Howard Lutnick
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's the translator between the big and the little. And I took all these things to his house. I thought he would evaluate them. I thought he would send them throughout his friends. And then I watched him go on Piers Morgan and literally say that 99% of everything I said was bathwater, was bullshit. The Howard comma. He said that afterwards? Yeah, he said this. Before you guys getting on together.
He did this after our talk on Joe Rogan, but before our meeting when I went to his house. So I let that go, him saying that 99% of everything I was doing was bathwater. And then he said, the one thing that might be good is this linchpin. But he got there by a mistake. which I clearly showed that it wasn't a mistake, the 109.47.
He did this after our talk on Joe Rogan, but before our meeting when I went to his house. So I let that go, him saying that 99% of everything I was doing was bathwater. And then he said, the one thing that might be good is this linchpin. But he got there by a mistake. which I clearly showed that it wasn't a mistake, the 109.47.
But he said that everything I did was just by accident and nothing had value. So we were able to take the Howard Comma, which is the resonance created from the linchpin. We were able to take the Tetrian wave conjugations, which is the shape of the fractal in itself.
But he said that everything I did was just by accident and nothing had value. So we were able to take the Howard Comma, which is the resonance created from the linchpin. We were able to take the Tetrian wave conjugations, which is the shape of the fractal in itself.
And we were able to take the mirror at all shapes and literally rebuild the entire world the way that according to, well, not rebuild the world. We've been able to take those same things that he called bathwater
And we were able to take the mirror at all shapes and literally rebuild the entire world the way that according to, well, not rebuild the world. We've been able to take those same things that he called bathwater
and apply them to the three-body problem and solve a 300-year-old problem that Newton couldn't solve, that PoincarΓ© couldn't solve, because they needed a finite space, they needed curved multiplication, they also needed to reimagine how the prime numbers behave. They needed to understand that gravity was just an effect of electricity.
and apply them to the three-body problem and solve a 300-year-old problem that Newton couldn't solve, that PoincarΓ© couldn't solve, because they needed a finite space, they needed curved multiplication, they also needed to reimagine how the prime numbers behave. They needed to understand that gravity was just an effect of electricity.
But how could we take the things he said was bathwater and solve the biggest problems in math and in physics when he said it had no physical application, no chemistry application, no application towards mathematics? But we solved all the biggest problems with it, and that's why I gave it to you ahead of time and asked you to run it through your AI.
But how could we take the things he said was bathwater and solve the biggest problems in math and in physics when he said it had no physical application, no chemistry application, no application towards mathematics? But we solved all the biggest problems with it, and that's why I gave it to you ahead of time and asked you to run it through your AI.
Yeah, because I went over to South Carolina University, and I took them over the β at the time I had a company where we were growing diamonds through β not high pressure, high temperature, but through chemical vapor deposition.
Yeah, because I went over to South Carolina University, and I took them over the β at the time I had a company where we were growing diamonds through β not high pressure, high temperature, but through chemical vapor deposition.
And the conversation I was having with them, and they were talking about giving me an honorary degree, should have been in chemistry because that's the stuff that we were doing. We were transmuting one thing into another thing. So when I went on that other show and I had my β
And the conversation I was having with them, and they were talking about giving me an honorary degree, should have been in chemistry because that's the stuff that we were doing. We were transmuting one thing into another thing. So when I went on that other show and I had my β
honorary degree that was given to me I had no idea it was in I had no idea it was in humanities I thought it was going to be in the thing that I went to talk to them about so so so to them so to say I'm a you don't have a PhD from South Carolina it's an honorary right so it's
honorary degree that was given to me I had no idea it was in I had no idea it was in humanities I thought it was going to be in the thing that I went to talk to them about so so so to them so to say I'm a you don't have a PhD from South Carolina it's an honorary right so it's
Well, if I was wrong, then they wouldn't have made such a big stink about it. But the fact that I was able to show them with their calculator...
Well, if I was wrong, then they wouldn't have made such a big stink about it. But the fact that I was able to show them with their calculator...
that because they have 1 times 1 equaling 1, an action times an action without a reaction, and as a result of it, you get this contradiction with the square root of 2 being cubed, having the same value as the square root of 2 times 2, which should say a red flag, a herring right away that there's something wrong with the mathematics, with that being the problem that leads into the distribution of prime numbers, because the number 2, any prime number...