Now You See Man Now You Don't (5/15/25)

The Secret Teachings - A podcast by Ryan Gable

Another recent scientific report documents how the Antarctic Ice Sheet, which we have been propagandized to zealously believe is one of the major players in rising sea levels, has actually gained, not lost, ice in the previous decade or so. The study found that, “Between 2002 and 2010, the AIS lost mass at a rate of about 73.79 Gt/year, a figure that doubled to 142.06 Gt/year during the 2011 to 2020 period.” These finding obviously challenge the “narrative of consistent mass loss in the region.” The same is actually true for the Australia coral reef too.This is one of many stories that in fact not just challenges the repeated narrative(s), but essentially destroys them. With more ice comes more reflection of sunlight, something universities, billionaires, and even governments have finally admitted to doing, or wanting to do, themselves. As the official narrative around melting ice likewise melts away, we are at a turning point where the introduction of geoenginering programs - which have been around for decades - will likely be given credit for reversing the melting of the various icy regions of earth. At the very least, they’ll be given credit for reversing climate change. But it’s not CC that has been reversed; instead, it’s the narrative. The same narrative is changing around overpopulation, too, and not just because people are figuring out there is a difference between the overcrowding of cities and overpopulation of the planet. A recent report suggests that we may have underestimated the number of humans on the planet. This is especially coincidental considering birth rates are falling globally and population is on the verge of a steep drop off. Likewise, the narrative about starvation and lack of available food, while certainly true for some very specific regions of the planet, is rapidly changing as well. For example, the U.S. wastes about 40% of its entire food supply due due to expiration date confusion or the simple wasting of produce - about 60 million tons. Interestingly, about half of what we buy is ultraprocessed junk. Outside the U.S. the whole world “wastes about 2.5 billion tons of food every year.” In other words, there is plenty of food - so much, we waste near half of it every year. With just these few examples, you can see that we don’t have a melting...