Graham Hancock
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
My eldest son, who is half Somali and half English, had his DNA done with 23andMe. And what it showed was that he's 50% African and 49% British and 1% Spanish. And we tried to figure that out. And the answer is that my ancestors came from Cornwall in the southwest of England.
And that's where the Spanish Armada washed up and the survivors of the Spanish Armada washed up and then integrated with the local community and contributed their genes. So, you know, there is an interest in the past. There is an interest in our personal past, our personal origins, our ancestors, who we are.
And that's where the Spanish Armada washed up and the survivors of the Spanish Armada washed up and then integrated with the local community and contributed their genes. So, you know, there is an interest in the past. There is an interest in our personal past, our personal origins, our ancestors, who we are.
And that's where the Spanish Armada washed up and the survivors of the Spanish Armada washed up and then integrated with the local community and contributed their genes. So, you know, there is an interest in the past. There is an interest in our personal past, our personal origins, our ancestors, who we are.
And there's a much broader interest in the story of humanity that has brought us to where we are today and this haunting feeling of That something's missing and that we have a civilization today. I often would like to compare it to a sort of furious – in terms of the level of consciousness, our civilization today is like a furious, petulant teenager.
And there's a much broader interest in the story of humanity that has brought us to where we are today and this haunting feeling of That something's missing and that we have a civilization today. I often would like to compare it to a sort of furious – in terms of the level of consciousness, our civilization today is like a furious, petulant teenager.
And there's a much broader interest in the story of humanity that has brought us to where we are today and this haunting feeling of That something's missing and that we have a civilization today. I often would like to compare it to a sort of furious – in terms of the level of consciousness, our civilization today is like a furious, petulant teenager.
But in terms of what it can do, in terms of the destructive power of nuclear weapons, it's a god. So we have godlike powers with the consciousness of an immature teenager. That's what we're looking at in the world today.
But in terms of what it can do, in terms of the destructive power of nuclear weapons, it's a god. So we have godlike powers with the consciousness of an immature teenager. That's what we're looking at in the world today.
But in terms of what it can do, in terms of the destructive power of nuclear weapons, it's a god. So we have godlike powers with the consciousness of an immature teenager. That's what we're looking at in the world today.
And maybe by understanding our past better, by understanding our unity that comes down from the past, maybe we can learn something that would be helpful to us in not carrying on in this way. Because we do live at an inflection point just now. This is... One thing I'm pretty sure that quote-unquote my lost civilization didn't have and that was nuclear weapons.
And maybe by understanding our past better, by understanding our unity that comes down from the past, maybe we can learn something that would be helpful to us in not carrying on in this way. Because we do live at an inflection point just now. This is... One thing I'm pretty sure that quote-unquote my lost civilization didn't have and that was nuclear weapons.
And maybe by understanding our past better, by understanding our unity that comes down from the past, maybe we can learn something that would be helpful to us in not carrying on in this way. Because we do live at an inflection point just now. This is... One thing I'm pretty sure that quote-unquote my lost civilization didn't have and that was nuclear weapons.
But we have nukes today and we have them in an enormous scale and behind each of those nukes is a fragile human being with his own or her own ego and complexes and fears and paranoia. And we're reaching a point where those buttons are going to be pressed. We are, as far as I know, the first human civilization that has the capacity to actually wipe itself out completely.
But we have nukes today and we have them in an enormous scale and behind each of those nukes is a fragile human being with his own or her own ego and complexes and fears and paranoia. And we're reaching a point where those buttons are going to be pressed. We are, as far as I know, the first human civilization that has the capacity to actually wipe itself out completely.
But we have nukes today and we have them in an enormous scale and behind each of those nukes is a fragile human being with his own or her own ego and complexes and fears and paranoia. And we're reaching a point where those buttons are going to be pressed. We are, as far as I know, the first human civilization that has the capacity to actually wipe itself out completely.
We don't need a comet impact. We don't need a solar outburst. We can do it to ourselves. And that requires humanity to make a major step forward in consciousness. And I think making that major step forward in consciousness will be helped by better understanding our own past.
We don't need a comet impact. We don't need a solar outburst. We can do it to ourselves. And that requires humanity to make a major step forward in consciousness. And I think making that major step forward in consciousness will be helped by better understanding our own past.
We don't need a comet impact. We don't need a solar outburst. We can do it to ourselves. And that requires humanity to make a major step forward in consciousness. And I think making that major step forward in consciousness will be helped by better understanding our own past.
You went with Brian Morareschi. Yeah. Brilliant. Brilliant guy.