Jason Jorjani
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Okay, but the story of what's going on on the moon is a lot more... it's a lot more startling than finding a city on the dark side of it, right? Because you could be dealing with a natural satellite that has been colonized at who knows what time by whatever space-faring civilization. No, it looks like there's a much more disturbing scenario here.
Okay, but the story of what's going on on the moon is a lot more... it's a lot more startling than finding a city on the dark side of it, right? Because you could be dealing with a natural satellite that has been colonized at who knows what time by whatever space-faring civilization. No, it looks like there's a much more disturbing scenario here.
And our government became aware of this during Apollo 12 and 13. During Apollo 12, I think it was the lander that impacted the moon. in a way that set off a seismometer that had been pre-positioned there. There was a seismograph that was pre-positioned on the moon. And when the Apollo 12 lander hit the surface of the moon...
And our government became aware of this during Apollo 12 and 13. During Apollo 12, I think it was the lander that impacted the moon. in a way that set off a seismometer that had been pre-positioned there. There was a seismograph that was pre-positioned on the moon. And when the Apollo 12 lander hit the surface of the moon...
And our government became aware of this during Apollo 12 and 13. During Apollo 12, I think it was the lander that impacted the moon. in a way that set off a seismometer that had been pre-positioned there. There was a seismograph that was pre-positioned on the moon. And when the Apollo 12 lander hit the surface of the moon...
The signal that came from the seismograph was consistent with the ringing or vibration of a hollow object. Right. So the way that the shockwave passed through the moon suggested that there was very little inside the moon. Right. Okay? It rang like a bell, as they described it. For a while, right? In the first case, it was for almost an hour. Mm-hmm.
The signal that came from the seismograph was consistent with the ringing or vibration of a hollow object. Right. So the way that the shockwave passed through the moon suggested that there was very little inside the moon. Right. Okay? It rang like a bell, as they described it. For a while, right? In the first case, it was for almost an hour. Mm-hmm.
The signal that came from the seismograph was consistent with the ringing or vibration of a hollow object. Right. So the way that the shockwave passed through the moon suggested that there was very little inside the moon. Right. Okay? It rang like a bell, as they described it. For a while, right? In the first case, it was for almost an hour. Mm-hmm.
So then they got curious about this, and in Apollo 13, they deliberately crashed the third stage of Apollo 13 into the surface of the moon to carry out a test to see whether this was a repeatable phenomenon, right? And this time, the seismograph not only confirmed the resonance passing through a hollow object, but the moon rang like a bell for three hours, right?
So then they got curious about this, and in Apollo 13, they deliberately crashed the third stage of Apollo 13 into the surface of the moon to carry out a test to see whether this was a repeatable phenomenon, right? And this time, the seismograph not only confirmed the resonance passing through a hollow object, but the moon rang like a bell for three hours, right?
So then they got curious about this, and in Apollo 13, they deliberately crashed the third stage of Apollo 13 into the surface of the moon to carry out a test to see whether this was a repeatable phenomenon, right? And this time, the seismograph not only confirmed the resonance passing through a hollow object, but the moon rang like a bell for three hours, right?
And they were able to tell how much, more or less, of the moon is apparently hollow. Right. And it's really shocking. It's like the moon goes down for about 20 miles as a solid structure, and then on the inside... There's a distance of about 1,000 miles radially, 1,000 miles from the interior of the shell to the core, radially in every direction.
And they were able to tell how much, more or less, of the moon is apparently hollow. Right. And it's really shocking. It's like the moon goes down for about 20 miles as a solid structure, and then on the inside... There's a distance of about 1,000 miles radially, 1,000 miles from the interior of the shell to the core, radially in every direction.
And they were able to tell how much, more or less, of the moon is apparently hollow. Right. And it's really shocking. It's like the moon goes down for about 20 miles as a solid structure, and then on the inside... There's a distance of about 1,000 miles radially, 1,000 miles from the interior of the shell to the core, radially in every direction.
In other words, the distance between Los Angeles and Seattle or New York and St. Louis or Paris and Prague.
In other words, the distance between Los Angeles and Seattle or New York and St. Louis or Paris and Prague.
In other words, the distance between Los Angeles and Seattle or New York and St. Louis or Paris and Prague.
i suspect that it's not natural caverns but that what they're seeing are the hollows between all kinds of com complex machinery that are inside that structure one of the other things that they noted with these impact tests was that the moon sort of it seemed to compensate and correct for the impact in a way that suggested there were oscillators inside the structure right
i suspect that it's not natural caverns but that what they're seeing are the hollows between all kinds of com complex machinery that are inside that structure one of the other things that they noted with these impact tests was that the moon sort of it seemed to compensate and correct for the impact in a way that suggested there were oscillators inside the structure right
i suspect that it's not natural caverns but that what they're seeing are the hollows between all kinds of com complex machinery that are inside that structure one of the other things that they noted with these impact tests was that the moon sort of it seemed to compensate and correct for the impact in a way that suggested there were oscillators inside the structure right