@Alex
As far as what you've posted on YouTube, the interview you did with Jason that was released on February 21, 2023 has almost 4K views. It should surpass the Kastrup interview in views when it hits the 5 month mark (Kastrup at 5K views) and a good shot to blow past the Dean Radin interview just aver a year ago (currently at 7.2K views). Great comments too in the Jorjani YouTube. Clearly the kind of thinkers that make great conversation possible. Wish they'd come to the Skeptiko Forum... I'll post that.
I was blown away that Alex got Jason on Skeptiko finally. Then they do this even more explosive discussion about ET, zero point energy, & Mars, among other things.
You may know about the strange change that results when astronauts travel to the Moon. Their 24 hour Earth rhythm switches to a Mars pattern, which to me suggests that Earthlings really are transplanted Martians. Of course, of even greater impact is the idea that the Moon, which IMO, is an artificial satellite placed in orbit by someone, can now be named as a Martian contribution to greater weather stability.
Briefly, the Moon rang like a bell in at least two seismic tests using lunar landers that were crashed at high speeds by NASA. The other detail that is easily checked is the shallow, fairly consistent depth of craters on the lunar surface, which IMO, leads to the conclusion that a very durable shell is covered by regolith.
Finally, there was a report by Live Science about China discovering glass spherules containing water, which may lead to billion of tons of it stored on the Moon's surface. I found the "explanation" for how the beads were formed naturally incredibly ridiculous. I think a much more understandable & less fantastic idea is that ETs put the spherules there for possibly future use. Water is useful in so many ways that having a huge supply of it on the Moon makes sense, especially since the first Apollo mission to land on the Moon reported ET spacecraft observing their activities from a distance on the surface. Since the Moon is hollow, this also nixes any clever mumbo jumbo about volcanic activity creating glass beads containing water.
https://www.livescience.com/china-d...-4848-94CD-8629A6958491&utm_source=SmartBrief
I'm actually a bit surprised that the glass spherules story was even allowed to be published. Maybe the gov't still believes the average American will swallow whole anything that is described as a "scientific explanation" & would never think beyond that point. It's truly insulting to think we're probably viewed that way, but look at the other things thrown at us, like the "magic bullet" & JFK's lone shooter assassination.