UnchartedX on JRE!

This week I had the amazing opportunity to appear as a guest on the Joe Rogan Experience! You can check out the full video, free on Spotify, via the link above or right here:

https://open.spotify.com/episode/7x3uLeqyCHIPkaDtoXnV24?si=0ec744b423e1445f

I hope you all enjoy the podcast – and I’ll be coming out with a cracker of a video next week getting into the details of some of the new research and work on ancient precision that I shared on the show!   

Cheers,  Ben

15 thoughts on “UnchartedX on JRE!”

  1. Ben,
    I’ve only recently discovered your channel and I’m hooked! I’ve been watching Jimmy for a few years, but I just had to come here to say that you were brilliant on JRE. You spoke so well and described everything so clearly – it was fascinating!
    You did the community proud mate… Well done. I hope you get a massive influx of new viewers and support.

  2. I enjoyed your JRE podcast. Wide-ranging, with lots of material to think about. Your brief foray into the geomagnetic field is a very deep rabbit hole (I dwell there), and one which leads to numerous other ones that often merge and diverge again. Highly complex and – in my opinion – one that consensus science gets completely wrong. If you would like an alternate take on the end of the Younger Dryas I have published one here:
    https://principia-scientific.com/why-did-the-laurentide-ice-sheet-melt-during-the-younger-dryas/

    The bad news: most of the data do not support multiple large meteorite impacts
    The good news: the data does support a need for people to move back to caves or move underground.
    I’m happy to discuss further.

  3. interesting take on the carolina bays. here in NC, Lake Waccamaw is a Carolina Bay. It is also home of the Waccamaw Siouan tribe. This tribe is also know as the “people of the fallen star”. from wikipedia – “According to the Waccamaw Siouan Indians, thousands of years ago, an immense meteor appeared in the night sky toward the southwest. Flaming to a brilliance of suns as it hurtled earthward, the meteor finally struck, burning deep within the earth. The waters of the surrounding swamps and rivers flowed into the crater and cooled it, creating the gem-blue, verdant green lake. Some historians contend that this story is the mid-20th century invention of James E. Alexander.[12]”

  4. Ben hi once again you blew our minds with your amazing knowledge on what is clearly a true passion of yours maybe your missus calls it an obsessesion the most reconizable change is that after Graham Hancock’s series was released on Netflix and he is now finally getting some well deserved credit for a lifelong pursuit backed up with the most credible evidence and clear proof for his hard work it seems you have also got some well earned credit for your hard work your baby steps have just moved up to large strides, in a nutshell you nailed it bud on the JRE podcast thanks for the very entertaining ride.
    PS trying to get shit in order to make to Turkey for week 2 really trying to make it happen so I can meet some amazing people first hand
    Cheers and thanks mate
    Mark

  5. Great Job! Especially loved your “smoking gun” video where you show a rare comprehension of mechanical constraints. It’s unfortunate more people don’t have that same type of understanding of physical interactions and limitations. Personally, I grew up in a machine shop.

    I think you’d enjoy my article on Graham Hancock’s site about the possibility that there is an ancient library in our DNA: https://grahamhancock.com/meuccis1/

    I have done about 20 years of intense research on alternative physics that I believe may have actually been available to ancient people (and passed down in mutated form via “telephone game” in religion) that I’d love to share with you. Deepak Chopra enjoyed the spiritual aspects of it in this interview: https://youtu.be/c_cx5lrpno4

    But I like the longer version I did immediately after much better: https://youtu.be/A7fpkVFrBKY
    It’s more directly about the scientific aspect of the aether.

    Though the spiritual view (and maybe some conspiracy undertones) is the only thing gaining me any interest, I’m most interested in teaching people about the alternative view of physics and the revolution that is bubbling under the surface there with aether at the forefront. (but I’ll take views where I can!)

    The exact same thing that happens in archeology happens in other sciences as well. Would love to have a conversation with you. Not asking to collab; I just want to spread the information.

  6. Ben your points focus on areas especially problematic for anthropology and Egyptology since they invite established expertise from other disciplines, they won’t look like they are observing courtesy due process to dismiss the engineering issues and your framing of the accumulated problems. You are the secret bullet to this entire alternate framing for civilization and history. There is one thing that does surprise me somewhat, your faith in ^CDM Cosmology. It has a 4.6% predictive success rate, lower than anthropology and Egyptology and only higher than one science, climatology at 1.47% predictive success for CMIP6 models using ocean instead of air as they did for CMIP5. There are so many problems I cannot even begin going into detail, better check out Plasma Cosmology which accounts for 100% of the universe and has no need for dark matter, dark energy, spscetime, strange matter, wormholes, new physics, big Bangs and the rest of the nonsense.

  7. Your research is wonderful = been following Graham since Art Bell first had him on.

    2 questions:

    1. Please have a podcast with Shannon Dorey from Canada who wrote 4 books on the Dogon tribe –

    2. I am going to Egypt in the fall of 2024 – will you be having a tour at that time?

    I believe that the vibrations through the air could move those stones. In Florida, there was a man who built a coral museum by apparently moving the coral in ancient way

  8. Hey Ben

    Great podcast. You chatted about the caves and living underground and so on, as an escape from the, er, waves and fire engulfing the world. Is it possible this is the purpose of the pyramids?! Somewhere to hang in for a week or so. The shape of them has always puzzled me – but if this were the purpose, it would be ideal.

  9. Hello Ben.

    Outstanding work on lidar works and the vase case. It is good to shake science community with those ideas as they are the drive that moves science forward.

    What really bothered me, while watching the interview and this is important– Russian egyptologist showed an exact way of drilling granite with abrasive and water – please watch it as he recreates the whole process and explains every detail. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g305wqCdPRs

    Best regards

    1. no one ever said grinding doesn’t work. These experiments and claims ignore the salient and difficult details of the ancient examples, the spiral groove, the taper etc. Just another spurious claim that doesn’t address the evidence at hand.

  10. I love your content but I haven’t seen you discussing geopolymers for the method of building the stones. I have watched how this process works and I can’t look at Egypt the same way. The scoop marks make so much sense if you factor geopolymers. Ancient Egyptians had everything they needed to create it. Tool marks become easy to explain and the seams as well if you consider that the stone was soft before it was finished. We can do these things with concrete and plaster. Geopolymers are better than both. Please research this and share your thoughts with us.

  11. Hi there, just listened to your illuminating JRE podcast—3 months after the fact but hey, here are a my useful/useless 2 cents:

    [-@ Jimmy: Yup, I had heard of the Sahara’s eye,(maybe because I am a former ubernerd/ current smartass and have some north-african background) but I had never heard of it being remnant of the Atlantis, thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, discoveries and insights]

    -@Jimmy: Your questioning on striking similarities between architecture/technologies/artifacts/ symbolism etc in parts of the world that were not supposed to be in contact at that time reminds me of the work of German philosopher Karl Jaspers and his concept of axial age/time. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_Age I guess thats not of direct interest but weaves your discoveries into a wider and repeating narrative.

    -@ Ben: tx for making me obsessed with engineering archeology and its anti BS brute force lol. You mentioned in passing Baalbek being baselessly attributed to the Romans (I remember also being puzzled thinking err Baal Phoenician God, and also I wasn’t getting the traditional Roman middle-eastern city feeling at all…), could you recommend any researcher/publication on the matter so I can flesh out those amateur inklings and understand better? (Also some real weird shit involving my phone happened there in case theres someone researching that)

    [- last remark picking up on Baal/ Phoenician/ North Africa, and though it is not that ancient, has anyone come up with a compelling explanation of how TF Hannibal almost brought his elephants on Rome all the way from North Africa through the Pyrenees and the Alps? The accepted textbook accounts seem dismissively ‘magical’ for lack of a better word.]

    tx again guys, appreciate your work!

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