Sergio Halabi - Unveiling the Secrets of Ancient Civilizations and Pyramids

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Unfiltered Union

In this episode, we dive deep into the mysteries of ancient civilizations, the construction of pyramids, and near-death experiences. Our guest, Sergio Halabi challenges the mainstream narrative and sheds light on the inconsistencies in the traditional explanations. Join us as we explore the fascinating theories that suggest the involvement of an advanced ancient civilization in the construction of the pyramids. Our guest also delves into the intriguing idea that the pyramids served as energy conductors, harnessing unknown forces. Additionally, we discuss common themes in near-death experiences, such as out-of-body travel and a profound sense of overwhelming love. Sergio encourages listeners to question the official narrative and embark on their own journey of understanding.
Join us for this thought-provoking episode as we unravel the mysteries of ancient civilizations and near-death experiences.
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Guest info:
Sergio Halabi
An independent researcher originally from Lebanon, currently living in Bahrain, focusing on ancient civilizations, mythologies, ufology and conspiracy theories as well as a spiritual investigator into the beyond and the paranormal, studying NDEs and OBEs and the nature of reality.
Website - https://sergiofx.wixsite.com/paradigmshiftpodcast
Paradigm Shift Podcast - https://open.spotify.com/show/6EoqGIHn8VM6Vf6eYep0Nw
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/paradigm.shift.experience/

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Timestamps:

(00:00:22) Introduction to the Unfiltered Union podcast

(00:00:53) Introduction of Sergio Halaby and his research interests

(00:01:30) Sergio's journey in the realm of research

(00:03:39) Discussion on the control of knowledge and history

(00:06:38) The importance of understanding history and connecting the dots

(00:10:08) Discussion on the construction of the pyramids and their builders

(00:24:32) The theory that the pyramids were transmitters of energy

(00:38:18) Common themes in near death experiences and out of body experiences

(00:47:06) Differentiating between information and conspiracy theories

(00:48:15) Challenging indoctrinated beliefs

(00:49:33) The importance of sharing knowledge

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Want more of the show? Check out all of our links below:
Website - https://www.unfilteredunion.com
Store - https://store.unfilteredunion.com
Patreon - https://patreon.com/unfilteredunion


Chapters

00:22 - Introduction to the Unfiltered Union podcast

00:53 - Introduction of Sergio Halaby and his research interests

01:30 - Sergio's journey in the realm of research

03:39 - Discussion on the control of knowledge and history

06:38 - The importance of understanding history and connecting the dots

10:08 - Discussion on the construction of the pyramids and their builders

24:32 - The theory that the pyramids were transmitters of energy

38:18 - Common themes in near death experiences and out of body experiences

47:06 - Differentiating between information and conspiracy theories

48:15 - Challenging indoctrinated beliefs

49:33 - The importance of sharing knowledge

Transcript
Lindz:

This is Lyns. This is Russ. And we're married. Ari? Yep. Since 2013.

Russell Okung:

We're the hosts of the Unfiltered Union podcast. Where we discuss popular headlines and interview interesting people. Our opinions may vary, but we will never censor our guests or our viewpoints. Welcome to the Unfiltered Union.

So we have a new guest today,

and this one's gonna be super fun.

Lindz:

You're gonna take the lead on this one. I'm here for the ride. Yeah. I've always been super interested in the pyramids, the architecture,

Russell Okung:

the perfection

that they are,

and

I found Sergio on

Reddit.

Reddit is awesome. Yeah. I love Reddit. But, so I'm just gonna dive right into the intro.

Sergio Halabi

is an independent researcher originally from Lebanon. He's currently living in Bahrain

and he focuses on ancient civilizations,

mythologies,

ufology?

Sergio Halabi:

I just make a straw. I said it right.

Russell Okung:

Oh, yeah. And conspiracy theories. He is also a spiritual investigator into the beyond and the paranormal.

He studies near death experiences and out of body experiences in the nature of reality.

Just a jumping off point,

let's get to know you a little bit more. How did you begin your journey in this realm of research?

Sergio Halabi:

Yeah. First of all, thank you for having me on.

For me, it was, I've always been fascinated with anything ancient

civilizations,

you know, mythologies,

old religions.

That's something that has been, you know, on my mind since I was

8 9 years old. It's just completely fascinated me. I used to stay up at night, watch, the Discovery Channel and, the National Geographic Channel just to get any new information about, you know, ancient Egypt, ancient Mesopotamia,

Greek, and all that. So this was always a big fascination to me.

But,

couple of years ago, I came to certain

books and the text that I've read

regarding the first civilization that ever was, which was in Mesopotamia,

as far as we know.

And that kind of shifted a lot of my thinking.

It reintroduced me to

to, what,

Abrahamic religions really were, to what the lands, how it was, you know, because I am from the land. I'm from Lebanon. I'm I'm Arabic.

I'm also Christian Catholic,

by birth.

So there was a lot of,

I connected a lot of dots when I was started reading these things, and it it, I I started understanding that, you know, what I've been told and I've learned, whether it was in school,

or theology and all that, that there are more to it than just what, you know, what we were taught.

And then, it it led me down, you know, an an unending rabbit hole,

regarding

ancient civilizations,

advanced ancient civilizations,

what we could have been in contact with,

something that, a word that came to me recently, which is, called,

paleo contact,

which is the contact of,

that our ancestors had with

perhaps much more advanced beings,

whether they were

human in nature or not is not the debate here. But

they definitely knew something that, you know, was is kept for us, as of now. So that's what I try to do. I just try to

uncover and,

rediscover

ancient truth

that was either lost to us or

hidden from us by certain powerful entities.

Lindz:

Awesome. That that's a lot. That was loaded. So, let's I wanna break it down something. It

is. It is. I wanna break something down that he said is,

that, you know, things are lost to us from a civilization to the next or from 1 generation to the next if you really break it down. I mean, to what extent do you feel like you have to be able to research? Meaning,

are you looking at text from those time periods? Are you looking at,

more

what I wanna say, like, research of the now?

Or how do you conduct your research?

Sergio Halabi:

It's it's basically

the key thing for me when when it comes to this topic is connecting the dots because they'll they'll always we have to start at a specific baseline

for why we believe certain things or why,

mainstream

science or archaeology

or religions,

why they have certain, you know, aspects

to them. And then once you start understanding and reading into

what mainstream does not want to talk about,

that's when you start discovering that there's a lot of hidden

information

and knowledge and truth that

you would think they should have been, you know, exposing us to them as, you know, whether it was in school or in on TV or all of that, but they're not. So that that just raised a question. Like, the first goal

as of, you know, in in the world we live today is that when the media is telling you to look right, you have to look left because they're definitely distracting you from something or want you to see something else.

But so when it comes to that, especially with ancient stuff,

there's a saying that goes that,

you know, our truth in terms of, let's say, let's say religion. Our truth is written on paper, but their truth, the truth of the Mesopotamian,

dynasty is carved in stone.

So that's something that they could not hide or could not change because

it's it's literally carved in stone. So when you look into that and you will and you look into,

the how it the first the first ever civilization,

unchanged,

unedited,

unredacted,

and you compare it to other civilization and you see how much those civilization

have in common with the Egyptian pantheon of gods, with the Greek pantheon of god, even if we go into Latin America, if you go to Hinduism,

China, Taoism, everything you can imagine, everyone is basically telling the same story. It's just changing the names, changing the dates. So that that puts you on that path of trying to understand, like,

oh, this needs a second look. This this needs a a much deeper look to to what we've been taught.

Lindz:

Wow. No. That's powerful because I think one of the things that you said right there is connecting dots and following it's almost like the breadcrumbs. Right? So that that's powerful. Yep. Yeah. For sure. And and there's very Exactly. There's very small

Russell Okung:

a very small group of powerful people that

essentially gatekeep knowledge

of what we're taught and what we Yeah. Because

Sergio Halabi:

yeah. Because

because you only need a few, a small amount of people. Everyone else is just gonna fall in line. If you trickle down that information into the right channels, then people are just gonna take it among themselves and run with it and teach it to others and to their kids and to, you know, the students and all of that. So you don't really need to control a large population.

It's very easy to manipulate the past

Russell Okung:

to just, you know, control everyone. For sure. And history is written by the victors.

So

Sergio Halabi:

Oh, yeah.

This is just proving that. And as they say, if you if you can fake, if you can fake the news today, imagine what they do with history. A 100%.

No. Like, today, we can see things happening on live on TV, on on the news, and they tell you, nope. You're not seeing that. That's that's not true. It's like, it's right there. So imagine what they do with history, like just a 100 years ago, not even going back 1000 of years. So there is no

Lindz:

question as to how much has been lost over the years, for sure. Especially as a species. Like, I feel like as a species, we are not as

enamored or fascinated by history as we should be because history repeats itself. Right? You can find patterns.

So if we're not being inquisitive and actually going back in the past and looking at things, then we're almost what? Self centered? The the idea of mindfulness. Right? Is mindfulness

something that

we need

to reevaluate?

Like, okay. You can be in the moment, but should you also be cognizant of the past?

Sergio Halabi:

Exactly. Exactly. And and, it's easier to control the population when you when you hide things from them, especially how

powerful they really are. So that aspect of control, like, by by keep reminding you that you need someone over your head. You need a power,

you know, to control you, to tell you what's right, to tell you what's wrong, then you're basically taking everything from that population. And when we look back at

those ancient civilizations, it's very clear how spiritual they were. Regardless of what they were able to to achieve on an archaeological level, let's say, with the pyramids and all that, which we'll get into. But even spiritually, they were much more attuned to nature, to earth, to mother earth, to to each other. And that is something that's completely lost to us now, like, completely lost. And it's not something that happened,

you know, by by chance. It was,

you know, it was designed

so that we lose that power, and then we have to go and ask for help from those in power. Right. We we have been taught to rely on the government.

Yep. On power In every aspect. Not just of, government.

Whether it was government, you need your politicians. Whether it was religions, you need your priests or your sheikh or your rabbis or all of that, whether it was,

you know, financial, you need the bankers to tell you how to spend your money. Every aspect of your how to eat, who what what where to spend your money. Every aspect of our lives is controlled

by by an entity. That's it.

Lindz:

I'm enjoying this. I've got my tinfoil hat on, and I am ready. Let's do this. Me too. Okay. So so let's just go ahead and and and jump right into

Russell Okung:

what the main the main theme of this this was about which was ancient civilizations and pyramids.

So

my first question for

you is were

the Egyptians

actually responsible

for building up those pyramids

and if you think they were, do you think they had help?

And if they had help, who was it from?

Sergio Halabi:

Well, I mean, to answer that is not obviously an easy question, and we have to set a a sort of like a baseline, right, to why,

people like me,

you know, reach certain conclusions.

So it's not because

we don't know how things were done, so we just guess as to how things it's it's what I said where you connect the dots. So when you look at at their aspect of civilization, the Egyptians, especially, when you look at the way they wrote their own history, how they kept it in the records, what they prayed to, and the gods that they considered, you know, to be their,

their creators,

alongside with several other things, you can start to see the holes in this mainstream idea of what the pyramids were, how they were built, and all of that. Because mainstream

media and, you know, archaeology and historians and all of that, are

completely adamant on one thing. Right? It was the Egyptians.

It was built around 4,500

years, BC,

and it was done under certain,

pharaohs, and they were tombs of those pharaohs. Right?

So the

the first, you know, the first hole I would poke in this theory is that

given how big the pyramid is, let's talk about the main the grand pyramid,

in Giza, and that it contains up to, like, hundreds of millions of blocks of stone, each weighing anywhere between 2 tons to 40 tons.

So

if we wanna consider that being built within the lifespan of 1 pharaoh.

Okay. So it's like he commissioned it because, yeah, this is gonna be my tombstone. Start building it. The mainstream,

history history tells you that it was built around in in about 20 to 25 years. That's how long it took, like a 100,000

slave

built it. But if you do the calculations,

simple as that, then you would get that they are putting each stone

on top of the other

every 4 minutes

nonstop

for 25 years so they build it.

Wow. Four minutes to put one stone.

That that is, like, by itself, this literally impossible to achieve. Even by today's standards, it's impossible to achieve. So that's not even it's not even remotely logical to even think something like this is is is real. So regardless of where they got the stones from, which by the way, they didn't even get them from anywhere in Giza or Alexandria. They got them from the south of Egypt, the whole south, like, all the way from the Nile. And the theory goes is that the way they brought those stones, which are limestones,

the way they brought them is that they couldn't bring them through the Nile because the Nile would flood over the years. So they had to actually move them across land. So add to that the time that they had to push those stones all the way from the south of Egypt,

which is an hour by airplane.

So you add to that into, like okay. That is starting to really not make sense anymore.

And then there are so many now studies that have recently come up because now we have better technology than we did before,

regarding the time it was built

and how it doesn't align with,

the the the Egyptian dynasty

of,

Khufu who built the the great pyramids.

So,

when when they're studying recently the the the entire plateau of Giza, we got whether it was the 3 pyramids or the, the sphinx, just next to

them, they discovered that there is a lot of erosion

that is at the base of these structures.

And these erosions

come from wind,

from sand,

and surprisingly, it's coming from water as well.

And that doesn't make sense if we follow the mainstream idea because there should not be water in the in the Sahara or in the desert, so they should not have been water. The way the erosions are happening or happened is through an extreme

amount of water hitting it constantly for years,

and that

puts or dates those monuments and those buildings to not 4000

BC, but more around 11 to 12000 BC.

Given where that was when the last ice age melted

and that's when the flood came and it kind of eroded

the entire area of that plateau. So you can see the scarring of that of that, you know, disaster that have happening. You can see it in on those, on those buildings.

Lindz:

Wow.

Sergio Halabi:

Other stuff as well

don't align.

Other stuff as well don't align which is the head of the Sphinx

because the head of the Sphinx

doesn't fit with the rest of the body. The body is very, very big and the head is extremely small. It looks very odd. And for a civilization

that built

with such precision

the pyramids to a degree that is unbelievable,

you do not make that mistake of building a big lion body and then put the head of of a pharaoh which is smaller. Now there's a theory that it what that was was actually the head of a lion.

And when one of the pharaohs came to power, that's when he commissioned that the lion itself would be carved out. They would carve his face into that lion, which is why it's extremely small and then the body is extremely big.

So, again, we see that

the the the applying when we apply when it was built, the time, for what reason,

they don't align with anything that we've been told.

Russell Okung:

Wow.

So

you you said millions of blocks. Right? Two tons apiece.

How does a person or people Yep. How are they able

to

do such a thing? Like, modern machinery

nowadays can't even lift those blocks. Yeah.

How how does a group of people do such a thing?

Sergio Halabi:

To give you one better, how is a group of people capable of doing something like this and that's and what we're told is that those people did not master math,

geometry,

physics,

chemistry,

archaeology,

engineering.

How do you even build a monument that has lasted 1,000 and 1,000 of years

without any sort of blueprint?

They didn't leave any blueprint behind. Right. You know what I mean? And Egyptians, they one thing about them that was so, you know, helpful for for us now is that they left

all the records, you know, with the holographics

and everything that they've accomplished. And they would always put their greatest victories and battles, the greatest pharaohs, the greatest, you know, civilizations. They would they would keep the keep those things in record, but they somehow decided not to keep any records

regarding

probably their biggest achievements ever.

Russell Okung:

Right.

Lindz:

Right. So where did those records go? Why are they not anywhere that is

viewable, I guess? Because I think, you know, most things that the Egyptians

carved into higher hieroglyphics are posted in one of the various areas around Yep. The

pyramids and or some other monument.

And then on top I mean, just Yep. Just on top of that, like, those blocks, I think, I one of the it may have been Joe Rogan's podcast, where he even said that they have to be placed in such a specific way that if they are inches off at the top, the whole thing's gonna topple over. So

if they haven't mastered geometry

Sergio Halabi:

they had to place them

Exactly. Exactly. If they haven't They had to place them with with with such

with such,

accuracy,

and then they needed to cover everything with white limestone. I don't know if you've if you've seen those pictures of how because they found traces of white limestone. It's covered everything, and then everything was extremely smooth. And then you can also add to it that

the the four angles of the pyramid align

with the with the four,

The cardinal port. Cardinal north and all the the the exactly. Of of Earth. How does that make sense? Like, off by 1

and it's off by 1 16th of a degree or something. Like, that's not even, you know, like, worth mentioning. It's literal perfection. Imagine perfection

on every level is perfection

and and we'll get to also why they were used

later,

but it's perfection in in in archaeology, perfection in germ in in engineering.

Everything needed to be extremely perfect. And we've been told that, yeah, this is a civilization that did not understand nature so much that they worshiped

the sun, and they worshiped the Nile, and they worshiped the crocodile and all that. Like, that doesn't and you're talking as if about 2 different civilizations. You're talking about civilization that is capable of building something like this, which means they've mastered

science completely. And then you're talking about civilization that doesn't understand the world they live in. How do you compute both civilization? It doesn't make sense. Well The way I see it and the way I've I've imagined it

is that

civil

the the early nomads of the desert before the Egyptian dynasty was was created,

the humanity were nomads. Right? We were we were hunter gatherers. We're moving around all the time.

What I believe happened is that a group of people

reached

the middle of the desert, and they saw this monument. They saw 3 giant pyramids, and they saw a giant, lion, statue. And they were so overwhelmed by it that they thought that these were sacred places. So they built the entire civilization

around those places and just called it home and took credit for it. Like, yeah, we we made it.

Russell Okung:

So so you believe you don't you you think that a possibility is that something else built them?

Sergio Halabi:

Oh, yeah. Definitely definitely something else with them.

Not necessarily it doesn't need to be nonhuman. No.

It could be, but, but there could be a a very

ancient advanced human civilization

that existed

100 of 1000 years ago before even the ice age, which happened which started a 120,000

years ago.

They existed.

They mastered everything. And

when when things went bad on earth, either they

were scattered everywhere or they left or they were, completely extinct. We don't know. But it feels like that

that civilization

or one of them was the one behind building these things.

For example, in,

now with the with the melting of the ice age sorry, with the melting of the ice caps because of the global warming,

we are seeing,

there's a pyramid that started to appear in Antarctica,

and

science still rejects that idea, but you can see it very clearly. It's on Google Maps. It's not even like a hidden thing. You can just, you know, the

you enter them, you can see the pyramid. And,

if that's a real pyramid that was built by by a civilization,

that means that that civilization lived lived on in arkatica before the ice age, which means, like, around 200000 years ago And and why for them to be able to to Why is Antarctica such a secret?

Russell Okung:

You know? There's only Oh, yeah. There's only researchers there. You can't go there. You and I can't pay for a plane ticket to go visit Yeah. Or or take a look. Yep.

Sergio Halabi:

It's crazy. Yeah. Exactly. And Yeah. And it's like one of the the most

unbroken treaty among countries, like like, of of of everything they've ever disagreed on. This is the one thing they agree on. No one goes there. Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. We'll we'll we'll kill each other over

Russell Okung:

stupid stuff, but, hey. 10 square feet. Yeah. But, hey, don't go to Antarctica. We all agree on that. Yeah.

Well, you you brought it up that the that the pyramids are perfectly aligned with cardinal points north, south, east and west

but there's also another thing another theory out there a researcher named Robert Bovall

pointed out that there are similarities between the layout of those 3 pyramids

in the Giza complex

and the relative separation between 3 stars in Orion's belt The Orion's belt. Yeah. Yeah.

So so you're talking about,

what we're led to believe that they were a basic civilization

that then knows how to freaking line up

Giza pyramids

to stars in the sky?

I'm confused. Exactly. And

Sergio Halabi:

to align them also to such a degree that if you put the map of the star on top of the of the of, you know, let's say, you're viewing the pyramids from top view, and then you you you superimpose

the Orion's belt on it, they actually match completely.

Right. And and they

what, there's,

Graham Graham Hancock, who was also on Joe Rogan, and he mentioned that the alignment of the pyramids

to Orion's belt

fits 100%

to the way that constellation looked around 3 around 13000 years ago. Now it's a bit slightly

skewed because, you know, constellations evolve over time. Like, we we see them a bit differently. But if you look at that time, it was actually it aligned perfectly,

which also reputs that theory that it was built in a much ancient time than than we think.

Russell Okung:

What else are we are what else are we not told if they're lying about this? You

Sergio Halabi:

don't cannot

imagine.

Lindz:

Sergio's got a list. He's here we go.

Russell Okung:

Yeah.

Yeah.

So so I have a I have another question about the pyramids

yep nikola tesla he theorized the pyramids were more than just tombs we've talked a bunch about

that and that they could be transmitters of energy very similar to

what a power plant does what do you think about that?

Sergio Halabi:

Yeah. I mean, I I definitely read into his his theory, and there's a lot of points that make a lot of sense because first of all, the pyramid is not a tomb. Like,

that should be clear by now to everyone that whatever they told us that they were useful, they're not. There is

there was no mummies.

There was no inscription

guiding the soul of the pharaoh into the second life.

There was no mentioning in any of their books ever

that we are using these pyramids,

as as tombs for our pharaohs. In fact, all the pharaohs and all the kings of Egypt were buried in the south of Egypt, which is called the valley of the kings, also the valley of the dead. That is an entire valley I visited,

and you can see tombs after tombs after tombs for all their main main pharaohs. Everyone was found there, and you can tell that these are tombs because of everything that surrounds them. The prayers, the chants, the the the offerings, and all of that. So the pyramids were not tombs, and they were not built,

for that for that reason at all. Now when it comes to what Tesla believed

and,

where his theory went,

so he believed that they were

conductors

of energy,

but clean energy.

So he so that civilization

was able

to harness the energy from the sun, but also use whatever from this the way the the pyramid is built from the inside and all the chambers leading. So from the base of the pyramid,

you would have,

they will they would release chemical reactions at the base, and then, like, for example, hydrogen would come out through the chambers in a specific way. And it because it was built with limestone

and quartz,

and quartz is what we use by the way in, like, clocks and compasses and all of that. So it is a conductor of energy and electricity.

So they they would align the entire room of, like, what they what they call it as the tomb of the pharaoh. Right? Like, the room where he was

buried. Everything inside is built from quartz, and it creates and emits,

electromagnetic

energy when done correctly. And in 2018

and then again in 2019, as recent as, like, only a few years ago, they've actually

thrown and tried to emit

electromagnetic pulse towards the pyramids, and they've noticed that it does conduct it in a specific way. It focuses the energy one way or another, and then it spreads it out. And that's the theory behind that which was Tesla was building his own machine on is that

if we take the same shape of that pyramid and if we conduct the same,

chemical reactions on the inside, then we are capable

to release

free

clean energy that could

cover an extremely large,

area

for for, you know, a lot of people. And

it's obviously not that they were using it to ride their cars or to use their mobile phones. You know what I mean? So that energy that they used, that served a different purpose for them. But it is an an actual machine to an extent. That's what they are. And that's what they keep trying to prove right now. Yeah. And aren't aren't we missing a a huge key piece of it as which is the those top keystone pieces?

Yes. Yep. Yep. They're all missing. Which are

nowhere to be found, surprisingly.

And

and also because of the way the limestone is no longer covering because of all the erosion and everything, so it no longer works the way it was working before or what it was. But that's what they're

finding that that was its original purpose. Yeah. And it wasn't that made of

Russell Okung:

well, it's theorized to be made of some different type of material too other than it not what the entire pyramid was made of?

Sergio Halabi:

Yeah. So you have, like like, within the pyramid, like, 4 or 5 different type of of material used from limestone to quartz to,

to other stuff as well, and each one served a purpose. So so certain things would be from for the base of of it and how to build it, you know, the pillars that were inside, and others would conduct the energy through the different chambers,

leading them to the middle chamber. And the the the limestone outside as well would cover it and contain it because there was,

there's a theory about it, how to contain that energy and not have it spread to make sure that it's it's still there. So every part of it served a specific purpose.

Russell Okung:

And we're led to believe that this wasn't a a an advanced

civilization.

Sergio Halabi:

I don't understand. I don't No. No. What what No. They're just people who who were afraid of grave robbers and, you know, just wanted their faggots not to be stolen.

Russell Okung:

Right.

Come on. Come on.

Lindz:

Well, if it can conduct that much energy, I mean, what it has been hypothesized as to what it would power I mean, are we talking about, like, powering a city?

Or are we talking about a weapon, or

do is there a theory there?

Sergio Halabi:

Honestly,

I I haven't read

a theory that is written in terms of what it could have powered, but I have my own, you know, theory. And and coming from reading what their mythology is, and this is this because this goes into what their beliefs.

Right? So why would they do certain things? Why would they and,

like I said before that, you know, space reality was a very big thing connecting to to to earth was was, you know, the way everything used to be done until a few 1000 years ago,

300 years ago as well. So

I believe that those conductors

were

more attuned

to the frequency of the earth, and that would create a more attuned population,

and those beings would be more in tune with that frequency.

So it wasn't so much as a beneficial for on a on a technological level. It was more on a spiritual level because that's how they used to operate. Like, it was a very important thing to them much more than than other stuff.

And with the connection to the constellations

as well and how they, you know you know, the theories about,

ancient beings,

extraterrestrial

beings, interdimensional

beings, and all that, it it connects

into, you know,

helping you with your own frequency. Help yeah. They would be used for those purposes, to travel if you want, astral travel, project

out of body,

and other stuff.

Russell Okung:

Moe, did you just say astral travel?

Oh, yeah.

Sergio Halabi:

Like, to where? I mean, when you when

I mean, that's when you talk about ancient, when they refer to an ancient mythologies about portals. Right? Like, you you you reads about portals where gods would come down from from the sky or or their own priests would use them to put to communicate with with beings and all that. To me, that is just a,

a very limited vocabulary that they used to have at the time

that we use in a different way right now. So when we talk about astral projection,

they would call it, you know, walking into into a to a portal and then completely, like, losing yourself or losing your body and then trust you know, transferring yourself to another

location, another planet, another dimension,

anything like that. So

when we when we look back at at these civilizations

and the way they would describe certain things and certain experiences,

when we align them in today's words and today's vocabulary,

we see that there's a lot of similarities.

There's a lot

of things that they would say that we should take them a bit more literally

than we take them because we do symbolically a lot now. That's that's the basis of main of, of archaeology and history is that what this civilization experience is symbolic.

But if we see it more literal,

then we can see that, no, it actually meant more.

You know, like, for example, I'll give you,

from, this story in the bible about Ezekiel

and, how Elijah. I'm sorry. Elijah,

and how he was walking with his,

brother-in-law,

in the middle of the desert. And then what it says is that a chariot of fire

came down from the sky

and,

Elijah was lifted in a beam of lights and and wind.

Now

if you compare that to what we have today or what we when when people talk about, for example, alien abduction stories, regardless of whether it's true or not. You have to look at a civilization that doesn't know what a spaceship is and doesn't know what,

a light beam is.

So they would use the next best word to describe that. So they would say they don't say it was an airplane or it was a spaceship. It was a chariot because that's all they knew. If it's something in the box that has people in it, it must be a chariot. It was a chariot of fire because while that

object could have emitted

any form of, you know, fire or any form of to for lift off, that's what they would say, oh, it was made of fire. And then it was he was beamed up. So there's a lot of stories about, like, you know, alien abductions

in the bible as well,

in the in Egyptian mythology, in other,

mythologies as well. We just don't refer to them like that because that's not how we are reading that language, but that's it. Oh, we're we're we're almost taught to not dig deeper than surface level.

Lindz:

Yep. For sure. And Exactly. I mean, even the way we translate things. I mean, you have how many different translations of the Bible itself.

But if you were to go for a one for 1, there are words that you just can't

do.

Like, what is the

the sound that God gave in order to pronounce his name? I am Yes. Y w e or something along those lines. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. So the the sound that is supposed to be breath. Right?

So there isn't an exact translation other than what we have given it now to be God. Right?

So to the your point, anything that you read, if it is a translation from previous text back to the idea of controlling information,

the victors win. So whatever we wanted it to be in, whatever language

we want to use religion in, that's what's going to Trump. So I I see how the breadcrumbs and everything connects for sure.

It's just it's so mind boggling how much out there can connect.

So I guess my question for you is, like, how do we weed through all this? How do we weed through all the information to make those connections?

Sergio Halabi:

I mean, it's it's it basically

has to make sense to you. Like, when you, when when I sit down and read certain things and I feel like and I see that, you know, that story that I was told, I was told to accept it because I just have to believe in it. It doesn't make sense. I just have to believe it. Whereas

what I'm reading now and I'm I'm I'm searching for now, it actually aligns more with

the world we live in today, how it was before,

what are they trying to hide from us, what they're trying to let us try to see. And when you start connecting them on your own,

that's when you can weed it out. You can immediately start seeing where the bullshit is and where the where the where some form of the truth is. Because

at the end of the day, it's it has to make sense. It has to make sense in a logical

way. And

those things that, for example, in my research, when I'm reading, when I'm looking, when I'm going visiting myself,

it makes a lot more sense for me to believe that

a civilization that was not even. A a group of people walked into a desert and did not know anything about science, no geometry, no math, no nothing, just sat down and built an entire civilization based on on on monuments,

then,

oh, out of nowhere, humanity moved from hunter gatherer societies to building as entire civilization that has laws, that has crime and punishment,

written language,

spoken language,

commerce,

and all of that, that shift in humanity,

humanity's

history that happened, you can say overnight,

just doesn't align with anything that that that we look at. Why did we live

in in the jungle and and and, in the Sahara and and and every aspect of and biomes on on the planet for 100 and 1000 and 1000000 of years. The first homo sapiens that, you know, the modern man appeared 1,200,000

years ago. That's the earliest we found as the closest thing to us, 1,200,000

years. So you're saying for 1,200,000

years, humanity lived in a specific way and then suddenly 6000 years ago, everyone's like, hey, let's just stop moving. Let's sit down. Let's

create agriculture.

Let's domesticate animals,

build monuments, and, you know, we'll build the civilization. Flip switch.

Yeah. How does that that doesn't work?

Russell Okung:

Right. And and not just build monuments, but build them perfectly.

Sergio Halabi:

Build them perfectly and lasting for 1000 of years into the future. Yeah. Through an ice age. Today don't even last that long.

Through an ice age, through not an and while we are believing that, you know, the sun is God and, the the moon is God and all of that.

Right. You know, like,

it just it doesn't work. It doesn't work. Right.

Russell Okung:

Alright. Well,

let's switch gears here a little bit. I kinda wanna talk about near death experiences or out of body experiences.

Oh. Yeah. Oh.

So Yeah.

Yeah. I've I've always been super interested in near death experiences. I am a Christian

and

so is Linz. And we

you know,

this seems like kind of a bridge

between

our world and that spiritual world.

What are some common themes that you've researched

about near death experiences or out of body experiences?

Sergio Halabi:

So these are very two different topics, out of body and near death. So if we focus on near death experiences,

one of the main thing that I saw was it was people I spoken to myself that they have gone through that or things books that I've read,

interviews that I've watched and all that,

is that they almost all tell the same story.

Even if these people

don't know that, you know, they're not exposed to each other. For example, there was a woman who was very close to me and to my family who

passed away for 20 minutes. Like, her heart stopped beating for 20 minutes.

And,

they were, you know, trying to get her back, and then they got her back.

And after she got out of the hospital, she told me several times that,

you know, I'm I'm a changed woman. I'm I'm very different. I've seen things on the other side that don't even scare me. I'm not even afraid of dying anymore. I know what's waiting for me.

And,

I'll tell you what she told me, but,

that woman when that happened and when she told me that story, she was,

like, around 65 or 66 years old, and she's not technologically advanced at all, and she's not exposed to other people and what they're saying. Whatever she was sharing with me, she was sharing it from her own experience,

which just happens to align with every other experience that I've read about or seen or spoken to as well. And these people talk with such an insane conviction

that they don't even try to convince you with what they're saying. They're not trying to get you on board. It's like, this is my experience since I know it's real and it's truth,

and I don't care if you believe it or not, or if you think I'm crazy or not. It's just this. That's what I saw. And

what they have all in common is this

floating out of the body, so seeing themselves in the room that they are in. They see whether it was in a hospital, they see the doctors and everything, all these people staff working on them or in the in the bedroom or in a car accidents

as well. Everything they see from above. And then they all say that

I traveled, and it feels like I was traveling faster than the speed of light. It was like at an insane speed. I'm just literally going through the stars. Like, I'm just floating

fast and faster and faster.

And then

I've reached a place

where

it was

made of light, like it was

light itself. It wasn't it wasn't any physical place. It's just made of light.

And everyone experiences

or talks about the overwhelming

sense of love that they felt. It was like

one person told me it's like the place was built

from love.

You know what I mean? Like, we can't even experience. And and and again, everyone who talks, they say,

my words are very limited. Like, what I'm telling you now is not even 5% of what I experienced. I don't have words to actually share with you what what I saw and what I felt. It's just this is the closest thing.

Now for example, this old woman, she told me that she reached a place and she felt

love and she also felt at home. She just felt like, alright. I'm here. Like, I'm I'm I'm back. This is my place.

But,

yeah, yeah, this is me. This is my place. But she also felt a hand

touch her on her shoulder,

and

there was no word spoken, but she knew what was that entity telling her, which is your time is not now. You need to go back.

And she went back.

And this your time is not now is

shared by everyone who has a near death experience. Everyone

says, I understood

that, yes, this is my home, but it's not my time to be here now. I have to go back because I have something left

undone on Earth. And then they go back, and they bring this peace with them, and they bring this acceptance.

It's it's really fascinating to see.

Russell Okung:

I actually have a family friend. He's he's

passed away now, but he

as a young boy,

he drowned.

And he had the exact same

experience that you're describing. He had he was floating up. He was looking down on them doing CPR on him, and then he felt that grab

on the shoulder, and he said, you're it's not it's not your time yet. And boom. He was back alive.

And if you were to ask him about it,

he was the chill he had he actually had he was an older gentleman, and he had cancer when I knew him. He knew he was going to die.

He knew for a fact. He was like, this is terminal.

I'm not I have a year.

He did not care because of that experience he had as a kid. Yep. Yep. Yes. He didn't care. Yes. Exactly. He knew. He was like, I know what's I know what's after. I ain't worried about this. You know? What's after is way better than what's going on down here. Yep. Yep. And and they just don't care. Like, they don't care what you think of them. Yeah. Yeah. What you said is that the conviction

of someone who

is literally

and and knows they're literally going to die because they

have cancer,

and he

chalked it up to meh. You know?

So he didn't care. It's it's it's gonna be good to go back. You know? Like, I'm Exactly. Glad you have to go back. He knew it was like he knew exactly where he was going, and he did because

he experienced it before.

Shoo.

Sergio Halabi:

It's it's it's, it's very,

it's really fascinating, like, that that this whole thing. And and there's always they try to give you, like, all the scientific

experience,

you know,

examples or explanations and, yeah, you see a light because the cornea in your eye is I don't know what and all that. But to me, this is just like

just trying to to to to to to

ground everything, you know, in the realm of of this physical world and to to try to prove it and all that. But there are some experiences you just cannot prove. Like, you just no matter how much you try, there there is no proof. Yeah. It's it's just like all the other history stuff. They want you

Russell Okung:

to be held to them and look to them as the power

but if you know

after this there's an, you know, there's

something after,

you

you're not really controllable anymore.

Sergio Halabi:

And, you become,

like, this is what happened with me

because I I do come from a Catholic background,

but,

where I am now is more like I don't really follow the the organized religion aspect of it, but I still believe in in in in a god. I believe in For sure. Creation and all of that. But,

yeah. But what it also gives you is this sort sort of sense of control

that that they took from you because you know that I am in control of myself. Like, I'm a believer of of,

of a form of reincarnation

if you want that, you know, we we came, you know, we existed before coming to earth, and we we gonna exist after we come to earth, and we might come back and might not come back. So this is because, you know, humans, like,

we exist on several dimensions, basically. It's not just this physical reality that we're experiencing now. We experience it on on all different dimensions that that exist. But to me, that that thought

puts me in power. You know what I mean? Gives me back that that power that they took from me because I'm no longer

just waiting for them to tell me what's right and what's wrong and what is acceptable.

And if I made a mistake or not, or what should I believe in, or what should I do? It's to me, it's like, this is my life. This is what I'm experiencing now, and I'm gonna experience it to its fullest. Whatever this life has to give me, I'm gonna go for it completely, and I've already made the choices that I'm gonna make here. You know what I mean? Like, like, there's something that we call, like, a sole contract if you want and sole agreements where before coming here, you kind of agree with so to so that you're gonna trigger the hell out of me and get me to heal on that aspect. And you're gonna bring me love, and I'm gonna do this to you. You know? So with that, it's like everything is in such a perfect harmony everywhere. You know? And it's like so fascinating.

Russell Okung:

For sure.

Lindz:

What

with everything that we've talked about so far, we've talked about how to kinda differentiate between information that you're receiving, that you're reviewing, that you're trying to make the connections and the dots. But if someone is just a nonbeliever,

I guess, or a naysayer,

you know, this is all conspiracy theory. What what would you say to them? Like, what is your message to someone who just is totally writing this off?

Sergio Halabi:

Well, first of all, there there is a there's a reality we have to accept.

It's something it's a quote I read a while ago, and it's it's, like, hit me deep.

And it says,

you can't help someone

out of an idea

that they did not think themselves into.

Okay?

You cannot help someone out of an idea

they did not think themselves into.

Any ideas

that we would have or these people have is because someone planted those ideas in them. They were brainwashed, indoctrinated,

forced,

groomed, everything, all the words you can imagine

to have them believe certain stuff. This is the history of the words, and there's nothing else. These are the religions of the words, and there's nothing else. This is what you have to do to live, to live, and that's it.

Obviously, it's a very difficult process to break away from these. If you do not have an innate curiosity

to challenge these thoughts and to try to find your own answers, then it's gonna be very difficult for people to come out of these thoughts, to to come out of these ideas.

So I accepted that. I accepted that and people around me, I've accepted that with people telling me I'm a conspiracy theorist and crazy and all that stuff. That's fine with me. What I do is that

I will never stop talking about this because I know that planting seeds

might eventually

help. You know what I mean? Maybe 10 years from now, someone is gonna look at something and go like, yeah. You know what? This doesn't work. Like, why are the pillars like this? You know, maybe. And then they go back to, wait. I've heard an idea that I, you know, like, 10 years ago where someone mentioned something like this. That's it for me.

Just be given that we have this

task and we have this capability of asking questions and searching for the truth and going after knowledge,

then it's our duty

to move that to someone else, to share this. Whether they accept it or not, that's it's their choice and their life path. Whatever their agreement they had, that's what they're gonna do. But it does should not hinder us from actually

doing those things. So I just keep talking about it. Whoever's gonna pick it up is gonna pick it up. It's like a radio station. It's like a frequency. Whoever is on the radio station is gonna listen to it. Whoever is not, is not gonna listen to it. But perhaps at some point, they will. So we just keep doing it.

Lindz:

I love that.

I really do. You have some

you have some great quotes up your sleeve. That was awesome, Sergio. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you.

Russell Okung:

Thank you.

Alright. Thank you. So

our final question

that we this is our fun one.

If you won $10,000,000

tonight, what would be the first thing you do

Sergio Halabi:

tomorrow? First thing to do, not to, like, what? I bought something to do.

Oh, damn.

First, I mean, obviously, I'm not gonna fall asleep. Okay? There's no sleeping.

That's not gonna happen. You know? So you're like, oh my god. This is not it.

I think I I would actually take time to process it. You know? Like, I would actually take a very just take it easy to kind of, like, you know, digest it and let it go. Like, okay, this is happening. This has happened. Now what I can do? Like, I need to process it very slowly. You know? And usually, in my life, I'm like, you know, moving all over the place. But, for something like this, it's it's like just to absorb it. No. And you need to absorb it for a while, and then I can start, you know, deciding what to do, what what choices to make, and all that. But

take it in. That's what I would love. Take it in. There you go.

Lindz:

Alright. So, Sergio, we're gonna have you come back, and we're gonna have you answer that question after you take it in.

Yeah. No.

Sergio Halabi:

Yes. I would have taken it like that.

Sure.

Russell Okung:

So you, yourself, you are a podcaster,

and you are on social media. We want to make sure that people that are listening can find you. So if you could just tell us about your podcast where people can find you online, your website, things of that nature,

shout them out.

Sergio Halabi:

Sure. Sure.

So the podcast is Paradigm Shift with Sergio Halaby. That's because we're trying to shift our thinking process, so that's why I called it Paradigm Shift.

And, as a podcast, it's available everywhere. Itunes,

sorry, Apple Podcast.

It's on Spotify,

IHouse Radio, and every every podcast channel there is, I'm I'm there.

I also have an Instagram account. And on that Instagram account, I go more

into visual aids. So whatever the topics that

I usually discuss and talk about on the podcast,

I create, more, designs for them and put the, you know, add text and all of that so that people kind of, like, you know, process them slower and get more visual

cues out of them. And, yeah, that's it, basically. I'm there.

Russell Okung:

Okay.

Awesome.

We really do appreciate having you on. I wanna definitely

think about some more topics to have you on, like maybe aliens and things of that nature because Wow. You never know.

Sergio Halabi:

Yeah. That that definitely is a topic for its own,

episode. So That's so funny. Yeah. It takes a lot of time. A lot of time.

Lindz:

Alright. Well, thank you. Thank you so much, Sergio.

Sergio Halabi:

Thank you. Thank you for having me.

Lindz:

Thanks for listening to The Unfiltered

Union.

Russell Okung:

Did you like the episode? Support the show. Visit us on patreon@patreon.com/

unfilteredunion.

Lindz:

Or you can rock some merch. Check out our store at store.unfilteredunion.com.

Russell Okung:

For all other things unfiltered, check out our site at unfilteredunion.com.

Lindz:

It's what you do with things you love.

Sergio HalabiProfile Photo

Sergio Halabi

Podcaster

An independent researcher originally from Lebanon, currently living in Bahrain, focusing on ancient civilizations, mythologies, ufology and conspiracy theories as well as a spiritual investigator into the beyond and the paranormal, studying NDEs and OBEs and the nature of reality.