
Danny Jones Podcast
#275 - The Bible Codes: God, Technology, Aliens & Human Origins | Greg Braden
Mon, 16 Dec 2024
Watch the show ad-free & uncensored on Patreon: https://patreon.com/danyjones Gregg Braden is a five-time New York Times best-selling author, scientist, international educator and renowned as a pioneer in the emerging paradigm based in science, social policy and human potential. SPONSORS https://apple.co/4e8ylpA - Sign up for DraftKings Casino with code DANNYJONESPOD. https://buy.ver.so/danny - Get 15% off your first order. https://chuckdefense.com/danny - Learn Chuck Norris' secret. https://whiterabbitenergy.com/?ref=DJP - Use code DJP for 20% off EPISODE LINKS Gregg's YouTube channel: @GreggBradenOfficial Pure Human book: https://a.co/d/7SWcRuk https://greggbraden.com FOLLOW DANNY JONES https://www.instagram.com/dannyjones https://twitter.com/jonesdanny OUTLINE 00:00 - Gregg's background & childhood 18:24 - CasPatreonailed nuke launch 26:18 - Society change coming by 2030 32:46 - Technological corruption vs human biology 47:24 - Biology is soft technology 54:28 - The trojan horse of evil 01:00:39 - Climate change 01:08:48 - The last generation of pure humans 01:18:42 - WEF 01:29:24 - Computing on neurons 01:34:31 - Liquid breathing technology 01:43:25 - How tech hijacks dopamine production 01:50:52 - Aliens are future humans hypothesis 02:01:52 - 200k year old engineered DNA 02:13:40 - Ancient temples on the moon 02:25:48 - Zecharia Sitchin & Sumerian texts 02:30:32 - Dead Sea Scrolls & the Bible 02:41:42 - Future events encoded in ancient Bible scrolls 02:50:26 - The 'Torah Codes' 03:00:02 - The Great Pyramid of Giza 03:14:49 - Patreon Q&A Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Chapter 1: What inspired Gregg Braden's journey into science and spirituality?
Thanksgiving, yeah. Can you believe this guy? This guy was nice enough to fly all the way here from New Mexico the day before Thanksgiving, and you're going to be on an airplane for Thanksgiving Day. I will. Are you going to be back in time for dinner? No.
I'm going to get home late. My wife's going to have a meal for me, though. Oh, that's nice. She's going to have a meal for me. I think you are worth it, and I think this planet is worth it, and I think the people of this world are worth this conversation, and that's why... I felt it was important to have a conversation.
You do a really great job at communicating some of the stuff that you talk about. And you cover a wide, wide swath of topics from religion to spirituality to all. I mean, I just like when I start diving down your YouTube channel, I can't stop.
Can I tell you a story about that? From home, I was doing a remote early morning talk show with a station in New York City, Commuter. I won't name the station. And the guy came on in the morning and it was 6 a.m. for me. It was 8 a.m. for him. No good morning. Welcome, Greg. Thanks for doing the show or nothing. He came on.
The first thing he said, he goes, why can't you stick with one topic like everybody else? And I thought it was a joke. I thought it was kidding. And I said, excuse me? He said, man, he said, you're all over the map. Are you talking about planetary magnetics? You're talking about ancient civilizations, DNA, you know, geomagnetic anomalies. What are you talking about? Then I knew he was serious.
And I said, well. I said, we do cover a lot of ground, but if you look closely, every one of those facets is just that, is a piece, one piece of a single picture. And it's a story of us. It's us and our relationship to our bodies in the world. So in a very real sense, I am sticking with one topic. It's just a big topic. And he said, let's go to station break. And he never came back. What?
That was the end. When was this? It was a couple of years ago. Wow. It was before COVID. That's wild. Yeah, it was wild. So for a lot of people, we tend to zero in on one facet of our relationship to the world. Sometimes you get really hung up in that one facet. Because we're trained to think that way, Danny. We're trained to compartmentalize our world.
We break the world down in the world of science. I'm trained as a scientist, and I was trained to think in terms of geology and biology and chemistry and physics and Yeah, we do that to make it comfortable for us to study the world. But the truth is the world doesn't know about those boundaries.
And where you really, really begin to take a deep dive and a deeper understanding of what this world is about is when you cross those traditional boundaries that have separated the sciences in the past. I've lost a lot of credibility doing that. The minute that I started talking about spiritual traditions as a scientist, my credibility went right out the door. And, you know, it's okay.
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Chapter 2: What are the implications of technology on human biology?
It was Fortran 4 and then Fortran 77. So although I was an earth scientist with a strong background in math, physics, computer science, and ocean science, the computer science is where I really excelled in those jobs. And they wanted to transfer me to Saudi Arabia. I didn't want to go.
And so I left and took the computer expertise and applied for a position with a company that explored the stars and the planets. It was called Martin Marietta Aerospace at that time. And they hired me, but it was during the Cold War. and said, well, you've got a job, but we need your expertise this Cold War on the defense side of the house. We want you to be a programmer.
And I was a senior computer systems designer for Martin Marietta. And I'm saying this, this is gonna be important in this conversation because it gave me insight into some of the most advanced technologies at that time. And even today, I mean, advanced laser systems, computer systems, radar systems, everything.
and what i began to realize because of my background in biology is that all the stuff i was seeing built around us is as cool as it was i have yet to this day to see any technology outside of us that doesn't mimic what we already do in the human body except we do it better and that's going to be important when we talk about where we're going here so so it was that path It wasn't a quantum leap.
It was a logical progression that I was developing my understanding of the technology and the science by day. By night, I was studying, and always have since I was five years old, ancient civilizations, ancient texts. Because I've always believed, and this really, and I don't talk about this a lot, but you asked me, so I'm happy to share it.
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Now back to the show.
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Chapter 3: How do ancient texts relate to modern society?
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That's why we began the way we began. We are, gotta go back to the context. We are living a fundamental battle. between good and evil. A lot of people, when I was a kid, I was born and raised in Northern Missouri, rural Northern Missouri, back in the 50s. And we would talk about, and it was a joke. Good and evil was a joke.
There's a little red devil that had horns and a pointy tail and a little angel here, and they were having this conversation. Evil is real. And it is deceptive in the way that it plays out. Because we are barreling down the path to this convergence point of 2030, evil is rearing its ugly head. And if you think that's not true, watch the music performance at the Grammys two years ago.
Literally satanic rituals playing out. What was that? Under the guise of entertainment. Or if you saw the opening, closing ceremonies of the Olympics.
Oh, yeah.
What does the pale white horse of death on the river have to do with the greatest Olympians in the world coming together?
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Chapter 4: What does the War Scroll reveal about humanity's struggle?
Right.
So, yeah, yeah, we did a whole podcast on this, but apparently that's not supposed to be... They're saying it's the Last Supper, but I think what Neil was telling us was that that was Apollo, that the big, the large woman in the center was supposed to be Apollo.
It was. It was a play on the Last Supper. Yeah. And it was a play on the Last Supper to denigrate the meaning of the Last Supper.
Right, right. Yeah. So the point is – That woman is the Jesus Christ we deserve. Yeah.
I mean, evil playing out.
There it is. There it was. There's the original. So that's Dionysus drinking wine at the bottom.
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Chapter 5: What is the significance of the year 2030?
Okay.
Or eating his grapes. And there's the lady. Right, exactly. The seven rays. It's still the same seven rays that Jesus had in the Last Supper. Where does all this have to do with the Olympics? It has nothing to do with the Olympics.
Exactly.
But the funny thing is, though, is everyone paid attention to this, and no one paid attention to the badass Gojira concert that was going on. Did you see the metal show that they had? They had this band, Gojira, and they had them all on these balconies. They had the drummer on his own balcony. I heard it. They had the guitarist on his own balcony. Oh, it was sick.
I think that was, that was a definite, definite win for the Olympics. But yeah, this whole thing was, was silly.
There it is. Yeah. Here's the point.
And some of it may be just people. And people like to take it to the extreme too. Like people on the opposite end of everything, they want to make things out to be something they're not. So it's like, you got to try to like be set. The truth is usually somewhere in the middle with this stuff.
If you're looking only at that, I would agree. Now you look at the context and where you can see where are the events that are being portrayed? Are they in support of life or do they deny life? And are they in support of our humanness or do they deny our humanness? And whatever the answer to that is, I mean, there's... This goes so deep. There's a concerted effort to remake our planet.
There's a concerted effort to remake our society. There's a concerted effort to remake our very biology. And all of those are playing out at the same time and they're all being pushed as an agenda. by the year 2030. And who is pushing it? Who's behind it? Well, this is this is there are people who are prone to greed. And you say, well, people do it for greed and money. When you talk about
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Chapter 6: How is climate change connected to human actions?
And it's like they came out of this haze and they started communicating with each other, started communicating with their dad. They started getting in, really getting into the culture and the people and the food and having a great time.
And they wake up.
It was almost sad that we had to come home, we did. And then when they went home, I assume they got their phones, but now they had their phones and they had the reference point of knowing themselves in the absence of the phones. Now they have to make a choice. What kind of a man do I want to be? Do I want to be a slave to this? I don't have my phone here, but to this technology.
And the whole group watched it happen. And we were, I mean, you know, we know it, but it's amazing when you actually see it, how much of an influence. This technology has on us. So this is not anti-tech. This is about hopefully developing a deeper appreciation for our humanness. And I like to take it a step further even, a sense of pride.
I'm proud to be a human because when you read the ancient texts and when you – there's a whole – another facet of this I'd like to go into. Yeah. There is something about us that is rare in this universe. It is precious. Can I share a couple of stories? Are you okay if I- Of course. Another perspective. And this isn't for everyone, but everyone learns differently. Everyone learns differently.
So I'm going at this from a number of different ways. And somebody will pick up something that means something to them. There was a researcher, Harvard trained. He was the head of psychiatry at Harvard University. And I had the honor and the privilege of knowing and touring with him on the conference circuit. His name was John Mack. Oh, yeah. I'm very familiar with John Mack. Okay. So I knew John.
We toured together before he was mysteriously killed. And there's a lot of uncertainty about precisely...
Looked the wrong way, crossing the street in London, right?
He wasn't crossing the street. He was on the sidewalk. And the car left the street. He was on the sidewalk after the conference. He had dinner with friends at night. He was walking home at night. The car left the street, came up on the sidewalk, struck him down, and returned to the street. And he was conscious when they found him, and he died not long after that.
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Chapter 7: What are the dangers of replacing our biology with technology?
I think it's no accident that we've seen that. So that's the, I mean, there's a lot more we can talk about with the Torah codes, but that's a little piece of the big conversation.
Have you ever been to Egypt? I'm sure you have.
I led groups there from 1992 until 9-11. He's done everything. Every year, at least once a year, sometimes twice a year. Such a fascinating place that I want to go. I've never been, no. Well, we should do a field trip. Yeah, we should. We should do our big, fun podcast field trip from the road.
Yeah.
That'd be a lot of fun.
Yeah. Are you familiar with Christopher Dunn? I don't get out much. He wrote a book. I think his first book was in the late 80s, maybe, called The Giza Power Plant.
I remember that book. I don't know the name, but I do remember that book.
Yeah, he's an engineer. He comes from aerospace. And when he first saw the pyramids, he thought, there's no way this is a tomb. He reverse engineered it, and he says, this is a functional tomb. this is a functional machine and his, he's revamped his theory and added onto it recently. And his newest book is called, um, the geek or the, the Tesla connection. It's like part two. Yeah.
And his idea is that the pyramid, the great pyramid is a, uh, a solid state electron harvester that harvests electrons deep within the earth. And he's even had like NASA scientists that have backed up his ideas with how those stones in there can, um, help with the electron flow through the earth and how like, you know, all those shafts and everything in there, they don't make sense.
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Chapter 8: How can we reclaim our humanness in a technological world?
There's some light bedtime reading.
Yeah. What is the finding? Go up and go up. No, no, no. The very top. It says findings at the top. Right where we just were. Findings. A strong correlation between porosity and density and good correlation between uniaxial strength and tensile strength. Carried out results indicated the small porosity results indicated
in greater rock strength and vice versa yeah but it's not talking about how it was built yeah no it's not they they published this in there's a core sample in the geologic journals uh and the geologists had no problem with it the historians had a huge problem with it and they also date it now as a geologist the the sphinx and the pyramids
The stones are showing erosion that is called fluvial erosion, which means fast amounts of water over long periods of time, not aeolian erosion, which means wind. They had believed that all that erosion was from wind. Robert Shock, Boston University, concluded with John Anthony West. I used to know John before he died. We took our groups over at the same time.
I would talk for his group and he would come and talk to my group. Oh, that's amazing. It was a lot of fun. He was a good man. Had a hard time in Egypt.
Yeah.
But during that time, it's in the early 90s, the only time they've had that kind of running water in Egypt was at the melting of the last ice, which puts this around 12,000 BP before present. And that means the Egyptians as we know them today are not the ones that built the Sphinx and the pyramids. And Geoloday published this article.
double apg american association petroleum geologists they published geologists said hey what's the problem i mean the data is right there of course it's it's water um the historians have a horrible time they said oh my god it can't be 12 500 years because that messes up you know the whole timeline and so they're they're struggling with that today yeah it's also crazy how all around those pyramids i've seen i've never been there but i've seen photos all around there there's like giant pieces we need to take you on a trip
Yeah, definitely. I want to go. Definitely. I got to wait till my kids get a little older so I can bring them with us, with me. But there's like all these giant granite blocks all around the pyramid that look like they have literal circular saw blade cuts in them. Like you could run a credit card through it. They're so perfect.
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