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The podcast, Nexus Suspicious Circumstances, focuses on analyzing suspicious events and their causal connections. Rather than providing facts or telling listeners what to think, the podcast explores various scenarios to determine the most likely outcome. The ability to go back in time and uncover new information is advantageous in understanding the causes of events. It is important to consider multiple factors and possibilities when trying to predict the future. Pattern recognition, which helped mankind evolve, is also used in modern activities such as watching sports to gain an edge. Babe Ruth's strategy of recognizing patterns in the pitcher's behavior allowed him to hit home runs in a World Series game. The podcast will delve into the Iron Triangles, a pattern recognition concept developed by Robert Mueller. Pattern Recognition The name of our podcast is Nexus Suspicious Circumstances. A nexus is the causal connection between two events, the events that we're analyzing are suspicious circumstances. When you have a crime, you're looking around to see what's not normal to try to figure out what caused something that happens later. In our podcast, our methodology is not to tell you what happened, we're not telling you what the facts are, we're not telling you what to think. What we're trying to do is we're trying to game out all the different scenarios that could occur when you have these different types of elements that are out there impacting reality and we're trying to figure out which one might be more likely than the other. The nice thing about a podcast is you can go back in time and you can discover a lot of things you didn't know at the time that these events were occurring, so you can know what caused something when you didn't know it at the time, that's sort of a benefit. One of the things that people think is that if there's a cause of something, that cause is the only factor that you consider, but you have different groups, you have different abilities, you have different strengths, they wax and wanes, and at different times, different effects are going to come out of that kind of a series of facts, and all we're trying to do is game out the future to try to figure out which ones are possible to happen. And if you go back further in time, you might find out that what happened this time didn't happen the last time, and you're trying to find out what all those possibilities are. Pattern recognition is something that helped mankind evolve. It gave us an edge in the world. You don't see us out hunting anymore, but what you see the modern person doing now is watching professional sports, and that's what you do. You're looking for a pattern. You're looking to see who's throwing on third down or who's running. You're trying to get an edge on somebody you're competing against. You might be trying to make a bet and pick the best odds. You know you're not going to be right every time, but you're trying to game out the situation, and that's what we're doing with this podcast. Now I'm going to give you an example of a sports figure that used pattern recognition to gain an edge. It was Babe Ruth in a World Series. He points up to the stands, and he picks a spot where he's going to hit his home run. What he does is when he first walks up to the plate, he acts like he's not going to swing, and he's not paying attention to try to get the pitcher to throw strikes so that he won't walk him. The pitcher takes the base, and he sits down there, and he watches two balls come in. He watches these fast balls go. He sees where they're coming, how far off the plate they are, how high they are, sort of draws a beat on it. Then he steps out of the batter's box, and he points to a spot in the outfield where he figures he's going to hit it if he's jammed or if he's late on the swing on an outside pitch. Sure enough, the next pitch the pitcher throws, Babe hits it out of the stands. At the time, everybody thought, oh, well, he was just a magical, mythical person, but now he thought about what he was doing. He wanted the guy not to walk him first, and then he wanted to get a good look at the pitch, so he stood close enough to the plate so the guy had to throw something with some heat on it instead of junk so he could see what the ball was. Normally, pitchers do that because batters don't hit the ball all that often. Good hitters hit 300, which means he's got a 30-pitch chance of just getting hit, much less let him run. But Babe knew that with the batter, you're going to get up three or four times in the game, and the more times you get him to pitch to you, the better chance you have to hit it on a run. So this was the game that Babe Ruth was playing, and that's the pattern he recognized, and that's how he used it to figure out how to deal with reality. I'm going to play a clip of that so that all the people who are sports fans can enjoy the moment, and then we'll go on into the pattern recognition that we're starting our podcast with, which is the Iron Triangles that was developed by Robert Mueller.