 Since Geter, read Temius and Cretius for Atlantis. Hancock isn't a scientist, however, he's a journalist and possibly an accredited Scientologist, but not an archaeologist or geologist. The baggy boy should not fly the plane. Here's the thing. I've studied paleontology. I know a little bit about archaeology because my background is geophysics and I've taken paleontology classes. Second year or fourth year paleontology. I've taken a lot of earth. I know about earth. Bacon and greens. I know about earth. Let me tell you something about something I all of a sudden just light bulbs went click, click, click that I understood about our understanding life on earth, the earth, the universe, especially humanity in general. So having become a geophysicist with a minor in mathematics, honors program, cooperative, blah blah blah, papers published, not much because I didn't last that long. I did 10 years. When it comes to paleontology, our understanding of the universe and our time here, there is one major fucking assumption that everything else is based on. And that's the law of formalism. I can't even pronounce it. I have a hard time pronouncing these isms, which is basically the law that says we assume that the rate of change, i.e. time occurred at the same rate in the past as it does now. So all of our assumptions regarding our timeline, understanding here comes out, understanding of the universe and all this jazz is based on the assumption that time is absolute. The rate of change of time is consistent throughout life of the universe, matter, matter. And as we talked about earlier in the stream, time is basically just a property of matter. And time is really the rate of change. So if this assumption that we make in paleontology, geology, astronomy, archeology and all this shit, the sciences, if that assumption does not hold, then some things might have a ripple effect. It might have a serious ripple effect if the rate of time, rate of change is not the same. And it's not, because we know time is influenced by matter and by speed. So if time is just a property of matter, which is gravity and speed, that's how you can control time. By gravity and speed, that's how you control time. Right. There's Sal. He's finding things. He usually is not allowed here. Oh, he's stuck. Are you stuck? There he goes. Right. Then you know what? Yeah, he's out. How's it going? You want to come up here? Come on. Then maybe, maybe, maybe our understanding of things is not what we thought. Hi. What is it? Are you doing good? Yeah. There you go. That's right. Fun. Fun.