4biddenknowledge Podcast
4biddenknowledge Podcast
The $300 Billion Ceasefire: Did Iran Win Without Firing the Final Shot?
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All right, what's going on, Forbidden Knowledge Family? It's going to be a great talk today. We're going to be talking about the $300 billion ceasefire. Did Iran win without firing the final shot? That's the topic of the podcast today. Did Iran win this war without having to fire the final shot? We're going to break down this war tonight and we're going to have a great conversation about it. And we're going to talk about the economics of it. And then we're going to connect that to some of the ancient civilizations and some of the ancient wars. And then I'm going to show you some of a couple of things here that might shock you in terms of some of these ancient uh these ancient civilizations. So it's going to be a great talk tonight. So if you're just chiming in, make sure you click that like button. Make sure you share this video. 4BK Academy is in the house. What's up? They call me Four Souls in the house. What's going on? All right, everybody here. Appreciate y'all. Crickets in the house. Melanated's in the house. We got a lot of great people here. Appreciate y'all. Thank you for joining today. It's going to be a great talk. Again, let's make sure we share, share the video, click the like button. Let's get this thing going. It's going to be a great talk tonight. We're going to be talking about this $300 billion deal. And um, I remember I made a post. I was one of the first people to post about it because I had uh very, very close to real-time information uh the night before, uh, really, really late, almost midnight, uh, Eastern Standard Time. And people were saying, Oh, you're just making this up, and this is not real, this is fake news, and so forth and so on, on social on uh Instagram. And they were like, This ain't real, nobody's just no deal, and da-da-da-da. And you know, and then the next morning into afternoon, they found out it was real, it's true. Uh, but we're gonna break down the deal and what it's all about, uh, and we're gonna get a basic, better understanding. No more are we going to sit around as people on this planet and just take the information given to us from uh one source. We're not gonna no longer take the information that's been forced down our throats. We're going to always analyze, break down, research. And you might not agree with everything I have to say. And guess what? That's okay. As I've been saying for the past 20 years, don't believe what I say, research what I say. I don't know how many thousands of times I've said that. So I'm gonna give you some perspective today, some stats today, some real stats, and then you can go and do your own research on all of this, and you can come up with your own conclusions. Um, but we're gonna dig into this tonight. We're gonna get an understanding of what this is, what happened, and how it has potentially affected uh us and also people of the world as well. Let's talk about that and some ancient wars and the connection between the two. Okay, so it's gonna be a great talk. Um, yeah, I remember I made this meme. I posted it um, I think it was the day before yesterday at around 11 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. And this meme right here says, the Iran War has taught the world powers that having expensive advanced weapons doesn't necessarily equal success. It just doesn't. And you can see um a representation metaphorically of David with the um, you know, with the slingshot. And you can see his cape is actually the Iranian flag, and he's slinging a stone at, of course, a megalithic uh Nephilim giant with military gear on and the flag jacket. And you can see that shield. That shield says 2 trillion defense budget, stealth fighter jets, aircraft carriers, precision missiles, drones, advanced surveillance and cyber warfare. And uh basically roughly going against what we considered, what we consider as Americans or American military considered to be a third world country. America had its David and Goliath moment. America had its David and Goliath moment, and there's no way around it. You can be as maga as you want, you can be as zealous as you want, you can tell yourself a hundred million lies to convince yourself that everything is okay and it all worked out for the better. At the end of the day, the statistics just don't lie, the numbers don't lie, the truth doesn't lie, and um America had its David and Goliath moment. What this proved to the world is that America, American military prowess is not what it thought it was any longer. Um yes, we can run up on people in Argentina and Venezuela, and we can run up on people in Cuba, and we can run up on people in you know some of these other little third world spots, Iran, Iran, you know, Iraq, I'm sorry, Iraq. And we can run in there real quick and we can, you know, we can do some damage. But really, at the end of the day, like who are we really fighting? You know, not a battle-tested 6,000-year-old empire, like Iran was. And then I don't think they took time to analyze the IQ of the people that they were going against. So you can't just, you know, one of the things I learned when I went to um weapons training, I went to weapons training to learn about you know how to utilize my guns. I got a lot of guns. You know, I'm all trained in weapons. Here's one right here, actually sitting here on my desk, you know, weapons training. And uh, you know, it's um one of the things I learned in class was you know, what's more dangerous? What's more dangerous? A person with a gun or a person with a car? What's more dangerous? A person with a gun or a person with a first question they asked me in in the um class, the first question, I had to sit back and think about it. Initially, I said, you know, person with a gun is more dangerous than the person with a with a car. And everyone in class gave that same exact answer. This is concealed weapons training class, tactical training class. The car is more dangerous because anybody can get into a vehicle, even a 16-year-old can get behind the wheel of a car, take off, and run over 10, 15, 20, 100 people standing on a sidewalk if they decided to. And people with the gun, in most cases, not all, are trained, have a certain level of responsibility and accountability, and don't want to end up behind bars. And so you begin to understand, okay, hmm. It's all about understanding the consciousness behind whatever's being wielded, whatever's being used. And so in the American military, we got a big ego, and we thought that just swinging around, tossing around these multi-billion dollar weapons would just get the job done without having to think and process. We didn't realize that the person on the other side didn't have those same levels of weapons, but they had tactical prowess, they had planning, they operate with a chess mindset, and we operated with a checkers mindset. It just is what it is, it just is what it is, you know. Um, so we'll dig into it tonight. And we have to realize that reality is reality, you know how in the world did we get into this situation? Now, America may have really won the skies, the battle of the skies, but Iran won the settlement. Because when you look at the past explosions, the headlines, the fighter jets, the drones, the missiles, and all the political talking points, there's just one number that changes the entire story. And that number is $300 billion. That's right. $300 billion has been reported for reconstruction and development. It's a fund being created connected to the ceasefire deal with Iran. And so the real question is it's not just who won the war. The real question is did Iran maybe lose the battle but win the deal? Are they now the master of the art of the deal? Because that's what it looks like to me. So before we go deeper into this, let's be clear. I'm going to talk some numbers tonight. Some of these numbers are coming from public reporting, they're coming from uh defense analysis, congressional tallies, uh humanitarian estimates. And that means some of them could change over time as more official information comes out. I really do believe that we'll we will see much bigger numbers in some areas, especially when we're talking about American soldiers' KIA numbers. I believe the KIA totals, in my opinion, from what I've heard when I was overseas when the war was going on, were over 1,000. Over 1,000 KIA American soldiers. America's not reporting that number. They're reporting some numbers much lower, and they're about 380 injured. But even with the numbers we have right now, the war was extremely expensive. Not just in money, it's not always about the money, but also in the hardware, in missiles. But not just in missiles, again, in human life. We lost aircraft, we lost drones, we lost infrastructure around the region. That infrastructure was really important. We may never, ever see American bases in those exact locations ever again, because they were completely decimated. And I'm talking about every single one in the region, strategically decimated to prevent us from refueling, from rearming, from bringing more ordinance, and the ordinance we had on site was also destroyed in those strikes. And of course that could sway the future balance of power in the Middle East. So that's what we're gonna do. We're gonna have to break this down piece by piece. Okay? We're gonna break this down. Let me have enough juice in this device. I'm gonna plug this in and I'm gonna put this phone on too. I'm gonna put this phone on on TikTok real quick. So we can get the TikTokers in the behind the scenes, get them a chance to hear this and see what's going on. And we're gonna tie this all into ancient wars. It seems like we just love to be at war as a civilization, as a species. We just love going to war and going to battle, don't we? It's just something that we just love to do for some strange reason. We can't get enough of it. We just can't get enough of going to war, fighting each other, and taking out our brothers and sisters all over the world to make up an excuse to have to do it in most cases. And this particular excuse was they were going to um they were going to make a nuke and use it against us, which was an absolute lie, which has been validated and verified by many, many sources, including generals that decided not to go to war and walk away. TikTokers, if you just chime in, we're talking about the $300 billion Iranian deal right now. Um, you're behind the scenes on the Forbidden Knowledge Podcast. Make sure you go over to YouTube and join the Forbidden Knowledge Podcast if you want to see this on the bigger screen, all right? Um, so let's talk about the American aircraft losses. So, according to the public reporting, the United States lost or had damaged about 42 aircraft during this campaign. Now, that number, first of all, is shocking by itself. Because if you would have told me that we were gonna lose 42, 42 American aircraft going against um a country in the Middle East, I would have said, man, get out of here. It's not gonna happen. I don't believe you, but it did happen. It did happen. And when you break it down, it becomes even more serious. So out of that 42 aircraft, about 25 were drones or unmanned aircraft. Then uh we had about 24 MQ-9 Reaper drones taken out. We had at least one MQ4C Triton surveillance drone taken down, which is crazy. And these aren't just like cheap pieces of equipment. We're talking about multi-billions of dollars worth of equipment. We're talking about multi-billion dollar surveillance and strike platforms, state of the art. I mean, we're talking about the highest level you can get in this type of technology. These aircraft were used to watch the battlefield, track targets, guide operations, gather intelligence. And in a lot of cases, they can even launch strikes on their own. These devices can launch their own strikes. So when those systems are lost, you're not just losing metal, you are losing your eyes in the sky, you're losing strike capability, you're losing intelligence capacity, you're losing battlefield awareness. And also, don't forget, you're losing a lot of money at an extremely massive scale. I mean a megalithic amount of money going down the tubes, has gone down the tubes over a war that didn't even need to happen. They called it in the beginning an excursion. It's just an excursion for a few days. The truth is, they thought that they would just drop a couple of bombs on these people, they would give in, and then they would cough up the oil, and we'd steal their oil, give them a new puppet dictator that would work along with the United States and Israel, and it would be over. Boom, boom, boom. One, two, three, and done. It just didn't happen that way. They got too spoiled with Venezuela, with watching Gaza being destroyed. They forgot we're not dealing with, you know, idiot dictators and people living in tents. It's really easy to blow up tents and people who can't defend themselves. It's really easy to fly in on a dictator in the middle of the night, hit him with sonic weapons, you know, knock out his untrained military and abduct him and his wife. That's a piece of cake. I mean, I can train kids at the local high school in my hood to do that. Doesn't take a lot of knowledge or IQ. Pretty basic training type stuff. But then when you go against a 6,000-year-old empire that's been prepping for this for 40 years, hmm, things get real. They get real, real fast, don't they? They get real, real fast. It got real. It got so real, they were just pumbling over their words, making up stuff at the podium, you know. So we talked, we we talked about the unmanned craft. What's what about the manned aircraft? Okay. We're talking about major losses, damage to fighter jets. We lost the F-15E strike eagle. Okay. I mean, okay, I could see that getting down because you know, I've studied these aircraft for quite some time. And F-15, you know, nice, nice, um, nice fighter jet, nice uh quality, nice speed, but still good maneuverability. But still, I mean, you know, it's not an F-18, it ain't an F-35, you know. Now, we lost an A-10 attack aircraft. And we lost an F-35. We lost an F-35. It's supposed to be untouchable. It's supposed to be, it was supposed to be untouchable. How in the world do we lose an F-35? This thing is supposed to be invisible. Well, you see, again, you're not dealing with idiots here. You're not dealing with low IQ third world uh country people that uh live in tents and and ride camels for a living. You see, the F-35 does give you a signature about the size of a golf ball or a soccer ball, depending on its flight angle and momentum. It does have incredible speed, but they didn't anticipate the Iranians prepping and preparing for that. One of the biggest flaws in the F-35, especially the F-35A, is its heat signature from its exhaust, the way it vents. So the actual solid part of the craft can throw off basic standard radar, even throw off some scalar radar, but the heat signature is undeniable. So what we weren't and what America didn't anticipate was that the Iranians would reprogram their drones, not to search for a physical device. Look like my sound's working fine. Check your check your audio there. Looks like my sound's working just fine. Let me see in the live chat if you can still hear me. Because one person said no sound. I know TikTok can hear me. YouTube, let me see. Drop in the live chat. Can you hear me? Before I go on, my sound looks like it's working perfectly fine. Okay, everyone says working fine. Okay, good. So let's get back to what I was talking about. So what they didn't anticipate with Iran was they didn't anticipate that they would take their $20,000 drones, which they have tens of thousands of, been creating them for quite some time, and reprogram their targeting. So instead of trying to target an actual physical uh object, a targeted heat signature. They switched out the sensor array on their drones. They switched their switched their sensor array out to infrared. And that's what surprised us. Okay, that's what surprised us. So we end up well, Iran ended up tracking the infrared, and that's how they struck the F-35, which is mind-boggling. Mind-boggling to strike an F-3500 billion dollar fighter jet, which is supposed to be untouchable, according to the developers. Mind-boggling. We also lost a tanker. We lost an aircraft carrier due to severe damage. We lost a KC-135. I mean, it's just insane. It's mind boggling how much we lost in a war that was supposed to be only a couple days. A week, a week's long excursion is what it was said to be. A weeks long excursion. Later, there were some more reports that came in of an Apache helicopter being shot down. And supposedly, supposedly, that Apache helicopter crew was rescued. Now, that really makes me scratch my head. I seriously doubt that. Like, I want to see those pilots. I want to see those, I want to see them on TV saying that they that they made it back home. I really want to see that. Because if I remember correctly, um there was a situation with Jimmy Carter. And that was in, I just want to look it up because I want to make sure I got it right. I think it was 1979. I think it was Jimmy Carter 1979. Um, he decided to land some helicopters in Iran. Didn't work out so well. He was the last person to try something crazy like that. Who was Jimmy Carter? He was the president when I was a kid. Uh first we had Nixon, then I saw Jimmy Carter come into office. And uh yes, I was correct. November 4th, 1979. My memory served me properly. November 4th, 1970. That's actually my my uh my daughter's birthday, one of my daughters, November 4th. The crisis, it was a hostage crisis that lasted 444 days, 444. Iran had got tired of being pushed around. They got tired of people coming there trying to steal their resources and take over their country. So they took hostages to tell the world we aren't gonna allow this. We're not gonna be bullied, we're not gonna have people step right in and take our oil and our resources. And something very interesting happened during Operation Eagle Claw, which is what's the name of this mission, Operation Eagle Claw. Um, there were some uh some African Americans uh in the um, you know, that had been also taken in uh and held, held hostage. And what was really interesting was the Iranians, once they identified the African Americans that were being held hostage along with the other ambassadors and so forth, they said, y'all, y'all are in the same boat as us talking to the African Americans. They said, we're releasing y'all. So they took all the African Americans that were in that group of hostages that they had from that uh delegation, and they released the uh the African American people back to safety, which got them out of there while this whole fiasco went down. They made sure that the black African Americans got out. Um, you know, and then they continued with their plea. Their plea was to stop messing around with this, leave us alone, and no, you can't have our resources. This is 1979, for goodness sake. Operation Eagle Claw. And what happened? So 1980, because this is how long it lasted, it goes into 80. After equipment problems and deadly accident, Carter says he canceled the mission because of helicopter failures. No, the helicopters didn't fail. He landed copters in choppers in an LZ in Iran, and the LZ was hot, and they lit them up. The LZ was so hot, they lit up that LZ. All of the choppers were taken out, all of them, and no pilots survived. None. What's an LZ? An L Z is a landing zone. They were looking to do an extraction of these of the hostages. And this is all behind the oil companies. Look at this. Here comes somebody in the live chat. They know what's up. Careful carpenter. Oil companies think the oil belongs to them. And these oil companies got bet their best buddies, they are always politicians, aren't they? And so they collaborate and collude together to go steal resources from other countries. And they tried to do this to Iran way back in 79. Well, they have been trying since before 79. Iran's by 79, Iran said I had enough. Enough is enough. You come knock on a door, we're going to uh shut the door on you. Right? Don't worry, I'm going to get into those Iraqi artifacts very soon, kosher. And uh so when they say that they were able to that they downed an Apache chopper and the people survived and got out. I just don't, I don't buy it. I just don't buy it. Based on history, based on the track record, I just don't buy it. That whole snatch and grab that they tried to do, they tried to go in there and snatch and grab the uh the uranium, the uh, you know, the nuclear um the it's not even nuclear grade, by the way, enriched uranium. They tried to do a snatch and grab, and then they claimed that they had to get get in there because um there was a down pilot. There wasn't ever a down pilot, that was just a a ploy. The real mission was to go in there and do a snatch and grab, which they failed miserably because Iran was waiting on them. Iran was waiting on them to land in their territory, and they destroyed us some more, and we lost even more people, many more soldiers KIA on that attempted snatch and grab, which was a major failure. There was never a down pilot. It was a lie. It was a rouge to try to get the American people to believe that we had to go in there. And then what their plan was, we'd go in there and snatch this uranium, would come out with the uh enriched uranium, and we quote unquote put a pilot on mainstream TV and say we rescued him too. It looks like a double, we look like geniuses. Didn't work out that way. Not only did we did we didn't have a pilot to bring back, we couldn't even, in my opinion, bring back the bodies. I guarantee you there's still bodies that didn't make it back in boxes that are still out there in that desert or by now, you know, the Iranians have them put in boxes somewhere. They're pushing up daisies. That's the stuff that you'll you won't see on mainstream TV. The foolishness that they've been doing behind the scenes, trying to pull off this whole sham to steal this oil, which failed miserably. We have all this technology, and so did America maybe dominate technologically? Of course, without a doubt. But Iran and this network proved that advanced weapons do not make you invincible, which was the reason I was talking about the gun and the knowledge, who has the power, who has the use of how to wield a weapon. If I've got this gun here, but I don't know how to use it, this is a big, powerful military, this is a military gun. But if I don't know how to use it, then what's the what how can I even defend myself? How can I defend my family? But somebody else who knows how to use a 22, a much smaller, simple weapon with less impact, but if they know how to use it properly, they can take me out because I don't know how to use mine. A smaller gun can take out somebody with a bigger gun, and that's exactly what happened. We still lost aircraft, we still lost drones, we still lost surveillance systems, we still lost military personnel. And we took on massive U.S. casualties, the number of which we still have not heard yet. The truth will come out eventually, but we don't have the true numbers yet. We don't see the boxes being paraded. They showed us a few boxes, but it won't show us all the bodies coming back in boxes. Those numbers will be revealed in a few years. The human cost was just undeniable on both sides. Now they're reporting only 13 U.S. service members were KIA and about 380 wounded. Okay. Even if those are just the numbers, even if those are the only numbers, their mothers, their wives, their children, their relatives, their friends of these people that are now no longer here, mortally wounded or maybe even now disabled for the rest of their life, because very rich billionaires wanted to go take oil and be a bully from someone else. And also wanted to play the stock market and play the inside markets, the insider trading, which they did very, very well. Every week it was over. We won. Then the next day, I'm dropping the bomb. Then the next week we lost. And the next week we won. And then we're going to drop a bomb. And this is just making the markets go up and down. So they're doing stock options on futures trading. So they buy the futures contracts in what we call calls and puts. Calls means that you anticipate that the price is going to go up, and a put means you're anticipating it's going to go down. So when you buy stock options contracts on calls and puts, you don't necessarily have to actually buy the stock or the commodity. You can actually just buy the bet that it's going to go up or down. And of course, if you have insider trading, which we've known, that they would uh buy those calls and puts the day before the tweet would go out on Truth Social, before the statement will go out behind the podium, and they will control the rise and fall of those commodities. And they made hundreds of billions of dollars playing around with this. They made hundreds of billions of dollars, which the American public will never see a penny of it. Not a stinking penny. So we have the 380 wounded, we have the 13 dead, which I'm telling you, when you finally see the real number, you're gonna be stunned. You're gonna be stunned on the real numbers. The KIA numbers are gonna come out. Parents and loved ones are gonna be pissed. There's gonna be an uproar uh for the amount of people that are unaccounted for that didn't even make it back in a box. There were some people connected to some of the crashes, hostile incidents, which means on the ground a campaign that was purely illegal, by the way. You can a president can call a war action with the approval of Congress. But a president can only initiate military action if it's only gonna be um like a very short-term thing, like they call it an excursion. Right? When you declare war, that requires so many more layers before it actually can happen. There's congressional oversight, there's committees. I mean, this is this it's not just some guy sitting around going, you know what, I'm gonna go to war. I want to take this oil from these people and I want to put this money in my bank account with these other billionaires that are my friends. So round up the troops and let's go get this oil. You just can't do that. So that then every single death becomes a war crime. And there will be war crimes trials. Now, the ringleader of this is Satanyahoo. Um, but on the American side, unfortunately, it's our president. He won't be around for the war crimes trials. But a lot of the people in his cabinet will. They will be around when those war crimes trials. You can't be pardoned for war crimes. This is what they, I guess they probably didn't read the legal books. I don't think they read, I don't think they spent time reading, uh, reading the uh the law. You cannot be pardoned for war crimes, and they will face war crimes trials. Every one of those numbers, every one of those people that's injured or unalived in KIA, they had a mother, they had a father, they may have had children. I mean, come on. Spouse, loved ones, friends, family, you name it. And they are no longer here or mortally injured or disabled. Why incredible. What we have to understand here at the end of the day is real people pay the price. Real people. When we look at the other side, the first place that was struck and targeted was a school, a girls' school. And why was that place targeted? It wasn't a mistake. That school was adjacent to the military compound in Iran. So here was the game plan and why this was done. The game plan was to strike that school, which was directly adjacent to the military compound where the top officers were located. That then would, of course, force them to come out of that compound and run to the site that was just obliterated to see if they can rescue any surviving children, because those children were their children. Those were their daughters. They go to school right next to them. Once the uh people showed up to try to find uh survivors, then a second strike came in and obliterated them, taking out the people sorting and scuffling through the stone and rock and debris for survivors. And then when a third wave of people came to help them, a third strike happened, taking out the third wave of rescuers. And then they went about bombing the colleges. These are the top colleges in the world, right there in Iran, for technology and mathematics, by the way. They went and took out the professors in their homes. This is the part you guys aren't finding out about until you research it. They took out the top doctors and physicians in their homes by dropping ordnance on them. They took out all their schools, hospitals, civilian infrastructure. All these are war crimes, by the way. All war crimes. There's gonna be a lot to answer for besides the 300 billion dollars. So we're not just talking about war or aircraft, missiles. On both sides, massive losses on the American side, you know, and on that side. We have to talk about the human beings who were sent into these conflicts, the people that took an order and ran out with blind faith to commit these acts. I think that we really have to start asking questions if you're in the military. I think you really have to start asking more questions and dig a lot deeper into the orders and the intelligence that you're getting to execute those orders. I think we need to take a much deeper look into where this is coming from. And we need to also follow the money and find out who's profiting from me going to unalive people halfway around the world. And if you find through your research and investigation that it's for enrichment of oligarchs and elites and political figures and corporations, then you should follow your oath that you took before you joined, or when you joined the military, follow your oath and denounce those orders like some of the generals did in this war. American generals stepped down and said they're not going to do it, they're not gonna participate in this. It's a war crime. And they walked away from their entire pensions to do what was right, to say, no, this is not right. This is not righteous. So shout out to them for being very strong and courageous. For politicians, war is just a game on a chess board. In this particular case, the American politicians, their war was on a checkers board. We didn't play chess. But for the soldiers and civilians, it's life and death. Okay, unfortunately. So there was a lot of damage to ship carriers, there was destroyers. I mean, we lost missile launchers, we lost naval craft, we lost, they took out all blockade operations, um, strike platforms from seas taken down. I mean, it's just incredible how much we lost. It's not just a 300 billion. It's a megalithic loss all the way around, right? Megalithic. And so if you want to talk about the money, about the estimated value of the U.S. aircraft alone and the aerial equipment losses is around 2.3 to 2.8 billion dollars. And that's just the aircraft, the drones, um, the surveillance systems, and all the aerial equipment. It doesn't even include the base damage. So we took out, they took out the bases. Those uh those bases are destroyed. They took out naval bases, they took out military bases around the region. The cost to repair those alone would be in the tens of billions of dollars. Well, we're not even going to do it because I don't think we're gonna be allowed back in those countries ever again. We proved to them that we could not keep them safe. You know, at the end of the day, we proved to them we just couldn't keep them safe. Um, and then, you know, don't forget about the $30 billion connected to the campaign itself. And the final numbers are just gonna keep going up. This thing could be a trillion dollar loss all the way around, plus the loss of life. And some people are saying, we won. At what cost there'll be win? At what cost? Billions in aircraft and drone losses, going after a country that didn't have a nuke and wasn't building a nuke. They were under sanctions, now they're unsanctioned. Now they're taking tolls to go through the Strait of Hormouths from everyone. The cost of gas is still going to be a little higher. And we have to ask ourselves, was this really a victory? Or was it just a very expensive reset? The ordinance that we wasted out there, the U.S. missiles and ordinance that was used, it took decades to stockpile that, and it will take us decades to replace it. This is one of the most important parts of this story because modern war is not just about who has the best weapons, it's about how fast you burn through them. Another little lesson that we learned from little old tiny Iran, because public defense analysts estimate that we depleted a huge amount of all of our key munitions. It can take decades. We blew through over 1,000 tomahawks. 1,000 tomahawk missiles, 1,100 Jasms. Are you kidding me? I mean, those are air launch cruise missiles. 1,100 gone. It takes two years to make one Jasmine. Hundreds of SM3 interceptors gone. Hundreds of SM6 missiles gone. Hundreds of Thad interceptors. Each Thad two years to make one. 1,000 Patriots gone. Wow. Ordinance is gone. We're so low. I mean, I mean, a thousand tomahawks. One tomahawk costs about 2.6 million dollars. One Jasm costs about $2.6 million. One SM3 costs about $29 million. An SM3 interceptor. And a THAT interceptor is about 15 milli gone. I mean, it's insane. Now, what has this done? This has put us at a very, very bad place as a country. Because when you have gone through that much ordinance, then you're in a very bad situation because now other big countries like Russia, like China, oh, believe me, they're watching. And don't think it never crossed their mind that, wow, right now, America can't really defend itself. They are literally out of what it would take to put up a strong war against one of us. Are we burned through everything? We literally burned through everything. And so um it's gonna take years, it's gonna take decades to replenish that stockpile. And so it put us in a very bad position as uh as a country. It puts us in a very weakened position. When Mexico, back in the day when Mexico was fighting off the Spaniards, Spain came over, they tried to take over Mexico. Mexico fought back, like you wouldn't believe. They beat the Spaniards, but they were more, they were so weakened, their ranks were weakened, they were they were almost taken out with them. It was almost a double knockout. Spaniards backed off, retreated, and left, left Mexico down there to lick their wounds. And guess what happens? Good old America says, Yay, you know what? Those Mexicans just got done fighting those doggone Spaniards, and they're pretty beat up. Let's go take some more of their land. So they went down there and said, Yeah, we'll just walk in and they won't put up much of a fight. We'll take Texas, we'll take New Mexico, and we'll take most of Southern California. Thank you, Mexico, for being wounded and uh and weakened because we saw they were weakened, we saw they didn't have the strength. We saw that they were, their armory were down, their ordinance was down, their weapons were low. And we also saw that their military force was very low. So we just walked in and we stole Texas, we stole New Mexico, and we stole California. That's how we got those parts to be part of the United States. We just stole them from a weakened Mexico who had just got done fighting off the Spaniards and won. So if we would think like that and actually execute that, well, what do you think China and Russia are doing when they see us literally excuse pardon my French blow our load? Literally blow our load. And uh it's insane. It's just insane. Anyway, um well when you look at the ancient civilizations, all right, you go back to these ancient wars, you know, you have the Rig Beda, the battle of the Ten Kings. You have the wars of the Mahabharata, where the people on the ground looked up and saw flying cities going to battle against each other. I mean, they were downing ships that they say in the Mahabharata, in the Bhagavad Gita, they were so huge that when they fell from the sky, they would destroy villages. Plural, villages with an S. We go into the Vedas, we find wars. We go into the Sumerian tablets, we find wars in the Akkadian version, in the Babylonian version. We go into the Greek and the Roman text, we find more wars and the wars of the gods. We go into the biblical text, we find more wars in the heavens and wars on the ground, and we find angels putting on breast breastplates of armor to go to war with men to battle people in another city, in another kingdom, or even in another village somewhere in the book of Deuteronomy. We go and we look at Rome. They try to take over planet Earth, the Roman Empire. They literally wanted to take over the entire planet and rule the entire planet. Once you were put into the Roman army, you automatically knew you were never gonna see home again. That's what that movie was about, right? Gladiator, the first one. Alexander the Great, he was the one pushing it as far as it can go. He even took over Egypt and became Pharaoh of Egypt. He tried to push so much further until he ran out of luck, didn't he? He ran out of luck trying to take over the planet. But again, war. When you look at the ancient text, and you begin to see the amount of wars that are taking place, and what are they usually fighting over? Control of resources and control of populations, control of resources and control of populations. I mean, it's insane. It's always the same story, no matter how far back you go. Like Hazm Kokah says, war is a business and it's been a business for eons. Not for decades, not for hundreds of years, for eons, for thousands and thousands of years, war has been a huge business. War for profit. Just like General Smedley Butler, one of the most decorated generals in the history of the United States, he wrote a book called War is a Racket. And in there he begins to destroy and tear down exactly what uh these wars were all about and how they play both sides and how it's all about making money. And most of it was oil money. General Smedley Butler. I have his book here somewhere. I was reading some of it the other day. So you go back into the Anunnaki, you have Enkian and Lil. They were at odds. But their sons, Enki's sons, Thoth and Amun Ra, aka Marduk, they were at odds with each other. They were having wars and going head-to-head battles. It got so bad that Enki said, Hey, Thoth, man, go to Mesoamerica and start a whole new civilization over there. So he left with some old Mex from Africa and they began building Tiltiwakan. Tiltiwacon is translates into the city of Tehuti. Who was Tehuti? That's Toth's name in Africa and other parts of Africa. His name was Tehuti as well. So he left and started, he this he said, get out of here, man. I can't stand these fights anymore. You have texts in the Sumerian where they talk about getting the WMDs, the weapons of mass destruction out. If you saw the movie Dune, they had the family's nukes hidden in the mountains on that planet. Well, where'd you think they got that from? That story, that part of the Dune movie? Dune 2, I think it was, or use one or probably two. I can't remember which one it was, but it's in Dune, the new versions. They got that directly from the tablets. Because that's exactly what they did. They brought nukes with them, which were forbidden, by the way, and hid them in the mountains. And when the families, these Anunnaki families, went to war against each other, they unleashed these nukes on earth. And there's evidence of this everywhere. Mohen Jendaro in the Indus Valley. You have buildings there that were turned to glass thousands of years ago. They're still there. The people that were living there, their bodies are still laying in the street today in 2026. Some of them are holding hands. No evidence of any scavenging. You take a Geiger counter and put it over these bodies in these buildings. The Geiger counter measures higher than background radiation. You go to the Sahara Desert and start digging your hand in the soot in the sand, you're going to come up with balls of glass every now and then. Why? It takes 3,000 degrees weapons fire to turn sand into glass. Which is why the ancient Egyptians would take these balls of glass that they discovered from the ancient war and they would etch them into beetles as a reverence to the gods. I mean, I can go on and on and on as to all these wars that happened in ancient times. And so in some way, epigenetically, this warring gene is flowing through us from generation to generation to generation. Except the problem we have is a lot of us have gotten to a point where we really would prefer not to do the war situation. But then we have these people that we have allowed to take positions of power over us where they're supposed to be our servants, and they have now flipped the script and have us serving them. And those people, oh, they want the wars, they want all the smoke. Even though they're not going to participate in the smoke from front lines, they'll go to their little bunkers and their little safe spots. But they're going to give an order. And that vibration they speak is going to go into the air of many soldiers, and those many soldiers are going to blindly follow those cinematic vibrations of darkness, even to their own demise. At the end of the day, we have to get to the young soldiers and we have to tell them don't blindly follow any orders. Research the orders, research the intelligence, validate it, verify it. Because it's your soul that you're going to pay with. It is your soul that you're going to pay with. Generational karma that you're going to pay with. Blindly following orders that are leading into darkness. At the end of the day, we have a ceasefire, supposedly. I don't think Israel's going to stop anything, but I believe they are uh they've actually already started back up again. You know? Um but what can you do? This is where we are as a civilization, you know. Um we have to begin to realize that the only change that's truly gonna come from allowing these situations to happen is gonna come within our own minds and hearts. Us, the civilians. Because at the end of the day, we're the ones that do this to ourselves. We are the ones making the kids that are saying yes to going into their militaries to commit the most egregious acts against mankind, so that someone else, completely unrelated to you or your child, can make billions of dollars for their families and their families' trust funds. And at some point, we gotta say, okay, not not no more. We gotta stop it. At some point, you know, we have to find a way to put an end to this. And that starts with us training and teaching our kids, our children from an early age, not just Americans, all countries, teaching their children from a young age and warning them of the ills of war and the possibility that they could be sent out to do harm for the enrichment of somebody else, of which you will never see any of those riches. Only they will, and only their trust funds will. Only their legacy funds will, but it will never touch the general population. Anyway, y'all, um, I gotta get ready for my webinar. I gotta go change my shirt and get ready for my webinar. It's coming in uh up pretty soon here, about 7:30. I got I do want to uh share something with you here. Check this out. I'm going to Egypt, and I want you to get a special invite. Everybody is Billy Carson, aka Forbidden Knowledge. I wanted to talk to you guys today about the 12-day Forbidden Egypt. This is not your average Egypt tour. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity hosted by myself, Billy Carson. Only a handful of seats remain, so make sure you hurry up and join us on this amazing journey before it spells out. If you've ever dreamed about walking the path of the Egypt, now is your chance. Make sure you register today to reserve your spot before it's all gone. I can't wait to see you in Egypt. It's gonna be amazing. I guarantee it's gonna change your life. All right, so I'll see y'all in Egypt. TikTok, click the link in my bio and request a special invite directly from me for Egypt. If you're on X, the link is in the caption of this live stream. Uh, same thing with Twitch and of course YouTube. The link is in the caption, it's in the live chat. I dropped it a couple times for y'all. And you can receive a very special invite from me directly for Egypt. I'd love to see you there and take you to see the most amazing things and hang out with you uh inside the King's Chamber. We'll do a very, very special meditation uh inside some of these pyramids. You see me climbing up out of a pyramid shaft right there. I'd love to take you to see some of the most amazing things that hardly anyone in the world has ever seen. You can only do that with forbidden knowledge. So click that link in my bio, the caption, the live chat, register ASAP, and let's go hang out in Egypt for two weeks and have a great time. All right, we'll have a great time in Egypt. All right. I appreciate y'all. Um space is limited, by the way. I can only take a certain number of people. Obviously, you can't imagine. I can't take a thousand people to Egypt. So space is limited. Fill out that form, and uh it'll be a very sacred tour. It's called the forbidden sacred tour, actually. Activations, meditations inside the pyramid. Imagine sitting inside the king's chamber of the pyramid for two hours doing a special type of an activation meditation. That's the kind of stuff we do. We go to sites where the doors have been sealed and locked with big padlocks, and I get the key directly handed to me from the groundskeeper or the pyramid priests, and I unlock doors that no other tourists can go into and see. And we go and we experience these places firsthand. And every time I go back, there's always new things. And this time we're gonna be going to the Valley of the Whales. I'm taking you to Fayum, to the Valley of the Whales, where you're gonna actually walk amongst megalithic 65 million-year-old fossils and whale bones in the desert. You'll be walking on the bed of an ancient sea that was there millions of years ago, long before Egypt was known as Egypt or Kemet was known as Kemet. It was a massive sea with massive, massive animals and a great ecology living in that sea. So, anyway, I appreciate y'all. I love y'all. Click that link. Thanks for hanging out behind the scenes TikTok. I really appreciate y'all. We had 101,000 people on TikTok, okay, and about six or seven hundred on YouTube. Uh, I'm gonna get ready for my my webinar. I'm about to teach right now, and uh, I'll see y'all next time. All right, peace.