John Reeves
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
How long are you planning? Another 15, 20 years.
How long are you planning? Another 15, 20 years.
How long are you planning? Another 15, 20 years.
To get the bones, all the bones back, first of all.
To get the bones, all the bones back, first of all.
To get the bones, all the bones back, first of all.
Because they have so many more. So many more.
Because they have so many more. So many more.
Because they have so many more. So many more.
They took, you got to remember there's 200 nozzles running. They took them all. They took hundreds and hundreds of thousands of bones to New York City. Hundreds of thousands. I've only got a couple hundred thousand. They took millions. And they got them all. They got them, every one of them. And the guy that was their collector, he was just a field hand on the Alaska Railroad.
They took, you got to remember there's 200 nozzles running. They took them all. They took hundreds and hundreds of thousands of bones to New York City. Hundreds of thousands. I've only got a couple hundred thousand. They took millions. And they got them all. They got them, every one of them. And the guy that was their collector, he was just a field hand on the Alaska Railroad.
They took, you got to remember there's 200 nozzles running. They took them all. They took hundreds and hundreds of thousands of bones to New York City. Hundreds of thousands. I've only got a couple hundred thousand. They took millions. And they got them all. They got them, every one of them. And the guy that was their collector, he was just a field hand on the Alaska Railroad.
And they said, hey, you want to collect bones for us? He said, sure.
And they said, hey, you want to collect bones for us? He said, sure.
And they said, hey, you want to collect bones for us? He said, sure.
So he ended up, when it was all said and done, with an honorary doctorate from the University of Alaska, who was in on it, by the way, on this tripartite agreement, and probably influenced by, you know, Charles Frick, the son of the industrialists that used to shoot his laborers because they wanted more money in the steel industry. Yeah, Henry Frick was a prick.