Christopher Dunn is the author of several books, including "Giza: The Tesla Connection," "Lost Technologies of Ancient Egypt," and "The Giza Power Plant." www.gizapower.com
Пікірлер: 6 100
@angelzepeda514215 күн бұрын
33 missed calls from Flint Dibbles😂
@trinidad11115 күн бұрын
Lmao
@dungeonquesting807515 күн бұрын
Flint sleeps in that hat
@yourwrongloserhaha15 күн бұрын
@@dungeonquesting8075lmfao
@Duckii_mode15 күн бұрын
Joe needs him back on! 😂
@sholaadjekota914015 күн бұрын
😂😂😭
@tylermunn944412 күн бұрын
I doubt you'll see this comment, but I was one of the engineers at danville metal who 3d printed that exact vase you were holding!!! It's really cool to see something I made on your podcast because I've been a fan of this podcast for a long time. Thank you for opening the minds of millions of people, we need more thinkers out there!
@Anne_Onymous12 күн бұрын
Congrats bro
@Rocko199012 күн бұрын
That's cool as fuck bro
@keithaustin591912 күн бұрын
I saw your comment and I appreciate the precise craftsmanship.
@voiceofreason182912 күн бұрын
What ? Its pronted?!?@@keithaustin5919
@3Kiwiana12 күн бұрын
You make no sense, they didn’t have a plastic vase they had a rose granite vase from pre dynastic Egypt on loan from a collector.
@AtnanMemedovski12 күн бұрын
I’m a machinist and this is the first time I’ve ever felt represented in any kind of media or entertainment
@BeggarAfterKnowledge11 күн бұрын
I felt the same way lol Joe trying to understand thousandths and tenths was funny lol it was neat seeing how metrology was used in the inspection of artifacts
@christophergallagher384510 күн бұрын
@BeggarAfterKnowledge he couldn't even pronounce ferrous lol
@leeturnbull208210 күн бұрын
Exactly the same, it's fantastic becuase people don't understand what we do or how important it is, and this guy is a proper engineer, also, how clumsy was joe using the Vernier
@LooksLike-om4df10 күн бұрын
Too bad you got this grifter.
@douglaseuritt391910 күн бұрын
I spent my professional life in automotive engineering and I always held all you tool and die people in the highest regard.
@hobolobobolo12 күн бұрын
As an mechanical engineer, everyone of my colleagues instantly see the points made out by Mr.Dunn as soon as you show them. Takes an engineer to see an engineer. Our ancient forefathers had some serious advanced engineering skills!
@patlambert-tr7gq11 күн бұрын
If so, why is there no evidence left behind of the machines that built the pyramids.
@aphysique11 күн бұрын
In theory, this would work wouldn't it?
@hobolobobolo9 күн бұрын
@@aphysique I work both in theory and in practice and have come to the conclusion that: In theory there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice there is. I would love to see a small model of it though!
@miltonturner29779 күн бұрын
I think the Egyptians FOUND all the stuff they took credit for. It's the same as the Pharaohs putting their name on everything. Then the Egyptologists ASSUME that Pharaoh built it. That is the 'Assuming' they are trying to hide behind, it gives them POWER.
@hobolobobolo8 күн бұрын
@@miltonturner2977 if this is true and the pyramids are older than 5000 years (which I believe), it still does not answer who, how and why they built it.
@stuartwhite89715 күн бұрын
Dibble snapped a pencil at the beginning of this podcast and got on his horse for Austin
@boagski14 күн бұрын
He only writes with feathers tho
@MagnusGalactusOG14 күн бұрын
Diddlr is laughing obnoxiously all the way to his Hobbit hole.
@nourdinemazali49314 күн бұрын
With those baby hands he ain't snapping shit 😂
@ajay.gillig14 күн бұрын
Had to go back.. he forgot his fedora
@dawooddawood315814 күн бұрын
You mean pony
@ig124315 күн бұрын
Flint Dibble fuming in his race car bed rn
@lidserg-b766314 күн бұрын
😂😂
@Darkstarsovereign14 күн бұрын
🤣🤣🤣💚 FUCK YES
@TheyCallMeGlitchDash14 күн бұрын
😂
@zachgrabow954114 күн бұрын
Vroom 😢
@Jamie-yh5eu13 күн бұрын
That his dad made for him
@lsaiahh13 күн бұрын
As a machinist myself hearing someone on Rogan talking about thous and tenths and hearing the words "depth per revolution" come out of rogans mouth is blowing my mind!! Love it
@chhhickenbonenowison13 күн бұрын
He said he mistakenly referred to .0001 as a tenth but anyone in machining knows it was no mistake
@AIenSmithee12 күн бұрын
Really? Even if it’s all garbage? Don’t have to be a machinist to see the drill core stuff is pretty dumb.
@lsaiahh12 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmithee Just happy to hear about the trade i love being talked about
@martinsanders541812 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmitheeAh the indoctrinated mind 🤡 The blind will never see the anomalies, or the absurdities, of their own perspective. And those that can't challenge their own thinking, cannot credibly claim to understand the issue
@AIenSmithee12 күн бұрын
@@martinsanders5418 have you watched any Scientists Against Myths videos? kzfaq.info/get/bejne/qdmTqtKI2by4Ynk.htmlsi=rzngS_eE3GSMxVlD
@MAAlharbi13 күн бұрын
“Can I go take a good nap then?” only guest that ever said that 😂😂
@thomaskoukouris407011 күн бұрын
Time stamp?
@bill207011 күн бұрын
That was the best! You could tell it was a bit much for him mentally.
@bill207011 күн бұрын
@@thomaskoukouris4070 it's In the last minute
@cornpopwuzzabaddude496214 күн бұрын
Christopher Dunn is my uncle. I have not seen him for 15 years as Texas is far away, he used to send me postcards in near perfect calligraphy print handwriting. Very honorable man.
@khall18714 күн бұрын
Chris is also my uncle. He sends me birthday presents wrapped with the utmost precision. Each piece of tape measures exactly 1.125" in length.
@Noctrl10014 күн бұрын
Chris is also my father’s 2nd cousin he used to send me paper airplanes from different parts of the world perfectly engineered to have a flight duration of exactly 3.14 mins with a 3.14 degree drop off every time!
@WSFM_Rex13 күн бұрын
Chris is also my uncle. He took me on an archaeological dig to Teotihucan when I was a junior in high school and he speaks fluent Spanish as well. It was pretty cool we met up with some of his old military buddies in Mexico City and that’s where I drank my first tequila, Uncle Chris sure knew how to have a good time I’m glad he’s doing well
@khall18713 күн бұрын
Chris is my mother. He's always there for me. Honestly couldn't ask for a better father to my children.
@brewcrewgarage13 күн бұрын
Chris is my Uncle 9th removed and I love getting his fathers days postcards
@nonyabiz885515 күн бұрын
Who else loves episodes like this that delves down the rabbit hole.
@anthonyallen392815 күн бұрын
This is the reason we watch
@gizabitadat149915 күн бұрын
DEFFO MORE PLZ !
@Drizz32215 күн бұрын
Totally! This was gold
@MrFarr00715 күн бұрын
I was loving it...
@RiskyBusiness14415 күн бұрын
Esp this guy as he SEEMS more on the level than the moon hoax guy and Gram. Joe needs a quick microwave course though. He was lost in the explanation.
@Wordtothewisepodcast13 күн бұрын
Back to the old Rogan having fascinating conversations with people pushing the boundaries and no culture war bullshit
@edzus1009 күн бұрын
... confirmation biased people you mean ... because ... no ... all cores dont show a spiral .. majority .. just DONT ... they are UN INTERESTINGLY matching what the fuckin copper pipe and sand do. And few anomalies dont prove shait.
@awsompawsome4 күн бұрын
Cry more, maybe if you cry long enough you can make a river
@Kingofthekop1Күн бұрын
@@awsompawsomeReal glass
@mr.anderson9938Күн бұрын
@@awsompawsomecalm down red hat
@Jippa_3312 күн бұрын
Chris Dunn is a legend! Great guest! He’s on Mt. Rushmore w/ Randall, Graham & John Anthony West. Also his voice reminds me of Albert Finney in Big Fish
@AlexMartinez-131610 күн бұрын
I kept thinking damn this guy looks like a movie star... thank you for reminding me about that !
@ExactConsciousness9 күн бұрын
He's on what? Is it some kind of Randall presentation?
@calvinjackson501314 күн бұрын
“Jaime can u pull up Flint Dibbles sleeves?” That was the best comment ever! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@iknowyoureright856414 күн бұрын
Whoever wrote that deserves some sort of award, 😅
@hcliff210014 күн бұрын
Long live comments about dibble i cant get enough of them 😂
@brifer9514 күн бұрын
Flint Dibble is a Harry Potter character with a secret master that tells him what to do
@HighLifeGaming9514 күн бұрын
Lol dude this was as good as the original comment
@kanifalam783514 күн бұрын
Oh shit, that's perfect
@5dollarshake26315 күн бұрын
Episodes like this are so nostalgic for early JRE watchers.
@juggadaaku421915 күн бұрын
The olden days. The rabbit holes..
@korbandallas893115 күн бұрын
The intro alone.
@pauliseri93515 күн бұрын
Olive Garden
@Makabert.Abylon15 күн бұрын
@@Medusas_Barberyou win a yellow tractor 🚜 in optional colour, and a special needs medal🏅
@colindavidson648315 күн бұрын
I guess that means he’s someone interesting
@evolbetty45989 күн бұрын
Mr. Dunn should be a weekly guest. He has so much knowledge to share.
@22Facesmusica12 күн бұрын
we really need people like Christopher Dunn. When talking about Egypt, Flint's arguments felt weak, but yet his attitude was like "believe the experts or be labeled stupid".
@AIenSmithee12 күн бұрын
He didn’t do that at all. He presented evidence and data. If evidence and data is not useful and you’d prefer to just listen to some cool stories, seriously, that’s fine. But please don’t pretend you care about science.
@IIINEMESESII11 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmithee seemed like they showed his cherry picked evidence at the end of this episode so i mean... sussy boi
@Uno_Floydd11 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmitheethis dude really did ignore your response and just stated illiterate illogical opinion
@Leynad77811 күн бұрын
If you listen to the counter arguments it's apparent, they think these are facts, even the official narrative is just a theory as well not based on first sources, but what historians wrote about ancient Egypt thousands of years later. There was a catastrophe with the Younger Drias, because 150 huge mammal races disappeared quite suddenly. There were Elephants in America and Mammuths. Official cause of distinction is, they were all killed by humans. The few million worldwide that existed during that time. There are too many very unscientific explanations regarding our past.
@BarryMccockiner11 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmithee there’s no evidence of Egyptians using cooper tools to cut granite or make these vases or drill cores out of huge slabs…
@kinsmanifesto115 күн бұрын
This is some EXTREMELY classic JRE shit, and I’m here for it.
@JeffreyGlover6515 күн бұрын
Spot on!
@keepingupwithJoaquinJones15 күн бұрын
Where?
@OingBoing-bh5vm14 күн бұрын
When ?
@monotech20.1414 күн бұрын
Rogan keep having frauds on his show.
@TopG-lu1hq14 күн бұрын
We need important people on instead of all these influencers
@BillMcLendon888814 күн бұрын
I am a quality control inspector with 14 years experience in the manufacturing field. And when he says that this material is measuring at a thou. Or a thou and a half .001/.0015 that blows my mind the accuracy of these ancient artifacts. Amazing.
@dragonmaster39114 күн бұрын
you would really enjoy UnchartedX. He is Ben and was on jre with Jimmy from Bright Insight. Ben has excellent videos covering the advanced machining evidence in ancient artifacts. in a recent video Ben was there with Chris, and they have the real vase on the turn table and just watch the indicator gauges holding shockingly steady. I highly recommend Ben's content
@cebukid7014 күн бұрын
Same here. I'm a manufacturing engineer and understand how hard it is to achieve those dimensions and tolerances
@josteincarlsen290514 күн бұрын
@@cebukid70how do you think they have done it? Can we do this today?
@josteincarlsen290514 күн бұрын
how do you think they have done it? Can we do this today?
@FFNOJG14 күн бұрын
@josteincarlsen2905 yes we can do it today... and the only way they could have done it is with a computer, and a machine.
@Kr4zYy-12 күн бұрын
Joe dropped this as a straight up middle finger to Flint Dribbles 💀
@madisonromero35299 күн бұрын
I was thinking the same thing.
@ExactConsciousness9 күн бұрын
Why not though? People who claim to be intelligent enough to understand things but closed minded and unable to process new data are degenerates of our time.
@CarlosVargas-io7wy9 күн бұрын
😂😂
@greentoolsnyc39859 күн бұрын
For realz
@user-ii1iy8fz1d6 күн бұрын
Joe does not seem a malicious chap... ❤
@cncshorts107513 күн бұрын
This guys speaking my language. Shout out all the machinists watching.
@Djfromkc115 күн бұрын
As a machinist myself for 25 years i really appreciate this episode. Thanks Joe.
@chrisk781215 күн бұрын
Machinist of 12 years and can’t agree more! Hearing someone one JRE say “two thou” is just awesome!
@laneovbey403115 күн бұрын
Me also. tho I have not made as many chips, that you probably have. I run a 1942 NO. 3 warner & swasey turret lathe and a Lagun republic FT 2 vertical milling machine At my shop
@wowhuhmike15 күн бұрын
@@chrisk7812 I love how he just keeps using the lingo without ever explaining that a “thou” is .001”
@papialeman15 күн бұрын
Same. I was an at Egyptian exhibit recently and was blown away at the precision with which old kingdom vases were obviously machined at within .001 concentricity from the OD and ID. few people can really appreciate how difficult that is even today and especially 4000 years ago with extremely hard granite. However they did it was lost and that quality was long gone by new kingdom Egypt
@stubbycuts15 күн бұрын
So good, I’m just heard Brazing on JRE!
@mikefunk142315 күн бұрын
Chris hired me at my job 27yrs ago and it was a pleasure working with him. I remember when they filmed an episode of Ancient Aliens in our shop years ago. I told the guys in the shop a year ago that I had a feeling Chris was going to be on the JRE……Nice work Chris 🍻
@djmastergroove94615 күн бұрын
That's cool! 👍
@PaulWall5199115 күн бұрын
This 100% didn't happen...
@mikefunk142315 күн бұрын
@@PaulWall51991 lol okay whatever.
@dudeDOGn15 күн бұрын
@@PaulWall51991Awww somebody's jealous 😿
@PaulWall5199115 күн бұрын
@@mikefunk1423 y u capping bro? No need to lie on the internet
@dereknemoART13 күн бұрын
Its so nice to see Mr. Dunn looking so healthy. Whether or not you like any of his research, he is a pillar for modern independent or amateur researchers of Ancient Mysteries. His latest collaborations with other engineers that have some very impressive resumes are exciting.
@victorzancudo541312 күн бұрын
Shirt sleeve game on point, which is now a standard we must hold people to while talking about Egypt.
@jalopyjoe306914 күн бұрын
Joe is so good at changing gears with an older guest like this. Making super digestible for us all. What a great, intriguing episode!
@ChrisTolf14 күн бұрын
Jeez Joe has came out with straight bangers for like three weeks in a row. GOAT
@markfrancis516412 күн бұрын
Christopher Dunn is the uncle for everyone. Full of real experience, knowledge, thought and expertise. A man who understands materials & machines and asks the questions pure academics refuse to confront as the answers are incompatible with their careers, ideas and credibility.
@greg.peepeeface9 күн бұрын
nicely summmed up
@Chillllllbruh9 күн бұрын
My Uncle is cool My Uncle is great Except for that time He was accused of ra.....
@fishyfishycoral11 күн бұрын
"You do ask a lot of good questions" :Genuine and high praise from a man of Mr. Dunn's caliber. Basically, grilling a man for an hour and he's not bored of your curiosity Is great conversation.
@Archangel308314 күн бұрын
These are my favorite kinda episodes. The ones where you gotta turn off all notifications and get somewhere quiet because shits about to get real in the rabbit hole.
@jasonolinger758513 күн бұрын
yeah, it takes you out of the mundane rat race. We call capitalism.
@barneypaws488313 күн бұрын
Absolutely, pure escapism. You want to give these episodes 100% of your time
@rjl575912 күн бұрын
@jasonolinger7585
@jopo799615 күн бұрын
That suit vest instantly adds 20 IQ points.
@trinidad11115 күн бұрын
Mine comes tomorrow, can’t wait to put it on and solve this mystery once and for all
@shinobi-no-bueno15 күн бұрын
*waistcoat
@ryangallagher-oy6qt15 күн бұрын
That's redundant. He's a brit.
@NecroChungus15 күн бұрын
[BUTTON-UP VEST] clothing +2 INT +1 CHR
@LunaticAsylum0115 күн бұрын
@@shinobi-no-buenois this a US-UK thing? I've never heard of a suit vest before!
@larrymondello847513 күн бұрын
Christopher Dunn is amazing. I worked in a tool and die shop, and I worked for Smith and Wesson also a lot of engineers like Christopher Dunn. I am in such awe of really good engineers,I wish I could have been that good. I was always so Jealous😂😂😂😂😂. Thank you.
@finalwaveee11 күн бұрын
my dad runs a cnc machine shop... for 30 years plus... growing up I thought it was the most dreadful place... Mr. Dunn has given me a spark of interest.
@ExactConsciousness9 күн бұрын
You've missed out on discovering how to make some cool stuff with water jets. Lol
@finalwaveee9 күн бұрын
@@ExactConsciousness just mills and lathes my friend...
@jamesevans554815 күн бұрын
Ben Van Kerkwyks whole fascination with ancient civilizations started with this guy. No UnchartedX maybe if not for Mr. Dunn. Awesome!
@agarsorchids770815 күн бұрын
Exactly!👍
@superstitiouspre-literatep973014 күн бұрын
Ben's the best, I was subbed to his old YT channel pukajay productions before he made UnchartedX. Can't wait to go on a tour with him some time!
@LesterBrunt14 күн бұрын
@@superstitiouspre-literatep9730 You are going to waste 8 grand to go to Egypt and have ben point at rocks while saying “I literally can’t even…”
@kennymichaelalanya713414 күн бұрын
@LesterBrunt Imagine valuing money over knowledge. Knowledge is power. Even PBD said it and he said he'd rather have knowledge over huge amounts of money because you can become rich with vast amounts of knowledge.
@superstitiouspre-literatep973014 күн бұрын
@LesterBrunt there's a lot more to a trip to Egypt than that. I have friends in Egypt I would love to visit, and the Nile cruise, hotels and cuisine, concerts, and yet staring at rocks with Ben. I'm not sure how you value your money, but I would see it as money well spent. God bless
@SkepticalTeacher15 күн бұрын
This is the Rogan we missed!!! Egypt, tech, aliens...
@Che1seabluesdrogba1115 күн бұрын
He's been talking about these topics, you just don't watch or listen as much
@ballsworthy15 күн бұрын
Yeah too much vaccine talk, not enough aliens
@deckofcards8715 күн бұрын
Joe never stopped covering those topics, lol.
@petertulp880615 күн бұрын
So much better then all the mma insanity
@ConnorSinclair42015 күн бұрын
Chris Dunn must sound like the man who made you gay in kindergarten because normal people can't tolerate these amateur hour boomer bullshit artists and their disgusting ways. Taking advantage of uneducated people to create some religion where Dunn is a disciple, furk right off mate!
@leeturnbull208210 күн бұрын
Im a machinist from the UK, amd its great to see someone whos a real engineer examine this stuff, its also very funny hearing Joe's clumsiness for inderstanding engineering, even the way he held the vernier was a reflection of the skill difference between a machinist and a normie
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
Yep, but I'm glad to see Joe's not afraid to learn.
@auxsiren6 күн бұрын
Please have this guy on again!
@kennyjenkins156414 күн бұрын
People who work with their hands on the show is refreshing
@ks555313 күн бұрын
You should check out Daniel Tosh's new podcast. It's him interviewing regular people
@GrowingDownUnder13 күн бұрын
Christopher Dunn is a computer programmer XD
@kennyjenkins15649 күн бұрын
@@GrowingDownUnder his background is a machinist
@michaelblurry655914 күн бұрын
I had an old machinist friend who Chris reminds me of. His name was John. Old vet. Worked at a machine shop. I would go visit him every day after work. He showed me how to use a lathe, mill, precision grinder, tumbler... you name it. He was a genius as most good machinists are. We need more Mr. Dunns in this world. I miss visiting John. RIP. Thank you, Joe for having Mr Dunn on your show.
@matthewcurry356514 күн бұрын
I'm jealous. I need a chris.
@MonkeyBall245314 күн бұрын
I love working on those giant old Bridgeport milling machines. They don’t make tools like that anymore.
@lmccampbell14 күн бұрын
This guy has absolutely no clue what he's talking about
@katastrafika525314 күн бұрын
Christian Bale?
@connorjohn501314 күн бұрын
You are John now.
@andrewacton588513 күн бұрын
This is like the 3th podcast I've watched with this Dunn, plus I've watched his presentations on how he believes the pyramid worked as a power plant. This guy is fascinating. Because of guys like Chris, Ben, and Graham, we could crack this code within the Millennials lifetime
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
Yep! It definitely is NOT a tomb or granary!! I think it could be a tunable, wood-fired, vacuum-based water pump for year-round irrigation.
@phillyfan1188 күн бұрын
Rogan is back in high school shop class. We need more old-timers talking about things.
@slyhawk575 күн бұрын
What talking out of their asses? 😂 the guy is an absolute fantasist. Has absolutely no clue what he's talking about
@tinatieden849914 күн бұрын
if anyone was wondering, this is the name of the guy Dunn was talking about with the earthquake lights. Friedemann T. Freund
@Qpzzii12 күн бұрын
Right on time🫶🏾
@spencerlandreth574614 күн бұрын
I wish this guy was my grandpa and that I had 1000 hours to listen to him talk! So much more pleasant than some.
@davidgammon493412 күн бұрын
Ghey
@Samcanplaymusic13 күн бұрын
Best episode in a while. Old manufacturing dudes have so much knowledge to share . Chris seems awesome
@NewShad0w13 күн бұрын
This is one of the most educational podcasts I’ve seen in a long time. Even Joe was taking mental notes.
@Tbaby122214 күн бұрын
No one else could make me interested in listening to two guys talking about drill effectiveness except for Joe. Bravo. That’s the beauty of this podcast.
@alexmeier115 күн бұрын
This episode is a masterclass on "how to extract information from an introverted podcast guest".
@insanity422414 күн бұрын
Yeah people cry about Rogan not pushing back on peoples claims.. it’s about making the guest feel comfortable and express what they really believe.
@mrromantimothy14 күн бұрын
Joe jumped on him from the beginning took him to the ground like an MMA fighter and never let him up. Like my dad would say he pumped him for all his dope.
@H3li0s14 күн бұрын
was pretty much thinking about the work Joe put in on this one.
@shinobi-no-bueno14 күн бұрын
@@mrromantimothyyour dad pumps guys for dope? 🤨
@mrromantimothy14 күн бұрын
Joe jumped on him from the beginning took him to the ground like an MMA fighter and never let him up. Like my dad would say he pumped him for all his dope.
@davillmusic838 күн бұрын
Well done Joe! This is the BEST interview I’ve heard with Chris Dunn. Great work guys!
@martinezlucia1013 сағат бұрын
Please bring him back again!!! I usually listen to most podcasts casts at 1.5x but didn’t realize I was listening at normal speed. More often than not I have a hard time maintaining focus when I listen at normal speed. He speaks a lot slower than many and usually it would drive me crazy but I absolutely enjoyed every moment! Similar to a really good book or movie, I’m a little sad that it’s over. I want to just sit and learn from this man I suspect there is so much he didn’t say and so many theories that should be investigated that he doesn’t want to discuss because they are unproven. I’m fed up with the portions of science that have closed the book and believe they have everything figured out. If that were the case with medicine we would still be treating humors and bleeding patients.
@dawnmeredith587814 күн бұрын
I am amazed at how how in contrast to Dibble, its so easy for Dunn to say “well, that’s interesting. I’ll look into this…” it’s such a different vibe. So much more open. It’s logic and critical thinking used in a more appropriate way to serve knowledge, and so authentically curious.
@Alexander_Kale13 күн бұрын
It's the easiest deflection. "I'll look into this" then the point is done and he never does. People like Dibble meanwhile get rather annoyed when you misrepresent their field of expertise to their face.
@AustinKoleCarlisle13 күн бұрын
@@Alexander_Kale you guys are insufferable.
@TheVaged13 күн бұрын
@@Alexander_Kale "Field of Expertise" He's not a physical scientist. He's a glorified social studies Indiana Jones LARPer, so is Graham. Dunn isn't, he's a real engineer. Get another Engineer to counter, not Diddle.
@Alexander_Kale13 күн бұрын
@@TheVaged As far as I can tell, Dibble has a Ph. D. in Classical archaeology. He has multiple publications to his name and he is doing actual archeology. So yes. Field of expertise. I dont give a damn whether you like his hat, the man knows what he is talking about. So how about you drop the petty insults? Meanwhile, for an engineer, Dunn has dodged an awful lot of questions in this interview and brought very little actual data. Whenever Joe tried to nail him into giving him precise measurements, or asked for points of contention between DUnn and archaeologists, Dunn dodged. E:g., when the 3d printed vase was brought up? Not only would measuring the print be pointless, because most printers are not very precise, at no point whatsoever did Dunn say that these tolerances were in any way out of the ordinary for vases, or if so, by how far. A very easy way of showing this supposed superiority for example would have been to list a couple of contemporary vases with vastly larger tolerances. For some reason he did not do that. When Dunn was asked what the contemporary opinion is on how these precise tolerances were achieved, he dodged. He mentioned how others were mean to him, pointing to less precise vases as a counteragrgument, but he himself in no way shape or form said how widespread his high precision vases were. How am I to know Dunn isn't the one cherry picking here, taking the one vase from the batch that had higher precision by accident? Then there was the thing with the visual fotography of th face he showed. He effectively admitted that he had no idea how precise thos proportions actually were, but claimed them to be special anyway.
@DevinDTV13 күн бұрын
Dibble is an actual subject matter expert, so he's not likely to find any given spurious argument "interesting". He's just going to feel annoyed that something illogical is being passed off as plausible.
@TaticalNinja11515 күн бұрын
fascinating to hear that his accent is probably reminiscent of how the U.S. founding fathers sounded, with a southern accent naturally developing
@prezz125715 күн бұрын
Yeah it's a great accent I'm british and can tell(even though he said) that he spent his early life here.
@SandrasSpicySpanishSalami15 күн бұрын
Underrated comment. I was thinking the exact same thing.
@lukeg.a504715 күн бұрын
Came here to say the same thing. 55 years in America and I can still hear an English tinge to some words.
@ItsCalled-Football15 күн бұрын
I know it’s irrational but the proud Englishman in me is a little annoyed that he lost his accent (even though it’s pretty obvious why he has)
@tasteofmassachusettsneweng280715 күн бұрын
literally thought the same thing!!!
@M.Khachatrian366 күн бұрын
Finally, I’ve been waiting to see Chris Dunn here for yeeeeaars!! It’s so nice to hear someone who actually knows what he’s talking about, and Chris is one! This should have been at least the podcast #4 with him, not #1! He’s work is absolutely brilliant and founded with knowledge and changes everything: in my estimate he’s the most underrated author about the Pyramids and he’s THE Most important and the most humble one, one in contrast: absolute genius! His work will be appreciated in 50+ years when he’ll be long gone, unfortunately… Chris, please go do some steam cell treatments so you can live another 50 years to see that, thank you!!!
@slyhawk575 күн бұрын
He has absolutely no idea what he's talking about. He's a complete fantasist... even calling himself an engineer is hilarious. So much he says is absolutely verifiable rubbish 😂
@ConstanceMurphy-hp6lo5 күн бұрын
Joe Rogan, your conversations are absolutely THE best. Thank you for enriching my life.
@richc36915 күн бұрын
Flint dibble is hugging his Indiana jones hat right now rocking back and forth.
@JeffreyGlover6515 күн бұрын
Lol
@alecbaldwinsnotpropgun15 күн бұрын
And jerkin’ it to his pops research
@poopool_Q15 күн бұрын
@@alecbaldwinsnotpropgunyeah but ... my dad
@AB-nj4ex15 күн бұрын
😂
@EricJustinSmithJr15 күн бұрын
Stomping around the house in his dads shirt and shoes.
@LensIsDead15 күн бұрын
The joke at the end solidified this dude as a legendary guest. What a pleasant experience
@AA11AA11AA15 күн бұрын
Top rated comment.
@MagnusGalactusOG14 күн бұрын
If Flint Diddlr was on with Dunn maybe he would behave like less of an obnoxious hobbit
@mr2wo14 күн бұрын
Until you see that he did infact " screw up " his investigations of drill core 7
@Rays_Bad_Decisions14 күн бұрын
@@MagnusGalactusOGI doubt it. Flints reasoning was more cult than academic. That's not going to change
@turbomunch14 күн бұрын
@@Rays_Bad_Decisions He had facts. Graham had conjecture and hurt feelings.
@flimflammaguilacuti608013 күн бұрын
Best advertisement for the Machining Industry. Made me feel proud of being a Tool Maker.
@AIenSmithee12 күн бұрын
Proud? How are you not embarrassed. This is like a sculptor claiming the statue of David was 3D printed. It’s nonsense.
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
@@AIenSmithee LMA0... Tell me you're clue.|ess... without telling me! L0L
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
Right! That's amazing precision! I hope someday we find out how it was done!
Thanks, Joe, for this fascinating episode. It really took me back to when I was an advanced engineer working at an aerospace company , for 25 years I was trained in pretty much every aspect of engineering, from firstly being a toolmaker, then going and specialising in those shopfloor trades like Turner milling grinding, casting, and later 3d printing. One of my jobs which I can't go into on here due to the secrets act I signed and company laws, was to do with a grinding technique, that would give you those finishes and would be able to cut granite at that rate, but the machine I used at the time, was alot of money and there was many contributing items to the the machine, like high speed coolant delivering through impregnation of the different types of wheels we used to cut different items. I would love to talk further with you, Christopher, if possible, to set you on another direction. Maybe you haven't considered, or just to talk more, and swap ideas, as this has peeked my interest, not ever seen this or heard of this before. Thx Mike Did you ever measure the distance between the spirals, top line to the next? If they are the same, might this suggest that it wasn't done by hand but either gravity fed system or machine based feed system?
@Charlieandersali14 күн бұрын
Joe is a master interviewer. Such a wonderful conversation.
@Biggppoppa15 күн бұрын
I was a toolmaker, cnc machinist and programmer for 20 years and it's nice to hear from a fellow professional.
Flint Dibble is rolling up his sleeves for a fight... He'll be ready in three months, maybe...
@evoltap8 күн бұрын
Yes. Big archaeology is preparing his propaganda points right now
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
DRIBBLE isn't worth listening to... blah, blah, blah... "Look at my Indiana Jones hat and just believe me!"
@harrydale51413 күн бұрын
What an awesome dude. Even if his theories are one day proven wrong, at least he had the balls to put forth his educated opinion, open up discussion and potentially propel our understanding of history and science. Beyond that, just seems like a really genuine guy.
@ExactConsciousness9 күн бұрын
Think about it though. Lots of engineers commenting and understanding his theory. More than it just being labeled a tomb for the dead, which noone believes.
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
Right!! Most people can see these aren't tombs. The similarity of the internal structures implies some type of machine. I think they could have been tunable, wood-fired, vacuum-based water pumps for year-round irrigation.
@Octaviousrex108015 күн бұрын
One problem with finding machines, or tools, made out of metal from thousands of years ago is that it's not missing, or buried, or undiscovered, it was found by people...melted down, and recycled into something else. Metal is pretty hard to get and make out of the ground, and this process of recycling is still done today. Walk past a building being torn down and there's a pile of iron or steel reinforcement rods aside from a pile of concrete because it's valuable and easily recycled off to become..whatever. Think of all the armies that have ever existed ever using metal weapons, archeologists find one today from Rome it's because it's underwater, or hidden in a cave, but other than that you'd think they'd be everywhere, no, they were recycled over and over and over. Even the casing stones in the great pyramid were recycled to build Cairo.
@hcliff210014 күн бұрын
Well said
@kennymichaelalanya713414 күн бұрын
I wish your comment was pinned Octaviousrex1080. It's ashamed that ancient tools get recycled over time. For example, the thieves who stole the original FIFA World Cup trophy likely got melted.
@realmister714 күн бұрын
And the other point is depending on the antiquity and remembering what Randall Carlsson imparted about how long metal lasts in the open environment maybe some just blows away on the wind
@markjeffo609814 күн бұрын
As a blacksmith for 15 years I agree.I smelted steel from iron sands and ore and I've forged metorie.I don't think it's a stretch to think iron and steel could have been produced then.Egyptians had the bellows to reach iron smelting temps.Also you don't just start forging that iron dagger in tuts tomb,it took someone or culture with a history of forging iron.Foring metorite,depending on the impurities,can be extremely difficult and requires skill.
@royeaston606713 күн бұрын
I don’t think it is that hard to get metal is abundant imagine before it was mined for everything that we use now how much metal must of been in the ground just waiting for a quake to shake loose.
@seth118415 күн бұрын
I can hear Dibble screaming right now... "Damn it, another English man!!!!"
@matthewsmolinsky560515 күн бұрын
"Another pyramidiot with a British accent and no evidence!!!" lol
@treyperryman218115 күн бұрын
"My dad's discoveries....☝🏻"
@jasonolinger758515 күн бұрын
That pod made me realize how much of this is novelty and entertainment for Graham. feel like Joe is secretly exposing him.
@jasonhayesIGotquestions15 күн бұрын
JOE a massive fan very off subject but my Australia government and my freedom to talk can cause me trouble I know you probably won't have any time to read but hope is all I have and I'll use it,thanks for all the truth and help to the young men that are very lost atm
@Mister_Peepo15 күн бұрын
Mah charred seeds!
@yungteach5 күн бұрын
Who'd have thought a lathe turner from Manchester would be so insightful into ancient things in Egypt. A classic JRE episode.
@slyhawk575 күн бұрын
He's not, he's a fantasist and evidently has very little idea what he's talking about. Even calling himself an engineer is quite a push to be quite honest
@yungteach5 күн бұрын
Yeah because you know this guy's entire work history, good one@@slyhawk57.
@stevecloutier94147 күн бұрын
This was a super fascinating discussion. Christopher Dunn is very humble , articulate and intelligent. I love how Joe has such an ability to confirm , clarify and pull out critical details from technically complex subjects. Jamie’s observations and input add much to the experience too. Thanks for this amazing , entertaining , intriguing discussion gentlemen.
@paulc201915 күн бұрын
Just imagine in 100 years time, there was this guy on the JR podcast, laid it all out. Even if its wrong, what a likeable man. Fascinating subject.
@SusanCahill-fb6ey15 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for having this man on,Christopher Dunn is a very,very,dedicated and inquisitive man!
@mcrgrooves13 күн бұрын
Dunn is a perfect combo of don’t care what you think and humour
@boogerCPT12 күн бұрын
This gentlemen is a literal master of many things and obviously knows what hes talking about ..and people still say it was done with sand and shit? C'mon man
@orgazmatron308015 күн бұрын
Flint dibble is doing a 80s fight training montage rn
@Willrocs15 күн бұрын
Take it to the limit !!!!
@damonn4414 күн бұрын
LIMIIIIIIIIIIIT
@Enkryption14 күн бұрын
Walk along the Razors edge
@damonn4414 күн бұрын
But don't look down just keep your head, or you'll be finished
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
I don't care what dribbles out of Flint DRIBBLES mind...
@PorkChopXpress438515 күн бұрын
Joe is the perfect translator from a genius to regular guy.
@alialrassam643215 күн бұрын
That's why he's successful
@ghostfifth15 күн бұрын
You think this guy's a genius? He's said nothing.
@lmccampbell15 күн бұрын
Literally nothing he says have any basis in reality
@PorkChopXpress438515 күн бұрын
@ghostfifth I didn't say that, the comment was about Joe. Have a nice day
@Gobearfoot_14 күн бұрын
@@lmccampbella guy says he’s speculating and only offering theory and the thought police shows up. Never fails. 😂
@nikolayargirov157312 күн бұрын
You should also have the guy from "The land of Chem". He is completely mad, but his theories about the pyramids make a lot of sense.
@adestuart11549 күн бұрын
He was inspired to go to Egypt by Dunn, but furthered Dunns theories. Dunn is right to a point, the main pyramid is a machine, but not a generator. Drums observations of how the precursor pyramids and what they were designed for, makes a good argument as to why the main pyramid was then constructed. Also shows a history of construction and more importantly, a reason
@nikolayargirov15738 күн бұрын
@adestuart1154 indeed. And the salt deposits on the wall is a big thing to support it. Really wish someone would look deeper into it and create more models.
@timhunter807922 сағат бұрын
From an old toolmaker, Joe is extremely intelligent to grasp these concepts so easily.
@divine_swine966514 күн бұрын
Having spent time building and rebuilding American V-Twins, I understand the importance of tolerances on machined parts and how tight they must be… I’ll say this, NO car, motorcycle, or vehicle on any type built by anyone has tolerances as tight as what those vases possess. PERIOD.
@mayorpufnstuf447014 күн бұрын
It's not as if tighter tolerances aren't possible Metals can be perfectly friction fit today Those engines don't have extreme tolerances bc they would seize if the tolerances were too tight
@lhh662713 күн бұрын
@mayorpufnstuf4470 what does that have to do with the tolerances found in ancient Egyptian stonework?
@mayorpufnstuf447013 күн бұрын
@@lhh6627 You'll have to ask the OP what engine tolerances have to do with stone vases. But my presumption from the context is that he's essentially claiming that such tolerances are not possible, or at least very difficult to produce today. Of course, that is not the case, and much tighter tolerances are possible today.in any case, it's a misleading comparison, which is my point. The idea that humans can not hand work materials to precision is nonsense. Dunn makes similar misleading comparisons while ignoring examples of precision hand work in other areas. The best fit firearms are all hand fit. The best cut gemstones with highly complex and accurate geometries are hand cut... Human skill alone can produce high accuracy and tight tolerances.
@toothman3213 күн бұрын
I did a quick google search and it appears you are wrong , sir.
@Alexander_Kale13 күн бұрын
If you are talking about the 3d print, keep in mind, that thing has the tolerances of the 3d printer, not the one of the actual vase. by printing it, you introduced an error into the equation, or alternatively removed one from it. On the other hand, ask yourself this: why in blue blazes would they do something on pottery that we ourselves do not do on precision machinery? Why would they bother? Why wouldl anyone design a machine that makes pottery this precise?
@badabing230214 күн бұрын
Just got over my hangover from playing the “drink when flint dibbles mentions his father” drinking game.
@null_wizard14 күн бұрын
thanks for the laugh bro
@patrickday420613 күн бұрын
Can't blame the hobbit for trying
@jimfrommars259113 күн бұрын
Drink every time Dunn says "Uh..."
@AIenSmithee12 күн бұрын
You should try drink every time a Hancock fan makes a joke about dibbles clothes instead of addressing massive problems with Hancock’s “theory”. 😢
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
LMA0... Do you mean... Flint DRIBBLE? L0L
@buddyhell710010 күн бұрын
This was one of my favourite JRE yet
@dillongarner111 күн бұрын
After analyzing the first vase with a structured light scanner, it was concluded that a computer MUST have been used in the design and execution of these vases. This is the biggest discovery nobody is talking about
@craigpaschke642715 күн бұрын
As a machinist/Manufacturing engineer, this is the first guest Joe has had that I feel I could have an intelligent conversation with. 😂
@oldscratch353515 күн бұрын
I've been using manual lathes for years at home, but I got a job 2 years ago running Swiss lathes. After learning that job, I began to understand just how difficult it would be to make those vases everyone says are "handmade". We could easily make one using a 5 axis mill with a separate op to finish the base. I don't even know how you'd make one on a regular lathe without some complicated workholding and multiple ops where the piece has to be removed from the chuck and flipped around. You'd need a separate driven tool to mill in between the lug handles and some way to control your rotational axis. And this would all be out of metal. I have no clue how you'd do it out of granite.
@jameskellison934215 күн бұрын
As a surveyor, I agree. I would be unable to tolerate a “Dibble”-type
@DavidDavoDavidson15 күн бұрын
I’ve been a machinist for 89 years and I can say
@user-et9zf3ne5p15 күн бұрын
I've been a machinist for 167 years and I agree
@joshshepherd566015 күн бұрын
I was IMMEDIATELY begging for Joe to bring Mr. Dunn on post-Dibble. Because once he insisted on the copper tooling and water/sand...I was a bit shocked that a man insisted "We KNOW they used copper and sand with water"....lol...wuuuuut...go try to drill a slab of like...Fuggin...ANYTHING harder than the COPPER with those things and then let me know how that goes pal...
@kobusvanrensburg409215 күн бұрын
Flint "My Dad" Dibble left the group.
@DaeoSZ12 күн бұрын
i'm an obsessive nerd when it comes to learning about ancient advanced civ and i've been tangentially aware of Chris Dunn's work for more than a decade probably, but never looked into it because it just seemed too absurd. regret is a bitch, this dude is as serious, sober, and professional as they come.
@AlwaysWrenchin12 күн бұрын
Not sure how or why your back on the KZfaq but super glad I get to watch your podcast on KZfaq again. Thanks Joe Rogan
@MonkeyBall245315 күн бұрын
Conversations like this is why I listen to JRE
@janetjacks340615 күн бұрын
Oh my how wonderful to see Chris Dunn here, so appreciate his incredible contribution to this fascinating subject, gratitude.
@YouSaveTheDay9 күн бұрын
I think the one of the key things that is missing from this history is the possibility that the Egyptians didn't build the pyramids. I think it reasonable to assume that they found them and built their civilisation around them. They didn't know how they worked. The Egyptian's kept meticulous records yet no written records or story survives regarding how they built possibly the most impressive structures to ever grace the earth. They probably stopped being functional and the knowledge surrounding them was probably lost during the cataclysm that took place during younger dryas (along with 90% of human kind). Egyptian royalty have a proven history of reworking prior works and claiming it as their own. I think these points fill a small void in works done by Dunn, Hancock etc. The reason no other pyramids compare to the main 3 at Giza is because the Egyptians' attempted to copy the main three they had inherited.
@onestoptechnologies73055 күн бұрын
EXACTLY!!! I think the Egyptians found the site and mimicked the people as a way to assume authority over the masses! Most/All megalithic sites are NOT claimed by the "indigenous" people... they usually explain how their people stumbled upon the amazing sites!... Which is easy to see in places like Pumapunku and Sacsayhuamán!
@YouSaveTheDay23 сағат бұрын
@@onestoptechnologies7305 I've also been to Sacsayhuamán. For such a "modern" civilization it makes zero sense as to why the methodologies as to how that stonework was produced hasn't survived even through stories/myths. They simply didn't have the knowledge to pass down through time!
@onestoptechnologies730522 сағат бұрын
@@YouSaveTheDay Yes, They would not have just "forgot" to pass on the most amazing/advanced methodologies. I can see not passing on a recipe that one person knows, but not something used by the massive number of people it took to build those! Something massively catastrophic had to happen to wipe out this level of advancement. Like meteoric impact/Younger Dryas/Great Flood. The "tabs" on the stones, the "pillow" shape, interlocking blocks and metal key-clamps that match across continents imply an interconnected civilization on Pangea. I can't help but think ante-diluvian civilization.
@murphsquad578513 күн бұрын
Eddie Brovio must be the new show scheduler.
@elc24815 күн бұрын
Love joe going back to the roots of the podcast, personally i was getting a bit tired of the uptic in politics and social issues, so these recent weeks of episodes has had me delighted!
@kevvymetal66615 күн бұрын
and hunters and bad comedians..
@ryadh45615 күн бұрын
@@kevvymetal666 True I swear comedians are the most boring people other than the most famous ones like Dave Chappelle or Theo Von.
@mcmays2215 күн бұрын
Right.
@SneakyPirate5415 күн бұрын
Can't relate. I enjoy a comedy break away from the constant high brow conversations. But that's the beauty of JRE, there's something for everybody to listen to and you don't have any obligations to watch them all. Great show.
@JarthenGreenmeadow15 күн бұрын
@@ryadh456 Really put Theo Von next to Dave Chappelle? Those dudes are on two entirely different levels lmao
@highallmighty23315 күн бұрын
For a second I thought that guy on the thumbnail was Bill Shatner
@sweettantle845515 күн бұрын
Same!!! Kinda disappointed lol
@braxtonrasmussen15 күн бұрын
Bill Shatner should go on the red letter media podcast if anything
@TheStupidDetectiv15 күн бұрын
Shatner would be great on the show. Here's hoping
@Jonthecrabjuiceguy15 күн бұрын
Yep, and I thought, this is the guest I didn't know I wanted! Oh well this guy is in aerospace so, similar
@theodorosgeorgitsis560015 күн бұрын
Me too😂
@tvrvids955212 күн бұрын
Joe needs to get Ben from Uncharted X on , there are granite Channels/ducts for liquid all over the giza complex
@robertmortimer828810 күн бұрын
I think Christopher Dunn makes a good defence against some critics starting in the 47th minute that even modern produced products/parts from today's society has parts that are precise because it's needed and parts that are not that precise because they don't need to be, they will still function well/achieve it's purpose! As an example Dunn mentioned the crankshaft of a modern car as comparison to the Serapeum boxes. The crankshaft has parts that are precise and parts that are imprecise because all parts of a crankshaft doesn't need to be precise to funtion well! To make parts precise of a crankshaft that doesn't need to be precise, would just be unnecessary, it would just be a waste of time, energy and money! The crankshaft is produced according to the specific requirements of the car-producing customer or manufacturer. Just like some of the boxes in the Serapeum, it seems like only some inner surfaces and inner corners needed to be precise and not all inner and outer parts/surfaces needed to be precise for whatever original function they had! Some boxes also seems to be finished, other boxes seems to be only semi-finished. It all depends on at which stage/step of the manufacturing process they were left in. Lastly, one factor that is important, is if the standard manufacturing process is already in place since a long time and precision is an automatic by-product. If so, than some products will be precision-made just because of how the manufacturing process is standardized. Different factors have to be taken into consideration! In some other areas I think he could have done better to clarify what he means, in his books and in other videos he explains those areas better!
@HblockFlightServices15 күн бұрын
Finally, Mr Dunn is on JRE. I figured he would show up with Hancock and Carlson. All three of Dunns books are fantastic.
@fingersm14 күн бұрын
😂😂😂hancock and Carlson are 🤡
@azoniarnl336214 күн бұрын
@@fingersm Only an idiot calls people a🤡 Same with all these idiots making fun of Flint Dibble.
@HblockFlightServices14 күн бұрын
What I don't like about this interview is Joe is digging hard on topics of which he doesn't know, and Dunn won't give it up such as the ram pump effect in the basement. How about the F sharp thing? Dunn didn't give specifics on that either. His newest book suggests the F sharp lead to the pyramid resonating at 432mhz. You gotta buy his book he says. Then why go on jre?
@tomjc1477 күн бұрын
@@fingersmHow so?
@aulternator861414 күн бұрын
I just saw Chris a few days ago, him and his wife came in to grab lunch where I work. Outstanding gentleman. Always a pleasure to have a quick chat with them.
@Zclip6812 күн бұрын
Bless 'em both. Joe for being the bridge, and Mr Dunn for his efforts to communicate engineering to "common tongue". Good stuff this!
@TheGuyvn12 күн бұрын
This dude is an engineer through and through from the way he talks and his perspectives. Kudos to him for having the courage to discuss fuzzy matters because it's hard as hell for an engineer to do so.
@Marcoose815 күн бұрын
Idk. His math is kinda fuzzy 9:10
@Marcoose815 күн бұрын
Two ten thousandths is in fact 20x larger than a hundred thousandth.
@Musthavetrav15 күн бұрын
Flint Dibble is frantically writing a mean tweet
@davidhooper25914 күн бұрын
…in between flipping burgers or DoorDash routes
@monotech20.1414 күн бұрын
Because Chris Dunn has been debunked time and time again. Yet Rogan keep having frauds on his show.
@davidhooper25914 күн бұрын
@user-vn3ut5tm6n why are you not typing like a human being instead some jive turkey or actually formulating a real compelling to talk? Go back to the peanut gallery, bud
@null_wizard14 күн бұрын
@user-vn3ut5tm6n because davidhooper is flippin burgers and doing doordash
@deebop353914 күн бұрын
He’s gotta find a way out of his dad’s oversized suit first.
@milanaleksovski271215 күн бұрын
Sir Dunn and 1.5 speed are best friends.
@mamajoe139915 күн бұрын
Thank you. Thats helps.
@TheMichaelangelo32415 күн бұрын
This was so needed thank you
@seshboy61215 күн бұрын
This generation can't listen to a man speak. Sad
@TheMichaelangelo32415 күн бұрын
@@seshboy612 I assume your what 20 25 😂
@seanerickson951615 күн бұрын
Thanks! Brutal listen this episode
@scarletbegonias23597 күн бұрын
After watching the Friedemann Freund, TED Talk explaining the process of conducting energy through stone and being able to measure it(?) I have come to the realization that Christopher Dunn is onto something valuable, however he is doing a piss poor job of explaining himself. Joe is doing a wonderful job trying to walk Christopher through his own theory.
@countrymorgan294213 күн бұрын
Came here from Spotify, I don’t know who decided when to place the ads on there but they need to rethink how well they’re doing their job
@geo52525215 күн бұрын
A machinist makes it to the Rogan show. Finally a guest I can relate to.
@AnthonyNelms15 күн бұрын
You're a machinist!? Great! My wife is looking to make her dildys a million times stronger. We want a join toy I can stick up my rectum. Is that something you can help us with? We tried taping 100 electric toothbrushes together and it didn't work.
@JesseP.Watson14 күн бұрын
Trouble is, the core sample he is referring to around the eight minute mark is not at all as he describes it, he is implying the signature of the cutting tool tracks around the core he is discussing uniformly, with uniform rate of penetration, spiralling down. [I have worked in engineering also, am a skilled, professional craftsman who has worked a broad range of materials - so him not seeing the obvious flaw in what he is saying here is not a good sign at all]. If you look at photographs of the core he is describing (that have not been overlaid with simplified graphics asserting this presumption) you can see very clearly that the grooves around it are not uniform and do not progress at a fixed rate like a machine drill, the grooves wander around, they do not spiral down, they wander in the space of one cycle. Anyone who understands how a machine drill functions knows that means this is not the signature of a machine drill. All these things evidence hand worked abrasive core drills and, though I wish it were not the case, I can see he is choosing his words very carefully here and I think it's because he knows that he is portraying an image which completely contradicts the evidence and indeed paints a false picture of the artefact he is describing - because he needs to maintain that to maintain his position. This is the trouble with Lost Ancient High Tech advocates, and I'm the last person to bow before academia, but, there is a LOT of VERY conscious, cautious cherry picking in this LAHT culture... it has very cult like qualities and I think this fella is demonstrating that right here.
@superstitiouspre-literatep973014 күн бұрын
@@JesseP.Watson he was allowed to take molds of the core, and he also had a skeptic with him who wrapped the core with a thread. It's a continuous spiral groove
@JesseP.Watson14 күн бұрын
@@superstitiouspre-literatep9730 It really isn't a continuous spiral groove, they did not follow the groove at all, they corrected the deviations with the thread, I've seen photos of that, they are very clearly attempting to mask those characteristics that do not support their narrative. SGDSacredgeometrydecoded has a video debunking it, not a difficult debunk, just need to look closely at the photos these guys promote as evidence because most of the time what they show as evidence of LAHT actually disproves what they say if you look closely. SGD has actually done the experiments they won't do with copper core drills, using abrasive paste, working granite, he's got precisely the results seen in the artefacts, plain as day. These guys are selling their tours, a brand, the Atlantis brand, not genuine enquiry - Bright Insights actually threatened to sue SGD for his debunking him, that's what goes on behind the scenes in this club, I'm very much into challenging orthodoxy but these guys are charlatans, plain and simple.
@JesseP.Watson14 күн бұрын
@@superstitiouspre-literatep9730 No it isn't, plain and simple. Don't listen to what they say, don't look at their graphic overlays, look at the ARTEFACT, the inconsistencies are plain to see. I have seen a picture of that thread you mention wound around that core and they used it to correct the deviations of the grooving, very clearly. Look closely, it's plain as day.
@davidwinking65714 күн бұрын
Joe is getting better and better at asking the best questions. Not that he's ever been bad, but the direct nature of his question asking to his guests is drastically improving and makes it easier to follow along. Cuze when you're watching, you can get blown off your feet with all this info, and the right questions help see the other side and flesh out the topic completely. Go Joe!
@richardlionheart937112 күн бұрын
I like how Joe started to dig/understand his dry, english humour after 30 minutes. He is being honest and honorable keeping high speculation out of converstaion and stating his qualified, machinist engineer opinion. My pops is an old english machinist(lathe,cnc, edm) and would respect this mans approach.
@airanwater0111 күн бұрын
I stopped what I was doing when they started talking about f# , I play constantly in the key of f# on guitar and bass, Always knew it was special