Session 24 January 2026

Thank you for the session. Lots of very interesting "inside information" to think about.

I was totally wrong about the ICE agent. I was convinced that he came into that confrontation already determined to shoot at the smallest justification when in fact it was the woman's body language and facial expression that communicated to him her intention to harm him. I Think he made a mistake in standing in front of the car and maybe overreacting but his conduct wasn't at all the way I perceived it initially.
 
Thank you for the session !



Wait, but what about fiction books (including romantic novels) and movies then? They are not actually real too.

A great story surely invests you emotionally and in this way enriches you somewhat, letting you live out a situation/life that you would never experience in real life. Maybe even helping you learn some lessons.
Getting a bit sad when you favourite character dies or something IS human, right? Shouldn't be that bad even if your emotions got sucked into a black hole, I guess.

Maybe what is needed is as always balance i.e not to get too involved in as not to disturb or take your true focus away from your real life, IMO.
In addition to the fact that the basis is human and therefore the connection would be made with the writer's real emotions, many romantic novels, like other books and materials, could have a “channeled” part that interacts with the author's mind and imagination, and this channeled part would be linked to real people who lived those stories.

Some video games and other products may fulfill the above due to the human factor behind them, but others probably do not, and the story, although entertaining, is simple or created with little intention beyond fulfilling a necessary requirement for the video game to be developed. In any case, playing for the sake of playing, which is what most people do and what many video games focus on, should not have many benefits on a deeper level, and that may be the important factor in the case of video games if Whitecoast's conjecture is partly true.

Thanks for the session!
 
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Thank you for this most recent session!

(Niall) It may be something you've come across before.

(L) Or it may be that nobody else has ever put it together.

(Chu) Is it something that Laura has to create?

A: Yes

From my previous experience as a software engineer, often time some old code kind of works but is not optimal and using the original code and just patching it would not work out. Oftentimes, the optimal solution is a re-write.

I recall watching some cartoon about a mad scientist not being dissuaded after their 600+ attempt and being asked why they were so cheery with so many failures. The mad scientist replied, "Well, each failure is just data for how _not_ to do the thing."

With my experience with old code, you have an example of "how not to do it".
 
Q: (luc) I had some interesting results creating an orchestral piece based on my own melody, chords, etc. with AI music.

Would that technology be worth it for people to experiment with, with the goal of creating some more uplifting or "STO energy" sort of music?

A: No

Q: (luc) My impression is that instrumental music might work, and that human input is crucial (no shortcuts), and that collaboration might be worth exploring. Any comments, warnings or pointers on that?

A: Electronic music is antihuman.
I’m thinking about how house music and trance music effect all those people in these huge venues in a bad way. Also probably targeted by design.

I guess it's no coincidence that at trans and techno concerts the beverage that sells the best is mineral water. Most attendees are on chemical substances that make alcohol redundant. I used to wonder why this kind of music attracts drug consumption so much when people go to other types of musical evens and don't need to do that. At least not to such a huge extent. Given the info in this session I now wonder if there's something about electronic music that influences this kind of behaviour. Or if electronic music mixed with drugs does something to the body that feels particularly good in the moment, making people want to do that again.
 
thanks for a great session! The music talk was really interesting. As a musician myself who enjoys both electronic and acoustic music, this made me think... Well, we know how C's feel about machines and computers, but it's still a bit vague. What music is good and what is not. String instruments and flutes and drums etc are OK, but at what point does it change? Are pipe organs still acceptable, or are they too advanced? Electric guitar? What about using a real voice as a base, but modulating it with a computer..? Sometimes when I play synthetizer, or some other electric instrument I get the same flow feeling as playing with guitar. That the music just flows through me. U are feeling the beat, and your body just moves almost automatically to press the keys. Is that also anti-human? Is the tone of the instrument really that important?

As a young buy I was fascinated with old nintendo and chiptune music. They use only 3 different waveforms to produce sound. Sine wave, triangle wave and the simplest waveform that can be produced which is square wave. Square is just symmetrical + and - alternating, so it doesn't get simpler than that. I always though that that music was "pure", because of how simple and minimal waveforms they used, but, but... maybe it is in deed anti-human just because of how perfectly unnatural those simple waveforms are...

Lots of food for thought, as always!
 
Wait, but what about fiction books (including romantic novels) and movies then? They are not actually real too.
The important point is that an human wrote it. So the energy flow human to human. But yeah, over putting emotional in it is certainly not good too.

I guess it's no coincidence that at trans and techno concerts the beverage that sells the best is mineral water. Most attendees are on chemical substances that make alcohol redundant. I used to wonder why this kind of music attracts drug consumption so much when people go to other types of musical evens and don't need to do that. At least not to such a huge extent. Given the info in this session I now wonder if there's something about electronic music that influences this kind of behaviour. Or if electronic music mixed with drugs does something to the body that feels particularly good in the moment, making people want to do that again.
Perhaps at the start but I think it's more the induced possession which make people want to do that again. I think entities behind the possession really know how to manipulated the brain once they have a door and so to have their lunch.
 
Thanks for the session.

(Joe) We're talking about stringed instruments played on the radio or... I mean, can it be digitized in a sense? If it's like digital music, essentially, it's okay, right?

(Chu) Like MP3s.

(Joe) If it's played on a natural instrument.

A: Yes

Q: (Joe) The main point is that it should be music that is produced on real instruments by humans, that's it.

A: Yes

Just to enrich the discussion. MP3 is a compression format. It takes the audio and compresses it by removing frequencies. Low frequencies are not audible to humans, meaning they are masked by other sounds in the recording, so MP3, by design, will remove those sounds that humans cannot perceive (psychoacoustics).

Ideally, when listening to digitally stored music, you should use a lossless format such as FLAC. If the aim is to listen to music produced by non-electronic instruments, it is best to be able to hear all frequencies, including ambient frequencies and those that are not entirely perceptible to the human ear.

Q: (Niall) Are forest fires in Argentina being started deliberately?

A: Yes

Q: (Niall) If yes, are "Israeli tourists" behind them as locals suspect?

A: Yes. Not tourists though.

Here in Argentina, we know they are Israeli soldiers.
 
As a young buy I was fascinated with old nintendo and chiptune music. They use only 3 different waveforms to produce sound. Sine wave, triangle wave and the simplest waveform that can be produced which is square wave. Square is just symmetrical + and - alternating, so it doesn't get simpler than that. I always though that that music was "pure", because of how simple and minimal waveforms they used, but, but... maybe it is in deed anti-human just because of how perfectly unnatural those simple waveforms are...
Yeah and I think there's different problems.

With chiptune music made of sine wave, triangle wave and square wave, as you said, it's not natural music patterns at all and so I guess it's very agressive for the cells.

Before digitalisation, there was another kind of instruments, trying to approximate instruments with a lot of electronic circuits. Kind of chiptune music but much more refined. Patterns are unnatural too...

Now there's the AI music and it's another problem. You connect perhaps a little bit with the original instrument but mainly with... the AI black hole.

I guess in natural instruments music, we have the golden ratio everywhere in the produced patterns. Would be interesting to know if studies have been carried out in this direction. If it's the cas it would be a mean to discriminate good and bad music.
 
I searched for the meaning of the name "Koelia" (of Cassiopaea) and asked Deep Seek for references.
AI came up with the Ancient Greek word "κοιλία, koilia" as a transliteration of Koelia. I don't know if this then is relevant? But interestingly it then pointed to several mentions of "koilia" in the New Testament used for the inner center of a person's emotional and spiritual life, including John, Philippians and Corinthians. So I thought maybe others can comment on the relevance of this AI interpretation.

"Summary: The word κοιλία maintained a consistent semantic range from Classical Greek through the New Testament, moving between literal anatomical reference (belly, womb) and figurative use for the inner center of a person's emotional and spiritual life."

Short Answer:
"Koelia" could be a transliteration (writing a word from one alphabet into another) of the Ancient Greek word κοιλία (koilia). Its core meaning is "cavity," "hollow space," or "belly." In medicine and biology, it is the root for terms related to body cavities, most notably the "coelom" (the main body cavity in animals).

Detailed Explanation:
  1. The Word Itself: κοιλία (koilia)
    • Pronunciation: koy-LEE-ah
    • Core Meaning: "Hollow," "cavity," "the belly," "the abdomen." It derives from the Greek adjective koilos (κοῖλος), meaning "hollow."
    • Usage in Ancient Texts: It was used literally to refer to the belly, womb, or stomach (the hollow internal organs). For example, in the New Testament, koilia is used for "womb" and "heart" as the seat of emotions.
  2. Its Legacy in Scientific Terminology:
    The Greek koiliais the direct root for many modern scientific terms via the combining form "coelo-" or "coel-".
    • Coelom (pronounced SEE-lum): The fundamental, fluid-filled body cavity found in most multicellular animals, lined with mesoderm tissue. It is a key anatomical feature for classifying animal groups (coelomates, acoelomates).
    • Coelenterata (an older term for Cnidaria): Referring to animals like jellyfish with a "hollow gut."
    • Coelacanth: The famous "living fossil" fish. Its name means "hollow spine," from koilos (hollow) + akantha (spine).

The usage of κοιλία (koilia) in Ancient Greek texts, with specific references.

Short Answer:
The Ancient Greek word κοιλία (koilia) is used extensively in texts from Homer to the New Testament. Its core meaning of "cavity" or "hollow" is applied to three primary contexts:
1) the physical belly/stomach (for eating or as the location of the intestines)
2) the womb
3) figuratively as the inner self, the seat of emotions, thought, and compassion.
The New Testament usage heavily emphasizes the latter two meanings.

Usage in Ancient Greek Literature (Classical and Helenistic):
The term appears from the earliest Greek literature onward, consistently referring to body cavities.
  • Homer, Odyssey(c. 8th century BCE):
    • Reference: Odyssey 9.296. After blinding Polyphemus, Odysseus and his men hide under the Cyclops's sheep. The text describes the men clinging to the sheep's underbellies: "...ἐνὶ κοιλίῃσι (eni koilīēsi)..." meaning "in/under the bellies" of the rams. Here, κοιλία refers to the abdominal cavity of the animal.
  • Hippocratic Corpus (Medical Texts, c. 5th-4th century BCE):
    • The physicians used κοιλία clinically to mean the abdominal cavity and its contents (stomach, intestines). For example, in Aphorisms (Section VII.1), it discusses diseases "περὶ κοιλίην (peri koiliēn)"—"concerning the belly." This is its standard anatomical meaning.

Specific examples on the New Testament
The New Testament continues the Septuagint's usage, favoring the metaphorical and womb-related meanings.

A. Koilia as "Womb":
This is one of the most common uses, linking birth, prophecy, and blessing.
  • Luke 1:41: When Elizabeth meets Mary, "ἐσκίρτησεν τὸ βρέφος ἐν τῇ κοιλίᾳ αὐτῆς (eskirtēsen to brephos en tē koilia autēs)" — "the baby leaped in her womb." (Referring to John the Baptist in Elizabeth's womb).

  • John 3:4: Nicodemus asks Jesus, "μὴ δύναται εἰς τὴν κοιλίαν τῆς μητρὸς αὐτοῦ δεύτερον εἰσελθεῖν καὶ γεννηθῆναι;" — "Can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born?"
  • Matthew 19:12: Jesus mentions those "εἰς τὴν κοιλίαν ἐκ γενετῆς (ek koilias ek genetēs)" — "from the womb from birth."
B. Koilia as the "Inner Self"/"Heart" (Seat of Emotions & Thought):
This figurative use treats the κοιλία as the center of feeling, compassion, and sometimes spiritual insight.

  • John 7:38: Jesus says, "ὁ πιστεύων εἰς ἐμέ... ποταμοὶ ἐκ τῆς κοιλίας αὐτοῦ ῥεύσουσιν ὕδατος ζῶντος" — "He who believes in me... out of his koilia (heart/inner being) will flow rivers of living water." Here, it is the source of spiritual life.

  • Philippians 3:19: Paul criticizes those "ὧν ὁ θεὸς ἡ κοιλία (hōn ho theos hē koilia)" — "whose god is their belly." This has a double meaning: literal gluttony and the enslavement to base physical desires.

  • 2 Corinthians 4:15 (context): Paul speaks of grace extending to more people, so that "ἡ εὐχαριστία περισσεύσῃ εἰς τὴν δόξαν τοῦ θεοῦ" through the thanksgiving of many. While koilia is not in this exact verse, the concept of gratitude flowing from the inner self is connected to the Johannine usage above. A clearer "seat of emotion" example is found in related vocabulary like σπλάγχνα (splangchna - bowels/compassion), but koilia carries a similar conceptual weight as the container of these depths.
C. Koilia as the Physical "Stomach/Belly":
  • 1 Corinthians 6:13: "τὴν δὲ κοιλίαν τοῖς βρώμασιν (tēn de koilian tois brōmasin)" — "The belly for food." Paul is making a physical argument: the stomach is made to digest food, but both it and food are temporal. This is the straightforward anatomical use.

Summary: The word κοιλία maintained a consistent semantic range from Classical Greek through the New Testament, moving between literal anatomical reference (belly, womb) and profound figurative use for the inner center of a person's emotional and spiritual life.
 
Q: (Joe) In a 2013 session it was said in reference to meteorites hitting Earth, "In the realm from which some of these things are manifested or, better, 'directed', information is king". Can it be inferred from that, that historical, meteorite-comet-induced cataclysms of whatever size were deliberately produced from another realm?

A: Some.

Q: (Joe) If so, for what purpose?

A: Reset.
Why is it needed though? Why were the dinosaurs needed?

Q: (Mrs. Peel) Was the woman who was recently shot in Minneapolis planning harm to the ICE agent with her vehicle, or was she just trying to get away?

A: Planning minor harm and getting away with it.

Q: (Mrs. Peel) Did he actually think he was in danger?

A: Yes

Q: (L) Why was that?

A: From the look on her face at the instant.
Right-wing fanatics were posting her pictures on which she actually looked like Gollum (crazy, fanatical). So I guess it could be that case. She could be a bit maniacal or borderline of some sort. But it doesn't change the fact she got murdered and the current administration supports it (even though they have to officially support their services to not create even more fuss, like allowing riots, etc.)

People are getting depressed, anxiety, committing suicide, their marriages are falling apart. But they're using it for that emotional engagement, whereas some people, like you and a lot of us, just use it like a search engine or just to collate data, without very much emotional engagement. So it would be the same thing with videos and even music. Like, if the video, if you're engaging with an AI creation and feeding emotion into it, that emotion isn't going anywhere because it's not real. It's not going to a real person. It's not even going to, like, a real soul-sucking alien or something. It's going into this digital black hole where there's nothing there. So it's basically feeding your emotions into the abyss. And I guess that then can be picked up by anything. But I think that's the important part. It is the emotional engagement.
That is really well said.
Moreover, people are incredibly fascinated by AI. They feel like creators and artists. As usual, they prefer to generate and copy rather than think. Considering the progress made so far, unless computational power (and the number of willing users) halts this at its current stage, degrades it, or monetizes it, we will see a surge of AI creators. Although many people are resistant to this.

I made Grok go out and find out for me which one of the elements of that timeline was based on an actual observation, or a computer simulation.
Grok has its moments, just like GPT, but sometimes it stumbles, overlooks, and misleads, as if stuck on an earlier version.
I wonder if Google was downgraded accidentally or intentionally (e.g., destroyed from within and missed the preparation stage). Before, we would have been using Google; now it's pointless, so we're forced to use AI, which is essentially a faster and more multi-layered search engine. But that doesn't change the fact that it's easy to slip up - especially when it seems plausible, logical, and coherent.

(Brewer) Did Apollo's missions 12 through 17 happen as described?

A: Close.

Q: (Brewer) What is meant by "altered reality" on the moon?

(L) Who said there was an altered reality on the moon?

(Joe & Gaby) In the last session.

A: Heavy 4D vibrations.

Q: (Brewer) Is it a "high strangeness" type?

A: Yes

Q: (Joe) Is that a permanent status on the moon?

A: No

Q: (Brewer) Is there altered perception also?

A: Yes

Q: (Brewer) What percentage of space imagery and video is faked?

A: 30.

Q: (L) 30 percent.

(Brewer) Did NASA know of "aliens" and other high strangeness before the missions?

A: Yes
Thanks for asking this. As I recall, NASA held a spurious press conference last year or so, claiming they hadn't seen or known anything. It was a complete sham. And if they were having such a press conference, it meant the situation had escalated enough to force them to do so. Why? I don't know, but for a moment, the topic became relevant.

(Beau) Internet theories claim some celebrity suicides were actually murders to cover up a global sex-trafficking ring. One of those theories holds that 3 celebrities – chef Anthony Bourdain and musicians Chester Bennington and Chris Cornell – were all killed for working together to expose a child sex-trafficking ring within Hollywood. The official story is they all committed suicide the same way: hanging themselves from a doorknob. Did they all die by suicide?

A: No

Q: (Joe) Did any of them die by suicide?

A: No

Q: (Beau) If no, were they killed to cover up a global child sex-trafficking ring?

A: Yes

Q: (Beau) Is there any significance to doorknob-hanging as the supposed cause of death? Former CIA officer Robert David Steele claims the following symbolism: “Hung on doorknobs… means choked for speaking out against the cabal.”

A: Close.

Q: (Beau) Actress Anne Heche allegedly drove her car at an extremely high speed into a house and was killed. She had also worked on a movie about sex trafficking that was rumored to be about Jeffrey Epstein. Did she actually die the way it was reported?

A: No

Q: (L) I'm sure most of you have seen that video where she was supposedly on a stretcher, and then she sat up.

(Joe) What was the deal with that? What was going on there?

A: She wasn't dead!
Holy f-. That's really news.
The video of her going to the fake ambulance is probably the creepiest thing I have ever seen. And the quality of the killed people. They are capable of anything.

It was a good session.
At the beginning of the year, I read that 2025 numerologically signified the closing of a certain phase, and 2026 was a new beginning. Maybe there's something to it - the last time I felt similar was in 2005...
 
Thank you for the great session. Among other things, the parts about AI were really clarifying for me. Some of the parts on music too.

(Approaching Infinity) Well, one comment on electric pianos and some synthesizers in general. The way some of them work is that they actually take... Like for the violin, for instance, there are synthesizers that record a person playing a violin and they use that recording as the sound... It's like a sample for the keyboard. So when you're playing the keyboard, you're actually hearing a recording of an actual violin.

Actually, it's just called a Sampler. You record a sound, literally any sound, and assign that sound (a sample) to a key on a keyboard. When you hit that key, it plays. You can map that sound to an entire keyboard and that sound will play higher or lower according to the key pressed, though using this technique distorts the sound (there's a way around this). A fun illustration of this is found in Ferris Beuller's Day Off (E-MU Emulator II at a whopping $7,995 US for the base model in 1984 ($24,773 today)).

There are many hardware samplers out there, popular with the dj crowd. You can buy software samplers and some DAWs have them already built in like Logic X, although it's getting long in the tooth now.

You can also by "sample packs". There are TONNES of them out there. These are just prerecorded sounds that are turned into samples that you can add to any DAW. You have to be careful what you buy though because a lot of the sounds are computer generated not human generated.
 
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