• 6 months ago
Explores the phenomenon where people misremember well-known facts or events, leading some to believe reality has been al | dG1fNHZFLW56T1VFWlk
Transcript
00:00 Something inexplicable is happening where almost half the population say they remember
00:07 things from the past being different or changed.
00:10 The Mandela effect got its name because there was a very large segment of the population
00:15 that believed that Nelson Mandela died decades earlier.
00:19 Suddenly his recent death was announced.
00:22 Billions of people are interested in this topic.
00:27 That memory isn't jiving up with reality.
00:30 It's like the Twilight Zone. Not everything is what you think it is.
00:35 In the car in which John F. Kennedy was assassinated, there were six passengers.
00:40 I've watched the videos over and over.
00:44 There's no way in my mind you could tell me there were six people in that car.
00:48 Things that people know so well just be twisted just enough to get people to question
00:54 whether or not what they remembered was real.
00:57 There are many possibilities for the origins of the Mandela effect.
01:01 Some people think it's a simple case of mass misremembering.
01:04 But the prevailing notion involves the idea that there are other universes existing right next to ours.
01:11 Fundamental reality as we know it can change.
01:15 This lines up with sciences of today.
01:19 CERN is a collider where there are smashing particles.
01:22 Stephen Hawking, he warned people about CERN.
01:26 Very adamant that this was not something that we should be doing.
01:30 We could be in a simulation. We don't know who is in charge.
01:35 It could be aliens. It could be angels or demons some people say.
01:39 It could be just artificial intelligence.
01:41 The nightmare scenarios that could stem from that are just limitless.
01:45 Now a growing number of people want to know if history is being edited.
01:51 [Music]

Recommended