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It's funny you say that. I just had a visual of Michael Burnham landing on 3-hour atlas and telling us, hey, yeah, it's just a rock. But you never know. I tend not to believe in aliens myself or extraterrestrial. The way I look at it and maybe the wrong way of looking at it, it just makes sense to me. There's no documented history of them landing on Earth up until now. They probably don't exist, kind of the way I look at it. That's not to say that ancient civilizations didn't exist eons and millions of years ago and was visited. There is a little place for that. I don't know if you all listen to Graham Hancock or not, but I know he's a little bit out there, but he is so much fun to listen to. I don't know if I take it all serious, but man, him and Randall Carlson. If you've never looked up Graham Hancock or Randall Carlson, you might ought to look them up. They are out there a bit. I should warn you now. But man, it's so fascinating to think about ancient civilizations being alive 10 million years ago or whatever. People say, well, we don't find anything on them. Well, yeah, the crust of the Earth, it gets folded back into itself every few million years ago. If it was something that happened before the last time that the crust turned over, well, then anything and everything that was on top of the crust would have been folded under also. Anyhow, that's kind of far-fetched out there, but you made me think of that when you was talking about probes and AI Atlas. You can kind of see the way that my mind spotters. It's kind of like a piece of glass or a mirror. You break it into spiders and you have all these different thought bubbles. That's my brain. Okay, let's take care of George, KBZ or MAI. Do you know anything about the Atlas or are you paying attention to it? What can you teach us about it, George? The mic is yours.
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