He says the cosmos is interconnected and has fail-safe systems, including earth rebellion and flood-like resets, so hell can never finally triumph.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Flood
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...probably had civilizations before this that were destroyed in the Great Flood, or what was technically called the geomagnetic excursion. The magnetic pole excursion...."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...probably had civilizations before this that were destroyed in the Great Flood, or what was technically called the geomagnetic excursion. The magnetic pole excursion...."
Key Notes
The flood survivor's immortality is presented as a one-off divine compensation after the gods regretted trying to destroy humanity; Gilgamesh fails the sleep test and cannot repeat it.
Jiang says earlier civilizations were probably destroyed by flood or geomagnetic-excursion cycles and that the pyramids prove advanced capacities unlike our own.
Timestamped Evidence
"...probably had civilizations before this that were destroyed in the Great Flood, or what was technically called the geomagnetic excursion. The magnetic pole excursion...."
"...of vibrational energy. And this leads to things like the great flood, which resets the world and lets humanity renew itself, okay? So there..."
"...to him he was made immortal because he survived the great flood. The gods created humans, but the humans became too loud for the..."
"And this is the basis of the story of the Norse flood in the Bible. After the flood receded, this man came down and..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
The title promises Iran war prediction, but the interview's real shape is stranger.
A source-grounded reading of Jiang's attack on the scientific worldview: Big Bang, evolution, neuroscience, school, and transhumanism become parts of one material story that forgets divinity, fears death, and lets power reinvent reality.
Mesopotamia turns geography into mythology: where Egypt imagines divine generosity and pyramidal immortality, the land between two uncooperative rivers learns struggle, creative destruction, and the more fragile immortality of being remembered by the people...
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