 So, Jack Parsons, let's talk about Jack, a fascinating character. They've recently made a documentary or a drama documentary. What was it called? Strange Angel, wasn't it? Yes, yes. I was on CBS TV in America, yeah. Essentially, he was like the guy that was originally behind NASA, absolutely fascinated with rockets and the attempt to get one into space. And him and his buddies operated out the desert in California, so sort of Hollywood sort of area. And I don't know, I like to think at some point, he found this experiment so difficult. You know, the rockets were all flying off. They certainly weren't getting anywhere near quote unquote space, whatever that might be. And he got invited to the Lima, which was Alistair Crowley's, what do we call that, like a cult, a dark, dark religion or something? It's just basically a religion. It's not even dark. It's just a religion. Yeah. And what happened was he grew up in, he grew up in Southern California and since he was a bi-humanist friend, Ed, were obsessed with science fiction. It's very interesting. It's almost like a chaos magic life in itself. And they were obsessed with science fiction and they used to build little rockets in Pasadena in their backyard and they would try to launch rockets. So he became interested in rockets. And he basically, his family fell out of money and things like that. So he ended up kind of, you know, working in factories and chemical plants, stealing chemicals to try and build his own rockets as a hobby. And they were the same friends from school. And with some success, I might add, they actually, you know, made some liquid fuel rockets, the chemical fuel rockets, enough for the US military and JPL laboratories in Pasadena. That's Jet Propulsion. That's not like Barsons Labs. That became a kind of a joke later. But to give him grants to actually develop a rocket thruster for aircraft, the Americans were not interested in rockets. They were having tremendous success with aviation and building airplanes. So they didn't really have an interest in rockets. So he formed a company, a Jet Propulsion company, a aeroget company, and they successfully built during World War II, thousands of these rocket motors to give an aircraft a boost, right? And while this was all going on, he was in, underneath the Hollywood sign, he heard about this thing called, he was always interested in, he was an educated man. He was the head of the Los Angeles science fiction club. And he was always interested in offbeat things. And he was invited to this, this, this dilemma group in, in, in Hollywood. And they had a thing called the, the Gnostic mass. And it's basically a mass that they do. And it just blew his mind. And so he, he realized that there were answers here that were outside the, that explain the strange things in science or in accidents that should have, like accidents that went wrong, but they actually turned out to be the right thing. There was like a, an unseen force in the universe. He, he, he drew himself wholly into magic and the occult. At the same time he was building the rockets. At the same time he was in contact before World War II, this is before World War II, with Werner von Braun, who eventually invented the Saturn V rocket. He was shocked and all the Americans were shocked to find out just how far behind the rockets were in America compared to Germany. The Germans were light years ahead. But Werner von Braun was also a science fiction head, which is very interesting that these guys were brought, they, they took science fiction and made it into reality in many ways. His life, he started this thing called the Agape Lodge, which was in Pasadena. And it was basically a kind of a hippie loving thing before the hippies came along. And he was getting paid a good salary then by Aerojet Corporation. So he had this like commune, we call it a commune of like artists and writers and, you know, good looking women and stuff like that. After a while, this guy called Elrond Hubbard comes in, who goes on to be the founder of Scientology. Jack Parsons becomes spelled down by him, mainly because Parsons lacked his father walked out on them when he was young. And he had this long term need for a father figure. And he got interested in introduced to people like Crowley through dialogue and letters. And Crowley and Parsons became kind of surrogate father figures for him. They became as you know, he used to write to Crowley in England saying my beloved father and things like this. And there's a genuine affection there. Now Crowley was getting was getting on at this point. Now, they Parsons and Hubbard really got into magic. And they have this concept of creating something called the moon child. And it's a really amazing story. There's a book by Crowley. It's an actual fictional novel. I mean, it's quite a fun read called Moon Child. I had a copy at our where is it right here. And it talks about an occult group who are planted into a woman, a magical child called the moon child with the with the process of making the human race eligible for the next stage of reality. You know, this kind of thing. Now this was to appeal to Parsons and Hubbard some way because maybe there were Parsons was probably thinking it's not going to be easy for humans to exist in space as we found out. It's not it's really they come back with all kind of health problems and mental problems and everything. So maybe decide there the moon child appeared to him that we actually built that the human that would be ready for space, something that Stanley Kubrick played around, but in 2001, R.C. Clark, the moon did the start child. They went down to the Baha'i Desert and did this invocation called the Babylon working. And it was to it was to get basically the horror Babylon. And they went down there with a book. And the cover of the book was a woman with flaming red hair. And that was his personification of Babylon. And it's just amazing. When they come back from the ritual, this gorgeous redheaded vamp called Marjorie Cameron is waiting for Parsons in his in his in the Pasadena Lodge. That was his Babylon. And she was just it's even more amazing. She was the first person in the United States, I believe, to make an official report of seeing a UFO in the desert. And she became his muse and so on. And, you know, so the Babylon ritual had actually worked. It worked. Now, unfortunately, Parsons died in an accident when he was working on a new kind of rocket fuel and the motor exploded in his garage and killed him. And there is a talk that he was assassinated because he was working as a subcontract for the Israeli military at the time. So there's all kinds of rumors that probably it could be true that the FBI or CIA killed him because he was giving records details of American projects to the Israelis because they weren't allies at that time. But however, from that man's life, from two from two eight year old boys building rockets in the backyard, the Saturn 5 rocket landed on the moon, and you can draw a clean trajectory. And it's like, oh, my God, it's like, you know, they started the rocket motor company Aerogit, they found it, what became JPL JPL brought over a Varner von Braun after the war for Project Blue Project Blue Book, not Blue Book Project Paperclip. And yeah, and then that became the Apollo, the Mercury problem, Apollo, the man landed on the moon. And it started with two little boys experimenting and passing it. It was one of those kind of like, if it was written out as a fictional story, you wouldn't believe it.