1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:05,080 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio, David. 2 00:00:05,120 --> 00:00:08,200 Speaker 2: The theories we're talking about tonight and the possibilities, are 3 00:00:08,240 --> 00:00:10,800 Speaker 2: they all yours or do they come from science? Where 4 00:00:10,800 --> 00:00:11,640 Speaker 2: do they come from? 5 00:00:12,640 --> 00:00:16,599 Speaker 3: Well, that's that's a good question. Let's see the actual 6 00:00:16,640 --> 00:00:21,520 Speaker 3: location of the capital is not mine. That came from 7 00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:23,760 Speaker 3: somewhere else. All the other stuff. What I try and do, 8 00:00:23,880 --> 00:00:26,000 Speaker 3: I don't know that I actually have anything original to 9 00:00:26,200 --> 00:00:29,840 Speaker 3: contribute when you put it out, because what I do, 10 00:00:30,000 --> 00:00:32,519 Speaker 3: I don't you know, you know, David Edward, what am 11 00:00:32,560 --> 00:00:34,199 Speaker 3: I going to do? I'm going to go with a 12 00:00:34,320 --> 00:00:36,839 Speaker 3: yardstick and go measure somewhere there's never been measured. I 13 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:39,360 Speaker 3: mean that I could, I could measure wrong. So what 14 00:00:39,440 --> 00:00:42,199 Speaker 3: I do, which I think is more powerful, is I 15 00:00:42,320 --> 00:00:46,159 Speaker 3: try and use the peer reviewed literature, the stuff macademia, 16 00:00:46,280 --> 00:00:52,279 Speaker 3: the Noah maps, satellite images, really deep stuff with the 17 00:00:52,320 --> 00:00:55,040 Speaker 3: text and the translation of the text, you know, because 18 00:00:55,080 --> 00:00:57,760 Speaker 3: we read all this stuff as translated texts, and a 19 00:00:57,840 --> 00:01:01,080 Speaker 3: lot of times those translations flat. Now you know, the 20 00:01:01,440 --> 00:01:05,320 Speaker 3: original Greek or the original Piez or original whatever it was. 21 00:01:06,120 --> 00:01:08,840 Speaker 3: So I try and synthesize all of those things, and 22 00:01:09,120 --> 00:01:11,919 Speaker 3: I think that's my contribution. I'm just like more Jay Adner. 23 00:01:11,920 --> 00:01:15,280 Speaker 3: He didn't write the great books of Western literature. He 24 00:01:15,440 --> 00:01:20,200 Speaker 3: made them readable or approachable from a lot of different 25 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:22,240 Speaker 3: entry points, and I think that's what I'm trying to do. 26 00:01:22,240 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 2: Here, David, what exactly did Plato say about Atlantis? 27 00:01:27,400 --> 00:01:29,640 Speaker 3: Well, Platus said a lot of things about Atlantis. He 28 00:01:29,680 --> 00:01:35,000 Speaker 3: has two we call him dialogues, Critius and Timerius or Timious, 29 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:37,120 Speaker 3: no one knows how to say it. And in both 30 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:41,040 Speaker 3: of them, Timius is more of a philosophical work where 31 00:01:41,040 --> 00:01:44,840 Speaker 3: he is inserting Greek world views and kind of using 32 00:01:44,880 --> 00:01:50,280 Speaker 3: Atlantis as a platitude or a moral example, and that's 33 00:01:50,280 --> 00:01:55,320 Speaker 3: typically how it gets phrased with people. Critius is much 34 00:01:55,360 --> 00:02:01,480 Speaker 3: more interesting because even Plato and Critias says, this isn't logos, 35 00:02:01,480 --> 00:02:04,520 Speaker 3: this isn't him trying to demonstrate logic. This is him 36 00:02:05,200 --> 00:02:08,280 Speaker 3: showing and recording history, and you get You've got a 37 00:02:08,280 --> 00:02:11,200 Speaker 3: lot more of the interesting measurements and things. For example, 38 00:02:11,720 --> 00:02:15,960 Speaker 3: in Critius we have those directional markers I was talking 39 00:02:15,960 --> 00:02:19,600 Speaker 3: about for the second province, for the province of that 40 00:02:20,680 --> 00:02:26,119 Speaker 3: Gadarius gaps. He's the second of the twins. And what's 41 00:02:26,160 --> 00:02:29,720 Speaker 3: interesting is you know this stuff, if it's really ninety 42 00:02:29,760 --> 00:02:33,960 Speaker 3: six hundred BC, this is before written language, I mean 43 00:02:34,160 --> 00:02:38,040 Speaker 3: written language. We start to get dashes and dots around 44 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:41,200 Speaker 3: thirty two hundred BC, so we are thousands and thousands 45 00:02:41,200 --> 00:02:45,440 Speaker 3: of years. So you can't go to the Greek or 46 00:02:45,600 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 3: the Spanish or the whatever and try and do linguistic 47 00:02:49,040 --> 00:02:51,960 Speaker 3: analysis using roots. We can't do that. Instead, you have 48 00:02:52,040 --> 00:02:58,720 Speaker 3: to use phonetic analysis using speech and dialect. And that's 49 00:02:58,720 --> 00:03:00,600 Speaker 3: where and this is where it all in. So if 50 00:03:00,639 --> 00:03:02,240 Speaker 3: you want to know what Atlantis is, you look at 51 00:03:02,560 --> 00:03:09,040 Speaker 3: where in Critius it says that Gadarius is the second province, 52 00:03:09,280 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 3: province facing Cadeens in the direction of the pillars, and 53 00:03:13,040 --> 00:03:17,320 Speaker 3: then Gadarius, Gadarius, Gadarius. You have to look linguistically and 54 00:03:17,400 --> 00:03:20,120 Speaker 3: if you look at those islands, they're called Canarius, the 55 00:03:20,160 --> 00:03:25,080 Speaker 3: Canarius Canarius the Canary Islands, and it's a match. And 56 00:03:25,120 --> 00:03:29,080 Speaker 3: if the Risshat is the capital where the first province 57 00:03:29,280 --> 00:03:34,680 Speaker 3: is West Africa, you can see the Canary Islands from 58 00:03:34,720 --> 00:03:39,280 Speaker 3: the coast. So if you're a culture that's expanding, especially 59 00:03:39,640 --> 00:03:42,680 Speaker 3: in this time period, you would see those Canary Islands, 60 00:03:42,720 --> 00:03:45,280 Speaker 3: so it'd be the very national first thing that you 61 00:03:45,280 --> 00:03:48,360 Speaker 3: would expand into it, and it's what the dialogue says, 62 00:03:48,440 --> 00:03:50,360 Speaker 3: and you can trace that all the way through. I 63 00:03:50,360 --> 00:03:51,760 Speaker 3: don't know that we have to go through, and I 64 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:54,560 Speaker 3: have to bore you with every single one. But if 65 00:03:54,640 --> 00:03:57,040 Speaker 3: you put my notes up real quick, if you get to. 66 00:03:59,360 --> 00:04:01,240 Speaker 2: The while you do that, how many people are we 67 00:04:01,320 --> 00:04:02,880 Speaker 2: talking about that went down with it? 68 00:04:04,000 --> 00:04:07,680 Speaker 3: Oh well, I think yeah, it was millions. I would 69 00:04:07,680 --> 00:04:09,360 Speaker 3: I would imagine, oh my gosh. 70 00:04:09,800 --> 00:04:09,960 Speaker 1: Yeah. 71 00:04:10,120 --> 00:04:12,480 Speaker 3: Well, because you're not just talking about the capital city, 72 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:16,720 Speaker 3: you're talking about a coastal civilization all around the Atlantic. 73 00:04:17,360 --> 00:04:19,320 Speaker 3: So if you go back and look at you know, 74 00:04:19,360 --> 00:04:21,160 Speaker 3: no one knows how many people there were back then. 75 00:04:21,640 --> 00:04:25,720 Speaker 3: All the academic models are just estimates and just mathematical 76 00:04:25,760 --> 00:04:31,360 Speaker 3: models projected projecting backwards. But there was I mean, it's 77 00:04:31,400 --> 00:04:34,200 Speaker 3: not that long ago, So there was millions of people. 78 00:04:34,240 --> 00:04:36,719 Speaker 3: And every every model I've ever seen from any academic 79 00:04:36,800 --> 00:04:41,240 Speaker 3: study anywhere has millions of people, which is not a lot. 80 00:04:41,320 --> 00:04:43,520 Speaker 3: If you spread that over the entire world. We're talking about, 81 00:04:43,800 --> 00:04:48,359 Speaker 3: you know, civilized centers of ten thousand, twenty five thousand people, 82 00:04:48,360 --> 00:04:50,679 Speaker 3: that kind of stuff. But when you look at around 83 00:04:50,720 --> 00:04:53,359 Speaker 3: the Atlantic basin, all the way around it, which is 84 00:04:53,360 --> 00:04:57,760 Speaker 3: where the Atlantic the Atlantis provinces were. The event which 85 00:04:57,800 --> 00:05:02,159 Speaker 3: was a flood event is going to effect all. So 86 00:05:02,240 --> 00:05:05,320 Speaker 3: here is look and so you can trace these the 87 00:05:05,360 --> 00:05:07,600 Speaker 3: twins list you can trace it out. So we did 88 00:05:07,640 --> 00:05:11,080 Speaker 3: the first one, which is Atlas. Let's say that's West Africa. 89 00:05:11,560 --> 00:05:15,760 Speaker 3: Then you get the Canary Islands Caderis, Canarios. The next 90 00:05:15,800 --> 00:05:19,200 Speaker 3: thing you see from the Canary Islands is you see 91 00:05:19,200 --> 00:05:22,200 Speaker 3: the straightership Altar and on the other side you see 92 00:05:22,440 --> 00:05:27,640 Speaker 3: the the n fairies seamount. It's is staying which and 93 00:05:27,640 --> 00:05:29,360 Speaker 3: they find stuff all the time where they think they 94 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:31,920 Speaker 3: find advantage there. That's that's the name of the third twin. 95 00:05:32,440 --> 00:05:35,680 Speaker 3: So we have a linguistic match. Then you keep going 96 00:05:35,760 --> 00:05:42,000 Speaker 3: up the coast and the fourth twin is Evermont Evermond. Well, 97 00:05:42,080 --> 00:05:45,680 Speaker 3: again linguistically we're up because we can see where we are, 98 00:05:45,720 --> 00:05:48,760 Speaker 3: because we know who these people are, we know the mythology. 99 00:05:48,800 --> 00:05:53,599 Speaker 3: There is Avalon, Evmon Avalon. That's basically dog Island, right, 100 00:05:53,640 --> 00:05:57,640 Speaker 3: which is now the thing with Dogland is is a 101 00:05:57,680 --> 00:06:03,040 Speaker 3: massive reed production center because lowlands hundreds of square miles 102 00:06:03,040 --> 00:06:06,640 Speaker 3: of lowlands. So when you get to Evmond or Doggerland 103 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:10,160 Speaker 3: up there or Avalon. That's where they get reeds, that's 104 00:06:10,200 --> 00:06:12,960 Speaker 3: where the reed technology comes in, and out of reeds 105 00:06:13,360 --> 00:06:16,359 Speaker 3: they can make boats. So sure enough, what do we 106 00:06:16,400 --> 00:06:18,520 Speaker 3: see from the next set of twins. The fifth twin 107 00:06:18,680 --> 00:06:25,480 Speaker 3: is minosis. There's different ways to say it, but nosus canosus, canosus, 108 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:31,599 Speaker 3: it fits. It fits right in to the interior Mediterranean, Egypt, 109 00:06:31,640 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 3: those areas which were told they were in. They didn't 110 00:06:33,839 --> 00:06:37,880 Speaker 3: get a really weird word auto chiffon, which is no 111 00:06:37,960 --> 00:06:40,680 Speaker 3: real way to know how to say it, but you 112 00:06:40,760 --> 00:06:46,760 Speaker 3: can find linguistic ties into the Mexican is the atland area, 113 00:06:47,240 --> 00:06:52,039 Speaker 3: which makes total sense because we've hit Dogland, we've got reeds. 114 00:06:52,560 --> 00:06:55,960 Speaker 3: So now we can follow the ocean currents which take 115 00:06:56,040 --> 00:06:59,080 Speaker 3: you from the Straits past the other islands, which are 116 00:06:59,080 --> 00:07:01,039 Speaker 3: the Canary Islands, and follow it and we know we 117 00:07:01,080 --> 00:07:03,760 Speaker 3: can do this. This store hair and all prove that 118 00:07:03,920 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 3: revokes do this, and the end up over in America 119 00:07:09,040 --> 00:07:09,560 Speaker 3: or Mexico. 120 00:07:09,880 --> 00:07:13,200 Speaker 2: We were talking earlier about the technology they might have possessed. 121 00:07:13,560 --> 00:07:15,040 Speaker 2: Did they have flying machines? 122 00:07:16,040 --> 00:07:19,440 Speaker 3: I think they did. We don't get that really from anywhere, 123 00:07:20,240 --> 00:07:22,400 Speaker 3: and I have no proof of that. I think. I 124 00:07:22,440 --> 00:07:26,760 Speaker 3: think though that we're dealing with technology that we would 125 00:07:26,800 --> 00:07:31,080 Speaker 3: consider advanced. You, you and I. But let's talk about 126 00:07:31,080 --> 00:07:32,600 Speaker 3: the technology. I mentioned that. 127 00:07:34,720 --> 00:07:35,120 Speaker 1: This thing. 128 00:07:35,160 --> 00:07:40,520 Speaker 3: There's a way you can link Plato into One Emoch, 129 00:07:41,000 --> 00:07:44,960 Speaker 3: and One Emoch is a book in the Ethiopian canon 130 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:47,720 Speaker 3: that people that like Atlantis also tend to like One Emoch. 131 00:07:47,760 --> 00:07:49,600 Speaker 3: I know, I did you used to naturally find it? 132 00:07:49,760 --> 00:07:53,040 Speaker 3: Because it's dot all kinds of kooky stuff and it 133 00:07:53,080 --> 00:07:58,960 Speaker 3: seems to float around the biblical Genesis six story with 134 00:07:59,080 --> 00:08:01,720 Speaker 3: nephlimb and watch and all that kind of stuff. But 135 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:06,960 Speaker 3: from and I'm gonna answer your technology question. So in 136 00:08:07,120 --> 00:08:11,200 Speaker 3: Plato we're told they're basically eight categories of technology that 137 00:08:11,400 --> 00:08:15,800 Speaker 3: he says Atlantis had. Okay, they had metallurgy and mining technology, 138 00:08:16,160 --> 00:08:19,280 Speaker 3: they had cosmetic and ornamental technology. They had earth knowledge, 139 00:08:19,320 --> 00:08:22,520 Speaker 3: water knowledge, sky knowledge, they had sacred geometry, they had 140 00:08:22,520 --> 00:08:25,280 Speaker 3: life sciences, and they had military arts. If you go 141 00:08:25,360 --> 00:08:29,720 Speaker 3: through Prittius and a little bit of Timinious, those are 142 00:08:29,720 --> 00:08:33,160 Speaker 3: the categories you get. Then you look at one Eenoch 143 00:08:33,880 --> 00:08:37,000 Speaker 3: and you look at what did the watchers teach? Well, 144 00:08:37,080 --> 00:08:40,640 Speaker 3: they taught metal urgy and mining and ornaments and cosmetics. 145 00:08:40,720 --> 00:08:43,160 Speaker 3: They taught earth knowledge and water knowledge and sky knowledge 146 00:08:43,320 --> 00:08:45,560 Speaker 3: and sacred geometry, and they taught life sciences and they 147 00:08:45,559 --> 00:08:50,520 Speaker 3: taught the military arts. It's the same list, which got 148 00:08:50,559 --> 00:08:54,880 Speaker 3: me intrigued because that would be an anchor between two 149 00:08:55,240 --> 00:09:00,439 Speaker 3: completely unrelated texts. It's not possible that Plato read One Enoch. 150 00:09:00,640 --> 00:09:04,160 Speaker 3: It just it is not was not in his order anywhere. 151 00:09:04,040 --> 00:09:07,280 Speaker 3: He was not copying the list. And actually we don't 152 00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:09,160 Speaker 3: really know because the chant of custody is kind of 153 00:09:09,200 --> 00:09:11,319 Speaker 3: wonky for one younop with the book that Washingtons, we're 154 00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:13,520 Speaker 3: dealing with the first sixteen chapters, but we don't really 155 00:09:13,520 --> 00:09:16,640 Speaker 3: know that the chant of custom for it either. But 156 00:09:16,679 --> 00:09:18,960 Speaker 3: it's the same list, which I thought was really interesting. 157 00:09:19,600 --> 00:09:22,839 Speaker 3: So then I started looking and saying, you know, if 158 00:09:22,840 --> 00:09:27,320 Speaker 3: the technology is the same, it is the pattern the same, 159 00:09:28,360 --> 00:09:30,600 Speaker 3: and the story pattern kind of is the same. And 160 00:09:30,640 --> 00:09:34,520 Speaker 3: this is it's kind of the same between Genesis, between 161 00:09:35,440 --> 00:09:38,880 Speaker 3: the First Enoch and between Plato's Atlantis, which and it's 162 00:09:39,000 --> 00:09:41,880 Speaker 3: it's a five story arc, which is God's come to Earth. 163 00:09:42,320 --> 00:09:45,959 Speaker 3: They mate with human women, they create hybrid children, the 164 00:09:46,040 --> 00:09:51,520 Speaker 3: hybrids become corrupt, God destroys them. That's the story of Atlantis. 165 00:09:52,280 --> 00:09:55,679 Speaker 3: That's the story of one nochty of Genesis six. It's 166 00:09:55,720 --> 00:09:58,520 Speaker 3: a great story. And so what you can then do 167 00:09:59,440 --> 00:10:03,480 Speaker 3: is you can fine the anchor points in the text 168 00:10:03,920 --> 00:10:07,839 Speaker 3: and you can see the Atlantis is a case study 169 00:10:07,920 --> 00:10:10,400 Speaker 3: because what we find here. Here's how I got there 170 00:10:11,040 --> 00:10:13,040 Speaker 3: is I kept looking, so I said, Okay, there might 171 00:10:13,040 --> 00:10:16,320 Speaker 3: be a similarity, but it's not clear enough. The fact 172 00:10:16,320 --> 00:10:19,920 Speaker 3: that technologies are the same, and even the story arc 173 00:10:20,080 --> 00:10:23,679 Speaker 3: is the same. I need something inside the stories that match. 174 00:10:24,400 --> 00:10:27,400 Speaker 3: So I kept reading. Plato just kept reading and kept 175 00:10:27,400 --> 00:10:32,280 Speaker 3: reading and kept I kept reading. Forseidon and he marries 176 00:10:32,320 --> 00:10:37,959 Speaker 3: a mountain girl and they have ten offspring, like, okay, 177 00:10:37,960 --> 00:10:42,560 Speaker 3: Poseidon's a god, he came down. We're told he was 178 00:10:42,720 --> 00:10:48,480 Speaker 3: given the province of the geography of Atlantis. So he's 179 00:10:48,520 --> 00:10:51,960 Speaker 3: a chiefs the he's a boss, and then he has 180 00:10:52,080 --> 00:10:57,640 Speaker 3: ten sons. He generates ten offspring, like okay, one chief 181 00:10:58,600 --> 00:11:01,320 Speaker 3: and ten chief and ten like that is familiar? Why 182 00:11:01,360 --> 00:11:05,320 Speaker 3: is that familiar? And it's familiar because that is exactly 183 00:11:05,360 --> 00:11:10,760 Speaker 3: what Enoch says. How the watchers were organized. They said 184 00:11:10,840 --> 00:11:14,520 Speaker 3: the watchers had a group of twenty leaders and they 185 00:11:14,559 --> 00:11:19,079 Speaker 3: had two hundred other watchers with them, and they organized 186 00:11:19,120 --> 00:11:22,840 Speaker 3: into what they called ten, one of the leaders, and 187 00:11:22,880 --> 00:11:27,959 Speaker 3: then ten, a group of ten of these beings, and 188 00:11:28,040 --> 00:11:30,800 Speaker 3: it's like, that's the same story. 189 00:11:32,040 --> 00:11:35,480 Speaker 2: Is it safe to assume, David, that this is not 190 00:11:35,640 --> 00:11:37,800 Speaker 2: a myth but actually happened. 191 00:11:39,040 --> 00:11:42,480 Speaker 3: Here's the way I look at it. There's enough physical evidence. 192 00:11:42,520 --> 00:11:47,280 Speaker 3: You have people on this show monthly who find real things. Yep, 193 00:11:47,960 --> 00:11:50,480 Speaker 3: we're not all idiots, you know. We're not all out 194 00:11:50,480 --> 00:11:54,320 Speaker 3: there looking at shadows and taking Warshack tests and and 195 00:11:54,760 --> 00:11:57,880 Speaker 3: you know, and finding faces in dirt and stuff. So 196 00:11:58,120 --> 00:12:01,360 Speaker 3: there's too much going on. That's what I say. There's 197 00:12:01,400 --> 00:12:05,760 Speaker 3: too much evidence. There's so much evidence that there's no evidence. 198 00:12:05,960 --> 00:12:08,959 Speaker 3: It's it's overwhelming. So do I think it was No? 199 00:12:09,160 --> 00:12:12,880 Speaker 3: I think I think it's worse. I think it's actually 200 00:12:12,880 --> 00:12:15,840 Speaker 3: a horror story. To answer that, I think it's all real. 201 00:12:17,240 --> 00:12:19,640 Speaker 3: I think all these pantheons we see, I think they 202 00:12:19,640 --> 00:12:23,680 Speaker 3: were all watchers and these these chiefs attend and the 203 00:12:23,720 --> 00:12:25,960 Speaker 3: timing of it kind of makes sense. It's all prehistory. 204 00:12:26,559 --> 00:12:30,320 Speaker 3: But what's going on in One Emach is a horror shows. 205 00:12:30,360 --> 00:12:35,120 Speaker 3: It's a disaster. You have these giants who are consuming everything, 206 00:12:35,720 --> 00:12:39,240 Speaker 3: and when they have consumed everything, they start eating humans 207 00:12:39,840 --> 00:12:44,680 Speaker 3: and it's just a horrible time. And I think that 208 00:12:45,040 --> 00:12:49,520 Speaker 3: is more our history than the shining Hittyo On, shining 209 00:12:49,600 --> 00:12:51,360 Speaker 3: City on the hill and the hope that this was 210 00:12:51,400 --> 00:12:53,920 Speaker 3: a you know, a better time. That's what the literature 211 00:12:53,960 --> 00:12:57,600 Speaker 3: says anywhere, that all this literature we read, it's all 212 00:12:57,600 --> 00:13:02,760 Speaker 3: apocalyptic disasters, and it all ends in God destroying everything. 213 00:13:02,760 --> 00:13:06,920 Speaker 3: Even even the Atlanta's story ends in God destroying Atlantis. 214 00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:08,720 Speaker 3: So it's just it's bad. 215 00:13:08,920 --> 00:13:11,720 Speaker 2: You see a lot of biblical connections here with Atlantis, 216 00:13:11,800 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 2: don't you. 217 00:13:12,840 --> 00:13:16,720 Speaker 3: I think Atlantis is a case study in Genesis six, 218 00:13:16,840 --> 00:13:20,960 Speaker 3: the time when mighty men of old and men of 219 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,600 Speaker 3: renown and the earth was corrupt and filled with violence. 220 00:13:24,679 --> 00:13:28,600 Speaker 3: I think that Atlantis is a case to it. And 221 00:13:28,640 --> 00:13:31,080 Speaker 3: this book I've written, I don't do a good job 222 00:13:31,120 --> 00:13:34,040 Speaker 3: explaining it's it's very simple when you see it. But 223 00:13:34,160 --> 00:13:38,240 Speaker 3: because our heads are so turned sideways on Atlantis to 224 00:13:38,240 --> 00:13:41,800 Speaker 3: even talk about it, I've yet to do a really 225 00:13:41,840 --> 00:13:45,679 Speaker 3: good job of eloquently introducing the concept. But yeah, Atlantis, 226 00:13:45,679 --> 00:13:49,800 Speaker 3: it's real. The provinces are easily mapped once you wander, 227 00:13:49,880 --> 00:13:52,600 Speaker 3: once you understand the linguistics, and you have a starting place, 228 00:13:53,080 --> 00:13:56,280 Speaker 3: and this story is the same story we get from 229 00:13:56,360 --> 00:14:00,839 Speaker 3: just about every ancient text. Initial greatness, everything consumed on splates, 230 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:05,120 Speaker 3: divine portion, phage, God destroys right, God's come down, make 231 00:14:05,160 --> 00:14:07,440 Speaker 3: a mess of things, and we're stuck to clean up 232 00:14:08,160 --> 00:14:09,920 Speaker 3: the aftermath. 233 00:14:10,960 --> 00:14:14,120 Speaker 2: Well with David edward Is latest book is called Atlanta's Saw. 234 00:14:14,120 --> 00:14:15,040 Speaker 2: Where do we get the book? 235 00:14:15,120 --> 00:14:15,440 Speaker 1: David? 236 00:14:16,160 --> 00:14:19,160 Speaker 3: Everything goes to Frequency ninety nine dot com, the books 237 00:14:19,200 --> 00:14:23,280 Speaker 3: on Amazon and everywhere else, but George, because you guys 238 00:14:23,320 --> 00:14:25,360 Speaker 3: called me to be on the show, I made all 239 00:14:25,360 --> 00:14:28,120 Speaker 3: my books free as just a way to say thank you. 240 00:14:28,360 --> 00:14:30,400 Speaker 3: So if anyone wants any of these books right now, 241 00:14:30,520 --> 00:14:32,560 Speaker 3: you know on Amazon you can make the digital copies 242 00:14:32,600 --> 00:14:34,600 Speaker 3: free for a couple of days. They're free I think 243 00:14:34,640 --> 00:14:37,080 Speaker 3: for the next three four days. And I think I've 244 00:14:37,080 --> 00:14:39,360 Speaker 3: got thirty of my books up there in the PDF 245 00:14:39,360 --> 00:14:42,440 Speaker 3: and you just download them and it's a free fest 246 00:14:42,480 --> 00:14:44,280 Speaker 3: if you go to Frequency nine to nine dot com. 247 00:14:44,360 --> 00:14:46,520 Speaker 2: It's amazing. Thank you. You didn't have to do that. 248 00:14:47,160 --> 00:14:49,640 Speaker 3: We didn't have to write down the show. We love you. 249 00:14:52,320 --> 00:14:55,640 Speaker 2: Would you say the Atlantis Mystery is one of the 250 00:14:55,680 --> 00:14:59,240 Speaker 2: greatest mysteries of all times on this planet. 251 00:15:00,360 --> 00:15:03,560 Speaker 3: I think it is the most solved mystery of all 252 00:15:03,600 --> 00:15:07,080 Speaker 3: time on this planet. It's the greatest mystery because every 253 00:15:07,120 --> 00:15:09,440 Speaker 3: time anyone looks at it, they instantly solve it. 254 00:15:10,440 --> 00:15:11,080 Speaker 2: And it's been. 255 00:15:11,000 --> 00:15:15,040 Speaker 3: Solved hundreds of thousands of times. But it's the greatest 256 00:15:15,080 --> 00:15:18,120 Speaker 3: mystery because we're drawn to it, like I opened with, 257 00:15:18,800 --> 00:15:23,280 Speaker 3: we know there's something wrong, and somehow thinking about worrying 258 00:15:23,320 --> 00:15:27,640 Speaker 3: about things like Atlantis. They don't make this world better, 259 00:15:27,680 --> 00:15:30,080 Speaker 3: but they make us feel better about being in it. 260 00:15:30,720 --> 00:15:34,640 Speaker 3: And I think that Atlantis is the word we can 261 00:15:34,760 --> 00:15:38,000 Speaker 3: use for this ancient past described in One Enoch and 262 00:15:38,080 --> 00:15:40,880 Speaker 3: Genesis six and all the other stories, for all the 263 00:15:40,880 --> 00:15:43,400 Speaker 3: other people who have found these things. The only caveat 264 00:15:43,440 --> 00:15:47,960 Speaker 3: I have is everywhere is it the capital? The capital 265 00:15:48,000 --> 00:15:50,960 Speaker 3: is one place, but Atlantis is pretty much all this 266 00:15:50,960 --> 00:15:52,040 Speaker 3: old stuff we're finding. 267 00:15:53,920 --> 00:15:57,200 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 268 00:15:57,200 --> 00:15:59,720 Speaker 1: one a m. Eastern and go to Coast to Coast 269 00:15:59,760 --> 00:16:01,240 Speaker 1: aam dot com for more