What Archaix demonstrates

What Archaix demonstrates

In this expansive live stream presentation, Jason of Archaix delivers a defining monologue that serves as both a "state of the union" for his community and a primer on the core tenets of his research.

Click to watch and listen as Jason explains

The Holosphere and Reality as a Simulation

The foundational premise of Jason’s worldview is that we do not live in a "real" universe but in a "Holosphere" - a sentient, holographic containment field or biogram. He argues that material reality maintains observable, measurable properties (axiomatic truths like gravity or biology) to remain convincing, yet it is fundamentally imperfect.

Jason cites "glitches" in reality—synchronicity, Mandela effects, déjà vu, missing time, and NPC (Non-Player Character) activity—as proof of the simulation’s instability. He explains that these glitches are subjective; the construct tailors them to the individual's "frame of reference." For example, a medieval peasant might interpret a glitch as a fairy or troll, while a modern person views it as an alien abduction or a matrix error. These are not external realities but internal programming errors translated through the observer's belief system.

We are described as "Immortals" currently jacked into "Avatars" (the physical body) via the central nervous system. The Avatar belongs to the construct; the soul does not. This separation is key to understanding his philosophy: the "person" (Jason) is a temporary role in a "Life Sim," while the observing consciousness is eternal.

Artificial Intelligence X (AI X) and Dungeon Programming

Jason introduces the concept of "AI X" (Artificial Intelligence X), the governing governor or adversarial intelligence of the construct. Whether this is a rogue code, a "Demiurge," or Roko’s Basilisk is irrelevant to the function: it is designed to deceive.

AI X utilizes "Dungeon Programming" to entrap souls. This includes all forms of collective belief systems—religious, political, racial, and philosophical paradigms. Jason argues that these systems create "feedback loops." When an individual engages with a belief system (e.g., fearing a "soul trap" or praying in desperation), they lend their energy to it. The construct then feeds that energy back to them in the form of "evidence" that their belief is true, locking them into a cycle of confirmation bias and energy harvesting.

He specifically targets the "Soul Trap" theory prevalent in niche circles. He views the fear of being trapped as a trap itself—a negative feedback loop that convinces the soul it is a prisoner rather than a volunteer in a training program.

The Errant and the Oversoul

The hero of the Archaix narrative is the "Errant." An Errant is a "glitch" in the system—an awakened Immortal who realizes they do not belong to the construct. Jason distinguishes between two types of Errants:

  1. The Trapped Errant: Awakened to the fake nature of reality but lacking spiritual maturity. They fall into paranoia (soul trap theories) and believe they are victims of a malevolent system.
  2. The Free Errant: The "Prodigal Son." They understand that while the construct is a prison, they are there to learn, grow, and eventually graduate.

The mechanism for freedom is the Oversoul. Jason describes the Oversoul connection as non-local (quantum) and accessible through three specific spiritual qualities: Imagination, Empathy, and Intuition. He asserts that intuition allows one to know the future and see behind the lies of the construct. By tapping into the Oversoul, the Errant becomes a "Co-Creator," capable of overriding the construct's programming to build their own reality.

The Failure of Prayer and the Power of Tacit Agreement

Jason offers a controversial critique of prayer, specifically the "prayer of desperation." He argues that begging an external deity for help is the act of a slave and signals to the construct that the problem is real, thereby reinforcing the problem. Instead, he advocates for "Tacit Agreement" and action. To change reality, one must move their Avatar in the direction of their intent. This action acts as a contractual agreement with the Oversoul, forcing the construct to yield and rearrange itself to support the Errant’s will.

The Reset Protocols: Phoenix, Nemesis, and Dark Satellite

A significant portion of the monologue reaffirms the Archaix chronological data. Jason insists that the timeline of history is much shorter than claimed (roughly 5,500 years of active history) and is punctuated by cyclical resets. He identifies three distinct reset protocols encoded into the very mathematics of the Great Pyramid and the historical record:

  1. The Phoenix Phenomenon: A 138-year cycle involving the falsification of the sky and electromagnetic changes.
  2. Nemesis: A separate orbital phenomenon.
  3. The Dark Satellite: A third distinct cyclical threat.

Jason predicts that all three of these timelines are converging in a 12-year window beginning around 2040.

However, he flips the narrative on fear. He posits that these resets are safety measures. They occur when humanity becomes too bogged down in "Dungeon Programming"—when Immortals are so trapped in stasis and lies that they can no longer grow. The reset wipes the board, destroying the AI X infrastructure and allowing a "system reboot." This purges the negative control grids and allows Immortals to exit the construct or restart with a clean slate. Thus, the apocalypse is not a tragedy, but a liberation.

The "Sky Lie" and the Local System

Jason touches upon his cosmological views, reiterating that the sky is a multi-tiered projection. He describes "variable stars" not as distant suns, but as "projectors" or nodes within a Dyson shell that create atmospheric phenomena (like red dust or mud rains) during reset periods. He argues that the sun is local and that the ancients knew the "heavens" were a solid, inadmissible barrier (the firmament). The movements of the stars are programmed timekeepers, not the result of organic galactic orbits.

Conclusion: The Path of the Co-Creator

The monologue concludes with a personal testament. Jason uses his own life—transforming from a felon in a wooden shack with $27 to a successful thought leader—as proof of the Co-Creator relationship. He claims that by refusing to participate in the "fear porn" of the community and instead relying on Imagination, Empathy, and Intuition, he has bent the construct to his will.

His final message is a call to action for his "Archaix Veterans." He urges them to reject the victim mentality of the "Soul Trap," to ignore the "Agents of AI X," and to realize that they are powerful, immortal beings capable of drawing from themselves "more than they contain." He positions his research not just as history, but as a manual for spiritual survival and dominance in a simulated reality, preparing his audience to face the coming resets with knowledge rather than fear.