
Danny Jones Podcast
#284 - New Göbekli Tepe Controversy & Earth's Next Magnetic Pole Flip | Jimmy Corsetti & Dan Richards
Mon, 03 Feb 2025
Watch this episode ad-free & uncensored on Patreon: https://patreon.com/dannyjones Jimmy Corsetti and Dan Richards "Bright Insight" and "DeDunking the Past," investigate ancient lost civilizations, and the mysteries of antiquity. SPONSORS http://ketone.com/dannyjones - Save 30% off your first subscription order & receive a free 6-pack. https://bit.ly/4goQWyL - Get the DraftKings app today & use code DANNYJONES for $200 in bonus bets. https://whiterabbitenergy.com/?ref=DJP - Use code DJP for 20% off. GUEST LINKS Jimmy's YouTube channel - @BrightInsight Dan's YouTube channe - @DeDunking FOLLOW DANNY JONES https://www.instagram.com/dannyjones https://x.com/jonesdanny OUTLINE 00:00 - Kellogg, Brown & Root 12:41 - Elon Musk drama 17:17 - Nazi Archeology 23:05 - Who secretly funded Hitler 25:00 - Fauci's preemptive pardon 29:14 - Hunter Biden 40:19 - Origins of Jimmy & Dan 46:24 - Secrets of Baalbek 01:01:37 - Pyramid power plant theory 01:13:14 - Pyramid chemical factory theory 01:23:28 - Ancient stone-softening chemicals 01:39:52 - War against archeology 01:47:58 - Flint Dibble vs. Graham Hancock 01:58:57 - Egyptian vase controversy 02:08:46 - Archaeologist cancel culture 02:16:00 - Gobekli Tepe controversy 02:27:02 - Society of American Archaeology DEI Hires 02:36:59 - The eye of the Sahara 02:42:06 - Evidence for Atlantis 02:59:48 - Pole shifts: the Gothenburg Magnetic Excursion 03:10:43 - What a modern cataclysm would look like 03:17:20 - New Gobekli Tepe controversy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Chapter 1: What is Kellogg, Brown & Root's role in military logistics?
When did you go to Iraq? 09 and 10. 09 and 10. OK. Which was an interesting time to be there because they had already started the withdrawal. So I was witnessing like them ship out hundreds of tanks and everything else. And at that time, so I was in northern Iraq and Mosul and Tel Afar.
And what was interesting is since the United States announced that they were going to stop or going to withdraw, so they stopped shooting at us. They stopped attacking us because they're like, just let them leave, let them leave. And so attacks were far, you know, few and far between.
But it was truly interesting to witness the withdrawal of such all that equipment, as well as to see like it kind of like put the nail in the coffin to understand that that whole war was bullshit because it's like we are still there. People were still dying, not as often as before, because like I said, they were they stopped attacking largely, but not entirely.
So it's like every person from there on out that died. It's like this is literally for nothing. So that that it didn't occur to me in that exact moment. But once I got home in the years following, I was like, I just started to realize I'm like, this was not OK. How old were you when you went over there? Twenty five. And I was twenty six when I left.
I was actually I was kind of older because most people I mean, there's certainly people older than me, but a lot of soldiers over there. There was a few people he deployed with that weren't even twenty one. Couldn't even couldn't even buy a beer. But there they are with a machine gun. So crazy, man. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I was I mean, I wasn't the oldest guy, but a lot of guys in their early 20s.
So me being 25 and 26 when I was there, I was kind of like I was older than my sergeant, my team leader. So that was interesting.
Yeah. Yeah, man. I've had a lot. I had so many people on here who went over there, like a lot of warfighters that went over to Iraq and Afghanistan and saw a lot of death and carnage and destruction, like like you were just saying before they were even 21 years old. And it's like it is just ravaged that man.
Dude, the fallout is still happening. I know a handful of people that have killed themselves. And then my best friend was killed in Afghanistan. And the fallout from that – he was the oldest of six siblings. And what that did to his family is – It's still carrying on. It's the most heartbreaking thing. Yeah.
You know, in fact, while we're talking about this, I mean, I'm not the first to say it, but if people want to look into a conspiracy involving Iraq and Afghanistan, look into KBR, which is Kellogg, Brown and Root. Have you heard of that company? No. OK, this is good. So Kellogg Brown and Root does all the logistics and supply chain for the United States military and government.
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Chapter 2: What insights do Jimmy and Dan share about their experiences in Iraq?
I'm like, if people want to find the conspiracy, it's Kellogg Brown and Root because they had overcharged. And you can find New York Times articles on this. They had overcharged by many, many billions of dollars. And people start raising red flags like what's going on here? Like what? You know, and so you connect the dots. I'm like, I bet you anything that Dick Cheney or here's my question.
Let me rephrase it. How many shares of stock did Dick Cheney own in Kellogg, Brown and Brute after stepping down from that company while we were still there? Was he still making money on that company? Because again, it was no bid contract. So, you know, whoever worked for Kelly, people, the higher ups at Kelly Brown route certainly profited greatly off that.
Yeah. I thought it was Halliburton that was over there.
Oh, they were there too. So it was both. Yes. In fact, I think those two companies had merged. I think Halliburton and KBR end up becoming one. I'd have to check this. Okay. Steve, can you find it? Or one may have been a subsidiary of the other. Oh, okay. I see.
Yeah. Yeah. Kellogg, Brown and Rupp.
Yeah, KBR. Next time you have a veteran on, ask them because they're the reason why we had steak and lobster tail every Sunday in Iraq. It wasn't Maine lobster. Really? Swear to God. Now, and these weren't ribeyes. These were like boiled steaks. They weren't particularly good. Halliburton's construction subsidiary.
Oh, wow.
So all the housing units, and I could tell you how overpriced this was. Our housing units, they said, were like $30,000. And that's as of 2009. These things were... I made jokes with people. We were all joking about them. Like, there's no way you couldn't build this for like a few grand at Home Depot. And they were charging $30,000. These were just...
box houses these were the most they weren't insulated um but you know between the fuel logistics the housing units as well as paying for the cargo shipping and everything else for because like for example with the tanks you know you can fly in tanks on c17s but most of them come over on boats um and so it's like well who's paying the shipping carriers and imagine how much that must cost to ship heavy equipment oh yeah hundreds of millions of tons of it oh yeah um so that's
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