we
[00:48:30] have the shirt coming down. So while we
[00:48:31] have the microphone going the m the
[00:48:33] magnet clasp and the microphone going
[00:48:34] across his chest, we have the shirt
[00:48:35] falling down. And then they kind of like
[00:48:37] at a certain point cross each other. and
[00:48:40] you kind of lose sight of the magnetic
[00:48:42] clasp and then that's when the wound on
[00:48:44] his neck appears. So if you look at it
[00:48:45] frame to frame, there's no single frame
[00:48:46] where you can see both at the same time.
[00:48:49] You see the you see the magnetic clasp
[00:48:51] and then you don't see it and then you
[00:48:52] see a wound on his neck.
[00:48:54] >> I'm not 100% certain that it is the
[00:48:55] magnetic clasp. It could be the magnetic
[00:48:56] clasp or the battery. They're very
[00:48:57] similar shape. As you saw in the video
[00:48:59] before, they're both rectangular, but I
[00:49:00] am sure of the trajectory of the
[00:49:01] microphone and the trajectory matches
[00:49:03] perfectly with the appearance of the
[00:49:04] wound and the microphone kind of snaps
[00:49:06] back um and you can just see kind of a
[00:49:08] bulge where it is, but you don't
[00:49:10] necessarily ever see the full magnetic
[00:49:11] clasp again. So, it it's it's the timing
[00:49:14] and the trajectory is what led me to
[00:49:15] believe that it was a blunt rectangular
[00:49:16] object from the microphone that causes
[00:49:18] the neck wound combined with actual um
[00:49:20] physical, you know, traits of the wound
[00:49:22] itself. You know, it it's [snorts] not a
[00:49:23] high velocity wound. That was a medium
[00:49:25] velocity wound and you know that because
[00:49:26] of the delayed bleeding and then also
[00:49:27] the the deformation of the skin. It was
[00:49:29] just the skin was flexed outwards. It
[00:49:30] wasn't you know it wasn't like a
[00:49:31] cavitation from a high energy impact and
[00:49:34] then the bleeding was was so strange and
[00:49:36] delayed and we can't show
[00:49:37] >> and we're a little bit hamstrung by
[00:49:39] trying to discuss this on YouTube which
[00:49:41] is a convenient accident because YouTube
[00:49:44] won't let us show the actual gore of the
[00:49:47] actual wound and the actual moment. And
[00:49:50] so you kind of have to go back and take
[00:49:52] this theory and then reanalyze the
[00:49:54] original video for yourself in order to
[00:49:57] make the decision for yourself of
[00:49:58] whether this makes sense to you or not.
[00:50:00] [cough] But [clears throat]
[00:50:02] I'm going to try to get us a little bit
[00:50:05] of frame analysis without the gore here
[00:50:08] in a minute. Um, but it is what it is
[00:50:11] >> here. But I actually have code that has
[00:50:13] mapped the fluid dynamics of the blood
[00:50:14] and I've been able to actually track the
[00:50:16] rectangular object falling out of his
[00:50:17] neck from two different angles. So, not
[00:50:19] only not only do we have the trajectory
[00:50:20] matching the the portion where the wound
[00:50:22] appears, but also have a rectangular
[00:50:24] object, flat black object falling out of
[00:50:25] the wound from two different angles.
[00:50:26] Also, either the magnetic clasp or the
[00:50:28] battery. It was something dense and
[00:50:30] rectangular.
[00:50:30] >> Okay. So, you don't think it was like
[00:50:31] shrapnel from the mic exploding?
[00:50:32] >> That's what I mean. It's it's shrapnel
[00:50:34] from it, but the the shrapnel was was a
[00:50:35] dense object being the magnetic clasp or
[00:50:37] the the um the battery itself.
[00:50:40] >> Unintentional.
[00:50:40] >> A lot of people are asking like how can
[00:50:41] the how can the mic and the and the mic
[00:50:43] magnet go towards like anywhere?
[00:50:45] Shouldn't it just explode away from the
[00:50:46] body?
[00:50:46] >> It's it's because it's a shake charge.
[00:50:47] Imagine it's it's like a jet. So it's
[00:50:50] not a explosive where it's a radial
[00:50:51] explosive where it's just it's exploding
[00:50:52] in all directions. This is an explosion
[00:50:54] that has a directed path
[00:50:55] >> and the only the only expansion comes
[00:50:57] out of that directed path, the cone. So
[00:50:58] it's it's like, you know, like a um a
[00:51:01] rocket engine when you when you launch a
[00:51:03] rocket engine, it just doesn't explode
[00:51:04] everywhere. It sends a direct a directed
[00:51:06] path in one direction and that causes a
[00:51:07] trajectory and it follows that
[00:51:08] trajectory quickly.
[00:51:09] >> So that would mean in this case equal
[00:51:11] opposite reaction that would mean that
[00:51:12] the shape charge would have had to been
[00:51:13] pointed down and away from him. Correct.
[00:51:14] To push everything up towards him,
[00:51:16] >> right? And and so the variable comes in
[00:51:17] is the primer.
[00:51:18] >> Where did you go to find the unedited
[00:51:20] video? The original video. You would
[00:51:21] have had to have download it yourself
[00:51:23] back then. Um I learned that from this
[00:51:27] event. And now I'm going to download
[00:51:28] every video right away. I do have a
[00:51:30] bunch of original videos, but if you
[00:51:32] don't have them by now, it's kind of
[00:51:34] hard to trust anything you're
[00:51:35] downloading off the internet unless you
[00:51:37] get it directly from someone that you do
[00:51:38] trust. Um,
[00:51:42] [clears throat] but by cross referencing
[00:51:45] videos to other videos, you can get a
[00:51:47] little bit of a sense of which ones are
[00:51:49] original, which ones are not. This one
[00:51:50] is not, but it's nice because it is
[00:51:53] extremely high frame rate HD. Um, and I
[00:51:57] do, although I don't enjoy Jason Goodman
[00:52:00] all that much, I do trust him a little
[00:52:02] bit. Um, and regardless,
[00:52:06] this this angle is useful because it
[00:52:09] doesn't show the gore. So, we can
[00:52:10] analyze it a little bit more. We're in a
[00:52:12] segment where Jason ultra slow mode it.
[00:52:14] And so, I can grab the slider bar and I
[00:52:17] can drag it between frames, one frame at
[00:52:20] a time. And you can see these are three
[00:52:24] separate frames.
[00:52:26] Okay? And he has it marked. This is a 60
[00:52:29] frames per second video,
[00:52:32] 4K HDR.
[00:52:34] And when I drag, so this is before the
[00:52:37] impact, frame one, frame two.
[00:52:42] In frame one, the shirt is already
[00:52:45] moving up. The necklace is already
[00:52:47] moving up. And by frame two, the
[00:52:50] necklace is already snapped and the
[00:52:52] shirt is already up above his chin.
[00:52:57] And when you just do the math,
[00:53:02] when you just do the math,
[00:53:06] even allowing for some error or for some
[00:53:09] whatever,
[00:53:11] that is crazy fast.
[00:53:15] Crazy fast. Physics don't lie, right?
[00:53:20] You would expect if a 306 were to hit
[00:53:23] him in the neck, you would expect the
[00:53:25] round to hit his neck for it to blow
[00:53:27] straight through for blood to explode
[00:53:29] all over the place. C massive cavitation
[00:53:32] event like you sort of like you see with
[00:53:34] uh the ballistics dummies. Not exactly
[00:53:36] obviously. And then that outwards blast
[00:53:40] should cause the shirt to expand away
[00:53:42] from him and then you know smash back
[00:53:44] into him or something like that
[00:53:46] presumably. That's just me thinking it
[00:53:48] through.
[00:53:50] But instead, what we get is in frame one
[00:53:54] of impact already, you can see right
[00:53:57] here, the shirt is starting to move up.
[00:53:59] And already the necklace is moving up at
[00:54:02] drastic speeds. It's so blurred right
[00:54:05] here, you can't even see where it goes.
[00:54:08] It's not even in the camera shot. And
[00:54:11] then by frame two, the necklace is
[00:54:13] already snapped in back here, and the
[00:54:16] shirt is already up in front of his
[00:54:18] neck. by frame two at 60 frames per
[00:54:21] second.
[00:54:24] So that's 130th of a second.
[00:54:29] That's the piece that actually has me
[00:54:32] considering this theory quite quite
[00:54:33] seriously.
[00:54:35] And obviously there's a lot of pieces
[00:54:37] that still need to get fit into place,
[00:54:39] but physics don't lie. And you can see
[00:54:42] that same speed of the how the shirt
[00:54:45] responds in all of the videos.
[00:54:50] And for the astute tinfoil wearers out
[00:54:53] there, I think that's probably a big
[00:54:55] part of what had them on the exploding
[00:54:56] microphone theory from the start.
[00:54:58] >> Charge where they have to create the
[00:54:59] standoff space. So combined with the odd
[00:55:02] angle that the microphone was kind of
[00:55:04] mounted on him. It wasn't mounted flat
[00:55:05] against his body. It was kind of like
[00:55:06] stood on its side. And then I'm going to
[00:55:08] rewind
[00:55:10] from the start.
[00:55:10] >> You know, like a um a rocket engine when
[00:55:13] you uh when you launch a rocket engine,
[00:55:14] it just doesn't explode everywhere. It
[00:55:15] sends a direct a directed path in one
[00:55:17] direction. And that causes a trajectory
[00:55:18] and it follows that trajectory quickly.
[00:55:20] >> So that would mean in this case equal
[00:55:21] and opposite reaction that would mean
[00:55:23] that the shape would have had to been
[00:55:24] pointed down and away from him. Correct.
[00:55:25] To push everything up towards him,
[00:55:26] >> right? And and so the variable comes in
[00:55:28] is the primer charge where they have to
[00:55:30] create the standoff space. So combined
[00:55:32] with the odd angle that the microphone
[00:55:34] was kind of mounted on him, it wasn't
[00:55:35] mounted it flat against his body. It was
[00:55:36] kind of like stood on its side. And then
[00:55:38] the standoff charge, which is my belief
[00:55:41] that they anticipated the mic to be flat
[00:55:42] on his body. and the standoff charge was
[00:55:44] made to to raise the microphone directly
[00:55:45] away from its body before the primary
[00:55:46] shape charge went off. But because the
[00:55:48] microphone was kind of mounted on its
[00:55:49] side, when the standoff charge went off,
[00:55:51] it lifted it up. So then it changed the
[00:55:52] trajectory when the shape charge went
[00:55:54] off, it basically created like a rocket
[00:55:55] engine that caused it to travel across
[00:55:57] his chest instead of it directing the
[00:55:59] charge directly into his chest. And a
[00:56:00] shape charge is 90% efficient, more than
[00:56:02] 90% efficient of directing the energy to
[00:56:04] one direction. So the whole equal and
[00:56:06] opposite, it doesn't really apply
[00:56:07] because we're sending less than a gram
[00:56:09] of metal cone in a high-speed jet into
[00:56:12] the flesh. So it's not like a bullet or
[00:56:13] a traditional ballistic where, you know,
[00:56:14] you're sending a heavy object in the
[00:56:15] opposite direction. How would this
[00:56:17] >> I would love to see Nate uh dissect this
[00:56:21] idea. I would love to see especially Zeb
[00:56:23] Boyin dissect this idea. Um I would love
[00:56:25] to see Chris Martinson apply his
[00:56:27] intellect to this idea. I would love to
[00:56:29] see the shills try to debunk this idea
[00:56:32] with serious math and analysis.
[00:56:34] >> This microphone exploded with enough
[00:56:35] force to kill someone. So, do you think
[00:56:36] that this has enough charge to cause all
[00:56:38] the reaction that we saw in that small
[00:56:39] of a package?
[00:56:39] >> It's because it's concentrating. It's
[00:56:40] like a water jet where you're basically
[00:56:41] taking all that energy in that in that
[00:56:44] charge and you're and you're directing
[00:56:45] it to a very small stream and because it
[00:56:47] it's you're creating an acceleration
[00:56:49] because you're forcing this expansive
[00:56:50] force down a very small cone.
[00:56:52] >> Is it hard to reproduce? Um, not if
[00:56:54] you're an explosives expert.
[00:56:57] I obviously I don't have the
[00:56:59] expertise to reproduce it. And even most
[00:57:01] people that are expert marksmen with a
[00:57:03] rifle, most of them would probably not
[00:57:04] have the skills to reproduce it. A
[00:57:07] Valhalla might have some experience with
[00:57:08] explosives. I don't know. Um I'm not
[00:57:11] sure, but you would need a very specific
[00:57:14] type of person to reproduce this safely.
[00:57:18] >> Um it it reaches
[00:57:20] >> uh this guy I don't believe is an
[00:57:21] explosives expert. He's expanding beyond
[00:57:23] his regular expertise. He's an expert in
[00:57:25] body armor and he helps repair and
[00:57:28] design body armor and stuff like that in
[00:57:30] his current career.
[00:57:31] >> Mach 7. So anything it contacts it
[00:57:32] basically turns it to liquid and so it's
[00:57:34] a deep penetrating. That's why they use
[00:57:36] flood would be familiar with it to
[00:57:37] defeat tank armor and things like that.
[00:57:38] But with soft tissue it's even more
[00:57:39] devastating because there's not as much
[00:57:41] resistance. So it would create a deep
[00:57:42] channel just like a 30 off 6 impact but
[00:57:45] it would do it with a minimum amount of
[00:57:46] charge less than two grams.
[00:57:47] >> So this is one of the pages from
[00:57:49] Lebanon.
[00:57:50] >> Yeah. That in particular is the the
[00:57:54] walkie-talkie.
[00:57:55] >> Walkie.
[00:57:55] >> See, he can recognize the photo right
[00:57:57] off because he's looked through all of
[00:58:01] not all of but a huge amount of evidence
[00:58:03] from the pager attacks. Um, that's how
[00:58:06] you note someone's expertise in a
[00:58:08] particular topic is when they're
[00:58:09] familiar with the source evidence.
[00:58:11] >> Okie dokie. Okay. So, now I'm just
[00:58:13] bringing this up because with the
[00:58:15] Candace kind of dropped that bomb in one
[00:58:16] of our videos saying that there's a
[00:58:17] little specks, the little black specks
[00:58:18] on the floor inside of her car. Have you
[00:58:20] seen that yet?
[00:58:20] >> Yeah.
[00:58:21] >> So, the car that Charlie was in and
[00:58:22] they're saying that that might be from,
[00:58:23] you know, people are implying that might
[00:58:24] be from the explosion like pieces of the
[00:58:25] pager or in this case of the audio um
[00:58:27] that exploded and these little tiny
[00:58:29] pieces they're seeing in the car were
[00:58:29] from that. What do you think about that?
[00:58:30] >> I believe
[00:58:31] >> I'm actually the one that sent the
[00:58:32] message about that. Um [laughter] the
[00:58:34] >> Yep. Um Stick says, "You can see the
[00:58:37] lower right side of Charlie's neck looks
[00:58:38] like it is being pushed up by
[00:58:39] something." Correct. And he comments on
[00:58:41] that, too.
[00:58:46] Um, the type of plastic that you
[00:58:54] um I don't think they made sure his
[00:58:55] shirt was tucked in. Do you mean when
[00:58:56] they carried him out? I don't know. But
[00:58:58] I do think that it's very likely that
[00:59:00] when they were rendering aid, what they
[00:59:02] were actually doing was cleaning up
[00:59:03] pieces of this operation. If if this is
[00:59:07] what happened, then that's definitely
[00:59:08] what they were doing. Hard to say for
[00:59:10] sure, but that makes me wonder like
[00:59:12] about the Y refi guy that was just
[00:59:15] incidentally over top of Charlie for the
[00:59:17] moment. I wonder what he saw because I
[00:59:20] can't imagine you're going to tell the
[00:59:21] fat Y Rei representative about
[00:59:24] your assassination plot, right? The dude
[00:59:28] smiling, Rick Cutler, he would be in on
[00:59:30] it if this happened. That's that's the
[00:59:31] kind of guy that would know. But the
[00:59:33] other guy that was standing over the top
[00:59:35] in the dark shirt, I wonder what he saw.
[00:59:38] And in the heat of the moment with
[00:59:39] bodies kind of over top of him, there
[00:59:41] would have been blood. Like there was
[00:59:42] going on. That kind of person might
[00:59:44] not even realize what they did see, but
[00:59:47] and it wasn't actually a handoff when
[00:59:49] Rick pointed back or maybe it was
[00:59:51] actually it might have been Brian that
[00:59:53] pointed back and the Y refi guy's hand
[00:59:55] kind of touched his hand. When you look
[00:59:57] at that in HD and you analyze it, they
[00:59:59] don't exchange anything between their
[01:00:00] hands. It's he's pointing and the guy in
[01:00:03] the dark shirt at first think he thinks
[01:00:05] that he's taking something from his
[01:00:06] hand. So he like reaches out to touch
[01:00:07] his hand. Then he realizes he's being
[01:00:09] directed to go to the car and he runs
[01:00:11] and turns around and goes to the car.
[01:00:13] [snorts and clears throat]
[01:00:14] >> You see in the floorboard too or would
[01:00:15] match the plastic you could expect from
[01:00:17] from that device. So you have flat black
[01:00:19] plastic and then you have glossy
[01:00:20] plastic. The glossy plastic is the
[01:00:21] actual
[01:00:21] >> Yeah. They were O crap and they
[01:00:23] surrounded him so you couldn't see his
[01:00:24] chest. Kind of seems that way.
[01:00:26] >> Face of the case which the battery is
[01:00:28] right behind that O there. So that
[01:00:30] immediate charge would basically shatter
[01:00:32] that into you know a million little
[01:00:34] pieces like glass. And then the primary
[01:00:36] charge would would further
[01:00:37] >> and then those little pieces would be
[01:00:39] stuck in Charlie's shirt. And in the
[01:00:41] car, if this is what happened, you would
[01:00:43] be the first thing you'd be doing is
[01:00:44] taking his shirt off and examining the
[01:00:46] injuries and figuring out what the
[01:00:48] went wrong and what you're going to need
[01:00:50] to do about it when you get to the
[01:00:51] hospital, taking away any evidence. And
[01:00:53] so that would explain why the shards
[01:00:55] would get all over the van and you
[01:00:56] wouldn't be able to clean them up. And
[01:00:58] you'd have to get rid of that
[01:00:59] car because it would those shards would
[01:01:02] just be everywhere.
[01:01:05] the break the inner core of the um of
[01:01:07] the device which you showed earlier when
[01:01:09] the battery was kind of popped out of
[01:01:10] the device. It's all flat black on the
[01:01:11] inside of it and um how thin that
[01:01:14] plastic is when it would break it would
[01:01:15] just shatter into small little pieces
[01:01:16] like that from the the the high pressure
[01:01:18] wave of the um the explosive. Like I
[01:01:19] said, it's a Mach 7, you know, jet
[01:01:21] that's going to be coming out of that
[01:01:22] device. It's just going to completely
[01:01:23] wreck anything. And it's not a hot
[01:01:25] explosion. It can reach, you know, 500
[01:01:27] degrees, but it does so in such a quick
[01:01:29] time that it doesn't really get time to
[01:01:30] transfer away. That's why it doesn't
[01:01:31] like burn things or leave burns on even
[01:01:33] on the victim. It would leave a wound
[01:01:35] that looked a lot like a rifle impact.
[01:01:37] >> Did you hear that? Is it that these
[01:01:40] shape charges apparently can happen so
[01:01:43] fast that they don't actually leave
[01:01:44] burns? They just penetrate directly.
[01:01:52] >> So, it's a quick release of energy, not
[01:01:54] a hot explosion.
[01:01:54] >> Yeah, that the the quickness of it is
[01:01:56] the the real key factor. It's it's
[01:01:58] extremely quick burning and clean
[01:01:59] burning explosion. Damn, Stacy in the
[01:02:01] house. Thank you, Stacy. That's how you
[01:02:04] know Stacy's woken up cuz she comes and
[01:02:06] drops the sub on the chat. Everybody say
[01:02:09] thanks to Stacy if you just got one of
[01:02:10] those 25 subs.
[01:02:12] >> And that kind of explains the high
[01:02:13] energy that we see, how fast it
[01:02:15] dissipates, you know, from the shirt. It
[01:02:16] causes a huge reaction, but then it goes
[01:02:17] away really fast.
[01:02:18] >> And just real quick, just to get this
[01:02:19] out of the way, do you think that
[01:02:20] there's any chance Charlie's still
[01:02:21] alive?
[01:02:21] >> Uh, if he's still alive, he's the
[01:02:23] greatest actor that's ever lived. I
[01:02:24] mean, he he nailed the physical reaction
[01:02:26] of a mid midbrain and brain stem damage
[01:02:28] and the way he hit the ground. You I
[01:02:30] have videos of him hitting the ground
[01:02:31] slow motion. It was just it was
[01:02:32] devastating. I mean, his head bounced
[01:02:33] off the ground. He was absolutely limp.
[01:02:35] I'm a firm I'm a firm believer that he
[01:02:37] was he was his heart was almost stopped
[01:02:39] before he hit the ground.
[01:02:40] >> Well, I know that Charles Mcccleintoch
[01:02:41] says he has an image where his neck is
[01:02:43] destroyed um based on the way his head
[01:02:45] >> I mean I wonder if there's a world in
[01:02:47] which this charge shot upwards through
[01:02:50] his neck into his brain. Like we still
[01:02:53] don't have an explanation for brain stem
[01:02:54] injury with any of the theories,
[01:02:56] including the mainstream one, right?
[01:03:00] But if it's down here and it's shooting
[01:03:02] up at him and there is a chest wound
[01:03:04] underneath there that we just didn't see
[01:03:06] blood come out of in initially. I mean
[01:03:09] maybe you could make the argument that
[01:03:10] it went up through his neck into his
[01:03:12] brain.
[01:03:15] Electrocution solves the brain stem
[01:03:16] injury. It does. And honestly if I were
[01:03:19] planning this kind of if this this kind
[01:03:21] of complex assassination I would want
[01:03:23] two methods of killing. I would want a
[01:03:25] backup strategy like electrocution.
[01:03:30] Um, that being said, I think these guys
[01:03:32] make a convincing argument against
[01:03:34] electrocution, but I'd be curious for
[01:03:36] your guys' opinion
[01:03:37] >> so that I mean I I know a lot of people
[01:03:39] would hope that he's still alive, but
[01:03:40] I'm not sure.
[01:03:41] >> Electricity is the trigger has something
[01:03:43] in it like PET or something in the
[01:03:45] necklace itself.
[01:03:45] >> Yeah, I've actually thought about that.
[01:03:46] the cross the pendant itself possibly
[01:03:48] having but um the um
[01:03:51] >> yeah C6 to C2 damage but in the opposite
[01:03:53] order that we've been told could be and
[01:03:55] it would help explain the cavitation
[01:03:57] right because there does appear to be
[01:03:59] cavitation in the neck
[01:04:03] and it peak out of the shirt still kind
[01:04:04] of intact maybe kind of leave that and
[01:04:08] it needs energetic means to you know it
[01:04:10] would be it'd be a lot more difficult to
[01:04:11] place an explosive independent of a
[01:04:13] cross and have a means to to trigger it
[01:04:15] than it would be in explains why Dan
[01:04:17] Flood pushes Charlie off the chair a
[01:04:20] little bit. I mean, you'd want to push
[01:04:21] him off the chair in any of these
[01:04:23] scenarios, including a shooter. So, it's
[01:04:26] kind of nothing,
[01:04:27] but yeah.
[01:04:29] >> And the microphone, the microphone is
[01:04:31] just the most convenient thing to target
[01:04:32] with explosives because you have you
[01:04:34] have a all the electronics, you have the
[01:04:36] battery, you know, it's going to be on
[01:04:37] his chest. Literally,
[01:04:38] >> there's a video showing entrance wound
[01:04:39] spray from behind his ear on his right
[01:04:42] side. I think he was shot from one of
[01:04:43] the balconies to his right. that video
[01:04:46] is is deceptive because it's low frame
[01:04:48] rate and bad quality. And when you see
[01:04:50] similar angles from higher quality, you
[01:04:53] learn that what that is is it's a
[01:04:55] blurred image of this uh piece of the
[01:04:59] necklace right here flying off and
[01:05:02] around the back. It's not actually blood
[01:05:04] spray. It's this movement right here
[01:05:06] from the ne the necklace doing that. And
[01:05:08] in those angles, it makes it look like
[01:05:11] like splatter, but it's not splatter.
[01:05:14] It's the [clears throat] necklace. And
[01:05:15] I've seen that from a number of
[01:05:16] different angles in very high quality uh
[01:05:19] footage. And I feel pretty confident. I
[01:05:23] mean, in in all of the high quality
[01:05:25] angles from this very back angle, you
[01:05:27] can see there's no blood splatter.
[01:05:29] There's no entrance wound that's
[01:05:30] visible. There's nothing of the sort on
[01:05:32] his back right side.
[01:05:35] I thought that at first, too. I was I
[01:05:37] that was something that range day bro
[01:05:39] brought up in his first big video
[01:05:41] [cough] but [clears throat] um I don't
[01:05:43] think so
[01:05:46] >> really against his chest. It's just it's
[01:05:47] just really really convenient and and he
[01:05:49] doesn't have it most of the time. His
[01:05:50] cross he's wearing you know all the
[01:05:51] time. It would just be a lot more
[01:05:52] difficult to get access to the cross to
[01:05:53] plant that explosive in it.
[01:05:54] >> Now this is a very common one.
[01:05:56] >> It's a good point that it would be very
[01:05:57] difficult to get access to the cross to
[01:05:59] plant an explosive in the cross. We're
[01:06:01] asking well if an explosion went off
[01:06:02] under a shirt, how come I didn't tear
[01:06:03] mark a shirt? Why are there no explosion
[01:06:05] marks? Why is there no tears or obvious?
[01:06:06] If there was enough force to kill them,
[01:06:08] then why wouldn't it have left some kind
[01:06:09] of marking or tearing
[01:06:10] >> and that's a very uh you know valid
[01:06:12] question and it's it comes down to the
[01:06:14] the use of the shape charge. Um they're
[01:06:16] made to be very efficient in directing
[01:06:18] that energy in one direction. So it's
[01:06:20] like having like I said before a rocket
[01:06:22] engine where you have a lot of
[01:06:22] propellant, you have a lot of energy,
[01:06:24] but there's only one path for it to
[01:06:25] escape and that path is through a very
[01:06:27] directed metal cone and as that
[01:06:28] explosion expands, it's slowly releasing
[01:06:30] out of that metal cone and creating a
[01:06:32] really high speed jet that penetrates
[01:06:33] into the flesh. So it's it's not like a
[01:06:35] a ballistic, you know, launch of a
[01:06:36] bullet where you have, you know, the the
[01:06:38] force of the bullet, you know, causing
[01:06:40] an equal and opposite force or like a
[01:06:41] traditional explosion where you have a
[01:06:42] radial force expanding everywhere. It's
[01:06:44] a very controlled explosion.
[01:06:45] >> All right. Now, let me ask you this.
[01:06:46] Because of the the new images that are
[01:06:48] coming out supposedly and Baron saying
[01:06:50] that he saw a burn under his nipple on
[01:06:52] the right side kind of down by his rib,
[01:06:53] >> could that be explained from the jet
[01:06:54] from the shape charge? Is that just that
[01:06:56] area as it was being going off? I would
[01:06:58] say it's probably more from the the um
[01:07:00] the primer charge where they they had to
[01:07:01] have a primary kind of like a priming
[01:07:04] explosive to create the space they
[01:07:05] needed between the device and his flesh
[01:07:07] for the shape charge to do his work. The
[01:07:08] shape charge is just going to leave a
[01:07:10] very you know small round very clean
[01:07:13] hole.
[01:07:13] >> Yeah, I think like a claymore charge
[01:07:15] pointed in a specific direction
[01:07:17] >> um and um you know like the Israel.
[01:07:19] >> How does Baron know about that nipple
[01:07:20] burn? He has a photo that other people
[01:07:22] don't have.
[01:07:24] >> Attacks of the with a with the msad
[01:07:26] attacks with the pager. They were
[01:07:27] designed to send shrapnel to their face
[01:07:28] or someone holding the device in their
[01:07:30] hands. So there's not a direct analog
[01:07:32] even though they used the same type of
[01:07:33] explosive hidden in a battery. It wasn't
[01:07:35] they weren't designed to explode right
[01:07:36] on the person's body or like a shaped
[01:07:38] charge which would be few centimeters
[01:07:39] away from the body. They were designed
[01:07:40] for someone to push a button looking at
[01:07:42] the pedal at their face basically. So um
[01:07:45] that's why we see the differences of you
[01:07:46] know from a traditional explosive. It's
[01:07:47] not something that that uh
[01:07:49] >> I don't know as I'm like a modern Batman
[01:07:51] guys. I I ain't got no Bruce Wayne side.
[01:07:53] I'm just me. But I appreciate the hype.
[01:07:56] were a custom machine. You can look at
[01:07:57] examples of, you know, armor penetrating
[01:08:00] shape
[01:08:02] >> 03x boot. You've made shape
[01:08:05] charges. Who are you, dog?
[01:08:08] Works to blow very specific holes in
[01:08:10] things when you're in the Marine Corps.
[01:08:12] dog. So, boot, in the sake of
[01:08:16] trust me, broing you, um, and trusting
[01:08:19] your Marine Corps time,
[01:08:22] how does this sound to you? Give it like
[01:08:24] a zero to 100% plausibility rating, Mr.
[01:08:28] Marine Co. Core, based on what you know
[01:08:31] of shape charges. Let the chat know
[01:08:34] if you think 0 to 100% possibility. It's
[01:08:38] like maybe nah, not a chance.
[01:08:43] Can we visit direct energy weapon
[01:08:45] possibility?
[01:08:47] Yeah, but it wouldn't be anything like
[01:08:48] any direct energy weapon that we know
[01:08:50] about. Sounds extremely plausible to
[01:08:52] you. Okay, that's interesting to know.
[01:08:54] It sounds like we should get some people
[01:08:56] that are work with shape charges to
[01:08:58] start talking on the record.
[01:09:01] 92 [clears throat] to 94% says another
[01:09:04] trust me bro in the chat.
[01:09:07] I mean they just did the pagers, right?
[01:09:09] So
[01:09:12] charges and kind of see how cleanly they
[01:09:14] >> and that's because that's why I didn't
[01:09:15] initially give it much much weight
[01:09:17] because I don't have any expertise in
[01:09:19] explosives obviously and I don't really
[01:09:21] know much of anything about shape
[01:09:22] charges. So, I just immediately thought
[01:09:23] about regular explosions and was like,
[01:09:25] "Dude, it's not an exploding microphone
[01:09:26] because I don't see an explosion."
[01:09:28] >> And so, once you start to get more
[01:09:31] expert analyses, it's like, "Oh, that
[01:09:33] actually does make a lot of
[01:09:34] sense."
[01:09:35] >> The holes and how they don't they don't
[01:09:37] have to put a backing on it. They just
[01:09:38] set it on the on the metal, right? And
[01:09:40] it it makes a big giant hole.
[01:09:41] >> A lot of people don't realize, too, that
[01:09:42] it's use on a much larger scale. They
[01:09:43] use it in war. They shape charges to
[01:09:45] blow through tanks and stuff like that.
[01:09:46] So, the technology is [clears throat]
[01:09:48] just miniaturaturized for this use case.
[01:09:49] >> Yeah. And it's very quiet, too. It
[01:09:50] sounds like a firework. So, you know,
[01:09:52] that's that that's other thing about the
[01:09:53] the
[01:09:53] >> you watched a video posted in summer and
[01:09:55] charge wound was compared to a 30 six
[01:09:57] wound before September. What
[01:10:02] >> rifle is like you wouldn't need a lot of
[01:10:04] sound to kind of muffle it and make it
[01:10:05] where people wouldn't notice that there
[01:10:07] was explosion you know right on his
[01:10:08] person if just you know any sort of
[01:10:10] distraction would make it easy for
[01:10:11] people to overlook it.
[01:10:12] >> So what are your thoughts on the sound
[01:10:13] itself? So a lot of audio engineers and
[01:10:15] um audio forensics people are saying
[01:10:16] that there was a crack thump that was
[01:10:18] consistent with a high power rifle and
[01:10:19] all those things. So what are your
[01:10:20] thoughts on that? I absolutely think
[01:10:21] that there was a 30 off6 shot that day.
[01:10:23] Uh that I think there was a supersonic
[01:10:25] crack. Um you know uh all that
[01:10:27] definitely happened, but I think it was
[01:10:29] more of a ruse to provide cover for the
[01:10:31] explosion and also to tie the the
[01:10:33] assassination to the patch. The area
[01:10:35] that it happened in is so tricky because
[01:10:37] there's there's a corridor, there's
[01:10:38] concrete walls on both sides, like large
[01:10:40] flat concrete walls and then we're
[01:10:41] dealing with uh audio from cell phones
[01:10:43] which are, you know, it's they clip.
[01:10:45] There's a lot of there's a lot of
[01:10:46] challenges. And the biggest biggest
[01:10:47] thing I have a problem with is that the
[01:10:48] the rifle sound came through the PA
[01:10:49] system. If you look at the videos, all
[01:10:50] the videos that the cameras can see the
[01:10:52] PA speakers, the rifle sound is so much
[01:10:54] louder than the videos where the cameras
[01:10:56] aren't in direct sight of the speakers.
[01:10:58] >> Okay. Say that again.
[01:11:00] >> The the rifle sound was played through
[01:11:01] the PA speakers. So the the speakers
[01:11:02] that were playing Charlie's voice and
[01:11:04] you know the the person that he was
[01:11:06] >> here, we're going to come back to what
[01:11:07] he's saying about the speakers.
[01:11:12] >> Three, two, one.
[01:11:16] >> Oh my god, that was a loud shape charge.
[01:11:19] Yes, we did it. Look how clean that is.
[01:11:23] That was very loud.
[01:11:31] I'm going to have to watch through this
[01:11:32] and get an analysis of what type of
[01:11:35] charge they're using.
[01:11:40] >> Good day.
[01:11:40] >> That is much different than I was
[01:11:42] expecting.
[01:11:42] >> Look how shiny it is.
[01:11:43] >> That's the crystallin structure of raw
[01:11:45] tungsten. Well, I'm glad it did
[01:11:47] something. I think we're going to break
[01:11:48] it. This is going to go away today.
[01:11:50] >> So, they're shooting holes straight
[01:11:51] through tungsten cubes with shape
[01:11:53] charges
[01:11:56] >> and they're doing it in slow motion.
[01:11:59] >> Conicle is so much brighter.
[01:12:04] >> Obviously, this is a different kind of
[01:12:06] charge than we're talking about.
[01:12:08] >> All right, there is the hot,
[01:12:09] >> but I'll have to do some digging into
[01:12:10] shape charges.
[01:12:14] All the videos that the cameras can see
[01:12:16] the PA speakers, the rifle sound is so
[01:12:17] much louder than the videos where the
[01:12:20] cameras aren't in direct sight of the
[01:12:22] speakers.
[01:12:22] >> Okay, say that again.
[01:12:23] >> The the rifle sound was played through
[01:12:25] the PA speakers. So the the speakers
[01:12:26] that were playing Charlie's voice and
[01:12:28] you know the the person that he was
[01:12:29] asked taking questions from, the rifle
[01:12:31] sound was without a doubt played through
[01:12:32] those speakers. Now whether that's
[01:12:33] Charlie's microphone picked it up or
[01:12:35] some other means, but you can't deny
[01:12:37] that the videos that are close to the
[01:12:38] speakers, the rifle sounds much louder
[01:12:40] than the the videos of the where the
[01:12:42] camera's not in direct sight of the
[01:12:44] speakers.
[01:12:44] >> So people asking about what about
[01:12:45] obviously the electrocution theory and
[01:12:47] or a taser. Would that explain what
[01:12:48] you're seeing with the body reaction?
[01:12:50] >> Um with one hand, but the the hand
[01:12:52] that's not holding like that picture I
[01:12:53] showed you where his his fingers are
[01:12:54] almost like crossed and you know his his
[01:12:56] knees coming together. Um you if you've
[01:12:58] ever been electrocuted, it affects where
[01:13:00] the the electricity is flowing. So, his
[01:13:01] hand that's holding the microphone,
[01:13:02] which I'm I'm using the exact same mic
[01:13:03] that Charlie used that day, by the way.
[01:13:05] >> Yes, sir. Um, it would definitely grasp.
[01:13:08] He would grasp and hold that microphone
[01:13:09] from that electricity, but that current
[01:13:10] would be traveling through his arm,
[01:13:11] through the chair, down to the ground.
[01:13:13] And that's the other problem is that
[01:13:14] he's sitting on a chair that has a
[01:13:16] plastic seat and he's sitting on like a
[01:13:17] memory foam cushion, and then he's on a
[01:13:19] platform that has a composite top and
[01:13:20] aluminum aluminum frame. So, like the
[01:13:22] path of conductivity is not very good
[01:13:24] either. Um, can it happen? Absolutely. I
[01:13:25] was shocked. You know, when I first
[01:13:26] heard it, I was very dismissive. But
[01:13:27] when I research, people get shocked by
[01:13:29] these microphones all the time because
[01:13:31] there's a ground. There's three prongs.
[01:13:32] One prong is a grounding prong. And if
[01:13:33] you're if it's hooked to a PA system
[01:13:34] that's not grounded properly, anything
[01:13:36] that's amplified on that PA system can
[01:13:38] send that voltage through you. And it it
[01:13:39] takes a lot less voltage to kill you
[01:13:40] than I ever imagined. So, it absolutely
[01:13:41] is possible. It absolutely could happen,
[01:13:43] but I don't think his physical reactions
[01:13:45] necessarily match that. And then there's
[01:13:46] two other too many other unexplained
[01:13:48] things like what caused the necklace to
[01:13:49] flop his head? What caused the shirt to
[01:13:50] balloon around? What caused the neck
[01:13:51] wound? you know, it would be like
[01:13:53] unnecessary addition to already
[01:13:55] complicated attempt assassination
[01:13:57] attempt. You know, if they
[01:13:58] >> So, one of the tough things about the
[01:13:59] shape charge videos is that a lot of the
[01:14:01] shape charge videos because shape
[01:14:02] charges, excuse me, because shape
[01:14:05] charges get used to blow holes in tanks,
[01:14:08] a lot of the shape charge videos are
[01:14:09] using super high power shape charges,
[01:14:11] the kind of things you would use to blow
[01:14:13] through a tank. Um, or they're like just
[01:14:15] exploding entire model heads with shape
[01:14:17] charges just because it looks badass.
[01:14:19] So, I don't know as we're going to ever
[01:14:21] find yet a example of a shape charge of
[01:14:26] the specificity that we're talking
[01:14:28] about, [cough]
[01:14:30] but [clears throat] um
[01:14:32] there are a couple of shape charge
[01:14:34] videos out there and there's one in
[01:14:35] particular that we're about to watch.
[01:14:37] Actually, we'll just do it right now.
[01:14:38] Shape charge, an explosive in which the
[01:14:41] energy is focused.
[01:14:42] >> This isn't a real shape charge. It's
[01:14:44] just a visualization. A shape charge is
[01:14:46] used when a barrier needs to be breached
[01:14:48] with a limited amount of explosive.
[01:14:51] There are many type of shape charges.
[01:14:53] Here we'll show a common type.
[01:14:57] First, there is the casing which will
[01:14:59] contain the explosive. Next, the housing
[01:15:02] which will contain the detonator.
[01:15:05] Now, the metal liner. The liner material
[01:15:08] and shape is the most important part of
[01:15:10] a shape charge. We'll see why shortly.
[01:15:13] The line I use in this example is made
[01:15:14] of copper. Next is
[01:15:17] >> hence how you get copper into the wound.
[01:15:19] >> The main explosive itself followed by
[01:15:21] the booster explosive. Finally, the
[01:15:23] detonator is added. An electrical charge
[01:15:26] is used to trigger the detonator.
[01:15:28] >> An electrical charge is used to trigger
[01:15:30] the detonator.
[01:15:33] >> The detonator causes the booster to
[01:15:35] explode with enough force to cause the
[01:15:37] less sensitive main explosive to
[01:15:38] explode. As the shock fun travels
[01:15:40] through the main explosive, it squeezes
[01:15:42] the liner into a thin jet which is then
[01:15:44] expelled at very high speed away from
[01:15:46] the explosive without melting. The
[01:15:48] kinetic energy alone of the liner is now
[01:15:50] able to cut through a thick barrier at a
[01:15:53] >> Does that make sense? [cough]
[01:15:55] >> Flow with enough force to cause the less
[01:15:57] sensitive.
[01:15:58] >> So it actually melts the liner
[01:16:00] >> as the shoots the liner the hole. It
[01:16:02] squeezes the liner into a thin jet which
[01:16:04] is then expelled at very high speed away
[01:16:06] from the explosive without melting. The
[01:16:09] kinetic energy alone of the liner is now
[01:16:11] able to cut through a thick barrier at a
[01:16:13] precise location.
[01:16:17] Interesting.
[01:16:19] Interesting.
[01:16:21] Not the type of explosions that most of
[01:16:24] us were familiar with.
[01:16:26] it was done nefariously, you know, and
[01:16:28] then he's holding the microphone on and
[01:16:29] off. Like what would trigger it all of a
[01:16:31] sudden to start electrocuting them?
[01:16:33] Usually there's something that causes it
[01:16:34] like someone hugs someone that's wet or
[01:16:35] they drop it in water or, you know, they
[01:16:37] pick it up for the first time. Like
[01:16:38] there has to be a variable that changes
[01:16:39] for it to all of a sudden start to
[01:16:40] electrocute you.
[01:16:41] >> I think some people are saying like
[01:16:42] nefarious reasons, right? Like someone
[01:16:43] flipped the switch, they took away the
[01:16:44] ground, right? That's kind of what I
[01:16:45] think that theory is based on.
[01:16:46] >> Yeah. And I think it's absolutely
[01:16:47] doable. It wouldn't take a lot, but it
[01:16:49] doesn't explain everything we saw.
[01:16:50] >> Yeah. Yeah. I agree. So he's on some
[01:16:51] kind of either carpet or industrial
[01:16:52] rubber or like tough coat and those are
[01:16:53] all designed design designed to be
[01:16:54] nonconductive.
[01:16:55] >> But in so if you get a chance after this
[01:16:57] go check
[01:16:57] >> you use plastic caps from Javelin
[01:16:59] missiles you believe to make the shape
[01:17:02] then used a small disc of copper on top
[01:17:04] of the C4. Interesting. So you were like
[01:17:07] making jerryrigged shape charges
[01:17:11] in the military. That's pretty neat.
[01:17:12] [laughter]
[01:17:17] Might be doing electrocution. the one
[01:17:18] where the blue thumbnail, but I spent
[01:17:20] like 50 minutes talking about all the
[01:17:21] different ways he could have been
[01:17:22] electrocuted besides the microphone
[01:17:23] itself. But one thing I want to point
[01:17:24] out too is you were talking about the
[01:17:25] way his, you know, his both hands came
[01:17:26] up, but it was only in his left hand.
[01:17:28] And typically,
[01:17:28] >> I think if you are playing out this
[01:17:30] theory and you, you know, that's the
[01:17:32] thing is that, yeah, it was fun. You
[01:17:34] sound like a homie. [snorts] Um, yeah.
[01:17:37] So, when you play a theory out, you have
[01:17:39] to, it's not that you're saying I
[01:17:41] believe the theory is true. You're
[01:17:43] saying that in order to understand the
[01:17:45] implications of the theory, you have to
[01:17:46] work within the sandbox that the theory
[01:17:48] implies. And this theory obviously
[01:17:50] obviously implies Israeli military
[01:17:53] intelligence or some military
[01:17:55] intelligence, right? It implies
[01:17:57] highlevel professional operation. And so
[01:18:00] if you're in a high level professional
[01:18:02] operation like that, you're not going to
[01:18:04] um
[01:18:07] [laughter]
[01:18:08] 0311, you made that name as a joke.
[01:18:11] Yeah. So if you're in a high level
[01:18:13] military operation, you're not going to
[01:18:15] rely on Brian Harple hitting the button
[01:18:17] at the exact right time to like match
[01:18:19] with a gunshot that's off somewhere to
[01:18:21] be a distraction and to draw attention
[01:18:23] to the shooter on the roof. That's going
[01:18:26] to be either radio electronically that's
[01:18:28] going to be timed in some high-tech way,
[01:18:32] right? And so maybe it's the electrical
[01:18:36] charge of an electrocution setting off
[01:18:38] the charge. Maybe it's some sort of
[01:18:40] electrical timing mechanism that's
[01:18:42] setting off everything at once. Um, I
[01:18:45] would assume in this instance that the
[01:18:47] rifle is rigged with something to have
[01:18:49] it timed to the same signal. So, I would
[01:18:52] assume that it wouldn't actually be a
[01:18:53] person pulling the trigger trigger on
[01:18:55] whatever rifle was fired if you're
[01:18:57] playing out that theory, right? That's
[01:19:01] my best read of the situation. I'd be
[01:19:02] curious what you guys think. you're
[01:19:05] electrocuted, that hand would grip on
[01:19:06] the other one would still be free to
[01:19:07] move and he'd probably be trying to rip
[01:19:07] it out of his hand and stuff like that.
[01:19:08] >> And yeah, we might have some choice
[01:19:09] words about Nicki Minaj later that the
[01:19:11] other thing is, and this was pointed out
[01:19:13] by Elgist, but he had his hands down in
[01:19:15] his lap with both hands on it when it
[01:19:16] started, right?
[01:19:17] >> So, he would have probably stayed in
[01:19:18] that position and gotten shot in both
[01:19:19] hands and been locked in that position.
[01:19:20] Right.
[01:19:21] >> So, this is interesting questioning of
[01:19:23] the electrocution theory is that when
[01:19:25] Charlie's hit, his hands are in his lap
[01:19:27] and then he comes up into this position
[01:19:29] sort of um which is interesting. doesn't
[01:19:34] exactly align with the electrocution
[01:19:35] theory, but I I don't know. I'm no
[01:19:37] electrical engineer.
[01:19:38] >> The fact the fact that he let go with
[01:19:40] one hand and had it in his other hand
[01:19:41] and was moving and stuff freely kind of
[01:19:42] I don't I don't want to say it like
[01:19:43] completely debunks it, but it doesn't
[01:19:44] look good for that theory.
[01:19:45] >> Yeah, it doesn't look like electrocution
[01:19:47] to me. I would say that there's from
[01:19:48] analyzing all the videos, there's
[01:19:49] definitely been a few videos that I'm
[01:19:50] very suspect of. The metadata doesn't
[01:19:52] match. They're made like 10 12 days
[01:19:54] after the event and then they're just so
[01:19:56] highly compressed. Um, and it's so easy
[01:19:58] to
[01:19:59] >> it's possible that that what they just
[01:20:01] said about the electrical electrocution,
[01:20:03] right, is that it could be a neuro
[01:20:04] response. So, it's like, yeah, maybe
[01:20:05] both hands aren't on the microphone, but
[01:20:07] maybe the electrocution is causing a
[01:20:09] neurological response that causes the
[01:20:11] corticate posturing and causes the
[01:20:12] clenching in both hands. So, I would be
[01:20:14] curious for some experts to kind of talk
[01:20:15] that through a little more because I
[01:20:17] could see it going either way, being not
[01:20:19] an expert at all
[01:20:20] >> to modify videos nowadays.
[01:20:21] >> Yeah, severe brain trauma
[01:20:22] >> injury. What I look for is consistency
[01:20:24] between angles. I know the first few
[01:20:25] angles that came out, they came out so
[01:20:27] fast after event that there's very
[01:20:28] little time for everyone when to fake
[01:20:29] them and they all happen to be very
[01:20:30] consistent from frame to frame. You
[01:20:31] don't see anything unique frame to frame
[01:20:33] and those
[01:20:34] >> I agree with that analysis of the early
[01:20:36] videos that came out
[01:20:37] >> videos than you see in you know any of
[01:20:39] the other originals. So whenever I see a
[01:20:40] video that has a even a unique frame I'm
[01:20:42] always very suspect of it.
[01:20:43] >> Another thing too that Jason Goodman
[01:20:44] pointed out um I know people have a lot
[01:20:46] of different feelings about his theory
[01:20:47] and that kind of stuff. One thing he was
[01:20:48] pointing out early on was um that there
[01:20:50] was like 15 I think it was was it 15 or
[01:20:52] 10 frames per second videos that were
[01:20:53] released
[01:20:54] >> which that is not normal frame rate for
[01:20:56] any device I've ever seen in my entire
[01:20:57] life. So obviously
[01:20:57] >> one thing I really like about Jason
[01:20:59] Goodman um other than his temper is that
[01:21:03] um he's very experienced in
[01:21:05] audiovisisual engineering and in cameras
[01:21:08] and lenses and so Jason has really
[01:21:11] highlevel analysis of video frames and
[01:21:14] frame rates and all the rest of it. So,
[01:21:17] um I do appreciate his expertise on that
[01:21:18] a lot.
[01:21:25] >> It's been manipulated in some kind of
[01:21:26] way.
[01:21:26] >> Yeah. And if you've ever done any work
[01:21:28] with like, you know, AI engine, like it
[01:21:29] wants to do less frames. It'll do
[01:21:31] whatever it can to double frames. It'll
[01:21:32] do, you know, it's very lazy in its
[01:21:34] processing. Um and to do 30 frames a
[01:21:36] second is a lot of work. So, if it can
[01:21:38] cheat a little bit and, you know, do 10
[01:21:40] frames, then it will. The sound would be
[01:21:42] very quiet, very directed. So only the
[01:21:44] people that were really close to Charlie
[01:21:45] would even be able to really perceive
[01:21:46] it. It would be no louder than an M80
[01:21:48] firecracker.
[01:21:50] >> Do we remember if there were any um
[01:21:54] any eyewitness reports of two different
[01:21:56] sounds.
[01:21:59] I don't exactly remember.
[01:22:05] I kind of feel like there were some
[01:22:06] eyewitness reports that at the time
[01:22:10] referred to sort of two different
[01:22:12] sounds.
[01:22:13] Right. Yeah. Brian Harple, right?
[01:22:17] Didn't Brian Harple say that?
[01:22:21] Yeah. The girl on the roof said two
[01:22:23] shots.
[01:22:25] Maybe the goth girls are
[01:22:26] dropping heat, dude.
[01:22:29] Maybe the goth girls have been dropping
[01:22:30] the heat all along. Maybe the secret to
[01:22:33] cracking the case has been with the
[01:22:35] Goth girls from square one, dog.
[01:22:40] Yeah. Didn't Harpoon say it? I'm pretty
[01:22:42] sure that Harpold describes something of
[01:22:44] that variety as well at some point.
[01:22:48] And obviously I don't trust witness
[01:22:51] reporting that much either, but it's
[01:22:53] just an interesting data point, right?
[01:22:56] It's an interesting data point because
[01:22:59] then you would have the sound of the
[01:23:01] rifle boom and you would have this like
[01:23:05] crack of the like of the shape charge
[01:23:08] that would be almost simultaneous but
[01:23:10] depending where you were in the crowd
[01:23:13] they would hit you at slightly different
[01:23:15] times probably.
[01:23:17] Yeah. Harpel said he heard the bullet
[01:23:19] enter his neck right
[01:23:22] which is obviously he didn't hear that.
[01:23:26] So,
[01:23:28] right, like are we hearing the
[01:23:31] testimonies reflecting a failure to
[01:23:33] understand these two different audio
[01:23:35] signatures?
[01:23:37] Could be not super strong evidence, but
[01:23:40] just an interesting data point.
[01:23:42] >> And I think that's where the key of the
[01:23:43] rifle shot kind of comes into play, too.
[01:23:44] But in my mind, as you know, the wouldbe
[01:23:46] assassin planning this, the rifle shot
[01:23:48] not only provides a tie to the psy guy,
[01:23:51] but it also provides perfect cover for
[01:23:53] the uh explosion. And can you ask an
[01:23:55] >> So that
[01:23:57] also lends evidence to Candice reporting
[01:24:01] that the guy that both that all the
[01:24:04] videos that showed the person running on
[01:24:06] the roof had really weird chains of
[01:24:07] custody. That all the videos that were
[01:24:10] like organic crowd videos of the guy on
[01:24:13] the roof running away and the video from
[01:24:15] before when he came and laid down to
[01:24:17] take the shot but conveniently didn't
[01:24:19] film him taking the shot. They were all
[01:24:21] military people that weren't students
[01:24:25] that had really weird chains of custody
[01:24:26] onto the internet when Candace tracked
[01:24:28] those people down.
[01:24:31] And that would go with the that would
[01:24:34] follow a sort of very intelligence
[01:24:37] agency tactic of fake organic releasing
[01:24:40] information that would turn everyone's
[01:24:42] attention towards the magic trick and
[01:24:46] away from everything else, right?
[01:24:50] Right. Look over here, not over there.
[01:24:53] And the analysis is very accurate that
[01:24:55] that Baron did last night and these guys
[01:24:57] touch on a little bit that when you
[01:24:59] point everyone up towards this character
[01:25:00] on the roof and then you release the
[01:25:02] video of him running away on the roof
[01:25:03] and then he jumps down and they
[01:25:05] purposfully zoom it in so that you don't
[01:25:07] see the white car in the parking lot,
[01:25:09] but you do see the guy running and
[01:25:10] crossing the street and he goes directly
[01:25:13] over towards the woods. Suddenly, it's
[01:25:15] very like, oh, we're looking in the
[01:25:17] woods for a rifle, which allegedly we
[01:25:20] didn't find on the first pass, but who
[01:25:21] knows?
[01:25:23] And so, it it does feel an awful lot
[01:25:26] like directed attention operations.
[01:25:30] It really does.
[01:25:32] And having been to that location in the
[01:25:35] woods, the place where the rifle was
[01:25:37] just set down, dropped
[01:25:41] like,
[01:25:42] yeah, you could come up with a lot of
[01:25:44] better places to hide the rifle just
[01:25:46] within throwing distance of that spot.
[01:25:49] Places where the dogs would have found
[01:25:51] it if the dogs had found it, but where a
[01:25:53] regular police recruit probably wouldn't
[01:25:57] have. I've been to those woods.
[01:25:59] >> Sorry, we're having to play the
[01:26:00] telephone game. Okay. But can you ask
[01:26:02] John if he's comfortable? At one point
[01:26:03] we had talked a little bit about the
[01:26:05] timing of the plant explosion that had
[01:26:09] happened in Tennessee. Um spicy. Can you
[01:26:11] ask him if he's if he's comfortable
[01:26:12] talking about that or if he's thought
[01:26:13] any more about that?
[01:26:14] >> Okay. Kelly's asking about the plant
[01:26:15] explosion in Tennessee and if you're
[01:26:16] comfortable talking more about that or
[01:26:18] or not.
[01:26:18] >> Oh yeah, absolutely. Um so this was just
[01:26:21] another one of those things.
[01:26:22] >> So I didn't know about this until Baron
[01:26:24] talked about it yesterday. I've been
[01:26:25] really distracted doing other projects
[01:26:27] behind the scenes getting buyer app out.
[01:26:29] I've had a lot of other stuff on my
[01:26:30] plate for the last couple weeks here and
[01:26:32] I did not know about this plant
[01:26:34] explosion until last night. So, we're
[01:26:37] about to dig into it together a little
[01:26:38] bit.
[01:26:39] >> I was just there's a certain amount of
[01:26:41] coincidences you can overlook. But one
[01:26:42] thing
[01:26:42] >> Do you think the hands in the casket are
[01:26:44] also a diversion? Um I certainly don't
[01:26:46] think they look like Charlie's hands.
[01:26:47] They look like wax hands to me.
[01:26:50] >> Start to get like highly weird. It it
[01:26:51] becomes hard to ignore it. So the AES
[01:26:53] plant in Tennessee were actually
[01:26:54] contracted to make these microshaped
[01:26:56] charges. They processed the same
[01:26:57] explosive that I proposed is in this
[01:26:59] device. They actually make the very
[01:27:00] device that I propose assassinated
[01:27:02] Charlie 30 days after the the uh not
[01:27:06] event at UVU.
[01:27:06] >> So listen to this manufacturing plant.
[01:27:08] There's a certain amount of coincidences
[01:27:09] you can overlook, but when things start
[01:27:10] to get like highly weird, it it becomes
[01:27:12] hard to ignore. So the AES plant in
[01:27:14] Tennessee, their defense contractor,
[01:27:16] they're they were actually contracted to
[01:27:17] make these microshaped charges. They
[01:27:19] process the same explosive that I
[01:27:20] proposed is in this device. They
[01:27:22] actually make the very device that
[01:27:23] proposed assassinated Charlie
[01:27:27] and then that plant goes big tits up one
[01:27:32] month later
[01:27:34] basically. Exactly.
[01:27:40] [clears throat]
[01:27:51] She gone.
[01:27:57] Super gone.
[01:28:04] Yeah. And it killed everyone. Highly
[01:28:07] tragic.
[01:28:14] And you have to assume that like in
[01:28:17] America,
[01:28:18] these kinds of accidents don't just
[01:28:20] happen all the time.
[01:28:24] Maybe like over in Lebanon or Yemen,
[01:28:29] but in America,
[01:28:31] that's awfully coincidental.
[01:28:36] It was the month after, not the month
[01:28:38] before.
[01:28:41] And you have to imagine, so play the
[01:28:43] theory out, right? Every time you're
[01:28:44] trying to work within a certain theory,
[01:28:46] you have to remember the con constraints
[01:28:48] of that theory. So in this theory,
[01:28:52] military operation has an explosive in
[01:28:54] the mic, has all these other complex
[01:28:56] setups to kind of drive the narrative,
[01:28:58] and they're expecting it to be a chest
[01:29:00] wound probably, and it just looks like a
[01:29:02] chest wound. It's a 30 sex, 30 six to
[01:29:05] the chest. All very explainable. the the
[01:29:08] wound, the blood, everything links up to
[01:29:10] that and it's all good and you're
[01:29:11] covered.
[01:29:13] You've got distractions, you've got a
[01:29:15] psy, you've got a rifle, it's all lined
[01:29:17] up.
[01:29:18] In the theoretical version, it's all
[01:29:21] clean and they're done. But then with
[01:29:23] the accidental discharge of this piece
[01:29:25] that hits his neck and then suddenly the
[01:29:27] narrative is at his neck, not at his
[01:29:29] chest, you have to pivot to it hit him
[01:29:31] in the neck. you have to go to Neck of
[01:29:33] Steel and oh no and cover everything up
[01:29:36] and don't release the autopsy and all
[01:29:37] this other Then you're like, "Oh
[01:29:39] we need to cover up the evidence
[01:29:41] of the shape charge immediately."
[01:29:44] high explosive material is trackable
[01:29:47] and then one month later the plant that
[01:29:50] that creates these exactive exact
[01:29:53] explosives just [snorts] blows up
[01:29:56] because it would if you're in that world
[01:29:58] in this theory it would take a little
[01:30:00] bit of time to devise a covert way to
[01:30:04] blow up that plant. You couldn't just do
[01:30:06] it immediately, but you'd want to do it
[01:30:08] as fast as possible,
[01:30:12] which is also why they would repave
[01:30:14] because then you would have toxic
[01:30:15] explosive material in the grass
[01:30:19] as well as maybe other shrapnel and
[01:30:20] other evidence.
[01:30:27] So, and they auctioned off the car.
[01:30:34] Yeah.
[01:30:37] And yeah, that theory would include them
[01:30:39] murdering all 16 employees that were at
[01:30:40] the plant that day.
[01:30:46] The company is literally called Accurate
[01:30:48] Energetic Systems because they create
[01:30:51] shaped charges. I presume
[01:31:01] that is tragic.
[01:31:07] As we get into this, we find it even
[01:31:09] more devastating than we thought
[01:31:10] initially.
[01:31:18] Trying to focus as much attention as we
[01:31:20] can on taking care of their families. I
[01:31:21] would love if you would investigate
[01:31:23] malfcence.
[01:31:26] It was the weirdest thing ever, she
[01:31:27] said. So then I'm like, are we in a
[01:31:29] tornado? Is there, you know, a bomb
[01:31:31] somewhere?
[01:31:43] It's one of the only businesses in this
[01:31:45] area. So, it's the only place, one of
[01:31:47] the only places for employment for
[01:31:48] locals.
[01:31:58] Damn.
[01:32:00] Holy
[01:32:03] This is Google Maps from the couple
[01:32:05] months before from the like earlier this
[01:32:07] year. And then this is aerial footage
[01:32:10] after the blast.
[01:32:12] The cars that we saw damaged were all
[01:32:14] the way down there in that lot.
[01:32:18] It got blown to tiny little bits.
[01:32:23] Whoa.
[01:32:26] That's wild.
[01:32:31] Yeah, 16 people and it didn't even get
[01:32:33] mentioned in the mainstream. Not a
[01:32:35] trace,
[01:32:36] right? Isn't that weird?
[01:32:40] Not even a mention. It got the Vegas
[01:32:42] treatment
[01:32:44] from day one.
[01:32:47] Nothing to see here.
[01:32:51] Just an accident.
[01:32:54] Yeah, we can't help but notice that the
[01:32:56] roof is not blue.
[01:33:00] Not a blue roof.
[01:33:08] Same Sky Five uh news footage.
[01:33:18] Same quotes used
[01:33:30] The sheriff said during an earlier
[01:33:32] briefing that this is a very big
[01:33:34] investigation. I sure hope so. I hope
[01:33:37] they investigate it to the fullest. I'm
[01:33:39] worried that they won't.
[01:33:44] Cause of the blast is not known.
[01:33:49] They're combing the incinerated property
[01:33:51] foot by foot, searching for possible
[01:33:52] evidence.
[01:34:02] That's dark.
[01:34:19] 16 confirmed victims.
[01:34:23] It happened at 7:45 a.m. Central time on
[01:34:27] Friday, September or October 11th.
[01:34:51] What caused the explosion? Not yet
[01:34:53] known. The investigation could take
[01:34:55] days. I bet it'll take forever. Oh,
[01:34:58] thank goodness though. The FBI
[01:35:01] is on the case.
[01:35:03] Isn't that reassuring?
[01:35:06] Thank god the FBI is on the case.
[01:35:09] Can we get a little bit of
[01:35:10] online uproar and noise about this
[01:35:14] explosion and get a get a proper
[01:35:15] investigation into this?
[01:35:18] Can we Can we get someone to ask a few
[01:35:21] questions about this explosion? Because
[01:35:23] I think we've got questions.
[01:35:26] I don't think we trust the FBI with this
[01:35:28] investigation.
[01:35:42] They also test explosives on their
[01:35:44] campus.
[01:35:46] [snorts]
[01:35:47] They've been awarded numerous military
[01:35:49] contracts, primarily from the US Army
[01:35:50] and Navy. Is this the contract that
[01:35:52] Baron was talking about yesterday?
[01:35:56] I need to go re-watch Baron's stream.
[01:35:59] Is this the military contract that Baron
[01:36:01] was tracking?
[01:36:07] Because Baron brought up a military
[01:36:09] contract. It is. Huh? No
[01:36:14] No
[01:36:17] That's wild.
[01:36:36] Wow.
[01:36:38] I'm gonna have to dig deeper into that.
[01:36:41] Um, this guy mentions tracking down the
[01:36:43] plant manager. This part is crazy. If
[01:36:46] you think that's wild, listen carefully
[01:36:47] to what uh John's about to say. 30 days
[01:36:50] after the the uh you know the event at
[01:36:53] UVU, the manufacturing plant that makes
[01:36:55] those microshaped chargers explodes into
[01:36:57] a million pieces.
[01:36:58] >> What are you saying? Say that again.
[01:37:00] >> The manufacturing plant that has a
[01:37:01] government contract to create these very
[01:37:02] devices that that I'm theorized killed
[01:37:04] Charlie exploded 30 days after the UVU
[01:37:06] event.
[01:37:07] >> Almost like a cover up.
[01:37:08] >> Exactly. So, you know, so I looked into
[01:37:11] the employees. I saw the victim list. 16
[01:37:12] employees died that day.
[01:37:14] >> Hey, dropping the contract number into
[01:37:16] the chat right there. freaking legend.
[01:37:22] >> Hey, God bless him. Um, but in the news
[01:37:25] report, it said the production manager
[01:37:27] was brand new to the job. So, it made me
[01:37:29] curious about what happened to the old
[01:37:30] production manager. When did he leave?
[01:37:31] And so, you know, I don't want to say
[01:37:32] the Gox the guy or anything, but you
[01:37:34] know, he literally left days after the
[01:37:36] event at the UVU and he doesn't have a
[01:37:38] new job. I wasn't able to contact him
[01:37:39] any numbers I could find. Like, it's
[01:37:41] very very odd. Like, he just kind of
[01:37:42] disappeared off the face of the earth.
[01:37:43] So, it's like you start to get the the
[01:37:46] vibes that something wasn't, you know,
[01:37:48] quite right there. It's suspicious
[01:37:49] timing to say the least.
[01:37:51] >> Yeah. I mean, all of that combined,
[01:37:52] that's I mean, if that's a that's
[01:37:54] definitely a could lead to chase, but
[01:37:55] that that's way too coincidental. I
[01:37:56] think
[01:37:56] >> the Lebanon explosions were pagers that
[01:37:58] were made to detonate to people's faces.
[01:38:00] Um, I'm on 2% battery, so you're about
[01:38:01] to lose me. Uh, I appreciate the both of
[01:38:03] you having me on. It's been great.
[01:38:05] >> Yeah. And just real quick on that note,
[01:38:06] um, if he's running out of time and and
[01:38:07] we're hitting two hours, too. Um, so I
[01:38:08] will, uh, with your battery dying, do
[01:38:10] you have any final thoughts?
[01:38:11] >> Uh, no. Oh, I think we've covered
[01:38:13] >> Man, they cut out the pieces.
[01:38:14] >> You have any other questions? Feel free.
[01:38:16] >> Holy dude.
[01:38:18] >> Questions here.
[01:38:20] >> Do you know it's very lazy in its
[01:38:22] processing um and to do thing up
[01:38:26] so only the people that were really
[01:38:28] close to Charlie would even be able to
[01:38:29] really perceive it. It would be no. He's
[01:38:30] holding the microphone on and off like
[01:38:32] on that.
[01:38:33] >> I absolutely think that there was a 30
[01:38:34] off six shot
[01:38:35] >> under a shirt. How come I didn't tear
[01:38:37] mark
[01:38:37] >> the time? It would just be a lot more
[01:38:38] through those speakers. No. Whether
[01:38:39] >> some kind of either carpet or industrial
[01:38:40] rubber or like tough coat
[01:38:42] >> the necklace to flop his head. What
[01:38:43] >> we obviously we want Kelly to be able to
[01:38:44] interact completely too carpole
[01:38:48] firecracker
[01:38:50] the same explosive that I proposed is in
[01:38:52] this microshaped chargers
[01:38:54] >> almost like a cover up.
[01:38:55] >> Exactly. So you know so I looked into
[01:38:58] the employees. I saw the victim list 16.
[01:39:00] >> Okay. This piece right here we went back
[01:39:02] to the main the full piece
[01:39:06] >> employees died that day. God bless them.
[01:39:08] Um, but in the news report it said the
[01:39:10] production manager was brand new to the
[01:39:12] job. So it made me curious about what
[01:39:14] happened to the old production manager.
[01:39:15] When did he leave? And so you know I
[01:39:17] don't want to say the giga guy or
[01:39:18] anything but you know he literally left
[01:39:19] days after the event at the UVU and he
[01:39:22] did you hear that?
[01:39:24] I need to corroborate this for myself
[01:39:28] but he just said
[01:39:30] that in the news report he read it said
[01:39:32] that the production manager was new to
[01:39:33] the job. So he looked into the old
[01:39:35] production manager and apparently
[01:39:37] allegedly the old production manager
[01:39:39] left the job days after the UVU event.
[01:39:46] So so
[01:39:50] he doesn't have a new job. I wasn't able
[01:39:52] to contact any numbers I could find.
[01:39:53] Like it's very very odd. Like he just
[01:39:55] kind of disappeared off the face of the
[01:39:56] earth. So it's like you start to get the
[01:39:58] the vibes that something wasn't you know
[01:40:00] quite right there. It's suspicious
[01:40:02] timing to
[01:40:03] >> I'm gonna have to track that down. I'm
[01:40:04] gonna have to try to corroborate that
[01:40:06] myself.
[01:40:07] >> Say the least.
[01:40:08] >> Yeah. I mean, all of that combined,
[01:40:09] that's I mean, if that's a that's
[01:40:10] definitely could lead to Chase, but that
[01:40:12] that's way too coincidental, I think.
[01:40:13] >> Yeah.
[01:40:14] >> Interesting. All right. Let's keep going
[01:40:16] on with the questions here.
[01:40:18] We talked about that. Okay. So, a lot of
[01:40:20] people are reasking this question. So, I
[01:40:21] know a lot of people like we're up to
[01:40:22] like 13,400 people. Um, anyone that's
[01:40:24] coming in, we we explored the exploding
[01:40:25] Mac theory and he gets into it pretty
[01:40:27] in-depth and he has way more in-depth
[01:40:28] stuff on X as well. So, make sure you
[01:40:29] check him out. Um, it's John Aaron Bray.
[01:40:31] I'll put that up here one more time.
[01:40:33] Right there. John Aaron Bray on X. But
[01:40:35] basically, he's saying that the mic
[01:40:36] exploded on his chest with a shape
[01:40:37] charge. That shape charge made it move
[01:40:39] towards his neck and something shrapnel
[01:40:40] or something from it or the mic magnet
[01:40:41] itself hit his neck. And he wrote a
[01:40:43] program or modified a program that
[01:40:45] showed that something square shaped or,
[01:40:46] you know, I guess like some kind of
[01:40:48] polygon came out with the blood as
[01:40:49] though something went into his neck and
[01:40:50] then the blood pushed it back out. Um,
[01:40:52] and that's kind of where he's at. He
[01:40:52] thinks that the shots itself did happen,
[01:40:54] but it was not what necessarily hit him
[01:40:56] or killed him. Correct.
[01:40:57] >> That's correct.
[01:40:57] >> Yep. And then um we're talking about
[01:40:59] some other things that are very
[01:41:00] coincidental like this Tennessee uh
[01:41:01] plant exploding that happened to make
[01:41:03] the same type of shape charges that he
[01:41:04] thinks might have been used in this um
[01:41:05] this assassination. So
[01:41:06] >> which is quite specific. I mean very
[01:41:08] specific and
[01:41:09] >> yeah and I'm not sure how common those
[01:41:11] are. I don't know how many companies
[01:41:12] make those but um I've never heard of a
[01:41:14] company that makes them. So I'm sure
[01:41:14] it's probably not a common thing.
[01:41:16] >> All right let's go to the next question
[01:41:18] here.
[01:41:19] >> Okay. Actually I have a question. So you
[01:41:21] mentioned that these shape charges often
[01:41:22] sound like fireworks and a lot of people
[01:41:24] heard this said they heard a firework
[01:41:25] that day. That's kind of the common
[01:41:26] theme. Do you think that's related?
[01:41:32] What do you think, chat?
[01:41:34] What do you think?
[01:41:39] This is potentially the plant where the
[01:41:42] explosives that killed Charlie were
[01:41:43] made. Yes, that is the implication.
[01:41:47] And it is an awfully weird coincidence
[01:41:51] that this plant exploded
[01:41:58] just a month after.
[01:42:22] I'm curious what report bro
[01:42:28] news is gonna up
[01:42:32] searching for new
[01:42:37] real hard.
[01:42:42] Yeah.
[01:42:52] makes more sense than electrocution. Not
[01:42:54] as technical.
[01:42:57] I start to question both simultaneously.
[01:43:03] How did it blow up the cars but not the
[01:43:04] trees? Um, debris hitting them, I
[01:43:08] believe. That would be my assumption.
[01:43:12] Check plane data for that area. Oh gosh,
[01:43:14] you're going to get me going on plane
[01:43:15] data. Oh, goodness gracious.
[01:43:19] Go darn it. You're gonna make me do that
[01:43:22] chat? Y'all crazy as hell. Asking me to
[01:43:26] start digging into plane data. Damn it.
[01:43:31] All right. Um,
[01:43:34] I'm probably
[01:43:37] gonna have to do it on ADSB.
[01:43:43] Um,
[01:43:46] so just a second. We're talking October
[01:43:49] 11th.
[01:43:52] So we'll go back to the 10th
[01:43:58] and we'll scroll out over here and we'll
[01:44:01] go to Tennessee.
[01:44:06] I'm probably going to do this off stream
[01:44:09] because it's going to take a lot of
[01:44:11] time. Um,
[01:44:23] Humphrey's County,
[01:44:37] Humphrey's County,
[01:44:40] Tennessee.
[01:44:53] in the upper left quadrant.
[01:44:58] Upper left turn.
[01:45:00] Yeah.
[01:45:19] It's kind of down underneath the notch.
[01:45:25] Um,
[01:45:27] so I've pulled it up on ADSB Exchange.
[01:45:29] I'll track through it. I'll look at it.
[01:45:31] Um,
[01:45:39] I doubt I doubt we're going to get
[01:45:41] anything, but we'll look.
[01:45:44] We will look.
[01:45:46] Um, here. Let me just pause this real
[01:45:49] quick so I can do that later.
[01:45:53] And what we're going to do is just
[01:45:54] really quickly again
[01:45:57] play through the timing of the shot
[01:46:00] because that is so critical to
[01:46:03] understanding why it might
[01:46:06] bucks Tennessee.
[01:46:11] I think Bucksnort might be so small
[01:46:15] that it doesn't even show up on the map.
[01:46:18] I'm gonna have to do more careful
[01:46:20] analysis.
[01:46:23] to um pinpoint the location and pinpoint
[01:46:30] potential uh air strips around it
[01:46:35] because Bucks is tiny. But I'm I'm
[01:46:38] looking at Humphre County with Waverly
[01:46:40] and Camden in it. That's Benton County,
[01:46:43] I guess, technically. Waverly in the
[01:46:45] middle of it.
[01:46:46] Um
[01:46:50] flight tracking. Ian needs some nerdy
[01:46:51] glasses for real. Um, but I just want to
[01:46:54] really quickly again point out that the
[01:46:57] reason why explosive is a worthwhile
[01:47:01] thing to think about is because within
[01:47:04] the first frame of impact, Charlie's
[01:47:07] shirt is already moving up and his
[01:47:09] necklace is already going insane
[01:47:12] at 60 frames per second. So within 160th
[01:47:16] of a second of impact, the necklace is
[01:47:21] already and the shirt is already
[01:47:24] moving upwards towards him. And there's
[01:47:26] a little bit of stuff going on in his
[01:47:28] shirt down below that I you can see now.
[01:47:38] It looks like the shirt is getting
[01:47:39] pulled forwards to accommodate for this
[01:47:42] is only two frames after impact.
[01:47:45] for the shirt being way up in front of
[01:47:46] his neck.
[01:47:50] You can see the magnet attached to his
[01:47:52] lapel mic right there.
[01:48:03] And then the extreme cavitation event
[01:48:05] occurs at frame three.
[01:48:12] And then decorticate posture sets in
[01:48:14] right about here.
[01:48:18] And then he falls over. And it is worth
[01:48:21] noting
[01:48:24] that his hand opens up.
[01:48:30] No. Am I imagining that?
[01:48:33] No. the corticut posturing all the way
[01:48:35] through,
[01:48:40] but it's on impact. The speed at which
[01:48:43] the impact affects
[01:48:46] his shirt and necklace
[01:48:50] is tremendously important. That's frame
[01:48:54] two.
[01:49:01] Uh Dylan some asks a great question.
[01:49:03] It's hardest part for me is how many
[01:49:05] people would have been implicated.
[01:49:07] Honestly,
[01:49:08] it wouldn't take necessarily more people
[01:49:12] than the security team.
[01:49:15] And let's just say that in this
[01:49:18] industry,
[01:49:20] you know, not to trust security teams.
[01:49:23] There is sentiment amongst smart folks
[01:49:26] in this industry that security teams are
[01:49:30] dangerous and it's the mo it's your
[01:49:32] greatest vulnerability because who
[01:49:34] around you has military training and
[01:49:36] weapons
[01:49:38] and often does not know you personally
[01:49:42] for a long time.
[01:49:45] They often have dark backstories or just
[01:49:47] complicated backstories.
[01:49:50] Michael Jackson had a security team
[01:49:51] change up a couple times right before he
[01:49:53] died. He had the same security guy his
[01:49:55] whole life that was like his father
[01:49:59] and then
[01:50:00] Bill had to retire and Michael Jackson
[01:50:03] started shifting through new security
[01:50:04] teams and then magically he died.
[01:50:07] It is I've worked security. Yes. Bingo.
[01:50:12] And I know good security folks don't
[01:50:14] want to admit that because there are
[01:50:15] great people that work security. I know
[01:50:17] some of them. But
[01:50:22] there's a lot of people that work
[01:50:23] security that come from complex special
[01:50:25] forces backgrounds and military
[01:50:26] backgrounds that you just don't know
[01:50:29] necessarily how to trust that. And
[01:50:31] they're the ones with weapons around you
[01:50:32] all the time. They're the ones with the
[01:50:34] greatest access. And they're the ones in
[01:50:36] charge of getting you out if something
[01:50:37] happens, which is exactly what we saw
[01:50:39] with Charlie. They ignored the
[01:50:42] paramedics. They rejected the help of
[01:50:44] paramedics and instead packed like four
[01:50:47] security guys into a vehicle and Frank
[01:50:49] Turk,
[01:50:51] but rejected
[01:50:54] the paramedic team and the bank.
[01:50:58] That's weird.
[01:51:02] That's super weird.
[01:51:11] The biggest indicator is when he is when
[01:51:12] Terrell Farnsworth said they in his self
[01:51:15] selfie video on the Rocky null. The very
[01:51:17] fact that Terl Farnsworth climbed up
[01:51:19] onto the Rocky null is weird.
[01:51:23] Super weird. That is a tall wall for
[01:51:26] Terrell Farnsworth to climb up onto.
[01:51:30] That being said, I did look into Terrell
[01:51:33] Farnsworth's family to try to
[01:51:34] corroborate the claims of Project
[01:51:36] Constitution, and I found no evidence of
[01:51:38] Project Constitution's claims that
[01:51:39] Terrell Farnsworth is related to
[01:51:41] everyone else in like the case and Tyler
[01:51:44] Robinson's lawyer and like that.
[01:51:45] Didn't didn't corroborate that one bit.
[01:51:48] Um, maybe I just failed, but I don't
[01:51:52] think so. Yeah, you climb on everything,
[01:51:54] but not in this instance. You don't. The
[01:51:56] Rocky null. Yeah, for real.
[01:52:00] There is no investigation because there
[01:52:01] is no dead body. I think there is
[01:52:03] definitely a dead body.
[01:52:06] I think that Baron is going to bring
[01:52:08] forth really interesting evidence that
[01:52:10] there might have been a plan to do a
[01:52:14] fake gunshot which has farreaching
[01:52:16] implications
[01:52:18] and then that got used as cover possibly
[01:52:22] for an actual assassination. And that is
[01:52:25] a crazy theory to go down. And at this
[01:52:29] point, even that makes more sense than a
[01:52:31] 30 out six to the neck. Way more sense.
[01:52:35] Way more sense than 306 to the neck.
[01:52:40] Um, and just
[01:52:42] at the end here,
[01:52:48] we're just going to go back to um, Heavy
[01:52:51] Duty Country and our boy Jesse.
[01:52:54] >> What's up?
[01:52:55] >> And just one more time, we're going to
[01:52:58] watch them blow concrete to bits.
[01:53:08] And they got pretty solid setup of 140
[01:53:10] yards with a little bit of elevation.
[01:53:12] >> Oh my lord.
[01:53:13] >> Nice shot, guy.
[01:53:18] >> Oh boy,
[01:53:20] >> that's a touchdown.
[01:53:23] >> What about a throat lozenge fashioned
[01:53:25] from RDX?
[01:53:27] Hey dude, at this point, so the thing
[01:53:30] about the throat lozenge is it wouldn't
[01:53:31] account for the shirt and the necklace.
[01:53:33] and the shirt and the necklace is really
[01:53:36] important to account for. Um, that's
[01:53:39] actually one of the primary pieces of
[01:53:41] evidence that we need to account for.
[01:53:45] >> There wasn't heavy duty one.
[01:53:48] >> He's hilarious.
[01:53:51] And he's a good shot. Boom.
[01:53:55] literally obliterates through two porks,
[01:53:58] obliterates a concrete slab, and pushes
[01:54:01] the other concrete slab off the table.
[01:54:09] And you're telling me that a neck stop
[01:54:11] stopped that?
[01:54:12] >> It exploded.
[01:54:14] >> Yeah. The throat goat neck of steel
[01:54:16] theory is very thoroughly debunked at
[01:54:20] this point and we're just waiting on all
[01:54:23] these internet trolls, all these
[01:54:24] ammunition manufacturers to just go
[01:54:27] shoot some rounds and put it on video
[01:54:29] for us. Show us a 306 stopping in
[01:54:32] anything at all.
[01:54:36] We're waiting
[01:54:38] because literally at this point, yeah,
[01:54:41] the elastic skin theory for real, Nick.
[01:54:43] At this point,
[01:54:47] honestly, at this point, directed energy
[01:54:49] weapons and like sky lasers seems more
[01:54:52] plausible than that
[01:54:55] That's the thing about it is that their
[01:54:57] theory, their mainstream Fed slop is so
[01:55:00] unbelievable that at this point
[01:55:03] literally any other theory is more
[01:55:05] plausible.
[01:55:07] And the the shape charge analysis
[01:55:10] actually it actually accounts for all of
[01:55:13] these weird physics events in the shirt
[01:55:15] and with the necklace that have been
[01:55:17] huge question marks from day one. From
[01:55:20] day one. And the bullet, any version of
[01:55:24] a bullet theory doesn't really account
[01:55:26] for it in my mind. And yeah, bullets do
[01:55:28] do crazy weird things. Yeah, weird
[01:55:30] things happen when people get shot.
[01:55:33] But I don't know how to physically
[01:55:35] explain
[01:55:38] the any form of bullet of any caliber,
[01:55:42] which I'm no expert in, but I don't know
[01:55:44] how to explain any form of bullet
[01:55:46] causing the shirt to fly up in front of
[01:55:48] his face. Sorry, reverse camera. to fly
[01:55:51] up in front of his face in frame two of
[01:55:55] a 60 fps video
[01:55:58] in the way that we saw it.
[01:56:02] And I was a critic of the exploding
[01:56:04] microphone theory all along.
[01:56:09] So
[01:56:12] that's the thing about evidence is that
[01:56:13] when you present evidence,
[01:56:16] theories have to change. We have some
[01:56:19] big questions and all those questions
[01:56:21] are getting the runaround. They're
[01:56:23] getting treated like they're ridiculous,
[01:56:25] though they're very logical, though all
[01:56:27] sorts of regular Americans are asking
[01:56:29] them. Why does Eric Kirk feel so
[01:56:31] untrustworthy? Why is everyone in your
[01:56:33] organization lying? Why does the story
[01:56:34] keep just changing? Why can't you
[01:56:37] produce the autopsy or the bullet or
[01:56:41] even the actual murder weapon? Because
[01:56:43] we still to this day have not seen the
[01:56:45] actual murder weapon. All we've seen is
[01:56:47] the New York Post's stock image of a
[01:56:51] random mouser that they pulled off the
[01:56:53] internet, not the murder weapon. We've
[01:56:55] never seen photos of the trans engraved
[01:56:58] bullets. And I suspect
[01:57:01] that we are honing in on the reason
[01:57:04] being that it's possible that no bullet
[01:57:07] was even fired at Charlie. And I think
[01:57:09] that that's a very compelling piece of
[01:57:10] this theory. I'm not saying I believe it
[01:57:12] 100%. I'm not saying that I think it's
[01:57:14] confirmed. I'm just saying that this
[01:57:17] theory would lend a lot of evidence to
[01:57:20] why the bullet is such a up piece
[01:57:22] of the story and why they keep changing
[01:57:24] the narrative around the autopsy and why
[01:57:25] they won't give us any transparency on
[01:57:27] any piece of that and why they had to
[01:57:29] control the body so carefully after the
[01:57:32] shot.
[01:57:33] Because if there's no bullet and there's
[01:57:35] no shot and it's all just them trying to
[01:57:37] cover up an accidental problem with the
[01:57:39] plan,
[01:57:42] they're The whole thing's
[01:57:45] It's a lot like JFK. A lot like JFK.
[01:57:51] Like a lot of people try to try to like
[01:57:54] live from the belief that these
[01:57:55] intelligence agencies are like literally
[01:57:57] the Illuminati and that they can do no
[01:57:59] wrong, that they control everything,
[01:58:00] they spy on everything, they know
[01:58:02] everything. And that's just not true.
[01:58:04] They make mistakes all the time.
[01:58:06] Things go wrong in every operation.
[01:58:08] There's always trails of breadcrumbs
[01:58:09] because they're sloppy or they're
[01:58:11] overconfident or something just goes
[01:58:12] wrong or it's too big of an operation.
[01:58:15] And if if there's one hallmark of
[01:58:17] Israeli intelligence specifically, it's
[01:58:20] operations so large and so insane and so
[01:58:23] up that they're hard to even
[01:58:25] believe they're real.
[01:58:29] You know what I'm talking about.
[01:58:32] And this one kind of has the same
[01:58:33] signature, honestly. In a lot of ways,
[01:58:36] this one has the same signature. And
[01:58:37] we're seeing a lot of the same little
[01:58:40] small pieces of evidence that seem to
[01:58:42] add up to a similar story.
[01:58:46] And the questions are mounting. The
[01:58:49] public sentiment is turning.
[01:58:51] And every single response just makes it
[01:58:54] seem more suspicious.
[01:58:56] Response from our own government,
[01:58:58] response from our own FBI, response from
[01:59:02] all the officials involved in the case,
[01:59:04] response from TPUSA and all the people
[01:59:06] at TPUSA, from Erica Kirk, the wife
[01:59:08] herself, none of it makes sense.
[01:59:11] Response from Israel and Israeli
[01:59:13] officials, BB Netanyahu himself, none of
[01:59:15] it makes sense unless you turn to a
[01:59:19] different theory. And then it starts to
[01:59:21] make a fuckload of sense.
[01:59:23] then it all starts to add up quite well
[01:59:26] actually.
[01:59:29] So that's where we're at.
[01:59:34] That is the current state of affairs.
[01:59:38] I think that everybody should share that
[01:59:41] interview around that we watched about
[01:59:43] the exploding microphone theory. Uh
[01:59:47] I think it's it feels highly compelling.
[01:59:49] compelling enough that we need to be
[01:59:51] asking questions about it and getting
[01:59:52] experts involved and getting demolition
[01:59:54] specialists, people that build shape
[01:59:56] charges. I want to see some shape
[01:59:59] charges set off on camera to try to test
[02:00:02] this theory, but if not, have a merry
[02:00:05] Christmas. Um, love your family, take
[02:00:07] good care of your people, drink some
[02:00:09] water, eat some healthy food, um, be
[02:00:11] good to people, be a good person, and
[02:00:14] uh, don't get lost in the noise. Don't
[02:00:15] get lost in the mud and in the
[02:00:17] political subversion and the hatred.
[02:00:19] Remember that they they try to control
[02:00:21] your mind and your emotions, but they do
[02:00:23] it by controlling your emotions and then
[02:00:25] your mind. So, take control of your
[02:00:28] emotions, take charge of your life, and
[02:00:30] do good. Okay,
[02:00:34] thanks for being here. I'll catch you on
[02:00:35] the next one. And that's it for today.
[02:00:38] Peace.
[02:00:39] >> Conspiracy theories [music] are entering
[02:00:40] a danger.
[02:00:41] >> Information is the oxygen of the
[02:00:44] democracy. There's so much evidence out
[02:00:46] there that even if less than 1% [music]
[02:00:48] is true,
[02:00:50] that be enough to collapse the current
[02:00:52] paradigm and change the whole planet.
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