Old world Florida. Old world Florida. Old world Florida, dude. I'm telling you, dude. Dr. Narco Longo came on and dropped the hammer of the gut. America's mother, daughter of Atlantis. God sent the weatherland, the devil sent the Spanish. Florida is evil, the phantom of deception. So Florida is the truth. Welcome to Florida, baby. Please welcome Dr. Narco Longo. You. What's up, guys? Howdy. Hope everyone's doing good. Juan's on the toilet, so we'll just give him a sec to wrap it up. But we're going to be talking about the black drink tonight. I don't know if who out there knows what the black drink is, but if you followed my channel for a little bit, I talk about Yopan casino, these different names for it, but the ingredients could vary tribe to tribe. But the black drink was this kind of communal shamanic beverage, also a bit of a libation that was used by the tribes of the southeast United States, especially Florida and down know Mexico, South America, the Caribbean. So the black, very, very trippy. Sometimes it was called the white drink, sometimes it had other names, but the black drink was somewhere in between coffee and like an ayahuasca drip, somewhere in between there. It was very close to coffee in color and effect. And the goal, it was often used as like a wake up drink. But if you didn't know what black drink is, that's a quick summary. So we're going to get into black drink. This is like America's native know. We don't need coffee from elsewhere. We have caffeine right here in Florida, in the southeast United States. Think about how much tea coffee we bring in, right? The opon is right here and it's a lot healthier and it's stronger. But that's black drink. And we're going to be bringing up some pictures and stuff. But we've got Professor Longo here, my brother. We've got shem Jacobs from tartarian truth. Appreciate you having me. We've got El chosen Juan, he's still on the bidet. And Professor Longa, you can find him at the dancing elephant YouTube channel too. That's a thing now. Well, we'll wait for Juan to get back, but yeah, just quick thoughts. And we're going to be linking it to Coca Cola. So just quick thoughts, guys. Yeah, we can also discuss the possibility of some of the drinks known around the world being connected to it, like with the greek religions, even in Africa and the Pacific area. Right. So black drink, we'll kind of get into some more definitions and pinpointing it to certain people. But I was backstage. I was likening the black drink and Coca Cola to tobacco. Ancient shamanic tobacco use and the modern cigarette. You know, in ancient Americas, you had all these shamans, South America, North America, they all used tobacco. And the tobacco was their number one kind of sacrament, burnt offering drug of choice, and also healing drug of choice. Medicine of choice for so many things. And the use of the tobacco by the shaman, over time, got so publicized or kind of circulated. The tobacco that the shaman was using, shipped all across the world, cheapened, adulterated. The shaman eventually ceased to be associated with tobacco. And tobacco was kind of for everybody. And that's where we're at today. And 100 years ago, 50 years ago, every single person smoked. And tobacco comes from America. It was like America's flag, planted in every corner of the know. Every market in every obscure country had a pack of american cigarettes. Well, the tobacco going from the shaman to the everyday man in the form of cigarettes, right from the pipe or from the cigar, naturally, to the cigarette mass produced in the pocket of everyone. And the cigar is being used by all the world leaders, blah, blah, blah. Very analogous to the black drink being this shamanic community backbone, morning practice, daily ritual used by the native tribes of the southeast, United States and all over the Americas, pretty much under different names, too, that they would use this black, highly spiced, emetic drink that would make them throw up in many cases. That was the point. A lot of the time, they would take this, usually in the morning, not always, but it was like coffee. It was like their wake up purge and retuning themselves. That for people who don't know what black drink is, we're connecting it to Coca Cola. Because Coca Cola is today, essentially the modern, everyday man's black drink. It doesn't need to be black. They make it black today. But blah, blah, blah, Coca Cola is the modern day black drink. And just know the shaman's pipe turned into the pack of cigarettes on every street corner. You find Coca Cola on every street corner in every movie, in every many world leaders. So we're going to be getting into this, too. And I'm a vegan vegetarian. My brother is, too. We're pretty health conscious, whatever that means. There's something to this stuff, and we're going to be talking about that. We're not afraid of any taboos. I'll talk about anything being good or bad. Interesting guy named Ray Pete. I don't know if you guys know Ray Pete, but he's like alternative health guy. He's really out there, like, flips it all upside down. But his take is basically that sugar, like in a coke or something or coffee with a bunch of sugar, is only bad if you're eating a diet that's not nutrient dense. So basically, if it's replacing other things, then that's bad. But if you're getting everything you need and you're adding on the sugar, then it's actually extremely beneficial because it's destressing you. And that that is much more important than, you know what I mean? So it's like, if your vitamins are taken care of, you're eating your normal diet, but then you're drinking, like, two cans of coke. That's just chilling you out. It's just like destressing you. And that has a ton of health benefits to it. So he's like a huge proponent of sugar, basically as like a de stressor, because he thinks that stress on the body is basically more detrimental than almost anything else. And I think there's something to be said, and to Dr. Longo's point, you see the progression when you sort of materialize things. Like, you take away the spiritual aspect of tobacco and it becomes just like this industrial tool, because there's something to be said there. People like Terrence McKenna and other people would say, oh, well, tobacco and caffeine and sugar caused or made it possible for us to have an industrial revolution, to have capitalist societies, office life, like all that kind of stuff. But that is true. But you also have to answer the question of, well, people have been smoking tobacco for a bajillion years, and people have been drinking Yoruba Monte and teas of caffeine and sugar for ancient times, and why weren't they building machines and running these societies? And it's because it had a spiritual aspect to it. It wasn't all materialized. It wasn't like fuel for the machine. It was treated differently. And I think if you can contextualize things, that it changes its effect. Probably. For the tamukwans, I have here first fruits, blood, corn, tobacco, and black drink. These things were used to achieve a personal state of purity, to purify the environment, to attract the attention of and interact with the sacred, including ancestors and the so. And my thing is another interesting aspect to it all, because what Shem said that this kind of hypes everybody up, and I'm up to two cups of coffee, a right. Everyone's America runs on Dunkin'you. Got Starbucks, you got all these different places where they sell, again, coffee, which is central know, you always need a cup of coffee in the morning type of thing. And it's putting everyone in this state of mind how you're saying sham all the time. And one of the things that really stood out to me with the Tamukwans, because it relates to Florida, is that they would also take the black drink in preparation for warfare, which that's why it's interesting that Trump and all these guys are into allegedly coke and all this stuff. And again, who knows if they're pushing this stuff because they're shareholders in these companies like Warren Buffett. They always show him eating. Is he a Taurus? He's always eating. In all these pictures that they show of him, he's a Virgo. Warren Buffett, yeah. Warren Buffett is an ascended master. He's a living guru. He's the greatest investor to ever live, and he's alive in our time. He used to drink cherry Pepsi. For, like, 20 years, he drank cherry Pepsi. And literally, I'm not even kidding, like six, seven cans a day. He switched to coke. Like Juan saying he switched to coke when he invested in coke. Berkshire Hathaway. I mean, that's Berkshire Hathaway. Well, the thing we also have to consider, the type of coke that's being shipped to these places and being sold most around the world is the type with sugar or the type with high fructose corn syrup. Right. Because I do agree that consuming the sugar and the caffeine does put you in that permanent state of a mild psychosis. So it could tie back to the ritual involved in connecting with some form of God. You could argue that it's almost like an agitated type of situation, kind of like a psychosis related to maybe like, the cult of Dionysus or is a. It is a bakic dionysian ritual that Buffett is reveling in. He is just a maniac. He does not give for people who are, like, super material. That's why I was saying that you have to sort of spiritualize. If you become super materialistic about what you eat, and you see it as counting, like, grams of this and grams of that and molecules, and I'm just feeding this beast that's basically an eating disorder. Buffett and people like Trump and Buffett and all these extremely high achievers, performers, they're, like, feeding on the ether. The food is, like, secondary. It's for fun. Buffett drinks coke all day long. You could look it up. I think he's, like 93. He's old. He works five days a week. He's the CEO of the largest company in America by equity, not by market cap. And he's out playing all 93. Yeah, he doesn't give a shit. And trump? Same thing. I think he drinks Diet Coke, but he's drinking Diet coke all day long. And those two guys have more energy than the four of us combined. They're, like, running the country. Maybe it's at least interesting. And we're down here saying, don't drink that corn syrup. Stressing out. You're drinking the kosher. I've been that guy who didn't have a Coke for three years. Like, no soda at all. And very always wanting to tell people. It's like the whole vegan stereotype. Oh, I don't drink soda. I don't drink soda. It's like, look at me like I'm fucking Princess Diana. Clip your nails, right? Got to clip your know, it's like getting a massage or. That's basically. That's what we're talking about. So, shem, you bring up a good point. Coke is not going to be the whole point of this, but we're referring to the fact that all these people drink coke. High achievers. Now, there's two types of cokes, right? Watch them. I don't know, just the high achievers drinking coke. It's almost like. It's like an advertisement for them. It sells itself. I mean, whatever, Americana. I'm part of the Florida tourism board, so. Yeah, not on their dollar. But you've got two types of coke. Let's look this up. And I want to add coke. Yeah, so I wanted to add that coke is also responsible for the whole Santa Claus red and white thing. So they literally birthed an aggregore into society in existence because they're the ones. Was it the polar bear, too? Like, they have a polar. They had a polar bear for a while, didn't they? Yeah, they did. But I mean, one of the. That's very saturnian, the polar bear. The polar. Yeah, polar, solar, whatever, all that stuff. Major. The logo, I think, has sex written in it, right? It's somewhere in there. Oh, yeah. It says sex. They're big subliminal marketers. There is a connection between these rituals and Saturnalia that we're going to talk about later, too, because the way that Saturnalia is to Christmas purim, the jewish tradition, would be to the elusian mysteries, or you'd know, right? You'd know, dude. And I think even drinking coke is saturnian because you're literally sacrificing the physical years off your life. You're like, look, I'll take a little extra energy and I'll give you a little bit of my. Whatever, clean. I always say this, I love this. I'll take the magica. You can have the health points. I'll take the magica points. You have 2 meters in life, and a lot of these health nuts think you only have the health meter, like up or down. And that's it. Well, that's what I mean. There's something else that's like artistic, creative, entrepreneurial capacity. Genius is separate from health. As much as anyone might try and tell you the opposite, health has little to no bearing on artistic or creative genius. Oh, yeah, that's obvious. Established fact. If you name your top ten musicians, painters, filmmakers, actors, whatever, they are all probably not even people you'd want to be around in the first place. But secondly, they're all extremely unhealthy, addicted to God knows what and just demolishing their bodies. It's absolutely a give and take. So is it just in their mind, are they manifesting it themselves, or are they possibly connecting with the muses through some sort of ritual? Connected to what we're doing right now? Talking about right now, it could be a dionysian sort of like, ecstasy type of state, like you said, an ecstatic state that you're in for a long time. Let's just back up real quick. Black drink with the Native Americans. Okay? In Florida. Trump lives in Florida, right? Trump is obsessed with Diet Coke, specifically from everything I've seen, what you guys have seen, right? It's usually Diet coke. He's very into, but he tweeted these back in 2012, and it's actually super hard to find a picture of Trump holding or drinking coke. I don't know if his media team scrubbed that, but I don't know. It's hard. So hard. He loves the stuff. He's proud about it, but it's so hard to find pictures. I have a couple, but maybe he has, like, his coke place. It's just like a private area where he goes unwind and drink a Diet Coke. He has the Ark of the covenant, so I wouldn't doubt it. He has the golden throne. Does that have any. Are you talking about that Apollo alleged Apollo shrine he has inside of his fifth Avenue tower or whatever? Is that what you're talking about? Or something else? No, I'm talking about the arc of the cup that we talked about last. Earlier this week. Yeah, I don't remember. Important to note, lads, that I'm not going to get hung up on Trump and Buffett as people, as if we just love them or whatever. But they're two good examples of this black drink thing. And I think that it's interesting because not only do they guzzle Coca Cola, but both of them do not drink alcohol at all. Both cannot be. And I would go as far to say that probably these native people are not drinking alcohol either. I don't think they're distilling alcohol. I'm not, like, an expert on whatever. And from what I've heard, the alcohol was only added to some of these drinks to kind of, like, lessen the psychedelic effects. From what I've heard, it wasn't intentional. Get drunk like a solvent, something. Yes, it was the solvent. Yeah. I think that's essential oils. Yeah. It's the black drink with no alcohol. That's not a jack and coke or something. Right. There's something to that that even till today, there's some kind of something going on with the caffeine and the black drinks. Even like a Yoruba mate in Argentina or something. It's heavily caffeinated. It's their ceremonial, traditional drink. But I don't think anyone's mixing liquor in with it. Right. It's an interesting point. Yeah. Alcohol. Alcohol is. Right. It takes away. Right. It separates the spirits. Right. That's what you use. So when you're drinking alcohol, you're literally stripping away part of yourself. And that's alchemy. And that's actually changed my mind on alcohol. I don't drink as much alcohol as I used to. I had. You been watching my videos, man? I don't watch. You've been paying attention. I don't watch your channel, dude. Don't get it twisted, all right? Who's this? This is my assistant producer. I was making sure it wasn't some random interdimensional crackhead trying to jump onto the stream. But there's something about the stripping away of yourself. And when people are drunk, they are in an altered state of consciousness, obviously. And I've heard it put that it opens you up for possession. So you're able, right? Spirits are able. Wine and spirits, things are able to slip in, and people act completely differently than they would, and they black out. Wow. Yeah. Guys do not drink alcohol, okay? Never. There's little to no justification. Kombucha. That's something else. Rubbing alcohol on a wound, that's something else. That's its intended purpose. It's an agent. It's a solvent. It strips the essence. Just like Juan said. They do push alcohol in society quite hard, though. And there's an entire push. So hard. 100%. But kombucha has worms in it. Dude, that's humunk juice. There's homunculi in kambucha. It's just like snot. It's not worms. No, they're worms, dude. Worms, all right. You'd be drinking that worm juice, bro. Is that what you like, longo? Yikes. Like the worms in your mouth, bro. Look at that. They're on. Yeah. Funny. Hidden too close to the truth. Look at that. Look at how he squirms. How. Monk, what were we talking about? You didn't tell us what this picture was yet. What is this? This is just yopon holly. Like, being sold as. Like a tea, not as the black drink, just yopon holly, which is the central. Primary ingredient of the black drink is yopon holly. So does it cover black as a result of that leaf? Or is there something that's added in later that makes it black? It's boiled down, so it starts off like wine colored, then like ginger ale colored, and it just gets cooked down into, like, a dark, dark brew. Is it part of the grass family, or is it like a cereal grain, or what is it? It's just a tree. Yopon is in the holly family. So these are like Christmas berries. They red holly, like, almost like a mistletoe. Similar, like little red berries on a bush. Small tree. So that's the central ingredient. You said that was Yopon holly, longo. Yeah, yopon holly. So I have something here. The use of Yopon holly was also very widespread throughout the southeast. The leaves of the yopon were dried and toasted, and a tea made from these leaves. The resulting drink is called casino or black drink. Black drink was most often used as an everyday drink and for ceremonial purposes. Additionally, the Timukwans use black drink. You said this at the beginning as a purifying agent in a variety of applications, including preparations for warfare. The tea was also used as a powerful ahmedic, which was part of the reason that the Tamukwans and the southeastern Indians viewed it as a purifying agent. And they would take it, and it was said to have. They would take it with seawater as well, which occasion great evacuations. Go ahead. What's interesting to me is the difference between when it was used for the shamans specifically, and then when it started becoming used for these people. So the ingredients must have changed at some point, because the shamans aren't going to be worried about war, right? Yes. There's a whole debate as to whether it's actually vomit inducing. Now, if you just take the yopon holly, the stems and the leaves that's safe to drink and brew, the berries of yopon holly are poisonous and can cause kidney failure. And they like to label some plants as dangerous. But yo bonhali, from what I've seen, it actually says that. But the danger or the throwing up is not even really necessarily danger, just the throwing up probably came from like what Juan just said, the seawater. So drinking seawater will make you gag and will make all your glands in your body release. So you'll be like barfing. It might not have always had seawater, but that could have caused the reaction. Also, maybe the induced vomiting was a plan to try to prevent some of the poisonous aspects while getting some of the psychedelic effects. Well, they also added emedic herbs, like it says here, which is herbs that would cause throwing up on purpose. So any number of things in it could have caused a throwing up. And I think, just using my common sense, I think that the shaman shamanic use would be like the heaviest dose imaginable. And the morning group usage might have been a little bit more like a coffee, like a wake up. Everyone's on the same page and in the same frequency. Then also, and I know this guy named fuck, what's his name? I forget his name. Shit. The guy who had the portal house in El portal with the cave, the native american cave in Miami. He is a shaman. He was using Yupan Haley with a lot of people as like a strong dose or. I don't know if a lot of people but himself and some people using a strong dose of yopan as something like a shamanic trip. Isn't Datura also sometimes said to be used in some of these drinks? Yes, I think that's mentioned in here is Doterra. That's one of the scariest drugs I've ever heard of. I had a buddy who ate a deterra plant and he was never the same ever again after that. He tripped for multiple days and was just. I don't know, it's really strange, but he just straight up, I guess, just ate it. From what I understand, there was no drink involved. I have here also, it was used as a. So black drink is a powerful stimulant containing large amounts of caffeine. However, as evomitoria was not used by any of the southeastern tribes as a labor or gynecological aid, it seems likely that yerba refers to black drink in this case so they were talking about if the herb was used by midwives. Right, because it's also used by the shamans. So in particular, they believe that Pareja refers to black drink twice in the confessionals, once in a question to shamans, and once in a question directed to herbalists or midwives. All right, so Pareja is the guy who interviewed some of these people. And I am getting this from. To make these sins. I'll find the name later. But to make. Golly. Anyways, the Spanish and other Europeans quickly incorporated black drink into their own pharmaceutical applications. Black drink, it was believed, cleansed the urinary passages and prevented distemper veins. Its use even spread to France, where Charlevois saw it taken as an emetic. So we talked about that. However, he contended that the manner in which the French prepared the beverage was not nearly as effective as the Florida preparation. As the French doubled the dose and boiled the tea for far too long, the Spaniards of Florida took to drinking the casino tea as well and regarded it as medicinal. Dude, can I pepper something into. Yeah. That I really hope it mentions in one of these pages I have. One of the reasons that Florida was discovered, we're told, is that ponzelion was looking for the fountain of youth. Believe it or not, the earliest mention of the whole fountain of youth thing, it actually talks about pon Steelion, who is only four foot eleven, trying to find a cure for his sexual dysfunction, for his ed. How old was he when this was happening? Just curious. Do you have any? I think, like late. I think late forty s. Okay. But it wasn't uncommon. The Spanish ate a lot of pig, especially the sailors. A lot of pork and pig and sludge and attack. Just not good foods. So it was very common to get Ed back then, and especially with all the diseases, being a sailor. And it literally says one of the earliest mentions, 15 hundreds, maybe early 16 hundreds, talks about him going to Florida to cure his ed. And the whole fountain of youth thing was not actually about him getting younger in years. It was about him returning to a youthful, functioning man, enhanced by know. And just look at, it's like America popped a viagra. It's phallic, it's oozing water, it's life giving, it's fertile. And to have these things coming out of Florida, like the black drink and stuff. So blah, blah, blah. Pon Steleon was coming to Florida to try and cure his dysfunction, sexuality, something like that. It says he had ed and the black drink was known. I hope it's going to say it here, but if not, I have pdfs, old, old pdfs. Maybe Jonathan Dickinson's story from like Palm beach area where it says that they would take casino every morning, which is the black drink, and that the Spanish and all the Europeans would risk trying to trade with the natives to get some because they'd heard it cures instantly ed that this black drink that all the natives in Florida they actually say had no problem were, you know, fully they ever. Are there any stories of them consuming the black drink for like a fertility ritual or in celebration of a harvest or was it just an everyday thing? I wasn't there. I'm not like an expert, expert, but it was like an everyday thing for a lot of the tribes. It was like a morning ritual. They'd get together. That's where we get the word casino too. They'd get together in like a bulletin, assembly, morning meeting and that would get passed around. Now if that was the high dose, I don't know. I don't think so. That probably had a communal dose then. They probably had like a ritual dose. I'm just speculating. Yeah, because to be under the effect of psychedelics constantly and then participating in warfare and all the other stuff that's said to have been happening back then, you would imagine that it would have to be a much more peaceful world for them to constantly be in that state of mind, I guess. Right, here we go. Perfect. Right here. This is the account I was just describing, the AES, who may or may not have been the guest. This is Jonathan Dickinson, who got stranded near Palm Beach, Florida, and he witnessed them brewing yopon. So that's like one of the most know english european accounts learned that the Spanish called the plant casina. Now this is very trippy because if you look up where the word caffeine goes, comes from. They tell us it comes from, I think, kava in Turkey. I think kawa or kava, which is like where you get kava cafe and stuff. I don't know what. I'll pull it up first there. You said caffeine. Yeah, caffeine. Origin of caffeine. If you look up the origin of caffeine, the word, it tells you turkish or somewhere around there, coffee. Now it's german. That has nothing. Can I pull it up? Okay, sure. Yeah, because you're wrong, longo. Absolutely wrong. All right, so let me pull it up here. There's also like a polynesian drink called caba, which is interesting that they drink on a daily basis, apparently, or like at least commonly that sounds pretty similar to this something in the Pacific area. I'll look it up real quick, too, and see if I can bring something up. Runes or runege 1790 518 67. Apparently from german cafe or cafe coffee. I don't know how you would say that. Coffee plus chemical en German in so called. Because the alkaloid was found in coffee beans. Its presence accounts for the stimulating effect of coffee and tea. The form of the english word may be via caffeine. True. Well, good. Nice. So regardless, it's not. Right. It's. It's from Eurasia. But guess what? When you take casino, which happens to have way more caffeine than coffee and tea, when you take casina and write it in the English, the Middle English or late English, whatever they're writing in the 1617 hundreds, what do you get? The s's turn to f's. And the casina is written in that Jonathan Dickinson report, an old PDF. You can find yourself cannibals of Florida, surviving the cannibals of Florida, or something like that. Jonathan Dickinson writes about the casina, like, all the time. The natives taking know how important it is, but it's spelt with two f's. Caffeina. Now, come on. Words are more interesting than they lead us to believe. Casina equals caffeine. Caffina. But they don't mention that at all in the etymologies. How is it that the native word casina, when spelt with two f's instead of s's, which was very common in that older English. If you go look up the pdfs, casina is written with two f's. Caffeina. That's a very strange coincidence. Sync link that's a very easy edit because that soft s does look very similar to an f. The only thing that's missing is just like that line that crosses over in most examples. Yes. So black drink casino Native Americans were using. Here we go. Yeah, they had little cups, coffee cups, straight up drinking them in the morning. There's also where we get the word casino. Casino. Like, just masculine natives should get together and talk business in the morning. I want to add real quick longo, that talking business. And by the way, I don't know if we've talked about this on the channel or not, but we have the two spirits of the tumukwa, which were the hermaphrodites, the man boys in their society, which also partook in the black drink ceremonies, because they were seen as people who can interact in both worlds, the sacred and the pure and the sacred and the polluted. So the tamuku has viewed the world in two separate ways, right? Good and evil. Dirty, pure, holy, clean. And these two spirits, the harmophrodites, which. There are plates about it, the plates that you've pulled up, they're the dudes or the lady boys with their hair tied up, I guess. But you were saying here, the Lemoyne writes that on certain days of the year, a formal council meeting was held. The Gasica and other elite men met early in the morning to discuss the concerns and affairs of the village, including issues related to alliances within the chieftain. At the start of meeting, the principales, led by the oldest member, proceeding in order of age, approached and saluted the casique. After the formal salute, the kasike heard the advice of the shamans and the principales casino. Black drink was served on these occasions. And these meetings formed the basis of Tamukwan political life. Actions carried out within that council house structured how tamukwans men related to one another through the enchantment, enactment of political hierarchy. So they even used it in their political affairs. This black drink, when they were meeting, they would discuss it over a cup of joe. Is that what they call coffee or the cup of Joe? Yeah. So we have it there. Related to the political activities of the Tamukwans shell. Yeah. Pretty crazy. And the two spirits, the hermaphrodites, they were like the healers. They would collect the dead. Yes. It said that they weren't weird. They weren't born, like, flamboyant. It was men who were either fearful or did not want to take on the duties of a man. Meaning, like, constant state of warfare. They were used, not to get graphic, but they penetrated and got penetrated in society. And some casikas, I'm serious. Some casikas would take them on as their wives, essentially. So it was a thing that almost reflects, like, the roman greek times, where that was kind of common. But, yeah, they did participate in that aspect, too. And how you're saying some weren't as flamboyant as others. But it's like you, bro, you like what you like. You know what I'm saying? Like your little. They were sissy boys, no doubt. Yeah. There's a plate on them. Let's see here. Go ahead. I think it's interesting because the Scythians in ancient history have this legend where they're affected with the woman sickness, which is allegedly basically being a hermaphrodite, being double form. And there's the God hermaphroditis who kind of seems like it could be an allusion to a messiah type figure because it's a God that only appears among men at certain times. And ancient authors like Herodotus and Dieters obsessly mention how hermaphrodites were usually killed when they were born. Hermaphrodites? Her rod. Yeah, her rod. She got a rod. Okay. Was he a tranny? Can we know for sure? I don't know. Herodus Helicomassus, it's hard to tell, but basically it's like the idea behind it that it's like an illusion for the messiah is that Cyrus the Great was called devil formed. And in those same sources, he said that his type of person should have never been born in that time period because of what he was. And they call him devil formed, but they also call him a mule, which basically could allude to him know both persian or greek and barbarian or whatever. But I just thought it was interesting because Cyrus the Great is known as the first messiah of the jewish people. Like a messiah. He was called a mule, you said? Yeah, he's a mule because he was like a mixed race. Yeah, like a hybrid. And mules are also sterile too, right? Mule, mulatto. Well, not all mules are sterile because he had a son. Unfortunately, he had two sons, and one of them killed like he was cursed. But basically he was the messiah for the jewish people because he allowed him to return to the Holy Land. But the prophecy of the Messiah riding on. Back into Jerusalem on the back of a mule, it could be seen as, like, Cyrus is carrying back jewish people too, because he's the mule, and the jewish people are basically the. You see what saying. But, yeah, I got you. I don't. It's. I think it's really interesting because he could have been a hermaphrodite is where I'm going with that, because they said he's double formed and that people like him would usually not be born. And they actually did try to kill him. The king tried to, like, his grandfather tried to have him killed, but this farmer had a child at the same time. He was a stillborn, so they switched him out. It's kind of like a similar story to Moses. It's pretty interesting. I don't know. Yeah, that, and I said these two spirits could interact with the dead who were polluted because they walked within both. So they also did burial ceremonies as well. They would bury the dead. The Tamukwans had. I think it's Carnell or Charnell houses. I don't know how to say it, but these houses where they would take the bones of the deceased, and they would feed the bones, and they would take them there and guard them from animals trying to take, because they would wait for the bones to. They would strip the bones and everything. And after they were done, they would put the bones in a box. They would prepare for the family that was given to the family, and the family would have to do offerings to the bones of the deceased. And the two spirits were in charge of all that, of interacting with that, because they felt like the women, when they were menstruating, that if you interacted with them, that you would also become polluted. So the two straits would take care of the women that were menstruating with separate fires and all THese different aspects of society. So LOngo would fit right into that, just like they do today. When your girl gets her period and she goes into the Starbucks and the two spirits make her vente latte and hand it back, and they talk about Joe Biden and whatever else two spirits are into. Yeah, nowadays, definitely. I like that. And did you see this picture? It looks like they're giants, bro. And this picture that I showed here, let me show it real quick because it looks like they're giants. And speaking of, like, hermethrodite, it kind of reminds me of kind of baphomet vibes here with the up and the down. And then everYone's kind of. The women are kind of smaller than These. Is that just perspective, or is that that they were giants? I mean, they were really tall. It does Seem related, BapHoMet, almost like that entire situation was created as a cover up for some of this stuff. And the sons of men came in upon the daughters of. The sons of God came in upon the daughters of know. They are pretty small. The men are large. In the earlier accounts, it says that the royal races of Florida were well above the average European height, but that the everyday plebeian, the lower caste, was kind of average height, and that it was the royal race, the higher caste, the blue bloods. Speaking of the Tamukua practices, how could you cross from the lower caste into the higher caste? Well, one of the ways you could do that was sacrificing a child to a king or a fallen soldier or a fallen shaman. All these things, both male and female, or did it have to be specific? Well, both male and female. I've heard a lot about the firstborn male. Now, Juan, I know, talks about the firstborn female being very important to them, too. But in terms of Them being similar to canaanite practices, which Tim Benz did an interview with ROb Skiba that Robert Sepper turned into his Jekyll island video, where Rob Skiba. Sorry, Tim Benz talks about how he's been to Mesopotamia and has seen Canaanite altars and Canaanite weaponry and all this stuff. And then he went to Jekyll Island, Temucua, to check out the Federal Reserve stuff and started learning about the Tamuku Indians, natives. And he was saying, well, hang on, they were canaanite practices, sacrifices, the firstborn. They would sodomize their dead enemies. You know about that, Juan? No, I don't know about that. In one of the plates, it's pretty flipping bizarre. But after they would take their black drink, know, ravage the enemy in the woods, in the swamp and whatever, at the end of the battle, they would sodomize their enemy, dead enemy and dying enemies with arrows. And they'd said that they were so particular and technical in this process that they would do it even if it meant danger. They'd go out of like it was a scalp. Like it was as important as a scalp. Like, get that scalp, bring it back. Yeah. Let me read this real quick, because sodomy is important to this aspect, and I'm going to add something to the sacrifice here to Coca Cola. A conspiracy. There is, in fact, no direct association of tamukwa two spirits with what Europeans construed as sodomy. Laudanae refers to the practice of sodomy being present among the tumukua, but fails to single out two spirits as being associated with this practice. Many other accounts of sodomy among the tumukua exist. The franciscan confessionals include questions about sodomy and pedestrian pedastry. Right? Am I saying that right? Pedestrian pederacy, as well as a question about same sex desire between women. Conversely, linguist Julian Granbury includes no word for two spirits in this dictionary of Tumuquin language. Nor sodomy was a part of the tumukuan sexual practices and was not conceived as a unclean or a perversion, as much different perception that led a much different perception than that held by Europeans. Yikes. The sexuality of two spirits among the tumuku, however, remains uncertain. Given the strong association of two spirit tradition with homosexuality, both historically and today, Tamukwa two spirit people probably engage what the European defined as sodomy. So that's interesting and also the aspect of the conspiracy, and I'm going to be careful how you say this, where they used certain cells from a fetus in the production of flavor for some of these drinks. And so the conspiracy goes that there. Well, so this is how it goes that there was, in fact, a company who was making artificially created flavors from the stem cells of dead fetus, okay? And then they replicated those. So it started from the stem cells of a fetus, and then they made replications of those cells and reproduced them. And they were using that for artificial flavoring. Now, that's real. And from what you can look up, again, if they never used it in any of the flavoring of any of these companies, allegedly, so you can look it up yourself. And again, I know it's probably going to, for the YouTube crowd is going to not be good, but it is a conspiracy. And that's why people tell you you're going to drink coke. Like, I've had people send me emails because allegedly, coke contains fetus cells. There is a push for them. They do want that kind of cannibalism aspect. That's why they push people eating pork, because there's the association with pork and humans. But I think that has something to do with it as well. Some people who don't eat pork would drink coke is where I'm going with. Yeah. Wow, dude, I've never seen this plate. No. Wow. We can read it at the bottom, too. You can read that? Nice. Yeah. Here. Our utina's men treated the slain of the enemy. During all the time that the French had dealings with the great chief Lolata Utina. In the war against his enemies, no pitched battle was fought. It all happened in ambushes and skirmishes, fresh troops constantly replacing those who retired. Whoever put the enemy to flight first was credited with victory, even when the number of his losses was very large. In these skirmishes, those who fall are immediately dragged off by men especially charged with this duty, so that they don't get sodomized with a sliver of Reed. With a sliver of reed, sharper than any steel blade, they cut the skin with the hair from the skull all the way around, the longest hairs being twisted into a plate, the hair from the forehead being rolled up for the length of two fingers with that of the back of the head in the manner of the ribbon of a bonnet. Immediately afterwards, if they have time, they dig a hole where they make a fire of smoldering moss, which they carry around in their leather breechquouts. The fire lit, they dry the scalp until it becomes hard like parchment. At the end of the battle, they are accustomed to cut the arms of their victims off at the shoulder and their legs at the thighs. The bones laid bare are crushed and bit, and the pieces, still dripping with blood, are dried on the same fire. Then they return home triumphantly with the skin of the heads at the ends of their spears. What astonished me, for I was one of the men sent by Laudinaire under Octigne's command, was that they never left the place of battle without piercing. The mutilate corpses of their enemies right through the anus with an arrow. During this task, a protective force always surrounded them. Is that where I'm going to f your ass up comes from? Probably. I'm going to mess you up, bro. You know what I'm saying? Dude, that's hardcore. That is some hardcore stuff right there. I'm trying to imagine what is the significance of that, because it seems very important. Do you have any opinions on it? Is there anything written about it? Let me say this. Let me say this, okay. The rings of Saturn, bro. No. Yes, you're on there. I can tell you right here where it is. When you're scalping someone, this is why they have guillotine people. Okay? It's believed by some, you don't have to believe this, but this is one interpretation and to me the most compelling one. The scalp is the crown chakra of your enemy. You seek to disrespect your enemy not only in this life, but the next and in every life. By taking the crown chakra straight off the head, you're hindering, tampering, if not foiling the reincarnation process. This is a major blow to the soUl. The soul seeks to escape, ideally out the top of the head. Now that's the crown chakra. If you bottle up the pressure at the top, you might shoot out the bottom. Right? Well, the root chakra is your bottom. The Gooch chakra, it's your butthole, essentially. And that's the only chakra that can be directly, essentially. That's why it's such a fiddled with in all these occult circles and stuff like that. Well, yeah, exactly. I was going to say that that's the whole thing with what I call sedomic time travel, where these occultists do the butt stuff to achieve altered states of consciousness. Juan knows all about that. Could possibly take, hang on. So they would take the arrow and then they're going essentially for the top chakra and the bottom chakra. Now, are they thinking about chakras when they're doing this? I don't know. It might be instinctual, but they're going for disrespect. Now, what's interesting is that the natives of Florida, they were fierce, vicious, but they had certain moral code. Now, sodomizing the victims was Aok, but they would never, rarely, if ever, they would never decimate, fully kill off their enemies, never, even when the opportunity was there. So if they met out in the woods and they have a tribe of 100 versus a tribe of 100, and they kill most of the men in a neutral battleground, they would not push on towards that town's city home and burn and take advantage of the fact that the men were killed off. They would return home and celebrate their victory and say, okay, now we can live to fight them for generations. I'm generalizing here, but they'd give the other town their enemies a chance to bounce back, to repopulate. They didn't never extinguish them completely. That's kind of where my question was going to go anyway. So I'm glad you elaborated, but that's what I was thinking. What possibly happened to make them have that much animosity towards the people they killed on the battlefield? Because you have stories of, like, the flower wars, for example, with these tribes, where they don't necessarily want to kill the people on the battlefield, a lot of times they want to take them back and sacrifice them. So what you're describing, this reasoning behind it, is very interesting and very different to what I've heard before. So let's never skip back to the black drink. That's crazy, dude. That's a good caveat. Are you like that? Who's the real colonizers? Colonizers? I don't want to hear that colonizer nonsense, okay? They were colonizing each other long before we ever got the bonyo bear back. Yeah, but so, yeah, tamukua. Savages. Savages. And I'm wondering their astrological knowledge and where it, because I know they were big into divination. And when I did my research, I mostly focused on their magic, if you will, with a k or a c, otherwise. And they believed in bewitchment. They believed in love charms. They believed in all these different things. They had witch doctors for the shamans, right? That would do these things. And there was also the divination before war. And that's the plate where you see the guy contorting with his arms out on the shield. That was a shaman divinating. And apparently they would sit there, and this dude's bones were cracking as he was contorting and twisting around, and they would just sit there and watch him until he was done. And then he would tell the kasike, like, it's favorable or it's not favorable to go and attack or go into war or whatever it was that they were going to be going to do. And it would all depend on this shaman doing this. I believe that they would take enthiogens. I'm not 100% sure. I don't remember. But, yeah, it's really interesting. And I'm wondering what their astrological knowledge would have been if they were aligning things to certain astrological alignments. Like, hey, this star is up in the north, or whatever it is. So this right here, he's on a shield. They would draw sigils, essentially, around in a circle, and he's divinating. And they're just all sitting around waiting for him to finish his thing. And they describe it as his bones cracking and he's contorting and doing all these things. And they're waiting for him to be like, it's good, or it's not good. I'm sure that they would take black drink, too, for this ceremony. He was taking something. They were taking something they could get their hands on. Yeah. But let's bring it back to coke. You hear about this in the news recently about this town that worships Coca Cola? Jimmy, could you bring that up? I think it's chalula, Mexico, or somewhere near there. Coke. If you just search mexican coke, actually, that'll probably bring up cartel stuff. But Coca Cola, Mexico, mexican city, Coca Cola should bring it up. Yeah. I want to add some stuff to this, because I did see this recently, and I was reading up on it before we had jumped on. I was reading about it yesterday, and there's a reasoning why they drink so much coke. Yeah, they call it liquid gold, like the nectar of their ancestors. Liquid gold. Drink of death. Like in a good way, like rebirth. Well, did we talk about the Florida connection? Did you talk about how were you able to confirm that water from Florida Springs was being used in the early days? Yes, let me bring that up. Speaking of Deleon and the fountain of youth, which I don't believe Deleon was a real person, dude. Yeah, that's okay. It's probably your daddy, dude. Probably your daddy. You know how many chicks he banged in Puerto Rico? He was legit. Probably a little daily on yourself. Yeah, maybe. Wow. Ice spring water, Buck. So here. Yeah, let me zoom in on this. Seven Springs Water Company. Seven. Oh, yeah. It's quite mythological name title, too. So Coca Cola purchased high Springs water bottling facility. Apparently they only ever used it for water. That's what they're saying. But how can you track water? Can you put a barcode on, know it was getting sent out to all these places? They could have been using it for other things. I know that they were pulling water from Florida in a similar agreement in the 80s somewhere, but this is just the one I brought up. That's from the Florida Springs Institute, apparently, I didn't believe you. That's why I was asking. Oh, yeah. Coca Cola was pulling Florida spring water. That was their number one. For a time. That was where they were trying to get their water. Now, I think most of the time they're pulling it out of local. So wherever their local plant is, like regional plant, it's taking municipal water from that area. So if you're in Florida, you might be lucky enough to be getting Florida spring water in your Coca Cola. Which is probably why Trump's benefiting so much from his coke. He's in Florida a lot of also, you know, fudge that guy. He's a loser and a tranny and wants us to be consumed by GMO mosquitoes. His wife, ex wife, probably a but. So Melinda Gates of hell, whatever, blah, blah, blah. All this stuff. Say what you want about the guy. He also. Count him up there with Warren Buffett, Trump and all the other guys here. I'll just search it. Yeah, Bill Gates is definitely up there. Does Elon Musk drink coke? Has he ever. Gates says he drinks three to four, which is nowhere near as much. Elon Musk? Yes. Dig into coke. Four cans per day. Yeah. What the hell? Dig into coke. That's so much sugar. He's wearing the coke colors right there in that dude. The elite want us all to think that sugar is like the ultimate. Have you seen his body, though? I mean, come on. Yeah, okay, well, dude, men don't have bank accounts, dude. Jesus. Remember he tweeted that? He posted next, I'm buying Coca Cola to put cocaine back in. That was one of those tweets that he first posted when he had bought interesting. Coke zero with the gold can. Liquid gold, baby. That's caffeine free coke. I think caffeine is the best thing in. Don't. So he is a loser. That's probably why he's chubby. Not getting the good. Well, sham, you brought up a good point earlier that we never got into fully was mexican coke versus regular. If you ever see a glass bottle of coke, 99% chance that it is a mexican coke or the healthier flavored sweetened version of coke. Mexican coke is made with cane sugar. Cane sugar. And it has, I think, six ingredients. 123456 ingredients. I think normal coke has like nine, if not more. What's the sugar content? Can you read the sugar real quick because Bill Gates is drinking. I just want to know how much sugar Bill Gates is consuming. Freaking sugar. 39 grams. So 39 times four. Not that bad. Dude, orange juice has more than that. Dude, fucking sugar is not that bad. People freaking out. It's like, dude, fruit is all sugar. Yeah, one or two. Okay, but four. Have you ever seen a hummingbird? You ever seen a hummingbird? Dude, they're wired. They're ready to go. Those things are fucking. They're cracked out, bro. Those things are wolves of Wall street. Hummingbirds are. They're wired on that sugar. That's what these people are. Sugar is not that bad. They must have invincible bodies, because I could not. Whatever. I'm not advocating for coke, but I like mexican cokes. Definitely a guilty pleasure of mine. Not even guilty, just. And if you find the kosher coke, they're made with cane sugar, too. It has a kosher label on it. You'd know, right? You know about that? Oh, did you know that they have interest free loans? You guys see that? I can't share on YouTube why I don't drink coke. It has to be on. I can't say the word with the j. But the. The hollow earth. The hollow earth jews get free interest loans so they don't get charged interest rates, according to thought on Twitter earlier. But, yeah, the festival that we celebrate when other people's firstborn children were killed. Yikes. Yikes. That's. Okay. Hummingbirds want war. They made it to the promised land, which is Florida. All good. There you go. So a yellow cap, guys. Kosher coke. Yellow cap. Let's see what else has a yellow cap. Gasoline has a yellow cap. True. So yellow cap is coke. That is so. Let's look up this. There we go. Warren Buffett drinking coke. Jimmy, can you pull up chalula, Mexico again, please? I know you probably did before I forgot to switch to it. The coke drinking town in Mexico that's obsessed. Well, I don't know if I'd call it obsessed, but there's a reason why they just drink coke. And I don't think it's because coke is so great. There's reasons beyond their control, such as their infrastructure. Their drinking water is tainted, therefore. But you can kind of see that as a sort of psyop. Because if you have these companies this particular town in Mexico that drinks a larger quantity of coke, the mexican coke company is still profiting regardless of the people's water quality. So it's in their best of interest to not fix the water. Hey, as long as they have roads to get it there, as long as they have the minimal infrastructure to get these cokes there, who cares about their water? Who cares about their drinking water? Because we're still getting the coke to them. So they're going to drink the coke. Someone said, el Chapo, double fisted two liters. But I don't know, I think that whole thing about the drinking water not being in the good quality is such a terrible excuse because they say the same thing about alcohol in the middle ages, but there's no substitution for water. You need water to survive. You can't drink coke as a substitute for water. Well, they do here. They do? How do they do it? I don't know, dude. I think you need water to be healthy. Come on, what's next? So water is not healthy. What's next, dude? Oh, my God, what's next? No water. I'm saying you don't need water to be alive. Like, you can drink coke and you can drink juices and stuff and you can drink liquids. My dad never, ever drank water. Not even kidding. One drink of water a year. Like, one glass of water. It gives you kidney stones, though, dude. You're going to get kidney stones from drinking. Yeah, I'm not saying it makes you healthy, it makes you unhealthy. But yikes, bro. Anyways, go ahead. I'm sorry, just didn't mean. Good. All good. Headline, Dr. Wongo. So this small town in Mexico is addicted to Coca Cola. Go look this up, guys, if you want, know, whenever you're doing stuff elsewhere, just go look, chill. I think it's chalu, though. I could be mean. I saw a documentary about this before, too. Some dude went down to the city and there's coke everywhere. Like every shop, little shop had the coolers and everything and they had the coke trucks delivering them. Chiapas. Not chalula, chiapas. So I'll just skim through this. Nobody in the world drinks more Coca Cola and other fizzy drinks than the residents of Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost and poorest state. In the state mountains. In the state's mountain town of San Cristobal de las Casas, population 186,000, locals drink just over two liters of soft drink a day, or around 800 liters a year. That's more than five times higher than the national average of 150 liters per person per year. Mexico. Consequently, Mexico is facing an obesity epidemic. And in Chiapos, health officials have declared a diabetes emergency. Pedro Jimenez lives in San Cristobal. Blah, blah, blah. Some fat, fat loser. Sometimes you're trying to promote it as positive, and there's, like, people crying and people being overweight. Don't. Someone said, don't skim over the pardon. If someone can drink two liters of coke, like, double fist two liters of coke and drink it in one day. That's one of the most impressive things I've ever heard. What do you got to say about that, Longo? Come on. How do you think they build those houses so quick? They're like, the hummingbirds are ready to go. Lee, that's hilarious. Oh, man. I'm done. So, yeah, he had diabetes. Boohoo. Tons of other stuff. We'll give you diabetes, but here, this diabetes, probably liquid gold. They're calling this stuff coke liquid gold. An hour away from San Cristobal lies the indigenous town of San Andreas la Reynezar, where Coca Cola is considered liquid gold. It's used by local shamans like Maria Lopez, as part of their religious ceremonies. As Maria aims to cure a diabetic, she prays over bottles of coke as incense and smoke from hundreds of candles fill the air. Situated right next to her shrine is Maria's own coke fridge. She sells around 50 crates a month. Is this real? There's no way. I'm sorry, bro. It's like longo is like. You see, they use it in ceremonial settings. You see? It's so beautiful. They're tapping into their roots. Golly, dude. I don't know, man. They got triabedians down there. If it is real, just imagine having that life. That would be incredible. I'm trying to imagine living in that mindset where you think Coca Cola is, like, this religious icon. Hilarious, dude. Oh, man. Can't be real, though, dude. Coca Cola good, man. The white man make it bad. Yeah, it's the white man that put that bad stuff in there, bruh. Yeah, straight up. Sure it is, dude. Gosh, that's fun. That's hilarious, dude. So, can I keep reading, or is this know. Go ahead. I'm going to be fine. You'll be okay, girls. Sham needs to shut up. Sham. Mute your fucking mic. Her perspective on the origins of diabetes differs to the scientific and medical reasoning due to her religious beliefs. This drink has healing properties. She says diabetes is caused by anger and problems in the family. When we scold each other. When we yell at each other, it turns into diabetes. I'm 51 and have never been sick. I have drunk and eaten plenty of soda, liquor, beer, and chicken. According to a 2019 study by the Chiapas and southern Border Multidisciplinary Research center, each resident of the southern state drank more than 800 liters of coke in a year. This equates to more than 3250 milliliter cups a year. Why such a large consumption? Safe drinking water is becoming increasingly scarce in the town, where some neighborhoods have running water just to. Don't read that part. Just skip this part. Yeah, you don't have to worry about this part. I know, it's just emotional, but here. Are we allowed to play that? I think so. It's not. Okay, let's skip through it. Those are the coolers I was talking about. You see that? Go back a little bit. Yeah, but look how much that is. These people barely have, like, a civilization and this is what they're working with. Well, I was saying sham, to be fair. Those people are loompa sized. So the bottles just look bigger here. Wait, can you hand me the Texas Coke, please? We got it bigger in Texas, dude, no joke. We got to show this shit is nuts. What? Here's the regular mexican coke, right? Here's a small one. It's a small one. It's the same size. Same size. This is a regular coke, right? Here's a coke from Texas. No, you're holding it up higher, bro. No, do. Dude, look. What does the bottle say? How much? That does look a lot bigger, actually. Hold on, hold on. Yeah, that doesn't look a lot bigger. What's the liters like on it? Is it bigger or does it look bigger? No, it's bigger. It's 500 ML. Regular is 355. Wow. This is one that we got at a mexican restaurant in Texas. So Texas is on its way, Shannon. Fucking huge. That's what she said. Every fat chick in Texas has got one of these gripped between her home of the giants. You got to get that giant coke. Hey, man, I'm with you. So let's see whatever he's masked up in Mexico. Here's the shaman. She looks like a coke drinker. Yeah, I would say so. Never been sick, though. But in Mexico, they don't consider diarrhea as anything. Cause for concern, though. She's about to show the ancient ritual of pouring. Damn, that's that black label. That's that good. That was even bigger than the Texas bottle. Hold on. Go back. No, they're just Oompa Loompa size, dude. I'm telling you, that could be one full liter. Like, they're pushing the limits down there. Yeah, living on the edge. That's wild, dude. Yeah, that's hilarious. She's got this vending machine right there in her little Santoria. So keep in mind you're barely able to take a normal shower, but you have these high tech coke machines. Well, shameless. Thought I was telling you, keep them at bay. Give them just enough to where they can consume our product, but don't fix anything else. You know what I'm saying? All the taxes that they're paying on this coke, just. Yeah, don't invest that back into the community. We don't need all that. As long as the roads are working and our trucks can haul the product to them, we're good. Send it. You know what I'm saying? That's what I was curious about is the crime rate down in that area. Is coke providing some sort of security? Is it a psyop? Is it a sort of operation where they're running to see if people can just live on Coca Cola? I mean, that's also a possibility, bro. I'm serious. Like, what if they're running a sort of operation to see the effects? Like, long term? Like, yeah, we're going to pump these people full of stuff. And, hey, it doesn't matter if you can use coke to clean rust off of your bumper. Don't worry about that. They've done way worse. So. Yeah, I mean, you're not in the wrong for thinking that, you know what I'm saying? I never thought about before, though. You would know. Your people would know what happens when things start to go south real quick. Right? So just operations. That's all I'm thinking. As soon as I saw that, I'm like, there's something much darker than just coke going on there, dude. Juan de Leone, can you talk about Juan Ponce right here? Juan himself, Juan Pones de Leone. Can you talk about how they would. Did you come across that in your research, how they would pour a bit out before they would drink the tamukua, the black drink? Have you seen that at all? No, I have not. Right, so you've got sacraments or like the divine wine or the communal beverage of a ceremony, but then you've also got what's called a libation, right? And the libation not exclusively, but generally refers to something that's, like, poured out of the cup onto the ground for the boys, onto the animal you're about to sacrifice, onto the temple. The platform that they're going to be sacrificed on, too. Right. So here, this is a libation, right? Oh, interesting. And a libation is a ritual pouring of a liquid or grain, such as rice, as an offering to a deity or spirit or in memory of the dead. It was common in many religions of antiquity and continues to be offered in cultures today. Dairyous substances have been used for libations, most commonly wine or other alcoholic drinks. Olive oil, honey, and in India, ghee. The vessels used in the ritual, including the patera, often had a significant form which differentiated them from secular vessels. The libation could be poured onto something of religious significance, such as an altar or into the earth. In East Asia, pouring an offering of rice into a running stream symbolizes the detachment from karma and bad energy. So blah, blah, blah. There's one here. Ancient Israel. Libations were part of ancient Judaism and are mentioned in the Bible. And Jacob set up a pillar in the place where he had spoken with him, a pillar of stone, and he poured out a drink offering on it and poured oil on it. Genesis. All three of the yearly pilgrimage festivals for going to the temple where they involve libations. So it's even more than that. They're only giving you one example. There's at least, like eight or nine different holidays that they do libations for. In Judaism, that's just one of the many connections between native Americans and Hebrews, Jews, Israelites. That's why I was curious earlier, when you were talking about the shaman class using the drink before everyone had access to it, because, yeah, over in Israel and the Phoenicians and the greco roman societies, it was kind of like an exclusive type thing, but it was more like a hallucinogenic. So what, when the shamans were using it, using the black drink, was it more hallucinogenic or was it altered between the two different exposures? Yeah, a strong dose was enough to be hallucinogenic or to give you a vision, you're not walking around doing tasks on it. But then there's also mention of it in the secular use being just like a mild coffee in the morning that everyone drank, and it just gave them energy, woke them up, just the caffeine. So I think if you're just using the yopon, you're getting more of that tea effect. If you're using the yopon with the vines and the different herbs and everything. We talk about the lean connection. Yeah, we should talk about the lean connection. But one more thing real quick, is that the aspect of throwing up is interesting. Too, because in the Purim festival for Judaism today, you're supposed to basically get drunk. So they want you to get intoxicated to the point of even throwing up. So I just thought that was a weird connection as well. Yeah, pouring one out, the lean, the purple drink. Purple is connected to the ancient mystery religions drinks as well, because the mushrooms that could have potentially been in the drink that they consumed to hallucinate was purple, the aircot mushroom. But, yeah, there's the whole culture of pouring out one out for your homies. Let's talk about that. And also. Right. The coffee also makes a lot of people go to the bathroom. Sometimes coffee has that effect on me or I'll shit my pants. It depends on the day. Sometimes it will, sometimes it won't. But that's also the evacuation factor. Probably also just the tons of homo beeping that you do that's contributing. We can't rule that out. No, you're a little pulverized down there. It's contributing to you, bro. Continue. Excuse me. No, no. Let's read this sentence real quick, though. An identical practice is found in Brazil when kachaka is drunk, with the drops being offered to para santo or para o santino. These customs are similar to the practice among the Visasians, Mendenau, the Philippines, where Roma spilled upon opening of the bottle. So, yeah, we talked about. We barely mentioned it earlier, but in the Philippines, they do have a black drink that's like a psychedelic type drink. So that's kind of. Mm hmm. Well, I think that all these things, again, it's an evolution of these. Right. The Mexicans, it's modelo time, foo. I mean, they drink a lot of beer. We wouldn't call it black drink, but I guess. Was there a form of alcoholic beverage that indigenous people would use? Do we know other than. Yeah, the Aztecs and Maya had alcohol, but most native american tribes were told did not, like, north american tribes were told did not have alcohol. For the most part, they might have gotten lucky or had certain fermented beverages, but they were not habitual alcohol people. We know that also because once they started drinking, everyone should know this in America, how detrimental alcohol was to native culture, because they had no resistance. They were not accustomed to alcohol culturally or, like, biologically. So when natives drink alcohol, they were way predisposed, way more predisposed for alcoholism, and they get super fat off of alcohol. Indians and Native Americans get really fat from alcohol just because their liver is, like, so foreign to the organs of the Native American that it just wrecks the body. Now, go ahead, finish up on that. I'm going to add something puerto rican into the mix here that I just thought about that I grew up. I learned that because we had randomized assignments or projects in fourth grade or something. In mine was Native Americans having extra wide feet, and they were debating, like, why did they have such wide feet and why didn't they fit into most normal shoes, Native Americans? And number one was because they're, like, barefoot, normally very wide toe spread. But then another thing was that so many of them were overweight from drinking that their feet got so goddamn fat they couldn't wear shoes. Wow. Yeah. I did a project on this, the Nike native shoe they made specifically for natives. So their toe spread very wide, like the Seminoles. Their toe spread was incredible. We have pictures of it because they're barefoot all day. But then they would drink so much, drinkers, their feet and ankles swell up, too. Kind of like pain pill people who do pain pills. But then also, this has to do with Atlantis. Supposedly, Atlanteans did not drink alcohol, but the aryan culture, like the cavalry that was in Eurasia, all throughout atlantean times, were big alcohol people. Sorry. That's kind of where I see the rivalry between these two sets of people. Because, for example, Dionysus, the cults of Dionysus, which are related to the drink we're describing, were more of, like, an alcoholic or psychedelic type ritual. But Apollo, the duality in that situation was like a sober type of God. So it's weird that you're saying, like, don't drink alcohol, but it seems to be tied in with one side of it, at least, and then the other side is completely, oh, Atlanteans. About how so? You have Native Americans, especially on the east coast, especially in the northeast of America, they're most susceptible to drinking. Then you have Irish, who are super susceptible to alcoholism, right? And you could say that they're actually less historically alcoholic than, like, Germans and people descended, possibly from the Scythians and the allens, because they were fermenting tons of stuff, making alcoholic drinks. Beer. Beer is one of the know aryan, indo european rude words. Whoa. So, whatever. If Atlantis was in the Atlantic or Florida, then the atlantean peoples, it seems, had less drinking, less alcohol. That's the way it seems to me here, let me catch up on some of these super chats. Fourth emperor, $5 money for some black drink. Appreciate that. That grape juice. Was it grape drink or something like that? Was it Chappelle black drink, purple drink? Fourth emperor from $2. Shout out to all the folks sipping og clear drink. Connor Osterblad. Osterblad. Look into the Kappa bowl ceremony from Fiji, the Pacific. Okay, Jimmy, can you look up the Kava bowl ceremony, please? Fourth emperor again, $2. How many cokes till you look like Mitch McConnell? Calex 279. Let's go. Thank you, Calex. And then sig sour. $5 from all of us. Appreciate it. When you're done with that, I got something that I grew up on that I didn't even make the connection until I kept seeing malt pop up on the chat. I'm going to bring it up now. Yeah, so this is something I grew up with in Puerto Rico. It's called Malta. And they literally call it. So it's literally the indian malta, I guess. And it's a lightly carbonated, non alcoholic malt beverage brewed from barley, hops and water, corn and caramel color. And I mean, there's different. Goya makes it and there's also different types from different countries that make it. But the one that I grew up on was this one here. And it's very black drink, know, dark bottle, dark drink. And this is widely drank all throughout Puerto Rico. Yeah, they love it. And I think it's absolutely disgusting because my dad married into a puerto rican family and we have it at every family event. And I'm just so tired. Really. I can't drink it. It's definitely an acquired taste. Maybe because I grew up with it, but I think it's delicious, dude, I love it. I can never imagine being thirsty and drinking it is the best way I can describe it. It's all right, dude. We know, know. I know your people love living in Puerto Rico because they don't get taxed. It's a tax haven. But I'm sure that they like to drink the Coca Cola homunculus. Yeah. Cause in the bad you've got, you potentially you've got the. I don't know if coke has any GMO products, but some of it probably is. And if that's the case, you do have some fetal cells in there. So yes, there is a little bit of homunculus. Yeah, 100%. You should make humuncola homo. Make your own. Enough people sign up, we'll do a collaboration with a soda company or something. Maybe a hamunk coffee or something. Hamunk coffee. Maybe like a limited edition brew that we can come up with some black drink. But I grew up with this sort of stuff. And it's interesting that it's India, which is indian and we're talking about the black drink of the indigenous people. Yep. And India has their own version of a drink as well. Didn't you mention something in the past I might be remembering it wrong about? After they consumed the black drink, they would go around in circles for some sort of ritual where they would, like, run around in a circle or dance in a circle. Yeah. In various ceremonies that would be used. And, yeah, they would dance sometimes afterwards. And the tamukwa were real big on first fruits, right? So the first sip, it would make sense that they would pour the first, because the first fruits, the first child, all this stuff that they would pour the first sip or as an offering or something. Yes. They would do a libation. Real quick, guys. Since we've been talking about coke so much in shem, I don't know if, based on some of the reactions I'm getting here, guys, I don't know if y'all are aware how therapeutic and medicinal coke actually is. Now, that is my second bottle. Yeah, they're the glass ones, so don't worry. It's as good as ambrosia. Right? You're going to be good to drive. They say never meet your heroes. No, I'm already at your mom's place, so I'm not going anywhere. Lucky for you, my mom doesn't like gay guys, so you'll be all right. Dude, that would mean you're jewish afterwards. That's cool. Your mom took my keys, then I took her to the keys. Bad joke. Yeah. You're so terrible, dude. So Coca Cola formula. This is something that most people don't know. Is that. Yes, the sweetener is the aspartame or whatever the fuck. Oh, it's got this. Oh, my God. Vote for Bernie. It's all this complaining. Well, people don't do enough celebrating of what is in there, what is in the coke that is actually good, even, whether this was the original recipe or not. Blah, blah, blah. Right? What you've got right here is the coke recipe. And I think there's a couple. This is Wikipedia. So, with a grain of salt. Right. But Pemberton. Coca Cola inventor John Pemberton is said to have written this recipe in his diary shortly before his death in 1888. The recipe does not specify when or how the ingredients are mixed, nor the flavoring oil quantity. Units of measure, though it implies that the merchandise seven x was mixed first. This was common in recipes at the time, as it was assumed that preparers knew the method. See, that recipe right there sounds amazing. No, and, dude, the modern recipe is a guarded secret. But we know that it largely still uses a lot of that. So natural flavoring, they can group a lot of things under. And most people say, like, oh, the beaver gland. Like, oh, you know, crushed up beetles. Asshole of a beaver. You can't do that. And I'm all for that. Remember, this is Dr. Longo you're talking to. Okay, go drink your orange juice. Right? There's nothing better than orange juice and fruit and all this stuff. But wouldn't you want to know why you drink so much of this garbage? Wouldn't you want to know why so many of the world know function at such a high? Warren Buffett, Donald Trump, all these people. Wouldn't you like to know why? If it's being done. Okay, so you've got caffeine citrate. Here's why we're comparing it to the black drink. It's not just because it's black. It's also because it's high on caffeine. Big on the caffeine. That's the two big connections right there. Caffeine, black color. Right. So citric acid, caffeine citrate, vanilla extract, lime juice. That's great for you. Vanilla extract, very good flavoring, whatever that is. But we're going to see that down here at the bottom. Sugar. Now, hey, different sources. 30 pounds different. Well, that's like a whole batch, but compared to the other ingredients, got 1oz, three ounce. Good point. Yeah. Merchandise. Seven x. Of course it'd be seven. Right? Coca leaves. Right. Flavor. Essence of the coca leaf. That's the cocaine leaf. Interesting ingredient. 2. 5 us gallons of water. That's water. That's real water. Could have been blessed, could have been sacred Florida spring water, for all we know. It's a guarded secret, after all. And some yopon. Holly? One of the biggest mysteries was this original source of caffeine, because they had to substitute it, and they're not sure what the original source might have been. The cola nut. The cola nut was the first one, but I think they gave that up pretty quickly. So it wasn't the cola nut. That's where you get Coca Cola. I think today they get it from the caffeine. And coke, I think comes from leftover coffee byproducts, like either the rinds leftover or somehow, but they get caffeine from somewhere else, and they put that in. Let's just keep reading here. Caramel. So actual caramel or caramel color to give it the color. Now the flavoring. One quart alcohol, 80 parts oil. Orange oil, 40 parts cinnamon oil, 120 parts lemon oil, 20 parts coriander oil, 40 parts nutmeg oil, 40 parts neroli oil, let stand for 24 hours. Now, this is why people were giving coke such medicinal properties originally, because it had stuff in here that any holistic blogger is going to tell you to take for any number of ailments. Orange oil, neroli oil, I think that is blossom from a sour orange, like the extract from the blossom of a sour orange. So pretty niche. Hard. Not the easiest thing to source. Not something you just slap into some goislop you want drunk at the gas station. These are some real deal healing elements. Now, I don't know how much of that is still in the modern mixture, but your best bet is getting a mexican coke, and I think you'll still have a lot of those. You said it was six ingredients. This is, like, at least 14. Well, the modern one, if you go to your coke, it'll say natural flavors. I think the natural flavors could be any group of things that are solely contributing a flavor rather than, like, a considerable measurably nutritional benefit. So natural flavors wouldn't include a lot of these, especially if they're, like, concentrated. You should look up the first day that cokers are released and do a meet up that day and make this recipe on the spot at the Miami circle. Shellia, you're going to come cater. I got you. If it's more than six months from now. Marori recipe. This is like the other alleged recipe, largely the same, except it's cinnamon, cassia, cinnamon, and lavender oil. A lot of times I'm a believer in that. I think that I can always taste the lavender and coke. Whenever I smell lavender, I'm like, that smells like coke from the tap on draft. Yeah. And then apparently it used to have glycerin in it. Hog fat. But then later to make it kosher, right? Jews and Muslims. No hog, no pig. I'll give you a fat hog. I bet you will. Jesus. There you go. Look at them. Look at them. They said, never meet your heroes because they'll disappoint you. That's what that is right there. Look at that. Don't go to Juan's house. All he drinks is fucking toilet water and beans. Fucking Puerto Ricans. Yeah, I love it. So coke recipe, some pretty interesting stuff in there. Real deal killing agents. Like I said, I don't know how much of that is in the modern coke, but there's this one comment right here. It says, coke is garbage. I agree with that. I do too. Longo is a psyop, dude. He's pushing this stuff that's not even good for you, and I'm not going to stand for that. Dude. I'm not going to let you lie to these people. We got over 700 people almost watching us. Someone said may eigth is when coke was created. Yeah, so that's the meat update. Original recipe, 15 ingredients, live in person. All right, you guys can take the show from here. Then we'll learn some real deal stuff. Yeah. Well, aren't there certain examples of the black drink being made with psilocybin mushrooms or something like that in some of these cultures? I mean, in the Yucatan and in Mexico, they were making brews from psychedelic mushrooms for sure. I'm still waiting to get explicit evidence of that in Florida recording. There are myths in some of these cultures, though, that talk about the mushrooms being sacred for those drinks. And they say that the striking of lightning on the soil caused this, like even Japan, other places around the world talk about this myth of lightning causing mushrooms to multiply. I found that completely fascinating. Well, guess what? Tampa Bay gets its name, Tampa, from the flashes of lightning that make that area. Debatably on which metrics you use. The lightning capital of the world. It's between there and Venezuela. But Tampa Bay area, central Florida is the lightning capital of the world, depending on which metrics you use. Tampa, flashes of light. And then what else is Tampa unique for? Having a type of mushroom that's not excluded. It's not restricted to reproducing in poop like a lot of mushrooms are. It can come about as a result of forest fires. So that's what makes that one unique. And they call it the philosopher's stone. Psilocyba Tampanencius. And a lot of these tribes would have had access to that. The tamukua came down just about to Tampa Bay, Jekyll island in the northeast, to Tampa Bay in the south. And the. Yeah, the drink I was talking about earlier, the Kaikion drink, which is described as like a dark purple drink. In ancient mythology, it was debated whether or not it was made with poppy seeds, cocaine, opium, something called lsa, and psilocybin mushrooms. But what I found interesting was there's a specific type of mushrooms they debated that was used for it called, like ericot or ergot, which grew on, like, wheat grains. It's a smut. Ergo. Ergot, yeah, ergo. Ergo. Apparently this mushroom grows under certain conditions, like wet conditions. But what's fascinating about it is that it's purple. So this is like a purple mushroom that grows to cause these mystery religions. So when we're talking about the mystery religions, we're talking about thousands of people who drink this drink called Kaikian on a certain festival, and they allegedly all experience. Up to 20,000 people are experiencing the same vision at the same time. That's what we're describing here with the psychedelic experience. So these people are consuming these potentially purple mushrooms, which could be related to the phoenician purple or the Han purple in some ways. Yeah. If you pull up my screen, there's a study that talks about how the striking of lightning really does make mushrooms multiply quickly. And I know you have ancient sources. This is kind of out there, but you have ancient sources talking about being able to control lightning and stuff like that. They basically needed to cultivate these mushrooms in a certain way to have these types of experiences in these temples. Interesting. And when the lightning strikes the soil, it creates this type of fossilized lightning called like fulgarite, which certain cultures around the world worshipped as a result of this. Sorry, continue. I was going to say attached to this striking of the lightning to the soil, which causes mushrooms which could be tied to this drink to multiply. You have people worshipping the fossilized lightning from those lightning strikes in that situation. Yeah. So Florida produces more vulgarites than anywhere else on earth. I have a video on this called, like, gods of lightning, Atlantis and the gods of lightning or something like that. Talks about crystals in Florida. The clamshell calcite and the lightning strike. Shut up. Hey, come here. Yeah, I held the one that your brother has at the store. Dude, that thing is wild and it's huge. But how is it able to strike precisely where that shell was or whatever that thing was? Well, thank you for describing how you handled my brother's huge fulgarite, but was big bro. This is also why the tampa. Good comment right there. Tampa Bay hockey team is the volts or the bolts. There was a fulgarite that touched down in Florida that produced a new, unknown element. Can you look this up? Lightning in a bottle. That term, too applies to fulgarites to an extent. The Tampa Bay team is called the lightning, by the way, too. They're shaped. Just called lightning. That's what I mean. Yeah. I thought they were the bolts or the volts or whatever, but Tampa Bay hockey team is the lightning. A fulgarit is like tubular too. It's almost like a churro. They're fucking trippy. Some of them are like churo shaped like a tube in the middle and very trippy. So there's this sand in central Florida that gets lightning struck all the time, and it might be because it's magnetic. This red sand, iron rich. That's like iron mountain out near Bach tower. That's in lightning alley. Lightning. That lake Wales Ridge. I think it was possible that our ancestors understood why lightning would strike in certain places, because just think about the idea of being able to be ancient person and you're worshipping this. You would have to know that it's happening. I've never seen lightning strike the soil in my lifetime. You know what I mean? You would have to know this is the area where this is going to happen in order to be able to collect it. Right. Yeah, you're absolutely right. You have to know how to find it because. Right, that's lightning ridge. Is that the Lake Wales ridge that they call lightning Ridge? Yeah, it's just iolian sand. Iolian sand, Florida. Go to the picture right there. The picture on the left there. Yeah, top left picture shows the ridge, the red sand. A lot of that is lightning alley, which I think goes from Titusville to Tampa Bay. Is there a certain time of year where the lightning is more prominent? Well, the summer. But you have two types of lightning here, and they say one of them is not real. But there's like lightning in a thunderstorm. Right? And you see the lightning, then you hear the thunder. Right. In Florida, we have what I grew up calling heat lightning. What? A lot of people here, when I grew up, everyone called heat lightning. You see a full thunderstorm with no sound, zero sound. You see this juan, right. Growing up in Florida, I personally haven't, but I don't know if I've never seen that. Are you talking about at night with the static from the clouds? Supposedly it's only at night. It's only at night, especially in the summer in Florida, where the sky will just be lighting up like almost the whole night and you won't hear a peep. Then in other instances, during the daytime, for example, you won't see anything, but you'll hear a thunder from dozens of miles away. You'll hear thunder. So they'll tell you online, I think that heat lightning is not real, that it's just too far and you can't hear the strikes. Right. That's not true because why is it that you can hear storms but not see them, but then in other instances, see storms, see lightning, but not hear it? Also, Florida has by far go on YouTube and look up Florida lightning storms or electric storms, lightning. That was in my. It's interesting because we were having a private conversation the other day about the difference between the God of thunder and the God of lightning. And it kind of sounds like what you're describing here as well. Sometimes you can see it, but you can't hear it. Good point. Silent but deadly for a reaction, bro. The hidden origin of it. Yeah, the hidden. Yep. So Florida, lightning capital of the world, depending on what metric you use. Because if you look at a certain wide area, it's Venezuela. If you measure by a very small area using a certain metric, Florida is the lightning capital of the world. Is it Brazil or Venezuela? Because I had googled that the other day, because I always told people that's Florida. Because I've heard you say it and I think it said Brazil. Lightning capital usually says Venezuela. Yeah, Venezuela. You're absolutely right. The Lake Maracaibo, the real lightning capital of the world, found in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, with 233 lightning flashes per square kilometer per year. Golly, that's a lot. So there was talking about vulgarites. Shem, there was a vulgarite that struck in Florida at the base of a tree. I think that produced a new element from scratch. So how much are you going to believe what these science guys tell us? They're all just trying to circle jerk each other and all try and get their 15 seconds of fame. But there's a little something to this, because fulgaroids are really strange. Happen in Florida all the time. This hitting, I think, someone's backyard, and they found a new element. Yeah, there you go. Perfect. Jimmy, tell me your fulgarite. One of those. If you look at the guy holding the. That guy is an eastern european. Yeah, that one. If you click on that. Why does it matter where he's from, bro? Because he's not a Floridian. He's not like, oh, I'm from want. He might be from Florida. This is my memory from, like, a year ago. But I'm saying he's not like a Floridian. Saying, oh, we want to be the light, like me. Of course I want us to be the lightning capital of the world, but this guy might not be as biased. This is the professor. Keep going down. Yeah, I think he says Florida's lightning capital. Matthew Pasich. Yeah, I put him in my video. He says Florida is lightning capital of the world in one of his. You should go out and grab some of this fulgarite and bring it to show us, because that'd be sweet. We have some at the store. My brother was at the store. He could have showed us. He has the shell that's a full grade. The shell that he showed me. Or is that something else? Yeah, we might have had clamshell calcite, too. So those are the two main types of crystals from Florida. He showed me some crazy looking bowl or something. Yeah. So Matthew Pasich, who is a geoscientist with USF, declared in April 11, 2023, Florida is the lightning capital of the world. Boom. Not me saying it. Geoscientist with USF saying it. So suck my balls. Swan cats do have that natural electricity about them there. So maybe there's a connection, right? This dude just scooped it out of his litter box. And check out this new element, guys. It's a good. Funny. Speaking of Coca Cola, right? Got the Bach saga. The fuck do those have to do with each other? Because it's got the word cock in it, and the Bach saga is all about cock. I don't know, man. Come on, dude. The jackpot. So what's this new element? Can we grind it up and do stuff with it? Is it the philosopher's stone? Did they say anything else? I don't know. It's still in testing. We're seeing how your mom reacts to it. The Smithsonian has it. We lost it. Can you share my screen real quick? No. Yeah, we're good. People want to see that. So this is an engraving from the temple of Lucius, which is where the Kaikihan drink was consumed that we were talking about earlier. This is the second most important temple in greek history, compared with the Vatican. But anyways, this is Demeter and Persephone, and they're holding a mushroom in this relief that was within the temple. So it just gives more evidence that this drink did have some hallucinogenic characteristics and was based on maybe, like, psilocybin mushrooms or something of the sort. What's it called again? Kai. Kaikion. Kukion. Sometimes it's called kukian. Kaikion. Eon. Kike. Like kike. Yeah, exactly. Right? One word. There is a connection with the semitic people, but, yeah, let's see. Where else is there to go with this? The last thing was the ergo, or ergot mushrooms you're talking about. It's said to be responsible for that dancing plague that happened in the medieval times. You know what I'm talking about? Because it infected the cereal grains or the grain of Demeter, basically, yes. And it's hard to eradicate from a region once it's infected. So it's just impressive that the people at the temple that this temple we're describing with Demeter and Elusius, they would have to understand how to extract certain things from it to make this drink. So it's very advanced. Thank you for that. John Levi. John Levi. I missed him. I don't know. That's all right. Which tribe did he belong to? Ergot was also the stuff that they blamed the Salem witch trials on. I believe it was where they believe that they were. It was it ergot right where everyone went insane or something like on the crops. Let's go through this slideshow. Let me cross everything off so we don't forget to talk about anything. This is yopon, green on the bush, yopan holly. This is the tamukua taking their morning know ritual communal black drink casino. In shells too, right? In shells. They drank it out of a shell. There's Trump talking about coke. But here is an actual Florida shell that would be used for black drink. Look at how precisely that's carved with the spider motif. Beautiful. Pretty crazy. That's some yopon right there in the other shell. But look at that. This could point to Scorpio, the 8th sign of the zodiac, the arachnid or the scorpion being a big time psychedelic trip with death coming back from the other side, seeing the threshold between worlds. This is spider is Big into that. The weaving together of fate and time. And number one thing people say when they take a big dose of something is time stood still. Or I saw how time worked or time ceased to exist and stuff like that. Like the dream state. Time is the most malleable aspect of the whole thing. DOn'T masons worship a spider God of some sorts? Like spider man is a thing. And the colors on spiderman, they have a spider on this. So I'm thinking maybe they're seeing a spider on the other side. It's got a cross on it. Just interesting also being matrilineal, which many Hebrew peoples were, and Native Americans, where the spiders being representative of matriarchy. Because most spiders, if I'm not mistaken, the female eats, consumes the man after she's done using him for his reproductive juices and then just either feeds on the corpse herself or allows her children to feed on their father's corpse. The first thing they eat when they hatch is their dead father. Ties into Greek mythology with the overthrowing of each patriarch because every time they collaborated with the mother goddess to make that happen. And in TEYwa TiWakan metriC, some south american cultures, they had the spider mother goddess. Wow. And it would make. Also, I did this podcast one time where we always talk about the seven chakras, the seven days of the week, the seven colors of the rainbow, like all these different sevens. And it was MarIO from SYmBolic studies where he was talking about that. Perhaps it's the eight. Doesn't a spider have eight legs? And he was talking about this hidden 8th chakra that that was the actual what you wanted to achieve to move on to the next level. So instead of the seven, it might actually be the eight. Right, the 88. Or takes you to the other dimension or time travel. The eight sideways is infinity. Yeah, exactly. I'm not really into numbers, but when you turn the 890 degrees, you have the symbol for Infinity. Yeah, exactly. Well, that's tying back into Scorpio. Scorpio is the death and rebirth. It's where we get the word natal auto, fellatio, naughty, natal nativity. This is Scorpio being birth, death, rebirth, and depending on who you ask, shamanic, psychedelic experiences, penetrating the underworld, the world of the dead, and things like that. Love the way you said penetrating there, dude. Nice, John. Sup? Thank you for the $5. This will go towards Juan's impending prostate surgery. Prostate cancer surgery. No. Thanks for the support. Don't eat any black drink around these parts, if you catch what I'm saying. Oh, God. It was used as an aphrodisiac. So my last question would be, was there any festivals involving fornication on a massive scale with these black drinks at any point in history? Or was it just. Yeah, I have not seen. Now hang on, shem, hands where we can see. Let's. I don't know if. I haven't seen anything about orgies like orgiastic rites in Florida or the southeast United States. I do know that they had a version of a temple priestess, like a temple prostitute, where adolescent men, like men growing up, whether it was their first experience or a rite of passage or whatever. You see this in places like Europe, too. Well, there's also ancient. There's like, certain cultures in ancient history that their daughters would go to the temple of Aphrodite, and basically the first person who would offer money to them, they would do it with. Yeah, and a lot of phoenician, jewish, ancient israelite, canaanite rites of passage were like that, where they would send their daughters to the temples. This was more. I don't know if it was daughters or if a family was doing it, but you had, like, a prostitute class that was not seen as, like, the low of society. They weren't beggars on corners. They weren't struggling to keep themselves fed. They were in the community, but they were essentially like, temple priestesses who would, like. You're saying this is Native Americans I'm talking about, who would represent, invoke, embody the great feminine or Venus or the moon or all this stuff, and they would essentially be a prostitute for whoever came to their hut and would. I don't know if they would take anything during that process. But you bring up a good point with the aphrodisiac being that aphrodite. Hang on, Shan, I'm sorry. Aphrodite and Venus were born in a shell, and shellfish shells especially, are known as aphrodisiacs for that reason. Yeshem claims are disgusting, first of all. But second of all, I'm just curious, what's the emphasis for the aphrodisiac? Why is it such an. So, like, that's the first thing they learned about these people when they got here and they wanted to report it back? Or did they witness rituals and that's why they observed this, because it seems like there is some sort of tie to orgies or something that would cause these spanish explorers to have the implications that there's an aphrodisiac related with this. Right? Yeah. I mean, there's some good links. Like, I've been theorizing about all the shell piles. You have burial mounds, which are made of, like, earth, but then you have shell piles all up and down the east coast and elsewhere in the world. In Florida, they're huge, and they're very common. They were just shucking piles. Like, if you ever eat a bag of pistachios and you're like, holy shit. There's a foot tall mound of pistachio shells left. The bag was this big, but the mound of shells is, like, this big. That was something they were running into in Florida, and they would pile up their shells into mounds. Midnights, just like the earthworks. And they would let them walk all over you. Sham. If I had more to say, I'd say it. I have the least amount of shit to say. I'm just some random ass dude. Appreciate everyone, though. Just some random jew. Gmail. Awesome. Dude, I got to be up early for a flight in the morning at 530. For what? First class? No, he's the dude holding the carrots that pulls the. Directs the plane. Yeah, I'm telling him where to go. Dude, he's the guy that chucks your laptop across the tarmac. Can I read one more thing before we get off of here, please do I share my screen? So if you want to bring that up real quick. We're talking about the aphrodisiac and the potential of orgies and stuff like that. So this is a book talking about the allusian mysteries. So I'll just read this quick passage. The allusian mysteries were the most celebrated and typical of all the Greeks rights, and they came very early to embody together with the original mysteries of Demeter and Persephone, those of Dionysus, the greek counterpart of Bacchus, the wine God. Basically this. I'm not going to read it all because I realize that it probably will be longer than that, but it just says that they had orgies and stuff like that. Actually, it says right here. Whoa, dude. Yeah, it's unbelievable. But I'm just so sick, dude. There's an association between these people and orgies. I mean, look, they had, like, sex and stuff. What? Well, think about Robert Sephard. He's always talking about not coming and stuff like that. Not coming to climax. So there's like a debate between these two different people or something. Left hand path or right hand path. You either hold it in or you just blast it all over everything. Enough cheesecake factory. You'll be oozing out under the table, you know what I mean? The person that films all this, whatever they're putting in that cheesecake, man, my Tesla has to drive me home every time I go to that place. Oh, man. What's this person complaining about? Go clip your toenails or whatever it is that longo says. Awesome. All right, boys, let's wrap it up then. Oh, yeah, one last thing is the interesting in that perm festival we're talking about a little bit earlier, they would drink the certain wine drink and they would wear masks. It kind of relates to the venetian carnival festival that took place among the elites in the 17th, 18th century. They would go there and have these massive orgies and wear masks. Kind of like in that Stanley Kubrick movie. Just another weird connection with this drink and these mystery cults. Right? Very quick. Just like Longo. Very quick. Don't call him. I can't make a joke. Yeah, right. No cue cards. Juan, what's wrong? I'm sorry, dude. That's okay. Let you off the hook. Let's see. Here's some dudes pouring one out for their bro. Probably Nelson Mandela or something. Yopon Poe went out for the boys. That looks like piss. That one. One more thing we forgot to mention. Coca Cola bought Columbia Pictures in 1982. Now I don't think they own them anymore, but that's pretty trippy. Wow. Yeah. I had no idea about that. So aside from that, what is the product placement? The light bringer, the torch. Mm hmm. I think that's all we got. Just some more pictures of trump drinking coke. And I'm sure the bottle looks extra big because he's got tiny hands. Right. So the bottle probably looks extra big in his hands. His hands are just fine. Juan, does DeSantis have small hands, too? What's with these guys? In small hands, it's just you wear a suit, your hands look small, typically. But Trump does have small hands. For someone who's six three, he does have tiny hands. Those are small hands. But also, hey, his hands are small, but his shoulders are perfectly large and strong enough to carry this country. All of your problems on. All of my problems. Weak hands, strong shoulders. Yeah. So I think that covers most of it, guys. Yeah, this is a good one. I'm glad I gave you the idea. You're welcome. And we'll do it again soon. What's next? I'll see you Monday. We're going to do that show on Monday, which is going to be interesting. We're going to be talking to guys. Kent Hoven. We're going to be talking to Kent Hoven on the fifth, Monday, the fifth, February the fifth at 01:00 p. m. . I believe. Stay tuned for that. Sponsored by G fuel. Ken Hoven, creationist Genesis scholar of Genesis teaches about creationism versus evolution. Dinosaurs, how they fit into the Bible, dragons, giants, elongated skulls, Noah's flood, all the good stuff. I cut my teeth on a lot of, you know, getting into conspiracy theories and the truth. He's more christian Christianity and all this stuff. He's a controversial know. So we're going to be meeting him for the first time. Never talked to him, but there are some YouTube channels that are based. A lot of their work is based on him. He's an interesting, he's. And he's in not, I wasn't just choosing any rabbit out of the hat. He's in Florida. He's a Florida guy. So we're going to be talking to Ken, destroying, hopefully destroying some evolution know, debunking Professor Dave's and the like. But who is shem, by the way? Shem is Professor Dave in his nighttime garbage. I'm funded by the government, as you can tell by the way I look and where I'm living. You think he's wearing a yamaka under that hat, dude, like in the back that I can't take it off because this is a wig. I love it. I'm excited for that. Should be a good one. See you guys. I'm probably going to end up doing a video on the black drink part. Black drink. Just taking the best parts and stitching together well thought out, linear, kind of boiled down version of what we discussed. But yeah, that's it. Everyone have a good night. Check out Juan. Go check out Shem tartarian truth, the one on one podcast, the chosen Juan and old Florida, you know, big pimping the OG. That's me. So make sure to drink your Coca Cola, book a flight down to cheers, fat City, Mexico, and yeah, thanks for tuning in. Black drink. We talked about it all. All right, have a good night. Good night. Good night, guys. Peace out. Peace. .