Jason Jorjani
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Very much so. Or like the doctor in Stranger Things, the one who works closely with Eleven.
You know, the papa figure.
You know, the papa figure.
You know, the papa figure.
Some of these guys are family men, and they go home, they have to deal with their wives, they have to deal with their kids, and they have to somehow dissociate from what it is they do at work every day. Right. In any case, what are the deepest, darkest secrets that these people have been apprised of?
Some of these guys are family men, and they go home, they have to deal with their wives, they have to deal with their kids, and they have to somehow dissociate from what it is they do at work every day. Right. In any case, what are the deepest, darkest secrets that these people have been apprised of?
Some of these guys are family men, and they go home, they have to deal with their wives, they have to deal with their kids, and they have to somehow dissociate from what it is they do at work every day. Right. In any case, what are the deepest, darkest secrets that these people have been apprised of?
You remember how I said in remote viewing of Mars by Joe McMoneagle, there was this very curious thing he reported about how these people on Mars kept trying to find a way out. Yeah. And they couldn't find a way out no matter what they did. What were they trying to find a way out of?
You remember how I said in remote viewing of Mars by Joe McMoneagle, there was this very curious thing he reported about how these people on Mars kept trying to find a way out. Yeah. And they couldn't find a way out no matter what they did. What were they trying to find a way out of?
You remember how I said in remote viewing of Mars by Joe McMoneagle, there was this very curious thing he reported about how these people on Mars kept trying to find a way out. Yeah. And they couldn't find a way out no matter what they did. What were they trying to find a way out of?
so they they got to earth i mean if the theory that i'm proposing is correct they made it to earth and they used the moon to terraform the earth and so forth right so they weren't trying to get out of mars or get off of mars what were they trying to get out of that's a good opener to this question of you know the simulation and what evidence there is that we might be living inside of a simulation
so they they got to earth i mean if the theory that i'm proposing is correct they made it to earth and they used the moon to terraform the earth and so forth right so they weren't trying to get out of mars or get off of mars what were they trying to get out of that's a good opener to this question of you know the simulation and what evidence there is that we might be living inside of a simulation
so they they got to earth i mean if the theory that i'm proposing is correct they made it to earth and they used the moon to terraform the earth and so forth right so they weren't trying to get out of mars or get off of mars what were they trying to get out of that's a good opener to this question of you know the simulation and what evidence there is that we might be living inside of a simulation
So this is something that I discuss at length in my book, Citanion. And, you know, I've discussed simulation theory in Closer Encounters and other books of mine before, but I discovered something recently that's much more rigorous from a mathematics and physics perspective and consequently also more compelling and disturbing. And that's this. Okay, so bear with me.
So this is something that I discuss at length in my book, Citanion. And, you know, I've discussed simulation theory in Closer Encounters and other books of mine before, but I discovered something recently that's much more rigorous from a mathematics and physics perspective and consequently also more compelling and disturbing. And that's this. Okay, so bear with me.
So this is something that I discuss at length in my book, Citanion. And, you know, I've discussed simulation theory in Closer Encounters and other books of mine before, but I discovered something recently that's much more rigorous from a mathematics and physics perspective and consequently also more compelling and disturbing. And that's this. Okay, so bear with me.
This gets a little bit complicated. So we start building computers in the 1940s, right? Alan Turing, the big wall-sized computers, and we're competing with the Nazis.
This gets a little bit complicated. So we start building computers in the 1940s, right? Alan Turing, the big wall-sized computers, and we're competing with the Nazis.
This gets a little bit complicated. So we start building computers in the 1940s, right? Alan Turing, the big wall-sized computers, and we're competing with the Nazis.
Yeah, and ENIAC. At that time in the 1940s, when we're building the first computers, there was this guy, Claude Shannon, who developed a science known as information theory, subsequently came to be known as information theory. Because before computers were built, nobody thought of mathematically formalizing the transfer of information. We had phones at that time. We had radio transmissions.