Jason Jorjani
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
He's like, well, I'm here to engage with like 30 members of your parliament who are interested in resolving our differences. Now, what historians won't tell you is that Hitler made like three or four peace offerings to the British before he declared war on them.
He's like, well, I'm here to engage with like 30 members of your parliament who are interested in resolving our differences. Now, what historians won't tell you is that Hitler made like three or four peace offerings to the British before he declared war on them.
He's like, well, I'm here to engage with like 30 members of your parliament who are interested in resolving our differences. Now, what historians won't tell you is that Hitler made like three or four peace offerings to the British before he declared war on them.
Not just peace offerings, he made offers to collaborate with the British Royal Navy and become basically military allies. They turned down all these offers. So Hess says, I'm here to make another offer to your people in the House of Lords. So he had the numbers already, right? There was a list of British politicians who this guy... Knew would be sympathetic.
Not just peace offerings, he made offers to collaborate with the British Royal Navy and become basically military allies. They turned down all these offers. So Hess says, I'm here to make another offer to your people in the House of Lords. So he had the numbers already, right? There was a list of British politicians who this guy... Knew would be sympathetic.
Not just peace offerings, he made offers to collaborate with the British Royal Navy and become basically military allies. They turned down all these offers. So Hess says, I'm here to make another offer to your people in the House of Lords. So he had the numbers already, right? There was a list of British politicians who this guy... Knew would be sympathetic.
So when Churchill turns and dies, so what do the British do? Churchill doesn't let him talk to these parliamentarians. They throw Hess in prison and he stays there for decades and decades. And then after the Berlin Wall comes down, you know, once Germany becomes democratic, reunification of Germany.
So when Churchill turns and dies, so what do the British do? Churchill doesn't let him talk to these parliamentarians. They throw Hess in prison and he stays there for decades and decades. And then after the Berlin Wall comes down, you know, once Germany becomes democratic, reunification of Germany.
So when Churchill turns and dies, so what do the British do? Churchill doesn't let him talk to these parliamentarians. They throw Hess in prison and he stays there for decades and decades. And then after the Berlin Wall comes down, you know, once Germany becomes democratic, reunification of Germany.
He was transplanted to a German prison, Hess. And no one was allowed to talk to him ever again for the rest of his life until he died. Why did he go to Britain two years after being in Antarctica? What was he going to tell the British about Antarctica? What might've been found there? You know? What do you think? And why did, why wasn't he allowed to talk to anybody for the rest of his life? Right?
He was transplanted to a German prison, Hess. And no one was allowed to talk to him ever again for the rest of his life until he died. Why did he go to Britain two years after being in Antarctica? What was he going to tell the British about Antarctica? What might've been found there? You know? What do you think? And why did, why wasn't he allowed to talk to anybody for the rest of his life? Right?
He was transplanted to a German prison, Hess. And no one was allowed to talk to him ever again for the rest of his life until he died. Why did he go to Britain two years after being in Antarctica? What was he going to tell the British about Antarctica? What might've been found there? You know? What do you think? And why did, why wasn't he allowed to talk to anybody for the rest of his life? Right?
So it's interesting.
So it's interesting.
So it's interesting.
Well, if you believe the empirical case that's been made for Atlantis in Antarctica, which Graham Hancock made in Fingerprints of the Gods, his first book, working off of the research of Charles Hapgood and Rand Flemeth. And Colin Wilson also at one point found this theory compelling when he wrote one of his books on Atlantis. That the only landmass that fits Plato's description is Antarctica.
Well, if you believe the empirical case that's been made for Atlantis in Antarctica, which Graham Hancock made in Fingerprints of the Gods, his first book, working off of the research of Charles Hapgood and Rand Flemeth. And Colin Wilson also at one point found this theory compelling when he wrote one of his books on Atlantis. That the only landmass that fits Plato's description is Antarctica.
Well, if you believe the empirical case that's been made for Atlantis in Antarctica, which Graham Hancock made in Fingerprints of the Gods, his first book, working off of the research of Charles Hapgood and Rand Flemeth. And Colin Wilson also at one point found this theory compelling when he wrote one of his books on Atlantis. That the only landmass that fits Plato's description is Antarctica.
Plato describes an island the size of Libya and Asia combined, of Asia and Libya combined. In the Greek world in that time, in Plato's time, that was a description for a territory roughly the size of the first Persian Empire. The first Persian Empire is about the size of the continental United States, a little larger than that. Well, that's the size of Antarctica.
Plato describes an island the size of Libya and Asia combined, of Asia and Libya combined. In the Greek world in that time, in Plato's time, that was a description for a territory roughly the size of the first Persian Empire. The first Persian Empire is about the size of the continental United States, a little larger than that. Well, that's the size of Antarctica.