00:00:00
A few days ago, an account known as
00:00:04
Nature Jab, headed by a guy named Julian
00:00:06
Brown, who claims to be the innovator of
00:00:09
microwave paralysis, basically creating
00:00:13
gasoline or diesel out of plastic trash,
00:00:15
apparently had went missing, ladies and
00:00:17
gentlemen. Now, if it's something that I
00:00:19
can tell you right now is obviously
00:00:21
we've all entertain a conspiracy theory.
00:00:24
Imagine ever messing around with any of
00:00:26
these big mega like industries. Imagine
00:00:28
if you discovered the cure for cancer.
00:00:31
Would big pharma be happy if you would
00:00:33
take away their cash cow of treating
00:00:36
such a disgusting illness or would they
00:00:38
absolutely favor it and just let you
00:00:40
drop your product? Do you think uh you
00:00:42
know big oil, you know, the people that
00:00:45
make billions upon billions of dollars
00:00:47
every year, literally just by drilling
00:00:50
up fossil fuels, refining it, and
00:00:51
putting it into our vehicles? would be
00:00:55
okay if some guy came out and basically
00:00:57
made a way to take your average plastic
00:01:01
trash and turn it into good oldfashioned
00:01:03
diesel. Ladies and gentlemen, that is
00:01:05
the person we're looking at today. So,
00:01:06
this account, Nature Jab, that I've been
00:01:08
kind of like looking at, he's got about
00:01:11
1.4 million followers and you know,
00:01:13
recently he made a video where he was
00:01:15
basically saying that people are kind of
00:01:17
coming after him. I think he's being
00:01:18
followed. I know that I'm not going to
00:01:21
live long. And that's why I put every
00:01:24
day, every hour, every minute into
00:01:27
building, into growing. Why am I out
00:01:30
here working on this plastic and fuel
00:01:32
reactor I've been working on for 5 years
00:01:34
since I was 17? Why am I out here in 100
00:01:36
degree weather? Why am I out here
00:01:37
despite being falsely accused and
00:01:39
reported to the EPA and the IRS? Why am
00:01:41
I out here despite weird black
00:01:43
helicopters that turn off their radar
00:01:45
transponder circling me six times at
00:01:48
night? Why am I out here sleeping in my
00:01:52
van, crazy humidity, mosquitoes, gnats
00:01:54
flying in, and yet I still do it. Why am
00:01:56
I out here just by having to drive 4
00:01:58
hours every time I want to work on this
00:02:00
machine? Because when I was doing it in
00:02:02
my parents' backyard, I blew myself up.
00:02:05
>> Yeah, there's a lot to process from this
00:02:07
video. Okay, so recently he's uploaded a
00:02:09
couple of these videos and uh you know
00:02:11
he's been talking about helicopters
00:02:13
flying over, you know, people falsely
00:02:14
reporting him to the Internal Revenue
00:02:16
Service and the Environmental Protection
00:02:19
Agency. He might actually in his mind be
00:02:20
thinking that he's stepping on some
00:02:23
pretty serious toes here. Again, inside
00:02:25
the research for this, it really was an
00:02:27
interesting rabbit hole to go down
00:02:29
because has this person discovered a new
00:02:31
fuel that could topple this industry?
00:02:32
you know, an industry that is already
00:02:34
being sort of like attacked by other big
00:02:37
players like EVs and [ __ ] What if this
00:02:39
guy actually is making diesel fuel out
00:02:41
of like trash? I mean, that could be a
00:02:42
serious gamechanging thing.
00:02:46
>> All right, listen everybody. I I can't
00:02:48
go into too much detail, but there is
00:02:52
some very, very odd stuff going on. Um,
00:02:55
I'm certainly under attack uh right now
00:02:57
from in many different ways. And I just
00:03:00
want everybody to know uh to just kind
00:03:05
of have your eyes open. And um I have my
00:03:08
eyes open, but there's a lot going on.
00:03:10
So there's apparently a lot going on. He
00:03:11
actually really feels like he's being
00:03:14
like gangstaled, tracked by these like
00:03:17
big oil cartels. So let's get a closer
00:03:19
look at his actual science and kind of
00:03:21
start seeing like maybe he's on to
00:03:22
something. Maybe if they're going this
00:03:24
hard to track the guy down, let's
00:03:26
actually see what he's made real quick.
00:03:28
So, nature jab for over here. This is
00:03:30
his first world continuous solar
00:03:33
microwave plastic to fuel fundraiser and
00:03:35
he's actually got like a little GoFundMe
00:03:39
over here which he's raised $30,932
00:03:42
out of a 16K goal. So, immediately I
00:03:43
wanted to go over to his account and
00:03:45
again he has one on YouTube with like
00:03:48
366,000 like subscribers and you can see
00:03:50
like this is his like actual reactor
00:03:52
that he's built. So, again he's been
00:03:54
doing this apparently since he was like
00:03:56
18. like he's like a young inventor uh
00:03:58
type fella. And again, this is like
00:04:00
interesting to see because apparently it
00:04:02
all comes out in this really shitty like
00:04:05
you know uh the shitty goo and then he
00:04:06
like refineses it into what appears to
00:04:08
be like just diesel fuel. So there it
00:04:10
is, man. It comes out. He's lighting it
00:04:13
up on fire and boom, it's uh it
00:04:16
apparently seems to be just actual fuel,
00:04:17
ladies and gentlemen. It's wild stuff.
00:04:20
So he takes like obviously discarded
00:04:22
shitty plastic and he puts it into this
00:04:25
reactor and it uniformly like burns down
00:04:27
this actual like plastic and allows him
00:04:30
to like convert it into this oil. Now
00:04:31
obviously this kind of technology and
00:04:32
this kind of claim isn't really new.
00:04:34
There's been plenty of people that have
00:04:35
come with like different alternative
00:04:37
fuel sources that would absolutely if
00:04:40
true destroy a lot of the big oil
00:04:42
industry that pretty much uh you know
00:04:44
does lobby and does push for their
00:04:47
technologies around the world. Right. So
00:04:48
for instance, one of the things you
00:04:50
might have heard of was Stanley Meyer
00:04:52
and his water powered vehicle. So for
00:04:54
instance, this one buggy would run on
00:04:56
like 22 gallons of like just tap water
00:04:58
and it would just like drive across.
00:05:00
Like according to this, Meyer claimed to
00:05:02
have replaced the spark plugs with
00:05:05
injectors that introduced a hydrogen
00:05:07
oxygen mixture into the engine
00:05:09
cylinders. The water was subjected to an
00:05:11
electrical resonance that disassociated
00:05:15
it into its basic atomic makeup. The
00:05:17
water fuel cell would split the water
00:05:20
into hydrogen and oxygen gas which would
00:05:22
then be combusted back into water vapor
00:05:24
in a conventional internal combustion
00:05:27
engine to produce net energy. So
00:05:29
obviously the thing with this kind of
00:05:30
technology is you know people started to
00:05:33
look into it and scientists had realized
00:05:35
that obviously very quickly the first
00:05:38
two laws of uh thermodynamics were kind
00:05:40
of being attacked with this. Now, there
00:05:42
was a lawsuit that came out of it where
00:05:44
it was termed fraudulent after two
00:05:46
investors who he sold dealership
00:05:48
offerings the right to do business with
00:05:51
that technology sued him in 96. And so,
00:05:53
basically, a bunch of experts started to
00:05:54
look at it and said that his water fuel
00:05:57
cell was later examined by three expert
00:05:59
witnesses in court who found that there
00:06:01
was nothing revolutionary about the cell
00:06:03
at all and that it was simply using
00:06:05
conventional electrolysis. So, while
00:06:07
Meyers is apparently dining at a
00:06:09
restaurant with apparently two Belgian
00:06:10
investers,
00:06:13
he runs outside and goes, "They poisoned
00:06:15
me." And after an investigation, the
00:06:17
coroner actually came out and said that
00:06:19
he had high blood pressure and actually
00:06:22
died of a cerebral aneurysm. Now, again,
00:06:24
that's what the coroner report says. And
00:06:26
people who follow into this conspiracy
00:06:28
actually think that, you know, maybe he
00:06:29
had something that he was going on with
00:06:31
and he probably was poisoned because if
00:06:33
he invented this technology that would
00:06:36
completely topple oil, that would change
00:06:38
the course that would destroy an entire
00:06:40
economy, an entire industry that was
00:06:42
thriving. So the thing about it is when
00:06:44
he produces this like fuel with
00:06:46
microwave paralysis, he calls it
00:06:49
plasties. Now, he ended up taking it to
00:06:51
a laboratory, ASAP Labs here. And
00:06:53
apparently, according to this
00:06:55
laboratory, and what he says is based on
00:06:57
the actual graphs and the data, the
00:06:59
diesel that he provided might actually
00:07:01
burn better than conventional diesel
00:07:03
diesel or at least cleaner than actual
00:07:06
diesel. So, the thing is obviously like
00:07:08
he's going to the actual lab and showing
00:07:10
the graphs as well with these guys. So,
00:07:12
I I I don't know. It might actually be
00:07:14
like a legitimate fuel that he's made
00:07:16
for sure, especially considering that
00:07:18
this is like a full laboratory that is
00:07:20
putting their own like um they're
00:07:23
putting their own uh balls on the line
00:07:25
basically by by siding with this. So
00:07:27
according if it's lab if it's lab
00:07:29
friendly, you know, I feel like I I I
00:07:31
feel like maybe this guy is really on to
00:07:33
something. Pyrolysis is basically the
00:07:35
idea of thermic thermally breaking down
00:07:38
like a plastic in the absence of like
00:07:40
any oxygen. So you can produce things
00:07:42
like that liquid uh diesel that he was
00:07:44
basically producing and this was studied
00:07:47
for decades in just like the world of
00:07:49
recycling from my understanding. Where
00:07:52
things do change is obviously Julian's
00:07:55
usage of microwave paralysis which again
00:07:58
this is where he heats it in a more like
00:08:01
uniform fashion and in his understanding
00:08:04
it's just better efficiency and it's
00:08:05
better than like just standard like
00:08:07
heating methods right and again
00:08:09
pyrolysis for anybody that has no
00:08:11
understanding of like how it was ever
00:08:13
used it was actually used at one point
00:08:15
and I researched this and apparently the
00:08:18
Nazis back in the days of World War II
00:08:21
too. When they had a lot of coal but not
00:08:23
a lot of oil, they would take their
00:08:25
massive abundance of coal for instance
00:08:28
and effectively just like liqufy it
00:08:30
through a process known as the Burgess
00:08:33
process or the Fisher Trops process and
00:08:35
through that they would actually turn
00:08:38
their coal into liquid fuel or some
00:08:41
usable fuel that you could bring in for
00:08:43
actual like you know applications. Now
00:08:45
the thing is this was pyrolysis built
00:08:48
fuel and it was absolutely inefficient.
00:08:50
And not only was it inefficient, one of
00:08:52
the things that came out of it was that
00:08:54
it required a lot of energy to
00:08:56
effectively produce just a little bit of
00:08:59
fuel. But remember at the time the Nazis
00:09:02
were at war. So it's better to expend a
00:09:04
lot of your resources to produce that
00:09:06
liquid gold you needed to possibly win
00:09:08
the war. Especially when you had such a
00:09:10
massive abundance of that coal to begin
00:09:13
with. Now, even people in Julian's like
00:09:15
comment sections go out and ask, "How
00:09:17
much plastic does it take for a gallon?
00:09:19
What's the waste from the process? How
00:09:22
much energy is actually required?" The
00:09:24
problem that pyrolysis has is it's
00:09:26
energyintensive. And if you don't have
00:09:27
scrubbers on your stacks, it does
00:09:29
release a lot of pollutants into the
00:09:31
air. So, this guy's been working on this
00:09:33
like method for years now. And one of
00:09:34
the things that has always kind of like
00:09:36
shocked me a little bit is as he's doing
00:09:38
this, there isn't really a lot of safety
00:09:41
that I think he personally applies. So I
00:09:43
I'm kind of hoping that, you know, for
00:09:46
his health, he's not breathing in some
00:09:48
of the worst chemicals known to man. I
00:09:50
mean, this could be some serious massive
00:09:52
health hazards down the road, especially
00:09:54
if he's not being careful right now. And
00:09:56
when you look into the history right
00:09:57
over here, this is from like uh black
00:10:00
enterprise.com. After finding out that
00:10:02
enter that plastic is made from crude
00:10:04
oil and can be turned back into fuel
00:10:06
with a reactor, I decided to build a
00:10:08
reactor. Putting my welding experience
00:10:10
to use, I saw a problem that needed a
00:10:12
solution quickly and desperately. So, I
00:10:13
really do think that this guy is coming
00:10:15
at this from a really altruistic end.
00:10:17
He's probably seen a lot of trash in the
00:10:19
areas. And uh, you know, obviously, if
00:10:21
you want to maybe clean up the trash
00:10:23
problem, this guy is basically turning
00:10:25
what people have thrown away into usable
00:10:27
energy. and and and hopefully that can
00:10:30
maybe make a cheaper energy solution for
00:10:32
a lot of people who live in areas where
00:10:34
well let's just be honest gas is
00:10:36
expensive in any capacity. So having gas
00:10:39
made from trash doesn't sound so bad. So
00:10:41
even they write over here that as
00:10:44
reported the use of pyrolysis is not
00:10:45
without its drawbacks. While it produces
00:10:48
a cleaner burning fuel it's also a
00:10:50
process that adds a lot of pollutants to
00:10:52
the atmosphere. So obviously like with
00:10:54
anything there is always a anti-ac
00:10:56
account here. For instance, unature jab
00:10:59
on Reddit writes four months ago, the
00:11:01
use of microwave technology and chemical
00:11:03
synthesis is well established and over
00:11:06
250 scientific papers are published each
00:11:09
year as supported by the results of the
00:11:11
web of science search on title microwave
00:11:13
and topic chemistry being used in
00:11:15
organic synthesis and materials
00:11:17
processing. And I really feel like this
00:11:18
probably something that Professor Dave
00:11:20
can probably break down in a much uh
00:11:22
better manner. But the idea here is that
00:11:25
the tech was patented in ' 71, widely
00:11:26
used and available. And there's nothing
00:11:28
new to determine outside of how to make
00:11:30
it more efficient, which there are
00:11:31
companies who have been doing this for
00:11:33
the last 40 years and use high vacuum
00:11:35
and inert gases to help reduce the
00:11:37
amount of electricity needed to run the
00:11:39
reactor. Nature Jab isn't even remotely
00:11:41
close as to what is the current standard
00:11:44
in doing this reaction. Wake the [ __ ]
00:11:46
up. And obviously people people are
00:11:47
like, "Yeah, it's real, but it's not
00:11:49
efficient, even a little bit." And he
00:11:51
exaggerates things and exactly what I
00:11:52
was thinking. I've always wondered if
00:11:54
this guy realizes just how much
00:11:56
pollution he is creating, thinking it's
00:11:58
clean. I remember doing a really
00:12:00
scaledown version of this when learning
00:12:02
chemical cracking and extracting styrene
00:12:05
from dry distillation of polystyrene.
00:12:08
Looking at the MSDS of styrene, that
00:12:10
[ __ ] is nasty. The amount of benzene,
00:12:13
styrene, box, dioxin, PCBs, and other
00:12:15
[ __ ] this guy is concentrating and
00:12:17
releasing to the atmosphere is actually
00:12:19
nuts. Which is one of the reasons why I
00:12:21
think maybe the EPA was called into this
00:12:22
because, you know, it is the
00:12:24
Environmental Protection AY's job to
00:12:26
make sure the environment is [ __ ]
00:12:29
protected. Uh, again, you might disagree
00:12:30
with that, but that's exactly why they
00:12:32
would have been called. I don't know why
00:12:34
the IRS so much. Maybe to like audit the
00:12:37
the the the the the GoFundMe. But yeah,
00:12:38
obviously people have raised some valid
00:12:40
concerns. It's a scam. It's not
00:12:42
revolutionary. And my skepticism about
00:12:44
it makes me think him showing any
00:12:46
gasoline that's been made from his
00:12:48
process is a prop. Uh accusing that
00:12:51
maybe the guy is just buying gasoline.
00:12:52
People send this guy tons of money
00:12:54
because they don't know better. I'll
00:12:55
admit if he were to show the cost and
00:12:57
energy and his steps to refine the
00:13:00
diesel and gasoline after pyrolysis, I
00:13:01
might not think so negatively. And
00:13:04
that's the thing, it's not necessarily a
00:13:05
scam. Like from what I'm understood, the
00:13:08
science here is actually well documented
00:13:11
for decades. It's just a matter of uh
00:13:13
you know, it's not as good. It's it's
00:13:15
not this like it's not this end all
00:13:17
beall that he's been showing. And this
00:13:18
is one of the problems with like Tik Tok
00:13:21
conspiracy theories is immediately
00:13:23
people started like getting freaked out
00:13:24
on the internet. They were like, "Where
00:13:26
is this guy? Did big oil get him? Did
00:13:28
they pop him in the head for possibly
00:13:30
creating an energy source that they
00:13:33
can't control?" Uh, no. Apparently, he
00:13:36
did disappear. And uh, there were people
00:13:37
who looked into like the Atlanta police
00:13:40
reports or police reports in his area
00:13:43
just to see if there was possibly
00:13:45
something of him being missing. And the
00:13:47
thing is, there wasn't really anything.
00:13:49
His mom actually ended up and coming out
00:13:51
and basically saying that he's actually
00:13:54
fine. I can confirm Julian is safe, but
00:13:56
in the best interest of his security,
00:13:59
I'm not able to provide any more
00:14:01
information. So again, it's still ending
00:14:04
on a note where maybe the guy's life is
00:14:06
actually in danger. Who knows? And he
00:14:09
has gone completely radio silent, right?
00:14:11
Which is again super duper weird because
00:14:13
he's been posting pretty actively. like
00:14:15
he's gained a lot of traction like
00:14:18
millions of plays on some of these uh
00:14:20
just showcasing his I would assume
00:14:22
almost near finished project of
00:14:24
microwave hydrarolysis or you know
00:14:26
pyrolysis sorry and you can see like
00:14:28
this is what clo this is what looks like
00:14:30
the actual final almost reactor right I
00:14:32
assume these are like you know he's got
00:14:34
like he puts in the plastic into this
00:14:36
reactor the they uniformly heat this and
00:14:38
because it's microwave it's supposed to
00:14:40
be a lot more efficient than your
00:14:42
traditional heating method so even the
00:14:43
people who are watching this are saying,
00:14:46
"Bro, 8 kowatts of power to make 5
00:14:48
milliliters of gasoline, it's not
00:14:50
necessarily about the gas. It's actually
00:14:53
about the plastic waste." But again,
00:14:54
even if you're burning the plastic
00:14:57
waste, I do absolutely ask what that's
00:14:58
doing to the environment, right? There's
00:15:00
a lot of questions to be asked and uh
00:15:03
yeah, it's a lot more complicated than
00:15:05
one would think. Now, I'm sure for a lot
00:15:06
of people, they could be like, "Well,
00:15:09
what if the oil companies try to kill
00:15:10
him?" And the reality is the oil
00:15:12
companies are not going to kill a guy
00:15:14
that's super duper popular. Okay, that's
00:15:15
that's just literally giving the
00:15:18
conspiracy theorist the actual W. No,
00:15:19
what's actually more likely to happen
00:15:21
over here before we end this video off
00:15:24
is that it is more likely that the oil
00:15:27
companies will probably find a way to
00:15:29
acquire the actual product over here.
00:15:31
Whether they pay him a large sum of
00:15:33
money or they actually use some form of
00:15:35
like patent suppression, which has
00:15:38
happened in the past, where they will
00:15:40
just literally like actually have
00:15:41
patents or probably bring up something
00:15:44
they wrote like [ __ ] forever ago, and
00:15:45
use that to actually suppress this guy
00:15:48
if he makes some serious progress in
00:15:50
this field. I mean you can read from 9
00:15:52
years ago companies like Exon Mobile for
00:15:54
instance patented tons of technologies
00:15:56
for things like low emission cars,
00:15:58
electric vehicles even in fact some of
00:16:00
the first electric vehicles which you
00:16:03
know granted if you know the first EV
00:16:05
was not like Tesla for instance one of
00:16:08
the first EVs back in the late 90s early
00:16:11
2000s were things like the GM EV1 and of
00:16:14
course the RAV 4 EV which would use uh
00:16:18
batteries the NIMH battery technology
00:16:19
companies Companies like Chevron, for
00:16:22
instance, would use their actual stakes
00:16:24
in companies like Kobasus to limit
00:16:27
access to those battery technologies,
00:16:29
right? And of course, this would
00:16:30
absolutely [ __ ] over anyone that was
00:16:32
trying to use his battery technology to
00:16:34
make electric vehicles that could
00:16:36
actually pose a serious competition to
00:16:39
that traditional gas-powered car. So,
00:16:41
no, you don't have to kill somebody,
00:16:42
okay? As long as you're running
00:16:44
corporate America, you can use any of
00:16:47
these tools to basically suppress any of
00:16:49
the stuff growing in your area and
00:16:51
people will just be fighting over legal
00:16:53
battles while you'll be raking in
00:16:55
billions of dollars. It's just like that
00:16:57
in the country. Now, if you actually
00:16:58
make some serious progress with
00:17:01
plastine, then color me shocked. I would
00:17:02
be excited to see it. Okay? Something
00:17:05
like a cleaner burning energy that is
00:17:07
taking away the plastic wastes from our
00:17:10
earth is something anybody wants to see.
00:17:12
But is it been done here? I don't
00:17:15
personally think so. I think that the uh
00:17:17
idea is interesting. I just don't think
00:17:20
that it's as efficient as uh as as
00:17:22
nature jab is saying. But ladies and
00:17:23
gentlemen, this was the weird
00:17:25
disappearance. Guy came back in the nick
00:17:27
of time. And whether those black
00:17:29
helicopters are real or big oil is
00:17:31
tracking him down, this has been an
00:17:33
interesting scientific rabbit hole to go
00:17:35
down. Ladies and gentlemen, if you like
00:17:36
what you saw, please like, comment, and
00:17:38
subscribe. Dislike if you dislike it. I
00:17:41
am out.