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Did NASA Physicists CONFIRM The Great Pyramids TRUE Purpose? | Chris Dunn

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Danny Jones

Danny Jones

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 300
@dannyjones
@dannyjones 10 ай бұрын
Help support the podcast by visiting our sponsors: mybookie.ag - Use Code DJP when depositing $50 or more bit.ly/AmericanHartfordGold - Use link for up to $5k in free silver on first order OUTLINE: 00:00 - Chris Dunn's background in engineering & aerospace 12:41 - Designing jet engines 17:30 - Aerospace Engineers perspective on Ancient Egyptian articacts 19:58 - Using high powered lazers to build stealth fighter jets 23:19 - Evidence the Romans were stealing stones from the pyramids 26:13 - Who assigned the official timeline for the building of the Great Pyramid 29:00 - Writing the Giza Power Plant 31:27 - Reverse-engineering the Great Pyramid of Giza 44:00 - The Great Pyramid is a solid-state electron harvester 50:51 - First time inside the pyramids 55:47 - Rudolph Gantenbrink 57:43 - Pyramid wave-guides plated with gold 01:01:43 - Resonance inside the King's chamber 01:10:09 - How the sub terrainian chamber vibrates the Pyramid; Tesla's Earthquake Machine 01:20:35 - Nasa physicist Friedman Freund's study of earthquake lights 01:54:26 - Why it would cost $25 Billion to restore the Great Pyramid 02:04:52 - Egyptologists reaction to Chris powerplant theory 02:15:04 - The young students in Egypt dismiss the Pyramid 'Tomb Theory' 02:19:12 - Scorch marks in the Grande Gallery; Evidence for a hydrogen explosion in the Kinds Chamber
@TourchezArt
@TourchezArt 10 ай бұрын
I agree once I heard graham say he was doing dmt to cure his migraines I was like tf is going on
@dandrechesterfield5411
@dandrechesterfield5411 10 ай бұрын
This guy is a living example of creating a hypothesis and then looking for evidence to fit his hypothesis.
@burtlangoustine1
@burtlangoustine1 10 ай бұрын
Have the old (better) intro as a outro. I miss it
@rdesign2753
@rdesign2753 10 ай бұрын
@@dandrechesterfield5411 interesting though that another engineer said there has to be another chamber to work as a preamp to complete Dunns hypothesis. Just luck I guess the chamber was recently found in exactly the right place.
@rdesign2753
@rdesign2753 10 ай бұрын
@@dandrechesterfield5411 interesting though that another engineer said there has to be another chamber to work as a preamp to complete Dunns hypothesis. Just luck I guess the chamber was recently found in exactly the right place.
@NWFC91
@NWFC91 10 ай бұрын
Danny: “Can you explain to me what it’s doing” Chris: “Right now, it’s just sitting there” 😂
@Wolfbabypuppylove
@Wolfbabypuppylove 10 ай бұрын
😂😂
@ebaystars
@ebaystars 7 ай бұрын
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
@adamwilkinson6721
@adamwilkinson6721 5 ай бұрын
Does anyone else know how to find the follow ups on this episode? He said it was part 1 of 6 hours.
@andrasziegenham6766
@andrasziegenham6766 5 ай бұрын
@@adamwilkinson6721kzfaq.info/get/bejne/rNV4qZBnqrDPiX0.html
@iaingill4879
@iaingill4879 3 ай бұрын
He cracks me up with his dry humour
@user-te4of2fq5d
@user-te4of2fq5d 10 ай бұрын
❗2 engineers slowly walked the Great Pyramid perimeter in silence, one MIT, the other Renssalear, completed, looked at each other, my Dad and I burst out laughing ! NO WAY those people as described built it, NO WAY that's a tomb, my very conservative Dad (NASA) saying it's obviously an electrical energy system of some kind, probably gold on the peak ? the structure had to be clad in something, an insulator..needed conductivity, there's water running beneath it, a river, an aquifer, a system of them, guarantee it, he said. 1973. I'm 77, nothing recently conjectured known at the time. It was obvious to us both
@anonony9081
@anonony9081 10 ай бұрын
The problem is that archaeologists and historians don't really consult engineers and people who would be knowledgeable about these things. They just look at the collection of artifacts they find and automatically group them together and assume they are all related. They never consider the idea that these things were stored all together because of their value, they just assume they came from the same era
@definitelynotthea.t.f.8813
@definitelynotthea.t.f.8813 10 ай бұрын
They have this assumption that they are smarter than people that lived before them. Obviously this is not true. We could have started and ended civilization multiple times over and what we are looking at is post cataclysmic civilizations creating new histories ignorant of what came before. The sheer weight of those stones is incredible by itself, not even mentioning the precision of the design and the fact that pyramids are all over the world, including places we have not uncovered yet.
@davidharrison6535
@davidharrison6535 10 ай бұрын
Your Father was one of the Few Truth tellers.
@HellCatt0770
@HellCatt0770 10 ай бұрын
Frustrating to hear people could see the flaws in the mainstream narrative in 1973 and yet still it’s not widely accepted that we just don’t know what the pyramids and serapeum were or who built them - but it definitely wasn’t the Egyptians or Pharaohs for a tomb! (They hadn’t even discovered wheels!).
@Hughesburner
@Hughesburner 10 ай бұрын
@@anonony9081 Totally agree. I am into PC building as a hobby, background in Electrical Engineering, specifically manufacturing/R&D. Some of the most recent PC builds in 2023 verge on the appearance of modern art. A regular user wouldn't even know how to turn it on, unless you knew exactly what you are looking at. There's a bit of inherit knowledge you have to have to use it. Like the pyramids, it's the narrowed height of one particular set of technology. I could imagine if someone from a completely different time period and civilization finding a PC from our time to be confusing. With not really knowing what a computer is and it's intended function or how/why we built it, they could mistake it for a piece of furniture, perhaps a kitchen device etc. A little odd but I have a kid and have seen this movie more times than I wanted to. I think of this scene when the issue of the pyramids come up. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/iMWDlsWJq92rcnk.htmlsi=JmModNxRDOsXGMwm
@theone31man
@theone31man 9 ай бұрын
For over 40 years I worked as an electrician on many different projects. I have worked with at least hundreds of engineers. They were all excellent men and women who were good to work with. I have always enjoyed their common sense and logic at working through problems. Chris Dunn reminds me of many of the men I knew and worked with.
@DwightKShrute
@DwightKShrute 8 ай бұрын
I'm a j-man electrician/electro-mech engineering tech, and I agree 100%. I feel we might have a lot in common lol. Take care. Peace
@unifyhumanity360
@unifyhumanity360 9 ай бұрын
“The Key to Unlock The Universe. Energy,Frequency and Vibration.” It never leaves my consciousness
@georgesnuffleupagus7920
@georgesnuffleupagus7920 7 ай бұрын
"Unlock The Universe"?
@ethick333
@ethick333 6 ай бұрын
369
@TxConfidential
@TxConfidential 5 ай бұрын
369
@unifyhumanity360
@unifyhumanity360 4 ай бұрын
@@georgesnuffleupagus7920 in ways we can’t even imagine
@oliversaxon8656
@oliversaxon8656 3 ай бұрын
@@unifyhumanity360 haha okay bro.
@PatPauloMMA
@PatPauloMMA 10 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn's presentation on the precision of Ancient Egyptian Statues changed the way I view history forever.
@bryanergau6682
@bryanergau6682 10 ай бұрын
Do you know who Ben Van Kerkwyk is?
@TheGoldeagle99
@TheGoldeagle99 10 ай бұрын
...what presentation was this?...
@finley.h
@finley.h 10 ай бұрын
In my case, it was through Ben. 🤗
@gameovr17
@gameovr17 10 ай бұрын
I jus don't see why scientist are so against the possibility of a missing civilization that were way further advanced that we had ever thought. Why are they so against that idea. Makes zero since
@myrnawatkins-aten4033
@myrnawatkins-aten4033 10 ай бұрын
STICHENS TRANSLATIONS GOT ME IMMEDIATELY MY PEOPLE ARE FROM THE STARS. POWHATAN NATIVE
@josephclites6971
@josephclites6971 10 ай бұрын
I could listen to experts talk about ancient tech and speculate and theorize about the subject ALL DAY LONG!! Can’t get enough. Fascinating…
@RossOnTop2
@RossOnTop2 10 ай бұрын
As I started typing my "I could listen to this guy talk about this all day long". I had to delete it as I seen your comment right below lol. I couldnt agree more with you here.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 9 ай бұрын
Experts? Lol I can't even....can you come squeeze a rock in my back yard and power my house please I would love to save some money
@Its_Shaun_the_Sheep
@Its_Shaun_the_Sheep 9 ай бұрын
You’re listening to the charlatan experts if you are here.
@BSIII
@BSIII 8 ай бұрын
Check out SGD Sacred Geometry Decoded.
@richiebricker
@richiebricker 8 ай бұрын
All dogs are really robots meant to spy on you nd take pictures of you in bad light
@aaronking8694
@aaronking8694 4 ай бұрын
After years of seeing intelligent men and women like this gentleman, I am one hundred percent convinced our taught history is absolute rubbish.
@GreyGhost9
@GreyGhost9 10 күн бұрын
I AGREE!
@fickyrisher
@fickyrisher 9 ай бұрын
I love that Cris's humour and witty comments just went completely over Danny's head 😂
@saqibanwar52
@saqibanwar52 8 ай бұрын
The vice versa is true as well 😂
@fickyrisher
@fickyrisher 8 ай бұрын
@@saqibanwar52 yep, battling through the generational gap, I loved every moment of it
@TheosEpicVideos
@TheosEpicVideos 4 ай бұрын
Americans don’t get ‘taking the piss’.
@Trebleblues
@Trebleblues 4 ай бұрын
British sarcasm
@openleft4214
@openleft4214 Ай бұрын
​@@TheosEpicVideoswe do understand stand it its in alot of amerina moves it the less used onea that we dont get.
@RandyBoBandy.
@RandyBoBandy. 10 ай бұрын
It’s amazing? Mr. Dunn became a brilliant machinist, engineer and author without spending one day in college. It’s almost like someone can learn a particular skill much quicker by actually working in said field. It also eliminates the crushing debt a young person saddles themselves with at the start of their working life.
@AndyRock1
@AndyRock1 10 ай бұрын
Yea back in 1950s and early 60s you could simply walk into an engineering firm and apply for the job. If you had some practical skill like a mechanic, they'd likely hire you and teach you on the job
@phyl1283
@phyl1283 10 ай бұрын
Makes you wonder how he got his "education" (i.e. skill) as an engineer in resonant energy producing pyramids. He sells books. He is a retired machinist and knows nothing about pryamids or energy. All Bullsh*t.
@ytgadfly
@ytgadfly 10 ай бұрын
no it means he is a fraud and you are too uneducated to understand it
@ytgadfly
@ytgadfly 10 ай бұрын
@@AndyRock1 you know nothing about what you are talking about.
@CaryGlennDavis
@CaryGlennDavis 10 ай бұрын
Actually he is spot on and you look stupid for your comment. Just shows you have no clue about history. @@ytgadfly
@waylonratcliffe
@waylonratcliffe 10 ай бұрын
Danny is taking the torch. I feel like Rogan is out of touch from what we’ve been discovering here, based on the last Graham Hancock episode.
@dannyjones
@dannyjones 10 ай бұрын
Thanks dude!
@paulslater9061
@paulslater9061 10 ай бұрын
I agree with you I think Rogan needs to kick the drugs into touch
@JML-TruthBelongsToEverybody
@JML-TruthBelongsToEverybody 10 ай бұрын
agree with you, question is why? he has too much money & success now? lost interest? or was told by deep state to back off?
@Bodhi_118
@Bodhi_118 10 ай бұрын
JRE copy🐱
@Beausinklear
@Beausinklear 10 ай бұрын
@@Bodhi_118 I was thinking the same thing. Wonder how long until they bust out the smelling salts 😂
@rachmonte
@rachmonte Ай бұрын
He is the last of his generation where you could start working at 15, drop out of school and work as an engineer and tool maker without a college degree. You can see his wheels turning while he speaks.
@ingrid-c
@ingrid-c 9 ай бұрын
I loved everything about this, especially Mr Dunn finally doing what everybody else have not up to this point by appealing to Egyptian pride to freaking finally have a proper look at the pyramid and take it out of Hawass hands. Saying Egyptians didn't build it was never the way. What he said, "People attacking Hancock and me are building their own funeral pile and will get burnt to the ground" LOL pure gold, nothing on this earth compares to the Great Pyramid, it is time to let real science take a proper look without the bunch of egotistical, brainwashed, and closed-minded archaeologists looking over its shoulder.
@SamtheIrishexan
@SamtheIrishexan 8 ай бұрын
Yeah God forbid they have to admit that modern egyptians are hardly related to the Egyptians who built the pyramid. That being gentically. However, it is still their country and DNA or skin color etc is irrelevant, it is Egyptian, it is their country, they should be proud of it whoever built it. I think most Egyptians would be open to clearing up the record. Especially when Dunns arguments are known to be serious
@larslevinberget9558
@larslevinberget9558 7 ай бұрын
​@@SamtheIrishexan Just like the Palestinians are not the Filistrians, and take a look at old paintings of the Turks ... they look Chinese don't they?
@rediusneckius1
@rediusneckius1 5 ай бұрын
@averageaimer8533
@averageaimer8533 2 ай бұрын
‘Funeral pyre’
@CoryHobbs2178
@CoryHobbs2178 2 ай бұрын
Have you ever seen the analysis on the rectilinear measurements of the pyramid from Archaix? Along with the calendrical implications of what they mean?
@Lemurai
@Lemurai 10 ай бұрын
Imagine if engineering was treated as an apprenticeship starting from a teenagers formative years where they can receive a massive amount of mentorship, and close quarters coaching & instruction, rather than getting drilled with tons of useless academic theory that is force fed to 18-19 year olds who “think” they know math & science until they get steam rolled (literally), and all morale crushed by graduation. That was mine & my classmates experience going through it, it’s sad because it often kills the desire to continue on in the field after graduation.
@ouchhurts
@ouchhurts 10 ай бұрын
sadly working at intended
@hofmannwaves1525
@hofmannwaves1525 10 ай бұрын
we'll get there, the internet is waking us up
@klaytonthorpe3050
@klaytonthorpe3050 10 ай бұрын
Liberalism is a cancer that destroys any civilization.
@OEFTF11
@OEFTF11 10 ай бұрын
Interestingly that's actually how Egyptian Scholars taught the sciences to their students. It was a long apprenticeship since childhood with proper transfer and application of the knowledge rather than speculation and theory.
@jondoe2542
@jondoe2542 10 ай бұрын
The older I get the more true the following phase gets. It's not what you know, it's who you know. If you're an engineer, it's easier for your kid to get the knowledge and the job, than Joe schmoe
@tenforward7485
@tenforward7485 9 ай бұрын
"What is a lathe?" is a good summary of the state of the western man
@PeterGibbonns
@PeterGibbonns 9 ай бұрын
Dork.
@plane_guy6051
@plane_guy6051 7 ай бұрын
Yes, it's goddamned tragic how little knowledge people in the west have these days.
@evanjkesten
@evanjkesten 6 ай бұрын
What is “reverse engineering?”
@richjohnson8777
@richjohnson8777 6 ай бұрын
What is metal shop class?
@salt_provider4824
@salt_provider4824 6 ай бұрын
Sorry we just don't care 🫡
@SamSeth
@SamSeth 8 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn for over two hours?? Gotta drop a like just so i can follow up later. His first two books have a permanent place on one of my top shelves
@randysanders5560
@randysanders5560 8 ай бұрын
Mr Dunn, you’re quite a national treasure. Thank you for your enlightening work.
@MsBee-tr9ti
@MsBee-tr9ti 6 ай бұрын
Hoosier that I am, I do feel proud that Mr. Dunn has a history living and working in Indiana!
@frosty6960
@frosty6960 6 ай бұрын
uhm .... he is a scammer
@adamwilkinson6721
@adamwilkinson6721 5 ай бұрын
Does anyone else know how to find the follow ups on this episode? He said it was part 1 of 6 hours.
@frosty6960
@frosty6960 5 ай бұрын
@@adamwilkinson6721 who would want hours of lies?
@adamwilkinson6721
@adamwilkinson6721 5 ай бұрын
@@frosty6960 and what spek of experience have you got in comparison with 50 years of practical mechanical engineering knowledge?
@mikelee9886
@mikelee9886 10 ай бұрын
I've had the opportunity to weld on a small piece of Hastelloy-X before, in welding school. Super expensive metal. Our teacher ran an Aerospace parts manufacturing, and had a small batch of blem washer-shaped pieces, that were made with the wrong size hole, that were made of Hastelloy-X, only about 10/1000s of an inch thick. For the advanced class, he had us come to his shop, and had us try to weld on some of these with an inverter welder. I welded the tiniest bead you've ever seen along the ridge of that washer, with the welder set at 5 amps, using a filler wire that was barely thicker than a human hair. Most difficult weld I've ever done, first few mm's were crap, but after that i actually made a perfect little bead around about half of it. Afterwards, I was told that the material i used, that little quarter-sized piece of Hastelloy-X, was worth over $500. So when Chris is talking about working with Hastelloy-X, realize that he's talking about working with material that's more valuable than gold. If he was MACHINING Hastelloy-X, then he was working with probably millions of dollars worth of material on a regular basis, and people don't trust people with millions of dollars of material unless they are F*CKING MASTERS.
@keefjunior4061
@keefjunior4061 10 ай бұрын
I work at an aerospace manufacturing company and we go through enough Hastelloy that we make a good chunk of money recycling from our drops. Kovar is another stupid expensive material that’s not very fun to work.
@NotAnnaJones
@NotAnnaJones 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this, I had no idea!
@PeterGibbonns
@PeterGibbonns 10 ай бұрын
This is 100% false information.
@Rookies103
@Rookies103 10 ай бұрын
And then some.
@joewalsh886
@joewalsh886 10 ай бұрын
​@@PeterGibbonnsenlighten me
@joewalsh886
@joewalsh886 10 ай бұрын
I would love to watch a debate with an engineer vs archeologist debating the construction techniques used on the pyramids
@ytgadfly
@ytgadfly 10 ай бұрын
a real engineer or this kook? lol. real engineers have been all over the pyramids and never found anything paranormal. they would likely all agree with the archeologists. the thing is you know nothing about science and engineering and want to think you have some secret knowledge so guys like this bamboozle you
@spandon
@spandon 10 ай бұрын
There used to be such discussions but they got 'disappeared' or at least made very hard to find....
@ArnoWalter
@ArnoWalter 10 ай бұрын
Unless you get one of the few archaeologists like Klaus Schmidt, it's gonna be pointless. Just look at the questions if the Polynesians reached south america. "Well sure, they traveled to Hawaii and made it all the way to Galapagos, but they mist a whole continent." "Well OK, we found Polynesian DNA in south american indigenous people, but that was probably introduced much later. " "We KNOW, that they had a plant that looks a lot like the sweet potato and has the same DNA, but that's a coincidence. That they use the same word for it, as the indigenous people in south america, is just another coincidence!" Archaeology is the history of denial. Troy is a fiction! Babylon just a fairy tale!
@briandeeley1599
@briandeeley1599 9 ай бұрын
"They mist"? @@ArnoWalter
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
I dont know a lot about Archaeology, but of one thing I am certain: a prerequisite for spreading mainstream Archaeological talking points seems to be that you have NEVER made anything in your entire life. It's worse hearing an Archaeologist muse on how things "must" have been made than listening to a woman describe what she thinks being a man is like 😂
@robertfisher5979
@robertfisher5979 9 ай бұрын
Its so impressive how patient Chris Dunn was with this kid who doesn't know enough about engineering to do this interview.
@auskilluminati333
@auskilluminati333 9 ай бұрын
Just because your not qualified at a subject doesnt mean you can't or aren't able to speak about that topic.... if you have someone who does great. If your both debating unskilled than you just need to verify your views to a qualified person. We all start somewhere
@juanito3821
@juanito3821 9 ай бұрын
Not everyone walks around with engineering degree
@bespinboi7523
@bespinboi7523 8 ай бұрын
Him not know much makes this interview good for people like me who also don’t know much
@CarolinaJeepJunkies
@CarolinaJeepJunkies 8 ай бұрын
Don't need a engineering degree to understand half of it.
@markstewart8171
@markstewart8171 8 ай бұрын
I think maybe he knows but he knows that many of his viewers need to have more insight because they wouldnt know what Chris was describing.
@isyouabitfik
@isyouabitfik 6 ай бұрын
“I landed in New York on the 9th May 1969”, “so you came to the US in 1968”. I’m only a few minutes in and I can see Chris looking at you thinking “how thick is this guy”
@berticusmaximus8381
@berticusmaximus8381 4 күн бұрын
Made me want to stop watching
@ryanramsey9621
@ryanramsey9621 10 ай бұрын
Hey mate I'm a machinist CNC in north central Indiana I make titanium hips knees shoulders etc. Great job explaining machining to a non tradesman. I'm USW too. Steelworkers all the way bro!
@omegafile
@omegafile 10 ай бұрын
How much to make the parts for the galaxy device on my channel? Are you able to make the signing bowl and tune it?
@eazzyblue3755
@eazzyblue3755 10 ай бұрын
get off your chair and get back to work, sir!
@cocoruse
@cocoruse 10 ай бұрын
Is the manufacturing plant in a city named after the capital of Poland?
@uncletoodles8118
@uncletoodles8118 5 сағат бұрын
@@cocorusecame here to say, good old Warsaw. I lived and worked there for a while. Probably sold this author if the original comment some booze at the liquor store I worked at. Good old Zimmer Biomet
@Auxik
@Auxik 10 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn is one of the smartest engineers I've ever listened to. I started reading the Giza powerplant years ago but life got in the way. I need to go back and re-read it.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 9 ай бұрын
The vibration theory is something, I am going to fill my room with vibrators and power the town... lol this is absurd...
@smyffmawzz
@smyffmawzz 9 ай бұрын
Don't .
@andymelendez9757
@andymelendez9757 9 ай бұрын
@@drummerdad80resonance coupling is everywhere
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 9 ай бұрын
@andymelendez9757 okay so there are power sources, rectifiers, coiled wires and oscillators in the pyramid okay, do you how resonance coupling works?
@anthonyv6962
@anthonyv6962 2 ай бұрын
He's a machinist and this is pseudoscience. You're not smart enough to be on the internet.
@balham456
@balham456 9 ай бұрын
Danny needs to raise his game: “What’s a lathe?”
@marraharris6080
@marraharris6080 6 ай бұрын
Danny's IQ is wanting and his knowledge parking lot puddle deep.
@GlennFordism
@GlennFordism 4 ай бұрын
Asking some really dumb questions. He needs to up his game.
@anthonyv6962
@anthonyv6962 2 ай бұрын
@@marraharris6080 I've been saying this since he started. I'm amazed so many people praise his abilities.
@wtfboom4585
@wtfboom4585 Ай бұрын
​@@anthonyv6962 says more about the people praising than his abilities. While I find these topics interesting the comments lapping it up without applying any critical thinking are both amusing and depressing to see
@J.Knox46
@J.Knox46 Ай бұрын
Also Danny discovering that Reverse engineering is engineering in reverse... Danny, come over here and piss in this cup please.....
@amandabaynham-swales9222
@amandabaynham-swales9222 7 ай бұрын
His Northern humour has remained intact despite leaving the UK in 69…Top lad!
@kahlrhoam6769
@kahlrhoam6769 10 ай бұрын
Engineer Chris Dunn is absolutely SOLID. He also reminds me of having William Shatner aboard. 🖖✨
@Sym0S
@Sym0S 8 ай бұрын
Yes; I love that captain Kirk is on the case!
@terryhuffaker3615
@terryhuffaker3615 6 ай бұрын
Split finger hand sign is a hebrew hand sign of peace introduced by Leonard Nimoy during the original Star Trek series.
@anthonyv6962
@anthonyv6962 2 ай бұрын
He's not an Engineer he's a machinist. He says it himself at the beginning of the podcast. There is a difference. One figures out hot to make a jet and have it meet the requirements stated. The other fabricates the components required to build it.
@jamess650
@jamess650 10 ай бұрын
Every day we get closer to uncovering the truth of our past, and I can't thank you enough for being a part of that.
@johnguanciale258
@johnguanciale258 10 ай бұрын
Not really
@hansburch3700
@hansburch3700 10 ай бұрын
Die Wahrheit ist Terraforming über sehr lange Zeit. Die Pyramiden waren dabei zur Kontrolle nötig.
@raddastronaut
@raddastronaut 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for having Chris’s Dunn on. Been a huge fan for some time. Stephen Mehler would be a great guest too if he’s up to it.
@d.b.7695
@d.b.7695 6 ай бұрын
Mind bogling, I am left bewildering by everything I heard in this marathon-interview.Great job Chris and Dann.Can't wait for part two.
@lukecaverns
@lukecaverns 10 ай бұрын
Danny is gonna F around & become an ancient history podcast 😂
@BaronKilaton
@BaronKilaton 10 ай бұрын
I love the mic drop moment where Dunn looks at Danny after the earthquake stress videos on electricity with granite. I get upset when I can’t find my keys. Now I have to wonder how many times mankind forgot how to build seismic electrical mega machines!
@Mr.Wednesday.
@Mr.Wednesday. 8 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn is exceedingly likeable
@bitty_bytes001
@bitty_bytes001 8 ай бұрын
Danny is a great interviewer. I have watched him interview a variety of people from different backgrounds. He is always knowledgeable and well read. How can he possibly know every thing about all these different fields. He obviously prepares before hand.
@handrewmillan4293
@handrewmillan4293 6 ай бұрын
youve got to be kidding
@pyromaniack13
@pyromaniack13 10 ай бұрын
This guy gives the vibe that he knows much more than he’s letting on. Absolutely amazing guest
@MrAchile13
@MrAchile13 10 ай бұрын
Indeed, he's selling books and making money from this "lost high tech" narrative. It's the same guy who publicly claimed on television that Coral Castle was built using levitation.
@voiceofreason1829
@voiceofreason1829 10 ай бұрын
Nooo
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
He's working on another book, I hope he includes some of the discourse we had that I gave him my permission to use!
@johnburbine5131
@johnburbine5131 9 ай бұрын
I think everyone that has knowledge of highly classifieds has a ceiling when they speak on social media. Rogan is perfect example, he could go much further with questions many many times. I think they all have a ceiling created for them. Breach the ceiling and they'll turn you off
@timeWaster76
@timeWaster76 9 ай бұрын
That is a just a technique to get your imagination spinning
@JimmyRJump
@JimmyRJump 8 ай бұрын
Don't forget the ancient Egyptians (or Khmetians) called the Great Pyramid "the house of fire", which the Greek translated to Pyramid. "Fire in the middle", from Pyros (fire) and Midos (middle).
@matthewknight5641
@matthewknight5641 8 ай бұрын
Danny... Joe... A few others are all great teachers to so many of us. The way they ask questions and bring out the knowledge of the guest is truly amazing. Thanks guys for your service
@TheGbelcher
@TheGbelcher 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, but unfortunately a lot of what we’re learning later turns out to be BS. They don’t push back on bad science and disinformation at all. It’s entertaining but unfortunately that’s about it. For example, the first 30 min Danny positions this guy as an aerospace engineer when he was actually a machinist. 😔 That’s not how you build credibility for an amateur archaeologist. 😂 Then when Dunn says the Romans built the pyramids because it wouldn’t make sense for Egyptians to loot something they built. WTF is he talking about? So teenagers in Mexico wouldn’t loot a Mayan or Aztec ruin? What? 😂 And wasn’t the Pyramid of Djedfre looted by the Romans for building materials? I guess they didn’t build it. Must have been the Geeeks. 😂 This is so dumb.
@therealmiddy
@therealmiddy 7 ай бұрын
Yeah, like, “What’s a lathe?” 😂
@handrewmillan4293
@handrewmillan4293 6 ай бұрын
i dont understand how nut gobblers like you exist. danny might be the dumbest person ive ever watched for more than 2 minutes. only stayed for dunn. you cant be dumber than danny, can you?
@Hashadabbery
@Hashadabbery 10 ай бұрын
Continually amazed at Danny’s grasp on very basic concepts & things he should know / should have researched before turning the camera on. The conversation can’t get interesting with Danny constantly interrupting to ask tangential questions & explanations 🤦‍♂️… read a book my dude.
@bartekdyszkiewicz1359
@bartekdyszkiewicz1359 10 ай бұрын
30 minutes in it seems like he doesn't know anything glad Chris is very patient.
@jtothecc2421
@jtothecc2421 10 ай бұрын
Yeah he brought on an expert on the pyramids to tell the audience what a lathe is😂
@bartekdyszkiewicz1359
@bartekdyszkiewicz1359 10 ай бұрын
But was engaged in the convo by the end and enjoyed the pod cast as a whole.
@ahernandez8965
@ahernandez8965 10 ай бұрын
His interviewing skills are on par with Zack Galafanakis
@Alarix246
@Alarix246 10 ай бұрын
Yeah, the question "what is a lathe?" Made me wonder if he'd ask him also "what is a chair? What is a car? What is a wheel?" Either he must have enormous gaps in basic education, or he does it because he presumes his audience is stupid.
@daltanionwaves
@daltanionwaves 9 ай бұрын
That's for sure, as an industrial designer from a family of machinists, it's frustrating seeing things that the experts can't even fathom, because their expertise is in history.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 9 ай бұрын
As an engineer you dunn are not historians......
@eggon4482
@eggon4482 24 күн бұрын
My favorite engineer I’ve been watching his work for years. Thank you.
@joefury6442
@joefury6442 9 ай бұрын
Tesla's "earthquake machine" was a product of him attempting to build an electric oscillating engine. The failure led him to design the standard induction motor that operates in a spinning motion instead of a linear motion.
@timpage5021
@timpage5021 6 ай бұрын
Not true.
@More-than-Money-in-REAL-ESTATE
@More-than-Money-in-REAL-ESTATE 10 ай бұрын
Started his career at only 22 yrs old with the highest recommendation as a professionally certified journeyman lathes man with personalized working knowledge in the most complex and exotic alloys, various metals & their workable tolerances... Amazing..
@janzizka4364
@janzizka4364 10 ай бұрын
When he was alone in the pyramid, he looked back and shouted: AZIZ, LIGHTS!
@justintaylor7837
@justintaylor7837 6 ай бұрын
Batteries dead but I have more in the truck.
@mojomanrosie
@mojomanrosie 5 ай бұрын
5th element!! 😂😂
@bonnierobbins4230
@bonnierobbins4230 Ай бұрын
Thanks For inviting Mr.Dunn! I read his first book! Amazing! I must buy his 2nd book! Great interview! Ohio😊
@bélalugrisi
@bélalugrisi 9 ай бұрын
Excellent interview, thanks Chris and Danny! “Few things in this world are more predictable than the reaction of conventional minds to unconventional ideas.” - John Anthony West
@kemshasan8866
@kemshasan8866 8 ай бұрын
I find I have quite an appreciation for well written verses. This is great thanks for sharing!
@bélalugrisi
@bélalugrisi 8 ай бұрын
John's wit & wisdom is sorely missed. Glad others like Chris & Danny are continuing to right the historical record. Best to you! @@kemshasan8866
@mackincali
@mackincali 8 ай бұрын
Or how many idiots exist that take 100% mindless verbal diarrhea as some kind of anything resembling factual or relevant. The fact people believe this crap on his basis is shameful. Unconventional or not. Thats exactly what theories without real knowledge and context are. Brain Diarrhea.
@mackincali
@mackincali 8 ай бұрын
What part outside of Dannys side was excellent please inform me
@etherealradar
@etherealradar 9 ай бұрын
So glad this dude is alive doing what he loves, fascinating stuff.
@bobeden5027
@bobeden5027 9 ай бұрын
Served my time as a fitter/turner 1967 to 1973. 4 pound 50 for a 40 hour week. Skills I learnt were so valuable to me in my life.
@bryanergau6682
@bryanergau6682 4 ай бұрын
So like a dime an hour?
@myleskuster2327
@myleskuster2327 5 ай бұрын
I've said for years. Frequency is everything!
@theAmazingblumpkin
@theAmazingblumpkin 9 ай бұрын
This was absolutely fascinating. Nice work fellas and thanks
@jacqulynhilyard1561
@jacqulynhilyard1561 10 ай бұрын
Excellent interview; nice to hear from Chris Dunn after so many years, he always brings sober reasoning to the table, and I look forward to reading his newest book.
@drummerdad80
@drummerdad80 9 ай бұрын
His pizio electric theory the whole pyramid would generate enough to light up one tiny led light lol wow...
@Mackaygolf
@Mackaygolf 10 ай бұрын
No clue what a wave guide was. This man explained it, with BRILLIANT graphic assist, in literal seconds. ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE. Fundamental principle, BAM! WOOO!
@jeboccuzzi10
@jeboccuzzi10 10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@davidmcivor2761
@davidmcivor2761 9 ай бұрын
Danny says “ What’s a lathe? “ says a lot!.
@andrewwalsh3744
@andrewwalsh3744 9 ай бұрын
Just to add a little: The Castles all over were power plants based on similar tech used in the Pyramids. As were the Starfort's of the previous era.
@vellron
@vellron 8 ай бұрын
you fool
@andrewwalsh3744
@andrewwalsh3744 8 ай бұрын
@@vellron Not my fault you are unred, and showing it!
@ricardovillegas5387
@ricardovillegas5387 10 ай бұрын
Listening to Dunn explaining a lathe to Danny while I'm running a lathe right now is weird lol
@rhodesianhunter9360
@rhodesianhunter9360 10 ай бұрын
Same here. Except it hurts my head
@msaintpc
@msaintpc 10 ай бұрын
I've travelled back and forth to Egypt off and on for nearly fifty years studying the great place, even learned Arabic well enough to converse. What I've managed to learn from studying the Pyramids is that they were already ancient artifacts at the inception of the Dynastic Egyptians. WE (talking about we present homo sapiens) have absolutely no clue or idea of the What, Why, When How or Who concerning these artifacts' origins and method of construction. All we know for certain is that technologically speaking, they were more advanced then than we are now. That's the real truth that we scientists know for certain. They were so much more mathematically, cosmologically and astronomically beyond us that all we can do is admit that we weren't the first technologically advanced civilization, and that these as well as many other artifacts found around our planet, are irrevocable, indisputable proof of that fact that no investigative archeologist or engineer can deny.
@gvibes69
@gvibes69 9 ай бұрын
The pyramids were made by aliens !!!! Thats why the egipcians never were capable off doing pyramids like the ones in giza after a thousand years with much better technology !!!
@v12dot
@v12dot 9 ай бұрын
👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@christophernoia5197
@christophernoia5197 7 ай бұрын
Yet, many do deny it and won't even consider the possibility. Quite sad
@PanglossDr
@PanglossDr 7 ай бұрын
Bollox, the age of the Pyramids is precisely, scientifically known.
@msaintpc
@msaintpc 7 ай бұрын
@@PanglossDr Not true. I'm a scientist, an archeologist and a Rosicrucian, who has spent more than fifty years studying the artifacts. We have no idea of their origins, purpose, method of construction or who or what constructed them. What we do know is that they were built pre flood, and that's all we know. Anything else said about them is pure speculation.
@caseybemis2403
@caseybemis2403 6 ай бұрын
Love most of your interviews that I have recently discovered. I'm an 82 year old woman (still very flexible and doing yoga). So I lived through everything this man talked about regarding JFK, RFK and MLK. Interesting they all end in K. By the time he finished with MLK's assassination, I was in tears reliving all of this stuff. It was a very disruptive and painful time. I can remember where I was when these happened, plus the Cuban Missile Crisis. "Seven Days in May" was a great movie. Watch it if you can. This was a great interview. Interesting book. "JFK: The Smoking Gun" by Colin McClaren. It's an interesting take on the shot that killed Kennedy.
@aalexander928
@aalexander928 8 ай бұрын
This is the most incredible 2 hours & 27 minutes I've ever had on You Tube - thoroughly enjoyable. Thank you so much Danny Jones & Chris Dunn. Looking forward to Part 2.
@VoiceHole
@VoiceHole 9 ай бұрын
haha I love when Chris looks at you after you ask him a funny question like " You trolling me right now Danny?" lol took a few days to watch this gonna start part 2 right now!
@markbonam545
@markbonam545 10 ай бұрын
Danny "What's a lathe ?" . Lmfao. I feel old
@marraharris6080
@marraharris6080 6 ай бұрын
You are not old, Danny is an ignoramus.
@adamuk5037
@adamuk5037 6 ай бұрын
Witness how we end up in dark ages, from time to time. 😅
@debshipman4697
@debshipman4697 6 ай бұрын
So mocked for asking an honest question in an area he knows very little about. Such grace you show.
@adamuk5037
@adamuk5037 6 ай бұрын
@@debshipman4697 the time for grace is over. Ignorant people should be mocked. This civilisation is finished if we don’t get back to some semblance of meritocracy. Ignorance should be ridiculed to encourage self improvement and the drive for success. STOP giving participation trophies to make yourself feel better about your worthless existence. It helps no one.
@raleighsmalls4653
@raleighsmalls4653 5 ай бұрын
First they laugh then "maybe" then "We knew it all along."
@andrewgibb8846
@andrewgibb8846 26 күн бұрын
I have the highest respect for Chris Dunn. A brilliant man and fact driven analysis that is foundational to answering the most important questions of our times. 🙏
@SideKickStudios
@SideKickStudios 10 ай бұрын
Can't wait for part two. The new age "historical archaeologists" are amazing, driving us in a new direction never thought of before in any scientific value. With every new tiny bit of info, I'm more and more convinced it's a rational conclusion that we've been scientifically advanced before and almost completely wiped out. Can't even imagine the horrors our ancestors went through and had to survive.
@gazmasonik2411
@gazmasonik2411 9 ай бұрын
Steven Greer claims with good evidence, anti gravity/electro Gravitics was mastered in October 1958. Probably earlier by the Nazis who used it for submarines to get to the moon.. instead of making specific space ships.
@MrAchile13
@MrAchile13 9 ай бұрын
But how do you deal with all the scientific evidence showing this is not true? Or with the logical inconsistencies?
@gazmasonik2411
@gazmasonik2411 9 ай бұрын
@@MrAchile13 I guess you have to trust the governments contradictory statements and believe elaborate distractions are meant for the good of national security. Sean Ryan has interviewed ex special forces with compelling anecdotes of underground bases concealing high voltage Anti Gravitic devices. Also on KZfaq is the sci-fi fantasy lies of Corey Good, (introduced as a "whistle blower" by David Wilcock) who used litigation against anyone making similar claims to him. As infringements against copyrighted ideas he created!.
@SideKickStudios
@SideKickStudios 9 ай бұрын
@MrAchile13 In all honesty, no conspiratory insinuation intended, what "evidence"? There is no evidence to show that humans did not have advanced skills and knowledge tens, if not hundreds of thousand of years ago. All we have is assumptions and guesstimates based on what's been found (dug up), however, if these ancient civilizations did exist, after 10 thousand years after global cataclysms and weathering, there's virtually nothing to find, most of it would be reconstituted into earth as minerals. Even if something artificial and out of time were to still remain somehow, it would most likely lie somewhere deep beneath the seas, because the coasts where humans tend to reside, from those ancient times are far below the waves today. And I'm curious, what logical inconsistencies are we talking about?
@richiebricker
@richiebricker 8 ай бұрын
All dogs are really robots meant to spy on you nd take pictures of you in bad light
@commonsense7754
@commonsense7754 10 ай бұрын
I know a gentleman who was involved in manufacturing time keeping and gyros for the space program from way down under in Australia. Amazingly mostly done in a small garden shed with hand tools. Chris identification of the requirement for precision being the reason for its existence is an extremely wise take. You do not manufacture to such levels of precision unless it’s required or economically makes sense.
@Rezistt
@Rezistt 10 ай бұрын
Who is he?
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
You make a great argument. I have tried using this argument elsewhere but when you communicate that to dull minds, you might as well be speaking Greek. With the vases and some other statues it is clear that ancient Egyptians had CHEAP high precision that was mass produced, easily replicated...which comes from MACHINES. it is SO FRUSTRATING hearing some jdjot who had clearly NEVER worked in engineering or manufacturing think that with enough slaves and harsh enough sweatshops and copper chisels ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE. Keep in mind too against the ancient slave/sweatshop approach: At that time of early agriculture, a MUCH higher percentage of people were farming fulltime because yields were HUNDREDS of times lower than they are today. THERE WAS NO EXCESS OF FOOD for these masses of slaves to wittle with copper chisels at these MASSIVE PRECISE granite objects. This is TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATED.
@justalitttleun
@justalitttleun 9 ай бұрын
I agree but you're missing one other possibility and that is it was just easy for them to do and therefore standard work.
@sullivanrachael
@sullivanrachael 9 ай бұрын
@@justalitttleun- precision handiwork is easier to do with practice, and with practice comes speed. But human issues of fatigue and enough hours in the day limit the throughput of work. Put another way, super high precision handiwork is possible, but it requires lots of time. The sheer scale of the precision items still standing today means a lot of precision stonework was done to have 10% (pure guess) surviving a few millennia later. This indicates precision machine tools are the only way to do this work. It also doesn’t answer why such a high level of precision was necessary if the structures were purely decorative or for religious iconology. The precision was needed for some function.
@kevinhank17
@kevinhank17 9 ай бұрын
​@@airthrowDBTso why so many examples of imprecise vases if it was so easy to mass produce perfect ones? Why are the majority clearly handmade of lesser precision? Can't ignore evidence if you want to be taken seriously.
@yelyab1
@yelyab1 8 ай бұрын
Machining is the fundamental practice of making wood and metal. Experts in machining have a very innovative and creative mind. Most of them go on to become mechanical engineers, go into electrical because of automation and control systems. Something very special about the mind of machinists. They can see solutions, in their head to a problem. Seems simple but when you are dealing with complex systems it’s seems impossible.
@nikkimatteson7103
@nikkimatteson7103 9 ай бұрын
With all due respect, I believe the reason the host, Danny, was asking what a lathe is, as well as other questions that some deemed to be too simple, is because he was thinking of his listening audience and asking on behalf of those who might not know what a lathe is or much about the advanced subjects that were brought up. He was being considerate towards his audience, a quality of a good interviewer. How is this not obvious?
@firstielasty1162
@firstielasty1162 9 ай бұрын
My impression was that, although he talks well, the hosts technical knowledge is minimal to none, and he actually didn't know what a lathe was. His question seemed genuine. Some other comments/reactions seemed to confirm this. I doubt he has much experience working with his hands.
@gazmmm
@gazmmm 9 ай бұрын
As an aerospace machinist myself it really is hard to state how spectacularly well made those vases are.
@mushedits
@mushedits 9 ай бұрын
UnchartedX for those that don’t know. Go check it out.
@dieselsmiths
@dieselsmiths 9 ай бұрын
Is “aerospace” one of those yuppie titles for self gratification?
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
@@dieselsmiths Why would you actually type something so stupid?
@TheVaged
@TheVaged 9 ай бұрын
@@dieselsmiths It's like a reverse of Archaeology where they leave out the Humanities tag.
@BSIII
@BSIII 8 ай бұрын
Try learning about stonemasonry techniques. Techniques we've used since the dawn of time, and still do. Techniques that these guys don't like to talk about. A handful of men literally carved out an Indian temple in Hawaii out of granite by hand using chisels.
@bobule
@bobule 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, absolutely love Chris Dunn's work and he's a funny chap also. His Brothers of the Serpent interview is so good also.
@manbearpig710
@manbearpig710 10 ай бұрын
“That’s the other scablands” 🤣🤣 my fav episode
@bobule
@bobule 10 ай бұрын
@@manbearpig710 😂🤣
@Wolfbabypuppylove
@Wolfbabypuppylove 10 ай бұрын
​@manbearpig710 why not Mercury......because its dangerous ... 😂😂
@bobule
@bobule 10 ай бұрын
@@Wolfbabypuppylove 😂😂
@GalactusOG
@GalactusOG 9 ай бұрын
Brother Dunn is sharp! These two episodes have been enlightening.
@handrewmillan4293
@handrewmillan4293 6 ай бұрын
funny joke
@XannyMaGroin
@XannyMaGroin 9 ай бұрын
This is not a podcast, it’s a SHOW. Podcasts are podcasts, they’re not linear on one topic, they are natural conversations while people hang out with each other and shoot the shit. Yes you can have very intresting things come out of podcasts but the format of a podcast and a show like this are 2 totally separate forms of entertainment.
@XannyMaGroin
@XannyMaGroin 9 ай бұрын
So quit saying this is taking over JRE. It is not. JRE has a much wider range of audience because of its podcast format.
@equaliser2265
@equaliser2265 9 ай бұрын
Nice to see a legend like Christopher on the show, fantastic love this guy.
@Alarix246
@Alarix246 10 ай бұрын
33:48 I remember the razor blade times - my dad cut out a pyramid shape from paper and laid the razor blade under in I think 1/3 of its height and supposedly it helped to keep the edge sharp... the good ole von Däniken days! 🤠
@gfelix3552
@gfelix3552 4 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn knows more. I get shivers .... I knew as a young kid that they were for a far greater purporse.
@TheJoyceAdventures
@TheJoyceAdventures Ай бұрын
As someone who grew up in northwest England, it is crazy to hear his accent consistently switching from American to different variations of a Lancashire accent
@box228
@box228 9 ай бұрын
The one thing I don’t understand is of the great pyramid was a power plant, why do the other two pyramids alongside it, which are just as impressive as the Khufu pyramid, have such drastically different interiors? They seem to have a different purpose
@samueladams5243
@samueladams5243 7 ай бұрын
I feel like they transmitted to different frequencies through the air, obelisks spread throughout the area would be manufactured at the same frequency to work as receivers of the wireless electricity.
@user-qs2gy2wn6c
@user-qs2gy2wn6c 2 ай бұрын
Midrange and tweeter
@johnashcroft-jones6091
@johnashcroft-jones6091 9 ай бұрын
Danny: 'What's a lathe? Astronaut backpack? You didn't know?
@lukeevans-bn4ki
@lukeevans-bn4ki 9 ай бұрын
Chris Dunns a legend! No way he’s from working class from Manchester with that accent though😂
@muntee33
@muntee33 9 ай бұрын
There's a difference between having a skill gained through experience, and being able ro articulate that experience so an unskilled person can grasp an understanding for themselves.... Ie, doing and teaching are both skills into themselves and it's apparent when someone is only skilled in the doing part.
@mrshiney2
@mrshiney2 10 ай бұрын
My dad worked for Perkin Elmer in Santa Ana Ca. in 1968. I am finding out more and more about some of the dark projects my old man worked on including Boeing Dyna-Soar shuttle craft and Hughes Satellite projects.
@NotAnnaJones
@NotAnnaJones 10 ай бұрын
Very cool
@PeterGibbonns
@PeterGibbonns 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, Mrs.
@fdannybrown
@fdannybrown 10 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn reminds me of Albert Finney in the movie Big Fish. Almost talks the same, looks the same. Great episode though. Your choice of guests are exactly who I want to listen to.
@iaingill4879
@iaingill4879 3 ай бұрын
Chris Dunn is a legend - gotta love this man! Sharp dry wit and incredibly insightful Thanks for this amazing interview
@brad9529
@brad9529 8 ай бұрын
There's so many things it could have been built to be. A giant sensor, to pickup signals, a lightning collector and battery, a water pump. More of it needs to been searched to help find the answers.
@nwchrista
@nwchrista 9 ай бұрын
What i liked about this guy's story is that I too was a machinest in Illinois, not too far from his area, in fact. And i became an electrical engineer later. And it's equally interesting how we both seem to share this identical interest in the pyramid power plant. Though, his analysis is off the charts in that regard.
@DwightKShrute
@DwightKShrute 8 ай бұрын
There is evidently SEVERAL of us in the comments lol. (I'm also a journeyman electrician/electro-mechanical engineer)
@TheEarl777
@TheEarl777 10 ай бұрын
I think Chris Dunn is spot on the money. He’s hit the nail on the head with regards to what the pyramids are.
@HarryWolf
@HarryWolf 10 ай бұрын
No, Mr Dunn is a very intelligent man, but on the function of the Great Pyramid and most other pyramids, his hypothesis is fantastical.
@Synic08
@Synic08 10 ай бұрын
Were just wrong about when they were built… we just know when they stopped being maintained.
@raiden72
@raiden72 10 ай бұрын
Why doesn't Mr Chris Dunn Make a small scale model? If you can't do it on a small scale then you can't do it on a big scale. Chris has proved nothing
@HarryWolf
@HarryWolf 10 ай бұрын
@@raiden72 Good point.
@Wolffzahn
@Wolffzahn 9 ай бұрын
@@raiden72 Can you build a working miniature atomic bomb? No you can't…you need a minimum size because of the critical mass. Same problem with recreating a working model of a "giza power plant"!
@zach9092
@zach9092 9 ай бұрын
Fun fact the dull blade being sharpened also happens when placed inside an orgone energy accumulator, Wilhelm Reich who created and studied orgone energy accumulators and generators did lors of research on what he called orgone energy and surprisingly if you look up what orgone generators look like it’s very similar to the pyramids and it also involves quartz which is very abundant in the granite used in the Giza pyramids
@mackincali
@mackincali 8 ай бұрын
So genius what does a orgone generator actually do and what's its actual use. I have a actual orgone and it has never nor will it sharpen a damn thing except my opinion for people like you or comments like this.
@ashhawk2346
@ashhawk2346 7 ай бұрын
It's so great to hear the new generation of Egyptologists are willing to take on these theories without dismissing them.. Leaving the stubborn and selfish old fellas that are holding back the secrets to die off. The next generation will finally access the truths to the Pyramids because those who are guarding the old beliefs are going to Die soon! Brilliant!
@CarsCatAliens
@CarsCatAliens 10 ай бұрын
Tesla believed the Pyramids were power generating machines
@TheMoneypresident
@TheMoneypresident 10 ай бұрын
He also said pigeons talked to him.
@BullyDrops
@BullyDrops 10 ай бұрын
He was batshit crazy last 30 years of life.
@TheMaxKids
@TheMaxKids 10 ай бұрын
pigeons said the same about Tesla@@TheMoneypresident
@lutze5086
@lutze5086 10 ай бұрын
​@@TheMoneypresidentand Newton was into ghosts and seance bs 🤷‍♂️
@TheMoneypresident
@TheMoneypresident 10 ай бұрын
@@lutze5086 and yet the pyramids still aren't power plants.
@metaspherz
@metaspherz 10 ай бұрын
I imagine that static electricity must have been all the rage in ancient times. Anybody who knew how to generate it and reproduce it on demand would've been considered a wizard or magician. A glass rod rubbed with a silk scarf would've been considered a magic wand, as it would've delivered an intriguing spark in the dark and/or a potent shock to anybody it touched.
@bullydully7428
@bullydully7428 9 ай бұрын
You are assuming without any proof that most of the people was stupid just because the lived 10000 years before us
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
​@@bullydully7428People aren't STUPID for having never encountered electricity, how insulting to our ancestors. YOU aren't "smart" because you have electricity that others wired for you and maintain for you.
@iCanSeeWhatMostCant
@iCanSeeWhatMostCant 9 ай бұрын
Wooden cylinder barrel 2 feet in diameter with jaguar pelts stretched around it. The barrel would be spun by human power on a shaft while a wide, amber "boot" was pressed against the spinning barrel. An ancient Van De Graaf style electrostatic pump.
@qualat9340
@qualat9340 9 ай бұрын
@@airthrowDBT Friend, @bullydully7428 is saying the same thing you are. The original poster was not yelling that anyone was stupid, all three of you are in agreeance, let down your vitriol.
@Kayenne54
@Kayenne54 8 ай бұрын
I've "shocked" people with static energy, which leapt across at least 12 inches of space between us. Always super aware of "discharging" any static before filling up the fuel tank. This static seems to be associated with A. very dry cold weather and/or B. increased solar activity.
@gregroth4696
@gregroth4696 8 ай бұрын
Imagination, intuition, perception, reason are all equally as important as engineer thinking to solve this lovely mystery.
@user-rt8ik1ow4i
@user-rt8ik1ow4i 7 ай бұрын
I am a Vermonter, born here. My grandfather worked 42 years for simmons precision, then Hercules, then the last na,me change was Aerospace.Vergennes Vermont, or panton vt.They made "space shuttle" part's. If I could only tell you the metal I saw,or whatever it was,and stories galore
@KristiGilleland
@KristiGilleland 10 ай бұрын
Looking at the diagram makes me think of the inner ear...like the 'thing' at the bottom as 3 little bones, with Eustachian tube going out to equalize pressure at that particular point. He helps me think about it in 3d.
@49ccMopedWorld
@49ccMopedWorld 10 ай бұрын
I am.a long time fan of Chris - I hope his health gets a bit better - so this is going to be good!!! Great channel this has become and Danny you have grown a lot!!!!
@7oneofseven
@7oneofseven 8 ай бұрын
35 years ago when we were building our house, the election that was installing the wiring, did something I have never forgotten. He had a shop light mounted on a rod of some sort, and stuck the rod in the ground and lit the light bulb. It was not solar or rechargeable it just an incandescent lightbulb in a socket mounted and wired to a pole. He claimed the energy was feeding through the ground from our temporary power cable from our pole to a junction box that was sitting on the ground. I said how can that be safe for us walking around, he said it was low level power, only enough to feed the lightbulb.👀
@abes1111
@abes1111 7 ай бұрын
This is like danny is having a conversation with his grandad 😂
@deathcultstudios
@deathcultstudios 10 ай бұрын
This is Fantastic, Dunn is the real deal and the best interview Ive seen. I hope we get some theories about Capstones, and the crystals/salts in the Queens Chamber
@chriswill9436
@chriswill9436 10 ай бұрын
Supporting Danny and his successful podcast is a good thing. I am just going to be brutally honest here: this interview sucked. Danny’s naïveté and inability to ask the rignt questions is painfully apparent. I think Chris Dunn and his ideas are super interesting, I just don’t think Danny was “qualified” for this one. Leave this one to Rogan. So many Rogan haters and I think that’s ridiculous. Joe is incredibly well rounded and don’t say things like “Danny is taking the torch.” Rogan built an empire and inspired an entire culture of podcasters. so many amazing guests and wild, captivating interviews. I read a comment on this thread saying Danny is taking a risk by having Chris Dunn on and I couldn’t agree more. This one made me cringe and it was painful to get through. I would be willing to bet Chris Dunn was uncomfortable for much of it.
@syzygyman7367
@syzygyman7367 10 ай бұрын
Rogan is indeed works a lot to prepare himself to his guests, to educate himself at least a little bit in his guests field of expertise. But the total failure of education is still manifesting itself hier nad there, both in Joe and guests, and in the audience too. He had Graham Hancock couple of weeks ago, and I heard it again - that to make a symmetrical statue you need to possess some advance technology, and same for the finding true North. Jesus Christ, Joe is a hunter, how can he be not aware of the most simple and logical tricks of navigation? Schools suck worldwide, people spend 8-12 years for nothing. I explain more physics during one drinking party like Joe and Alex Jones have, than teachers do in years. Imagine how better the world would be if people were really learning something at school.
@AustinKoleCarlisle
@AustinKoleCarlisle 10 ай бұрын
This is the level of ignorance the globalists want for the average person. The best way to keep people dependent on the government is to make them uneducated, ignorant, and unskilled.
@stuartyBhoy
@stuartyBhoy Ай бұрын
Ffs even i know what a lathe is and i consider myself genuinely stupid...
@randywollin5732
@randywollin5732 8 күн бұрын
I love this guy, its not my first look at his theories of his. I have seen him a number of times before. Including at South American sites. But the question that flashed in my mind, was on the columns like the ones in the light bulb thing where there isnt enough air to burn torches for light. I cant remember what they called those columns but there is one holding the end of that bulb devise. Perhaps Mr. dunns resonaters were those type of columns. They are a column with rings around them. Mr. Dunn is in my view the type of person I want to hear from, because he is smart enough to keep his mind open to possibilities we dont understand and is not afraid to be proven wrong and then to look in other directions for answers. That is a trait that our best scientists dont possess.
@lizbiedinger9065
@lizbiedinger9065 10 ай бұрын
Danny...What a lovely, lovely interview that you did with this dear thoughtful, may l say, humble man. Chris has said at a fairly recent conference that he had survived a couple of life threatening illnesses and one can see that they slowed him down. You gave him time to ponder, the way older people do. You brought out, with such youthful exuberance and yet such respect his wealth of ideas, Chris really enjoyed sharing his depth of knowledge and love of his life's work with you. You nearly brought me to tears. Sometimes these types of interviews are plodding, but l could see the glimmer in Chris' eyes. I know we will never find out who built the pyramids but the wonder is, who in this world thought of designing these enormous edifices and that they were going emit energy. These ancient peoples were obviously astonishing.The pyramids never stop amazing me. I am an 82 yr old Canadian grandma and l started this journey from age 15 with Emanuel Velikofksy, to Erich von Daniken and on, and on and still the more artifacts are found, the more there are!! Thanks for this!!
@airthrowDBT
@airthrowDBT 9 ай бұрын
I truly believe the point of the Pyramid, its "function" is to get an 82 year old Canadian grandma and a 38 year old Electronics technician from Washington state to ponder them. If you do it together, you're in the cult of the pyramids
@lizbiedinger9065
@lizbiedinger9065 9 ай бұрын
​@@airthrowDBTl just saw this reply today. The commentary had been reposted and I wondered why. I've been in the Pyramid cult since l can't remember when. My regret is l never got to see them. Thanks!
@stephenlloyd3064
@stephenlloyd3064 10 ай бұрын
About the Pyramid razor blade sharpener, Remember, in the '70s we are probably talking about the chrome plated, zinc cast double edged safety razor. 2 years of Chemistry taught me that 2 dissimilar metals + water and you have a battery. One metal collects the electrons and corrodes. The corrosion forms on points and edges first. Just remove the blade from the razor and dry it and you have stopped the corrosion process. My blades last for months without actually using the plastic pyramid. Typically, pyramids don't work well unless aligned to true North to work anyway or so it was claimed.
@raiden72
@raiden72 10 ай бұрын
I go a step further and after drying the razor on a towel, I use a hair dryer to evacuate any excess moisture. My blades last almost forever. No pyramid magic is needed!
@EthNick16
@EthNick16 6 ай бұрын
1:25:30 maybe not everybody learned this but i definitely remember learning about all the different rock types in 6th grade. i kind of had second hand embarassement when this question was asked
@Whenthoughtsmaycome
@Whenthoughtsmaycome 10 ай бұрын
I do agree with Dunn and respect his work fully, but I also think these things where chemical plants, I’d really love to see Dunn and the guy from “The land of Chem” collaborate. I forgot his name, I just found his channel but the evidence he presents (hands on) is very interesting
@chickenfist1554
@chickenfist1554 10 ай бұрын
Geoffrey Drum if I've spelt that right. And I totally agree :)
@thephantomarcana
@thephantomarcana 10 ай бұрын
Geoffrey Drum has nailed what the pyramids are in my opinion. 100% chemical manufacturing.
@NotAnnaJones
@NotAnnaJones 10 ай бұрын
Yes, I love watching the guy from The Land of Chem! Get both Dunn and the Chen guy on together. Would be epic.
@kklh7918
@kklh7918 10 ай бұрын
The land of chem brings very good ideas
@treymarkovich8204
@treymarkovich8204 10 ай бұрын
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