The weird way I started the space, I set it up on my phone in advance, but then
actually physically started it on my PC and then carried it on on my phone. So I think
it's probably that. I think that may have happened before actually.
It rubbed. Oh, good. Get it set up.
If Jake is... Okay. Go ahead and give it a retweet again.
and we're back welcome back the last the first space rubbed
I don't think it's suspicious actually even though I
said some stuff in it I think it's because I
started the space in a different app
just when you get a nice room going when we did the 207 hour space too we had the I'll send it to your father as well.
I think he said he would come up.
Boom. Welcome back everybody. Welcome back, everybody.
And we have indeed the father of art with art, Bradley Wallace.
Joe Wallace is on the stage.
Fresh from check. the body house everybody going tonight good harry perhaps
i'm doing great i'm doing great idea
i've been working hard on your on the a i a m uh... it's a has woken me uh...
i'm getting information that i could never get off of uh...
like google uh... I'm getting information that I could never get off of like Google
It's like it's a very very limited when you get on Google but when you use the AI it has so much information worldwide
Just the information that you're drawn from it
feels so much less biased
and so much more information that actually you can sink your teeth
into like meat and potatoes compared to going to Subway
and getting plastic sandwiches, you know?
In comparison, I don't know how many of you has a Subway,
I don't think you have any where you live, have I ever? the the I've never watched less YouTube or any other channel.
All I've been doing is beating the crap out of the AIs, challenging them.
It's like almost they appreciate it.
The computer system itself, it's like, wow, thanks for that challenge.
It's eye-opening how AI has developed and where it's going, and if this is just the start of it,
I mean, there's some features on AI right now that I'm finding that it's limited.
It's limited because it only responds to what you need. It's it's uses a tool right now
arm instead what maybe i feel the capabilities could be
that's what i've been doing all day
i'm getting a lot of information out of a hum brad the the that the But yeah, the technology is unbelievable.
I can remember just as a child, I mean, in the 60s, all we had was dirt and sticks, you
know, that's what we played with.
And now it's like, it's almost like entering another dimension.
And it happened so fast. I think it really took off like in the mid 1980s when when internet really came in full
It just so much information out there
And it's and it's how you take it, you know how you take that information and what you do with it and
Like I said going through like Google search engines like that
It's it's so limited and it usually just sends you to
like a YouTube channel or something where they're making money.
If you're asking something about a medication, it usually is something that is sponsored.
And with AI, you ask something about a medication and it comes right up with exactly what you'd
need and everything about a medication and it comes right up with exactly what you need and everything about that medication.
Like I said, they've limited us to the amount of information that they want us to have.
That way, we won't be as rich as they are, I guess.
That's probably why our 13-year-old children here in America could not pass the general
13-year-olds in math, every one of them, I think it was in New Jersey, none of them
passed the, were able to pass it.
It's like something's wrong there.
We got to do something about our education. home the the What it is is you've got a problem. I used to use it in the military. And what you would do is you'd start off in A, and then they'd have the problem.
And then you'd test this one.
If you get a certain voltage there, you keep on going down.
If you got that voltage, go to this space.
If you didn't get that voltage, then go over here.
And that's how you do it.
You get more in depth of what you're learning.
What I want to do with that is do it where in a kindergarten, it's
like they usually learn their colors first and their numbers. And the colors is like,
oh, pick the green block, pick the yellow block, the red block. And that's all they're
subjected to. With my plan, I would be looking at the child, for instance,
and saying, OK, pick all the green things in the square.
And there might be five or six different items with green.
OK, now take out all the green that has yellow with it.
And you go on and do the one that it's the shortest green
or that it's the tallest green, okay.
And then finally it's like,
pick the green with the brown
and the brown would be the trunk of the tree.
So what you really want them to do is see the tree
show them, you know, let them know that that tree, they actually went deeper into the learning process. And that way they'll learn to learn how to think the way it is right now. The green block,
okay, you passed it, green, they said they know your colors, you know, it's this one just brings
it in depth. And if you do that, I believe that we'll have better educated children, you know, it's this one just brings it in depth. And if you do that, I believe that we'll have better educated
children, you know, just the thought I've been working on.
And the thing is, you can bring this all the way up through high
school and college, you know, just a different way of, of, of, of learning.
Months as I reach schools and stuff like that, they, they, they like stuff like that, you know, alternative schooling, which actually is kicking the public the the the poorest of the world, let's say. And I always remembered that idea. It's a brilliant idea.
So yeah, it's interesting to hear that you've got
a vision for education as well.
I wonder how that would tie in.
Like, how would you, if you were in charge of education,
I throw this to you on a Thursday night,
if you were in charge of education for the whole of America
and you could teach people on army bases, not forced like that sort of thing, but just a repurpose of the land, open
education, how would you teach people?
I think I would actually use the same system that I was talking about in kindergarten.
What you do is you make people think deeper than they need to.
And a lot of them might say, well, hey, wait a minute, why didn't you just say green?
But what it does is it teaches them to do that by the numbers.
And if you teach them that when they get older and they start building things, they don't
cut corners and they build them right because they understand how important it is to make
sure that all the T's are crossed and the I's are dotted. That's how I would instruct them when I was in the
military. I used flow charts, actually I did. I probably got it from there. Whenever I was
doing training and teaching, that's what I would do. I would make them think deeper than
what they actually needed to.
That way, when they actually were successful,
they'd say, wow, that wasn't so bad, you know?
And I learned something at the same time.
I did this with officers once.
I had 32 officers in a room,
and I taught them different tasks
that the military wants you to know
is to be able to survive.
And I mean, at the end of it,
all 32 of them stood up and just applauded me and said, this has got to be one of the
best classes I ever had in the military in my entire career. And it's because I got them
involved. I got them to think about what they were doing instead of doing it by the numbers, the the ago too, you know? Yeah, I think it stuck with me because I remembered the assassination.
I remember being put in the closet with my brothers and sisters and the door being closed
and the dresser slit in front of it, my mother going crazy in the middle of the night screaming
and hollering, you know? It affected me. So they had me believe in a lot of things that the line and when you go against the grain you pay for it after a while you'll learn to go
walk in the same line because if you don't then you're thrown away you know what I mean
and I think that's the way civilization is right now the the the the I live in a 260 square foot room.
260 square feet, one room in a bathroom.
I pay over $925 just for the rent.
Then I have to pitch in for my electricity and everything else on top of it.
And I have a storage unit that I have to be able to change my winter stuff and then my
summer stuff, bring it in.
So that's another 85 bucks on top of it
you know um and i'm looking at your country and i said i wish i could go there because i i would love that i i've been listening to a lot of videos on youtube about your place
and found out you could live like a thousand dollars easily where you're at a month and that's
including your food you're going out to the party whatever you want to do. Oh yeah. That's doable.
That's the only way that I was able to fund myself on Chia
was because it's cheap to live here.
So yeah, like I guess I had like,
I probably lived for the last three years.
I think I had about $40,000 basically
that in the last three or so years I've spent, but I've been ordering delivery
food, I've been partying, I've been abroad, I've flown.
I've got a taxi home every night, so I'm going to, $1,000 a month.
Yeah, I think maybe even less than that.
Maybe $800 you could do it.
That's what I heard too, $8,000 to $1,000. the and the but in the more up-kept areas of, you know, there's a tradition there and there's a lot of color
Yeah, you've got a lot of street food restaurants
and open, you know, open room restaurants
with where you need that sort of color for the wall.
So yeah, you see a lot of art in the restaurants here.
So I could imagine your work being there.
Oh my God, I would draw people in. I know it would. the the the beautiful ocean air and you know and just seeing those crashing waves and and and getting away from all the
It's like I'm a different person when I'm out in nature
It's like I feel like I'm bonded with it, you know
And it all those all those stresses that I have that it's built up inside me for some reason they all disappear
And then I just that's where I up inside me for some reason they all disappear and
then I guess that's where I leave them, I leave them right there you know.
Yeah that one, right where you live isn't it, it's like I guess an hour away not just
around the corner but that lighthouse there is so beautiful, it looks so fresh.
Well I get the, that's the one in Porton in Cape Elizabeth, that's about 75 miles from that the the the What is the largest lighthouse? What is the smallest lighthouse?
What lighthouse is the most famous? Which lighthouse had a lot of damage
I mean, it can warn all kinds of questions.
Until you find out that all the things that are available,
like not only is Portland Headlight there,
but it's in Fort Williams Park,
which is the old Fort Williams
that used to protect the coast in Maine.
They had a firing battery there.
And all of the storage where they used to have all the ammo is still there.
And you could ask questions like that.
I'm looking for places where they better store ammunition, you know?
And when you start putting it all together, that's the only lighthouse that has all of those. It's just that you have to look in deep. You're not only looking for that lighthouse,
but you're finding out about all the other lighthouses too. It's just a different way
I just checked. There are lighthouses in Thailand of some form or another. I just did a quick
Google search, but you'd think that there'd be a right for NFT promotion a lighthouse
like could they project I guess they're just shining a light could they put for sponsorship
could you put an NFT image on the lighthouse and project it out at sea like a bat signal the So they went to LED and found out that it is two miles less light.
It used to go up 12 miles and now it can only go up 10, but most of that whole area, they don't need light at 12 miles.
They can catch it at 10 and be safe.
So they took all that stuff into consideration when they changed the light bulbs.
I don't know why I know that knowledge, but I do. the the I have a possible meeting with the Soul Foundation with the Chocks Ballet.
I had reached out to them today about some of my research.
And you think it would be helpful for them?
They think it's very interesting. They're very interested to hear about it, so I'm setting up a meeting with them.
Is this here in Maine? No. the
the stuff. They work in more of like a quantum physics paranormal states. They do a bunch
of like research on more of your abstract like physics paranormal like activities things
like that ancient sites. So they're they're they're Ghostbusters. Yeah in a sense they're the the the And I talked with AI about it. I told him what the symptoms were and I said, yes, that's exactly probably the problem with it. You've got pinched nerves in that back because it would affect that whole flank, the groin, hip, back, into the ribs.
So, and that's what that doctor told me, the hip doctor told me already, that's what it is. You just need to get somebody in there to do something with it, you know? So maybe I can go down and get nerve blocks done.
I had that done on my neck, remember?
And that did work for a while, so maybe they can do that here and at least it'll give
me some relief for a year.
You know what I'm saying?
Because it takes about a year for the nerves to grow back into the way where they were.
So it gives me a year to figure out what I could do with it next, you know? I'm tired of band-aids. th the the the that
the in his head so that he could hear again. He couldn't hear without the implant.
The implant stimulated the nerves in his ears
so that he could hear again,
which I thought was just totally amazing, you know?
So there was some good things that could happen, you know?
You're working tomorrow? the Oh no, they're just super heavy. Uh, they're one of them is an eight foot panel of glass, so there's two
eight foot panels of glass and then there's two 73 inch sliders, but there's they're super beefy.
Maybe put them on a, on a, on a, a little dolly like we had here.
You know, when you were doing the Thailand.
Yeah, it's too big for that.
But if you put them on two of them, you know, one on each end. the the the the the the the the the the
the the the the the Yeah, I've shared that I don't want to necessarily put that on a recorded space right now
Okay, but yeah, there's there's
There's an ancient legend called the the blue and red kachina which the the like Aztecs
He's talked about in the Mayans and the Hopi Indians
and the Hopi Indians, basically they all have different stories for the same thing.
Basically, they all have different stories
What I've been able to do is translate a bunch of dead languages as well as older ancient
languages and they all seem to talk about this same thing, which is based on Dan Carlin's
work, which is the Younger Dryas period.
So this is basically showing the proof of what Dan Carlin has been talking about in all of his research with corroborated evidence of these ancient languages, basically saying the same thing in different ways.
So that's what I have the meeting with the Soul Foundation about. about? Ah, that is so interesting Bradley, because you know, there's like so many different variations
of religion as an example, where the same stories put out, but it's told differently, to, I don't
know if it's to narrate what they believe in and what they support. I remember being in a little tin of Hampshire and there was
this one church that was jealous of the church I was going for. And I walked down the street one
day and this lady's complaining about the pastor of this church complaining about this other church
that's taking all her people away from her, you know, and it was like, oh my God, you know.
It's like, it's almost like a war between churches sometimes, you know
So yeah, but the same message is going out but it's it's told differently like you're saying the old ancient languages, you know
So so how far does this go back? And what is the real message that's out there?
the real message that's out there.
Have you been able to decipher anything out of it?
Have you been able to decipher anything out of it?
Well, that is the deciphering is that the languages themselves are written based on
ancient Polynesian languages and the phonetics of the way that they speak and the mathematics
of their language itself has quantum mechanics
built into the timing structures of the phonetics.
Wow, so this language could go even deeper. It could be a deeper meaning where there's
the cycle of the 12,000 years. The younger dry ice was 12,800 years ago, and this is what Dan Carlin has been trying to prove.
it could be almost an energy language, couldn't it?
Atlantis, these were all ancient societies that have been wiped from existence in a sense, and the
technologies that they developed back in the day have also either been lost or hidden
or partially obfuscated throughout different events through history.
That's super deep. the the the the the the and you have a great evening, all right? Thank you, Bob. You too.
Are you going to bed? All right.
Edward, we'll talk to you later.
Cheers, Joe. Thanks. Always a pleasure.
Okay, man. We'll talk to you later. Good night.
I was enjoying that. I was just realized this.
I think this is the first time there's three simultaneous
space is going on at once.
So, yeah, there's plenty more.
We could jump in there, I guess.
I think there's two Tangang could jump in there, I guess.
There's I think there's two Tangang ones.
Rigidity just started a space.
And obviously, this is part two of our space.
So yeah, I think we've reached the critical mass.
Like, Chia space is a whoops the word.
It's like the flag has been planted around now.
And the flame is not going to go out. the You've been the heart of this thing the whole way through so Whilst the price has gone down and all that sort of stuff all the negatives and we've kept it positive and specifically you have
It's it's been amazing to see you flourishing your father flourishing. Yeah seeing the spaces crop up
Like this is really amazing feel so yeah, congratulations
Thanks, sir you as well yeah let's where should we go which space
should we join rigidity um yeah sure i'm gonna
hop in there for a little bit i'm i'm gonna go to bed soon i've been just
going like hard i should actually be doing my taxes right now
because i have a meeting on saturday to get those done so i should be working on
that but i i need to be more disciplined the the Take us out my friend Thank you all for tuning in to another fantastic thursday night space, uh, this is like I said, we've been doing this two and a half years
Um, love you edward. Love everybody in here. Thank you all for joining us. Happy four years of main net
Um, we'll see you on the flip side. Go join whichever chia space you'd like to because there's there's four going on apparently
Hey, jesma. Love love you too, take it easy.